<h2><SPAN name="chap26"></SPAN>Chapter XXVI</h2>
<p>Things had changed greatly since last Cowperwood had talked with Butler.
Although most friendly at the time the proposition was made that he should
combine with Mollenhauer and Simpson to sustain the market, alas, now on this
Monday morning at nine o’clock, an additional complication had been added
to the already tangled situation which had changed Butler’s attitude
completely. As he was leaving his home to enter his runabout, at nine
o’clock in the morning of this same day in which Cowperwood was seeking
Stener’s aid, the postman, coming up, had handed Butler four letters, all
of which he paused for a moment to glance at. One was from a sub-contractor by
the name of O’Higgins, the second was from Father Michel, his confessor,
of St. Timothy’s, thanking him for a contribution to the parish poor
fund; a third was from Drexel & Co. relating to a deposit, and the fourth
was an anonymous communication, on cheap stationery from some one who was
apparently not very literate—a woman most likely—written in a
scrawling hand, which read:</p>
<p class="letter">
DEAR SIR—This is to warn you that your daughter Aileen is running around
with a man that she shouldn’t, Frank A. Cowperwood, the banker. If you
don’t believe it, watch the house at 931 North Tenth Street. Then you can
see for yourself.</p>
<p>There was neither signature nor mark of any kind to indicate from whence it
might have come. Butler got the impression strongly that it might have been
written by some one living in the vicinity of the number indicated. His
intuitions were keen at times. As a matter of fact, it was written by a girl, a
member of St. Timothy’s Church, who did live in the vicinity of the house
indicated, and who knew Aileen by sight and was jealous of her airs and her
position. She was a thin, anemic, dissatisfied creature who had the type of
brain which can reconcile the gratification of personal spite with a comforting
sense of having fulfilled a moral duty. Her home was some five doors north of
the unregistered Cowperwood domicile on the opposite side of the street, and by
degrees, in the course of time, she made out, or imagined that she had, the
significance of this institution, piecing fact to fancy and fusing all with
that keen intuition which is so closely related to fact. The result was
eventually this letter which now spread clear and grim before Butler’s
eyes.</p>
<p>The Irish are a philosophic as well as a practical race. Their first and
strongest impulse is to make the best of a bad situation—to put a better
face on evil than it normally wears. On first reading these lines the
intelligence they conveyed sent a peculiar chill over Butler’s sturdy
frame. His jaw instinctively closed, and his gray eyes narrowed. Could this be
true? If it were not, would the author of the letter say so practically,
“If you don’t believe it, watch the house at 931 North Tenth
Street”? Wasn’t that in itself proof positive—the hard,
matter-of-fact realism of it? And this was the man who had come to him the
night before seeking aid—whom he had done so much to assist. There forced
itself into his naturally slow-moving but rather accurate mind a sense of the
distinction and charm of his daughter—a considerably sharper picture than
he had ever had before, and at the same time a keener understanding of the
personality of Frank Algernon Cowperwood. How was it he had failed to detect
the real subtlety of this man? How was it he had never seen any sign of it, if
there had been anything between Cowperwood and Aileen?</p>
<p>Parents are frequently inclined, because of a time-flattered sense of security,
to take their children for granted. Nothing ever has happened, so nothing ever
will happen. They see their children every day, and through the eyes of
affection; and despite their natural charm and their own strong parental love,
the children are apt to become not only commonplaces, but ineffably secure
against evil. Mary is naturally a good girl—a little wild, but what harm
can befall her? John is a straight-forward, steady-going boy—how could he
get into trouble? The astonishment of most parents at the sudden accidental
revelation of evil in connection with any of their children is almost
invariably pathetic. “My John! My Mary! Impossible!” But it is
possible. Very possible. Decidedly likely. Some, through lack of experience or
understanding, or both, grow hard and bitter on the instant. They feel
themselves astonishingly abased in the face of notable tenderness and
sacrifice. Others collapse before the grave manifestation of the insecurity and
uncertainty of life—the mystic chemistry of our being. Still others,
taught roughly by life, or endowed with understanding or intuition, or both,
see in this the latest manifestation of that incomprehensible chemistry which
we call <i>life</i> and personality, and, knowing that it is quite vain to hope
to gainsay it, save by greater subtlety, put the best face they can upon the
matter and call a truce until they can think. We all know that life is
unsolvable—we who think. The remainder imagine a vain thing, and are full
of sound and fury signifying nothing.</p>
<p>So Edward Butler, being a man of much wit and hard, grim experience, stood
there on his doorstep holding in his big, rough hand his thin slip of cheap
paper which contained such a terrific indictment of his daughter. There came to
him now a picture of her as she was when she was a very little girl—she
was his first baby girl—and how keenly he had felt about her all these
years. She had been a beautiful child—her red-gold hair had been pillowed
on his breast many a time, and his hard, rough fingers had stroked her soft
cheeks, lo, these thousands of times. Aileen, his lovely, dashing daughter of
twenty-three! He was lost in dark, strange, unhappy speculations, without any
present ability to think or say or do the right thing. He did not know what the
right thing was, he finally confessed to himself. Aileen! Aileen! His Aileen!
