Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 47, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1925 — Page 12

12

The /nTTIpT/TT7 & r'C<rllv><KlJcy

Chiokie Helena),, now 22 is the only daughter of Jonathan and Jennie Bryce of Indianapolis. To jtart life anew after her child dies and Barry Dunne, her sweetheart, jilts her to marry wealthy Ila Moore, Chickie roes to Chicago for employment. Sarah Dillon, the Abbott sisters, Amy Heaton, Stella Wilson, (Mary Blake MePike. Janina Knowles and wealthy munson are Chickie s home-town friends. Jimmie Blake, a childhood sweetheart, who still loves Chickie, accspts a position in Honolulu. Chickie refuses the friendship of Edgar Manx, fellow boarder at Mrs. Janis. _ Daisy Brack. Eloise Maxwell. Betty and Doris Ordin and Bobby Jones work with Chickie in the office of Norp Willman. Chickie eroes to his Winnetka home as companion for Barbara, his daughter. Lee, his son, loves Chickie. ~ Their sister. Mrs. Edith Hotter, in the absence of Dirk, her husband, rives a party for Timmy, an acti'. whom she secretly loves. Dirk arrives unexpectedly, but hears the situation meekly and roes for a game of billiards with Betty Jane, Mel and Chickie at Edith's suggestion. In Lee's absence Edith interfered with the elopment of Barbara and Paul Scott and speaks contemptibly to Chickie for aiding them. Chickie returns to the city after Barbara's father consents to the ma--Jake calls and takes Chickie tt> dit.ne He asks Chickie to forget her past and live blithely again, but she tells him she fears it whl become known m Chicago and the Whitmans would he furious if they knew. GO ON YtITH THE STORY By Elinore teherin She turned suddenly from him, biting her lips. They walked to the top of the hill. Jake patted her hand. “In a few months, Helena dear, you will look at things coolly. Why .—some of the richest and happie. t natures I’ve ever met had plenty to regret. What of it? We live and we learn. When Life hands us a jolt the only way wc can get even with her is to straighten up more squarely than before. ’ Jake swung the giant shoulders: And you tell me I don’t know—why, you little white darling, I've gone the curved read and Ido know ’ “Oh —but a man, Jake —it makes no difference with a man—” “And it must make no difference with you. I’m telling you something. You’re not to come up here and make friends with the lakes. When you’re lonely, sit ye down and write to an old dog. And listen to me, Helena—how would it be if you were to pick up with a few old ladies, carry them a bunch of daisies of a Saturday afternoon? Or, I’ll tell you, take yourself down to a hospital and cast a few smiles at old cronies that have come to the end of the road. If I were an old buck on the last lap and one Helena Bryce came over and gave me a smile, I’d like that! Id like it mighty well.” She said, turning to him with shimmering eyes: “Jake if all the world was like you —" He laughed. “We’ll be so busy hiding the cross in our own eyes we’d never see the beam in another’s. That’s It! But you do that, will you Helena? And you’ll find that many doors are opened and they’ll lead to broader sweeps than a friend c f mine of several years ago could ever have entered. ‘Why, Jake—’.'” “Oh —she was such a pretty darling—” She looked at him sharply. “You mean I was so shallow? And so vain? And so tickled with myself?” He squeezed her hands: “And uuch a love, Chickie, deai “But I’m all that yet, Jake. I just am. And all these things you’ve said show it. I haven’t really tried to fight, have I? I’m just as weak as weak! Only -I know it now—” “No—not weak. But just new to this up-grade road. You’ll have to throw her into second to make it. And you will. Helena, shall I tell you something? I was half afraid to come that morning. I never thought to find you quiet and strong—” “Oh—and I wasn't! I leaned and leaned on Jonathan. I made hitn bear it all—” “I saw for myself, Helena. I didn’t hear you say a word of blame; a single excuse.” “Ho! I hadn’t any. I did it all myself. All of it!” She swayed a little, clasping her hands against her mouth, half murmuring to herself: “Don’t think —hush —” Jake drew her. With his arm about her shoulder he took her hands, pressed them in his palms. “I’ve thought of that day a lot. Helena dear. I’ve thought of another day, too. Would it hurt too much if I speak of it?” “You couldn’t do a thing to hurt, Jake.” “Well—it was that Saturday you bumped against us in Washington St,, and I made you come to lunch. About a year ago—you know when I mean?” “Oh—” The stabbing her throat made it hard to breathe. Did she know? That awful day when she had waited in the office till Stella and Janina were gone; the day she gave up hope because no word had come and she half knew none ever was to come. > “How pale you were, Helena dear, and the gallant bluff you made. Suppose I am a man; can't I know that that was hard? Can’t I know the gvii it tooh and the strength?

