<div><span class='pageno' title='240' id='Page_240'></span><h1>XIV</h1></div>
<p class='pindent'>Throughout Dirk’s Freshman year there
were, for him, no heartening, informal, mellow
talks before the wood-fire in the book-lined
study of some professor whose wisdom was such
a mixture of classic lore and modernism as to be an inspiration
to his listeners. Midwest professors delivered
their lectures in the classroom as they had been
delivering them in the past ten or twenty years and as
they would deliver them until death or a trustees’
meeting should remove them. The younger professors
and instructors in natty gray suits and bright-coloured
ties made a point of being unpedantic in the
classroom and rather overdid it. They posed as being
one of the fellows; would dashingly use a bit of slang
to create a laugh from the boys and an adoring titter
from the girls. Dirk somehow preferred the pedants
to these. When these had to give an informal talk to
the men before some university event they would start
by saying, “Now listen, fellahs——” At the dances
they were not above “rushing” the pretty co-eds.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Two of Dirk’s classes were conducted by women
professors. They were well on toward middle age,
or past it; desiccated women. Only their eyes were
alive. Their clothes were of some indefinite dark
stuff, brown or drab-gray; their hair lifeless; their
hands long, bony, unvital. They had seen classes
and classes and classes. A roomful of fresh young
faces that appeared briefly only to be replaced by another
roomful of fresh young faces like round white
pencil marks manipulated momentarily on a slate, only
to be sponged off to give way to other round white
marks. Of the two women one—the elder—was occasionally
likely to flare into sudden life; a flame in the
ashes of a burned-out grate. She had humour and a
certain caustic wit, qualities that had managed miraculously
to survive even the deadly and numbing effects
of thirty years in the classroom. A fine mind, and
iconoclastic, hampered by the restrictions of a conventional
community and the soul of a congenital
spinster.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Under the guidance of these Dirk chafed and grew
restless. Miss Euphemia Hollingswood had a way
of emphasizing every third or fifth syllable, bringing
her voice down hard on it, thus:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“In the <span class='it'>con</span>sideration of <span class='it'>all</span> the facts in the <span class='it'>case</span> presented
be<span class='it'>fore</span> us we must <span class='it'>first</span> review the <span class='it'>his</span>tory and
at<span class='it'>tempt</span> to analyze the <span class='it'>out</span>standing——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He found himself waiting for that emphasis and
shrinking from it as from a sledge-hammer blow. It
hurt his head.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Miss Lodge droned. She approached a word with
a maddening uh-uh-uh-uh. In the uh-uh-uh face of the
uh-uh-uh-uh geometrical situation of the uh-uh-uh
uh——</p>
<p class='pindent'>He shifted restlessly in his chair, found his hands
clenched into fists, and took refuge in watching the
shadow cast by an oak branch outside the window on a
patch of sunlight against the blackboard behind her.</p>
<p class='pindent'>During the early spring Dirk and Selina talked
things over again, seated before their own fireplace in
the High Prairie farmhouse. Selina had had that
fireplace built five years before and her love of it
amounted to fire-worship. She had it lighted always
on winter evenings and in the spring when the nights
were sharp. In Dirk’s absence she would sit before
it at night long after the rest of the weary household
had gone to bed. Old Pom, the mongrel, lay stretched
at her feet enjoying such luxury in old age as he had
never dreamed of in his bastard youth. High Prairie,
driving by from some rare social gathering or making
a late trip to market as they sometimes were forced to
do, saw the rosy flicker of Mrs. DeJong’s fire dancing
on the wall and warmed themselves by it even while
they resented it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“A good heater in there and yet anyway she’s got to
have a fire going in a grate. Always she does something
funny like that. I should think she’d be lonesome
sitting there like that with her dog only.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They never knew how many guests Selina entertained
there before her fire those winter evenings—old
friends and new. Sobig was there, the plump earth-grimed
baby who rolled and tumbled in the fields
while his young mother wiped the sweat from her face
to look at him with fond eyes. Dirk DeJong of ten
years hence was there. Simeon Peake, dapper, soft-spoken,
ironic, in his shiny boots and his hat always a
little on one side. Pervus DeJong, a blue-shirted
giant with strong tender hands and little fine golden
hairs on the backs of them. Fanny Davenport, the
actress-idol of her girlhood came back to her, smiling,
bowing; and the gorgeous spangled creatures in the
tights and bodices of the old Extravaganzas. In
strange contrast to these was the patient, tireless figure
of Maartje Pool standing in the doorway of Roelf’s
little shed, her arms tucked in her apron for warmth.
