>J3 W89 / 1 The Fugitive CZ3CZ3C i i i ni 1 Oa A DRAMA IN FOUR ACTS BY J. S. WOODHOUSE " " H a THE FUGITIVE THE FUGITIVE A DRAMA IN FOUR ACTS BY J. S. WOODHOUSE DES MOINES, IOWA NINETEEN THIRTEEN Copyright Edition Limited to 1000 copies, of which this is No. Copyrighted 1912 Copyrighted 1913 By J. S. Woodhouse Printed July 1913 THE TORCH PRESS CEDAR RAPIDS IOWA iCID 33851 CHARACTERS Tompkins — Servant in Hart's home. Charles Smith — Manager of Hart's factory and in love with Sylvia Hart. He has a scar on his cheek. Sylvia Hart — Daughter of Hart and in love with Richard Wallick. Jacob B. Hart — Owner of shoe factory, employing prison labor. Grace Cameron — Actress, playing "Juliet" at the American theatre and friend to Sylvia. Harley Meyers — Actor at the American and in love with Grace. Kichard Wallick — Playing "Romeo" at the Ameri- can and in love with Sylvia. James — Wallick 's servant. Bill Simons — Burglar and convict. Edwards — Assistant to Warden in Penitentiary. Geo. Landers — Warden of Penitentiary. Jack Campbell — Manager of American Company. Officers, Actors, etc. ACT I The scene is an elaborate reception room in a modern metropolitan home on a Monday afternoon at two. At the left is a sm,all exit door. Back of this at the rear an alcove window draped with heavy veloir curtains. A little distance to the right appears an entrance door, back of which is a small cloak room filled with ladies and gentlemen's wraps. At the right is a large arch door, obliquely from the room, through which comes strains of soft dance music and the hum of voices, the owners of which are hidden from the audience by palms and banks of flowers. The servant, Tompkins, is discovered in the center of the room on his tiptoes, peeking over the foliage and making a count of those in the ball room and indicating each count with his finger. While thus engaged Charles Smith enters and removes his own coat. TOMPKINS {To himself)— Twenty-four, twenty-five, twenty-six. Four more before I may leave the door. I wonder if it be they who have not come? SMITH — All here Tompkins? TOMPKINS — I beg your pardon Mr. Smith (tak- ing his wraps). Three more besides yourself, sir. 8 THE FUGITIVE SMITH — Why this new diversion of turning day into night ? TOMPKINS — Account of these actor folks, friends of Miss Sylvia. They have to be at the theatre nights, you know, so she is giving this afternoon party in honor of Miss Cameron, who plays "Ju- liet ' ' in the present run at the American. SMITH — She seems fond of this Miss Cameron ? TOMPKINS — Very much, indeed, sir. They ride very often forenoons and Miss Sylvia visits her at the theatre two or three times every week. SMITH — How came they to know each other, Tomp- kins? TOMPKINS — An odd chance, sir. It was a Sunday. You see some how or other the actress ripped the sole off her shoe. The stores were all closed and in her dilemma she came here to ask Mr. Hart to get her a new pair from the factory. He went for them himself and While she waited she visited with Sylvia, talking about life on the stage. Miss Sylvia ex- pressed a wish she might see behind the scenes. The invitation was of course given and Miss Sylvia, who you know has a liking for things unconvention- al, promptly accepted. After that they were very good friends and she went very often to the theatre. SMITH — And eliminated her visits to the factory, where her sympathy for the prisoners, had led her almost daily. Strange! Such neglect seems un- like her. THE FUGITIVE 9 TOMPKINS — Of course, sir, I have no proof, and perhaps as a servant should not think, but I have suspected — SYLVIA (entering from ballroom) — Mr. Smith! Foregoing your work to add to the success of my party is indeed complimentary to me ! SMITH — I am glad of an opportunity to see you. Tompkins ! Will you ask Mr. Hart to see me here a few minutes ? (To Sylvia : ) You see, your pret- ty folly doesn't quite fit business customs and I must ask your indulgence for a few minutes' diver- sion of your father 's time. SYLVIA — You aren 't inconvenienced at the factory, I trust, by my little eccentricity ? SMITH — Nothing could so inconvenience us as your sudden neglect to visit the factory of late. That has made work a double burden for me. SYLVIA — It isn 't pleasant to see those convicts working like slaves, making shoes for the free. SMITH — They are none the less slaves to the state than to you, Miss Sylvia. They love you, every one of them. SYLVIA — Why ? What have I ever done ? SMITH — You have always given each a kind word and smile. It has bought the heart of all. SYLVIA — Are hearts so cheap ? SMITH — No ; your smiles so dear. SYLVIA — You flatter. SMITH — No ; I speak from the heart as one enslaved. 10 THE FUGITIVE SYLVIA — I must return to my guests. Will you — SMITH — Miss Sylvia, this opportunity has been long in coming. You must hear me. I am the greatest slave of all. I love you. For years I have been your father's manager. The work would have been bitter indeed did I not teach myself to believe that I toiled for your interest and your happiness. Since then it has been a work of love. I want to work for your whole life 's happiness. Will you let me serve you as a husband ? SYLVIA — I would be false to you and to myself, for I do not love you. SMITH — Then you must learn. Promise me — (Hart enters and Smith diverts his meaning) you will come to the prison factory again tomorrow. For the men 's sake. Will you ? SYLVIA — Yes, for the men 's sake. (Exit. ) HART — Now what? SMITH — I love her. HART — Well? SMITH — I want her for my wife. HART — You know, my boy, wives aren 't secured by the same methods you would employ to get a shoe contract. I like you. Without knowledge of your parents, a graduate only of an orphan's home, no friends, and yet to prove such ability as you have shown in the management of my business instills confidence in me that you are of the right material. I wouldn't object to having you for a son-in-law. THE FUGITIVE 11 I'll help you and I dare say she'll be yours. But you must take your time. Women aren't won by logic, but by frivolities. Be nice to her and leave off the love speeches. I '11 keep the path clear. You attack the heart with bonbons and roses. Have some man at the factory make her a pretty pair of slippers — the finest ever made. That 's the way. Now then, what of this business ? SMITH — Another man 's escaped. HART — Well, that's the state's lookout. SMITH — But our working force is now so depleted we cannot fill the orders we have contracted. We cannot mix outside labor with the prison workers. There have been more vacancies caused by paroles and escapes than can be filled by new convicts. A trifle less surveillance at the prison and a little more laxity in our criminal courts, will force you to aban- don the prison factory and establish an outside in- stitution with help at $2 instead of forty-seven cents per day. HART — How short of help are we ? SMITH — We are twenty men short of full working force, and there are over thirty escapes from prison, now fugitives. Laxness of the authorities is undis- ciplining the men. They'll take 'most any chance, because they know the state is making practically no effort at recapture. HART — Well, we must make an example of a few of them. Slip over right away and see the warden. 12 THE FUGITIVE Hang a reward of five hundred on this fellow 's head, and the rest '11 be a bit more careful. We must put a stop to this shortening of help. Editor Wrant is here tonight. He needs financial help. I '11 inspire him to an editorial campaign for less delay of law and a stricter rule in imposing penalties. Unless there is a greater swiftness of justice society will be at the mercy of the criminal class. ( Two guests ap- pear in rear room removing wraps.) Ah! More guests coming. You may avoid the encounter by slipping out the side way {indicating left door) . SMITH — And Miss Sylvia ? HART — You have my word. {Exit Smith.) HART {to Miss Cameron, who enters) — Ah, Miss Cameron, my daughter has been asking for you. CAMERON — Mr. Hart, I want you to meet Mr. Meyer. HART — I am pleased, Mr. Meyer. Oh, yes, I remem- ber seeing you at the American. You '11 excuse me. I'll send my daughter to extend her welcome. {Exit.) MEYER — Is there any grease paint on my nose ? CAMERON — No. MEYER — Why do I bear so indelibly the stamp of the theatre ? CAMERON {laughing) — It's your predominating personality. MEYER — Well, its predomination has failed at en- trance to the critic 's mind, the manager 's purse, or your heart. THE FUGITIVE 13 CAMERON — You know I love you — but I hesitate. MEYER — Till I can play as Wallick does ? Or draw as large a salary ? Or hang myself as proof of my undying affection? CAMERON — None of those. It 's an old shadow, and one you should know, before you become too ardent in your affection. My close observation of matri- mony has not been assuring. My mother, unhappy in her marriage, fled with another man, taking her baby boy with her and leaving me to my father's care. Then, as you already know, I was married and I was deserted. MEYER — And he took with him your heart ? CAMERON — No ; my jewels. Our love dream soon proved a nightmare. I was glad to be rid of him, but he robbed me and left me penniless to fight my own way. MEYER — What ties then bind? CAMERON — It isn't those that bind, but those ex- perience makes me hesitate to trust. I secured my divorce from him — (starting) — By all of Shake- speare's ghosts, my latest grief I had almost forgot- ten. You must help me. I sent for a certified copy of that decree and received it last evening at the theatre. I stuck the folded envelope in my bodice. It is lost. You must find it. MEYER — And my reward? CAMERON — Consideration. MEYER — I bless you for the joy of serving. 