If her mother knew this it would break her heart. She mustn’t! She
mustn’t! And yet mustn’t she?</p>
<p>The heart of a father! The world wanders into many strange by-paths of
affection. The love of a mother for her children is dominant, leonine, selfish,
and unselfish. It is concentric. The love of a husband for his wife, or of a
lover for his sweetheart, is a sweet bond of agreement and exchange trade in a
lovely contest. The love of a father for his son or daughter, where it is love
at all, is a broad, generous, sad, contemplative giving without thought of
return, a hail and farewell to a troubled traveler whom he would do much to
guard, a balanced judgment of weakness and strength, with pity for failure and
pride in achievement. It is a lovely, generous, philosophic blossom which
rarely asks too much, and seeks only to give wisely and plentifully.
“That my boy may succeed! That my daughter may be happy!” Who has
not heard and dwelt upon these twin fervors of fatherly wisdom and tenderness?</p>
<p>As Butler drove downtown his huge, slow-moving, in some respects chaotic mind
turned over as rapidly as he could all of the possibilities in connection with
this unexpected, sad, and disturbing revelation. Why had Cowperwood not been
satisfied with his wife? Why should he enter into his (Butler’s) home, of
all places, to establish a clandestine relationship of this character? Was
Aileen in any way to blame? She was not without mental resources of her own.
She must have known what she was doing. She was a good Catholic, or, at least,
had been raised so. All these years she had been going regularly to confession
and communion. True, of late Butler had noticed that she did not care so much
about going to church, would sometimes make excuses and stay at home on
Sundays; but she had gone, as a rule. And now, now—his thoughts would
come to the end of a blind alley, and then he would start back, as it were,
mentally, to the center of things, and begin all over again.</p>
<p>He went up the stairs to his own office slowly. He went in and sat down, and
thought and thought. Ten o’clock came, and eleven. His son bothered him
with an occasional matter of interest, but, finding him moody, finally
abandoned him to his own speculations. It was twelve, and then one, and he was
still sitting there thinking, when the presence of Cowperwood was announced.</p>
<p>Cowperwood, on finding Butler not at home, and not encountering Aileen, had
hurried up to the office of the Edward Butler Contracting Company, which was
also the center of some of Butler’s street-railway interests. The floor
space controlled by the company was divided into the usual official
compartments, with sections for the bookkeepers, the road-managers, the
treasurer, and so on. Owen Butler, and his father had small but attractively
furnished offices in the rear, where they transacted all the important business
of the company.</p>
<p>During this drive, curiously, by reason of one of those strange psychologic
intuitions which so often precede a human difficulty of one sort or another, he
had been thinking of Aileen. He was thinking of the peculiarity of his
relationship with her, and of the fact that now he was running to her father
for assistance. As he mounted the stairs he had a peculiar sense of the
untoward; but he could not, in his view of life, give it countenance. One
glance at Butler showed him that something had gone amiss. He was not so
friendly; his glance was dark, and there was a certain sternness to his
countenance which had never previously been manifested there in
Cowperwood’s memory. He perceived at once that here was something
different from a mere intention to refuse him aid and call his loan. What was
it? Aileen? It must be that. Somebody had suggested something. They had been
seen together. Well, even so, nothing could be proved. Butler would obtain no
sign from him. But his loan—that was to be called, surely. And as for an
additional loan, he could see now, before a word had been said, that that
thought was useless.</p>
<p>“I came to see you about that loan of yours, Mr. Butler,” he
observed, briskly, with an old-time, jaunty air. You could not have told from
his manner or his face that he had observed anything out of the ordinary.</p>
<p>Butler, who was alone in the room—Owen having gone into an adjoining
room—merely stared at him from under his shaggy brows.</p>
<p>“I’ll have to have that money,” he said, brusquely, darkly.</p>
<p>An old-time Irish rage suddenly welled up in his bosom as he contemplated this