“You make fun, huh?” she said, wistfully, “you and
Roelf. You make fun.” And Roelf, the dark vivid
boy, misunderstood. Roelf, the genius. He was always
one of the company.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Oh, Selina DeJong never was lonely on these winter
evenings before her fire.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She and Dirk sat there one fine sharp evening in
early April. It was Saturday. Of late Dirk had not
always come to the farm for the week-end. Eugene
and Paula Arnold had been home for the Easter holidays.
Julie Arnold had invited Dirk to the gay parties
at the Prairie Avenue house. He had even spent
two entire week-ends there. After the brocaded luxury
of the Prairie Avenue house his farm bedroom
seemed almost startlingly stark and bare. Selina
frankly enjoyed Dirk’s somewhat fragmentary accounts
of these visits; extracted from them as much
vicarious pleasure as he had had in the reality—more,
probably.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Now tell me what you had to eat,” she would say,
sociably, like a child. “What did you have for dinner,
for example? Was it grand? Julie tells me
they have a butler now. Well! I can’t wait till I
hear Aug Hempel on the subject.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He would tell her of the grandeurs of the Arnold
ménage. She would interrupt and exclaim: “Mayonnaise!
On fruit! Oh, I don’t believe I’d like <span class='it'>that</span>.
You did! Well, I’ll have it for you next week when
you come home. I’ll get the recipe from Julie.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He didn’t think he’d be home next week. One of
the fellows he’d met at the Arnolds’ had invited him
to their place out north, on the lake. He had a
boat.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That’ll be lovely!” Selina exclaimed, after an almost
unnoticeable moment of silence—silence with
panic in it. “I’ll try not to fuss and be worried like
an old hen every minute of the time I think you’re on
the water. . . . Now do go on, Sobig. First
fruit with mayonnaise, h’m? What kind of soup?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He was not a naturally talkative person. There
was nothing surly about his silence. It was a taciturn
streak inherited from his Dutch ancestry. This time,
though, he was more voluble than usual. “Paula
. . .” came again and again into his conversation.
“Paula . . . Paula . . .” and again “. . . Paula.”
He did not seem conscious of the repetition, but Selina’s
quick ear caught it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I haven’t seen her,” Selina said, “since she went
away to school the first year. She must be—let’s see—she’s
a year older than you are. She’s nineteen going
on twenty. Last time I saw her I thought she was
a dark scrawny little thing. Too bad she didn’t
inherit Julie’s lovely gold colouring and good looks,
instead of Eugene, who doesn’t need ’em.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“She isn’t!” said Dirk, hotly. “She’s dark and
slim and sort of—uh—sensuous”—Selina started visibly,
and raised her hand quickly to her mouth to hide
a smile—“like Cleopatra. Her eyes are big and kind
of slanting—not squinty I don’t mean, but slanting up
a little at the corners. Cut out, kind of, so that they
look bigger than most people’s.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My eyes used to be considered rather fine,” said
Selina, mischievously; but he did not hear.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“She makes all the other girls look sort of blowzy.”