14 THE FUGITIVE CAMERON — How grand! Such a home! (survey- ing the room.) MEYER — Too pretentions. A ten by twelve, a fire- place, a Morris chair, a pipe and a bunch of prospec- tive comedians kicking polish off the furniture is more to my liking. CAMERON (embarrassed) — I wonder if Wallick is here. MEYER — Is he coming ? CAMERON — Why, yes. MEYER — And you helped plan this party ? CAMERON — To the extent of getting Wallick and you invited. MEYER — Grace, what is that man to you ? CAMERON — Very much. I can't understand the something that seems to make me care — but I do care. MEYER — Would that I were dead ! CAMERON — Mow magnificent ! MEYER — What 1 My death ? CAMERON — Oh, dear, no. The appointment of the room, the harmony of the colors. Such appropriate paper. MEYER — More so, I would say, were it striped. CAMERON (disgusted) — Such taste ! MEYER — Indeed? Well, the wealth with which it was papered was made from stripes. CAMERON — Harley ! Leave your comedy with your grease paint and your wig. Your wit is as artificial as your makeup. THE FUGITIVE 15 MEYER — Then will you be serious ? CAMERON — Yes. I meant no reflection on your acting the lines others have written. There is on the stage today no greater fool. MEYER — I feel the part. I play Mercutio while my rival plays Romeo and reaps the kisses which in real life I would corner. CAMERON — That foolish jealousy again ? Absurd ! (Enter Wallick, unnoticed.) Then here's my wish that you rise to play my Romeo. MEYER — Many a man on the stage as in real life, endowed by nature with faculties for a king, is forced, by circumstances, to play the fool. WALLICK — I trust you mean no adverse imputa- tion. CAMERON — Just venting our professional disposi- tion — malcontent. MEYER — And justly. I 've died so often in my parts I'll soon be fit to play but corpse. "WALLICK — Well, Harley, there's the Ghost in Ham- let left. CAMERON (laughing) — Or Mephistopheles in MEYER — Wait ! Remember the scriptural admoni- tion, Judge not WALLICK — Well, if you would wear the white wings of scriptural promise, you must stifle your everlast- ing pessimism. MEYER — Don't preach, till you have ceased that playful kleptomania that lets you steal, in the guise 16 THE FUGITIVE of sport, one 's very clothes. We are late guests to- day because of my missing cuff button. I warrant you took it. WALLICK — Why, so I did, with my left hand while I was shaking your right. A pretty thing (pro- ducing the button from his vest pocket) . MEYER — The button — yes. If your profession as actor ever gives out nature has endowed you for an- other. WALLICK — That reminds me, Grace ; last night in the balcony scene I deftly stole an envelope from your bodice, to see if you would detect me. Permit me — (returning it). MEYER — My knighthood's mission at an end. There 's an airship for every opportunity I seek. CAMERON (to Wallick) —You are, indeed, well suit- ed for your new part. WALLICK — You know the next bill ? CAMERON — It 's Marchant 's new play. WALLICK — And begins ? CAMERON — Next week. MEYER — I 'm glad this long Shakesperian run is at an end. WALLICK — Campbell has indeed favored you with first information of our next piece. CAMERON — Only that I might be a convenient mes- senger to you. He would have you go to prison to- morrow. WALLICK — Prison? THE FUGITIVE 17 CAMERON — For your local color. (Smith enters quietly. Cameron's back is toward him. He slips behind bay-window curtains unnoticed.) WALLICK — Ye gods ! Now what ? (Sylvia enters from the arch just in time to hear Cameron's words.) CAMERON — You are < < The Fugitive. ' ' SYLVIA (after greeting all; to Cameron) — So good of you to bring your Romeo to me. You come op- portunely. They're playing a dream waltz. If Mercutio can dance as deftly as he recites Queen Mab, you should not miss the pleasure. CAMERON — I will demand the proof. MEYER (bowing) — I thank you both. (Exit right Cameron and Meyer.) (Wallick would embrace Sylvia. She holds him at a distance with a warning hand.) SYLVIA — Just let me look at you. (He is embar- rassed.) You do not bear, as unabashed, admira- tion off as on the stage. Do you realize this is the first time I have ever seen you in modern clothes ? WALLICK — I tremble for the comparison. SYLVIA — Why should you, when I have loved you through generations of men — the hateful Richard, the treacherous Iago, the unrelenting Shylock, the homely Cyrano. When all your words of love have been whispered through the lips of painted charac- ters, why should I not with joy anticipate and pro- long the greeting of the man ? 18 THE FUGITIVE WALLICK (embracing her) — Sylvia, I love you. SYLVIA — How good it seems to wrest you for one brief respite from that world of mimicry, where, through the goodness of Grace, I met and learned to love you. But all our meetings have been so clan- destine. Now I have you in my own world, under all approved formalities. WALLICK — I am such a stranger in this world. I have so long played the lives of others I know not how to gracefully act myself. SYLVIA — Then play you are my Borneo. WALLICK — I fear you love the actor, not the man. You have been charmed by the tinsel's glow, the lights' glamour, the playwright's poetry, and the critic's praise. The unveiling of the real man's shortcomings will crush your romance. SYLVIA — You are grander to me tonight. WALLICK — Were I not famous ? < SYLVIA — It would make no difference. WALLICK — And I owned an unknown name ? SYLVIA — I would gladly share it. (He kisses her.) But we must remain no longer from the guests. WALLICK — Then, (giving her his hand) Beauty, lead forth your beast. (Exit Sylvia and Wallick.) SMITH (appearing from window curtains) — So? That's the why? Art, and friendship for the act- ress were not the theatre's chief attraction. It is this star of the play world that has led her into THE FUGITIVE 19 dreams of romance, that make my offers seem lowly and worthless in her eyes. They are waltzing to- gether. How trustingly she looks into his eyes. Oh, smile — you stagey good-for-naught. You may be the idol now, but I '11 shatter you at her very feet ! Ill HART (who enters from ball-room) — Come, Smith, you must join the dancers. You already have lost too much of the happy occasion. SMITH — I prefer a word with you. HART — I 'in that good-natured I '11 grant you any- thing. SMITH — Who is that dancing with Miss Sylvia ? HART — Why, really, I do not know. SMITH — It is Richard Wallick, the actor. HART — Upon my word ! I didn 't know he was among the guests. SMITH — And there is more you didn 't know. HART — What do you mean ? SMITH — That he is her lover. HART — You lie! SMITH — With my own eyes, not ten minutes since, here in this very room, I saw him fold her in his arms and press passionate kisses on her lips. HART — Smith, so help me God if you deceive me — SMITH — I speak the truth. HART (presses bell button) — We'll know the truth! (To Tompkins who appears:) Send my daughter to me. (Exit servant.) 20 THE FUGITIVE SMITH — If she confess her love ? HART — For a common play actor ? SMITH — There have been such unfortunate fascina- tions. HART — Then God help me. SMITH — You said you would clear the way for me. HART — But if her heart is given — her life 's hap- piness at stake ! SMITH — You would desert me — break your word ? HART — What obstacle can I offer ? What objection justly make, based upon the question of honor ? SMITH — He is a fugitive. HART — How do you know that ¥ SMITH — I heard a woman accuse him here, not long since, and he did not deny. Would you have your daughter marry him, who might have to serve as con- vict in your own factory ? HART — Who Was this woman who accused him ? SMITH — I did not see her face, and Sylvia's arrival broke off their quarrel. HART — And this actor has dared make love to her ? SMITH — Has won in his suit to the point of her con- fessing love. HART — Dare you call him fugitive ? SMITH — To his very face. HART — Tompkins has reached them. They turn this way. He comes with her. The presumptious cur! I'll teach the aspiring felon. SMITH (nervously) — Who is that woman to whom she speaks now ? THE FUGITIVE 21 HART — That is the actress Grace Cameron. She and her escort are coming too. SMITH (nervously) — On more sober thought, per- haps my presence here might prejudice me in Syl- via's eyes. Even though the mask be torn from this rogue's face she might hesitate to give her heart to him who shattered her illusions. I have spoken the truth, but better than be the executioner of her hopes in disclosing it, should I be the staff to which she will naturally turn for consoling support. HART — You reason well. Retire, but be close at hand should I need you. (Smith, his face disclosing great relief, hastily exits rear. Hart stands nervously awaiting the laughing group that entesr from the dance hall.) CAMERON — We are the advance guard of the even- ing 's princess who in answer to your summons comes into your presence. MEYER — And she has made every subject in her realm a slave to her delightful charms. SYLVIA — Father, you sent for me ? HART (coldly) —Yes. SYLVIA — I 've brought with me a friend, I so want you to meet. So often you've admired him on the stage. Mr. Richard Wallick. HART — Yes, I have admired him — on the stage. I sent for my daughter, but as the matter concerns you Mr. Wallick, it perhaps is not amiss you also came (looking at Grace and Meyer inquiringly.) 22 THE FUGITIVE WALLICK — These are my friends. What 'ere con- cerns me need be no secret from them. HART — This is your first visit to my home, I believe ? WALLICK — It is, indeed. HART — Let it be your last. SYLVIA — Father — HART (to Sylvia) — And let me hear no more of these rendezvous behind the theatre scenes. SYLVIA — It was the merest chance father, when I visited Grace. WALLICK — My motives, sir, are the purest — HART — Pure? To link the name of an honorable girl with a scandalous stage gossip, to be mongered through the city. SYLVIA — Father, I love him (throwing her arms about her father's neck and burying her head on his shoulder.) WALLICK — My intentions, sir, are most honorable. HART — Honorable ? To entice an innocent girl from under the protection of her only parent, behind theatre scenes where there is a false glamor of life and there instill in her unsuspecting heart false dreams of romance? WALLICK — My name and honor, sir, would not sully any woman. Sylvia — HART (stretching out his arm to bar the actor from his daughter whom he pushes gently away with the other) — What name ? WALLICK — Richard Wallick. THE FUGITIVE 23 HART — A false one. ( All start. ) SYLVIA — Father — HART — What honor ? WALLICK — The honor of a — HART — Fugitive. SYLVIA (gasps) — Fugitive (sinks into chair with hands to her eyes. Grace kneels at her side to com- fort her.) WALLICK — You — (Meyer steps between Wallick and Hart, taking the actor's hand in his own.) MEYER — Mr. Hart. There is some terrible mistake here, some misunderstanding. Surely you have been misinformed. HART (to Wallick) —What do you say, sir? WALLICK — It is absurd. HART — Do you deny you are living under a false name and under a charge of crime ? WALLICK (hesitatingly) — Sir — I — HART — Wait. (Rings bell.) Before you answer Tompkins can bring either the proof or your wraps. Which? (All intent. Tompkins enters door right rear. ) WALLICK — No gentleman will quarrel with the father of the woman he loves. HART — Tompkins, bring his wraps. SYLVIA (moaning) — Oh-o-o. HART — Miss Cameron, will you assist Miss Sylvia quietly to her room? (Cameron nods sadly and Hart exists right.) 