~ Doubt ~
by
Susan Newton Bennet
The group selected Laura to lead the parade
mounted on a handsome Arabian stallion.
A great honor, Laura felt happy to emulate one
of the heroines of the movement, Inez Milholland, who had led suffragist parades
in New York and Washington D.C. in 1913 and 1916. Known as “the woman on the
horse,” Milholland epitomized the devotion and zeal of the suffrage movement.
The day of the parade turned cool with a cloudy
overcast sky. Laura, mounted on the handsome steed, wore a straw hat with a red,
white and blue band. Across her chest a red sash with bold blue letters stated
“The Vote for Women Now”.
Behind her, five ladies each wearing straw hats
similar to Laura’s lined up hoisting a banner proclaiming “Women Are Citizens
Too.” Behind these five individuals, more women carried placards or signs
espousing their cause.
The parade moved sedately down Larimer Street.
Most of the curious spectators gaped. One man yelled, “Stay home where you
belong with your brats!”
Another piped up, “Better still, stay in bed.”
Guffaws and laughter trailed the marchers.
When the women turned towards the area of the
smelters, they noticed first the odors and smoke. Trash and horse manure made
walking the street difficult. Behind them a horde of urchin children followed,
taken up with the excitement of something different in their mean lives. No
encouraging women appeared at the windows of the shabby dwellings with
trash-filled lawns pushed up against the smelters. Some of the women marchers
looked fearful, glancing left and right. Laura looked in vain for a policeman.
Groups of men shouted obscenities at them.
Laura decided to lead the group back to the
better part of town and directed her horse up a side street. Suddenly, the women
were surrounded by an angry mob of men yelling and cursing.
“Get the bitch on the horse!” one shouted.
A dirty-faced man in a long trench coat grabbed
the bridle while two other men tried to pull her off her horse. Laura fought
them, but she was soon overcome and thrown to the pavement. She heard a loud
noise in her head, felt a sharp pain in her scalp, and then oblivion.
~ * ~
Ravannel saw it all happen. His car slowly followed the gaggle of urchins behind the women. As soon as Laura fell, he burst from the car and raced to her side. Chaos reigned. Men grabbed the placards and signs to destroy them. Women screamed. Ravannel pushed through the melee, picked up Laura, and carried her to his car.
Fifi opened the door to her garishly appointed apartment. She looked at Ravannel in amazement as he stood carrying an unconscious woman with blood coursing down her face.
Ravannel pushed Fifi aside and carried Laura to
the red velvet couch, letting her down gently. He found a fringed pillow and
placed it under her head. He collapsed in a chair breathing hard. No longer a
young man, his burden became heavy and difficult for him to carry. Halfway up
the steps to the apartment, he’d had to pause and rest.
Fifi stood open-mouthed.
“Get me some alcohol, a clean cloth and two
handkerchiefs!” he barked at her.
“I don’t like you busting in here like this.
Who is that lady?” Fifi stood with her hands on her hips.
“Shut up, woman. Do as I say!”
One look at his face and Fifi moved quickly.
Gently Ravannel wiped off the blood seeping
from a wound on Laura’s forehead and cleansed her face. He then cleansed the
wound with alcohol, took the handkerchiefs and pressed gently to try to stop the
seepage.
“Look up the telephone number of a Dr. Willis
Anderson,” he demanded.
Still smarting from Ravannel’s demands, Fifi
nevertheless did as she was told. “I have it,” Fifi said, handing him a slip of
paper.
“Come here and keep pressing at this wound
while I make the call.”
After calling the doctor, Ravannel demanded
Fifi get him flakes of ice in a clean cloth. In the kitchen, she stabbed the
pick at the block of ice, muttering to herself of the terrible injustice thrust
upon her. Ravannel took the cloth filled with ice and attempted to keep it on
the wound. Laura moaned briefly but did not come to.
Satisfied he did all he could until the doctor
arrived, Ravannel turned to Fifi.
“I want you to pack a suitcase and get out of
here. I don’t want you here when the doctor comes. Take enough clothes to be
gone a week. I’ll give you my card. In a week you can call me. I’ll let you know
when you can come back.”
He took out his wallet and handed her two fifty
dollar bills.
Her mouth dropped open. “Well, I never, I
thought you was a gentlemen. That’s no way to treat a lady.”
“Fifi, you ain’t no lady. Now do as I say and
be quick about it. Either you go or I’ll call the police to arrest you for
trespassing.”
With no other choice, Fifi packed her suitcase
and left in record time.
