CHEERFUL ~ BY REQUEST
CONTENTS
I. CHEERFUL—BY
REQUEST II. THE GAY OLD DOG
III. THE TOUGH GUY
IV. THE ELDEST V. THAT'S MARRIAGE
VI. THE WOMAN WHO
TRIED TO BE GOOD VII. THE GIRL WHO
WENT RIGHT VIII. THE
HOOKER-UP-THE-BACK IX. THE GUIDING
MISS GOWD X.
SOPHY-AS-SHE-MIGHT-HAVE-BEEN XI. THE THREE OF
THEM XII. SHORE LEAVE
I.CHEERFUL—BY REQUEST
The editor paid for the lunch (as editors do). He lighted his
seventh cigarette and leaned back. The conversation, which had zigzagged from
the war to Zuloaga, and from Rasputin the Monk to the number of miles a Darrow
would go on a gallon, narrowed down to the thin, straight line of business.
"Now don't misunderstand. Please! We're not presuming to
dictate. Dear me, no! We have always felt that the writer should be free to
express that which is in his—ah—heart. But in the last year we've been swamped
with these drab, realistic stories. Strong, relentless things, you know, about
dishwashers, with a lot of fine detail about the fuzz of grease on the rim of
the pan. And then those drear and hopeless ones about fallen sisters who end it
all in the East River. The East River must be choked up with 'em. Now, I know
that life is real, life is earnest, and I'm not demanding a happy ending,
exactly. But if you could—that is—would you—do you see your way at all clear to
giving us a fairly cheerful story? Not necessarily Glad, but not so darned
Russian, if you get me. Not pink, but not all grey either. Say—mauve." ...
That was Josie Fifer's existence. Mostly grey, with a dash of
pink. Which makes mauve.
Unless you are connected (which you probably are not) with the
great firm of Hahn & Lohman, theatrical producers, you never will have
heard of Josie Fifer.
There are things about the theatre that the public does not know.
A statement, at first blush, to be disputed. The press agent, the special
writer, the critic, the magazines, the Sunday supplement, the divorce
courts—what have they left untold? We know the make of car Miss Billboard
drives; who her husbands are and were; how much the movies have offered her;
what she wears, reads, says, thinks, and eats for breakfast. Snapshots of
author writing play at place on Hudson; pictures of the play in rehearsal; of
the director directing it; of the stage hands rewriting it—long before the
opening night we know more about the piece than does the playwright himself,
and are ten times less eager to see it.
Josie Fifer's knowledge surpassed even this. For she was keeper of
the ghosts of the firm of Hahn & Lohman. Not only was she present at the
birth of a play; she officiated at its funeral. She carried the keys to the
closets that housed the skeletons of the firm. When a play died of inanition,
old age, or—as was sometimes the case—before it was born, it was Josie Fifer who
laid out its remains and followed it to the grave.
Her notification of its demise would come thus:
"Hello, Fifer! This is McCabe" (the property man of H.
& L. at the phone).
"Well?"
"A little waspish this morning, aren't you, Josephine?"
"I've got twenty-five bathing suits for the No. 2 'Ataboy'
company to mend and clean and press before five this afternoon. If you think
I'm going to stand here wasting my—"
"All right, all right! I just wanted to tell you that 'My
Mistake' closes Saturday. The stuff'll be up Monday morning early."
A sardonic laugh from Josie. "And yet they say 'What's in a
name!'"
The unfortunate play had been all that its title implies. Its
purpose was to star an actress who hadn't a glint. Her second-act costume alone
had cost $700, but even Russian sable bands can't carry a bad play. The critics
had pounced on it with the savagery of their kind and hacked it, limb from
limb, leaving its carcass to rot under the pitiless white glare of Broadway.
The dress with the Russian sable bands went the way of all Hahn & Lohman
tragedies. Josie Fifer received it, if not reverently, still appreciatively.
"I should think Sid Hahn would know by this time," she
observed sniffily, as her expert fingers shook out the silken folds and
smoothed the fabulous fur, "that auburn hair and a gurgle and a Lucille
dress don't make a play. Besides, Fritzi Kirke wears the biggest shoe of any
actress I ever saw. A woman with feet like that"—she picked up a satin
slipper, size 7½ C—"hasn't any business on the stage. She ought to travel
with a circus. Here, Etta. Hang this away in D, next to the amethyst blue
velvet, and be sure and lock the door."
McCabe had been right. A waspish wit was Josie's.
The question is whether to reveal to you now where it was that
Josie Fifer reigned thus, queen of the cast-offs; or to take you back to the
days that led up to her being there—the days when she was José Fyfer on the
programme.
Her domain was the storage warehouse of Hahn & Lohman, as you
may have guessed. If your business lay Forty-third Street way, you might have
passed the building a hundred times without once giving it a seeing glance. It
was not Forty-third Street of the small shops, the smart crowds, and the
glittering motors. It was the Forty-third lying east of the Grand Central
sluice gates; east of fashion; east, in a word, of Fifth Avenue—a great square
brick building smoke-grimed, cobwebbed, and having the look of a cold-storage
plant or a car barn fallen into disuse; dusty, neglected, almost eerie. Yet
within it lurks Romance, and her sombre sister Tragedy, and their antic brother
Comedy, the cut-up.
A worn flight of wooden steps leads up from the sidewalk to the
dim hallway; a musty-smelling passage wherein you are met by a genial sign
which reads:
"No admittance. Keep out. This means you."
To confirm this, the eye, penetrating the gloom, is confronted by
a great blank metal door that sheathes the elevator. To ride in that elevator
is to know adventure, so painfully, so protestingly, with such creaks and jerks
and lurchings does it pull itself from floor to floor, like an octogenarian
who, grunting and groaning, hoists himself from his easy-chair by slow stages
that wring a protest from ankle, knee, hip, back and shoulder. The corkscrew
stairway, broken and footworn though it is, seems infinitely less perilous.
First floor—second—third—fourth. Whew! And there you are in Josie
Fifer's kingdom—a great front room, unexpectedly bright and even cosy with its
whir of sewing machines: tables, and tables, and tables, piled with orderly
stacks of every sort of clothing, from shoes to hats, from gloves to parasols;
and in the room beyond this, and beyond that, and again beyond that, row after
row of high wooden cabinets stretching the width of the room, and forming
innumerable aisles. All of Bluebeard's wives could have been tucked away in one
corner of the remotest and least of these, and no one the wiser. All grimly
shut and locked, they are, with the key in Josie's pocket. But when, at the
behest of McCabe, or sometimes even Sid Hahn himself, she unlocked and opened
one of these doors, what treasures hung revealed! What shimmer and sparkle and
perfume—and moth balls! The long-tailed electric light bulb held high in one
hand, Josie would stand at the door like a priestess before her altar.
There they swung, the ghosts and the skeletons, side by side. You
remember that slinking black satin snakelike sheath that Gita Morini wore in
"Little Eyolf"? There it dangles, limp, invertebrate, yet how
eloquent! No other woman in the world could have worn that gown, with its
unbroken line from throat to hem, its smooth, high, black satin collar, its
writhing tail that went slip-slip-slipping after her. In it she had looked like
a sleek and wicked python that had fasted for a long, long time.
Dresses there are that have made stage history. Surely you
remember the beruffled, rose-strewn confection in which the beautiful Elsa
Marriott swam into our ken in "Mississipp'"? She used to say,
wistfully, that she always got a hand on her entrance in that dress. It was due
to the sheer shock of delight that thrilled audience after audience as it
beheld her loveliness enhanced by this floating, diaphanous tulle cloud. There
it hangs, time-yellowed, its pristine freshness vanished quite, yet as fragrant
with romance as is the sere and withered blossom of a dead white rose pressed
within the leaves of a book of love poems. Just next it, incongruously enough,
flaunt the wicked froufrou skirts and the low-cut bodice and the wasp waist of
the abbreviated costume in which Cora Kassell used so generously to display her
charms. A rich and portly society matron of Pittsburgh now—she whose name had
been a synonym for pulchritude these thirty years; she who had had more cold
creams, hats, cigars, corsets, horses, and lotions named for her than any woman
in history! Her ample girth would have wrought sad havoc with that
eighteen-inch waist now. Gone are the chaste curves of the slim white silk legs
that used to kick so lithely from the swirl of lace and chiffon. Yet there it hangs,
pertly pathetic, mute evidence of her vanished youth, her delectable beauty,
and her unblushing confidence in those same.
Up one aisle and down the next—velvet, satin, lace and
broadcloth—here the costume the great Canfield had worn in Richard III; there
the little cocked hat and the slashed jerkin in which Maude Hammond, as
Peterkins, winged her way to fame up through the hearts of a million children
whose ages ranged from seven to seventy. Brocades and ginghams; tailor suits
and peignoirs; puffed sleeves and tight—dramatic history, all, they spelled
failure, success, hope, despair, vanity, pride, triumph, decay. Tragic ghosts,
over which Josie Fifer held grim sway!
Have I told you that Josie Fifer, moving nimbly about the great
storehouse, limped as she went? The left leg swung as a normal leg should. The
right followed haltingly, sagging at hip and knee. And that brings us back to
the reason for her being where she was. And what.
The story of how Josie Fifer came to be mistress of the cast-off
robes of the firm of Hahn & Lohman is one of those stage tragedies that
never have a public performance. Josie had been one of those little girls who
speak pieces at chicken-pie suppers held in the basement of the Presbyterian
church. Her mother had been a silly, idle woman addicted to mother hubbards and
paper-backed novels about the house. Her one passion was the theatre, a passion
that had very scant opportunity for feeding in Wapello, Iowa. Josie's
piece-speaking talent was evidently a direct inheritance. Some might call it a
taint.
Two days before one of Josie's public appearances her mother would
twist the child's hair into innumerable rag curlers that stood out in
grotesque, Topsy-like bumps all over her fair head. On the eventful evening
each rag chrysalis would burst into a full-blown butterfly curl. In a
pale-blue, lace-fretted dress over a pale-blue slip, made in what her mother
called "Empire style," Josie would deliver herself of
"Entertaining Big Sister's Beau" and other sophisticated classics
with an incredible ease and absence of embarrassment. It wasn't a definite
boldness in her. She merely liked standing there before all those people, in
her blue dress and her toe slippers, speaking her pieces with enhancing
gestures taught her by her mother in innumerable rehearsals.
Any one who has ever lived in Wapello, Iowa, or its equivalent,
remembers the old opera house on the corner of Main and Elm, with Schroeder's
drug store occupying the first floor. Opera never came within three hundred
miles of Wapello, unless it was the so-called comic kind. It was before the day
of the ubiquitous moving-picture theatre that has since been the undoing of the
one-night stand and the ten-twenty-thirty stock company. The old red-brick
opera house furnished unlimited thrills for Josie and her mother. From the time
Josie was seven she was taken to see whatever Wapello was offered in the way of
the drama. That consisted mostly of plays of the tell-me-more-about-me-mother
type.
By the time she was ten she knew the whole repertoire of the Maude
La Vergne Stock Company by heart. She was blasé with
"East Lynne" and "The Two Orphans," and even
"Camille" left her cold. She was as wise to the trade tricks as is a
New York first nighter. She would sit there in the darkened auditorium of a
Saturday afternoon, surveying the stage with a judicious and undeceived eye, as
she sucked indefatigably at a lollipop extracted from the sticky bag clutched
in one moist palm. (A bag of candy to each and every girl; a ball or a top to
each and every boy!) Josie knew that the middle-aged soubrette who
came out between the first and second acts to sing a gingham-and-sunbonnet song
would whisk off to reappear immediately in knee-length pink satin and curls.
When the heroine left home in a shawl and a sudden snowstorm that followed her
upstage and stopped when she went off, Josie was interested, but undeceived.
She knew that the surprised-looking white horse used in the Civil War
comedy-drama entitled "His Southern Sweetheart" came from Joe Brink's
livery stable in exchange for four passes, and that the faithful old negro
servitor in the white cotton wig would save somebody from something before the
afternoon was over.
In was inevitable that as Josie grew older she should take part in
home-talent plays. It was one of these tinsel affairs that had made clear to
her just where her future lay. The Wapello Daily Courier helped
her in her decision. She had taken the part of a gipsy queen, appropriately
costumed in slightly soiled white satin slippers with four-inch heels, and a
white satin dress enhanced by a red sash, a black velvet bolero, and large hoop
earrings. She had danced and sung with a pert confidence, and the Courier had
pronounced her talents not amateur, but professional, and had advised the
managers (who, no doubt, read the Wapello Courier daily, along
with their Morning Telegraph) to seek her out, and speedily.
Josie didn't wait for them to take the hint. She sought them out
instead. There followed seven tawdry, hard-working, heartbreaking years. Supe,
walk-on, stock, musical comedy—Josie went through them all. If any illusions
about the stage had survived her Wapello days, they would have vanished in the
first six months of her dramatic career. By the time she was twenty-four she
had acquired the wisdom of fifty, a near-seal coat, a turquoise ring with a
number of smoky-looking crushed diamonds surrounding it, and a reputation for
wit and for decency. The last had cost the most.
During all these years of cheap theatrical boarding houses (the
most soul-searing cheapness in the world), of one-night stands, of insult,
disappointment, rebuff, and something that often came perilously near to want,
Josie Fifer managed to retain a certain humorous outlook on life. There was
something whimsical about it. She could even see a joke on herself. When she
first signed her name José Fyfer, for example, she did it with, an appreciative
giggle and a glint in her eye as she formed the accent mark over the e.
"They'll never stop me now," she said. "I'm made.
But I wish I knew if that J was pronounced like H, in humbug. Are there any
Spanish blondes?"
It used to be the habit of the other women in the company to say
to her: "Jo, I'm blue as the devil to-day. Come on, give us a laugh."
She always obliged.
And then came a Sunday afternoon in late August when her laugh
broke off short in the middle, and was forever after a stunted thing.
She was playing Atlantic City in a second-rate musical show. She
had never seen the ocean before, and she viewed it now with an appreciation that
still had in it something of a Wapello freshness.
They all planned to go in bathing that hot August afternoon after
rehearsal. Josie had seen pictures of the beauteous bathing girl dashing into
the foaming breakers. She ran across the stretch of glistening beach, paused
and struck a pose, one toe pointed waterward, her arms extended affectedly.
"So!" she said mincingly. "So this is Paris!"
It was a new line in those days, and they all laughed, as she had
meant they should. So she leaped into the water with bounds and shouts and much
waving of white arms. A great floating derelict of a log struck her leg with
its full weight, and with all the tremendous force of the breaker behind it.
She doubled up ridiculously, and went down like a shot. Those on the beach
laughed again. When she came up, and they saw her distorted face they stopped
laughing, and fished her out. Her leg was broken in two places, and mashed in a
dozen.
José Fyfer's dramatic career was over. (This is not the cheery
portion of the story.)
When she came out of the hospital, three months later, she did
very well indeed with her crutches. But the merry-eyed woman had vanished—she
of the Wapello colouring that had persisted during all these years. In her
place limped a wan, shrunken, tragic little figure whose humour had soured to a
caustic wit. The near-seal coat and the turquoise-and-crushed-diamond ring had
vanished too.
During those agonized months she had received from the others in
the company such kindness and generosity as only stage folk can show—flowers,
candy, dainties, magazines, sent by every one from the prima donna to the call
boy. Then the show left town. There came a few letters of kind inquiry, then an
occasional post card, signed by half a dozen members of the company. Then these
ceased. Josie Fifer, in her cast and splints and bandages and pain, dragged out
long hospital days and interminable hospital nights. She took a dreary pleasure
in following the tour of her erstwhile company via the pages of the theatrical
magazines.
"They're playing Detroit this week," she would announce
to the aloof and spectacled nurse. Or: "One-night stands, and they're due
in Muncie, Ind., to-night. I don't know which is worse—playing Muncie for one
night or this moan factory for a three month's run."
When she was able to crawl out as far as the long corridor she
spoke to every one she met. As she grew stronger she visited here and there,
and on the slightest provocation she would give a scene ranging all the way
from "Romeo and Juliet" to "The Black Crook." It was thus
she first met Sid Hahn, and felt the warming, healing glow of his friendship.
Some said that Sid Hahn's brilliant success as a manager at
thirty-five was due to his ability to pick winners. Others thought it was his
refusal to be discouraged when he found he had picked a failure. Still others,
who knew him better, were likely to say: "Why, I don't know. It's a sort
of—well, you might call it charm—and yet—. Did you ever see him smile? He's got
a million-dollar grin. You can't resist it."
None of them was right. Or all of them. Sid Hahn, erstwhile usher,
call boy, press agent, advance man, had a genius for things theatrical. It was
inborn. Dramatic, sensitive, artistic, intuitive, he was often rendered
inarticulate by the very force and variety of his feelings. A little, rotund,
ugly man, Sid Hahn, with the eyes of a dreamer, the wide, mobile mouth of a
humourist, the ears of a comic ol'-clo'es man. His generosity was proverbial,
and it amounted to a vice.
In September he had come to Atlantic City to try out
"Splendour." It was a doubtful play, by a new author, starring Sarah
Haddon for the first time. No one dreamed the play would run for years, make a
fortune for Hahn, lift Haddon from obscurity to the dizziest heights of stardom,
and become a classic of the stage.
Ten minutes before the curtain went up on the opening performance
Hahn was stricken with appendicitis. There was not even time to rush him to New
York. He was on the operating table before the second act was begun. When he
came out of the ether he said: "How did it go?"
"Fine!" beamed the nurse. "You'll be out in two
weeks."
"Oh, hell! I don't mean the operation. I mean the play."
He learned soon enough from the glowing, starry-eyed Sarah Haddon
and from every one connected with the play. He insisted on seeing them all
daily, against his doctor's orders, and succeeded in working up a temperature
that made his hospital stay a four weeks' affair. He refused to take the tryout
results as final.
"Don't be too bubbly about this thing," he cautioned
Sarah Haddon. "I've seen too many plays that were skyrockets on the road
come down like sticks when they struck New York."
The company stayed over in Atlantic City for a week, and Hahn held
scraps of rehearsals in his room when he had a temperature of 102. Sarah Haddon
worked like a slave. She seemed to realise that her great opportunity had
come—the opportunity for which hundreds of gifted actresses wait a lifetime.
Haddon was just twenty-eight then—a year younger than Josie Fifer. She had not
yet blossomed into the full radiance of her beauty. She was too slender, and
inclined to stoop a bit, but her eyes were glorious, her skin petal-smooth, her
whole face reminding one, somehow, of an intelligent flower. Her voice was a
golden, liquid delight.
Josie Fifer, dragging herself from bed to chair, and from chair to
bed, used to watch for her. Hahn's room was on her floor. Sarah Haddon, in her
youth and beauty and triumph, represented to Josie all that she had dreamed of
and never realised; all that she had hoped for and never could know. She used
to insist on having her door open, and she would lie there for hours, her eyes
fixed on that spot in the hall across which Haddon would flash for one brief
instant on her way to the room down the corridor. There is about a successful
actress a certain radiant something—a glamour, a luxuriousness, an atmosphere
that suggest a mysterious mixture of silken things, of perfume, of adulation,
of all that is rare and costly and perishable and desirable.
Josie Fifer's stage experience had included none of this. But she
knew they were there. She sensed that to this glorious artist would come all
those fairy gifts that Josie Fifer would never possess. All things about
her—her furs, her gloves, her walk, her hats, her voice, her very shoe
ties—were just what Josie would have wished for. As she lay there she developed
a certain grim philosophy.
"She's got everything a woman could wish for. Me, I haven't
got a thing. Not a blamed thing! And yet they say everything works out in the
end according to some scheme or other. Well, what's the answer to this, I
wonder? I can't make it come out right. I guess one of the figures must have
got away from me."
In the second week of Sid Hahn's convalescence he heard, somehow,
of Josie Fifer. It was characteristic of him that he sent for her. She put a
chiffon scarf about the neck of her skimpy little kimono, spent an hour and ten
minutes on her hair, made up outrageously with that sublime unconsciousness
that comes from too close familiarity with rouge pad and grease jar, and went.
She was trembling as though facing a first-night audience in a part she wasn't
up on. Between the crutches, the lameness, and the trembling she presented to
Sid Hahn, as she stood in the doorway, a picture that stabbed his kindly,
sensitive heart with a quick pang of sympathy.
He held out his hand. Josie's crept into it. At the feel of that
generous friendly clasp she stopped trembling. Said Hahn:
"My nurse tells me that you can do a bedside burlesque of
'East Lynne' that made even that Boston-looking interne with the thick glasses
laugh. Go on and do it for me, there's a good girl. I could use a laugh myself
just now."
And Josie Fifer caught up a couch cover for a cloak, with the
scarf that was about her neck for a veil, and, using Hahn himself as the ailing
chee-ild, gave a biting burlesque of the famous bedside visit that brought the
tears of laughter to his eyes, and the nurse flying from down the hall.
"This won't do," said that austere person.
"Won't, eh? Go on and stick your old thermometer in my mouth.
What do I care! A laugh like that is worth five degrees of temperature."
When Josie rose to leave he eyed her keenly, and pointed to the
dragging leg.
"How about that? Temporary or permanent?"
"Permanent."
"Oh, fudge! Who's telling you that? These days they can
do—"
"Not with this, though. That one bone was mashed into about
twenty-nine splinters, and when it came to putting 'em together again a couple
of pieces were missing. I must've mislaid 'em somewhere. Anyway, I make a
limping exit—for life."
"Then no more stage for you—eh, my girl?"
"No more stage."
Hahn reached for a pad of paper on the table at his bedside,
scrawled a few words on it, signed it "S.H." in the fashion which
became famous, and held the paper out to her.
"When you get out of here," he said, "you come to
New York, and up to my office; see? Give 'em this at the door. I've got a job
for you—if you want it."
And that was how Josie Fifer came to take charge of the great Hahn
& Lohman storehouse. It was more than a storehouse. It was a museum. It
housed the archives of the American stage. If Hahn & Lohman prided
themselves on one thing more than on another, it was the lavish generosity with
which they invested a play, from costumes to carpets. A period play was a
period play when they presented it. You never saw a French clock on a Dutch
mantel in a Hahn & Lohman production. No hybrid hangings marred their back
drop. No matter what the play, the firm provided its furnishings from the
star's slippers to the chandeliers. Did a play last a year or a week, at the
end of its run furniture, hangings, scenery, rugs, gowns, everything, went off
in wagonloads to the already crowded storehouse on East Forty-third Street.
Sometimes a play proved so popular that its original costumes,
outworn, had to be renewed. Sometimes the public cried "Thumbs down!"
at the opening performance, and would have none of it thereafter. That meant
that costumes sometimes reached Josie Fifer while the wounds of the dressmaker's
needle still bled in them. And whether for a week or a year fur on a Hahn &
Lohman costume was real fur; its satin was silk-backed, its lace real lace. No
paste, or tinsel, or cardboard about H. & L.! Josie Fifer could recall the
scenes in a play, step by step from noting with her keen eye the marks left on
costume after costume by the ravages of emotion. At the end of a play's run she
would hold up a dress for critical inspection, turning it this way and that.
"This is the dress she wore in her big scene at the end of
the second act where she crawls on her knees to her wronged husband and pounds
on the door and weeps. She certainly did give it some hard wear. When Marriott
crawls she crawls, and when she bawls she bawls. I'll say that for her. From
the looks of this front breadth she must have worn a groove in the stage at the
York."
No gently sentimental reason caused Hahn & Lohman to house
these hundreds of costumes, these tons of scenery, these forests of furniture.
Neither had Josie Fifer been hired to walk wistfully among them like a spinster
wandering in a dead rose garden. No, they were stored for a much thriftier
reason. They were stored, if you must know, for possible future use. H. &
L. were too clever not to use a last year's costume for a this year's road
show. They knew what a coat of enamel would do for a bedroom set. It was Josie
Fifer's duty not only to tabulate and care for these relics, but to refurbish
them when necessary. The sewing was done by a little corps of assistants under
Josie's direction.
But all this came with the years. When Josie Fifer, white and
weak, first took charge of the H. & L. lares et penates, she
told herself it was only for a few months—a year or two at most. The end of
sixteen years found her still there.
When she came to New York, "Splendour" was just
beginning its phenomenal three years' run. The city was mad about the play.
People came to see it again and again—a sure sign of a long run. The Sarah
Haddon second-act costume was photographed, copied (unsuccessfully), talked
about, until it became as familiar as a uniform. That costume had much to do
with the play's success, though Sarah Haddon would never admit it.
"Splendour" was what is known as a period play. The famous dress was
of black velvet, made with a quaint, full-gathered skirt that made Haddon's
slim waist seem fairylike and exquisitely supple. The black velvet bodice
outlined the delicate swell of the bust. A rope of pearls enhanced the
whiteness of her throat. Her hair, done in old-time scallops about her forehead,
was a gleaming marvel of simplicity, and the despair of every woman who tried
to copy it. The part was that of an Italian opera singer. The play pulsated
with romance and love, glamour and tragedy. Sarah Haddon, in her flowing black
velvet robe and her pearls and her pallor, was an exotic, throbbing, exquisite
realisation of what every woman in the audience dreamed of being and every man
dreamed of loving.
Josie Fifer saw the play for the first time from a balcony seat
given her by Sid Hahn. It left her trembling, red-eyed, shaken. After that she
used to see it, by hook or crook whenever possible. She used to come in at the
stage door and lurk back of the scenes and in the wings when she had no
business there. She invented absurd errands to take her to the theatre where
"Splendour" was playing. Sid Hahn always said that after the big
third-act scene he liked to watch the audience swim up the aisle. Josie, hidden
in the back-stage shadows, used to watch, fascinated, breathless. Then, one
night, she indiscreetly was led, by her, absorbed interest, to venture too far
into the wings. It was during the scene where Haddon, hearing a broken-down
street singer cracking the golden notes of "Aïda" into a thousand
mutilated fragments, throws open her window and, leaning far out, pours a
shower of Italian and broken English and laughter and silver coin upon her
amazed compatriot below.
When the curtain went down she came off raging.
"What was that? Who was that standing in the wings? How dare
any one stand there! Everybody knows I can't have any one in the wings.
Staring! It ruined my scene to-night. Where's McCabe? Tell Mr. Hahn I want to
see him. Who was it? Staring at me like a ghost!"
Josie had crept away, terrified, contrite, and yet resentful. But
the next week saw her back at the theatre, though she took care to stay in the
shadows.
She was waiting for the black velvet dress. It was more than a
dress to her. It was infinitely more than a stage costume. It was the habit of
glory. It epitomised all that Josie Fifer had missed of beauty and homage and
success.
The play ran on, and on, and on. Sarah Haddon was superstitious
about the black gown. She refused to give it up for a new one. She insisted
that if ever she discarded the old black velvet for a new the run of the play
would stop. She assured Hahn that its shabbiness did not show from the front.
She clung to it with that childish unreasonableness that is so often found in
people of the stage.
But Josie waited patiently. Dozens of costumes passed through her
hands. She saw plays come and go. Dresses came to her whose lining bore the
mark of world-famous modistes. She hung them away, or refurbished them if
necessary with disinterested conscientiousness. Sometimes her caustic comment,
as she did so, would have startled the complacency of the erstwhile wearers of
the garments. Her knowledge of the stage, its artifices, its pretence, its
narrowness, its shams, was widening and deepening. No critic in bone-rimmed
glasses and evening clothes was more scathingly severe than she. She sewed on
satin. She mended fine lace. She polished stage jewels. And waited. She knew
that one day her patience would be rewarded. And then, at last came the
familiar voice over the phone: "Hello, Fifer! McCabe talking."
"Well?"
"'Splendour' closes Saturday. Haddon says she won't play in
this heat. They're taking it to London in the autumn. The stuff'll be up
Monday, early."
Josie Fifer turned away from the telephone with a face so radiant
that one of her sewing women, looking up, was moved to comment.
"Got some good news, Miss Fifer?"
"'Splendour' closes this week."
"Well, my land! To look at you a person would think you'd
been losing money at the box office every night it ran."
The look was still on her face when Monday morning came. She was
sewing on a dress just discarded by Adelaide French, the tragédienne.
Adelaide's maid was said to be the hardest-worked woman in the profession. When
French finished with a costume it was useless as a dress; but it was something
historic, like a torn and tattered battle flag—an emblem.
McCabe, box under his arm, stood in the doorway. Josie Fifer stood
up so suddenly that the dress on her lap fell to the floor. She stepped over it
heedlessly, and went toward McCabe, her eyes on the pasteboard box. Behind
McCabe stood two more men, likewise box-laden.
"Put them down here," said Josie. The men thumped the
boxes down on the long table. Josie's fingers were already at the strings. She
opened the first box, emptied its contents, tossed them aside, passed on to the
second. Her hands busied themselves among the silks and broadcloth of this;
then on to the third and last box. McCabe and his men, with scenery and
furniture still to unload and store, turned to go. Their footsteps echoed
hollowly as they clattered down the worn old stairway. Josie snapped the cord
that bound the third box. Her cheeks were flushed, her eyes bright. She turned
it upside down. Then she pawed it over. Then she went back to the contents of
the first two boxes, clawing about among the limp garments with which the table
was strewn. She was breathing quickly. Suddenly: "It isn't here!" she
cried. "It isn't here!" She turned and flew to the stairway. The
voices of the men came up to her. She leaned far over the railing. "McCabe!
McCabe!"
"Yeh? What do you want?"
"The black velvet dress! The black velvet dress! It isn't
there."
"Oh, yeh. That's all right. Haddon, she's got a bug about
that dress, and she says she wants to take it to London with her, to use on the
opening night. She says if she wears a new one that first night, the play'll be
a failure. Some temperament, that girl, since she's got to be a star!"
Josie stood clutching the railing of the stairway. Her
disappointment was so bitter that she could not weep. She felt cheated,
outraged. She was frightened at the intensity of her own sensations. "She
might have let me have it," she said aloud in the dim half light of the
hallway. "She's got everything else in the world. She might have let me
have that."
Then she went back into the big, bright sewing room.
"Splendour" ran three years in London.
During those three years she saw Sid Hahn only three or four
times. He spent much of his time abroad. Whenever opportunity presented itself
she would say: "Is 'Splendour' still playing in London?"
"Still playing."
The last time Hahn, intuitive as always, had eyed her curiously.
"You seem to be interested in that play."
"Oh, well," Josie had replied with assumed carelessness,
"it being in Atlantic City just when I had my accident, and then meeting
you through that, and all, why, I always kind of felt a personal interest in
it." ...
At the end of three years Sarah Haddon returned to New York with
an English accent, a slight embonpoint, and a little foreign habit of rushing
up to her men friends with a delighted exclamation (preferably French) and
kissing them on both cheeks. When Josie Fifer, happening back stage at a
rehearsal of the star's new play, first saw her do this a grim gleam came into
her eyes.
"Bernhardt's the only woman who can spring that and get away
with it," she said to her assistant. "Haddon's got herself sized up
wrong. I'll gamble her next play will be a failure."
And it was.
The scenery, props, and costumes of the London production of
"Splendour" were slow in coming back. But finally they did come.
Josie received them with the calmness that comes of hope deferred. It had been
three years since she last saw the play. She told herself, chidingly, that she
had been sort of foolish over that play and this costume. Her recent glimpse of
Haddon had been somewhat disillusioning. But now, when she finally held the
gown itself in her hand—the original "Splendour" second-act gown, a
limp, soft black mass: just a few yards of worn and shabby velvet—she found her
hands shaking. Here was where she had hugged the toy dog to her breast. Here
where she had fallen on her knees to pray before the little shrine in her hotel
room. Every worn spot had a meaning for her. Every mark told a story. Her
fingers smoothed it tenderly.
"Not much left of that," said one of the sewing girls,
glancing up. "I guess Sarah would have a hard time making the hooks and
eyes meet now. They say she's come home from London looking a little too
prosperous."
Josie did not answer. She folded the dress over her arm and
carried it to the wardrobe room. There she hung it away in an empty closet,
quite apart from the other historic treasures. And there it hung, untouched,
until the following Sunday.
On Sunday morning East Forty-third Street bears no more
resemblance to the week-day Forty-third than does a stiffly starched and
subdued Sabbath-school scholar to his Monday morning self. Strangely quiet it
is, and unfrequented. Josie Fifer, scurrying along in the unwonted stillness,
was prompted to throw a furtive glance over her shoulder now and then, as
though afraid of being caught at some criminal act. She ran up the little
flight of steps with a rush, unlocked the door with trembling fingers, and let
herself into the cool, dank gloom of the storehouse hall. The metal door of the
elevator stared inquiringly after her. She fled past it to the stairway. Every
step of that ancient structure squeaked and groaned. First floor, second,
third, fourth. The everyday hum of the sewing machines was absent. The room
seemed to be holding its breath. Josie fancied that the very garments on the
worktables lifted themselves inquiringly from their supine position to see what
it was that disturbed their Sabbath rest. Josie, a tense, wide-eyed, frightened
little figure, stood in the centre of the vast room, listening to she knew not
what. Then, relaxing, she gave a nervous little laugh and, reaching up,
unpinned her hat. She threw it on a near-by table and disappeared into the
wardrobe room beyond.
Minutes passed—an hour. She did not come back. From the room
beyond came strange sounds—a woman's voice; the thrill of a song; cries; the
anguish of tears; laughter, harsh and high, as a desperate and deceived woman
laughs—all this following in such rapid succession that Sid Hahn, puffing
laboriously up the four flights of stairs leading to the wardrobe floor,
entered the main room unheard. Unknown to any one, he was indulging in one of
his unsuspected visits to the old wareroom that housed the evidence of past and
gone successes—successes that had brought him fortune and fame, but little real
happiness, perhaps. No one knew that he loved to browse among these pathetic
rags of a forgotten triumph. No one would have dreamed that this chubby little
man could glow and weep over the cast-off garment of a famous Cyrano, or the
faded finery of a Zaza.
At the doorway he paused now, startled. He was listening with
every nerve of his taut body. What? Who? He tiptoed across the room with a step
incredibly light for one so stout, peered cautiously around the side of the
doorway, and leaned up against it weakly. Josie Fifer, in the black velvet and
mock pearls of "Splendour," with her grey-streaked blonde hair hidden
under the romantic scallops of a black wig, was giving the big scene from the
third act. And though it sounded like a burlesque of that famous passage, and
though she limped more than ever as she reeled to an imaginary shrine in the
corner, and though the black wig was slightly askew by now, and the black
velvet hung with bunchy awkwardness about her skinny little body, there was
nothing of mirth in Sid Hahn's face as he gazed. He shrank back now.
She was coming to the big speech at the close of the act—the big
renunciation speech that was the curtain. Sid Hahn turned and tiptoed
painfully, breathlessly, magnificently, out of the big front room, into the
hallway, down the creaking stairs, and so to the sunshine of Forty-third
Street, with its unaccustomed Sunday-morning quiet. And he was smiling that
rare and melting smile of his—the smile that was said to make him look
something like a kewpie, and something like a cupid, and a bit like an imp, and
very much like an angel. There was little of the first three in it now, and
very much of the last. And so he got heavily into his very grand motor car and
drove off.
"Why, the poor little kid," said he—"the poor,
lonely, stifled little crippled-up kid."
"I beg your pardon, sir?" inquired his chauffeur.
"Speak when you're spoken to," snapped Sid Hahn.
And here it must be revealed to you that Sid Hahn did not marry
the Cinderella of the storage warehouse. He did not marry anybody, and neither
did Josie. And yet there is a bit more to this story—ten years more, if you
must know—ten years, the end of which found Josie a sparse, spectacled, and
agile little cripple, as alert and caustic as ever. It found Sid Hahn the most
famous theatrical man of his day. It found Sarah Haddon at the fag-end of a
career that had blazed with triumph and adulation. She had never had a success
like "Splendour." Indeed, there were those who said that all the
plays that followed had been failures, carried to semi-success on the strength
of that play's glorious past. She eschewed low-cut gowns now. She knew that it
is the telltale throat which first shows the marks of age. She knew, too, why
Bernhardt, in "Camille," always died in a high-necked nightgown. She
took to wearing high, ruffled things about her throat, and softening, kindly
chiffons.
And then, in a mistaken moment, they planned a revival of
"Splendour." Sarah Haddon would again play the part that had become a
classic. Fathers had told their children of it—of her beauty, her golden voice,
the exquisite grace of her, the charm, the tenderness, the pathos. And they
told them of the famous black velvet dress, and how in it she had moved like a
splendid, buoyant bird.
So they revived "Splendour." And men and women brought
their sons and daughters to see. And what they saw was a stout, middle-aged
woman in a too-tight black velvet dress that made her look like a dowager. And
when this woman flopped down on her knees in the big scene at the close of the
last act she had a rather dreadful time of it getting up again. And the
audience, resentful, bewildered, cheated of a precious memory, laughed. That
laugh sealed the career of Sarah Haddon. It is a fickle thing, this public that
wants to be amused; fickle and cruel and—paradoxically enough—true to its
superstitions. The Sarah Haddon of eighteen years ago was one of these. They
would have none of this fat, puffy, ample-bosomed woman who was trying to blot
her picture from their memory. "Away with her!" cried the critics
through the columns of next morning's paper. And Sarah Haddon's day was done.
"It's because I didn't wear the original black velvet
dress!" cried she, with the unreasoning rage for which she had always been
famous. "If I had worn it, everything would have been different. That
dress had a good-luck charm. Where is it? I want it. I don't care if they do
take off the play. I want it. I want it."
"Why, child," Sid Hahn said soothingly, "that dress
has probably fallen into dust by this time."
"Dust! What do you mean? How old do you think I am? That you
should say that to me! I've made millions for you, and now—"
"Now, now, Sally, be a good girl. That's all rot about that
dress being lucky. You've grown out of this part; that's all. We'll find
another play—"
"I want that dress."
Sid Hahn flushed uncomfortably. "Well, if you must know, I
gave it away."
"To whom?"
"To—to Josie Fifer. She took a notion to it, and so I told
her she could have it." Then, as Sarah Haddon rose, dried her eyes, and
began to straighten her hat: "Where are you going?" He trailed her to
the door worriedly. "Now, Sally, don't do anything foolish. You're just
tired and overstrung. Where are you—"
"I am going to see Josie Fifer."
"Now, look here, Sarah!"
But she was off, and Sid Hahn could only follow after, the showman
in him anticipating the scene that was to follow. When he reached the fourth
floor of the storehouse Sarah Haddon was there ahead of him. The two women—one
tall, imperious, magnificent in furs; the other shrunken, deformed,
shabby—stood staring at each other from opposites sides of the worktable. And
between them, in a crumpled, grey-black heap, lay the velvet gown.
"I don't care who says you can have it," Josie Fifer's
shrill voice was saying. "It's mine, and I'm going to keep it. Mr. Hahn
himself gave it to me. He said I could cut it up for a dress or something if I
wanted to. Long ago." Then, as Sid Hahn himself appeared, she appealed to
him. "There he is now. Didn't you, Mr. Hahn? Didn't you say I could have
it? Years ago?"
"Yes, Jo," said Sid Hahn. "It's yours, to do with
as you wish."
Sarah Haddon, who never had been denied anything in all her
pampered life, turned to him now. Her bosom rose and fell. She was breathing
sharply. "But S.H.!" she cried, "S.H., I've got to have it.
Don't you see, I want it! It's all I've got left in the world of what I used to
be. I want it!" She began to cry, and it was not acting.
Josie Fifer stood staring at her, her eyes wide with horror and
unbelief.
"Why, say, listen! Listen! You can have it. I didn't know you
wanted it as bad as that. Why, you can have it. I want you to take it.
Here."
She shoved it across the table. Sarah reached out for it quickly.
She rolled it up in a tight bundle and whisked off with it without a backward
glance at Josie or at Hahn. She was still sobbing as she went down the stairs.
The two stood staring at each other ludicrously. Hahn spoke first.
"I'm sorry, Josie. That was nice of you, giving it to her
like that."
But Josie did not seem to hear. At least she paid no attention to
his remark. She was staring at him with that dazed and wide-eyed look of one
upon whom a great truth has just dawned. Then, suddenly, she began to laugh.
She laughed a high, shrill laugh that was not so much an expression of mirth as
of relief.
Sid Hahn put up a pudgy hand in protest. "Josie! Please! For
the love of Heaven don't you go and get it. I've had to do
with one hysterical woman to-day. Stop that laughing! Stop it!"
Josie stopped, not abruptly, but in a little series of recurring
giggles. Then these subsided and she was smiling. It wasn't at all her usual
smile. The bitterness was quite gone from it. She faced Sid Hahn across the
table. Her palms were outspread, as one who would make things plain. "I
wasn't hysterical. I was just laughing. I've been about seventeen years earning
that laugh. Don't grudge it to me."
"Let's have the plot," said Hahn.
"There isn't any. You see, it's just—well, I've just
discovered how it works out. After all these years! She's had everything she
wanted all her life. And me, I've never had anything. Not a thing. She's
travelled one way, and I've travelled in the opposite direction, and where has
it brought us? Here we are, both fighting over an old black velvet rag. Don't
you see? Both wanting the same—" She broke off, with the little twisted
smile on her lips again. "Life's a strange thing, Mr. Hahn."
"I hope, Josie, you don't claim any originality for that
remark," replied Sid Hahn dryly.
"But," argued the editor, "you don't call this a
cheerful story, I hope."
"Well, perhaps not exactly boisterous. But it teaches a
lesson, and all that. And it's sort of philosophical and everything, don't you
think?"
The editor shuffled the sheets together decisively, so that they formed
a neat sheaf. "I'm afraid I didn't make myself quite clear. It's
entertaining, and all that, but—ah—in view of our present needs, I'm sorry to
say we—"
II.THE GAY OLD DOG
Those of you who have dwelt—or even lingered—in Chicago, Illinois
(this is not a humorous story), are familiar with the region known as the Loop.
For those others of you to whom Chicago is a transfer point between New York
and San Francisco there is presented this brief explanation:
The Loop is a clamorous, smoke-infested district embraced by the
iron arms of the elevated tracks. In a city boasting fewer millions, it would
be known familiarly as downtown. From Congress to Lake Street, from Wabash
almost to the river, those thunderous tracks make a complete circle, or loop.
Within it lie the retail shops, the commercial hotels, the theatres, the
restaurants. It is the Fifth Avenue (diluted) and the Broadway (deleted) of
Chicago. And he who frequents it by night in search of amusement and cheer is
known, vulgarly, as a Loop-hound.
Jo Hertz was a Loop-hound. On the occasion of those sparse first
nights granted the metropolis of the Middle West he was always present, third
row, aisle, left. When a new loop café was opened Jo's table always commanded
an unobstructed view of anything worth viewing. On entering he was wont to say,
"Hello, Gus," with careless cordiality to the head waiter, the while
his eye roved expertly from table to table as he removed his gloves. He ordered
things under glass, so that his table, at midnight or thereabouts, resembled a
hot-bed that favours the bell system. The waiters fought for him. He was the
kind of man who mixes his own salad dressing. He liked to call for a bowl, some
cracked ice, lemon, garlic, paprika, salt, pepper, vinegar, and oil and make a
rite of it. People at near-by tables would lay down their knives and forks to
watch, fascinated. The secret of it seemed to lie in using all the oil in sight
and calling for more.
That was Jo—a plump and lonely bachelor of fifty. A plethoric,
roving-eyed and kindly man, clutching vainly at the garments of a youth that
had long slipped past him. Jo Hertz, in one of those pinch-waist belted suits
and a trench coat and a little green hat, walking up Michigan Avenue of a
bright winter's afternoon, trying to take the curb with a jaunty youthfulness
against which every one of his fat-encased muscles rebelled, was a sight for
mirth or pity, depending on one's vision.
The gay-dog business was a late phase in the life of Jo Hertz. He
had been a quite different sort of canine. The staid and harassed brother of
three unwed and selfish sisters is an under dog. The tale of how Jo Hertz came
to be a Loop-hound should not be compressed within the limits of a short story.
It should be told as are the photo plays, with frequent throwbacks and many
cut-ins. To condense twenty-three years of a man's life into some five or six
thousand words requires a verbal economy amounting to parsimony.
At twenty-seven Jo had been the dutiful, hard-working son (in the
wholesale harness business) of a widowed and gummidging mother, who called him
Joey. If you had looked close you would have seen that now and then a double
wrinkle would appear between Jo's eyes—a wrinkle that had no business there at
twenty-seven. Then Jo's mother died, leaving him handicapped by a death-bed
promise, the three sisters and a three-story-and-basement house on Calumet
Avenue. Jo's wrinkle became a fixture.
Death-bed promises should be broken as lightly as they are
seriously made. The dead have no right to lay their clammy fingers upon the
living.
"Joey," she had said, in her high, thin voice,
"take care of the girls."
"I will, Ma," Jo had choked.
"Joey," and the voice was weaker, "promise me you
won't marry till the girls are all provided for." Then as Joe had
hesitated, appalled: "Joey, it's my dying wish. Promise!"
"I promise, Ma," he had said.
Whereupon his mother had died, comfortably, leaving him with a
completely ruined life.
They were not bad-looking girls, and they had a certain style,
too. That is, Stell and Eva had. Carrie, the middle one, taught school over on
the West Side. In those days it took her almost two hours each way. She said
the kind of costume she required should have been corrugated steel. But all
three knew what was being worn, and they wore it—or fairly faithful copies of
it. Eva, the housekeeping sister, had a needle knack. She could skim the State
Street windows and come away with a mental photograph of every separate tuck,
hem, yoke, and ribbon. Heads of departments showed her the things they kept in
drawers, and she went home and reproduced them with the aid of a
two-dollar-a-day seamstress. Stell, the youngest, was the beauty. They called
her Babe. She wasn't really a beauty, but some one had once told her that she
looked like Janice Meredith (it was when that work of fiction was at the height
of its popularity). For years afterward, whenever she went to parties, she
affected a single, fat curl over her right shoulder, with a rose stuck through
it.
Twenty-three years ago one's sisters did not strain at the
household leash, nor crave a career. Carrie taught school, and hated it. Eva
kept house expertly and complainingly. Babe's profession was being the family
beauty, and it took all her spare time. Eva always let her sleep until ten.
This was Jo's household, and he was the nominal head of it. But it
was an empty title. The three women dominated his life. They weren't
consciously selfish. If you had called them cruel they would have put you down
as mad. When you are the lone brother of three sisters, it means that you must
constantly be calling for, escorting, or dropping one of them somewhere. Most
men of Jo's age were standing before their mirror of a Saturday night,
whistling blithely and abstractedly while they discarded a blue polka-dot for a
maroon tie, whipped off the maroon for a shot-silk, and at the last moment
decided against the shot-silk in favor of a plain black-and-white, because she
had once said she preferred quiet ties. Jo, when he should have been preening
his feathers for conquest, was saying:
"Well, my God, I am hurrying! Give a man
time, can't you? I just got home. You girls have been laying around the house
all day. No wonder you're ready."
He took a certain pride in seeing his sisters well dressed, at a
time when he should have been reveling in fancy waistcoats and brilliant-hued
socks, according to the style of that day, and the inalienable right of any
unwed male under thirty, in any day. On those rare occasions when his business
necessitated an out-of-town trip, he would spend half a day floundering about
the shops, selecting handkerchiefs, or stockings, or feathers, or fans, or
gloves for the girls. They always turned out to be the wrong kind, judging by
their reception.
From Carrie, "What in the world do I want of a fan!"
"I thought you didn't have one," Jo would say.
"I haven't. I never go to dances."
Jo would pass a futile hand over the top of his head, as was his
way when disturbed. "I just thought you'd like one. I thought every girl
liked a fan. Just," feebly, "just to—to have."
"Oh, for pity's sake!"
And from Eva or Babe, "I've got silk
stockings, Jo." Or, "You brought me handkerchiefs the last
time."
There was something selfish in his giving, as there always is in
any gift freely and joyfully made. They never suspected the exquisite pleasure
it gave him to select these things; these fine, soft, silken things. There were
many things about this slow-going, amiable brother of theirs that they never
suspected. If you had told them he was a dreamer of dreams, for example, they would
have been amused. Sometimes, dead-tired by nine o'clock, after a hard day down
town, he would doze over the evening paper. At intervals he would wake,
red-eyed, to a snatch of conversation such as, "Yes, but if you get a blue
you can wear it anywhere. It's dressy, and at the same time it's quiet,
too." Eva, the expert, wrestling with Carrie over the problem of the new
spring dress. They never guessed that the commonplace man in the frayed old
smoking-jacket had banished them all from the room long ago; had banished
himself, for that matter. In his place was a tall, debonair, and rather
dangerously handsome man to whom six o'clock spelled evening clothes. The kind
of man who can lean up against a mantel, or propose a toast, or give an order
to a man-servant, or whisper a gallant speech in a lady's ear with equal ease.
The shabby old house on Calumet Avenue was transformed into a brocaded and
chandeliered rendezvous for the brilliance of the city. Beauty was here, and
wit. But none so beautiful and witty as She. Mrs.—er—Jo Hertz. There was wine,
of course; but no vulgar display. There was music; the soft sheen of satin;
laughter. And he the gracious, tactful host, king of his own domain—
"Jo, for heaven's sake, if you're going to snore go to
bed!"
"Why—did I fall asleep?"
"You haven't been doing anything else all evening. A person
would think you were fifty instead of thirty."
And Jo Hertz was again just the dull, grey, commonplace brother of
three well-meaning sisters.
Babe used to say petulantly, "Jo, why don't you ever bring
home any of your men friends? A girl might as well not have any brother, all
the good you do."
Jo, conscience-stricken, did his best to make amends. But a man
who has been petticoat-ridden for years loses the knack, somehow, of comradeship
with men. He acquires, too, a knowledge of women, and a distaste for them,
equalled only, perhaps, by that of an elevator-starter in a department store.
Which brings us to one Sunday in May. Jo came home from a late
Sunday afternoon walk to find company for supper. Carrie often had in one of
her school-teacher friends, or Babe one of her frivolous intimates, or even Eva
a staid guest of the old-girl type. There was always a Sunday night supper of
potato salad, and cold meat, and coffee, and perhaps a fresh cake. Jo rather
enjoyed it, being a hospitable soul. But he regarded the guests with the
undazzled eyes of a man to whom they were just so many petticoats, timid of the
night streets and requiring escort home. If you had suggested to him that some
of his sisters' popularity was due to his own presence, or if you had hinted
that the more kittenish of these visitors were probably making eyes at him, he
would have stared in amazement and unbelief.
This Sunday night it turned out to be one of Carrie's friends.
"Emily," said Carrie, "this is my brother,
Jo."
Jo had learned what to expect in Carrie's friends. Drab-looking
women in the late thirties, whose facial lines all slanted downward.
"Happy to meet you," said Jo, and looked down at a
different sort altogether. A most surprisingly different sort, for one of
Carrie's friends. This Emily person was very small, and fluffy, and blue-eyed,
and sort of—well, crinkly looking. You know. The corners of her mouth when she
smiled, and her eyes when she looked up at you, and her hair, which was brown,
but had the miraculous effect, somehow, of being golden.
Jo shook hands with her. Her hand was incredibly small, and soft,
so that you were afraid of crushing it, until you discovered she had a firm
little grip all her own. It surprised and amused you, that grip, as does a
baby's unexpected clutch on your patronising forefinger. As Jo felt it in his
own big clasp, the strangest thing happened to him. Something inside Jo Hertz
stopped working for a moment, then lurched sickeningly, then thumped like mad.
It was his heart. He stood staring down at her, and she up at him, until the
others laughed. Then their hands fell apart, lingeringly.
"Are you a school-teacher, Emily?" he said.
"Kindergarten. It's my first year. And don't call me Emily,
please."
"Why not? It's your name. I think it's the prettiest name in
the world." Which he hadn't meant to say at all. In fact, he was perfectly
aghast to find himself saying it. But he meant it.
At supper he passed her things, and stared, until everybody
laughed again, and Eva said acidly, "Why don't you feed her?"
It wasn't that Emily had an air of helplessness. She just made you
feel you wanted her to be helpless, so that you could help her.
Jo took her home, and from that Sunday night he began to strain at
the leash. He took his sisters out, dutifully, but he would suggest, with a
carelessness that deceived no one, "Don't you want one of your girl
friends to come along? That little What's-her-name—Emily, or something. So
long's I've got three of you, I might as well have a full squad."
For a long time he didn't know what was the matter with him. He
only knew he was miserable, and yet happy. Sometimes his heart seemed to ache
with an actual physical ache. He realised that he wanted to do things for
Emily. He wanted to buy things for Emily—useless, pretty, expensive things that
he couldn't afford. He wanted to buy everything that Emily needed, and
everything that Emily desired. He wanted to marry Emily. That was it. He
discovered that one day, with a shock, in the midst of a transaction in the
harness business. He stared at the man with whom he was dealing until that
startled person grew uncomfortable.
"What's the matter, Hertz?"
"Matter?"
"You look as if you'd seen a ghost or found a gold mine. I
don't know which."
"Gold mine," said Jo. And then, "No. Ghost."
For he remembered that high, thin voice, and his promise. And the
harness business was slithering downhill with dreadful rapidity, as the
automobile business began its amazing climb. Jo tried to stop it. But he was
not that kind of business man. It never occurred to him to jump out of the
down-going vehicle and catch the up-going one. He stayed on, vainly applying
brakes that refused to work.