He was silent a moment. Selina was silent, too, and
it was not a happy silence. Dirk spoke again, suddenly,
as though continuing aloud a train of thought,
“—all but her hands.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina made her voice sound natural, not sharply
inquisitive. “What’s the matter with her hands,
Dirk?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He pondered a moment, his brows knitted. At last,
slowly, “Well, I don’t know. They’re brown, and
awfully thin and sort of—grabby. I mean it makes
me nervous to watch them. And when the rest of her
is cool they’re hot when you touch them.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He looked at his mother’s hands that were busy
with some sewing. The stuff on which she was working
was a bit of satin ribbon; part of a hood intended
to grace the head of Geertje Pool Vander Sijde’s second
baby. She had difficulty in keeping her rough fingers
from catching on the soft surface of the satin.
Manual work, water, sun, and wind had tanned those
hands, hardened them, enlarged the knuckles, spread
them, roughened them. Yet how sure they were, and
strong, and cool and reliable—and tender. Suddenly,
looking at them, Dirk said, “Now your hands. I love
your hands, Mother.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She put down her work hastily, yet quietly, so that
the sudden rush of happy grateful tears in her eyes
should not sully the pink satin ribbon. She was
flushed, like a girl. “Do you, Sobig?” she said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>After a moment she took up her sewing again. Her
face looked young, eager, fresh, like the face of the
girl who had found cabbages so beautiful that night
when she bounced along the rutty Halsted road with
Klaas Pool, many years ago. It came into her face,
that look, when she was happy, exhilarated, excited.
That was why those who loved her and brought that
look into her face thought her beautiful, while those
who did not love her never saw the look and consequently
considered her a plain woman.</p>
<p class='pindent'>There was another silence between the two. Then:
“Mother, what would you think of my going East next
fall, to take a course in architecture?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Would you like that, Dirk?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes, I think so—yes.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Then I’d like it better than anything in the world.
I—it makes me happy just to think of it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It would—cost an awful lot.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll manage. I’ll manage. . . . What made
you decide on architecture?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know, exactly. The new buildings at the
university—Gothic, you know—are such a contrast to
the old. Then Paula and I were talking the other
day. She hates their house on Prairie—terrible old
lumpy gray stone pile, with the black of the I. C.
trains all over it. She wants her father to build north—an
Italian villa or French château. Something of
that sort. So many of her friends are moving to the
north shore, away from these hideous south-side and
north-side Chicago houses with their stoops, and their
bay windows, and their terrible turrets. Ugh!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, now, do you know,” Selina remonstrated
mildly, “I like ’em. I suppose I’m wrong, but to me
they seem sort of natural and solid and unpretentious,
like the clothes that old August Hempel wears, so
squarecut and baggy. Those houses look dignified to
me, and fitting. They may be ugly—probably are—but
anyway they’re not ridiculous. They have a certain
rugged grandeur. They’re Chicago. Those
French and Italian gimcracky things they—they’re incongruous.
It’s as if Abraham Lincoln were to appear
suddenly in pink satin knee breeches and buckled
shoes, and lace ruffles at his wrists.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dirk could laugh at that picture. But he protested,
too. “But there’s no native architecture, so what’s to
be done! You wouldn’t call those smoke-blackened
old stone and brick piles with their iron fences and
their conservatories and cupolas and gingerbread exactly
native, would you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No,” Selina admitted, “but those Italian villas and
French châteaux in north Chicago suburbs are a good
deal like a lace evening gown in the Arizona desert. It
wouldn’t keep you cool in the daytime, and it wouldn’t
be warm enough at night. I suppose a native architecture
is evolved from building for the local climate
and the needs of the community, keeping beauty in
mind as you go. We don’t need turrets and towers
any more than we need draw-bridges and moats. It’s
all right to keep them, I suppose, where they grew up,
in a country where the feudal system meant that any
day your next-door neighbour might take it into his
head to call his gang around him and sneak up to steal
your wife and tapestries and gold drinking cups.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dirk was interested and amused. Talks with his
mother were likely to affect him thus. “What’s your
idea of a real Chicago house, Mother?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina answered quickly, as if she had thought often
about it; as if she would have liked just such a dwelling
on the site of the old DeJong farmhouse in which
they now were seated so comfortably. “Well, it
would need big porches for the hot days and nights
so’s to catch the prevailing southwest winds from the
prairies in the summer—a porch that would be swung
clear around to the east, too—or a terrace or another
porch east so that if the precious old lake breeze should
come up just when you think you’re dying of the heat,
as it sometimes does, you could catch that, too. It
ought to be built—the house, I mean—rather squarish
and tight and solid against our cold winters and north-easters.
