<h3 align="center">CHAPTER LV</h3><br/><br/>
<p>The social and business worlds of Chicago, Cincinnati,
Cleveland, and other cities saw, during the
year or two which followed the breaking of his relationship
with Jennie, a curious rejuvenation in the social and
business spirit of Lester Kane. He had become rather
distant and indifferent to certain personages and affairs
while he was living with her, but now he suddenly appeared
again, armed with authority from a number of
sources, looking into this and that matter with the air of
one who has the privilege of power, and showing himself
to be quite a personage from the point of view of finance
and commerce. He was older of course. It must be
admitted that he was in some respects a mentally altered
Lester. Up to the time he had met Jennie he was full
of the assurance of the man who has never known defeat.
To have been reared in luxury as he had been, to have
seen only the pleasant side of society, which is so persistent
and so deluding where money is concerned, to have
been in the run of big affairs not because one has created
them, but because one is a part of them and because they
are one's birthright, like the air one breathes, could not
help but create one of those illusions of solidarity which
is apt to befog the clearest brain. It is so hard for us to
know what we have not seen. It is so difficult for us to
feel what we have not experienced. Like this world of
ours, which seems so solid and persistent solely because
we have no knowledge of the power which creates it,
Lester's world seemed solid and persistent and real
enough to him. It was only when the storms set in and
the winds of adversity blew and he found himself facing
the armed forces of convention that he realized he might
be mistaken as to the value of his personality, that his
private desires and opinions were as nothing in the face
of a public conviction; that he was wrong. The race
spirit, or social avatar, the "Zeitgeist" as the Germans
term it, manifested itself as something having a system
in charge, and the organization of society began to show
itself to him as something based on possibly a spiritual,
or, at least, superhuman counterpart. He could not fly
in the face of it. He could not deliberately ignore its
mandates. The people of his time believed that some
particular form of social arrangement was necessary, and
unless he complied with that he could, as he saw, readily
become a social outcast. His own father and mother had
turned on him—his brother and sisters, society, his
friends. Dear heaven, what a to-do this action of his had
created! Why, even the fates seemed adverse. His
real estate venture was one of the most fortuitously
unlucky things he had ever heard of. Why? Were the
gods battling on the side of a to him unimportant social
arrangement? Apparently. Anyhow, he had been compelled
to quit, and here he was, vigorous, determined,
somewhat battered by the experience, but still forceful
and worth while.</p>
<p>And it was a part of the penalty that he had become
measurably soured by what had occurred. He was
feeling that he had been compelled to do the first ugly,
brutal thing of his life. Jennie deserved better of him.
It was a shame to forsake her after all the devotion she
had manifested. Truly she had played a finer part than
he. Worst of all, his deed could not be excused on the
grounds of necessity. He could have lived on ten thousand a year;
he could have done without the million and
more which was now his. He could have done without
the society, the pleasures of which had always been a lure.
He could have, but he had not, and he had complicated
it all with the thought of another woman.</p>
<p>Was she as good as Jennie? That was a question
which always rose before him. Was she as kindly?
Wasn't she deliberately scheming under his very eyes to
win him away from the woman who was as good as his
wife? Was that admirable? Was it the thing a truly
big woman would do? Was she good enough for him
after all? Ought he to marry her? Ought he to marry
any one seeing that he really owed a spiritual if not
a legal allegiance to Jennie? Was it worth while for
any woman to marry him? These things turned in his
brain. They haunted him. He could not shut out the
fact that he was doing a cruel and unlovely thing.</p>
<p>Material error in the first place was now being complicated
with spiritual error. He was attempting to right
the first by committing the second. Could it be done
<i>to his own satisfaction?</i> Would it pay mentally and
spiritually? Would it bring him peace of mind? He
was thinking, thinking, all the while he was readjusting
his life to the old (or perhaps better yet, new) conditions,
and he was not feeling any happier. As a matter of fact
he was feeling worse—grim, revengeful. If he married
Letty he thought at times it would be to use her fortune
as a club to knock other enemies over the head, and he
hated to think he was marrying her for that. He took
up his abode at the Auditorium, visited Cincinnati in a
distant and aggressive spirit, sat in council with the
board of directors, wishing that he was more at peace
with himself, more interested in life. But he did not
change his policy in regard to Jennie.</p>
<p>Of course Mrs. Gerald had been vitally interested in
Lester's rehabilitation. She waited tactfully some little
time before sending him any word; finally she ventured
to write to him at the Hyde Park address (as if she did
not know where he was), asking, "Where are you?" By
this time Lester had become slightly accustomed to the
change in his life. He was saying to himself that he
needed sympathetic companionship, the companionship
of a woman, of course. Social invitations had begun to
come to him now that he was alone and that his financial
connections were so obviously restored. He had made
his appearance, accompanied only by a Japanese valet,
at several country houses, the best sign that he was once
more a single man. No reference was made by any one
to the past.</p>
<p>On receiving Mrs. Gerald's note he decided that he
ought to go and see her. He had treated her rather
shabbily. For months preceding his separation from
Jennie he had not gone near her. Even now he waited
until time brought a 'phoned invitation to dinner. This
he accepted.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gerald was at her best as a hostess at her perfectly
appointed dinner-table. Alboni, the pianist, was
there on this occasion, together with Adam Rascavage,
the sculptor, a visiting scientist from England, Sir Nelson
Keyes, and, curiously enough, Mr. and Mrs. Berry Dodge,
whom Lester had not met socially in several years. Mrs.
