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A POOR WISE MAN
By Mary Roberts Rinehart
CHAPTER I
The city turned its dreariest aspect toward the railway on blackened walls, irregular and ill-paved streets, gloomy warehouses, and over all a gray, smoke-laden atmosphere which gave it mystery and often beauty. Sometimes the softened towers of the great steel bridges rose above the river mist like fairy towers suspended between Heaven and earth. And again the sun tipped the surrounding hills with gold, while the city lay buried in its smoke shroud, and white ghosts of river boats moved spectrally along.
Sometimes it was ugly, sometimes beautiful, but always the city was powerful, significant, important. It was a vast melting pot. Through its gates came alike the hopeful and the hopeless, the dreamers and those who would destroy those dreams. From all over the world there came men who sought a chance to labor. They came in groups, anxious and dumb, carrying with them their pathetic bundles, and shepherded by men with cunning eyes.
Raw material, for the crucible of the city, as potentially powerful as the iron ore which entered the city by the same gate.
The city took them in, gave them sanctuary, and forgot them. But the shepherds with the cunning eyes remembered.
Lily Cardew, standing in the train shed one morning early in March, watched such a line go by. She watched it with interest. She had developed a new interest in people during the year she had been away. She had seen, in the army camp, similar shuffling lines of men, transformed in a few hours into ranks of uniformed soldiers, beginning already to be actuated by the same motive. These aliens, going by, would become citizens. Very soon now they would appear on the streets in new American clothes of extraordinary cut and color, their hair cut with clippers almost to the crown, and surmounted by derby hats always a size too small.
Lily smiled, and looked out for her mother. She was suddenly unaccountably glad to be back again. She liked the smoke and the noise, the movement, the sense of things doing. And the sight of her mother, small, faultlessly tailored, wearing a great bunch of violets, and incongruous in that work-a-day atmosphere, set her smiling again.
How familiar it all was! And heavens, how young she looked! The limousine was at the curb, and a footman as immaculately turned out as her mother stood with a folded rug over his arm. On the seat inside lay a purple box. Lily had known it would be there. They would be ostensibly from her father, because he had not been able to meet her, but she knew quite well that Grace Cardew had stopped at the florist's on her way downtown and bought them.
A little surge of affection for her mother warmed the girl's eyes. The small attentions which in the Cardew household took the place of loving demonstrations had always touched her. As a family the Cardews were rather loosely knitted together, but there was something very lovable about her mother.
Grace Cardew kissed her, and then held her off and looked at her.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Poor Wise Man by Mary Roberts Rinehart
- 2: But why the subterfuge about the flowers
- 3: Then she remembered the day when Elinor Cardew
- 4: The Cardews had fighting traditions
- 5: Grace Cardew followed them up the staircase
- 6: People no proper Cardew would care to know
- 7: And became again a housemaid in the Anthony Cardew house
- 8: And Anthony Cardew began to dream
- 9: He never quite forgave Roebling
- 10: Anthony Cardew did not like the plain people
- 11: Doyle began by being pugnacious
- 12: If Anthony gave Doyle a thought
- 13: And Elinor and Fraulein would have a shopping excursion
- 14: Anthony Cardew would never have a grandson
- 15: Anthony Cardew gave Elinor sanctuary
- 16: Dingy curtains hung at their windows
- 17: While Castle was unpacking under her supervision
- 18: And a coffee machine coffee and doughnuts
- 19: Anthony Cardew had come home for dinner
- 20: He said one day to Lily Cardew
- 21: Willy Cameron was badly beaten up
- 22: Thus Willy Cameron speciously to himself
- 23: There was the blood of Covenanters in Willy Cameron's mother
- 24: And this Lily Cardew lived in state
- 25: The last of the Cardews is home from the wars
- 26: Anthony was engrossed with his food
- 27: Partly because my name is Cardew
- 28: Suzette says Will he try to keep him from being elected
- 29: And the last of the Cardews harked with her
- 30: Miss Boyd attended to the general merchandise
- 31: To the little moving picture theater at the camp