24 THE FUGITIVE MEYER (shaking Wallick's hand) — I believe in you old man, but you should have cast the lie in his teeth. WALLICK (to Meyer) — And gained her disfavor. Order my machine, will you, please? MEYER — Certainly. (Exits right rear. Cameron helps Sylvia, who is weep- ing, to her feet and they cross to front left door be- fore Wallick, to whom Tompkins gives his wraps. When they have passed Cameron stops momentarily and turning back to Wallick speaks.) CAMERON — 1 11 explain. (Exit Cameron and Sylvia left. Exit Tompkins right.) WALLICK (alone)— Pool, fool that I was. The world IS a stage, but the ablest actor cannot fake a part in the cast to which he is a stranger. CURTAIN ACT II The apartment of Richard Wallick at 12:30 Tuesday morning presents an air of expectancy. The room is lighted only by the silver moonbeams that scintil- late through the large glass doors of an alcove win- dow at the rear, overlooking the street below. An open door at the rear and left discloses a bed cham- ber of restful blue awaiting the mentally and phy- sically tired owner. Close to the entrance door on the right an empty hall tree stretches out its arms as waiting the coat to be carelessly thrown to its pro- tection and across the room in readiness the smoking jacket is laid over the Morris chair, pushed close to the open fireplace, with slippers close by. Before the large mirror over the mantel invitingly reposes the pipe and tobacco bowl, which finds a contreclaimant for the owner's attention in the caraffe of ivine on the table in the center of the room. James is discov- ered kneeling on the hearth, poking the ashes in the grate. JAMES — Bad luck to these useless playthings. That fire will not last till he returns, and the fuel is down three flights of stairs. (Stirs coals again and shakes his head dubiously.) If he can't have a bright fire 26 THE FUGITIVE to sit by for a half hour, sure he'll be ill tempered for a week. I don't believe it will last. I am sure it will not. Three flights of stairs (yawns.) Well it's no use. I '11 have to get the fuel. (Exit.) (The figure of a man glides down a rope outside the window. He opens it and enters. He is roughly dressed, his hair real gray, a man of about 60 years. An intelligent face hardened by adversity. There being little light in the room he operates an electric flashlight, and examines the place, opening drawers of sideboard, table, examines mantel. and is near the door at the left when a door is heard to slam and he slips cautiously into adjoining room.) WALLICK ( entering r) — James ! ( Shrugs shoulders and shuts window.) James ! ! (Removes outer wraps and presses electric button.) Where the devil — (James enters loaded down with fuel.) Ah. There you are. It's cold as a storage here. JAMES (looking at clock) — I did not expect you, sir, for a half hour. WALLICK — True. I did not eat tonight. JAMES (replenishing fire) — Shall I fetch you some- thing here, sir. WALLICK — Yes. (Bell rings. ) See who is at the door first. I 'm not at home. JAMES — Yes sir. (Exit. ) ( Wallick seats himself in Morris chair, fills his pipe and proceeds to make himself comfortable.) JAMES (returning) — It's a lady sir. THE FUGITIVE 27 WALLICK — At this time of night ? Send her away. JAMES — I tried to, sir, but she wouldn't go. Said she was a friend of yours. WALLICK — How is she dressed ? JAMES — She has a long brown wooly coat, sir, with a sort o' hood that comes up over her head. "WALLICK — Let her in. Then go for my lunch. Make it for two please. JAMES — Yes, sir. (Exit ) WALLICK (to himself) — rlt's Cameron. Why on earth did she come this time of night? To discuss my humiliation I suppose. Discussing misfortune is a woman's conception of consolation. Man's is si- lence. To avoid this I was late tonight at the theatre and for the same reason quitted it with grease paint still sticking to my skin. (Resignedly.) Ah, well. (Woman enters dressed as described and advances to center. Without looking up Wallick says) Well, Grace, I suppose you bring me Sylvia's farewell. SYLVIA (the woman) — Richard. WALLICK (recognizing voice) — Good God. Sylvia. Here, this time of night, alone. You must go away. Someone might come and — SYLVIA — Not until you forgive me. WALLICK — You ? Why, you have not wronged me. SYLVIA — Ah, but I have, for when you refused to deny my father's charges I did mistrust. I had known so little of your real life. Then, yesterday I heard Grace say, ' ' You are the fugitive. ' ' I must 28 THE FUGITIVE honestly confess my weakness of faith for nothing else will excuse the shameful manner in which I let you leave the home to which I had urged your com- ing. Grace told me of your part in the next produc- tion at the theatre. I realized your nobleness in re- fusing a quarrel with my father and the shame for my own weakness would not give me peace. Grace, believing she was giving comfort in yielding to a childish whim, left her coat with me. It was the dis- guise I wanted to escape from home. Your forgive- ness meant more to me than all conventionalities of the world. Never again will my love falter. WALLICK (embracing her) — Dear Sylvia. And if all your father said were true ? SYLVIA — I would love you just the same. Ah, I know you doubt me now. This afternoon I didn't know what it meant to give you up. I do now and henceforth my love shall be steadfast. WALLICK — God help you, little girl. It is true. (She gives a little cry and her head sinks on his shoulder.) But it is not as bad as it sounds. You should know who and what I am. Will you sit here. (She sits in Morris chair and he sits on the hearth at her feet.) I was raised until I was 12 years old in a little town not more than 300 miles from here, mostly by my mother who was a dear soul. As I look back now my heart aches for her. I saw little of my fath- er. He seldom came home. When he did it was for but a few days. He was a railroad construction THE FUGITIVE 29 engineer, I believe that is what mother said. Many a lonely day she spent, especially during the last few years I was home when in childish thoughtlessness I gave more attention to my playfellows and games than to her. But each night when I went home and put my arms about her neck, all the clouds seemed to pass from her face. Gently she would pat me on the head and smilingly say: "Ah, some day my little man will make his mother proud of her son. ' ' Then how my little heart ached because of the poor clothes she wore. Her skirt was patched and her shoes were badly broken out at the sole. One day mother received a letter. She said it was from father. There was no money in it as usual, and she cried long into the night. I can hear in my imagin- ation her sobs even today. I thought it was because of the shoes she needed and could not have. Next night my temptation came. It was after supper and I was playing with three little comrades, who always had been rather rough. We had been reading stories of wild desperadoes and it was finally proposed that we rob the town store. I was reluctant. I knew it was wrong. I thought of the shoes my mother need- ed and when one of the lads proposed I only stand outside and keep watch, I yielded. Well I remem- ber the awfulness of that suspense. They had just come out with the plunder and handed me the shoes when an alarm was given. We scattered and I ran for dear life, just as far from home as my legs would 30 , THE FUGITIVE carry me, out into the timber that skirted the town. I was afraid to go back home. Every little noise startled me. Oh, the awfulness of that night in the woods. Morning dawned and yet I hesitated. Then I looked at the shoes, wondering, after all, if I had the right size. There was an imprint on the inside. I read it with horror. It said "Prison Made No. 1878. ' ' They seemed like an omen of welcome from the prison that would hold me for punishment. The figures burned into my soul for they represented the year I was born. I was more frightened than ever. I waited until night. Then I fled from the community, throwing the shoes in the road as far as I could toward the town. Haunted by fear I changed my name and worked at one thing and another until I ran into a position as stage hand at the American. I cultivated a taste for the stage. I showed aptness as a super. I was given minor parts and gradually worked up to what you have known me to be. SYLVIA — And your mother f WALLICK — My mother? Ah, she was the first one of whom I thought when I won fame. I had suc- ceeded and ' ' might make her proud. ' ' At my first opportunity I quietly left the city and hurried back to that little village to lay at her feet the laurels she had so often prophesied for me. My only greeting was a grave in the potter 's field. Mother was dead. The old home was deserted and tumbling in decay. Buried with her was the secret of the letter that had THE FUGITIVE 31 caused her sadness. My father? Had he died or merely met reverses? Fate had completely wiped him from my life. Over my mother's grave I put a monument of white marble, poor recompense for the misery I had cost her. I looked through the crim- inal records. I had been indicted with the rest. The boys arrested had been reprimanded and set free as guilty of only a boyish prank. The record still stood against me. That is why I could not deny your father 's charge. I seemed condemned without a hearing in your eyes and so I bowed to fate. But now you know the man with his fault, is your love still firm? SYLVIA — More than ever. That against such odds you should ascend to your present heights is proof of your character. WALLICK — And today I am going to your father and tell him all. He must understand and yield you to me. SYLVIA — That would never do. He would not con- sent. You must not try to see him. WALLICK — What will he urge against me ? SYLVIA — It isn 't his judgment but his will that rules him now. He would have me marry Mr. Smith, manager of his factory. He has forbidden me to even see you. But Richard, I love you. I guess I have outgrown the age of women, who in story books, stifle their love and die in grief. Woman is surely a purpose of God and not a tool of man. And if her 32 THE FUGITIVE purpose, as I believe, be to build homes, upon which rests our government and our civilization, then should she found that home upon her love. If the voice of her heart is silenced, woe unto our race. When conventionalities of society are cast down and love alone shall build our homes, then will prison walls crumble, breweries fall into decay, war's clamor will vanish when woman has her say. My father's mind has been poisoned by Mr. Smith, in whom he has great confidence. He would marry me. My only escape from their united force is open revolt in my father's home. I cannot give you up. I shall declare my emancipation and am here to plan a way. WALLICK — A way V Where can it be ? SYLVIA — I have given you my love, Richard. My father's sanction I will forego. WALLICK — You mean you will elope? SYLVIA — If that be the only way. WALLICK — But — SYLVIA (laughing) — Am I not worth the stealing? WALLICK — Sylvia. (He embraces her. Door bell buzzes vehemently.) Someone is ringing. James wouldn't ring. Hush! (A door slams.) The im- pudent is coming in. Quickly. Into this room. (Exit Sylvia into room where burglar is also hiding.) WALLICK (in act of lighting cigarette to Meyer who enters wildly at right)— Hello, night prowler. MEYER — Where the devil — WALLICK — Have a cigarette ? THE FUGITIVE 33 MEYER — Thanks {taking the silver case) I thought I would find it here. When did you steal it? WALLICK — Just after you delivered "Queen Mab" It stuck temptingly from your girt. Was you afraid to wait for it till morning? MEYER — Not if I had been sure you had it, but you know you aren 't the only thief about the theatre, and the others haven't your pleasant faculty of return- ing the plunder. WALLICK — Well, I hadn't noticed its intrinsic value of such great importance. MEYER — No. But it is Grace's first and only gift to me. WALLICK — So ? When did it happen ? MEYER — Only yesterday. WALLICK — I suppose, following your complaint of frequent dying, she thought it time you should begin to smoke. MEYER — Fortunate you didn't aspire to comedy, Wallick. You would have starved on such wit. Bless her heart. And I haven't even thanked her for it yet. I waited too. She must have hurried from the theatre. You didn't see her did youl WALLICK — Why, no. I hurried away as fast as I could. That party put me out and I wanted soli- tude. MEYER (overlooking the significance of Wallick 's last word) — What did Sylvia say to Grace after we left ? WALLICK — I haven 't spoken to Grace since, except in our scenes. 34 THE FUGITIVE MEYER — Richard, I have always suspicioned you cared a lot for Grace. WALLICK — Yes, I do. MEYER — I know, but I mean in a way that might rival my attentions. To tell the truth I 've been genuinely jealous of you. But today after the open avowal of love between you and Sylvia I take it you do not seek Grace in marriage. Am I right ? WALLICK — Your deductions are marvelously cor- rect. MEYER — Thanks. That relieves my mind a lot. I'll not be jealous any more, if you are sure your friendship is only platonic. WALLICK — Only platonic. MEYER — Well, I'll say good-bye old man. Thanks for my cigarette case. WALLACK — You're welcome. MEYER — Good night. WALLICK — Good morning. MEYER (turning to go he sees Grace's coat on the hall tree, and whirling angrily around snarls) — Richard, you lie. WALLICK (laughing) — Harley, you're a fool. MEYER — Oh. Am I ? Well not so big as you might think. Grace is here in your rooms now. WALLICK — You're an ass. MEYER — Do you deny it? WALLICK — Most emphatically. MEYER — Then how comes her coat here ? THE FUGITIVE 35 WALLICK (thrown off guard) — Why — MEYER — You don't answer. Nothing to say. Well I'll take the trouble to answer myself. (Starts to enter room where Sylvia is hidden. Wallick steps in doorway.) WALLICK — You can't go in there. MEYER — Then you admit the woman is there ? WALLICK — I admit nothing. MEYER — Then I'll confront her with her perfidy. Stand aside, or I'll force my way. WALLICK — One minute. Suppose instead of force you use common sense. There 's the telephone. You know her number. See if she be home before you rush in where you might find encounter more pain- fully realistic than in your stage scenes. MEYER (at telephone) — Central? Red 196. Hello. That you Grace? Say do you know where your brown coat is? (pause.) I say do you know where your brown coat is — the one I gave you with the admonition to let no other shoulder wear it ? Sent it to the cleaners? By whom? Richard. Never mind, I '11 explain some other time. Good night dear. (Hangs up phone receiver.) Richard I am a fool. WALLICK — Fortunate you didn't aspire to serious roles. The tears you would have brought would have been those of laughter. MEYER — Rub it in. I deserve it. Forgive me old chap. 36 THE FUGITIVE WALLI CK ( laughing ) — Good bye. (As Meyer starts to go he is confronted by James who enters with tray covered by napkin. Meyer stops, putting on his gloves, while James removes cover.) JAMES — Anything else sir ? WALLICK — Await my call. (Exit James.) MEYER — Supper for two. I say, Richard, what have you in that room you're so particular about? WALLICK — A burglar, impudence. Get out. MEYER ( laughing ) — Good night. ( Exit. ) WALLICK — Sylvia! (drawing back Gurtain of door to room where she was hiding, permitting her to enter.) SYLVIA — Richard, I was so frightened. WALLICK — A little hot coffee and a bite to eat will restore your nerves. SYLVIA — But I must not. I might even now be missed, though I bribed my maid. I must go. WALLICK — But how? SYLVIA — I came in a carriage. It is waiting. Good- bye. WALLICK — Till when » SYLVIA — When 'ere you will. WALLICK — Then today before the sun is up. SYLVIA — I '11 be waiting in the rose garden at 4 a. m. It is leafless and flower less now, but you'll know it by the little garden house in which I'll be waiting. If you want me — WALLICK — Want you ? For such a flower I would THE FUGITIVE 37 fight my way against the thorns of winter manteled bushes to the center of a wilderness of shrubbery. SYLVIA — Now you are my Romeo. (He embraces and kisses her. Door is heard to slam.) I must hurry. (He helps her into her coat. James enters.) WALLICK (to James) — Escort this lady to her car- riage. And order one for me at 3:30. Then you may retire. JAMES — Yes, sir. (Exit.) SYLVIA (pausing at door) — Aufwiedersehn. WALLICK — God speed the minutes. (Exit Sylvia.) WALLICK (alone) — Sylvia, mine. Here life begins in earnest. True love is a rock on which to build one's character. What is fame? A mere flame to be flickered out by some trifling breeze of public whim. But to live and fight for a trusting heart, one that beats in sympathy with yours; to build a home where love shall rule and bequeath to posterity an honorable progeny; to be a part of God's great plan. That is life. Richard (crossing to mantel mirror and addressing self) Your world of make be- lieve has a rival in the life that really is. Before the pillar of love how insignificantly crumble one's former idols, glory, money. Money ? How persist - ly the ' ' Root of evil ' ' impresses its necessity even in the accomplishment of that which is good. One cannot even take a wife at 4 a. m. without its assist- ance. How am I prepared? (As he takes his wallet from his pocket and with arm 38 THE FUGITIVE leaning on mantel counts his bills, the burglar en- ters and cautiously approaches him with upraised club.) WALLICK — Ten, twenty, thirty, forty, fifty — and mother's picture. {Burglar just ready to strike stands as petrified. Wallick raising eyes and seeing burglar in the glass cries) "Wait (swings himself away from robber with back to wall.) What do you want? BURGLAR — Nothing. WALLICK — Well I'm compelled to admit you have a boisterous way of extracting it. Where did you come from? BURGLAR — There (pointing to left door.) WALLICK — In there? (Burglar nods). And the girl ? BURGLAR — She had the room. I was in the closet. WALLICK — Why are you here? BURGLAR — I need money. WALLICK — Then why not — (Wallick completes his meaning by a display of his money and a helpless shrug of the shoulders.) BURGLAR — I changed my mind. WALLICK — But, why ? BURGLAR — There 's a seed of goodness in the Worst as well as badness in the best that needs but condi- tion to develop. WALLICK — I don't perceive the application of your philosophy. THE FUGITIVE 39 BURGLAR — I was never more vicious in my life than tonight. Hunted down like a dog, needing money to purchase freedom, I had my arm trained to kill, but when I saw the face of that woman — (catch- ing himself.) WALLICK — Oh, yes. The girl who was your fel- low prisoner there. BURGLAR (seizing the opportunity) — Yes, that's it. I lost my nerve, that's all. Goodbye (starts for window. ) WALLICK — Wait (indicating supper.) Sit down. BURGLAR — Here ? Supper? With you? You want to detain me — WALLICK — You misjudge me. I merely wish to talk to you. I am an actor. (Burglar hesitates.) Have you conscientious scruples against eating with an actor? BURGLAR — No, but — WALLICK — But actors are not noted for generosity, you would say ? Well I '11 be generous at the risk of being a bad actor. (They sit down.) You see I may have to know something of your life some time in order to play the part. (Starts to pour tea and suddenly laughs.) Strange coincidence. One may even speak the truth unconsciously. I meant to lie when I told Harl this supper was for a burglar. (Passing bread and salad to burglar.) Tell me, have you ever been in prison ? BURGLAR — Well, yes. 40 THE FUGITIVE WALLICK — Can you tell me in a few words what prison life is ? BURGLAR — I can tell in one. WALLICK — Well? BURGLAR — Hell. WALLICK — How compendious. BURGLAR — What 's that ? WALLICK — That 's brief, short, terse, compact. BURGLAR — Condensed, concentrated, concise, com- prehensive — I know the word. It's the covered dish of which I inquire. WALLICK — I beg your pardon. Potatoes au gratin. Help yourself. I see you are highly educated. BURGLAR — Yes, and lowly. WALLICK — Then why are you a common burglar ? BURGLAR — Because in the art and methods of steal- ing there is such extensive competition some of us need be common. But few are crowned financial barons. WALLICK — But why be dishonest at all. BURGLAR — Because honest men today have formed a trust and crush all opposition. WALLICK — I don't understand. BURGLAR — You were never in prison ? WALLICK — No. ( Startled. ) Thank God. BURGLAR — That makes man understand. A year, perhaps ten. You pay the penalty. Then you're given freedom (sneeringly) with a suit of clothes and enough to but a day's rations. How can you THE FUGITIVE 41 live ? Work ? Everyone would know from whence you came. Prison! You are driven away like a plague. They deny you the right to live honestly. That's their religion. WALLICK {fascinated)— Then what? BURGLAR — Back to the organization. WALLICK — The organization ? BURGLAR — Yes. That's another trust. That's the dishonest man's trust. But they have greater faith in humanity than the honest trust. They have confidence in you. They loan you money, furn- ish you tools, assign you work and in case of adver- sity they stand by you. They furnish a lawyer. And they only ask a fourth of your income. Now there is some religion. They give a man a chance. WALLICK — It is hardly religious to profit on others misfortune. BURGLAR — Then there is no such thing as religion. No man gains, but at another's loss. Our natural history teaches nothing is created. It is only trans- formed. WALLICK — But who gains by your imprisonment ? BURGLAR — In our prison there is a shoe factory. I worked there like a dog from seven in the morn- ing till six at night. My compensation ? A four by eight stone cell in which to sleep and thin bean soup and bread. The more prisoners there are the more money for the state. The state received so much from prison labor last year it had to make no tax 42 THE FUGITIVE levy on the people. The people elect the judges who pronounce sentence on those who fill the prison factory. The more prisoners the lower the tax on the people. Is the man slaving in the prison shoe shop unfortunate ? Then who profits by him being there, while his own wife and children on the out- side may be starving. Is society then a religious organization ? WALLICK — But there was a cause for your being there. BURGLAR — Yes. I collected from the rich shoe manufacturer some of the unpaid wares I had earned. WALLICK — Oh. Then you had been in prison even before that ? BURGLAR — Yes. Several times. WALLICK — When were you given your liberty. BURGLAR — I am the recipient of no such philan- thropy from the state. All it has given me is a branded name. My liberty, I took. WALLACK — Then you are a fugitive? BURGLAR — In the humblest meaning of the word. Another cup of coffee would greatly alleviate my affliction. WALLICK — Certainly. (Pouring coffee.) Your apparent good education coupled with a thinking mind arouse my curiosity. Would you mind telling me What first sent you to prison ? BURGLAR — The judge called it embezzlement. I THE FUGITIVE 43 was working in a store at fifteen dollars per week and it was hard enough with that to keep my wife and baby decently. Then one day a box fell on my hand and crushed the fingers. The doctor did twenty- five dollars worth of patching. I worked hard hop- ing for a raise so I could pay the doctor. The raise was slow and he became impatient. He threatened a lawsuit and to tell my proprietor I squandered my earnings. That would mean the loss of my position. That would never do. So I just borrowed five dol- lars a week from the cash to pay the doctor. He was satisfied and didn't ask from where the money came. I meant to replace it as soon as my raise came. The boss found it out, and as a consequence I was asked to pay society the penalty of having loved my family too well. When I was finally re- leased from prison, no one wanted me. Society denied me a right to live, so I helped myself. WALLICK — Then that was your first crime ? BURGLAR — I didn't say that. There are some crimes to which the law pays no attention. WALLICK — In your judgment, what was your first crime? BURGLAR — When I stole a pure innocent woman from an honorable home. WALLICK — Stole ? You say. BURGLAR — Certainly. Whatever cannot be done openly is dishonest. WALLICK — You would preach? 