Then sleeping porches, of course. There’s
a grand American institution for you! England may
have its afternoon tea on the terrace, and Spain may
have its patio, and France its courtyard, and Italy its
pergola, vine-covered; but America’s got the sleeping
porch—the screened-in open-air sleeping porch, and I
shouldn’t wonder if the man who first thought of that
would get precedence, on Judgment Day, over the
men who invented the aeroplane, the talking machine,
and the telephone. After all, he had nothing in mind
but the health of the human race.” After which
grand period Selina grinned at Dirk, and Dirk grinned
at Selina and the two giggled together there by the
fireplace, companionably.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Mother, you’re simply wonderful!—only your native
Chicago dwelling seems to be mostly porch.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina waved such carping criticism away with a
careless hand. “Oh, well, any house that has enough
porches, and two or three bathrooms and at least eight
closets can be lived in comfortably, no matter what
else it has or hasn’t got.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Next day they were more serious. The eastern
college and the architectural career seemed to be settled
things. Selina was content, happy. Dirk was troubled
about the expense. He spoke of it at breakfast
next morning (Dirk’s breakfast; his mother had had
hers hours before and now as he drank his coffee, was
sitting with him a moment and glancing at the paper
that had come in the rural mail delivery). She had
been out in the fields overseeing the transplanting of
young tomato seedlings from hotbed to field. She
wore an old gray sweater buttoned up tight, for the
air was still sharp. On her head was a battered black
felt soft hat (an old one of Dirk’s) much like the one
she had worn to the Haymarket that day ten years
ago. Selina’s cheeks were faintly pink from her walk
across the fields in the brisk morning air.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She sniffed. “That coffee smells wonderful. I
think I’ll just——” She poured herself a half cup with
the air of virtue worn by one who really longs for a
whole cup and doesn’t take it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been thinking,” he began, “the expense——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Pigs,” said Selina, serenely.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Pigs!” He looked around, bewildered; stared at
his mother.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Pigs’ll do it,” Selina explained, calmly. “I’ve been
wanting to put them in for three or four years. It’s
August Hempel’s idea. Hogs, I should have said.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Again, as before, he echoed, “Hogs!” rather
faintly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“High-bred hogs. They’re worth their weight in
silver this minute, and will be for years to come. I
won’t go in for them extensively. Just enough to
make an architect out of Mr. Dirk DeJong.” Then,
at the expression in his face: “Don’t look so pained,
son. There’s nothing revolting about a hog—not my
kind, brought up in a pen as sanitary as a tiled bathroom
and fed on corn. He’s a handsome, impressive-looking
animal, the hog, when he isn’t treated like
one.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He looked dejected. “I’d rather not go to school
on—hogs.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She took off the felt hat and tossed it over to the
old couch by the window; smoothed her hair back with
the flat of her palm. You saw that the soft dark hair
was liberally sprinkled with gray now, but the eyes
were bright and clear as ever.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You know, Sobig, this is what they call a paying
farm—as vegetable farms go. We’re out of debt,
the land’s in good shape, the crop promises well if we
don’t have another rainy cold spring like last year’s.
