He held her wrist and drew her into the hall. Other women were waiting to get into the room. Well-dressed, watching men went and came.
“You come with me,” said the Inger.
“But – ” she tried to say.
“You come along with me,” he repeated. And as her troubled look questioned him:
“I’ve got two tickets to Washington,” he said. “You don’t want no job here if you get one.”
“You hadn’t ought – ” she began, breathlessly.
“I know it,” he told her. “What I’d ought to ’a’ done was to get two tickets to Whiteface and the hut. Hadn’t I?”
The baby, deserted, began to cry weakly. Lory turned back to her, stooped over her, comforted her. As he stood there, leaning in the doorway, once more there came to the Inger that curiously sharp sense of the morning on the prairie.
For a flash as he looked at those empty faces and worn figures, he knew – positively and as at first hand – what it was to be, not Lory alone now, but all the rest. Abruptly, with some great wrench of the understanding, it was almost as if momentarily he were those other wretched creatures. When Lory had brought her pack and joined him, he stood for a moment, still staring into that room.
“My God,” he said. “I wish I could do something for ’em!”
He struggled with this.
“‘Seems as if it’d help if I’d canter in and shoot every one of ’em dead,” he said.
They went out on the street again, intent on finding a place to lunch. There were two hours until the Washington train left. The Inger refusing utterly to ask anybody anything, they walked until they came to a place which, by hot flapjacks in the making in the great window, the Inger loudly recognized to be his own.
Seated at a little white oil-cloth covered table beneath which the Inger insisted on stowing the packs, the two relaxed in that moment of rest and well-being.
The Inger, seeing her there across from him, spoke out in a kind of wonder.
“It seems like I can’t remember the time when you wasn’t along,” he said.
She laughed – and it was pathetic to see how an interval of comfort and quiet warmed her back to security and girlishness. But not to the remotest coquetry. Of that, since the morning on the desert, he had had in her no glimpse. By this he knew dimly all that he had forfeited. He made wistful attempts to call forth even a shadow of her old way.
“A week ago,” he said, “I hardly knew you.”
She assented gravely, and found no more to say about it.
“A week ago,” he said, “I was fishing, and didn’t bring home nothin’ but a turtle.” He smiled at a recollection. “I was scrapin’ him out,” he said, “when I heard your weddin’ bell. How’d you ever come to have a weddin’ bell?” he wondered.
“It was Bunchy’s doing,” she said, listlessly. “He sent the priest a case o’ somethin’, to have it rung. I hated it.”
“Well,” said the Inger, “it was Bunchy’s own rope, then, that hung him. I shouldn’t have come down if I hadn’t heard the bell – ” he paused perplexed. “You didn’t know I was down there, though?” he said.
“No, I thought you’d be up on the mountain when I went up. I didn’t think you’d be in town. You hardly ever,” she added, “did come down.”
He did not miss this: she had noticed, then, that he hardly ever came down.
“When I did come,” he said, “I always saw you with Bunchy. Only that once.”
“Only that once,” she assented, and did not meet his eyes. “Oh!” she cried, “I’ll be glad when we get to Washington and I’m off your hands! That’s why I wanted a job here – to be off your hands!”
On this the Inger was stabbed through with his certainty. It was true, then. She was longing to be free of him – and no wonder! To hide his hurt and his chagrin he turned to the waiter, who was arriving with flapjacks, and lifted candidly inquiring eyes.
“See anything the matter with my hands?” he drawled.
“No, sir,” said the man, in surprise.
“Well, neither do I,” said the Inger. “What is the matter with ’em?” he demanded of Lory, as the man departed.
“Why, if it wasn’t for me on ’em,” said Lory, “you’d be starting for war.”
War! The Inger heard the word in astonishment. That was so, he had been going to the war. He had been bent on going to the war, and had so announced his intention. In that day on the mountain, those days on the train, these hours in the city, he had never once thought of war. He flooded his flapjacks with syrup, and said nothing.
“Washington ain’t much out of your way,” she added. “You can get started by day after to-morrow anyway.”
Still he was silent. Then, feeling that something was required of him, he observed nonchalantly:
“Well, we don’t have to talk about it now, as I know of.”
In this, however, he reckoned without his host of the restaurant. As the Inger paid the bill, there was thrust in his hands a white poster, printed in great letters:
The Inger read it through twice.