jaunty, sophisticated undoer of his daughter’s virtue. He fairly glared
at him as he thought of him and her.</p>
<p>“I judged from the way things were going this morning that you might want
it,” Cowperwood replied, quietly, without sign of tremor. “The
bottom’s out, I see.”</p>
<p>“The bottom’s out, and it’ll not be put back soon, I’m
thinkin’. I’ll have to have what’s belongin’ to me
to-day. I haven’t any time to spare.”</p>
<p>“Very well,” replied Cowperwood, who saw clearly how treacherous
the situation was. The old man was in a dour mood. His presence was an
irritation to him, for some reason—a deadly provocation. Cowperwood felt
clearly that it must be Aileen, that he must know or suspect something.</p>
<p>He must pretend business hurry and end this. “I’m sorry. I thought
I might get an extension; but that’s all right. I can get the money,
though. I’ll send it right over.”</p>
<p>He turned and walked quickly to the door.</p>
<p>Butler got up. He had thought to manage this differently.</p>
<p>He had thought to denounce or even assault this man. He was about to make some
insinuating remark which would compel an answer, some direct charge; but
Cowperwood was out and away as jaunty as ever.</p>
<p>The old man was flustered, enraged, disappointed. He opened the small office
door which led into the adjoining room, and called, “Owen!”</p>
<p>“Yes, father.”</p>
<p>“Send over to Cowperwood’s office and get that money.”</p>
<p>“You decided to call it, eh?”</p>
<p>“I have.”</p>
<p>Owen was puzzled by the old man’s angry mood. He wondered what it all
meant, but thought he and Cowperwood might have had a few words. He went out to
his desk to write a note and call a clerk. Butler went to the window and stared
out. He was angry, bitter, brutal in his vein.</p>
<p>“The dirty dog!” he suddenly exclaimed to himself, in a low voice.
“I’ll take every dollar he’s got before I’m through
with him. I’ll send him to jail, I will. I’ll break him, I will.
Wait!”</p>
<p>He clinched his big fists and his teeth.</p>
<p>“I’ll fix him. I’ll show him. The dog! The damned
scoundrel!”</p>
<p>Never in his life before had he been so bitter, so cruel, so relentless in his
mood.</p>
<p>He walked his office floor thinking what he could do. Question
Aileen—that was what he would do. If her face, or her lips, told him that
his suspicion was true, he would deal with Cowperwood later. This city
treasurer business, now. It was not a crime in so far as Cowperwood was
concerned; but it might be made to be.</p>
<p>So now, telling the clerk to say to Owen that he had gone down the street for a
few moments, he boarded a street-car and rode out to his home, where he found
his elder daughter just getting ready to go out. She wore a purple-velvet
street dress edged with narrow, flat gilt braid, and a striking gold-and-purple
turban. She had on dainty new boots of bronze kid and long gloves of lavender
suede. In her ears was one of her latest affectations, a pair of long jet
earrings. The old Irishman realized on this occasion, when he saw her, perhaps
more clearly than he ever had in his life, that he had grown a bird of rare
plumage.</p>
<p>“Where are you going, daughter?” he asked, with a rather
unsuccessful attempt to conceal his fear, distress, and smoldering anger.</p>
<p>“To the library,” she said easily, and yet with a sudden
realization that all was not right with her father. His face was too heavy and
gray. He looked tired and gloomy.</p>
<p>“Come up to my office a minute,” he said. “I want to see you
before you go.”</p>
<p>Aileen heard this with a strange feeling of curiosity and wonder. It was not
customary for her father to want to see her in his office just when she was
going out; and his manner indicated, in this instance, that the exceptional
procedure portended a strange revelation of some kind. Aileen, like every other
person who offends against a rigid convention of the time, was conscious of and
sensitive to the possible disastrous results which would follow exposure. She
had often thought about what her family would think if they knew what she was
doing; she had never been able to satisfy herself in her mind as to what they
would do. Her father was a very vigorous man. But she had never known him to be
cruel or cold in his attitude toward her or any other member of the family, and
especially not toward her. Always he seemed too fond of her to be completely
alienated by anything that might happen; yet she could not be sure.</p>
<p>Butler led the way, planting his big feet solemnly on the steps as he went up.