"You know, Emily, I couldn't support two households now. Not
the way things are. But if you'll wait. If you'll only wait. The girls
might—that is, Babe and Carrie—"
She was a sensible little thing, Emily. "Of course I'll wait.
But we mustn't just sit back and let the years go by. We've got to help."
She went about it as if she were already a little match-making
matron. She corralled all the men she had ever known and introduced them to
Babe, Carrie, and Eva separately, in pairs, and en masse. She
arranged parties at which Babe could display the curl. She got up picnics. She
stayed home while Jo took the three about. When she was present she tried to
look as plain and obscure as possible, so that the sisters should show up to
advantage. She schemed, and planned, and contrived, and hoped; and smiled into
Jo's despairing eyes.
And three years went by. Three precious years. Carrie still taught
school, and hated it. Eva kept house, more and more complainingly as prices
advanced and allowance retreated. Stell was still Babe, the family beauty; but
even she knew that the time was past for curls. Emily's hair, somehow, lost its
glint and began to look just plain brown. Her crinkliness began to iron out.
"Now, look here!" Jo argued, desperately, one night.
"We could be happy, anyway. There's plenty of room at the house. Lots of
people begin that way. Of course, I couldn't give you all I'd like to, at
first. But maybe, after a while—"
No dreams of salons, and brocade, and velvet-footed servitors, and
satin damask now. Just two rooms, all their own, all alone, and Emily to work
for. That was his dream. But it seemed less possible than that other absurd one
had been.
You know that Emily was as practical a little thing as she looked
fluffy. She knew women. Especially did she know Eva, and Carrie, and Babe. She
tried to imagine herself taking the household affairs and the housekeeping
pocketbook out of Eva's expert hands. Eva had once displayed to her a sheaf of
aigrettes she had bought with what she saved out of the housekeeping money. So
then she tried to picture herself allowing the reins of Jo's house to remain in
Eva's hands. And everything feminine and normal in her rebelled. Emily knew
she'd want to put away her own freshly laundered linen, and smooth it, and pat
it. She was that kind of woman. She knew she'd want to do her own delightful
haggling with butcher and vegetable pedlar. She knew she'd want to muss Jo's
hair, and sit on his knee, and even quarrel with him, if necessary, without the
awareness of three ever-present pairs of maiden eyes and ears.
"No! No! We'd only be miserable. I know. Even if they didn't
object. And they would, Jo. Wouldn't they?"
His silence was miserable assent. Then, "But you do love me,
don't you, Emily?"
"I do, Jo. I love you—and love you—and love you. But, Jo,
I—can't."
"I know it, dear. I knew it all the time, really. I just
thought, maybe, somehow—"
The two sat staring for a moment into space, their hands clasped.
Then they both shut their eyes, with a little shudder, as though what they saw
was terrible to look upon. Emily's hand, the tiny hand that was so unexpectedly
firm, tightened its hold on his, and his crushed the absurd fingers until she
winced with pain.
That was the beginning of the end, and they knew it.
Emily wasn't the kind of girl who would be left to pine. There are
too many Jo's in the world whose hearts are prone to lurch and then thump at
the feel of a soft, fluttering, incredibly small hand in their grip. One year
later Emily was married to a young man whose father owned a large, pie-shaped
slice of the prosperous state of Michigan.
That being safely accomplished, there was something grimly
humorous in the trend taken by affairs in the old house on Calumet. For Eva
married. Of all people, Eva! Married well, too, though he was a great deal
older than she. She went off in a hat she had copied from a French model at
Field's, and a suit she had contrived with a home dressmaker, aided by pressing
on the part of the little tailor in the basement over on Thirty-first Street.
It was the last of that, though. The next time they saw her, she had on a hat
that even she would have despaired of copying, and a suit that sort of melted
into your gaze. She moved to the North Side (trust Eva for that), and Babe
assumed the management of the household on Calumet Avenue. It was rather a pinched
little household now, for the harness business shrank and shrank.
"I don't see how you can expect me to keep house decently on
this!" Babe would say contemptuously. Babe's nose, always a little
inclined to sharpness, had whittled down to a point of late. "If you knew
what Ben gives Eva."
"It's the best I can do, Sis. Business is something
rotten."
"Ben says if you had the least bit of—" Ben was Eva's
husband, and quotable, as are all successful men.
"I don't care what Ben says," shouted Jo, goaded into rage.
"I'm sick of your everlasting Ben. Go and get a Ben of your own, why don't
you, if you're so stuck on the way he does things."
And Babe did. She made a last desperate drive, aided by Eva, and
she captured a rather surprised young man in the brokerage way, who had made up
his mind not to marry for years and years. Eva wanted to give her her wedding
things, but at that Jo broke into sudden rebellion.
"No sir! No Ben is going to buy my sister's wedding clothes,
understand? I guess I'm not broke—yet. I'll furnish the money for her things,
and there'll be enough of them, too."
Babe had as useless a trousseau, and as filled with extravagant
pink-and-blue and lacy and frilly things as any daughter of doting parents. Jo
seemed to find a grim pleasure in providing them. But it left him pretty well
pinched. After Babe's marriage (she insisted that they call her Estelle now) Jo
sold the house on Calumet. He and Carrie took one of those little flats that
were springing up, seemingly over night, all through Chicago's South Side.
There was nothing domestic about Carrie. She had given up teaching
two years before, and had gone into Social Service work on the West Side. She
had what is known as a legal mind—hard, clear, orderly—and she made a great
success of it. Her dream was to live at the Settlement House and give all her
time to the work. Upon the little household she bestowed a certain amount of
grim, capable attention. It was the same kind of attention she would have given
a piece of machinery whose oiling and running had been entrusted to her care.
She hated it, and didn't hesitate to say so.
Jo took to prowling about department store basements, and
household goods sections. He was always sending home a bargain in a ham, or a
sack of potatoes, or fifty pounds of sugar, or a window clamp, or a new kind of
paring knife. He was forever doing odd little jobs that the janitor should have
done. It was the domestic in him claiming its own.
Then, one night, Carrie came home with a dull glow in her leathery
cheeks, and her eyes alight with resolve. They had what she called a plain
talk.
"Listen, Jo. They've offered me the job of first assistant
resident worker. And I'm going to take it. Take it! I know fifty other girls
who'd give their ears for it. I go in next month."
They were at dinner. Jo looked up from his plate, dully. Then he
glanced around the little dining room, with its ugly tan walls and its heavy,
dark furniture (the Calumet Avenue pieces fitted cumbersomely into the
five-room flat).
"Away? Away from here, you mean—to live?" Carrie laid
down her fork. "Well, really, Jo! After all that explanation."
"But to go over there to live! Why, that neighbourhood's full
of dirt, and disease, and crime, and the Lord knows what all. I can't let you
do that, Carrie."
Carrie's chin came up. She laughed a short little laugh. "Let
me! That's eighteenth-century talk, Jo. My life's my own to live. I'm
going."
And she went.
Jo stayed on in the apartment until the lease was up. Then he sold
what furniture he could, stored or gave away the rest, and took a room on
Michigan Avenue in one of the old stone mansions whose decayed splendour was
being put to such purpose.
Jo Hertz was his own master. Free to marry. Free to come and go.
And he found he didn't even think of marrying. He didn't even want to come or
go, particularly. A rather frumpy old bachelor, with thinning hair and a
thickening neck. Much has been written about the unwed, middle-aged woman; her
fussiness, her primness, her angularity of mind and body. In the male that same
fussiness develops, and a certain primness, too. But he grows flabby where she
grows lean.
Every Thursday evening he took dinner at Eva's, and on Sunday noon
at Stell's. He tucked his napkin under his chin and openly enjoyed the
home-made soup and the well-cooked meats. After dinner he tried to talk
business with Eva's husband, or Stell's. His business talks were the
old-fashioned kind, beginning:
"Well, now, looka here. Take, f'rinstance your raw hides and
leathers."
But Ben and George didn't want to "take, f'rinstance, your
raw hides and leathers." They wanted, when they took anything at all, to
take golf, or politics or stocks. They were the modern type of business man who
prefers to leave his work out of his play. Business, with them, was a
profession—a finely graded and balanced thing, differing from Jo's clumsy,
downhill style as completely as does the method of a great criminal detective
differ from that of a village constable. They would listen, restively, and say,
"Uh-uh," at intervals, and at the first chance they would sort of
fade out of the room, with a meaning glance at their wives. Eva had two
children now. Girls. They treated Uncle Jo with good-natured tolerance. Stell
had no children. Uncle Jo degenerated, by almost imperceptible degrees, from the
position of honoured guest, who is served with white meat, to that of one who
is content with a leg and one of those obscure and bony sections which, after
much turning with a bewildered and investigating knife and fork, leave one
baffled and unsatisfied.
Eva and Stell got together and decided that Jo ought to marry.
"It isn't natural," Eva told him. "I never saw a
man who took so little interest in women."
"Me!" protested Jo, almost shyly. "Women!"
"Yes. Of course. You act like a frightened schoolboy."
So they had in for dinner certain friends and acquaintances of
fitting age. They spoke of them as "splendid girls." Between
thirty-six and forty. They talked awfully well, in a firm, clear way, about
civics, and classes, and politics, and economics, and boards. They rather
terrified Jo. He didn't understand much that they talked about, and he felt
humbly inferior, and yet a little resentful, as if something had passed him by.
He escorted them home, dutifully, though they told him not to bother, and they
evidently meant it. They seemed capable, not only of going home quite
unattended, but of delivering a pointed lecture to any highwayman or brawler
who might molest them.
The following Thursday Eva would say, "How did you like her,
Jo?"
"Like who?" Jo would spar feebly.
"Miss Matthews."
"Who's she?"
"Now, don't be funny, Jo. You know very well I mean the girl
who was here for dinner. The one who talked so well on the emigration question.
"Oh, her! Why, I liked her all right. Seems to be a smart
woman."
"Smart! She's a perfectly splendid girl."
"Sure," Jo would agree cheerfully.
"But didn't you like her?"
"I can't say I did, Eve. And I can't say I didn't. She made
me think a lot of a teacher I had in the fifth reader. Name of Himes. As I
recall her, she must have been a fine woman. But I never thought of her as a
woman at all. She was just Teacher."
"You make me tired," snapped Eva impatiently. "A
man of your age. You don't expect to marry a girl, do you? A child!"
"I don't expect to marry anybody," Jo had answered.
And that was the truth, lonely though he often was.
The following spring Eva moved to Winnetka. Any one who got the
meaning of the Loop knows the significance of a move to a north-shore suburb,
and a house. Eva's daughter, Ethel, was growing up, and her mother had an eye
on society.
That did away with Jo's Thursday dinner. Then Stell's husband
bought a car. They went out into the country every Sunday. Stell said it was
getting so that maids objected to Sunday dinners, anyway. Besides, they were
unhealthy, old-fashioned things. They always meant to ask Jo to come along, but
by the time their friends were placed, and the lunch, and the boxes, and
sweaters, and George's camera, and everything, there seemed to be no room for a
man of Jo's bulk. So that eliminated the Sunday dinners.
"Just drop in any time during the week," Stell said,
"for dinner. Except Wednesday—that's our bridge night—and Saturday. And,
of course, Thursday. Cook is out that night. Don't wait for me to phone."
And so Jo drifted into that sad-eyed, dyspeptic family made up of
those you see dining in second-rate restaurants, their paper propped up against
the bowl of oyster crackers, munching solemnly and with indifference to the
stare of the passer-by surveying them through the brazen plate-glass window.
And then came the War. The war that spelled death and destruction
to millions. The war that brought a fortune to Jo Hertz, and transformed him,
over night, from a baggy-kneed old bachelor, whose business was a failure, to a
prosperous manufacturer whose only trouble was the shortage in hides for the
making of his product—leather! The armies of Europe called for it. Harnesses!
More harnesses! Straps! Millions of straps. More! More!
The musty old harness business over on Lake Street was magically
changed from a dust-covered, dead-alive concern to an orderly hive that hummed
and glittered with success. Orders poured in. Jo Hertz had inside information
on the War. He knew about troops and horses. He talked with French and English
and Italian buyers—noblemen, many of them—commissioned by their countries to
get American-made supplies. And now, when he said to Ben or George, "Take
f'rinstance your raw hides and leathers," they listened with respectful
attention.
And then began the gay-dog business in the life of Jo Hertz. He
developed into a Loop-hound, ever keen on the scent of fresh pleasure. That
side of Jo Hertz which had been repressed and crushed and ignored began to
bloom, unhealthily. At first he spent money on his rather contemptuous nieces.
He sent them gorgeous fans, and watch bracelets, and velvet bags. He took two
expensive rooms at a downtown hotel, and there was something more
tear-compelling than grotesque about the way he gloated over the luxury of a
separate ice-water tap in the bathroom. He explained it.
"Just turn it on. Ice-water! Any hour of the day or
night."
He bought a car. Naturally. A glittering affair; in colour a
bright blue, with pale blue leather straps and a great deal of gold fittings,
and wire wheels. Eva said it was the kind of thing a soubrette would use,
rather than an elderly business man. You saw him driving about in it, red-faced
and rather awkward at the wheel. You saw him, too, in the Pompeian room at the
Congress Hotel of a Saturday afternoon when doubtful and roving-eyed matrons in
kolinsky capes are wont to congregate to sip pale amber drinks. Actors grew to
recognise the semi-bald head and the shining, round, good-natured face looming
out at them from the dim well of the parquet, and sometimes, in a musical show,
they directed a quip at him, and he liked it. He could pick out the critics as
they came down the aisle, and even had a nodding acquaintance with two of them.
"Kelly, of the Herald," he would say
carelessly. "Bean, of the Trib. They're all afraid of
him."
So he frolicked, ponderously. In New York he might have been
called a Man About Town.
And he was lonesome. He was very lonesome. So he searched about in
his mind and brought from the dim past the memory of the luxuriously furnished
establishment of which he used to dream in the evenings when he dozed over his
paper in the old house on Calumet. So he rented an apartment, many-roomed and
expensive, with a man-servant in charge, and furnished it in styles and periods
ranging through all the Louises. The living room was mostly rose colour. It was
like an unhealthy and bloated boudoir. And yet there was nothing sybaritic or
uncleanly in the sight of this paunchy, middle-aged man sinking into the
rosy-cushioned luxury of his ridiculous home. It was a frank and naïve indulgence
of long-starved senses, and there was in it a great resemblance to the rolling
eyed ecstasy of a schoolboy smacking his lips over an all-day sucker.
The War went on, and on, and on. And the money continued to roll
in—a flood of it. Then, one afternoon, Eva, in town on shopping bent, entered a
small, exclusive, and expensive shop on Michigan Avenue. Exclusive, that is, in
price. Eva's weakness, you may remember, was hats. She was seeking a hat now.
She described what she sought with a languid conciseness, and stood looking
about her after the saleswoman had vanished in quest of it. The room was
becomingly rose-illumined and somewhat dim, so that some minutes had passed
before she realised that a man seated on a raspberry brocade settee not five feet
away—a man with a walking stick, and yellow gloves, and tan spats, and a check
suit—was her brother Jo. From him Eva's wild-eyed glance leaped to the woman
who was trying on hats before one of the many long mirrors. She was seated, and
a saleswoman was exclaiming discreetly at her elbow.
Eva turned sharply and encountered her own saleswoman returning,
hat-laden. "Not to-day," she gasped. "I'm feeling ill.
Suddenly." And almost ran from the room.
That evening she told Stell, relating her news in that telephone
pidgin-English devised by every family of married sisters as protection against
the neighbours and Central. Translated, it ran thus:
"He looked straight at me. My dear, I thought I'd die! But at
least he had sense enough not to speak. She was one of those limp, willowy
creatures with the greediest eyes that she tried to keep softened to a baby
stare, and couldn't, she was so crazy to get her hands on those hats. I saw it
all in one awful minute. You know the way I do. I suppose some people would
call her pretty. I don't. And her colour! Well! And the most expensive-looking
hats. Aigrettes, and paradise, and feathers. Not one of them under
seventy-five. Isn't it disgusting! At his age! Suppose Ethel had been with
me!"
The next time it was Stell who saw them. In a restaurant. She said
it spoiled her evening. And the third time it was Ethel. She was one of the
guests at a theatre party given by Nicky Overton II. You know. The North Shore
Overtons. Lake Forest. They came in late, and occupied the entire third row at
the opening performance of "Believe Me!" And Ethel was Nicky's
partner. She was glowing like a rose. When the lights went up after the first
act Ethel saw that her uncle Jo was seated just ahead of her with what she
afterward described as a blonde. Then her uncle had turned around, and seeing
her, had been surprised into a smile that spread genially all over his plump
and rubicund face. Then he had turned to face forward again, quickly.
"Who's the old bird?" Nicky had asked. Ethel had
pretended not to hear, so he had asked again.
"My Uncle," Ethel answered, and flushed all over her
delicate face, and down to her throat. Nicky had looked at the blonde, and his
eyebrows had gone up ever so slightly.
It spoiled Ethel's evening. More than that, as she told her mother
of it later, weeping, she declared it had spoiled her life.
Eva talked it over with her husband in that intimate, kimonoed
hour that precedes bedtime. She gesticulated heatedly with her hair brush.
"It's disgusting, that's what it is. Perfectly disgusting.
There's no fool like an old fool. Imagine! A creature like that. At his time of
life."
There exists a strange and loyal kinship among men. "Well, I
don't know," Ben said now, and even grinned a little. "I suppose a
boy's got to sow his wild oats some time."
"Don't be any more vulgar than you can help," Eva
retorted. "And I think you know, as well as I, what it means to have that
Overton boy interested in Ethel."
"If he's interested in her," Ben blundered, "I
guess the fact that Ethel's uncle went to the theatre with some one who wasn't
Ethel's aunt won't cause a shudder to run up and down his frail young frame,
will it?"
"All right," Eva had retorted. "If you're not man
enough to stop it, I'll have to, that's all. I'm going up there with Stell this
week."
They did not notify Jo of their coming. Eva telephoned his
apartment when she knew he would be out, and asked his man if he expected his
master home to dinner that evening. The man had said yes. Eva arranged to meet
Stell in town. They would drive to Jo's apartment together, and wait for him
there.
When she reached the city Eva found turmoil there. The first of
the American troops to be sent to France were leaving. Michigan Boulevard was a
billowing, surging mass: Flags, pennants, banners crowds. All the elements that
make for demonstration. And over the whole—quiet. No holiday crowd, this. A
solid, determined mass of people waiting patient hours to see the khaki-clads
go by. Three years of indefatigable reading had brought them to a clear knowledge
of what these boys were going to.
"Isn't it dreadful!" Stell gasped.
"Nicky Overton's only nineteen, thank goodness."
Their car was caught in the jam. When they moved at all it was by
inches. When at last they reached Jo's apartment they were flushed, nervous,
apprehensive. But he had not yet come in. So they waited.
No, they were not staying to dinner with their brother, they told
the relieved houseman.
Jo's home has already been described to you. Stell and Eva, sunk
in rose-coloured cushions, viewed it with disgust, and some mirth. They rather
avoided each other's eyes.
"Carrie ought to be here," Eva said. They both smiled at
the thought of the austere Carrie in the midst of those rosy cushions, and
hangings, and lamps. Stell rose and began to walk about, restlessly. She picked
up a vase and laid it down; straightened a picture. Eva got up, too, and
wandered into the hall. She stood there a moment, listening. Then she turned
and passed into Jo's bedroom. And there you knew Jo for what he was.
This room was as bare as the other had been ornate. It was Jo, the
clean-minded and simple-hearted, in revolt against the cloying luxury with
which he had surrounded himself. The bedroom, of all rooms in any house,
reflects the personality of its occupant. True, the actual furniture was
panelled, cupid-surmounted, and ridiculous. It had been the fruit of Jo's first
orgy of the senses. But now it stood out in that stark little room with an air
as incongruous and ashamed as that of a pink tarleton danseuse who
finds herself in a monk's cell. None of those wall-pictures with which bachelor
bedrooms are reputed to be hung. No satin slippers. No scented notes. Two
plain-backed military brushes on the chiffonier (and he so nearly hairless!). A
little orderly stack of books on the table near the bed. Eva fingered their
titles and gave a little gasp. One of them was on gardening.
"Well, of all things!" exclaimed Stell. A book on the
War, by an Englishman. A detective story of the lurid type that lulls us to
sleep. His shoes ranged in a careful row in the closet, with a shoe-tree in
every one of them. There was something speaking about them. They looked so
human. Eva shut the door on them, quickly. Some bottles on the dresser. A jar
of pomade. An ointment such as a man uses who is growing bald and is
panic-stricken too late. An insurance calendar on the wall. Some
rhubarb-and-soda mixture on the shelf in the bathroom, and a little box of
pepsin tablets.
"Eats all kinds of things at all hours of the night,"
Eva said, and wandered out into the rose-coloured front room again with the air
of one who is chagrined at her failure to find what she has sought. Stell
followed her furtively.
"Where do you suppose he can be?" she demanded.
"It's"—she glanced at her wrist—"why, it's after six!"
And then there was a little click. The two women sat up, tense.
The door opened. Jo came in. He blinked a little. The two women in the rosy
room stood up.
"Why—Eve! Why, Babe! Well! Why didn't you let me know?"
"We were just about to leave. We thought you weren't coming
home."
Joe came in, slowly.
"I was in the jam on Michigan, watching the boys go by."
He sat down, heavily. The light from the window fell on him. And you saw that
his eyes were red.
And you'll have to learn why. He had found himself one of the
thousands in the jam on Michigan Avenue, as he said. He had a place near the
curb, where his big frame shut off the view of the unfortunates behind him. He
waited with the placid interest of one who has subscribed to all the funds and
societies to which a prosperous, middle-aged business man is called upon to
subscribe in war time. Then, just as he was about to leave, impatient at the
delay, the crowd had cried, with a queer dramatic, exultant note in its voice,
"Here they come! Here come the boys!"
Just at that moment two little, futile, frenzied fists began to
beat a mad tattoo on Jo Hertz's broad back. Jo tried to turn in the crowd, all
indignant resentment. "Say, looka here!"
The little fists kept up their frantic beating and pushing. And a
voice—a choked, high little voice—cried, "Let me by! I can't see! You man,
you! You big fat man! My boy's going by—to war—and I can't see! Let me
by!"
Jo scrooged around, still keeping his place. He looked down. And
upturned to him in agonised appeal was the face of little Emily. They stared at
each other for what seemed a long, long time. It was really only the fraction
of a second. Then Jo put one great arm firmly around Emily's waist and swung
her around in front of him. His great bulk protected her. Emily was clinging to
his hand. She was breathing rapidly, as if she had been running. Her eyes were
straining up the street.
"Why, Emily, how in the world!—"
"I ran away. Fred didn't want me to come. He said it would
excite me too much."
"Fred?"
"My husband. He made me promise to say good-bye to Jo at
home."
"Jo?"
"Jo's my boy. And he's going to war. So I ran away. I had to
see him. I had to see him go."
She was dry-eyed. Her gaze was straining up the street.
"Why, sure," said Jo. "Of course you want to see
him." And then the crowd gave a great roar. There came over Jo a feeling
of weakness. He was trembling. The boys went marching by.
"There he is," Emily shrilled, above the din.
"There be is! There he is! There he—" And waved a futile little hand.
It wasn't so much a wave as a clutching. A clutching after something beyond her
reach.
"Which one? Which one, Emily?"
"The handsome one. The handsome one. There!" Her voice
quavered and died.
Jo put a steady hand on her shoulder. "Point him out,"
he commanded. "Show me." And the next instant. "Never mind. I
see him."
Somehow, miraculously, he had picked him from among the hundreds.
Had picked him as surely as his own father might have. It was Emily's boy. He
was marching by, rather stiffly. He was nineteen, and fun-loving, and he had a
girl, and he didn't particularly want to go to France and—to go to France. But
more than he had hated going, he had hated not to go. So he marched by, looking
straight ahead, his jaw set so that his chin stuck out just a little. Emily's
boy.
Jo looked at him, and his face flushed purple. His eyes, the
hard-boiled eyes of a Loop-hound, took on the look of a sad old man. And
suddenly he was no longer Jo, the sport; old J. Hertz, the gay dog. He was Jo
Hertz, thirty, in love with life, in love with Emily, and with the stinging
blood of young manhood coursing through his veins.
Another minute and the boy had passed on up the broad street—the
fine, flag-bedecked street—just one of a hundred service-hats bobbing in
rhythmic motion like sandy waves lapping a shore and flowing on.
Then he disappeared altogether.
Emily was clinging to Jo. She was mumbling something, over and
over. "I can't. I can't. Don't ask me to. I can't let him go. Like that. I
can't."
Jo said a queer thing.
"Why, Emily! We wouldn't have him stay home, would we? We
wouldn't want him to do anything different, would we? Not our boy. I'm glad he
enlisted. I'm proud of him. So are you glad."
Little by little he quieted her. He took her to the car that was
waiting, a worried chauffeur in charge. They said good-bye, awkwardly. Emily's
face was a red, swollen mass.
So it was that when Jo entered his own hallway half an hour later
he blinked, dazedly, and when the light from the window fell on him you saw
that his eyes were red.
Eva was not one to beat about the bush. She sat forward in her
chair, clutching her bag rather nervously.
"Now, look here, Jo. Stell and I are here for a reason. We're
here to tell you that this thing's got to stop."
"Thing? Stop?"
"You know very well what I mean. You saw me at the milliner's
that day. And night before last, Ethel. We're all disgusted. If you must go
about with people like that, please have some sense of decency."
Something gathering in Jo's face should have warned her. But he
was slumped down in his chair in such a huddle, and he looked so old and fat
that she did not heed it. She went on. "You've got us to consider. Your
sisters. And your nieces. Not to speak of your own—"
But he got to his feet then, shaking, and at what she saw in his
face even Eva faltered and stopped. It wasn't at all the face of a fat,
middle-aged sport. It was a face Jovian, terrible.
"You!" he began, low-voiced, ominous. "You!"
He raised a great fist high. "You two murderers! You didn't consider me,
twenty years ago. You come to me with talk like that. Where's my boy! You
killed him, you two, twenty years ago. And now he belongs to somebody else.
Where's my son that should have gone marching by to-day?" He flung his
arms out in a great gesture of longing. The red veins stood out on his
forehead. "Where's my son! Answer me that, you two selfish, miserable
women. Where's my son!" Then, as they huddled together, frightened,
wild-eyed. "Out of my house! Out of my house! Before I hurt you!"
They fled, terrified. The door banged behind them.
Jo stood, shaking, in the centre of the room. Then he reached for
a chair, gropingly, and sat down. He passed one moist, flabby hand over his
forehead and it came away wet. The telephone rang. He sat still. It sounded far
away and unimportant, like something forgotten. I think he did not even hear it
with his conscious ear. But it rang and rang insistently. Jo liked to answer
his telephone, when at home.
"Hello!" He knew instantly the voice at the other end.
"That you, Jo?" it said.
"Yes."
"How's my boy?"
"I'm—all right."
"Listen, Jo. The crowd's coming over to-night. I've fixed up
a little poker game for you. Just eight of us."
"I can't come to-night, Gert."
"Can't! Why not?"
"I'm not feeling so good."
"You just said you were all right."
"I am all right. Just kind of tired."
The voice took on a cooing note. "Is my Joey tired? Then he
shall be all comfy on the sofa, and he doesn't need to play if he don't want
to. No, sir."
Jo stood staring at the black mouth-piece of the telephone. He was
seeing a procession go marching by. Boys, hundreds of boys, in khaki.
"Hello! Hello!" the voice took on an anxious note.
"Are you there?"
"Yes," wearily.
"Jo, there's something the matter. You're sick. I'm coming
right over."
"No!"
"Why not? You sound as if you'd been sleeping. Look
here—"
"Leave me alone!" cried Jo, suddenly, and the receiver
clacked onto the hook. "Leave me alone. Leave me alone." Long after
the connection had been broken.
He stood staring at the instrument with unseeing eyes. Then he
turned and walked into the front room. All the light had gone out of it. Dusk
had come on. All the light had gone out of everything. The zest had gone out of
life. The game was over—the game he had been playing against loneliness and
disappointment. And he was just a tired old man. A lonely, tired old man in a
ridiculous, rose-coloured room that had grown, all of a sudden, drab.
III.THE TOUGH GUY
You could not be so very tough in Chippewa, Wisconsin. But Buzz
Werner managed magnificently with the limited means at hand. Before he was
nineteen mothers were warning their sons against him, and brothers their
sisters. Buzz Werner not only was tough—he looked tough. When he spoke—which
was often—his speech slid sinisterly out of the extreme left corner of his
mouth. He had a trick of hitching himself up from the belt—one palm on the
stomach and a sort of heaving jerk from the waist, as a prize fighter does
it—that would have made a Van Bibber look rough.
His name was not really Buzz, but quotes are dispensed with
because no one but his mother remembered what it originally had been. His
mother called him Ernie and she alone, in all Chippewa, Wisconsin, was unaware
that her son was the town tough guy. But even she sometimes mildly remonstrated
with him for being what she called kind of wild. Buzz had yellow hair with a
glint in it, and it curled up into a bang at the front. No amount of wetting or
greasing could subdue that irrepressible forelock. A boy with hair like that
never grows up in his mother's eyes.
If Buzz's real name was lost in the dim mists of boyhood, the
origin and fitness of his nickname were apparent after two minutes'
conversation with him. Buzz Werner was called Buzz not only because he talked
too much, but because he was a braggart. His conversation bristled with the
perpendicular pronoun, and his pet phrase was, "I says to him—"
He buzzed.
By the time Buzz was fourteen he was stealing brass from the yards
of the big paper mills down in the Flats and selling it to the junk man. How he
escaped the reform school is a mystery. Perhaps it was the blond forelock. At
nineteen he was running with the Kearney girl.
Twenty-five years hence Chippewa will have learned to treat the
Kearney-girl type as a disease, and a public menace. Which she was. The Kearney
girl ran wild in Chippewa, and Chippewa will be paying taxes on the fruit of
her liberty for a hundred years to come. The Kearney girl was a beautiful
idiot, with a lovely oval face, and limpid, rather wistful blue eyes, and fair,
fine hair, and a long slim neck. She looked very much like those famous wantons
of history, from Lucrezia Borgia to Nell Gwyn, that you see pictured in the
galleries of Europe—all very mild and girlish, with moist red mouths, like a
puppy's, so that you wonder if they have not been basely defamed through all
the centuries.
The Kearney girl's father ran a saloon out on Second Avenue, and
every few days the Chippewa paper would come out with a story of a brawl, a
knifing, or a free-for-all fight following a Saturday night in Kearney's. The
Kearney girl herself was forever running up and down Grand Avenue, which was
the main business street. She would trail up and down from the old Armory to
the post-office and back again. When she turned off into the homeward stretch
on Outagamie Street there always slunk after her some stoop-shouldered,
furtive, loping youth. But he never was seen with her on Grand Avenue. She had
often been up before old Judge Colt for some nasty business or other. At such
times the shabby office of the Justice of the Peace would be full of shawled
mothers and heavy-booted, work-worn fathers, and an aunt or two, and some
cousins, and always a slinking youth fumbling with the hat in his hands, his
glance darting hither and thither, from group to group, but never resting for a
moment within any one else's gaze. Of all these present, the Kearney girl
herself was always the calmest. Old Judge Colt meted out justice according to
his lights. Unfortunately, the wearing of a yellow badge on the breast was a
custom that had gone out some years before.
This nymph it was who had taken a fancy to Buzz Werner. It looked
very black for his future.The strange part of it was that the girl possessed
little attraction for Buzz. It was she who made all the advances. Buzz had
sprung from very decent stock, as you shall see. And something about the sultry
unwholesomeness of this girl repelled him, though he was hardly aware that this
was so. Buzz and his gang would meet down town of a Saturday night, very moist
as to hair and clean as to soft shirt. They would lounge on the corner of Grand
and Outagamie, in front of Schroeder's brightly lighted drug store, watching
the girls go by. They were, for the most part, a pimply-faced lot. They would
shuffle their feet in a slow jig, hands in pockets. When a late comer joined
them it was considered au fait to welcome him by assuming a
fistic attitude, after the style of the pugilists pictured in the barber-shop
magazines, and spar a good-natured and make-believe round with him, with much
agile dancing about in a circle, head held stiffly, body crouching, while
working a rapid and facetious right.
This corner, or Donovan's pool-shack, was their club, their forum.
Here they recounted their exploits, bragged of their triumphs, boasted of their
girls, flexed their muscles to show their strength. And all through their talk
there occurred again and again a certain term whose use is common to their
kind. Their remarks were prefaced and interlarded and concluded with it, so
that it was no longer an oath or a blasphemy.
"Je's, I was sore at 'm. I told him where to get off at.
Nobody can talk to me like that. Je's, I should say not."
So accustomed had it grown that it was not even thought of as
profanity.
If Buzz's family could have heard him in his talk with his
street-corner companions they would not have credited their ears. A mouthy
braggart in company is often silent in his own home, and Buzz was no exception
to this rule. Fortunately, Buzz's braggadocio carried with it a certain
conviction. He never kept a job more than a month, and his own account of his
leave-taking was always as vainglorious as it was dramatic.
"'G'wan!' I says to him, 'Who you talkin' to? I don't have to
take nothin' from you nor nobody like you,' I says. 'I'm as good as you are any
day, and better. You can have your dirty job,' I says. And with that I give him
my time and walked out on 'm. Je's, he was sore!"
They would listen to him, appreciatively, but with certain mental
reservations; reservations inevitable when a speaker's name is Buzz. One by one
they would melt away as their particular girl, after flaunting by with a giggle
and a sidelong glance for the dozenth time, would switch her skirts around the
corner of Outagamie Street past the Brill House, homeward bound.
"Well, s'long," they would say. And lounging after her,
would overtake her in the shadow of the row of trees in front of the Agassiz
School.
If the Werner family had been city folk they would, perforce, have
burrowed in one of those rabbit-warren tenements that line block after block of
city streets. But your small-town labouring man is likely to own his two-story
frame house with a garden patch in the back and a cement walk leading up to the
front porch, and pork roast on Sundays. The Werners had all this, no thanks to
Pa Werner; no thanks to Buzz, surely; and little to Minnie Werner who clerked
in the Sugar Bowl Candy Store and tried to dress like Angie Hatton whose father
owned the biggest Pulp and Paper mill in the Fox River Valley. No, the house
and the garden, the porch and the cement sidewalk, and the pork roast all had
their origin in Ma Werner's tireless energy, in Ma Werner's thrift; in her
patience and unremitting toil, her nimble fingers and bent back, her shapeless
figure and unbounded and unexpressed (verbally, that is) love for her children.
Pa Werner—sullen, lazy, brooding, tyrannical—she soothed and mollified for the
children's sake, or shouted down with a shrewish outburst, as the occasion
required. An expert stone-mason by trade, Pa Werner could be depended on only
when he was not drinking, or when he was not on strike, or when he had not
quarrelled with the foreman. An anarchist, Pa—dissatisfied with things as they
were, but with no plan for improving them. His evil-smelling pipe between his
lips, he would sit, stocking-footed, in silence, smoking and thinking vague,
formless, surly thoughts. This sullen unrest and rebellion it was that,
transmitted to his son, had made Buzz the unruly braggart that he was, and
which, twenty or thirty years hence, would find him just such a one as his
father—useless, evil-tempered, half brutal, defiant of order.
It was in May, a fine warm sunny day, that Ma Werner, looking up
from the garden patch where she was spading, a man's old battered felt hat
perched grotesquely atop her white head, saw Buzz lounging homeward, cutting
across lots from Bates Street, his dinner pail glinting in the sun. It was four
o'clock in the afternoon. Ma Werner straightened painfully and her over-flushed
face took on a purplish tinge. She wiped her moist chin with an apron-corner.
As Buzz espied her his gait became a swagger. At sight of that
swagger Ma knew. She dropped her spade and plodded heavily through the freshly
turned earth to the back porch as Buzz turned in at the walk. She shifted her
weight ponderously as she wiped first one earth-crusted shoe and then the
other.
"What's the matter, Ernie? You ain't sick, are you?"
"Naw."
"What you home so early for?"
"Because I feel like it, that's why."
He took the back steps at a bound and slammed the kitchen door
behind him. Ma Werner followed heavily after. Buzz was hanging his hat up
behind the kitchen door. He turned with a scowl as his mother entered. She
looked even more ludicrous in the house than she had outside, with her skirts
tucked up to make spading the easier, so that there was displayed an unseemly
length of thick ankle rising solidly above the old pair of men's side-boots
that encased her feet. The battered hat perched rakishly atop her knob of
gray-white hair gave her a jaunty, sporting look, as of a ponderous, burlesque
Watteau.
She abandoned pretense. "Ernie, your pa'll be awful mad. You
know the way he carried on the last time."
"Let him. He aint worked five days himself this month."
Then, at a sudden sound from the front of the house, "He ain't home, is
he?"
"That's the shade flapping."
Buzz turned toward the inside wooden stairway that led to the
half-story above. But his mother followed, with surprising agility for so heavy
a woman. She put a hand on his arm. "Such a good-payin' job, Ernie. An'
you said only yesterday you liked it. Somethin' must've happened."
There broke a grim little laugh from Buzz. "Believe me something
happened good an' plenty." A little frightened look came into his eyes.
"I just had a run-in with young Hatton."
The red faded from her face and a grey-white mask seemed to slip
down over it. "You don't mean Hatton! Not Hatton's son. Ernie, you ain't
done—"
A dash of his street-corner bravado came back to him. "Aw,
keep your hair on, Ma. I didn't know it was young Hatton when I hit'm. An'
anyway nobody his age is gonna tell me where to get off at. Say, w'en a guy who
ain't twenty-three, hardly, and that never done a lick in his life except go to
college, the sissy, tries t'—"
But the first sentence only had penetrated her brain. She grappled
with it, dizzily. "Hit him! Ernie, you don't mean you hit him! Not
Hatton's son! Ernie!"
"Sure I did. You oughta seen his face." But there was
very little triumph or satisfaction in Buzz Werner's face or voice as he said
it. "Course, I didn't know it was him when I done it. I dunno would it
have made any difference if I had."
She seemed so old and so shrunken, in spite of her bulk, as she
looked up at him. The look in her eyes was so strained. The way her hand
brought her apron-corner up to her mouth, as though to stifle the fear that
shook her, was so groping, somehow, so uncertain, that, paradoxically, the
pitifulness of it reacted to make him savage.
When she quavered her next question, "What was he doin' in
the mill?" he turned toward the stairway again, flinging his answer over
his shoulder.
"Learnin' the business, that's what. From the ground up,
see?" He turned at the first stair and leaned forward and down, one hand
on the door-jamb. "Well, believe me he don't use me as no ground-dirt. An'
when I'm takin' the screen off the big roll—see?—he comes up to me an' says I'm
handlin' it rough an' it's a delicate piece of mechanism. 'Who're you?' I says.
'Never mind who I am' he says, 'I'm working' on this job,' he says, 'an' this
is a paper mill you're workin' in,' he says, 'not a boiler factory. Treat the
machinery accordin', like a real workman,' he says. The simp! I just stepped
down off the platform of the big press, and I says, 'Well, you look like a
kinda delicate piece of mechanism yourself,' I says, 'an' need careful
handlin', so take that for a starter,' I says. An' with that I handed him one
in the nose." Buzz laughed, but there was little mirth in it. "I bet
he seen enough wheels an' delicate machinery that minute to set up a whole new
plant."
There was nothing of mirth in the woman's drawn face. "Oh,
Ernie, f'r God's sake! What they goin' to do to you!"
He was half way up the narrow stairway, she at the foot of it,
peering up at him. "They won't do anything. I guess old Hatton ain't so
stuck on havin' his swell golf club crowd know his little boy was beat up by
one of the workmen."
He was clumping about upstairs now. So she turned toward the
kitchen, dazedly. She glanced at the clock. Going on toward five. Still in the
absurd hat she got out a panful of potatoes and began to peel them skilfuly,
automatically. The seamed and hardened fingers had come honestly by their
deftness. They had twirled and peeled pecks—bushels—tons of these brown balls
in their time.
At five-thirty Pa came in. At six, Minnie. She had to go back to
the Sugar Bowl until nine. Five minutes later the supper was steaming on the
table."Ernie," called Ma, toward the ceiling. "Er-nie! Supper's
on." The three sat down at the table without waiting. Pa had slipped off
his shoes, and was in his stockinged feet. They ate in silence. It was a good
meal. A European family of the same class would have considered it a banquet.
There were meat and vegetables, butter and home-made bread, preserve and cake,
true to the standards of the extravagant American labouring-class household. In
the summer the garden supplied them with lettuce, beans, peas, onions,
radishes, beets, potatoes, corn, thanks to Ma's aching back and blistered
hands. They stored enough vegetables in the cellar to last through the winter.
Buzz usually cleaned up after supper. But to-night, when he came
down, he was already clean-shaven, clean-shirted, and his hair was wet from the
comb. He took his place in silence. His acid-stained work shoes had been
replaced by his good tan ones. Evidently he was going down town after supper.
Buzz never took any exercise for the sake of his body's good. Sometimes he and
the Lembke boys across the way played a game of ball in the middle of the road,
or in the vacant lot, but they did it out of the game instinct, and with no
thought of their muscles' gain.
But to-night, evidently, there was to be no ball. Buzz ate little.
His mother, forever between the stove and the table, ate less. But that was
nothing unusual in her. She waited on the others, but mostly she hovered about
the boy.
"Ernie, you ain't eaten your potatoes. Look how nice an'
mealy they are."
"Don't want none."
"Ernie, would you rather have a baked apple than the
raspberry preserve? I fixed a pan this morning."
"Naw. Lemme alone. I ain't hungry."
He slouched from the table. Minnie, teacup in hand, regarded him
over its rim with wide, malicious eyes. "I saw that Kearney girl go by
here before supper, and she rubbered in like everything."
"You're a liar," said Buzz, unemotionally."I did
so! She went by and then she came back again. I saw her both times. Say, I
guess I ought to know her. Anybody in town'd know Kearney."
Buzz had been headed toward the front porch. He hesitated and
turned, now, and picked up the newspaper from the sitting-room sofa. Pa Werner,
in trousers, shirt and suspenders, was padding about the kitchen with his pipe
and tobacco. He came into the sitting room now and stood a moment, his lips
twisted about the pipe-stem. The pipe's putt-putting gave warning that he was
about to break into unaccustomed speech. He regarded Buzz with beady, narrowed
eyes.
"You let me see you around with that Kearney girl and I'll
break every bone in your body, and hers too. The hussy!"
"Oh, you will, will you?"
Ma, who had been making countless trips from the kitchen to the
back garden with water pail and sprinkling can sagging from either arm, put in
a word to stay the threatening storm. "Now, Pa! Now, Ernie!" The two
men subsided into bristling silence.
Suddenly, "There she is again!" shrilled Minnie, from
her bedroom. Buzz shrank back in his chair. Old man Werner, with a muttered
oath, went to the open doorway and stood there, puffing savage little spurts of
smoke streetward. The Kearney girl stared brazenly at him as she strolled
slowly by, a slim and sinister figure. Old man Werner watched her until she
passed out of sight.
"You go gettin' mixed up with dirt like that,"
threatened he, "and I'll learn you. She'll be hangin' around the mill yet,
the brass-faced thing. If I hear of it I'll get the foreman to put her off the
place. You'll stay home to-night. Carry a pail of water for your ma once."
"Carry it yourself."
Buzz, with a wary eye up the street, slouched out to the front
porch, into the twilight of the warm May evening. Charley Lembke, from his
porch across the street, called to him: "Goin' down town?"
"Yeh, I guess so."
"Ain't you afraid of bein' pinched?" Buzz turned his
head quickly toward the room just behind him. He turned to go in. Charley's
voice came again, clear and far-reaching. "I hear you had a run-in with
Hatton's son, and knocked him down. Some class t' you, Buzz, even if it does
cost you your job."
From within the sound of a newspaper hurled to the floor. Pa
Werner was at the door. "What's that! What's that he's sayin'?"
Buzz, cornered, jutted a threatening jaw at his father and
brazened it out. "Can't you hear good?"
"Come on in here."
Buzz hesitated a moment. Then he turned, slowly, and walked into
the little sitting room with an attempt at a swagger that failed to convince even
himself. He leaned against the side of the door, hands in pockets. Pa Werner
faced him, black-browed. "Is that right, what he said? Lembke? Huh?"
"Sure it's right. I had a run-in with Hatton, an' licked him,
and give'm my time. What you goin' to do about it?"
Ma Werner was in the room, now. Minnie, passing through on her way
to work again, caught the electric current of the storm about to break and
escaped it with a parting:
"Oh, for the land's sakes! You two. Always a-fighting."
The two men faced each other. The one a sturdy man-boy nearing
twenty, with a great pair of shoulders and a clear eye, a long, quick arm and a
deft hand—these last his assets as a workman. The other, gnarled, prematurely
wrinkled, almost gnome-like. This one took his pipe from between his lips and
began to speak. The drink he had had at Wenzel's on the way home sparked his
speech.
He began with a string of epithets. They flowed from his lips, an
acid stream. Pick and choose as I will, there is none that can be repeated
here. Old Man Werner had, perhaps, been something of a tough guy himself, in
his youth. As he reviled his son now you saw that son, at fifty, just such
another stocking-footed, bitter old man, smoking a glum pipe on the back porch,
summer evenings, and spitting into the fresh young grass.
I don't say that this thought came to Buzz as his father flayed
him with his abuse. But there was something unusual, surely, in the
non-resistance with which he allowed the storm to beat about his head.
Something in his steady, unruffled gaze caused the other man to falter a little
in his tirade, and finally to stop, almost apprehensively. He had paid no heed
to Ma Werner's attempts at pacification. "Now, Pa!" she had said,
over and over, her hand on his arm, though he shook it off again and again.
"Now, Pa!—" But he stopped now, fist raised in a last profane period.
Buzz stood regarding him with his unblinking stare.
Finally: "You through?" said Buzz.
"Ya-as," snarled Pa, "I'm through. Get to hell out
of here. You'll be hung yet, you loafer. A good-for-nothing bum, that's what.
Get out o' here!"
"I'm gettin'," said Buzz. He took his hat off the hook
and wiped it carefully with the lower side of his sleeve, round and round. He
placed it on his head, jauntily. He stepped to the kitchen, took a tooth-pick
from the little red-and-white glass holder on the table, and—with this emblem
of insouciance, at an angle of ninety, between his teeth—strolled indolently,
nonchalantly down the front steps, along the cement walk to the street and so toward
town. The two old people, left alone in the sudden silence of the house, stared
after the swaggering figure until the dim twilight blotted it out. And a
sinister something seemed to close its icy grip about the heart of one of them.
A vague premonition that she could only feel, not express, made her next words
seem futile.
"Pa, you oughtn't to talked to him like that. He's just a
little wild. He looked so kind of funny when he went out. I don'no, he looked
so kind of—"
"He looked like the bum he is, that's what. No respect for
nothing. For his pa, or ma, or nothing. Down on the corner with the rest of
'em, that's where he's goin'. Hatton ain't goin' to let this go by. You
see."
But she, on her way to the kitchen, repeated, "I don'no, he
looked so kind of funny. He looked so kind of—"
Considering all things—the happenings of the past few hours, at
least—Buzz, as he strolled on down toward Grand Avenue with his sauntering,
care-free gait, did undoubtedly look kind of funny. The red-hot rage of the
afternoon and the white-hot rage of the evening had choked the furnace of brain
and soul with clinkers so that he was thinking unevenly and disconnectedly. On
the surface he was cool and unruffled. He stopped for a moment at the railroad
tracks to talk with Stumpy Gans, the one-legged gateman. The little bell above
Stumpy's shanty was ringing its warning, so he strolled leisurely over to the
depot platform to see the 7:15 come in from Chicago. When the train pulled out
Buzz went on down the street. His mind was darting here and there, planning
this revenge, discarding it; seizing on another, abandoning that. He'd show'm.
He'd show'm. Sick of the whole damn bunch, anyway.... Wonder was Hatton going
to raise a shindy.... Let'm. Who cares?... The old man was a drunk, that's
what.... Ma had looked kinda sick....
He put that uncomfortable thought out of his mind and slammed the
door on it. Anyway, he'd show'm.
Out of the shadows of the great trees in front of the Agassiz
School stepped the Kearney girl, like a lean and hungry cat. One hand clutched
his arm.
Buzz jumped and said something under his breath. Then he laughed,
shortly. "Might as well kill a guy as scare him to death!"
She thrust one hand through his arm and linked it with the other.
"I've been waiting for you, Buzz."
"Yeh. Well, let me tell you something. You quit traipsing up
and down in front of my house, see?"
"I wanted to see you. An' I didn't know whether you was
coming down town to-night or not."
"Well, I am. So now you know." He pulled away from her,
but she twined her arm the tighter about his.
"Ain't sore at me, are yuh, Buzz?"
"No. Leggo my arm."
"If you're sore because I been foolin' round with that little
wart of a Donahue—" She turned wise eyes up to him, trying to make them
limpid in the darkness.
"What do I care who you run with?"
"Don't you care, Buzz?" The words were soft but there
was a steel edge to her utterance.
"No."
"Oh, Buzz, I'm batty about you. I can't help it, can I? H'm?
Look here, you go on to Grand, and hang around for an hour, maybe, and I'll
meet you here an' we'll walk a ways. Will you? I got something to tell
you."
"Naw, I can't to-night. I'm busy."
And then the steel edge cut. "Buzz, if you turn me down I'll
have you up."
"Up?"
"Before old Colt. I can fix up charges. He'll believe it.
Say, he knows me, Judge Colt does. I can name you an'—"
"Me!" Sheer amazement rang in his voice. "Me? You
must be crazy. I ain't had anything to do with you. You make me sick."
"That don't make any difference. You can't prove it. I told
you I was crazy about you. I told you—"
He jerked loose from her then and was off. He ran one block. Then,
after a backward glance, fell into a quick walk that brought him past the Brill
House and to Schroeder's drug store corner. There was his crowd—Spider, and
Red, and Bing, and Casey. They took him literally unto their breasts. They
thumped him on the back. They bestowed on him the low epithets with which they
expressed admiration. Red worked at one of the bleaching vats in the Hatton
paper mill. The story of Buzz's fistic triumph had spread through the big plant
like a flame.
"Go on, Buzz, tell 'em about it," Red urged, now.
"Je's, I like to died laughing when I heard it. He must of looked a sight,
the poor boob. Go on, Buzz, tell 'em how you says to him he must be a kind of
delicate piece of—you know; go on, tell 'em."
Buzz hitched himself up with a characteristic gesture, and plunged
into his story. His audience listened entranced, interrupting him with an
occasional "Je's!" of awed admiration. But the thing seemed to lack a
certain something. Perhaps Casey put his finger on that something when, at the
recital's finish he asked:
"Didn't he see you was goin' to hit him?"
"No. He never see a thing."
Casey ruminated a moment. "You could of give him a chanst to
put up his dukes," he said at last. A little silence fell upon the group.
Honour among thieves.
Buzz shifted uncomfortably. "He's a bigger guy than I am. I
bet he's over six foot. The papers was always telling how he played football at
that college he went to."
Casey spoke up again. "They say he didn't wait for this here
draft. He's goin' to Fort Sheridan, around Chicago somewhere, to be made a
officer."
"Yeh, them rich guys, they got it all their own way,"
Spider spoke up, gloomily. "They—"
From down the street came a dull, muffled thud-thud-thud-thud.
Already Chippewa, Wisconsin, had learned to recognise it. Grand Avenue, none
too crowded on this mid-week night, pressed to the curb to see. Down the street
they stared toward the moving mass that came steadily nearer. The listless
group on the corner stiffened into something like interest.
"Company G," said Red. "I hear they're leavin' in a
couple of days."
And down the street they came, thud-thud-thud, Company G, headed
for the new red-brick Armory for the building of which they had engineered
everything from subscription dances and exhibition drills to turkey raffles.
Chippewa had never taken Company G very seriously until now. How could it, when
Company G was made up of Willie Kemp, who clerked in Hassell's shoe store; Fred
Garvey, the reporter on the Chippewa Eagle; Hermie Knapp, the
real-estate man, and Earl Hanson who came around in the morning for your
grocery order.
Thud-thud-thud-thud. And to Chippewa, standing at the curb, quite
suddenly these every-day men and boys were transformed into something remote
and almost terrible. Something grim. Something sacrificial. Something sacred.
Thud-thud-thud-thud. Looking straight ahead.
"The poor boobs," said Spider, and spat, and laughed.
The company passed on down the street—vanished. Grand Avenue went
its way.
A little silence fell upon the street-corner group. Bing was the
first to speak.
"They won't git me in this draft. I got a mother an' two kid
sisters to support."
"Yeh, a swell lot of supportin' you do!"
"Who says I don't! I can prove it."
"They'll get me all right," said Casey. "I ain't
kickin'."
"I'm under age," from Red.
Spider said nothing. His furtive eyes darted here and there.
Spider was of age. And Spider had no family to support. But Spider had reason
to know that no examining board would pass him into the army of his country.
And it was a reason of which one did not speak. "You're only twenty, ain't
you, Buzz?" he asked, to cover the gap in the conversation.
"Yeh." Silence fell again. Then, "But I wouldn't mind
goin'. Anything for a change. This place makes me sick.”