- 32: A Scot is always a reformer and a preacher
- 33: But Miss Boyd was at the telephone
- 34: Alton Denslow was generally known as Pink
- 35: Cardew and Miss Cardew at home
- 36: And Lily had seemed as dear as ever
- 37: The Cardew name was whispered through the shops
- 38: There were depths of wickedness
- 39: Aunt Elinor lived on Cardew Way
- 40: Satyr like ears of that brilliant Irishman
- 41: It is not often that I have a Cardew in my house
- 42: Aunt Elinor smiled her quiet smile
- 43: When Doyle nodded toward Elinor
- 44: But Louis Akers had only calculation and ambition
- 45: Elinor did not hate her father
- 46: Lily found Louis Akers interesting
- 47: The name meant nothing to Grace Cardew
- 48: Orchids or violets at luncheons
- 49: And Willy Cameron was essentially undramatic
- 50: Whose name he had learned was Louis Akers
- 51: To them the neighborhood pharmacy
- 52: Hendricks nudged Doctor Smalley
- 53: Said the roundsman aggressively
- 54: Hendricks had a great admiration for brains
- 55: And the roomer she had had in mind was Willy Cameron
- 56: But he was going to dinner with Lily Cardew
- 57: But the Cardew Mills would go down
- 58: But people don't want to marry Willy Cameron
- 59: In politics Willy Cameron was less satisfactory
- 60: Dogs were forbidden in the Cardew house
- 61: Anthony Cardew flung open the door and entered
- 62: Divided between uneasiness and delight
- 63: CHAPTER XIII For three weeks Lily did not see Louis Akers
- 64: Louis Akers had both written and telephoned her
- 65: Had been the gift of Anthony Cardew
- 66: Yet her liking and real sympathy were with Pink
- 67: But it had obeyed Louis Akers like a master
- 68: You will have to apologize for that
- 69: It was Doyle who found the weak place in his armor
- 70: He believed that he could marry Lily Cardew
- 71: The thought of Louis Akers repelled her
- 72: I've promised Jinx one all day
- 73: Ready to fetch and carry like Jinx here
- 74: How well do you know Louis Akers
- 75: Louis Akers had been waiting for some time
- 76: Akers watched him up the street with calculating
- 77: An alarm clock and Jinx to the Boyd house
- 78: It was perhaps Jinx who decided Willy Cameron
- 79: Where Willy Cameron visualized
- 80: Hendricks climbed part of the way
- 81: Hendricks bent forward and pointed a finger at him
- 82: So it is Akers and Howard Cardew
- 83: And obediently Jinx followed him
- 84: Mademoiselle watched her secretly
- 85: She was Cardew enough to get their point of view
- 86: Frankly infatuated with Louis Akers
- 87: It feeds on martyrdom and fattens on sacrifice
- 88: The older men pooh poohed that
- 89: Grand aunt Caroline was a terrible person
- 90: You understand that this Doyle once tried to assassinate me
- 91: She felt sure that the girl was seeing Louis Akers
- 92: Lily brought Elinor something she needed
- 93: Don't see too much of Louis Akers
- 94: Doyle watched Gompers cynically
- 95: A few days after Lily had had her talk with Elinor
- 96: For he had had Doctor Smalley in to see her
- 97: Boyd the movies was the acme of dissipation
- 98: He had made one or two speeches for Hendricks already
- 99: She says she's been living at the Cardews
- 100: Did you notice the number of the taxicab
- 101: Is to ring that doorbell and ask him a question
- 102: Jim Doyle apparently deliberated
- 103: She had known Louis Akers very well
- 104: They were wrong about Louis Akers
- 105: After a few words with Elinor Doyle alone
- 106: To find Lily composed and resigned
- 107: CHAPTER XX Ellen was staying at the Boyd house
- 108: Of the decorum of the Cardew servants' hall
- 109: Edith on the same porch in the evening
- 110: But the chain of Cardew Mills was closed
- 111: Boyd with a lace fichu pinned around her neck
- 112: The fiction of diphtheria was kept up
- 113: And reaching out for paper and pencil stub
- 114: Edith and Dan and Lily were behind it
- 115: When Lily Cardew and Cameron had been together
- 116: He found Akers under discussion
- 117: But Willy Cameron overruled that
- 118: Elinor Doyle was a perpetual enigma to her
- 119: Another night Elinor was taken ill
- 120: To Lily the moment was almost a holy one
- 121: If you knew what I suspect about Doyle
- 122: One always had to take Willy Cameron as he was
- 123: The feeling that she could not let Akers go
- 124: A room filled with pails and brushes
- 125: And Hendricks was generally the central figure
- 126: Those crazy Wilkinson kids make such a racket
- 127: But she wanted Lily to marry Louis Akers
- 128: They say they're employed by the Myers Housecleaning Company