But no truck garden is going to make its owner rich
these days, with labour so high and the market what
it is, and the expense of hauling and all. Any truck
farmer who comes out even thinks he’s come out
ahead.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I know it.” Rather miserably.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well. I’m not complaining, son. I’m just telling
you. I’m having a grand time. When I see the
asparagus plantation actually yielding, that I planted
ten years ago, I’m as happy as if I’d stumbled on a
gold mine. I think, sometimes, of the way your
father objected to my planting the first one. April,
like this, in the country, with everything coming up
green and new in the rich black loam—I can’t tell you.
And when I know that it goes to market as food—the
best kind of food, that keeps people’s bodies clean
and clear and flexible and strong! I like to think of
babies’ mothers saying: ‘Now eat your spinach, every
scrap, or you can’t have any dessert! . . . Carrots
make your eyes bright. . . . Finish your potato.
Potatoes make you strong!’ ”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina laughed, flushed a little.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes, but how about hogs? Do you feel that way
about hogs?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Certainly!” said Selina, briskly. She pushed
toward him a little blue-and-white platter that lay on
the white cloth near her elbow. “Have a bit more
bacon, Dirk. One of these nice curly slivers that are
so crisp.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ve finished my breakfast, Mother.” He rose.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The following autumn saw him a student of architecture
at Cornell. He worked hard, studied even
during his vacations. He would come home to the
heat and humidity of the Illinois summers and spend
hours each day in his own room that he had fitted up
with a long work table and a drawing board. His
T-square was at hand; two triangles—a 45 and a 60;
his compass; a pair of dividers. Selina sometimes
stood behind him watching him as he carefully worked
on the tracing paper. His contempt for the local
architecture was now complete. Especially did he
hold forth on the subject of the apartment-houses that
were mushrooming on every street in Chicago from
Hyde Park on the south to Evanston on the north.
Chicago was very elegant in speaking of these; never
called them “flats”; always apartments. In front of
each of these (there were usually six to a building),
was stuck a little glass-enclosed cubicle known as a
sun-parlour. In these (sometimes you heard them
spoken of, grandly, as solariums) Chicago dwellers
took refuge from the leaden skies, the heavy lake atmosphere,
the gray mist and fog and smoke that so
frequently swathed the city in gloom. They were
done in yellow or rose cretonnes. Silk lamp shades
glowed therein, and flower-laden boxes. In these frank
little boxes Chicago read its paper, sewed, played
bridge, even ate its breakfast. It never pulled down
the shades.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Terrible!” Dirk fumed. “Not only are they hideous
in themselves, stuck on the front of those houses
like three pairs of spectacles; but the lack of decent
privacy! They do everything but bathe in ’em. Have
they never heard the advice given people who live in
glass houses!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>By his junior year he was talking in a large way
about the Beaux Arts. But Selina did not laugh at
this. “Perhaps,” she thought. “Who can tell!
After a year or two in an office here, why not another
year of study in Paris if he needs it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Though it was her busiest time on the farm Selina
went to Ithaca for his graduation in 1913. He was
twenty-two and, she was calmly sure, the best-looking
man in his class. Undeniably he was a figure to please
the eye; tall, well-built, as his father had been, and
blond, too, like his father, except for his eyes. These
were brown—not so dark as Selina’s, but with some of
the soft liquid quality of her glance. They strengthened
his face, somehow; gave him an ardent look of
which he was not conscious. Women, feeling the
ardour of that dark glance turned upon them, were
likely to credit him with feelings toward themselves
of which he was quite innocent. They did not know
that the glance and its effect were mere matters of
pigmentation and eye-conformation. Then, too, the
gaze of a man who talks little is always more effective
than that of one who is loquacious.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina, in her black silk dress, and her plain black
hat, and her sensible shoes was rather a quaint little
figure amongst all those vivacious, bevoiled, and beribboned
mammas. But a distinctive little figure, too.
Dirk need not be ashamed of her. She eyed the rather
paunchy, prosperous, middle-aged fathers and thought,
with a pang, how much handsomer Pervus would have
been than any of these, if only he could have lived to
see this day. Then, involuntarily, she wondered if
this day would ever have occurred, had Pervus lived.