Gerald and Lester exchanged the joyful greetings of those
who understand each other thoroughly and are happy in
each other's company. "Aren't you ashamed of yourself,
sir," she said to him when he made his appearance,
"to treat me so indifferently? You are going to be
punished for this."</p>
<p>"What's the damage?" he smiled. "I've been extremely
rushed. I suppose something like ninety stripes
will serve me about right."</p>
<p>"Ninety stripes, indeed!" she retorted. "You're
letting yourself off easy. What is it they do to evil-doers
in Siam?"</p>
<p>"Boil them in oil, I suppose."</p>
<p>"Well, anyhow, that's more like. I'm thinking of
something terrible."</p>
<p>"Be sure and tell me when you decide," he laughed,
and passed on to be presented to distinguished strangers
by Mrs. De Lincum who aided Mrs. Gerald in receiving.</p>
<p>The talk was stimulating. Lester was always at his
ease intellectually, and this mental atmosphere revived
him. Presently he turned to greet Berry Dodge, who
was standing at his elbow.</p>
<p>Dodge was all cordiality. "Where are you now?" he
asked. "We haven't seen you in—oh, when? Mrs.
Dodge is waiting to have a word with you." Lester
noticed the change in Dodge's attitude.</p>
<p>"Some time, that's sure," he replied easily. "I'm
living at the Auditorium."</p>
<p>"I was asking after you the other day. You know
Jackson Du Bois? Of course you do. We were thinking
of running up into Canada for some hunting. Why don't
you join us?"</p>
<p>"I can't," replied Lester. "Too many things on hand
just now. Later, surely."</p>
<p>Dodge was anxious to continue. He had seen Lester's
election as a director of the C. H. & D. Obviously he
was coming back into the world. But dinner was announced
and Lester sat at Mrs. Gerald's right hand.</p>
<p>"Aren't you coming to pay me a dinner call some afternoon
after this?" asked Mrs. Gerald confidentially when
the conversation was brisk at the other end of the table.</p>
<p>"I am, indeed," he replied, "and shortly. Seriously,
I've been wanting to look you up. You understand
though how things are now?"</p>
<p>"I do. I've heard a great deal. That's why I want
you to come. We need to talk together."</p>
<p>Ten days later he did call. He felt as if he must talk
with her; he was feeling bored and lonely; his long home
life with Jennie had made hotel life objectionable. He
felt as though he must find a sympathetic, intelligent ear,
and where better than here? Letty was all ears for his
troubles. She would have pillowed his solid head upon
her breast in a moment if that had been possible.</p>
<p>"Well," he said, when the usual fencing preliminaries
were over, "what will you have me say in explanation?"</p>
<p>"Have you burned your bridges behind you?" she
asked.</p>
<p>"I'm not so sure," he replied gravely. "And I can't
say that I'm feeling any too joyous about the matter as a
whole."</p>
<p>"I thought as much," she replied. "I knew how it
would be with you. I can see you wading through this
mentally, Lester. I have been watching you, every step
of the way, wishing you peace of mind. These things are
always so difficult, but don't you know I am still sure it's
for the best. It never was right the other way. It never
could be. You couldn't afford to sink back into a mere
shell-fish life. You are not organized temperamentally
for that any more than I am. You may regret what you
are doing now, but you would have regretted the other
thing quite as much and more. You couldn't work your
life out that way—now, could you?"</p>
<p>"I don't know about that, Letty. Really, I don't.
