<h2><SPAN name="chap46"></SPAN>Chapter XLVI</h2>
<p>Meanwhile, in the Butler home the family was assembling for dinner. Mrs. Butler
was sitting in rotund complacency at the foot of the table, her gray hair
combed straight back from her round, shiny forehead. She had on a dark-gray
silk dress, trimmed with gray-and-white striped ribbon. It suited her florid
temperament admirably. Aileen had dictated her mother’s choice, and had
seen that it had been properly made. Norah was refreshingly youthful in a
pale-green dress, with red-velvet cuffs and collar. She looked young, slender,
gay. Her eyes, complexion and hair were fresh and healthy. She was trifling
with a string of coral beads which her mother had just given her.</p>
<p>“Oh, look, Callum,” she said to her brother opposite her, who was
drumming idly on the table with his knife and fork. “Aren’t they
lovely? Mama gave them to me.”</p>
<p>“Mama does more for you than I would. You know what you’d get from
me, don’t you?”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>He looked at her teasingly. For answer Norah made a face at him. Just then Owen
came in and took his place at the table. Mrs. Butler saw Norah’s grimace.</p>
<p>“Well, that’ll win no love from your brother, ye can depend on
that,” she commented.</p>
<p>“Lord, what a day!” observed Owen, wearily, unfolding his napkin.
“I’ve had my fill of work for once.”</p>
<p>“What’s the trouble?” queried his mother, feelingly.</p>
<p>“No real trouble, mother,” he replied. “Just
everything—ducks and drakes, that’s all.”</p>
<p>“Well, ye must ate a good, hearty meal now, and that’ll refresh
ye,” observed his mother, genially and feelingly.
“Thompson”—she was referring to the family
grocer—“brought us the last of his beans. You must have some of
those.”</p>
<p>“Sure, beans’ll fix it, whatever it is, Owen,” joked Callum.
“Mother’s got the answer.”</p>
<p>“They’re fine, I’d have ye know,” replied Mrs. Butler,
quite unconscious of the joke.</p>
<p>“No doubt of it, mother,” replied Callum. “Real brain-food.
Let’s feed some to Norah.”</p>
<p>“You’d better eat some yourself, smarty. My, but you’re gay!
I suppose you’re going out to see somebody. That’s why.”</p>
<p>“Right you are, Norah. Smart girl, you. Five or six. Ten to fifteen
minutes each. I’d call on you if you were nicer.”</p>
<p>“You would if you got the chance,” mocked Norah. “I’d
have you know I wouldn’t let you. I’d feel very bad if I
couldn’t get somebody better than you.”</p>
<p>“As good as, you mean,” corrected Callum.</p>
<p>“Children, children!” interpolated Mrs. Butler, calmly, looking
about for old John, the servant. “You’ll be losin’ your
tempers in a minute. Hush now. Here comes your father. Where’s
Aileen?”</p>
<p>Butler walked heavily in and took his seat.</p>
<p>John, the servant, appeared bearing a platter of beans among other things, and
Mrs. Butler asked him to send some one to call Aileen.</p>
<p>“It’s gettin’ colder, I’m thinkin’,” said
Butler, by way of conversation, and eyeing Aileen’s empty chair. She
would come soon now—his heavy problem. He had been very tactful these
last two months—avoiding any reference to Cowperwood in so far as he
could help in her presence.</p>
<p>“It’s colder,” remarked Owen, “much colder. We’ll
soon see real winter now.”</p>
<p>Old John began to offer the various dishes in order; but when all had been
served Aileen had not yet come.</p>
<p>“See where Aileen is, John,” observed Mrs. Butler, interestedly.