Spider laughed. "You better be a hero and go and
enlist."
Buzz's head came up with a jerk. "Je's, I never thought of
that!"
Red struck an attitude, one hand on his breast. "Now's your
chanct, Buzz, to save your country an' your flag. Enlistment office's right
over the Golden Eagle clothing store. Step up. Don't crowd gents! This
way!"
Buzz was staring at him, open-mouthed. His gaze was fixed, tense.
Suddenly he seemed to gather all his muscles together as for a spring. But he
only threw his cigarette into the gutter, yawned elaborately, and moved away.
"S'long," he said; and lounged off. The others looked after him a
moment, puzzled, speculative. Buzz was not usually so laconic. But evidently he
was leaving with no further speech.
"I guess maybe he ain't so dead sure that Hatton bunch won't
git him for this, anyway," Casey said. Then, raising his voice:
"Goin' home, Buzz?"
"Yeh."
But he did not. If they had watched him they would have seen him
change his lounging gait when he reached the corner. They would have seen him
stand a moment, sending a quick glance this way and that, then turn, retrace
his steps almost at a run, and dart into the doorway that led to the flight of
wooden stairs at the side of the Golden Eagle clothing store.
A dingy room. A man at a bare table. Another seated at the window,
his chair tipped back, his feet on the sill, a pipe between his teeth. Buzz,
shambling, suddenly awkward, stood in the door.
"This the place where you enlist?"
The man at the table stood up. The chair in front of the open
window came down on all-fours.
"Sure," said the first man. "What's your
name?"
Buzz told him.
"Meet Sergeant Keith. He's a Canadian. Been through the whole
game."
Five minutes later Buzz's fine white torso rose above his trousers
like a great pillar. Unconsciously his sagging shoulders had straightened. His
stomach was held in. His chest jutted, shelf-like. His ribs showed through the
pink-white flesh.
"Get some of that pork off of him," observed Sergeant
Keith, "and he'll do in a couple of Fritzes before he's through."
"Me!" blurted Buzz, struggling now with his shirt.
"A couple! Say, you don't know me. Whaddyou mean, a couple? I can lick a
whole regiment of them beerheads with one hand tied behind me an' my feet in a
sack." He emerged from the struggle with his shirt, his face very red, his
hair rumpled.
Sergeant Keith smiled a grim little smile. "Keep your shirt
on, kid," he said, "and remember, this isn't a fist fight you're
going into. It's war."
Buzz, fumbling with his hat, put his question. "When—when do
I go?" For he had signed his name in his round, boyish, sixth-grade
scrawl.
"To-morrow. Now listen to these instructions."
"T-to-morrow?" gasped Buzz.
He was still gasping as he reached the street and struck out
toward home. To-morrow! When the Kearney girl again stepped out of the
tree-shadows he stared at her as at something remote and trivial.
"I thought you tried to give me the slip, Buzz. Where you
been?"
"Never mind where I've been."
She fell into step beside him, but had difficulty in matching his
great strides. She caught at his arm. At that Buzz turned and stopped. It was
too dark to see his face, but something in his voice—something new, and hard,
and resolute—reached even the choked and slimy cells of this creature's
consciousness.
"Now looka here. You beat it. I got somethin' on my mind
to-night and I can't be bothered with no fool girl, see? Don't get me sore. I
mean it."
Her hand dropped away from his arm. "I didn't mean what I
said about havin' you up, Buzz; honest t' Gawd I didn't."
"I don't care what you meant."
'Will you meet me to-morrow night? Will you, Buzz?"
"If I'm in this town to-morrow night I'll meet you. Is that
good enough?"
He turned and strode away. But she was after him. "Where you
goin' to-morrow?"
"I'm goin' to war, that's where."
"Yes you are!" scoffed Miss Kearney. Then, at his
silence: "You didn't go and do a fool thing like that?"
"I sure did."
"When you goin'?"
"To-morrow."
"Well, of all the big boobs," sneered Miss Kearney;
"what did you go and do that for?"
"Search me," said Buzz, dully.
"Search me."
Then he turned and went on toward home, alone. The Kearney girl's
silly, empty laugh came back to him through the darkness. It might have been
called a scornful laugh if the Kearney girl had been capable of any emotion so
dignified as scorn.
The family was still up. The door was open to the warm May night.
The Werners, in their moments of relaxation, were as unbuttoned and
highly negligée as one of those group pictures you see of the
Robert Louis Stevenson family. Pa, shirt-sleeved, stocking-footed, asleep in
his chair. Ma's dress open at the front. Minnie, in an untidy kimono, sewing.
On this flaccid group Buzz burst, bomb-like. He hung his hat on
the hook, wordlessly. The noise he made woke his father, as he had meant that
it should. There came a muttered growl from the old man. Buzz leaned against
the stairway door, negligently. The eyes of the three were on him.
"Well," he said, "I guess you won't be bothered
with me much longer." Ma Werner's head came up sharply at that.
"What you done, Ernie?"
"Enlisted."
"Enlisted—for what?"
"For the war; what do you suppose?"
Ma Werner rose at that, heavily. "Ernie! You never!"
Pa Werner was wide awake now. Out of his memory of the old
country, and soldier service there, he put his next question. "Did you
sign to it?"
"Yeh."
"When you goin'?"
"To-morrow."
Even Pa Werner gasped at that.
In families like the Werners emotion is rarely expressed. But now,
because of something in the stricken face and starting eyes of the woman, and
the open-mouthed dumbfoundedness of the old man, and the sudden tender
fearfulness in the face of the girl; and because, in that moment, all these
seemed very safe, and accustomed, and, somehow, dear, Buzz curled his mouth
into the sneer of the tough guy and spoke out of the corner of that contorted
feature.
"What did you think I was goin' to do? Huh? Stick around here
and take dirt from the bunch of you! Nix! I'm through!"
There was nothing dramatic about Buzz's going. He seemed to be
whisked away. One moment he was eating his breakfast at an unaccustomed hour,
in his best shirt and trousers, his mother, only half understanding even now,
standing over him with the coffee pot; the next he was standing with his cheap
shiny suitcase in his hand. Then he was waiting on the depot platform, and
Hefty Burke, the baggage man, was saying, "Where you goin', Buzz?"
"Goin' to fight the Germans."
Hefty had hooted hoarsely: "Ya-a-as you are, you big
bluff!"
"Who you callin' a bluff, you baggage-smasher, you! I'm goin'
to war, I'm tellin' you."
Hefty, still scoffing, turned away to his work. "Well, then,
I guess it's as good as over. Give old Willie a swipe for me, will you?"
"You bet I will. Watch me!"
I think he more than half meant it.
And thus Buzz Werner went to war. He was vague about its locality.
Somewhere in Europe. He was pretty sure it was France. A line from his Fourth
Grade geography came back to him. "The French," it had said,
"are a gay people, fond of dancing and light wines."
Well, that sounded all right.
The things that happened to Buzz Werner in the next twelve months
cannot be detailed here. They would require the space of what the publishers
call a 12-mo volume. Buzz himself could never have told you. Things happened
too swiftly, too concentratedly.
Chicago first. Buzz had never seen Chicago. Now that he saw it, he
hardly believed it. His first glimpse of it left him cowering, terrified. The
noise, the rush, the glitter, the grimness, the vastness, were like blows upon
his defenceless head. They beat the braggadocio and the self-confidence
temporarily out of him. But only temporarily.
Then came a camp. A rough, temporary camp compared to which the
present cantonments are luxurious. The United States Government took Buzz
Werner by the slack of the trousers and the slack of the mind, and, holding him
thus, shook him into shape—and into submission. And eventually—though it
required months—into an understanding of why that submission was manly, courageous,
and fine. But before he learned that he learned many other things. He learned
there was little good in saying, "Aw, g'wan!" to a dapper young
lieutenant if they clapped you into the guard-house for saying it. There was
little point to throwing down your shovel and refusing to shovel coal if they
clapped you into the guard house for doing it; and made you shovel harder than
ever when you came out. He learned what it was to rise at dawn and go
thud-thud-thudding down a dirt road for endless weary miles. He became an
olive-drab unit in an olive-drab village. He learned what it was to wake up in
the morning so sore and lame that he felt as if he had been pulled apart, limb
from limb, during the night, and never put together again. He stood out with a
raw squad in the dirt of No Man's Land between barracks and went through
exercises that took hold of his great slack muscles and welded them into
whip-cords. And in front of him, facing him, stood a slim, six-foot
whipper-snapper of a lieutenant, hatless, coatless, tireless, merciless—a
creature whom Buzz at first thought he could snap between thumb and finger—like
that!—who made life a hell for Buzz Werner. Until his muscles became used to
it.
"One—two!—three! One—two—three! One—two—three!"
yelled this person. And, "Inhale! Exhale! Inhale! Exhale!"
till Buzz's lungs were bursting, his eyes were starting from his head, his
chest carried a sledge hammer inside it, his thigh-muscles screamed, and his
legs, arms, neck, were no longer parts of him, but horrid useless burdens,
detached, yet clinging. He learned what this person meant when he shouted
(always with the rising inflection), "Comp'ny! Right! Whup!"
Buzz whupped with the best of 'em. The whipper-snapper seemed tireless. Long
after Buzz felt that another moment of it would kill him the lithe young
lieutenant would be leaping about like a faun, and pride kept Buzz going though
he wanted to drop with fatigue, and his shirt and hair and face were wet with
sweat.
So much for his body. It soon became accustomed to the routine,
then hardened. His mind was less pliable. But that, too, was undergoing a
change. He found that the topics of conversation that used to interest his
little crowd on the street corner in Chippewa were not of much interest, here.
There were boys from every part of the great country. And they talked of the
places whence they had come and speculated about the places to which they were
going. And Buzz listened and learned. There was strangely little talk about
girls. There usually is when muscles and mind are being driven to the utmost.
But he heard men—men as big as he—speak openly of things that he had always
sneered at as soft. After one of these conversations he wrote an awkward, but
significant scrawl home to his mother.
"Well Ma," he wrote, "I guess maybe you would like
to hear a few words from me. Well I like it in the army it is the life for me
you bet. I am feeling great how are you all—"
Ma Werner wasted an entire morning showing it around the
neighbourhood, and she read and reread it until it was almost pulp.
Six months of this. Buzz Werner was an intelligent machine
composed of steel, cord, and iron. I think he had forgotten that the Kearney
girl had ever existed. One day, after three months of camp life, the man in the
next cot had thrown him a volume of Kipling. Buzz fingered it, disinterestedly.
Until that moment Kipling had not existed for Buzz Werner. After that moment he
dominated his leisure hours. The Y.M.C.A. hut had many battered volumes of this
writer. Buzz read them all.
The week before Thanksgiving Buzz found himself on his way to New
York. For some reason unexplained to him he was separated from his company in
one of the great shake-ups performed for the good of the army. He never saw
them again. He was sent straight to a New York camp. When he beheld his new
lieutenant his limbs became fluid, and his heart leaped into his throat, and
his mouth stood open, and his eyes bulged. It was young Hatton—Harry
Hatton—whose aristocratic nose he had punched six months before, in the Hatton
Pulp and Paper Mill.
And even as he stared young Hatton fixed him with his eye, and
then came over to him and said, "It's all right, Werner."
Buzz Werner could only salute with awkward respect, while with one
great gulp his heart slid back into normal place. He had not thought that
Hatton was so tall, or so broad-shouldered, or so—
He no more thought of telling the other men that he had once
knocked this man down than he thought of knocking him down again. He would
almost as soon have thought of taking a punch at the President.
The day before Thanksgiving Buzz was told he might have a holiday.
Also he was given an address and a telephone number in New York City and told
that if he so desired he might call at that address and receive a bountiful
Thanksgiving dinner. They were expecting him there. That the telephone exchange
was Murray Hill, and the street Madison Avenue meant nothing to Buzz. He made
the short trip to New York, floundered about the city, found every one willing
and eager to help him find the address on the slip, and brought up, finally, in
front of the house on Madison Avenue. It was a large, five-story stone place,
and Buzz supposed it was a flat, of course. He stood off and surveyed it. Then
he ascended the steps and rang the bell. They must have been waiting for him.
The door was opened by a large amiable-looking, middle-aged man who said,
"Well, well! Come in, come in, my boy!" a great deal as the folks in
Chippewa, Wisconsin, might have said it. The stout old party also said he was
glad to see him and Buzz believed it. They went upstairs, much to Buzz's
surprise. In Buzz's experience upstairs always meant bedrooms. But in this case
it meant a great bright sitting room, with books in it, and a fireplace, very
cheerful. There were not a lot of people in the room. Just a middle-aged woman
in a soft kind of dress, who came to him without any fuss and the first thing
he knew he felt acquainted. Within the next fifteen minutes or so some other
members of the family seemed to ooze in, unnoticeably. First thing you knew,
there they were. They didn't pay such an awful lot of attention to you. Just
took you for granted. A couple of young kids, a girl of fourteen, and a boy of
sixteen who asked you easy questions about the army till you found yourself patronising
him. And a tall black-haired girl who made you think of the vamps in the
movies, only her eyes were different. And then, with a little rush, a girl
about his own age, or maybe younger—he couldn't tell—who came right up to him,
and put out her hand, and gave him a grip with her hard little fist, just like
a boy, and said, "I'm Joyce Ladd."
"Pleased to meetcha," mumbled Buzz. And then he found
himself talking to her quite easily. She knew a surprising lot about the army.
"I've two brothers over there," she said. "And all
my friends, of course." He found out later, quite by accident, that this
boyish, but strangely appealing person belonged to some sort of Motor Service
League, and drove an automobile, every day, from eight to six, up and down and
round and about New York, working like a man in the service of the country. He
never would have believed that the world held that kind of girl.
Then four other men in uniform came in, and it turned out that
three of them were privates like himself, and the other a sergeant. Their
awkward entrance made him feel more than ever at ease, and ten minutes later
they were all talking like mad, and laughing and joking as if they had known
these people for years. They all went in to dinner. Buzz got panicky when he
thought of the knives and forks, but that turned out all right, too, because
they brought these as you needed them. And besides, the things they gave you to
eat weren't much different from the things you had for Sunday or Thanksgiving
dinner at home, and it was cooked the way his mother would have cooked it—even
better, perhaps. And lots of it. And paper snappers and caps and things, and
much laughter and talk. And Buzz Werner, who had never been shown any respect
or deference in his life, was asked, politely, his opinion of the war, and the
army, and when he thought it all would end; and he told them, politely, too.
After dinner Mrs. Ladd said, "What would you boys like to do?
Would you like to drive around the city and see New York? Or would you like to
go to a matinée, or a picture show? Or do you want to stay here? Some of
Joyce's girl friends are coming in a little later."
And Buzz found himself saying, stumblingly, "I—I'd kind of
rather stay and talk with the girls." Buzz, the tough guy, blushing like a
shy schoolboy.
They did not even laugh at that. They just looked as if they
understood that you missed girls at camp. Mrs. Ladd came over to him and put
her hand on his arm and said, "That's splendid. We'll all go up to the
ballroom and dance." And they did. And Buzz, who had learned to dance at
places like Kearney's saloon, and at the mill shindigs, glided expertly about
with Joyce Ladd of Madison Avenue, and found himself seated in a great
cushioned window-seat, talking with her about Kipling. It was like talking to
another fellow, almost, only it had a thrill in it. She said such comic things.
And when she laughed she threw back her head and your eyes were dazzled by her
slender white throat. They all stayed for supper. And when they left Mrs. Ladd
and Joyce handed them packages that, later, turned out to be cigarettes, and
chocolate, and books, and soap, and knitted things and a wallet. And when Buzz
opened the wallet and found, with relief, that there was no money in it he knew
that he had met and mingled with American royalty as its equal.
Three days later he sailed for France.
Buzz Werner, the Chippewa tough guy, in Paris! Buzz Werner at
Napoleon's tomb, that glorious white marble poem. Buzz Werner in the Place de
la Concorde. Eating at funny little Paris restaurants.
Then a new life. Life in a drab, rain-soaked, mud-choked little
French village, sleeping in barns, or stables, or hen coops. If the French were
"a gay people, fond of dancing and light wines," he'd like to know
where it came in! Nothing but drill and mud, mud and drill, and rain, rain,
rain! And old women with tragic faces, and young women with old eyes. And
unbelievable stories of courage and sacrifice. And more rain, and more mud, and
more drill. And then—into it!
Into it with both feet. Living in the trenches. Back home, in
camp, they had refused to take the trenches seriously. They had played in them
as children play bear under the piano or table, and had refused to keep their
heads down. But Buzz learned to keep his down now, quickly enough. A first
terrifying stretch of this, then back to the rear again. More mud and drill.
Marches so long and arduous that walking was no longer walking but a dreadful
mechanical motion. He learned what thirst was, did Buzz. He learned what it was
to be obliged to keep your mind off the thought of pails of water—pails that
slopped and brimmed over, so that you could put your head into them and lip
around like a horse.
Then back into the trenches. And finally, over the top! Very
little memory of what happened after that. A rush. Trampling over soft heaps
that writhed. Some one yelling like an Indian with a voice somehow like his
own. The German trench reached. At them with his bayonet! He remembered,
automatically, how his manual had taught him to jerk out the steel, after you
had driven it home. He did it. Into the very trench itself. A great six-foot
German struggling with a slim figure that Buzz somehow recognised as his
lieutenant, Hatton. A leap at him, like an enraged dog:
"G'wan! who you shovin', you big slob you" yelled Buzz
(I regret to say). And he thrust at him, and through him. The man released his
grappling hold of Hatton's throat, and grunted, and sat down. And Buzz laughed.
And the two went on, Buzz behind his lieutenant, and then something smote his thigh,
and he too sat down. The dying German had thrown his last bomb, and it had
struck home.
Buzz Werner would never again do a double shuffle on Schroeder's
drug-store corner.
Hospital days. Hospital nights. A wheel chair. Crutches. Home.
It was May once more when Buzz Werner's train came into the little
red-brick depot at Chippewa, Wisconsin. Buzz, spick and span in his uniform,
looked down rather nervously, and yet with a certain pride at his left leg.
When he sat down you couldn't tell which was the real one. As the train pulled
in at the Chippewa Junction, just before reaching the town proper, there was
old Bart Ochsner ringing the bell for dinner at the Junction eating house.
Well, for the love of Mike! Wouldn't that make you laugh. Ringing that bell,
just like always, as if nothing had happened in the last year! Buzz leaned
against the window, to see. There was some commotion in the train and some one
spoke his name. Buzz turned, and there stood Old Man Hatton, and a lot of
others, and he seemed to be making a speech, and kind of crying, though that
couldn't be possible. And his father was there, very clean and shaved and
queer. Buzz caught words about bravery, and Chippewa's pride, and he was fussed
to death, and glad when the train pulled in at the Chippewa station. But there
the commotion was worse than ever. There was a band, playing away like mad.
Buzz's great hands grown very white, were fidgeting at his uniform buttons, and
at the stripe on his sleeve, and the medal on his breast. They wouldn't let him
carry a thing, and when he came out on the car platform to descend there went
up a great sound that was half roar and half scream. Buzz Werner was the first
of Chippewa's men to come back.
After that it was rather hazy. There was his mother. His sister
Minnie, too. He even saw the Kearney girl, with her loose red mouth, and her
silly eyes, and she was as a strange woman to him. He was in Hatton's
glittering automobile, being driven down Grand Avenue. There were speeches, and
a dinner, and, later, when he was allowed to go home, rather white, a steady
stream of people pouring in and out of the house all day. That night, when he
limped up the stairs to his hot little room under the roof he was dazed, spent,
and not so very happy.
Next morning, though, he felt more himself, and inclined to joke.
And then there was a talk with old Man Hatton; a talk that left Buzz somewhat
numb, and the family breathless.
Visitors again, all that afternoon.
After supper he carried water for the garden, against his mother's
outraged protests.
"What'll folks think!" she said, "you carryin'
water for me?"
Afterward he took his smart visored cap off the hook and limped
down town, his boots and leggings and uniform very spick and span from Ma
Werner's expert brushing and rubbing. She refused to let Buzz touch them,
although he tried to tell her that he had done that job for a year.
At the corner of Grand and Outagamie, in front of Schroeder's drug
store, stood what was left of the gang, and some new members who had come
during the year that had passed. Buzz knew them all.
They greeted him at first with a mixture of shyness and
resentment. They eyed his leg, and his uniform, and the metal and ribbon thing
that hung at his breast. Bing and Red and Spider were there. Casey was gone.
Finally Spider spat and said, "G'wan, Buzz, give us your
spiel about how you saved young Hatton—the simp!"
"Who says he's a simp?" inquired Buzz, very quietly. But
there was a look about his jaw.
"Well—anyway—the papers was full of how you was a hero. Say,
is that right that old Hatton's goin' to send you to college? Huh? Je's!"
"Yeh," chorused the others, "go on, Buzz. Tell
us."
Red put his question. "Tell us about the fightin', Buzz. Is
it like they say?"
It was Buzz Werner's great moment. He had pictured it a thousand
times in his mind as he lay in the wet trenches, as he plodded the muddy French
roads, as he reclined in his wheel chair in the hospital garden. He had them in
the hollow of his hand. His eyes brightened. He looked at the faces so eagerly
fixed on his utterance.
"G'wan, Buzz," they urged.
Buzz opened his lips and the words he used were the words he might
have used a year before, as to choice. "There's nothin' to tell. A guy
didn't have no time to be scairt. Everything kind of come at once, and you got
yours, or either you didn't. That's all there was to it. Je's, it was
fierce!"
They waited. Nothing more. "Yeh, but tell us—"
And suddenly Buzz turned away. The little group about him fell
back, respectfully. Something in his face, perhaps. A quietness, a new dignity.
"S'long, boys," he said. And limped off, toward home.
And in that moment Buzz, the bully and braggart, vanished forever.
And in his place—head high, chest up, eyes clear—limped Ernest Werner, the man.
IV.THE ELDEST
The Self-Complacent Young Cub leaned an elbow against the mantel
as you've seen it done in English plays, and blew a practically perfect
smoke-ring. It hurtled toward me like a discus.
"Trouble with your stuff," he began at once (we had just
been introduced), "is that it lacks plot. Been meaning to meet and tell
you that for a long time. Your characterization's all right, and your dialogue.
In fact, I think they're good. But your stuff lacks raison d'être—if
you know what I mean.
"But"—in feeble self-defence—"people's insides are
often so much more interesting than their outsides; that which they think or
feel so much more thrilling than anything they actually do.
Bennett—Wells—"
"Rot!" remarked the young cub, briskly. "Plot's the
thing."
There is no plot to this because there is no plot to Rose. There
never was. There never will be. Compared to the drab monotony of Rose's
existence a desert waste is as thrilling as a five-reel film.
They had called her Rose, fatuously, as parents do their
first-born girl. No doubt she had been normally pink and white and velvety. It
is a risky thing to do, however. Think back hastily on the Roses you know.
Don't you find a startling majority still clinging, sere and withered, to the
family bush?
In Chicago, Illinois, a city of two millions (or is it three?),
there are women whose lives are as remote, as grey, as unrelated to the world
about them as is the life of a Georgia cracker's woman-drudge. Rose was one of
these. An unwed woman, grown heavy about the hips and arms, as houseworking
women do, though they eat but little, moving dully about the six-room flat on
Sangamon Street, Rose was as much a slave as any black wench of plantation
days.
There was the treadmill of endless dishes, dirtied as fast as
cleansed; there were beds, and beds, and beds; gravies and soups and stews. And
always the querulous voice of the sick woman in the front bedroom demanding
another hot water bag. Rose's day was punctuated by hot water bags. They dotted
her waking hours. She filled hot water bags automatically, like a machine—water
half-way to the top, then one hand clutching the bag's slippery middle while
the other, with a deft twist, ejected the air within; a quick twirl of the
metal stopper, the bag released, squirming, and, finally, its plump and rufous
cheeks wiped dry.
"Is that too hot for you, Ma? Where'd you want it—your head
or your feet?"
A spinster nearing forty, living thus, must have her memories—one
precious memory, at least—or she dies. Rose had hers. She hugged it, close. The
L trains roared by, not thirty feet from her kitchen door. Alley and yard and
street sent up their noises to her. The life of Chicago's millions yelped at
her heels. On Rose's face was the vague, mute look of the woman whose days are
spent indoors, at sordid tasks.
At six-thirty every night that look lifted, for an hour. At
six-thirty they came home—Floss, and Al, and Pa—their faces stamped with the
marks that come from a day spent in shop and factory. They brought with them
the crumbs and husks of the day's happenings, and these they flung carelessly
before the life-starved Rose and she ate them, gratefully.
They came in with a rush, hungry, fagged, grimed, imperious,
smelling of the city. There was a slamming of doors, a banging of drawers, a
clatter of tongues, quarrelling, laughter. A brief visit to the sick woman's
room. The thin, complaining voice reciting its tale of the day's discomfort and
pain. Then supper.
"Guess who I waited on to-day!" Floss might demand.
Rose, dishing up, would pause, interested. "Who?"
"Gladys Moraine! I knew her the minute she came down the
aisle. I saw her last year when she was playing in 'His Wives.' She's prettier
off than on, I think. I waited on her, and the other girls were wild. She
bought a dozen pairs of white kids, and made me give 'em to her huge, so she
could shove her hand right into 'em, like a man does. Two sizes too big. All
the swells wear 'em that way. And only one ring—an emerald the size of a
dime."
"What'd she wear?" Rose's dull face was almost animated.
"Ah yes!" in a dreamy falsetto from Al, "what did she
wear?"
"Oh, shut up, Al! Just a suit, kind of plain, and yet you'd
notice it. And sables! And a Gladys Moraine hat. Everything quiet, and plain,
and dark; and yet she looked like a million dollars. I felt like a roach while
I was waiting on her, though she was awfully sweet to me."
Or perhaps Al, the eel-like, would descend from his heights to
mingle a brief moment in the family talk. Al clerked in the National Cigar
Company's store at Clark and Madison. His was the wisdom of the snake, the
weasel, and the sphinx. A strangely silent young man, this Al, thin-lipped,
smooth-cheeked, perfumed. Slim of waist, flat of hip, narrow of shoulder, his
was the figure of the born fox-trotter. He walked lightly, on the balls of his
feet, like an Indian, but without the Indian's dignity.
"Some excitement ourselves, to-day, down at the store,
believe me. The Old Man's son started in to learn the retail selling end of the
business. Back of the showcase with the rest of us, waiting on trade, and looking
like a Yale yell."
Pa would put down his paper to stare over his reading specs at Al.
"Mannheim's son! The president!"
"Yep! And I guess he loves it, huh? The Old Man wants him to
learn the business from the ground up. I'll bet he'll never get higher than the
first floor. To-day he went out to lunch at one and never shows up again till
four. Wears English collars, and smokes a brand of cigarettes we don't
carry."
Thus was the world brought to Rose. Her sallow cheek would show a
faint hint of colour as she sipped her tea.
At six-thirty on a Monday morning in late April (remember,
nothing's going to happen) Rose smothered her alarm clock at the first warning
snarl. She was wide-awake at once, as are those whose yesterdays, to-days and
to-morrows are all alike. Rose never opened her eyes to the dim, tantalising
half-consciousness of a something delightful or a something harrowing in store
for her that day. For one to whom the wash-woman's Tuesday visitation is the
event of the week, and in whose bosom the delivery boy's hoarse
"Groc-rees!" as he hurls soap and cabbage on the kitchen table,
arouses a wild flurry, there can be very little thrill on awakening.
Rose slept on the davenport-couch in the sitting-room. That fact
in itself rises her status in the family. This Monday morning she opened her
eyes with what might be called a start if Rose were any other sort of heroine.
Something had happened, or was happening. It wasn't the six o'clock steam
hissing in the radiator. She was accustomed to that. The rattle of the L
trains, and the milkman's artillery disturbed her as little as does the
chirping of the birds the farmer's daughter. A sensation new, yet familiar;
delicious, yet painful, held her. She groped to define it, lying there. Her
gaze, wandering over the expanse of the grey woollen blanket, fixed upon a
small black object trembling there. The knowledge that came to her then had
come, many weeks before, in a hundred subtle and exquisite ways, to those who
dwell in the open places. Rose's eyes narrowed craftily. Craftily, stealthily,
she sat up, one hand raised. Her eyes still fixed on the quivering spot, the
hand descended, lightning-quick. But not quickly enough. The black spot
vanished. It sped toward the open window. Through that window there came a balmy
softness made up of Lake Michigan zephyr, and stockyards smell, and distant
budding things. Rose had failed to swat the first fly of the season. Spring had
come.
As she got out of bed and thud-thudded across the room on her
heels to shut the window she glanced out into the quiet street. Her city eyes,
untrained to nature's hints, failed to notice that the scraggy, smoke-dwarfed
oak that sprang, somehow, miraculously, from the mangey little dirt-plot in
front of the building had developed surprising things all over its scrawny
branches overnight. But she did see that the front windows of the flat building
across the way were bare of the Chicago-grey lace curtains that had hung there
the day before. House cleaning! Well, most decidedly spring had come.
Rose was the household's Aurora. Following the donning of her limp
and obscure garments it was Rose's daily duty to tear the silent family from
its slumbers. Ma was always awake, her sick eyes fixed hopefully on the door.
For fourteen years it had been the same.
"Sleeping?"
"Sleeping! I haven't closed an eye all night."
Rose had learned not to dispute that statement.
"It's spring out! I'm going to clean the closets and the
bureau drawers to-day. I'll have your coffee in a jiffy. Do you feel like
getting up and sitting out on the back porch, toward noon, maybe?"
On her way kitchenward she stopped for a sharp tattoo at the door
of the room in which Pa and Al slept. A sleepy grunt of remonstrance rewarded
her. She came to Floss's door, turned the knob softly, peered in. Floss was
sleeping as twenty sleeps, deeply, dreamlessly, one slim bare arm outflung, the
lashes resting ever so lightly on the delicate curve of cheek. As she lay there
asleep in her disordered bedroom, her clothes strewing chair, dresser, floor,
Floss's tastes, mental equipment, spiritual make-up, innermost thoughts, were
as plainly to be read by the observer as though she had been scientifically
charted by a psycho-analyst, a metaphysician and her dearest girl friend.
"Floss! Floss, honey! Quarter to seven!" Floss stirred,
moaned faintly, dropped into sleep again.
Fifteen minutes later, the table set, the coffee simmering, the
morning paper brought from the back porch to Ma, Rose had heard none of the
sounds that proclaimed the family astir—the banging of drawers, the rush of
running water, the slap of slippered feet. A peep of enquiry into the depths of
the coffee pot, the gas turned to a circle of blue beads, and she was down the
hall to sound the second alarm.
"Floss, you know if Al once gets into the bathroom!"
Floss sat up in bed, her eyes still closed. She made little clucking sounds
with her tongue and lips, as a baby does when it wakes. Drugged with sleep,
hair tousled, muscles sagging, at seven o'clock in the morning, the most trying
hour in the day for a woman, Floss was still triumphantly pretty. She had on
one of those absurd pink muslin nightgowns, artfully designed to look like
crêpe de chine. You've seen them rosily displayed in the cheaper shop windows,
marked ninety-eight cents, and you may have wondered who might buy them,
forgetting that there is an imitation mind for every imitation article in the
world.
Rose stooped, picked up a pair of silk stockings from the floor,
and ran an investigating hand through to heel and toe. She plucked a soiled
pink blouse off the back of a chair, eyed it critically, and tucked it under
her arm with the stockings.
"Did you have a good time last night?"
Floss yawned elaborately, stretched her slim arms high above her
head; then, with a desperate effort, flung back the bed-clothes, swung her legs
over the side of the bed and slipped her toes into the shabby, pomponed
slippers that lay on the floor.
"I say, did you have a g—"
"Oh Lord, I don't know! I guess so," snapped Floss.
Temperamentally, Floss was not at her best at seven o'clock on Monday morning.
Rose did not pursue the subject. She tried another tack.
"It's as mild as summer out. I see the Werners and the Burkes
are housecleaning. I thought I'd start to-day with the closets, and the bureau
drawers. You could wear your blue this morning, if it was pressed."
Floss yawned again, disinterestedly, and folded her kimono about
her.
"Go as far as you like. Only don't put things back in my
closet so's I can't ever find 'em again. I wish you'd press that blue skirt.
And wash out the Georgette crêpe waist. I might need it."
The blouse, and skirt, and stockings under her arm, Rose went back
to the kitchen to prepare her mother's breakfast tray. Wafted back to her came
the acrid odour of Pa's matutinal pipe, and the accustomed bickering between Al
and Floss over the possession of the bathroom.
"What do you think this is, anyway? A Turkish bath?"
"Shave in your own room!"
Between Floss and Al there existed a feud that lifted only when a
third member of the family turned against either of them. Immediately they
about-faced and stood united against the offender.
Pa was the first to demand breakfast, as always. Very neat, was
Pa, and fussy, and strangely young looking to be the husband of the
grey-haired, parchment-skinned woman who lay in the front bedroom. Pa had two
manias: the movies, and a passion for purchasing new and complicated household
utensils—cream-whippers, egg-beaters, window-clamps, lemon-squeezers,
silver-polishers. He haunted department store basements in search of them.
He opened his paper now and glanced at the head-lines and at the
Monday morning ads. "I see the Fair's got a spring housecleaning sale.
They advertise a new kind of extension curtain rod. And Scouro, three cakes for
a dime."
"If you waste one cent more on truck like that," Rose
protested, placing his breakfast before him, "when half the time I can't
make the housekeeping money last through the week!"
"Your ma did it."
"Fourteen years ago liver wasn't thirty-two cents a
pound," retorted Rose, "and besides—"
"Scramble 'em!" yelled Al, from the bedroom, by way of
warning.
There was very little talk after that. The energies of three of
them were directed toward reaching the waiting desk or counter on time. The
energy of one toward making that accomplishment easy. The front door slammed
once—that was Pa, on his way; slammed again—Al. Floss rushed into the
dining-room fastening the waist-band of her skirt, her hat already on. Rose
always had a rather special breakfast for Floss. Floss posed as being a rather
special person. She always breakfasted last, and late. Floss's was a
fastidiousness which shrinks at badly served food, a spotted table-cloth, or a
last year's hat, while it overlooks a rent in an undergarment or the
accumulated dust in a hairbrush. Her blouse was of the sheerest. Her hair shone
in waves about her delicate checks. She ate her orange, and sipped her very
special coffee, and made a little face over her egg that had been shirred in
the oven or in some way highly specialised. Then the front door slammed again—a
semi-slam, this time. Floss never did quite close a door. Rose followed her
down the hall, shut and bolted it, Chicago fashion. The sick woman in the front
bedroom had dropped into one of her fitful morning dozes. At eight o'clock the
little flat was very still.
If you knew nothing about Rose; if you had not already been told
that she slept on the sitting-room davenport; that she was taken for granted as
the family drudge; that she was, in that household, merely an intelligent
machine that made beds, fried eggs, filled hot water bags, you would get a
characterization of her from this: She was the sort of person who never has a
closet or bureau drawer all her own. Her few and negligible garments hung
apologetically in obscure corners of closets dedicated to her sister's wardrobe
or her brother's, or her spruce and fussy old father's. Vague personal
belongings, such as combings, handkerchiefs, a spectacle case, a hairbrush,
were found tucked away in a desk pigeon-hole, a table drawer, or on the top
shelf in the bathroom.
As she pulled the disfiguring blue gingham dust-cap over her hair
now, and rolled her sleeves to her elbows, you would never have dreamed that
Rose was embarking upon her great adventure. You would never have guessed that
the semi-yearly closet cleaning was to give to Rose a thrill as delicious as it
was exquisitely painful. But Rose knew. And so she teased herself, and tried
not to think of the pasteboard box on the shelf in the hall closet, under the
pile of reserve blankets, and told herself that she would leave that closet
until the last, when she would have to hurry over it.
When you clean closets and bureau drawers thoroughly you have to
carry things out to the back porch and flap them, Rose was that sort of
housekeeper. She leaned over the porch railing and flapped things, so that the
dust motes spun and swirled in the sunshine. Rose's arms worked up and down
energetically, then less energetically, finally ceased their motion altogether.
She leaned idle elbows on the porch railing and gazed down into the yard below
with a look in her eyes such as no squalid Chicago back yard, with its dusty
débris, could summon, even in spring-time.
The woman next door came out on her back porch that adjoined
Rose's. The day seemed to have her in its spell, too, for in her hand was
something woolly and wintry, and she began to flap it about as Rose had done.
She had lived next door since October, had that woman, but the two had never
exchanged a word, true to the traditions of their city training. Rose had her
doubts of the woman next door. She kept a toy dog which she aired afternoons,
and her kimonos were florid and numerous. Now, as the eyes of the two women
met, Rose found herself saying, "Looks like summer."
The woman next door caught the scrap of conversation eagerly,
hungrily. "It certainly does! Makes me feel like new clothes, and
housecleaning."
"I started to-day!" said Rose, triumphantly.
"Not already!" gasped the woman next door, with the
chagrin that only a woman knows who has let May steal upon her unawares.
From far down the alley sounded a chant, drawing nearer and
nearer, until there shambled into view a decrepit horse drawing a dilapidated
huckster's cart. Perched on the seat was a Greek who turned his dusky face up
toward the two women leaning over the porch railings. "Rhubarb, leddy.
Fresh rhubarb!"
"My folks don't care for rhubarb sauce," Rose told the
woman next door.
"It makes the worst pie in the world," the woman
confided to Rose.
Whereupon each bought a bunch of the succulent green and red
stalks. It was their offering at the season's shrine.
Rose flung the rhubarb on the kitchen table, pulled her dust-cap
more firmly about her ears, and hurried back to the disorder of Floss's dim
little bedroom. After that it was dust-cloth, and soapsuds, and scrub-brush in
a race against recurrent water bags, insistent doorbells, and the inevitable
dinner hour. It was mid-afternoon when Rose, standing a-tiptoe on a chair, came
at last to the little box on the top shelf under the bedding in the hall
closet. Her hand touched the box, and closed about it. A little electric thrill
vibrated through her body. She stepped down from the chair, heavily, listened
until her acute ear caught the sound of the sick woman's slumbrous breathing;
then, box in hand, walked down the dark hall to the kitchen. The rhubarb pie,
still steaming in its pan, was cooling on the kitchen table. The dishes from
the invalid's lunch-tray littered the sink. But Rose, seated on the kitchen
chair, her rumpled dust-cap pushed back from her flushed, perspiring face,
untied the rude bit of string that bound the old candy box, removed the lid,
slowly, and by that act was wafted magically out of the world of rhubarb pies,
and kitchen chairs, and dirty dishes, into that place whose air is the breath
of incense and myrrh, whose paths are rose-strewn, whose dwellings are temples
dedicated to but one small god. The land is known as Love, and Rose travelled
back to it on the magic rug of memory.
A family of five in a six-room Chicago flat must sacrifice
sentiment to necessity. There is precious little space for those pressed
flowers, time-yellowed gowns, and ribbon-bound packets that figured so
prominently in the days of attics. Into the garbage can with yesterday's roses!
The janitor's burlap sack yawns for this morning's mail; last year's gown has
long ago met its end at the hands of the ol'-clo'es man or the wash-woman's
daughter. That they had survived these fourteen years, and the strictures of
their owner's dwelling, tells more about this boxful of letters than could be
conveyed by a battalion of adjectives.
Rose began at the top of the pile, in her orderly fashion, and
read straight through to the last. It took one hour. Half of that time she was
not reading. She was staring straight ahead with what is mistakenly called an
unseeing look, but which actually pierces the veil of years and beholds things
far, far beyond the vision of the actual eye. They were the letters of a
commonplace man to a commonplace woman, written when they loved each other, and
so they were touched with something of the divine. They must have been, else
how could they have sustained this woman through fifteen years of drudgery?
They were the only tangible foundation left of the structure of dreams she had
built about this man. All the rest of her house of love had tumbled about her
ears fifteen years before, but with these few remaining bricks she had erected
many times since castles and towers more exquisite and lofty and soaring than
the original humble structure had ever been.
The story? Well, there really isn't any, as we've warned you. Rose
had been pretty then in much the same delicate way that Floss was pretty now.
They were to have been married. Rose's mother fell ill, Floss and Al were little
more than babies. The marriage was put off. The illness lasted six months—a
year—two years—became interminable. The breach into which Rose had stepped
closed about her and became a prison. The man had waited, had grown impatient,
finally rebelled. He had fled, probably, to marry a less encumbered lady. Rose
had gone dully on, caring for the household, the children, the sick woman. In
the years that had gone by since then Rose had forgiven him his faithlessness.
She only remembered that he had been wont to call her his Röschen, his Rosebud,
his pretty flower (being a German gentleman). She only recalled the wonder of
having been first in some one's thoughts—she who now was so hopelessly, so
irrevocably last.
As she sat there in her kitchen, wearing her soap-stained and
faded blue gingham, and the dust-cap pushed back at a rakish angle, a simpering
little smile about her lips, she was really very much like the disappointed old
maids you used to see so cruelly pictured in the comic valentines. Had those letters
obsessed her a little more strongly she might have become quite mad, the
Freudians would tell you. Had they held less for her, or had she not been so
completely the household's slave, she might have found a certain solace and
satisfaction in viewing the Greek profile and marcel wave of the
most-worshipped movie star. As it was, they were her ballast, her refuge, the
leavening yeast in the soggy dough of her existence. This man had wanted her to
be his wife. She had found favour in his eyes. She was certain that he still
thought of her, sometimes, and tenderly, regretfully, as she thought of him. It
helped her to live. Not only that, it made living possible.
A clock struck, a window slammed, or a street-noise smote her ear
sharply. Some sound started her out of her reverie. Rose jumped, stared a
moment at the letters in her lap, then hastily, almost shamefacedly, sorted
them (she knew each envelope by heart) tied them, placed them in their box and
bore them down the hail. There, mounting her chair, she scrubbed the top shelf
with her soapy rag, placed the box in its corner, left the hall closet smelling
of cleanliness, with never a hint of lavender to betray its secret treasure.
Were Rose to die and go to Heaven, there to spend her days
thumbing a golden harp, her hands, by force of habit, would, drop harp-strings
at quarter to six, to begin laying a celestial and unspotted table-cloth for
supper. Habits as deeply rooted as that must hold, even in after-life.
To-night's six-thirty stampede was noticeably subdued on the part
of Pa and Al. It had been a day of sudden and enervating heat, and the city had
done its worst to them. Pa's pink gills showed a hint of purple. Al's flimsy
silk shirt stuck to his back, and his glittering pompadour was many degrees
less submissive than was its wont. But Floss came in late, breathless, and
radiant, a large and significant paper bag in her hand. Rose, in the kitchen,
was transferring the smoking supper from pot to platter. Pa, in the doorway of
the sick woman's little room, had just put his fourteen-year-old question with
his usual assumption of heartiness and cheer: "Well, well! And how's the
old girl to-night? Feel like you could get up and punish a little supper,
eh?" Al engaged at the telephone with some one whom he addressed
proprietorially as Kid, was deep in his plans for the evening's diversion. Upon
this accustomed scene Floss burst with havoc.
"Rose! Rose, did you iron my Georgette crêpe? Listen! Guess
what!" All this as she was rushing down the hall, paper hat-bag still in
hand. "Guess who was in the store to-day!"
Rose, at the oven, turned a flushed and interested face toward
Floss.
"Who? What's that? A hat?"
"Yes. But listen—"
"Let's see it."
Floss whipped it out of its bag, defiantly. "There! But wait
a minute! Let me tell you—"
"How much?"
Floss hesitated just a second. Her wage was nine dollars a week.
Then, "Seven-fifty, trimmed." The hat was one of those tiny,
head-hugging absurdities that only the Flosses can wear.
"Trimmed is right!" jeered Al, from the doorway.
Rose, thin-lipped with disapproval, turned to her stove again.
"Well, but I had to have it. I'm going to the theatre
to-night. And guess who with! Henry Selz!"
Henry Selz was the unromantic name of the commonplace man over
whose fifteen-year-old letters Rose had glowed and dreamed an hour before. It
was a name that had become mythical in that household—to all but one. Rose
heard it spoken now with a sense of unreality. She smiled a little uncertainly,
and went on stirring the flour thickening for the gravy. But she was dimly
aware that something inside her had suspended action for a moment, during which
moment she felt strangely light and disembodied, and that directly afterward
the thing began to work madly, so that there was a choked feeling in her chest
and a hot pounding in her head.
"What's the joke?" she said, stirring the gravy in the
pan.
"Joke nothing! Honest to God! I was standing back of the
counter at about ten. The rush hadn't really begun yet. Glove trade usually
starts late. I was standing there kidding Herb, the stock boy, when down the
aisle comes a man in a big hat, like you see in the western pictures, hair a
little grey at the temples, and everything, just like a movie actor. I said to
Herb, 'Is it real?' I hadn't got the words out of my mouth when the fellow sees
me, stands stock still in the middle of the aisle with his mouth open and his
eyes sticking out. 'Register surprise,' I said to Herb, and looked around for
the camera. And that minute he took two jumps over to where I was standing,
grabbed my hands and says, 'Rose! Rose!' kind of choky. 'Not by about twenty
years,' I said. 'I'm Floss, Rose's sister. Let go my hands!'"
Rose—a transfigured Rose, glowing, trembling, radiant—repeated,
vibrantly, "You said, 'I'm Floss, Rose's sister. Let go my hands!'
And—?"
"He looked kind of stunned, for just a minute. His face was a
scream, honestly. Then he said, 'But of course. Fifteen years. But I had always
thought of her as just the same.' And he kind of laughed, ashamed, like a kid.
And the whitest teeth!"
"Yes, they were—white," said Rose. "Well?"
"Well, I said, 'Won't I do instead?' 'You bet you'll do!' he
said. And then he told me his name, and how he was living out in Spokane, and
his wife was dead, and he had made a lot of money—fruit, or real estate, or
something. He talked a lot about it at lunch, but I didn't pay any attention,
as long as he really has it a lot I care how—"
"At lunch?"
"Everything from grape-fruit to coffee. I didn't know it
could be done in one hour. Believe me, he had those waiters jumping. It takes
money. He asked all about you, and ma, and everything. And he kept looking at
me and saying, 'It's wonderful!' I said, 'Isn't it!' but I meant the lunch. He
wanted me to go driving this afternoon—auto and everything. Kept calling me
Rose. It made me kind of mad, and I told him how you look. He said, 'I suppose
so,' and asked me to go to a show to-night. Listen, did you press my Georgette?
And the blue?"
"I'll iron the waist while you're eating. I'm not hungry. It
only takes a minute. Did you say he was grey?"
"Grey? Oh, you mean—why, just here, and here. Interesting,
but not a bit old. And he's got that money look that makes waiters and doormen
and taxi drivers just hump. I don't want any supper. Just a cup of tea. I
haven't got enough time to dress in, decently, as it is."
Al, draped in the doorway, removed his cigarette to give greater
force to his speech. "Your story interests me strangely, little gell. But
there's a couple of other people that would like to eat, even if you wouldn't.
Come on with that supper, Ro. Nobody staked me to a lunch to-day."
Rose turned to her stove again. Two carmine spots had leaped
suddenly to her cheeks. She served the meal in silence, and ate nothing, but
that was not remarkable. For the cook there is little appeal in the meat that
she has tended from its moist and bloody entrance in the butcher's paper,
through the basting or broiling stage to its formal appearance on the platter.
She saw that Al and her father were served. Then she went back to the kitchen,
and the thud of her iron was heard as she deftly fluted the ruffles of the
crêpe blouse. Floss appeared when the meal was half eaten, her hair shiningly
coiffed, the pink ribbons of her corset cover showing under her thin kimono.
She poured herself a cup of tea and drank it in little quick, nervous gulps.
She looked deliriously young, and fragile and appealing, her delicate
slenderness revealed by the flimsy garment she wore. Excitement and
anticipation lent a glow to her eyes, colour to her cheeks. Al, glancing
expertly at the ingenuousness of her artfully simple coiffure, the slim
limpness of her body, her wide-eyed gaze, laughed a wise little laugh.
"Every move a Pickford. And so girlish withal."
Floss ignored him. "Hurry up with that waist, Rose!"
"I'm on the collar now. In a second." There was a little
silence. Then: "Floss, is—is Henry going to call for you—here?"
"Well, sure! Did you think I was going to meet him on the
corner? He said he wanted to see you, or something polite like that."
She finished her tea and vanished again. Al, too, had disappeared
to begin that process from which he had always emerged incredibly sleek, and
dapper and perfumed. His progress with shaving brush, shirt, collar and tie was
marked by disjointed bars of the newest syncopation whistled with an uncanny
precision and fidelity to detail. He caught the broken time, and tossed it
lightly up again, and dropped it, and caught it deftly like a juggler playing
with frail crystal globes that seem forever on the point of crashing to the
ground.
Pa stood up, yawning. "Well," he said, his manner very
casual, "guess I'll just drop around to the movie."
From the kitchen, "Don't you want to sit with ma a minute,
first?"
"I will when I come back. They're showing the third installment
of 'The Adventures of Aline,' and I don't want to come in in the middle of
it."
He knew the selfishness of it, this furtive and sprightly old man.
And because he knew it he attempted to hide his guilt under a burst of temper.
"I've been slaving all day. I guess I've got the right to a
little amusement. A man works his fingers to the bone for his family, and then
his own daughter nags him."
He stamped down the hall, righteously, and slammed the front door.
Rose came from the kitchen, the pink blouse, warm from the iron,
in one hand. She prinked out its ruffles and pleatings as she went. Floss,
burnishing her nails somewhat frantically with a dilapidated and greasy buffer,
snatched the garment from her and slipped bare arms into it. The front door bell
rang, three big, determined rings. Panic fell upon the household.
"It's him!" whispered Floss, as if she could be heard in
the entrance three floors below. "You'll have to go."
"I can't!" Every inch of her seemed to shrink and cower
away from the thought. "I can't!" Her eyes darted to and fro like a
hunted thing seeking to escape. She ran to the hall. "Al! Al, go to the
door, will you?"
"Can't," came back in a thick mumble.
"Shaving."
The front door-bell rang again, three big, determined rings.
"Rose!" hissed Floss, her tone venomous. "I can't go with my
waist open. For heaven's sake! Go to the door!"
"I can't," repeated Rose, in a kind of wail.
"I—can't." And went. As she went she passed one futile, work-worn
hand over her hair, plucked off her apron and tossed it into; a corner, first
wiping her flushed face with it.
Henry Selz came up the shabby stairs springily as a man of forty
should. Rose stood at the door and waited for him. He stood in the doorway a
moment, uncertainly.
"How-do, Henry."
His uncertainty became incredulity. Then, "Why, how-do, Rose!
Didn't know you—for a minute. Well, well! It's been a long time. Let's
see—ten—fourteen—about fifteen years, isn't it?"
His tone was cheerfully conversational. He really was interested,
mathematically. He was as sentimental in his reminiscence as if he had been
calculating the lapse of time between the Chicago fire and the World's Fair.
"Fifteen," said Rose, "in May. Won't you come in?
Floss'll be here in a minute."
Henry Selz came in and sat down on the davenport couch and dabbed
at his forehead. The years had been very kind to him—those same years that had
treated Rose so ruthlessly. He had the look of an outdoor man; a man who has
met prosperity and walked with her, and followed her pleasant ways; a man who
has learned late in life of golf and caviar and tailors, but who has adapted
himself to these accessories of wealth with a minimum of friction.
"It certainly is warm, for this time of year." He leaned
back and regarded Rose tolerantly. "Well, and how've you been? Did little
sister tell you how flabbergasted I was when I saw her this morning? I'm darned
if it didn't take fifteen years off my age, just like that! I got kind of
balled up for one minute and thought it was you. She tell you?"
"Yes, she told me," said Rose.
"I hear your ma's still sick. That certainly is tough. And
you've never married, eh?"
"Never married," echoed Rose.
And so they made conversation, a little uncomfortably, until there
came quick, light young steps down the hallway, and Floss appeared in the door,
a radiant, glowing, girlish vision. Youth was in her eyes, her cheeks, on her
lips. She radiated it. She was miraculously well dressed, in her knowingly
simple blue serge suit, and her tiny hat, and her neat shoes and gloves.
"Ah! And how's the little girl to-night?" said Henry
Selz.
Floss dimpled, blushed, smiled, swayed. "Did I keep you
waiting a terribly long time?"
"No, not a bit. Rose and I were chinning over old times,
weren't we, Rose?" A kindly, clumsy thought struck him. "Say, look
here, Rose. We're going to a show. Why don't you run and put on your hat and
come along. H'm? Come on!"
Rose smiled as a mother smiles at a child that has unknowingly
hurt her. "No, thanks, Henry. Not to-night. You and Floss run along. Yes,
I'll remember you to Ma. I'm sorry you can't see her. But she don't see
anybody, poor Ma."
Then they were off, in a little flurry of words and laughter. From
force of habit Rose's near-sighted eyes peered critically at the hang of
Floss's blue skirt and the angle of the pert new hat. She stood a moment,
uncertainly, after they had left. On her face was the queerest look, as of one
thinking, re-adjusting, struggling to arrive at a conclusion in the midst of
sudden bewilderment. She turned mechanically and went into her mother's room.
She picked up the tray on the table by the bed.
