An American Tragedy - Theodore Dreiser [390]
“And why not?”
“Well, there were my relatives. They wouldn’t have wanted to keep me any more, or her either, I guess.”
“I see. They wouldn’t have considered you fit for the work you were doing, or her either. Is that it?”
“I thought so, anyhow,” replied Clyde.
“And then what?”
“Well, even if I had wanted to go away with her and marry her, I didn’t have enough money to do that and she didn’t either. I would have had to give up my place and gone and found another somewhere before I could let her come. Besides that, I didn’t know any place where I could go and earn as much as I did there.”
“How about hotel work? Couldn’t you have gone back to that?”
“Well, maybe—if I had an introduction of some kind. But I didn’t want to go back to that.”
“And why not?”
“Well, I didn’t like it so much any more—not that kind of life.”
“But you didn’t mean that you didn’t want to do anything at all, did you? That wasn’t your attitude, was it?”
“Oh, no, sir. That wasn’t it. I told her right away if she would go away for a while—while she had her baby—and let me stay on there in Lycurgus, that I would try to live on less and give her all I could save until she was all right again.”
“But not marry her?”
“No, sir, I didn’t feel that I could do that then.”
“And what did she say to that?”
“She wouldn’t do it. She said she couldn’t and wouldn’t go through with it unless I would marry her.”
“I see. Then and there?”
“Well, yes—pretty soon, anyhow. She was willing to wait a little while, but she wouldn’t go away unless I would marry her.”
“And did you tell her that you didn’t care for her any more?”
“Well, nearly—yes, sir”
“What do you mean by ‘nearly’?”
“Well, that I didn’t want to. Besides, she knew I didn’t care for her any more. She said so herself.”
“To you, at that time?”
“Yes, sir. Lots of times.”
“Well, yes, that’s true—it was in all of those letters of hers that were read here. But when she refused so flatly, what did you do then?”
“Well, I didn’t know what to do. But I thought maybe if I could get her to go up to her home for a while, while I tried and saved what I could—well … maybe … once she was up there and saw how much I didn’t want to marry her—” (Clyde paused and fumbled at his lips. This lying was hard.)
“Yes, go on. And remember, the truth, however ashamed of it you may be, is better than any lie.”
“And maybe when she was a little more frightened and not so determined—”
“Weren’t you frightened, too?”
“Yes, sir, I was.”
“Well, go on.”
“That then—well—maybe if I offered her all that I had been able to save up to then—you see I thought maybe I might be able to borrow some from some one too—that she might be willing to go away and not make me marry her—just live somewhere and let me help her.”
“I see. But she wouldn’t agree to that?”
“Well, no—not to my not marrying her, no—but to going up there for a month, yes. I couldn’t get her to say that she would let me off.”
“But did you at that or any other time before or subsequent to that say that you would come up there and marry her?”
“No, sir. I never did.”
“Just what did you say then?”
“I said that … as soon as I could get the money,” stuttered Clyde at this point, so nervous and shamed was he, “I would come for her in about a month and we could go away somewhere until— until—well, until she was out of that.”
“But you did not tell her that you would marry her?”
“No, sir. I did not.”
“But she wanted you to, of course.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Had you any notion that she could force you so to do at that time— marry her against your will, I mean?”
“No, sir, I didn’t. Not if I could help it. My plan was to wait as long as I could and save all the money I could and then when the time came just refuse and give her all the money that I had and help her all I could from then on.”
“But you know,” proceeded Jephson, most suavely and diplomatically at this point,