Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 74, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1925 — Page 20

20

CHICKIE

'The Sequel to

Dickie (Heflenal is the only daughter of Jonathan and Jennie Bryce of Indianapolis. To start life anew after her child dies and Barry Dunne, her sweetheart, ;'ilts her to marry wealth Ila Moore. Chickie goes to Chicago for employment Sarah Dillon, the Abbott sisters, Amy Heaton. Stella Wilson, Mary Blake McPike, .Tanina Know"® . wealthy Jake Munson are Chickie home-town frienus. Jimmie B ake. a childhood sweetheart who still loves Chickie, accepts a position in Honolulu. Chickie goes to the home of her employer. Norp Willman. as companion for his daughter. Barbara. Lee. his son. loves Chickie. Myra King recognizes Chickie and tells their sister Edith (Mrs. Dirks Potter) ot her past life. Edith orders (Jhickie to leave. Lee attempts suicide when. Chickie confirms the story. She accepts a position in the office of George Edgeman. where Luis Lamarck. friend of the Willmans. has a studio. While Edgeman is away, Lamarck tells Chickie that her past means nothing to him. The climax comes when he insinuates that because of him she is receiving more salary than! the work is worth. She tears up her check and leaves. . Chickie returns home with her parents and begins training as an irse. Jake gives Chickie time to consider his proposal of marriage. Chickie excites the interest of Dr. David Ramtn, and Kenneth Harmon, young interne, discards his fiancee. Edith Underwood, for Chickie. She is elected editor of the senior journal, but when Miss Simonds, an official, learns of Chickie's past life, she promptly expels her. Chickie abhors telling her parents and starts on an aimless shopping tour. GO ON WITH THE STORY By Elinore Mehertn She went around other stores buying all manner of nick-nacks — three big, bine egg cups—nice for breakfast. Jennie would like them. It occurred to hei to bring gifts to them. Jennie loved lavender — two bungalow aprons of lavender with the pockets and all piped in black, with bunches of roses here and there — And a silk shirt for Jonathan. Wouldn’t he be the lord, though? She bought a white one, very heavy. She paid $9 for it. Putting it under her arm, she came near to crying. She rode blocks past Thirtieth St. on her way home, > then got off and walked hack. She took out her vanity case, put on rouge—made her lips as bright as cherries. And she came in to them laughing —and tossed the packages upon them. They were sitting at lurich. She said: “Ho—well, here she is! Ain’t this grand though?” Then there was “Why?” “What! and how can you he here?” “By reason of two feet and ten toes, ole dears —my vacation —” She threw her arms around Jonathan —and pressed her head against his rugged heart ami all her life seemed trembling from her. But she said: “A surprise, Johnny darling—don’t you love to be surprised? Set my place—all - pretty now —” She ran into her room—gay, sunny room—closed the door —braced her back and all her strength against it.

CHAPTER LIX The Gift She heard Wildie sniffing under the door, and she opened it a little. He walked cautiously around her, licking her hands where the fingers curled. Then he loolked up with his proud, trustful eyes and rubbed his head along her a.-m. And he saw that this was no jaunty time —no merry lark that brought her home. Jennie and Jonathan all right, but not the dog. He licked hor face and guessed. She knew it by the quiet way he let his head rest against her knee. Jonathan was chuckling now because Jennie went pattering about their room, trying on the new dress, brushing her hair up smart to make a sweet appearance. *Chickie, in the midst of these triflings homey things, with the old endearments touching her through every sense, felt a white, grim fire aflame within her mind. All this was her®—and she was theirs. She had a right to them and honor and everything! Who were they to take it from her? She went over to the window and pressed her forehead against the glass. And she couldn’t believe that her hope was gone. Nor this a final thing. Twenty months of effort blotted out; twenty months of striving mocked? She wouldn’t meet it so. She kept saying to herself: “There’ll be a way—l’ll thin': of something—” Luckily the house was all at ends for they were papering the halls and the little parlor. All the furniture was stacked in the dining worn. It made a stirring, bright hubbub and kept Jennie running from one end of the place to another. She said to Chickie: “Can you stand all this, Chickie, dear? Will you stay home the whole two weeks?” “Why not? • Ain’t home grand? And I’ll sun myself in Jennie’s garden and fill myself with Jennie’s tarts—so sweet, ole dear!” She pulled open the drawers of t)i6 cupboard, ferreting for an old pair of gloves. She drew them on with a flourish and began to help with the polishing of the furniture. Jennie blushed to be so flattered; blushed that Chickie loved the little cotttage so. Why, she might well be flaunting off to some summer resort, and here she was, rushing about with a dustrag. And her very first day off, at that. i Jennie said: "Well, we'll soon finish. Then your father will take us driving.” She was thinking: “Myrtle is getting off now. She’ll see my trunk and the things gone from the dresser.” 'Chicikie’s heart thumped against the old walnut sideboard. Myrtle would begin to wonder. Soon they would all be talking. They would be stopping each other with shocked whispers: “What do you make of it Is it true? Os all things!” And Irene would be the center of excited groups. Was this what she had to tell at the election? Oh —her aunt knew it all? Chickie blamed Irene. She was the one who had unearthed it. Chickie had gone all her life to school out here. People that she had forgotten remembered her. And it was only two years and two months since that April morning when Helena Bryce had her name in the papier with a long, ambiguous statement about her baby’s death, so that it might even appear she had killed the child— This was what they were saying to each other about her now. And the had walked out without a gejodby: without a word of defense. She had been forced to this. She could never go back—the future was blocked. Chickie’s hands flew. The old walnut sideboard grew a

