You haven't any place to go, have you?"
"No," said Vallance, "nowhere to-night. I'll
have a bench with you."
"You take it cool," said Ide, "if you've told it to
me straight. I should think a man put on the bum
from a good job just in one day would be tearing his
hair."
"I believe I've already remarked," said Vallance,
laughing, "that I would have thought that a man
who was expecting to come into a fortune on the
next day would be feeling pretty easy and quiet."
"It's funny business," philosophized Ide, "about
the way people take things, anyhow. Here's your
bench, Dawson, right next to mine. The light don't
shine in your eyes here. Say, Dawson, I'll get the
old man to give you a letter to somebody about a job
when I get back home. You've helped me a lot to-
night. I don't believe I could have gone through
the night if I hadn't struck you."
"Thank you," said Vallance. "Do you lie down
or sit up on these when you sleep?
For hours Vallance gazed almost without winking
at the stars through the branches of the trees and
listened to the sharp slapping of horses' hoofs on the
sea of
asphalt to the south His mind was active,
but his feelings were dormant. Every emotion
seemed to have been eradicated. Ide felt no regrets,
no fears, no pain or
discomfort. Even when be
thought of the girl, it was as of an inhabitant of one
of those
remote stars at which be gazed. He re-
membered the
absurd antics of his
companion and
laughed
softly, yet without a feeling of mirth. Soon
the daily army of milk wagons made of the city a
roaring drum to which they marched. Vallance fell
asleep on his comfortless bench.
At ten o'clock on the next day the two stood at the
door of Lawyer Mead's office in Ann Street.
Ide's nerves fluttered worse than ever when the
hour approached; and Vallance could not decide to
leave him a possible prey to the dangers he dreaded.
When they entered the office, Lawyer Mead looked
at them wonderingly. He and Vallance were old
friends. After his greeting, he turned to Ide, who
stood with white face and trembling limbs before the
expected crisis.
"I sent a second letter to your address last night,
Mr. Ide," he said. "I
learned this morning that
you were not there to receive it. It will inform you
that Mr. Paulding has reconsidered his offer to take
you back into favor. He has
decided not to do so,
and desires you to understand that no change will be
made in the relations existing between you and
him."
Ide's trembling suddenly ceased. The color came
back to his face, and be straightened his back. His
jaw went forward half an inch, and a gleam came
into his eye. He pushed back his battered bat with
one hand, and
extended the other, with levelled fin-
gers, toward the
lawyer. He took a long
breath and
then laughed sardonically.
"Tell old Paulding he may go to the devil," he
said, loudly and clearly, and turned and walked out
of the office with a firm and
lively step.
Lawyer Mead turned on his heel to Vallance and
smiled.
"I am glad you came in," he said, genially.
"Your uncle wants you to return home at once. He
is reconciled to the situation that led to his hasty
action, and desires to say that all will be as -- "
"Hey, Adams!" cried Lawyer Mead, breaking his
sentence, and
calling to his clerk. "Bring a glass of
water Mr. Vallance has fainted."
THE PLUTONIAN FIRE
There are a few editor men with whom I am privi-
leged to come in
contact. It has not been long since
it was their habit to come in
contact with me. There
is a difference.
They tell me that with a large number of the
manuscripts that are submitted to them come advices
(in the way of a boost) from the author asseverating
that the incidents in the story are true. The des-
tination of such contributions depends
wholly upon
the question of the
enclosure of stamps. Some are
returned, the rest are thrown on the floor in a corner
on top of a pair of gum shoes, an overturned statu-
ette of the Winged Victory, and a pile of old maga-
zines containing a picture of the editor in the act
of
reading the latest copy of Le Petit Journal, right
side up - you can tell by the illustrations. It is
only a legend that there are waste baskets in editors'
offices.
Thus is truth held in disrepute. But in time truth
and science and nature will adapt themselves to art.
Things will happen
logically, and the
villain be dis-
comfited instead of being elected to the board of
directors. But in the
meantimefiction must not only
be divorced from fact, but must pay alimony and be
awarded
custody of the press despatches.
This preamble is to warn you off the grade cross-
ing of a true story. Being that, it shall be told sim-
ply, with conjunctions substituted for adjectives
wherever possible, and
whatever evidences of style
may appear in it shall be due to the linotype man.