"Who was that?" asked the sick woman, in her ghostly,
devitalised voice.
"That was Henry Selz," said Rose.
The sick woman grappled a moment with memory. "Henry Selz!
Henry—oh, yes. Did he go out with Rose?"
"Yes," said Rose.
"It's cold in here," whined the sick woman.
"I'll get you a hot bag in a minute, Ma." Rose carried
the tray down the hall to the kitchen. At that Al emerged from his bedroom,
shrugging himself into his coat. He followed Rose down the hall and watched her
as she filled the bag and screwed it and wiped it dry.
"I'll take that in to Ma," he volunteered. He was up the
hall and back in a flash. Rose had slumped into a chair at the dining-room
table, and was pouring herself a cup of cold and bitter tea. Al came over to
her and laid one white hand on her shoulder.
"Ro, lend me a couple of dollars till Saturday, will
you?"
"I should say not."
Al doused his cigarette in the dregs of a convenient teacup. He
bent down and laid his powdered and pale cheek against Rose's sallow one. One
arm was about her, and his hand patted her shoulder.
"Oh, come on, kid," he coaxed. "Don't I always pay
you back? Come on! Be a sweet ol' sis. I wouldn't ask you only I've got a date
to go to the White City to-night, and dance, and I couldn't get out of it. I
tried." He kissed her, and his lips were moist, and he reeked of tobacco,
and though Rose shrugged impatiently away from him he knew that he had won.
Rose was not an eloquent woman; she was not even an articulate one, at times.
If she had been, she would have lifted up her voice to say now:
"Oh, God! I am a woman! Why have you given me all the
sorrows, and the drudgery, and the bitterness and the thanklessness of
motherhood, with none of its joys! Give me back my youth! I'll drink the dregs
at the bottom of the cup, but first let me taste the sweet!"
But Rose did not talk or think in such terms. She could not have
put into words the thing she was feeling even if she had been able to diagnose
it. So what she said was, "Don't you think I ever get sick and tired of
slaving for a thankless bunch like you? Well, I do! Sick and tired of it.
That's what! You make me tired, coming around asking for money, as if I was a
bank."
But Al waited. And presently she said, grudgingly, wearily,
"There's a dollar bill and some small change in the can on the second
shelf in the china closet."
Al was off like a terrier. From the pantry came the clink of metal
against metal. He was up the hall in a flash, without a look at Rose. The front
door slammed a third time.
Rose stirred her cold tea slowly, leaning on the table's edge and
gazing down into the amber liquid that she did not mean to drink. For suddenly
and comically her face puckered up like a child's. Her head came down among the
supper things with a little crash that set the teacups, and the greasy plates
to jingling, and she sobbed as she lay there, with great tearing, ugly sobs
that would not be stilled, though she tried to stifle them as does one who
lives in a paper-thin Chicago flat. She was not weeping for the Henry Selz whom
she had just seen. She was not weeping for envy of her selfish little sister,
or for loneliness, or weariness. She was weeping at the loss of a ghost who had
become her familiar. She was weeping because a packet of soiled and yellow old
letters on the top shelf in the hall closet was now only a packet of soiled and
yellow old letters, food for the ash can. She was weeping because the urge of
spring, that had expressed itself in her only this morning pitifully enough in
terms of rhubarb, and housecleaning and a bundle of thumbed old love letters,
had stirred in her for the last time.
But presently she did stop her sobbing and got up and cleared the
table, and washed the dishes and even glanced at the crumpled sheets of the
morning paper that she never found time to read until evening. By eight o'clock
the little flat was very still.
V.THAT'S MARRIAGE
Theresa Platt (she that had been Terry Sheehan) watched her
husband across the breakfast table with eyes that smouldered. When a woman's
eyes smoulder at 7.30 a.m. the person seated opposite her had better look out.
But Orville Platt was quite unaware of any smouldering in progress. He was
occupied with his eggs. How could he know that these very eggs were feeding the
dull red menace in Terry Platt's eyes?
When Orville Platt ate a soft-boiled egg he concentrated on it. He
treated it as a great adventure. Which, after all, it is. Few adjuncts of our
daily life contain the element of chance that is to be found in a three-minute
breakfast egg.
This was Orville Platt's method of attack: First, he chipped off
the top, neatly. Then he bent forward and subjected it to a passionate and
relentless scrutiny. Straightening—preparatory to plunging his spoon therein—he
flapped his right elbow. It wasn't exactly a flap; it was a pass between a
hitch and a flap, and presented external evidence of a mental state. Orville
Platt always gave that little preliminary jerk when he was contemplating a
step, or when he was moved, or argumentative. It was a trick as innocent as it
was maddening.
Terry Platt had learned to look for that flap—they had been
married four years—to look for it, and to hate it with a morbid, unreasoning
hate. That flap of the elbow was tearing Terry Platt's nerves into raw,
bleeding fragments.
Her fingers were clenched tightly under the table, now. She was
breathing unevenly. "If he does that again," she told herself,
"if he flaps again when he opens the second egg, I'll scream. I'll scream.
I'll scream! I'll sc—"
He had scooped the first egg into his cup. Now he picked up the
second, chipped it, concentrated, straightened, then—up went the elbow, and
down, with the accustomed little flap.
The tortured nerves snapped. Through the early morning quiet of
Wetona, Wisconsin, hurtled the shrill, piercing shriek of Terry Platt's
hysteria.
"Terry! For God's sake! What's the matter!"
Orville Platt dropped the second egg, and his spoon. The egg yolk
trickled down his plate. The spoon made a clatter and flung a gay spot of
yellow on the cloth. He started toward her.
Terry, wild-eyed, pointed a shaking finger at him. She was
laughing, now, uncontrollably. "Your elbow! Your elbow!"
"Elbow?" He looked down at it, bewildered; then up,
fright in his face. "What's the matter with it?"
She mopped her eyes. Sobs shook her. "You f-f-flapped
it."
"F-f-f—" The bewilderment in Orville Platt's face gave
way to anger. "Do you mean to tell me that you screeched like that because
my—because I moved my elbow?"
"Yes."
His anger deepened and reddened to fury. He choked. He had started
from his chair with his napkin in his hand. He still clutched it. Now he
crumpled it into a wad and hurled it to the centre of the table, where it
struck a sugar bowl, dropped back, and uncrumpled slowly, reprovingly.
"You—you—" Then bewilderment closed down again like a fog over his
countenance. "But why? I can't see—"
"Because it—because I can't stand it any longer. Flapping.
This is what you do. Like this."
And she did it. Did it with insulting fidelity, being a clever
mimic.
"Well, all I can say is you're crazy, yelling like that, for
nothing."
"It isn't nothing."
"Isn't, huh? If that isn't nothing, what is?" They were
growing incoherent. "What d'you mean, screeching like a maniac? Like a
wild woman? The neighbours'll think I've killed you. What d'you mean,
anyway!"
"I mean I'm tired of watching it, that's what. Sick and
tired."
"Y'are, huh? Well, young lady, just let me tell you something—"
He told her. There followed one of those incredible quarrels, as
sickening as they are human, which can take place only between two people who
love each other; who love each other so well that each knows with cruel
certainty the surest way to wound the other; and who stab, and tear, and claw
at these vulnerable spots in exact proportion to their love.
Ugly words. Bitter words. Words that neither knew they knew flew
between them like sparks between steel striking steel.
From him—"Trouble with you is you haven't got enough to do.
That's the trouble with half you women. Just lay around the house, rotting. I'm
a fool, slaving on the road to keep a good-for-nothing—"
"I suppose you call sitting around hotel lobbies slaving! I
suppose the house runs itself! How about my evenings? Sitting here alone, night
after night, when you're on the road."
Finally, "Well, if you don't like it," he snarled, and
lifted his chair by the back and slammed it down, savagely, "if you don't
like it, why don't you get out, h'm? Why don't you get out?"
And from her, her eyes narrowed to two slits, her cheeks scarlet:
"Why, thanks. I guess I will."
Ten minutes later he had flung out of the house to catch the 8.19
for Manitowoc. He marched down the street, his shoulders swinging rhythmically
to the weight of the burden he carried—his black leather hand-bag and the shiny
tan sample case, battle-scarred, both, from many encounters with ruthless
porters and 'bus men and bell boys. For four years, as he left for his
semi-monthly trip, he and Terry had observed a certain little ceremony (as had
the neighbours). She would stand in the doorway watching him down the street,
the heavier sample-case banging occasionally at his shin. The depot was only
three blocks away. Terry watched him with fond, but unillusioned eyes, which
proves that she really loved him. He was a dapper, well-dressed fat man, with a
weakness for pronounced patterns in suitings, and addicted to brown derbies.
One week on the road, one week at home. That was his routine. The wholesale
grocery trade liked Platt, and he had for his customers the fondness that a
travelling salesman has who is successful in his territory. Before his marriage
to Terry Sheehan his little red address book had been overwhelming proof
against the theory that nobody loves a fat man.
Terry, standing in the doorway, always knew that when he reached
the corner, just where Schroeder's house threatened to hide him from view, he
would stop, drop the sample case, wave his hand just once, pick up the sample
case and go on, proceeding backward for a step or two, until Schroeder's house made
good its threat. It was a comic scene in the eyes of the onlooker, perhaps
because a chubby Romeo offends the sense of fitness. The neighbours, lurking
behind their parlour curtains, had laughed at first. But after awhile they
learned to look for that little scene, and to take it unto themselves, as if it
were a personal thing. Fifteen-year wives whose husbands had long since
abandoned flowery farewells used to get a vicarious thrill out of it, and to
eye Terry with a sort of envy.
This morning Orville Platt did not even falter when he reached
Schroeder's corner. He marched straight on, looking steadily ahead, the heavy
bags swinging from either hand. Even if he had stopped—though she knew he
wouldn't—Terry Platt would not have seen him. She remained seated at the
disordered breakfast table, a dreadfully still figure, and sinister; a figure
of stone and fire; of ice and flame. Over and over in her mind she was milling
the things she might have said to him, and had not. She brewed a hundred
vitriolic cruelties that she might have flung in his face. She would concoct
one biting brutality, and dismiss it for a second, and abandon that for a
third. She was too angry to cry—a dangerous state in a woman. She was what is
known as cold mad, so that her mind was working clearly and with amazing
swiftness, and yet as though it were a thing detached; a thing that was no part
of her.
She sat thus for the better part of an hour, motionless except for
one forefinger that was, quite unconsciously, tapping out a popular and cheap
little air that she had been strumming at the piano the evening before, having
bought it down town that same afternoon. It had struck Orville's fancy, and she
had played it over and over for him. Her right forefinger was playing the
entire tune, and something in the back of her head was following it accurately,
though the separate thinking process was going on just the same. Her eyes were
bright, and wide, and hot. Suddenly she became conscious of the musical antics
of her finger. She folded it in with its mates, so that her hand became a fist.
She stood up and stared down at the clutter of the breakfast table. The
egg—that fateful second egg—had congealed to a mottled mess of yellow and
white. The spoon lay on the cloth. His coffee, only half consumed, showed tan
with a cold grey film over it. A slice of toast at the left of his plate seemed
to grin at her with the semi-circular wedge that he had bitten out of it.
Terry stared down at this congealing remnant. Then she laughed, a
hard, high little laugh, pushed a plate away contemptuously with her hand, and
walked into the sitting room. On the piano was the piece of music (Bennie
Gottschalk's great song hit, "Hicky Bloo") which she had been playing
the night before. She picked it up, tore it straight across, once, placed the
pieces back to back and tore it across again. Then she dropped the pieces to
the floor.
"You bet I'm going," she said, as though concluding a
train of thought. "You just bet I'm going. Right now!"
And Terry went. She went for much the same reason as that given by
the ladye of high degree in the old English song—she who had left her lord and
bed and board to go with the raggle-taggle gipsies-O! The thing that was
sending Terry Platt away was much more than a conjugal quarrel precipitated by
a soft-boiled egg and a flap of the arm. It went so much deeper that if
psychology had not become a cant word we might drag it into the explanation. It
went so deep that it's necessary to delve back to the days when Theresa Platt
was Terry Sheehan to get the real significance of it, and of the things she did
after she went.
When Mrs. Orville Platt had been Terry Sheehan she had played the
piano, afternoons and evenings, in the orchestra of the Bijou theatre, on Cass
street, Wetona, Wisconsin. Any one with a name like Terry Sheehan would,
perforce, do well anything she might set out to do. There was nothing of genius
in Terry, but there was something of fire, and much that was Irish. The
combination makes for what is known as imagination in playing. Which meant that
the Watson Team, Eccentric Song and Dance Artists, never needed a rehearsal
when they played the Bijou. Ruby Watson used merely to approach Terry before
the Monday performance, sheet-music in hand, and say, "Listen, dearie.
We've got some new business I want to wise you to. Right here it goes 'Tum dee-dee dum dee-dee tum
dum dum. See? Like that. And then Jim vamps. Get me?"
Terry, at the piano, would pucker her pretty brow a moment. Then,
"Like this, you mean?"
"That's it! You've got it."
"All right. I'll tell the drum."
She could play any tune by ear, once heard. She got the spirit of
a thing, and transmitted it. When Terry played a march number you tapped the
floor with your foot, and unconsciously straightened your shoulders. When she
played a home-and-mother song that was heavy on the minor wail you hoped that
the man next to you didn't know you were crying (which he probably didn't,
because he was weeping, too).
At that time motion pictures had not attained their present
virulence. Vaudeville, polite or otherwise, had not yet been crowded out by the
ubiquitous film. The Bijou offered entertainment of the cigar-box tramp
variety, interspersed with trick bicyclists, soubrettes in slightly soiled
pink, trained seals, and Family Fours with lumpy legs who tossed each other
about and struck Goldbergian attitudes.
Contact with these gave Terry Sheehan a semi-professional tone.
The more conservative of her townspeople looked at her askance. There never had
been an evil thing about Terry, but Wetona considered her rather fly. Terry's
hair was very black, and she had a fondness for those little, close-fitting
scarlet velvet turbans. A scarlet velvet turban would have made Martha
Washington look fly. Terry's mother had died when the girl was eight, and
Terry's father had been what is known as easy-going. A good-natured, lovable,
shiftless chap in the contracting business. He drove around Wetona in a
sagging, one-seated cart and never made any money because he did honest work
and charged as little for it as men who did not. His mortar stuck, and his
bricks did not crumble, and his lumber did not crack. Riches are not acquired
in the contracting business in that way. Ed Sheehan and his daughter were great
friends. When he died (she was nineteen) they say she screamed once, like a
banshee, and dropped to the floor.
After they had straightened out the muddle of books in Ed
Sheehan's gritty, dusty little office Terry turned her piano-playing talent to
practical account. At twenty-one she was still playing at the Bijou, and into
her face was creeping the first hint of that look of sophistication which comes
from daily contact with the artificial world of the footlights. It is the look
of those who must make believe as a business, and are a-weary. You see it developed
into its highest degree in the face of a veteran comedian. It is the thing that
gives the look of utter pathos and tragedy to the relaxed expression of a
circus clown.
There are, in a small, Mid-West town like Wetona, just two kinds
of girls. Those who go down town Saturday nights, and those who don't. Terry,
if she had not been busy with her job at the Bijou, would have come in the
first group. She craved excitement. There was little chance to satisfy such
craving in Wetona, but she managed to find certain means. The travelling men
from the Burke House just across the street used to drop in at the Bijou for an
evening's entertainment. They usually sat well toward the front, and Terry's
expert playing, and the gloss of her black hair, and her piquant profile as she
sometimes looked up toward the stage for a signal from one of the performers,
caught their fancy, and held it.
Terry did not accept their attentions promiscuously. She was too
decent a girl for that. But she found herself, at the end of a year or two,
with a rather large acquaintance among these peripatetic gentlemen. You
occasionally saw one of them strolling home with her. Sometimes she went
driving with one of them of a Sunday afternoon. And she rather enjoyed taking
Sunday dinner at the Burke Hotel with a favoured friend. She thought those
small-town hotel Sunday dinners the last word in elegance. The roast course was
always accompanied by an aqueous, semi-frozen concoction which the bill of fare
revealed as Roman punch. It added a royal touch to the repast, even when served
with roast pork. I don't say that any of these Lotharios snatched a kiss during
a Sunday afternoon drive. Or that Terry slapped him promptly. But either seems
extremely likely.
Terry was twenty-two when Orville Platt, making his initial
Wisconsin trip for the wholesale grocery house he represented, first beheld
Terry's piquant Irish profile, and heard her deft manipulation of the keys.
Orville had the fat man's sense of rhythm and love of music. He had a buttery
tenor voice, too, of which he was rather proud.
He spent three days in Wetona that first trip, and every evening
saw him at the Bijou, first row, centre. He stayed through two shows each time,
and before he had been there fifteen minutes Terry was conscious of him through
the back of her head. In fact I think that, in all innocence, she rather played
up to him. Orville Platt paid no more heed to the stage, and what was occurring
thereon, than if it had not been. He sat looking at Terry, and waggling his
head in time to the music. Not that Terry was a beauty. But she was one of
those immaculately clean types. That look of fragrant cleanliness was her chief
charm. Her clear, smooth skin contributed to it, and the natural pencilling of
her eyebrows. But the thing that accented it, and gave it a last touch, was the
way in which her black hair came down in a little point just in the centre of
her forehead, where hair meets brow. It grew to form what is known as a
cow-lick. (A prettier name for it is widow's peak.) Your eye lighted on it,
pleased, and from it travelled its gratified way down her white temples, past
her little ears, to the smooth black coil at the nape of her neck. It was a
trip that rested you.
At the end of the last performance on the second night of his visit
to the Bijou, Orville waited until the audience had begun to file out. Then he
leaned forward over the rail that separated orchestra from audience.
"Could you," he said, his tones dulcet, "could you
oblige me with the name of that last piece you played?"
Terry was stacking her music. "George!" she called, to
the drum. "Gentleman wants to know the name of that last piece." And
prepared to leave.
"'My Georgia Crackerjack'," said the laconic drum.
Orville Platt took a hasty side-step in the direction of the door
toward which Terry was headed. "It's a pretty thing," he said,
fervently. "An awful pretty thing. Thanks. It's beautiful."
Terry flung a last insult at him over her shoulder: "Don't
thank me for it. I didn't write it."
Orville Platt did not go across the street to the hotel. He
wandered up Cass street, and into the ten-o'clock quiet of Main street, and
down as far as the park and back. "Pretty as a pink! And play!... And
good, too. Good."
A fat man in love.
At the end of six months they were married. Terry was surprised
into it. Not that she was not fond of him. She was; and grateful to him, as
well. For, pretty as she was, no man had ever before asked Terry to be his
wife. They had made love to her. They had paid court to her. They had sent her
large boxes of stale drug-store chocolates, and called her endearing names as
they made cautious declaration such as:
"I've known a lot of girls, but you've got something
different. I don't know. You've got so much sense. A fellow can chum around
with you. Little pal."
Orville's headquarters were Wetona. They rented a comfortable,
seven-room house in a comfortable, middle-class neighbourhood, and Terry
dropped the red velvet turbans and went in for picture hats and paradise
aigrettes. Orville bought her a piano whose tone was so good that to her ear,
accustomed to the metallic discords of the Bijou instrument, it sounded out of
tune. She played a great deal at first, but unconsciously she missed the sharp
spat of applause that used to follow her public performance. She would play a
piece, brilliantly, and then her hands would drop to her lap. And the silence
of her own sitting room would fall flat on her ears. It was better on the
evenings when Orville was home. He sang, in his throaty, fat man's tenor, to
Terry's expert accompaniment.
"This is better than playing for those bum actors, isn't it,
hon?" And he would pinch her ear.
"Sure"—listlessly.
But after the first year she became accustomed to what she termed
private life. She joined an afternoon sewing club, and was active in the
ladies' branch of the U.C.T. She developed a knack at cooking, too, and
Orville, after a week or ten days of hotel fare in small Wisconsin towns, would
come home to sea-foam biscuits, and real soup, and honest pies and cake.
Sometimes, in the midst of an appetising meal he would lay down his knife and
fork and lean back in his chair, and regard the cool and unruffled Terry with a
sort of reverence in his eyes. Then he would get up, and come around to the
other side of the table, and tip her pretty face up to his.
"I'll bet I'll wake up, some day, and find out it's all a
dream. You know this kind of thing doesn't really happen—not to a dub like
me."
One year; two; three; four. Routine. A little boredom. Some
impatience. She began to find fault with the very things she had liked in him:
his super-neatness; his fondness for dashing suit patterns; his throaty tenor;
his worship of her. And the flap. Oh, above all, that flap! That little,
innocent, meaningless mannerism that made her tremble with nervousness. She
hated it so that she could not trust herself to speak of it to him. That was
the trouble. Had she spoken of it, laughingly or in earnest, before it became
an obsession with her, that hideous breakfast quarrel, with its taunts, and revilings,
and open hate, might never have come to pass. For that matter, any one of those
foreign fellows with the guttural names and the psychoanalytical minds could
have located her trouble in one séance.
Terry Platt herself didn't know what was the matter with her. She
would have denied that anything was wrong. She didn't even throw her hands
above her head and shriek: "I want to live! I want to live! I want to
live!" like a lady in a play. She only knew she was sick of sewing at the
Wetona West-End Red Cross shop; sick of marketing, of home comforts, of
Orville, of the flap.
Orville, you may remember, left at 8.19. The 11.23 bore Terry
Chicagoward. She had left the house as it was—beds unmade, rooms unswept,
breakfast table uncleared. She intended never to come back.
Now and then a picture of the chaos she had left behind would
flash across her order-loving mind. The spoon on the table-cloth. Orville's
pajamas dangling over the bathroom chair. The coffee-pot on the gas stove.
"Pooh! What do I care?"
In her pocketbook she had a tidy sum saved out of the housekeeping
money. She was naturally thrifty, and Orville had never been niggardly. Her
meals when Orville was on the road, had been those sketchy, haphazard affairs
with which women content themselves when their household is manless. At noon
she went into the dining car and ordered a flaunting little repast of chicken
salad and asparagus, and Neapolitan ice cream. The men in the dining car eyed
her speculatively and with appreciation. Then their glance dropped to the third
finger of her left hand, and wandered away. She had meant to remove it. In
fact, she had taken it off and dropped it into her bag. But her hand felt so
queer, so unaccustomed, so naked, that she had found herself slipping the
narrow band on again, and her thumb groped for it, gratefully.
It was almost five o'clock when she reached Chicago. She felt no
uncertainty or bewilderment. She had been in Chicago three or four times since
her marriage. She went to a down town hotel. It was too late, she told herself,
to look for a more inexpensive room that night. When she had tidied herself she
went out. The things she did were the childish, aimless things that one does
who finds herself in possession of sudden liberty. She walked up State Street,
and stared in the windows; came back, turned into Madison, passed a bright
little shop in the window of which taffy—white and gold—was being wound
endlessly and fascinatingly about a double-jointed machine. She went in and
bought a sackful, and wandered on down the street, munching.
She had supper at one of those white-tiled sarcophagi that
emblazon Chicago's down town side streets. It had been her original intention
to dine in state in the rose-and-gold dining room of her hotel. She had even
thought daringly of lobster. But at the last moment she recoiled from the idea
of dining alone in that wilderness of tables so obviously meant for two.
After her supper she went to a picture show. She was amazed to
find there, instead of the accustomed orchestra, a pipe-organ that panted and
throbbed and rumbled over lugubrious classics. The picture was about a
faithless wife. Terry left in the middle of it.
She awoke next morning at seven, as usual, started up wildly,
looked around, and dropped back. Nothing to get up for. The knowledge did not
fill her with a rush of relief. She would have her breakfast in bed! She
telephoned for it, languidly. But when it came she got up and ate it from the
table, after all. Terry was the kind of woman to whom a pink gingham all-over
apron, and a pink dust-cap are ravishingly becoming at seven o'clock in the
morning. That sort of woman congenitally cannot enjoy her breakfast in bed.
That morning she found a fairly comfortable room, more within her
means, on the north side in the boarding house district. She unpacked and hung
up her clothes and drifted down town again, idly. It was noon when she came to
the corner of State and Madison streets. It was a maelstrom that caught her up,
and buffeted her about, and tossed her helplessly this way and that. The corner
of Broadway and Forty-second streets has been exploited in song and story as
the world's most hazardous human whirlpool. I've negotiated that corner. I've
braved the square in front of the American Express Company's office in Paris,
June, before the War. I've crossed the Strand at 11 p.m. when the theatre
crowds are just out. And to my mind the corner of State and Madison streets
between twelve and one, mid-day, makes any one of these dizzy spots look bosky,
sylvan, and deserted.
The thousands jostled Terry, and knocked her hat awry, and dug her
with unheeding elbows, and stepped on her feet.
"Say, look here!" she said, once futilely. They did not
stop to listen. State and Madison has no time for Terrys from Wetona. It goes
its way, pellmell. If it saw Terry at all it saw her only as a prettyish
person, in the wrong kind of suit and hat, with a bewildered, resentful look on
her face.
Terry drifted on down the west side of State Street, with the
hurrying crowd. State and Monroe. A sound came to Terry's ears. A sound
familiar, beloved. To her ear, harassed with the roar and crash, with the
shrill scream of the crossing policemen's whistle, with the hiss of feet
shuffling on cement, it was a celestial strain. She looked up, toward the
sound. A great second-story window opened wide to the street. In it a girl at a
piano, and a man, red-faced, singing through a megaphone. And on a flaring red
and green sign:
BERNIE GOTTSCHALK'S MUSIC HOUSE!
COME IN! HEAR BERNIE GOTTSCHALK'S LATEST HIT! THE HEART-THROB SONG
THAT HAS GOT 'EM ALL! THE SONG THAT MADE THE KAISER CRAWL!
"I COME FROM PARIS, ILLINOIS, BUT OH! YOU PARIS, FRANCE!
I USED TO WEAR BLUE OVERALLS BUT NOW ITS KHAKI PANTS."
COME IN! COME IN!
Terry accepted.
She followed the sound of the music. Around the corner. Up a
little flight of stairs. She entered the realm of Euterpe; Euterpe with her
back hair frizzed; Euterpe with her flowing white robe replaced by soiled white
boots that failed to touch the hem of an empire-waisted blue serge; Euterpe abandoning
her lyre for jazz. She sat at the piano, a red-haired young lady whose
familiarity with the piano had bred contempt. Nothing else could have accounted
for her treatment of it. Her fingers, tipped with sharp-pointed grey and
glistening nails, clawed the keys with a dreadful mechanical motion. There were
stacks of music-sheets on counters, and shelves, and dangling from overhead
wires. The girl at the piano never ceased playing. She played mostly by
request. A prospective purchaser would mumble something in the ear of one of
the clerks. The fat man with the megaphone would bawl out, "'Hicky Bloo!'
Miss Ryan." And Miss Ryan would oblige. She made a hideous rattle and
crash and clatter of sound compared to which an Indian tom-tom would have seemed
as dulcet as the strumming of a lute in a lady's boudoir.
Terry joined the crowds about the counter. The girl at the piano
was not looking at the keys. Her head was screwed around over her left shoulder
and as she played she was holding forth animatedly to a girl friend who had
evidently dropped in from some store or office during the lunch hour. Now and
again the fat man paused in his vocal efforts to reprimand her for her
slackness. She paid no heed. There was something gruesome, uncanny, about the
way her fingers went their own way over the defenceless keys. Her conversation
with the frowzy little girl went on.
"Wha'd he say?" (Over her shoulder).
"Oh, he laffed."
"Well, didja go?"
"Me! Well, whutya think I yam, anyway?"
"I woulda took a chanst."
The fat man rebelled.
"Look here! Get busy! What are you paid for? Talkin' or
playin'? Huh?"
The person at the piano, openly reproved thus before her friend,
lifted her uninspired hands from the keys and spake. When she had finished she
rose.
"But you can't leave now," the megaphone man argued.
"Right in the rush hour."
"I'm gone," said the girl. The fat man looked about,
helplessly. He gazed at the abandoned piano, as though it must go on of its own
accord. Then at the crowd. "Where's Miss Schwimmer?" he demanded of a
clerk.
"Out to lunch."
Terry pushed her way to the edge of the counter and leaned over.
"I can play for you," she said.
The man looked at her. "Sight?"
"Yes."
"Come on."
Terry went around to the other side of the counter, took off her
hat and coat, rubbed her hands together briskly, sat down and began to play.
The crowd edged closer.
It is a curious study, this noonday crowd that gathers to sate its
music-hunger on the scraps vouchsafed it by Bernie Gottschalk's Music House.
Loose-lipped, slope-shouldered young men with bad complexions and slender
hands. Girls whose clothes are an unconscious satire on present-day fashions.
On their faces, as they listen to the music, is a look of peace and dreaming.
They stand about, smiling a wistful half smile. It is much the same expression
that steals over the face of a smoker who has lighted his after-dinner cigar,
or of a drug victim who is being lulled by his opiate. The music seems to
satisfy a something within them. Faces dull, eyes lustreless, they listen in a
sort of trance.
Terry played on. She played as Terry Sheehan used to play. She
played as no music hack at Bernie Gottschalk's had ever played before. The
crowd swayed a little to the sound of it. Some kept time with little jerks of
the shoulder—the little hitching movement of the rag-time dancer whose blood is
filled with the fever of syncopation. Even the crowd flowing down State Street
must have caught the rhythm of it, for the room soon filled.
At two o'clock the crowd began to thin. Business would be slack,
now, until five, when it would again pick up until closing time at six.
The fat vocalist put down his megaphone, wiped his forehead, and
regarded Terry with a warm blue eye. He had just finished singing "I've
Wandered Far from Dear Old Mother's Knee." (Bernie Gottschalk Inc.
Chicago. New York. You can't get bit with a Gottschalk hit. 15 cents each.)
"Girlie," he said, emphatically, "You
sure—can—play!" He came over to her at the piano and put a stubby hand on
her shoulder. "Yessir! Those little fingers—"
Terry just turned her head to look down her nose at the moist hand
resting on her shoulder. "Those little fingers are going to meet your
face—suddenly—if you don't move on."
"Who gave you your job?" demanded the fat man.
"Nobody. I picked it myself. You can have it if you want
it."
"Can't you take a joke?"
"Label yours."
As the crowd dwindled she played less feverishly, but there was
nothing slipshod about her performance. The chubby songster found time to
proffer brief explanations in asides. "They want the patriotic stuff. It
used to be all that Hawaiian dope, and Wild Irish Rose junk, and songs about
wanting to go back to every place from Dixie to Duluth. But now seems it's all
these here flag raisers. Honestly, I'm so sick of 'em I got a notion to enlist
to get away from it."
Terry eyed him with, withering briefness. "A little training
wouldn't ruin your figure."
She had never objected to Orville's embonpoint. But
then, Orville was a different sort of fat man; pink-cheeked, springy,
immaculate.
At four o'clock, as she was in the chorus of "Isn't There
Another Joan of Arc?" a melting masculine voice from the other side of the
counter said, "Pardon me. What's that you're playing?"
Terry told him. She did not look up.
"I wouldn't have known it. Played like that—a second
Marseillaise. If the words—what are the words? Let me see a—"
"Show the gentleman a 'Joan'," Terry commanded briefly,
over her shoulder. The fat man laughed a wheezy laugh. Terry glanced around,
still playing, and encountered the gaze of two melting masculine eyes that
matched the melting masculine voice. The songster waved a hand uniting Terry
and the eyes in informal introduction.
"Mr. Leon Sammett, the gentleman who sings the Gottschalk
songs wherever songs are heard. And Mrs.—that is—and Mrs. Sammett—"
Terry turned. A sleek, swarthy world-old young man with the
fashionable concave torso, and alarmingly convex bone-rimmed glasses. Through
them his darkly luminous gaze glowed upon Terry. To escape their warmth she
sent her own gaze past him to encounter the arctic stare of the large blonde
person who had been included so lamely in the introduction. And at that the
frigidity of that stare softened, melted, dissolved.
"Why Terry Sheehan! What in the world!"
Terry's eyes bored beneath the layers of flabby fat.
"It's—why, it's Ruby Watson, isn't it? Eccentric Song and Dance—"
She glanced at the concave young man and faltered. He was not Jim,
of the Bijou days. From him her eyes leaped back to the fur-bedecked splendour
of the woman. The plump face went so painfully red that the makeup stood out on
it, a distinct layer, like thin ice covering flowing water. As she surveyed
that bulk Terry realised that while Ruby might still claim eccentricity, her
song and dance days were over. "That's ancient history, m'dear. I haven't
been working for three years. What're you doing in this joint? I'd heard you'd
done well for yourself. That you were married."
"I am. That is I—well, I am. I—"
At that the dark young man leaned over and patted Terry's hand
that lay on the counter. He smiled. His own hand was incredibly slender, long,
and tapering.
"That's all right," he assured her, and smiled.
"You two girls can have a reunion later. What I want to know is can you
play by ear?"
"Yes, but—"
He leaned far over the counter. "I knew it the minute I heard
you play. You've got the touch. Now listen. See if you can get this, and fake
the bass."
He fixed his sombre and hypnotic eyes on Terry. His mouth screwed
up into a whistle. The tune—a tawdry but haunting little melody—came through
his lips. And Terry's quick ear sensed that every note was flat. She turned
back to the piano. "Of course you know you flatted every note," she
said.
This time it was the blonde woman who laughed, and the man who
flushed. Terry cocked her head just a little to one side, like a knowing bird,
looked up into space beyond the piano top, and played the lilting little melody
with charm and fidelity. The dark young man followed her with a wagging of the
head and little jerks of both outspread hands. His expression was beatific,
enraptured. He hummed a little under his breath and any one who was music wise
would have known that he was just a half-beat behind her all the way.
When she had finished he sighed deeply, ecstatically. He bent his
lean frame over the counter and, despite his swart colouring, seemed to glitter
upon her—his eyes, his teeth, his very finger-nails.
"Something led me here. I never come up on Tuesdays. But
something—"
"You was going to complain," put in his lady, heavily,
"about that Teddy Sykes at the Palace Gardens singing the same songs this
week that you been boosting at the Inn."
He put up a vibrant, peremptory hand. "Bah! What does that
matter now! What does anything matter now! Listen Miss—ah—Miss?—"
"Pl—Sheehan. Terry Sheehan."
He gazed off a moment into space. "H'm. 'Leon Sammett in
Songs. Miss Terry Sheehan at the Piano.' That doesn't sound bad. Now listen,
Miss Sheehan. I'm singing down at the University Inn. The Gottschalk song hits.
I guess you know my work. But I want to talk to you, private. It's something to
your interest. I go on down at the Inn at six. Will you come and have a little
something with Ruby and me? Now?"
"Now?" faltered Terry, somewhat helplessly. Things
seemed to be moving rather swiftly for her, accustomed as she was to the
peaceful routine of the past four years.
"Get your hat. It's your life chance. Wait till you see your
name in two-foot electrics over the front of every big-time house in the
country. You've got music in you. Tie to me and you're made." He turned to
the woman beside him. "Isn't that so, Rube?"
"Sure. Look at me!" One would not have
thought there could be so much subtle vindictiveness in a fat blonde.
Sammett whipped out a watch. "Just three-quarters of an hour.
Come on, girlie."
His conversation had been conducted in an urgent undertone, with
side glances at the fat man with the megaphone. Terry approached him now.
"I'm leaving now," she said.
"Oh, no you're not. Six o'clock is your quitting time."
In which he touched the Irish in Terry. "Any time I quit is
my quitting time." She went in quest of hat and coat much as the girl had
done whose place she had taken early in the day. The fat man followed her,
protesting. Terry, pinning on her hat tried to ignore him. But he laid one
plump hand on her arm and kept it there, though she tried to shake him off.
"Now, listen to me. That boy wouldn't mind putting his heel
on your face if he thought it would bring him up a step. I know'm. Y'see that
walking stick he's carrying? Well, compared to the yellow stripe that's in him,
that cane is a lead pencil. He's a song tout, that's all he is." Then,
more feverishly, as Terry tried to pull away: "Wait a minute. You're a
decent girl. I want to—Why, he can't even sing a note without you give it to
him first. He can put a song over, yes. But how? By flashin' that toothy grin,
of his and talkin' every word of it. Don't you—"
But Terry freed herself with a final jerk and whipped around the
counter. The two, who had been talking together in an undertone, turned to
welcome her. "We've got a half hour. Come on. It's just over to Clark and
up a block or so."
If you know Chicago at all, you know the University Inn, that
gloriously intercollegiate institution which welcomes any graduate of any
school of experience, and guarantees a post-graduate course in less time than
any similar haven of knowledge. Down a flight of stairs and into the unwonted
quiet that reigns during the hour of low potentiality, between five and six,
the three went, and seated themselves at a table in an obscure corner. A waiter
brought them things in little glasses, though no order had been given. The
woman who had been Ruby Watson was so silent as to be almost wordless. But the
man talked rapidly. He talked well, too. The same quality that enabled him, voiceless
though he was, to boost a song to success, was making his plea sound plausible
in Terry's ears now.
"I've got to go and make up in a few minutes. So get this.
I'm not going to stick down in this basement eating house forever. I've got too
much talent. If I only had a voice—I mean a singing voice. But I haven't. But
then, neither has Georgie Cohan, and I can't see that it's wrecked his life
any. Look at Elsie Janis! But she sings. And they like it! Now listen. I've got
a song. It's my own. That bit you played for me up at Gottschalk's is part of
the chorus. But it's the words that'll go big. They're great. It's an aviation
song, see? Airship stuff. They're yelling that it's the airyoplanes that're
going to win this war. Well, I'll help 'em. This song is going to put the
aviator where he belongs. It's going to be the big song of the war. It's going
to make 'Tipperary' sound like a Moody and Sankey hymn. It's the—"
Ruby lifted her heavy-lidded eyes and sent him a meaning look.
"Get down to business, Leon. I'll tell her how good you are while you're
making up."
He shot her a malignant glance, but took her advice. "Now
what I've been looking for for years is somebody who has got the music knack to
give me the accompaniment just a quarter of a jump ahead of my voice, see? I
can follow like a lamb, but I've got to have that feeler first. It's more than
a knack. It's a gift. And you've got it. I know it when I see it. I want to get
away from this cabaret thing. There's nothing in it for a man of my talent. I'm
gunning for vaudeville. But they won't book me without a tryout. And when they
hear my voice they—Well, if me and you work together we can fool 'em. The
song's great. And my makeup's one of these av-iation costumes to go with the
song, see? Pants tight in the knee and baggy on the hips. And a coat with one
of those full skirt whaddyoucall'ems—"
"Peplums," put in Ruby, placidly.
"Sure. And the girls'll be wild about it. And the
words!" he began to sing, gratingly off-key:
"Put on your sky clothes,
Put on your fly clothes
And take a trip with me.
We'll sail so high
Up in the sky
We'll drop a bomb from Mercury."
"Why, that's awfully cute!" exclaimed Terry. Until now
her opinion of Mr. Sammett's talents had not been on a level with his.
"Yeh, but wait till you hear the second verse. That's only
part of the chorus. You see, he's supposed to be talking to a French girl. He
says:
I'll parlez-vous in Français plain,
You'll answer, 'Cher Américain,
We'll both. . . . . . . . . . ."
The six o'clock lights blazed up, suddenly. A sad-looking group of
men trailed in and made for a corner where certain bulky, shapeless bundles
were soon revealed as those glittering and tortuous instruments which go to
make a jazz band.
"You better go, Lee. The crowd comes in awful early now, with
all those buyers in town."
Both hands on the table he half rose, reluctantly, still talking.
"I've got three other songs. They make Gottschalk's stuff look sick. All I
want's a chance. What I want you to do is accompaniment. On the stage, see?
Grand piano. And a swell set. I haven't quite made up my mind to it. But a kind
of an army camp room, see? And maybe you dressed as Liberty. Anyway, it'll be
new, and a knock-out. If only we can get away with the voice thing. Say, if
Eddie Foy, all those years never had a—"
The band opened with a terrifying clash of cymbal, and thump of
drum. "Back at the end of my first turn," he said as he fled. Terry
followed his lithe, electric figure. She turned to meet the heavy-lidded gaze
of the woman seated opposite. She relaxed, then, and sat back with a little
sigh. "Well! If he talks that way to the managers I don't see—"
Ruby laughed a mirthless little laugh. "Talk doesn't get it
over with the managers, honey. You've got to deliver."
"Well, but he's—that song is a good one. I
don't say it's as good as he thinks it is, but it's good."
"Yes," admitted the woman, grudgingly, "it's
good."
"Well, then?"
The woman beckoned a waiter; he nodded and vanished, and
reappeared with a glass that was twin to the one she had just emptied.
"Does he look like he knew French? Or could make a rhyme?"
"But didn't he? Doesn't he?"
"The words were written by a little French girl who used to
skate down here last winter, when the craze was on. She was stuck on a Chicago
kid who went over to fly for the French."
"But the music?"
"There was a Russian girl who used to dance in the cabaret
and she—"
Terry's head came up with a characteristic little jerk. "I
don't believe it!"
"Better." She gazed at Terry with the drowsy look that
was so different from the quick, clear glance of the Ruby Watson who used to
dance so nimbly in the Old Bijou days. "What'd you and your husband
quarrel about, Terry?"
Terry was furious to feel herself flushing. "Oh, nothing. He
just—I—it was—Say, how did you know we'd quarrelled?"
And suddenly all the fat woman's apathy dropped from her like a
garment and some of the old sparkle and animation illumined her heavy face. She
pushed her glass aside and leaned forward on her folded arms, so that her face
was close to Terry's.
"Terry Sheehan, I know you've quarrelled, and I know just
what it was about. Oh, I don't mean the very thing it was about; but the kind
of thing. I'm going to do something for you, Terry, that I wouldn't take the
trouble to do for most women. But I guess I ain't had all the softness knocked
out of me yet, though it's a wonder. And I guess I remember too plain the
decent kid you was in the old days. What was the name of that little small-time
house me and Jim used to play? Bijou, that's it; Bijou."
The band struck up a new tune. Leon Sammett—slim, sleek, lithe in
his evening clothes—appeared with a little fair girl in pink chiffon. The woman
reached across the table and put one pudgy, jewelled hand on Terry's arm.
"He'll be through in ten minutes. Now listen to me. I left Jim four years
ago, and there hasn't been a minute since then, day or night, when I wouldn't
have crawled back to him on my hands and knees if I could. But I couldn't. He
wouldn't have me now. How could he? How do I know you've quarrelled? I can see
it in your eyes. They look just the way mine have felt for four years, that's
how. I met up with this boy, and there wasn't anybody to do the turn for me
that I'm trying to do for you. Now get this. I left Jim because when he ate
corn on the cob he always closed his eyes and it drove me wild. Don't
laugh."
"I'm not laughing," said Terry.
"Women are like that. One night—we was playing Fond du Lac; I
remember just as plain—we was eating supper and Jim reached for one of those
big yellow ears, and buttered and salted it, and me kind of hanging on to the
edge of the table with my nails. Seemed to me if he shut his eyes when he put
his teeth into that ear of corn I'd scream. And he did. And I screamed. And
that's all."
Terry sat staring at her with a wide-eyed stare, like a sleep
walker. Then she wet her lips, slowly. "But that's almost the very—"
"Kid, go on back home. I don't know whether it's too late or
not, but go anyway. If you've lost him I suppose it ain't any more than you
deserve, but I hope to God you don't get your desserts this time. He's almost
through. If he sees you going he can't quit in the middle of his song to stop
you. He'll know I put you wise, and he'll prob'ly half kill me for it. But it's
worth it. You get."
And Terry—dazed, shaking, but grateful—fled. Down the noisy aisle,
up the stairs, to the street. Back to her rooming house. Out again, with her
suitcase, and into the right railroad station somehow, at last. Not another
Wetona train until midnight. She shrank into a remote corner of the waiting
room and there she huddled until midnight watching the entrances like a child
who is fearful of ghosts in the night.
The hands of the station clock seemed fixed and immovable. The
hour between eleven and twelve was endless. She was on the train. It was almost
morning. It was morning. Dawn was breaking. She was home! She had the house key
clutched tightly in her hand long before she turned Schroeder's corner. Suppose
he had come home! Suppose he had jumped a town and come home ahead of his schedule.
They had quarrelled once before, and he had done that.
Up the front steps. Into the house. Not a sound. She stood there a
moment in the early morning half-light. She peered into the dining room. The
table, with its breakfast débris, was as she had left it. In the kitchen the
coffee pot stood on the gas stove. She was home. She was safe. She ran up the
stairs, got out of her clothes and into crisp gingham morning things. She flung
open windows everywhere. Down-stairs once more she plunged into an orgy of
cleaning. Dishes, table, stove, floor, rugs. She washed, scoured, flapped,
swabbed, polished. By eight o'clock she had done the work that would ordinarily
have taken until noon. The house was shining, orderly, and redolent of
soapsuds.
During all this time she had been listening, listening, with her
sub-conscious ear. Listening for something she had refused to name definitely
in her mind, but listening, just the same; waiting.
And then, at eight o'clock, it came. The rattle of a key in the
lock. The boom of the front door. Firm footsteps.
He did not go to meet her, and she did not go to meet him. They
came together and were in each other's arms. She was weeping.
"Now, now, old girl. What's there to cry about? Don't, honey;
don't. It's all right."
She raised her head then, to look at him. How fresh, and rosy, and
big he seemed, after that little sallow, yellow restaurant rat.
"How did you get here? How did you happen—?"
"Jumped all the way from Ashland. Couldn't get a sleeper, so
I sat up all night. I had to come back and square things with you, Terry. My
mind just wasn't on my work. I kept thinking how I'd talked—how I'd
talked—"
"Oh, Orville, don't! I can't bear—Have you had your
breakfast?"
"Why, no. The train was an hour late. You know that Ashland
train."
But she was out of his arms and making for the kitchen. "You
go and clean up. I'll have hot biscuits and everything in fifteen minutes. You
poor boy. No breakfast!"
She made good her promise. It could not have been more than twenty
minutes later when he was buttering his third feathery, golden brown biscuit.
But she had eaten nothing. She watched him, and listened, and again her eyes
were sombre, but for a different reason. He broke open his egg. His elbow came
up just a fraction of an inch. Then he remembered, and flushed like a
schoolboy, and brought it down again, carefully. And at that she gave a little
tremulous cry, and rushed around the table to him.
"Oh, Orville!" She took the offending elbow in her two
arms, and bent and kissed the rough coat sleeve.
"Why, Terry! Don't, honey. Don't!"
"Oh, Orville, listen—"
"Yes."
"Listen, Orville—"
"I'm listening, Terry."
"I've got something to tell you. There's something you've got
to know."
"Yes, I know it, Terry. I knew you'd out with it, pretty
soon, if I just waited."
She lifted an amazed face from his shoulder then, and stared at
him. "But how could you know? You couldn't! How could you?"
He patted her shoulder then, gently. "I can always tell. When
you have something on your mind you always take up a spoon of coffee, and look
at it, and kind of joggle it back and forth in the spoon, and then dribble it
back into the cup again, without once tasting it. It used to get me nervous
when we were first married watching you. But now I know it just means you're
worried about something, and I wait, and pretty soon—"
"Oh, Orville!" she cried, then. "Oh, Orville!"
"Now, Terry. Just spill it, hon. Just spill it to daddy. And
you'll feel better."
VI.THE WOMAN WHO TRIED TO BE GOOD
Before she tried to be a good woman she had been a very bad
woman—so bad that she could trail her wonderful apparel up and down Main
Street, from the Elm Tree Bakery to the railroad tracks, without once having a
man doff his hat to her or a woman bow. You passed her on the street with a
surreptitious glance, though she was well worth looking at—in her furs and
laces and plumes. She had the only full-length sealskin coat in our town, and
Ganz' shoe store sent to Chicago for her shoes. Hers were the miraculously
small feet you frequently see in stout women.
Usually she walked alone; but on rare occasions, especially round
Christmas time, she might have been seen accompanied by some silent, dull-eyed,
stupid-looking girl, who would follow her dumbly in and out of stores, stopping
now and then to admire a cheap comb or a chain set with flashy imitation
stones—or, queerly enough, a doll with yellow hair and blue eyes and very pink
cheeks. But, alone or in company, her appearance in the stores of our town was
the signal for a sudden jump in the cost of living. The storekeepers mulcted
her; and she knew it and paid in silence, for she was of the class that has no
redress. She owned the House With the Closed Shutters, near the freight
depot—did Blanche Devine. And beneath her silks and laces and furs there was a
scarlet letter on her breast.
In a larger town than ours she would have passed unnoticed. She
did not look like a bad woman. Of course she used too much perfumed white
powder, and as she passed you caught the oversweet breath of a certain heavy
scent. Then, too, her diamond eardrops would have made any woman's features
look hard; but her plump face, in spite of its heaviness, wore an expression of
good-humoured intelligence, and her eyeglasses gave her somehow a look of
respectability. We do not associate vice with eyeglasses. So in a large city
she would have passed for a well-dressed prosperous, comfortable wife and
mother, who was in danger of losing her figure from an overabundance of good
living; but with us she was a town character, like Old Man Givins, the
drunkard, or the weak-minded Binns girl. When she passed the drug-store corner
there would be a sniggering among the vacant-eyed loafers idling there, and
they would leer at each other and jest in undertones.
So, knowing Blanche Devine as we did, there was something
resembling a riot in one of our most respectable neighbourhoods when it was
learned that she had given up her interest in the house near the freight depot
and was going to settle down in the white cottage on the corner and be good.
All the husbands in the block, urged on by righteously indignant wives, dropped
in on Alderman Mooney after supper to see if the thing could not be stopped.
The fourth of the protesting husbands to arrive was the Very Young Husband, who
lived next door to the corner cottage that Blanche Devine had bought. The Very
Young Husband had a Very Young Wife, and they were the joint owners of Snooky.
Snooky was three-going-on-four, and looked something like an angel—only
healthier and with grimier hands. The whole neighbourhood borrowed her and
tried to spoil her; but Snooky would not spoil.
Alderman Mooney was down in the cellar fooling with the furnace.
He was in his furnace overalls—a short black pipe in his mouth. Three
protesting husbands had just left. As the Very Young Husband, following Mrs.
Mooney's directions, cautiously descended the cellar stairs, Alderman Mooney
looked up from his tinkering. He peered through a haze of pipe-smoke.
"Hello!" he called, and waved the haze away with his
open palm. "Come on down! Been tinkering with this blamed furnace since
supper. She don't draw like she ought. 'Long toward spring a furnace always
gets balky. How many tons you used this winter?"
"Oh—ten," said the Very Young Husband shortly. Alderman
Mooney considered it thoughtfully. The Young Husband leaned up against the side
of the cistern, his hands in his pockets. "Say, Mooney, is that right
about Blanche Devine's having bought the house on the corner?"
"You're the fourth man that's been in to ask me that this
evening. I'm expecting the rest of the block before bedtime. She's bought it
all right."
The Young Husband flushed and kicked at a piece of coal with the
toe of his boot.
"Well, it's a darned shame!" he began hotly. "Jen
was ready to cry at supper. This'll be a fine neighbourhood for Snooky to grow
up in! What's a woman like that want to come into a respectable street for
anyway? I own my home and pay my taxes—"
Alderman Mooney looked up.
"So does she," he interrupted. "She's going to
improve the place—paint it, and put in a cellar and a furnace, and build a
porch, and lay a cement walk all round."
The Young Husband took his hands out of his pockets in order to
emphasize his remarks with gestures.
"What's that got to do with it? I don't care if she puts in
diamonds for windows and sets out Italian gardens and a terrace with peacocks
on it. You're the alderman of this ward, aren't you? Well, it was up to you to
keep her out of this block! You could have fixed it with an injunction or
something. I'm going to get up a petition—that's what I'm going—"
Alderman Mooney closed the furnace door with a bang that drowned
the rest of the threat. He turned the draft in a pipe overhead and brushed his
sooty palms briskly together like one who would put an end to a profitless
conversation.
"She's bought the house," he said mildly, "and paid
for it. And it's hers. She's got a right to live in this neighbourhood as long
as she acts respectable."
The Very Young Husband laughed.
"She won't last! They never do."
Alderman Mooney had taken his pipe out of his mouth and was
rubbing his thumb over the smooth bowl, looking down at it with unseeing eyes.
On his face was a queer look—the look of one who is embarrassed because he is
about to say something honest.
"Look here! I want to tell you something: I happened to be up
in the mayor's office the day Blanche signed for the place. She had to go
through a lot of red tape before she got it—had quite a time of it, she did!
And say, kid, that woman ain't so—bad."
The Very Young Husband exclaimed impatiently:
"Oh, don't give me any of that, Mooney! Blanche Devine's a
town character. Even the kids know what she is. If she's got religion or
something, and wants to quit and be decent, why doesn't she go to another
town—Chicago or some place—where nobody knows her?"
That motion of Alderman Mooney's thumb against the smooth pipebowl
stopped. He looked up slowly.
