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"I've been down there and ran right upon it."
The father's affection and alarm outleapt his caution at this. "You better keep away from there, Boyee," he warned anxiously.
"If there's no epidemic, why should I keep away?"
"There's always a lot of infection down in those tenements," said Dr.
Surtaine lamely.
"Dad, when you made your report for the 'Clarion' did you tell us all you knew?"
"All except some medical technicalities," said the Doctor, who never told a lie when a half-lie would serve.
"I've just had a talk with the health officer, Dr. Merritt."
"Merritt's an alarmist."
"He's alarmed this time, certainly."
"What does he think it is?"
"It?" said Hal, a trifle maliciously. "The epidemic?"
"Epidemic's a big word. The sickness."
"How can he tell? He's had no chance to see the cases. They still mysteriously disappear before he can get to them. By the way, your Dr.
De Vito seems to have a hand in that."
"Hal, I wish you'd get over your trick of seeing a mystery in everything," said his father with a mild and tempered melancholy. "It's a queer slant to your brain."
"There's a queer slant to this business of the Rookeries somewhere, but I don't think it's in my brain. Merritt says the Mayor is holding him off, and he believes that Tip O'Farrell, agent for the Rookeries, has got the Mayor's ear. He wants to force the issue by quarantining the whole locality."
"And advertise to the world that there's some sort of contagion there!"
cried Dr. Surtaine in dismay.
"Well, if there is--"
"Think of Old Home Week," adjured his father.
"The whole thing would be stamped out long before then."
"But not the panic and the fear of it. Hal, I do hope you aren't going to take this up in the 'Clarion.'"
"Not at present. There isn't enough to go on. But we're going to watch, and if things get any worse I intend to do something. So much I've promised Merritt."
The result of this conversation was that Dr. Surtaine called a special meeting of the Committee on Arrangements for Old Home Week. In conformity with the laws of its genus, the committee was made up of the representative business men of the city, with a clergyman or two for compliment to the Church, and most of the newspaper owners or editors, to enlist the "services of the press."
Its chairman was thoroughly typical of the mental and ethical att.i.tude of the committee. He felt comfortably a.s.sured that as he thought upon any question of local public import, so would they think. Nevertheless, he didn't intend to tell them all he knew. Such was not the purpose of the meeting. Its real purpose, not to put too fine a point on it, was to intimidate the newspapers, lest, if the "Clarion" broke the politic silence, others might follow; and, as a secondary step, to furnish funds for the handling of the Rookeries situation. Since Dr. Surtaine designed to reveal as little as possible to his colleagues, he naturally began his speech with the statement that he would be perfectly frank with them.
"There's more sickness than there ought to be in the Rookeries district," he proceeded. "It isn't dangerous, but it may prove obstinate. Some sort of malarious affection, apparently. Perhaps it may be necessary to do some cleaning up down there. In that case, money may be needed."
"How much?" somebody asked.
"Five thousand dollars ought to do it."
"That's a considerable sum," another pointed out.
"And this is a serious matter," retorted the chairman. "Many of us remember the disastrous effect that rumors of smallpox had on Old Home Week, some years back. We can't afford to have anything of that sort this time. An epidemic scare might ruin the whole show."
Now, an epidemic to these hard-headed business men was something that kept people away from their stores. And the rumor of an epidemic might accomplish that as thoroughly as the epidemic itself. Therefore, without questioning too far, they were quite willing to spend money to avert such disaster. The sum suggested was voted into the hands of a committee of three to be appointed by the chair.
"In the mean time," continued Dr. Surtaine, "I think we should go on record to the effect that any newspaper which shall publish or any individual who shall circulate any report calculated to inspire distrust or alarm is hostile to the best interests of the city."
"Well, what newspaper is likely to do that?" demanded Leroy Vane, of the "Banner."
"If it's any it'll be the 'Clarion,'" growled Colonel Parker, editor of the "Telegram."
"The newspaper business in this town is going to the dogs since the 'Clarion' changed hands," said Carney Ford, of the "Press," savagely.
"n.o.body can tell what they're going to do next over there. They're keeping the decent papers on the jump all the time, with their yellowness and scarehead muckraking."
"A big sensational story about an epidemic would be great meat for the 'Clarion,'" said Vane. "What does it care for the best interests of the town?"
"As an editor," observed Dr. Surtaine blandly, "my son don't appear to be over-popular with his confreres."
"Why should he be?" cried Parker. "He's forever publishing stuff that we've always let alone. Then the public wants to know why we don't get the news. Get it? Of course we get it. But we don't always want to print it. There's such a thing as a gentleman's understanding in the newspaper business."
"So I've heard," replied the chairman. "Well, gentlemen, the boy's young. Give him time."
"I'll give him six months, not longer, to go on the way he's been going," said John M. Gibbs, with a vicious snap of his teeth.
"Does the 'Clarion' really intend to publish anything about an epidemic?" asked Stickler, of the Hotel Stickler.
"Nothing is decided yet, so far as I know. But I may safely say that there's a probability of their getting up some kind of a sensational story."
"Can't you control your own son?" asked some one bluntly.
"Understand this, if you please, gentlemen. Over the Worthington 'Clarion' I have no control whatsoever."
"Well, there's where the danger lies," said Vane. "If the 'Clarion'
comes out with a big story, the rest of us have got to publish something to save our face."
"What's to be done, then?" cried Stickler. "This means a big loss to the hotel business."
"To all of us," amended the chairman. "My suggestion is that our special committee be empowered to wait upon the editor of the 'Clarion' and talk the matter over with him."
Embodied in the form of a motion this was pa.s.sed, and the chair appointed as that committee three merchants, all of whom were members of the Publication Committee of the Retail Union; and, as such, exercised the most powerful advertising control in Worthington. Dr. Surtaine still pinned his hopes to the dollar and its editorial potency.
Unofficially and privately these men invited to go with them to the "Clarion" office Elias M. Pierce, who had not been at the meeting. At first he angrily refused. He wished to meet that young whelp Surtaine nowhere but in a court of law, he announced. But after Bertram Hollenbeck, of the Emporium, the chairman of the subcommittee, had outlined his plan, Pierce took a night to think it over, and in the morning accepted the invitation with a grim smile.