<h2><SPAN name="chap20"></SPAN>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
<p>It was about a week from the beginning of Lent, when there would be a lull in
the city’s gaieties, and Society would shift the scene of its activities
to the country clubs, and to California and Hot Springs and Palm Beach. Mrs.
Caroline Smythe invited Alice to join her in an expedition to the last-named
place; but Montague interposed, because he saw that Alice had been made pale
and nervous by three months of night-and-day festivities. Also, a trip to
Florida would necessitate ten or fifteen thousand dollars’ worth of new
clothes; and these would not do for the summer, it appeared—they would be
faded and <i>passé</i> by that time.</p>
<p>So Alice settled back to rest; but she was too popular to be let alone—a
few days later came another invitation, this time from General Prentice and his
family. They were planning a railroad trip—to be gone for a month; they
would have a private train, and twenty five people in the party, and would take
in California and Mexico—“swinging round the circle,” as it
was called. Alice was wild to go, and Montague gave his consent. Afterward he
learned to his dismay that Charlie Carter was one of those invited, and he
would have liked to have Alice withdraw; but she did not wish to, and he could
not make up his mind to insist.</p>
<p>These train trips were the very latest diversion of the well-to-do; a year ago
no one had heard of them, and now fifty parties were leaving New York every
month. You might see a dozen of such hotel-trains at once at Palm Beach; there
were some people who lived on board all the time, having special tracks built
for them in pleasant locations wherever they stopped. One man had built a huge
automobile railroad car, shaped like a ram, and having accommodation for sixty
people. The Prentice train had four cars, one of them a “library
car,” finished in St. Iago mahogany, and provided with a pipe-organ. Also
there were bath-rooms and a barber-shop, and a baggage car with two autos on
board for exploring purposes.</p>
<p class="p2">
Since the episode of Mrs. Winnie, Oliver had apparently concluded that his
brother was one of the initiated. Not long afterward he permitted him to a
glimpse into that side of his life which had been hinted at in the songs at the
bachelors’ dinner.</p>
<p>Oliver had planned to take Betty Wyman to the theatre; but Betty’s
grandfather had come home from the West unexpectedly, and so Oliver came round
and took his brother instead.</p>
<p>“I was going to play a joke on her,” he said. “We’ll go
to see one of my old flames.”</p>
<p>It was a translation of a French farce, in which the marital infidelities of
two young couples were the occasion of many mishaps. One of the characters was
a waiting-maid, who was in love with a handsome young soldier, and was pursued
by the husband of one of the couples. It was a minor part, but the young Jewish
girl who played it had so many pretty graces and such a merry laugh that she
made it quite conspicuous. When the act was over, Oliver asked him whose acting
he liked best, and he named her.</p>
<p>“Come and be introduced to her,” Oliver said.</p>
<p>He opened a door near their box. “How do you do, Mr. Wilson,” he
said, nodding to a man in evening dress, who stood near by. Then he turned
toward the dressing-rooms, and went down a corridor, and knocked upon one of
the doors. A voice called, “Come in,” and he opened the door; and
there was a tiny room, with odds and ends of clothing scattered about, and the
girl, clad in corsets and underskirt, sitting before a mirror. “Hello,
Rosalie,” said he.</p>
<p>And she dropped her powder-puff, and sprang up with a
cry—“Ollie!” ‘In a moment more she had her arms about
his neck.</p>
<p>“Oh, you wretched man,” she cried. “Why don’t you come
to see me any more? Didn’t you get my letters?”</p>
<p>“I got some,” said he. “But I’ve been busy. This is my
brother, Mr. Allan Montague.”</p>
<p>The other nodded to Montague, and said, “How do you do?”—but
without letting go of Oliver. “Why don’t you come to see me?”
she exclaimed.</p>
<p>“There, there, now!” said Oliver, laughing good-naturedly. “I
brought my brother along so that you’d have to behave yourself.”</p>
<p>“I don’t care about your brother!” exclaimed the girl,
without even giving him another glance. Then she held Oliver at arm’s
length, and gazed into his face. “How can you be so cruel to me?”
she asked.</p>
<p>“I told you I was busy,” said he, cheerfully. “And I gave you
fair warning, didn’t I? How’s Toodles?”</p>
<p>“Oh, Toodles is in raptures,” said Rosalie. “She’s got
a new fellow.” And then, her manner changing to one of merriment, she
added: “Oh, Ollie! He gave her a diamond brooch! And she looks like a
countess—she’s hoping for a chance to wear it in a part!”</p>
<p>“You’ve seen Toodles,” said Oliver, to his brother
“She’s in ‘The Kaliph of Kamskatka’”.</p>
<p>“They’re going on the road next week,” said Rosalie.