"That's what I said—the mayor too. But Blanche Devine said
she wanted to try it here. She said this was home to her. Funny—ain't it? Said
she wouldn't be fooling anybody here. They know her. And if she moved away, she
said, it'd leak out some way sooner or later. It does, she said. Always! Seems
she wants to live like—well, like other women. She put it like this: She says
she hasn't got religion, or any of that. She says she's no different than she
was when she was twenty. She says that for the last ten years the ambition of
her life has been to be able to go into a grocery store and ask the price of,
say, celery; and, if the clerk charged her ten when it ought to be seven, to be
able to sass him with a regular piece of her mind—and then sail out and trade
somewhere else until he saw that she didn't have to stand anything from
storekeepers, any more than any other woman that did her own marketing. She's a
smart woman, Blanche is! She's saved her money. God knows I ain't taking her
part—exactly; but she talked a little, and the mayor and me got a little of her
history."
A sneer appeared on the face of the Very Young Husband. He had
been known before he met Jen as a rather industrious sower of that seed known
as wild oats. He knew a thing or two, did the Very Young Husband, in spite of
his youth! He always fussed when Jen wore even a V-necked summer gown on the
street.
"Oh, she wasn't playing for sympathy," west on Alderman
Mooney in answer to the sneer. "She said she'd always paid her way and
always expected to. Seems her husband left her without a cent when she was
eighteen—with a baby. She worked for four dollars a week in a cheap eating
house. The two of 'em couldn't live on that. Then the baby—"
"Good night!" said the Very Young Husband. "I
suppose Mrs. Mooney's going to call?"
"Minnie! It was her scolding all through supper that drove me
down to monkey with the furnace. She's wild—Minnie is." He peeled off his
overalls and hung them on a nail. The Young Husband started to ascend the
cellar stairs. Alderman Mooney laid a detaining finger on his sleeve.
"Don't say anything in front of Minnie! She's boiling! Minnie and the kids
are going to visit her folks out West this summer; so I wouldn't so much as
dare to say 'Good morning!' to the Devine woman. Anyway a person wouldn't talk
to her, I suppose. But I kind of thought I'd tell you about her."
"Thanks!" said the Very Young Husband dryly.
In the early spring, before Blanche Devine moved in, there came
stonemasons, who began to build something. It was a great stone fireplace that
rose in massive incongruity at the side of the little white cottage. Blanche
Devine was trying to make a home for herself. We no longer build fireplaces for
physical warmth—we build them for the warmth of the soul; we build them to
dream by, to hope by, to home by.
Blanche Devine used to come and watch them now and then as the
work progressed. She had a way of walking round and round the house, looking up
at it pridefully and poking at plaster and paint with her umbrella or
fingertip. One day she brought with her a man with a spade. He spaded up a neat
square of ground at the side of the cottage and a long ridge near the fence
that separated her yard from that of the very young couple next door. The ridge
spelled sweet peas and nasturtiums to our small-town eyes.
On the day that Blanche Devine moved in there was wild agitation
among the white-ruffled bedroom curtains of the neighbourhood. Later on certain
odours, as of burning dinners, pervaded the atmosphere. Blanche Devine, flushed
and excited, her hair slightly askew, her diamond eardrops flashing, directed
the moving, wrapped in her great fur coat; but on the third morning we gasped
when she appeared out-of-doors, carrying a little household ladder, a pail of
steaming water and sundry voluminous white cloths. She reared the little ladder
against the side of the house mounted it cautiously, and began to wash windows:
with housewifely thoroughness. Her stout figure was swathed in a grey sweater
and on her head was a battered felt hat—the sort of window-washing costume that
has been worn by women from time immemorial. We noticed that she used plenty of
hot water and clean rags, and that she rubbed the glass until it sparkled,
leaning perilously sideways on the ladder to detect elusive streaks. Our
keenest housekeeping eye could find no fault with the way Blanche Devine washed
windows.
By May, Blanche Devine had left off her diamond eardrops—perhaps
it was their absence that gave her face a new expression. When she went down
town we noticed that her hats were more like the hats the other women in our
town wore; but she still affected extravagant footgear, as is right and proper
for a stout woman who has cause to be vain of her feet. We noticed that her
trips down town were rare that spring and summer. She used to come home laden
with little bundles; and before supper she would change her street clothes for
a neat, washable housedress, as is our thrifty custom. Through her bright
windows we could see her moving briskly about from kitchen to sitting room; and
from the smells that floated out from her kitchen door, she seemed to be
preparing for her solitary supper the same homely viands that were frying or
stewing or baking in our kitchens. Sometimes you could detect the delectable
scent of browning hot tea biscuit. It takes a brave, courageous, determined
woman to make tea biscuit for no one but herself.
Blanche Devine joined the church. On the first Sunday morning she
came to the service there was a little flurry among the ushers at the vestibule
door. They seated her well in the rear. The second Sunday morning a dreadful
thing happened. The woman next to whom they seated her turned, regarded her
stonily for a moment, then rose agitatedly and moved to a pew across the aisle.
Blanche Devine's face went a dull red beneath her white powder. She never came
again—though we saw the minister visit her once or twice. She always
accompanied him to the door pleasantly, holding it well open until he was down
the little flight of steps and on the sidewalk. The minister's wife did not
call—but, then, there are limits to the duties of a minister's wife.
She rose early, like the rest of us; and as summer came on we used
to see her moving about in her little garden patch in the dewy, golden morning.
She wore absurd pale-blue kimonos that made her stout figure loom immense
against the greenery of garden and apple tree. The neighbourhood women viewed
these negligées with Puritan disapproval as they smoothed down their own prim,
starched gingham skirts. They said it was disgusting—and perhaps it was; but
the habit of years is not easily overcome. Blanche Devine—snipping her sweet
peas; peering anxiously at the Virginia creeper that clung with such fragile
fingers to the trellis; watering the flower baskets that hung from her
porch—was blissfully unconscious of the disapproving eyes. I wish one of us had
just stopped to call good morning to her over the fence, and to say in our
neighbourly, small town way: "My, ain't this a scorcher! So early too!
It'll be fierce by noon!" But we did not.
I think perhaps the evenings must have been the loneliest for her.
The summer evenings in our little town are filled with intimate, human, neighbourly
sounds. After the heat of the day it is infinitely pleasant to relax in the
cool comfort of the front porch, with the life of the town eddying about us. We
sew and read out there until it grows dusk. We call across-lots to our
next-door neighbour. The men water the lawns and the flower boxes and get
together in little quiet groups to discuss the new street paving. I have even
known Mrs. Hines to bring her cherries out there when she had canning to do,
and pit them there on the front porch partially shielded by her porch vine, but
not so effectually that she was deprived of the sights and sounds about her.
The kettle in her lap and the dishpan full of great ripe cherries on the porch
floor by her chair, she would pit and chat and peer out through the vines, the
red juice staining her plump bare arms.
I have wondered since what Blanche Devine thought of us those
lonesome evenings—those evenings filled with little friendly sights and sounds.
It is lonely, uphill business at best—this being good. It must have been
difficult for her, who had dwelt behind closed shutters so long, to seat
herself on the new front porch for all the world to stare at; but she did sit
there—resolutely—watching us in silence.
She seized hungrily upon the stray crumbs of conversation that
fell to her. The milkman and the iceman and the butcher boy used to hold daily
conversation with her. They—sociable gentlemen—would stand on her doorstep, one
grimy hand resting against the white of her doorpost, exchanging the time of
day with Blanche in the doorway—a tea towel in one hand, perhaps, and a plate
in the other. Her little house was a miracle of cleanliness. It was no uncommon
sight to see her down on her knees on the kitchen floor, wielding her brush and
rag like the rest of us. In canning and preserving time there floated out from
her kitchen the pungent scent of pickled crab apples; the mouth-watering,
nostril-pricking smell that meant sweet pickles; or the cloying, tantalising,
divinely sticky odour that meant raspberry jam. Snooky, from her side of the
fence, often used to peer through the pickets, gazing in the direction of the
enticing smells next door. Early one September morning there floated out from
Blanche Devine's kitchen that clean, fragrant, sweet scent of fresh-baked cookies—cookies
with butter in them, and spice, and with nuts on top. Just by the smell of them
your mind's eye pictured them coming from the oven—crisp brown circlets,
crumbly, toothsome, delectable. Snooky, in her scarlet sweater and cap, sniffed
them from afar and straightway deserted her sandpile to take her stand at the
fence. She peered through the restraining bars, standing on tiptoe. Blanche
Devine, glancing up from her board and rolling-pin, saw the eager golden head.
And Snooky, with guile in her heart, raised one fat, dimpled hand above the
fence and waved it friendlily. Blanche Devine waved back. Thus encouraged,
Snooky's two hands wigwagged frantically above the pickets. Blanche Devine
hesitated a moment, her floury hand on her hip. Then she went to the pantry
shelf and took out a clean white saucer. She selected from the brown jar on the
table three of the brownest, crumbliest, most perfect cookies, with a walnut
meat perched atop of each, placed them temptingly on the saucer and, descending
the steps, came swiftly across the grass to the triumphant Snooky. Blanche
Devine held out the saucer, her lips smiling, her eyes tender. Snooky reached
up with one plump white arm.
"Snooky!" shrilled a high voice. "Snooky!" A
voice of horror and of wrath. "Come here to me this minute! And don't you
dare to touch those!" Snooky hesitated rebelliously, one pink finger in
her pouting mouth. "Snooky! Do you hear me?"
And the Very Young Wife began to descend the steps of her back
porch. Snooky, regretful eyes on the toothsome dainties, turned away aggrieved.
The Very Young Wife, her lips set, her eyes flashing, advanced and seized the
shrieking Snooky by one writhing arm and dragged her away toward home and
safety.
Blanche Devine stood there at the fence, holding the saucer in her
hand. The saucer tipped slowly, and the three cookies slipped off and fell to
the grass. Blanche Devine followed them with her eyes and stood staring at them
a moment. Then she turned quickly, went into the house and shut the door.
It was about this time we noticed that Blanche Devine was away
much of the time. The little white cottage would be empty for a week. We knew
she was out of town because the expressman would come for her trunk. We used to
lift our eyebrows significantly. The newspapers and handbills would accumulate
in a dusty little heap on the porch; but when she returned there was always a
grand cleaning, with the windows open, and Blanche—her head bound turbanwise in
a towel—appearing at a window every few minutes to shake out a dustcloth. She
seemed to put an enormous amount of energy into those cleanings—as if they were
a sort of safety valve.
As winter came on she used to sit up before her grate fire long,
long after we were asleep in our beds. When she neglected to pull down the
shades we could see the flames of her cosy fire dancing gnomelike on the wall.
There came a night of sleet and snow, and wind and rattling
hail—one of those blustering, wild nights that are followed by morning-paper
reports of trains stalled in drifts, mail delayed, telephone and telegraph
wires down. It must have been midnight or past when there came a hammering at
Blanche Devine's door—a persistent, clamorous rapping. Blanche Devine, sitting
before her dying fire half asleep, started and cringed when she heard it; then
jumped to her feet, her hand at her breast—her eyes darting this way and that,
as though seeking escape.
She had heard a rapping like that before. It had meant bluecoats
swarming up the stairway, and frightened cries and pleadings, and wild
confusion. So she started forward now, quivering. And then she remembered,
being wholly awake now—she remembered, and threw up her head and smiled a
little bitterly and walked toward the door. The hammering continued, louder
than ever. Blanche Devine flicked on the porch light and opened the door. The
half-clad figure of the Very Young Wife next door staggered into the room. She
seized Blanche Devine's arm with both her frenzied hands and shook her, the
wind and snow beating in upon both of them.
"The baby!" she screamed in a high, hysterical voice.
"The baby! The baby—"
Blanche Devine shut the door and shook the Young Wife smartly by
the shoulders.
"Stop screaming," she said quietly. "Is she
sick?"
The Young Wife told her, her teeth chattering:
"Come quick! She's dying! Will's out of town. I tried to get
the doctor. The telephone wouldn't—I saw your light! For God's sake—"
Blanche Devine grasped the Young Wife's arm, opened the door, and
together they sped across the little space that separated the two houses.
Blanche Devine was a big woman, but she took the stairs like a girl and found
the right bedroom by some miraculous woman instinct. A dreadful choking,
rattling sound was coming from Snooky's bed.
"Croup," said Blanche Devine, and began her fight.
It was a good fight. She marshalled her little inadequate forces,
made up of the half-fainting Young Wife and the terrified and awkward hired
girl.
"Get the hot water on—lots of it!" Blanche Devine pinned
up her sleeves. "Hot cloths! Tear up a sheet—or anything! Got an oilstove?
I want a teakettle boiling in the room. She's got to have the steam. If that
don't do it we'll raise an umbrella over her and throw a sheet over, and hold
the kettle under till the steam gets to her that way. Got any ipecac?"
The Young Wife obeyed orders, whitefaced and shaking. Once Blanche
Devine glanced up at her sharply.
"Don't you dare faint!" she commanded.
And the fight went on. Gradually the breathing that had been so
frightful became softer, easier. Blanche Devine did not relax. It was not until
the little figure breathed gently in sleep that Blanche Devine sat back
satisfied. Then she tucked a cover ever so gently at the side of the bed, took
a last satisfied look at the face on the pillow, and turned to look at the wan,
dishevelled Young Wife.
"She's all right now. We can get the doctor when morning
comes—though I don't know's you'll need him."
The Young Wife came round to Blanche Devine's side of the bed and
stood looking up at her.
"My baby died," said Blanche Devine simply. The Young
Wife gave a little inarticulate cry, put her two hands on Blanche Devine's
broad shoulders and laid her tired head on her breast.
"I guess I'd better be going," said Blanche Devine.
The Young Wife raised her head. Her eyes were round with fright.
"Going! Oh, please stay! I'm so afraid. Suppose she should
take sick again! That awful—awful breathing—"
"I'll stay if you want me to."
"Oh, please! I'll make up your bed and you can rest—"
"I'm not sleepy. I'm not much of a hand to sleep anyway. I'll
sit up here in the hall, where there's a light. You get to bed. I'll watch and
see that every-thing's all right. Have you got something I can read out
here—something kind of lively—with a love story in it?"
So the night went by. Snooky slept in her little white bed. The
Very Young Wife half dozed in her bed, so near the little one. In the hall, her
stout figure looming grotesque in wall-shadows, sat Blanche Devine pretending
to read. Now and then she rose and tiptoed into the bedroom with miraculous
quiet, and stooped over the little bed and listened and looked—and tiptoed away
again, satisfied.
The Young Husband came home from his business trip next day with
tales of snowdrifts and stalled engines. Blanche Devine breathed a sigh of
relief when she saw him from her kitchen window. She watched the house now with
a sort of proprietary eye. She wondered about Snooky; but she knew better than
to ask. So she waited. The Young Wife next door had told her husband all about
that awful night—had told him with tears and sobs. The Very Young Husband had
been very, very angry with her—angry and hurt, he said, and astonished! Snooky
could not have been so sick! Look at her now! As well as ever. And to have
called such a woman! Well, really he did not want to be harsh; but she must
understand that she must never speak to the woman again. Never!
So the next day the Very Young Wife happened to go by with the
Young Husband. Blanche Devine spied them from her sitting-room window, and she
made the excuse of looking in her mailbox in order to go to the door. She stood
in the doorway and the Very Young Wife went by on the arm of her husband. She
went by—rather white-faced—without a look or a word or a sign!
And then this happened! There came into Blanche Devine's face a
look that made slits of her eyes, and drew her mouth down into an ugly, narrow
line, and that made the muscles of her jaw tense and hard. It was the ugliest
look you can imagine. Then she smiled—if having one's lips curl away from one's
teeth can be called smiling.
Two days later there was great news of the white cottage on the
corner. The curtains were down; the furniture was packed; the rugs were rolled.
The wagons came and backed up to the house and took those things that had made
a home for Blanche Devine. And when we heard that she had bought back her
interest in the House With the Closed Shutters, near the freight depot, we
sniffed.
"I knew she wouldn't last!" we said.
VII.THE GIRL WHO WENT RIGHT
There is a story—Kipling, I think—that tells of a spirited horse
galloping in the dark suddenly drawing up tense, hoofs bunched, slim flanks
quivering, nostrils dilated, ears pricked. Urging being of no avail the rider
dismounts, strikes a match, advances a cautious step or so, and finds himself
at the precipitous brink of a newly formed crevasse.
So it is with your trained editor. A miraculous sixth sense guides
him. A mysterious something warns him of danger lurking within the seemingly
innocent oblong white envelope. Without slitting the flap, without pausing to
adjust his tortoise-rimmed glasses, without clearing his throat, without
lighting his cigarette—he knows.
The deadly newspaper story he scents in the dark. Cub reporter.
Crusty city editor. Cub fired. Stumbles on to a big story. Staggers into
newspaper office wild-eyed. Last edition. "Hold the presses!" Crusty
C.E. stands over cub's typewriter grabbing story line by line. Even foreman of
pressroom moved to tears by tale. "Boys, this ain't just a story this
kid's writin'. This is history!" Story finished. Cub faints. C.E. makes
him star reporter.
The athletic story: "I could never marry a mollycoddle like
you, Harold Hammond!" Big game of the year. Team crippled. Second half.
Halfback hurt. Harold Hammond, scrub, into the game. Touchdown! Broken leg.
Five to nothing. "Harold, can you ever, ever forgive me?"
The pseudo-psychological story: She had been sitting before the
fire for a long, long time. The flame had flickered and died down to a
smouldering ash. The sound of his departing footsteps echoed and re-echoed
through her brain. But the little room was very, very still.
The shop-girl story: Torn boots and temptation, tears and snears,
pathos and bathos, all the way from Zola to the vice inquiry.
Having thus attempted to hide the deadly commonplaceness of this
story with a thin layer of cynicism, perhaps even the wily editor may be
tricked into taking the leap.
Four weeks before the completion of the new twelve-story addition
the store advertised for two hundred experienced saleswomen. Rachel Wiletzky,
entering the superintendent's office after a wait of three hours, was Applicant
No. 179. The superintendent did not look up as Rachel came in. He scribbled
busily on a pad of paper at his desk, thus observing rules one and two in the
proper conduct of superintendents when interviewing applicants. Rachel
Wiletzky, standing by his desk, did not cough or wriggle or rustle her skirts
or sag on one hip. A sense of her quiet penetrated the superintendent's
subconsciousness. He glanced up hurriedly over his left shoulder. Then he laid
down his pencil and sat up slowly. His mind was working quickly enough though.
In the twelve seconds that intervened between the laying down of the pencil and
the sitting up in his chair he had hastily readjusted all his well-founded
preconceived ideas on the appearance of shop-girl applicants.
Rachel Wiletzky had the colouring and physique of a dairymaid. It
was the sort of colouring that you associate in your mind with lush green
fields, and Jersey cows, and village maids, in Watteau frocks, balancing
brimming pails aloft in the protecting curve of one rounded upraised arm, with
perhaps a Maypole dance or so in the background. Altogether, had the
superintendent been given to figures of speech, he might have said that Rachel was
as much out of place among the preceding one hundred and seventy-eight
bloodless, hollow-chested, stoop-shouldered applicants as a sunflower would be
in a patch of dank white fungi.
He himself was one of those bleached men that you find on the
office floor of department stores. Grey skin, grey eyes, greying hair, careful
grey clothes—seemingly as void of pigment as one of those sunless things you
disclose when you turn over a board that has long lain on the mouldy floor of a
damp cellar. It was only when you looked closely that you noticed a fleck of
golden brown in the cold grey of each eye, and a streak of warm brown forming
an unquenchable forelock that the conquering grey had not been able to
vanquish. It may have been a something within him corresponding to those
outward bits of human colouring that tempted him to yield to a queer impulse.
He whipped from his breast-pocket the grey-bordered handkerchief, reached up
swiftly and passed one white corner of it down the length of Rachel Wiletzky's
Killarney-rose left cheek. The rude path down which the handkerchief had
travelled deepened to red for a moment before both rose-pink cheeks bloomed
into scarlet. The superintendent gazed rather ruefully from unblemished
handkerchief to cheek and back again.
"Why—it—it's real!" he stammered.
Rachel Wiletzky smiled a good-natured little smile that had in it
a dash of superiority.
"If I was putting it on," she said, "I hope I'd
have sense enough to leave something to the imagination. This colour out of a
box would take a spiderweb veil to tone it down."
Not much more than a score of words. And yet before the half were
spoken you were certain that Rachel Wiletzky's knowledge of lush green fields
and bucolic scenes was that gleaned from the condensed-milk ads that glare down
at one from billboards and street-car chromos. Hers was the ghetto voice—harsh,
metallic, yet fraught with the resonant music of tragedy.
"H'm—name?" asked the grey superintendent. He knew that
vocal quality.
A queer look stole into Rachel Wiletzky's face, a look of cunning
and determination and shrewdness.
"Ray Willets," she replied composedly. "Double
l."
"Clerked before, of course. Our advertisement stated—"
"Oh yes," interrupted Ray Willets hastily, eagerly.
"I can sell goods. My customers like me. And I don't get tired. I don't
know why, but I don't."
The superintendent glanced up again at the red that glowed higher
with the girl's suppressed excitement. He took a printed slip from the little
pile of paper that lay on his desk.
"Well, anyway, you're the first clerk I ever saw who had so
much red blood that she could afford to use it for decorative purposes. Step
into the next room, answer the questions on this card and turn it in. You'll be
notified."
Ray Willets took the searching, telltale blank that put its
questions so pertinently. "Where last employed?" it demanded.
"Why did you leave? Do you live at home?"
Ray Willets moved slowly away toward the door opposite. The
superintendent reached forward to press the button that would summon Applicant
No. 180. But before his finger touched it Ray Willets turned and came back
swiftly. She held the card out before his surprised eyes.
"I can't fill this out. If I do I won't get the job. I work
over at the Halsted Street Bazaar. You know—the Cheap Store. I lied and sent
word I was sick so I could come over here this morning. And they dock you for
time off whether you're sick or not."
The superintendent drummed impatiently with his fingers. "I
can't listen to all this. Haven't time. Fill out your blank, and if—"
All that latent dramatic force which is a heritage of her race
came to the girl's aid now.
"The blank! How can I say on a blank that I'm leaving because
I want to be where real people are? What chance has a girl got over there on
the West Side? I'm different. I don't know why, but I am. Look at my face!
Where should I get red cheeks from? From not having enough to eat half the time
and sleeping three in a bed?"
She snatched off her shabby glove and held one hand out before the
man's face.
"From where do I get such hands? Not from selling hardware
over at Twelfth and Halsted. Look at it! Say, couldn't that hand sell silk and
lace?"
Some one has said that to make fingers and wrists like those which
Ray Willets held out for inspection it is necessary to have had at least five
generations of ancestors who have sat with their hands folded in their laps.
Slender, tapering, sensitive hands they were, pink-tipped, temperamental.
Wistful hands they were, speaking hands, an inheritance, perhaps, from some
dreamer ancestor within the old-world ghetto, some long-haired, velvet-eyed
student of the Talmud dwelling within the pale with its squalor and noise, and
dreaming of unseen things beyond the confining gates—things rare and exquisite
and fine.
"Ashamed of your folks?" snapped the superintendent.
"N-no—No! But I want to be different. I am different! Give me
a chance, will you? I'm straight. And I'll work. And I can sell goods. Try
me."
That all-pervading greyness seemed to have lifted from the man at
the desk. The brown flecks in the eyes seemed to spread and engulf the
surrounding colourlessness. His face, too, took on a glow that seemed to come
from within. It was like the lifting of a thick grey mist on a foggy morning,
so that the sun shines bright and clear for a brief moment before the damp
curtain rolls down again and effaces it.
He leaned forward in his chair, a queer half-smile on his face.
"I'll give you your chance," he said, "for one
month. At the end of that time I'll send for you. I'm not going to watch you.
I'm not going to have you watched. Of course your sale slips will show the
office whether you're selling goods or not. If you're not they'll discharge
you. But that's routine. What do you want to sell?"
"What do I want to—Do you mean—Why, I want to sell the lacy
things."
"The lacy—"
Ray, very red-cheeked, made the plunge. "The—the lawnjeree,
you know. The things with ribbon and handwork and yards and yards of real lace.
I've seen 'em in the glass case in the French Room. Seventy-nine dollars marked
down from one hundred."
The superintendent scribbled on a card. "Show this Monday
morning. Miss Jevne is the head of your department. You'll spend two hours a
day in the store school of instruction for clerks. Here, you're forgetting your
glove."
The grey look had settled down on him again as he reached out to
press the desk button. Ray Willets passed out at the door opposite the one
through which Rachel Wiletzky had entered.
Some one in the department nick-named her Chubbs before she had
spent half a day in the underwear and imported lingerie. At the store school
she listened and learned. She learned how important were things of which
Halsted Street took no cognisance. She learned to make out a sale slip as
complicated as an engineering blueprint. She learned that a clerk must develop
suavity and patience in the same degree as a customer waxes waspish and
insulting, and that the spectrum's colours do not exist in the costume of the
girl-behind-the-counter. For her there are only black and white. These things
she learned and many more, and remembered them, for behind the rosy cheeks and
the terrier-bright eyes burned the indomitable desire to get on. And the
finished embodiment of all of Ray Willets' desires and ambitions was daily
before her eyes in the presence of Miss Jevne, head of the lingerie and
negligées.
Of Miss Jevne it might be said that she was real where Ray was
artificial, and artificial where Ray was real. Everything that Miss Jevne wore
was real. She was as modish as Ray was shabby, as slim as Ray was stocky, as
artificially tinted and tinctured as Ray was naturally rosy-cheeked and buxom.
It takes real money to buy clothes as real as those worn by Miss Jevne. The
soft charmeuse in her graceful gown was real and miraculously draped. The
cobweb-lace collar that so delicately traced its pattern against the black
background of her gown was real. So was the ripple of lace that cascaded down
the front of her blouse. The straight, correct, hideously modern lines of her
figure bespoke a real eighteen-dollar corset. Realest of all, there reposed on
Miss Jevne's bosom a bar pin of platinum and diamonds—very real diamonds set in
a severely plain but very real bar of precious platinum. So if you except Miss
Jevne's changeless colour, her artificial smile, her glittering hair and her
undulating head-of-the-department walk, you can see that everything about Miss
Jevne was as real as money can make one.
Miss Jevne, when she deigned to notice Ray Willets at all, called
her "girl," thus: "Girl, get down one of those Number Seventeens
for me—with the pink ribbons." Ray did not resent the tone. She thought
about Miss Jevne as she worked. She thought about her at night when she was
washing and ironing her other shirtwaist for next day's wear. In the Halsted
Street Bazaar the girls had been on terms of dreadful intimacy with those
affairs in each other's lives which popularly are supposed to be private
knowledge. They knew the sum which each earned per week; how much they turned
in to help swell the family coffers and how much they were allowed to keep for
their own use. They knew each time a girl spent a quarter for a cheap sailor
collar or a pair of near-silk stockings. Ray Willets, who wanted passionately
to be different, whose hands so loved the touch of the lacy, silky garments
that made up the lingerie and negligee departments, recognised the perfection
of Miss Jevne's faultless realness—recognised it, appreciated it, envied it. It
worried her too. How did she do it? How did one go about attaining the same
degree of realness?
Meanwhile she worked. She learned quickly. She took care always to
be cheerful, interested, polite. After a short week's handling of lacy silken
garments she ceased to feel a shock when she saw Miss Jevne displaying a robe-de-nuit made
up of white cloud and sea-foam and languidly assuring the customer that of
course it wasn't to be expected that you could get a fine handmade lace at that
price—only twenty-seven-fifty. Now if she cared to look at something really
fine—made entirely by hand—why—
The end of the first ten days found so much knowledge crammed into
Ray Willets' clever, ambitious little head that the pink of her cheeks had
deepened to carmine, as a child grows flushed and too bright-eyed when
overstimulated and overtired.
Miss Myrtle, the store beauty, strolled up to Ray, who was
straightening a pile of corset covers and brassieres. Miss Myrtle
was the store's star cloak-and-suit model. Tall, svelte, graceful, lovely in
line and contour, she was remarkably like one of those exquisite imbeciles that
Rossetti used to love to paint. Hers were the great cowlike eyes, the wonderful
oval face, the marvellous little nose, the perfect lips and chin. Miss Myrtle
could don a forty-dollar gown, parade it before a possible purchaser, and make
it look like an imported model at one hundred and twenty-five. When Miss Myrtle
opened those exquisite lips and spoke you got a shock that hurt. She laid one
cool slim finger on Ray's ruddy cheek.
"Sure enough!" she drawled nasally. "Whereja get it
anyway, kid? You must of been brought up on peaches 'n' cream and slept in a
pink cloud somewheres."
"Me!" laughed Ray, her deft fingers busy straightening a
bow here, a ruffle of lace there. "Me! The L-train runs so near my bed
that if it was ever to get a notion to take a short cut it would slice off my
legs to the knees."
"Live at home?" Miss Myrtle's grasshopper mind never
dwelt long on one subject.
"Well, sure," replied Ray. "Did you think I had a
flat up on the Drive?"
"I live at home too," Miss Myrtle announced impressively.
She was leaning indolently against the table. Her eyes followed the deft, quick
movements of Ray's slender, capable hands. Miss Myrtle always leaned when there
was anything to lean on. Involuntarily she fell into melting poses. One
shoulder always drooped slightly, one toe always trailed a bit like the picture
on the cover of the fashion magazines, one hand and arm always followed the
line of her draperies while the other was raised to hip or breast or head.
Ray's busy hands paused a moment. She looked up at the picturesque
Myrtle. "All the girls do, don't they?"
"Huh?" said Myrtle blankly.
"Live at home, I mean? The application blank says—"
"Say, you've got clever hands, ain't you?" put in Miss
Myrtle irrelevantly. She looked ruefully at her own short, stubby,
unintelligent hands, that so perfectly reflected her character in that
marvellous way hands have. "Mine are stupid-looking. I'll bet you'll get
on." She sagged to the other hip with a weary gracefulness. "I ain't
got no brains," she complained.
"Where do they live then?" persisted Ray.
"Who? Oh, I live at home"—again virtuously—"but
I've got some heart if I am dumb. My folks couldn't get along without what I
bring home every week. A lot of the girls have flats. But that don't last. Now
Jevne—"
"Yes?" said Ray eagerly. Her plump face with its
intelligent eyes was all aglow.
Miss Myrtle lowered her voice discreetly. "Her own folks
don't know where she lives. They says she sends 'em money every month, but with
the understanding that they don't try to come to see her. They live way over on
the West Side somewhere. She makes her buying trip to Europe every year. Speaks
French and everything. They say when she started to earn real money she just
cut loose from her folks. They was a drag on her and she wanted to get to the
top."
"Say, that pin's real, ain't it?"
"Real? Well, I should say it is! Catch Jevne wearing anything
that's phony. I saw her at the theatre one night. Dressed! Well, you'd have
thought that birds of paradise were national pests, like English sparrows. Not
that she looked loud. But that quiet, rich elegance, you know, that just smells
of money. Say, but I'll bet she has her lonesome evenings!"
Ray Willets' eyes darted across the long room and rested upon the
shining black-clad figure of Miss Jevne moving about against the luxurious
ivory-and-rose background of the French Room.
"She—she left her folks, h'm?" she mused aloud.
Miss Myrtle, the brainless, regarded the tips of her shabby boots.
"What did it get her?" she asked as though to herself.
"I know what it does to a girl, seeing and handling stuff that's made for
millionaires, you get a taste for it yourself. Take it from me, it ain't the
six-dollar girl that needs looking after. She's taking her little pay envelope
home to her mother that's a widow and it goes to buy milk for the kids.
Sometimes I think the more you get the more you want. Somebody ought to turn
that vice inquiry on to the tracks of that thirty-dollar-a-week girl in the
Irish crochet waist and the diamond bar pin. She'd make swell readin'."
There fell a little silence between the two—a silence of which
neither was conscious. Both were thinking, Myrtle disjointedly, purposelessly,
all unconscious that her slow, untrained mind had groped for a great and vital
truth and found it; Ray quickly, eagerly, connectedly, a new and daring resolve
growing with lightning rapidity.
"There's another new baby at our house," she said aloud
suddenly. "It cries all night pretty near."
"Ain't they fierce?" laughed Myrtle. "And yet I
dunno—"
She fell silent again. Then with the half-sign with which we waken
from day dreams she moved away in response to the beckoning finger of a
saleswoman in the evening-coat section. Ten minutes later her exquisite face
rose above the soft folds of a black charmeuse coat that rippled away from her
slender, supple body in lines that a sculptor dreams of and never achieves.
Ray Willets finished straightening her counter. Trade was slow.
She moved idly in the direction of the black-garbed figure that flitted about
in the costly atmosphere of the French section. It must be a very special
customer to claim Miss Jevne's expert services. Ray glanced in through the
half-opened glass and ivory-enamel doors.
"Here, girl," called Miss Jevne. Ray paused and entered.
Miss Jevne was frowning. "Miss Myrtle's busy. Just slip this on. Careful
now. Keep your arms close to your head."
She slipped a marvellously wrought garment over Ray's sleek head.
Fluffy drifts of equally exquisite lingerie lay scattered about on chairs, over
mirrors, across showtables. On one of the fragile little ivory-and-rose chairs,
in the centre of the costly little room, sat a large, blonde, perfumed woman
who clanked and rustled and swished as she moved. Her eyes were white-lidded
and heavy, but strangely bright. One ungloved hand was very white too, but
pudgy and covered so thickly with gems that your eye could get no clear picture
of any single stone or setting.
Ray, clad in the diaphanous folds of the robe-de-nuit that
was so beautifully adorned with delicate embroideries wrought by the patient,
needle-scarred fingers of some silent, white-faced nun in a far-away convent,
paced slowly up and down the short length of the room that the critical eye of
this coarse, unlettered creature might behold the wonders woven by this weary
French nun, and, beholding, approve.
"It ain't bad," spake the blonde woman grudgingly.
"How much did you say?"
"Ninety-five," Miss Jevne made answer smoothly. "I
selected it myself when I was in France my last trip. A bargain."
She slid the robe carefully over Ray's head. The frown came once
more to her brow. She bent close to Ray's ear. "Your waist's ripped under
the left arm. Disgraceful!"
The blonde woman moved and jangled a bit in her chair. "Well,
I'll take it," she sighed. "Look at the colour on that girl! And it's
real too." She rose heavily and came over to Ray, reached up and pinched
her cheek appraisingly with perfumed white thumb and forefinger.
"That'll do, girl," said Miss Jevne sweetly. "Take
this along and change these ribbons from blue to pink."
Ray Willets bore the fairy garment away with her. She bore it
tenderly, almost reverently. It was more than a garment. It represented in her
mind a new standard of all that was beautiful and exquisite and desirable.
Ten days before the formal opening of the new twelve-story
addition there was issued from the superintendent's office an order that made a
little flurry among the clerks in the sections devoted to women's dress. The
new store when thrown open would mark an epoch in the retail drygoods business
of the city, the order began. Thousands were to be spent on perishable
decorations alone. The highest type of patronage was to be catered to.
Therefore the women in the lingerie, negligée, millinery, dress, suit and
corset sections were requested to wear during opening week a modest but modish
black one-piece gown that would blend with the air of elegance which those
departments were to maintain.
Ray Willets of the lingerie and negligée sections read her order
slip slowly. Then she reread it. Then she did a mental sum in simple
arithmetic. A childish sum it was. And yet before she got her answer the
solving of it had stamped on her face a certain hard, set, resolute look.
The store management had chosen Wednesday to be the opening day. By
eight-thirty o'clock Wednesday morning the French lingerie, millinery and dress
sections, with their women clerks garbed in modest but modish black one-piece
gowns, looked like a levee at Buckingham when the court is in mourning. But the
ladies-in-waiting, grouped about here and there, fell back in respectful
silence when there paced down the aisle the queen royal in the person of Miss
Jevne. There is a certain sort of black gown that is more startling and daring
than scarlet. Miss Jevne's was that style. Fast black you might term it. Miss
Jevne was aware of the flurry and flutter that followed her majestic progress
down the aisle to her own section. She knew that each eye was caught in the tip
of the little dog-eared train that slipped and slunk and wriggled along the
ground, thence up to the soft drapery caught so cunningly just below the knee,
up higher to the marvelously simple sash that swayed with each step, to the
soft folds of black against which rested the very real diamond and platinum bar
pin, up to the lace at her throat, and then stopping, blinking and staring
again gazed fixedly at the string of pearls that lay about her throat, pearls
rosily pink, mistily grey. An aura of self-satisfaction enveloping her, Miss
Jevne disappeared behind the rose-garlanded portals of the new cream-and-mauve
French section. And there the aura vanished, quivering. For standing before one
of the plate-glass cases and patting into place with deft fingers the satin bow
of a hand-wrought chemise was Ray Willets, in her shiny little black serge
skirt and the braver of her two white shirtwaists.
Miss Jevne quickened her pace. Ray turned. Her bright brown eyes
grew brighter at sight of Miss Jevne's wondrous black. Miss Jevne, her train
wound round her feet like an actress' photograph, lifted her eyebrows to an
unbelievable height.
"Explain that costume!" she said.
"Costume?" repeated Ray, fencing.
Miss Jevne's thin lips grew thinner. "You understood that
women in this department were to wear black one-piece gowns this week!"
Ray smiled a little twisted smile. "Yes, I understood."
"Then what—"
Ray's little smile grew a trifle more uncertain. "—I had the
money—last week—I was going to—The baby took sick—the heat I guess, coming so
sudden. We had the doctor—and medicine—I—Say, your own folks come before black
one-piece dresses!"
Miss Jevne's cold eyes saw the careful patch under Ray's left arm
where a few days before the torn place had won her a reproof. It was the last
straw.
"You can't stay in this department in that rig!"
"Who says so?" snapped Ray with a flash of Halsted
Street bravado. "If my customers want a peek at Paquin I'll send 'em to
you."
"I'll show you who says so!" retorted Miss Jevne, quite
losing sight of the queen business. The stately form of the floor manager was
visible among the glass showcases beyond. Miss Jevne sought him agitatedly. All
the little sagging lines about her mouth showed up sharply, defying years of
careful massage.
The floor manager bent his stately head and listened. Then, led by
Miss Jevne, he approached Ray Willets, whose deft fingers, trembling a very
little now, were still pretending to adjust the perfect pink-satin bow.
The manager touched her on the arm not unkindly. "Report for
work in the kitchen utensils, fifth floor," he said. Then at sight of the
girl's face: "We can't have one disobeying orders, you know. The rest of
the clerks would raise a row in no time."
Down in the kitchen utensils and household goods there was no rule
demanding modest but modish one-piece gowns. In the kitchenware one could don
black sateen sleevelets to protect one's clean white waist without breaking the
department's tenets of fashion. You could even pin a handkerchief across the
front of your waist, if your job was that of dusting the granite ware.
At first Ray's delicate fingers, accustomed to the touch of soft,
sheer white stuff and ribbon and lace and silk, shrank from contact with meat
grinders, and aluminum stewpans, and egg beaters, and waffle irons, and pie
tins. She handled them contemptuously. She sold them listlessly. After weeks of
expatiating to customers on the beauties and excellencies of gossamer lingerie
she found it difficult to work up enthusiasm over the virtues of dishpans and
spice boxes. By noon she was less resentful. By two o'clock she was saying to a
fellow clerk:
"Well, anyway, in this section you don't have to tell a woman
how graceful and charming she's going to look while she's working the washing
machine."
She was a born saleswoman. In spite of herself she became
interested in the buying problems of the practical and plain-visaged housewives
who patronised this section. By three o'clock she was looking
thoughtful—thoughtful and contented.
Then came the summons. The lingerie section was swamped! Report to
Miss Jevne at once! Almost regretfully Ray gave her customer over to an idle
clerk and sought out Miss Jevne. Some of that lady's statuesqueness was gone.
The bar pin on her bosom rose and fell rapidly. She espied Ray and met her
halfway. In her hand she carried a soft black something which she thrust at
Ray.
"Here, put that on in one of the fitting rooms. Be quick
about it. It's your size. The department's swamped. Hurry now!"
Ray took from Miss Jevne the black silk gown, modest but modish.
There was no joy in Ray's face. Ten minutes later she emerged in the limp and
clinging little frock that toned down her colour and made her plumpness seem
but rounded charm.
The big store will talk for many a day of that afternoon and the
three afternoons that followed, until Sunday brought pause to the thousands of
feet beating a ceaseless tattoo up and down the thronged aisles. On the Monday
following thousands swarmed down upon the store again, but not in such
overwhelming numbers. There were breathing spaces. It was during one of these
that Miss Myrtle, the beauty, found time for a brief moment's chat with Ray
Willets.
Ray was straightening her counter again. She had a passion for
order. Myrtle eyed her wearily. Her slender shoulders had carried an endless
number and variety of garments during those four days and her feet had paced
weary miles that those garments might the better be displayed.
"Black's grand on you," observed Myrtle. "Tones you
down." She glanced sharply at the gown. "Looks just like one of our
eighteen-dollar models. Copy it?"
"No," said Ray, still straightening petticoats and
corset covers. Myrtle reached out a weary, graceful arm and touched one of the
lacy piles adorned with cunning bows of pink and blue to catch the shopping
eye.
"Ain't that sweet!" she exclaimed. "I'm crazy about
that shadow lace. It's swell under voiles. I wonder if I could take one of them
home to copy it."
Ray glanced up. "Oh, that!" she said contemptuously.
"That's just a cheap skirt. Only twelve-fifty. Machine-made lace.
Imitation embroidery—"
She stopped. She stared a moment at Myrtle with the fixed and
wide-eyed gaze of one who does not see.
"What'd I just say to you?"
"Huh?" ejaculated Myrtle, mystified.
"What'd I just say?" repeated Ray.
Myrtle laughed, half understanding. "You said that was a
cheap junk skirt at only twelve-fifty, with machine lace and imitation—"
But Ray Willets did not wait to hear the rest. She was off down
the aisle toward the elevator marked "Employées." The
superintendent's office was on the ninth floor. She stopped there. The grey
superintendent was writing at his desk. He did not look up as Ray entered, thus
observing rules one and two in the proper conduct of superintendents when
interviewing employees. Ray Willets, standing by his desk, did not cough or
wriggle or rustle her skirts or sag on one hip. A consciousness of her quiet
penetrated the superintendent's mind. He glanced up hurriedly over his left
shoulder. Then he laid down his pencil and sat up slowly.
"Oh, it's you!" he said.
"Yes, it's me," replied Ray Willets simply. "I've
been here a month to-day."
"Oh, yes." He ran his fingers through his hair so that
the brown forelock stood away from the grey. "You've lost some of your
roses," he said, and tapped his cheek. "What's the trouble?"
"I guess it's the dress," explained Ray, and glanced
down at the folds of her gown. She hesitated a moment awkwardly. "You said
you'd send for me at the end of the month. You didn't."
"That's all right," said the grey superintendent.
"I was pretty sure I hadn't made a mistake. I can gauge applicants pretty
fairly. Let's see—you're in the lingerie, aren't you?"
"Yes."
Then with a rush: "That's what I want to talk to you about.
I've changed my mind. I don't want to stay in the lingeries. I'd like to be
transferred to the kitchen utensils and household goods."
"Transferred! Well, I'll see what I can do. What was the name
now? I forget."
A queer look stole into Ray Willets' face, a look of determination
and shrewdness.
"Name?" she said. "My name is Rachel
Wiletzky."
VIII.THE HOOKER-UP-THE-BACK
Miss Sadie Corn was not a charmer, but when you handed your
room-key to her you found yourself stopping to chat a moment. If you were the
right kind you showed her your wife's picture in the front of your watch. If
you were the wrong kind, with your scant hair carefully combed to hide the bald
spot, you showed her the newspaper clipping that you carried in your vest
pocket. Following inspection of the first, Sadie Corn would say: "Now
that's what I call a sweet face! How old is the youngest?" Upon perusal the
second was returned with dignity and: "Is that supposed to be funny?"
In each case Sadie Corn had you placed for life.
She possessed the invaluable gift of the floor clerk, did Sadie
Corn—that of remembering names and faces. Though you had registered at the
Hotel Magnifique but the night before, for the first time, Sadie Corn would
look up at you over her glasses as she laid your key in its proper row, and
say: "Good morning, Mr. Schultz! Sleep well?"
"Me!" you would stammer, surprised and gratified.
"Me! Fine! H'm—Thanks!" Whereupon you would cross your right foot
over your left nonchalantly and enjoy that brief moment's chat with Floor Clerk
Number Two. You went back to Ishpeming, Michigan, with three new impressions:
The first was that you were becoming a personage of considerable importance.
The second was that the Magnifique realised this great truth and was grateful
for your patronage. The third was that New York was a friendly little hole
after all!
Miss Sadie Corn was dean of the Hotel Magnifique's floor clerks.
The primary requisite in successful floor clerkship is homeliness. The second
is discreet age. The third is tact. And for the benefit of those who think the
duties of a floor clerk end when she takes your key when you leave your room,
and hands it back as you return, it may be mentioned that the fourth, fifth,
sixth and seventh requisites are diplomacy, ingenuity, unlimited patience and a
comprehensive knowledge of human nature. Ambassadors have been known to keep
their jobs on less than that.
She had come to the Magnifique at thirty-three, a plain, spare,
sallow woman, with a quiet, capable manner, a pungent trick of the tongue on
occasion, a sparse fluff of pale-coloured hair, and big, bony-knuckled hands,
such as you see on women who have the gift of humanness. She was forty-eight
now—still plain, still spare, still sallow. Those bony, big-knuckled fingers
had handed keys to potentates, and pork-packers, and millinery buyers from
Seattle; and to princes incognito, and paupers much the same—the difference
being that the princes dressed down to the part, while the paupers dressed up
to it.
Time, experience, understanding and the daily dealing with
ever-changing humanity had brought certain lines into Sadie Corn's face. So
skilfully were they placed that the unobservant put them down as wrinkles on
the countenance of a homely, middle-aged woman; but he who read as he ran saw
that the lines about the eyes were quizzical, shrewd lines, which come from the
practice of gauging character at a glance; that the mouth-markings meant
tolerance and sympathy and humour; that the forehead furrows had been carved
there by those master chisellers, suffering and sacrifice.
In the last three or four years Sadie Corn had taken to wearing a
little lavender-and-white crocheted shawl about her shoulders on cool days, and
when Two-fifty-seven, who was a regular, caught his annual heavy cold late in
the fall, Sadie would ask him sharply whether he had on his winter flannels. On
his replying in the negative she would rebuke him scathingly and demand a bill
of sizable denomination; and when her watch was over she would sally forth to
purchase four sets of men's winter underwear. As captain of the Magnifique's
thirty-four floor clerks Sadie Corn's authority extended from the parlours to
the roof, but her especial domain was floor two. Ensconced behind her little
desk in a corner, blocked in by mailracks, pantry signals, pneumatic-tube
chutes and telephone, with a clear view of the elevators and stairway, Sadie
Corn was mistress of the moods, manners and morals of the Magnifique's second
floor.
It was six thirty p.m. on Monday of Automobile Show Week when
Sadie Corn came on watch. She came on with a lively, well-developed case of
neuralgia over her right eye and extending down into her back teeth. With its
usual spitefulness the attack had chosen to make its appearance during her long
watch. It never selected her short-watch days, when she was on duty only from
eleven a.m. until six-thirty p.m.
Now with a peppermint bottle held close to alternately sniffing
nostrils Sadie Corn was running her eye over the complex report sheet of the
floor clerk who had just gone off watch. The report was even more detailed and
lengthy than usual. Automobile Show Week meant that the always prosperous
Magnifique was filled to the eaves and turning them away. It meant twice the
usual number of inside telephone calls anent rooms too hot, rooms too cold,
radiators hammering, radiators hissing, windows that refused to open, windows
that refused to shut, packages undelivered, hot water not forthcoming. As the
human buffers between guests and hotel management, it was the duty of Sadie
Corn and her diplomatic squad to pacify the peevish, to smooth the path of the
paying.
Down the hall strolled Donahue, the house detective—Donahue the
leisurely. Donahue the keen-eyed, Donahue the guileless—looking in his evening
clothes for all the world like a prosperous diner-out. He smiled benignly upon
Sadie Corn, and Sadie Corn had the bravery to smile back in spite of her
neuralgia, knowing well that men have no sympathy with that anguishing ailment
and no understanding of it.
"Everything serene, Miss Corn?" inquired Donahue.
"Everything's serene," said Sadie Corn. "Though
Two-thirty-three telephoned a minute ago to say that if the valet didn't bring
his pants from the presser in the next two seconds he'd come down the hall as
he is and get 'em. Perhaps you'd better stay round."
Donahue chuckled and passed on. Half way down the hall he retraced
his steps, and stopped again before Sadie Corn's busy desk. He balanced a
moment thoughtfully from toe to heel, his chin lifted inquiringly: "Keep
your eye on Two-eighteen and Two-twenty-three this morning?"
"Like a lynx!" answered Sadie.
"Anything?"
"Not a thing. I guess they just scraped acquaintance in the
Alley after dinner, like they sometimes do. A man with eyelashes like his
always speaks to any woman alone who isn't pockmarked and toothless. Two
minutes after he's met a girl his voice takes on the 'cello note. I know his kind.
Why, say, he even tried waving those eyelashes of his at me first time he
turned in his key; and goodness knows I'm so homely that pretty soon I'll be
ripe for bachelor floor thirteen. You know as well as I that to qualify for
that job a floor clerk's got to look like a gargoyle."
"Maybe they're all right," said Donahue thoughtfully.
"If it's just a flirtation, why—anyway, watch 'em this evening. The day
watch listened in and says they've made some date for to-night."
He was off down the hall again with his light, quick step that
still had the appearance of leisureliness.
The telephone at Sadie's right buzzed warningly. Sadie picked up
the receiver and plunged into the busiest half hour of the evening. From that
moment until seven o'clock her nimble fingers and eyes and brain and tongue
directed the steps of her little world. She held the telephone receiver at one
ear and listened to the demands of incoming and outgoing guests with the other.
She jotted down reports, dealt out mail and room-keys, kept her neuralgic eye
on stairs and elevators and halls, her sound orb on tube and pantry signals,
while through and between and above all she guided the stream of humanity that
trickled past her desk—bellhops, Polish chambermaids, messenger boys, guests,
waiters, parlour maids.
Just before seven there disembarked at floor two out of the
cream-and-gold elevator one of those visions that have helped to make Fifth
Avenue a street of the worst-dressed women in the world. The vision was
Two-eighteen, and her clothes were of the kind that prepared you for the shock
that you got when you looked at her face. Plume met fur, and fur met silk, and
silk met lace, and lace met gold—and the whole met and ran into a riot of
colour, and perfume—and little jangling, swishing sounds. Just by glancing at
Two-eighteen's feet in their inadequate openwork silk and soft kid you knew
that Two-eighteen's lips would be carmined.
She came down the corridor and stopped at Sadie Corn's desk. Sadie
Corn had her key ready for her. Two-eighteen took it daintily between
white-gloved fingers.
"I'll want a maid in fifteen minutes," she said.
"Tell them to send me the one I had yesterday. The pretty one. She isn't
so clumsy as some."
Sadie Corn jotted down a note without looking up.
"Oh, Julia? Sorry—Julia's busy," she lied.
Two-eighteen knew she lied, because at that moment there came
round the bend in the broad, marble stairway that led up from the parlour floor
the trim, slim figure of Julia herself.
Two-eighteen took a quick step forward. "Here, girl! I'll
want you to hook me in fifteen minutes," she said.
"Very well, ma'am," replied Julia softly.
There passed between Sadie Corn and Two-eighteen a—well, you could
hardly call it a look, it was so fleeting, so ephemeral; that electric,
pregnant, meaning something that flashes between two women who dislike and
understand each other. Then Two-eighteen was off down the hall to her room.
Julia stood at the head of the stairway just next to Sadie's desk
and watched Two-eighteen until the bend in the corridor hid her. Julia, of the
lady's-maid staff, could never have qualified for the position of floor clerk,
even if she had chosen to bury herself in lavender-and-white crocheted shawls
to the tip of her marvellous little Greek nose. In her frilly white cap, her
trim black gown, her immaculate collar and cuffs and apron, Julia looked
distractingly like the young person who, in the old days of the
furniture-dusting drama, was wont to inform you that it was two years since
young master went away—all but her feet. The feather-duster person was addicted
to French-heeled, beaded slippers. Not so Julia. Julia was on her feet for ten
hours or so a day. When you subject your feet to ten-hour tortures you are apt
to pass by French-heeled effects in favour of something flat-heeled, laced,
with an easy, comfortable crack here and there at the sides, and stockings with
white cotton soles.
Julia, at the head of the stairway, stood looking after
Two-eighteen until the tail of her silken draperies had whisked round the
corner. Then, still staring, Julia spoke resentfully:
"Life for her is just one darned pair of long white kid
gloves after another! Look at her! Why is it that kind of a face is always
wearing the sables and diamonds?"
"Sables and diamonds," replied Sadie Corn, sniffing
essence of peppermint, "seem a small enough reward for having to carry
round a mug like that!"
Julia came round to the front of Sadie Corn's desk. Her eyes were
brooding, her lips sullen.
"Oh, I don't know!" she said bitterly. "Being
pretty don't get you anything—just being pretty! When I first came I used to
wonder at those women that paint their faces and colour their hair, and wear
skirts that are too tight and waists that are too low. But—I don't know! This
town's so big and so—so kind of uninterested. When you see everybody wearing
clothes that are more gorgeous than yours, and diamonds bigger, and limousines
longer and blacker and quieter, it gives you a kind of fever. You—you want to
make people look at you too."
