10106 lines
428 KiB
Plaintext
10106 lines
428 KiB
Plaintext
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OUR MR. WRENN, by SINCLAIR LEWIS
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Digitized by Cardinalis Etext Press, C.E.K.
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Posted to Wiretap in July 1993, as wrenn.txt.
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Italics are represented as _italics_.
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This text is in the PUBLIC DOMAIN.
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OUR MR. WRENN
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THE ROMANTIC ADVENTURES OF A GENTLE MAN
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BY
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SINCLAIR LEWIS
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HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
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NEW YORK AND LONDON
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MCMXIV
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COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY HARPER & BROTHERS
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PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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PUBLISHED FEBRUARY, 1914
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TO
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GRACE LIVINGSTONE HEGGER
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CHAPTER I
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MR. WRENN IS LONELY
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The ticket-taker of the Nickelorion Moving-Picture Show is a
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public personage, who stands out on Fourteenth Street, New York,
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wearing a gorgeous light-blue coat of numerous brass buttons.
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He nods to all the patrons, and his nod is the most cordial
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in town. Mr. Wrenn used to trot down to Fourteenth Street,
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passing ever so many other shows, just to get that cordial nod,
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because he had a lonely furnished room for evenings, and for
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daytime a tedious job that always made his head stuffy.
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He stands out in the correspondence of the Souvenir and Art
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Novelty Company as "Our Mr. Wrenn," who would be writing you
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directly and explaining everything most satisfactorily.
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At thirty-four Mr. Wrenn was the sales-entry clerk of the
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Souvenir Company. He was always bending over bills and columns
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of figures at a desk behind the stock-room. He was a meek little
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bachlor--a person of inconspicuous blue ready-made suits, and a
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small unsuccessful mustache.
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To-day--historians have established the date as April 9,
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1910--there had been some confusing mixed orders from the
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Wisconsin retailers, and Mr. Wrenn had been "called down"
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by the office manager, Mr. Mortimer R. Guilfogle. He needed
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the friendly nod of the Nickelorion ticket-taker. He found
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Fourteenth Street, after office hours, swept by a dusty
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wind that whisked the skirts of countless plump Jewish girls,
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whose V-necked blouses showed soft throats of a warm brown.
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Under the elevated station he secretly made believe that he was
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in Paris, for here beautiful Italian boys swayed with trays of
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violets; a tramp displayed crimson mechanical rabbits, which
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squeaked, on silvery leading-strings; and a newsstand was heaped
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with the orange and green and gold of magazine covers.
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"Gee!" inarticulated Mr. Wrenn. "Lots of colors. Hope I see
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foreign stuff like that in the moving pictures."
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He came primly up to the Nickelorion, feeling in his vest
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pockets for a nickel and peering around the booth at the
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friendly ticket-taker. But the latter was thinking about buying
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Johnny's pants. Should he get them at the Fourteenth Street
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Store, or Siegel-Cooper's, or over at Aronson's, near home?
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So ruminating, he twiddled his wheel mechanically, and Mr. Wrenn's
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pasteboard slip was indifferently received in the plate-glass
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gullet of the grinder without the taker's even seeing the
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clerk's bow and smile.
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Mr. Wrenn trembled into the door of the Nickelorion. He wanted
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to turn back and rebuke this fellow, but was restrained by
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shyness. He _had_ liked the man's "Fine evenin', sir "--rain
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or shine--but he wouldn't stand for being cut. Wasn't he making
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nineteen dollars a week, as against the ticket-taker's ten
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or twelve? He shook his head with the defiance of a cornered
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mouse, fussed with his mustache, and regarded the moving
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pictures gloomily.
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They helped him. After a Selig domestic drama came a stirring
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Vitagraph Western scene, "The Goat of the Rancho," which
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depicted with much humor and tumult the revolt of a ranch cook,
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a Chinaman. Mr. Wrenn was really seeing, not cow-punchers and
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sage-brush, but himself, defying the office manager's surliness
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and revolting against the ticket-man's rudeness. Now he was
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ready for the nearly overpowering delight of travel-pictures.
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He bounced slightly as a Gaumont film presented Java.
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He was a connoisseur of travel-pictures, for all his life he had
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been planning a great journey. Though he had done Staten Island
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and patronized an excursion to Bound Brook, neither of these was
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his grand tour. It was yet to be taken. In Mr. Wrenn,
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apparently fastened to New York like a domestic-minded barnacle,
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lay the possibilities of heroic roaming. He knew it. He, too,
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like the man who had taken the Gaumont pictures, would saunter
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among dusky Javan natives in "markets with tiles on the roofs
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and temples and--and--uh, well--places!" The scent of Oriental
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spices was in his broadened nostrils as he scampered out of the
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Nickelorion, without a look at the ticket-taker, and headed for
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"home"--for his third-floor-front on West Sixteenth Street.
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He wanted to prowl through his collection of steamship brochures
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for a description of Java. But, of course, when one's landlady
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has both the sciatica and a case of Patient Suffering one stops
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in the basement dining-room to inquire how she is.
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Mrs. Zapp was a fat landlady. When she sat down there was
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a straight line from her chin to her knees. She was usually
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sitting down. When she moved she groaned, and her apparel creaked.
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She groaned and creaked from bed to breakfast, and ate five
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griddle-cakes, two helpin's of scrapple, an egg, some rump steak,
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and three cups of coffee, slowly and resentfully. She creaked
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and groaned from breakfast to her rocking-chair, and sat about
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wondering why Providence had inflicted upon her a weak digestion.
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Mr. Wrenn also wondered why, sympathetically, but Mrs. Zapp was
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too conscientiously dolorous to be much cheered by the sympathy
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of a nigger-lovin' Yankee, who couldn't appreciate the subtle
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sorrows of a Zapp of Zapp's Bog, allied to all the First Families
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of Virginia.
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Mr. Wrenn did nothing more presumptuous than sit still, in the
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stuffy furniture-crowded basement room, which smelled of dead
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food and deader pride in a race that had never existed. He sat
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still because the chair was broken. It had been broken now for
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four years.
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For the hundred and twenty-ninth time in those years Mrs. Zapp
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said, in her rich corruption of Southern negro dialect, which
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can only be indicated here, "Ah been meaning to get that chair
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mended, Mist' Wrenn." He looked gratified and gazed upon the
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crayon enlargements of Lee Theresa, the older Zapp daughter (who
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was forewoman in a factory), and of Godiva. Godiva Zapp was
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usually called "Goaty," and many times a day was she called by
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Mrs. Zapp. A tamed child drudge was Goaty, with adenoids, which
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Mrs. Zapp had been meanin' to have removed, and which she would
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continue to have benevolent meanin's about till it should be too
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late, and she should discover that Providence never would let
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Goaty go to school.
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"Yes, Mist' Wrenn, Ah told Goaty she was to see the man about
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getting that chair fixed, but she nev' does nothing Ah tell her."
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In the kitchen was the noise of Goaty, ungovernable Goaty, aged
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eight, still snivelingly washing, though not cleaning, the
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incredible pile of dinner dishes. With a trail of hesitating
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remarks on the sadness of sciatica and windy evenings Mr. Wrenn
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sneaked forth from the august presence of Mrs. Zapp and mounted
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to paradise--his third-floor-front.
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It was an abjectly respectable room--the bedspread patched;
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no two pieces of furniture from the same family; half-tones
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from the magazines pinned on the wall. But on the old marble
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mantelpiece lived his friends, books from wanderland.
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Other friends the room had rarely known. It was hard enough
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for Mr. Wrenn to get acquainted with people, anyway, and Mrs.
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Zapp did not expect her gennulman lodgers to entertain. So Mr.
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Wrenn had given up asking even Charley Carpenter, the assistant
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bookkeeper at the Souvenir Company, to call. That left him the
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books, which he now caressed with small eager finger-tips.
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He picked out a P. & O. circular, and hastily left for fairyland.
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The April skies glowed with benevolence this Saturday morning.
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The Metropolitan Tower was singing, bright ivory tipped with
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gold, uplifted and intensely glad of the morning. The buildings
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walling in Madison Square were jubilant; the honest red-brick
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fronts, radiant; the new marble, witty. The sparrows in the
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middle of Fifth Avenue were all talking at once, scandalously but
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cleverly. The polished brass of limousines threw off teethy smiles.
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At least so Mr. Wrenn fancied as he whisked up Fifth Avenue,
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the skirts of his small blue double-breasted coat wagging.
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He was going blocks out of his way to the office; ready to
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defy time and eternity, yes, and even the office manager.
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He had awakened with Defiance as his bedfellow, and
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throughout breakfast at the hustler Dairy Lunch sunshine
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had flickered over the dirty tessellated floor.
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He pranced up to the Souvenir Company's brick building, on
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Twenty-eighth Street near Sixth Avenue. In the office he
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chuckled at his ink-well and the untorn blotters on his
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orderly desk. Though he sat under the weary unnatural brilliance
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of a mercury-vapor light, he dashed into his work, and was too
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keen about this business of living merrily to be much flustered
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by the bustle of the lady buyer's superior "_Good_ morning."
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Even up to ten-thirty he was still slamming down papers on
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his desk. Just let any one try to stop his course, his readiness
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for snapping fingers at The Job; just let them _try_ it, that was
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all he wanted!
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Then he was shot out of his chair and four feet along the
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corridor, in reflex response to the surly " Bur-r-r-r-r" of
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the buzzer. Mr. Mortimer R. Guilfogle, the manager, desired
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to see him. He scampered along the corridor and slid
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decorously through the manager's doorway into the long
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sun-bright room, ornate with rugs and souvenirs. Seven Novelties
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glittered on the desk alone, including a large rococo
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Shakespeare-style glass ink-well containing cloves and a small
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iron Pittsburg-style one containing ink. Mr. Wrenn blinked like
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a noon-roused owlet in the brilliance. The manager dropped his
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fist on the desk, glared, smoothed his flowered prairie of
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waistcoat, and growled, his red jowls quivering:
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"Look here, Wrenn, what's the matter with you? The Bronx
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Emporium order for May Day novelties was filled twice, they
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write me."
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"They ordered twice, sir. By 'phone," smiled Mr. Wrenn, in an
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agony of politeness.
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"They ordered hell, sir! Twice--the same order?"
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"Yes, sir; their buyer was prob----"
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"They say they've looked it up. Anyway, they won't pay twice.
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I know, em. We'll have to crawl down graceful, and all because
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you---- I want to know why you ain't more careful!"
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The announcement that Mr. Wrenn twice wriggled his head, and
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once tossed it, would not half denote his wrath. At last!
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It was here--the time for revolt, when he was going to be defiant.
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He had been careful; old Goglefogle was only barking; but why
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should _he_ be barked at? With his voice palpitating and his
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heart thudding so that he felt sick he declared:
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"I'm _sure_, sir, about that order. I looked it up. Their buyer
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was drunk!"
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It was done. And now would he be discharged? The manager
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was speaking:
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"Probably. You looked it up, eh? Um! Send me in the two
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order-records. Well. But, anyway, I want you to be more
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careful after this, Wrenn. You're pretty sloppy. Now get out.
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Expect me to make firms pay twice for the same order, cause of
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your carelessness?"
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Mr. Wrenn found himself outside in the dark corridor.
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The manager hadn't seemed much impressed by his revolt.
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The manager wasn't. He called a stenographer and dictated:
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"Bronx Emporium:
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"GENTLEMEN:--Our Mr. Wrenn has again (underline that `again,'
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Miss Blaustein), again looked up your order for May Day novelties.
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As we wrote before, order certainly was duplicated by 'phone.
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Our Mr. Wrenn is thoroughly reliable, and we have his records
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of these two orders. We shall therefore have to push
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collection on both----"
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After all, Mr. Wrenn was thinking, the crafty manager might be
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merely concealing his hand. Perhaps he had understood the defiance.
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That gladdened him till after lunch. But at three, when his head
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was again foggy with work and he had forgotten whether there was
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still April anywhere, he began to dread what the manager might
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do to him. Suppose he lost his job; The Job! He worked
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unnecessarily late, hoping that the manager would learn of it.
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As he wavered home, drunk with weariness, his fear of losing
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The Job was almost equal to his desire to resign from The Job.
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He had worked so late that when he awoke on Sunday morning he
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was still in a whirl of figures. As he went out to his
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breakfast of coffee and whisked wheat at the Hustler Lunch the
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lines between the blocks of the cement walk, radiant in a white
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flare of sunshine, irritatingly recalled the cross-lines of
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order-lists, with the narrow cement blocks at the curb standing
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for unfilled column-headings. Even the ridges of the Hustler
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Lunch's imitation steel ceiling, running in parallel lines,
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jeered down at him that he was a prosaic man whose path was a ruler.
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He went clear up to the branch post-office after breakfast to
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get the Sunday mail, but the mail was a disappointment.
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He was awaiting a wonderful fully illustrated guide to the
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Land of the Midnight Sun, a suggestion of possible and
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coyly improbable trips, whereas he got only a letter from his
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oldest acquaintance--Cousin John, of Parthenon, New York, the
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boy-who-comes-to-play of Mr. Wrenn's back-yard days in Parthenon.
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Without opening the letter Mr. Wrenn tucked it into his inside coat
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pocket, threw away his toothpick, and turned to Sunday wayfaring.
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He jogged down Twenty-third Street to the North River ferries afoot.
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Trolleys took money, and of course one saves up for future great
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traveling. Over him the April clouds were fetterless vagabonds
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whose gaiety made him shrug with excitement and take a curb with
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a frisk as gambolsome as a Central Park lamb. There was no hint
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of sales-lists in the clouds, at least. And with them Mr. Wrenn's
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soul swept along, while his half-soled Cum-Fee-Best $3.80 shoes
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were ambling past warehouses. Only once did he condescend to
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being really on Twenty-third Street. At the Ninth Avenue corner,
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under the grimy Elevated, he sighted two blocks down to the
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General Theological Seminary's brick Gothic and found in a
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pointed doorway suggestions of alien beauty.
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But his real object was to loll on a West and South Railroad in
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luxury, and go sailing out into the foam and perilous seas of
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North River. He passed through the smoking-cabin. He didn't
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smoke--the habit used up travel-money. Once seated on the upper
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deck, he knew that at last he was outward-bound on a liner.
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True, there was no great motion, but Mr. Wrenn was inclined to
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let realism off easily in this feature of his voyage. At least
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there were undoubted life-preservers in the white racks
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overhead; and everywhere the world, to his certain witnessing,
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was turned to crusading, to setting forth in great ships as if
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it were again in the brisk morning of history when the joy of
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adventure possessed the Argonauts.
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He wasn't excited over the liners they passed. He was so
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experienced in all of travel, save the traveling, as to have
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gained a calm interested knowledge. He knew the _Campagnia_
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three docks away, and explained to a Harlem grocer her fine
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points, speaking earnestly of stacks and sticks, tonnage
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and knots.
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Not excited, but--where couldn't he go if he were pulling out
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for Arcady on the _Campagnia!_ Gee! What were even the
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building-block towers of the Metropolitan and Singer buildings
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and the _Times's_ cream-stick compared with some old shrine in a
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cathedral close that was misted with centuries!
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All this he felt and hummed to himself, though not in words.
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He had never heard of Arcady, though for many years he had
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been a citizen of that demesne.
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Sure, he declared to himself, he was on the liner now; he was
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sliding up the muddy Mersey (see the _W. S. Travel Notes_ for
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the source of his visions); he was off to St. George's Square
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for an organ-recital (see the English Baedeker); then an express
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for London and---- Gee!
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The ferryboat was entering her slip. Mr. Wrenn trotted toward
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the bow to thrill over the bump of the boat's snub nose against
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the lofty swaying piles and the swash of the brown waves heaped
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before her as she sidled into place. He was carried by the herd
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on into the station.
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He did not notice the individual people in his exultation as he
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heard the great chords of the station's paean. The vast roof
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roared as the iron coursers stamped titanic hoofs of scorn at
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the little stay-at-home.
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That is a washed-out hint of how the poets might describe Mr.
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Wrenn's passion. What he said was "Gee!"
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He strolled by the lists of destinations hung on the track gates.
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Chicago (the plains! the Rockies! sunset over mining-camps!),
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Washington, and the magic Southland--thither the iron horses
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would be galloping, their swarthy smoke manes whipped back by
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the whirlwind, pounding out with clamorous strong hoofs their
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sixty miles an hour. Very well. In time he also would mount
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upon the iron coursers and charge upon Chicago and the
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Southland; just as soon as he got ready.
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Then he headed for Cortlandt Street; for Long Island, City.
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finally, the Navy Yard. Along his way were the docks of the
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tramp steamers where he might ship as steward in the
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all-promising Sometime. He had never done anything so reckless
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as actually to ask a skipper for the chance to go a-sailing, but
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he had once gone into a mission society's free shipping-office
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on West Street where a disapproving elder had grumped at him,
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"Are you a sailor? No? Can't do anything for you, my friend.
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Are you saved?" He wasn't going to risk another horror like
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that, yet when the golden morning of Sometime dawned he
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certainly was going to go cruising off to palm-bordered lagoons.
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As he walked through Long Island City he contrived conversations
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with the sailors he passed. It would have surprised a Norwegian
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bos'un's mate to learn that he was really a gun-runner, and
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that, as a matter of fact, he was now telling yarns of the
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Spanish Main to the man who slid deprecatingly by him.
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Mr. Wrenn envied the jackies on the training-ship and carelessly
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went to sea as the President's guest in the admiral's barge and
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was frightened by the stare of a sauntering shop-girl and
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arrived home before dusk, to Mrs. Zapp's straitened approval.
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Dusk made incantations in his third-floor-front. Pleasantly
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fagged in those slight neat legs, after his walk, Mr. Wrenn sat
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in the wicker rocker by the window, patting his scrubby tan
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mustache and reviewing the day's wandering. When the gas was
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lighted he yearned over pictures in a geographical magazine for
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a happy hour, then yawned to himself, "Well-l-l, Willum, guess
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it's time to crawl into the downy."
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He undressed and smoothed his ready-made suit on the
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rocking-chair back. Sitting on the edge of his bed, quaint in
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his cotton night-gown, like a rare little bird of dull plumage,
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he rubbed his head sleepily. Um-m-m-m-m! How tired he was!
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He went to open the window. Then his tamed heart leaped into a
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waltz, and he forgot third-floor-fronts and sleepiness.
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Through the window came the chorus of fog-horns on North River.
