Elder Conklin by Frank Harris (free e reader txt) š
On the following morning he went to his school very early. The girls were not as obtrusive as they had been. Miss Jessie Stevens did not bother him by coming up every five minutes to see what he thought of her dictation, as she had been wont to do. He was rather glad of this; it saved him importunate glances and words, and the propinquity of girlish forms, which had been more trying still. But what was the cause of the change? It was evident that the girls regarded him as belonging to Miss Conklin. He disliked the assumption; his caution took alarm; he would be more careful in future. The forenoon melted into afternoon quietly, though there were traces on Jake Conklin's bench of unusual agitation and excitement. To these signs the schoolmaster paid small heed at the moment. He was absorbed in thinking of the evening before, and in trying to appraise each of Loo's w
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While Mr. Gulmore was speaking, Mr. Hutchings gave himself to thought. After all, why was he running for Mayor? The place, as Gulmore said, would be of no use to him. He was weary of fighting which only ended in defeat, and could only end in a victory that would be worthless. Mayor, indeed! If he had a chance of becoming a Member of Congress, that would be different. And across his brain flitted the picture so often evoked by imagination in earlier years. Why not? Gulmore could make it certain. Would he?
āWhat you say seems plausible enough, but I donāt see my way. I donāt feel inclined to go into business at my time of life.ā
āYou donāt need to go into the business. Iāll see to that.ā
āNo. I donāt need money now particularly.ā
āNext year, Hutchinās, Iāll have a better man than Robinson against you. Lawyer Nevilsonās as good as ken be found, I reckon, and he wouldnāt refuse to join me if I gave him the chance.ā But while he was speaking, Mr. Gulmore kept his opponentās answer in view. He considered it thoughtfully; āI donāt need money now particularly.ā What did the man need? Congress? As a Republican? That would do as well. When Mr. Hutchings shook his head, careless of the menace, Mr. Gulmore made up his mind. His obstinacy came out; he would win at any price. He began:
āItās what I said at first, Hutchinās; weāve each got to give what the other wants. Iāve told you what I want; tell me squarely what you want, anā pārāaps the thing ken be settled.ā
As Mr. Hutchings did not answer at once, the Boss went on:
āYouāre in politics for somethinā. What is it? If youāre goinā to buck agen me, you might as well draw out; youāll do no good. You know that. See here! Is it the State Legislature youāre after, orāCongress?ā
The mere words excited Mr. Hutchings; he wanted to be back again in the East as a victor; he longed for the cultivated amenities and the social life of Washington. He could not help exclaiming:
āAh! if it hadnāt been for you Iād have been in Congress long ago.ā
āAs a Democrat? Not from this State, I guess.ā
āWhat does it matter? Democrat or Republican, the difference now is only in the name.ā
āThe price is high, Hutchinās. I ask you to give up runninā for Mayor, and you ask me for a seat in Congress instead. ButāIāll pay it, if you do as I say. Youāve no chance in this State as a Democrat; you know that yourself. To run for Mayor as a Democrat hurts you; that must stop right nowāin your own interest. But what I want from you is that you donāt announce your withdrawal till the day after tomorrow, anā meantime you say nothinā to the Professor or any one else. Are you agreed?ā
Mr. Hutchings paused. The path of his desire lay open before him; the opportunity was not to be missed; he grew eager. But still there was something disagreeable in an action which demanded secrecy. He must think coolly. What was the proposal? What was he giving? Nothing. He didnāt wish to be Mayor with Gulmore and all the City Council against him. Nothingāexcept the withdrawal on the very morning of the election. That would look bad, but he could pretend illness, and he had told the Professor he didnāt care to be Mayor; he had advised him not to mix in the struggle; besides, Roberts would not suspect anything, and if he did thereād be no shadow of proof for a long time to come. In the other scale of the balance he had Gulmoreās promise: it was trustworthy, he knew, butā:
āDo you mean that youāll run me for the next term and get me elected?ā
āIāll do all I know, and I guess youāll succeed.ā
āI have nothing but your word.ā
āNothinā.ā
Again Mr. Hutchings paused. To accept definitively would be dangerous if the conversation had had listeners. It was characteristic of the place and time that he could suspect a man of laying such a trap, upon whose word he was prepared to rely. Mr. Gulmore saw and understood his hesitation:
āI said we were alone, Hutchinās, and I meant it. Jest as I say now, if you withdraw and tell no one and be guided by me in becoming a Republican, Iāll do what I ken to get you into Congress,ā and as he spoke he stood up.
Mr. Hutchings rose, too, and said, as if in excuse: āI wanted to think it over, but Iām agreed. Iāll do as you say,ā and with a hurried āGood night!ā he left the room.
