The Reverend Winthrop Oaklander gave no sign of life, however. The customary barrage of legal letters had been laid down, but without eliciting any response. The Reverend Winthrop must be a wise one, opined Tutt, and he began to have a hearty contempt as well as hatred for his quarry. The first letter had been the usual vague hint that the clergyman might and probably would find it to his advantage to call at the offices of Tutt &Tutt, and so on. The Reverend Winthrop, however did not seem to care to secure said advantage whatever it might be. The second epistle gave the name of the client and proposed a friendly discussion of her affairs. No reply. The third hinted at legal proceedings. Total silence. The fourth demanded ten thousand dollars damages and threatened immediate suit.
In answer to this last appeared the Reverend Winthrop himself. He was a fine-looking young chap with a clear eye-almost as blue as Georgie's-and a skin even pinker than hers, and he stood six feet five in his Oxfords and his fist looked to Tutt as big as a coconut.
“Are you the blackmailer who's been writing me those letters?” he demanded, springing into Tutt's office. “If you are, let me tell you something. You've got hold of the wrong monkey. I've been dealing with fellows of your variety ever since I got out of the seminary. I don't know the lady you pretend to represent, and I never heard of her. If I get any more letters from you I'll go down and lay the case before the district attorney; and if he doesn't put you in jail I'll come up here and knock your head off. Understand? Good day!”
At any other period in his existence Tutt could not have failed to be impressed with the honesty of this husky exponent of the church militant, but he was drugged as by the drowsy mandragora. The blatant defiance of this muscular preacher outraged him. This canting hypocrite, this wolf in priest's clothing must be brought to book. But how? Mrs. Allison had admitted the literal truth when she had told him that there were no letters, no photographs. There was no use commencing an action for breach of promise if there was no evidence to support it. And once the papers were filed their bolt would have been shot. Some way must be devised whereby the Reverend Winthrop Oaklander could be made to perceive that Tutt &Tutt meant business, and-equally imperative -whereby Georgie would be impressed with the fact that not for nothing had she come to them-that is, to him-for help.
The fact of the matter was that the whole thing had become rather hysterical. Tutt, though having nothing seriously to reproach himself with, was constantly haunted by a sense of being rather ridiculous and doing something behind his wife's back. He told himself that his Platonic regard for Georgie was a noble thing and did him honor, but it was an honor which he preferred to wear as an entirely private decoration. He was conscious of being laughed at by Willie and Scraggs and disapproved of by Miss Wiggin, who was very snippy to him. And in addition there was the omnipresent horror of having Abigail unearth his philandering. He now not only thought of Mrs. Allison as Georgie but addressed her thus, and there was quite a tidy little bill at the florist's for flowers that he had sent her. In one respect only did he exhibit even the most elementary caution-he wrote and signed all his letters to her himself upon the typewriter, and filed copies in the safe.
“So there we are!” he sighed as he gave to Mrs. Allison a somewhat expurgated, or rather emasculated version of the Reverend Winthrop's visit. “We have got to hand him something hot or make up our minds to surrender. In a word we have got to scare him-Georgie.”
And then it was that, like the apocryphal mosquito, the Fat and Skinny Club justified its attempted existence. For the indefatigable Sorg made an unheralded reappearance in the outer office and insisted upon seeing Tutt, loudly asserting that he had reason to believe that if a new application were now made to another judge-whom he knew-it would be more favorably received. Tutt went to the doorway and stood there barring the entrance and expostulating with him.
“All right!” shouted Sorg. “All right! I hear you! But don't tell me that a man named Solomon Swackhamer can change his name to Phillips Brooks Vanderbilt and in the same breath a reputable body of citizens be denied the right to call themselves what they please!”
“He don't understand!” explained Tutt to Georgie, who had listened with wide, dreamy eyes. “He don't appreciate the difference between doing a thing as an individual and as a group.”
“What thing?”
“Why, taking a name.”
“I don't get you,” said Georgie.
“Sorg wanted to call his crowd the Fat and Skinny Club, and the court wouldn't let him-thought it was silly.”
“Well?”
“But he could have called himself Mr. Fat or Mr. Skinny or Mr. Anything Else without having to ask anybody-Oh, I say!”
Tutt had stiffened into sculpture.
“What is it?” demanded Georgie fascinated.
“I've got an idea,” he cried. “You can call yourself anything you like. Why not call yourself Mrs. Winthrop Oaklander?”
“But what good would that do?” she asked vaguely.
“Look here!” directed Tutt. “This is the surest thing you know! Just go up to the Biltmore and register as Mrs. Winthrop Oaklander. You have a perfect legal right to do it. You could call yourself Mrs. Julius Caesar if you wanted to. Take a room and stay there until our young Christian soldier offers you a suitable inducement to move along. Even if you're violating the law somehow his first attempt to make trouble for you will bring about the very publicity he is anxious to avoid. Why, it's marvelous-and absolutely safe? They can't touch you. He'll come across inside of two hours. If he doesn't a word to the reporters will start things in the right direction.”
For a moment Mrs. Allison looked puzzled. Then her beautiful face broke into an enthusiastic classic smile and she laid her little hand softly on his arm.
“What a clever boy you are-Sammy!”
A subdued snigger came from the direction of the desk usually occupied by William. Tutt flushed. It was one thing to call Mrs. Allison “Georgie” in private and another to have her “Sammy” him within hearing of the office force. And just then Miss Wiggin passed by with her nose slightly in the air.
“What a perfectly wonderful idea!” went on Mrs. Allison rapturously. “A perfectly wonderful idea!”
Then she smiled a strange, mysterious, significant smile that almost tore Tutt's heart out by the roots.
“Listen, Sammy,” she whispered, with a new light in those beautiful eyes. “I want five thousand dollars.”
“Five?” repeated Tutt simply. “I thought you wanted ten thousand!”
“Only five from you, Sammy!”
“Me!” he gagged.
“You-dearest!”
Tutt turned blazing hot; then cold, dizzy and sea-sick. His sight was slightly blurred. Slowly he groped for the door and closed it cautiously.
“What-are-you-talking about?” he choked, though he knew perfectly well.
Georgie had thrown herself back in the leather chair by his desk and had opened her gold mesh-bag.
“About five thousand dollars,” she replied with the careful enunciation of a New England school-mistress.
“What five thousand dollars?”
“The five you're going to hand me before I leave this office, Sammy darling,” she retorted dazzlingly.