Aileen followed with a single glance at herself in the tall pier-mirror which
stood in the hall, realizing at once how charming she looked and how uncertain
she was feeling about what was to follow. What could her father want? It made
the color leave her cheeks for the moment, as she thought what he might want.</p>
<p>Butler strolled into his stuffy room and sat down in the big leather chair,
disproportioned to everything else in the chamber, but which, nevertheless,
accompanied his desk. Before him, against the light, was the visitor’s
chair, in which he liked to have those sit whose faces he was anxious to study.
When Aileen entered he motioned her to it, which was also ominous to her, and
said, “Sit down there.”</p>
<p>She took the seat, not knowing what to make of his procedure. On the instant
her promise to Cowperwood to deny everything, whatever happened, came back to
her. If her father was about to attack her on that score, he would get no
satisfaction, she thought. She owed it to Frank. Her pretty face strengthened
and hardened on the instant. Her small, white teeth set themselves in two even
rows; and her father saw quite plainly that she was consciously bracing herself
for an attack of some kind. He feared by this that she was guilty, and he was
all the more distressed, ashamed, outraged, made wholly unhappy. He fumbled in
the left-hand pocket of his coat and drew forth from among the various papers
the fatal communication so cheap in its physical texture. His big fingers
fumbled almost tremulously as he fished the letter-sheet out of the small
envelope and unfolded it without saying a word. Aileen watched his face and his
hands, wondering what it could be that he had here. He handed the paper over,
small in his big fist, and said, “Read that.”</p>
<p>Aileen took it, and for a second was relieved to be able to lower her eyes to
the paper. Her relief vanished in a second, when she realized how in a moment
she would have to raise them again and look him in the face.</p>
<p class="letter">
DEAR SIR—This is to warn you that your daughter Aileen is running around
with a man that she shouldn’t, Frank A. Cowperwood, the banker. If you
don’t believe it, watch the house at 931 North Tenth Street. Then you can
see for yourself.</p>
<p>In spite of herself the color fled from her cheeks instantly, only to come back
in a hot, defiant wave.</p>
<p>“Why, what a lie!” she said, lifting her eyes to her
father’s. “To think that any one should write such a thing of me!
How dare they! I think it’s a shame!”</p>
<p>Old Butler looked at her narrowly, solemnly. He was not deceived to any extent
by her bravado. If she were really innocent, he knew she would have jumped to
her feet in her defiant way. Protest would have been written all over her. As
it was, she only stared haughtily. He read through her eager defiance to the
guilty truth.</p>
<p>“How do ye know, daughter, that I haven’t had the house
watched?” he said, quizzically. “How do ye know that ye
haven’t been seen goin’ in there?”</p>
<p>Only Aileen’s solemn promise to her lover could have saved her from this
subtle thrust. As it was, she paled nervously; but she saw Frank Cowperwood,
solemn and distinguished, asking her what she would say if she were caught.</p>
<p>“It’s a lie!” she said, catching her breath. “I
wasn’t at any house at that number, and no one saw me going in there. How
can you ask me that, father?”</p>
<p>In spite of his mixed feelings of uncertainty and yet unshakable belief that
his daughter was guilty, he could not help admiring her courage—she was
so defiant, as she sat there, so set in her determination to lie and thus
defend herself. Her beauty helped her in his mood, raised her in his esteem.
After all, what could you do with a woman of this kind? She was not a
ten-year-old girl any more, as in a way he sometimes continued to fancy her.</p>
<p>“Ye oughtn’t to say that if it isn’t true, Aileen,” he
said. “Ye oughtn’t to lie. It’s against your faith. Why would
anybody write a letter like that if it wasn’t so?”</p>
<p>“But it’s not so,” insisted Aileen, pretending anger and
outraged feeling, “and I don’t think you have any right to sit
there and say that to me. I haven’t been there, and I’m not running
around with Mr. Cowperwood. Why, I hardly know the man except in a social
way.”</p>
<p>Butler shook his head solemnly.</p>
<p>“It’s a great blow to me, daughter. It’s a great blow to
me,” he said. “I’m willing to take your word if ye say so;
but I can’t help thinkin’ what a sad thing it would be if ye were
lyin’ to me. I haven’t had the house watched. I only got this this
mornin’. And what’s written here may not be so. I hope it
isn’t. But we’ll not say any more about that now. If there is
anythin’ in it, and ye haven’t gone too far yet to save yourself, I
want ye to think of your mother and your sister and your brothers, and be a
good girl. Think of the church ye was raised in, and the name we’ve got
to stand up for in the world. Why, if ye were doin’ anything wrong, and
the people of Philadelphy got a hold of it, the city, big as it is,
wouldn’t be big enough to hold us. Your brothers have got a reputation to
make, their work to do here. You and your sister want to get married sometime.