“What crisis?” he asked.
The restaurant keeper – a man with meeting eyebrows, who looked as if he had just sipped something acid – stopped counting change in piles, and stared at him.
“Where you from?” he asked, and saw the packs, and added “Boat, eh? Ain’t you heard about the vessel?”
The Inger shook his head.
“Well, man,” said the restaurant keeper with enjoyment, “another nice big U. S. merchantman is blowed into flinders a couple o’ days ago, a-sailin’ neutral seas. Nobody much killed, I guess – but leave ’em wait and see what we give ’em!”
“Does it mean war?” asked the Inger, eagerly.
“That’s for the meetin’ to say,” said the man, and winked, and, still winking, reached for somebody’s pink check.
The Inger turned to Lory with eyes alight.
“Let’s get a train in the night,” he said. “Let’s stay here for this meeting.”
In the circumstances, there was nothing that she could well say against this. She nodded. The Inger consulted his timetable, found a train toward morning, and the thing was done. He left the place like a boy.
“Let’s see some of this Mouth o’ the Pit this afternoon,” he said, “being we’re here. And then we’ll head for that war meeting. It’s grand we got here for it,” he added.
Lory looked up at him in a kind of fear. On the mountain that night she had not once really feared him. But here, she now understood, was a man with whom, in their days together, she had after all never yet come face to face.
They sat where they could see the great audience gather. The people came by thousands. They poured in the aisles, advanced, separated, sifted into the rows of seats, climbed to the boxes, the galleries, ranged along those sloping floors like puppets. The stage filled. There were men and women, young, old, clothed in a mass of black shot through with color. Here were more people than ever in their lives Lory or the Inger had seen. The stage alone was a vast audience hall.
The people talked. A dull roar came from them, fed by voices, by shuffling feet, by the moving of garments and papers and bodies. They all moved. No one was still. The human mass, spread so thinly in the hollow shell of the hall, moved like maggots.
The Inger leaned forward, watching. His eyes were lit and his breath quickened. His huge frame obscured the outlook of a little white-faced youth who sat beside him, continually stroking and twisting at a high and small moustache.
“Sit back, sir, can’t you?” this exasperated youth finally demanded.
The Inger, his hand spread massively as he leaned on his leg, tossed him a glance, over shoulder, and with lifted brows.
“Why, you little lizard,” he observed, only, and did not change his posture.
A group of men and women in evening clothes sat beside Lory, who frankly stared at them. One of the women, elderly, pallidly powdered, delicately worn down by long, scrupulous care of her person, sat with one blue and boned hand in evidence, heavily clad with rings.
“Look at the white bird’s claw,” the Inger said suddenly. “I’d like to snap it off its bloomin’ stem.”
And as the people ceased to come in, and now were merely sitting there, breathing, and incredibly alive, he suddenly spoke aloud:
“If hundreds of ’em fell dead and was dragged out,” he said, “we’d never know the difference, would we?”
Lory’s look was the speculative look which always embarrassed him.
“If two of ’em was us, we would,” she said.
The Inger laughed boisterously.
“You bet, – then!” he agreed. “Lord, ain’t it grand that the rest of ’em could go, for all we care!”
She pondered it.
“What if they was a big fire,” she said, “like the Hess House?”
The Hess House, an unsavory place of Inch, had burned the year before, and with it five nameless women.
“Oh gosh,” said the Inger, “you could hand ’em out like fish off the coals, and save ’em, alive and kicking, and cord ’em up somewheres, and rip back for more.”
“Why?” asked Lory. “Why would you do that – if it didn’t make any difference?”
“Because you’d be a dub if you didn’t,” he replied simply.
He was silent for a minute, played at picking her up in his arms, holding her, hewing through the crowd, trampling them out of the way, and as he went, kissing her when he pleased. To him the hall dimmed and went out… Then he heard the chairman speaking.
The chairman was a man of thick body and bent head, with watching eyes, and a mouth that shut as a fist shuts. His voice went over the hall like a horn.
The meeting had been called because something must be done – something must be done. The war had dragged on until the world was sucked. Men, women, children, money, arms, cities, nations, were heaped on the wreck. The wreck was the world. Something must be done – something must be done. In all the earth stood only one great nation, untouched of carnage, fat, peopled – and peopled with sons of the warring world. This meeting had been called because something must be done. There were those who had come to tell what to do.