- 129: Howard found Grace dressing for dinner
- 130: This man Hendricks is getting pretty strong
- 131: They meant to do it in Seattle
- 132: She was the last of the Cardews
- 133: Resentment was rising fast in Lily
- 134: At Friendship the unruly element was very strong
- 135: And a surprising majority of the rioters were armed
- 136: If you go to Akers there will be a fight
- 137: He had no plan in his mind except to see Louis Akers
- 138: Louis Akers was not unprepared
- 139: The Denslow Bank was the first to go
- 140: Don't suppose the watchmen got out
- 141: The election would show them something
- 142: And Doyle continued a furious harangue
- 143: Doyle stood staring at Lily angrily
- 144: Is that man Doyle in the house
- 145: With Lily struggling to understand
- 146: Then Elinor opened the door wide
- 147: Elinor continued her methodical work
- 148: Akers temporarily out of the way
- 149: Anthony Cardew nodded to him grimly
- 150: If they can keep an anarchist out of office
- 151: Willy Cameron glanced at his watch
- 152: Their very flag was theatrical
- 153: Beating old Anthony Cardew at his own cynical game
- 154: Willy Cameron had gone very white
- 155: Akers was standing by the table
- 156: CHAPTER XXX At midnight Howard Cardew reached home again
- 157: We Cardews all marry good women
- 158: When Woslosky had brought the scheme to him
- 159: Elinor knew Doyle was beginning to suspect her
- 160: Elinor had cowered against the wall
- 161: CHAPTER XXXII Life had beaten Lily Cardew
- 162: He threw Aunt Elinor downstairs
- 163: And the delegates went back to their local unions
- 164: And watched Anthony Cardew enter his house
- 165: The Cardew house first among them
- 166: Elinor put out a hand to touch him
- 167: And Ellen had gone up for the invalid's tray
- 168: He realized that Edith was right
- 169: Willy Cameron was facing the decision of his life that night
- 170: But Akers was too quick for him
- 171: He watched Grayson start up the stairs
- 172: And that had been Willy Cameron
- 173: The Cardew Mills were still down
- 174: We'd have an end to the storekeepers
- 175: Edie Edith had gained new courage and new facility
- 176: He meant to play square with Edith
- 177: Cusick said it was a dirt lane
- 178: Akers rose lazily and stretched himself
- 179: Edith looked up at her with wistful eyes
- 180: Do you know that that man Akers has married Lily Cardew
- 181: Edith was glad to get out of the house
- 182: With five little Wilkinsons trailing along behind
- 183: Lily miraculously come back to him
- 184: Our young friend Cameron has done that
- 185: He said I'm still skeptical about Cusick
- 186: He knew that Cameron had been gone about ten minutes
- 187: Woslosky did not like Louis Akers
- 188: Woslosky regarded as extremely pernicious
- 189: Snarled Woslosky from the floor
- 190: Woslosky listened and slowly smiled
- 191: Then Cameron would have the choice of two things
- 192: Variously clothed and even more variously armed
- 193: Willy Cameron was fully alert now
- 194: And Willy Cameron went upstairs
- 195: As though the city stirred but had not wakened
- 196: Ellen reminded her of something
- 197: Suddenly Edith forgot Willy Cameron
- 198: Willy Cameron argued to himself
- 199: The Cardews won't let that marriage stand
- 200: Joe Wilkinson was following him that night
- 201: She connected that with Louis Akers
- 202: A girl more unfortunate but less wicked than herself
- 203: Suddenly Willy Cameron laughed
- 204: CHAPTER XLIV Elinor Doyle was up and about her room
- 205: And later on Louis Akers drove up in an open automobile
- 206: As you have also correctly surmised
- 207: And almost immediately she heard Olga moving about
- 208: Louis Akers heard the news apathetically
- 209: And hated Akers for proving him wrong
- 210: One enveloping gesture shirt and under shirt
- 211: He stopped Annabelle and stared
- 212: A tense and strained Howard Cardew
- 213: Quite silently and unemotionally
- 214: Strikers lined the streets and watched them
- 215: At three o'clock the Cardew doorbell rang
- 216: Evidently making for the bridge at Chester Street
- 217: In the car Akers spoke only once
- 218: Groups of twenty became a rabble of five hundred
- 219: The guns were not firing into the rioters
- 220: For other eyes also had seen old Anthony Cardew
- 221: Edith had got the bread and sugar
- 222: And in the end it was Willy Cameron who told her
- 223: She found Willy Cameron pacing the floor
- 224: It saw old Anthony Cardew gone to his fathers
- 225: In evening clothes and gardenia