“The meal will be gettin’ cold.”</p>
<p>Old John returned with the news that Aileen was not in her room.</p>
<p>“Sure she must be somewhere,” commented Mrs. Butler, only slightly
perplexed. “She’ll be comin’, though, never mind, if she
wants to. She knows it’s meal-time.”</p>
<p>The conversation drifted from a new water-works that was being planned to the
new city hall, then nearing completion; Cowperwood’s financial and social
troubles, and the state of the stock market generally; a new gold-mine in
Arizona; the departure of Mrs. Mollenhauer the following Tuesday for Europe,
with appropriate comments by Norah and Callum; and a Christmas ball that was
going to be given for charity.</p>
<p>“Aileen’ll be wantin’ to go to that,” commented Mrs.
Butler.</p>
<p>“I’m going, you bet,” put in Norah.</p>
<p>“Who’s going to take you?” asked Callum.</p>
<p>“That’s my affair, mister,” she replied, smartly.</p>
<p>The meal was over, and Mrs. Butler strolled up to Aileen’s room to see
why she had not come down to dinner. Butler entered his den, wishing so much
that he could take his wife into his confidence concerning all that was
worrying him. On his desk, as he sat down and turned up the light, he saw the
note. He recognized Aileen’s handwriting at once. What could she mean by
writing him? A sense of the untoward came to him, and he tore it open slowly,
and, putting on his glasses, contemplated it solemnly.</p>
<p>So Aileen was gone. The old man stared at each word as if it had been written
in fire. She said she had not gone with Cowperwood. It was possible, just the
same, that he had run away from Philadelphia and taken her with him. This was
the last straw. This ended it. Aileen lured away from home—to
where—to what? Butler could scarcely believe, though, that Cowperwood had
tempted her to do this. He had too much at stake; it would involve his own and
Butler’s families. The papers would be certain to get it quickly. He got
up, crumpling the paper in his hand, and turned about at a noise. His wife was
coming in. He pulled himself together and shoved the letter in his pocket.</p>
<p>“Aileen’s not in her room,” she said, curiously. “She
didn’t say anything to you about going out, did she?”</p>
<p>“No,” he replied, truthfully, wondering how soon he should have to
tell his wife.</p>
<p>“That’s odd,” observed Mrs. Butler, doubtfully. “She
must have gone out after somethin’. It’s a wonder she
wouldn’t tell somebody.”</p>
<p>Butler gave no sign. He dared not. “She’ll be back,” he said,
more in order to gain time than anything else. He was sorry to have to pretend.
Mrs. Butler went out, and he closed the door. Then he took out the letter and
read it again. The girl was crazy. She was doing an absolutely wild, inhuman,
senseless thing. Where could she go, except to Cowperwood? She was on the verge
of a public scandal, and this would produce it. There was just one thing to do
as far as he could see. Cowperwood, if he were still in Philadelphia, would
know. He would go to him—threaten, cajole, actually destroy him, if
necessary. Aileen must come back. She need not go to Europe, perhaps, but she
must come back and behave herself at least until Cowperwood could legitimately
marry her. That was all he could expect now. She would have to wait, and some
day perhaps he could bring himself to accept her wretched proposition. Horrible
thought! It would kill her mother, disgrace her sister. He got up, took down
his hat, put on his overcoat, and started out.</p>
<p>Arriving at the Cowperwood home he was shown into the reception-room.
Cowperwood at the time was in his den looking over some private papers. When
the name of Butler was announced he immediately went down-stairs. It was
characteristic of the man that the announcement of Butler’s presence
created no stir in him whatsoever. So Butler had come. That meant, of course,
that Aileen had gone. Now for a battle, not of words, but of weights of
personalities. He felt himself to be intellectually, socially, and in every
other way the more powerful man of the two. That spiritual content of him which
we call life hardened to the texture of steel. He recalled that although he had
told his wife and his father that the politicians, of whom Butler was one, were
trying to make a scapegoat of him, Butler, nevertheless, was not considered to
be wholly alienated as a friend, and civility must prevail. He would like very
much to placate him if he could, to talk out the hard facts of life in a quiet
and friendly way. But this matter of Aileen had to be adjusted now once and for
all. And with that thought in his mind he walked quickly into Butler’s
presence.</p>
<p>The old man, when he learned that Cowperwood was in and would see him,
determined to make his contact with the financier as short and effective as
possible. He moved the least bit when he heard Cowperwood’s step, as
light and springy as ever.</p>
<p>“Good evening, Mr. Butler,” said Cowperwood, cheerfully, when he
saw him, extending his hand. “What can I do for you?”</p>
<p>“Ye can take that away from in front of me, for one thing,” said
Butler, grimly referring to his hand. “I have no need of it. It’s
my daughter I’ve come to talk to ye about, and I want plain answers.