To those who comprehended, the weight of the moment lay in the chaos of applause which took the house. The air of the place, languid, silent, casual, for all that one observed, abruptly solidified and snapped, and flew asunder. In its place leaped something electric, which played from the people to the speaker who came first to his place, and from him back to the people.
This man began to speak slowly. He was slow-moving, slow of eyelid and of glance, and his words came half sleepily. It was so that he told them about themselves: Children of those who had come to America for escape, for retreat, for a place of self-expression. Who had sought liberty, free schools, manhood suffrage, womanhood suffrage, religious freedom, and had found some of these and were seeking more. Picture by picture he showed them a country which, save for its enduring era of industrial babyhood, and its political and judicial error, gave them richly of what they had sought, developed them, fed them, comforted them. A place of plenty, a happy paradise, a walled world, he pictured theirs.
In the same sleepy, casual fashion, he went on: Why should they set about all this talk of “something must be done”? This was none of our quarrel. Perfectly, by this time, we recognized its causes as capitalistic issues. If they chose to murder one another, should we add terror unto terror by slaying more, and ourselves? Why ourselves and our sons? Why not stay soft in the nest we had made, while men of the soil which had nourished our fathers called to us vainly, the death rattle in their throats? Sigh delicately for this rattle of death in millions of throats and fill our own with the fat of the land whose prosperity must not be imperilled. Read of a people decimated, and answer by filing a protest. Pray for peace incessantly, beside our comfortable beds. Read of atrocities and shudder in our warm libraries. Hear of dead men who fought and dead men who rotted, and talk it over on our safe, sunlit streets. Meet insult on the high seas, and merely hold mass meetings. And speculate, speculate, speculate, at our laden dinner tables, on the probable outcome.
“The part of men is being played by us all,” the slow voice went on, “of men and of descendants of men of Europe. It was so that they acted in ’76 – the men of Europe, was it not? And we are the sons of those who, before ’76, made Europe as they made America – and us. The destruction of one of our vessels – what is that to us? Let’s turn the other cheek. And let’s meet here often, friends, what do you say? Here it is warm and light – you come from good dinners – you come in good clothes – in automobiles. Let us meet to-morrow and to-morrow and to-morrow! Let us have music – Where is the music to-night? ‘Tipperary’ – ‘Marseillaise’ – ‘Wacht Am Rhein’ – ‘God Save the King’ – why are we not being stirred by these to sign a protest, to take a collection which shall keep them fighting on? ‘Something must be done!’ So we meet – and meet – and meet again. And we play a part that in the history of the next century will make the very schoolboys say: ‘Thank God, America locked her door and kept her safety and let them die!’ Next week – let us meet here again next week, pleasantly and together. ‘Something must be done!’ In the name of all the bleeding nations, let us keep on meeting, in this large and lighted hall.”
Before the silence in which he turned away had been rent by the applause that followed on the surprise of it, another man sprang from his seat on the stage and strode to the front. In a gesture curiously awkward and involuntary, he signed them to let him speak, and his voice burst out before they could hear him.
“… he is right – he is right – and I burn in flesh and soul and blood and bone of these peoples of Europe who made me. Their flesh cries to my flesh and it answers with a tongue that has been dumb too long. Men of America! Men who have lately been sons of the warring nations and have crept off here just in time – by a decade or by a century – to stand with whole skins and unbroken bones – let’s have done with it! Do we face our insults as men – or do we stand silent and bid for more? And are we another kind of creature? Do we understand what those men suffer? Are their cries of agony to us in another tongue? Have blood and misery and madness a language of their own, and are we deaf to it – or do we know with every fibre in us what it is they are going through, what it is they ask of us, what it is that if we are men we must give them – and give them now! For now their provocation is our provocation. I ask you what it shall be – the safe way of intervention? Or the hands of human beings, to succor the naked hands of the desperate and the dying of our own kin – our own kin! And to revenge our wrong!”
In an instant the hall was shattered by a thousand cries. Men leaped to their feet. Some sat still. Some wept. But the cries which came from no one knew whom of them, rose and roared distinguishably!
“To war … war … war!”
The Inger had risen and stood stooping forward, his hands on the rail, his eyes sweeping the crowd. His look seemed to lick up something that it had long wanted, and to burn it in his face. He was smiling with his teeth slightly showing.