“And then I’ll be all alone.” She added, in a pleading voice:
“Do, Ollie, be a good boy and take us out to-night. Think how long
it’s been since I’ve seen you! Why, I’ve been so good I
don’t know myself in the looking-glass. Please, Ollie!”</p>
<p>“All right,” said he, “maybe I will.”</p>
<p>“I’m not going to let you get away from me,” she cried.
“I’ll come right over the footlights after you!”</p>
<p>“You’d better get dressed,” said Oliver. “You’ll
be late.”</p>
<p>He pushed aside a tray with some glasses on it, and seated himself upon a
trunk; and Montague stood in a corner and watched Rosalie, while she powdered
and painted herself, and put on an airy summer dress, and poured out a flood of
gossip about “Toodles” and “Flossie” and
“Grace” and some others. A few minutes later came a stentorian
voice in the hallway: “Second act!” There were more embraces, and
then Ollie brushed the powder from his coat, and went away laughing.</p>
<p>Montague stood for a few moments in the wings, watching the scene-shifters
putting the final touches to the new set, and the various characters taking
their positions. Then they went out to their seats. “Isn’t she a
jewel?” asked Oliver.</p>
<p>“She’s very pretty,” the other admitted.</p>
<p>“She came right out of the slums,” said Oliver—“over on
Rivington Street. That don’t happen very often.”</p>
<p>“How did you come to know her?” asked his brother.</p>
<p>“Oh, I picked her out. She was in a chorus, then. I got her first
speaking part.”</p>
<p>“Did you?” said the other, in surprise. “How did you do
that?”</p>
<p>“Oh, a little money,” was the reply. “Money will do most
anything. And I was in love with her—that’s how I got her.”</p>
<p>Montague said nothing, but sat in thought.</p>
<p>“We’ll take her out to supper and make her happy,” added
Oliver, as the curtain started up. “She’s lonesome, I guess. You
see, I promised Betty I’d reform.”</p>
<p>All through that scene and the next one Rosalie acted for them; she was so full
of <i>verve</i> and merriment that there was quite a stir in the audience, and
she got several rounds of applause. Then, when the play was over, she
extricated herself from the arms of the handsome young soldier, and fled to her
dressing-room, and when Oliver and Montague arrived, she was half ready for the
street.</p>
<p>They went up Broadway, and from a group of people coming out of another
stage-entrance a young girl came to join them—an airy little creature
with the face of a doll-baby, and a big hat with a purple feather on top. This
was “Toodles”—otherwise known as Helen Gwynne; and she took
Montague’s arm, and they fell in behind Oliver and his companion.</p>
<p>Montague wondered what one said to a chorus-girl on the way to supper.
Afterward his brother told him that Toodles had been the wife of a real-estate
agent in a little town in Oklahoma, and had run away from respectability and
boredom with a travelling theatrical company. Now she was tripping her part in
the musical comedy which Montague had seen at Mrs. Lane’s; and
incidentally swearing devotion to a handsome young “wine-agent.”
She confided to Montague that she hoped the latter might see her that
evening—he needed to be made jealous.</p>
<p>“The Great White Way” was the name which people had given to this
part of Broadway; and at the head of it stood a huge hotel with flaming lights,
and gorgeous marble and bronze, and famous paintings upon the walls and
ceilings inside. At this hour every one of its many dining-rooms was thronged
with supper-parties, and the place rang with laughter and the rattle of dishes,
and the strains of several orchestras which toiled heroically in the midst of
the uproar. Here they found a table, and while Oliver was ordering frozen
poached eggs and quails in aspic, Montague sat and gazed about him at the
revelry, and listened to the prattle of the little ex-sempstress from Rivington
Street.</p>
<p>His brother had “got her,” he said, by buying a speaking part in a
play for her; and Montague recalled the orgies of which he had heard at the
bachelors’ dinner, and divined that here he was at the source of the
stream from which they were fed. At the table next to them was a young Hebrew,
whom Toodles pointed out as the son and heir of a great clothing manufacturer.