Where is she?”</p>
<p>“You mean Aileen?” said Cowperwood, looking at him with steady,
curious, unrevealing eyes, and merely interpolating this to obtain a moment for
reflection. “What can I tell you about her?”</p>
<p>“Ye can tell me where she is, that I know. And ye can make her come back
to her home, where she belongs. It was bad fortune that ever brought ye across
my doorstep; but I’ll not bandy words with ye here. Ye’ll tell me
where my daughter is, and ye’ll leave her alone from now, or
I’ll—” The old man’s fists closed like a vise, and his
chest heaved with suppressed rage. “Ye’ll not be drivin’ me
too far, man, if ye’re wise,” he added, after a time, recovering
his equanimity in part. “I want no truck with ye. I want my
daughter.”</p>
<p>“Listen, Mr. Butler,” said Cowperwood, quite calmly, relishing the
situation for the sheer sense of superiority it gave him. “I want to be
perfectly frank with you, if you will let me. I may know where your daughter
is, and I may not. I may wish to tell you, and I may not. She may not wish me
to. But unless you wish to talk with me in a civil way there is no need of our
going on any further. You are privileged to do what you like. Won’t you
come up-stairs to my room? We can talk more comfortably there.”</p>
<p>Butler looked at his former protege in utter astonishment. He had never before
in all his experience come up against a more ruthless type—suave, bland,
forceful, unterrified. This man had certainly come to him as a sheep, and had
turned out to be a ravening wolf. His incarceration had not put him in the
least awe.</p>
<p>“I’ll not come up to your room,” Butler said, “and
ye’ll not get out of Philadelphy with her if that’s what
ye’re plannin’. I can see to that. Ye think ye have the upper hand
of me, I see, and ye’re anxious to make something of it. Well,
ye’re not. It wasn’t enough that ye come to me as a beggar,
cravin’ the help of me, and that I took ye in and helped ye all I
could—ye had to steal my daughter from me in the bargain. If it
wasn’t for the girl’s mother and her sister and her
brothers—dacenter men than ever ye’ll know how to
be—I’d brain ye where ye stand. Takin’ a young, innocent girl
and makin’ an evil woman out of her, and ye a married man! It’s a
God’s blessin’ for ye that it’s me, and not one of me sons,
that’s here talkin’ to ye, or ye wouldn’t be alive to say
what ye’d do.”</p>
<p>The old man was grim but impotent in his rage.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry, Mr. Butler,” replied Cowperwood, quietly.
“I’m willing to explain, but you won’t let me. I’m not
planning to run away with your daughter, nor to leave Philadelphia. You ought
to know me well enough to know that I’m not contemplating anything of
that kind; my interests are too large. You and I are practical men. We ought to
be able to talk this matter over together and reach an understanding. I thought
once of coming to you and explaining this; but I was quite sure you
wouldn’t listen to me. Now that you are here I would like to talk to you.
If you will come up to my room I will be glad to—otherwise not.
Won’t you come up?”</p>
<p>Butler saw that Cowperwood had the advantage. He might as well go up. Otherwise
it was plain he would get no information.</p>
<p>“Very well,” he said.</p>
<p>Cowperwood led the way quite amicably, and, having entered his private office,
closed the door behind him.</p>
<p>“We ought to be able to talk this matter over and reach an
understanding,” he said again, when they were in the room and he had
closed the door. “I am not as bad as you think, though I know I appear
very bad.” Butler stared at him in contempt. “I love your daughter,
and she loves me. I know you are asking yourself how I can do this while I am
still married; but I assure you I can, and that I do. I am not happily married.