Chided herself for thinking thus.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When he returned to Chicago, Dirk went into the
office of Hollis & Sprague, Architects. He thought
himself lucky to work with this firm, for it was doing
much to guide Chicago’s taste in architecture away
from the box car. Already Michigan Boulevard’s
skyline soared somewhat above the grimly horizontal.
But his work there was little more than that of
draughtsman, and his weekly stipend could hardly be
dignified by the term of salary. But he had large ideas
about architecture and he found expression for his
suppressed feelings on his week-ends spent with Selina
at the farm. “Baroque” was the word with which he
dismissed the new Beachside Hotel, north. He said
the new Lincoln Park band-stand looked like an igloo.
He said that the city council ought to order the Potter
Palmer mansion destroyed as a blot on the landscape,
and waxed profane on the subject of the east face of
the Public Library Building, down town.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Never mind,” Selina assured him, happily. “It
was all thrown up so hastily. Remember that just
yesterday, or the day before, Chicago was an Indian
fort, with tepees where towers are now, and mud wallows
in place of asphalt. Beauty needs time to perfect
it. Perhaps we’ve been waiting all these years for just
such youngsters as you. And maybe some day I’ll be
driving down Michigan Boulevard with a distinguished
visitor—Roelf Pool, perhaps. Why not? Let’s say
Roelf Pool, the famous sculptor. And he’ll say,
‘Who designed that building—the one that is so strong
and yet so light? So gay and graceful, and yet so
reticent!’ And I’ll say, ‘Oh, that! That’s one of
the earlier efforts of my son, Dirk DeJong.’ ”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Dirk pulled at his pipe moodily; shook his
head. “Oh, you don’t know, Mother. It’s so
damned slow. First thing you know I’ll be thirty.
And what am I! An office boy—or little more than
that—at Hollis’s.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>During his university years Dirk had seen much of
the Arnolds, Eugene and Paula, but it sometimes
seemed to Selina that he avoided these meetings—these
parties and week-ends. She was content that
this should be so, for she guessed that the matter of
money held him back. She thought it was well that
he should realize the difference now. Eugene had his
own car—one of five in the Arnold garage. Paula,
too, had hers. She had been one of the first Chicago
girls to drive a gas car; had breezed about Chicago’s
boulevards in one when she had been little more than
a child in short skirts. At the wheel she was dexterous,
dare-devil, incredibly relaxed. Her fascination
for Dirk was strong. Selina knew that, too. In the
last year or two he had talked very little of Paula and
that, Selina knew, meant that he was hard hit.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Sometimes Paula and Eugene drove out to the farm,
making the distance from their new north-shore house
to the DeJong place far south in some breath-taking
number of minutes. Eugene would appear in rakish
cap, loose London coat, knickers, queer brogans with
an English look about them, a carefully careless looseness
about the hang and fit of his jacket. Paula did
not affect sports clothes for herself. She was not the
type, she said. Slim, dark, vivacious, she wore slinky
clothes—crêpes, chiffons. Her feet were slim in sheer
silk stockings and slippers with buckles. Her eyes
were languorous, lovely. She worshipped luxury and
said so.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll have to marry money,” she declared. “Now
that they’ve finished calling poor Grandpa a beef-baron
and taken I don’t know how many millions away
from him, we’re practically on the streets.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You look it!” from Dirk; and there was bitterness
beneath his light tone.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, it’s true. All this silly muckraking in the
past ten years or more. Poor Father! Of course
Grand-dad was pur-ty rough, let me tell you. I read
some of the accounts of that last indictment—the 1910
one—and I must say I gathered that dear old Aug
made Jesse James look like a philanthropist. I should
think, at his age, he’d be a little scared. After all,
when you’re over seventy you’re likely to have some
doubts and fears about punishment in the next world.