Lift Off-No Pain!

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Look up at me, Helena dear.” He raised her faee and, though her eyes were closed, he wiped away the tearsc. “And don’t I know that doors will open—any door you want. And you will have the dream yet—” She moved her lips. She put up her hand between his face and hers. “Not that door, Jake. No —I never want it opened—oh, really, really—all that is ended —” “Why—ended! It hasn’t yet begun. You must want it. I tell you, you must.” “Don’t, Jake —please—don’t say so —Oh, I can do those other things—yes, and I will. But I won’t ever ask for what you mean. And I won’t ever want it. I am so still inside.” He laid his hand on her soft, fair cheek. He smiled. And that night as he left he stood before her like a king, with his head bared. He looked down at her. “Helena, think of me, will you? When you think of that last door, think of me, too —do that —please—” Chapter XVI Awakening SHERE was no light in the room. The oak table where Chickie sat was all in shadow. Yet there seemed a glow; a murmuring about her like echoes of some luminous song. Her hands lay folded in her lap. She felt a warmth and a brightness now like a rush of tears to her throat; and now like a joy or a proud smile touching her lips. She said, “oh,” and raised her head as though she saw a thing of beauty; saw faith and hope before her. She walked about the room with light, delicate step. Yes—open doors; she could. Well, she would. Hard, up-grade road, but quiet and strong and she would make it — Jake said she must, and he stood before her, royal fellow that he was, raying so easily: "Look at life freely, Helena dear, as you did a few years ago when that grand old wind of yours was to come sweeping over hilltops—” She heard the rich, throaty voice; felt the clasp of the strong hand. Oh—he was princely coming to her like that. She had for Jake a feeling of gratitude that was akin to worship. The way he raised her face, wiping the tears—why, she cried now, remembering it. He said she would be better and finer. She would make him glad to trust her so. She felt brave for anything. Her emotion raised her to this state of tremulous exaltation. But it was a sexless thing; as much so as her devotion to Jonathan. There had been a time when Jake’s black, flashing eyes looking at her so warmly had stirred her subtly though against her will. That night when he wanted so to kiss her; when he caught her hands and his lips were aflame moving over her palms—that night she was half terrified because of the breathless thrill stealing so pervasively upon her. It was her spirit now that had been touched —not her heart. Love, with its tumult and its wild expectance, she would never feel again. Oh—she was sure of this. That last door Jake spoke of was closed — closed always. There was a sense of finality about it that even now brought a chill to Chickie’s thoughts. She had so wanted sweetness; so wanted joy. Love had been as life to her. Love had been the glory and the dream. So much so indeed that when she found it gone there had come an utter darkness, as though living, too, was finished. Coming here to Chicago she had gone to work, she had taken walks, she had read but all this she did without vividness, as an automaton might. And for months she dwelt in this muteness; in this gray and brooding solitude. That was no way to do! Jake made her feel its weakness; made it seem all petty—a selfish, cowardly way to go. Oh —there were others in the world; oh. it didn’t matter that she had suffered some. If the gladness for others; bunches of daisies for a few old ladies, or a smile to an old man dying. Hers wasn’t ■fihe only heart with grief for a lodger. Learn that! So he gave her an impudse to live; gave her a reason to laugh. It altered her vision—made her even welcome the coming of days. She missed him. The day after he left it seemed so empty—so very still —oh. lonelier much than it had been before. She went over scenes, recalled words. She sat at her table and wrote letters, one to Jake, another to herself. Childish thing to do, but she wanted to grip with both hands on this new strength she had a moment glimpsed. She wanted to bind herself; keep Jake and the heartening things he said close In her thoughts. She wrote: “Dear Jake: I have the daisies ready and am now scouring the byways for some nice, decrepit old man; startle him back to life with the most radiant smile. When you come again there shall await you the cosiest family of venerable old

Puzzle a Day

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Here is a sketch of what Billy Evans calls the correct knuckle hold for a fast fall. The artist drew It in one continuous line. Can you duplicate the artist's feat? Last puzzle answer: It is obvious that the number of chickens was greater than the number of eggs each chicken laid, since chickens average less than an egg a day and 365 days equal a year. Therefore the answer is 4,649 chickens each laying 239 eggs a year equals 1,111,111.

Jake’s Philosophy Cheers Chickie and Gives Her a New Purpose.

ladies this city of angels can furnish. Shall you like that, Mr. Jake, and. more proposals to refuse? “Oh, really, Jake, you don’t know all the differences and how I thank you. I am wearing very scarlet lips. But that’s not all. You have the kindest heart in all the world. I can never say It all. You will see. I mean to do those things. I really do.” To herself she wrote over and over one line: “Dear Helena: There are many doors in this world. You are to open them—open them. You are to forget the past—put it completely from your thoughts. Well —you are! You shall!” Daisy Brack said to her one noon time. ’’Well, you’re coming out of it, aren’t you?” Chickie started: “What, Daisy?” “The thing that gets us all but it got you even more than it did me. Homessick —I thought I never could stick it out—” Chickie laughed: “Well—was That my trouble Daisy? I didn’t know just what had got me.” Yet when Saturday afternoon came and she considered her plan, she was all at once in a panic. She had never visited a hospital. She said to herself, weakening: “Mayfce they don’t permit it. It may seem ridiculous.” But she looked up the address. She went to a florist and bought a dollar’s worth of cosmos in every delicate shade of pink and lavender and blue. She was coming out of the shop, her arms filled, when someone touched her with an eager: "Are you decorating the graves of all the hearts you’ve broken, Helena?” It was Lee Willman, his deep, large eyes alit. It was the first time she had seen since her return except for a hurried encounter in the office. She blushed, unwilling to state her mission. But he walked at her side: "Let me drive yo<u?” "I can’t. You see I'm visiting a friend at the hospita'.” “My car will drive to a hospital. Which one?” She laughed: “The city and county so you see I can’t trouble you.” He repeated softly: “Oh —” then swiftly: “Won’t you please let me take you? That’s only a friendly offer, isn't it? Please —” and he began the flowers from her arms: “You have bought enough, I hope.” “I’ll be there quite a while—in fact, all afternoon.” “No you won’t —they don’t allow visitors to spend the afternoon." And he brushed aside her opposition, helping her to the machine. It made her quiet with an odd sense of defeat. She scarcely spoke as he drove her. She said, leaving the machine, “Real nice in you, Mr. Willman.” “Can’t I come in with you, Helena? Can’t I carry the flowers?” She shook her bead with a festure of dismissal. “I've imposed enough.” Inside, she didn’t know what to do. She hesitated so that the girl at the telephone switch asked, “Which ward do you want?” Chickie stammered, "Well—is It permitted—l’ve brought these flowers—” “Oh, you just want to leave them. Take that turn to the left. The nurse will be glad to get them.” And the nurse took them from her in a very abrupt mannner, as though she was not at all pleased. Chickie said, “I’d like to visit the old men’s ward.” The girl laughed. ‘T’ts all right with me. Help yourself,” like a smart slap. She went down the corridor, turned this way and that. A door opened. She looked in: a man who was not old pulled the covers hastily to his chin and frowned. Chickei hurried. She stood at a window and looked ‘nto a garden. A nurse in white sat J in a chair, her feet stretched out. ; She was sleeping. Chickie walked back —waited. Will- J man was still there, smoking lazily, J as though he w'ero prepared to spend the rest of the afternoon. Tears | blinked at Chickie’s eyes. Ho—what did Jake know- of hospitals? Why—she’d like to bet he’d never been in one. She went out. Willman sprang from the car: “How Is your friend? Better now?” Chickie smiled. He looked at her j with rapt, fervent eyes. “So this | is the way you spend your Saturdays, Helena? Well—” She said: “Oh, no—only today.” But a smile kindled In his face. “Barbara asked me to bring you out to tea. You’ll come? Poor kid — she’s happy now.” He touched Chickie’s hand. “They'll be married in a few weeks. All sorts of wild preparations going on. You are to be one of the bridesmaids.” “I!” “Yes—is there anything startling in that?” “A great deal—why—you must see it —no —its out of the question.” He shrugged: “A good many things may seem out f the question to you Helena, but they don’t to me. That’* only one of them.”