I had expected, if this panic hadn’t come along, to arrange with my wife
for a divorce and marry Aileen. My intentions are perfectly good. The situation
which you can complain of, of course, is the one you encountered a few weeks
ago. It was indiscreet, but it was entirely human. Your daughter does not
complain—she understands.” At the mention of his daughter in this
connection Butler flushed with rage and shame, but he controlled himself.</p>
<p>“And ye think because she doesn’t complain that it’s all
right, do ye?” he asked, sarcastically.</p>
<p>“From my point of view, yes; from yours no. You have one view of life,
Mr. Butler, and I have another.”</p>
<p>“Ye’re right there,” put in Butler, “for once,
anyhow.”</p>
<p>“That doesn’t prove that either of us is right or wrong. In my
judgment the present end justifies the means. The end I have in view is to
marry Aileen. If I can possibly pull myself out of this financial scrape that I
am in I will do so. Of course, I would like to have your consent for
that—so would Aileen; but if we can’t, we can’t.”
(Cowperwood was thinking that while this might not have a very soothing effect
on the old contractor’s point of view, nevertheless it must make some
appeal to his sense of the possible or necessary. Aileen’s present
situation was quite unsatisfactory without marriage in view. And even if he,
Cowperwood, was a convicted embezzler in the eyes of the public, that did not
make him so. He might get free and restore himself—would
certainly—and Aileen ought to be glad to marry him if she could under the
circumstances. He did not quite grasp the depth of Butler’s religious and
moral prejudices.) “Lately,” he went on, “you have been doing
all you can, as I understand it, to pull me down, on account of Aileen, I
suppose; but that is simply delaying what I want to do.”</p>
<p>“Ye’d like me to help ye do that, I suppose?” suggested
Butler, with infinite disgust and patience.</p>
<p>“I want to marry Aileen,” Cowperwood repeated, for emphasis’
sake. “She wants to marry me. Under the circumstances, however you may
feel, you can have no real objection to my doing that, I am sure; yet you go on
fighting me—making it hard for me to do what you really know ought to be
done.”</p>
<p>“Ye’re a scoundrel,” said Butler, seeing through his motives
quite clearly. “Ye’re a sharper, to my way of thinkin’, and
it’s no child of mine I want connected with ye. I’m not
sayin’, seein’ that things are as they are, that if ye were a free
man it wouldn’t be better that she should marry ye. It’s the one
dacent thing ye could do—if ye would, which I doubt. But that’s
nayther here nor there now. What can ye want with her hid away somewhere? Ye
can’t marry her. Ye can’t get a divorce. Ye’ve got your hands
full fightin’ your lawsuits and kapin’ yourself out of jail.
She’ll only be an added expense to ye, and ye’ll be wantin’
all the money ye have for other things, I’m thinkin’. Why should ye
want to be takin’ her away from a dacent home and makin’ something
out of her that ye’d be ashamed to marry if you could? The laist ye could
do, if ye were any kind of a man at all, and had any of that thing that
ye’re plased to call love, would be to lave her at home and keep her as
respectable as possible. Mind ye, I’m not thinkin’ she isn’t
ten thousand times too good for ye, whatever ye’ve made of her. But if ye
had any sinse of dacency left, ye wouldn’t let her shame her family and
break her old mother’s heart, and that for no purpose except to make her
worse than she is already. What good can ye get out of it, now? What good can
ye expect to come of it? Be hivins, if ye had any sinse at all I should think
ye could see that for yerself. Ye’re only addin’ to your troubles,
not takin’ away from them—and she’ll not thank ye for that
later on.”</p>
<p>He stopped, rather astonished that he should have been drawn into an argument.
