<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXIX </h2>
<h3> I </h3>
<p>THE assurance of Tanis Judique's friendship fortified Babbitt's
self-approval. At the Athletic Club he became experimental. Though Vergil
Gunch was silent, the others at the Roughnecks' Table came to accept
Babbitt as having, for no visible reason, "turned crank." They argued
windily with him, and he was cocky, and enjoyed the spectacle of his
interesting martyrdom. He even praised Seneca Doane. Professor Pumphrey
said that was carrying a joke too far; but Babbitt argued, "No! Fact! I
tell you he's got one of the keenest intellects in the country. Why, Lord
Wycombe said that—"</p>
<p>"Oh, who the hell is Lord Wycombe? What you always lugging him in for? You
been touting him for the last six weeks!" protested Orville Jones.</p>
<p>"George ordered him from Sears-Roebuck. You can get those English
high-muckamucks by mail for two bucks apiece," suggested Sidney
Finkelstein.</p>
<p>"That's all right now! Lord Wycombe, he's one of the biggest intellects in
English political life. As I was saying: Of course I'm conservative
myself, but I appreciate a guy like Senny Doane because—"</p>
<p>Vergil Gunch interrupted harshly, "I wonder if you are so conservative? I
find I can manage to run my own business without any skunks and reds like
Doane in it!"</p>
<p>The grimness of Gunch's voice, the hardness of his jaw, disconcerted
Babbitt, but he recovered and went on till they looked bored, then
irritated, then as doubtful as Gunch.</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>He thought of Tanis always. With a stir he remembered her every aspect.
His arms yearned for her. "I've found her! I've dreamed of her all these
years and now I've found her!" he exulted. He met her at the movies in the
morning; he drove out to her flat in the late afternoon or on evenings
when he was believed to be at the Elks. He knew her financial affairs and
advised her about them, while she lamented her feminine ignorance, and
praised his masterfulness, and proved to know much more about bonds than
he did. They had remembrances, and laughter over old times. Once they
quarreled, and he raged that she was as "bossy" as his wife and far more
whining when he was inattentive. But that passed safely.</p>
<p>Their high hour was a tramp on a ringing December afternoon, through
snow-drifted meadows down to the icy Chaloosa River. She was exotic in an
astrachan cap and a short beaver coat; she slid on the ice and shouted,
and he panted after her, rotund with laughter.... Myra Babbitt never slid
on the ice.</p>
<p>He was afraid that they would be seen together. In Zenith it is impossible
to lunch with a neighbor's wife without the fact being known, before
nightfall, in every house in your circle. But Tanis was beautifully
discreet. However appealingly she might turn to him when they were alone,
she was gravely detached when they were abroad, and he hoped that she
would be taken for a client. Orville Jones once saw them emerging from a
movie theater, and Babbitt bumbled, "Let me make you 'quainted with Mrs.
Judique. Now here's a lady who knows the right broker to come to, Orvy!"
Mr. Jones, though he was a man censorious of morals and of laundry
machinery, seemed satisfied.</p>
<p>His predominant fear—not from any especial fondness for her but from
the habit of propriety—was that his wife would learn of the affair.
He was certain that she knew nothing specific about Tanis, but he was also
certain that she suspected something indefinite. For years she had been
bored by anything more affectionate than a farewell kiss, yet she was hurt
by any slackening in his irritable periodic interest, and now he had no
interest; rather, a revulsion. He was completely faithful—to Tanis.
