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<h2> CHAPTER IV </h2>
<p>On the morning after Sidney had invited K. Le Moyne to take her to walk,
Max Wilson came down to breakfast rather late. Dr. Ed had breakfasted an
hour before, and had already attended, with much profanity on the part of
the patient, to a boil on the back of Mr. Rosenfeld's neck.</p>
<p>“Better change your laundry,” cheerfully advised Dr. Ed, cutting a strip
of adhesive plaster. “Your neck's irritated from your white collars.”</p>
<p>Rosenfeld eyed him suspiciously, but, possessing a sense of humor also, he
grinned.</p>
<p>“It ain't my everyday things that bother me,” he replied. “It's my
blankety-blank dress suit. But if a man wants to be tony—”</p>
<p>“Tony” was not of the Street, but of its environs. Harriet was “tony”
because she walked with her elbows in and her head up. Dr. Max was “tony”
because he breakfasted late, and had a man come once a week and take away
his clothes to be pressed. He was “tony,” too, because he had brought back
from Europe narrow-shouldered English-cut clothes, when the Street was
still padding its shoulders. Even K. would have been classed with these
others, for the stick that he carried on his walks, for the fact that his
shabby gray coat was as unmistakably foreign in cut as Dr. Max's, had the
neighborhood so much as known him by sight. But K., so far, had remained
in humble obscurity, and, outside of Mrs. McKee's, was known only as the
Pages' roomer.</p>
<p>Mr. Rosenfeld buttoned up the blue flannel shirt which, with a pair of Dr.
Ed's cast-off trousers, was his only wear; and fished in his pocket.</p>
<p>“How much, Doc?”</p>
<p>“Two dollars,” said Dr. Ed briskly.</p>
<p>“Holy cats! For one jab of a knife! My old woman works a day and a half
for two dollars.”</p>
<p>“I guess it's worth two dollars to you to be able to sleep on your back.”
He was imperturbably straightening his small glass table. He knew
Rosenfeld. “If you don't like my price, I'll lend you the knife the next
time, and you can let your wife attend to you.”</p>
<p>Rosenfeld drew out a silver dollar, and followed it reluctantly with a
limp and dejected dollar bill.</p>
<p>“There are times,” he said, “when, if you'd put me and the missus and a
knife in the same room, you wouldn't have much left but the knife.”</p>
<p>Dr. Ed waited until he had made his stiff-necked exit. Then he took the
two dollars, and, putting the money into an envelope, indorsed it in his
illegible hand. He heard his brother's step on the stairs, and Dr. Ed made
haste to put away the last vestiges of his little operation.</p>
<p>Ed's lapses from surgical cleanliness were a sore trial to the younger
man, fresh from the clinics of Europe. In his downtown office, to which he
would presently make his leisurely progress, he wore a white coat, and
sterilized things of which Dr. Ed did not even know the names.</p>
<p>So, as he came down the stairs, Dr. Ed, who had wiped his tiny knife with
a bit of cotton,—he hated sterilizing it; it spoiled the edge,—thrust
it hastily into his pocket. He had cut boils without boiling anything for
a good many years, and no trouble. But he was wise with the wisdom of the
serpent and the general practitioner, and there was no use raising a
discussion.</p>
<p>Max's morning mood was always a cheerful one. Now and then the way of the
transgressor is disgustingly pleasant. Max, who sat up until all hours of
the night, drinking beer or whiskey-and-soda, and playing bridge, wakened
to a clean tongue and a tendency to have a cigarette between shoes, so to
speak. Ed, whose wildest dissipation had perhaps been to bring into the
world one of the neighborhood's babies, wakened customarily to the dark
hour of his day, when he dubbed himself failure and loathed the Street
with a deadly loathing.</p>
<p>So now Max brought his handsome self down the staircase and paused at the
office door.</p>
<p>“At it, already,” he said. “Or have you been to bed?”</p>
<p>“It's after nine,” protested Ed mildly. “If I don't start early, I never
get through.”</p>
<p>Max yawned.</p>
<p>“Better come with me,” he said. “If things go on as they've been doing,
I'll have to have an assistant. I'd rather have you than anybody, of
course.” He put his lithe surgeon's hand on his brother's shoulder. “Where
would I be if it hadn't been for you? All the fellows know what you've
done.”</p>
<p>In spite of himself, Ed winced. It was one thing to work hard that there
might be one success instead of two half successes. It was a different
thing to advertise one's mediocrity to the world. His sphere of the Street
and the neighborhood was his own. To give it all up and become his younger
brother's assistant—even if it meant, as it would, better hours and
more money—would be to submerge his identity. He could not bring
himself to it.</p>
<p>“I guess I'll stay where I am,” he said. “They know me around here, and I
know them. By the way, will you leave this envelope at Mrs. McKee's?