He was “keeping” several girls, said she; and the queenly creature
who was his vis-a-vis was one of the chorus in “The Maids of
Mandalay.” And a little way farther down the room was a boy with the face
of an angel and the air of a prince of the blood—he had inherited a
million and run away from school, and was making a name for himself in the
Tenderloin. The pretty little girl all in green who was with him was Violet
Pane, who was the artist’s model in a new play that had made a hit. She
had had a full-page picture of herself in the Sunday supplement of the
“sporting paper” which was read here—so Rosalie remarked.</p>
<p>“Why don’t you ever do that for me?” she added, to Oliver.</p>
<p>“Perhaps I will,” said he, with a laugh. “What does it
cost?”</p>
<p>And when he learned that the honour could be purchased for only fifteen hundred
dollars, he said, “I’ll do it, if you’ll be good.” And
from that time on the last trace of worriment vanished from the face and the
conversation of Rosalie.</p>
<p>As the champagne cocktails disappeared, she and Oliver became confidential.
Then Montague turned to Toodles, to learn more about how the “second
generation” was preying upon the women of the stage.</p>
<p>“A chorus-girl got from ten to twenty dollars a week,” said
Toodles; and that was hardly enough to pay for her clothes. Her work was very
uncertain—she would spend weeks at rehearsal, and then if the play
failed, she would get nothing. It was a dog’s life; and the keys of
freedom and opportunity were in the keeping of rich men, who haunted the
theatres and laid siege to the girls. They would send in notes to them, or
fling bouquets to them, with cards, or perhaps money, hidden in them. There
were millionaire artists and bohemians who kept a standing order for seats in
the front rows at opening performances; they had accounts with florists and
liverymen and confectioners, and gave <i>carte blanche</i> to scores of girls
who lent themselves to their purposes. Sometimes they were in league with the
managers, and a girl who held back would find her chances imperilled; sometimes
these men would even finance shows to give a chance to some favourite.</p>
<p>Afterward Toodles turned to listen to Oliver and his companion; and Montague
sat back and gazed about the room. Next to him was a long table with a dozen,
people at it; and he watched the buckets of champagne and the endless
succession of fantastic-looking dishes of food, and the revellers, with their
flushed faces and feverish eyes and loud laughter. Above all the tumult was the
voice of the orchestra, calling, calling, like the storm wind upon the
mountains; the music was wild and chaotic, and produced an indescribable sense
of pain and confusion. When one realized that this same thing was going on in
thousands of places in this district it seemed that here was a flood of
dissipation that out-rivalled even that of Society.</p>
<p>It was said that the hotels of New York, placed end to end, would reach all the
way to London; and they took care of a couple of hundred thousand people a
day—a horde which had come from all over the world in search of pleasure
and excitement. There were sight-seers and “country customers” from
forty-five states; ranchers from Texas, and lumber kings from Maine, and mining
men from Nevada. At home they had reputations, and perhaps families to
consider; but once plunged into the whirlpool of the Tenderloin, they were
hidden from all the world. They came with their pockets full of money; and
hotels and restaurants, gambling-places and pool-rooms and brothels—all
were lying in wait for them! So eager had the competition become that there was
a tailoring establishment and a bank that were never closed the year round,
except on Sunday.</p>
<p>Everywhere about one’s feet the nets of vice were spread. The head waiter
in one’s hotel was a “steerer” for a “dive,” and
the house detective was “touting” for a gambling-place. The
handsome woman who smiled at one in “Peacock Alley” was a
“madame”; the pleasant-faced young man who spoke to one at the bar
was on the look-out for customers for a brokerage-house next door. Three times
in a single day in another of these great caravanserais Montague was offered
“short change”; and so his eyes were opened to a new kind of
plundering. He was struck by the number of attendants in livery who swarmed
about him, and to whom he gave tips for their services. He did not notice that
the boys in the wash-rooms and coat-rooms could not speak a word of English; he
could not know that they were searched every night, and had everything taken
from them, and that the Greek who hired them had paid fifteen thousand dollars
a year to the hotel for the privilege.</p>
<p>So far had the specialization in evil proceeded that there were places of