CHAPTER XVII The Bridesmaid Chickie became busy with a lock o fhair that had worked out from her net. She tucked it in, surveying it critically in a small mirror. She did this to hide from Willman her eyes, because they would keep blinking and blinking with her disappointment. Ho! Visit the hospital! Why, it was just foolish. Jake never meant to do a thing like that —walk into the corridors like a simpleton and ask for the old men’s ward! Old men who were sick would be thrilled indeed to have some busybody grinning at them, saying cheerfully, “Feeling better today?” Chickie bit her lips. She was aware of Willman’s glance and thought with a trace of impatience:' “Why did I have to meet him, too?” He saw the faint protest moving on her lips; s fw her lashes dark, moiten'ng against her cheek. Her

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

beauty affected him so deeply he wished to speak of it. So sweet —so delicate seemed her face—and so quiet. This was its mystery for him, and its lure. Quiet —why w r as she so quiet? Why was a girl so young, so full of piercing charm shutting out the world with this serene indifference? He wondered —and his ardor grew. He said: “I’d love to see beneath.” “Beneath what?” “You.” Chickie smiled. He went on: “You say you came down here, because of a wish to see things. And yet you are not at all adventurous; not a bit eager for experience. In al! this fairyland can’t you find a better recreation for your afternoon off than visiting a hospital?” “Is that such an odd thing to do, Mr. Willman?" “Yes—for a girl like you—spending your earnings to carry flowers to a hospital.” He grew silent, driving now through a broad avenue. “Have you been to Green Lake?” "No—” “Next Saturday I’ll take you there.” “Oh —” a sharp breath, like a sigh. Willman heard it, put his hand on hers with an impetuous: “There! Now why do you do that? Why do you sigh?” Chickie laughed: “You are in an evil mood today, I fear. Why pick on me if I grab off a long breath now and then?” He said, the color In his face quickened and the boyish light in his eyes: “Well—have your vows against us all, Helena. But there are a thousand things to see here and I’m going to be your guide. You can’t object to that, can you? Why refuse a flower to me when you are so free with them to others? My need is greater.” Chickie recalled with a pang Jake's advice: "Face life freely, just as you did before —” How could she do that? She sank down against the cushions, managed to smile: “I was bringing those flowers to an old, old man, Mr. Willman.” “Count me as old as Methuselah then and hand me the bouquet. Listen, Helena, it can’t interfere any with you, can it? You can dismiss me without a moment’s notice. I promise to hear no grudge. But we are to be friends. I’d love to take you around —I know the country well —” (To Be Continued) (Copyright. King Feature Syndicate)

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