He was distressed by the sight of his wife's slack plumpness, by her puffs
and billows of flesh, by the tattered petticoat which she was always
meaning and always forgetting to throw away. But he was aware that she, so
long attuned to him, caught all his repulsions. He elaborately, heavily,
jocularly tried to check them. He couldn't.</p>
<p>They had a tolerable Christmas. Kenneth Escott was there, admittedly
engaged to Verona. Mrs. Babbitt was tearful and called Kenneth her new
son. Babbitt was worried about Ted, because he had ceased complaining of
the State University and become suspiciously acquiescent. He wondered what
the boy was planning, and was too shy to ask. Himself, Babbitt slipped
away on Christmas afternoon to take his present, a silver cigarette-box,
to Tanis. When he returned Mrs. Babbitt asked, much too innocently, "Did
you go out for a little fresh air?"</p>
<p>"Yes, just lil drive," he mumbled.</p>
<p>After New Year's his wife proposed, "I heard from my sister to-day,
George. She isn't well. I think perhaps I ought to go stay with her for a
few weeks."</p>
<p>Now, Mrs. Babbitt was not accustomed to leave home during the winter
except on violently demanding occasions, and only the summer before, she
had been gone for weeks. Nor was Babbitt one of the detachable husbands
who take separations casually He liked to have her there; she looked after
his clothes; she knew how his steak ought to be cooked; and her clucking
made him feel secure. But he could not drum up even a dutiful "Oh, she
doesn't really need you, does she?" While he tried to look regretful,
while he felt that his wife was watching him, he was filled with exultant
visions of Tanis.</p>
<p>"Do you think I'd better go?" she said sharply.</p>
<p>"You've got to decide, honey; I can't."</p>
<p>She turned away, sighing, and his forehead was damp.</p>
<p>Till she went, four days later, she was curiously still, he cumbrously
affectionate. Her train left at noon. As he saw it grow small beyond the
train-shed he longed to hurry to Tanis.</p>
<p>"No, by golly, I won't do that!" he vowed. "I won't go near her for a
week!"</p>
<p>But he was at her flat at four.</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>He who had once controlled or seemed to control his life in a progress
unimpassioned but diligent and sane was for that fortnight borne on a
current of desire and very bad whisky and all the complications of new
acquaintances, those furious new intimates who demand so much more
attention than old friends. Each morning he gloomily recognized his
idiocies of the evening before. With his head throbbing, his tongue and
lips stinging from cigarettes, he incredulously counted the number of
drinks he had taken, and groaned, "I got to quit!" He had ceased saying,
"I WILL quit!" for however resolute he might be at dawn, he could not, for
a single evening, check his drift.</p>
<p>He had met Tanis's friends; he had, with the ardent haste of the Midnight
People, who drink and dance and rattle and are ever afraid to be silent,
been adopted as a member of her group, which they called "The Bunch." He
first met them after a day when he had worked particularly hard and when
he hoped to be quiet with Tanis and slowly sip her admiration.</p>
<p>From down the hall he could hear shrieks and the grind of a phonograph. As
Tanis opened the door he saw fantastic figures dancing in a haze of
cigarette smoke. The tables and chairs were against the wall.</p>
<p>"Oh, isn't this dandy!" she gabbled at him. "Carrie Nork had the loveliest
idea. She decided it was time for a party, and she 'phoned the Bunch and
told 'em to gather round. . . . George, this is Carrie."</p>
<p>"Carrie" was, in the less desirable aspects of both, at once matronly and
spinsterish. She was perhaps forty; her hair was an unconvincing
ash-blond; and if her chest was flat, her hips were ponderous. She greeted
Babbitt with a giggling "Welcome to our little midst! Tanis says you're a
real sport."</p>
<p>He was apparently expected to dance, to be boyish and gay with Carrie, and
he did his unforgiving best. He towed her about the room, bumping into
other couples, into the radiator, into chair-legs cunningly ambushed. As
he danced he surveyed the rest of the Bunch: A thin young woman who looked
capable, conceited, and sarcastic. Another woman whom he could never quite
remember. Three overdressed and slightly effeminate young men—soda-fountain
clerks, or at least born for that profession. A man of his own age,
immovable, self-satisfied, resentful of Babbitt's presence.</p>
<p>When he had finished his dutiful dance Tanis took him aside and begged,
"Dear, wouldn't you like to do something for me? I'm all out of booze, and
the Bunch want to celebrate. Couldn't you just skip down to Healey
Hanson's and get some?"</p>
<p>"Sure," he said, trying not to sound sullen.</p>
<p>"I'll tell you: I'll get Minnie Sonntag to drive down with you." Tanis was
pointing to the thin, sarcastic young woman.</p>
<p>Miss Sonntag greeted him with an astringent "How d'you do, Mr. Babbitt.
