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The St.u.r.dy Oak.
by Samuel Merwin, et al.
PREFACE
At a certain committee meeting held in the spring of 1916, it was agreed that fourteen leading American authors, known to be extremely generous as well as gifted, should be asked to write a composite novel.
As I was not present at this particular meeting, it was unanimously and joyously decided by those who were present that I should attend to the trivial details of getting this novel together.
It appeared that all I had to do was:
First, to persuade each of the busy authors on the list to write a chapter of the novel.
Second, to keep steadily on their trails from the moment they promised their chapters until they turned them in.
Third, to have the novel finished and published serially during the autumn Campaign of 1917.
The carrying out of these requirements has not been the childish diversion it may have seemed. Splendid team work, however, has made success possible.
Every author represented, every worker on the team, has gratuitously contributed his or her services; and every dollar realized by the serial and book publication of "The St.u.r.dy Oak" will be devoted to the Suffrage Cause. But the novel itself is first of all a very human story of American life today. It neither unduly nor unfairly emphasizes the question of equal suffrage, and it should appeal to all lovers of good fiction.
Therefore, pausing only to wipe the beads of perspiration from our brows, we urge every one to buy this book!
ELIZABETH JORDAN.
NEW YORK.
_November_, 1917. CONTENTS
THE St.u.r.dY OAK
CHAPTER I. BY SAMUEL MERWIN
Genevieve Remington had been called beautiful. She was tall, with brown eyes and a fine spun ma.s.s of golden-brown hair. She had a gentle smile, that disclosed white, even teeth. Her voice was not unmusical. She was twenty-three years old and possessed a husband who, though only twenty-six, had already shown such strength of character and such apt.i.tude at the criminal branch of the law that he was now a candidate for the post of district attorney on the regular Republican ticket.
The popular impression was that he would be elected hands down. His address on Alexander Hamilton at the Union League Club banquet at Hamilton City, twenty-five miles from Whitewater (with which smaller city we are concerned in this narrative), had been reprinted in full in the Hamilton City _Tribune_; and Mrs. Brewster-Smith reported that former Congressman Hanc.o.c.k had compared it, not unfavorably, with certain public utterances of the Honorable Elihu Root.
George Remington was an inch more than six feet tall, with st.u.r.dy shoulders, a chin that gave every indication of stubborn strength, a frank smile, and a warm, strong handclasp. He was connected by blood (as well as by marriage) with five of the eight best families in Whitewater.
Mr. Martin Jaffry, George's uncle and sole inheritor of the great Jaffry estate (and a bachelor), was known to favor his candidacy; was supposed, indeed, to be a large contributor to the Remington campaign fund. In fact, George Remington was a lucky young man, a coming young man.
George and Genevieve had been married five weeks; this was their first day as master and mistress of the old Remington place on Sheridan Road.
Genevieve, that afternoon, was in the long living-room, trying out various arrangements of the flowers that had been sent in. There were a great many flowers. Most of them came from admirers of George. The Young Men's Republican Club, for one item, had sent eight dozen roses.
But Genevieve, still a-thrill with the magic of her five-weeks-long honeymoon, tremulously happy in the c.u.mulative proof that her husband was the n.o.blest, strongest, bravest man alive, felt only joy in his popularity.
As his wife she shared his triumphs. "For better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and health..." the ancient phrases repeated themselves so many times in her softly confused thought, as she moved about among the flowers, that they finally took on a rhythm--
_"For better or worse, For richer or poorer, For richer or poorer, For better or worse--"_
On this day her life was beginning. She had given herself irrevocably into the hands of this man. She would live only in him. Her life would find expression only through his. His strong, trained mind would be her guide, his st.u.r.dy courage her strength. He would build for them both, for the twain that were one.
She caught up one red rose, winked the moisture from her eyes, and gazed--rapt, lips parted, color high--out at the close-clipped lawn behind the privet hedge. The afternoon would soon be waning--in another hour or so. She must not disturb him now.
In an hour, say, she would run up the stairs and tap at his door. And he would come out, clasp her in his big arms, and she would stand on the tips of her toes and kiss away the wrinkles between his brows, and they would walk on the lawn and talk about themselves and the miracle of their love.
The clock on the mantel struck three. She pouted; turned and stared at it. "Well," she told herself, "I'll wait until half-past four."
The doorbell rang.
Genevieve's color faded. The slim hand that held the rose trembled a very little. Her first caller! She decided that it would be best not to talk about George. Not one word about George! Her feelings were her secret--and his.
Marie ushered in two ladies. One, who rushed forward with outstretched hand, was a curiously vital-appearing creature in black--plainly a widow--hardly more than thirty-two or thirty-three, fresh of skin, rather prominent as to eyeb.a.l.l.s, yet, everything considered, a handsome woman. This was Alys Brewster-Smith. The other, shorter, slighter, several years older, a faded, smiling, tremulously hopeful spinster, was Genevieve's own cousin, Emelene Brand.
"It's so nice of you to come--" Genevieve began timidly, only to be swept aside by the superior aggressiveness and the stronger voice of Mrs. Brewster-Smith.
"My _dear_! Isn't it perfectly delightful to see you actually mistress of this wonderful old home. And"--her slightly prominent eyes swiftly took in furniture, pictures, rugs, flowers,--"how wonderfully you have managed to give the old place your own tone!" "Nothing has been changed," murmured Genevieve, a thought bewildered.
"Nothing, my dear, but yourself! I am _so_ looking forward to a good talk with you. Emelene and I were speaking of that only this noon. And I can't tell you how sorry I am that our first call has to be on a miserable political matter. Tell me, dear, is that wonderful husband of yours at home?"
"Why--yes. But I am not to disturb him."
"Ah, shut away in his den?"
Genevieve nodded.
"It's a very important paper he has to write. It has to be done now, before he is drawn into the whirl of campaign work."
"Of course! Of course! But I'm afraid the campaign is whirling already.
I will tell you what brought us, my dear. You know of course that Mrs. Harvey Herrington has come out for suffrage--thrown in her whole personal weight and, no doubt, her money. I can't understand it--with her home, and her husband--going into the mire of politics. But that is what she has done. And Grace Hatfield called up not ten minutes ago to say that she has just led a delegation of ladies up to your husband's office. Think of it--to his office! The first day!... Well, Emelene, it is some consolation that they won't find him there."
"He isn't going to the office today," said Genevieve. "But what can they want of him?"
"To get him to declare for suffrage, my dear."
"Oh--I'm sure he wouldn't do that!"
"Are you, my dear? Are you _sure_?"
"Well----"