Norris restrained an impulse to throttle him and allowed Barry to

proceed.

"Why, yes, we passed the old thing. I always said we would. Your friend

Percival voted with the combine. He's the real stuff. When he saw how

truth and justice lay, he buckled down and did the square thing. Have a

cigar? No? Oh yes, it's straight goods I'm givin' you. You needn't look

so queer. And say, on the quiet, I'm rather stuck on you reform

fellers. All they need is argument. So when you get 'em, you get 'em

cheap. Say, it's better than cash, any day."

Norris ran up the steps and snatched a morning's paper. Yes, it was

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true. Percival had voted against his friends and had given the victory

to the other side. Ellery flung into his office and whirled into his

day's work in a kind of daze. There was much to do and no time for

outside thought, but when the afternoon was over, instead of rushing

back to the little home, as he had expected, Norris hurried into his

coat and hastened to find Dick. Mr. Percival was at home; and, without

waiting to be announced, Ellery sprang up the stairs to the little

sanctum where the two had confabbed on many a day. He plunged in on

Dick, pale and unresponsive, and blurted out his question.

"Yes," said Dick, "I voted for it. I became convinced that it was the

best thing the city could do. I've been telling the boys so for the past

two weeks. I really didn't understand the matter before. Don't get so

excited, Norris."

He spoke quietly, but without meeting his friend's eyes, and Ellery's

heart sank.

"I don't know what it means, Dick," he said bitterly, "but it seems to

me that, like Lucifer, you've been falling from dawn to dewy eve, and

now you are likely to consort with the devils in the pit. Are you the

old Dick who used to be my idol?"

"Oh, bosh!" said Dick. "You are making mountains out of mole hills. The

franchise is all right."

"It's not all right; and you're not all right," cried Norris, in a

frantic grasping after the truth of the matter. "The old relationships

are slipping away and something that was as dear to me as myself is

going with them."

He turned away and Dick suddenly rose.

"Ellery," he cried hoarsely, and Norris turned to see anguish in Dick's

face and outstretched hand, "I--I--can't explain to you," cried

Percival; "but, Ellery--" he moved forward, "don't cut the bonds of old

friendship, for God's sake! I need you now, as I never did before. If

you desert me, I shall lose my grip."

Norris stepped back, and the two took each other's hands and looked

steadfastly, eye into eye. And Norris saw something that took on him the

hold that death has on us, and made him ready to forgive. Death is the

big problem of every mind. We may perhaps master and solve the question

when the death is of the body, but when the soul dies out, the problem

is too great.




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