house for the hotel.
Lester, leaving Cincinnati a few days earlier than he expected, had failed to receive her reply; he arrived at Cleveland feeling sadly out of tune with the world. He had a lingering hope that a letter from Jennie might be
awaiting him at the hotel, but there was no word from her. He was a man
not easily wrought up, but to-night he felt depressed, and so went
gloomily up to his room and changed his linen. After supper he proceeded
to drown his dissatisfaction in a game of billiards with some friends, from whom he did not part until he had taken very much more than his usual
amount of alcoholic stimulant. The next morning he arose with a vague
idea of abandoning the whole affair, but as the hours elapsed and the time of his appointment drew near he decided that it might not be unwise to
give her one last chance. She might come. Accordingly, when it still
lacked a quarter of an hour of the time, he went down into the parlor.
Great was his delight when he beheld her sitting in a chair and waiting—
the outcome of her acquiescence. He walked briskly up, a satisfied,
gratified smile on his face.
"So you did come after all," he said, gazing at her with the look of one who has lost and recovered a prize. "What do you mean by not writing me? I thought from the way you neglected me that you had made up your
mind not to come at all."
"I did write," she replied.
"Where?"
"To the address you gave me. I wrote three days ago."
"That explains it. It came too late. You should have written me before.
How have you been?"
"Oh, all right," she replied.
"You don't look it!" he said. "You look worried. What's the trouble, Jennie? Nothing gone wrong out at your house, has there?"
It was a fortuitous question. He hardly knew why he had asked it. Yet it
opened the door to what she wanted to say.
"My father's sick," she replied.
"What's happened to him?"
"He burned his hands at the glass-works. We've been terribly worried. It looks as though he would not be able to use them any more."
She paused, looking the distress she felt, and he saw plainly that she was facing a crisis.
"That's too bad," he said. "That certainly is. When did this happen?"
"Oh, almost three weeks ago now."
"It certainly is bad. Come into lunch, though. I want to talk with you. I've been wanting to get a better understanding of your family affairs ever
since I left." He led the way into the dining- room and selected a secluded table. He tried to divert her mind by asking her to order the luncheon, but she was too worried and too shy to do so and he had to make out the
menu by himself. Then he turned to her with a cheering air. "Now,
Jennie," he said, "I want you to tell me all about your family. I got a little something of it last time, but I want to get it straight. Your father, you said, was a glass-blower by trade. Now he can't work any more at that,
that's obvious."
"Yes," she said.
"How many other children are there?"
"Six."
"Are you the oldest?"
"No, my brother Sebastian is. He's twenty-two."
"And what does he do?"
"He's a clerk in a cigar store."
"Do you know how much he makes?"
"I think it's twelve dollars," she replied thoughtfully.
"And the other children?"
"Martha and Veronica don't do anything yet. They're too young. My
brother George works at Wilson's. He's a cash-boy. He gets three dollars
and a half."
"And how much do you make?"
"I make four."
He stopped, figuring up mentally just what they had to live on. "How much rent do you pay?" he continued.
"Twelve dollars."
"How old is your mother?"
"She's nearly fifty now."
He turned a fork in his hands back and forth; he was thinking earnestly.
"To tell you the honest truth, I fancied it was something like that, Jennie,"
he said. "I've been thinking about you a lot. Now, I know. There's only one answer to your problem, and it isn't such a bad one, if you'll only
believe me." He paused for an inquiry, but she made none. Her mind was running on her own difficulties.
"Don't you want to know?" he inquired.
"Yes," she answered mechanically.
"It's me," he replied. "You have to let me help you. I wanted to last time.
Now you have to; do you hear?"
"I thought I wouldn't," she said simply.
"I knew what you thought," he replied. "That's all over now. I'm going to
'tend to that family of yours. And I'll do it right now while I think of it."
He drew out his purse and extracted several ten and twenty-dollar bills—
two hundred and fifty dollars in all. "I want you to take this," he said. "It's just the beginning. I will see that your family is provided for from now
on. Here, give me your hand."
"Oh no," she said. "Not so much. Don't give me all that."
"Yes," he replied. "Don't argue. Here. Give me your hand."
She put it out in answer to the summons of his eyes, and he shut her
fingers on the money, pressing them gently at the same time. "I want you to have it, sweet. I love you, little girl. I'm not going to see you suffer, nor any one belonging to you."
Her eyes looked a dumb thankfulness, and she bit her lips.
"I don't know how to thank you," she said.
"You don't need to," he replied. "The thanks are all the other way—
believe me."
He paused and looked at her, the beauty of her face holding him. She
looked at the table, wondering what would come next.
"How would you like to leave what you're doing and stay at home?" he asked. "That would give you your freedom day times."
"I couldn't do that," she replied. "Papa wouldn't allow it. He knows I ought to work."
"That's true enough," he said. "But there's so little in what you're doing.
Good heavens! Four dollars a week! I would be glad to give you fifty
times that sum if I thought there was any way in which you could use it."
He idly thrummed the cloth with his fingers.
"I couldn't," she said. "I hardly know how to use this. They'll suspect. I'll have to tell mamma."
From the way she said it he judged there must be some bond of sympathy
between her and her mother which would permit of a confidence such as
this. He was by no means a hard man, and the thought touched him. But
he would not relinquish his purpose.
"There's only one thing to be done, as far as I can see," he went on very gently. "You're not suited for the kind of work you're doing. You're too refined. I object to it. Give it up and come with me down to New York;
I'll take good care of you. I love you and want you. As far as your family is concerned, you won't have to worry about them anymore. You can take
a nice home for them and furnish it in any style you please. Wouldn't you like that?"
He paused, and Jennie's thoughts reverted quickly to her mother, her dear mother. All her life long Mrs. Gerhardt had been talking of this very thing
—a nice home. If they could just have a larger house, with good furniture and a yard filled with trees, how happy she would be. In such a home she
would be free of the care of rent, the discomfort of poor furniture, the
wretchedness of poverty; she would be so happy. She hesitated there
while his keen eye followed her in spirit, and he saw what a power he had set in motion. It had been a happy inspiration—the suggestion of a decent home for the family. He waited a few minutes longer, and then said: