For a long moment Elsie sat staring at her companion. The last prop of her faith in the man who had married her was crumbling. She could not give up this last illusion of Druce’s faithfulness without a struggle. The blood flamed to her cheeks and she started to her feet.
“I don’t believe it,” she cried in anguish.
To her surprise, Lou made no reply. She merely regarded her pityingly. This was the last blow. Elsie burst into a flood of tears.
“I know you don’t believe it,” said Lou gently. “It’s hard for anyone who is decent to believe that men can fall so low. Why, nobody believes it! The men who run the city government don’t believe it, the law makers don’t believe it, the vice commission, doesn’t believe it. The only people who believe it are the people who, at their own bitter cost, know it—and this girl Mary Randall.”
She paused.
“Look at me, kid,” she went on. “I was sold for $175. Sold, do you get that? SOLD! And I came high. They buy and sell ’em in this district every day for fifty. Yes, I was prime stock. They brought me up here from Kentucky. Kentucky Lou, price $175—a choice article.” She broke off, laughing bitterly, and summoned a waiter.
“Whisky,” she said, “and be quick with it.”
She waited until the waiter returned without speaking. Then she tossed off the glass of fiery liquid like a man.
“Now,” she said, resuming the conversation abruptly, “let me tell you what you are up against. You can’t go home, your pride won’t let you. And if you wanted to go home you haven’t the money. Druce has turned you loose in this district to starve and when you’ve starved enough you’ll come back to him.”
Elsie shook her head.