It is a story of the
literary life in a great city, and
it should be of interest to every author within a 20-
mile
radius of Gosport, Ind., whose desk holds a MS.
story
beginning thus: "While the cheers following
his
nomination were still ringing through the old
courthouse, Harwood broke away from the congrat-
ulating handclasps of his henchmen and
hurried to
Judge Creswell's house to find Ida."
Pettit came up out of Alabama to write
fiction.
The Southern papers had printed eight of his stories
under an
editorial caption identifying the author as
the son of "the
gallant Major Pettingill Pettit, our
former County Attorney and hero of the battle of
Lookout Mountain."
Pettit was a
rugged fellow, with a kind of shame-
faced
culture, and my good friend. His father kept
a general store in a little town called Hosea. Pettit
had been raised in the pine-woods and broom-sedge
fields
adjacentthereto. He had in his gripsack two
manuscript novels of the adventures in Picardy of
one Gaston Laboulaye, Vicompte de Montrepos, in
the year 1329. That's nothing. We all do that.
And some day when we make a hit with the little
sketch about a newsy and his lame dog, the editor
prints the other one for us -- or "on us," as the say-
ing is -- and then -- and then we have to get a big
valise and peddle those
patent air-draft gas burners.
At $1.25 everybody should have 'em.
I took Pettit to the red-brick house which was to
appear in an article entitled "Literary Landmarks
of Old New York," some day when we got through
with it. He engaged a room there,
drawing on the
general store for his expenses. I showed New York
to him, and he did not mention how much narrower
Broadway is than Lee Avenue in Hosea. This
seemed a good sign, so I put the final test.
"Suppose you try your band at a descriptive arti-
cle," I suggested, "giving your impressions of New
York as seen from the Brooklyn Bridge. The fresh
point of view, the -- "
"Don't be a fool," said Pettit. "Let's go have
some beer. On the whole I rather like the city."
We discovered and enjoyed the only true Bohemia.
Every day and night we repaired to one of those
palaces of
marble and glass and tilework, where goes
on a
tremendous and sounding epic of life. Valhalla
itself could not be more
glorious and sonorous. The
classic
marble on which we ate, the great, light-
flooded, vitreous front, adorned with snow-white
scrolls; the grand Wagnerian din of clanking cups
and bowls the flashing staccato of brandishing cut-
lery, the
piercing recitative of the white-aproned
grub-maidens at the morgue-like
banquet tables; the
recurrent lied-motif of the cash-register -- it was a
gigantic,
triumphant welding of art and sound, a
deafening, soul-uplifting
pageant of
heroic and em-
blematic life. And the beans were only ten cents.
We wondered why our fellow-artists cared to dine at
sad little tables in their
so-called Bohemian restau-
rants; and we shuddered lest they should seek out our
resorts and make them
conspicuous with their pres-
ence.
Pettit wrote many stories, which the editors re-
turned to him. He wrote love stories, a thing I have
always kept free from,
holding the
belief that the
well-known and popular
sentiment is not
properly a
matter for
publication, but something to be privately
handled by the alienists and florists. But the editors
had told him that they wanted love stories, because
they said the women read them.
Now, the editors are wrong about that, of course.
Women do not read the love stories in the magazines.
They read the poker-game stories and the recipes
for
cucumber lotion. The love stories are read by
fat cigar drummers and little ten-year-old girls. I
am not criticising the judgment of editors. They
are
mostly very fine men, but a man can be but one
man, with individual opinions and tastes. I knew
two
associate editors of a magazine who were won-
derfully alike in almost everything. And yet one
of them was very fond of Flaubert, while the other
preferred gin.
Pettit brought me his returned manuscripts, and
we looked them over together to find out why they
were not accepted. They seemed to me pretty fair
stories, written in a good style, and ended, as they
should, at the bottom of the last page.
They were well constructed and the events were
marshalled in
orderly and
logicalsequence. But I
thought I detected a lack of living substance -- it
was much as if I gazed at a symmetrical array of
presentable clamshells from which the succulent and
vital inhabitants had been removed. I intimated that
the author might do well to get better acquainted with
his theme.
"You sold a story last week," said Pettit, "about
a gun fight in an Arizona
mining town in which the
hero drew his Colt's .45 and shot seven bandits as