Tanis tells me you're a very prominent man, and I'm honored by being
allowed to drive with you. Of course I'm not accustomed to associating
with society people like you, so I don't know how to act in such exalted
circles!"</p>
<p>Thus Miss Sonntag talked all the way down to Healey Hanson's. To her jibes
he wanted to reply "Oh, go to the devil!" but he never quite nerved
himself to that reasonable comment. He was resenting the existence of the
whole Bunch. He had heard Tanis speak of "darling Carrie" and "Min Sonntag—she's
so clever—you'll adore her," but they had never been real to him. He
had pictured Tanis as living in a rose-tinted vacuum, waiting for him,
free of all the complications of a Floral Heights.</p>
<p>When they returned he had to endure the patronage of the young
soda-clerks. They were as damply friendly as Miss Sonntag was dryly
hostile. They called him "Old Georgie" and shouted, "Come on now, sport;
shake a leg" . . . boys in belted coats, pimply boys, as young as Ted and
as flabby as chorus-men, but powerful to dance and to mind the phonograph
and smoke cigarettes and patronize Tanis. He tried to be one of them; he
cried "Good work, Pete!" but his voice creaked.</p>
<p>Tanis apparently enjoyed the companionship of the dancing darlings; she
bridled to their bland flirtation and casually kissed them at the end of
each dance. Babbitt hated her, for the moment. He saw her as middle-aged.
He studied the wrinkles in the softness of her throat, the slack flesh
beneath her chin. The taut muscles of her youth were loose and drooping.
Between dances she sat in the largest chair, waving her cigarette,
summoning her callow admirers to come and talk to her. ("She thinks she's
a blooming queen!" growled Babbitt.) She chanted to Miss Sonntag, "Isn't
my little studio sweet?" ("Studio, rats! It's a plain
old-maid-and-chow-dog flat! Oh, God, I wish I was home! I wonder if I
can't make a getaway now?")</p>
<p>His vision grew blurred, however, as he applied himself to Healey Hanson's
raw but vigorous whisky. He blended with the Bunch. He began to rejoice
that Carrie Nork and Pete, the most nearly intelligent of the nimble
youths, seemed to like him; and it was enormously important to win over
the surly older man, who proved to be a railway clerk named Fulton Bemis.</p>
<p>The conversation of the Bunch was exclamatory, high-colored, full of
references to people whom Babbitt did not know. Apparently they thought
very comfortably of themselves. They were the Bunch, wise and beautiful
and amusing; they were Bohemians and urbanites, accustomed to all the
luxuries of Zenith: dance-halls, movie-theaters, and roadhouses; and in a
cynical superiority to people who were "slow" or "tightwad" they cackled:</p>
<p>"Oh, Pete, did I tell you what that dub of a cashier said when I came in
late yesterday? Oh, it was per-fect-ly priceless!"</p>
<p>"Oh, but wasn't T. D. stewed! Say, he was simply ossified! What did Gladys
say to him?"</p>
<p>"Think of the nerve of Bob Bickerstaff trying to get us to come to his
house! Say, the nerve of him! Can you beat it for nerve? Some nerve I call
it!"</p>
<p>"Did you notice how Dotty was dancing? Gee, wasn't she the limit!"</p>
<p>Babbitt was to be heard sonorously agreeing with the once-hated Miss
Minnie Sonntag that persons who let a night go by without dancing to jazz
music were crabs, pikers, and poor fish; and he roared "You bet!" when
Mrs. Carrie Nork gurgled, "Don't you love to sit on the floor? It's so
Bohemian!" He began to think extremely well of the Bunch. When he
mentioned his friends Sir Gerald Doak, Lord Wycombe, William Washington
Eathorne, and Chum Frink, he was proud of their condescending interest. He
got so thoroughly into the jocund spirit that he didn't much mind seeing
Tanis drooping against the shoulder of the youngest and milkiest of the
young men, and he himself desired to hold Carrie Nork's pulpy hand, and
dropped it only because Tanis looked angry.</p>
<p>When he went home, at two, he was fully a member of the Bunch, and all the
week thereafter he was bound by the exceedingly straitened conventions,
the exceedingly wearing demands, of their life of pleasure and freedom. He
had to go to their parties; he was involved in the agitation when
everybody telephoned to everybody else that she hadn't meant what she'd
said when she'd said that, and anyway, why was Pete going around saying
she'd said it?</p>
<p>Never was a Family more insistent on learning one another's movements than
were the Bunch. All of them volubly knew, or indignantly desired to know,
where all the others had been every minute of the week. Babbitt found
himself explaining to Carrie or Fulton Bemis just what he had been doing
that he should not have joined them till ten o'clock, and apologizing for
having gone to dinner with a business acquaintance.</p>
<p>Every member of the Bunch was expected to telephone to every other member
at least once a week. "Why haven't you called me up?" Babbitt was asked
accusingly, not only by Tanis and Carrie but presently by new ancient
friends, Jennie and Capitolina and Toots.</p>
<p>If for a moment he had seen Tanis as withering and sentimental, he lost
that impression at Carrie Nork's dance. Mrs. Nork had a large house and a
small husband. To her party came all of the Bunch, perhaps thirty-five of
them when they were completely mobilized. Babbitt, under the name of "Old
Georgie," was now a pioneer of the Bunch, since each month it changed half
its membership and he who could recall the prehistoric days of a fortnight
ago, before Mrs. Absolom, the food-demonstrator, had gone to Indianapolis,
and Mac had "got sore at" Minnie, was a venerable leader and able to
condescend to new Petes and Minnies and Gladyses.</p>
<p>At Carrie's, Tanis did not have to work at being hostess. She was
dignified and sure, a clear fine figure in the black chiffon frock he had
always loved; and in the wider spaces of that ugly house Babbitt was able
to sit quietly with her. He repented of his first revulsion, mooned at her
feet, and happily drove her home. Next day he bought a violent yellow tie,
to make himself young for her. He knew, a little sadly, that he could not
make himself beautiful; he beheld himself as heavy, hinting of fatness,
but he danced, he dressed, he chattered, to be as young as she was . . .