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"Boom-m-m!" That must be a giant liner, battling up through the
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fog. (It was a ferry.) A liner! She'd be roaring just like that
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if she were off the Banks! If he were only off the Banks! "Toot!
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Toot!" That was a tug. "Whawn-n-n!" Another liner. The tumultuous
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chorus repeated to him all the adventures of the day.
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He dropped upon the bed again and stared absently at his
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clothes. Out of the inside coat pocket stuck the unopened
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letter from Cousin John.
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He read a paragraph of it. He sprang from the bed and danced a
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tarantella, pranced in his cottony nightgown like a drunken
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Yaqui. The letter announced that the flinty farm at Parthenon,
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left to Mr. Wrenn by his father, had been sold. Its location on
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a river bluff had made it valuable to the Parthenon Chautauqua
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Association. There was now to his credit in the Parthenon
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National Bank nine hundred and forty dollars!
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He was wealthy, then. He had enough to stalk up and down the
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earth for many venturesome (but economical) months, till he
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should learn the trade of wandering, and its mysterious trick of
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living without a job or a salary.
|
|
|
|
He crushed his pillow with burrowing head and sobbed excitedly,
|
|
with a terrible stomach-sinking and a chill shaking. Then he
|
|
laughed and wanted to--but didn't--rush into the adjacent hall
|
|
room and tell the total stranger there of this world-changing news.
|
|
He listened in the hall to learn whether the Zapps were up,
|
|
but heard nothing; returned and cantered up and down, gloating
|
|
on a map of the world.
|
|
|
|
"Gee! It's happened. I could travel all the time. I guess I
|
|
won't be--very much--afraid of wrecks and stuff. . . . Things like
|
|
that. . . . Gee! If I don't get to bed I'll be late at the
|
|
office in the morning!"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn lay awake till three o'clock. Monday morning he felt
|
|
rather ashamed of having done so eccentric a thing. But he got
|
|
to the office on time. He was worried with the cares of wealth,
|
|
with having to decide when to leave for his world-wanderings,
|
|
but he was also very much aware that office managers are
|
|
disagreeable if one isn't on time. All morning he did nothing
|
|
more reckless than balance his new fortune, plus his savings,
|
|
against steamship fares on a waste half-sheet of paper.
|
|
|
|
The noon-hour was not The Job's, but his, for exploration of the
|
|
parlous lands of romance that lie hard by Twenty-eighth Street
|
|
and Sixth Avenue. But he had to go out to lunch with Charley
|
|
Carpenter, the assistant bookkeeper, that he might tell the news.
|
|
As for Charley, He needed frequently to have a confidant who knew
|
|
personally the tyrannous ways of the office manager, Mr. Guilfogle.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn and Charley chose (that is to say, Charley chose)
|
|
a table at Drubel's Eating House. Mr. Wrenn timidly hinted,
|
|
"I've got some big news to tell you."
|
|
|
|
But Charley interrupted, "Say, did you hear old Goglefogle light
|
|
into me this morning? I won't stand for it. Say, did you hear
|
|
him--the old----"
|
|
|
|
"What was the trouble, Charley?"
|
|
|
|
"Trouble? Nothing was the trouble. Except with old Goglefogle.
|
|
I made one little break in my accounts. Why, if old Gogie had
|
|
to keep track of seventy-'leven accounts and watch every single
|
|
last movement of a fool girl that can't even run the adding-machine,
|
|
why, he'd get green around the gills. He'd never do anything
|
|
_but_ make mistakes! Well, I guess the old codger must have had
|
|
a bum breakfast this morning. Wanted some exercise to digest it.
|
|
Me, I was the exercise--I was the goat. He calls me in, and he
|
|
calls me _down_, and me--well, just lemme tell you, Wrenn,
|
|
I calls his bluff!"
|
|
|
|
Charley Carpenter stopped his rapid tirade, delivered with quick
|
|
head-shakes like those of palsy, to raise his smelly cigarette
|
|
to his mouth. Midway in this slow gesture the memory of his
|
|
wrongs again overpowered him. He flung his right hand back on
|
|
the table, scattering cigarette ashes, jerked back his head with
|
|
the irritated patience of a nervous martyr, then waved both
|
|
hands about spasmodically, while he snarled, with his cheaply
|
|
handsome smooth face more flushed than usual:
|
|
|
|
"Sure! You can just bet your bottom dollar I let him see from
|
|
the way I looked at him that I wasn't going to stand for no more
|
|
monkey business. You bet I did!... I'll fix him, I will.
|
|
You just _watch_ me. (Hey, Drubel, got any lemon merang? Bring me
|
|
a hunk, will yuh?) Why, Wrenn, that cross-eyed double-jointed
|
|
fat old slob, I'll slam him in the slats so hard some day---- I
|
|
will, you just watch my smoke. If it wasn't for that messy wife
|
|
of mine---- I ought to desert her, and I will some day, and----"
|
|
|
|
"Yuh." Mr. Wrenn was curt for a second.... "I know how it is, Charley.
|
|
But you'll get over it, honest you will. Say, I've got some news.
|
|
Some land that my dad left me has sold for nearly a thousand plunks.
|
|
By the way, this lunch is on me. Let me pay for it, Charley."
|
|
|
|
Charley promised to let him pay, quite readily. And, expanding, said:
|
|
|
|
"Great, Wrenn! Great! Lemme congratulate you. Don't know
|
|
anybody I'd rather've had this happen to. You're a meek little
|
|
baa-lamb, but you've got lots of stuff in you, old Wrennski.
|
|
Oh say, by the way, could. you let me have fifty cents till
|
|
Saturday? Thanks. I'll pay it back sure. By golly! you're
|
|
the only man around the office that 'preciates what a double
|
|
duck-lined old fiend old Goglefogle is, the old----"
|
|
|
|
"Aw, gee, Charley, I wish you wouldn't jump on Guilfogle
|
|
so hard. He's always treated me square."
|
|
|
|
"Gogie--square? Yuh, he's square just like a hoop. You know it,
|
|
too, Wrenn. Now that you've got enough money so's you don't
|
|
need to be scared about the job you'll realize it, and you'll
|
|
want to soak him, same's I do. _Say!_" The impulse of a great
|
|
idea made him gleefully shake his fist sidewise. "Say!
|
|
Why _don't_ you soak him? They bank on you at the Souvenir
|
|
Company. Darn' sight more than you realize, lemme tell you.
|
|
Why, you do about half the stock-keeper's work, sides your own.
|
|
Tell you what you do. You go to old Goglefogle and tell him you
|
|
want a raise to twenty-five, and want it right now. Yes, by
|
|
golly, _thirty!_ You're worth that, or pretty darn' near it, but
|
|
'course old Goglefogle'll never give it to you. He'll threaten
|
|
to fire you if you say a thing more about it. You can tell him
|
|
to go ahead, and then where'll he be? Guess that'll call his
|
|
bluff some!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but, Charley, then if Guilfogle feels he can't pay me that
|
|
much--you know he's responsible to the directors; he can't do
|
|
everything he wants to--why, he'll just have to fire me, after
|
|
I've talked to him like that, whether he wants to or not.
|
|
And that'd leave us -- that'd leave them -- without a sales clerk,
|
|
right in the busy season."
|
|
|
|
"Why, sure, Wrenn; that's what we want to do. If you go it 'd
|
|
leave 'em without just about _two_ men. Bother 'em like the deuce.
|
|
It 'd bother Mr. Mortimer X. Y. Guglefugle most of all,
|
|
thank the Lord. He wouldn't know where he was at--trying to
|
|
break in a man right in the busy season. Here's your chance.
|
|
Come on, kid; don't pass it up."
|
|
|
|
"Oh gee, Charley, I can't do that. You wouldn't want me to try
|
|
to _hurt_ the Souvenir Company after being there for--lemme see,
|
|
it must be seven years."
|
|
|
|
"Well, maybe you _like_ to get your cute little nose rubbed on
|
|
the grindstone! I suppose you'd like to stay on at nineteen per
|
|
for the rest of your life."
|
|
|
|
"Aw, Charley, don't get sore; please don't! I'd like to get off,
|
|
all right--like to go traveling, and stuff like that.
|
|
|
|
Gee! I'd like to wander round. But I can't cut out right in
|
|
the bus----"
|
|
|
|
"But can't you see, you poor nut, you won't be _leaving_
|
|
'em--they'll either pay you what they ought to or lose you."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I don't know about that, Charley.
|
|
|
|
"Charley was making up for some uncertainty as to his own
|
|
logic by beaming persuasiveness, and Mr. Wrenn was afraid
|
|
of being hypnotized. "No, no!" he throbbed, rising.
|
|
|
|
"Well, all right!" snarled Charley, "if you like to be Gogie's
|
|
goat.... Oh, you're all right, Wrennski. I suppose you had
|
|
ought to stay, if you feel you got to.... Well, so long.
|
|
I've got to beat it over and buy a pair of socks before I go back."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn crept out of Drubel's behind him, very melancholy.
|
|
Even Charley admitted that he "had ought to stay," then; and
|
|
what chance was there of persuading the dread Mr. Mortimer R.
|
|
Guilfogle that he wished to be looked upon as one resigning?
|
|
Where, then, any chance of globe-trotting; perhaps for months he
|
|
would remain in slavery, and he had hoped just that morning----
|
|
One dreadful quarter-hour with Mr. Guilfogle and he might be free.
|
|
He grinned to himself as he admitted that this was like
|
|
seeing Europe after merely swimming the mid-winter Atlantic.
|
|
|
|
Well, he had nine minutes more, by his two-dollar watch; nine
|
|
minutes of vagabondage. He gazed across at a Greek restaurant
|
|
with signs in real Greek letters like "ruins at--well, at Aythens."
|
|
A Chinese chop-suey den with a red-and-yellow carved dragon,
|
|
and at an upper window a squat Chinaman who might easily
|
|
be carrying a _kris_, "or whatever them Chink knives are," as he
|
|
observed for the hundredth time he had taken this journey.
|
|
A rotisserie, before whose upright fender of scarlet coals whole
|
|
ducks were happily roasting to a shiny brown. In a furrier's
|
|
window were Siberian foxes' skins (Siberia! huts of "awful
|
|
brave convicks"; the steely Northern Sea; guards in blouses,
|
|
just as he'd seen them at an Academy of Music play) and a polar
|
|
bear (meaning, to him, the Northern Lights, the long hike,
|
|
and the _igloo_ at night). And the florists! There were orchids
|
|
that (though he only half knew it, and that all inarticulately)
|
|
whispered to him of jungles where, in the hot hush, he saw the
|
|
slumbering python and---- "What was it in that poem, that,
|
|
Mandalay, thing? _was_ it about jungles? Anyway:
|
|
|
|
"`Them garlicky smells,
|
|
And the sunshine and the palms and the bells.'"
|
|
|
|
He had to hurry back to the office. He stopped only to pat the
|
|
head of a florist's delivery horse that looked wistfully at him
|
|
from the curb. "Poor old fella. What you thinking about?
|
|
Want to be a circus horse and wander? Le's beat it together.
|
|
You can't, eh? Poor old fella!"
|
|
|
|
At three-thirty, the time when it seems to office persons that
|
|
the day's work never will end, even by a miracle, Mr. Wrenn was
|
|
shaky about his duty to the firm. He was more so after an
|
|
electrical interview with the manager, who spent a few minutes,
|
|
which he happened to have free, in roaring "I want to know why"
|
|
at Mr. Wrenn. There was no particular "why" that he wanted to
|
|
know; he was merely getting scientific efficiency out of
|
|
employees, a phrase which Mr. Guilfogle had taken from a
|
|
business magazine that dilutes efficiency theories for
|
|
inefficient employers.
|
|
|
|
At five-twenty the manager summoned him, complimented him on
|
|
nothing in particular, and suggested that he stay late with
|
|
Charley Carpenter and the stock-keeper to inventory a line of
|
|
desk-clocks which they were closing out.
|
|
|
|
As Mr. Wrenn returned to his desk he stopped at a window on the
|
|
corridor and coveted the bright late afternoon. The cornices of
|
|
lofty buildings glistened; the sunset shone fierily through the
|
|
glass-inclosed layer-like upper floors. He wanted to be out
|
|
there in the streets with the shopping crowds. Old Goglefogle
|
|
didn't consider him; why should he consider the firm?
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER II
|
|
HE WALKS WITH MISS THERESA
|
|
|
|
As he left the Souvenir Company building after working late at
|
|
taking inventory and roamed down toward Fourteenth Street, Mr.
|
|
Wrenn felt forlornly aimless. The worst of it all was that he
|
|
could not go to the Nickelorion for moving pictures; not after
|
|
having been cut by the ticket-taker. Then, there before him was
|
|
the glaring sign of the Nickelorion tempting him; a bill with
|
|
"Great Train Robbery Film Tonight" made his heart thump like
|
|
stair-climbing--and he dashed at the ticket-booth with a nickel
|
|
doughtily extended. He felt queer about the scalp as the
|
|
cashier girl slid out a coupon. Why did she seem to be watching
|
|
him so closely? As he dropped the ticket in the chopper he
|
|
tried to glance away from the Brass-button Man. For one-
|
|
nineteenth of a second he kept his head turned. It turned
|
|
back of itself; he stared full at the man, half bowed--and
|
|
received a hearty absent-minded nod and a "Fine evenin'."
|
|
He sang to himself a monotonous song of great joy. When he
|
|
stumbled over the feet of a large German in getting to a seat,
|
|
he apologized as though he were accustomed to laugh easily with
|
|
many friends.
|
|
|
|
The train-robbery film was--well, he kept repeating "Gee!" to
|
|
himself pantingly. How the masked men did sneak, simply sneak
|
|
and sneak, behind the bushes! Mr. Wrenn shrank as one of them
|
|
leered out of the picture at him. How gallantly the train
|
|
dashed toward the robbers, to the spirit-stirring roll of the
|
|
snare-drum. The rush from the bushes followed; the battle with
|
|
detectives concealed in the express - car. Mr. Wrenn was
|
|
standing sturdily and shooting coolly with the slender
|
|
hawk-faced Pinkerton man in puttees; with him he leaped to horse
|
|
and followed the robbers through the forest. He stayed through
|
|
the whole program twice to see the train robbery again.
|
|
|
|
As he started to go out he found the ticket-taker changing his
|
|
long light-blue robe of state for a highly commonplace sack-coat
|
|
without brass buttons. In his astonishment at seeing how a
|
|
Highness could be transformed into an every-day man, Mr. Wrenn
|
|
stopped, and, having stopped, spoke:
|
|
|
|
"Uh--that was quite a--quite a picture--that train robbery.
|
|
Wasn't it."
|
|
|
|
"Yuh, I guess---- Now where's the devil and his wife flew away
|
|
to with my hat? Them guys is always swiping it. Picture,
|
|
mister? Why, I didn't see it no more 'n---- Say you, Pink Eye,
|
|
say you crab-footed usher, did you swipe my hat? Ain't he the
|
|
cut-up, mister! Ain't both them ushers the jingling sheepsheads,
|
|
though! Being cute and hiding my hat in the box-office.
|
|
_Picture?_ I don't get no chance to see any of 'em. Funny,
|
|
ain't it?--me barking for 'em like I was the grandmother of the
|
|
guy that invented 'em, and not knowing whether the train
|
|
robbery---- Now who stole my going-home shoes?... Why, I don't
|
|
know whether the train did any robbing or not!"
|
|
|
|
He slapped Mr. Wrenn on the back, and the sales clerk's heart
|
|
bounded in comradeship. He was surprised into declaring:
|
|
|
|
"Say--uh--I bowed to you the other night and you--well, honestly,
|
|
you acted like you never saw me."
|
|
|
|
"Well, well, now, and that's what happens to me for being the
|
|
dad of five kids and a she-girl and a tom-cat. Sure, I couldn't
|
|
've seen you. Me, I was probably that busy with fambly cares--I
|
|
was probably thinking who was it et the lemon pie on me--was it Pete
|
|
or Johnny, or shall I lick 'em both together, or just bite me wife."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn knew that the ticket-taker had never, never really
|
|
considered biting his wife. _He_ knew! His nod and grin and
|
|
"That's the idea!" were urbanely sophisticated. He urged:
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, I'm sure you didn't intend to hand me the icy mitt.
|
|
Say! I'm thirsty. Come on over to Moje's and I'll buy you a drink."
|
|
|
|
He was aghast at this abyss of money-spending into which he had
|
|
leaped, and the Brass-button Man was suspiciously wondering what
|
|
this person wanted of him; but they crossed to the adjacent
|
|
saloon, a New York corner saloon, which of course "glittered"
|
|
with a large mirror, heaped glasses, and a long shining
|
|
foot-rail on which, in bravado, Mr. Wrenn placed his
|
|
Cum-Fee-Best shoe.
|
|
|
|
"Uh?" said the bartender.
|
|
|
|
"Rye, Jimmy," said the Brass-button Man.
|
|
|
|
"Uh-h-h-h-h," said Mr. Wrenn, in a frightened diminuendo, now
|
|
that--wealthy citizen though he had become--he was in danger of
|
|
exposure as a mollycoddle who couldn't choose his drink properly.
|
|
"Stummick been hurting me. Guess I'd better just take a lemonade."
|
|
|
|
"You're the brother-in-law to a wise one," commented the
|
|
Brass-button Man. "Me, I ain't never got the sense to do the
|
|
traffic cop on the booze. The old woman she says to me, `Mory,'
|
|
she says, `if you was in heaven and there was a pail of beer on
|
|
one side and a gold harp on the other,' she says, `and you was
|
|
to have your pick, which would you take?' And what 'd yuh think
|
|
I answers her?"
|
|
|
|
"The beer," said the bartender. "She had your number, all right."
|
|
|
|
"Not on your tin-type," declared the ticket-taker.
|
|
|
|
"`Me?' I says to her. `Me? I'd pinch the harp and pawn it for
|
|
ten growlers of Dutch beer and some man-sized rum!'"
|
|
|
|
"Hee, hee hee!" grinned Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
"Ha, ha, ha!" grumbled the bartender.
|
|
|
|
"Well-l-l," yawned the ticket-taker, "the old woman'll be
|
|
chasing me best pants around the flat, if she don't have me to
|
|
chase, pretty soon. Guess I'd better beat it. Much obliged for
|
|
the drink, Mr. Uh. So long, Jimmy."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn set off for home in a high state of exhilaration
|
|
which, he noticed, exactly resembled driving an aeroplane, and
|
|
went briskly up the steps of the Zapps' genteel but unexciting
|
|
residence. He was much nearer to heaven than West Sixteenth
|
|
Street appears to be to the outsider. For he was an explorer of
|
|
the Arctic, a trusted man on the job, an associate of witty
|
|
Bohemians. He was an army lieutenant who had, with his friend
|
|
the hawk - faced Pinkerton man, stood off bandits in an attack
|
|
on a train. He opened and closed the door gaily.
