At last. Gene said rather abruptly, "Well, let's have it, Miss Dorn. You know that my curiosity is
growing and searching." He reached over and set his empty glass on the table.
"You mean ... you mean what I was going to ask of you," said Meredith in a small voice. Gene
nodded, his blue eyes encouraging her.
"No! I can't go through with it, Mr. Morey," she said.
"My dear, it can't be that serious. What are you afraid of? What have I done to make you afraid
of me? Some people show pity for me ... but fear? I think not." A flash of anger in his eyes
quickly disappeared when he looked up at her. His mood changed and again he laughed. "Yes,"
he said, "I'm sure that you're only sixteen at the most."
Meredith stood up, still holding the little glass of liqueur she had scarcely tasted. She walked to
the window and stared out without seeing the lilies blooming in the court below. Then she placed
her glass on a table, squared her shoulders and turned to face him. He sat watching her with a
curious but kind expression on his face. And in this moment of her great need, Meredith seemed
to see this crippled man for the first time. She recognized his kindness, his sympathy, his
intelligence, his superiority. She would have laughed at these thoughts a few days ago, but now
she knew that in this injured man there was something bigger than she had ever met before. It was
this knowledge that helped to fortify her determination. She would trust Eugene Morey.
"Mr. Morey," she said, "Johnny told me that you want a child ... a son ... more than anything
else in the world. And I feel that in order to be happy at all, I must become a great singer. This is
very, very important to me. Johnny said that you would pay for a child of your own. Mr. Morey,
all that stands between me and what I want is money. I need that money. With it I know that I
will succeed!"
Gene Morey's face had turned a slow red. His eyes were searching the farthest corner of the
room. After a silence that seemed to push against the walls around them, he said, without looking
at her, "You are just a little girl. You can't know what you would be doing. Just a little girl!"
"I am not a little girl!" she exclaimed in swift anger. "But that is not the question. Do you want a
child? And will you pay for that child, Mr. Morey?"
"Just a little girl," he repeated, quietly, "and a very foolish little girl."
"I am not a little girl!" Meredith exclaimed more emphatically than before. "And what's more, I
never was a little girl. When I was eight years old, I was milking cows. At ten, I could bake a
cake. While other children played, I washed dishes in order to earn my piano lessons. I was the
only one in my family who went to college. My family believed in me, but what have I
accomplished? For two years, I have been working for your firm, doing jobs I probably could
have done had I never seen the inside of a college. And now my mother is gone and my father is
old ... old in never having had a chance to do what he wanted to do. There is no one else, Mr.
Morey. I, too, am old ... old in frustration. I have always had to fight for what I got and I shall
continue to fight for what I want."
"Miss Dorn" said Gene, when she paused for breath, "you shall have what you want. I will give
you the money to go to New York, or wherever it is that you want to go. But I will not let you do
this ... this other thing."
"Don't be so noble!" Meredith exclaimed, in irritation. "I will not let you be better than I am! I
was taught to earn my way. It was harder for a little girl to stand on a box to wash dishes when
she longed to go out to play, than it will be for me to do this. I will not be an object of your
charity. I can give you a child. Then I will take your money, I will be free ... free from any
obligation. And I'll be ready to make a life for myself, the life that I have always wanted."
"You don't know what you're saying," said Gene Morey, scarcely above a whisper. "My dear,
you don't know what it would mean to you."
"What don't I know? Do you think I don't know about life ... birth ... death? Mr. Morey, when I
was eleven years old, I held a lantern while my father helped in the birth of a calf." At her words,
Gene turned away and Meredith, misunderstanding, exclaimed in anger, "Now you think that I'm
being crude, don't you? Mr. Morey, I didn't know that birth was considered a vulgarity until I
went to high school. On the farm, birth was as natural as life itself. Only death was something to
be avoided, if possible."
"We are not talking about the same thing here. You would be . . ."
"Be giving birth to a bastard?" interrupted Meredith. "Or were you possibly thinking of my
virginity? I've known more than one girl to throw that away for what she thought was love, or
even for just the fun of it. I would not be giving myself in such a cheap way. I would not be
preventing life as they always try to do. I would be purposely bringing life into the world. Let's
keep to the main issue, Mr. Morey. I want money and you want a son."
"My dear, you would be selling yourself," said Gene, somberly. "And I can't change a beautiful
girl into a ... a prostitute."
"Prostitute! Prostitute!" cried Meredith. "How dare you, Mr. Morey?" Tears stung her angry eyes
as she continued, "Prostitution means misuse if it means anything. And if I learned anything on
the farm, it was that sex was for the sole purpose of bringing life into the world. That is not
misusing sex! A prostitute is one who does everything possible to avoid having children. I would
be no prostitute! I would be giving myself for the purpose of reproduction. No one would dare
call me a prostitute!"
As she spoke, she looked so small and so belligerent that Gene felt like smiling, but, he said in all
seriousness, "What you say is probably true, yet nevertheless, your kind of people, and they are
also my kind of people, will find your position untenable. What you propose is far too serious to
be acted upon without the most deliberate consideration. But, usually, one can find a solution to
any problem. Give me time to think this out from all angles. And in the meantime, will you
consider my offer? I give money away where I think it will do the most good. Please think it
over."
"Not a chancel" said Meredith, vehemently. "Not a chance, Mr. Morey!"