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<h2> CHAPTER XXI. HAPPINESS </h2>
<p>We laid Peter to rest in that noisy, careless, busy city that he had loved
so well, and I think his cynical lips would have curled in a bitterly
amused smile, and his somber eyes would have flamed into sudden wrath if
he could have seen how utterly and completely New York had forgotten Peter
Orme. He had been buried alive ten years before—and Newspaper Row
has no faith in resurrections. Peter Orme was not even a memory. Ten years
is an age in a city where epochs are counted by hours.</p>
<p>Now, after two weeks of Norah's loving care, I was back in the pretty
little city by the lake. I had come to say farewell to all those who had
filled my life so completely in that year. My days of newspaper work were
over. The autumn and winter would be spent at Norah's, occupied with hours
of delightful, congenial work, for the second book was to be written in
the quiet peace of my own little Michigan town. Von Gerhard was to take
his deferred trip to Vienna in the spring, and I knew that I was to go
with him. The thought filled my heart with a great flood of happiness.</p>
<p>Together Von Gerhard and I had visited Alma Pflugel's cottage, and the
garden was blooming in all its wonder of color and scent as we opened the
little gate and walked up the worn path. We found them in the cool shade
of the arbor, the two women sewing, Bennie playing with the last wonderful
toy that Blackie had given him. They made a serene and beautiful picture
there against the green canopy of the leaves. We spoke of Frau Nirlanger,
and of Blackie, and of the strange snarl of events which had at last been
unwound to knit a close friendship between us. And when I had kissed them
and walked for the last time in many months up the flower-bordered path,
the scarlet and pink, and green and gold of that wonderful garden swam in
a mist before my eyes.</p>
<p>Frau Nirlanger was next. When we spoke of Vienna she caught her breath
sharply.</p>
<p>"Vienna!" she repeated, and the longing in her voice was an actual pain.
"Vienna! Gott! Shall I ever see it again? Vienna! My boy is there. Perhaps—"</p>
<p>"Perhaps," I said, gently. "Stranger things have happened. Perhaps if I
could see them, and talk to them—if I could tell them—they
might be made to understand. I haven't been a newspaper reporter all these
years without acquiring a golden gift of persuasiveness. Perhaps—who
knows?—we may meet again in Vienna. Stranger things have happened."</p>
<p>Frau Nirlanger shook her head with a little hopeless sigh. "You do not
know Vienna; you do not know the iron strength of caste, and custom and
stiff-necked pride. I am dead in Vienna. And the dead should rest in
peace."</p>
<p>It was late in the afternoon when Von Gerhard and I turned the corner
which led to the building that held the Post. I had saved that for the
last.</p>
<p>"I hope that heaven is not a place of golden streets, and twanging harps
and angel choruses," I said, softly. "Little, nervous, slangy, restless
Blackie, how bored and ill at ease he would be in such a heaven! How
lonely, without his old black pipe, and his checked waistcoats, and his
diamonds, and his sporting extra. Oh, I hope they have all those
comforting, everyday things up there, for Blackie's sake."</p>
<p>"How you grew to understand him in that short year," mused Von Gerhard. "I
sometimes used to resent the bond between you and this little Blackie
whose name was always on your tongue."</p>
<p>"Ah, that was because you did not comprehend. It is given to very few
women to know the beauty of a man's real friendship. That was the bond
between Blackie and me. To me he was a comrade, and to him I was a
good-fellow girl—one to whom he could talk without excusing his pipe
or cigarette. Love and love-making were things to bring a kindly, amused
chuckle from Blackie."</p>
<p>Von Gerhard was silent. Something in his silence held a vague irritation
for me. I extracted a penny from my purse, and placed it in his hand.</p>
<p>"I was thinking," he said, "that none are so blind as those who will not
see."</p>
<p>"I don't understand," I said, puzzled.</p>
<p>"That is well," answered Von Gerhard, as we entered the building. "That is
as it should be." And he would say nothing more.</p>
<p>The last edition of the paper had been run off for the day. I had
purposely waited until the footfalls of the last departing reporter should
have ceased to echo down the long corridor. The city room was deserted
except for one figure bent over a pile of papers and proofs. Norberg, the
city editor, was the last to leave, as always. His desk light glowed in
the darkness of the big room, and his typewriter alone awoke the echoes.</p>
<p>As I stood in the doorway he peered up from beneath his green eye-shade,
and waved a cloud of smoke away with the palm of his hand.</p>
<p>"That you, Mrs. Orme?" he called out. "Lord, we've missed you! That new
woman can't write an obituary, and her teary tales sound like they were
carved with a cold chisel. When are you coming back?"</p>
<p>"I'm not coming back," I replied. "I've come to say good-by to you and—Blackie."</p>
<p>Norberg looked up quickly. "You feel that way, too? Funny. So do the rest
of us. Sometimes I think we are all half sure that it is only another of
his impish tricks, and that some morning he will pop open the door of the
city room here and call out, 'Hello, slaves! Been keepin' m' memory
green?'"</p>
<p>I held out my hand to him, gratefully. He took it in his great palm, and a
smile dimpled his plump cheeks. "Going to blossom into a regular little
writer, h'm? Well, they say it's a paying game when you get the hang of
it. And I guess you've got it. But if ever you feel that you want a real
thrill—a touch of the old satisfying newspaper feeling—a sniff
of wet ink—the music of some editorial cussing—why come up
here and I'll give you the hottest assignment on my list, if I have to
take it away from Deming's very notebook."</p>
<p>When I had thanked him I crossed the hall and tried the door of the
sporting editor's room. Von Gerhard was waiting for me far down at the
other end of the corridor. The door opened and I softly entered and shut
it again. The little room was dim, but in the half-light I could see that
Callahan had changed something—had shoved a desk nearer the window,
or swung the typewriter over to the other side. I resented it. I glanced
up at the corner where the shabby old office coat had been wont to hang.
There it dangled, untouched, just as he had left it. Callahan had not
dared to change that. I tip-toed over to the corner and touched it gently
with my fingers. A light pall of dust had settled over the worn little
garment, but I knew each worn place, each ink-spot, each scorch or burn
from pipe or cigarette. I passed my hands over it reverently and gently,
and then, in the dimness of that quiet little room I laid my cheek against
the rough cloth, so that the scent of the old black pipe came back to me
once more, and a new spot appeared on the coat sleeve—a damp, salt
spot. Blackie would have hated my doing that. But he was not there to see,
and one spot more or less did not matter; it was such a grimy,
disreputable old coat.</p>
<p>"Dawn!" called Von Gerhard softly, outside the door. "Dawn! Coming,
Kindchen?"</p>
<p>I gave the little coat a parting pat. "Goodby," I whispered, under my
breath, and turned toward the door.</p>
<p>"Coming!" I called, aloud.</p>
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