mirror. Never he a nurse now— But she kept seeing the hospital, the long corridors; the airy, sun filled wards; and the children, patient, even happy in their plain. Little Emma laughing because that picture —hee—so funny! And Johnny Ross begging: “Aw, gee, nurse, can’t I have a drink? Gimme a sip—gwan!” This life was hers! That night Chickie lay with her hands covering her eyes. She thought of her bed in the room with Myrtle. She imagined herself stealing back —softly—oh. and wake up there tomorrow morning, pin the white cap to her hair; find all this of today but a dream; ail this of today wiped out. Suddenly she sat holt upright. There was to be an operation in the morning. Doctor David was the surgeon. He would notice her gone. Would he ask why?—Would he hear this thing 7 Os course, he'd hear! Why should her secret be kept? And it wouldn't. She knew that well enough. In a week it would filter through all the wards —oh, you hear everything. Chickie saw his face, pale yet strong, and with such a winning charm about it. She thought he had the noblest look sometimes, yet a youngness and a verve. And he made fun of her, calling her “Nurse Helen” because she couldn't leave off the "doctor” before the David. How would lie look hearing this of her? What would he think of the way she had lied and pretended? And the way she had talked of babies who were abandoned and selfish people who left them. It/would sicken him. She lay back and turned her face against the pillows. In her thought she had flashed out boldly against every one el'se s scorn. Now she was stilled. They were going to a concert together on Friday night. Well—there would be no concert. All the next morning Chickie’s mind went through the hundred details of the opertaion. Miss Pain, the chief surgical nurse, a fair girl with magnificent blue eyes, would ask: “Where is Bryce?” Irene would give some answer. Then Irene would begin to scrub. She would have a bright hot look in her face. Miss Pain, whom Chickie half adored because she was so wondrously capable, yet as gracious as a practititioner, would begin to wonder. Chickie was carried so completely into this scene that for two or three minutes she stood with a plate in her hand, the dish towel quiet. Jennie said: “Chickie, dear, you just go out in the garden—never mind about these dishes.” So Chickie laughed and flipped the towel with a terrible speed Afterwards she aired all the beds. &he went into the front room to see hew the painters were getting along. And she thought: ‘I should send 1 for the trunks.” But her thought balked. No! Her trunk had a right to be there —and she had a right to be there. She loved sitting in the dining room, with all the happy chatter. Did they all blame her? Did any one put in a word for her? Phyllis w’ould? Would Myrtle?

That afternoon she walked half way down to the hospital, not knowing why. She walked back in a breathless panic— No use! Those gates were closed. She couldn’t force them to reopen. Resentment burned a poison in her heart. She wanted to talk — shout out this thing— Yet when the phone rang for her, she refused to answer. And three days passed. Thursday afternoon a registered package came. It was from Jake. Within was a bracelet—a broad, platinum band, massed with diamonds and sapphires. It was the most exquisite thing Chickie had ever seen. Oh —a gift like this for her. Tears sprang into her eyes. There was a note. “Mr. Munson presents his compliments to Miss Helena Bryce and begs she will accept the enclosed in memory of moons and sich, and that she will accept it yay or nay. Firstly, if it be yay, then in honor of great winds on mountain tops. Secondly—though God save the man’s soul if it be nay—yet that she accepc it none the less in token of much beauty and the sweetness of great hours shared.” She was touched to the inmost heart by that note, even more than she was astonished at the priceless gift. For the note had the mellowness, and. the rich, fine tolerance that was Jake’s. Much he cared if they called her “doubtful.” Ho —if she wrote one single word he would come speeding. He would laugh at these puny judgments. “To the devil with them, Helena. Let them kick us out on our face. I tell you there’are better gardens to tread!” Something like that Jake would say. He would put his arms around her: snap bis fingers at the world— Chickie put the bracelet on her wrist. She sat down, feeling suddenly weak and defeated. Well—•(he had tried anyway—tried hard to come back alone — And how gentle it was—and how sweet to know another cared. Another —high up in the world’s good grace, would yet so gladly stoop to her— '

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A Costly Gift Comes from Jake— Chickie Decides to Keep It.

