The After House - Page 77/108

"As a matter of fact," I admitted, "that was my initial performance,

and it is badly done. It--it puckers."

She turned on me a trifle impatiently.

"Why do you make such a secret of your identity?" she demanded.

"Is it a pose? Or--have you a reason for concealing it?"

"It is not a pose; and I have nothing to be ashamed of, unless

poverty--"

"Of course not. What do you mean by poverty?"

"The common garden variety sort. I have hardly a dollar in the

world. As to my identity,--if it interests you at all, I

graduated in medicine last June. I spent the last of the money

that was to educate me in purchasing a dress suit to graduate in,

and a supper by way of celebration. The dress suit helped me to

my diploma. The supper gave me typhoid."

"So that was it!"

"Not jail, you see."

"And what are you going to do now?"

I glanced around to where a police officer stood behind us watchfully.

"Now? Why, now I go to jail in earnest."

"You have been very good to us," she said wistfully. "We have all

been strained and nervous. Maybe you have not thought I noticed or

--or appreciated what you were doing; but I have, always. You have

given all of yourself for us. You have not slept or eaten. And now

you are going to be imprisoned. It isn't just!"

I tried to speak lightly, to reassure her.

"Don't be unhappy about that," I said. "A nice, safe jail, where

one may sleep and eat, and eat and sleep--oh, I shall be very

comfortable! And if you wish to make me exceedingly happy, you

will see that they let me have a razor."

But, to my surprise, she buried her face in her arms. I could not

believe at first that she was crying. The policeman had wandered

across to the other rail, and stood looking out at the city lights,

his back to us. I put my hand out to touch her soft hair, then

drew it back. I could not take advantage of her sympathy, of the

hysterical excitement of that last night on the Ella. I put my

hands in my pockets, and held them there, clenched, lest, in spite

of my will, I reach out to take her in my arms.