Part 7 (1/2)

The Political Economist, noting the incident in its entirety, turned abruptly on his heel, climbed down the tremulous ladder to the trunk-room floor and knocked peremptorily at Noreen's door.

In reply to the answer which he thought he heard, he turned the handle of the door and entered. The gas jet sizzled blatantly across the room, and a tiny blue flame toiled laboriously in a cooking lamp beneath a pot of water. The room was reeking strong with the smell of coffee, the rank brew that wafted him back in nervous terror to his college days and the ghastly eve of his final examinations. A coat, a hat, a mouse-gray sweater, a sketch-book, and a bunch of pencils were thrown together on the edge of the divan. Crouched on the floor with head and shoulders prostrate across her easel chair and thin hands straining at the woodwork was Noreen Gaudette. The startled face that lifted to his was haggard with the energy of a year rallied to the needs of an hour.

”I thought you told me to come in,” said the Political Economist. ”I came down to go to the fire with you.”

Noreen was on her feet in an instant, hurrying into her hat and coat, and quaffing greedily at the reeking coffee.

”You ought to have some one to look after you,” persisted the man.

”Where's Mr. Dextwood?”

Noreen stood still in the middle of the floor and stared at him.

”Why, I've broken my engagement,” she exclaimed, trying hard to speak tamely and reserve every possible fraction of her artificial energy.

”Oh, yes,” she smiled wanly, ”I couldn't afford to be engaged! I couldn't afford the time. I couldn't afford the money. I couldn't afford the mental distraction. I'm working again now, but it's horribly hard to get back into the mood. My drawing has all gone to smash. But I'll get the hang of it again pretty soon.”

”You look in mighty poor shape to work to-night,” said the Political Economist. ”What makes you go?”

”What makes me go?” cried Noreen, with an extravagant burst of vehemence. ”What makes me go?--Why, if I make good to-night on those Fire-Department Pictures I get a Hundred Dollars, as well as the a.s.surance of all the Republican cartooning for the next city election.

It's worth a lot of money to me!”

”Enough to kill yourself for?” probed the Man.

Noreen's mouth began to twist. ”Yes--if you still owe for your automobile coat, and your black evening gown, and your room rent and a few other trifles of that sort. But come on, if you'll promise not to talk to me till it's all over.” Like a pair of youngsters they scurried down the stairs, jumped into the waiting cab, and galloped off toward the river edge of the city.

True to his promise, the Political Economist did not speak to her, but he certainly had not promised to keep his eyes shut as well as his mouth. From the very first she sat far forward on the seat where the pa.s.sing street-lights blazed upon her unconscious face. The Man, the cab, love-making, debt-paying, all were forgotten in her desperate effort to keep keyed up to the working-point. Her brain was hurriedly sketching in her backgrounds. Her suddenly narrowed eyes foretold the tingling pride in some particular imagining. The flas.h.i.+ng twist of her smile predicted the touch of malice that was to make her pictures the sensation of--a day.

The finish of the three-mile drive found her jubilant, prescient, pulsing with power. The glow from the flames lit up the cab like a room.

The engine bells clanged around them. Sparks glittered. Steam hissed.

When the cabman's horse refused to scorch his nose any nearer the conflagration, Noreen turned to the Political Economist with some embarra.s.sment. ”If you really want to help me,” she pleaded, ”you'll stay here in the cab and wait for me.”

Then, before the Political Economist could offer his angry protest, she had opened the door, jumped from the step, and disappeared into the surging, rowdy throng of spectators. A tedious hour later the cab door opened abruptly, and Noreen reappeared.

Her hat was slouched down over her heat-scorched eyes. Her shoulders were limp. Her face was dull, dumb, gray, like a j.a.panese lantern robbed of its candle. Bluntly she thrust her sketch-book into his hands and threw herself down on the seat beside him.

”Oh, take me home,” she begged. ”Oh, take me home _quick_. It's no use,”

she added with a shrug, ”I've seen the whole performance. I've been everywhere--inside the ropes--up on the roofs--out on the waterfront.

The Fire Department Men are not 'inefficient.' They're simply _bully_!

_And I make no caricatures of heroes!_”

The lurch of the cab wheel against a curbstone jerked a faint smile into her face. ”Isn't it horrid,” she complained, ”to have a Talent and a Living that depend altogether upon your _getting mad_?” Then her eyes flooded with worry. ”What _shall_ I do?”

”You'll marry me,” said the Political Economist.

”Oh, no!” gasped Noreen. ”I shall never, never marry any one! I told you that I couldn't afford to be engaged. It takes too much time, and besides,” her color flamed piteously, ”I didn't like being engaged.”