CHAPTER LX The Visitor That night Chickie wrote to Jake. She would keep the gift because of the way it was offered. She would prize it above measure. There were long, bright pages. When it was finished she dashed a bit of sachet on the paper, for this was a schoolgirl trick of hers. And she signed her name with an airy flourish. But she made no mention of her dismissal—no hint that she was beaten. She sat at her pretty wicker desk moving a dry pen back and forth over the page. Her heart was blazing. For there had been, like a star in her mind, the dream of great achievement; vision of anew and glorious Chickie climbing up to some great height; pale, beautiful, person, with a light about her like she had seen in the faces of those who serve. She wanted this; had followed the hope of it. In the hospital it became each day more nearly hers. Now it was gone. The world wanted her to fall—had the power to shut her out. She considered this with a hard, metallic quiet. They could say she was a menace and ask her to leave. If the world could do this, what was to become of her? Hate spread like a wound in her mind. Yet she wouldn’t admit to Jake that she was conquered. To write this would mean surrender, complete and final, of her fight. She wasn’t ready for this —not yet— Withal, she had never wished more piercingly for someone to stand beside her; someone to say that faith, w'as high—oh, come now— She thought of Mary. Ask her. Mary might think of a way. She went down to Mary’s on Friday morning. Mary thought it was just her day off. This made it hard to speak. Now if Mary had said: “How come! What are you doing home? This isn’t your free time, is it?” Chickie would have answered: “Ho —you bet it’s free! Time’s my own again. Kicked out —that’s a fact . . . ” But Mary’s eyes were dancing with excitameent. She grabbed Chickie effusively: “You heard! Oh —you didn’t? About Lucy—well—sit tight then. If it isn’t delirious! After all these years of grubbing, in walks George Adams last night with SIO,OOO in his pockets. Poor Lucy! She’s almost out of her 'mind. It’s from those old lots they owned in Florida. George bought the lots and paid about two-bits for them? “Well —a railroad needs them. And they bounce down the SIO,OO0 — no eyes winked about it one way or the other —” / This was drama exultant and quivering marching straight into their homely kitchens. They raved about it —Mary was in a fever. So Chickie didn’t speak. But after lunch when the first extraordinary delight was a little tempered, Chickie’s own problem came uppermost. She went over ways of broaching the subject and mentally decided to say calmly: (‘Mary, I’ve been asked to resign. I’ve left the hospital. I have no idea what on earth to do now—” What she heard herself saying was this: “Mary—what do you

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suppose would happen if they should find out about me?” "For pity sakes —why should they find out about it now? Didn’t you say few of the girls are from Indianapolis? It would be the purest accident if they should stumble on it.” Just then little Edward came in from the back/yard. He saw now 5, full of roguery, and at the knowing stage where he seized on each new word, rolled it over under his tongue, and lay In his crib at night trying it out. He said to Chickie once when she appeared without a hat and with her hair blown: “Say—you look reckless!” And he teased Mary by calling her in very precise, prolonged sounds: "Oh—mother, dear!” The Mary had chalked in the yard was blurred. He wanted it made ot-er. Then Mary must teach him again how to play. When they got to the mailbox between the fifth and sixth space, there was a heated argument. Couldn’t she tell him how to do it? You did not straddle the box —that wasn’t the way! And it wasn't a mailbox, anyhow. It was the devil’s ears belonged there in the center. Well, he guessed he knew. Mary said: “It is the way! That's the way we always played. You ask Chickie." Edward wrinkled his nose, with a lofty: “Maybe that was the way in old times? ’Tain’t the way now!” He puzzled and practiced and finally jumped with both feet together. And that was the new. good way. Mary became absorbed, wondering about the child. Should she give his individuality full play? Should she let him contradict and argue with her? When should she curb and when should she humor? She reverted from this to the consideration of Lucy’s luminous good fortune, forgetting Chickfe’s problem until Chickie’s desire to speak was gone. Then Mary said: “What was that we were talking about?” “I forget. Nothing important, I suppose.” Why make Mary sad? Settle it herself. Mary walked home with her. There would be a conclave of all the Blakes, little and big, in Martha’s kitchen. They would have lunch and wind into all the details of Lucy’s dazzling, incredible Joy. (To Be Continued) (Copyright King- Feature Syndicate) 666 It a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Elu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria It kill* the verntt.

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FRIDAY, AUG. 7, 1925

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