“Too swell for Charlie’s,” commented Mr. Max. “Except after closing hours. I’ve seen ’em in use there then, but the idea wasn’t glory and decoration.”
“I hope you don’t dislike the candles, Mr. Cargan,” remarked Miss Norton. “They add such a lot to the romance of the affair, don’t you think? I’m terribly thrilled by all this. The rattling of the windows, and the flickering light — two lines of a poem keep running through my head:
I don’t know who the lord was, nor what he followed — perhaps the seventh key. But the weeping candles and the wind seem so romantic — and so like Baldpate Inn to-night.”
“If I had a daughter your age,” commented Cargan, not unkindly, “she’d be at home reading Laura Jean Libbey by the fire, and not chasing after romance on a mountain.”
“That would be best for her, I’m sure,” replied the girl sweetly. “For then she wouldn’t be likely to find out things about her father that would prove disquieting.”
“Dearie!” cried Mrs. Norton. No one else spoke, but all looked at the mayor. He was busily engaged with his food. Smiling his amusement, Mr. Magee sought to direct the conversation into less personal channels.
“We hear so much about romance, especially since its widely advertised death,” he said. “And to every man I ever met, it meant something different. Mr. Cargan, speaking as a broad-minded man of the world — what does romance mean to you?”
The mayor ran his fingers through his graying hair, and considered seriously.
“Romance,” he reflected. “Well, I ain’t much on the talk out of books. But here’s what I see when you say that word to me. It’s the night before election, and I’m standing in the front window of the little room on Main Street where the boys can always find me. Down the street I hear the snarl and rumble of bands, and pretty soon I see the yellow flicker of torches, like the flicker of that candle, and the bobbing of banners. And then — the boys march by. All the boys! Pat Doherty, and Bob Larsen, and Matt Sanders — all the boys! And when they get to my window they wave their hats and cheer. Just a fat old man in that window, but they’ll go to the pavement with any guy that knocks him. They’re loyal. They’re for me. And so they march by — cheering and singing — all the boys — just for me to see and hear. Well — that — that’s romance to me.”
“Power,” translated Mr. Magee.
“Yes, sir,” cried the mayor. “I know I’ve got them. All the reformers in the world can’t spoil my thrill then. They’re mine. I guess old Napoleon knew that thrill. I guess he was the greatest romancer the world ever knew. When he marched over the mountains with his starving bunch — and looked back and saw them in rags and suffering — for him — well I reckon old Nap was as close to romance then as any man ever gets.”
“I wonder,” answered Mr. Magee. It came to him suddenly that in each person’s definition of this intangible thing might lie exposed something of both character and calling. At the far end of the table Mrs. Norton’s lined tired face met his gaze. To her he put his question.
“Well,” she answered, and her voice seemed softer than its wont, “I ain’t thought much of that word for a good many years now. But when I do — say, I seem to see myself sitting on our porch back home — thirty years ago. I’ve got on a simple little muslin dress, and I’m slender as Elsie Janis, and the color in my cheeks is — well, it’s the sort that Norton likes. And my hair — but — I’m thinking of him, of Norton. He’s told me he wants to make me happy for life, and I’ve about decided I’ll let him try. I see him — coming up our front walk. Coming to call on me — have I mentioned I’ve got a figure — a real sweet figure? That’s about what romance means to me.”
“Youth, dear?” asks Miss Norton gently.
“That’s it, dearie,” answered the older woman dreamily. “Youth.”
For a time those about the table sat in silence, picturing no doubt the slender figure on the steps of that porch long ago. Not without a humorous sort of pity did they glance occasionally toward the woman whom Norton had begged to make happy. The professor of Comparative Literature was the first to break the silence.
“The dictionary,” he remarked academically, “would define romance as a species of fictitious writing originally composed in the Romance dialects, and afterward in prose. But — the dictionary is prosaic, it has no soul. Shall I tell you what romance means to me? I will. I see a man toiling in a dim laboratory, where there are strange fires and stranger odors. Night and day he experiments, the love of his kind in his eyes, a desire to help in his heart. And then — the golden moment — the great moment in that quiet dreary cell — the moment of the discovery. A serum, a formula — what not. He gives it to the world and a few of the sick are well again, and a few of the sorrowful are glad. Romance means neither youth nor power to me. It means — service.”
He bent his dim old eyes on his food, and Mr. Magee gazed at him with a new wonder. Odd sentiments these from an old man who robbed fireplaces, held up hermits, and engaged in midnight conferences by the annex door. More than ever Magee was baffled, enthralled, amused. Now Mr. Max leered about the table and contributed his unsavory bit.
“Funny, ain’t it,” he remarked, “the different things the same word means to a bunch of folks. Say romance to me, and I don’t see no dim laboratory. I don’t see nothing dim. I see the brightest lights in the world, and the best food, and somebody, maybe, dancing the latest freak dance in between the tables. And an orchestra playing in the distance — classy dames all about — a taxi clicking at the door. And me sending word to the chauffeur ‘Let her click till the milk carts rumble — I can pay.’ Say — that sure is romance to me.”
“Mr. Hayden,” remarked Magee, “are we to hear from you?”
Hayden hesitated, and looked for a moment into the black eyes of Myra Thornhill.
“My idea has often been contradicted,” he said, keeping his gaze on the girl, “it may be again. But to me the greatest romance in the world is the romance of money making — dollar piling on dollar in the vaults of the man who started with a shoe-string, and hope, and nerve. I see him fighting for the first thousand — and then I see his pile growing, slowly at first — faster — faster — faster — until a motor-car brings him to his office, and men speak his name with awe in the streets.”
“Money,” commented Miss Thornhill contemptuously. “What an idea of romance for a man.”
“I did not expect,” replied Hayden, “that my definition would pass unchallenged. My past experiences—” he looked meaningly at the girl — “had led me to be prepared for that. But it is my definition — I spoke the truth. You must give me credit for that.”
“I ain’t one to blame you,” sneered Cargan, “for wanting it noticed when you do side-step a lie. Yes, I certainly—”
“See here, Cargan,” blazed Hayden.
“Yes, you did speak the truth,” put in Miss Thornhill hastily. “You mentioned one word in your definition — it was a desecration to drag it in — hope. For me romance means only — hope. And I’m afraid there are a pitiful number in the world to whom it means the same.”