44 THE FUGITIVE BURGLAR — No. But I know the right classifica- tion of things in my business, and I wouldn't ad- vise anyone to start in it. It is so easy to get into, but there are no doors that open out. WALLICK — You heard me plan to elope with this young woman, didn't you? BURGLAR — Yes. Don 't do it. WALLICK — I can hardly concede your classification of an elopement as a theft. What is lost? BURGLAR — The father loses his daughter's love. The daughter loses her father 's confidence and per- haps her inheritance. WALLICK — And I would lose ? BURGLAR — Your self respect. WALLICK — Who the devil are you? BURGLAR — We don't have names in prison. Just numbers. WALLICK — Well? BURGLAR — I am best known in my half of the world as number 1878. WALLICK — My God (recognising the number he saw printed on the shoe.) BURGLAR — What 's the matter ? Are you ill ? WALLICK — No. The truth of your words just struck home. Here take this (handing him his purse) and try to start right. (As burglar starts to go.) Wait. (Presses electric bell button) I want a picture in there. (Burglar removes picture and after looking at it hands it with trembling hand to THE FUGITIVE 45 Wallick. ) It 's the only picture of my mother. You tremble. You need not fear. I rang only for my servant. (Burglar starts for the window.) Wait you shall go out the front door. BURGLAR — Why? WALLICK — That we may both retain our self re- spect. (James enters in dressing gown and slip- pers, with towseled hair, rubbing his eyes.) James. Let this gentleman out the front door. JAMES — Yes, sir. WALLICK — And, James. You may dismiss the car- riage I ordered. CURTAIN ACT III {The furnishings of Warden Landers' s office are quite in keeping with the cold stone prison walls. The only unbarred and unlocked door is the entrance from without at the right. Directly across is a heavily barred door leading to the prison, while a large barred window at the rear overlooks the prison yard and close to it is a barred door leading to the same. Aside from a few solid chairs, and the big calendar showing it is Tuesday and the clock indicating 10 a. m., the only furniture in the room is a flat desk in the center on which is a large record book and a tele- phone. Behind this Edwards, the warden's assist- ant, is discovered seated and opening mail. A mes- senger boy enters, delivers a telegram and exits. Ed- wards opens the message, affects surprise and smiles. There is a rattling of locks, the door at the left opens and Warden Landers enters.) LANDERS — Well, Edwards, any news? EDWARDS — This 1878 — LANDERS — Who escaped Monday, what of him ? EDWARDS {showing telegram) — Caught. Be here in a few minutes. LANDERS — Good. Give him three days solitary confinement. That ought to discipline him some. THE FUGITIVE 47 EDWARDS — Hart is complaining of the scarcity of workers in the factory. Manager Smith has tele- phoned asking a conference with you this morning, to arrange for extending the hours of work. Sim- mons is one of the best workmen in the factory. LANDERS — Put him back to work and give him a bread and water diet three days. When are these actor folks coming to look over the place? EDWARDS — One of them — the man — is in the fac- tory now. The actress, I understand, is coming at 10 o'clock with Miss Sylvia Hart. LANDERS — We've got to tighten up on the rules about visitors. This new fever "sociology" has made so many soft hearted folks light headed that there is quite a general delirium that loudly cries out for operation of prisons on Sunday school plans. The more reformers kept out the fewer fault finders against us. A few more parole boards, anti-capital punishment laws, and lax courts and we'll have to convert the prisons into fortresses as safe abiding places for the few remaining honest. Why defiance of law is even innoculating the agents of justice. I caught Willets, one of our oldest guards, slipping opium into the cell of 49 last night. I am going now to discharge him. I would like to know the source of this opium supply. Call me when Smith comes. EDWARDS — Very well, sir. (Exit Landers.) Will that fool Willetts peach? SMITH (entering right)— Well, Edwards? 48 THE FUGITIVE EDWARDS — Oh. It's you? Just in time. Wil- letts, the bungling fool, was caught last night slip- ping a bundle of dope across. The warden has just gone to give him his discharge. How '11 he take it ? Will he spill, and bring us in ? SMITH — He should know we'll take care of him. If the worst comes we can outswear him. What most troubles my mind is to find someone to do his work. The demand for dope has become enormous, and there 's too big a profit in it for us to do Without an agent. EDWARDS — Listen. Landers has confidence in you. Take sides with him against Willetts and commend him for his efforts to get better men. Like as not he'll ask you to recommend a guard. Then we'll get the right kind of a man. I'll tell him you're here and at the same time try to give Willets a sign to keep his head shut. (Unlocking door left center. ) By the way we 've caught that surley devil, Bill Simons. SMITH — Poor fellow. EDWARDS — You always sympathize with him, and you 're the only person about prison he '11 treat with respect. What 's the relationship ? SMITH — Don't joke about relationship. You know damned well I 'm a foundling. This fellow respects me. He works well. He 's an example of discipline in the factory. EDWARDS — I only thought you might prevail upon him to be Willets 's successor. THE FUGITIVE 49 SMITH — No prisoner agents. It gives them too big a lever on you. You will not need assistants unless you hurry and stop that fool Willetts's head. EDWARDS — Let the visitor in from the court when he comes to the door. (Exit.) SMITH (alone. Nervously fingers papers on desk. Picks up note from table.) Ah. Sylvia's hand- writing. (Reads.) "Warden Landers. I wish to visit the prison this morning at 10 with a friend. Receiving no objections I will consider your kind ex- tension of this privilege still in force. Gratefully, Sylvia Hart. ' ' She 's coming here. Good. 1 11 beg the privilege to hastily break the news. (Door at rear rattles. Smith, peers out. Then opens it. Enter Wallick.) It isn't to every man who rattles that these doors are opened. WALLICK — I am glad to take advantage of the ex- ception to the rule. Are you connected with the prison ? SMITH — But semi-officially. WALLICK — Perhaps you can gratify my curiosity. How long are the prisoners required to work each day in those stuffy quarters, SMITH — Ten hours, but this is soon to be changed. WALLICK — I am glad to hear they will be reduced. SMITH — Quite the contrary. They are to be ex- tended to twelve hours. WALLICK — Outrageous. Is such service necessary ? SMITH — The shoe factory is far behind its orders. 50 THE FUGITIVE Honest men cannot go barefoot that thieves may loll in idleness. WALLICK — Must the feet of freedom walk well shod at the price of slavery like this? SMITH — You understand these men are criminals. WALLICK — They are human beings. SMITH — They are sent here for punishment. WALLICK — An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth? SMITH — Such is our law. WALLICK — What, then, has civilization done for this country? SMITH — It has provided laws to safeguard life and property of the righteous. WALLICK — And institutions like this to dwarf the body and damn the souls of unfortunates. SMITH (laughing) — What seems to you work, is their blessing. Not one of them would be without it. Ask them. WALLICK — I did ask. They are glad to work to the extent of their strength, but — Good God, I saw a man working at a leather rolling machine faint and fall forward, his arm going into the mangel and being crushed to a pulp. He had been on bread and water, they said, for three days. Another man in a frenzy of passion struck at a guard. He was floored by a blow from a club. In his half dazed condition, groveling on the ground he chattered weird words. As they raised him up a guard dragged THE FUGITIVE 51 from the convict's pocket the remains of a package of opium that some human fiend had spirited through these stone walls and iron bars to make this creature a double slave. Is it not enough that these men be deprived of the glorious freedom of this country, but that they must be converted into money making machines for the state, and a prey for some unscrupulous cur who would barter them out of their mere pittance of prison wage with a poisonous drug. SMITH — Our prisons are not hidden beneath a bush- el. Men know the penalty when they choose to vio- late the law. WALLICK — And when they pay the penalty. How are they set afoot upon the world again ? SMITH (jauntily) — He is furnished a bran new suit of clothes, transportation to that place from whence he came and five dollars. WALLICK — And he is expected to start a righteous life with an emaciated and drug steeped body, a cowed soul and five dollars? SMITH — There is honest work if they would turn their hands to it. Most have learned a trade, if they would but employ it. But they are encouraged to live lives of crime by this maudlin sentiment that makes them martyrs more than criminals. The sympathy springs most readily from those in whom heredity has planted similar inclinations and from whom our prison body is most readily recruited. WALLICK (angrily) — You mean to insinuate — (Warden enters door at left.) 52 THE FUGITIVE SMITH — Warden Landers may give more gratifying answers to your psychological queries. "Warden, I am expecting a lady here this morning, will you kindly apprise me of her arrival. LANDERS — Assuredly. Edwards asked to see you concerning the prison workers. He is in the first cell house. (Exit Smith left and Warden locks door after him.) So you are a preacher, sir? WALLICK — Quite the contrary. I am an actor. LANDERS — Ah. Well I am relieved. Mr. Wallick, whom we expected, I presume? WALLICK — Quite your debtor for the liberty of the prison. LANDERS — Welcome. There are few who enter here who can call it liberty. My mistake regarding your profession was due to the reference to psycholo- gy by Mr. Smith. WALLICK — Mr. Smith? LANDERS — Oh. Had you not met him ? WALLICK — Never saw him before. LANDERS — Then I must make you known to each other. WALLICK — Quite unnecessary. We did that with- out formalities. LANDERS — Have you seen enough of the prison ? WALLICK — Quite enough. LANDERS — Does it interest you? WALLICK — Very deeply. Tell me, do these men ever escape? THE FUGITIVE 53 LANDERS — From prison? Yes. They never es- cape their own selves. WALLICK — You mean — * LANDERS — That practically all these men are crim- inals by nature and not by circumstance. They are born with an inherited inclination for wrong doing. Now here is an escaped convict just captured. He was caught with fifty dollars in his pockets — al- most too much to gain honestly in two days liberty, eh ? If you wait you may see him for he will be re- turned here shortly. He has served out many sen- tences here and always comes back. He can no more become honest than can the savage change the color of his skin. Both are blood conditions. His re- turns are so sure that to avoid confusion we keep ever ready for him his same registration number, 1878. (Wallick starts.) WALLICK — I will wait, in the court if I may. LANDERS — Most assuredly (unlocking rear door.) The court guard will open for your return when you wish. WALLICK — I thank you. (Wallick goes out and as Landers turns from locking the door Sylvia, Cameron and Meyers enter the right door. ) LANDERS — Ah. Miss Sylvia, I am charmed to see you, for you know you have been sadly neglecting us of late. SYLVIA — Warden Landers, I want you to meet my friends, Miss Grace Cameron. 