His contempt for this man was so great that he could scarcely look at him, but
his duty and his need was to get Aileen back. Cowperwood looked at him as one
who gives serious attention to another. He seemed to be thinking deeply over
what Butler had said.</p>
<p>“To tell you the truth, Mr. Butler,” he said, “I did not want
Aileen to leave your home at all; and she will tell you so, if you ever talk to
her about it. I did my best to persuade her not to, and when she insisted on
going the only thing I could do was to be sure she would be comfortable
wherever she went. She was greatly outraged to think you should have put
detectives on her trail. That, and the fact that you wanted to send her away
somewhere against her will, was the principal reasons for her leaving. I assure
you I did not want her to go. I think you forget sometimes, Mr. Butler, that
Aileen is a grown woman, and that she has a will of her own. You think I
control her to her great disadvantage. As a matter of fact, I am very much in
love with her, and have been for three or four years; and if you know anything
about love you know that it doesn’t always mean control. I’m not
doing Aileen any injustice when I say that she has had as much influence on me
as I have had on her. I love her, and that’s the cause of all the
trouble. You come and insist that I shall return your daughter to you. As a
matter of fact, I don’t know whether I can or not. I don’t know
that she would go if I wanted her to. She might turn on me and say that I
didn’t care for her any more. That is not true, and I would not want her
to feel that way. She is greatly hurt, as I told you, by what you did to her,
and the fact that you want her to leave Philadelphia. You can do as much to
remedy that as I can. I could tell you where she is, but I do not know that I
want to. Certainly not until I know what your attitude toward her and this
whole proposition is to be.”</p>
<p>He paused and looked calmly at the old contractor, who eyed him grimly in
return.</p>
<p>“What proposition are ye talkin’ about?” asked Butler,
interested by the peculiar developments of this argument. In spite of himself
he was getting a slightly different angle on the whole situation. The scene was
shifting to a certain extent. Cowperwood appeared to be reasonably sincere in
the matter. His promises might all be wrong, but perhaps he did love Aileen;
and it was possible that he did intend to get a divorce from his wife some time
and marry her. Divorce, as Butler knew, was against the rules of the Catholic
Church, which he so much revered. The laws of God and any sense of decency
commanded that Cowperwood should not desert his wife and children and take up
with another woman—not even Aileen, in order to save her. It was a
criminal thing to plan, sociologically speaking, and showed what a villain
Cowperwood inherently was; but, nevertheless, Cowperwood was not a Catholic,
his views of life were not the same as his own, Butler’s, and besides and
worst of all (no doubt due in part to Aileen’s own temperament), he had
compromised her situation very materially. She might not easily be restored to
a sense of the normal and decent, and so the matter was worth taking into
thought. Butler knew that ultimately he could not countenance any such
thing—certainly not, and keep his faith with the Church—but he was
human enough none the less to consider it. Besides, he wanted Aileen to come
back; and Aileen from now on, he knew, would have some say as to what her
future should be.</p>
<p>“Well, it’s simple enough,” replied Cowperwood. “I
should like to have you withdraw your opposition to Aileen’s remaining in
Philadelphia, for one thing; and for another, I should like you to stop your
attacks on me.” Cowperwood smiled in an ingratiating way. He hoped really
to placate Butler in part by his generous attitude throughout this procedure.
“I can’t make you do that, of course, unless you want to. I merely
bring it up, Mr. Butler, because I am sure that if it hadn’t been for
Aileen you would not have taken the course you have taken toward me. I
understood you received an anonymous letter, and that afternoon you called your
loan with me. Since then I have heard from one source and another that you were
strongly against me, and I merely wish to say that I wish you wouldn’t
be. I am not guilty of embezzling any sixty thousand dollars, and you know it.