Maggie Rosenfeld is ironing there to-day. It's for her.”</p>
<p>Max took the envelope absently.</p>
<p>“You'll go on here to the end of your days, working for a pittance,” he
objected. “Inside of ten years there'll be no general practitioners; then
where will you be?”</p>
<p>“I'll manage somehow,” said his brother placidly. “I guess there will
always be a few that can pay my prices better than what you specialists
ask.”</p>
<p>Max laughed with genuine amusement.</p>
<p>“I dare say, if this is the way you let them pay your prices.”</p>
<p>He held out the envelope, and the older man colored.</p>
<p>Very proud of Dr. Max was his brother, unselfishly proud, of his skill, of
his handsome person, of his easy good manners; very humble, too, of his
own knowledge and experience. If he ever suspected any lack of finer fiber
in Max, he put the thought away. Probably he was too rigid himself. Max
was young, a hard worker. He had a right to play hard.</p>
<p>He prepared his black bag for the day's calls—stethoscope,
thermometer, eye-cup, bandages, case of small vials, a lump of absorbent
cotton in a not over-fresh towel; in the bottom, a heterogeneous
collection of instruments, a roll of adhesive plaster, a bottle or two of
sugar-milk tablets for the children, a dog collar that had belonged to a
dead collie, and had put in the bag in some curious fashion and there
remained.</p>
<p>He prepared the bag a little nervously, while Max ate. He felt that modern
methods and the best usage might not have approved of the bag. On his way
out he paused at the dining-room door.</p>
<p>“Are you going to the hospital?”</p>
<p>“Operating at four—wish you could come in.”</p>
<p>“I'm afraid not, Max. I've promised Sidney Page to speak about her to you.
She wants to enter the training-school.”</p>
<p>“Too young,” said Max briefly. “Why, she can't be over sixteen.”</p>
<p>“She's eighteen.”</p>
<p>“Well, even eighteen. Do you think any girl of that age is responsible
enough to have life and death put in her hands? Besides, although I
haven't noticed her lately, she used to be a pretty little thing. There is
no use filling up the wards with a lot of ornaments; it keeps the internes
all stewed up.”</p>
<p>“Since when,” asked Dr. Ed mildly, “have you found good looks in a girl a
handicap?”</p>
<p>In the end they compromised. Max would see Sidney at his office. It would
be better than having her run across the Street—would put things on
the right footing. For, if he did have her admitted, she would have to
learn at once that he was no longer “Dr. Max”; that, as a matter of fact,
he was now staff, and entitled to much dignity, to speech without
contradiction or argument, to clean towels, and a deferential interne at
his elbow.</p>
<p>Having given his promise, Max promptly forgot about it. The Street did not
interest him. Christine and Sidney had been children when he went to
Vienna, and since his return he had hardly noticed them. Society, always
kind to single men of good appearance and easy good manners, had taken him
up. He wore dinner or evening clothes five nights out of seven, and was
supposed by his conservative old neighbors to be going the pace. The rumor
had been fed by Mrs. Rosenfeld, who, starting out for her day's washing at
six o'clock one morning, had found Dr. Max's car, lamps lighted, and
engine going, drawn up before the house door, with its owner asleep at the
wheel. The story traveled the length of the Street that day.</p>
<p>“Him,” said Mrs. Rosenfeld, who was occasionally flowery, “sittin' up as
straight as this washboard, and his silk hat shinin' in the sun; but
exceptin' the car, which was workin' hard and gettin' nowhere, the whole
outfit in the arms of Morpheus.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Lorenz, whose day it was to have Mrs. Rosenfeld, and who was