But not a grand old pirate like Grandfather. He’ll
sack and burn and plunder until he goes down with
the ship. And it looks to me as if the old boat had a
pretty strong list to starboard right now. Father says
himself that unless a war breaks, or something, which
isn’t at all likely, the packing industry is going to
spring a leak.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Elaborate figure of speech,” murmured Eugene.
The four of them—Paula, Dirk, Eugene, and Selina—,
were sitting on the wide screened porch that Selina had
had built at the southwest corner of the house. Paula
was, of course, in the couch-swing. Occasionally she
touched one slim languid foot to the floor and gave indolent
impetus to the couch.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It is, rather, isn’t it? Might as well finish it, then.
Darling Aug’s been the grand old captain right
through the vi’age. Dad’s never been more than a
pretty bum second mate. And as for you, Gene
my love, cabin boy would be, y’understand me,
big.” Eugene had gone into the business a year before.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What can you expect,” retorted Eugene, “of a lad
that hates salt pork? And every other kind of pig
meat?” He despised the yards and all that went
with it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina now got up and walked to the end of the
porch. She looked out across the fields, shading her
eyes with her hand. “There’s Adam coming in with
the last load for the day. He’ll be driving into town
now. Cornelius started an hour ago.” The DeJong
farm sent two great loads to the city now. Selina was
contemplating the purchase of one of the large automobile
trucks that would do away with the plodding
horses and save hours of time on the trip. She
went down the steps now on her way to oversee the
loading of Adam Bras’s wagon. At the bottom
of the steps she turned. “Why can’t you two stay
to supper? You can quarrel comfortably right
through the meal and drive home in the cool of the
evening.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll stay,” said Paula, “thanks. If you’ll have all
kinds of vegetables, cooked and uncooked. The
cooked ones smothered in cream and oozing butter.
And let me go out into the fields and pick ’em myself
like Maud Muller or Marie Antoinette or any of
those make-believe rustic gals.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>In her French-heeled slippers and her filmy silk
stockings she went out into the rich black furrows of
the fields, Dirk carrying the basket.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Asparagus,” she ordered first. Then, “But where
is it? Is <span class='it'>that</span> it!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You dig for it, idiot,” said Dirk, stooping, and taking
from his basket the queerly curved sharp knife or
spud used for cutting the asparagus shoots. “Cut the
shoots three or four inches below the surface.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, let me do it!” She was down on her silken
knees in the dirt, ruined a goodly patch of the fine
tender shoots, gave it up and sat watching Dirk’s expert
manipulation of the knife. “Let’s have radishes,
and corn, and tomatoes and lettuce and peas and artichokes
and——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Artichokes grow in California, not Illinois.” He
was more than usually uncommunicative, and noticeably
moody.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Paula remarked it. “Why the Othello brow?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You didn’t mean that rot, did you? about marrying
a rich man.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Of course I meant it. What other sort of man
do you think I ought to marry?” He looked at her,
silently. She smiled. “Yes, wouldn’t I make an ideal
bride for a farmer!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m not a farmer.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, architect then. Your job as draughtsman
at Hollis & Sprague’s must pay you all of twenty-five
a week.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Thirty-five,” said Dirk, grimly. “What’s that
got to do with it!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Not a thing, darling.” She stuck out one foot.
“These slippers cost thirty.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I won’t be getting thirty-five a week all my life.
You’ve got brains enough to know that. Eugene
wouldn’t be getting that much if he weren’t the son of
his father.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The grandson of his grandfather,” Paula corrected
him. “And I’m not so sure he wouldn’t.
Gene’s a born mechanic if they’d just let him work at
it. He’s crazy about engines and all that junk. But
no—‘Millionaire Packer’s Son Learns Business from
Bottom Rung of Ladder.’ Picture of Gene in workman’s
overalls and cap in the Sunday papers. He
drives to the office on Michigan at ten and leaves at
four and he doesn’t know a steer from a cow when he
sees it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t care a damn about Gene. I’m talking
about you. You were joking, weren’t you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I wasn’t. I’d hate being poor, or even just moderately
rich. I’m used to money—loads of it. I’m
twenty-four. And I’m looking around.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He kicked an innocent beet-top with his boot. “You
like me better than any man you know.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Of course I do. Just my luck.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, then!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, then, let’s take these weggibles in and have
’em cooked in cream, as ordered.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She made a pretense of lifting the heavy basket.
