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Literature Post > Sinclair, Upton > 100%: The Story of a Patriot > Chapter 36

100%: The Story of a Patriot by Sinclair, Upton - Chapter 36

Section 36





"Well," said McGivney one day, "I've got something interesting for
you now. You're going into high society for a while!"

And the rat-faced man explained that there was a young man in a
neighboring city, reputed to be a multi-millionaire, who had written
a book against the war, and was the financial source of much
pacificism and sedition. "These people are spending lots of money
for printing," said McGivney, "and we hear this fellow Lackman is
putting it up. We've learned that he is to be in town tomorrow, and
we want you to find out all about his affairs."

So Peter was to meet a millionaire! Peter had never known one of
these fortunate beings, but he was for them--he had always been for
them. Ever since he had learned to read, he had liked to find
stories about them in the newspapers, with pictures of them and
their palaces. He had read these stories as a child reads fairy
tales. They were his creatures of dreams, belonging to a world above
reality, above pain and inconvenience.

And then in the days when Peter had been a servant in the Temple of
Jimjambo, devoted to the cult of Eleutherinian Exoticism, he had
found hanging in the main assembly room a picture labelled, "Mount
Olympus," showing a dozen gods and goddesses reclining at ease on
silken couches, sipping nectar from golden goblets and gazing down
upon the far-off troubles of the world. Peter would peer from behind
the curtains and see the Chief Magistrian emerging from behind the
seven mystic veils, lifting his rolling voice and in a kind of chant
expounding life to his flock of adoring society ladies. He would
point to the picture and explain those golden, Olympian days when
the Eleutherinian cult had originated. The world had changed much
since then, and for the worse; those who had power must take it as
their task to restore beauty and splendor to the world, and to
develop the gracious possibilities of being.

Peter, of course, hadn't really believed in anything that went on in
the Temple of Jimjambo; and yet he had been awed by its richness,
and by the undoubtedly exclusive character of its worshippers; he
had got the idea definitely fixed in his head that there really had
been a Mount Olympus, and when he tried to imagine the millionaires
and their ways, it was these gods and goddesses, reclining on silken
couches and sipping nectar, that came to his mind!

Now since Peter had come to know the Reds, who wanted to blow up the
palaces of the millionaires, he was more than ever on the side of
his gods and goddesses. His fervors for them increased every time he
heard them assailed; he wanted to meet some of them, and
passionately, yet respectfully, pour out to them his allegiance. A
glow of satisfaction came over him as he pictured himself in some
palace, lounging upon a silken conch and explaining to a millionaire
his understanding of the value of beauty and splendor in the world.

And now he was to meet one; it was to be a part of his job to
cultivate one! True, there was something wrong with this particular
millionaire--he was one of those freaks who for some reason beyond
imagining gave their sympathy to the dynamiters and assassins. Peter
had met "Parlor Reds" at the home of the Todd sisters; the large
shining ladies who came in large shining cars to hear him tell of
his jail experiences. But he hadn't been sure as to whether they
were really millionaires or not, and Sadie, when he had inquired
particularly, had answered vaguely that every one in the radical
movement who could afford an automobile or a dress-suit was called a
millionaire by the newspapers.

But young Lackman was a real millionaire, McGivney positively
assured him; and so Peter was free to admire him in spite of all his
freak ideas, which the rat-faced man explained with intense
amusement. Young Lackman conducted a school for boys, and when one
of the boys did wrong, the teacher would punish himself instead of
the boy! Peter must pretend to be interested in this kind of
"education," said McGivney, and he must learn at least the names of
Lackman's books.

"But will he pay any attention to me?" demanded Peter.

"Sure, he will," said McGivney. "That's the point--you've been in
jail, you've really done something as a pacifist. What you want to
do is to try to interest him in your Anti-conscription League. Tell
him you want to make it into a national organization, you want to
get something done besides talking."

The address of young Lackman was the Hotel de Soto; and as he heard
this, Peter's heart gave a leap. The Hotel de Soto was the Mount
Olympus of American City! Peter had walked by the vast white
structure, and seen the bronze doors swing outward, and the favored
ones of the earth emerging to their magic chariots; but never had it
occurred to him that he might pass thru those bronze doors, and gaze
upon those hidden mysteries!

"Will they let me in?" he asked McGivney, and the other laughed.
"Just walk in as if you owned the place," he said. "Hold up your
head, and pretend you've lived there all your life."

That was easy for McGivney to say, but not so easy for Peter to
imagine. However, he would try it; McGivney must be right, for it
was the same thing Mrs. James had impressed upon him many times. You
must watch what other people did, and practice by yourself, and then
go in and do it as if you had never done anything else. All life was
a gigantic bluff, and you encouraged yourself in your bluffing by
the certainty that everybody else was bluffing just as hard.

At seven o'clock that evening Peter strolled up to the magic bronze
doors, and touched them; and sure enough, the blue-uniformed
guardians drew them back without a word, and the tiny brass-button
imps never even glanced at Peter as he strode up to the desk and
asked for Mr. Lackman.

The haughty clerk passed him on to a still more haughty telephone
operator, who condescended to speak into her trumpet, and then
informed him that Mr. Lackman was out; he had left word that he
would return at eight. Peter was about to go out and wander about
the streets for an hour, when he suddenly remembered that everybody
else was bluffing; so he marched across the lobby and seated himself
in one of the huge leather arm-chairs, big enough to hold three of
him. There he sat, and continued to sit--and nobody said a word!