|
|
|
|
He was an apologetic little Mr. Wrenn. His landlady stood
|
|
on the bottom step of the hall stairs in a bunchy Mother
|
|
Hubbard, groaning:
|
|
|
|
"Mist' Wrenn, if you got to come in so late, Ah wish you
|
|
wouldn't just make all the noise you can. Ah don't see why Ah
|
|
should have to be kept awake all night. Ah suppose it's the
|
|
will of the Lord that whenever Ah go out to see Mrs. Muzzy and
|
|
just drink a drop of coffee Ah must get insomina, but Ah don't
|
|
see why anybody that tries to be a gennulman should have to go
|
|
and bang the door and just rack mah nerves."
|
|
|
|
He slunk up-stairs behind Mrs. Zapp's lumbering gloom.
|
|
|
|
"There's something I wanted to tell you, Mrs. Zapp--something
|
|
that's happened to me. That's why I was out celebrating last
|
|
evening and got in so late." Mr. Wrenn was diffidently sitting
|
|
in the basement.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," dryly, "Ah noticed you was out late, Mist' Wrenn."
|
|
|
|
"You see, Mrs. Zapp, I--uh--my father left me some land, and
|
|
it's been sold for about one thousand plunks."
|
|
|
|
" Ah'm awful' glad, Mist' Wrenn," she said, funereally. "Maybe
|
|
you'd like to take that hall room beside yours now. The two
|
|
rooms'd make a nice apartment." (She really said "nahs
|
|
'pahtmun', "you understand.)
|
|
|
|
"Why, I hadn't thought much about that yet." He felt guilty, and
|
|
was profusely cordial to Lee Theresa Zapp, the factory
|
|
forewoman, who had just thumped down-stairs.
|
|
|
|
Miss Theresa was a large young lady with a bust, much black
|
|
hair, and a handsome disdainful discontented face. She waited
|
|
till he had finished greeting her, then sniffed, and at her
|
|
mother she snarled:
|
|
|
|
"Ma, they went and kept us late again to-night. I' m getting
|
|
just about tired of having a bunch of Jews and Yankees think I'm
|
|
a nigger. Uff! I hate them!"
|
|
|
|
"T'resa, Mist' Wrenn's just inherited two thousand dollars, and
|
|
he's going to take that upper hall room." Mrs. Zapp beamed with
|
|
maternal fondness at the timid lodger.
|
|
|
|
But the gallant friend of Pinkertons faced her--for the first
|
|
time. "Waste his travel-money?" he was inwardly exclaiming as
|
|
he said:
|
|
|
|
"But I thought you had some one in that room. I heard som----"
|
|
|
|
"That fellow! Oh, he ain't going to be perm'nent. And he
|
|
promised me---- So you can have----"
|
|
|
|
"I'm _awful_ sorry, Mrs. Zapp, but I'm afraid I can't take it.
|
|
Fact is, I may go traveling for a while."
|
|
|
|
"Co'se you'll keep your room if you do, Mist' Wrenn?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, I'm afraid I'll have to give it up, but---- Oh, I may not be
|
|
going for a long long while yet; and of course I'll be glad to
|
|
come--I'll want to come back here when I get back to New York.
|
|
I won't be gone for more than, oh, probably not more than a year
|
|
anyway, and----"
|
|
|
|
"And Ah thought you said you was going to be perm'nent!" Mrs.
|
|
Zapp began quietly, prefatory to working herself up into
|
|
hysterics. "And here Ah've gone and had your room fixed up
|
|
just for you, and new paper put in, and you've always been
|
|
talking such a lot about how you wanted your furniture arranged,
|
|
and Ah've gone and made all mah plans----"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn had been a shyly paying guest of the Zapps for four
|
|
years. That famous new paper had been put up two years before.
|
|
So he spluttered: "Oh, I'm _awfully_ sorry. I wish--uh--I
|
|
don't----"
|
|
|
|
"Ah'd _thank_ you, Mist' Wrenn, if you could _conveniently_ let me
|
|
_know_ before you go running off and leaving me with empty rooms,
|
|
with the landlord after the rent, and me turning away people
|
|
that 'd pay more for the room, because Ah wanted to keep it for
|
|
you. And people always coming to see you and making me answer
|
|
the door and----"
|
|
|
|
Even the rooming-house worm was making small worm-like sounds
|
|
that presaged turning. Lee Theresa snapped just in time, "Oh,
|
|
cut it out, Ma, will you!" She had been staring at the worm, for
|
|
he had suddenly become interesting and adorable and,
|
|
incidentally, an heir. "I don't see why Mr. Wrenn ain't giving
|
|
us all the notice we can expect. He said he mightn't be going
|
|
for a long time."
|
|
|
|
"Oh!" grunted Mrs. Zapp. "So mah own flesh and blood is going
|
|
to turn against me!"
|
|
|
|
She rose. Her appearance of majesty was somewhat lessened by
|
|
the creak of stays, but her instinct for unpleasantness was
|
|
always good. She said nothing as she left them, and she plodded
|
|
up-stairs with a train of sighs.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn looked as though sudden illness had overpowered him.
|
|
But Theresa laughed, and remarked: "You don't want to let Ma
|
|
get on her high horse, Mr. Wrenn. She's a bluff."
|
|
|
|
With much billowing of the lower, less stiff part of her
|
|
garments, she sailed to the cloudy mirror over the
|
|
magazine-filled bookcase and inspected her cap of false curls,
|
|
with many prods of her large firm hands which flashed with
|
|
Brazilian diamonds. Though he had heard the word "puffs,"
|
|
he did not know that half her hair was false. He stared
|
|
at it. Though in disgrace, he felt the honor of knowing
|
|
so ample and rustling a woman as Miss Lee Theresa.
|
|
|
|
"But, say, I wish I could 've let her know I was going earlier,
|
|
Miss Zapp. I didn't know it myself, but it does seem like a
|
|
mean trick. I s'pose I ought to pay her something extra."
|
|
|
|
"Why, child, you won't do anything of the sort. Ma hasn't got
|
|
a bit of kick coming. You've always been awful nice, far as I
|
|
can see." She smiled lavishly. "I went for a walk to-night....
|
|
I wish all those men wouldn't stare at a girl so. I'm sure I
|
|
don't see why they should stare at me."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn nodded, but that didn't seem to be the right comment,
|
|
so he shook his head, then looked frightfully embarrassed.
|
|
|
|
"I went by that Armenian restaurant you were telling me about,
|
|
Mr. Wrenn. Some time I believe I'll go dine there." Again she paused.
|
|
|
|
He said only, "Yes, it is a nice place."
|
|
|
|
Remarking to herself that there was no question about it,
|
|
after all, he _was_ a little fool, Theresa continued the siege.
|
|
"Do you dine there often?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes. It is a nice place."
|
|
|
|
"Could a lady go there?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, yes, I----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes!"
|
|
|
|
"I should think so," he finished.
|
|
|
|
"Oh!... I do get so awfully tired of the greasy stuff Ma and
|
|
Goaty dish up. They think a big stew that tastes like
|
|
dish-water is a dinner, and if they do have anything I like they
|
|
keep on having the same thing every day till I throw it in the
|
|
sink. I wish I could go to a restaurant once in a while for a
|
|
change, but of course---- I dunno's it would be proper for a
|
|
lady to go alone even there. What do you think? Oh dear!"
|
|
She sat brooding sadly.
|
|
|
|
He had an inspiration. Perhaps Miss Theresa could be persuaded
|
|
to go out to dinner with him some time. He begged:
|
|
|
|
"Gee, I wish you'd let me take you up there some evening, Miss Zapp."
|
|
|
|
"Now, didn't I tell you to call me `Miss Theresa'? Well, I
|
|
suppose you just don't want to be friends with me. Nobody
|
|
does." She brooded again.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I didn't mean to hurt your feelings. Honest I didn't.
|
|
I've always thought you'd think I was fresh if I called you
|
|
`Miss Theresa,' and so I----"
|
|
|
|
"Why, I guess I could go up to the Armenian with you, perhaps.
|
|
When would you like to go? You know I've always got lots of
|
|
dates but I--um--let's see, I think I could go to-morrow evening."
|
|
|
|
"Let's do it! Shall I call for you, Miss--uh--Theresa?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, you may if you'll be a good boy. Good night." She
|
|
departed with an air of intimacy.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn scuttled to the Nickelorion, and admitted to the
|
|
Brass-button Man that he was "feeling pretty good 's evening."
|
|
|
|
He had never supposed that a handsome creature like Miss Theresa
|
|
could ever endure such a "slow fellow" as himself. For about
|
|
one minute he considered with a chill the question of whether
|
|
she was agreeable because of his new wealth, but reproved the
|
|
fiend who was making the suggestion; for had he not heard her
|
|
mention with great scorn a second cousin who had married an old
|
|
Yankee for his money? That just settled _that_, he assured
|
|
himself, and scowled at a passing messenger-boy for having thus
|
|
hinted, but hastily grimaced as the youngster showed signs of
|
|
loud displeasure.
|
|
|
|
The Armenian restaurant is peculiar, for it has foreign food at
|
|
low prices, and is below Thirtieth Street, yet it has not become
|
|
Bohemian. Consequently it has no bad music and no crowd of
|
|
persons from Missouri whose women risk salvation for an evening
|
|
by smoking cigarettes. Here prosperous Oriental merchants,
|
|
of mild natures and bandit faces, drink semi-liquid Turkish
|
|
coffee and discuss rugs and revolutions.
|
|
|
|
In fact, the place seemed so unartificial that Theresa, facing
|
|
Mr. Wrenn, was bored. And the menu was foreign without being
|
|
Society viands. It suggested rats' tails and birds' nests, she
|
|
was quite sure. She would gladly have experimented with _pate
|
|
de foie gras_ or alligator-pears, but what social prestige was
|
|
there to be gained at the factory by remarking that she "always
|
|
did like _pahklava_"? Mr. Wrenn did not see that she was
|
|
glancing about discontentedly, for he was delightedly listening
|
|
to a lanky young man at the next table who was remarking to his
|
|
_vis-a-vis_, a pale slithey lady in black, with the lines of a
|
|
torpedo-boat: "Try some of the stuffed vine-leaves, child of
|
|
the angels, and some wheat _pilaf_ and some _bourma_. Your wheat
|
|
_pilaf_ is a comfortable food and cheering to the stomach of man.
|
|
Simply _won_-derful. As for the _bourma_, he is a merry beast, a
|
|
brown rose of pastry with honey cunningly secreted between his
|
|
petals and---- Here! Waiter! Stuffed vine-leaves, wheat _p'laf,
|
|
bourm'_ --twice on the order and hustle it."
|
|
|
|
"When you get through listening to that man--he talks like a bar
|
|
of soap--tell me what there is on this bill of fare that's safe
|
|
to eat," snorted Theresa.
|
|
|
|
"I thought he was real funny," insisted Mr. Wrenn.... "I'm sure
|
|
you'll like _shish kebab_ and s----"
|
|
|
|
"_Shish kibub!_ Who ever heard of such a thing! Haven't they
|
|
any--oh, I thought they'd have stuff they call `Turkish Delight'
|
|
and things like that."
|
|
|
|
"`Turkish Delights' is cigarettes, I think."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I know it isn't, because I read about it in a story in a
|
|
magazine. And they were eating it. On the terrace.... What is
|
|
that _shish kibub_?"
|
|
|
|
"_Kebab_.... It's lamb roasted on skewers. I know you'll like it."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'm not going to trust any heathens to cook my meat.
|
|
I'll take some eggs and some of that--what was it the idiot was
|
|
talking about--_berma_?"
|
|
|
|
"_Bourma_.... That's awful nice. With honey. And do try some
|
|
of the stuffed peppers and rice."
|
|
|
|
"All right," said Theresa, gloomily.
|
|
|
|
Somehow Mr. Wrenn wasn't vastly transformed even by the
|
|
possession of the two thousand dollars her mother had reported.
|
|
He was still "funny and sort of scary," not like the
|
|
overpowering Southern gentlemen she supposed she remembered.
|
|
Also, she was hungry. She listened with stolid glumness to Mr.
|
|
Wrenn's observation that that was "an awful big hat the lady
|
|
with the funny guy had on."
|
|
|
|
He was chilled into quietness till Papa Gouroff, the owner of
|
|
the restaurant, arrived from above - stairs. Papa Gouroff was
|
|
a Russian Jew who had been a police spy in Poland and a hotel
|
|
proprietor in Mogador, where he called himself Turkish and
|
|
married a renegade Armenian. He had a nose like a sickle and a
|
|
neck like a blue-gum nigger. He hoped that the place would
|
|
degenerate into a Bohemian restaurant where liberal clergymen
|
|
would think they were slumming, and barbers would think they
|
|
were entering society, so he always wore a _fez_ and talked bad
|
|
Arabic. He was local color, atmosphere, Bohemian flavor. Mr.
|
|
Wrenn murmured to Theresa:
|
|
|
|
"Say, do you see that man? He's Signor Gouroff, the owner.
|
|
I've talked to him a lot of times. Ain't he great! Golly! look
|
|
at that beak of his. Don't he make you think of _kiosks_ and
|
|
_hyrems_ and stuff? Gee! What does he make you think----"
|
|
|
|
"He's got on a dirty collar.... That waiter's awful slow....
|
|
Would you please be so kind and pour me another glass of water?"
|
|
|
|
But when she reached the honied _bourma_ she grew tolerant toward
|
|
Mr. Wrenn. She had two cups of cocoa and felt fat about the
|
|
eyes and affectionate. She had mentioned that there were good
|
|
shows in town. Now she resumed:
|
|
|
|
"Have you been to `The Gold Brick' yet?"
|
|
|
|
"No, I--uh--I don't go to the theater much."
|
|
|
|
"Gwendolyn Muzzy was telling me that this was the funniest show
|
|
she'd ever seen. Tells how two confidence men fooled one of
|
|
those terrible little jay towns. Shows all the funny people,
|
|
you know, like they have in jay towns.... I wish I could go to
|
|
it, but of course I have to help out the folks at home, so----
|
|
Well.... Oh dear."
|
|
|
|
"Say! I'd like to take you, if I could. Let's go--this
|
|
evening!" He quivered with the adventure of it.
|
|
|
|
"Why, I don't know; I didn't tell Ma I was going to be out.
|
|
But--oh, I guess it would be all right if I was with you."
|
|
|
|
"Let's go right up and get some tickets."
|
|
|
|
"All right." Her assent was too eager, but she immediately
|
|
corrected that error by yawning, "I don't suppose I'd ought to
|
|
go, but if you want to----"
|
|
|
|
They were a very lively couple as they walked up. He trickled
|
|
sympathy when she told of the selfishness of the factory girls
|
|
under her and the meanness of the superintendent over her, and
|
|
he laughed several times as she remarked that the superintendent
|
|
"ought to be boiled alive--that's what _all_ lobsters ought to
|
|
be," so she repeated the epigram with such increased jollity
|
|
that they swung up to the theater in a gale; and, once facing
|
|
the ennuied ticket-seller, he demanded dollar seats just as
|
|
though he had not been doing sums all the way up to prove that
|
|
seventy-five-cent seats were the best he could afford.
|
|
|
|
The play was a glorification of Yankee smartness. Mr. Wrenn was
|
|
disturbed by the fact that the swindler heroes robbed quite all
|
|
the others, but he was stirred by the brisk romance of
|
|
money-making. The swindlers were supermen--blonde beasts with
|
|
card indices and options instead of clubs. Not that Mr. Wrenn
|
|
made any observations regarding supermen. But when, by way of
|
|
commercial genius, the swindler robbed a young night clerk Mr.
|
|
Wrenn whispered to Theresa, "Gee! he certainly does know how to
|
|
jolly them, heh?"
|
|
|
|
"Sh-h-h-h-h-h!" said Theresa.
|
|
|
|
Every one made millions, victims and all, in the last act, as a
|
|
proof of the social value of being a live American business man.
|
|
As they oozed along with the departing audience Mr. Wrenn gurgled:
|
|
|
|
"That makes me feel just like I'd been making a million
|
|
dollars." Masterfully, he proposed, "Say, let's go some place
|
|
and have something to eat."
|
|
|
|
"All right."
|
|
|
|
"Let's---- I almost feel as if I could afford Rector's, after
|
|
that play; but, anyway, let's go to Allaire's."
|
|
|
|
Though he was ashamed of himself for it afterward, he was almost
|
|
haughty toward his waiter, and ordered Welsh rabbits and beer
|
|
quite as though he usually breakfasted on them. He may even
|
|
have strutted a little as he hailed a car with an imaginary
|
|
walking-stick. His parting with Miss Theresa was intimate; he
|
|
shook her hand warmly.
|
|
|
|
As he undressed he hoped that he had not been too abrupt with
|
|
the waiter, "poor cuss." But he lay awake to think of Theresa's
|
|
hair and hand-clasp; of polished desks and florid gentlemen who
|
|
curtly summoned bank-presidents and who had--he tossed the
|
|
bedclothes about in his struggle to get the word--who had a
|
|
_punch!_
|
|
|
|
He would do that Great Traveling of his in the land of Big
|
|
Business!
|
|
|
|
The five thousand princes of New York to protect themselves
|
|
against the four million ungrateful slaves had devised the
|
|
sacred symbols of dress-coats, large houses, and automobiles as
|
|
the outward and visible signs of the virtue of making money, to
|
|
lure rebels into respectability and teach them the social value
|
|
of getting a dollar away from that inhuman, socially injurious
|
|
fiend, Some One Else. That Our Mr. Wrenn should dream for
|
|
dreaming's sake was catastrophic; he might do things because
|
|
he wanted to, not because they were fashionable; whereupon,
|
|
police forces and the clergy would disband, Wall Street and
|
|
Fifth Avenue would go thundering down. Hence, for him were
|
|
provided those Y. M. C. A. night bookkeeping classes
|
|
administered by solemn earnest men of thirty for solemn credulous
|
|
youths of twenty-nine; those sermons on content; articles on
|
|
"building up the rundown store by live advertising"; Kiplingesque
|
|
stories about playing the game; and correspondence-school
|
|
advertisements that shrieked, "Mount the ladder to thorough
|
|
knowledge--the path to power and to the fuller pay-envelope."