“Ah-h-h,” he said within his breath, and said it again, and stood rocking a little and breathing hard.
The demonstration lasted on as if a pent presence had lapped them to itself and possessed them. A man, and another tried to speak, but no one listened. A few in the front rows left the hall, and, ominous, and barely audible, a hissing began in the galleries and ran down the great bank of heads, and scourged the few as they gained the door.
What at last silenced them was the dignity and status of a man who took the stage. He made no effort to speak. He merely waited. Presently they were quiet, though not all reseated themselves.
He was a man of more than middle years, with a face worn and tortured – but it was as if the torture had been long ago.
“My neighbors,” he said, “will some one tell me why you want to kill your neighbors across the water?”
“To vindicate our honor! To help our neighbors and our kin!” shouted the lean man who had spoken last.
The older man regarded him quietly:
“You want to kill your neighbors,” he repeated. “You want to go over there with arms and be at war. You want to kill your neighbors. I am asking you why?”
From the upper gallery came a cry that was like a signal. Up there a hundred throats took up a national hymn. Instantly from the balconies below, from pit, from stage, a thousand were on their feet and a thousand throats took up the air. Not an instant later, something cut the current of the tune, wavered, broke, swelled – and another nation’s hymn, by another thousand, rose and bore upon the first, and the two shook the place with discord. A third nation’s air – a fourth – the hall was a warfare of jarring voices – and out of the horror of sound came the old exquisite phrases, struggling for dominance: “God Save the Queen” – ”Watch on the Rhine,” “The Marseillaise,” “The Italian Hymn,” and rollicking over all, the sickening wistfulness and hopelessness and sweetness of “Tipperary.”
The Inger raised his great form and stretched up his arms and shook them above his head, and swung out his right arm as if it flung a rope.
“Yi – eih – ai – la – o-o-o-oh – !” he shouted, like the cry of all the galloping cow-punchers of the West, galloping, and galloping, to a thing on which, with sovereign intensity, they were bent. He silenced those about him, and they looked and laughed, and gave themselves back to their shouting. The woman with the blue-boned hand looked over to Lory, and smiled with a liquid brightness in her eyes, and her pink spangled fan tapped her hand in tune with the nearest of the songs about her. This woman looked like a woman of the revolution, who believed that good has always come out of war, and that from war good will always come. She smiled. Tears rolled on her face. She sank back weakly, but she waved her pink spangled fan.
As his hand came down, Lory caught at the Inger’s sleeve.
“Can’t we go?” she begged. “Can’t we?”
He pulled his sleeve from her hand, hardly knowing that it was there, and kept at his shouting.
The only man to whom they would listen was, at last, the man who had so roused them. When, after a hurried conference with the chairman, and others, this man rose again, they listened – in the vague expectation that something would now be said which would excite them further.
“Don’t be senseless fools!” he shouted. “This is no better than a neat, printed protest. ‘Something must be done!’ Say what it is that you are going to do, or you may as well go home.”
He turned pointedly toward a dark-bearded man who was evidently expected to follow him. This man rose and shook out a paper. He shouted shrilly and wagged his head in his effort to make himself heard, and his long hair swung at the sides.
“At this moment,” he rehearsed, “eighteen meetings such as this are being held in eighteen towns – New York, Baltimore, New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Salt Lake, Denver, Omaha, Portland, Spokane, St. Louis, Cleveland, Minneapolis, Milwaukee – these and the others are holding meetings like this. You know how each meeting is to take action and transmit that action to-night to each of the other meeting places. I ask you: what is it that this meeting is going to do? And Mr. Chairman, I make you a motion.”
The hall was so silent that it seemed drained of breathing: so electric with listening that it seemed drained of thought.
“Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen, ay, and Ladies, for I deem you fully worthy to have a share in these deliberations,” said he, with a magnificent bow. “I move you, that, Whereas our government in its wisdom has seen fit to withhold itself from the great drama of the world’s business for a length of time not to be tolerated by a great mass of its citizens: and, Whereas, since the destruction of the steamship Fowler, a merchant vessel, belonging to the United States and sailing neutral waters, three days have elapsed without action on the part of the government thus outraged past all precedent in conduct toward neutral nations – save only one nation! – That now, therefore, we here assembled, citizens of the United States, do voice our protest and demand of our government that if within the week no adequate explanation or apology shall be forthcoming from the offending power, we do proceed without further delay to declare war against that power.