as young as she seemed to be.</p>
<p>IV</p>
<p>As all converts, whether to a religion, love, or gardening, find as by
magic that though hitherto these hobbies have not seemed to exist, now the
whole world is filled with their fury, so, once he was converted to
dissipation, Babbitt discovered agreeable opportunities for it everywhere.</p>
<p>He had a new view of his sporting neighbor, Sam Doppelbrau. The
Doppelbraus were respectable people, industrious people, prosperous
people, whose ideal of happiness was an eternal cabaret. Their life was
dominated by suburban bacchanalia of alcohol, nicotine, gasoline, and
kisses. They and their set worked capably all the week, and all week
looked forward to Saturday night, when they would, as they expressed it,
"throw a party;" and the thrown party grew noisier and noisier up to
Sunday dawn, and usually included an extremely rapid motor expedition to
nowhere in particular.</p>
<p>One evening when Tanis was at the theater, Babbitt found himself being
lively with the Doppelbraus, pledging friendship with men whom he had for
years privily denounced to Mrs. Babbitt as a "rotten bunch of tin-horns
that I wouldn't go out with, rot if they were the last people on earth."
That evening he had sulkily come home and poked about in front of the
house, chipping off the walk the ice-clots, like fossil footprints, made
by the steps of passers-by during the recent snow. Howard Littlefield came
up snuffling.</p>
<p>"Still a widower, George?"</p>
<p>"Yump. Cold again to-night."</p>
<p>"What do you hear from the wife?"</p>
<p>"She's feeling fine, but her sister is still pretty sick."</p>
<p>"Say, better come in and have dinner with us to-night, George."</p>
<p>"Oh—oh, thanks. Have to go out."</p>
<p>Suddenly he could not endure Littlefield's recitals of the more
interesting statistics about totally uninteresting problems. He scraped at
the walk and grunted.</p>
<p>Sam Doppelbrau appeared.</p>
<p>"Evenin', Babbitt. Working hard?"</p>
<p>"Yuh, lil exercise."</p>
<p>"Cold enough for you to-night?"</p>
<p>"Well, just about."</p>
<p>"Still a widower?"</p>
<p>"Uh-huh."</p>
<p>"Say, Babbitt, while she's away—I know you don't care much for
booze-fights, but the Missus and I'd be awfully glad if you could come in
some night. Think you could stand a good cocktail for once?"</p>
<p>"Stand it? Young fella, I bet old Uncle George can mix the best cocktail
in these United States!"</p>
<p>"Hurray! That's the way to talk! Look here: There's some folks coming to
the house to-night, Louetta Swanson and some other live ones, and I'm
going to open up a bottle of pre-war gin, and maybe we'll dance a while.