54 THE FUGITIVE LANDERS — Charmed, I am sure. SYLVIA — And Mr. Harl Meyers. LANDERS — Most welcome, sir. MEYERS — Thanks. I feel at home. So long have I played death parts the near approach to the elec- tric chair is not the least disconcerting. LANDERS — Then you are an actor ? SYLVIA — Both Miss Cameron and Mr. Meyers are of the American. LANDERS — Quite a coincidence. We already have an actor of the American, a Mr. Wallick here. SYLVIA — A prisoner ? LANDERS — Oh, no. As guest. He is in the court now. Mr. Smith, your father's manager, Miss Syl- via, is also here and asked to be told of your ar- rival. With your permission I will seek him. Make your friends feel as welcome as our surroundings will permit. (Exit through left door.) MEYERS (who has retired to window left rear and is looking out) — By Jove, what high stone walls. SYLVIA — Grace, I must go. It seems rude I know, but the warden will show you through. After what happened I cannot meet Wallick. CAMERON — Nonsense, dear. I am sure there is some reason why he did not come. He will explain. SYLVIA — He gave no hint to you last night, offered not a single word of explanation. CAMERON — You forget. I was not told of your plans, and he would hardly offer explanation to me THE FUGITIVE 55 who was ignorant of a cause for any. He is reserv- ing that for you. SYLVIA — No. I cannot face him. Think of it. After a sleepless night I waited in the rose garden before gray streaked the eastern sky, shivering from both the chilly air and fright, straining my ear to catch the first sound of his approach and peering through the dim light for sight of the man I loved and by whom I hoped to be carried away to the real- ization of happy dreams. And as the sun rose high- er, peeking tauntingly over the horizon, I felt my face grow crimson as the flowers that bloom there in summer time and as the last shadow of night, like morning mist, faded before the dancing beams of morning just so did my vain hopes dissolve and leave me exposed to the glare of day, rejected and ashamed. MEYERS {from window) — Say girls here comes Wal- lick. SYLVIA — I must go. GRACE {detaining her) — No. It is not your shame, but his. {Key can he heard turning in door rear right. ) SYLVIA — Oh, I can 't. ( She disengages herself from Cameron and turns to go to right just as Wallick enters the rear and faces her.) WALLICK — Sylvia. {Sylvia bows her head, but does not raise her hand.) MEYERS (to Cameron)— What's the row? 56 THE FUGITIVE CAMERON — Hush. WALLICK — I know you believe me cowardly for not coming as we planned, but when I explain — SYLVIA — There need be no explanation. It is enough to know my un worthiness without being told the reasons. WALLICK — Not that, but you must let me justify myself. SYLVIA — Since you rejected the one thing such jus- tification might win you, it is useless. WALLICK — Rejection is not the word. I merely scorned the means. SYLVIA — Your sudden change of scruples did not lighten my embarrassment. GRACE — Richard, I think you've acted cowardly. WALLICK — Judgment was not passed on the mean- est convict in this prison without the right to trial. Am I to be condemned without a hearing. (Ed- wards enters left door.) SYLVIA — Mr. Edwards. We have come to see the prison. EDWARDS — At your service, Miss Sylvia. We'll see the cell house first. (Opening door.) MEYERS — And end with the death chamber, I pre- sume. (Exit Grace Cameron and Meyers. Sylvia almost reaches door.) WALLICK — Sylvia — SYLVIA (hesitates during a conflict of emotions, but finally speaks to Edwards) — I'll wait here. THE FUGITIVE 57 EDWARDS — Very well, Miss. (Exit left center.) WALLICK — Sylvia. While hidden in my room awaiting my expulsion of Meyers, you were not alone. (She starts.) A burglar who had come to rob me of wealth just as I had planned to rob you of honor, crouched within your reach. But he was your friend. When you had gone we clashed. He would have struck me down behind my back but for some mysterious impulse that suddenly seized him. Then was he content to tell me he had overheard and to predict I would be as bad a thief as him. He said he began by stealing an innocent woman from her home. He made me feel a criminal, and I deter- mined then to get you honorably. Today I shall go boldly to your father and in the name of love de- mand your hand. I will prove to him the folly of his unjust suspicion. SYLVIA — Too late, too late. WALLICK — Too late. What do you mean? SYLVIA — I am betrothed to Mr. Smith. WALLICK — To — Oh. Impossible. Was your love then so weak. SYLVIA — Not that. But when you left unclaimed the heart I threw so boldly at your feet, life seemed indeed a worthless waste to me. My own happiness destroyed I sought to save at least that of my only parent. The staff of love whereon I leaned broken asunder patera al affection was my only refuge and in filial duty I yielded to the wish that might at least bring joy into his life. 58 THE FUGITIVE WALLICK — You do not love this man? SYLVIA — I honor my father 's choice. WALLICK — This wedding shall never be. SYLVIA — What would you do? WALLICK — Demand justice. Unmask this wretch who has no drop of human sympathy within his blood and would make you but a slave to his am- bitions. Demand in the name of her who bore you the right every woman craves by her own choice to fill her heart with joy of love's eternal fount or sor- row of despair's black grave. Then. let you choose — SYLVIA — It is useless. WALLICK — But why — SYLVIA — I knew the only way, else Would I not have thrust myself into your arms. My father's prejudices, though fixed upon the frailest base, are proof against dislodgement by either reason, threat or plea. It was because I knew my father well that I made bold to suggest the only plan by which I might become your wife — a plan that failed. There is no other way. WALLICK — No way ? Love will find a way and — God, Sylvia, you have not ceased to love me"? SYLVIA — I have no right to answer you now. WALLICK — Actions may disclose the thought the lips dare not speak. {He takes her in his arms and would kiss her.) SYLVIA — No you must not — not now. WALLICK — Then you do love him ? THE FUGITIVE 59 SYLVIA — Not that, but there is an honor. I am bound to respect the word I gave my father to marry him until freed from his claim. WALLICK — Then this kiss shall free you. SYLVIA (straggling) — Stop, you must not. Don't — LANDERS (entering left center and advancing rapid- ly toward Wallick and Sylvia.) Stop! (Wallick and Sylvia separate, Landers stepping to her side and Smith, who has followed Landers, confronting Wallick.) SMITH — Coward ! Your criminal sympathy crops out early in the blood. You assault a helpless wom- an. Your pretense at goodness is as shameful as your debasing act. WALLICK — You lie! SMITH — You'll answer for this to me ! WALLICK — By what right to you ? SMITH — This lady is to be my wife. WALLICK — You lie again ! SYLVIA (grabbing Smith's arm as he would strike Wallick) — Don't ! For my sake, I implore you ! (Enter Meyer, Grace and Edwards from left in order named.) MEYER — What 's the trouble ? WALLICK — That blackguard there is CAMERON — My husband ! (confronting Smith.) SMITH — The devil! (Sylvia shrinks away from him. ) MEYER — Put him in chains ! 60 THE FUGITIVE LANDERS — What does all this mean? CAMERON (pointing to Smith) — That man robbed me of five thousand dollars after I had divorced him. There is a warrant for his arrest. He is a fugitive. I demand he be held a prisoner. SMITH — Edwards, will you telephone Mr. Hart? He will supply my surety. It is all a mistake. WALLICK (crossing to Sylvia.) — Sylvia! CAMERON (to Smith.) —Mistake? Well, it's one for which you will pay dearly now. EDWARDS (telephoning.) —No. 1463X. Mr. Hart? Will you please step over to the warden's office? A little misunderstanding, and Mr. Smith asked — Very well. (Hangs up receiver.) He is coming. (Telephone rings again and he answers.) What's that ? ( To Landers : ) They Ve brought in number 1878. LANDERS — Tell them to bring him up. EDWARDS (telephoning.) — Bring him up. WALLICK (to Sylvia) — Our burglar. (Officers enter right door pushing Simons, who is hand- cuffed, before them to the desk at which Landers has seated himself and opened register.) LANDERS — Well, 1878, back again, eh? We have reserved your room for you. (Simons, dazed, does not answer but looks questioningly at those in the room, while the officers search his pockets.) CAMERON (to Meyer.) — How miserable he looks! MEYER — He is used to it. Such fellows can't be happy outside. THE FUGITIVE 61 LANDERS — Mr. Smith, since formal charge is made against you, 1 11 ask you to undergo the formality of being searched. SMITH — But I protest ! LANDERS — A mere formality, you know. In spite of Mr. Hart's good offices you will have to remain temporarily here in custody pending court routine. My duty, you know. Edwards, please search him. (Edwards makes search, laying objects on warden's desk. Attempts to conceal something just as Lan- ders looks up.) What's that ? EDWARDS — A small tobacco box, I believe. We al- ways leave the usual allowance. LANDERS — I'll look at that, please. (Edwards re- luctantly hands it over.) Good God! Opium! Then you — I wouldn 't have believed it ! I am afraid even Mr. Hart can not help you much now. SMITH — A box I found on the road outside the walls. LANDERS — Oh, very well. We'll search your room and effects and if we find no corroborating circum- stances we'll believe that story. Handcuff him, Ed- wards, to 1878. EDWARDS — Yes, sir. (Handcuffs men together and motions them to left door, which he proceeds to unlock. As they reach door and wait, Wallick crosses from left to center and addresses Landers as he takes a card and pencil from his pocket.) WALLICK — Warden, I feel sorry for this 1878. He has my sympathy. Would you mind giving me his name? 62 THE FUGITIVE LANDERS — Not at all. While he is best known by number and a half dozen aliases, his real