“And I further move you that it be the sense of this meeting that we hereby petition for immediate mobilization of our army.
“And I further move you that, on the carrying of this motion, a copy of it be telegraphed to the President of the United States, and to the Chairmen of the eighteen similar meetings held in the United States this night, in the common name of liberty and humanity.”
The hall became a medley of sound with but one meaning. Men leaped to the seats, to the rails of balconies, shouting. The thing they had wanted to have said had been said. The fire that had been smouldering since early in the war, that had occasionally blazed in public meetings, in the press, in private denunciation, had at last eaten through the long silence to burn now with a devouring flame, and the people gave it fuel.
A dozen men and women there were who fought their way forward, and stood on the platform, appealing for silence. One by one these tried to speak. To each the hall listened until it had determined the temper of the speaker: then, if it was, as it was from several, a passionate denunciation of the policy, groans and hisses drowned the speaker’s voice. And if it was a ringing cry of “Patriots of the world, show your patriotism in the cause of the stricken world and of this offended nation!” – the fury of applauding hands and stamping feet silenced speech no less.
“Question! Question! Question!” they called – not here and there and otherwhere, but in a great wave of hoarse shouting, like a pulse.
The Chairman rose to put the motion, and as silence fell for him to speak, a youth of twenty, lithe, dark, with a face of the fineness of some race more like to all peoples than peoples now are like to one another, hurled himself before him, and shouted into the quiet:
“Comrades! Comrades! In the name of God – of the hope of the International…”
A yell went up from the hall. A dozen hands drew the youth away. He waved his arms toward the hall. From above and below, came voices – some of men, some of women, hoarse or clear or passionate:
“Comrades! Comrades!..”
But in that moment’s breath of another meaning, the speaker who first had fired them stood beside the chairman, and held up a telegram. They let him read:
“Resolution almost unanimously passed by Metropolitan mass meeting and by two overflow meetings…”
If there was more to the telegram, no one but the reader knew. The clamor was like a stretching of hands across the miles to New York, to clasp those other hands in their brother-lust. The youth of twenty flung himself free of those who had held him, and dropped to the floor, and sat hugging his knees and staring out over the hall as if death sat there, infinitely repeated, and naked.
The Chairman lifted his hand. “You have heard the motion. Does any one desire to hear it re-read?”
Again that amazing, pulsing, unanimity of the cry:
“Question! Question! Question!”
“All those in favor – ” the Chairman’s bent head was raised so that he peered at them from under his lids – “will make it manifest by saying ‘ay.’”
Out of the depth of their experience and practice at meetings for charity, for philanthropy, for church, for state, for home, they voted, so that it was like One Great Thing with a voice of its own.
“Ay!”
In this “ay” the Inger’s voice boomed out so that some remembered and wondered, and even in that moment, a few turned to see him.
“Those opposed will make it manifest by saying ‘no.’”
The boy sprang to his feet, and with the clear call of a few hundred no’s, his own voice rang out in agony:
“Oh my God,” he said, “No! No! No!”
There must have been a thousand who laughed at him and called him a name. But the others were gone wild again. And with them the Inger was shouting his wildest, so that for a moment he did not hear Lory. Then he realized that she was standing beside him crying with the few hundred their ‘No!’”
He took her by the shoulder and shook her roughly.
“What do you want to do that for?” he said. “Are you a white feather?”
It smote him with dull surprise that she was so calm.
She answered him as she might have spoken on the mountain trail:
“If that means that I ain’t like them,” she said, “then I am a white feather, I guess.”
“But look here,” he burst out, “you’re no mollycoddle. You’re the West! You know how things go – ”
She broke in then, with her face turned toward the hall again.
“Yes,” she said. “I know how things go. They’re voting to kill folks – Oh my God!”
The Inger blazed up in a flame.
“It ain’t any such thing!” he burst out. “They don’t care a hang about killing folks – not for the fun o’ killing!”
He hurled his new fact at her, passionately anxious that she should understand.
“Don’t you see?” he cried. “It’s for somethin’ – it’s for somethin’! That’s all the difference. It’s grand! It’s – it’s grand – ” He shook with his effort to make her know.
“It’s killing ’em just as dead!” she said, and she wept.