|
|
|
|
To all these Mr. Wrenn had been indifferent, for they showed no
|
|
imagination. But when he saw Big Business glorified by a
|
|
humorous melodrama, then The Job appeared to him as picaresque
|
|
adventure, and he was in peril of his imagination.
|
|
|
|
The eight-o'clock sun, which usually found a wildly shaving Mr.
|
|
Wrenn, discovered him dreaming that he was the manager of the
|
|
Souvenir Company. But that was a complete misunderstanding of
|
|
the case. The manager of the Souvenir Company was Mr. Mortimer
|
|
R. Guilfogle, and he called Mr. Wrenn in to acquaint him with
|
|
that fact when the new magnate started his career in Big
|
|
Business by arriving at the office one hour late.
|
|
|
|
What made it worse, considered Mr. Guilfogle, was that this
|
|
Wrenn had a higher average of punctuality than any one else in
|
|
the office, which proved that he knew better. Worst of all, the
|
|
Guilfogle family eggs had not been scrambled right at breakfast;
|
|
they had been anemic. Mr. Guilfogle punched the buzzer and set
|
|
his face toward the door, with a scowl prepared.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn seemed weary, and not so intimidated as usual.
|
|
|
|
"Look here, Wrenn; you were just about two hours late this
|
|
morning. What do you think this office is? A club or a
|
|
reading-room for hoboes? Ever occur to you we'd like to have
|
|
you favor us with a call now and then so's we can learn how
|
|
you're getting along at golf or whatever you're doing these days?"
|
|
|
|
There was a sample baby-shoe office pin-cushion on the manager's
|
|
desk. Mr. Wrenn eyed this, and said nothing. The manager:
|
|
|
|
"Hear what I said? D'yuh think I'm talking to give my throat exercise?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn was stubborn. "I couldn't help it."
|
|
|
|
"Couldn't help----! And you call that an explanation! I know
|
|
just exactly what you're thinking, Wrenn; you're thinking that
|
|
because I've let you have a lot of chances to really work into
|
|
the business lately you're necessary to us, and not simply an
|
|
expense----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh no, Mr. Guilfogle; honest, I didn't think----"
|
|
|
|
"Well, hang it, man, you _want_ to think. What do you suppose we
|
|
pay you a salary for? And just let me tell you, Wrenn, right
|
|
here and now, that if you can't condescend to spare us some of
|
|
your valuable time, now and then, we can good and plenty get
|
|
along without you."
|
|
|
|
An old tale, oft told and never believed; but it interested Mr.
|
|
Wrenn just now.
|
|
|
|
"I'm real glad you can get along without me. I've just
|
|
inherited a big wad of money! I think I'll resign! Right now!"
|
|
|
|
Whether he or Mr. Mortimer R. Guilfogle was the more aghast at
|
|
hearing him bawl this no one knows. The manager was so worried
|
|
at the thought of breaking in a new man that his eye-glasses
|
|
slipped off his poor perspiring nose. He begged, in sudden
|
|
tones of old friendship:
|
|
|
|
"Why, you can't be thinking of leaving us! Why, we expect to
|
|
make a big man of you, Wrenn. I was joking about firing you.
|
|
You ought to know that, after the talk we had at Mouquin's the
|
|
other night. You can't be thinking of leaving us! There's no
|
|
end of possibilities here."
|
|
|
|
"Sorry," said the dogged soldier of dreams.
|
|
|
|
"Why----" wailed that hurt and astonished victim of ingratitude,
|
|
Mr. Guilfogle.
|
|
|
|
"I'll leave the middle of June. That's plenty of notice,"
|
|
chirruped Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
At five that evening Mr. Wrenn dashed up to the Brass-button Man
|
|
at his station before the Nickelorion, crying:
|
|
|
|
"Say! You come from Ireland, don't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Now what would you think? Me--oh no; I'm a Chinaman from Oshkosh!"
|
|
|
|
"No, honest, straight, tell me. I've got a chance to travel.
|
|
What d'yuh think of that? Ain't it great! And I'm going right
|
|
away. What I wanted to ask you was, what's the best place in
|
|
Ireland to see?"
|
|
|
|
"Donegal, o' course. I was born there."
|
|
|
|
Hauling from his pocket a pencil and a worn envelope, Mr. Wrenn
|
|
joyously added the new point of interest to a list ranging from
|
|
Delagoa Bay to Denver.
|
|
|
|
He skipped up-town, looking at the stars. He shouted as he saw
|
|
the stacks of a big Cunarder bulking up at the end of Fourteenth
|
|
Street. He stopped to chuckle over a lithograph of the
|
|
Parthenon at the window of a Greek bootblack's stand.
|
|
Stars--steamer--temples, all these were his. He owned them now.
|
|
He was free.
|
|
|
|
Lee Theresa sat waiting for him in the basement livingroom till
|
|
ten-thirty while he was flirting with trainboards at the Grand
|
|
Central. Then she went to bed, and, though he knew it not, that
|
|
prince of wealthy suitors, Mr. Wrenn, had entirely lost the
|
|
heart and hand of Miss Zapp of the F. F. V.
|
|
|
|
He stood before the manager's god-like desk on June 14, 1910. Sadly:
|
|
|
|
"Good-by, Mr. Guilfogle. Leaving to-day. I wish---- Gee!
|
|
I wish I could tell you, you know--about how much I appreciate----"
|
|
|
|
The manager moved a wire basket of carbon copies of letters from
|
|
the left side of his desk to the right, staring at them
|
|
thoughtfully; rearranged his pencils in a pile before his
|
|
ink-well; glanced at the point of an indelible pencil with a
|
|
manner of startled examination; tapped his desk-blotter with his
|
|
knuckles; then raised his eyes. He studied Mr. Wrenn, smiled,
|
|
put on the look he used when inviting him out for a drink. Mr.
|
|
Guilfogle was essentially an honest fellow, harshened by The
|
|
Job; a well-satisfied victim, with the imagination clean gone out
|
|
of him, so that he took follow-up letters and the celerity of
|
|
office-boys as the only serious things in the world. He was
|
|
strong, alive, not at all a bad chap, merely efficient.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Wrenn, I suppose there's no use of rubbing it in. Course
|
|
you know what I think about the whole thing. It strikes me
|
|
you're a fool to leave a good job. But, after all, that's your
|
|
business, not ours. We like you, and when you get tired of
|
|
being just a bum, why, come back; we'll always try to have a job
|
|
open for you. Meanwhile I hope you'll have a mighty good time,
|
|
old man. Where you going? When d'yuh start out?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, first I'm going to just kind of wander round generally.
|
|
Lots of things I'd like to do. I think I'll get away real soon
|
|
now.... Thank you awfully, Mr. Guilfogle, for keeping a place
|
|
open for me. Course I prob'ly won't need it, but gee! I sure do
|
|
appreciate it."
|
|
|
|
"Say, I don't believe you're so plumb crazy about leaving us,
|
|
after all, now that the cards are all dole out. Straight now,
|
|
are you?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, sir, it does make me feel a little blue--been here so
|
|
long. But it'll be awful good to get out at sea."
|
|
|
|
"Yuh, I know, Wrenn. I'd like to go traveling myself--I
|
|
suppose you fellows think I wouldn't care to go bumming around
|
|
like you do and never have to worry about how the firm's going
|
|
to break even. But---- Well, good-by, old man, and don't
|
|
forget us. Drop me a line now and then and let me know how
|
|
you're getting along. Oh say, if you happen to see any novelties
|
|
that look good let us hear about them. But drop me a line, anyway.
|
|
We'll always be glad to hear from you. Well, good-by and good luck.
|
|
Sure and drop me a line."
|
|
|
|
In the corner which had been his home for eight years Mr. Wrenn
|
|
could not devise any new and yet more improved arrangement of
|
|
the wire baskets and clips and desk reminders, so he cleaned a
|
|
pen, blew some gray eraser-dust from under his iron ink-well
|
|
standard, and decided that his desk was in order; reflecting:
|
|
|
|
He'd been there a long time. Now he could never come back to
|
|
it, no matter how much he wanted to.... How good the manager
|
|
had been to him. Gee! he hadn't appreciated how considerut
|
|
Guilfogle was!
|
|
|
|
He started down the corridor on a round of farewells to the boys.
|
|
"Too bad he hadn't never got better acquainted with them,
|
|
but it was too late now. Anyway, they were such fine jolly
|
|
sports; they'd never miss a stupid guy like him."
|
|
|
|
Just then he met them in the corridor, all of them except
|
|
Guilfogle, headed by Rabin, the traveling salesman, and Charley
|
|
Carpenter, who was bearing a box of handkerchiefs with a large
|
|
green-and-crimson-paper label.
|
|
|
|
"Gov'nor Wrenn," orated Charley, "upon this suspicious occasion
|
|
we have the pleasure of showing by this small token of our
|
|
esteem our 'preciation of your untiring efforts in the
|
|
investigation of Mortimer R. Gugglegiggle of the Graft Trust
|
|
and----
|
|
|
|
"Say, old man, joking aside, we're mighty sorry you're going
|
|
and--uh--well, we'd like to give you something to show
|
|
we're--uh--mighty sorry you're going. We thought of a box of
|
|
cigars, but you don't smoke much; anyway, these han'k'chiefs'll
|
|
help to show---- Three cheers for Wrenn, fellows!"
|
|
|
|
Afterward, by his desk, alone, holding the box of handkerchiefs
|
|
with the resplendent red-and-green label, Mr. Wrenn began to cry.
|
|
|
|
He was lying abed at eight-thirty on a morning of late June, two
|
|
weeks after leaving the Souvenir Company, deliberately hunting
|
|
over his pillow for cool spots, very hot and restless in the
|
|
legs and enormously depressed in the soul. He would have got up
|
|
had there been anything to get up for. There was nothing, yet
|
|
he felt uneasily guilty. For two weeks he had been afraid of
|
|
losing, by neglect, the job he had already voluntarily given up.
|
|
So there are men whom the fear of death has driven to suicide.
|
|
|
|
Nearly every morning he had driven himself from bed and had
|
|
finished shaving before he was quite satisfied that he didn't
|
|
have to get to the office on time. As he wandered about during
|
|
the day he remarked with frequency, "I'm scared as teacher's pet
|
|
playing hookey for the first time, like what we used to do
|
|
in Parthenon." All proper persons were at work of a week-day
|
|
afternoon. What, then, was he doing walking along the street
|
|
when all morality demanded his sitting at a desk at the Souvenir
|
|
Company, being a little more careful, to win the divine favor of
|
|
Mortimer R. Guilfogle?
|
|
|
|
He was sure that if he were already out on the Great Traveling
|
|
he would be able to "push the buzzer on himself and get up his
|
|
nerve." But he did not know where to go. He had planned so many
|
|
trips these years that now he couldn't keep any one of them
|
|
finally decided on for more than an hour. It rather stretched
|
|
his short arms to embrace at once a gay old dream of seeing
|
|
Venice and the stern civic duty of hunting abominably dangerous
|
|
beasts in the Guatemala bush.
|
|
|
|
The expense bothered him, too. He had through many years so
|
|
persistently saved money for the Great Traveling that he
|
|
begrudged money for that Traveling itself. Indeed, he planned
|
|
to spend not more than $300 of the $1,235.80 he had now
|
|
accumulated, on his first venture, during which he hoped to
|
|
learn the trade of wandering.
|
|
|
|
He was always influenced by a sentence he had read somewhere
|
|
about "one of those globe-trotters you meet carrying a
|
|
monkey-wrench in Calcutta, then in raiment and a monocle at the
|
|
Athenaeum." He would learn some Kiplingy trade that would teach
|
|
him the use of astonishingly technical tools, also daring and
|
|
the location of smugglers' haunts, copra islands, and whaling -
|
|
stations with curious names.
|
|
|
|
He pictured himself shipping as third engineer at the Manihiki
|
|
Islands or engaged for taking moving pictures of an aeroplane
|
|
flight in Algiers. He _had_ to get away from Zappism. He had to
|
|
be out on the iron seas, where the battle-ships and liners went
|
|
by like a marching military band. But he couldn't get started.
|
|
|
|
Once beyond Sandy Hook, he would immediately know all about
|
|
engines and fighting. It would help, he was certain, to be
|
|
shanghaied. But no matter how wistfully, no matter how late at
|
|
night he timorously forced himself to loiter among unwashed
|
|
English stokers on West Street, he couldn't get himself molested
|
|
except by glib persons wishing ten cents "for a place to sleep."
|
|
|
|
When he had dallied through breakfast that particular morning he
|
|
sat about. Once he had pictured sitting about reading
|
|
travel-books as a perfect occupation. But it concealed no
|
|
exciting little surprises when he could be a Sunday loafer on any
|
|
plain Monday. Furthermore, Goaty never made his bed till noon,
|
|
and the gray-and-brown-patched coverlet seemed to trail all
|
|
about the disordered room.
|
|
|
|
Midway in a paragraph he rose, threw _One Hundred Ways to See
|
|
California_ on the tumbled bed, and ran away from Our Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
But Our Mr. Wrenn pursued him along the wharves, where the sun
|
|
glared on oily water. He had seen the wharves twelve times that
|
|
fortnight. In fact, he even cried viciously that "he had seen
|
|
too blame much of the blame wharves."
|
|
|
|
Early in the afternoon he went to a moving-picture show, but the
|
|
first sight of the white giant figures bulking against the gray
|
|
background was wearily unreal; and when the inevitable
|
|
large-eyed black-braided Indian maiden met the canonical
|
|
cow-puncher he threshed about in his seat, was irritated by the
|
|
nervous click of the machine and the hot stuffiness of the room,
|
|
and ran away just at the exciting moment when the Indian chief
|
|
dashed into camp and summoned his braves to the war-path.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps he could hide from thought at home.
|
|
|
|
As he came into his room he stood at gaze like a kitten of good
|
|
family beholding a mangy mongrel asleep in its pink basket.
|
|
For on his bed was Mrs. Zapp, her rotund curves stretching behind
|
|
her large flat feet, whose soles were toward him. She was
|
|
noisily somnolent; her stays creaked regularly as she breathed,
|
|
except when she moved slightly and groaned.
|
|
|
|
Guiltily he tiptoed down-stairs and went snuffling along the
|
|
dusty unvaried brick side streets, wondering where in all New
|
|
York he could go. He read minutely a placard advertising an
|
|
excursion to the Catskills, to start that evening. For an
|
|
exhilarated moment he resolved to go, but--" oh, there was a lot
|
|
of them rich society folks up there." He bought a morning
|
|
_American_ and, sitting in Union Square, gravely studied the
|
|
humorous drawings.
|
|
|
|
He casually noticed the "Help Wanted" advertisements.
|
|
|
|
They suggested an uninteresting idea that somehow he might find
|
|
it economical to go venturing as a waiter or farm-hand.
|
|
|
|
And so he came to the gate of paradise:
|
|
|
|
MEN WANTED. Free passage on cattle-boats to Liverpool feeding
|
|
cattle. Low fee. Easy work. Fast boats. Apply International
|
|
and Atlantic Employment Bureau, ---- Greenwich Street.
|
|
|
|
"Gee!" he cried, "I guess Providence has picked out my first
|
|
hike for me."
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III
|
|
HE STARTS FOR THE LAND OF ELSEWHERE
|
|
|
|
The International and Atlantic Employment Bureau is a long dirty
|
|
room with the plaster cracked like the outlines on a map, hung
|
|
with steamship posters and the laws of New York regarding
|
|
employment offices, which are regarded as humorous by the
|
|
proprietor, M. Baraieff, a short slender ejaculatory person
|
|
with a nervous black beard, lively blandness, and a knowledge of
|
|
all the incorrect usages of nine languages. Mr. Wrenn edged
|
|
into this junk-heap of nationalities with interested wonder.
|
|
M. Baraieff rubbed his smooth wicked hands together and bowed a
|
|
number of times.
|
|
|
|
Confidentially leaning across the counter, Mr. Wrenn murmured:
|
|
"Say, I read your ad. about wanting cattlemen. I want to make
|
|
a trip to Europe. How----?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, yes, yes, Mistaire. I feex you up right away.
|
|
Ten dollars pleas-s-s-s."
|
|
|
|
"Well, what does that entitle me to?"
|
|
|
|
"I tole you I feex you up. Ha! Ha! I know it; you are a
|
|
gentleman; you want a nice leetle trip on Europe. Sure.
|
|
|
|
I feex you right up. I send you off on a nice easy cattleboat
|
|
where you won't have to work much hardly any. Right away it
|
|
goes. Ten dollars pleas-s-s-s."
|
|
|
|
"But when does the boat start? Where does it start from?" Mr.
|
|
Wrenn was a bit confused. He had never met a man who grimaced
|
|
so politely and so rapidly.
|
|
|
|
"Next Tuesday I send you right off."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn regretfully exchanged ten dollars for a card informing
|
|
Trubiggs, Atlantic Avenue, Boston, that Mr. "Ren" was to be
|
|
"ship 1st poss. catel boat right away and charge my acct. fee
|
|
paid Baraieff." Brightly declaring "I geef you a fine ship,"
|
|
M. Baraieff added, on the margin of the card, in copper-plate
|
|
script, "Best ship, easy work." He caroled, "Come early next
|
|
Tuesday morning, "and bowed out Mr. Wrenn like a Parisian
|
|
shopkeeper. The row of waiting servant-girls curtsied as though
|
|
they were a hedge swayed by the wind, while Mr. Wrenn
|
|
self-consciously hurried to get past them.
|
|
|
|
He was too excited to worry over the patient and quiet suffering
|
|
with which Mrs. Zapp heard the announcement that he was going.
|
|
That Theresa laughed at him for a cattleman, while Goaty, in the
|
|
kitchen, audibly observed that "nobody but a Yankee would travel
|
|
in a pig-pen, "merely increased his joy in moving his belongings
|
|
to a storage warehouse.
|
|
|
|
Tuesday morning, clad in a sweater-jacket, tennis-shoes, an old
|
|
felt hat, a khaki shirt and corduroys, carrying a suit-case
|
|
packed to bursting with clothes and Baedekers, with one hundred
|
|
and fifty dollars in express-company drafts craftily concealed,
|
|
he dashed down to Baraieff's hole. Though it was only
|
|
eight-thirty, he was afraid he was going to be late.