prostitution which did a telephone-business exclusively, and would send a woman
in a cab to any address; and there were high-class assignation-houses, which
furnished exquisite apartments and the services of maids and valets. And in
this world of vice the modern doctrine of the equality of the sexes was fully
recognized; there were gambling-houses and pool-rooms and opium-joints for
women, and drinking-places which catered especially for them. In the
“orange room” of one of the big hotels, you might see rich women of
every rank and type, fingering the dainty leather-bound and gold-embossed wine
cards. In this room alone were sold over ten thousand drinks every day; and the
hotel paid a rental of a million a year to the Devon estate. Not far away the
Devons also owned negro-dives, where, in the early hours of the morning, you
might see richly-gowned white women drinking.</p>
<p>In this seething caldron of graft there were many strange ways of making money,
and many strange and incredible types of human beings to be met. Once, in
“Society,” Montague had pointed out to him a woman who had been a
“tattooed lady” in a circus; there was another who had been a
confederate of gamblers upon the ocean steamships, and another who had washed
dishes in a mining-camp. There was one of these great hotels whose proprietor
had been a successful burglar; and a department-store whose owner had begun
life as a “fence.” In any crowd of these revellers you might have
such strange creatures pointed out to you; a multimillionaire who sold rotten
jam to the people; another who had invented opium soothing-syrup for babies; a
convivial old gentleman who disbursed the “yellow dog fund” of
several railroads; a handsome chauffeur who had run away with an heiress.
‘Once a great scientist had invented a new kind of underwear, and had
endeavoured to make it a gift to humanity; and here was a man who had seized
upon it and made millions out of it! Here was a “trance medium,”
who had got a fortune out of an imbecile old manufacturer; here was a great
newspaper proprietor, who published advertisements of assignations at a dollar
a line; here was a cigar manufacturer, whose smug face was upon every
billboard—he had begun as a tin manufacturer, and to avoid the duty, he
had had his raw material cast in the form of statues, and brought them in as
works of art!</p>
<p>And terrible and vile as were the sources from which the fortunes had been
derived, they were no viler nor more terrible than the purposes for which they
had been spent. Mrs. Vivie Patton had hinted to Montague of a “Decameron
Club,” whose members gathered in each others’ homes and vied in the
telling of obscene stories; Strathcona had told him about another set of
exquisite ladies and gentlemen who gave elaborate entertainments, in which they
dressed in the costumes of bygone periods, and imitated famous characters in
history, and the vices and orgies of courts and camps. One heard of
“Cleopatra nights” on board of yachts at Newport. There was a
certain Wall Street “plunger,” who had begun life as a mining man
in the West; and when his customers came in town, he would hire a trolley-car,
and take a load of champagne and half a dozen prostitutes, and spend the night
careering about the country. This man was now quartered in one of the great
hotels in New York; and in his apartments he would have prize fights and
chicken fights; and bloodthirsty exhibitions called “purring
matches,” in which men tried to bark each other’s shins; or perhaps
a “battle royal,” with a diamond scarf-pin dangling from the
ceiling, and half a dozen negroes in a free-for-all fight for the prize.</p>
<p>No picture of the ways of the Metropolis would be complete which did not force
upon the reluctant reader some realization of the extent to which new and
hideous incitements to vice were spreading. To say that among the leisured
classes such practices were raging like a pestilence would be no exaggeration.
Ten years ago they were regarded with aversion by even the professionally
vicious; but now the commonest prostitute accepted them as part of her fate.
And there was no height to which they had not reached—ministers of state
were enslaved by them; great fortunes and public events were controlled by
them. In Washington there had been an ambassador whose natural daughter taught
them in the houses of the great, until the scandal forced the minister’s
recall. Some of these practices were terrible in their effects, completely
wrecking the victim in a short time; and physicians who studied their symptoms
would be horrified to see them appearing in the homes of their friends.</p>
<p>And from New York, the centre of the wealth and culture of the country, these
vices spread to every corner of it. Theatrical companies and travelling
salesmen carried them; visiting merchants and sightseers acquired them.