Mr. Gulmore returned to his chair and lit a cigar. He was fairly satisfied with the result of his efforts. His triumph over the Professor would not be as flagrant, perhaps, as if Hutchināsā name had been linked with his in a city contract; but, he thought with amusement, every one would suspect that he had bought the lawyer for cash. What a fool the man was! What did he want to get into Congress for? Weak vanity! Heād have no weight there. To prefer a seat in Congress to wealthāsilly. Besides, Hutchinās would be a bad candidate. Of course the party name would cover anythinā. But what a mean skunk! Here Mr. Gulmoreās thoughts reverted to himself. Ought he to keep his word and put such a man into Congress? He hated to break a promise. But why should he help the Professorās father-in-law to power? Wall, there was no hurry. Heād make up his mind later. Anyway, the Professorād have a nice row to hoe on the morninā of the election, and Boss Gulmoreād win and win big, anā that was the point. The laugh would be on the Professorā
*
On the morning of the election Professor Roberts was early afoot. He felt hopeful, light-hearted, and would not confess even to himself that his good spirits were due chiefly to the certainty that in another twelve hours his electioneering would be at an end. The work of canvassing and public speaking had become very disagreeable to him. The mere memory of the speeches he had listened to, had left, as it were, an unpleasant aftertaste. How the crowds had cheered the hackneyed platitudes, the blatant patriotic appeals, the malevolent caricature of opponents! Something unspeakably trivial, vulgar, and evil in it all reminded him of tired children when the romping begins to grow ill-natured.
And if the intellectual side of the struggle had been offensive, the moral atmosphere of the Committee Rooms, infected as it was by the candidates, had seemed to him to be even worseāmephitic, poisonous. He had shrunk from realizing the sensations which had been forced upon him thereāa recoil of his nature as from unappeasable wild-beast greeds, with their attendant envy, suspicion, and hatred seething like lava under the thin crust of a forced affability, of a good-humour assumed to make deception easy. He did not want to think of it; it was horrible. And perhaps, after all, he was mistaken; perhaps his dislike of the work had got upon his nerves, and showed him everything in the darkest colours. It could scarcely be as bad as he thought, or human society would be impossible. But argument could not blunt the poignancy of his feelings; he preferred, therefore, to leave them inarticulate, striving to forget. In any case, the ordeal would soon be over; it had to be endured for a few hours more, and then he would plunge into his books again, and enjoy good company, he and May together.
He was still lingering over this prospect when the servant came to tell him that some gentlemen were waiting for him, and he found in the sitting-room half-a-dozen of his favourite students. One of the Seniors, named Cartrell, a young man of strong figure, and keen, bold face, remarked, as he shook hands, that they had come to accompany himā āElections are sometimes rough, and we know the ropes.ā Roberts thanked them warmly, and they set off.
The Committee Rooms of the Democratic party were situated near the Court House, in what had been once the centre, but was now the edge of the town. The little troop had to pass through the negro quarterāsmall frame-houses, peppered over grassless, bare lots, the broken-down fences protesting against unsociable isolation. The Rooms, from the outside, reminded one of a hive of angry bees. In and out of the door men were hurrying, and a crowd swarmed on the sidewalk talking in a loud, excited hum. As soon as the Professor was recognized, a silence of astonishment fell upon the throng. With stares of curiosity they drew aside to let him enter. Slightly surprised by the reception, the Professor passed into the chief room. At a table in the middle a man was speaking in a harsh, loud voiceāone Simpson, a popular orator, who had held aloof from the meetings of the party. He was saying:
āItās a put-up game between them, but the question is, whoās to go on the ticket ināā
As Simpsonās eyes met those of Roberts he stopped speaking.
āGood morning, gentlemen. Please continue, Mr. Simpson; I hope Iām not interrupting you.ā
The Professor did not like Mr. Simpson. The atrabilious face, the bitter, thin lips, and grey eyes veined with yellow, reminded him indefinably of a wild beast. Mr. Simpson seemed to take the courteous words as a challenge. Drawing his wiry figure up he said, with insult in voice and manner:
āPerhaps youāve come to nominate a Mayor; weād all like to know your choice.ā
āI donāt understand you.ā
The Professorās tone was frank, his sincerity evident, but Simpson went on:
āDonāt ye? Perhaps Hutchinās has sent you to say, as heās sick itād be well to run Robinson on both ticketsāeh?ā
āI donāt know what you mean. I expected to meet Mr. Hutchings here. Is he ill?ā
āHeāll get well soon, I reckon; but after taking a perscription from Gulmore, heās mighty bad and canāt leave the house.ā
āWhat do you mean?ā
āI mean that Hutchings has withdrawn his candidature as Mayor. I mean that the āHeraldā has the announcinā of it. I mean itās a put-up job between him and Gulmore to ruin the Democratic party in this town. I meanāā
As the Professor drew back in amazement, young Cartrell stepped in front of him and addressed Simpson:
āWhat proof have you of what you say?ā
āProof! Proof enough. Does an honest man resign a candidature on the morning of an election, and give the other side the news before his own party?ā
The interruption had given Roberts time for reflection. He felt that Simpsonās facts must be right. It was characteristic of him that his first thought was, Had Hutchings withdrawn in order to save him from further attacks? No. If he had heād have told him before the event. A sort of nausea overpowered him as he remembered that Hutchings had related how Gulmore had bought Patrick Byrneāand now he, too, had sold himself. As in a flash Hutchingsā weakness of fibre was laid bare to him. āThatās the reason I couldnāt find him yesterday.ā His heart sank within him. āHow could Hutchings have been soā?ā With the belief in the
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