Why don't you drop in and jazz it up a little, just for a change?"</p>
<p>"Well—What time they coming?"</p>
<p>He was at Sam Doppelbrau's at nine. It was the third time he had entered
the house. By ten he was calling Mr. Doppelbrau "Sam, old hoss."</p>
<p>At eleven they all drove out to the Old Farm Inn. Babbitt sat in the back
of Doppelbrau's car with Louetta Swanson. Once he had timorously tried to
make love to her. Now he did not try; he merely made love; and Louetta
dropped her head on his shoulder, told him what a nagger Eddie was, and
accepted Babbitt as a decent and well-trained libertine.</p>
<p>With the assistance of Tanis's Bunch, the Doppelbraus, and other
companions in forgetfulness, there was not an evening for two weeks when
he did not return home late and shaky. With his other faculties blurred he
yet had the motorist's gift of being able to drive when he could scarce
walk; of slowing down at corners and allowing for approaching cars. He
came wambling into the house. If Verona and Kenneth Escott were about, he
got past them with a hasty greeting, horribly aware of their level young
glances, and hid himself up-stairs. He found when he came into the warm
house that he was hazier than he had believed. His head whirled. He dared
not lie down. He tried to soak out the alcohol in a hot bath. For the
moment his head was clearer but when he moved about the bathroom his
calculations of distance were wrong, so that he dragged down the towels,
and knocked over the soap-dish with a clatter which, he feared, would
betray him to the children. Chilly in his dressing-gown he tried to read
the evening paper. He could follow every word; he seemed to take in the
sense of things; but a minute afterward he could not have told what he had
been reading. When he went to bed his brain flew in circles, and he
hastily sat up, struggling for self-control. At last he was able to lie
still, feeling only a little sick and dizzy—and enormously ashamed.
To hide his "condition" from his own children! To have danced and shouted
with people whom he despised! To have said foolish things, sung idiotic
songs, tried to kiss silly girls! Incredulously he remembered that he had
by his roaring familiarity with them laid himself open to the patronizing
of youths whom he would have kicked out of his office; that by dancing too
ardently he had exposed himself to rebukes from the rattiest of withering
women. As it came relentlessly back to him he snarled, "I hate myself! God
how I hate myself!" But, he raged, "I'm through! No more! Had enough,
plenty!"</p>
<p>He was even surer about it the morning after, when he was trying to be
grave and paternal with his daughters at breakfast. At noontime he was
less sure. He did not deny that he had been a fool; he saw it almost as
clearly as at midnight; but anything, he struggled, was better than going
back to a life of barren heartiness. At four he wanted a drink. He kept a
whisky flask in his desk now, and after two minutes of battle he had his
drink. Three drinks later he began to see the Bunch as tender and amusing
friends, and by six he was with them . . . and the tale was to be told all
over.</p>
<p>Each morning his head ached a little less. A bad head for drinks had been
his safeguard, but the safeguard was crumbling. Presently he could be
drunk at dawn, yet not feel particularly wretched in his conscience—or
in his stomach—when he awoke at eight. No regret, no desire to
escape the toil of keeping up with the arduous merriment of the Bunch, was
so great as his feeling of social inferiority when he failed to keep up.
To be the "livest" of them was as much his ambition now as it had been to
excel at making money, at playing golf, at motor-driving, at oratory, at
climbing to the McKelvey set. But occasionally he failed.</p>
<p>He found that Pete and the other young men considered the Bunch too
austerely polite and the Carrie who merely kissed behind doors too
embarrassingly monogamic. As Babbitt sneaked from Floral Heights down to
the Bunch, so the young gallants sneaked from the proprieties of the Bunch
off to "times" with bouncing young women whom they picked up in department
stores and at hotel coatrooms. Once Babbitt tried to accompany them. There
was a motor car, a bottle of whisky, and for him a grubby shrieking
cash-girl from Parcher and Stein's. He sat beside her and worried. He was
apparently expected to "jolly her along," but when she sang out, "Hey,
leggo, quit crushing me cootie-garage," he did not quite know how to go
on. They sat in the back room of a saloon, and Babbitt had a headache, was
confused by their new slang looked at them benevolently, wanted to go
home, and had a drink—a good many drinks.</p>