Pack-pedlers sold vile pictures and books—the manufacturing or importing
of which was now quite an industry; one might read catalogues printed abroad in
English, the contents of which would make one’s flesh creep. There were
cheap weeklies, costing ten cents a year, which were thrust into area-windows
for servant-girls; there were yellow-covered French novels of unbelievable
depravity for the mistress of the house. It was a curious commentary upon the
morals of Society that upon the trains running to a certain suburban community
frequented by the ultra-fashionable, the newsboys did a thriving business in
such literature; and when the pastor of the fashionable church eloped with a
Society girl, the bishop publicly laid the blame to the morals of his
parishioners!</p>
<p class="p2">
The theory was that there were two worlds, and that they were kept rigidly
separate. There were two sets of women; one to be toyed with and flung aside,
and the other to be protected and esteemed. Such things as prostitutes and kept
women might exist, but people of refinement did not talk about them, and were
not concerned with them. But Montague was familiar with the saying, that if you
follow the chain of the slave, you will find the other end about the wrist of
the master; and he discovered that the Tenderloin was wreaking its vengeance
upon Fifth Avenue. It was not merely that the men of wealth were carrying to
their wives and children the diseases of vice; they were carrying also the
manners and the ideals.</p>
<p>Montague had been amazed by the things he had found in New York Society; the
smoking and drinking and gambling of women, their hard and cynical views of
life, their continual telling of coarse stories. And here, in this under-world,
he had come upon the fountain head of the corruption. It was something which
came to him in a sudden flash of intuition;—the barriers between the two
worlds were breaking down!</p>
<p>He could picture the process in a hundred different forms. There was Betty
Wyman. His brother had meant to take her to the theatre, to let her see
Rosalie, by way of a joke! So, of course, Betty knew of his escapades, and of
those of his set; she and her girl friends were whispering and jesting about
them. Here sat Oliver, smiling and cynical, toying with Rosalie as a cat might
toy with a mouse; and to-morrow he would be with Betty—and could anyone
doubt any longer whence Betty had derived her attitude towards life? And the
habits of mind that Oliver had taught her as a girl she would not forget as a
wife; he might be anxious to keep her to himself, but there would be others
whose interest was different.</p>
<p>And Montague recalled other things that he had seen or heard in Society, that
he could put his finger upon, as having come out of this under-world. The more
he thought of the explanation, the more it seemed to explain. This
“Society,” which had perplexed him—now he could describe it:
its manners and ideals of life were those which he would have expected to find
in the “fast” side of stage life.</p>
<p>It was, of course, the women who made Society, and gave it its tone; and the
women of Society were actresses. They were actresses in their love of notoriety
and display; in their taste in clothes and jewels, their fondness for
cigarettes and champagne. They made up like actresses; they talked and thought
like actresses. The only obvious difference was that the women of the stage
were carefully selected—were at least up to a certain standard of
physical excellence; whereas the women of Society were not selected at all, and
some were lean, and some were stout, and some were painfully homely.</p>
<p>Montague recalled cases where the two sets had met as at some of the private
entertainments. It was getting to be the fashion to hobnob with the stage
people on such occasions; and he recalled how naturally the younger people took
to this. Only the older women held aloof; looking down upon the women of the
stage from an ineffable height, as belonging to a lower caste—because
they were obliged to work for their livings. But it seemed to Montague, as he
sat and talked with this poor chorus-girl, who had sold herself for a little
pleasure, that it was easier to pardon her than the woman who had been born to
luxury, and scorned those who produced her wealth.</p>
<p>But most of all, one’s sympathies went out to a person who was not to be
met in either of these sets; to the girl who had not sold herself, but was
struggling for a living in the midst of this ravening corruption. There were
thousands of self-respecting women, even on the stage; Toodles herself had been
among them, she told Montague. “I kept straight for a long time,”
she said, laughing cheerfully—“and on ten dollars a week! I used to
go out on the road, and then they paid me sixteen; and think of trying to live
on one-night stands—to board yourself and stop at hotels and dress for
the theatre—on sixteen a week, and no job half the year! And all that
time—do you know Cyril Chambers, the famous church painter?”</p>
<p>“I’ve heard of him,” said Montague.</p>
<p>“Well, I was with a show here on Broadway the next winter; and every
night for six months he sent me a bunch of orchids that couldn’t have
cost less than seventy-five dollars! And he told me he’d open accounts
for me in all the stores I chose, if I’d spend the next summer in Europe
with him. He said I could take my mother or my sister with me—and I was
so green in those days, I thought that must mean he didn’t intend
anything wrong!”</p>
<p>Toodles smiled at the memory. “Did you go?” asked the man.</p>
<p>“No,” she answered. “I stayed here with a roof-garden show
that failed. And I went to my old manager for a job, and he said to me,
‘I can only pay you ten a week. But why are you so foolish?’