unfamiliar with mythology, gasped at the last word.</p>
<p>“Mercy!” she said. “Do you mean to say he's got that awful drug habit!”</p>
<p>Down the clean steps went Dr. Max that morning, a big man, almost as tall
as K. Le Moyne, eager of life, strong and a bit reckless, not fine,
perhaps, but not evil. He had the same zest of living as Sidney, but with
this difference—the girl stood ready to give herself to life: he
knew that life would come to him. All-dominating male was Dr. Max, that
morning, as he drew on his gloves before stepping into his car. It was
after nine o'clock. K. Le Moyne had been an hour at his desk. The McKee
napkins lay ironed in orderly piles.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, Dr. Max was suffering under a sense of defeat as he rode
downtown. The night before, he had proposed to a girl and had been
rejected. He was not in love with the girl,—she would have been a
suitable wife, and a surgeon ought to be married; it gives people
confidence,—but his pride was hurt. He recalled the exact words of
the rejection.</p>
<p>“You're too good-looking, Max,” she had said, “and that's the truth. Now
that operations are as popular as fancy dancing, and much less bother,
half the women I know are crazy about their surgeons. I'm too fond of my
peace of mind.”</p>
<p>“But, good Heavens! haven't you any confidence in me?” he had demanded.</p>
<p>“None whatever, Max dear.” She had looked at him with level, understanding
eyes.</p>
<p>He put the disagreeable recollection out of his mind as he parked his car
and made his way to his office. Here would be people who believed in him,
from the middle-aged nurse in her prim uniform to the row of patients
sitting stiffly around the walls of the waiting-room. Dr. Max, pausing in
the hall outside the door of his private office, drew a long breath. This
was the real thing—work and plenty of it, a chance to show the other
men what he could do, a battle to win! No humanitarian was he, but a
fighter: each day he came to his office with the same battle lust.</p>
<p>The office nurse had her back to him. When she turned, he faced an
agreeable surprise. Instead of Miss Simpson, he faced a young and
attractive girl, faintly familiar.</p>
<p>“We tried to get you by telephone,” she explained. “I am from the
hospital. Miss Simpson's father died this morning, and she knew you would
have to have some one. I was just starting for my vacation, so they sent
me.”</p>
<p>“Rather a poor substitute for a vacation,” he commented.</p>
<p>She was a very pretty girl. He had seen her before in the hospital, but he
had never really noticed how attractive she was. Rather stunning she was,
he thought. The combination of yellow hair and dark eyes was unusual. He
remembered, just in time, to express regret at Miss Simpson's bereavement.</p>
<p>“I am Miss Harrison,” explained the substitute, and held out his long
white coat. The ceremony, purely perfunctory with Miss Simpson on duty,
proved interesting, Miss Harrison, in spite of her high heels, being small
and the young surgeon tall. When he was finally in the coat, she was
rather flushed and palpitating.</p>
<p>“But I KNEW your name, of course,” lied Dr. Max. “And—I'm sorry
about the vacation.”</p>
<p>After that came work. Miss Harrison was nimble and alert, but the surgeon
worked quickly and with few words, was impatient when she could not find
the things he called for, even broke into restrained profanity now and
then. She went a little pale over her mistakes, but preserved her dignity
and her wits. Now and then he found her dark eyes fixed on him, with
something inscrutable but pleasing in their depths. The situation was
rather piquant. Consciously he was thinking only of what he was doing.