My intentions were of the best. I did not think I was going to fail at the time
I used those certificates, and if it hadn’t been for several other loans
that were called I would have gone on to the end of the month and put them back
in time, as I always had. I have always valued your friendship very highly, and
I am very sorry to lose it. Now I have said all I am going to say.”</p>
<p>Butler looked at Cowperwood with shrewd, calculating eyes. The man had some
merit, but much unconscionable evil in him. Butler knew very well how he had
taken the check, and a good many other things in connection with it. The manner
in which he had played his cards to-night was on a par with the way he had run
to him on the night of the fire. He was just shrewd and calculating and
heartless.</p>
<p>“I’ll make ye no promise,” he said. “Tell me where my
daughter is, and I’ll think the matter over. Ye have no claim on me now,
and I owe ye no good turn. But I’ll think it over, anyhow.”</p>
<p>“That’s quite all right,” replied Cowperwood.
“That’s all I can expect. But what about Aileen? Do you expect her
to leave Philadelphia?”</p>
<p>“Not if she settles down and behaves herself: but there must be an end of
this between you and her. She’s disgracin’ her family and
ruinin’ her soul in the bargain. And that’s what you are
doin’ with yours. It’ll be time enough to talk about anything else
when you’re a free man. More than that I’ll not promise.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood, satisfied that this move on Aileen’s part had done her a real
service if it had not aided him especially, was convinced that it would be a
good move for her to return to her home at once. He could not tell how his
appeal to the State Supreme Court would eventuate. His motion for a new trial
which was now to be made under the privilege of the certificate of reasonable
doubt might not be granted, in which case he would have to serve a term in the
penitentiary. If he were compelled to go to the penitentiary she would be
safer—better off in the bosom of her family. His own hands were going to
be exceedingly full for the next two months until he knew how his appeal was
coming out. And after that—well, after that he would fight on, whatever
happened.</p>
<p>During all the time that Cowperwood had been arguing his case in this fashion
he had been thinking how he could adjust this compromise so as to retain the
affection of Aileen and not offend her sensibilities by urging her to return.
He knew that she would not agree to give up seeing him, and he was not willing
that she should. Unless he had a good and sufficient reason, he would be
playing a wretched part by telling Butler where she was. He did not intend to
do so until he saw exactly how to do it—the way that would make it most
acceptable to Aileen. He knew that she would not long be happy where she was.
Her flight was due in part to Butler’s intense opposition to himself and
in part to his determination to make her leave Philadelphia and behave; but
this last was now in part obviated. Butler, in spite of his words, was no
longer a stern Nemesis. He was a melting man—very anxious to find his
daughter, very willing to forgive her. He was whipped, literally beaten, at his
own game, and Cowperwood could see it in the old man’s eyes. If he
himself could talk to Aileen personally and explain just how things were, he
felt sure he could make her see that it would be to their mutual advantage, for
the present at least, to have the matter amicably settled. The thing to do was
to make Butler wait somewhere—here, possibly—while he went and
talked to her. When she learned how things were she would probably acquiesce.</p>
<p>“The best thing that I can do under the circumstances,” he said,
after a time, “would be to see Aileen in two or three days, and ask her
what she wishes to do. I can explain the matter to her, and if she wants to go
back, she can. I will promise to tell her anything that you say.”</p>
<p>“Two or three days!” exclaimed Butler, irritably. “Two or
three fiddlesticks! She must come home to-night. Her mother doesn’t know
she’s left the place yet. To-night is the time! I’ll go and fetch
her meself to-night.”</p>
<p>“No, that won’t do,” said Cowperwood. “I shall have to
go myself. If you wish to wait here I will see what can be done, and let you
know.”</p>
<p>“Very well,” grunted Butler, who was now walking up and down with
his hands behind his back. “But for Heaven’s sake be quick about
it. There’s no time to lose.” He was thinking of Mrs. Butler.
Cowperwood called the servant, ordered his runabout, and told George to see
that his private office was not disturbed. Then, as Butler strolled to and fro
in this, to him, objectionable room, Cowperwood drove rapidly away.</p>
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