Sadie Corn leaned back in her chair. The peppermint bottle was
held at her nose. It may have been that which caused her eyes to narrow to mere
slits as she gazed at the drooping Julia. She said nothing. Suddenly Julia
seemed to feel the silence. She looked down at Sadie Corn. As by a miracle all
the harsh, sullen lines in the girl's face vanished, to be replaced by a lovely
compassion.
"Your neuralgy again, dearie?" she asked in pretty
concern.
Sadie sniffed long and audibly at the peppermint bottle.
"If you ask me I think there's some imp inside of my head
trying to push my right eye out with his thumb. Anyway it feels like
that."
"Poor old dear!" breathed Julia. "It's the weather.
Have them send you up a pot of black tea."
"When you've got neuralgy over your right eye," observed
Sadie Corn grimly, "there's just one thing helps—that is to crawl into bed
in a flannel nightgown, with the side of your face resting on the red rubber
bosom of a hot-water bottle. And I can't do it; so let's talk about something
cheerful. Seen Jo to-day?"
There crept into Julia's face a wave of colour—not the pink of
pleasure, but the dull red of pain. She looked away from Sadie's eyes and down
at her shabby boots. The sullen look was in her face once more.
"No; I ain't seen him," she said.
"What's the trouble?" Sadie asked.
"I've been busy," replied Julia airily. Then, with a
forced vivacity: "Though it's nothing to Auto Show Week last year. I
remember that week I hooked up until my fingers were stiff. You know the way
the dresses fastened last winter. Some of 'em ought to have had a map to go by,
they were that complicated. And now, just when I've got so's I can hook any
dress that was ever intended for the human form—"
"Wasn't it Jo who said they ought to give away an engineering
blueprint with every dress, when you told him about the way they hooked?"
put in Sadie. "What's the trouble between you and—"
Julia rattled on, unheeding:
"You wouldn't believe what a difference there's been since
these new peasant styles have come in! And the Oriental craze! Hook down the
side, most of 'em—and they can do 'em themselves if they ain't too fat."
"Remember Jo saying they ought to have a hydraulic press for
some of those skintight dames, when your fingers were sore from trying to
squeeze them into their casings? By the way, what's the trouble between you
and—"
"Makes an awful difference in my tips!" cut in Julia
deftly. "I don't believe I've hooked up six this evening, and two of them
sprung the haven't-anything-but-a-five-dollar-bill-see-you-to-morrow! Women are
devils! I wish—"
Sadie Corn leaned forward, placed her hand on Julia's arm, and
turned the girl about so that she faced her. Julia tried miserably to escape
her keen eyes and failed.
"What's the trouble between you and Jo?" she demanded
for the fourth time. "Out with it or I'll telephone down to the engine
room and ask him myself."
"Oh, well, if you want to know—" She paused, her eyelids
drooping again; then, with a rush: "Me and Jo have quarrelled again—for
good, this time. I'm through!"
"What about?"
"I s'pose you'll say I'm to blame. Jo's mother's sick again.
She's got to go to the hospital and have another operation. You know what that
means—putting off the wedding again until God knows when! I'm sick of
it—putting off and putting off! I told him we might as well quit and be done
with it. We'll never get married at this rate. Soon's Jo gets enough put by to
start us on, something happens. Last three times it's been his ma. Pretty soon
I'll be as old and wrinkled and homely as—"
"As me!" put in Sadie calmly. "Well, I don't know's
that's the worst thing that can happen to you. I'm happy. I had my plans, too,
when I was a girl like you—not that I was ever pretty; but I had my trials.
Funny how the thing that's easy and the thing that's right never seem to be the
same!"
"Oh, I'm fond of Jo's ma," said Julia, a little
shamefacedly. "We get along all right. She knows how it is, I guess; and
feels—well, in the way. But when Jo told me, I was tired I guess. We had words.
I told him there were plenty waiting for me if he was through. I told him I
could have gone out with a real swell only last Saturday if I'd wanted to.
What's a girl got her looks for if not to have a good time?"
"Who's this you were invited out by?" asked Sadie Corn.
"You must have noticed him," said Julia, dimpling.
"He's as handsome as an actor. Name's Venner. He's in
two-twenty-three."
There came the look of steel into Sadie Corn's eyes.
"Look here, Julia! You've been here long enough to know that
you're not to listen to the talk of the men guests round here. Two-twenty-three
isn't your kind—and you know it! If I catch you talking to him again
I'll—"
The telephone at her elbow sounded sharply. She answered it
absently, her eyes, with their expression of pain and remonstrance, still
unshrinking before the onslaught of Julia's glare. Then her expression changed.
A look of consternation came into her face.
"Right away, madam!" she said, at the telephone.
"Right away! You won't have to wait another minute." She hung up the
receiver and waved Julia away with a gesture. "It's Two-eighteen. You
promised to be there in fifteen minutes. She's been waiting and her voice
sounds like a saw. Better be careful how you handle her."
Julia's head, with its sleek, satiny coils of black hair that
waved away so bewitchingly from the cream of her skin, came up with a jerk.
"I'm tired of being careful of other people's feelings. Let
somebody be careful of mine for a change." She walked off down the hall,
the little head still held high. A half dozen paces and she turned. "What
was it you said you'd do to me if you caught me talking to him again?" she
sneered.
A miserable twinge of pain shot through Sadie Corn's eye, to be
followed by a wave of nausea that swept over her. They alone were responsible
for her answer.
"I'll report you!" she snapped, and was sorry at once.
Julia turned again, walked down the corridor and round the corner
in the direction of two-eighteen.
Long after Julia had disappeared Sadie Corn stared after
her—miserable, regretful.
Julia knocked once at the door of two-eighteen and turned the knob
before a high, shrill voice cried:
"Come!"
Two-eighteen was standing in the centre of the floor in scant
satin knickerbockers and tight brassière. The blazing folds of a cerise satin
gown held in her hands made a great, crude patch of colour in the
neutral-tinted bedroom. The air was heavy with scent. Hair, teeth, eyes,
fingernails—Two-eighteen glowed and glistened. Chairs and bed held odds and
ends.
"Where've you been, girl?" shrilled Two-eighteen.
"I've been waiting like a fool! I told you to be here in fifteen
minutes."
"My stop-watch isn't working right," replied Julia
impudently and took the cerise satin gown in her two hands.
She made a ring of the gown's opening, and through that cerise
frame her eyes met those of Two-eighteen.
"Careful of my hair!" Two-eighteen warned her, and
ducked her head to the practised movement of Julia's arms. The cerise gown
dropped to her shoulders without grazing a hair. Two-eighteen breathed a sigh
of relief. She turned to face the mirror.
"It starts at the left, three hooks; then to the centre; then
back four—under the arm and down the middle again. That chiffon comes over like
a drape."
She picked up a buffer from the litter of ivory and silver on the
dresser and began to polish her already glittering nails, turning her head this
way and that, preening her neck, biting her scarlet lips to deepen their
crimson, opening her eyes wide and half closing them languorously. Julia, down
on her knees in combat with the trickiest of the hooks, glanced up and saw.
Two-eighteen caught the glance in the mirror. She stopped her idle polishing
and preening to study the glowing and lovely little face that looked up at her.
A certain queer expression grew in her eyes—a speculative, eager look.
"Tell me, little girl," she said, "What do you do
round here?"
Julia turned from the mirror to the last of the hooks, her fingers
working nimbly.
"Me? My regular job is working. Don't jerk, please. I've
fastened this one three times."
"Working!" laughed Two-eighteen, fingering the diamonds
at her throat. "What does a pretty girl like you want to do that
for?"
"Hook off here," said Julia. "Shall I sew it?"
"Pin it!" snapped Two-eighteen.
Julia's tidy nature revolted.
"It'll take just a minute to catch it with thread—"
Two-eighteen whirled about in one of the sudden hot rages of her
kind:
"Pin it, you fool! Pin it! I told you I was late!"
Julia paused a moment, the red surging into her face. Then in
silence she knelt and wove a pin deftly in and out. When she rose from her
knees her face was quite white.
"There, that's the girl!" said Two-eighteen blithely,
her rage forgotten. "Just pat this over my shoulders."
She handed a powder-puff to Julia and turned her back to the broad
mirror, holding a hand-glass high as she watched the powder-laden puff leaving
a snowy coat on the neck and shoulders and back so generously displayed in the
cherry-coloured gown. Julia's face was set and hard.
"Oh, now, don't sulk!" coaxed Two-eighteen
good-naturedly, all of a sudden. "I hate sulky girls. I like people to be
cheerful round me."
"I'm not used to being yelled at," Julia said
resentfully.
Two-eighteen patted her cheek lightly. "You come out with me
to-morrow and I'll buy you something pretty. Don't you like pretty
clothes?"
"Yes; but—"
"Of course you do. Every girl does—especially pretty ones
like you. How do you like this dress? Don't you think it smart?"
She turned squarely to face Julia, trying on her the tricks she
had practised in the mirror. A little cruel look came into Julia's face.
"Last year's, isn't it?" she asked coolly.
"This!" cried Two-eighteen, stiffening. "Last
year's! I got it yesterday on Fifth Avenue, and paid two hundred and fifty for
it. What do you—"
"Oh, I believe you," drawled Julia. "They can tell
a New Yorker from an out-of-towner every time. You know the really new thing is
the Bulgarian effect!"
"Well, of all the nerve!" began Two-eighteen, turning to
the mirror in a sort of fright. "Of all the—"
What she saw there seemed to reassure. She raised one hand to push
the gown a little more off the left shoulder.
"Will there be anything else?" inquired Julia, standing
aloof.
Two-eighteen turned reluctantly from the mirror and picked up a
jewelled gold-mesh bag that lay on the bed. From it she extracted a coin and
held it out to Julia. It was a generous coin. Julia looked at it. Her
smouldering wrath burst into flame.
"Keep it!" she said savagely, and was out of the room
and down the hall.
Sadie Corn, at her desk, looked up quickly as Julia turned the
corner. Julia, her head held high, kept her eyes resolutely away from Sadie.
"Oh, Julia, I want to talk to you!" said Sadie Corn as
Julia reached the stairway. Julia began to descend the stairs, unheeding. Sadie
Corn rose and leaned over the railing, her face puckered with anxiety. "Now,
Julia, girl, don't hold that up against me! I didn't mean it. You know that.
You wouldn't be mad at a poor old woman that's half crazy with neuralgy!"
Julia hesitated, one foot poised to take the next step. "Come on up,"
coaxed Sadie Corn, "and tell me what Two-eighteen's wearing this evening.
I'm that lonesome, with nothing to do but sit here and watch the letter-ghosts
go flippering down the mailchute! Come on!"
"What made you say you'd report me?" demanded Julia
bitterly.
"I'd have said the same thing to my own daughter if I had
one. You know yourself I'd bite my tongue out first!"
"Well!" said Julia slowly, and relented. She came up the
stairs almost shyly. "Neuralgy any better?"
"Worse!" said Sadie Corn cheerfully.
Julia leaned against the desk sociably and glanced down the hall.
"Would you believe it," she snickered, "she's
wearing red! With that hair! She asked me if I didn't think she looked too
pale. I wanted to tell her that if she had any more colour, with that dress,
they'd be likely to use the chemical sprinklers on her when she struck the
Alley."
"Sh-sh-sh!" breathed Sadie in warning. Two-eighteen, in
her shimmering, flame-coloured costume, was coming down the hall toward the
elevators. She walked with the absurd and stumbling step that her scant skirt
necessitated. With each pace the slashed silken skirt parted to reveal a
shameless glimpse of cerise silk stocking. In her wake came Venner, of
Two-twenty-three—a strange contrast in his black and white.
Sadie and Julia watched them from the corner nook. Opposite the
desk Two-eighteen stopped and turned to Julia.
"Just run into my room and pick things up and hang them away,
will you?" she said. "I didn't have time—and I hate things all about
when I come in dead tired."
The little formula of service rose automatically to Julia's lips.
"Very well, madam," she said.
Her eyes and Sadie's followed the two figures until they had
stepped into the cream-and-gold elevator and had vanished. Sadie, peppermint
bottle at nose, spoke first:
"She makes one of those sandwich men with a bell, on Sixth
Avenue, look like a shrinking violet!"
Julia's lower lip was caught between her teeth. The scent that had
enveloped Two-eighteen as she passed was still in the air. Julia's nostrils
dilated as she sniffed it. Her breath came a little quickly. Sadie Corn sat
very still, watching her.
"Look at her!" said Julia, her voice vibrant. "Look
at her! Old and homely, and all made up! I powdered her neck. Her skin's like
tripe.
"Now Julia—" remonstrated Sadie Corn soothingly.
"I don't care," went on Julia with a rush. "I'm
young. And I'm pretty too. And I like pretty things. It ain't fair! That was
one reason why I broke with Jo. It wasn't only his mother. I told him he
couldn't ever give me the things I want anyway. You can't help wanting
'em—seeing them all round every day on women that aren't half as good-looking
as you are! I want low-cut dresses too. My neck's like milk. I want silk
underneath, and fur coming up on my coat collar to make my cheeks look pink.
I'm sick of hooking other women up. I want to stand in front of a mirror,
looking at myself, polishing my pink nails with a silver thing and having
somebody else hook me up!"
In Sadie Corn's eyes there was a mist that could not be traced to
neuralgia or peppermint.
"Julia, girl," said Sadie Corn, "ever since the
world began there's been hookers and hooked. And there always will be. I was
born a hooker. So were you. Time was when I used to cry out against it too. But
shucks! I know better now. I wouldn't change places. Being a hooker gives you
such an all-round experience like of mankind. The hooked only get a front view.
They only see faces and arms and chests. But the hookers—they see the necks and
shoulderblades of this world, as well as faces. It's mighty broadening—being a
hooker. It's the hookers that keep this world together, Julia, and fastened up
right. It wouldn't amount to much if it had to depend on such as that!"
She nodded her head in the direction the cerise figure had taken. "The
height of her ambition is to get the cuticle of her nails trained back so
perfectly that it won't have to be cut; and she don't feel decently dressed to
be seen in public unless she's wearing one of those breastplates of orchids.
Envy her! Why, Julia, don't you know that as you were standing here in your
black dress as she passed she was envying you!"
"Envying me!" said Julia, and laughed a short laugh that
had little of mirth in it. "You don't understand, Sadie!"
Sadie Corn smiled a rather sad little smile.
"Oh, yes, I do understand. Don't think because a woman's
homely, and always has been, that she doesn't have the same heartaches that a
pretty woman has. She's built just the same inside."
Julia turned her head to stare at her wide-eyed. It was a long and
trying stare, as though she now saw Sadie Corn for the first time.
Sadie, smiling up at the girl, stood it bravely. Then, with a
sudden little gesture, Julia patted the wrinkled, sallow cheek and was off down
the hall and round the corner to two-eighteen.
The lights still blazed in the bedroom. Julia closed the door and
stood with her back to it, looking about the disordered chamber. In that
marvellous way a room has of reflecting the very personality of its absent
owner, room two-eighteen bore silent testimony to the manner of woman who had
just left it. The air was close and overpoweringly sweet with perfume—sachet,
powder—the scent of a bedroom after a vain and selfish woman has left it. The
litter of toilet articles lay scattered about on the dresser. Chairs and bed
held garments of lace and silk. A bewildering negligée hung limply over a
couch; and next it stood a patent-leather slipper, its mate on the floor.
Julia saw these things in one accustomed glance. Then she advanced
to the middle of the room and stooped to pick up a pink wadded bedroom slipper
from where it lay under the bed. And her hand touched a coat of velvet and fur
that had been flung across the counterpane—touched it and rested there.
The coat was of stamped velvet and fur. Great cuffs of fur there
were, and a sumptuous collar that rolled from neck to waist. There was a lining
of vivid orange. Julia straightened up and stood regarding the garment, her
hands on her hips.
"I wonder if it's draped in the back," she said to
herself, and picked it up. It was draped in the back—bewitchingly. She held it
at arm's length, turning it this way and that. Then, as though obeying some
powerful force she could not resist, Julia plunged her arms into the satin of
the sleeves and brought the great soft revers up about her throat. The great,
gorgeous, shimmering thing completely hid her grubby little black gown. She
stepped to the mirror and stood surveying herself in a sort of ecstasy. Her
cheeks glowed rose-pink against the dark fur, as she had known they would. Her
lovely little head, with its coils of black hair, rose flowerlike from the
clinging garment. She was still standing there, lips parted, eyes wide with
delight, when the door opened and closed—and Venner, of two-twenty-three,
strode into the room.
"You little beauty!" exclaimed Two-twenty-three.
Julia had wheeled about. She stood staring at him, eyes and lips
wide with fright now. One hand clutched the fur at her breast.
"Why, what—" she gasped.
Two-twenty-three laughed.
"I knew I'd find you here. I made an excuse to come up. Old
Nutcracker Face in the hall thinks I went to my own room." He took two
quick steps forward. "You raving little Cinderella beauty, you!"—And
he gathered Julia, coat and all, into his arms.
"Let me go!" panted Julia, fighting with all the
strength of her young arms. "Let me go!"
"You'll have coats like this," Two-twenty-three was
saying in her ear—"a dozen of them! And dresses too; and laces and furs!
You'll be ten times the beauty you are now! And that's saying something.
Listen! You meet me to-morrow—"
There came a ring—sudden and startling—from the telephone on the
wall near the door. The man uttered something and turned. Julia pushed him
away, loosened the coat with fingers that shook and dropped it to the floor. It
lay in a shimmering circle about the tired feet in their worn, cracked boots.
And one foot was raised suddenly and kicked the silken garment into a heap.
The telephone bell sounded again. Venner, of two-twenty-three,
plunged his hand into his pocket, took out something and pressed it in Julia's
palm, shutting her fingers over it. Julia did not need to open them and look to
see—she knew by the feel of the crumpled paper, stiff and crackling. He was
making for the door, with some last instructions that she did not hear, before
she spoke. The telephone bell had stopped its insistent ringing.
Julia raised her arm and hurled at him with all her might the
yellow-backed paper he had thrust in her hand.
"I'll—I'll get my man to whip you for this!" she panted.
"Jo'll pull those eyelashes of yours out and use 'em for couplings. You
miserable little—"
The outside door opened again, striking Two-twenty-three squarely
in the back. He crumpled up against the wall with an oath.
Sadie Corn, in the doorway, gave no heed to him. Her eyes searched
Julia's flushed face. What she saw there seemed to satisfy her. She turned to
him then grimly.
"What are you doing here?" Sadie asked briskly.
Two-twenty-three muttered something about the wrong room by
mistake. Julia laughed.
"He lies!" she said, and pointed to the floor.
"That bill belongs to him."
Sadie Corn motioned to him.
"Pick it up!" she said.
"I don't—want it!" snarled Two-twenty-three.
"Pick—it—up!" articulated Sadie Corn very carefully. He
came forward, stooped, put the bill in his pocket. "You check out to-night!"
said Sadie Corn. Then, at a muttered remonstrance from him: "Oh, yes, you
will! So will Two-eighteen. Huh? Oh, I guess she will! Say, what do you think a
floor clerk's for? A human keyrack? I'll give you until twelve. I'm off watch
at twelve-thirty." Then, to Julia, as he slunk off: "Why didn't you
answer the phone? That was me ringing!"
A sob caught Julia in the throat, but she turned it into a laugh.
"I didn't hardly hear it. I was busy promising him a licking
from Jo."
Sadie Corn opened the door.
"Come on down the hall. I've left no one at the desk. It was
Jo I was telephoning you for."
Julia grasped her arm with gripping fingers.
"Jo! He ain't—"
Sadie Corn took the girl's hand in hers.
"Jo's all right! But Jo's mother won't bother you any more,
Sadie. You'll never need to give up your housekeeping nest-egg for her again.
Jo told me to tell you."
Julia stared at her for one dreadful moment, her fist, with the
knuckles showing white, pressed against her mouth. A little moan came from her
that, repeated over and over, took the form of words:
"Oh, Sadie, if I could only take back what I said to Jo! If I
could only take back what I said to Jo! He'll never forgive me now! And I'll
never forgive myself!"
"He'll forgive you," said Sadie Corn; "but you'll
never forgive yourself. That's as it should be. That, you know, is our
punishment for what we say in thoughtlessness and anger."
They turned the corridor corner. Standing before the desk near the
stairway was the tall figure of Donahue, house detective. Donahue had always
said that Julia was too pretty to be a hotel employé.
"Straighten up, Julia!" whispered Sadie Corn. "And
smile if it kills you—unless you want to make me tell the whole of it to
Donahue."
Donahue, the keen-eyed, balancing, as was his wont, from toe to
heel and back again, his chin thrust out inquiringly, surveyed the pair.
"Off watch?" inquired Donahue pleasantly, staring at
Julia's eyes. "What's wrong with Julia?"
"Neuralgy!" said Sadie Corn crisply. "I've just
told her to quit rubbing her head with peppermint. She's got the stuff into her
eyes."
She picked up the bottle on her desk and studied its label,
frowning. "Run along downstairs, Julia. I'll see if they won't send you
some hot tea."
Donahue, hands clasped behind him, was walking off in his
leisurely, light-footed way.
"Everything serene?" he called back over his big
shoulder.
The neuralgic eye closed and opened, perhaps with another twinge.
"Everything's serene!" said Sadie Corn.
IX.THE GUIDING MISS GOWD
It has long been the canny custom of writers on travel bent to
defray the expense of their journeyings by dashing off tales filled with
foreign flavour. Dickens did it, and Dante. It has been tried all the way from
Tasso to Twain; from Raskin to Roosevelt. A pleasing custom it is and thrifty
withal, and one that has saved many a one but poorly prepared for the European
robber in uniform the moist and unpleasant task of swimming home.
Your writer spends seven days, say, in Paris. Result? The Latin
Quarter story. Oh, mes enfants! That Parisian student-life
story! There is the beautiful young American girl—beautiful, but as earnest and
good as she is beautiful, and as talented as she is earnest and good. And
wedded, be it understood, to her art—preferably painting or singing. From New
York! Her name must be something prim, yet winsome. Lois will do—Lois, la
belle Américaine. Then the hero—American too. Madly in love with Lois. Tall
he is and always clean-limbed—not handsome, but with one of those strong,
rugged faces. His name, too, must be strong and plain, yet snappy. David is
always good. The villain is French, fascinating, and wears a tiny black
moustache to hide his mouth, which is cruel.
The rest is simple. A little French restaurant—Henri's. Know you
not Henri's? Tiens! But Henri's is not for the tourist. A dim
little shop and shabby, modestly tucked away in the shadows of the Rue Brie.
But the food! Ah, the—whadd'you-call'ems—in the savoury sauce, that is Henri's
secret! The tender, broiled poularde, done to a turn! The bottle of
red wine! Mais oui; there one can dine under the watchful glare of
Rosa, the plump, black-eyed wife of the concierge. With a snowy
apron about her buxom waist, and a pot of red geraniums somewhere, and a sleek,
lazy cat contentedly purring in the sunny window!
Then Lois starving in a garret. Temptation! Sacré bleu!
Zut! Also nom d'un nom! Enter David. Bon! Oh,
David, take me away! Take me back to dear old Schenectady. Love is more than
all else, especially when no one will buy your pictures.
The Italian story recipe is even simpler. A pearl necklace; a low,
clear whistle. Was it the call of a bird or a signal? His-s-s-st! Again! A
black cape; the flash of steel in the moonlight; the sound of a splash in the
water; a sickening gurgle; a stifled cry! Silence! His-st! Vendetta!
There is the story made in Germany, filled with students and
steins and scars; with beer and blonde, blue-eyed Mädchen garbed—the Mädchen,
that is—in black velvet bodice, white chemisette, scarlet skirt with two rows
of black ribbon at the bottom, and one yellow braid over the shoulder.
Especially is this easily accomplished if actually written in the Vaterland,
German typewriting machines being equipped with umlauts.
And yet not one of these formulas would seem to fit the story of
Mary Gowd. Mary Gowd, with her frumpy English hat and her dreadful English
fringe, and her brick-red English cheeks, which not even the enervating Italian
sun, the years of bad Italian food or the damp and dim little Roman room had
been able to sallow. Mary Gowd, with her shabby blue suit and her mangy bit of
fur, and the glint of humour in her pale blue eyes. Many, many times that same
glint of humour had saved English Mary Gowd from seeking peace in the muddy old
Tiber.
Her card read imposingly thus: Mary M. Gowd, Cicerone.
Certificated and Licensed Lecturer on Art and Archaeology. Via del Babbuino,
Roma.
In plain language Mary Gowd was a guide. Now, Rome is swarming
with guides; but they are men guides. They besiege you in front of Cook's. They
perch at the top of the Capitoline Hill, ready to pounce on you when you arrive
panting from your climb up the shallow steps. They lie in wait in the doorway
of St. Peter's. Bland, suave, smiling, quiet, but insistent, they dog you from
the Vatican to the Catacombs.
Hundreds there are of these little men—undersized, even in this
land of small men—dapper, agile, low-voiced, crafty. In his inner coat pocket
each carries his credentials, greasy, thumb-worn documents, but precious. He
glances at your shoes—this insinuating one—or at your hat, or at any of those
myriad signs by which he marks you for his own. Then up he steps and speaks to
you in the language of your country, be you French, German, English, Spanish or
American.
And each one of this clan—each slim, feline little man in blue
serge, white-toothed, gimlet-eyed, smooth-tongued, brisk—hated Mary Gowd. They
hated her with the hate of an Italian for an outlander—with the hate of an
Italian for a woman who works with her brain—with the hate of an Italian who
sees another taking the bread out of his mouth. All this, coupled with the fact
that your Italian is a natural-born hater, may indicate that the life of Mary
Gowd had not the lyric lilt that life is commonly reputed to have in sunny
Italy.
Oh, there is no formula for Mary Gowd's story. In the first place,
the tale of how Mary Gowd came to be the one woman guide in Rome runs like
melodrama. And Mary herself, from her white cotton gloves, darned at the
fingers, to her figure, which mysteriously remained the same in spite of fifteen
years of scant Italian fare, does not fit gracefully into the rôle of heroine.
Perhaps that story, scraped to bedrock, shorn of all floral
features, may gain in force what it loses in artistry.
She was twenty-two when she came to Rome—twenty-two and art-mad.
She had been pretty, with that pink-cheesecloth prettiness of the provincial
English girl, who degenerates into blowsiness at thirty. Since seventeen she
had saved and scrimped and contrived for this modest Roman holiday. She had
given painting lessons—even painted on loathsome china—that the little hoard
might grow. And when at last there was enough she had come to this Rome against
the protests of the fussy English father and the spinster English sister.
The man she met quite casually one morning in the Sistine
Chapel—perhaps he bumped her elbow as they stood staring up at the glorious
ceiling. A thousand pardons! Ah, an artist too? In five minutes they were
chattering like mad—she in bad French and exquisite English; he in bad English
and exquisite French. He knew Rome—its pictures, its glories, its history—as
only an Italian can. And he taught her art, and he taught her Italian, and he
taught her love.
And so they were married, or ostensibly married, though Mary did
not know the truth until three months later when he left her quite as casually
as he had met her, taking with him the little hoard, and Mary's English
trinkets, and Mary's English roses, and Mary's broken pride.
So! There was no going back to the fussy father or the spinster
sister. She came very near resting her head on Father Tiber's breast in those
days. She would sit in the great galleries for hours, staring at the
wonder-works. Then, one day, again in the Sistine Chapel, a fussy little
American woman had approached her, her eyes snapping. Mary was sketching, or
trying to.
"Do you speak English?"
"I am English," said Mary.
The feathers in the hat of the fussy little woman quivered.
"Then tell me, is this ceiling by Raphael?"
"Ceiling!" gasped Mary Gowd. "Raphael!"
Then, very gently, she gave the master's name.
"Of course!" snapped the excited little American.
"I'm one of a party of eight. We're all school-teachers And this
guide"—she waved a hand in the direction of a rapt little group standing
in the agonising position the ceiling demands—"just informed us that the
ceiling is by Raphael. And we're paying him ten lire!"
"Won't you sit here?" Mary Gowd made a place for her.
"I'll tell you."
And she did tell her, finding a certain relief from her pain in
unfolding to this commonplace little woman the glory of the masterpiece among
masterpieces.
"Why—why," gasped her listener, who had long since
beckoned the other seven with frantic finger, "how beautifully you explain
it! How much you know! Oh, why can't they talk as you do?" she wailed, her
eyes full of contempt for the despised guide.
"I am happy to have helped you," said Mary Gowd.
"Helped! Why, there are hundreds of Americans who would give
anything to have some one like you to be with them in Rome."
Mary Gowd's whole body stiffened. She stared fixedly at the
grateful little American school-teacher.
"Some one like me—"
The little teacher blushed very red.
"I beg your pardon. I wasn't thinking. Of course you don't
need to do any such work, but I just couldn't help saying—"
"But I do need work," interrupted Mary Gowd. She stood
up, her cheeks pink again for the moment, her eyes bright. "I thank you.
Oh, I thank you!"
"You thank me!" faltered the American.
But Mary Gowd had folded her sketchbook and was off, through the
vestibule, down the splendid corridor, past the giant Swiss guard, to the
noisy, sunny Piazza di San Pietro.
That had been fifteen years ago. She had taken her guide's
examinations and passed them. She knew her Rome from the crypt of St. Peter's
to the top of the Janiculum Hill; from the Campagna to Tivoli. She read and
studied and learned. She delved into the past and brought up strange and
interesting truths. She could tell you weird stories of those white marble men
who lay so peacefully beneath St. Peter's dome, their ringed hands crossed on
their breasts. She learned to juggle dates with an ease that brought gasps from
her American clients, with their history that went back little more than one
hundred years.
She learned to designate as new anything that failed to have its
origin stamped B.C.; and the Magnificent Augustus, he who boasted of finding
Rome brick and leaving it marble, was a mere nouveau riche with
his miserable A.D. 14.
She was as much at home in the Thermae of Caracalla as you in your
white-and-blue-tiled bath. She could juggle the history of emperors with one
hand and the scandals of half a dozen kings with the other. No ruin was too
unimportant for her attention—no picture too faded for her research. She had
the centuries at her tongue's end. Michelangelo and Canova were her brothers in
art, and Rome was to her as your back-garden patch is to you.
Mary Gowd hated this Rome as only an English woman can who has
spent fifteen years in that nest of intrigue. She fought the whole race of
Roman guides day after day. She no longer turned sick and faint when they
hissed after her vile Italian epithets that her American or English clients
quite failed to understand. Quite unconcernedly she would jam down the lever of
the taximeter the wily Italian cabby had pulled only halfway so that the meter
might register double. And when that foul-mouthed one crowned his heap of abuse
by screaming "Camorrista! Camor-r-rista!" at her, she would
merely shrug her shoulders and say "Andate presto!" to show
him she was above quarrelling with a cabman.
She ate eggs and bread, and drank the red wine, never having
conquered her disgust for Italian meat since first she saw the filthy
carcasses, fly-infested, dust-covered, loathsome, being carted through the
swarming streets.
It was six o'clock of an evening early in March when Mary Gowd
went home to the murky little room in the Via Babbuino. She was too tired to
notice the sunset. She was too tired to smile at the red-eyed baby of the
cobbler's wife, who lived in the rear. She was too tired to ask Tina for the
letters that seldom came. It had been a particularly trying day, spent with a
party of twenty Germans, who had said "Herrlich!" when she
showed them the marvels of the Vatican and "Kolossal!" at the
grandeur of the Colosseum and, for the rest, had kept their noses buried in
their Baedekers.
She groped her way cautiously down the black hall. Tina had a
habit of leaving sundry brushes, pans or babies lying about. After the warmth
of the March sun outdoors the house was cold with that clammy, penetrating,
tomblike chill of the Italian home.
"Tina!" she called.
From the rear of the house came a cackle of voices. Tina was
gossiping. There was no smell of supper in the air. Mary Gowd shrugged patient
shoulders. Then, before taking off the dowdy hat, before removing the white
cotton gloves, she went to the window that overlooked the noisy Via Babbuino,
closed the massive wooden shutters, fastened the heavy windows and drew the
thick curtains. Then she stood a moment, eyes shut. In that little room the
roar of Rome was tamed to a dull humming. Mary Gowd, born and bred amid the
green of Northern England, had never become hardened to the maddening noises of
the Via Babbuino: The rattle and clatter of cab wheels; the clack-clack of
thousands of iron-shod hoofs; the shrill, high cry of the street venders; the
blasts of motor horns that seemed to rend the narrow street; the roar and
rumble of the electric trams; the wail of fretful babies; the chatter of
gossiping women; and above and through and below it all the cracking of the
cabman's whip—that sceptre of the Roman cabby, that wand which is one part whip
and nine parts crack. Sometimes it seemed to Mary Gowd that her brain was
seared and welted by the pistol-shot reports of those eternal whips.
She came forward now and lighted a candle that stood on the table
and another on the dresser. Their dim light seemed to make dimmer the dark
little room. She looked about with a little shiver. Then she sank into the
chintz-covered chair that was the one bit of England in the sombre chamber. She
took off the dusty black velvet hat, passed a hand over her hair with a gesture
that was more tired than tidy, and sat back, her eyes shut, her body inert, her
head sagging on her breast.
The voices in the back of the house had ceased. From the kitchen
came the slipslop of Tina's slovenly feet. Mary Gowd opened her eyes and sat up
very straight as Tina stood in the doorway. There was nothing picturesque about
Tina. Tina was not one of those olive-tinted, melting-eyed daughters of Italy
that one meets in fiction. Looking at her yellow skin and her wrinkles and her
coarse hands, one wondered whether she was fifty, or sixty, or one hundred, as
is the way with Italian women of Tina's class at thirty-five.
Ah, the signora was tired! She smiled pityingly. Tired! Not at
all, Mary Gowd assured her briskly. She knew that Tina despised her because she
worked like a man.
"Something fine for supper?" Mary Gowd asked mockingly.
Her Italian was like that of the Romans themselves, so soft, so liquid, so
perfect.
Tina nodded vigorously, her long earrings shaking.
"Vitello"—she began, her tongue clinging lovingly
to the double l sound—"Vee-tail-loh—"
"Ugh!" shuddered Mary Gowd. That eternal veal and
mutton, pinkish, flabby, sickening!
"What then?" demanded the outraged Tina.
Mary Gowd stood up, making gestures, hat in hand.
"Clotted cream, with strawberries," she said in English,
an unknown language, which always roused Tina to fury. "And a steak—a real
steak of real beef, three inches thick and covered with onions fried in butter.
And creamed chicken, and English hothouse tomatoes, and fresh peaches and
little hot rolls, and coffee that isn't licorice and ink, and—and—"
Tina's dangling earrings disappeared in her shoulders. Her
outspread palms were eloquent.
"Crazy, these English!" said the shoulders and palms.
"Mad!"
Mary Gowd threw her hat on the bed, pushed aside a screen and
busied herself with a little alcohol stove.
"I shall prepare an omelet," she said over her shoulder
in Italian. "Also, I have here bread and wine."
"Ugh!" granted Tina.
"Ugh, veal!" grunted Mary Gowd. Then, as Tina's flapping
feet turned away: "Oh, Tina! Letters?"
Tina fumbled at the bosom of her gown, thought deeply and drew out
a crumpled envelope. It had been opened and clumsily closed again. Fifteen
years ago Mary Gowd would have raged. Now she shrugged philosophic shoulders.
Tina stole hairpins, opened letters that she could not hope to decipher,
rummaged bureau drawers, rifled cupboards and fingered books; but then, so did
most of the other Tinas in Rome. What use to complain?
Mary Gowd opened the thumb-marked letter, bringing it close to the
candlelight. As she read, a smile appeared.
"Huh! Gregg," she said, "Americans!" She
glanced again at the hotel letterhead on the stationery—the best hotel in
Naples. "Americans—and rich!"
The pleased little smile lingered as she beat the omelet briskly
for her supper.
The Henry D. Greggs arrived in Rome on the two o'clock train from
Naples. And all the Roman knights of the waving palm espied them from afar and
hailed them with whoops of joy. The season was still young and the Henry D.
Greggs looked like money—not Italian money, which is reckoned in lire, but
American money, which mounts grandly to dollars. The postcard men in the Piazza
delle Terme sped after their motor taxi. The swarthy brigand, with his wooden
box of tawdry souvenirs, marked them as they rode past. The cripple who lurked
behind a pillar in the colonnade threw aside his coat with a practised hitch of
his shoulder to reveal the sickeningly maimed arm that was his stock in trade.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Gregg had left their comfortable home in
Batavia, Illinois, with its sleeping porch, veranda and lawn, and
seven-passenger car; with its two glistening bathrooms, and its Oriental rugs,
and its laundry in the basement, and its Sunday fried chicken and ice cream,
because they felt that Miss Eleanora Gregg ought to have the benefit of foreign
travel. Miss Eleanora Gregg thought so too: in fact, she had thought so first.
Her name was Eleanora, but her parents called her Tweetie, which
really did not sound so bad as it might if Tweetie had been one whit less
pretty. Tweetie was so amazingly, Americanly pretty that she could have
triumphed over a pet name twice as absurd.
The Greggs came to Rome, as has been stated, at two P.M.
Wednesday. By two P.M. Thursday Tweetie had bought a pair of long, dangling
earrings, a costume with a Roman striped collar and sash, and had learned to
loll back in her cab in imitation of the dashing, black-eyed, sallow women she
had seen driving on the Pincio. By Thursday evening she was teasing Papa Gregg
for a spray of white aigrets, such as those same languorous ladies wore in
feathery mists atop their hats.
"But, Tweet," argued Papa Gregg, "what's the use?
You can't take them back with you. Custom-house regulations forbid it."
The rather faded but smartly dressed Mrs. Gregg asserted herself:
"They're barbarous! We had moving pictures at the club
showing how they're torn from the mother birds. No daughter of mine—"
"I don't care!" retorted Tweetie. "They're
perfectly stunning; and I'm going to have them."
And she had them—not that the aigret incident is important; but it
may serve to place the Greggs in their respective niches.
At eleven o'clock Friday morning Mary Gowd called at the Gregg's
hotel, according to appointment. In far-away Batavia, Illinois, Mrs. Gregg had
heard of Mary Gowd. And Mary Gowd, with her knowledge of everything Roman—from
the Forum to the best place at which to buy pearls—was to be the staff on which
the Greggs were to lean.
"My husband," said Mrs. Gregg; "my daughter
Twee—er—Eleanora. We've heard such wonderful things of you from my dear friend
Mrs. Melville Peters, of Batavia."
"Ah, yes!" exclaimed Mary Gowd. "A most charming
person, Mrs. Peters."
"After she came home from Europe she read the most wonderful
paper on Rome before the Women's West End Culture Club, of Batavia. We're
affiliated with the National Federation of Women's Clubs, as you probably know;
and—"
"Now, Mother," interrupted Henry Gregg, "the lady
can't be interested in your club."
"Oh, but I am!" exclaimed Mary Gowd very vivaciously.
"Enormously!"
Henry Gregg eyed her through his cigar smoke with suddenly
narrowed lids.
"M-m-m! Well, let's get to the point anyway. I know Tweetie
here is dying to see St. Peter's, and all that."
Tweetie had settled back inscrutably after one comprehensive,
disdainful look at Mary Gowd's suit, hat, gloves and shoes. Now she sat up, her
bewitching face glowing with interest.
"Tell me," she said, "what do they call those
officers with the long pale-blue capes and the silver helmets and the swords?
And the ones in dark-blue uniform with the maroon stripe at the side of the
trousers? And do they ever mingle with the—that is, there was one of the blue
capes here at tea yesterday—"
Papa Gregg laughed a great, comfortable laugh.
"Oh, so that's where you were staring yesterday, young lady!
I thought you acted kind of absent-minded." He got up to walk over and
pinch Tweetie's blushing cheek.
So it was that Mary Gowd began the process of pouring the bloody,
religious, wanton, pious, thrilling, dreadful history of Rome into the pretty
and unheeding ear of Tweetie Gregg.
On the fourth morning after that introductory meeting Mary Gowd
arrived at the hotel at ten, as usual, to take charge of her party for the day.
She encountered them in the hotel foyer, an animated little group centred about
a very tall, very dashing, very black-mustachioed figure who wore a long pale
blue cape thrown gracefully over one shoulder as only an Italian officer can
wear such a garment. He was looking down into the brilliantly glowing face of
the pretty Eleanora, and the pretty Eleanora was looking up at him; and Pa and
Ma Gregg were standing by, placidly pleased.
A grim little line appeared about Miss Gowd's mouth. Blue Cape's
black eyes saw it, even as he bent low over Mary Gowd's hand at the words of
introduction.
"Oh, Miss Gowd," pouted Tweetie, "it's too bad you
haven't a telephone. You see, we shan't need you to-day."
"No?" said Miss Gowd, and glanced at Blue Cape.
"No; Signor Caldini says it's much too perfect a day to go
poking about among old ruins and things."
Henry D. Gregg cleared his throat and took up the explanation.
"Seems the—er—Signor thinks it would be just the thing to take a touring
car and drive to Tivoli, and have a bite of lunch there."
"And come back in time to see the Colosseum by
moonlight!" put in Tweetie ecstatically.
"Oh, yes!" said Mary Gowd.
Pa Gregg looked at his watch.
"Well, I'll be running along," he said. Then, in answer
to something in Mary Gowd's eyes: "I'm not going to Tivoli, you see. I met
a man from Chicago here at the hotel. He and I are going to chin awhile this
morning. And Mrs. Gregg and his wife are going on a shopping spree. Say, ma, if
you need any more money speak up now, because I'm—"
Mary Gowd caught his coat sleeve.
"One moment!"
Her voice was very low. "You mean—you mean Miss Eleanora will
go to Tivoli and to the Colosseum alone—with—with Signor Caldini?"
Henry Gregg smiled indulgently.
"The young folks always run round alone at home. We've got
our own car at home in Batavia, but Tweetie's beaus are always driving up for
her in—"
Mary Gowd turned her head so that only Henry Gregg could hear what
she said.
"Step aside for just one moment. I must talk to you."
"Well, what?"
"Do as I say," whispered Mary Gowd.
Something of her earnestness seemed to convey a meaning to Henry
Gregg.
"Just wait a minute, folks," he said to the group of
three, and joined Mary Gowd, who had chosen a seat a dozen paces away.
"What's the trouble?" he asked jocularly. "Hope you're not
offended because Tweet said we didn't need you to-day. You know young
folks—"
"They must not go alone," said Mary Gowd.
"But—"
"This is not America. This is Italy—this Caldini is an
Italian."
"Why, look here; Signor Caldini was introduced to us last
night. His folks really belong to the nobility."
"I know; I know," interrupted Mary Gowd. "I tell
you they cannot go alone. Please believe me! I have been fifteen years in Rome.
Noble or not, Caldini is an Italian. I ask you"—she had clasped her hands
and was looking pleadingly up into his face—"I beg of you, let me go with
them. You need not pay me to-day. You—"
Henry Gregg looked at her very thoughtfully and a little puzzled.
Then he glanced over at the group again, with Blue Cape looking down so eagerly
into Tweetie's exquisite face and Tweetie looking up so raptly into Blue Cape's
melting eyes and Ma Gregg standing so placidly by. He turned again to Mary
Gowd's earnest face.
"Well, maybe you're right. They do seem to use chaperons in
Europe—duennas, or whatever you call 'em. Seems a nice kind of chap,
though."
He strolled back to the waiting group. From her seat Mary Gowd
heard Mrs. Gregg's surprised exclamation, saw Tweetie's pout, understood
Caldini's shrug and sneer. There followed a little burst of conversation. Then,
with a little frown which melted into a smile for Blue Cape, Tweetie went to
her room for motor coat and trifles that the long day's outing demanded. Mrs.
Gregg, still voluble, followed.
Blue Cape, with a long look at Mary Gowd, went out to confer with
the porter about the motor. Papa Gregg, hand in pockets, cigar tilted, eyes
narrowed, stood irresolutely in the centre of the great, gaudy foyer. Then,
with a decisive little hunch of his shoulders, he came back to where Mary Gowd
sat.
"Did you say you've been fifteen years in Rome?"
"Fifteen years," answered Mary Gowd.
Henry D. Gregg took his cigar from his mouth and regarded it
thoughtfully.
"Well, that's quite a spell. Must like it here." Mary
Gowd said nothing. "Can't say I'm crazy about it—that is, as a place to
live. I said to Mother last night: 'Little old Batavia's good enough for Henry
D.' Of course it's a grand education, travelling, especially for Tweetie. Funny,
I always thought the fruit in Italy was regular hothouse stuff—thought the
streets would just be lined with trees all hung with big, luscious oranges.
But, Lord! Here we are at the best hotel in Rome, and the fruit is worse than
the stuff the pushcart men at home feed to their families—little wizened
bananas and oranges. Still, it's grand here in Rome for Tweetie. I can't stay
long—just ran away from business to bring 'em over; but I'd like Tweetie to
stay in Italy until she learns the lingo. Sings, too—Tweetie does; and she and
Ma think they'll have her voice cultivated over here. They'll stay here quite a
while, I guess."
"Then you will not be here with them?" asked Mary Gowd.
"Me? No."
They sat silent for a moment.
"I suppose you're crazy about Rome," said Henry Gregg
again. "There's a lot of culture here, and history, and all that;
and—"
"I hate Rome!" said Mary Gowd.
Henry Gregg stared at her in bewilderment.
"Then why in Sam Hill don't you go back to England?"
"I'm thirty-seven years old. That's one reason why. And I
look older. Oh, yes, I do. Thanks just the same. There are too many women in
England already—too many half-starving shabby genteel. I earn enough to live on
here—that is, I call it living. You couldn't. In the bad season, when there are
no tourists, I live on a lire a day, including my rent."
Henry Gregg stood up.
"My land! Why don't you come to America?" He waved his
arms. "America!"
Mary Gowd's brick-red cheeks grew redder.
"America!" she echoed. "When I see American
tourists here throwing pennies in the Fountain of Trevi, so that they'll come
back to Rome, I want to scream. By the time I save enough money to go to
America I'll be an old woman and it will be too late. And if I did contrive to
scrape together enough for my passage over I couldn't go to the United States
in these clothes. I've seen thousands of American women here. If they look like
that when they're just travelling about, what do they wear at home!"
"Clothes?" inquired Henry Gregg, mystified. "What's
wrong with your clothes?"
"Everything! I've seen them look at my suit, which hunches in
the back and strains across the front, and is shiny at the seams. And my
gloves! And my hat! Well, even though I am English I know how frightful my hat
is."
"You're a smart woman," said Henry D. Gregg.
"Not smart enough," retorted Mary Gowd, "or I
shouldn't be here."
The two stood up as Tweetie came toward them from the lift.
Tweetie pouted again at sight of Mary Gowd, but the pout cleared as Blue Cape,
his arrangements completed, stood in the doorway, splendid hat in hand.
It was ten o'clock when the three returned from Tivoli and the
Colosseum—Mary Gowd silent and shabbier than ever from the dust of the road;
Blue Cape smiling; Tweetie frankly pettish. Pa and Ma Gregg were listening to
the after-dinner concert in the foyer.
"Was it romantic—the Colosseum, I mean—by moonlight?"
asked Ma Gregg, patting Tweetie's cheek and trying not to look uncomfortable as
Blue Cape kissed her hand.
"Romantic!" snapped Tweetie. "It was as romantic as
Main Street on Circus Day. Hordes of people tramping about like buffaloes.
Simply swarming with tourists—German ones. One couldn't find a single ruin to
sit on. Romantic!" She glared at the silent Mary Gowd.
There was a strange little glint in Mary Gowd's eyes, and the grim
line was there about the mouth again, grimmer than it had been in the morning.
"You will excuse me?" she said. "I am very tired. I
will say good night."
"And I," announced Caldini.
Mary Gowd turned swiftly to look at him.
"You!" said Tweetie Gregg.
"I trust that I may have the very great happiness to see you
in the morning," went on Caldini in his careful English. "I cannot
permit Signora Gowd to return home alone through the streets of Rome." He
bowed low and elaborately over the hands of the two women.
"Oh, well; for that matter—" began Henry Gregg
gallantly.
Caldini raised a protesting, white-gloved hand.
"I cannot permit it."
He bowed again and looked hard at Mary Gowd. Mary Gowd returned
the look. The brick-red had quite faded from her cheeks. Then, with a nod, she
turned and walked toward the door. Blue Cape, sword clanking, followed her.
In silence he handed her into the fiacre. In silence
he seated himself beside her. Then he leaned very close.
"I will talk in this damned English," he began, "that
the pig of a fiaccheraio may not understand. This—this Gregg,
he is very rich, like all Americans. And the little Eleanora! Bellissima! You
must not stand in my way. It is not good." Mary Dowd sat silent. "You
will help me. To-day you were not kind. There will be much money—money for me;
also for you."
Fifteen years before—ten years before—she would have died sooner
than listen to a plan such as he proposed; but fifteen years of Rome blunts
one's English sensibilities. Fifteen years of privation dulls one's moral
sense. And money meant America. And little Tweetie Gregg had not lowered her
voice or her laugh when she spoke that afternoon of Mary Gowd's absurd English
fringe and her red wrists above her too-short gloves.
"How much?" asked Mary Gowd. He named a figure. She
laughed.
"More—much more!"
He named another figure; then another.
"You will put it down on paper," said Mary Gowd,
"and sign your name—to-morrow."
They drove the remainder of the way in silence. At her door in the
Via Babbuino:
"You mean to marry her?" asked Mary Gowd.
Blue Cape shrugged eloquent shoulders:
"I think not," he said quite simply.
It was to be the Appian Way the next morning, with a stop at the
Catacombs. Mary Gowd reached the hotel very early, but not so early as Caldini.
"Think the five of us can pile into one carriage?"
boomed Henry Gregg cheerily.
"A little crowded, I think," said Mary Gowd, "for
such a long drive. May I suggest that we three"—she smiled on Henry Gregg
and his wife—"take this larger carriage, while Miss Eleanora and Signor
Caldini follow in the single cab?"
A lightning message from Blue Cape's eyes.
“Yes; that would be nice!" cooed Tweetie.
So it was arranged. Mary Gowd rather outdid herself as a guide
that morning. She had a hundred little intimate tales at her tongue's end. She
seemed fairly to people those old ruins again with the men and women of a
thousand years ago. Even Tweetie—little frivolous, indifferent Tweetie—was
impressed and interested.
As they were returning to the carriages after inspecting the Baths
of Caracalla, Tweetie even skipped ahead and slipped her hand for a moment into
Mary Gowd's.
"You're simply wonderful!" she said almost shyly.
"You make things sound so real. And—and I'm sorry I was so nasty to you
yesterday at Tivoli."
Mary Dowd looked down at the glowing little face. A foolish little
face it was, but very, very pretty, and exquisitely young and fresh and sweet.
Tweetie dropped her voice to a whisper:
"You should hear him pronounce my name. It is like music when
he says it—El-e-a-no-ra; like that. And aren't his kid gloves always
beautifully white? Why, the boys back home—"
Mary Gowd was still staring down at her. She lifted the slim,
ringed little hand which lay within her white-cotton paw and stared at that
too.
Then with a jerk she dropped the girl's hand and squared her
shoulders like a soldier, so that the dowdy blue suit strained more than ever
at its seams; and the line that had settled about her mouth the night before
faded slowly, as though a muscle too tightly drawn had relaxed.
In the carriages they were seated as before. The horses started
up, with the smaller cab but a dozen paces behind. Mary Gowd leaned forward.
She began to speak—her voice very low, her accent clearly English, her brevity
wonderfully American.
"Listen to me!" she said. "You must leave Rome
to-night!"
"Leave Rome to-night!" echoed the Greggs as though
rehearsing a duet.
"Be quiet! You must not shout like that. I say you must go
away."
Mamma Gregg opened her lips and shut them, wordless for once.
Henry Gregg laid one big hand on his wife's shaking knees and eyed Mary Gowd
very quietly.
"I don't get you," he said.
Mary Gowd looked straight at him as she said what she had to say:
"There are things in Rome you cannot understand. You could
not understand unless you lived here many years. I lived here many months
before I learned to step meekly off into the gutter to allow a man to pass on
the narrow sidewalk. You must take your pretty daughter and go away. To-night!
No—let me finish. I will tell you what happened to me fifteen years ago, and I
will tell you what this Caldini has in his mind. You will believe me and
forgive me; and promise me that you will go quietly away."
When she finished Mrs. Gregg was white-faced and luckily too
frightened to weep. Henry Gregg started up in the carriage, his fists
white-knuckled, his lean face turned toward the carriage crawling behind.
"Sit down!" commanded Mary Gowd. She jerked his sleeve.
"Sit down!"
Henry Gregg sat down slowly. Then he wet his lips slightly and
smiled.
"Oh, bosh!" he said. "This—this is the twentieth
century and we're Americans, and it's broad daylight. Why, I'll lick the—"
"This is Rome," interrupted Mary Gowd quietly, "and
you will do nothing of the kind, because he would make you pay for that too,
and it would be in all the papers; and your pretty daughter would hang her head
in shame forever." She put one hand on Henry Gregg's sleeve. "You do
not know! You do not! Promise me you will go." The tears sprang suddenly
to her English blue eyes. "Promise me! Promise me!"
