In the Arena: Stories of Political Life. Booth Tarkington
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“Well, what are you going to do? Are you going to see him?”
“No, sir!” Lafe spoke sharply.
“Well, well! What?”
“I'm not bothering to run around asking audiences of Farwell Knowleses; you ought to know that!”
“Given it up?”
“Not exactly. I've sent a fellow around to talk to him.”
“What use will that be?”
Gorgett brought his feet down off the desk with a bang.
“Then he can come to see me, if he wants to. D'you think I've been fool enough not to know what sort of man I was going up against? D'you think that, knowing him as I do, I've not been ready for something of this kind? And that's all you'll get out of me, this afternoon!”
And it was all I did.
It may have been about one o'clock, that night, or perhaps a little earlier, as I lay tossing about, unable to sleep because I was too much disturbed in my mind—too angry with myself—when there came a loud, startling ring at the front-door bell. I got up at once and threw open a window over the door, calling out to know what was wanted.
“It's I,” said a voice I didn't know—a queer, hoarse voice. “Come down.”
“Who's 'I'?” I asked.
“Farwell Knowles,” said the voice. “Let me in!”
I started, and looked down.
He was standing on the steps where the light of a street-lamp fell on him, and I saw even by the poor glimmer that something was wrong; he was white as a dead man. There was something wild in his attitude; he had no hat, and looked all mixed-up and disarranged.
“Come down—come down!” he begged thickly, beckoning me with his arm.
I got on some clothes, slipped downstairs without wakening my wife, lit the hall light, and took him into the library. He dropped in a chair with a quick breath like a sob, and when I turned from lighting the gas I was shocked by the change in him since afternoon. I never saw such a look before. It was like a rat you've seen running along the gutter side of the curbstone with a terrier after it.
“What's the matter, Farwell?” I asked.
“Oh, my God!” he whispered.
“What's happened?”
“It's hard to tell you,” said he. “Oh, but it's hard to tell.”
“Want some whiskey?” I asked, reaching for a decanter that stood handy. He nodded and I gave him good allowance.
“Now,” said I, when he'd gulped it down, “let's hear what's turned up.”
He looked at me kind of dimly, and I'll be shot if two tears didn't well up in his eyes and run down his cheeks. “I've come to ask you,” he said slowly and brokenly, “to ask you—if you won't intercede with Gorgett for me; to ask you if you won't beg him to—to grant me—an interview before to-morrow noon.”
“What!”
“Will you do it?”
“Certainly. Have you asked for an interview with him yourself?”
He struck the back of his hand across his forehead—struck hard, too.
“Have I tried? I've been following him like a dog since five o'clock this afternoon, beseeching him to give me twenty minutes' talk in private. He laughed at me! He isn't a man; he's an iron-hearted devil! Then I went to his house and waited three hours for him. When he came, all he would say was that you were supposed to be running this campaign for me, and I'd better consult with you. Then he turned me out of his house!”
“You seem to have altered a little since this afternoon.” I couldn't resist that.
“This afternoon!” he shuddered. “I think that was a thousand years ago!”
“What do you want to see him for?”
“What for? To see if there isn't a little human pity in him for a fellow-being in agony—to end my suspense and know whether or not he means to ruin me and my happiness and my home forever!”
Farwell didn't seem to be regarding me so much in the light of a character as usual; still, one thing puzzled me, and I asked him how he happened to come to me.
“Because I thought if anyone in the world could do anything with Gorgett, you'd be the one,” he answered. “Because it seemed to me he'd listen to you, and because I thought—in my wild clutching at the remotest hope—that he meant to make my humiliation more awful by sending me to you to ask you to go back to him for me.”
“Well, well,” I said, “I guess if you want me to be of any use you'll have to tell me what it's all about.”
“I suppose so,” he said, and choked, with a kind of despairing sound; “I don't see any way out of it.”
“Go ahead,” I told him. “I reckon I'm old enough to keep my counsel. Let it go, Farwell.”
“Do you know,” he began, with a sharp, grinding of his teeth, “that dishonourable scoundrel has had me watched, ever since there was talk of me for the fusion candidate? He's had me followed, shadowed, till he knows more about me than I do myself.”
I saw right there that I'd never really measured Gorgett for as tall as he really was. “Have a cigar?” I asked Knowles, and lit one myself. But he shook his head and went on:
“You remember my taking you to call on General Buskirk's daughter?”
“Quite well,” said I, puffing pretty hard.
“An angel! A white angel! And this beast, this boodler has the mud in his hands to desecrate her white garments!”
“Oh,” says I.
The angel's knight began to pace the room as he talked, clinching and unclinching his hands, while the perspiration got his hair all scraggly on his forehead. You see Farwell was doing some suffering and he wasn't used to it.
“When she came home from abroad, a year ago,” he said, “it seemed to me that a light came into my life. I've got to tell you the whole thing,” he groaned, “but it's hard! Well, my wife is taken up with our little boy and