name is William H. Simons. (Wallick starts, card drops from his hand, and he stands dazed when Hart en- ters right center.) HART (excitedly.) — So this is the trouble! That fugitive again? SYLVIA — Father! He is no fugitive and I love him! (She starts toward Wallick, but Hart stops her with his arm, turning half-way to Wallick.) HART — Then let him deny ! SYLVIA — Richard ! — now ! WALLICK (startled by her earnest appeal to grasp the psychological moment into a realization of his whereabouts, almost shouts:) Now? God! The awf ulness of that word ! But a minute since and I could have denied the world. But a second is re- quired to plunge one from the highest clouds of hope to the lowest depth of despair. I am a fugitive ! (All start.) Not from the law, but from my own self. This petty thievery I thought but a playful caprice may be a terrible latent passion running within my blood, only awaiting opportunity to break out. I stole — great God ! — I stole and cringingly threw the ill-gotten thing back toward the town. I fled. I sought refuge under the name of Wallick — I made the public honor and love an imposter. I have cheated the world. I have lived a lie. THE FUGITIVE 63 SYLVIA — No, no ! You are too noble to have been aught but your real self ! WALLICK— -But I'll be a fugitive no longer! I'll draw a streak of red through every poster that bears the name of Wallick. I'll check in the blood the wish to wear the mask, the impulse to play awrong the game of life. I'll build a foundation of truth upon which to raise my character. I'll turn back the hateful laws of heredity. I'll rub the tarnish from the name my mother gave or die. I '11 live and act myself. Then know me all — you who would scorn or pity — I am the son of 1878 ! CURTAIN TABLEAU Landers Edwards, 1878 and Smith Wallick Sylvia and Hart Cameron and Meyer ACT IV (The Green Room of the American theatre is located directly beneath the stage and the actors' numbered dressing rooms extending in a row along one side, find commodious space presumably beneath the or- chestra floor. Two unnumbered doors in the row are labeled "Orchestra" and "Theatre," the latter leading, it may well be surmised, to the box entrance. At the right side is a door marked "Street Exit" and at the left a stairway leading to the stage above. The room has been furnished in keeping with its name, there being a wealth of rich blue-green up- holstering, rugs, etc. Easy chairs are plentiful and in the center a large table is covered with dramatic publications and current newspapers. Meyer is dis- covered sitting on the edge of the table dressed as "Mercutio," smoking a cigarette and reading the daily paper. He rises impatiently, goes to one of the dressing-room doors and raps.) MEYER — Grace! CAMERON {from behind door.) —Well? MEYER — Will you never finish making up ? CAMERON — What's the hurry? MEYER — I want to see you. THE FUGITIVE 65 CAMERON — Oh! (with a drawl) MEYERS (Again seats himself on table and reads, only to rise impatiently and again rap on the door.) Grace ! CAMERON — Well, what is the matter with you? MEYER — Have you seen the evening papers ? CAMERON — Now you know I only read the papers the day following our presentation of a new play. Why should I see them tonight ? MEYER — There 's a scandalous writeup about Wal- lick here. (Cameron emerges from dressing-room in costume of Juliet. ) So ! It takes the magic name of Wallick to unlock my lady 's door. / could wait. CAMERON — Stupid child! Do you know woman so poorly to be ignorant that the word "scandal" arouses her from deepest lethargy? Forget your stupid jealousy. Read me the paper. MEYER (reading.) — Noted Actor Proves to be Con- vict 's Son. ' ' That 's in black headlines across three columns. "Makes Astounding Confession in War- den's Office at State's Prison where He Confronts His Father." That's two columns wide. "May Play a Prison Part Himself in the Next Bill at the American. ' ' Now here 's the article : "A decided sensation was caused today in dra- matic circles when it became known that Richard Wallick, leading man at the American, is the son of a convict and himself assumed the fictitious name he has made famous in order to hide an affair in which 66 THE FUGITIVE he was involved years ago in his home town. The news came in the form of a confession from the actor himself when he accidentally encountered his father while visiting the state penitentiary to secure local color for the part of a prison fugitive which fate, quite ironically, had destined as his role in the next production of the American company. At the time of the expose he was in company of Miss Sylvia Hart, with whom it is rumored he was secretly engaged. The appearance of the girl's father on the scene re- sulted in a denunciation that quite rivaled the stage itself. "Wallick is said to have expressed a desire to shake off the nom de guerre. Whether he intends to do this before his appearance as "The Fugitive" or whether he will appear at all in that part is now a matter of wide speculation. Little information could be secured at the prison but it is understood one arrest was made. Manager Campbell of the American refused to discuss the matter. ' ' The mercenary old devil! I bet he gave out the story himself for sake of advertisement. CAMERON — It 's an outrage ! Where is Richard 1 MEYER — He went up several minutes ago. CAMERON — And to think they had to drag her name into it ! MEYER — Ssh ! (Sylvia and Hart enter from theatre.) CAMERON — Ah, Sylvia ! I am so glad you are here. Dear girl ! THE FUGITIVE 67 SYLVIA — I thought it best. CAMERON {extending hand to Hart) — And you too, Mr. Hart. Welcome again to our play world. HART — Well, to be perfectly frank, young woman, I can't share my daughter's opinion that it was best to come, but I have spoiled her so long that with me yielding has become a demoralizing habit. SYLVIA — You see. the papers said CAMERON — Yes, dear, I 've seen. It is outrageous ! SYLVIA — Well, I thought my presence in the the- atre would serve to discredit them. I was bound to come, despite the suffering it might cost me. CAMERON — And so Mr. Hart was good enough to accompany you. HART — Good enough ? You don 't think I am going to take chances of losing her through this show busi- ness, do you? Enough trouble I have already — my manager imprisoned, my business disrupted and my household cast in gloom — without turning her loose here to be stolen from me. CAMERON — I hope you do not regret, Mr. Hart, the disclosure of Mr. Smith 's true character. He plead- ed guilty at once and was sentenced. HART — H 'm — no ; but I 'm not going to take on any more bad bargains. SYLVIA — Father! HART — Well, (looking uneasily at his watch) we came down here to fix your slipper. We better look after it and go to our box. It 's about time for the next act. 68 THE FUGITIVE SYLVIA (limps.) Oh! CAMERON (to her side.) What is it 1 SYLVIA — It must be a nail in the heel of this new slipper (raising her skirt). CAMERON — Sit down, dear (offering chair). MEYER (dropping on knee) — Allow me to remove it. (He has trouble trying to untie the laces.) CAMERON — How pretty! Where did you get them? SYLVIA — They were made especially for me on father's request at the prison factory, and only came late today. When father ordered them one prisoner volunteered to make them alone — didn't you say, father ? HART — Yes, yes, dear ( looking nervously at Meyer trying to untie knot) . Said he made them all alone. MEYER — My, that's a hard knot. (Bell buzzes in dressing room.) And there's my bell. CAMERON (Another bell buzzes.) — And mine. SYLVIA — Well, let the shoe go. I guess I can stand it until after the play. MEYER — I'm sorry I'm so clumsy, but I'll HART (opening door for daughter) — Sylvia ! (Bells buzz furiously and all exit rapidly.) (The street door opens cautiously and Smith, in con- vict's uniform, seeing the way clear, creeps quietly in. Applause can be heard in theatre.) SMITH — Applause ! Perhaps for her. Fool that I was to rush into her presence ! Her hatred is less THE FUGITIVE 69 to be blamed than my own folly. (Door slams and he starts, throwing himself back against the wall.) God ! What a coward a few hours in that black hell have made me ! My ears buzz with the rattle of the chains, my eyes burn with the sight of those stone walls and I tremble at the thought of joining that throng of slaves. Yield to such a hell? What a dream it seems ! One daring blow, a dash, the bul- lets whistling by my head in the dark, and then freedom — but a fugitive! I must act quickly. (Creeps cautiously along back wall, tapping lightly on each dressing-room door and calling in a hoarse whisper:) Wallick! Wallick! (Finding one un- locked and ajar he throws open the door and surveys the interior.) Wallick's! Empty! (He enters and closes door behind him.) (Hisses can be heard from theatre. Wallick comes slowly down the stairs.) WALLICK — Hissed ! Hissed for doing that for which I have been cheered a thousand times ! Such is the public whim. Wine for which they smack their lips when it is served in a silver chalice would be dashed in the gutter if offered from a wooden bowl. How well to know the hollowness of public praise ; how bitter the price of learning it ! I thought I had produced a classic characterization of Romeo that would go down in history as a precedent for all others. I thought I had perfected an art that would withstand the critic's cold anaylsis, the rival's jeal- 70 THE FUGITIVE ous sneer and every unjust force that might attack it. I worked — not for personal glory but for the cause of art, and the plaudits of these many nights carried me into the joyful hope that I had built with- in the hearts of those who clapped their hands. But the public praise was as false to the art as the name under which I reared it. They were deaf to the au- thor 's words, blind to the actor's portrayal. They made the man beneath the mask their idol and quick- ly dashed him to the ground when they learned he was but flesh and blood. God ! How can it be that man of man can have so little human charity ? Why, it seems to me that if I saw the world's meanest cow- ard in my clothes I would extend a helping hand. (He pulls open his dressing-room door. Smith, dressed in Wallick's clothes, stands motionless in the doorway.) WALLICK — What do you want ? SMITH — A helping hand. WALLICK — My God ! It is really you ! I doubted my eyes. I thought you were SMITH — In prison ? So I was. WALLICK — What do you seek here? SMITH — Your clothes. WALLICK — To leave me the stripes, I suppose, in which you would have falsely paraded me before the world. SMITH — I did you wrong. WALLICK — You embittered against me the keeper of the one jewel in this world for which I longed. THE FUGITIVE 71 SMITH — The brightness of that same jewel blinded me to justice. WALLICK — You sought to build your own fortune on the wreckage of other lives. You as ruthlessly maligned me to gain possession of that innocent girl, as you tried to cast away the first woman who hon- ored you. SMITH — She has her revenge. WALLICK — Revenge ? Justice, you mean. Do you think the few years you might spend in prison could compare with the years she suffered after you robbed and deserted her, fighting her way onward alone un- til she could shake off her shame and misery ? She faced her responsibility with true womanhood. She was weak and yet she bore her cross for years. She paid the price, while you, a man, shrink before the penalty of your misdoing like a craven coward. How gained you your freedom, have you added murder to your list of crimes ? SMITH — No ; not that. I struck a guard, but only enough to fell him for a moment. Then with the help of a fellow-prisoner I gained the wall and braved the storm of bullets that followed me. WALLICK — Preposterous! What prisoner would risk his life for you ? SMITH — No. 1878. WALLICK — My own father! And your gratitude is to come here to rob me of my clothes and witness my humiliation. 