"Henry!" cried Mamma Gregg, very grey-faced.
"Promise, Henry!"
"I promise," said Henry Gregg, and he turned away.
Mary Gowd sank back in her seat and shut her eyes for a moment.
"Presto!" she said to the half-sleeping driver.
Then she waved a gay hand at the carriage in the rear. "Presto!"
she called, smiling. "Presto!"
At six o'clock Mary Gowd entered the little room in the Via
Babbuino. She went first to the window, drew the heavy curtains. The roar of
Rome was hushed to a humming. She lighted a candle that stood on the table. Its
dim light emphasized the gloom. She took off the battered black velvet hat and
sank into the chintz-covered English chair. Tina stood in the doorway. Mary
Gowd sat up with a jerk.
"Letters, Tina?"
Tina thought deeply, fumbled at the bosom of her gown and drew out
a sealed envelope grudgingly.
Mary Gowd broke the seal, glanced at the letter. Then, under
Tina's startled gaze, she held it to the flaming candle and watched it burn.
"What is it that you do?" demanded Tina.
Mary Gowd smiled.
"You have heard of America?"
"America! A thousand—a million time! My brother Luigi—"
"Naturally! This, then"—Mary Gowd deliberately gathered
up the ashes into a neat pile and held them in her hand, a crumpled
heap—"this then, Tina, is my trip to America."
X.SOPHY-AS-SHE-MIGHT-HAVE-BEEN
The key to the heart of Paris is love. He whose key-ring lacks
that open sesame never really sees the city, even though he dwell in the shadow
of the Sorbonne and comprehend the fiacre French of the Paris
cabman. Some there are who craftily open the door with a skeleton key; some who
ruthlessly batter the panels; some who achieve only a wax impression, which
proves to be useless. There are many who travel no farther than the outer
gates. You will find them staring blankly at the stone walls; and their plaint
is:
"What do they find to rave about in this town?"
Sophy Gold had been eight days in Paris and she had not so much as
peeked through the key-hole. In a vague way she realised that she was seeing
Paris as a blind man sees the sun—feeling its warmth, conscious of its white
light beating on the eyeballs, but never actually beholding its golden glory.
This was Sophy Gold's first trip to Paris, and her heart and soul
and business brain were intent on buying the shrewdest possible bill of
lingerie and infants' wear for her department at Schiff Brothers', Chicago; but
Sophy under-estimated the powers of those three guiding parts. While heart,
soul, and brain were bent dutifully and indefatigably on the lingerie and
infants'-wear job they also were registering a series of kaleidoscopic outside
impressions.
As she drove from her hotel to the wholesale district, and from
the wholesale district to her hotel, there had flashed across her consciousness
the picture of the chic little modistes' models and ouvrières slipping
out at noon to meet their lovers on the corner, to sit over their sirop or
wine at some little near-by café, hands clasped, eyes glowing.
Stepping out of the lift to ask for her room key, she had come on
the black-gowned floor clerk, deep in murmured conversation with the valet, and
she had seemed not to see Sophy at all as she groped subconsciously for the key
along the rows of keyboxes. She had seen the workmen in their absurdly baggy
corduroy trousers and grimy shirts strolling along arm in arm with the women of
their class—those untidy women with the tidy hair. Bareheaded and happy, they
strolled along, a strange contrast to the glitter of the fashionable boulevard,
stopping now and then to gaze wide-eyed at a million-franc necklace in a
jeweller's window; then on again with a laugh and a shrug and a caress. She had
seen the silent couples in the Tuileries Gardens at twilight.
Once, in the Bois de Boulogne, a slim, sallow élégant had
bent for what seemed an interminable time over a white hand that was stretched
from the window of a motor car. He was standing at the curb; in either greeting
or parting, and his eyes were fastened on other eyes within the car even while
his lips pressed the white hand.
Then one evening—Sophy reddened now at memory of it—she had turned
a quiet corner and come on a boy and a girl. The girl was shabby and sixteen;
the boy pale, voluble, smiling.
Evidently they were just parting. Suddenly, as she passed, the boy
had caught the girl in his arms there on the street corner in the daylight, and
had kissed her—not the quick, resounding smack of casual leave-taking, but a
long, silent kiss that left the girl limp.
Sophy stood rooted to the spot, between horror and fascination.
The boy's arm brought the girl upright and set her on her feet.
She took a long breath, straightened her hat, and ran on to rejoin
her girl friend awaiting her calmly up the street. She was not even flushed;
but Sophy was. Sophy was blushing hotly and burning uncomfortably, so that her
eyes smarted.
Just after her late dinner on the eighth day of her Paris stay,
Sophy Gold was seated in the hotel lobby. Paris thronged with American business
buyers—those clever, capable, shrewd-eyed women who swarm on the city in June
and strip it of its choicest flowers, from ball gowns to back combs. Sophy
tried to pick them from the multitude that swept past her. It was not
difficult. The women visitors to Paris in June drop easily into their proper
slots.
There were the pretty American girls and their marvellously
young-looking mammas, both out-Frenching the French in their efforts to look
Parisian; there were rows of fat, placid, jewel-laden Argentine mothers, each
with a watchful eye on her black-eyed, volcanically calm, be-powdered daughter;
and there were the buyers, miraculously dressy in next week's styles in suits
and hats—of the old-girl type most of them, alert, self-confident, capable.
They usually returned to their hotels at six, limping a little,
dog-tired; but at sight of the brightly lighted, gay hotel foyer they would
straighten up like war-horses scenting battle and achieve an effective entrance
from the doorway to the lift.
In all that big, busy foyer Sophy Gold herself was the one person
distinctly out of the picture. One did not know where to place her. To begin
with, a woman as irrevocably, irredeemably ugly as Sophy was an anachronism in
Paris. She belonged to the gargoyle period. You found yourself speculating on
whether it was her mouth or her nose that made her so devastatingly plain, only
to bring up at her eyes and find that they alone were enough to wreck any
ambitions toward beauty. You knew before you saw it that her hair would be limp
and straggling.
You sensed without a glance at them that her hands would be bony,
with unlovely knuckles.
The Fates, grinning, had done all that. Her Chicago tailor and
milliner had completed the work. Sophy had not been in Paris ten minutes before
she noticed that they were wearing 'em long and full. Her coat was short and
her skirt scant. Her hat was small. The Paris windows were full of large and
graceful black velvets of the Lillian Russell school.
"May I sit here?"
Sophy looked up into the plump, pink, smiling face of one of those
very women of the buyer type on whom she had speculated ten minutes before—a
good-natured face with shrewd, twinkling eyes. At sight of it you forgave her
her skittish white-kid-topped shoes.
"Certainly," smiled Sophy, and moved over a bit on the
little French settee.
The plump woman sat down heavily. In five minutes Sophy was
conscious she was being stared at surreptitiously. In ten minutes she was
uncomfortably conscious of it. In eleven minutes she turned her head suddenly
and caught the stout woman's eyes fixed on her, with just the baffled,
speculative expression she had expected to find in them. Sophy Gold had caught
that look in many women's eyes. She smiled grimly now.
"Don't try it," she said, "It's no use."
The pink, plump face flushed pinker.
"Don't try—"
"Don't try to convince yourself that if I wore my hair
differently, or my collar tighter, or my hat larger, it would make a difference
in my looks. It wouldn't. It's hard to believe that I'm as homely as I look,
but I am. I've watched women try to dress me in as many as eleven mental changes
of costume before they gave me up."
"But I didn't mean—I beg your pardon—you mustn't think—"
"Oh, that's all right! I used to struggle, but I'm used to it
now. It took me a long time to realise that this was my real face and the only
kind I could ever expect to have."
The plump woman's kindly face grew kinder.
"But you're really not so—"
"Oh, yes, I am. Upholstering can't change me. There are
various kinds of homely women—some who are hideous in blue maybe, but who
soften up in pink. Then there's the one you read about, whose features are
lighted up now and then by one of those rare, sweet smiles that make her plain
face almost beautiful. But once in a while you find a woman who is ugly in any
colour of the rainbow; who is ugly smiling or serious, talking or in repose,
hair down low or hair done high—just plain dyed-in-the-wool, sewed-in-the-seam
homely. I'm that kind. Here for a visit?"
"I'm a buyer," said the plump woman.
"Yes; I thought so. I'm the lingerie and infants'-wear buyer
for Schiff, Chicago."
"A buyer!" The plump woman's eyes jumped uncontrollably
again to Sophy Gold's scrambled features. "Well! My name's Miss
Morrissey—Ella Morrissey. Millinery for Abelman's, Pittsburgh. And it's no snap
this year, with the shops showing postage-stamp hats one day and cart-wheels
the next. I said this morning that I envied the head of the tinware department.
Been over often?"
Sophy made the shamefaced confession of the novice: "My first
trip."
The inevitable answer came:
"Your first! Really! This is my twentieth crossing. Been
coming over twice a year for ten years. If there's anything I can tell you,
just ask. The first buying trip to Paris is hard until you know the ropes. Of
course you love this town?"
Sophy Gold sat silent a moment, hesitating. Then she turned a
puzzled face toward Miss Morrissey.
"What do people mean when they say they love Paris?"
Ella Morrissey stared. Then a queer look came into her face—a
pitying sort of look. The shrewd eyes softened. She groped for words.
"When I first came over here, ten years ago, I—well, it would
have been easier to tell you then. I don't know—there's something about
Paris—something in the atmosphere—something in the air. It—it makes you do
foolish things. It makes you feel queer and light and happy. It's nothing you
can put your finger on and say 'That's it!' But it's there."
"Huh!" grunted Sophy Gold. "I suppose I could save
myself a lot of trouble by saying that I feel it; but I don't. I simply don't
react to this town. The only things I really like in Paris are the Tomb of
Napoleon, the Seine at night, and the strawberry tart you get at Vian's. Of
course the parks and boulevards are a marvel, but you can't expect me to love a
town for that. I'm no landscape gardener."
That pitying look deepened in Miss Morrissey's eyes.
"Have you been out in the evening? The restaurants! The
French women! The life!"
Sophy Gold caught the pitying look and interpreted it without
resentment; but there was perhaps an added acid in her tone when she spoke.
"I'm here to buy—not to play. I'm thirty years old, and it's
taken me ten years to work my way up to foreign buyer. I've worked. And I
wasn't handicapped any by my beauty. I've made up my mind that I'm going to buy
the smoothest-moving line of French lingerie and infants' wear that Schiff
Brothers ever had."
Miss Morrissey checked her.
"But, my dear girl, haven't you been round at all?"
"Oh, a little; as much as a woman can go round alone in
Paris—even a homely woman. But I've been disappointed every time. The noise
drives me wild, to begin with. Not that I'm not used to noise. I am. I can
stand for a town that roars, like Chicago. But this city yelps. I've been going
round to the restaurants a little. At noon I always picked the restaurant I
wanted, so long as I had to pay for the lunch of the commissionnaire who
was with me anyway. Can you imagine any man at home letting a woman pay for his
meals the way those shrimpy Frenchmen do?
"Well, the restaurants were always jammed full of Americans.
The men of the party would look over the French menu in a helpless sort of way,
and then they'd say: 'What do you say to a nice big steak with French-fried
potatoes?' The waiter would give them a disgusted look and put in the order.
They might just as well have been eating at a quick lunch place. As for the
French women, every time I picked what I took to be a real Parisienne coming
toward me I'd hear her say as she passed: 'Henry, I'm going over to the Galerie
Lafayette. I'll meet you at the American Express at twelve. And, Henry, I think
I'll need some more money.'"
Miss Ella Morrissey's twinkling eyes almost disappeared in
wrinkles of laughter; but Sophy Gold was not laughing. As she talked she gazed
grimly ahead at the throng that shifted and glittered and laughed and chattered
all about her.
"I stopped work early one afternoon and went over across the
river. Well! They may be artistic, but they all looked as though they needed a
shave and a hair-cut and a square meal. And the girls!"
Ella Morrissey raised a plump, protesting palm.
"Now look here, child, Paris isn't so much a city as a state
of mind. To enjoy it you've got to forget you're an American. Don't look at it
from a Chicago, Illinois, viewpoint. Just try to imagine you're a mixture of
Montmartre girl, Latin Quarter model and duchess from the Champs Élysées. Then
you'll get it."
"Get it!" retorted Sophy Gold. "If I could do that
I wouldn't be buying lingerie and infants' wear for Schiffs'. I'd be crowding
Duse and Bernhardt and Mrs. Fiske off the boards."
Miss Morrissey sat silent and thoughtful, rubbing one fat
forefinger slowly up and down her knee. Suddenly she turned.
"Don't be angry—but have you ever been in love?"
"Look at me!" replied Sophy Gold simply. Miss Morrissey
reddened a little. "As head of the lingerie section I've selected
trousseaus for I don't know how many Chicago brides; but I'll never have to
decide whether I'll have pink or blue ribbons for my own."
With a little impulsive gesture Ella Morrissey laid one hand on
the shoulder of her new acquaintance.
"Come on up and visit me, will you? I made them give me an
inside room, away from the noise. Too many people down here. Besides, I'd like
to take off this armour-plate of mine and get comfortable. When a girl gets as
old and fat as I am—"
"There are some letters I ought to get out," Sophy Gold
protested feebly.
"Yes; I know. We all have; but there's such a thing as
overdoing this duty to the firm. You get up at six to-morrow morning and slap
off those letters. They'll come easier and sound less tired."
They made for the lift; but at its very gates:
"Hello, little girl!" cried a masculine voice; and a
detaining hand was laid on Ella Morrissey's plump shoulder.
That lady recognised the voice and the greeting before she turned
to face their source. Max Tack, junior partner in the firm of Tack Brothers,
Lingerie and Infants' Wear, New York, held out an eager hand.
"Hello, Max!" said Miss Morrissey not too cordially.
"My, aren't you dressy!"
He was undeniably dressy—not that only, but radiant with the
self-confidence born of good looks, of well-fitting evening clothes, of a fresh
shave, of glistening nails. Max Tack, of the hard eye and the soft smile, of
the slim figure and the semi-bald head, of the flattering tongue and the
business brain, bent his attention full on the very plain Miss Sophy Gold.
"Aren't you going to introduce me?" he demanded.
Miss Morrissey introduced them, buyer fashion—names, business
connection, and firms.
"I knew you were Miss Gold," began Max Tack, the
honey-tongued. "Some one pointed you out to me yesterday. I've been trying
to meet you ever since."
"I hope you haven't neglected your business," said Miss
Gold without enthusiasm.
Max Tack leaned closer, his tone lowered.
"I'd neglect it any day for you. Listen, little one: aren't
you going to take dinner with me some evening?"
Max Tack always called a woman "Little one." It was part
of his business formula. He was only one of the wholesalers who go to Paris
yearly ostensibly to buy models, but really to pay heavy diplomatic court to
those hundreds of women buyers who flock to that city in the interests of their
firms. To entertain those buyers who were interested in goods such as he
manufactured in America; to win their friendship; to make them feel under
obligation at least to inspect his line when they came to New York—that was Max
Tack's mission in Paris. He performed it admirably.
"What evening?" he said now. "How about
to-morrow?" Sophy Gold shook her head. "Wednesday then? You stick to
me and you'll see Paris. Thursday?"
"I'm buying my own dinners," said Sophy Gold.
Max Tack wagged a chiding forefinger at her.
"You little rascal!" No one had ever called Sophy Gold a
little rascal before. "You stingy little rascal! Won't give a poor
lonesome fellow an evening's pleasure, eh! The theatre? Want to go slumming?"
He was feeling his way now, a trifle puzzled. Usually he landed a
buyer at the first shot. Of course you had to use tact and discrimination. Some
you took to supper and to the naughty revues.
Occasionally you found a highbrow one who preferred the opera. Had
he not sat through Parsifal the week before? And nearly died! Some wanted to
begin at Tod Sloan's bar and work their way up through Montmartre, ending with
breakfast at the Pré Catalan. Those were the greedy ones. But this one!
"What's she stalling for—with that face?" he asked
himself.
Sophy Gold was moving toward the lift, the twinkling-eyed Miss
Morrissey with her.
"I'm working too hard to play. Thanks, just the same.
Good-night."
Max Tack, his face blank, stood staring up at them as the lift
began to ascend.
"Trazyem," said Miss Morrissey grandly to the
lift man.
"Third," replied that linguistic person, unimpressed.
It turned out to be soothingly quiet and cool in Ella Morrissey's
room. She flicked on the light and turned an admiring glance on Sophy Gold.
"Is that your usual method?"
"I haven't any method," Miss Gold seated herself by the
window. "But I've worked too hard for this job of mine to risk it by
putting myself under obligations to any New York firm. It simply means that
you've got to buy their goods. It isn't fair to your firm."
Miss Morrissey was busy with hooks and eyes and strings. Her
utterance was jerky but concise. At one stage of her disrobing she breathed a
great sigh of relief as she flung a heavy garment from her.
"There! That's comfort! Nights like this I wish I had that
back porch of our flat to sit on for just an hour. Ma has flower boxes all
round it, and I bought one of those hammock couches last year. When I come home
from the store summer evenings I peel and get into my old blue-and-white kimono
and lie there, listening to the girl stirring the iced tea for supper, and
knowing that Ma has a platter of her swell cold fish with egg sauce!" She
relaxed into an armchair. "Tell me, do you always talk to men that way?"
Sophy Gold was still staring out the open window.
"They don't bother me much, as a rule."
"Max Tack isn't a bad boy. He never wastes much time on me. I
don't buy his line. Max is all business. Of course he's something of a smarty,
and he does think he's the first verse and chorus of Paris-by-night; but you
can't help liking him."
"Well, I can," said Sophy Gold, and her voice was a
little bitter, "and without half trying."
"Oh, I don't say you weren't right. I've always made it a
rule to steer clear of the ax-grinders myself. There are plenty of girls who
take everything they can get. I know that Max Tack is just padded with letters
from old girls, beginning 'Dear Kid,' and ending, 'Yours with a world of love!'
I don't believe in that kind of thing, or in accepting things. Julia Harris,
who buys for three departments in our store, drives up every morning in the
French car that Parmentier's gave her when she was here last year. That's bad
principle and poor taste. But—Well, you're young; and there ought to be
something besides business in your life."
Sophy Gold turned her face from the window toward Miss Morrissey.
It served to put a stamp of finality on what she said:
"There never will be. I don't know anything but business.
It's the only thing I care about. I'll be earning my ten thousand a year pretty
soon."
"Ten thousand a year is a lot; but it isn't everything. Oh,
no, it isn't. Look here, dear; nobody knows better than I how this working and
being independent and earning your own good money puts the stopper on any sentiment
a girl might have in her; but don't let it sour you. You lose your illusions
soon enough, goodness knows! There's no use in smashing 'em out of pure
meanness."
"I don't see what illusions have got to do with Max
Tack," interrupted Sophy Gold.
Miss Morrissey laughed her fat, comfortable chuckle.
"I suppose you're right, and I guess I've been getting a
lee-tle bit nosey; but I'm pretty nearly old enough to be your mother. The
girls kind of come to me and I talk to 'em. I guess they've spoiled me. They—"
There came a smart rapping at the door, followed by certain
giggling and swishing. Miss Morrissey smiled.
"That'll be some of 'em now. Just run and open the door, will
you, like a nice little thing? I'm too beat out to move."
The swishing swelled to a mighty rustle as the door opened.
Taffeta was good this year, and the three who entered were the last in the
world to leave you in ignorance of that fact. Ella Morrissey presented her new
friend to the three, giving the department each represented as one would
mention a title or order.
"The little plump one in black?—Ladies' and Misses'
Ready-to-wear, Gates Company, Portland.... That's a pretty hat, Carrie. Get it
to-day? Give me a big black velvet every time. You can wear 'em with anything,
and yet they're dressy too. Just now small hats are distinctly passy.
"The handsome one who's dressed the way you always imagined
the Parisiennes would dress, but don't?—Fancy Goods, Stein & Stack, San
Francisco. Listen, Fan: don't go back to San Francisco with that stuff on your
lips. It's all right in Paris, where all the women do it; but you know as well
as I do that Morry Stein would take one look at you and then tell you to go
upstairs and wash your face. Well, I'm just telling you as a friend.
"That little trick is the biggest lace buyer in the
country.... No, you wouldn't, would you? Such a mite! Even if she does wear a
twenty-eight blouse she's got a forty-two brain—haven't you, Belle? You didn't
make a mistake with that blue crêpe de chine, child. It's chic and yet it's
girlish. And you can wear it on the floor, too, when you get home. It's quiet
if it is stunning."
These five, as they sat there that June evening, knew what your
wife and your sister and your mother would wear on Fifth Avenue or Michigan
Avenue next October. On their shrewd, unerring judgment rested the success or
failure of many hundreds of feminine garments. The lace for Miss Minnesota's
lingerie; the jewelled comb in Miss Colorado's hair; the hat that would grace
Miss New Hampshire; the dress for Madam Delaware—all were the results of their
farsighted selection. They were foragers of feminine fal-lals, and their booty
would be distributed from oyster cove to orange grove.
They were marcelled and manicured within an inch of their lives.
They rustled and a pleasant perfume clung about them. Their hats were so smart
that they gave you a shock. Their shoes were correct. Their skirts bunched
where skirts should bunch that year or lay smooth where smoothness was decreed.
They looked like the essence of frivolity—until you saw their eyes; and then
you noticed that that which is liquid in sheltered women's eyes was
crystallised in theirs.
Sophy Gold, listening to them, felt strangely out of it and
plainer than ever.
"I'm taking tango lessons, Ella," chirped Miss Laces.
"Every time I went to New York last year I sat and twiddled my thumbs
while every one else was dancing. I've made up my mind I'll be in it this
year."
"You girls are wonders!" Miss Morrissey marvelled.
"I can't do it any more. If I was to work as hard as I have to during the
day and then run round the way you do in the evening they'd have to hold
services for me at sea. I'm getting old."
"You—old!" This from Miss Ready-to-Wear. "You're
younger now than I'll ever be. Oh, Ella, I got six stunning models at Estelle
Mornet's. There's a business woman for you! Her place is smart from the ground
floor up—not like the shabby old junk shops the others have. And she greets you
herself. The personal touch! Let me tell you, it counts in business!"
"I'd go slow on those cape blouses if I were you; I don't
think they're going to take at home. They look like regular Third Avenue style
to me."
"Don't worry. I've hardly touched them."
They talked very directly, like men, when they discussed clothes;
for to them a clothes talk meant a business talk.
The telephone buzzed. The three sprang up, rustling.
"That'll be for us, Ella," said Miss Fancy Goods.
"We told the office to call us here. The boys are probably
downstairs." She answered the call, turned, nodded, smoothed her gloves
and preened her laces.
Ella Morrissey, in kimonoed comfort, waved a good-bye from her
armchair. "Have a good time! You all look lovely. Oh, we met Max Tack
downstairs, looking like a grand duke!"
Pert Miss Laces turned at the door, giggling.
"He says the French aristocracy has nothing on him, because
his grandfather was one of the original Ten Ikes of New York."
A final crescendo of laughter, a last swishing of silks, a breath
of perfume from the doorway and they were gone.
Within the room the two women sat looking at the closed door for a
moment. Then Ella Morrissey turned to look at Sophy Gold just as Sophy Gold
turned to look at Ella Morrissey.
"Well?" smiled Ella.
Sophy Gold smiled too—a mirthless, one-sided smile.
"I felt just like this once when I was a little girl. I went
to a party, and all the other little girls had yellow curls. Maybe some of them
had brown ones; but I only remember a maze of golden hair, and pink and blue
sashes, and rosy cheeks, and ardent little boys, and the sureness of those
little girls—their absolute faith in their power to enthrall, and in the
perfection of their curls and sashes. I went home before the ice cream. And I
love ice cream!"
Ella Morrissey's eyes narrowed thoughtfully.
"Then the next time you're invited to a party you wait for
the ice cream, girlie."
"Maybe I will," said Sophy Gold.
The party came two nights later. It was such a very modest affair
that one would hardly call it that—least of all Max Tack, who had spent
seventy-five dollars the night before in entertaining an important prospective
buyer.
On her way to her room that sultry June night Sophy had
encountered the persistent Tack. Ella Morrissey, up in her room, was fathoms
deep in work. It was barely eight o'clock and there was a wonderful opal sky—a
June twilight sky, of which Paris makes a specialty—all grey and rose and mauve
and faint orange.
"Somebody's looking mighty sweet to-night in her new Paris
duds!"
Max Tack's method of approach never varied in its simplicity.
"They're not Paris—they're Chicago."
His soul was in his eyes.
"They certainly don't look it!" Then, with a little hurt
look in those same expressive features: "I suppose, after the way you
threw me down hard the other night, you wouldn't come out and play somewhere,
would you—if I sat up and begged and jumped through this?"
"It's too warm for most things," Sophy faltered.
"Anywhere your little heart dictates," interrupted Max
Tack ardently. "Just name it."
Sophy looked up.
"Well, then, I'd like to take one of those boats and go down
the river to St.-Cloud. The station's just back of the Louvre. We've just time
to catch the eight-fifteen boat."
"Boat!" echoed Max Tack stupidly. Then, in revolt:
"Why, say, girlie, you don't want to do that! What is there in taking an
old tub and flopping down that dinky stream? Tell you what we'll do:
we'll—"
"No, thanks," said Sophy. "And it really doesn't
matter. You simply asked me what I'd like to do and I told you. Thanks.
Good-night."
"Now, now!" pleaded Max Tack in a panic. "Of course
we'll go. I just thought you'd rather do something fussier—that's all. I've
never gone down the river; but I think that's a classy little idea—yes, I do.
Now you run and get your hat and we'll jump into a taxi and—"
"You don't need to jump into a taxi; it's only two blocks.
We'll walk."
There was a little crowd down at the landing station. Max Tack
noticed, with immense relief, that they were not half-bad-looking people
either. He had been rather afraid of workmen in red sashes and with lime on
their clothes, especially after Sophy had told him that a trip cost twenty
centimes each.
"Twenty centimes! That's about four cents! Well, my
gad!"
They got seats in the prow. Sophy took off her hat and turned her
face gratefully to the cool breeze as they swung out into the river. The Paris
of the rumbling, roaring auto buses, and the honking horns, and the shrill
cries, and the mad confusion faded away. There was the palely glowing sky
ahead, and on each side the black reflection of the tree-laden banks, mistily
mysterious now and very lovely. There was not a ripple on the water and the
Pont Alexandre III and the golden glory of the dome of the Hôtel des Invalides
were ahead.
"Say, this is Venice!" exclaimed Max Tack.
A soft and magic light covered the shore, the river, the sky, and
a soft and magic something seemed to steal over the little boat and work its
wonders. The shabby student-looking chap and his equally shabby and merry
little companion, both Americans, closed the bag of fruit from which they had
been munching and sat looking into each other's eyes.
The long-haired artist, who looked miraculously like pictures of
Robert Louis Stevenson, smiled down at his queer, slender-legged little
daughter in the curious Cubist frock; and she smiled back and snuggled up and
rested her cheek on his arm. There seemed to be a deep and silent understanding
between them. You knew, somehow, that the little Cubist daughter had no mother,
and that the father's artist friends made much of her and that she poured tea
for them prettily on special days.
The bepowdered French girl who got on at the second station sat
frankly and contentedly in the embrace of her sweetheart. The stolid married
couple across the way smiled and the man's arm rested on his wife's plump
shoulder.
So the love boat glided down the river into the night. And the
shore faded and became grey, and then black. And the lights came out and cast
slender pillars of gold and green and scarlet on the water.
Max Tack's hand moved restlessly, sought Sophy's, found it,
clasped it. Sophy's hand had never been clasped like that before. She did not
know what to do with it, so she did nothing—which was just what she should have
done.
"Warm enough?" asked Max Tack tenderly.
"Just right," murmured Sophy.
The dream trip ended at St.-Cloud. They learned to their dismay
that the boat did not return to Paris. But how to get back? They asked
questions, sought direction—always a frantic struggle in Paris. Sophy, in the
glare of the street light, looked uglier than ever.
"Just a minute," said Max Tack. "I'll find a
taxi."
"Nonsense! That man said the street car passed right here,
and that we should get off at the Bois. Here it is now! Come on!"
Max Tack looked about helplessly, shrugged his shoulders and gave
it up.
"You certainly make a fellow hump," he said, not without
a note of admiration. "And why are you so afraid that I'll spend some
money?" as he handed the conductor the tiny fare.
"I don't know—unless it's because I've had to work so hard
all my life for mine."
At Porte Maillot they took one of the flock of waiting fiacres.
"But you don't want to go home yet!" protested Max Tack.
"I—I think I should like to drive in the Bois Park—if you
don't mind—that is—"
"Mind!" cried the gallant and game Max Tack.
Now Max Tack was no villain; but it never occurred to him that one
might drive in the Bois with a girl and not make love to her. If he had driven
with Aurora in her chariot he would have held her hand and called her tender
names. So, because he was he, and because this was Paris, and because it was so
dark that one could not see Sophy's extreme plainness, he took her unaccustomed
hand again in his.
"This little hand was never meant for work," he
murmured.
Sophy, the acid, the tart, said nothing. The Bois Park at night is
a mystery maze and lovely beyond adjectives. And the horse of that
particular fiacre wore a little tinkling bell that somehow
added to the charm of the night. A waterfall, unseen, tumbled and frothed near
by. A turn in the winding road brought them to an open stretch, and they saw
the world bathed in the light of a yellow, mellow, roguish Paris moon. And Max
Tack leaned over quietly and kissed Sophy Gold on the lips.
Now Sophy Gold had never been kissed in just that way before. You
would have thought she would not know what to do; but the plainest woman, as
well as the loveliest, has the centuries back of her. Sophy's mother, and her
mother's mother, and her mother's mother's mother had been kissed before her.
So they told her to say:
"You shouldn't have done that."
And the answer, too, was backed by the centuries:
"I know it; but I couldn't help it. Don't be angry!"
"You know," said Sophy with a little tremulous laugh,
"I'm very, very ugly—when it isn't moonlight."
"Paris," spake Max Tack, diplomat, "is so full of
medium-lookers who think they're pretty, and of pretty ones who think they're
beauties, that it sort of rests my jaw and mind to be with some one who hasn't
any fake notions to feed. They're all right; but give me a woman with brains
every time." Which was a lie!
They drove home down the Bois—the cool, spacious, tree-bordered
Bois—and through the Champs Élysées. Because he was an artist in his way, and
because every passing fiacre revealed the same picture, Max
Tack sat very near her and looked very tender and held her hand in his. It
would have raised a laugh at Broadway and Forty-second. It was quite, quite
sane and very comforting in Paris.
At the door of the hotel:
"I'm sailing Wednesday," said Max Tack. "You—you
won't forget me?"
"Oh, no—no!"
"You'll call me up or run into the office when you get to New
York?"
"Oh, yes!"
He walked with her to the lift, said good-bye and returned to
the fiacre with the tinkling bell. There was a stunned sort of
look in his face. The fiacre meter registered two francs
seventy. Max Tack did a lightning mental calculation. The expression on his
face deepened. He looked up at the cabby—the red-faced, bottle-nosed cabby,
with his absurd scarlet vest, his mustard-coloured trousers and his glazed top
hat.
"Well, can you beat that? Three francs thirty for the
evening's entertainment! Why—why, all she wanted was just a little love!"
To the bottle-nosed one all conversation in a foreign language
meant dissatisfaction with the meter. He tapped that glass-covered contrivance
impatiently with his whip. A flood of French bubbled at his lips.
"It's all right, boy! It's all right! You don't get me!"
And Max Tacked pressed a five-franc piece into the outstretched palm. Then to
the hotel porter: "Just grab a taxi for me, will you? These tubs make me
nervous."
Sophy, on her way to her room, hesitated, turned, then ran up the
stairs to the next floor and knocked gently at Miss Morrissey's door. A moment
later that lady's kimonoed figure loomed large in the doorway.
"Who is—oh, it's you! Well, I was just going to have them
drag the Seine for you. Come in!"
She went back to the table. Sheets of paper, rough sketches of hat
models done from memory, notes and letters lay scattered all about. Sophy
leaned against the door dreamily.
"I've been working this whole mortal evening," went on
Ella Morrissey, holding up a pencil sketch and squinting at it disapprovingly
over her working spectacles, "and I'm so tired that one eye's shut and the
other's running on first. Where've you been, child?"
"Oh, driving!" Sophy's limp hair was a shade limper than
usual, and a strand of it had become loosened and straggled untidily down over
her ear. Her eyes looked large and strangely luminous. "Do you know, I
love Paris!"
Ella Morrissey laid down her pencil sketch and turned slowly. She
surveyed Sophy Gold, her shrewd eyes twinkling.
"That so? What made you change your mind?"
The dreamy look in Sophy's eyes deepened.
"Why—I don't know. There's something in the
atmosphere—something in the air. It makes you do and say foolish things. It
makes you feel queer and light and happy."
Ella Morrissey's bright twinkle softened to a glow. She stared for
another brief moment. Then she trundled over to where Sophy stood and patted
her leathery cheek. "Welcome to our city!" said Miss Ella Morrissey.
XI.THE THREE OF THEM
For eleven years Martha Foote, head housekeeper at the Senate
Hotel, Chicago, had catered, unseen, and ministered, unknown, to that great,
careless, shifting, conglomerate mass known as the Travelling Public. Wholesale
hostessing was Martha Foote's job. Senators and suffragists, ambassadors and
first families had found ease and comfort under Martha Foote's régime. Her
carpets had bent their nap to the tread of kings, and show girls, and buyers
from Montana. Her sheets had soothed the tired limbs of presidents, and
princesses, and prima donnas. For the Senate Hotel is more than a hostelry; it
is a Chicago institution. The whole world is churned in at its revolving front
door.
For eleven years Martha Foote, then, had beheld humanity throwing
its grimy suitcases on her immaculate white bedspreads; wiping its muddy boots
on her bath towels; scratching its matches on her wall paper; scrawling its
pencil marks on her cream woodwork; spilling its greasy crumbs on her carpet;
carrying away her dresser scarfs and pincushions. There is no supremer test of
character. Eleven years of hotel housekeepership guarantees a knowledge of
human nature that includes some things no living being ought to know about her
fellow men. And inevitably one of two results must follow. You degenerate into
a bitter, waspish, and fault-finding shrew; or you develop into a patient,
tolerant, and infinitely understanding woman. Martha Foote dealt daily with
Polack scrub girls, and Irish porters, and Swedish chambermaids, and Swiss
waiters, and Halsted Street bell-boys. Italian tenors fried onions in her
Louis-Quinze suite. College boys burned cigarette holes in her best linen
sheets. Yet any one connected with the Senate Hotel, from Pete the pastry cook
to H.G. Featherstone, lessee-director, could vouch for Martha Foote's serene
unacidulation.
Don't gather from this that Martha Foote was a beaming, motherly
person who called you dearie. Neither was she one of those managerial and
magnificent blonde beings occasionally encountered in hotel corridors, engaged
in addressing strident remarks to a damp and crawling huddle of calico that is
doing something sloppy to the woodwork. Perhaps the shortest cut to Martha
Foote's character is through Martha Foote's bedroom. (Twelfth floor. Turn to
your left. That's it; 1246. Come in!)
In the long years of its growth and success the Senate Hotel had
known the usual growing pains. Starting with walnut and red plush it had, in
its adolescence, broken out all over into brass beds and birds'-eye maple.
This, in turn, had vanished before mahogany veneer and brocade. Hardly had the
white scratches on these ruddy surfaces been doctored by the house painter
when—whisk! Away with that sombre stuff! And in minced a whole troupe of
near-French furnishings; cream enamel beds, cane-backed; spindle-legged
dressing tables before which it was impossible to dress; perilous chairs with
raspberry complexions. Through all these changes Martha Foote, in her big,
bright twelfth floor room, had clung to her old black walnut set.
The bed, to begin with, was a massive, towering edifice with a
headboard that scraped the lofty ceiling. Head and foot-board were fretted and
carved with great blobs representing grapes, and cornucopias, and tendrils, and
knobs and other bedevilments of the cabinet-maker's craft. It had been polished
and rubbed until now it shone like soft brown satin. There was a monumental
dresser too, with a liver-coloured marble top. Along the wall, near the
windows, was a couch; a heavy, wheezing, fat-armed couch decked out in white
ruffled cushions. I suppose the mere statement that, in Chicago, Illinois,
Martha Foote kept these cushions always crisply white, would make any further
characterization superfluous. The couch made you think of a plump grandmother
of bygone days, a beruffled white fichu across her ample, comfortable bosom.
Then there was the writing desk; a substantial structure that bore no relation
to the pindling rose-and-cream affairs that graced the guest rooms. It was the
solid sort of desk at which an English novelist of the three-volume school
might have written a whole row of books without losing his dignity or cramping
his style. Martha Foote used it for making out reports and instruction sheets,
for keeping accounts, and for her small private correspondence.
Such was Martha Foote's room. In a modern and successful hotel,
whose foyer was rose-shaded, brass-grilled, peacock-alleyed and tessellated,
that bed-sitting-room of hers was as wholesome, and satisfying, and real as a
piece of home-made rye bread on a tray of French pastry; and as incongruous.
It was to the orderly comfort of these accustomed surroundings
that the housekeeper of the Senate Hotel opened her eyes this Tuesday morning.
Opened them, and lay a moment, bridging the morphean chasm that lay between
last night and this morning. It was 6:30 A.M. It is bad enough to open one's
eyes at 6:30 on Monday morning. But to open them at 6:30 on Tuesday morning,
after an indigo Monday.... The taste of yesterday lingered, brackish, in
Martha's mouth.
"Oh, well, it won't be as bad as yesterday, anyway. It
can't." So she assured herself, as she lay there. "There never
were two days like that, hand running. Not even in the hotel
business."
For yesterday had been what is known as a muddy Monday. Thick,
murky, and oozy with trouble. Two conventions, three banquets, the lobby so
full of khaki that it looked like a sand-storm, a threatened strike in the
laundry, a travelling man in two-twelve who had the grippe and thought he was
dying, a shortage of towels (that bugaboo of the hotel housekeeper) due to the
laundry trouble that had kept the linen-room telephone jangling to the tune of
a hundred damp and irate guests. And weaving in and out, and above, and about
and through it all, like a neuralgic toothache that can't be located, persisted
the constant, nagging, maddening complaints of the Chronic Kicker in
six-eighteen.
Six-eighteen was a woman. She had arrived Monday morning, early.
By Monday night every girl on the switchboard had the nervous jumps when they
plugged in at her signal. She had changed her rooms, and back again. She had
quarrelled with the room clerk. She had complained to the office about the
service, the food, the linen, the lights, the noise, the chambermaid, all the
bell-boys, and the colour of the furnishings in her suite. She said she
couldn't live with that colour. It made her sick. Between 8:30 and 10:30 that
night, there had come a lull. Six-eighteen was doing her turn at the Majestic.
Martha Foote knew that. She knew, too, that her name was Geisha
McCoy, and she knew what that name meant, just as you do. She had even laughed
and quickened and responded to Geisha McCoy's manipulation of her audience,
just as you have. Martha Foote knew the value of the personal note, and it had
been her idea that had resulted in the rule which obliged elevator boys,
chambermaids, floor clerks, doormen and waiters if possible, to learn the names
of Senate Hotel guests, no matter how brief their stay.
"They like it," she had said, to Manager Brant.
"You know that better than I do. They'll be flattered, and surprised, and
tickled to death, and they'll go back to Burlington, Iowa, and tell how well
known they are at the Senate."
When the suggestion was met with the argument that no human being could
be expected to perform such daily feats of memory Martha Foote battered it down
with:
"That's just where you're mistaken. The first few days are
bad. After that it's easier every day, until it becomes mechanical. I remember
when I first started waiting on table in my mother's quick lunch eating house
in Sorghum, Minnesota. I'd bring 'em wheat cakes when they'd ordered pork and
beans, but it wasn't two weeks before I could take six orders, from soup to
pie, without so much as forgetting the catsup. Habit, that's all."
So she, as well as the minor hotel employés, knew six-eighteen as
Geisha McCoy. Geisha McCoy, who got a thousand a week for singing a few songs
and chatting informally with the delighted hundreds on the other side of the
footlights. Geisha McCoy made nothing of those same footlights. She reached
out, so to speak, and shook hands with you across their amber glare. Neither
lovely nor alluring, this woman. And as for her voice!—And yet for ten years or
more this rather plain person, somewhat dumpy, no longer young, had been
singing her every-day, human songs about every-day, human people. And
invariably (and figuratively) her audience clambered up over the footlights,
and sat in her lap. She had never resorted to cheap music-hall tricks. She had
never invited the gallery to join in the chorus. She descended to no
finger-snapping. But when she sang a song about a waitress she was a waitress.
She never hesitated to twist up her hair, and pull down her mouth, to get an
effect. She didn't seem to be thinking about herself, at all, or about her
clothes, or her method, or her effort, or anything but the audience that was
plastic to her deft and magic manipulation.
Until very recently. Six months had wrought a subtle change in
Geisha McCoy. She still sang her every-day, human songs about every-day, human
people. But you failed, somehow, to recognise them as such. They sounded
sawdust-stuffed. And you were likely to hear the man behind you say, "Yeh,
but you ought to have heard her five years ago. She's about through."
Such was six-eighteen. Martha Foote, luxuriating in that one
delicious moment between her 6:30 awakening, and her 6:31 arising, mused on
these things. She thought of how, at eleven o'clock the night before, her
telephone had rung with the sharp zing! of trouble. The voice of Irish Nellie,
on night duty on the sixth floor, had sounded thick-brogued, sure sign of
distress with her.
"I'm sorry to be a-botherin' ye, Mis' Phut. It's Nellie
speakin'—Irish Nellie on the sixt'."
"What's the trouble, Nellie?"
"It's that six-eighteen again. She's goin' on like mad. She's
carryin' on something fierce."
"What about?"
"Th'—th' blankets, Mis' Phut."
"Blankets?—"
"She says—it's her wurruds, not mine—she says they're vile.
Vile, she says."
Martha Foote's spine had stiffened. "In this house!
Vile!"
If there was one thing more than another upon which Martha Foote
prided herself it was the Senate Hotel bed coverings. Creamy, spotless, downy,
they were her especial fad. "Brocade chairs, and pink lamps, and gold snake-work
are all well and good," she was wont to say, "and so are American
Beauties in the lobby and white gloves on the elevator boys. But it's the
blankets on the beds that stamp a hotel first or second class." And now
this, from Nellie.
"I know how ye feel, an' all. I sez to 'er, I sez: 'There
never was a blanket in this house,' I sez, 'that didn't look as if
it cud be sarved up wit' whipped cr-ream,' I sez, 'an' et,' I sez to her; 'an'
fu'thermore,' I sez—"
"Never mind, Nellie. I know. But we never argue with guests.
You know that rule as well as I. The guest is right—always. I'll send up the
linen-room keys. You get fresh blankets; new ones. And no arguments. But I want
to see those—those vile—"
"Listen, Mis' Phut." Irish Nellie's voice, until now
shrill with righteous anger, dropped a discreet octave. "I seen 'em. An'
they are vile. Wait a minnit! But why? Becus that there maid
of hers—that yella' hussy—give her a body massage, wit' cold cream an' all,
usin' th' blankets f'r coverin', an' smearin' 'em right an' lift.
This was afther they come back from th' theayter. Th' crust of thim people,
using the iligent blankets off'n the beds t'—"
"Good night, Nellie. And thank you."
"Sure, ye know I'm that upset f'r distarbin' yuh, an' all,
but—"
Martha Foote cast an eye toward the great walnut bed. "That's
all right. Only, Nellie—"
"Yesm'm."
"If I'm disturbed again on that woman's account for anything
less than murder—"
"Yesm'm?"
"Well, there'll be one, that's all. Good
night."
Such had been Monday's cheerful close.
Martha Foote sat up in bed, now, preparatory to the heroic
flinging aside of the covers. "No," she assured herself, "it
can't be as bad as yesterday." She reached round and about her pillow,
groping for the recalcitrant hairpin that always slipped out during the night;
found it, and twisted her hair into a hard bathtub bun.
With a jangle that tore through her half-wakened senses the
telephone at her bedside shrilled into life. Martha Foote, hairpin in mouth,
turned and eyed it, speculatively, fearfully. It shrilled on in her very face,
and there seemed something taunting and vindictive about it. One long ring,
followed by a short one; a long ring, a short. "Ca-a-an't it? Ca-a-an't
it?"
"Something tells me I'm wrong," Martha Foote told
herself, ruefully, and reached for the blatant, snarling thing.
"Yes?"
"Mrs. Foote? This is Healy, the night clerk. Say, Mrs. Foote,
I think you'd better step down to six-eighteen and see what's—"
"I am wrong," said Martha Foote.
"What's that?"
"Nothing. Go on. Will I step down to six-eighteen and—?"
"She's sick, or something. Hysterics, I'd say. As far as I
could make out it was something about a noise, or a sound or—Anyway, she can't
locate it, and her maid says if we don't stop it right away—"
"I'll go down. Maybe it's the plumbing. Or the radiator. Did
you ask?"
"No, nothing like that. She kept talking about a wail."
"A what!"
"A wail. A kind of groaning, you know. And then dull raps on
the wall, behind the bed."
"Now look here, Ed Healy; I get up at 6:30, but I can't see a
joke before ten. If you're trying to be funny!—"
"Funny! Why, say, listen, Mrs. Foote. I may be a night clerk,
but I'm not so low as to get you out at half past six to spring a thing like
that in fun. I mean it. So did she."
"But a kind of moaning! And then dull raps!"
"Those are her words. A kind of m—"
"Let's not make a chant of it. I think I get you. I'll be
down there in ten minutes. Telephone her, will you?"
"Can't you make it five?"
"Not without skipping something vital."
Still, it couldn't have been a second over ten, including shoes,
hair, and hooks-and-eyes. And a fresh white blouse. It was Martha Foote's
theory that a hotel housekeeper, dressed for work, ought to be as inconspicuous
as a steel engraving. She would have been, too, if it hadn't been for her eyes.
She paused a moment before the door of six-eighteen and took a
deep breath. At the first brisk rat-tat of her knuckles on the door there had
sounded a shrill "Come in!" But before she could turn the knob the
door was flung open by a kimonoed mulatto girl, her eyes all whites. The girl
began to jabber, incoherently but Martha Foote passed on through the little
hall to the door of the bedroom.
Six-eighteen was in bed. At sight of her Martha Foote knew that
she had to deal with an over-wrought woman. Her hair was pushed back wildly
from her forehead. Her arms were clasped about her knees. At the left her
nightgown had slipped down so that one plump white shoulder gleamed against the
background of her streaming hair. The room was in almost comic disorder. It was
a room in which a struggle has taken place between its occupant and that
burning-eyed hag, Sleeplessness. The hag, it was plain, had won. A half-emptied
glass of milk was on the table by the bed. Warmed, and sipped slowly, it had
evidently failed to soothe. A tray of dishes littered another table.
Yesterday's dishes, their contents congealed. Books and magazines, their covers
spread wide as if they had been flung, sprawled where they lay. A little heap
of grey-black cigarette stubs. The window curtain awry where she had stood
there during a feverish moment of the sleepless night, looking down upon the
lights of Grant Park and the sombre black void beyond that was Lake Michigan. A
tiny satin bedroom slipper on a chair, its mate, sole up, peeping out from
under the bed. A pair of satin slippers alone, distributed thus, would make a
nun's cell look disreputable. Over all this disorder the ceiling lights, the
wall lights, and the light from two rosy lamps, beat mercilessly down; and upon
the white-faced woman in the bed.
She stared, hollow-eyed, at Martha Foote. Martha Foote, in the
doorway, gazed serenely back upon her. And Geisha McCoy's quick intelligence
and drama-sense responded to the picture of this calm and capable figure in the
midst of the feverish, over-lighted, over-heated room. In that moment the
nervous pucker between her eyes ironed out ever so little, and something
resembling a wan smile crept into her face. And what she said was:
"I wouldn't have believed it."
"Believed what?" inquired Martha Foote, pleasantly.
"That there was anybody left in the world who could look like
that in a white shirtwaist at 6:30 A.M. Is that all your own hair?"
"Strictly."
"Some people have all the luck," sighed Geisha McCoy,
and dropped listlessly back on her pillows. Martha Foote came forward into the
room. At that instant the woman in the bed sat up again, tense, every nerve
strained in an attitude of listening. The mulatto girl had come swiftly to the
foot of the bed and was clutching the footboard, her knuckles showing white.
"Listen!" A hissing whisper from the haggard woman in
the bed. "What's that?"
"Wha' dat!" breathed the coloured girl, all her elegance
gone, her every look and motion a hundred-year throwback to her voodoo-haunted
ancestors.
The three women remained rigid, listening. From the wall somewhere
behind the bed came a low, weird monotonous sound, half wail, half croaking
moan, like a banshee with a cold. A clanking, then, as of chains. A s-s-swish.
Then three dull raps, seemingly from within the very wall itself.
The coloured girl was trembling. Her lips were moving,
soundlessly. But Geisha McCoy's emotion was made of different stuff.
"Now look here," she said, desperately, "I don't
mind a sleepless night. I'm used to 'em. But usually I can drop off at five,
for a little while. And that's been going on—well, I don't know how long. It's
driving me crazy. Blanche, you fool, stop that hand wringing! I tell you
there's no such thing as ghosts. Now you"—she turned to Martha Foote
again—"you tell me, for God's sake, what is that!"
And into Martha Foote's face there came such a look of mingled
compassion and mirth as to bring a quick flame of fury into Geisha McCoy's
eyes.
"Look here, you may think it's funny but—"
"I don't. I don't. Wait a minute." Martha Foote turned
and was gone. An instant later the weird sounds ceased. The two women in the
room looked toward the door, expectantly. And through it came Martha Foote,
smiling. She turned and beckoned to some one without. "Come on," she
said. "Come on." She put out a hand, encouragingly, and brought
forward the shrinking, cowering, timorous figure of Anna Czarnik, scrub-woman
on the sixth floor. Her hand still on her shoulder Martha Foote led her to the
centre of the room, where she stood, gazing dumbly about. She was the
scrub-woman you've seen in every hotel from San Francisco to Scituate. A
shapeless, moist, blue calico mass. Her shoes turned up ludicrously at the
toes, as do the shoes of one who crawls her way backward, crab-like, on hands
and knees. Her hands were the shrivelled, unlovely members that bespeak long
and daily immersion in dirty water. But even had these invariable marks of her
trade been lacking, you could not have failed to recognise her type by the
large and glittering mock-diamond comb which failed to catch up her dank and
stringy hair in the back.
One kindly hand on the woman's arm, Martha Foote performed the
introduction.
"This is Mrs. Anna Czarnik, late of Poland. Widowed. Likewise
childless. Also brotherless. Also many other uncomfortable things. But the life
of the crowd in the scrub-girls' quarters on the top floor. Aren't you, Anna?
Mrs. Anna Czarnik, I'm sorry to say, is the source of the blood-curdling moan,
and the swishing, and the clanking, and the ghost-raps. There is a service
stairway just on the other side of this wall. Anna Czarnik was performing her
morning job of scrubbing it. The swishing was her wet rag. The clanking was her
pail. The dull raps her scrubbing brush striking the stair corner just behind
your wall."
"You're forgetting the wail," Geisha McCoy suggested,
icily.
"No, I'm not. The wail, I'm afraid, was Anna Czarnik,
singing."
"Singing?"
Martha Foote turned and spoke a gibberish of Polish and English to
the bewildered woman at her side. Anna Czarnik's dull face lighted up ever so
little.
"She says the thing she was singing is a Polish folk-song
about death and sorrow, and it's called a—what was that, Anna?"
"Dumka."
"It's called a dumka. It's a song of mourning, you see? Of
grief. And of bitterness against the invaders who have laid her country
bare."
"Well, what's the idea!" demanded Geisha McCoy.
"What kind of a hotel is this, anyway? Scrub-girls waking people up in the
middle of the night with a Polish cabaret. If she wants to sing her hymn of
hate why does she have to pick on me!"
"I'm sorry. You can go, Anna. No sing, remember!
Sh-sh-sh!"
Anna Czarnik nodded and made her unwieldy escape.
Geisha McCoy waved a hand at the mulatto maid. "Go to your
room, Blanche. I'll ring when I need you." The girl vanished, gratefully,
without a backward glance at the disorderly room. Martha Foote felt herself
dismissed, too. And yet she made no move to go. She stood there, in the middle
of the room, and every housekeeper inch of her yearned to tidy the chaos all
about her, and every sympathetic impulse urged her to comfort the
nerve-tortured woman before her. Something of this must have shone in her face,
for Geisha McCoy's tone was half-pettish, half-apologetic as she spoke.
"You've no business allowing things like that, you know. My
nerves are all shot to pieces anyway. But even if they weren't, who could stand
that kind of torture? A woman like that ought to lose her job for that. One
word from me at the office and she—"
"Don't say it, then," interrupted Martha Foote, and came
over to the bed. Mechanically her fingers straightened the tumbled covers,
removed a jumble of magazines, flicked away the crumbs. "I'm sorry you
were disturbed. The scrubbing can't be helped, of course, but there is a rule
against unnecessary noise, and she shouldn't have been singing. But—well, I
suppose she's got to find relief, somehow. Would you believe that woman is the
cut-up of the top floor? She's a natural comedian, and she does more for me in
the way of keeping the other girls happy and satisfied than—"
"What about me? Where do I come in? Instead of sleeping until
eleven I'm kept awake by this Polish dirge. I go on at the Majestic at four,
and again at 9.45 and I'm sick, I tell you! Sick!"
She looked it, too. Suddenly she twisted about and flung herself,
face downward, on the pillow. "Oh, God!" she cried, without any
particular expression. "Oh, God! Oh, God!"
That decided Martha Foote.
She crossed over to the other side of the bed, first flicking off
the glaring top lights, sat down beside the shaken woman on the pillows, and
laid a cool, light hand on her shoulder.
"It isn't as bad as that. Or it won't be, anyway, after
you've told me about it."
She waited. Geisha McCoy remained as she was, face down. But she
did not openly resent the hand on her shoulder. So Martha Foote waited. And as
suddenly as Six-eighteen had flung herself prone she twisted about and sat up,
breathing quickly. She passed a hand over her eyes and pushed back her
streaming hair with an oddly desperate little gesture. Her lips were parted,
her eyes wide.
"They've got away from me," she cried, and Martha Foote
knew what she meant. "I can't hold 'em any more. I work as hard as
ever—harder. That's it. It seems the harder I work the colder they get. Last
week, in Indianapolis, they couldn't have been more indifferent if I'd been the
educational film that closes the show. And, oh my God! They sit and knit."
"Knit!" echoed Martha Foote. "But everybody's
knitting nowadays."
"Not when I'm on. They can't. But they do. There were three
of them in the third row yesterday afternoon. One of 'em was doing a grey sock
with four shiny needles. Four! I couldn't keep my eyes off of them. And the
second was doing a sweater, and the third a helmet. I could tell by the shape.
And you can't be funny, can you, when you're hypnotised by three stony-faced
females all doubled up over a bunch of olive-drab? Olive-drab! I'm scared of
it. It sticks out all over the house. Last night there were two young kids in
uniform right down in the first row, centre, right. I'll bet the oldest wasn't
twenty-three. There they sat, looking up at me with their baby faces. That's
all they are. Kids. The house seems to be peppered with 'em. You wouldn't think
olive-drab could stick out the way it does. I can see it farther than red. I
can see it day and night. I can't seem to see anything else. I can't—"
Her head came down on her arms, that rested on her tight-hugged
knees.
"Somebody of yours in it?" Martha Foote asked, quietly.
She waited. Then she made a wild guess—an intuitive guess. "Son?"
"How did you know?" Geisha McCoy's head came up.
"I didn't."
"Well, you're right. There aren't fifty people in the world,
outside my own friends, who know I've got a grown-up son. It's bad business to
have them think you're middle-aged. And besides, there's nothing of the stage
about Fred. He's one of those square-jawed kids that are just cut out to be
engineers. Third year at Boston Tech."
"Is he still there, then?"
"There! He's in France, that's where he is. Somewhere—in
France. And I've worked for twenty-two years with everything in me just set,
like an alarm-clock, for the time when that kid would step off on his own. He
always hated to take money from me, and I loved him for it. I never went on
that I didn't think of him. I never came off with a half dozen encores that I
didn't wish he could hear it. Why, when I played a college town it used to be a
riot, because I loved every fresh-faced boy in the house, and they knew it. And
now—and now—what's there in it? What's there in it? I can't even hold 'em any
more. I'm through, I tell you. I'm through!"
And waited to be disputed. Martha Foote did not disappoint her.
"There's just this in it. It's up to you to make those three
women in the third row forget what they're knitting for, even if they don't
forget their knitting. Let 'em go on knitting with their hands, but keep their
heads off it. That's your job. You're lucky to have it."
"Lucky?"
"Yes ma'am! You can do all the dumka stuff in
private, the way Anna Czarnik does, but it's up to you to make them laugh twice
a day for twenty minutes."
"It's all very well for you to talk that cheer-o stuff. It
hasn't come home to you, I can see that."
Martha Foote smiled. "If you don't mind my saying it, Miss
McCoy, you're too worn out from lack of sleep to see anything clearly. You
don't know me, but I do know you, you see. I know that a year ago Anna Czarnik
would have been the most interesting thing in this town, for you. You'd have
copied her clothes, and got a translation of her sob song, and made her as real
to a thousand audiences as she was to us this morning; tragic history, patient
animal face, comic shoes and all. And that's the trouble with you, my dear.
When we begin to brood about our own troubles we lose what they call the human
touch. And that's your business asset."
Geisha McCoy was looking up at her with a whimsical half-smile.
"Look here. You know too much. You're not really the hotel housekeeper,
are you?"
"I am."
"Well, then, you weren't always—"
"Yes I was. So far as I know I'm the only hotel housekeeper
in history who can't look back to the time when she had three servants of her
own, and her private carriage. I'm no decayed black-silk gentlewoman. Not me.
My father drove a hack in Sorgham, Minnesota, and my mother took in boarders
and I helped wait on table. I married when I was twenty, my man died two years
later, and I've been earning my living ever since."
"Happy?"
"I must be, because I don't stop to think about it. It's part
of my job to know everything that concerns the comfort of the guests in this
hotel."
"Including hysterics in six-eighteen?"
"Including. And that reminds me. Up on the twelfth floor of
this hotel there's a big, old-fashioned bedroom. In half an hour I can have
that room made up with the softest linen sheets, and the curtains pulled down,
and not a sound. That room's so restful it would put old Insomnia himself to
sleep. Will you let me tuck you away in it?"
Geisha McCoy slid down among her rumpled covers, and nestled her
head in the lumpy, tortured pillows. "Me! I'm going to stay right
here."
"But this room's—why, it's as stale as a Pullman sleeper. Let
me have the chambermaid in to freshen it up while you're gone."
"I'm used to it. I've got to have a room mussed up, to feel
at home in it. Thanks just the same."
Martha Foote rose, "I'm sorry. I just thought if I could
help—"
Geisha McCoy leaned forward with one of her quick movements and
caught Martha Foote's hand in both her own, "You have! And I don't mean to
be rude when I tell you I haven't felt so much like sleeping in weeks. Just
turn out those lights, will you? And sort of tiptoe out, to give the
effect." Then, as Martha Foote reached the door, "And oh, say! D'you
think she'd sell me those shoes?"
Martha Foote didn't get her dinner that night until almost eight,
what with one thing and another. Still as days go, it wasn't so bad as Monday;
she and Irish Nellie, who had come in to turn down her bed, agreed on that. The
Senate Hotel housekeeper was having her dinner in her room. Tony, the waiter,
had just brought it on and had set it out for her, a gleaming island of white
linen, and dome-shaped metal tops. Irish Nellie, a privileged person always,
waxed conversational as she folded back the bed covers in a neat triangular
wedge.
"Six-eighteen kinda ca'med down, didn't she? High toime, the
divil. She had us jumpin' yist'iddy. I loike t' went off me head wid her, and
th' day girl th' same. Some folks ain't got no feelin', I dunno."
Martha Foote unfolded her napkin with a little tired gesture.
"You can't always judge, Nellie. That woman's got a son who has gone to
war, and she couldn't see her way clear to living without him. She's better
now. I talked to her this evening at six. She said she had a fine
afternoon."
"Shure, she ain't the only wan. An' what do you be hearin'
from your boy, Mis' Phut, that's in France?"
"He's well, and happy. His arm's all healed, and he says
he'll be in it again by the time I get his letter."
"Humph," said Irish Nellie. And prepared to leave. She
cast an inquisitive eye over the little table as she made for the
door—inquisitive, but kindly. Her wide Irish nostrils sniffed a familiar smell.
"Well, fur th' land, Mis' Phut! If I was housekeeper here, an' cud have
hothouse strawberries, an' swatebreads undher glass, an' sparrowgrass, an'
chicken, an' ice crame, the way you can, whiniver yuh loike, I
wouldn't be a-eatin' cornbeef an' cabbage. Not me."
"Oh, yes you would, Nellie," replied Martha Foote,
quietly, and spooned up the thin amber gravy. "Oh, yes you would."
XII.SHORE LEAVE
Tyler Kamps was a tired boy. He was tired from his left great toe
to that topmost spot at the crown of his head where six unruly hairs always
persisted in sticking straight out in defiance of patient brushing, wetting,
and greasing. Tyler Kamps was as tired as only a boy can be at 9.30 P.M. who
has risen at 5.30 A.M. Yet he lay wide awake in his hammock eight feet above
the ground, like a giant silk-worm in an incredible cocoon and listened to the
sleep-sounds that came from the depths of two hundred similar cocoons suspended
at regular intervals down the long dark room. A chorus of deep regular
breathing, with an occasional grunt or sigh, denoting complete relaxation.
Tyler Kamps should have been part of this chorus, himself. Instead he lay
staring into the darkness, thinking mad thoughts of which this is a sample:
"Gosh! Wouldn't I like to sit up in my hammock and give one
yell! The kind of a yell a movie cowboy gives on a Saturday night. Wake 'em up
and stop that—darned old breathing."
Nerves. He breathed deeply himself, once or twice, because it
seemed, somehow to relieve his feeling of irritation. And in that unguarded
moment of unconscious relaxation Sleep, that had been lying in wait for him
just around the corner, pounced on him and claimed him for its own. From his
hammock came the deep, regular inhalation, exhalation, with an occasional grunt
or sigh. The normal sleep-sounds of a very tired boy.
The trouble with Tyler Kamps was that he missed two things he
hadn't expected to miss at all. And he missed not at all the things he had been
prepared to miss most hideously.
First of all, he had expected to miss his mother. If you had known
Stella Kamps you could readily have understood that. Stella Kamps was the kind
of mother they sing about in the sentimental ballads; mother, pal, and
sweetheart. Which was where she had made her big mistake. When one mother tries
to be all those things to one son that son has a very fair chance of turning
out a mollycoddle. The war was probably all that saved Tyler Kamps from such a
fate.
In the way she handled this son of hers Stella Kamps had been as
crafty and skilful and velvet-gloved as a girl with her beau. The proof of it
is that Tyler had never known he was being handled. Some folks in Marvin,
Texas, said she actually flirted with him, and they were almost justified.
Certainly the way she glanced up at him from beneath her lashes was excused
only by the way she scolded him if he tracked up the kitchen floor. But then,
Stella Kamps and her boy were different, anyway. Marvin folks all agreed about
that. Flowers on the table at meals. Sitting over the supper things talking and
laughing for an hour after they'd finished eating, as if they hadn't seen each
other in years. Reading out loud to each other, out of books and then going on
like mad about what they'd just read, and getting all het up about it. And
sometimes chasing each other around the yard, spring evenings, like a couple of
fool kids. Honestly, if a body didn't know Stella Kamps so well, and what a
fight she had put up to earn a living for herself and the boy after that
good-for-nothing Kamps up and left her, and what a housekeeper she was, and
all, a person'd think—well—
So, then, Tyler had expected to miss her first of all. The way she
talked. The way she fussed around him without in the least seeming to fuss. Her
special way of cooking things. Her laugh which drew laughter in its wake. The
funny way she had of saying things, vitalising commonplaces with the spark of
her own electricity.
And now he missed her only as the average boy of twenty-one misses
the mother he has been used to all his life. No more and no less. Which would
indicate that Stella Kamps, in her protean endeavours, had overplayed the parts
just a trifle.
He had expected to miss the boys at the bank. He had expected to
miss the Mandolin Club. The Mandolin Club met, officially, every Thursday and
spangled the Texas night with their tinkling. Five rather dreamy-eyed
adolescents slumped in stoop-shouldered comfort over the instruments cradled in
their arms, each right leg crossed limply over the left, each great foot that
dangled from the bony ankle, keeping rhythmic time to the
plunketty-plink-tinketty-plunk.
He had expected to miss the familiar faces on Main Street. He had
even expected to miss the neighbours with whom he and his mother had so rarely
mingled. All the hundred little, intimate, trivial, everyday things that had
gone to make up his life back home in Marvin, Texas—these he had expected to
miss.
And he didn't.
After ten weeks at the Great Central Naval Training Station so
near Chicago, Illinois, and so far from Marvin, Texas, there were two things he
missed.
He wanted the decent privacy of his small quiet bedroom back home.
He wanted to talk to a girl.
He knew he wanted the first, definitely. He didn't know he wanted
the second. The fact that he didn't know it was Stella Kamps' fault. She had
kept his boyhood girlless, year and year, by sheer force of her own love for
him, and need of him, and by the charm and magnetism that were hers. She had
been deprived of a more legitimate outlet for these emotions. Concentrated on
the boy, they had sufficed for him. The Marvin girls had long ago given him up
as hopeless. They fell back, baffled, their keenest weapons dulled by the
impenetrable armour of his impersonal gaze.
The room? It hadn't been much of a room, as rooms go. Bare, clean,
asceptic, with a narrow, hard white bed and a maple dresser whose second drawer
always stuck and came out zig-zag when you pulled it; and a swimmy mirror that
made one side of your face look sort of lumpy, and higher than the other side.
In one corner a bookshelf. He had made it himself at manual training. When he
had finished it—the planing, the staining, the polishing—Chippendale himself,
after he had designed and executed his first gracious, wide-seated,
back-fitting chair, could have felt no finer creative glow. As for the books it
held, just to run your eye over them was like watching Tyler Kamps grow up.
Stella Kamps had been a Kansas school teacher in the days before she met and
married Clint Kamps. And she had never quite got over it. So the book case
contained certain things that a fond mother (with a teaching past) would think
her small son ought to enjoy. Things like "Tom Brown At Rugby" and "Hans
Brinker, Or the Silver Skates." He had read them, dutifully, but they were
as good as new. No thumbed pages, no ragged edges, no creases and tatters where
eager boy hands had turned a page over—hastily. No, the thumb-marked,
dog's-eared, grimy ones were, as always, "Tom Sawyer" and
"Huckleberry Finn" and "Marching Against the Iroquois."
A hot enough little room in the Texas summers. A cold enough
little room in the Texas winters. But his own. And quiet. He used to lie there
at night, relaxed, just before sleep claimed him, and he could almost feel the
soft Texas night enfold him like a great, velvety, invisible blanket, soothing
him, lulling him. In the morning it had been pleasant to wake up to its bare,
clean whiteness, and to the tantalising breakfast smells coming up from the
kitchen below. His mother calling from the foot of the narrow wooden stairway:
"Ty-ler!," rising inflection. "Ty-ler,"
falling inflection. "Get up, son! Breakfast'll be ready."
It was always a terrific struggle between a last delicious stolen
five minutes between the covers, and the scent of the coffee and bacon.
"Ty-ler! You'll be late!"
A mighty stretch. A gathering of his will forces. A swing of his
long legs over the side of the bed so that they described an arc in the air.
"Been up years."
Breakfast had won.
Until he came to the Great Central Naval Training Station Tyler's
nearest approach to the nautical life had been when, at the age of six, he had
sailed chips in the wash tub in the back yard. Marvin, Texas, is five hundred
miles inland. And yet he had enlisted in the navy as inevitably as though he
had sprung from a long line of Vikings. In his boyhood his choice of games had
always been pirate. You saw him, a red handkerchief binding his brow, one foot
advanced, knee bent, scanning the horizon for the treasure island from the
vantage point of the woodshed roof, while the crew, gone mad with thirst,
snarled and shrieked all about him, and the dirt yard below became a hungry,
roaring sea. His twelve-year-old vocabulary boasted such compound difficulties
as mizzentopsail-yard and main-topgallantmast. He knew the intricate parts of a
full-rigged ship from the mainsail to the deck, from the jib-boom to the
chart-house. All this from pictures and books. It was the roving, restless
spirit of his father in him, I suppose. Clint Kamps had never been meant for
marriage. When the baby Tyler was one year old Clint had walked over to where
his wife sat, the child in her lap, and had tilted her head back, kissed her on
the lips, and had gently pinched the boy's roseleaf cheek with a quizzical
forefinger and thumb. Then, indolently, negligently, gracefully, he had
strolled out of the house, down the steps, into the hot and dusty street and so
on and on and out of their lives. Stella Kamps had never seen him again. Her
letters back home to her folks in Kansas were triumphs of bravery and
bare-faced lying. The kind of bravery, and the kind of lying that only a woman
could understand. She managed to make out, somehow, at first. And later, very
well indeed. As the years went on she and the boy lived together in a sort of
closed corporation paradise of their own. At twenty-one Tyler, who had gone
through grammar school, high school and business college had never kissed a
girl or felt a love-pang. Stella Kamps kept her age as a woman does whose brain
and body are alert and busy. When Tyler first went to work in the Texas State
Savings Bank of Marvin the girls would come in on various pretexts just for a
glimpse of his charming blondeur behind the little cage at the rear. It is
difficult for a small-town girl to think of reasons for going into a bank. You
have to be moneyed to do it. They say that the Davies girl saved up nickels
until she had a dollar's worth and then came into the bank and asked to have a
bill in exchange for it. They gave her one—a crisp, new, crackly dollar bill.
She reached for it, gropingly, her eyes fixed on a point at the rear of the
bank. Two days later she came in and brazenly asked to have it changed into
nickels again. She might have gone on indefinitely thus if Tyler's country
hadn't given him something more important to do than to change dollars into
nickels and back again.
On the day he left for the faraway naval training station Stella
Kamps for the second time in her life had a chance to show the stuff she was
made of, and showed it. Not a whimper. Down at the train, standing at the car
window, looking up at him and smiling, and saying futile, foolish, final
things, and seeing only his blond head among the many thrust out of the open
window.
"... and Tyler, remember what I said about your feet. You
know. Dry.... And I'll send a box every week, only don't eat too many of the
nut cookies. They're so rich. Give some to the other—yes, I know you will. I
was just ... Won't it be grand to be right there on the water all the time!
My!... I'll write every night and then send it twice a week.... I don't suppose
you ... Well once a week, won't you, dear?... You're—you're moving. The train's
going! Good-b—" she ran along with it for a few feet, awkwardly, as a
woman runs. Stumblingly.
And suddenly, as she ran, his head always just ahead of her, she
thought, with a great pang:
"O my God, how young he is! How young he is, and he doesn't
know anything. I should have told him.... Things.... He doesn't know anything
about ... and all those other men—"
She ran on, one arm outstretched as though to hold him a moment
longer while the train gathered speed. "Tyler!" she called, through
the din and shouting. "Tyler, be good! Be good!" He only saw her lips
moving, and could not hear, so he nodded his head, and smiled, and waved, and
was gone.
So Tyler Kamps had travelled up to Chicago. Whenever they passed a
sizable town they had thrown open the windows and yelled, "Youp! Who-ee!
Yow!"
People had rushed to the streets and had stood there gazing after
the train. Tyler hadn't done much youping at first, but in the later stages of
the journey he joined in to keep his spirits up. He, who had never been more
than a two-hours' ride from home was flashing past villages, towns,
cities—hundreds of them.
The first few days had been unbelievably bad, what with typhoid
inoculations, smallpox vaccinations, and loneliness. The very first day, when
he had entered his barracks one of the other boys, older in experience, misled
by Tyler's pink and white and gold colouring, had leaned forward from amongst a
group and had called in glad surprise, at the top of a leathery pair of lungs:
"Why, hello, sweetheart!" The others had taken it up
with cruelty of their age. "Hello, sweetheart!" It had stuck.
Sweetheart. In the hard years that followed—years in which the blood-thirsty
and piratical games of his boyhood paled to the mildest of imaginings—the
nickname still clung, long after he had ceased to resent it; long after he had
stripes and braid to refute it.
But in that Tyler Kamps we are not interested. It is the boy Tyler
Kamps with whom we have to do. Bewildered, lonely, and a little resentful.
Wondering where the sea part of it came in. Learning to say "on the
station" instead of "at the station," the idea being that the
great stretch of land on which the station was located was not really land, but
water; and the long wooden barracks not really barracks at all, but ships.
Learning to sleep in a hammock (it took him a full week). Learning to pin back
his sailor collar to save soiling the white braid on it (that meant scrubbing).
Learning—but why go into detail? One sentence covers it.
Tyler met Gunner Moran. Moran, tattooed, hairy-armed,
hairy-chested as a gorilla and with something of the sadness and humour of the
gorilla in his long upper lip and short forehead. But his eyes did not bear out
the resemblance. An Irish blue; bright, unravaged; clear beacon lights in a
rough and storm-battered countenance. Gunner Moran wasn't a gunner at all, or
even a gunner's mate, but just a seaman who knew the sea from Shanghai to New
Orleans; from Liverpool to Barcelona. His knowledge of knots and sails and
rifles and bayonets and fists was a thing to strike you dumb. He wasn't the
stuff of which officers are made. But you should have seen him with a
Springfield! Or a bayonet! A bare twenty-five, Moran, but with ten years' sea
experience. Into those ten years he had jammed a lifetime of adventure. And he
could do expertly all the things that Tyler Kamps did amateurishly. In a
barrack, or in a company street, the man who talks the loudest is the man who
has the most influence. In Tyler's barrack Gunner Moran was that man.
Because of what he knew they gave him two hundred men at a time
and made him company commander, without insignia or official position. In rank,
he was only a "gob" like the rest of them. In influence a captain.
Moran knew how to put the weight lunge behind the bayonet. It was a matter of
balance, of poise, more than of muscle.
Up in the front of his men, "G'wan," he would yell.
"Whatddye think you're doin'! Tickling 'em with a straw! That's a bayonet
you got there, not a tennis rackit. You couldn't scratch your initials on a
Fritz that way. Put a little guts into it. Now then!"
He had been used to the old Krag, with a cam that jerked out, and
threw back, and fed one shell at a time. The new Springfield, that was a
gloriously functioning thing in its simplicity, he regarded with a sort of
reverence and ecstasy mingled. As his fingers slid lightly, caressingly along
the shining barrel they were like a man's fingers lingering on the soft curves
of a woman's throat. The sight of a rookie handling this metal sweetheart
clumsily filled him with fury.
"Whatcha think you got there, you lubber, you! A section o'
lead pipe! You ought t' be back carryin' a shovel, where you belong. Here. Just
a touch. Like that. See? Easy now."
He could box like a professional. They put him up against
Slovatsky, the giant Russian, one day. Slovatsky put up his two huge hands,
like hams, and his great arms, like iron beams and looked down on this lithe,
agile bantam that was hopping about at his feet. Suddenly the bantam crouched,
sprang, and recoiled like a steel trap. Something had crashed up against
Slovatsky's chin. Red rage shook him. He raised his sledge-hammer right for a
slashing blow. Moran was directly in the path of it. It seemed that he could no
more dodge it than he could hope to escape an onrushing locomotive, but it
landed on empty air, with Moran around in back of the Russian, and peering
impishly up under his arm. It was like an elephant worried by a mosquito. Then
Moran's lightning right shot out again, smartly, and seemed just to tap the
great hulk on the side of the chin. A ludicrous look of surprise on Slovatsky's
face before he crumpled and crashed.
This man it was who had Tyler Kamps' admiration. It was more than
admiration. It was nearer adoration. But there was nothing unnatural or
unwholesome about the boy's worship of this man. It was a legitimate thing,
born of all his fatherless years; years in which there had been no big man
around the house who could throw farther than Tyler, and eat more, and wear
larger shoes and offer more expert opinion. Moran accepted the boy's homage
with a sort of surly graciousness.
In Tyler's third week at the Naval Station mumps developed in his
barracks and they were quarantined. Tyler escaped the epidemic but he had to
endure the boredom of weeks of quarantine. At first they took it as a lark,
like schoolboys. Moran's hammock was just next Tyler's. On his other side was a
young Kentuckian named Dabney Courtney. The barracks had dubbed him Monicker
the very first day. Monicker had a rather surprising tenor voice. Moran a salty
bass. And Tyler his mandolin. The trio did much to make life bearable, or
unbearable, depending on one's musical knowledge and views. The boys all sang a
great deal. They bawled everything they knew, from "Oh, You Beautiful
Doll" and "Over There" to "The End of a Perfect Day."
The latter, ad nauseum. They even revived "Just Break the News
to Mother" and seemed to take a sort of awful joy in singing its dreary
words and mournful measures. They played everything from a saxophone to a
harmonica. They read. They talked. And they grew so sick of the sight of one
another that they began to snap and snarl.
Sometimes they gathered round Moran and he told them tales they
only half believed. He had been in places whose very names were exotic and
oriental, breathing of sandalwood, and myrrh, and spices and aloes. They were
places over which a boy dreams in books of travel. Moran bared the vivid
tattooing on hairy arms and chest—tattooing representing anchors, and serpents,
and girls' heads, and hearts with arrows stuck through them. Each mark had its
story. A broad-swathed gentleman indeed, Gunner Moran. He had an easy way with
him that made you feel provincial and ashamed. It made you ashamed of not
knowing the sort of thing you used to be ashamed of knowing.
Visiting day was the worst. They grew savage, somehow, watching
the mothers and sisters and cousins and sweethearts go streaming by to the
various barracks. One of the boys to whom Tyler had never even spoken suddenly
took a picture out of his blouse pocket and showed it to Tyler. It was a cheap
little picture—one of the kind they sell two for a quarter if one sitter; two
for thirty-five if two. This was a twosome. The boy, and a girl. A healthy,
wide-awake wholesome looking small-town girl, who has gone through high school
and cuts out her own shirtwaists.
"She's vice-president of the Silver Star Pleasure Club back
home," the boy confided to Tyler. "I'm president. We meet every other
Saturday."
Tyler looked at the picture seriously and approvingly. Suddenly he
wished that he had, tucked away in his blouse, a picture of a clear-eyed,
round-cheeked vice-president of a pleasure club. He took out his mother's
picture and showed it.
"Oh, yeh," said the boy, disinterestedly.
The dragging weeks came to an end. The night of Tyler's
restlessness was the last night of quarantine. To-morrow morning they would be
free. At the end of the week they were to be given shore leave. Tyler had made
up his mind to go to Chicago. He had never been there.
Five thirty. Reveille.
Tyler awoke with the feeling that something was going to happen.
Something pleasant. Then he remembered, and smiled. Dabney Courtney, in the
next hammock, was leaning far over the side of his perilous perch and
delivering himself of his morning speech. Tyler did not quite understand this
young southern elegant. Monicker had two moods, both of which puzzled Tyler.
When he awoke feeling gay he would lean over the extreme edge of his hammock
and drawl, with an affected English accent:
"If this is Venice, where are the canals?"
In his less cheerful moments he would groan, heavily, "There
ain't no Gawd!"
This last had been his morning observation during their many weeks
of durance vile. But this morning he was, for the first time in many days,
enquiring about Venetian waterways.
Tyler had no pal. His years of companionship with his mother had
bred in him a sort of shyness, a diffidence. He heard the other boys making
plans for shore leave. They all scorned Waukegan, which was the first sizable
town beyond the Station. Chicago was their goal. They were like a horde of
play-hungry devils after their confinement. Six weeks of restricted freedom,
six weeks of stored-up energy made them restive as colts.
"Goin' to Chicago, kid?" Moran asked him, carelessly. It
was Saturday morning.
"Yes. Are you?" eagerly.
"Kin a duck swim?"
At the Y.M.C.A. they had given him tickets to various free
amusements and entertainments. They told him about free canteens, and about
other places where you could get a good meal, cheap. One of the tickets was for
a dance. Tyler knew nothing of dancing. This dance was to be given at some kind
of woman's club on Michigan Boulevard. Tyler read the card, glumly. A dance
meant girls. He knew that. Why hadn't he learned to dance?
Tyler walked down to the station and waited for the train that
would bring him to Chicago at about one o'clock. The other boys, in little
groups, or in pairs, were smoking and talking. Tyler wanted to join them, but
he did not. They seemed so sufficient unto themselves, with their plans, and
their glib knowledge of places, and amusements, and girls. On the train they
all bought sweets from the train butcher—chocolate maraschinos, and nut bars,
and molasses kisses—and ate them as greedily as children, until their hunger
for sweets was surfeited.
Tyler found himself in the same car with Moran. He edged over to a
seat near him, watching him narrowly. Moran was not mingling with the other
boys. He kept aloof, his sea-blue eyes gazing out at the flat Illinois prairie.
All about him swept and eddied the currents and counter-currents of talk.
"They say there's a swell supper in the Tower Building for
fifty cents."
"Fifty nothing. Get all you want in the Library canteen for
nix."
"Where's this dance, huh?"
"Search me."
"Heh, Murph! I'll shoot you a game of pool at the club."
"Naw, I gotta date."
Tyler's glance encountered Moran's, and rested there. Scorn curled
the Irishman's broad upper lip. "Navy! This ain't no navy no more. It's a
Sunday school, that's what! Phonographs, an' church suppers, an' pool an'
dances! It's enough t' turn a fella's stomick. Lot of Sunday school kids don't
know a sail from a tablecloth when they see it."
He relapsed into contemptuous silence.
Tyler, who but a moment before had been envying them their
familiarity with these very things now nodded and smiled understanding at
Moran. "That's right," he said. Moran regarded him a moment,
curiously. Then he resumed his staring out of the window. You would never have
guessed that in that bullet head there was bewilderment and resentment almost
equalling Tyler's, but for a much different reason. Gunner Moran was of the old
navy—the navy that had been despised and spat upon. In those days his uniform
alone had barred him from decent theatres, decent halls, decent dances, contact
with decent people. They had forced him to a knowledge of the burlesque houses,
the cheap theatres, the shooting galleries, the saloons, the dives. And now,
bewilderingly, the public had right-about faced. It opened its doors to him. It
closed its saloons to him. It sought him out. It offered him amusement. It
invited him to its home, and sat him down at its table, and introduced him to
its daughter.
"Nix!" said Gunner Moran, and spat between his teeth.
"Not f'r me. I pick me own lady friends."
Gunner Moran was used to picking his own lady friends. He had picked
them in wicked Port Said, and in Fiume; in Yokohama and Naples. He had picked
them unerringly, and to his taste, in Cardiff, and Hamburg, and Vladivostok.
When the train drew in at the great Northwestern station shed he
was down the steps and up the long platform before the wheels had ceased
revolving.
Tyler came down the steps slowly. Blue uniforms were streaming
past him—a flood of them. White leggings twinkled with the haste of their
wearers. Caps, white or blue, flowed like a succession of rippling waves and
broke against the great doorway, and were gone.
In Tyler's town, back home in Marvin, Texas, you knew the train
numbers and their schedules, and you spoke of them by name, familiarly and
affectionately, as Number Eleven and Number Fifty-five. "I reckon
Fifty-five'll be late to-day, on account of the storm."
Now he saw half a dozen trains lined up at once, and a dozen more
tracks waiting, empty. The great train shed awed him. The vast columned waiting
room, the hurrying people, the uniformed guards gave him a feeling of personal
unimportance. He felt very negligible, and useless, and alone. He stood, a
rather dazed blue figure, in the vastness of that shining place. A voice—the
soft, cadenced voice of the negro—addressed him.
"Lookin' fo' de sailors' club rooms?"
Tyler turned. A toothy, middle-aged, kindly negro in a uniform and
red cap. Tyler smiled friendlily. Here was a human he could feel at ease with.
Texas was full of just such faithful, friendly types of negro.
"Reckon I am, uncle. Show me the way?"
Red Cap chuckled and led the way. "Knew you was f'om de south
minute Ah see yo'. Cain't fool me. Le'ssee now. You-all f'om—?"
"I'm from the finest state in the Union. The most glorious
state in the—"
"H'm—Texas," grinned Red Cap.
"How did you know!"
"Ah done heah 'em talk befoh, son. Ah done heah 'em talk
be-foh."
It was a long journey through the great building to the section
that had been set aside for Tyler and boys like him. Tyler wondered how any one
could ever find it alone. When the Red Cap left him, after showing him the wash
rooms, the tubs for scrubbing clothes, the steam dryers, the bath-tubs, the
lunch room, Tyler looked after him regretfully. Then he sped after him and
touched him on the arm.
"Listen. Could I—would they—do you mean I could clean up in
there—as much as I wanted? And wash my things? And take a bath in a bathtub,
with all the hot water I want?"
"Yo' sho' kin. On'y things look mighty grabby now. Always is
Sat'days. Jes' wait aroun' an' grab yo' tu'n."
Tyler waited. And while he waited he watched to see how the other
boys did things. He saw how they scrubbed their uniforms with scrubbing
brushes, and plenty of hot water and soap. He saw how they hung them carefully,
so that they might not wrinkle, in the dryers. He saw them emerge, glowing,
from the tub rooms. And he waited, the fever of cleanliness burning in his eye.
His turn came. He had waited more than an hour, reading, listening
to the phonograph and the electric piano, and watching.
Now he saw his chance and seized it. And then he went through a
ceremony that was almost a ritual. Stella Kamps, could she have seen it, would
have felt repaid for all her years of soap-and-water insistence.
First he washed out the stationary tub with soap, and brush, and
scalding water. Then he scalded the brush. Then the tub again. Then,
deliberately, and with the utter unconcern of the male biped he divested
himself, piece by piece, of every stitch of covering wherewith his body was
clothed. And he scrubbed them all. He took off his white leggings and his white
cap and scrubbed those, first. He had seen the other boys follow that order of
procedure. Then his flapping blue flannel trousers, and his blouse. Then his
underclothes, and his socks. And finally he stood there, naked and unabashed, slim,
and pink and silver as a mountain trout. His face, as he bent over the steamy
tub, was very red, and moist and earnest. His yellow hair curled in little damp
ringlets about his brow. Then he hung his trousers and blouse in the dryers
without wringing them (wringing, he had been told, wrinkled them). He rinsed
and wrung, and flapped the underclothes, though, and shaped his cap carefully,
and spread his leggings, and hung those in the dryer, too. And finally, with a
deep sigh of accomplishment, he filled one of the bathtubs in the adjoining
room—filled it to the slopping-over point with the luxurious hot water, and he
splashed about in this, and reclined in it, gloriously, until the waiting ones
threatened to pull him out. Then he dried himself and issued forth all flushed
and rosy. He wrapped himself in a clean coarse sheet, for his clothes would not
be dry for another half hour. Swathed in the sheet like a Roman senator he lay
down on one of the green velvet couches, relics of past Pullman glories, and there,
with the rumble and roar of steel trains overhead, with the smart click of the
billiard balls sounding in his ears, with the phonograph and the electric piano
going full blast, with the boys dancing and larking all about the big room, he
fell sound asleep as only a boy cub can sleep.
When he awoke an hour later his clothes were folded in a neat pile
by the deft hand of some jackie impatient to use the drying space for his own
garments. Tyler put them on. He stood before a mirror and brushed his hair until
it glittered. He drew himself up with the instinctive pride and self respect
that comes of fresh clean clothes against the skin. Then he placed his absurd
round hat on his head at what he considered a fetching angle, though
precarious, and sallied forth on the streets of Chicago in search of amusement
and adventure.
He found them.
Madison and Canal streets, west, had little to offer him. He
sensed that the centre of things lay to the east, so he struck out along
Madison, trying not to show the terror with which the grim, roaring, clamorous
city filled him. He jingled the small coins in his pocket and strode along, on
the surface a blithe and carefree jackie on shore leave; a forlorn and lonely
Texas boy, beneath.
It was late afternoon. His laundering, his ablutions and his nap
had taken more time than he had realised. It was a mild spring day, with just a
Lake Michigan evening snap in the air. Tyler, glancing about alertly,
nevertheless felt dreamy, and restless, and sort of melting, like a snow-heap in
the sun. He wished he had some one to talk to. He thought of the man on the
train who had said, with such easy confidence, "I got a date." Tyler
wished that he too had a date—he who had never had a rendezvous in his life. He
loitered a moment on the bridge. Then he went on, looking about him
interestedly, and comparing Chicago, Illinois, with Marvin, Texas, and finding
the former sadly lacking. He passed LaSalle, Clark. The streets were packed.
The noise and rush tired him, and bewildered him. He came to a moving picture
theatre—one of the many that dot the district. A girl occupied the little
ticket kiosk. She was rather a frowsy girl, not too young, and with a certain
look about the jaw. Tyler walked up to the window and shoved his money through
the little aperture. The girl fed him a pink ticket without looking up. He
stood there looking at her. Then he asked her a question. "How long does
the show take?" He wanted to see the colour of her eyes. He wanted her to
talk to him.
"'Bout a hour," said the girl, and raised wise eyes to
his.
"Thanks," said Tyler, fervently, and smiled. No
answering smile curved the lady's lips. Tyler turned and went in. There was an
alleged comic film. Tyler was not amused. It was followed by a war picture. He
left before the show was over. He was very hungry by now. In his blouse pocket
were the various information and entertainment tickets with which the Y.M.C.A.
man had provided him. He had taken them out, carefully, before he had done his
washing. Now he looked them over. But a dairy lunch room invited him, with its
white tiling, and its pans of baked apples, and browned beans and its coffee
tank. He went in and ate a solitary supper that was heavy on pie and cake.
When he came out to the street again it was evening. He walked over
to State Street (the wrong side). He took the dance card out of his pocket and
looked at it again. If only he had learned to dance. There'd be girls. There'd
have to be girls at a dance. He stood staring into the red and tin-foil window
display of a cigar store, turning the ticket over in his fingers, and the
problem over in his mind.
Suddenly, in his ear, a woman's voice, very soft and low.
"Hello, Sweetheart!" the voice said. His nickname! He whirled around,
eagerly.
The girl was a stranger to him. But she was smiling, friendlily,
and she was pretty, too, sort of. "Hello, Sweetheart!" she said,
again.
"Why, how-do, ma'am," said Tyler, Texas fashion.
"Where you going, kid?" she asked.
Tyler blushed a little. "Well, nowhere in particular, ma'am.
Just kind of milling around."
"Come on along with me," she said, and linked her arm in
his.
"Why—why—thanks, but—"
And yet Texas people were always saying easterners weren't
friendly. He felt a little uneasy, though, as he looked down into her smiling
face. Something—
"Hello, Sweetheart!" said a voice, again. A man's voice,
this time. Out of the cigar store came Gunner Moran, the yellow string of a
tobacco bag sticking out of his blouse pocket, a freshly rolled cigarette
between his lips.
A queer feeling of relief and gladness swept over Tyler. And then
Moran looked sharply at the girl and said, "Why, hello, Blanche!"
"Hello yourself," answered the girl, sullenly.
"Thought you was in 'Frisco."
"Well, I ain't."
Moran shifted his attention from the girl to Tyler. "Friend
o' yours?"
Before Tyler could open his lips to answer the girl put in,
"Sure he is. Sure I am. We been around together all afternoon."
Tyler jerked. "Why, ma'am, I guess you've made a mistake. I
never saw you before in my life. I kind of thought when you up and spoke to me
you must be taking me for somebody else. Well, now, isn't that funny—"
The smile faded from the girl's face, and it became twisted with
fury. She glared at Moran, her lips drawn back in a snarl. "Who're you to
go buttin' into my business! This guy's a friend of mine, I tell yuh!"
"Yeh? Well, he's a friend of mine, too. Me an' him had a date
to meet here right now and we're goin' over to a swell little dance on Michigan
Avenoo. So it's you who's buttin' in, Blanche, me girl."
The girl stood twisting her handkerchief savagely. She was panting
a little. "I'll get you for this."
"Beat it!" said Moran. He tucked his arm through
Tyler's, with a little impelling movement, and Tyler found himself walking up
the street at a smart gait, leaving the girl staring after them.
Tyler Kamps was an innocent, but he was not a fool. At what he had
vaguely guessed a moment before, he now knew. They walked along in silence, the
most ill-sorted pair that you might hope to find in all that higgledy-piggledy
city. And yet with a new, strong bond between them. It was more than fraternal.
It had something of the character of the feeling that exists between a father
and son who understand each other.
Man-like, they did not talk of that which they were thinking.
Tyler broke the silence.
"Do you dance?"
"Me! Dance! Well, I've mixed with everything from hula
dancers to geisha girls, not forgettin' the Barbary Coast in the old days,
but—well, I ain't what you'd rightly call a dancer. Why you askin'?"
"Because I can't dance, either. But we'll just go up and see
what it's like, anyway."
"See wot wot's like?"
Tyler took out his card again, patiently. "This dance we're
going to."
They had reached the Michigan Avenue address given on the card,
and Tyler stopped to look up at the great, brightly lighted building. Moran
stopped too, but for a different reason. He was staring, open-mouthed, at Tyler
Kamps.
"You mean t' say you thought I was goin'—"
He choked. "Oh, my Gawd!"
Tyler smiled at him, sweetly. "I'm kind of scared, too. But
Monicker goes to these dances and he says they're right nice. And lots of—of
pretty girls. Nice girls. I wouldn't go alone. But you—you're used to dancing,
and parties and—girls."
He linked his arm through the other man's. Moran allowed himself
to be propelled along, dazedly. Still protesting, he found himself in the
elevator with a dozen red-cheeked, scrubbed-looking jackies. At which point
Moran, game in the face of horror, accepted the inevitable. He gave a
characteristic jerk from the belt.
"Me, I'll try anything oncet. Lead me to it."
The elevator stopped at the ninth floor. "Out here for the
jackies' dance," said the elevator boy.
The two stepped out with the others. Stepped out gingerly, caps in
hand. A corridor full of women. A corridor a-flutter with girls. Talk.
Laughter. Animation. In another moment the two would have turned and fled,
terrified. But in that half-moment of hesitation and bewilderment they were
lost.
A woman approached them hand outstretched. A tall, slim, friendly
looking woman, low-voiced, silk-gowned, inquiring.
"Good-evening!" she said, as if she had been haunting
the halls in the hope of their coming. "I'm glad to see you. You can check
your caps right there. Do you dance?"
Two scarlet faces. Four great hands twisting at white caps in an
agony of embarrassment. "Why, no ma'am."
"That's fine. We'll teach you. Then you'll go into the ball
room and have a wonderful time."
"But—" in choked accents from Moran.
"Just a minute. Miss Hall!" She beckoned a diminutive
blonde in blue. "Miss Hall, this is Mr.—ah—Mr. Moran. Thanks. And
Mr.?—yes—Mr. Kamps. Tyler Kamps. They want to learn to dance. I'll turn them
right over to you. When does your class begin?"
Miss Hall glanced at a toy watch on the tiny wrist. Instinctively
and helplessly Moran and Tyler focused their gaze on the dials that bound their
red wrists. "Starting right now," said Miss Hall, crisply. She eyed
the two men with calm appraising gaze. "I'm sure you'll both make
wonderful dancers. Follow me."
She turned. There was something confident, dauntless, irresistible
about the straight little back. The two men stared at it. Then at each other.
Panic was writ large on the face of each. Panic, and mutiny. Flight was in the
mind of both. Miss Hall turned, smiled, held out a small white hand. "Come
on," she said. "Follow me."
And the two, as though hypnotised, followed.
A fair-sized room, with a piano in one corner and groups of
fidgeting jackies in every other corner. Moran and Tyler sighed with relief at
sight of them. At least they were not to be alone in their agony.
Miss Hall wasted no time. Slim ankles close together, head held
high, she stood in the centre of the room. "Now then, form a circle
please!"
Twenty six-foot, well-built specimens of manhood suddenly became
shambling hulks. They clumped forward, breathing hard, and smiling mirthlessly,
with an assumption of ease that deceived no one, least of all, themselves.
"A little lively, please. Don't look so scared. I'm not a bit vicious. Now
then, Miss Weeks! A fox trot."
Miss Weeks, at the piano, broke into spirited strains. The first
faltering steps in the social career of Gunner Moran and Tyler Kamps had begun.
To an onlooker, it might have been mirth-provoking if it hadn't
been, somehow, tear-compelling. The thing that little Miss Hall was doing might
have seemed trivial to one who did not know that it was magnificent. It wasn't
dancing merely that she was teaching these awkward, serious, frightened boys.
She was handing them a key that would unlock the social graces. She was presenting
them with a magic something that would later act as an open sesame to a hundred
legitimate delights.
She was strictly business, was Miss Hall. No nonsense about her.
"One-two-three-four! And a one-two three-four.
One-two-three-four! And a turn-two, turn-four. Now
then, all together. Just four straight steps as if you were walking down the
street. That's it! One-two-three-four! Don't look at me. Look at my feet. And
a one-two three-four."
Red-faced, they were. Very earnest. Pathetically eager and docile.
Weeks of drilling had taught them to obey commands. To them the little dancing
teacher whose white spats twinkled so expertly in the tangle of their own
clumsy clumping boots was more than a pretty girl. She was knowledge. She was
power. She was the commanding officer. And like children they obeyed.
Moran's Barbary Coast experience stood him in good stead now,
though the stern and watchful Miss Hall put a quick stop to a certain tendency
toward shoulder work. Tyler possessed what is known as a rhythm sense. An
expert whistler is generally a natural dancer. Stella Kamps had always waited
for the sound of his cheerful whistle as he turned the corner of Vernon Street.
High, clear, sweet, true, he would approach his top note like a Tettrazini
until, just when you thought he could not possibly reach that dizzy eminence he
did reach it, and held it, and trilled it, bird-like, in defiance of the laws
of vocal equilibrium.
His dancing was much like that. Never a half-beat behind the
indefatigable Miss Weeks. It was a bit laboured, at first, but it was true.
Little Miss Hall, with the skilled eye of the specialist, picked him at a
glance.
"You've danced before?"
"No ma'am."
"Take the head of the line, please. Watch Mr. Kamps. Now
then, all together, please."
And they were off again.
At 9.45 Tyler Kamps and Gunner Moran were standing in the crowded
doorway of the ballroom upstairs, in a panic lest some girl should ask them to
dance; fearful lest they be passed by. Little Miss Hall had brought them to the
very door, had left them there with a stern injunction not to move, and had
sped away in search of partners for them.
Gunner Moran's great scarlet hands were knotted into fists. His
Adam's apple worked convulsively.
"Le's duck," he whispered hoarsely. The jackie band in
the corner crashed into the opening bars of a fox trot.
"Oh, it don't seem—" But it was plain that Tyler was
weakening. Another moment and they would have turned and fled. But coming
toward them was little Miss Hall, her blonde head bobbing in and out among the
swaying couples. At her right and left was a girl. Her bright eyes held her two
victims in the doorway. They watched her approach, and were helpless to flee.
They seemed to be gripped by a horrible fascination. Their limbs were fluid.
A sort of groan rent Moran. Miss Hall and the two girls stood
before them, cool, smiling, unruffled.
"Miss Cunningham, this is Mr. Tyler Kamps. Mr. Moran, Miss
Cunningham. Miss Drew—Mr. Moran, Mr. Kamps."
The boy and the man gulped, bowed, mumbled something.
"Would you like to dance?" said Miss Cunningham, and
raised limpid eyes to Tyler's.
"Why—I—you see I don't know how. I just started to—"
"Oh, that's all right," Miss Cunningham
interrupted, cheerfully. "We'll try it." She stood in position and
there seemed to radiate from her a certain friendliness, a certain assurance
and understanding that was as calming as it was stimulating. In a sort of daze
Tyler found himself moving over the floor in time to the music. He didn't know
that he was being led, but he was. She didn't try to talk. He breathed a prayer
of thanks for that. She seemed to know, somehow, about those four straight
steps and two to the right and two to the left, and four again, and turn-two,
turn-four. He didn't know that he was counting aloud, desperately. He didn't
even know, just then, that this was a girl he was dancing with. He seemed to
move automatically, like a marionette. He never was quite clear about those
first ten minutes of his ballroom experience.
The music ceased. A spat of applause. Tyler mopped his head, and
his hands, and applauded too, like one in a dream. They were off again for the
encore.
Five minutes later he found himself seated next Miss Cunningham in
a chair against the wall. And for the first time since their meeting the mists
of agony cleared before his gaze and he saw Miss Cunningham as a tall, slim,
dark-haired girl, with a glint of mischief in her eye, and a mouth that looked
as if she were trying to keep from smiling.
"Why don't you?" Tyler asked, and was aghast.
"Why don't I what?"
"Smile if you want to."
At which the glint in her eye and the hidden smile on her lips
sort of met and sparked and she laughed. Tyler laughed, too, and then they
laughed together and were friends.
Miss Cunningham's conversation was the kind of conversation that a
nice girl invariably uses in putting at ease a jackie whom she has just met at
a war recreation dance. Nothing could have been more commonplace or unoriginal,
but to Tyler Kamps the brilliance of a Madame de Stael would have sounded trivial
and uninteresting in comparison.
"Where are you from?"
"Why, I'm from Texas, ma'am. Marvin, Texas."
"Is that so? So many of the boys are from Texas. Are you out
at the station or on one of the boats?"
"I'm on the Station. Yes ma'am."
"Do you like the navy?"
"Yes ma'am, I do. I sure do. You know there isn't a drafted
man in the navy. No ma'am! We're all enlisted men."
"When do you think the war will end, Mr. Kamps?"
He told her, gravely. He told her many other things. He told her
about Texas, at length and in detail, being a true son of that Brobdingnagian
state. Your Texan born is a walking mass of statistics. Miss Cunningham made a
sympathetic and interested listener. Her brown eyes were round and bright with
interest. He told her that the distance from Texas to Chicago was only half as
far as from here to there in the state of Texas itself. Yes ma'am!
He had figures about tons of grain, and heads of horses and herds of cattle.
Why, say, you could take little ol' meachin' Germany and tuck it away in a
corner of Texas and you wouldn't any more know it was there than if it was
somebody's poor no-'count ranch. Why, Big Y ranch alone would make the whole
country of Germany look like a cattle grazin' patch. It was bigger than all
those countries in Europe strung together, and every man in Texas would rather
fight than eat. Yes ma'am. Why, you couldn't hold 'em.
"My!" breathed Miss Cunningham.
They danced again. Miss Cunningham introduced him to some other
girls, and he danced with them, and they in turn asked him about the station,
and Texas, and when he thought the war would end. And altogether he had a
beautiful time of it, and forgot completely and entirely about Gunner Moran. It
was not until he gallantly escorted Miss Cunningham downstairs for refreshments
that he remembered his friend. He had procured hot chocolate for himself and
Miss Cunningham; and sandwiches, and delectable chunks of caramel cake. And
they were talking, and eating, and laughing and enjoying themselves hugely, and
Tyler had gone back for more cake at the urgent invitation of the white-haired,
pink-cheeked woman presiding at the white-clothed table in the centre of the
charming room. And then he had remembered. A look of horror settled down over
his face. He gasped.
"W-what's the matter?" demanded Miss Cunningham.
"My—my friend. I forgot all about him." He regarded her
with stricken eyes.
"Oh, that's all right," Miss Cunningham assured him for
the second time that evening. "We'll just go and find him. He's probably
forgotten all about you, too."
And for the second time she was right. They started on their
quest. It was a short one. Off the refreshment room was a great, gracious
comfortable room all deep chairs, and soft rugs, and hangings, and pictures and
shaded lights. All about sat pairs and groups of sailors and girls, talking,
and laughing and consuming vast quantities of cake. And in the centre of just
such a group sat Gunner Moran, lolling at his ease in a rosy velvet-upholstered
chair. His little finger was crookt elegantly over his cup. A large and
imposing square of chocolate cake in the other hand did not seem to cramp his
gestures as he talked. Neither did the huge bites with which he was rapidly
demolishing it seem in the least to stifle his conversation. Four particularly
pretty girls, and two matrons surrounded him. And as Tyler and Miss Cunningham
approached him he was saying, "Well, it's got so I can't sleep in
anything but a hammick. Yessir! Why, when I was fifteen years
old I was—" He caught Tyler's eye. "Hello!" he called, genially.
"Meet me friend." This to the bevy surrounding him. "I was just
tellin' these ladies here—"
And he was off again. All the tales that he told were not
necessarily true. But that did not detract from their thrill. Moran's audience
grew as he talked. And he talked until he and Tyler had to run all the way to
the Northwestern station for the last train that would get them on the Station
before shore leave expired. Moran, on leaving, shook hands like a presidential
candidate.
"I never met up with a finer bunch of ladies," he
assured them, again and again. "Sure I'm comin' back again. Ask me. I've
had a elegant time. Elegant. I never met a finer bunch of ladies."
They did not talk much in the train, he and Tyler. It was a sleepy
lot of boys that that train carried back to the Great Central Naval Station.
Tyler was undressed and in his hammock even before Moran, the expert. He would
not have to woo sleep to-night. Finally Moran, too, had swung himself up to his
precarious nest and relaxed with a tired, happy grunt.
Quiet again brooded over the great dim barracks. Tyler felt
himself slipping off to sleep, deliciously. She would be there next Saturday.
Her first name, she had said, was Myrtle. An awful pretty name for a girl. Just
about the prettiest he had ever heard. Her folks invited jackies to dinner at
the house nearly every Sunday. Maybe, if they gave him thirty-six hours' leave
next time—
"Hey, Sweetheart!" sounded in a hissing whisper from
Moran's hammock.
"What?"
"Say, was that four steps and then turn-turn, or four and two
steps t' the side? I kinda forgot."
"O, shut up!" growled Monicker, from the other side.
"Let a fellow sleep, can't you! What do you think this is? A boarding
school!"
"Shut up yourself!" retorted Tyler, happily. "It's
four steps, and two to the right and two to the left, and four again, and turn
two, turn two."
"I was pretty sure," said Moran, humbly. And relaxed
again.
Quiet settled down upon the great room. There were only the sounds of deep regular breathing, with an occasional grunt or sigh. The normal sleep sounds of very tired boys.
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