I've wanted to come and see you for a long time, but I
didn't think that I ought to. The fight was outside—you
know what I mean."</p>
<p>"Yes, indeed, I do," she said soothingly.</p>
<p>"It's still inside. I haven't gotten over it. I don't
know whether this financial business binds me sufficiently
or not. I'll be frank and tell you that I can't say I love
her entirely; but I'm sorry, and that's something."</p>
<p>"She's comfortably provided for, of course," she commented
rather than inquired.</p>
<p>"Everything she wants. Jennie is of a peculiar disposition.
She doesn't want much. She's retiring by
nature and doesn't care for show. I've taken a cottage
for her at Sandwood, a little place north of here on the
lake; and there's plenty of money in trust, but, of
course, she knows she can live anywhere she pleases."</p>
<p>"I understand exactly how she feels, Lester. I know
how you feel. She is going to suffer very keenly for a
while—we all do when we have to give up the thing we
love. But we can get over it, and we do. At least, we
can live. She will. It will go hard at first, but after a
while she will see how it is, and she won't feel any the
worse toward you."</p>
<p>"Jennie will never reproach me, I know that," he
replied. "I'm the one who will do the reproaching. I'll
be abusing myself for some time. The trouble is with
my particular turn of mind. I can't tell, for the life of
me, how much of this disturbing feeling of mine is habit—the
condition that I'm accustomed to—and how much
is sympathy. I sometimes think I'm the the most pointless
individual in the world. I think too much."</p>
<p>"Poor Lester!" she said tenderly. "Well, I understand
for one. You're lonely living where you are,
aren't you?"</p>
<p>"I am that," he replied.</p>
<p>"Why not come and spend a few days down at West
Baden? I'm going there."</p>
<p>"When?" he inquired.</p>
<p>"Next Tuesday."</p>
<p>"Let me see," he replied. "I'm not sure that I can."
He consulted his notebook. "I could come Thursday,
for a few days."</p>
<p>"Why not do that? You need company. We can
walk and talk things out down there. Will you?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I will," he replied.</p>
<p>She came toward him, trailing a lavender lounging
robe. "You're such a solemn philosopher, sir," she
observed comfortably, "working through all the ramifications
of things. Why do you? You were always like
that."</p>
<p>"I can't help it," he replied. "It's my nature to
think."</p>
<p>"Well, one thing I know—" and she tweaked his ear
gently. "You're not going to make another mistake
through sympathy if I can help it," she said daringly.
"You're going to stay disentangled long enough to give
yourself a chance to think out what you want to do.
You must. And I wish for one thing you'd take over the
management of my affairs. You could advise me so
much better than my lawyer."</p>
<p>He arose and walked to the window, turning to look
back at her solemnly. "I know what you want," he
said doggedly.</p>
<p>"And why shouldn't I?" she demanded, again approaching
him. She looked at him pleadingly, defiantly.
"Yes, why shouldn't I?"</p>
<p>"You don't know what you're doing," he grumbled;
but he kept on looking at her; she stood there, attractive
as a woman of her age could be, wise, considerate, full of
friendship and affection.</p>
<p>"Letty," he said. "You ought not to want to marry
me. I'm not worth it. Really I'm not. I'm too cynical.
Too indifferent. It won't be worth anything in the
long run."</p>
<p>"It will be worth something to me," she insisted. "I
know what you are. Anyhow, I don't care. I want
you!"</p>
<p>He took her hands, then her arms. Finally he drew
her to him, and put his arms about her waist. "Poor
Letty!" he said; "I'm not worth it. You'll be sorry."</p>
<p>"No, I'll not," she replied. "I know what I'm doing.
I don't care what you think you are worth." She laid
her cheek on his shoulder. "I want you."</p>
<p>"If you keep on I venture to say you'll have me," he
returned. He bent and kissed her.</p>
<p>"Oh," she exclaimed, and hid her hot face against his
breast.</p>
<p>"This is bad business," he thought, even as he held her
within the circle of his arms. "It isn't what I ought to
be doing."</p>
<p>Still he held her, and now when she offered her lips
coaxingly he kissed her again and again.</p>
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