How could ye expect to look the world in the face and do anythin’ at all
if ye are doin’ what this letter says ye are, and it was told about
ye?”</p>
<p>The old man’s voice was thick with a strange, sad, alien emotion. He did
not want to believe that his daughter was guilty, even though he knew she was.
He did not want to face what he considered in his vigorous, religious way to be
his duty, that of reproaching her sternly. There were some fathers who would
have turned her out, he fancied. There were others who might possibly kill
Cowperwood after a subtle investigation. That course was not for him. If
vengeance he was to have, it must be through politics and finance—he must
drive him out. But as for doing anything desperate in connection with Aileen,
he could not think of it.</p>
<p>“Oh, father,” returned Aileen, with considerable histrionic ability
in her assumption of pettishness, “how can you talk like this when you
know I’m not guilty? When I tell you so?”</p>
<p>The old Irishman saw through her make-believe with profound sadness—the
feeling that one of his dearest hopes had been shattered. He had expected so
much of her socially and matrimonially. Why, any one of a dozen remarkable
young men might have married her, and she would have had lovely children to
comfort him in his old age.</p>
<p>“Well, we’ll not talk any more about it now, daughter,” he
said, wearily. “Ye’ve been so much to me during all these years
that I can scarcely belave anythin’ wrong of ye. I don’t want to,
God knows. Ye’re a grown woman, though, now; and if ye are doin’
anythin’ wrong I don’t suppose I could do so much to stop ye. I
might turn ye out, of course, as many a father would; but I wouldn’t like
to do anythin’ like that. But if ye are doin’ anythin’
wrong”—and he put up his hand to stop a proposed protest on the
part of Aileen—“remember, I’m certain to find it out in the
long run, and Philadelphy won’t be big enough to hold me and the man
that’s done this thing to me. I’ll get him,” he said, getting
up dramatically. “I’ll get him, and when I do—” He
turned a livid face to the wall, and Aileen saw clearly that Cowperwood, in
addition to any other troubles which might beset him, had her father to deal
with. Was this why Frank had looked so sternly at her the night before?</p>
<p>“Why, your mother would die of a broken heart if she thought there was
anybody could say the least word against ye,” pursued Butler, in a shaken
voice. “This man has a family—a wife and children, Ye
oughtn’t to want to do anythin’ to hurt them. They’ll have
trouble enough, if I’m not mistaken—facin’ what’s
comin’ to them in the future,” and Butler’s jaw hardened just
a little. “Ye’re a beautiful girl. Ye’re young. Ye have
money. There’s dozens of young men’d be proud to make ye their
wife. Whatever ye may be thinkin’ or doin’, don’t throw away
your life. Don’t destroy your immortal soul. Don’t break my heart
entirely.”</p>
<p>Aileen, not ungenerous—fool of mingled affection and passion—could
now have cried. She pitied her father from her heart; but her allegiance was to
Cowperwood, her loyalty unshaken. She wanted to say something, to protest much
more; but she knew that it was useless. Her father knew that she was lying.</p>
<p>“Well, there’s no use of my saying anything more, father,”
she said, getting up. The light of day was fading in the windows. The
downstairs door closed with a light slam, indicating that one of the boys had
come in. Her proposed trip to the library was now without interest to her.
“You won’t believe me, anyhow. I tell you, though, that I’m
innocent just the same.”</p>
<p>Butler lifted his big, brown hand to command silence. She saw that this
shameful relationship, as far as her father was concerned, had been made quite
clear, and that this trying conference was now at an end. She turned and walked
shamefacedly out. He waited until he heard her steps fading into faint nothings
down the hall toward her room. Then he arose. Once more he clinched his big
fists.</p>
<p>“The scoundrel!” he said. “The scoundrel! I’ll drive
him out of Philadelphy, if it takes the last dollar I have in the world.”</p>
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