Dirk snatched it roughly out of her hand so that she
gave a little cry and looked ruefully down at the red
mark on her palm. He caught her by the shoulder—even
shook her a little. “Look here, Paula. Do
you mean to tell me you’d marry a man simply because
he happened to have a lot of money!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps not simply because he had a lot of money.
But it certainly would be a factor, among other things.
Certainly he would be preferable to a man who
knocked me about the fields as if I were a bag of potatoes.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, forgive me. But—listen, Paula—you know
I’m—gosh!—— And there I am stuck in an architect’s
office and it’ll be years before I——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes, but it’ll probably be years before I meet the
millions I require, too. So why bother? And even
if I do, you and I can be just as good friends.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, shut up. Don’t pull that ingénue stuff on me,
please. Remember I’ve known you since you were ten
years old.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And you know just how black my heart is, don’t
you, what? You want, really, some nice hearty lass
who can tell asparagus from peas when she sees ’em,
and who’ll offer to race you from here to the kitchen.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“God forbid!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Six months later Paula Arnold was married to
Theodore A. Storm, a man of fifty, a friend of her
father’s, head of so many companies, stockholder in
so many banks, director of so many corporations that
even old Aug Hempel seemed a recluse from business
in comparison. She never called him Teddy. No
one ever did. Theodore Storm was a large man—not
exactly stout, perhaps, but flabby. His inches saved
him from grossness. He had a large white serious
face, fine thick dark hair, graying at the temples, and
he dressed very well except for a leaning toward rather
effeminate ties. He built for Paula a town house on
the Lake Shore drive in the region known as the Gold
Coast. The house looked like a restrained public
library. There was a country place beyond Lake
Forest far out on the north shore, sloping down to the
lake and surrounded by acres and acres of fine woodland,
expertly parked. There were drives, ravines,
brooks, bridges, hothouses, stables, a race-track, gardens,
dairies, fountains, bosky paths, keeper’s cottage
(twice the size of Selina’s farmhouse). Within three
years Paula had two children, a boy and a girl. “There!
That’s done,” she said. Her marriage was a great
mistake and she knew it. For the war, coming in
1914, a few months after her wedding, sent the
Hempel-Arnold interests sky-rocketing. Millions of
pounds of American beef and pork were shipped to
Europe. In two years the Hempel fortune was
greater than it ever had been. Paula was up to her
eyes in relief work for Bleeding Belgium. All the
Gold Coast was. The Beautiful Mrs. Theodore A.
Storm in her Gift Shop Conducted for the Relief of
Bleeding Belgium.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dirk had not seen her in months. She telephoned
him unexpectedly one Friday afternoon in his office at
Hollis & Sprague’s.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Come out and spend Saturday and Sunday with
us, won’t you? We’re running away to the country
this afternoon. I’m so sick of Bleeding Belgium, you
can’t imagine. I’m sending the children out this morning.
I can’t get away so early. I’ll call for you in
the roadster this afternoon at four and drive you out
myself.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I am going to spend the week-end with Mother.
She’s expecting me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Bring her along.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“She wouldn’t come. You know she doesn’t enjoy
all that velvet-footed servitor stuff.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, but we live quite simply out there, really.
Just sort of rough it. Do come, Dirk. I’ve got some
plans to talk over with you . . . How’s the
job?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, good enough. There’s very little building going
on, you know.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Will you come?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think I——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll call for you at four. I’ll be at the curb.
Don’t keep me waiting, will you? The cops fuss so
if you park in the Loop after four.”</p>
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