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"What do you two lovers purpose doing?"
I unfolded my scheme of living with Hildreth in a Jersey bungalow ...
Derek's income to me would go on a while yet ... I could sell stories and poems to the New York magazines ... Hildreth could write a book as well as I ... we would become to the modern world an example of the radical love-life ... the G.o.dwin and Wollstonecraft of the age.
We ate supper together, the three of us, in the flat. It was so cosy.
Darrie and Hildreth joined in cleaning the house that afternoon.
But a bomb was to be hurled among us.
At twelve o'clock of the next day the 'phone rang.
Darrie answered it. After a few words she came for me, her face as white as a sheet....
"My G.o.d, Penton is in town!"
"--this is only Thursday ... he was not coming till Sat.u.r.day!" I exclaimed, full of forboding.
"I knew, I knew he wouldn't keep his original mind!" exclaimed Hildreth.
"He's holding the wire ... wants to say something to you, Johnnie."
"Yes, Penton, what is it?"
"Only this," his voice replied, as if rehearsing a set speech, "yesterday afternoon I sent a telegram to my lawyer to inst.i.tute proceedings for a divorce, and I mentioned you as co-respondent...."
"d.a.m.n you to h.e.l.l ... I thought we were going to settle this in the radical way?"
"It's the only way out that I can see. I've stood this business till it's almost killing me."
"Well, is that all?"
"No ... somehow--how, I do not know, the _New York Journal_ has gotten hold of my wire ... it will be in all the papers to-night or to-morrow ... so I advise you and Hildreth to disappear quietly somewhere, if you don't want to see the reporters,--who will all presently be on the way to the flat."
"d.a.m.n you, Penton ... needn't tell _me_ about the news leaking out ...
you've done it yourself ... now I want you to promise me only one thing, that you'll hold the reporters off for a couple of hours, till we have a good start."
"I'll do my best," answered he, "but please believe me. How they got the contents of the telegram I do not know, but on my honour I did not give it out nor did I tell the reporters where you are."
Hildreth was so angry she could hardly speak.
"This is a fine to-do," exclaimed Darrie, "Penton distinctly promised me--"
"I'd like to get a good crack at him!" I boasted, at the same time enjoying the excitement.
Hildreth began packing her clothes in a large suitcase ... as we later found she cast all her clean clothes aside, and in her excitement included all her soiled linen and lingerie....
We had our last meal together. I brought in a large bottle of white wine. All of us grew rather hilarious and made a merry joke of the adventure. We poked fun at Penton.
We sallied forth at the front door, Darrie to go to the Martha Was.h.i.+ngton. "I don't want to be mixed up in the coming uproar and scandal," she exclaimed ... "so far, I'm clear of all blame, and I know only too well what the papers would insinuate."
Hildreth and I took train for New Jersey ... two tickets for--anywhere ... in our excited condition we ran off first to Elizabeth. We had with us exactly one hundred dollars, which I had borrowed of Darrie before we parted on our several ways.
I registered for Hildreth and myself as "Mr. Arthur Mallory and wife,"
in the register of an obscure hotel hear the noise and clatter of a hundred trains drawing continually out and in.
It made me happy and important to sign her name on the register as something belonging to me.
Once alone in the room, Hildreth, to my consternation, could talk of nothing else but Penton.
"--to think that he would do such a thing to me, only to think of it!"
she cried vehemently, again and again.
"If he believes in freedom for men and women, why was all this necessary? the sordidness of the public clamour? the divorce court?...
oh, my poor, dear, sweet, wild poet-boy, you're in for it! Don't you wish you were well out of all this and back in Kansas again?"
"No; I am glad. As long as I am with you I don't care what happens. I love you, Hildreth!"
In the night she woke, screaming, from a nightmare. I could hardly stop her.
"Hush, dearest ... darling ... sweetheart ... I am with you; everything is all right" ... then, as she kept it up, "for G.o.d's sake ... Hildreth, do be quiet ... you're all right ... the man you love is here, close by you ... no harm shall come to you."
"Oh, Johnnie," clutching me, quivering, "I've just had such a horrible dream," sobbing as I took her tenderly in my arms....
"There, there, darling!"
She was quiet now.
"In a few minutes we would have had the whole hotel breaking in at the door ... thinking I was killing you."
She woke up again, and woke me up.
"Johnnie, find me some ink and a pen. I'm going to write that cad a letter that will shrivel him up like acid."
"Can't you wait till morning, Hildreth?" sleepily.
"No ... I _must_ write it now."