<p>Two evenings after, Fulton Bemis, the surly older man of the Bunch, took
Babbitt aside and grunted, "Look here, it's none of my business, and God
knows I always lap up my share of the hootch, but don't you think you
better watch yourself? You're one of these enthusiastic chumps that always
overdo things. D' you realize you're throwing in the booze as fast as you
can, and you eat one cigarette right after another? Better cut it out for
a while."</p>
<p>Babbitt tearfully said that good old Fult was a prince, and yes, he
certainly would cut it out, and thereafter he lighted a cigarette and took
a drink and had a terrific quarrel with Tanis when she caught him being
affectionate with Carrie Nork.</p>
<p>Next morning he hated himself that he should have sunk into a position
where a fifteenth-rater like Fulton Bemis could rebuke him. He perceived
that, since he was making love to every woman possible, Tanis was no
longer his one pure star, and he wondered whether she had ever been
anything more to him than A Woman. And if Bemis had spoken to him, were
other people talking about him? He suspiciously watched the men at the
Athletic Club that noon. It seemed to him that they were uneasy. They had
been talking about him then? He was angry. He became belligerent. He not
only defended Seneca Doane but even made fun of the Y. M. C. A, Vergil
Gunch was rather brief in his answers.</p>
<p>Afterward Babbitt was not angry. He was afraid. He did not go to the next
lunch of the Boosters' Club but hid in a cheap restaurant, and, while he
munched a ham-and-egg sandwich and sipped coffee from a cup on the arm of
his chair, he worried.</p>
<p>Four days later, when the Bunch were having one of their best parties,
Babbitt drove them to the skating-rink which had been laid out on the
Chaloosa River. After a thaw the streets had frozen in smooth ice. Down
those wide endless streets the wind rattled between the rows of wooden
houses, and the whole Bellevue district seemed a frontier town. Even with
skid chains on all four wheels, Babbitt was afraid of sliding, and when he
came to the long slide of a hill he crawled down, both brakes on. Slewing
round a corner came a less cautious car. It skidded, it almost raked them
with its rear fenders. In relief at their escape the Bunch—Tanis,
Minnie Sonntag, Pete, Fulton Bemis—shouted "Oh, baby," and waved
their hands to the agitated other driver. Then Babbitt saw Professor
Pumphrey laboriously crawling up hill, afoot, Staring owlishly at the
revelers. He was sure that Pumphrey recognized him and saw Tanis kiss him
as she crowed, "You're such a good driver!"</p>
<p>At lunch next day he probed Pumphrey with "Out last night with my brother
and some friends of his. Gosh, what driving! Slippery 's glass. Thought I
saw you hiking up the Bellevue Avenue Hill."</p>
<p>"No, I wasn't—I didn't see you," said Pumphrey, hastily, rather
guiltily.</p>
<p>Perhaps two days afterward Babbitt took Tanis to lunch at the Hotel
Thornleigh. She who had seemed well content to wait for him at her flat
had begun to hint with melancholy smiles that he must think but little of
her if he never introduced her to his friends, if he was unwilling to be
seen with her except at the movies. He thought of taking her to the
"ladies' annex" of the Athletic Club, but that was too dangerous. He would
have to introduce her and, oh, people might misunderstand and—He
compromised on the Thornleigh.</p>
<p>She was unusually smart, all in black: small black tricorne hat, short
black caracul coat, loose and swinging, and austere high-necked black
velvet frock at a time when most street costumes were like evening gowns.
Perhaps she was too smart. Every one in the gold and oak restaurant of the
Thornleigh was staring at her as Babbitt followed her to a table. He
uneasily hoped that the head-waiter would give them a discreet place
behind a pillar, but they were stationed on the center aisle. Tanis seemed
not to notice her admirers; she smiled at Babbitt with a lavish "Oh, isn't
this nice! What a peppy-looking orchestra!" Babbitt had difficulty in
being lavish in return, for two tables away he saw Vergil Gunch. All
through the meal Gunch watched them, while Babbitt watched himself being
watched and lugubriously tried to keep from spoiling Tanis's gaiety. "I
felt like a spree to-day," she rippled. "I love the Thornleigh, don't you?
It's so live and yet so—so refined."</p>
<p>He made talk about the Thornleigh, the service, the food, the people he
recognized in the restaurant, all but Vergil Gunch. There did not seem to
be anything else to talk of. He smiled conscientiously at her fluttering
jests; he agreed with her that Minnie Sonntag was "so hard to get along
with," and young Pete "such a silly lazy kid, really just no good at all."
