<h3 align="center">CHAPTER XL</h3><br/><br/>
<p>Lester returned to Chicago. He realized that he
had offended his father seriously, how seriously
he could not say. In all his personal relations with old
Archibald he had never seen him so worked up. But
even now Lester did not feel that the breach was irreparable;
he hardly realized that it was necessary for him
to act decisively if he hoped to retain his father's affection
and confidence. As for the world at large, what did it
matter how much people talked or what they said. He
was big enough to stand alone. But was he? People
turn so quickly from weakness or the shadow of it. To
get away from failure—even the mere suspicion of it—that
seems to be a subconscious feeling with the average
man and woman; we all avoid non-success as though we
fear that it may prove contagious. Lester was soon to
feel the force of this prejudice.</p>
<p>One day Lester happened to run across Berry Dodge,
the millionaire head of Dodge, Holbrook & Kingsbury,
a firm that stood in the dry-goods world, where the Kane
Company stood in the carriage world. Dodge had been
one of Lester's best friends. He knew him as intimately
as he knew Henry Bracebridge, of Cleveland, and George
Knowles, of Cincinnati. He visited at his handsome
home on the North Shore Drive, and they met constantly
in a business and social way. But since Lester had
moved out to Hyde Park, the old intimacy had lapsed.
Now they came face to face on Michigan Avenue near
the Kane building.</p>
<p>"Why, Lester, I'm glad to see you again," said Dodge.</p>
<p>He extended a formal hand, and seemed just a little
cool. "I hear you've gone and married since I saw
you."</p>
<p>"No, nothing like that," replied Lester, easily, with
the air of one who prefers to be understood in the way of
the world sense.</p>
<p>"Why so secret about it, if you have?" asked Dodge,
attempting to smile, but with a wry twist to the corners
of his mouth. He was trying to be nice, and to go
through a difficult situation gracefully. "We fellows
usually make a fuss about that sort of thing. You
ought to let your friends know."</p>
<p>"Well," said Lester, feeling the edge of the social
blade that was being driven into him, "I thought I'd do
it in a new way. I'm not much for excitement in that
direction, anyhow."</p>
<p>"It is a matter of taste, isn't it?" said Dodge a little
absently. "You're living in the city, of course?"</p>
<p>"In Hyde Park."</p>
<p>"That's a pleasant territory. How are things otherwise?"
And he deftly changed the subject before waving
him a perfunctory farewell.</p>
<p>Lester missed at once the inquiries which a man like
Dodge would have made if he had really believed that he
was married. Under ordinary circumstances his friend
would have wanted to know a great deal about the new
Mrs. Kane. There would have been all those little
familiar touches common to people living on the same
social plane. Dodge would have asked Lester to bring
his wife over to see them, would have definitely promised
to call. Nothing of the sort happened, and Lester
noticed the significant omission.</p>
<p>It was the same with the Burnham Moores, the Henry
Aldriches, and a score of other people whom he knew
equally well. Apparently they all thought that he
had married and settled down. They were interested
to know where he was living, and they were rather disposed
to joke him about being so very secretive on
the subject, but they were not willing to discuss the
supposed Mrs. Kane. He was beginning to see that
this move of his was going to tell against him notably.</p>
<p>One of the worst stabs—it was the cruelest because,
in a way, it was the most unintentional—he received
from an old acquaintance, Will Whitney, at the Union
Club. Lester was dining there one evening, and Whitney
met him in the main reading-room as he was crossing
from the cloak-room to the cigar-stand. The latter was
a typical society figure, tall, lean, smooth-faced, immaculately
garbed, a little cynical, and to-night a little the
worse for liquor. "Hi, Lester!" he called out, "what's
this talk about a <i>ménage</i> of yours out in Hyde Park?
Say, you're going some. How are you going to explain
all this to your wife when you get married?"</p>
<p>"I don't have to explain it," replied Lester irritably.
"Why should you be so interested in my affairs? You're
not living in a stone house, are you?"</p>
<p>"Say, ha! ha! that's pretty good now, isn't it?
You didn't marry that little beauty you used to travel
around with on the North Side, did you? Eh, now!
Ha, ha! Well, I swear. You married! You didn't,
now, did you?"</p>
<p>"Cut it out, Whitney," said Lester roughly. "You're
talking wild."</p>
<p>"Pardon, Lester," said the other aimlessly, but sobering.
"I beg your pardon. Remember, I'm just a little
warm. Eight whisky-sours straight in the other room
there. Pardon. I'll talk to you some time when I'm
all right. See, Lester? Eh! Ha! ha! I'm a little
loose, that's right. Well, so long! Ha! ha!"</p>
<p>Lester could not get over that cacophonous "ha! ha!"
It cut him, even though it came from a drunken man's
mouth. "That little beauty you used to travel with on
the North Side. You didn't marry her, did you?" He
quoted Whitney's impertinences resentfully. George!
But this was getting a little rough! He had never endured
anything like this before—he, Lester Kane. It
set him thinking. Certainly he was paying dearly for
trying to do the kind thing by Jennie.</p>
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