Subconsciously his busy ego was finding solace after last night's rebuff.</p>
<p>Once, during the cleaning up between cases, he dropped to a personality.
He was drying his hands, while she placed freshly sterilized instruments
on a glass table.</p>
<p>“You are almost a foreign type, Miss Harrison. Last year, in a London
ballet, I saw a blonde Spanish girl who looked like you.”</p>
<p>“My mother was a Spaniard.” She did not look up.</p>
<p>Where Miss Simpson was in the habit of clumping through the morning in
flat, heavy shoes, Miss Harrison's small heels beat a busy tattoo on the
tiled floor. With the rustling of her starched dress, the sound was
essentially feminine, almost insistent. When he had time to notice it, it
amused him that he did not find it annoying.</p>
<p>Once, as she passed him a bistoury, he deliberately placed his fine hand
over her fingers and smiled into her eyes. It was play for him; it
lightened the day's work.</p>
<p>Sidney was in the waiting-room. There had been no tedium in the morning's
waiting. Like all imaginative people, she had the gift of dramatizing
herself. She was seeing herself in white from head to foot, like this
efficient young woman who came now and then to the waiting-room door; she
was healing the sick and closing tired eyes; she was even imagining
herself proposed to by an aged widower with grown children and quantities
of money, one of her patients.</p>
<p>She sat very demurely in the waiting-room with a magazine in her lap, and
told her aged patient that she admired and respected him, but that she had
given herself to the suffering poor.</p>
<p>“Everything in the world that you want,” begged the elderly gentleman.
“You should see the world, child, and I will see it again through your
eyes. To Paris first for clothes and the opera, and then—”</p>
<p>“But I do not love you,” Sidney replied, mentally but steadily. “In all
the world I love only one man. He is—”</p>
<p>She hesitated here. It certainly was not Joe, or K. Le Moyne of the gas
office. It seem to her suddenly very sad that there was no one she loved.
So many people went into hospitals because they had been disappointed in
love.</p>
<p>“Dr. Wilson will see you now.”</p>
<p>She followed Miss Harrison into the consulting room. Dr. Max—not the
gloved and hatted Dr. Max of the Street, but a new person, one she had
never known—stood in his white office, tall, dark-eyed, dark-haired,
competent, holding out his long, immaculate surgeon's hand, and smiling
down at her.</p>
<p>Men, like jewels, require a setting. A clerk on a high stool, poring over
a ledger, is not unimpressive, or a cook over her stove. But place the
cook on the stool, poring over the ledger! Dr. Max, who had lived all his
life on the edge of Sidney's horizon, now, by the simple changing of her
point of view, loomed large and magnificent. Perhaps he knew it. Certainly
he stood very erect. Certainly, too, there was considerable manner in the
way in which he asked Miss Harrison to go out and close the door behind
her.</p>
<p>Sidney's heart, considering what was happening to it, behaved very well.</p>
<p>“For goodness' sake, Sidney,” said Dr. Max, “here you are a young lady and
I've never noticed it!”</p>
<p>This, of course, was not what he had intended to say, being staff and all
that. But Sidney, visibly palpitant, was very pretty, much prettier than
the Harrison girl, beating a tattoo with her heels in the next room.</p>
<p>Dr. Max, belonging to the class of man who settles his tie every time he
sees an attractive woman, thrust his hands into the pockets of his long
white coat and surveyed her quizzically.</p>
<p>“Did Dr. Ed tell you?”</p>
<p>“Sit down. He said something about the hospital. How's your mother and
Aunt Harriet?”</p>
<p>“Very well—that is, mother's never quite well.” She was sitting
forward on her chair, her wide young eyes on him. “Is that—is your
nurse from the hospital here?”</p>
<p>“Yes. But she's not my nurse. She's a substitute.”</p>
<p>“The uniform is so pretty.” Poor Sidney! with all the things she had meant
to say about a life of service, and that, although she was young, she was
terribly in earnest.</p>
<p>“It takes a lot of plugging before one gets the uniform. Look here,
Sidney; if you are going to the hospital because of the uniform, and with
any idea of soothing fevered brows and all that nonsense—”</p>
<p>She interrupted him, deeply flushed. Indeed, no. She wanted to work. She
was young and strong, and surely a pair of willing hands—that was
absurd about the uniform. She had no silly ideas. There was so much to do
in the world, and she wanted to help. Some people could give money, but
she couldn't. She could only offer service. And, partly through
earnestness and partly through excitement, she ended in a sort of nervous
sob, and, going to the window, stood with her back to him.</p>
<p>He followed her, and, because they were old neighbors, she did not resent
it when he put his hand on her shoulder.</p>
<p>“I don't know—of course, if you feel like that about it,” he said,
“we'll see what can be done. It's hard work, and a good many times it
seems futile. They die, you know, in spite of all we can do. And there are
many things that are worse than death—”</p>
<p>His voice trailed off. When he had started out in his profession, he had
had some such ideal of service as this girl beside him. For just a moment,
as he stood there close to her, he saw things again with the eyes of his
young faith: to relieve pain, to straighten the crooked, to hurt that he
might heal,—not to show the other men what he could do,—that
had been his early creed. He sighed a little as he turned away.</p>
<p>“I'll speak to the superintendent about you,” he said. “Perhaps you'd like
me to show you around a little.”</p>
<p>“When? To-day?”</p>
<p>He had meant in a month, or a year. It was quite a minute before he
replied:—</p>
<p>“Yes, to-day, if you say. I'm operating at four. How about three o'clock?”</p>
<p>She held out both hands, and he took them, smiling.</p>
<p>“You are the kindest person I ever met.”</p>
<p>“And—perhaps you'd better not say you are applying until we find out
if there is a vacancy.”</p>
<p>“May I tell one person?”</p>
<p>“Mother?”</p>
<p>“No. We—we have a roomer now. He is very much interested. I should
like to tell him.”</p>
<p>He dropped her hands and looked at her in mock severity.</p>
<p>“Much interested! Is he in love with you?”</p>
<p>“Mercy, no!”</p>
<p>“I don't believe it. I'm jealous. You know, I've always been more than
half in love with you myself!”</p>
<p>Play for him—the same victorious instinct that had made him touch
Miss Harrison's fingers as she gave him the instrument. And Sidney knew
how it was meant; she smiled into his eyes and drew down her veil briskly.</p>
<p>“Then we'll say at three,” she said calmly, and took an orderly and
unflurried departure.</p>
<p>But the little seed of tenderness had taken root. Sidney, passing in the
last week or two from girlhood to womanhood,—outgrowing Joe, had she
only known it, as she had outgrown the Street,—had come that day
into her first contact with a man of the world. True, there was K. Le
Moyne. But K. was now of the Street, of that small world of one dimension
that she was leaving behind her.</p>
<p>She sent him a note at noon, with word to Tillie at Mrs. McKee's to put it
under his plate:—</p>
<p>DEAR MR. LE MOYNE,—I am so excited I can hardly write. Dr. Wilson,
the surgeon, is going to take me through the hospital this afternoon. Wish
me luck. SIDNEY PAGE.</p>
<p>K. read it, and, perhaps because the day was hot and his butter soft and
the other “mealers” irritable with the heat, he ate little or no luncheon.
Before he went out into the sun, he read the note again. To his jealous
eyes came a vision of that excursion to the hospital. Sidney, all vibrant
eagerness, luminous of eye, quick of bosom; and Wilson, sardonically
smiling, amused and interested in spite of himself. He drew a long breath,
and thrust the note in his pocket.</p>
<p>The little house across the way sat square in the sun. The shades of his
windows had been lowered against the heat. K. Le Moyne made an impulsive
movement toward it and checked himself.</p>
<p>As he went down the Street, Wilson's car came around the corner. Le Moyne
moved quietly into the shadow of the church and watched the car go by.</p>
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