Here the Inger received an unexpected ally. The woman with the blue-boned hand beside Lory leaned forward, and touched the girl’s arm with her pink, spangled fan:
“My child,” she said, “try to understand: killing is so small a part of it all!”
Lory faced her, and her eyes blazed into the faded eyes of her.
“Did you ever see your father kill a sheriff?” she asked. “Well, mine did – and I watched him. And I tell you, no matter how murderin’ is done, it’s hell. If you don’t know that, take it from me!”
About them, the crowd, waiting for no adjournment, was rising, streaming out, falling back as it got to the doors. The Inger, marshalling Lory before him, made his way with the rest. He looked across Lory’s head and above most of the others. He was noticing the people.
There was a fine stalwart lad, he thought – good for the army, and looking ready to shoulder his gun. That chap with the shoulders – what a seat he’d have in the cavalry – or on a broncho, for the matter of that. That fellow there was too old, but he was in excited talk with some one, and both were as eager as boys. Some were still shouting to one another, flushed with immediate purpose. Others were quiet and moved out soberly, as when the lights come back after the great climax. But every one was thrilled and fired by a powerful emotion, and it lived in their faces. The Inger read it there, because he felt it in his own. He warmed to them all.
A man about town, fashionably dressed, and in absorbed talk, came down on the Inger’s foot with shocking vigor.
“I’m so sorry!” he exclaimed in a hurrying falsetto, pitching down three notes of the scale.
“Don’t you give a damn,” said the Inger unexpectedly.
At the door, in the bewilderment of lights and carriage calls and traffic, the Inger stood in complete uncertainty.
“Can you tell me – ” “Say, could you tell me – ” “Say, which way – ” he addressed one or two, but in the inner turmoil of them and in the clamor without, they did not heed him.
The Inger faced the next man, a fat being, with two nieces – one knew that they were nieces; and demanded of him to be told the way to his station.
“Lord bless me,” said the man. “Get on any car going that way!”
“Thank you to hell,” said the Inger heartily. “Hope we’re on the same side,” he warmed to it. “Hope we’re in the same regiment!” he mounted with it.
As the two swung out on the sidewalk, he was silent with the vague mulling of this.
“Could we walk?” Lory suggested. “Is there time?”
He welcomed it. They went up Wabash Avenue with the slow-moving crowd.
It had been raining, and the asphalt between the rails, and the rails themselves, were wet and shining. The black cobblestones were covered thinly with glossy mud. Even the sidewalks palely mirrored the amazing flame of the lights.
It was another Chicago from the city which they had entered with the dawn. Here was a gracious place of warm-looking ways, and a time of leisure, and the people meant other than the people of the morning. The Inger moved among them, swam with them, looked on them all with something new stirring him.
Lory went silently. She had slipped her handkerchief cap away, and her hair was bright and uncovered in the lamplight. But she seemed not to be looking anywhere.
“You did get on to it there to-night, didn’t you?” he asked, wistfully.
“What do you mean?” she said.
“Why – the new part,” he told her. “Didn’t you notice? Every last one of ’em was goin’ on about country and folks. That’s why they want to go.”
She was silent, and he was afraid that she did not understand.
“I never thought of it till to-night, either,” he excused her. “Don’t you see? Fellows don’t want to go to war just to smash around for a fight. It’s for somethin’ else.”
He stopped, vaguely uncomfortable in his exaltation.
“It’s killin’,” she said, “an’ killin’ ’s killin’.”
He stood still on the walk, regardless of the passers, and shook her arm.
“Good heavens,” he said, “women had ought to see that. Women are better’n men, and they’d ought to see it! Can’t you get past the killin’? Can’t you understand they might have a thunderin’ reason?”
“No reason don’t matter,” she said. “It’s killin’. And it ain’t anything else.”
He walked on, his head bent, his eyes on the ground. She knew that he was disappointed in her – but she was too much shaken to think about that. She remembered how her mother had watched her brother go out to fight after some mean uprising of drunken whites against the Indians. Nobody knew now what it had been about, but six men had been shot. That stayed.
Presently the Inger raised his head, and walked with it thrown back again. Women, he supposed, wouldn’t understand. They were afraid – they hated a gun – they hated a scratch. There was the woman with the blue-boned hand and wrist and the pink spangled fan —she understood, it seemed. But somehow that proved nothing, and he freed his thought of her.