Part 10 (1/2)
”What did you do to your suffragist, anyhow?”
”Oh, she had too much coin for my simple taste. If father learned about her, he couldn't talk anything else.... Not for mine!”
A rattle of knocks on the door broke off the discussion. Several graduate students pushed into the room. ”h.e.l.lo, Judson. Going out for supper, Neil?”
He stretched himself up, and reached for a cap. ”Pell and I were just about to prowl down to Heublein's.”
”Come on, then.”
As they crossed Chapel Street, the rubber-lunged news-boys were shouting, ”All about the big strike! Street car men to quit to-morrow!”
Pelham purchased a smudgy sheet. While the waiter was double-quicking their orders, all eyes were directed at the leading story.
”Look at this,” Ralph Jervis, one of the cla.s.smates, pointed insistently, ”the president of the road says he'll break the strike with college men. Let's take a week off, and be blooming motormen!”
A spectacled Senior dissented at once. ”It wouldn't be the thing, fellows. Those strikers may be in the right, for all we know.”
Jervis howled his disgust. ”That's what comes of joining the Socialist Study Club! Falkhaven's a regular anarchist. Why, it's a great idea! Are you on, Neil?”
”Sure!” The Texan roused himself to answer briskly. ”If Pell'll come too.”
”I'm for it,” Pelham a.s.sented quietly.
The constant deference and affection displayed toward his big-hearted roommate hurt him, against his will. For all his ability in studies and on the mat, Pelham was not popular. He had never been accepted in the higher circles of Sheff life, the Colony and Cloister groups; and he in turn held himself aloof from the run of the cla.s.s.
He was a thorough-going sn.o.b, for all his talk of democracy. Anywhere in the South, which held the finest people in the country, a Judson would be known and recognized, and given his proper place. These Yankees, no matter how nice they might be personally, were Republicans; in the South, only negroes and turncoats belonged to that party. At meetings of the Southern Club, he had seconded the resolution asking that negro students be provided with a separate gymnasium and eating hall. It had furnished a week's laugh to the University; hot-headedly, he resented this. He felt that the leading men held him merely on tolerance; he shrank in upon himself.
This feeling of isolation was not entirely unwelcome. He had become used to it in his mountain days. Here it had driven him to the College Library, where he had mastered all its bulky volumes on mining and kindred phases of engineering. He branched from these into higher mathematics, until he could stump his instructor on the fourth dimension. The previous Christmas holiday, he had turned to modern European drama, and had covered what he could find in an amazing short time; although it was not easy to stomach such plays as ”The Weavers,”
and some of Shaw's dramatic maunderings.
His college loyalty, and cla.s.s loyalty, in the social sense, continued at a high pitch; and he was among the first to arrive at the office of the New Haven Electric, and to sign up for strike-duty.
He spent an intense morning learning the mechanism of the car--it was not difficult, for a good driver; and he knew automobiles thoroughly.
He was put at a controller on the Savin Rock run, with a halfback for his conductor, and two guards furnished by a Newark agency to aid the uniformed policemen in preserving order through the rioting poorer districts.
The resort was reached, and the return made, in a tiresomely unexciting manner. On the second trip out, a crowd had gathered near the turn by the switching yards, which shouted epithets at the green crew.
”They're a bunch uh mouthin' blackguards, mate,” the cheek-scarred guard on the front platform observed with alcoholic familiarity. He dodged a spattering tomato flung jeeringly by a tiny Irishwoman. ”All they does is shoot off their mouth.”
Pelham found the guard's nearness the main irritation of the ride.
When they neared the same corner on the run in, two women stepped into the street. He slowed the car. They suddenly turned back to the sidewalk. He urged the speed up two notches.
A wagon had been backed across the track. ”Clear that off, there.” The driver was evidently too asleep, or drunk, to heed.
”You move it,” he ordered the guard.
As the man stepped down uneasily, the rush began. Out of the cheap lodging houses and dingy side entrances flooded shouting men, women, children. Bricks, garbage, old bottles thumped against the car sides.
”Better not stop, Judson,” the green conductor's shout reached him.
”It'll be hot in a minute.”