72 THE FUGITIVE SMITH — No ; I come to tell you my grief for the in- jury I have done you and to implore of you the help I could not dare to hope of any other. WALLICK — Help from me, who have greatest cause to hate you? Why? Because Bill Simons, who helped you, is my father ? SMITH — Your father — and mine ! WALLICK — You lie ! I was the only boy. SMITH — Of your mother, yes. But he had a wife before, who died and left me, an infant. That 's what he confessed to me and is why he helped me to escape. I was put in an asylum when he married your mother, and after that I was farmed out. He lost track of me until several years ago he encoun- tered me as factory superintendent in prison and recognized the scar on my cheek. He kept the secret until we were fellow-prisoners. WALLICK — A weird fairy tale devised by a craven brain to promote your escape. SMITH — I swear it is the truth. WALLICK — You can quickly prove it. He alone knows my true given name. What did he say to you? SMITH — He said to me, ' ; When I was in trouble he helped me. Go to him, for Walter is a good boy. ' ' ( Wallick starts at name of "Walter.") Forgive me and let me go from here in your clothes. WALLICK — Go. SMITH — Thanks. (Stops and takes purse from THE FUGITIVE 73 pocket. ) I thank you for the clothes. I '11 leave the purse. WALLICK — Take it. I only wish that it were more. SMITH (grasping Wallick's hand.) — God bless you! WALLICK — And make you live uprightly. SMITH — I will ! Good-bye ! (Exit Smith. Wallick remains in center listening at- tentively. Cameron and Meyer enter from stairway, she extending her hand to him sympathetically.) CAMERON — Richard WALLICK — Wait! (raising his hand forbiddingly as he listens. Door slams.) Thank God! (Drops his hand and closes eyes to relieve mental strain.) MEYER (putting arm about Wallick.) I say, don't take it so hard, old man. Your friends are still loyal. Don 't let a few unmannered gallery ruffians depress you. CAMERON — The loyalty of one soul alone should sustain you. Sylvia is here and applauded. WALLICK — Sylvia ? I saw her face, and though her hands applauded, her eyes and mouth betrayed intense suffering. My own disgrace is nothing, but for all the glory I have had, for all the money I have made, I would not have brought this misery to her soul. CAMERON — I am sure she fears not the loss of your fame, but your love for her. She loves you as loyal- ly as ever ; Harl is true, and I WALLICK — You? Good God! Do you know who I am? 74 THE FUGITIVE CAMERON — I know enough that nothing in this world could shake my faith in you. WALLICK — Who do you imagine slammed that door as you came in ? CAMERON — I can't imagine. WALLICK — Charles Smith ! MEYER — I thought he was WALLICK — So he was. But he escaped and with my help and in my clothes is now away from danger. MEYER — You helped him? CAMERON — Why should you WALLICK — He is my brother. CAMERON — Oh! (Sinks in chair, weeping, with head upon the table.) MEYER — Impossible ! WALLICK — For me no misfortune is impossible. Bill Simons helped him to escape after confessing he was his son by his first marriage. He appealed to me for help in the name of brother. I did a bro- ther 's duty only to add another shame to the burden I already bear. Whatever way I turn the barriers forbid me. The prisoner can leave the walls of stone that hem him in, but / cannot escape myself. If in Romeo 's death tonight the dagger supplants the poi- son vial, and Art finds Realism its companion, may God have mercy on my soul. (Exit to dressing- room.) MEYER — Not that, Wallick ! — (dressing-room door closes. ) My God ! Grace ! We cannot let him take THE FUGITIVE 75 his life ! Some power must yet appeal to him. Oh, God ! Send us a messenger of mercy ! (Sylvia enters from theatre door, limping, followed by father. ) SYLVIA — Grace, in tears 1 Why MEYER — It's Wallick. HART — Broken another heart, I suppose. MEYER (to Sylvia, who is trying to comfort Cam- eron.) — It is Wallick needs the help. You must speak to him. HART — I have forbidden my daughter to have aught to do with him. MEYER — He may kill himself ! HART — Quite natural for a convict 's son. SYLVIA — No, no ! MEYER — Even now he threatened in the tomb scene to actually take his own life. SYLVIA — I will speak to him — (Takes step and cries out in pain. ) Oh ! MEYER — What is it ? (supporting her) . SYLVIA — My foot! (Sinks into chair offered by her father.) HART — That's why we're here. The nail in that slipper, I fear, is sharper than she admitted. MEYER (dropping on knee.) — I'll do better this time. (Takes slipper off and looks within.) Nail, yes indeed! (He reaches to girdle as if searching for something. Wallick enters and makes for the stairs.) Wallick! (Wallick pauses.) Your dagger, please. 76 THE FUGITIVE WALLICK — I cherish its possession most dearly to- night. MEYER — You would not let selfishness override your chivalry, by refusing assistance to a lady in distress ? (Wallick hesitates.) Then yourself remove the nail from the lady's slipper. (Wallick, unsheathing dagger, turns and takes slipper and is in the act of removing the nail when his eyes become fixed in a glassy stare on the inside of the shoe; his hand trem- bles and the slipper drops to the floor. Meyer re- covers it.) WALLICK (hoarsely) — ' ' Prison made. 1878. ' ' (Tremblingly hands dagger to Meyer, and slowly makes his way to stairs at left.) MEYER (working at slipper.) Strange! I see no purpose that tack could have served. Looks as though it had been purposely put there — just stuck through the insole. (Pulls up insole to extract tack. ) It was. Here 's a note ! HART — What 1 A note ? SYLVIA — Who could have sent it? MEYER — It's from Bill Simons. (Wallick turns. Cameron raises her head, Sylvia leans anxiously for- ward and Hart becomes very attentive, while Meyer, still on his knee, reads.) "Dear Miss Hart: The night you hid in Richard Wallick 's room" — (Hart starts, Sylvia raises kerchief to her eyes, Meyer looks at Wallick as he sees solution of that night's mys- tery.) — I was crouching as a burglar in his clos- THE FUGITIVE 77 et. When you said that prayer asking God to guide you right, you were not three feet from me. Your hands extended toward me, your pure face seemea to pry into my very soul. Maybe God didn't hear that prayer, but I did, and in His name I want to direct you rightly. I know your love for Wallick, and that your heart breaks because he is a convict 's son. So I must tell the truth. He is not my son ! " ( Grace jumps to her feet, Sylvia drops kerchief from her eyes, Wallick strides excitedly across to the group. ) WALLICK— Go on, man! For God's sake, go on! MEYER ( reading. ) — ' * I eloped with Wallick 's mother just as I prevented him from eloping with you. She had a little baby at the time. That was Wallick. His real name is not Simon, but that of his mother, who was Helen Cameron. CAMERON (with cry.) — O-oh ! My mother ! Then my brother taken away by her was you, Richard! You — my brother! (rushing into his arms.) WALLICK — My sister ! Thank God, my heritage is not a criminal's blood ! I need not be longer a fugi- tive from self. MEYER (reading.) —"My real and only son by a former marriage is Charles Smith. Wishing you happiness and in return for my confession asking of you and your friends charity and compassion for my boy, who is now a fugitive, I am the man who heard your prayer. Bill Simon, No. 1878." (Hands let- ter to Sylvia.) 78 THE FUGITIVE SYLVIA — See, father (handing letter to her father), how you have wronged him. (Hart silently reads the letter again.) MEYER — Ah, Richard (taking his hand), forgive my many foolish jealousies. It was not strange that Grace should love you. I am proud to yield to you the closer tie only that I may ask your sanction to another that shall make us man and wife. WALLICK — It is hard to give away so soon a sister just recovered; but there is not a man in all the world to whom I would rather trust her. (Delivers Cameron to Meyer and crossing kneels at Sylvia's feet and picks up her slipper.) Sylvia, I — (pauses in his speech, and turns to Hart.) Mr. Hart, may I renew my claim to your daughter's affections? SYLVIA — Father (pleadingly), he has no taint of convict blood. HART — Well, he is still an actor. CAMPBELL (storming down stairs.) Ho, Wallick! Wallick ! — Oh, I beg your pardon for interrupting the party, but business is business, and I have no time for formalities. After tonight — you are im- possible. Accept this as you notice. You are off the American cast. (Turning to Meyer.) Meyer, report tomorrow for rehearsal for leads. (Exit.) WALLICK (rising.) I congratulate you, Harl. You see I give you both bride and position. MEYER — I regret it through such means. WALLICK — I am glad to assume my new role of Self. THE FUGITIVE 79 VOICE {from above.) Stage set. Last act. MEYER — How can I ever thank you ? WALLICK — Be good to my sister. GRACE (as bell buzzes) — There's my call. Harl, please help me hurry. (Exit up stairs.) WALLICK (to Hart.) — I'm not an actor now. HART — Well, what right has a man with neither name or position to aspire to a woman 's love ? WALLICK — I made a position and name for a fic- titious person. I should be able to do as much for my own self. SYLVIA (pleadingly.) —Father? HART (to Richard.) — Your logic seems sound. Would you accept the management of my factory? WALLICK — On one condition. HART — And that WALLICK — That prisoners be allowed regular wages and such be given for support of the innocent, suf- fering families. SYLVIA — Father, that is only justice. (Hart med- itates. ) WALLICK (as bell rings.) — That is my call bell. HART — You may take the place. WALLICK — And Sylvia? HART — Well, in the last anaylsis, I always do what she wishes. WALLICK— Sylvia! SYLVIA — Richard! (They embrace. Richard's bell buzzes again, and he releases her.) JUL 21 1913 80 THE FUGITIVE WALLICK — When I have died as Romeo, I will re- turn your modern lover. (Starts for stairs still car- rying Sylvia's slipper in his hand. Hart has retired to the theatre entrance door awaiting his daughter.) SYLVIA — Oh, Richard ! My slipper ! WALLICK (returning.) With my name, my position, and my reputation I seem also to have lost my head. SYLVIA — But you have won a heart. (They em- brace.) GRUFF VOICE (from stage.) —Last call for Rich- ard Wallick ! WALLICK (starting.) — The last call for Richard Wallick! Thank God! (They embrace. Wallick's bell buzzes furiously.) CURTAIN LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 017 401 660