|
|
|
|
Till 2 P.M. he sat waiting, then was sent to the Joy Steamship
|
|
Line wharf with a ticket to Boston and a letter to Trubiggs's
|
|
shipping-office: "Give bearer Ren as per inclosed receet one
|
|
trip England catel boat charge my acct. SYLVESTRE BARAIEFF, N. Y."
|
|
|
|
Standing on the hurricane-deck of the Joy Line boat, with his
|
|
suit-case guardedly beside him, he crooned to himself tuneless
|
|
chants with the refrain, "Free, free, out to sea. Free, free,
|
|
that's _me!_" He had persuaded himself that there was practically
|
|
no danger of the boat's sinking or catching fire. Anyway, he
|
|
just wasn't going to be scared. As the steamer trudged up East
|
|
River he watched the late afternoon sun brighten the Manhattan
|
|
factories and make soft the stretches of Westchester fields.
|
|
(Of course, he "thrilled.")
|
|
|
|
He had no state-room, but was entitled to a place in a
|
|
twelve-berth room in the hold. Here large farmers without their
|
|
shoes were grumpily talking all at once, so he returned to the
|
|
deck; and the rest of the night, while the other passengers
|
|
snored, he sat modestly on a canvas stool, unblinkingly gloating
|
|
over a sea-fabric of frosty blue that was shot through with
|
|
golden threads when they passed lighthouses or ships. At dawn
|
|
he was weary, peppery-eyed, but he viewed the flooding light
|
|
with approval.
|
|
|
|
At last, Boston.
|
|
|
|
The front part of the shipping-office on Atlantic Avenue was a
|
|
glass-inclosed room littered with chairs, piles of circulars,
|
|
old pictures of Cunarders, older calendars, and directories to
|
|
be ranked as antiques. In the midst of these remains a
|
|
red-headed Yankee of forty, smoking a Pittsburg stogie, sat
|
|
tilted back in a kitchen chair, reading the Boston _American_.
|
|
Mr. Wrenn delivered M. Baraieff's letter and stood waiting,
|
|
holding his suit-case, ready to skip out and go aboard a
|
|
cattle-boat immediately.
|
|
|
|
The shipping-agent glanced through the letter, then snapped:
|
|
|
|
"Bryff's crazy. Always sends 'em too early. Wrenn, you ought
|
|
to come to me first. What j'yuh go to that Jew first for? Here
|
|
he goes and sends you a day late--or couple days too early. 'F
|
|
you'd got here last night I could 've sent you off this morning
|
|
on a Dominion Line boat. All I got now is a Leyland boat that
|
|
starts from Portland Saturday. Le's see; this is Wednesday.
|
|
Thursday, Friday--you'll have to wait three days. Now you want
|
|
me to fix you up, don't you? I might not be able to get you off
|
|
till a week from now, but you'd like to get off on a good boat
|
|
Saturday instead, wouldn't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes; I _would_. I----"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'll try to fix it. You can see for yourself; boats
|
|
ain't leaving every minute just to please Bryff. And it's the
|
|
busy season. Bunches of rah-rah boys wanting to cross, and
|
|
Canadians wanting to get back to England, and Jews beating it to
|
|
Poland--to sling bombs at the Czar, I guess. And lemme tell
|
|
you, them Jews is all right. They're willing to pay for a man's
|
|
time and trouble in getting 'em fixed up, and so----"
|
|
|
|
With dignity Mr. William Wrenn stated, "Of course I'll be glad
|
|
to--uh--make it worth your while."
|
|
|
|
"I _thought_ you was a gentleman. Hey, Al! _Al!_" An underfed boy
|
|
with few teeth, dusty and grown out of his trousers, appeared.
|
|
"Clear off a chair for the gentleman. Stick that valise on top
|
|
my desk.... Sit down, Mr. Wrenn. You see, it's like this: I'll
|
|
tell you in confidence, you understand. This letter from Bryff
|
|
ain't worth the paper it's written on. He ain't got any right
|
|
to be sending out men for cattle-boats. Me, I'm running that.
|
|
I deal direct with all the Boston and Portland lines. If you
|
|
don't believe it just go out in the back room and ask any of the
|
|
cattlemen out there."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I see," Mr. Wrenn observed, as though he were ill, and
|
|
toed an old almanac about the floor. "Uh--Mr.--Trubiggs, is it?"
|
|
|
|
"Yump. Yump, my boy. Trubiggs. Tru by name and true by
|
|
nature. Heh?"
|
|
|
|
This last was said quite without conviction. It was evidently
|
|
a joke which had come down from earlier years. Mr. Wrenn
|
|
ignored it and declared, as stoutly as he could:
|
|
|
|
"You see, Mr. Trubiggs, I'd be willing to pay you----"
|
|
|
|
"I'll tell you just how it is, Mr. Wrenn. I ain't one of these
|
|
Sheeny employment bureaus; I'm an American; I like to look out
|
|
for Americans. Even if you _didn't_ come to me first I'll watch
|
|
out for your interests, same's if they was mine. Now, do you
|
|
want to get fixed up with a nice fast boat that leaves Portland
|
|
next Saturday, just a couple of days' wait?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, I _do_, Mr. Trubiggs."
|
|
|
|
"Well, my list is really full--men waiting, too--but if it 'd be
|
|
worth five dollars to you to----"
|
|
|
|
"Here's the five dollars."
|
|
|
|
The shipping-agent was disgusted. He had estimated from Mr.
|
|
Wrenn's cheap sweater-jacket and tennis-shoes that he would be
|
|
able to squeeze out only three or four dollars, and here he
|
|
might have made ten. More in sorrow than in anger:
|
|
|
|
"Of course you understand I may have a lot of trouble working
|
|
you in on the _next_ boat, you coming as late as this. Course
|
|
five dollars is less 'n what I usually get." He contemptuously
|
|
tossed the bill on his desk. "If you want me to slip a little
|
|
something extra to the agents----"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn was too head-achy to be customarily timid. "Let's see
|
|
that. Did I give you only five dollars?" Receiving the bill, he
|
|
folded it with much primness, tucked it into the pocket of his
|
|
shirt, and remarked:
|
|
|
|
"Now, you said you'd fix me up for five dollars. Besides, that
|
|
letter from Baraieff is a form with your name printed on it; so
|
|
I know you do business with him right along. If five dollars
|
|
ain't enough, why, then you can just go to hell, Mr. Trubiggs;
|
|
yes, sir, that's what you can do. I'm just getting tired of
|
|
monkeying around. If five _is_ enough I'll give this back to you
|
|
Friday, when you send me off to Portland, if you give me a
|
|
receipt. There!" He almost snarled, so weary and discouraged
|
|
was he.
|
|
|
|
Now, Trubiggs was a warm-hearted rogue, and he liked the society
|
|
of what he called "white people." He laughed, poked a Pittsburg
|
|
stogie at Mr. Wrenn, and consented:
|
|
|
|
"All right. I'll fix you up. Have a smoke. Pay me the five
|
|
Friday, or pay it to my foreman when he puts you on the
|
|
cattle-boat. I don't care a rap which. You're all right.
|
|
Can't bluff you, eh?"
|
|
|
|
And, further bluffing Mr. Wrenn, he suggested to him a
|
|
lodging-house for his two nights in Boston. "Tell the clerk
|
|
that red-headed Trubiggs sent you, and he'll give you the best
|
|
in the house. Tell him you're a friend of mine."
|
|
|
|
When Mr. Wrenn had gone Mr. Trubiggs remarked to some one, by
|
|
telephone, "'Nother sucker coming, Blaugeld. Now don't try to
|
|
do me out of my bit or I'll cap for some other joint,
|
|
understand? Huh? Yuh, stick him for a thirty-five-cent bed.
|
|
S' long."
|
|
|
|
The caravan of Trubiggs's cattlemen who left for Portland by
|
|
night steamer, Friday, was headed by a bulky-shouldered boss, who
|
|
wore no coat and whose corduroy vest swung cheerfully open. A
|
|
motley troupe were the cattlemen -- Jews with small trunks,
|
|
large imitation-leather valises and assorted bundles, a stolid
|
|
prophet-bearded procession of weary men in tattered derbies and
|
|
sweat-shop clothes.
|
|
|
|
There were Englishmen with rope-bound pine chests. A
|
|
lewd-mouthed American named Tim, who said he was a hatter out of
|
|
work, and a loud-talking tough called Pete mingled with a
|
|
straggle of hoboes.
|
|
|
|
The boss counted the group and selected his confidants for the
|
|
trip to Portland--Mr. Wrenn and a youth named Morton.
|
|
|
|
Morton was a square heavy-fleshed young man with stubby hands,
|
|
who, up to his eyes, was stolid and solid as a granite monument,
|
|
but merry of eye and hinting friendliness in his tousled
|
|
soft-brown hair. He was always wielding a pipe and artfully
|
|
blowing smoke through his nostrils.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn and he smiled at each other searchingly as the
|
|
Portland boat pulled out, and a wind swept straight from the
|
|
Land of Elsewhere.
|
|
|
|
After dinner Morton, smoking a pipe shaped somewhat like a
|
|
golf-stick head and somewhat like a toad, at the rail of the
|
|
steamer, turned to Mr. Wrenn with:
|
|
|
|
"Classy bunch of cattlemen we've got to go with. Not!... My
|
|
name's Morton."
|
|
|
|
"I'm awful glad to meet you, Mr. Morton. My name's Wrenn."
|
|
|
|
"Glad to be off at last, ain't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Golly! I should say I _am!_"
|
|
|
|
"So'm I. Been waiting for this for years. I'm a clerk for the
|
|
P. R. R. in N' York."
|
|
|
|
"I come from New York, too."
|
|
|
|
"So? Lived there long?"
|
|
|
|
"Uh-huh, I----" began Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I been working for the Penn. for seven years now. Now
|
|
I've got a vacation of three months. On me. Gives me a chance
|
|
to travel a little. Got ten plunks and a second-class ticket
|
|
back from Glasgow. But I'm going to see England and France just
|
|
the same. Prob'ly Germany, too."
|
|
|
|
"Second class? Why don't you go steerage, and save?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, got to come back like a gentleman. You know. You're from
|
|
New York, too, eh?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I'm with an art-novelty company on Twenty-eighth Street.
|
|
I been wanting to get away for quite some time, too.... How are
|
|
you going to travel on ten dollars?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, work m' way. Cinch. Always land on my feet. Not on my
|
|
uppers, at that. I'm only twenty-eight, but I've been on my
|
|
own, like the English fellow says, since I was twelve.... Well,
|
|
how about you? Traveling or going somewhere?"
|
|
|
|
"Just traveling. I'm glad we're going together, Mr. Morton.
|
|
I don't think most of these cattlemen are very nice. Except for
|
|
the old Jews. They seem to be fine old coots. They make you
|
|
think of -- oh -- you know -- prophets and stuff. Watch 'em, over
|
|
there, making tea. I suppose the steamer grub ain't kosher.
|
|
I seen one on the Joy Line saying his prayers--I suppose he
|
|
was--in a kind of shawl."
|
|
|
|
"Well, well! You don't say so!"
|
|
|
|
Distinctly, Mr. Wrenn felt that he was one of the gentlemen who,
|
|
in Kipling, stand at steamer rails exchanging observations on
|
|
strange lands. He uttered, cosmopolitanly:
|
|
|
|
"Gee! Look at that sunset. Ain't that grand!"
|
|
|
|
"Holy smoke! it sure is. I don't see how anybody could believe
|
|
in religion after looking at that."
|
|
|
|
Shocked and confused at such a theory, yet excited at finding
|
|
that Morton apparently had thoughts, Mr. Wrenn piped:
|
|
"Honestly, I don't see that at _all_. I don't see how anybody
|
|
could disbelieve anything after a sunset like that. Makes me
|
|
believe all sorts of thing--gets me going--I imagine I'm all
|
|
sorts of places--on the Nile and so on."
|
|
|
|
"Sure! That's just it. Everything's so peaceful and natural.
|
|
Just _is_. Gives the imagination enough to do, even by itself,
|
|
without having to have religion."
|
|
|
|
"Well," reflected Mr. Wrenn, "I don't hardly ever go to church.
|
|
I don't believe much in all them highbrow sermons that don't
|
|
come down to brass tacks--ain't got nothing to do with real
|
|
folks. But just the same, I love to go up to St. Patrick's
|
|
Cathedral. Why, I get real _thrilled_--I hope you won't think
|
|
I'm trying to get high-browed, Mr. Morton."
|
|
|
|
"Why, no. Cer'nly not. I understand. Gwan."
|
|
|
|
"It gets me going when I look down the aisle at the altar and
|
|
see the arches and so on. And the priests in their robes--they
|
|
look so--so way up--oh, I dunno just how to say it--so kind of
|
|
_uplifted_."
|
|
|
|
"Sure, I know. Just the esthetic end of the game. Esthetic,
|
|
you know--the beauty part of it."
|
|
|
|
"Yuh, sure, that's the word. 'Sthetic, that's what it is.
|
|
Yes, 'sthetic. But, just the same, it makes me feel's though I
|
|
believed in all sorts of things."
|
|
|
|
"Tell you what I believe may happen, though," exulted Morton.
|
|
"This socialism, and maybe even these here International Workers
|
|
of the World, may pan out as a new kind of religion. I don't
|
|
know much about it, I got to admit. But looks as though it might
|
|
be that way. It's dead certain the old political parties are just
|
|
gangs--don't stand for anything except the name. But this comrade
|
|
business--good stunt. Brotherhood of man--real brotherhood. My
|
|
idea of religion. One that is because it's got to be, not just
|
|
because it always has been. Yessir, me for a religion of guys
|
|
working together to make things easier for each other."
|
|
|
|
"You bet!" commented Mr. Wrenn, and they smote each other upon
|
|
the shoulder and laughed together in a fine flame of shared hope.
|
|
|
|
"I wish I knew something about this socialism stuff," mused Mr.
|
|
Wrenn, with tilted head, examining the burnt-umber edges of the
|
|
sunset.
|
|
|
|
"Great stuff. Not working for some lazy cuss that's inherited
|
|
the right to boss you. And _international_ brotherhood, not just
|
|
neighborhoods. New thing."
|
|
|
|
"Gee! I surely would like that, awfully," sighed Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
He saw the processional of world brotherhood tramp steadily
|
|
through the paling sunset; saffron-vestured Mandarin marching by
|
|
flax-faced Norseman and languid South Sea Islander--the diverse
|
|
peoples toward whom he had always yearned.
|
|
|
|
"But I don't care so much for some of these ranting street-corner
|
|
socialists, though," mused Morton. "The kind that holler `Come
|
|
get saved _our_ way or go to hell! Keep off scab guides to prosperity.'"
|
|
|
|
"Yuh, sure. Ha! ha! ha!"
|
|
|
|
"Huh! huh!"
|
|
|
|
Morton soon had another thought. "Still, same time, us guys
|
|
that do the work have got to work out something for ourselves.
|
|
We can't bank on the rah-rah boys that wear eye-glasses and
|
|
condescend to like us, cause they think we ain't entirely too
|
|
dirty for 'em to associate with, and all these writer guys and
|
|
so on. That's where you got to hand it to the street-corner
|
|
shouters."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's _so_. Y' right there, I guess, all right."
|
|
|
|
They looked at each other and laughed again; initiated friends;
|
|
tasting each other's souls. They shared sandwiches and
|
|
confessions. When the other passengers had gone to bed and the
|
|
sailors on watch seemed lonely the two men were still declaring,
|
|
shyly but delightedly, that "things is curious."
|
|
|
|
In the damp discomfort of early morning the cattlemen shuffled
|
|
from the steamer at Portland and were herded to a lunch-room by
|
|
the boss, who cheerfully smoked his corn-cob and ejaculated to
|
|
Mr. Wrenn and Morton such interesting facts as:
|
|
|
|
"Trubiggs is a lobster. You don't want to let the bosses bluff
|
|
you aboard the _Merian_. They'll try to chase you in where the
|
|
steers'll gore you. The grub'll be----"
|
|
|
|
"What grub do you get?"
|
|
|
|
"Scouse and bread. And water."
|
|
|
|
"What's scouse?"
|
|
|
|
"Beef stew without the beef. Oh, the grub'll be rotten.
|
|
Trubiggs is a lobster. He wouldn't be nowhere if 't wa'n't for me."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn appreciated England's need of roast beef, but he
|
|
timidly desired not to be gored by steers, which seemed
|
|
imminent, before breakfast coffee. The streets were coldly
|
|
empty, and he was sleepy, and Morton was silent. At the
|
|
restaurant, sitting on a high stool before a pine counter, he
|
|
choked over an egg sandwich made with thick crumby slices of a
|
|
bread that had no personality to it. He roved forlornly about
|
|
Portland, beside the gloomy pipe-valiant Morton, fighting two
|
|
fears: the company might not need all of them this trip, and he
|
|
might have to wait; secondly, if he incredibly did get shipped
|
|
and started for England the steers might prove dreadfully
|
|
dangerous. After intense thinking he ejaculated, "Gee! it's be
|
|
bored or get gored." Which was much too good not to tell Morton,
|
|
so they laughed very much, and at ten o'clock were signed on for
|
|
the trip and led, whooping, to the deck of the S.S. _Merian_.
|
|
|
|
Cattle were still struggling down the chutes from the dock. The
|
|
dirty decks were confusingly littered with cordage and the
|
|
cattlemen's luggage. The Jewish elders stared sepulchrally at
|
|
the wilderness of open hatches and rude passageways, as though
|
|
they were prophesying death.
|
|
|
|
But Mr. Wrenn, standing sturdily beside his suit-case to guard
|
|
it, fawned with romantic love upon the rusty iron sides of their
|
|
pilgrims' caravel; and as the _Merian_ left the wharf with no
|
|
more handkerchief-waving or tears than attends a ferry's leaving
|
|
he mumbled:
|
|
|
|
"Free, free, out to sea. Free, free, that's _me!_"
|
|
|
|
Then, "Gee!... Gee whittakers!"
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV
|
|
HE BECOMES THE GREAT LITTLE BILL WRENN
|
|
|
|
When the _Merian_ was three days out from Portland the frightened
|
|
cattleman stiff known as "Wrennie" wanted to die, for he was now
|
|
sure that the smell of the fo'c'sle, in which he was lying on a
|
|
thin mattress of straw covered with damp gunny-sacking, both
|
|
could and would become daily a thicker smell, a stronger smell,
|
|
a smell increasingly diverse and deadly.
|
|
|
|
Though it was so late as eight bells of the evening, Pete, the
|
|
tough factory hand, and Tim, the down-and-out hatter, were still
|
|
playing seven-up at the dirty fo'c'sle table, while McGarver,
|
|
under-boss of the Morris cattle gang, lay in his berth, heavily
|
|
studying the game and blowing sulphurous fumes of Lunch Pail
|
|
Plug Cut tobacco up toward Wrennie.
|
|
|
|
Pete, the tough, was very evil. He sneered. He stole. He
|
|
bullied. He was a drunkard and a person without cleanliness of
|
|
speech. Tim, the hatter, was a loud-talking weakling, under
|
|
Pete's domination. Tim wore a dirty rubber collar without a
|
|
tie, and his soul was like his neckware.
|
|
|
|
McGarver, the under-boss, was a good shepherd among the men,
|
|
though he had recently lost the head foremanship by a spree
|
|
complicated with language and violence. He looked like one of
|
|
the _Merian_ bulls, with broad short neck and short curly hair
|
|
above a thick-skinned deeply wrinkled low forehead. He never
|
|
undressed, but was always seen, as now, in heavy shoes and
|
|
blue-gray woolen socks tucked over the bottoms of his overalls.
|
|
He was gruff and kind and tyrannical and honest.
|
|
|
|
Wrennie shook and drew his breath sharply as the foghorn yawped
|
|
out its "Whawn-n-n-n" again, reminding him that they were
|
|
still in the Bank fog; that at any moment they were likely to be
|
|
stunned by a heart-stopping crash as some liner's bow burst
|
|
through the fo'c'sle's walls in a collision. Bow-plates
|
|
buckling in and shredding, the in-thrust of an enormous black
|
|
bow, water flooding in, cries and---- However, the horn did at least
|
|
show that They were awake up there on the bridge to steer him
|
|
through the fog; and weren't They experienced seamen? Hadn't
|
|
They made this trip ever so many times and never got killed?
|
|
Wouldn't They take all sorts of pains on Their own account as
|
|
well as on his?
|
|
|
|
But--just the same, would he really ever get to England alive?
|
|
And if he did, would he have to go on holding his breath in
|
|
terror for nine more days? Would the fo'c'sle always keep
|
|
heaving up--up--up, like this, then down--down--down, as though
|
|
it were going to sink?
|
|
|
|
"How do yuh like de fog-horn, Wrennie?"
|
|
|
|
Pete, the tough, spit the question up at him from a corner of
|
|
his mouth. "Hope we don't run into no ships."
|
|
|
|
He winked at Tim, the weakling hatter, who took the cue and
|
|
mourned:
|
|
|
|
"I'm kinda afraid we're going to, ain't you, Pete? The mate was
|
|
telling me he was scared we would."
|
|
|
|
"Sures' t'ing you know. Hey, Wrennie, wait till youse have to
|
|
beat it down-stairs and tie up a bull in a storm. Hully gee!
|
|
Youse'll last quick on de game, Birdie!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, shut up," snapped Wrennie's friend Morton.
|
|
|
|
But Morton was seasick; and Pete, not heeding him, outlined
|
|
other dangers which he was happily sure were threatening them.
|
|
Wrennie shivered to hear that the "grub 'd git worse." He
|
|
writhed under Pete's loud questions about his loss, in some
|
|
cattle-pen, of the gray-and-scarlet sweater-jacket which he had
|
|
proudly and gaily purchased in New York for his work on the
|
|
ship. And the card-players assured him that his suit-case,
|
|
which he had intrusted to the Croac ship's carpenter, would
|
|
probably be stolen by "Satan."
|
|
|
|
Satan! Wrennie shuddered still more. For Satan, the gaunt-jawed
|
|
hook-nosed rail-faced head foreman, diabolically smiling when
|
|
angry, sardonically sneering when calm, was a lean human
|
|
whip-lash. Pete sniggered. He dilated upon Satan's wrath at
|
|
Wrennie for not "coming across" with ten dollars for a bribe
|
|
as he, Pete, had done.
|
|
|
|
(He lied, of course. And his words have not been given
|
|
literally. They were not beautiful words.)
|
|
|
|
McGarver, the straw-boss, would always lie awake to enjoy a good
|
|
brisk indecent story, but he liked Wrennie's admiration of him,
|
|
so, lunging with his bull-like head out of his berth, he snorted:
|
|
|
|
"Hey, you, Pete, it's time to pound your ear. Cut it out."
|
|
|
|
Wrennie called down, sternly, "I ain't no theological student,
|
|
Pete, and I don't mind profanity, but I wish you wouldn't talk
|
|
like a garbage-scow."
|
|
|
|
"Hey, Poicy, did yuh bring your dictionary?" Pete bellowed to
|
|
Tim, two feet distant from him. To Wrennie, "Say, Gladys, ain't
|
|
you afraid one of them long woids like, t'eological, will turn
|
|
around and bite you right on the wrist?"
|
|
|
|
"Dry up!" irritatedly snapped a Canadian.
|
|
|
|
"Aw, cut it out, you----," groaned another.
|
|
|
|
"Shut up," added McGarver, the straw-boss. "Both of you."
|
|
Raging: "Gwan to bed, Pete, or I'll beat your block clean off.
|
|
I mean it, see? _Hear me?_"
|
|
|
|
Yes, Pete heard him. Doubtless the first officer on the bridge
|
|
heard, too, and perhaps the inhabitants of Newfoundland. But
|
|
Pete took his time in scratching the back of his neck and
|
|
stretching before he crawled into his berth. For half an hour
|
|
he talked softly to Tim, for Wrennie's benefit, stating his belief
|
|
that Satan, the head boss, had once thrown overboard a Jew much
|
|
like Wrennie, and was likely thus to serve Wrennie, too.
|
|
Tim pictured the result when, after the capsizing of the steamer
|
|
which would undoubtedly occur if this long sickening motion kept up,
|
|
Wrennie had to take to a boat with Satan.
|
|
|
|
The fingers of Wrennie curled into shape for strangling some one.
|
|
|
|
When Pete was asleep he worried off into thin slumber.
|
|
|
|
Then, there was Satan, the head boss, jerking him out of his
|
|
berth, stirring his cramped joints to another dawn of
|
|
drudgery--two hours of work and two of waiting before the daily
|
|
eight-o'clock insult called breakfast. He tugged on his shoes,
|
|
marveling at Mr. Wrenn's really being there, at his sitting in
|
|
cramped stoop on the side of a berth in a dark filthy place that
|
|
went up and down like a freight elevator, subject to the orders
|
|
of persons whom he did not in the least like.
|
|
|
|
Through the damp gray sea-air he staggered hungrily along the
|
|
gangway to the hatch amidships, and trembled down the iron
|
|
ladder to McGarver's crew 'tween-decks.
|
|
|
|
First, watering the steers. Sickened by walking backward with
|
|
pails of water he carried till he could see and think of nothing
|
|
in the world save the water-butt, the puddle in front of it, and
|
|
the cattlemen mercilessly dipping out pails there, through
|
|
centuries that would never end. How those steers did drink!
|
|
|
|
McGarver's favorite bull, which he called "the Grenadier," took
|
|
ten pails and still persisted in leering with dripping gray
|
|
mouth beyond the headboard, trying to reach more. As Wrennie
|
|
was carrying a pail to the heifers beyond, the Grenadier's horn
|
|
caught and tore his overalls. The boat lurched. The pail
|
|
whirled out of his hand. He grasped an iron stanchion and
|
|
kicked the Grenadier in the jaw till the steer backed off, a
|
|
reformed character.
|
|
|
|
McGarver cheered, for such kicks were a rule of the game.
|
|
|
|
"Good work," ironically remarked Tim, the weakling hatter.
|
|
|
|
"You go to hell," snapped Wrennie, and Tim looked much more
|
|
respectful.
|
|
|
|
But Wrennie lost this credit before they had finished feeding
|
|
out the hay, for he grew too dizzy to resent Tim's remarks.
|
|
|
|
Straining to pitch forkfuls into the pens while the boat rolled,
|
|
slopping along the wet gangway, down by the bunkers of coal,
|
|
where the heat seemed a close-wound choking shroud and the
|
|
darkness was made only a little pale by light coming through
|
|
dust-caked port-holes, he sneezed and coughed and grunted till
|
|
he was exhausted. The floating bits of hay-dust were a thousand
|
|
impish hands with poisoned nails scratching at the roof of his
|
|
mouth. His skin prickled all over. He constantly discovered
|
|
new and aching muscles. But he wabbled on until he finished the
|
|
work, fifteen minutes after Tim had given out.
|
|
|
|
He crawled up to the main deck and huddled in the shelter of a
|
|
pile of hay-bales where Pete was declaring to Tim and the rest
|
|
that Satan "couldn't never get nothing on him."
|
|
|
|
Morton broke into Pete's publicity with the question, "Say, is
|
|
it straight what they say, Pete, that you're the guy that owns
|
|
the Leyland Line and that's why you know so much more than the
|
|
rest of us poor lollops? Watson, the needle, quick!" [Applause
|
|
and laughter.]
|
|
|
|
Wrennie felt personally grateful to Morton for this, but he went
|
|
up to the aft top deck, where he could lie alone on a pile of
|
|
tarpaulins. He made himself observe the sea which, as Kipling
|
|
and Jack London had specifically promised him in their stories,
|
|
surrounded him, everywhere shining free; but he glanced at it
|
|
only once. To the north was a liner bound for home.
|
|
|
|
Home! Gee! That _was_ rubbing it in! While at work, whether
|
|
he was sick or not, he could forget--things. But the liner,
|
|
fleeting on with bright ease, made the cattle-boat seem about
|
|
as romantic as Mrs. Zapp's kitchen sink.
|
|
|
|
Why, he wondered-- "why had he been a chump? Him a wanderer?
|
|
No; he was a hired man on a sea-going dairy-farm. Well, he'd get
|
|
onto this confounded job before he was through with it, but
|
|
then--gee! back to God's Country!"
|
|
|
|
While the _Merian_, eleven days out, pleasantly rocked through
|
|
the Irish Sea, with the moon revealing the coast of Anglesey,
|
|
one Bill Wrenn lay on the after-deck, condescending to the
|
|
heavens. It was so warm that they did not need to sleep below,
|
|
and half a dozen of the cattlemen had brought their mattresses
|
|
up on deck. Beside Bill Wrenn lay the man who had given him
|
|
that name--Tim, the hatter, who had become weakly alarmed and
|
|
admiring as Wrennie learned to rise feeling like a boy in early
|
|
vacation-time, and to find shouting exhilaration in sending a
|
|
forkful of hay fifteen good feet.
|
|
|
|
Morton, who lay near by, had also adopted the name "Bill
|
|
Wrenn." Most of the trip Morton had discussed Pete and Tim
|
|
instead of the fact that "things is curious." Mr. Wrenn had been
|
|
jealous at first, but when he learned from Morton the theory
|
|
that even a Pete was a "victim of 'vironment" he went out for
|
|
knowing him quite systematically.
|
|
|
|
To McGarver he had been "Bill Wrenn" since the fifth day, when
|
|
he had kept a hay-bale from slipping back into the hold on the
|
|
boss's head. Satan and Pete still called him "Wrennie," but he
|
|
was not thinking about them just now with Tim listening
|
|
admiringly to his observations on socialism.
|
|
|
|
Tim fell asleep. Bill Wrenn lay quiet and let memory color the
|
|
sky above him. He recalled the gardens of water which had
|
|
flowered in foam for him, strange ships and nomadic gulls, and
|
|
the schools of sleekly black porpoises that, for him, had
|
|
whisked through violet waves. Most of all, he brought back the
|
|
yesterday's long excitement and delight of seeing the Irish
|
|
coast hills--his first foreign land--whose faint sky fresco had
|
|
seemed magical with the elfin lore of Ireland, a country that
|
|
had ever been to him the haunt not of potatoes and politicians,
|
|
but of fays. He had wanted fays. They were not common on the
|
|
asphalt of West Sixteenth Street. But now he had seen them
|
|
beckoning in Wanderland.
|
|
|
|
He was falling asleep under the dancing dome of the sky, a happy
|
|
Mr. Wrenn, when he was aroused as a furious Bill, the cattleman.
|
|
Pete was clogging near by, singing hoarsely, "Dey was a skoit
|
|
and 'er name was Goity."
|
|
|
|
"You shut up!" commanded Bill Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
"Say, be careful!" the awakened Tim implored of him.
|
|
Pete snorted: "Who says to `shut up,' hey? Who was it, Satan?"
|
|
|
|
From the capstan, where he was still smoking, the head foreman
|
|
muttered: "What's the odds? The little man won't say it again."
|
|
|
|
Pete stood by Bill Wrenn's mattress. "Who said `shut up'?"
|
|
sounded ominously.
|
|
|
|
Bill popped out of bed with what he regarded as a vicious
|
|
fighting-crouch. For he was too sleepy to be afraid. "I did!
|
|
What you going to do about it?" More mildly, as a fear of his
|
|
own courage began to form, "I want to sleep."
|
|
|
|
"Oh! You want to sleep. Little mollycoddle wants to sleep,
|
|
does he? Come here!"
|
|
|
|
The tough grabbed at Bill's shirt-collar across the mattress.
|
|
Bill ducked, stuck out his arm wildly, and struck Pete, half by
|
|
accident. Roaring, Pete bunted him, and he went down, with Pete
|
|
kneeling on his stomach and pounding him.
|
|
|
|
Morton and honest McGarver, the straw-boss, sprang to drag off
|
|
Pete, while Satan, the panther, with the first interest they had
|
|
ever seen in his eyes, snarled: "Let 'em fight fair. Rounds.
|
|
You're a' right, Bill."
|
|
|
|
"Right," commended Morton.
|
|
|
|
Armored with Satan's praise, firm but fearful in his rubber
|
|
sneakers, surprised and shocked to find himself here doing this,
|
|
Bill Wrenn squared at the rowdy. The moon touched sadly the
|
|
lightly sketched Anglesey coast and the rippling wake, but Bill
|
|
Wrenn, oblivious of dream moon and headland, faced his
|
|
fellow-bruiser.
|
|
|
|
They circled. Pete stuck out his foot gently. Morton sprang
|
|
in, bawling furiously, "None o' them rough-and-tumble tricks."
|
|
|
|
"Right-o," added McGarver.
|
|
|
|
Pete scowled. He was left powerless. He puffed and grew dizzy
|
|
as Bill Wrenn danced delicately about him, for he could do
|
|
nothing without back-street tactics. He did bloody the nose of
|
|
Bill and pummel his ribs, but many cigarettes and much whisky
|
|
told, and he was ready to laugh foolishly and make peace when,
|
|
at the end of the sixth round, he felt Bill's neat little fist
|
|
in a straight -- and entirely accidental -- rip to the point of
|
|
his jaw.
|
|
|
|
Pete sent his opponent spinning with a back-hander which awoke
|
|
all the cruelty of the terrible Bill. Silently Bill Wrenn
|
|
plunged in with a smash! smash! smash! like a murderous savage,
|
|
using every grain of his strength.
|
|
|
|
Let us turn from the lamentable luck of Pete. He had now got the
|
|
idea that his supposed victim could really fight. Dismayed, shocked,
|
|
disgusted, he stumbled and sought to flee, and was sent flat.
|
|
|
|
This time it was the great little Bill who had to be dragged
|
|
off. McGarver held him, kicking and yammering, his mild
|
|
mustache bristling like a battling cat's, till the next round,
|
|
when Pete was knocked out by a clumsy whirlwind of fists.
|
|
|
|
He lay on the deck, with Bill standing over him and demanding,
|
|
"What's my name, _heh?_"
|
|
|
|
"I t'ink it's Bill now, all right, Wrennie, old hoss--Bill, old
|
|
hoss," groaned Pete.
|
|
|
|
He was permitted to sneak off into oblivion.
|
|
|
|
Bill Wrenn went below. In the dark passage by the fidley he
|
|
fell to tremorous weeping. But the brackish hydrant water that
|
|
stopped his nose-bleed saved him from hysterics. He climbed to
|
|
the top deck, and now he could again see his brother pilgrim,
|
|
the moon.
|
|
|
|
The stiffs and bosses were talking excitedly of the fight.
|
|
Tim rushed up to gurgle: "Great, Bill, old man!
|
|
|
|
You done just what I'd 'a' done if he'd cussed me. I told you
|
|
Pete was a bluffer."
|
|
|
|
"Git out," said Satan.
|
|
|
|
Tim fled.
|
|
|
|
Morton came up, looked at Bill Wrenn, pounded him on the shoulder,
|
|
and went off to his mattress. The other stiffs slouched away,
|
|
but McGarver and Satan were still discussing the fight.
|
|
|
|
Snuggling on the hard black pile of tarpaulins, Bill talked to
|
|
them, warmed to them, and became Mr. Wrenn. He announced his
|
|
determination to wander adown every shining road of Europe.
|
|
|
|
"Nice work." "Sure." "You'll make a snappy little ole
|
|
globe-trotter." "Sure; ought to be able to get the slickest
|
|
kind of grub for four bits a day." "Nice work," Satan
|
|
interjected from time to time, with smooth irony. "Sure.
|
|
Go ahead. Like to hear your plans."
|
|
|
|
McGarver broke in: "Cut that out, Marvin. You're a `Satan' all
|
|
right. Quit your kidding the little man. He's all right. And
|
|
he done fine on the job last three-four days."
|
|
|
|
Lying on his mattress, Bill stared at the network of the
|
|
ratlines against the brilliant sky. The crisscross lines made
|
|
him think of the ruled order-blanks of the Souvenir Company.
|
|
|
|
"Gee!" he mused, "I'd like to know if Jake is handling my work
|
|
the way we--they--like it. I'd like to see the old office again,
|
|
and Charley Carpenter, just for a couple of minutes. Gee!
|
|
I wish they could have seen me put it all over Pete to-night!
|
|
That's what I'm going to do to the blooming Englishmen if they
|
|
don't like me."
|
|
|
|
The S.S. _Merian_ panted softly beside the landing-stage at
|
|
Birkenhead, Liverpool's Jersey City, resting in the sunshine
|
|
after her voyage, while the cattle were unloaded. They had
|
|
encountered fog-banks at the mouth of the Mersey River. Mr.
|
|
Wrenn had ecstatically watched the shores of
|
|
England--_England!_--ride at him through the fog, and had panted
|
|
over the lines of English villas among the dunes. It was like
|
|
a dream, yet the shore had such amazingly safe solid colors,
|
|
real red and green and yellow, when contrasted with the fog-wet
|
|
deck unearthily glancing with mist-lights.
|
|
|
|
Now he was seeing his first foreign city, and to Morton,
|
|
stolidly curious beside him, he could say nothing save "Gee!"
|
|
With church-tower and swarthy dome behind dome, Liverpool lay
|
|
across the Mersey. Up through the Liverpool streets that ran
|
|
down to the river, as though through peep-holes slashed straight
|
|
back into the Middle Ages, his vision plunged, and it wandered
|
|
unchecked through each street while he hummed:
|
|
|
|
"Free, free, in Eu-ro-pee, that's _me!_"
|
|
|
|
The cattlemen were called to help unload the remaining hay.
|
|
They made a game of it. Even Satan smiled, even the Jewish
|
|
elders were lightly affable as they made pretendedly fierce
|
|
gestures at the squat patient hay-bales. Tim, the hatter,
|
|
danced a limber foolish jig upon the deck, and McGarver
|
|
bellowed, "The bon-nee bon-nee banks of Loch Lo-o-o-o-mond."
|
|
|
|
The crowd bawled: "Come on, Bill Wrenn; your turn. Hustle up
|
|
with that bale, Pete, or we'll sic Bill on you."
|
|
|
|
Bill Wrenn, standing very dignified, piped: "I'm Colonel
|
|
Armour. I own all these cattle, 'cept the Morris uns, see?
|
|
Gotta do what I say, savvy? Tim, walk on your ear."
|
|
|
|
The hatter laid his head on the deck and waved his anemic legs
|
|
in accordance with directions from Colonel Armour (late Wrenn).
|
|
|
|
The hay was off. The _Merian_ tooted and headed across the
|
|
Mersey to the Huskinson Dock, in Liverpool, while the cattlemen
|
|
played tag about the deck. Whooping and laughing, they made
|
|
last splashy toilets at the water-butts, dragged out their
|
|
luggage, and descended to the dock-house.
|
|
|
|
As the cattlemen passed Bill Wrenn and Morton, shouting
|
|
affectionate good-bys in English or courteous Yiddish, Bill
|
|
commented profanely to Morton on the fact that the solid stone
|
|
floor of the great shed seemed to have enough sea-motion to
|
|
"make a guy sick." It was nearly his last utterance as Bill Wrenn.
|
|
He became Mr. Wrenn, absolute Mr. Wrenn, on the street,
|
|
as he saw a real English bobby, a real English carter, and the
|
|
sign, "Cocoa House. Tea _Id_."
|
|
|
|
England!
|
|
|
|
"Now for some real grub!" cried Morton. "No more scouse and
|
|
willow-leaf tea."
|
|
|
|
Stretching out their legs under a table glorified with toasted
|
|
Sally Lunns and Melton Mowbrays, served by a waitress who said
|
|
"Thank _you_" with a rising inflection, they gazed at the line of
|
|
mirrors running Britishly all around the room over the long
|
|
lounge seat, and smiled with the triumphant content which comes
|
|
to him whose hunger for dreams and hunger for meat-pies are
|
|
satisfied together.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V
|
|
HE FINDS MUCH QUAINT ENGLISH FLAVOR
|
|
|
|
Big wharves, all right. England sure is queen of the sea, heh?
|
|
Busy town, Liverpool. But, say, there is a quaint English
|
|
flavor to these shops.... Look at that: `Red Lion Inn.'...
|
|
`Overhead trams' they call the elevated. Real flavor, all
|
|
right. English as can be.... I sure like to wander around
|
|
these little shops. Street crowd. That's where you get the
|
|
real quaint flavor."
|
|
|
|
Thus Morton, to the glowing Mr. Wrenn, as they turned into St.
|
|
George's Square, noting the Lipton's Tea establishment. _Sir_
|
|
Thomas Lipton--wasn't he a friend of the king? Anyway, he was
|
|
some kind of a lord, and he owned big society racing-yachts.
|
|
|
|
In the grandiose square Mr. Wrenn prayerfully remarked, "Gee!"
|
|
|
|
"Greek temple. Fine," agreed Morton.
|
|
|
|
"That's St. George's Hall, where they have big organ concerts,"
|
|
explained Mr. Wrenn. "And there's the art-gallery across the
|
|
Square, and here's the Lime Street Station." He had studied his
|
|
Baedeker as club women study the cyclopedia. "Let's go over and
|
|
look at the trains."
|
|
|
|
"Funny little boxes, ain't they, Wrenn, them cars! Quaint
|
|
things. What is it they call 'em--carriages? First, second,
|
|
third class...."
|
|
|
|
"Just like in books."
|
|
|
|
"Booking-office. That's tickets.... Funny, eh?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn insisted on paying for both their high teas at the
|
|
cheap restaurant, timidly but earnestly. Morton was troubled.
|
|
As they sat on a park bench, smoking those most Anglican
|
|
cigarettes, "Dainty Bits," Mr. Wrenn begged:
|
|
|
|
"What's the matter, old man?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, nothing. Just thinking." Morton smiled artificially.
|
|
He added, presently: "Well, old Bill, got to make the break.
|
|
Can't go on living on you this way."
|
|
|
|
"Aw, thunder! You ain't living on me. Besides, I want you to.
|
|
Honest I do. We can have a whole lot better time together, Morty."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but---- Nope; I can't do it. Nice of you. Can't do it,
|
|
though. Got to go on my own, like the fellow says."
|
|
|
|
"Aw, come on. Look here; it's my money, ain't it? I got a
|
|
right to spend it the way I want to, haven't I? Aw, come on.
|
|
We'll bum along together, and then when the money is gone we'll
|
|
get some kind of job together. Honest, I want you to."
|
|
|
|
"Hunka. Don't believe you'd care for the kind of knockabout
|
|
jobs I'll have to get."
|
|
|
|
"Sure I would. Aw, come on, Morty. I----"
|
|
|
|
"You're too level-headed to like to bum around like a fool hobo.
|
|
You'd dam soon get tired of it."
|
|
|
|
"What if I did? Morty, look here. I've been learning something
|
|
on this trip. I've always wanted to just do one thing--see
|
|
foreign places. Well, I want to do that just as much as ever.
|
|
But there's something that's a whole lot more important.
|
|
Somehow, I ain't ever had many friends. Some ways you're about
|
|
the best friend I've ever had--you ain't neither too highbrow or
|
|
too lowbrow. And this friendship business--it means such an
|
|
awful lot. It's like what I was reading about--something by
|
|
Elbert Hubbard or--thunder, I can't remember his name, but,
|
|
anyway, it's one of those poet guys that writes for the back
|
|
page of the _Journal_--something about a _joyous adventure_.
|
|
That's what being friends is. Course you understand I wouldn't
|
|
want to say this to most people, but you'll understand how I mean.
|
|
It's--this friendship business is just like those old crusaders--
|
|
you know--they'd start out on a fine morning--you know; armor
|
|
shining, all that stuff. It wouldn't make any dif. what they met
|
|
as long as they was fighting together. Rainy nights with folks
|
|
sneaking through the rain to get at 'em, and all sorts of things--
|
|
ready for anything, long as they just stuck together. That's the way
|
|
this friendship business is, I b'lieve. Just like it said in the
|
|
_Journal_. Yump, sure is. Gee! it's---- Chance to tell folks
|
|
what you think and really get some fun out of seeing places
|
|
together. And I ain't ever done it much. Course I don't mean
|
|
to say I've been living off on any blooming desert island all my
|
|
life, but, just the same, I've always been kind of alone--not
|
|
knowing many folks. You know how it is in a New York
|
|
rooming-house. So now---- Aw, don't slip up on me, Morty.
|
|
Honestly, I don't care what kind of work we do as long as we can
|
|
stick together; I don't care a hang if we don't get anything
|
|
better to do than scrub floors!"
|
|
|
|
Morton patted his arm and did not answer for a while. Then:
|
|
|
|
"Yuh, I know how you mean. And it's good of you to like beating
|
|
it around with me. But you sure got the exaggerated idee of me.
|
|
And you'd get sick of the holes I'm likely to land in."
|
|
|
|
There was a certain pride which seemed dreadfully to shut Mr.
|
|
Wrenn out as Morton added:
|
|
|
|
"Why, man, I'm going to do all of Europe. From the Turkish
|
|
jails to--oh, St. Petersburg.... You made good on the _Merian_,
|
|
all right. But you do like things shipshape."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I'd----"
|
|
|
|
"We might stay friends if we busted up now and met in New York
|
|
again. But not if you get into all sorts of bum places w----"
|
|
|
|
"Why, look here, Morty----"
|
|
|
|
"--with me.... However, I'll think it over. Let's not talk
|
|
about it till to-morrow."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, please do think it over, Morty, old man, won't you? And
|
|
to-night you'll let me take you to a music-hall, won't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Uh--yes," Morton hesitated.
|
|
|
|
A music-hall--not mere vaudeville! Mr. Wrenn could hardly keep
|
|
his feet on the pavement as they scampered to it and got
|
|
ninepenny seats. He would have thought it absurd to pay
|
|
eighteen cents for a ticket, but pence---- They were out at
|
|
nine-thirty. Happily tired, Mr. Wrenn suggested that they go to
|
|
a temperance hotel at his expense, for he had read in Baedeker
|
|
that temperance hotels were respectable--also cheap.
|
|
|
|
"No, no!" frowned Morton. "Tell you what you do, Bill. You go
|
|
to a hotel, and I'll beat it down to a lodging-house on Duke
|
|
Street.... Juke Street!... Remember how I ran onto Pete on the
|
|
street? He told me you could get a cot down there for fourpence."
|
|
|
|
"Aw, come on to a hotel. Please do! It 'd just hurt me to think
|
|
of you sleeping in one of them holes. I wouldn't sleep a bit
|
|
if----"
|
|
|
|
"Say, for the love of Mike, Wrenn, get wise! Get wise, son!
|
|
I'm not going to sponge on you, and that's all there is to it."
|
|
|
|
Bill Wrenn strode into their company for a minute, and quoth the
|
|
terrible Bill:
|
|
|
|
"Well, you don't need to get so sore about it. I don't go
|
|
around asking folks can I give 'em a meal ticket all the time,
|
|
let me tell you, and when I do---- Oh rats! Say, I didn't mean to
|
|
get huffy, Morty. But, doggone you, old man, you can't shake me
|
|
this easy. I sye, old top, I'm peeved; yessir. We'll go Dutch
|
|
to a lodging-house, or even walk the streets."
|
|
|
|
"All right, sir; all right. I'll take you up on that. We'll
|
|
sleep in an areaway some place."
|
|
|
|
They walked to the outskirts of Liverpool, questing the desirable
|
|
dark alley. Awed by the solid quietude and semigrandeur of the
|
|
large private estates, through narrow streets where dim trees
|
|
leaned over high walls whose long silent stretches were broken
|
|
only by mysterious little doors, they tramped bashfully,
|
|
inspecting, but always rejecting, nooks by lodge gates.
|
|
|
|
They came to a stone church with a porch easily reached from the
|
|
street, a large and airy stone porch, just suited, Morton
|
|
declared, "to a couple of hoboes like us. If a bobby butts in,
|
|
why, we'll just slide under them seats. Then the bobby can go
|
|
soak his head."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn had never so far defied society as to steal a place
|
|
for sleeping. He felt very uneasy, like a man left naked on the
|
|
street by robbers, as he rolled up his coat for a pillow and
|
|
removed his shoes in a place that was perfectly open to the
|
|
street. The paved floor was cold to his bare feet, and, as he
|
|
tried to go to sleep, it kept getting colder and colder to his
|
|
back. Reaching out his hand, he fretfully rubbed the cracks
|
|
between stones. He scowled up at the ceiling of the porch.
|
|
He couldn't bear to look out through the door, for it framed the
|
|
vicar's house, with lamplight bodying forth latticed windows,
|
|
suggesting soft beds and laughter and comfortable books. All
|
|
the while his chilled back was aching in new places.
|
|
|
|
He sprang up, put on his shoes, and paced the churchyard. It
|
|
seemed a great waste of educational advantages not to study the
|
|
tower of this foreign church, but he thought much more about his
|
|
aching shoulder-blades.
|
|
|
|
Morton came from the porch stiff but grinning. "Didn't like it
|
|
much, eh, Bill? Afraid you wouldn't. Must say I didn't either,
|
|
though. Well, come on. Let's beat it around and see if we
|
|
can't find a better place."
|
|
|
|
In a vacant lot they discovered a pile of hay. Mr. Wrenn hardly
|
|
winced at the hearty slap Morton gave his back, and he
|
|
pronounced, "Some Waldorf-Astoria, that stack!" as they sneaked
|
|
into the lot. They had laid loving hands upon the hay,
|
|
remarking, "Well, I _guess!_" when they heard from a low stable
|
|
at the very back of the lot:
|
|
|
|
"I say, you chaps, what are you doing there?"
|
|
|
|
A reflective carter, who had been twisting two straws, ambled
|
|
out of the shadow of the stable and prepared to do battle.
|
|
|
|
"Say, old man, can't we sleep in your hay just to-night?" argued
|
|
Morton. "We're Americans. Came over on a cattle-boat. We
|
|
ain't got only enough money to last us for food," while Mr.
|
|
Wrenn begged, "Aw, please let us."
|
|
|
|
"Oh! You're Americans, are you? You seem decent enough. I've
|
|
got a brother in the States. He used to own this stable with
|
|
me. In St. Cloud, Minnesota, he is, you know. Minnesota's some
|
|
kind of a shire. Either of you chaps been in Minnesota?"
|
|
|
|
"Sure," lied Morton; "I've hunted bear there."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I say, bear now! My brother's never written m----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that was way up in the northern part, in the Big Woods.
|
|
I've had some narrow escapes."
|
|
|
|
Then Morton, who had never been west of Pittsburg, sang somewhat
|
|
in this wise the epic of the hunting he had never done:
|
|
|
|
Alone. Among the pines. Dead o' winter. Only one shell in his
|
|
rifle. Cold of winter. Snow--deep snow. Snow-shoes. Hiking
|
|
along--reg'lar mushing--packing grub to the lumber-camp. Way up
|
|
near the Canadian border. Cold, terrible cold. Stars looked
|
|
like little bits of steel.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn thought he remembered the story. He had read it in a
|
|
magazine. Morton was continuing:
|
|
|
|
Snow stretched out among the pines. He was wearing a Mackinaw
|
|
and shoe-packs. Saw a bear loping along. He had--Morton had--a
|
|
.44-.40 Marlin, but only one shell. Thrust the muzzle of his
|
|
rifle right into the bear's mouth. Scared for a minute. Almost
|
|
fell off his snow-shoes. Hardest thing he ever did, to pull that
|
|
trigger. Fired. Bear sort of jumped at him, then rolled over, clawing.
|
|
Great place, those Minnesota Big----
|
|
|
|
"What's a shoe-pack?" the Englishman stolidly interjected.
|
|
|
|
"Kind of a moccasin.... Great place, those woods. Hope your
|
|
brother gets the chance to get up there."
|
|
|
|
"I say, I wonder did you ever meet him? Scrabble is his name,
|
|
Jock Scrabble."
|
|
|
|
"Jock Scrabble--no, but _say!_ By golly, there was a fellow up in
|
|
the Big Woods that came from St. Cl-- St. Cloud? Yes, that was
|
|
it. He was telling us about the town. I remember he said your
|
|
brother had great chances there."
|
|
|
|
The Englishman meditatively accepted a bad cigar from Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
Suddenly: "You chaps can sleep in the stable-loft if you'd
|
|
like. But you must blooming well stop smoking."
|
|
|
|
So in the dark odorous hay-mow Mr. Wrenn stretched out his legs
|
|
with an affectionate "good night" to Morton. He slept nine
|
|
hours. When he awoke, at the sound of a chain clanking in the
|
|
stable below, Morton was gone. This note was pinned to his
|
|
sleeve:
|
|
|
|
DEAR OLD MAN,--I still feel sure that you will not enjoy the
|
|
hiking. Bumming is not much fun for most people, I don't think,
|
|
even if they say it is. I do not want to live on you. I always
|
|
did hate to graft on people. So I am going to beat it off
|
|
alone. But I hope I will see you in N Y & we will enjoy many a
|
|
good laugh together over our trip. If you will phone the P. R.
|
|
R. you can find out when I get back & so on. As I do not know
|
|
what your address will be. Please look me up & I hope you will
|
|
have a good trip.
|
|
Yours truly,
|
|
HARRY P. MORTON.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn lay listening to the unfriendly rattling of the chain
|
|
harness below for a long time. When he crawled languidly down
|
|
from the hay-loft he glowered in a manner which was decidedly
|
|
surly even for Bill Wrenn at a middle-aged English stranger who
|
|
was stooping over a cow's hoof in a stall facing the ladder.
|
|
|
|
"Wot you doing here?" asked the Englishman, raising his head and
|
|
regarding Mr. Wrenn as a housewife does a cockroach in the
|
|
salad-bowl.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn was bored. This seemed a very poor sort of man; a
|
|
bloated Cockney, with a dirty neck-cloth, vile cuffs of grayish
|
|
black, and a waistcoat cut foolishly high.
|
|
|
|
"The owner said I could sleep here," he snapped.
|
|
|
|
"Ow. 'E did, did 'e? 'E ayn't been giving you any of the
|
|
perishin' 'osses, too, 'as 'e?"
|
|
|
|
It was sturdy old Bill Wrenn who snarled, "Oh, shut up!" Bill
|
|
didn't feel like standing much just then. He'd punch this
|
|
fellow as he'd punched Pete, as soon as not--or even sooner.
|
|
|
|
"Ow.... It's shut up, is it?... I've 'arf a mind to set the
|
|
'tecs on you, but I'm lyte. I'll just 'it you on the bloody nowse."
|
|
|
|
Bill Wrenn stepped off the ladder and squared at him. He was
|
|
sorry that the Cockney was smaller than Pete.
|
|
|
|
The Cockney came over, feinted in an absent-minded manner, made
|
|
swift and confusing circles with his left hand, and hit Bill
|
|
Wrenn on the aforesaid bloody nose, which immediately became a
|
|
bleeding nose. Bill Wrenn felt dizzy and, sitting on a
|
|
grain-sack, listened amazedly to the Cockney's apologetic:
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry I ayn't got time to 'ave the law on you, but I could
|
|
spare time to 'it you again."
|
|
|
|
Bill shook the blood from his nose and staggered at the Cockney,
|
|
who seized his collar, set him down outside the stable with a
|
|
jarring bump, and walked away, whistling:
|
|
|
|
"Come, oh come to our Sunday-school,
|
|
Ev-v-v-v-v-v-ry Sunday morn-ing."
|
|
|
|
"Gee!" mourned Mr. William Wrenn, "and I thought I was getting
|
|
this hobo business down pat.... Gee! I wonder if Pete _was_ so
|
|
hard to lick?"