But he himself had nothing to say. He considered telling her his worries
about Gunch, but—"oh, gosh, it was too much work to go into the
whole thing and explain about Verg and everything."</p>
<p>He was relieved when he put Tanis on a trolley; he was cheerful in the
familiar simplicities of his office.</p>
<p>At four o'clock Vergil Gunch called on him.</p>
<p>Babbitt was agitated, but Gunch began in a friendly way:</p>
<p>"How's the boy? Say, some of us are getting up a scheme we'd kind of like
to have you come in on."</p>
<p>"Fine, Verg. Shoot."</p>
<p>"You know during the war we had the Undesirable Element, the Reds and
walking delegates and just the plain common grouches, dead to rights, and
so did we for quite a while after the war, but folks forget about the
danger and that gives these cranks a chance to begin working underground
again, especially a lot of these parlor socialists. Well, it's up to the
folks that do a little sound thinking to make a conscious effort to keep
bucking these fellows. Some guy back East has organized a society called
the Good Citizens' League for just that purpose. Of course the Chamber of
Commerce and the American Legion and so on do a fine work in keeping the
decent people in the saddle, but they're devoted to so many other causes
that they can't attend to this one problem properly. But the Good
Citizens' League, the G. C. L., they stick right to it. Oh, the G. C. L.
has to have some other ostensible purposes—frinstance here in Zenith
I think it ought to support the park-extension project and the City
Planning Committee—and then, too, it should have a social aspect,
being made up of the best people—have dances and so on, especially
as one of the best ways it can put the kibosh on cranks is to apply this
social boycott business to folks big enough so you can't reach 'em
otherwise. Then if that don't work, the G. C. L. can finally send a little
delegation around to inform folks that get too flip that they got to
conform to decent standards and quit shooting off their mouths so free.
Don't it sound like the organization could do a great work? We've already
got some of the strongest men in town, and of course we want you in. How
about it?"</p>
<p>Babbitt was uncomfortable. He felt a compulsion back to all the standards
he had so vaguely yet so desperately been fleeing. He fumbled:</p>
<p>"I suppose you'd especially light on fellows like Seneca Doane and try to
make 'em—"</p>
<p>"You bet your sweet life we would! Look here, old Georgie: I've never for
one moment believed you meant it when you've defended Doane, and the
strikers and so on, at the Club. I knew you were simply kidding those poor
galoots like Sid Finkelstein.... At least I certainly hope you were
kidding!"</p>
<p>"Oh, well—sure—Course you might say—" Babbitt was
conscious of how feeble he sounded, conscious of Gunch's mature and
relentless eye. "Gosh, you know where I stand! I'm no labor agitator! I'm
a business man, first, last, and all the time! But—but honestly, I
don't think Doane means so badly, and you got to remember he's an old
friend of mine."</p>
<p>"George, when it comes right down to a struggle between decency and the
security of our homes on the one hand, and red ruin and those lazy dogs
plotting for free beer on the other, you got to give up even old
friendships. 'He that is not with me is against me.'"</p>
<p>"Ye-es, I suppose—"</p>
<p>"How about it? Going to join us in the Good Citizens' League?"</p>
<p>"I'll have to think it over, Verg."</p>
<p>"All right, just as you say." Babbitt was relieved to be let off so
easily, but Gunch went on: "George, I don't know what's come over you;
none of us do; and we've talked a lot about you. For a while we figured
out you'd been upset by what happened to poor Riesling, and we forgave you
for any fool thing you said, but that's old stuff now, George, and we
can't make out what's got into you. Personally, I've always defended you,
but I must say it's getting too much for me. All the boys at the Athletic
Club and the Boosters' are sore, the way you go on deliberately touting
Doane and his bunch of hell-hounds, and talking about being liberal—which
means being wishy-washy—and even saying this preacher guy Ingram
isn't a professional free-love artist. And then the way you been carrying
on personally! Joe Pumphrey says he saw you out the other night with a
gang of totties, all stewed to the gills, and here to-day coming right
into the Thornleigh with a—well, she may be all right and a perfect
lady, but she certainly did look like a pretty gay skirt for a fellow with
his wife out of town to be taking to lunch. Didn't look well. What the
devil has come over you, George?"</p>
<p>"Strikes me there's a lot of fellows that know more about my personal
business than I do myself!"</p>
<p>"Now don't go getting sore at me because I come out flatfooted like a
friend and say what I think instead of tattling behind your back, the way
a whole lot of 'em do. I tell you George, you got a position in the
community, and the community expects you to live up to it. And—Better
think over joining the Good Citizens' League. See you about it later."</p>
<p>He was gone.</p>
<p>That evening Babbitt dined alone. He saw all the Clan of Good Fellows
peering through the restaurant window, spying on him. Fear sat beside him,
and he told himself that to-night he would not go to Tanis's flat; and he
did not go . . . till late.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />