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<h1> ALICE ADAMS </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Booth Tarkington </h2>
<p><br/></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<p>The patient, an old-fashioned man, thought the nurse made a mistake in
keeping both of the windows open, and her sprightly disregard of his
protests added something to his hatred of her. Every evening he told her
that anybody with ordinary gumption ought to realize that night air was
bad for the human frame. "The human frame won't stand everything, Miss
Perry," he warned her, resentfully. "Even a child, if it had just ordinary
gumption, ought to know enough not to let the night air blow on sick
people yes, nor well people, either! 'Keep out of the night air, no matter
how well you feel.' That's what my mother used to tell me when I was a
boy. 'Keep out of the night air, Virgil,' she'd say. 'Keep out of the
night air.'"</p>
<p>"I expect probably her mother told her the same thing," the nurse
suggested.</p>
<p>"Of course she did. My grandmother——"</p>
<p>"Oh, I guess your GRANDmother thought so, Mr. Adams! That was when all
this flat central country was swampish and hadn't been drained off yet. I
guess the truth must been the swamp mosquitoes bit people and gave 'em
malaria, especially before they began to put screens in their windows.
Well, we got screens in these windows, and no mosquitoes are goin' to bite
us; so just you be a good boy and rest your mind and go to sleep like you
need to."</p>
<p>"Sleep?" he said. "Likely!"</p>
<p>He thought the night air worst of all in April; he hadn't a doubt it would
kill him, he declared. "It's miraculous what the human frame WILL
survive," he admitted on the last evening of that month. "But you and the
doctor ought to both be taught it won't stand too dang much! You poison a
man and poison and poison him with this April night air——"</p>
<p>"Can't poison you with much more of it," Miss Perry interrupted him,
indulgently. "To-morrow it'll be May night air, and I expect that'll be a
lot better for you, don't you? Now let's just sober down and be a good boy
and get some nice sound sleep."</p>
<p>She gave him his medicine, and, having set the glass upon the center
table, returned to her cot, where, after a still interval, she snored
faintly. Upon this, his expression became that of a man goaded out of
overpowering weariness into irony.</p>
<p>"Sleep? Oh, CERTAINLY, thank you!"</p>
<p>However, he did sleep intermittently, drowsed between times, and even
dreamed; but, forgetting his dreams before he opened his eyes, and having
some part of him all the while aware of his discomfort, he believed, as
usual, that he lay awake the whole night long. He was conscious of the
city as of some single great creature resting fitfully in the dark outside
his windows. It lay all round about, in the damp cover of its night cloud
of smoke, and tried to keep quiet for a few hours after midnight, but was
too powerful a growing thing ever to lie altogether still. Even while it
strove to sleep it muttered with digestions of the day before, and these
already merged with rumblings of the morrow. "Owl" cars, bringing in last
passengers over distant trolley-lines, now and then howled on a curve;
faraway metallic stirrings could be heard from factories in the sooty
suburbs on the plain outside the city; east, west, and south,
switch-engines chugged and snorted on sidings; and everywhere in the air
there seemed to be a faint, voluminous hum as of innumerable wires
trembling overhead to vibration of machinery underground.</p>
<p>In his youth Adams might have been less resentful of sounds such as these
when they interfered with his night's sleep: even during an illness he
might have taken some pride in them as proof of his citizenship in a "live
town"; but at fifty-five he merely hated them because they kept him awake.
They "pressed on his nerves," as he put it; and so did almost everything
else, for that matter.</p>
<p>He heard the milk-wagon drive into the cross-street beneath his windows
and stop at each house. The milkman carried his jars round to the "back
porch," while the horse moved slowly ahead to the gate of the next
customer and waited there. "He's gone into Pollocks'," Adams thought,
following this progress. "I hope it'll sour on 'em before breakfast.
Delivered the Andersons'. Now he's getting out ours. Listen to the darn
brute! What's HE care who wants to sleep!" His complaint was of the horse,
who casually shifted weight with a clink of steel shoes on the worn brick
pavement of the street, and then heartily shook himself in his harness,
perhaps to dislodge a fly far ahead of its season. Light had just filmed
the windows; and with that the first sparrow woke, chirped instantly, and
roused neighbours in the trees of the small yard, including a loud-voiced
robin. Vociferations began irregularly, but were soon unanimous.</p>
<p>"Sleep? Dang likely now, ain't it!"</p>
<p>Night sounds were becoming day sounds; the far-away hooting of
freight-engines seemed brisker than an hour ago in the dark. A cheerful
whistler passed the house, even more careless of sleepers than the
milkman's horse had been; then a group of coloured workmen came by, and
although it was impossible to be sure whether they were homeward bound
from night-work or on their way to day-work, at least it was certain that
they were jocose. Loose, aboriginal laughter preceded them afar, and beat
on the air long after they had gone by.</p>
<p>The sick-room night-light, shielded from his eyes by a newspaper propped
against a water-pitcher, still showed a thin glimmering that had grown
offensive to Adams. In his wandering and enfeebled thoughts, which were
much more often imaginings than reasonings, the attempt of the night-light
to resist the dawn reminded him of something unpleasant, though he could
not discover just what the unpleasant thing was. Here was a puzzle that
irritated him the more because he could not solve it, yet always seemed
just on the point of a solution. However, he may have lost nothing
cheerful by remaining in the dark upon the matter; for if he had been a
little sharper in this introspection he might have concluded that the
squalor of the night-light, in its seeming effort to show against the
forerunning of the sun itself, had stimulated some half-buried perception
within him to sketch the painful little synopsis of an autobiography.</p>
<p>In spite of noises without, he drowsed again, not knowing that he did; and
when he opened his eyes the nurse was just rising from her cot. He took no
pleasure in the sight, it may be said. She exhibited to him a face
mismodelled by sleep, and set like a clay face left on its cheek in a hot
and dry studio. She was still only in part awake, however, and by the time
she had extinguished the night-light and given her patient his tonic, she
had recovered enough plasticity. "Well, isn't that grand! We've had
another good night," she said as she departed to dress in the bathroom.</p>
<p>"Yes, you had another!" he retorted, though not until after she had closed
the door.</p>
<p>Presently he heard his daughter moving about in her room across the narrow
hall, and so knew that she had risen. He hoped she would come in to see
him soon, for she was the one thing that didn't press on his nerves, he
felt; though the thought of her hurt him, as, indeed, every thought hurt
him. But it was his wife who came first.</p>
<p>She wore a lank cotton wrapper, and a crescent of gray hair escaped to one
temple from beneath the handkerchief she had worn upon her head for the
night and still retained; but she did everything possible to make her
expression cheering.</p>
<p>"Oh, you're better again! I can see that, as soon as I look at you," she
said. "Miss Perry tells me you've had another splendid night."</p>
<p>He made a sound of irony, which seemed to dispose unfavourably of Miss
Perry, and then, in order to be more certainly intelligible, he added,
"She slept well, as usual!"</p>
<p>But his wife's smile persisted. "It's a good sign to be cross; it means
you're practically convalescent right now."</p>
<p>"Oh, I am, am I?"</p>
<p>"No doubt in the world!" she exclaimed. "Why, you're practically a well
man, Virgil—all except getting your strength back, of course, and
that isn't going to take long. You'll be right on your feet in a couple of
weeks from now."</p>
<p>"Oh, I will?"</p>
<p>"Of course you will!" She laughed briskly, and, going to the table in the
center of the room, moved his glass of medicine an inch or two, turned a
book over so that it lay upon its other side, and for a few moments
occupied herself with similar futilities, having taken on the air of a
person who makes things neat, though she produced no such actual effect
upon them. "Of course you will," she repeated, absently. "You'll be as
strong as you ever were; maybe stronger." She paused for a moment, not
looking at him, then added, cheerfully, "So that you can fly around and
find something really good to get into."</p>
<p>Something important between them came near the surface here, for though
she spoke with what seemed but a casual cheerfulness, there was a little
betraying break in her voice, a trembling just perceptible in the
utterance of the final word. And she still kept up the affectation of
being helpfully preoccupied with the table, and did not look at her
husband—perhaps because they had been married so many years that
without looking she knew just what his expression would be, and preferred
to avoid the actual sight of it as long as possible. Meanwhile, he stared
hard at her, his lips beginning to move with little distortions not
lacking in the pathos of a sick man's agitation.</p>
<p>"So that's it," he said. "That's what you're hinting at."</p>
<p>"'Hinting?'" Mrs. Adams looked surprised and indulgent. "Why, I'm not
doing any hinting, Virgil."</p>
<p>"What did you say about my finding 'something good to get into?'" he
asked, sharply. "Don't you call that hinting?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Adams turned toward him now; she came to the bedside and would have
taken his hand, but he quickly moved it away from her.</p>
<p>"You mustn't let yourself get nervous," she said. "But of course when you
get well there's only one thing to do. You mustn't go back to that old
hole again."</p>
<p>"'Old hole?' That's what you call it, is it?" In spite of his weakness,
anger made his voice strident, and upon this stimulation she spoke more
urgently.</p>
<p>"You just mustn't go back to it, Virgil. It's not fair to any of us, and
you know it isn't."</p>
<p>"Don't tell me what I know, please!"</p>
<p>She clasped her hands, suddenly carrying her urgency to plaintive
entreaty. "Virgil, you WON'T go back to that hole?"</p>
<p>"That's a nice word to use to me!" he said. "Call a man's business a
hole!"</p>
<p>"Virgil, if you don't owe it to me to look for something different, don't
you owe it to your children? Don't tell me you won't do what we all want
you to, and what you know in your heart you ought to! And if you HAVE got
into one of your stubborn fits and are bound to go back there for no other
reason except to have your own way, don't tell me so, for I can't bear
it!"</p>
<p>He looked up at her fiercely. "You've got a fine way to cure a sick man!"
he said; but she had concluded her appeal—for that time—and
instead of making any more words in the matter, let him see that there
were tears in her eyes, shook her head, and left the room.</p>
<p>Alone, he lay breathing rapidly, his emaciated chest proving itself equal
to the demands his emotion put upon it. "Fine!" he repeated, with husky
indignation. "Fine way to cure a sick man! Fine!" Then, after a silence,
he gave forth whispering sounds as of laughter, his expression the while
remaining sore and far from humour.</p>
<p>"And give us our daily bread!" he added, meaning that his wife's little
performance was no novelty.</p>
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