In the past few years numerous times Ravannel
had attempted to contact Cal. Cal had refused
to take the calls--probably because his mother told her boy to have no
more contact with him. The central operator at the hotel got to know Ravannel’s
voice and merely stated Mr. Prescott was not available. One time Ravannel
resorted to having a confederate place the call. As soon as Cal heard Ravannel’s
voice on the other end of the line, he slammed down the receiver.
This time when the operator answered Ravannel told her to get Cal, that it concerned his mother.
Immediately, Cal picked up the phone. “If this
is some kind of trick--”
“No trick, your mother has been hurt.”
“My God, what happened?”
“I don’t know if you’ve heard about it yet.
Your mother’s suffragist group was attacked by a bunch of thugs. They pulled her
from her horse, and she hit her head on the pavement. She’s out cold with a
nasty cut on her forehead.”
“Where is she?”
“In my apartment at three hundred one Blake St,
it’s over the Sam Howard Dry Goods Store. Come at once. I want you here when she
comes to.”
“I don’t understand. Why is she at your
apartment?”
Ravannel yelled into the phone, “Don’t argue
with me--just come! I have a doctor on the way.”
“I’m on my way.”
“Wait!” he ordered. “I want just you here, Cal.
Don’t tell that brother of yours.”
Cal paused a long moment. “All right, I won’t.”
Ravannel found a light blanket to cover Laura.
He bent to gently kiss her forehead. She stirred but did not waken. He
whispered, “You silly woman.”
A half hour later, he opened the door to an
elderly doctor. The man, panting from the long walk up the stairs, carried his
medical bag in one hand and mopped his bald pate with the other.
“That’s quite a climb, Mr. Ravennel. Where is
the patient?” the doctor asked.
Ravannel took him to the prone Laura.
“My, my, we’ll have to attend to that,”
he said, removing the makeshift bandage. He reached into his bag for an
antiseptic to cleanse the area. The gap in her skull began a little above
Laura’s hairline and descended at an angle toward her right eyebrow. The wound
seeped blood.
“I’ll have to give her a few stitches, I’m
afraid. With a head injury like this, I don’t think it wise to give her
laudanum. I’m sorry to have to hurt her more.”
Laura heard someone screaming. Enclosed in a
dark tunnel, an evil being poked her with sharp needles. She realized the scream
came from within her head. Vaguely she saw a pair of glasses on the end of a
veined nose, then merciful oblivion.
Ravannel sank into a chair.
Cal burst through the door and rushed to the
couch. “My God, what happened?”
Ravannel stood and laid a hand on his shoulder.
“Men pulled her off her horse when she was leading the parade. Her head hit the
pavement.”
“You saw it?”
“Yes, some people I know told me there might be
trouble. I followed the parade.”
Cal clinched his fist, anger reflected in his
face. “And you didn’t bother to tell me!” he shouted.
Laura stirred but did not wake.
“Be quiet, Cal,” Ravannel soothed him. “I tried
to warn you, but that operator at the hotel refused to let me speak to you. I
didn’t have time to come to the hotel.”
Cal sat down and put his head in his hands. “I
promised Ma I wouldn’t speak to you.”
Suddenly aware the doctor was listening to
them, Ravannel took out his wallet and turned to him.
“Thank you for coming, doctor. Is there
something more we should do?”
“Let her rest for a while. When she seems to be
coming out of it, get her up and try to walk her around a little. Give her a
little tea. Then she must be quiet for a few days. Observe the wound for any
sign of infection. Each day cleanse it with the antiseptic I’ll leave with you.
I should be able to remove the stitches in my office in about a week.”
Ravannel took the Doctor’s arm and guided him
toward the door. Cal pulled a chair close to the couch
and took his mother’s hand.
“Thank you, Ransom. I’m so grateful you were
there,”
“Forget it. Come, let’s have a drink. We have a
lot of catching up to do.”
Ravannel took an ice pick from the drawer and slashed at the cake of ice in the icebox to fill an ice bucket. He got out two glasses and a bottle of whiskey and sat down at the kitchen table. Cal joined him. For a moment they sipped their whiskey in silence.
“I hope saving your mother will allow us to
renew our friendship. I’ve missed you these past years.” He took a long sip and
then lowered his eyes. “Do you think your mother can ever forgive me?”
“Don’t be ridiculous. She told me you raped her.”
Ravannel hung his head and whispered. “Yes. I
was obsessed with her. It was too much of a blow to my ego not to have her.”
“How can I forgive a man who raped my mother?”
“Because we may well be father and son, that’s a pretty good reason. Will you spend some time with me, Cal?”