Part 7 (2/2)
”Yes, and Mr. Evans, if what I hear is true, a good-looking woman can talk you out of your safety deposit key!”
”That's where you're wrong, Mrs. Smith, and I'll prove it to you.
Despite any wavering I may have exhibited, I now stand, as George puts it in his article, 'ready to conserve the threatened flower of womanhood by also endeavoring to conserve her unpolled vote!' If you women want prohibition, it is in your power to sway man's vote to prohibition.
If you women want the moon, let man cast your proxy vote for it! In my mind, that is the true chivalry. To quote again, 'Woman is man's rarest heritage, his beautiful responsibility, and at all times his co-operation, support and protection are due her. His support and protection.'”
Miss Emelene closed her eyes. The red had spread in her cheeks and she laid her head back against the chair, rocking softly and stroking the thick-napped cat.
”The flower of womanhood,” she repeated. ”'His support and his protection.' If ever a man deserved high office because of high principles, it's my cousin George Remington! My cousin Genevieve Livingston Remington is the luckiest girl in the world, and not one of us Brands but what is willing to admit it. My two nephews, too, if their Aunt Emelene has anything to say, and I think she has--”
”Why, there isn't a stone in the world I wouldn't turn to see that boy in office,” Mrs. Smith interrupted.
At that Mr. Evans rose.
”You mean that, Mrs. Smith?”
Miss Emelene rose with him, the cat pouring from her lap.
”Of course she means it, Penfield. What self-respecting woman wouldn't!”
Mr. Evans sat down again suddenly, Miss Emelene with him, and leaning violently forward, thrust his eager, sun-tanned face between the two women.
”Well, then, ladies, here's your chance to prove it! That's what brings me today. As two of the self-respecting, idealistic and womanly women of this community, I have come to urge you both to--”
”Oh, Mr. Evans!”
”Penfield, you are the flatterer!”
”To induce two such representative women as yourselves to help my partner to the election he so well deserves.”
”Us?” ”It is in your power, ladies, to demonstrate to Whitewater that George Remington's chivalry is not only on paper, but in his soul.”
”But--how?”
”By throwing yourselves upon his generosity and hospitality, at least during the campaign. You have it in your power, ladies, to strengthen the only uncertain plank upon which George Remington stands today.”
A clock ticked roundly into a silence tinged with eloquence. The Maltese leaped back into Miss Emelene's lap, purring there.
”You mean, Penfield, for us to go visit George--er--er--”
”Just that! Bag and baggage. As two relatives and two unattached women, it is your privilege, nay, your right.”
”But--”
”He hasn't come out in words with it, but he has intimated that such an act from the representative antis of this town would more than anything strengthen his theories into facts. As unattached women, particularly as women of his own family, his support and protection, as he puts it, are due you, _due_ you!”
Mrs. Smith clasped her plentifully ringed fingers, and regarded him with her prominent eyes widening.
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