‘How do you mean?’ I asked; and he answered, ‘Why don’t
you get a rich sweetheart? Then I could pay you sixty.’ That’s what
a girl hears on the stage!”</p>
<p>“I don’t understand,” said Montague, perplexed. “Did he
mean he could get money out of the man?”</p>
<p>“Not directly,” said Toodles; “but tickets—and
advertising. Why, men will hire front-row seats for a whole season, if
they’re interested in a girl in the show. And they’ll take all
their friends to see her, and she’ll be talked about—she’ll
be somebody, instead of just nobody, as I was.”</p>
<p>“Then it actually helps her on the stage!” said Montague.</p>
<p>“Helps her!” exclaimed Toodles. “My God! I’ve known a
girl who’d been abroad with a tip-top swell—and had the gowns and
the jewels to prove it—to come home and get into the front row of a
chorus at a hundred dollars a week.”</p>
<p class="p2">
Toodles was cheerful and all unaware; and that only made the tragedy of it all
one shade more black to Montague. He sat lost in sombre reverie, forgetting his
companions, and the blare and glare of the place.</p>
<p>In the centre of this dining-room was a great cone-shaped stand, containing a
display of food; and as they strolled out, Montague stopped to look at it.
There were platters garnished with flowers and herbs, and containing roast
turkeys and baked hams, jellied meats and game in aspic, puddings and tarts and
frosted cakes—every kind of food-fantasticality imaginable. One might
have spent an hour in studying it, and from top to bottom he would have found
nothing simple, nothing natural. The turkeys had paper curls and rosettes stuck
over them; the hams were covered with a white gelatine, the devilled crabs with
a yellow mayonnaise—and all painted over in pink and green and black with
landscapes and marine views—with “ships and shoes and sealing-wax
and cabbages and kings.” The jellied meats and the puddings were in the
shape of fruits and flowers; and there were elaborate works of art in pink and
white confectionery—a barn-yard, for instance, with horses and cows, and
a pump, and a dairymaid—and one or two alligators.</p>
<p>And all this was changed every day! Each morning you might see a procession of
a score of waiters bearing aloft a new supply. Montague remembered Betty
Wyman’s remark at their first interview, apropos of the whipped cream
made into little curleques; how his brother had said, “If Allan were
here, he’d be thinking about the man who fixed that cream, and how long
it took him, and how he might have been reading ‘The Simple
Life’!”</p>
<p>He thought of that now; he stood here and gazed, and wondered about all the
slaves of the lamp who served in this huge temple of luxury. He looked at the
waiters—pale, hollow-chested, harried-looking men: he imagined the hordes
of servants of yet lower kinds, who never emerged into the light of day; the
men who washed the dishes, the men who carried the garbage, the men who
shovelled the coal into the furnaces, and made the heat and light and power.
Pent up in dim cellars, many stories under ground, and bound for ever to the
service of sensuality—how terrible must be their fate, how unimaginable
their corruption! And they were foreigners; they had come here seeking liberty.
And the masters of the new country had seized them and pent them here!</p>
<p>From this as a starting-point his thought went on, to the hordes of toilers in
every part of the world, whose fate it was to create the things which these
blind revellers destroyed; the women and children in countless mills and
sweatshops, who spun the cloth, and cut and sewed it; the girls who made the
artificial flowers, who rolled the cigarettes, who gathered the grapes from the
vines; the miners who dug the coal and the precious metals out of the earth;
the men who watched in ten thousand signal-towers and engines, who fought the
elements from the decks of ten thousand ships—to bring all these things
here to be destroyed. Step by step, as the flood of extravagance rose, and the
energies of the men were turned to the creation of futility and
corruption—so, step by step, increased the misery and degradation of all
these slaves of Mammon. And who could imagine what they would think about
it—if ever they came to think?</p>
<p>And then, in a sudden flash, there came back to Montague that speech he had
heard upon the street-corner, the first evening he had been in New York! He
could hear again the pounding of the elevated trains, and the shrill voice of
the orator; he could see his haggard and hungry face, and the dense crowd
gazing up at him. And there came to him the words of Major Thorne:</p>
<p>“It means another civil war!”</p>
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