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI
|
|
HE IS AN ORPHAN
|
|
|
|
Sadly clinging to the plan of the walking - trip he was to have
|
|
made with Morton, Mr. Wrenn crossed by ferry to Birkenhead,
|
|
quite unhappily, for he wanted to be discussing with Morton the
|
|
quaintness of the uniformed functionaries. He looked for the
|
|
_Merian_ half the way over. As he walked through Birkenhead,
|
|
bound for Chester, he pricked himself on to note red-brick
|
|
house-rows, almost shocking in their lack of high front stoops.
|
|
Along the country road he reflected: "Wouldn't Morty enjoy
|
|
this! Farm-yard all paved. Haystack with a little roof on it.
|
|
Kitchen stove stuck in a kind of fireplace. Foreign as the deuce."
|
|
|
|
But Morton was off some place, in a darkness where there weren't
|
|
things to enjoy. Mr. Wrenn had lost him forever. Once he heard
|
|
himself wishing that even Tim, the hatter, or "good old
|
|
McGarver" were along. A scene so British that it seemed proper
|
|
to enjoy it alone he did find in a real garden-party, with what
|
|
appeared to be a real curate, out of a story in _The Strand_,
|
|
passing teacups; but he passed out of that hot glow into a cold
|
|
plodding that led him to Chester and a dull hotel which might as
|
|
well have been in Bridgeport or Hoboken.
|
|
|
|
He somewhat timidly enjoyed Chester the early part of the next
|
|
day, docilely following a guide about the walls, gaping at the
|
|
mill on the Dee and asking the guide two intelligent questions
|
|
about Roman remains. He snooped through the galleried streets,
|
|
peering up dark stairways set in heavy masonry that spoke of
|
|
historic sieges, and imagined that he was historically besieging.
|
|
For a time Mr. Wrenn's fancies contented him.
|
|
|
|
He smiled as he addressed glossy red and green postcards to Lee
|
|
Theresa and Goaty, Cousin John and Mr. Guilfogle, writing on
|
|
each a variation of "Having a splendid trip. This is a very
|
|
interesting old town. Wish you were here." Pantingly, he found
|
|
a panorama showing the hotel where he was staying--or at least
|
|
two of its chimneys--and, marking it with a heavy cross and the
|
|
announcement "This is my hotel where I am staying," he sent it
|
|
to Charley Carpenter.
|
|
|
|
He was at his nearest to greatness at Chester Cathedral.
|
|
He chuckled aloud as he passed the remains of a refectory of
|
|
monastic days, in the close, where knights had tied their
|
|
romantically pawing chargers, "just like he'd read about in a
|
|
story about the olden times." He was really there. He glanced
|
|
about and assured himself of it. He wasn't in the office. He
|
|
was in an English cathedral close!
|
|
|
|
But shortly thereafter he was in an English temperance hotel,
|
|
sitting still, almost weeping with the longing to see Morton.
|
|
He walked abroad, feeling like an intruder on the lively night
|
|
crowd; in a tap-room he drank a glass of English porter and
|
|
tried to make himself believe that he was acquainted with the
|
|
others in the room, to which theory they gave but little
|
|
support. All this while his loneliness shadowed him.
|
|
|
|
Of that loneliness one could make many books; how it sat down
|
|
with him; how he crouched in his chair, be-spelled by it, till
|
|
he violently rose and fled, with loneliness for companion in his
|
|
flight. He was lonely. He sighed that he was "lonely as fits."
|
|
Lonely--the word obsessed him. Doubtless he was a bit mad, as
|
|
are all the isolated men who sit in distant lands longing for
|
|
the voices of friendship.
|
|
|
|
Next morning he hastened to take the train for Oxford to get
|
|
away from his loneliness, which lolled evilly beside him in
|
|
the compartment. He tried to convey to a stodgy North
|
|
Countryman his interest in the way the seats faced each other.
|
|
The man said "Oh aye?" insultingly and returned to his
|
|
Manchester newspaper.
|
|
|
|
Feeling that he was so offensive that it was a matter of honor
|
|
for him to keep his eyes away, Mr. Wrenn dutifully stared out of
|
|
the door till they reached Oxford.
|
|
|
|
There is a calm beauty to New College gardens. There is, Mr.
|
|
Wrenn observed, "something simply _slick_ about all these old
|
|
quatrangleses," crossed by summering students in short flappy
|
|
gowns. But he always returned to his exile's room, where he now
|
|
began to hear the new voice of shapeless nameless Fear--fear of
|
|
all this alien world that didn't care whether he loved it or not.
|
|
|
|
He sat thinking of the cattle-boat as a home which he had loved
|
|
but which he would never see again. He had to use force on
|
|
himself to keep from hurrying back to Liverpool while there
|
|
still was time to return on the same boat.
|
|
|
|
No! He was going to "stick it out somehow, and get onto the
|
|
hang of all this highbrow business."
|
|
|
|
Then he said: "Oh, darn it all. I feel rotten. I wish I was dead!"
|
|
|
|
"Those, sir, are the windows of the apartment once occupied by
|
|
Walter Pater," said the cultured American after whom he was
|
|
trailing. Mr. Wrenn viewed them attentively, and with shame
|
|
remembered that he didn't know who Walter Pater was. But--oh
|
|
yes, now he remembered; Walter was the guy that 'd murdered his
|
|
whole family. So, aloud, "Well, I guess Oxford's sorry Walt
|
|
ever come here, all right."
|
|
|
|
"My dear sir, Mr. Pater was the most immaculate genius of the
|
|
nineteenth century," lectured Dr. Mittyford, the cultured
|
|
American, severely.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn had met Mittyford, Ph.D., near the barges; had, upon
|
|
polite request, still more politely lent him a match, and seized
|
|
the chance to confide in somebody. Mittyford had a bald head,
|
|
neat eye-glasses, a fair family income, a chatty good-fellowship
|
|
at the Faculty Club, and a chilly contemptuousness in his
|
|
rhetoric class-room at Leland Stanford, Jr., University. He
|
|
wrote poetry, which he filed away under the letter " P" in his
|
|
letter-file.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Mittyford grudgingly took Mr. Wrenn about, to teach him what
|
|
not to enjoy. He pointed at Shelley's rooms as at a
|
|
certificated angel's feather, but Mr. Wrenn writhingly admitted
|
|
that he had never heard of Shelley, whose name he confused with
|
|
Max O'Rell's, which Dr. Mittyford deemed an error. Then,
|
|
Pater's window. The doctor shrugged. Oh well, what could you
|
|
expect of the proletariat! Swinging his stick aloofly, he
|
|
stalked to the Bodleian and vouchsafed, "That, sir, is the
|
|
_AEschylus_ Shelley had in his pocket when he was drowned."
|
|
|
|
Though he heard with sincere regret the news that his new idol
|
|
was drowned, Mr. Wrenn found that _AEschylus_ left him cold. It
|
|
seemed to be printed in a foreign language. But perhaps it was
|
|
merely a very old book.
|
|
|
|
Standing before a case in which was an exquisite book in a queer
|
|
wrigglesome language, bearing the legend that from this volume
|
|
Fitzgerald had translated the _Rubaiyat_, Dr. Mittyford waved his
|
|
hand and looked for thanks.
|
|
|
|
"Pretty book," said Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
"And did you note who used it?"
|
|
|
|
"Uh--yes." He hastily glanced at the placard. "Mr. Fitzgerald.
|
|
Say, I think I read some of that Rubaiyat. It was something
|
|
about a Persian kitten--I don't remember exactly."
|
|
|
|
Dr. Mittyford walked bitterly to the other end of the room.
|
|
|
|
About eight in the evening Mr. Wrenn's landlady knocked with,
|
|
"There's a gentleman below to see you, sir."
|
|
|
|
"Me?" blurted Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
He galloped down-stairs, panting to himself that Morton had at
|
|
last found him. He peered out and was overwhelmed by a
|
|
motor-car, with Dr. Mittyford waiting in awesome fur coat,
|
|
goggles, and gauntlets, centered in the car-lamplight that
|
|
loomed in the shivery evening fog.
|
|
|
|
"Gee! just like a hero in a novel!" reflected Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
"Get on your things," said the pedagogue. "I'm going to give
|
|
you the time of your life."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn obediently went up and put on his cap. He was
|
|
excited, yet frightened and resentful at being "dragged into all
|
|
this highbrow business" which he had resolutely been putting
|
|
away the past two hours.
|
|
|
|
As he stole into the car Dr. Mittyford seemed comparatively
|
|
human, remarking: "I feel bored this evening. I thought I would
|
|
give you a _nuit blanche_. How would you like to go to the Red
|
|
Unicorn at Brempton--one of the few untouched old inns?"
|
|
|
|
"That would be nice," said Mr. Wrenn, unenthusiastically.
|
|
|
|
His chilliness impressed Dr. Mittyford, who promptly told one of
|
|
the best of his well - known whimsical yet scholarly stories.
|
|
|
|
"Ha! ha!" remarked Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
He had been saying to himself: "By golly! I ain't going to even
|
|
try to be a society guy with him no more. I'm just going to be
|
|
_me_, and if he don't like it he can go to the dickens."
|
|
|
|
So he was gentle and sympathetic and talked West Sixteenth
|
|
Street slang, to the rhetorician's lofty amusement.
|
|
|
|
The tap-room of the Red Unicorn was lighted by candles and
|
|
a fireplace. That is a simple thing to say, but it was not a
|
|
simple thing for Mr. Wrenn to see. As he observed the trembling
|
|
shadows on the sanded floor he wriggled and excitedly murmured,
|
|
"Gee!... Gee whittakers!"
|
|
|
|
The shadows slipped in arabesques over the dust-gray floor and
|
|
scampered as bravely among the rafters as though they were in
|
|
such a tale as men told in believing days. Rustics in smocks
|
|
drank ale from tankards; and in a corner was snoring an
|
|
ear-ringed peddler with his beetle-black head propped on an
|
|
oilcloth pack.
|
|
|
|
Stamping in, chilly from the ride, Mr. Wrenn laughed aloud.
|
|
With a comfortable feeling on the side toward the fire he stuck
|
|
his slight legs straight out before the old-time settle, looked
|
|
devil-may-care, made delightful ridges on the sanded floor with
|
|
his toe, and clapped a pewter pot on his knee with a small
|
|
emphatic "Wop!" After about two and a quarter tankards he broke
|
|
out, "Say, that peddler guy there, don't he look like he was a
|
|
gipsy--you know--sneaking through the hedges around the
|
|
manner-house to steal the earl's daughter, huh?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes.... You're a romanticist, then, I take it?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I guess I am. Kind of. Like to read romances and stuff."
|
|
He stared at Mittyford beseechingly. "But, say--say, I wonder
|
|
why---- Somehow, I haven't enjoyed Oxford and the rest of the places
|
|
like I ought to.
|
|
|
|
See, I'd always thought I'd be simply nutty about the quatrangles
|
|
and stuff, but I'm afraid they're too highbrow for me. I hate
|
|
to own up, but sometimes I wonder if I can get away with this
|
|
traveling stunt."
|
|
|
|
Mittyford, the magnificent, had mixed ale and whisky punch.
|
|
He was mellowly instructive:
|
|
|
|
"Do you know, I've been wondering just what you _would_ get out
|
|
of all this. You really have a very fine imagination of a sort,
|
|
you know, but of course you're lacking in certain factual bases.
|
|
As I see it, your _metier_ would be to travel with a pleasant
|
|
wife, the two of you hand in hand, so to speak, looking at the
|
|
more obvious public buildings and plesaunces--avenues and
|
|
plesuances. There must be a certain portion of the tripper
|
|
class which really has the ability `for to admire and for to see.'"
|
|
|
|
Dr. Mittyford finished his second toddy and with a wave of his
|
|
hand presented to Mr. Wrenn the world and all the plesaunces
|
|
thereof, for to see, though not, of course, to admire Mittyfordianly.
|
|
|
|
"But--what are you to do now about Oxford? Well, I'm afraid
|
|
you're taken into captivity a bit late to be trained for that
|
|
sort of thing. Do about Oxford? Why, go back, master the world
|
|
you understand. By the way, have you seen my book on _Saxon
|
|
Derivatives?_ Not that I'm prejudiced in its favor, but it might
|
|
give you a glimmering of what this difficile thing `culture'
|
|
really is."
|
|
|
|
The rustics were droning a church anthem. The glow of the ale
|
|
was in Mr. Wrenn. He leaned back, entirely happy, and it seemed
|
|
confusedly to him that what little he had heard of his learned
|
|
and affectionate friend's advice gratefully confirmed his own
|
|
theory that what one wanted was friends--a "nice wife"--folks.
|
|
"Yes, sir, by golly! It was awfully nice of the Doc." He
|
|
pictured a tender girl in golden brown back in the New York he
|
|
so much desired to see who would await him evenings with a smile
|
|
that was kept for him. Homey--that was what _he_ was going to be!
|
|
He happily and thoughtfully ran his finger about the rim of his
|
|
glass ten times.
|
|
|
|
"Time to go, I' m afraid," Dr. Mittyford was saying. Through
|
|
the exquisite haze that now filled the room Mr. Wrenn saw him
|
|
dimly, as a triangle of shirt-front and two gleaming ellipses
|
|
for eyes.... His dear friend, the Doc!... As he walked through
|
|
the room chairs got humorously in his way, but he good-naturedly
|
|
picked a path among them, and fell asleep in the motor-car. All
|
|
the ride back he made soft mouse-like sounds of snoring.
|
|
|
|
When he awoke in the morning with a headache and surveyed his
|
|
unchangeably dingy room he realized slowly, after smothering his
|
|
head in the pillow to shut off the light from his scorching
|
|
eyeballs, that Dr. Mittyford had called him a fool for trying to
|
|
wander. He protested, but not for long, for he hated to venture
|
|
out there among the dreadfully learned colleges and try to
|
|
understand stuff written in letters that look like crow-tracks.
|
|
|
|
He packed his suit-case slowly, feeling that he was very wicked
|
|
in leaving Oxford's opportunities.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn rode down on a Tottenham Court Road bus, viewing the
|
|
quaintness of London. Life was a rosy ringing valiant pursuit,
|
|
for he was about to ship on a Mediterranean steamer laden
|
|
chiefly with adventurous friends. The bus passed a victoria
|
|
containing a man with a real monocle. A newsboy smiled up at him.
|
|
The Strand roared with lively traffic.
|
|
|
|
But the gray stonework and curtained windows of the
|
|
Anglo-Southern Steamship Company's office did not invite any Mr.
|
|
Wrenns to come in and ship, nor did the hall porter, a beefy
|
|
person with a huge collar and sparse painfully sleek hair, whose
|
|
eyes were like cold boiled mackerel as Mr. Wrenn yearned:
|
|
|
|
"Please--uh--please will you be so kind and tell me where I can
|
|
ship as a steward for the Med----"
|
|
|
|
"None needed."
|
|
|
|
"Or Spain? I just want to get any kind of a job at first.
|
|
Peeling potatoes or---- It don't make any difference----"
|
|
|
|
"None needed, I said, my man." The porter examined the hall
|
|
clock extensively.
|
|
|
|
Bill Wrenn suddenly popped into being and demanded: "Look here,
|
|
you; I want to see somebody in authority. I want to know what
|
|
I _can_ ship as."
|
|
|
|
The porter turned round and started. All his faith in mankind
|
|
was destroyed by the shock of finding the fellow still there.
|
|
"Nothing, I told you. No one needed."
|
|
|
|
"Look here; can I see somebody in authority or not?"
|
|
|
|
The porter was privately esteemed a wit at his motherin-law's.
|
|
Waddling away, he answered, "Or not."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn drooped out of the corridor. He had planned to see the
|
|
Tate Gallery, but now he hadn't the courage to face the
|
|
difficulties of enjoying pictures. He zig-zagged home, mourning:
|
|
"What's the use. And I'll be hung if I'll try any other
|
|
offices, either. The icy mitt, that's what they hand you here.
|
|
Some day I'll go down to the docks and try to ship there.
|
|
Prob'ly. Gee! I feel rotten!"
|
|
|
|
Out of all this fog of unfriendliness appeared the waitress at
|
|
the St. Brasten Cocoa House; first, as a human being to whom he
|
|
could talk, second, as a woman. She was ignorant and vulgar;
|
|
she misused English cruelly; she wore greasy cotton garments,
|
|
planted her large feet on the floor with firm clumsiness, and
|
|
always laughed at the wrong cue in his diffident jests. But she
|
|
did laugh; she did listen while he stammered his ideas of
|
|
meat-pies and St. Paul's and aeroplanes and Shelley and fog and
|
|
tan shoes. In fact, she supposed him to be a gentleman and
|
|
scholar, not an American.
|
|
|
|
He went to the cocoa-house daily.
|
|
|
|
She let him know that he was a man and she a woman, young and
|
|
kindly, clear-skinned and joyous-eyed. She touched him with
|
|
warm elbow and plump hip, leaning against his chair as he gave
|
|
his order. To that he looked forward from meal to meal, though he
|
|
never ceased harrowing over what he considered a shameful intrigue.
|
|
|
|
That opinion of his actions did not keep him from tingling one
|
|
lunch-time when he suddenly understood that she was expecting to
|
|
be tempted. He tempted her without the slightest delay,
|
|
muttering, "Let's take a walk this evening?"
|
|
|
|
She accepted. He was shivery and short of breath while he was
|
|
trying to smile at her during the rest of the meal, and so he
|
|
remained all afternoon at the Tower of London, though he very
|
|
well knew that all this history--"kings and gwillotines and
|
|
stuff"--demanded real Wrenn thrills.
|
|
|
|
They were to meet on a street-corner at eight. At seven-thirty
|
|
he was waiting for her. At eight-thirty he indignantly walked
|
|
away, but he hastily returned, and stood there another
|
|
half-hour. She did not come.
|
|
|
|
When he finally fled home he was glad to have escaped the great
|
|
mystery of life, then distressingly angry at the waitress, and
|
|
desolate in the desert stillness of his room.
|
|
|
|
He sat in his cold hygienic uncomfortable room on Tavistock
|
|
Place trying to keep his attention on the "tick, tick, tick,
|
|
tick" of his two-dollar watch, but really cowering before the
|
|
vast shadowy presences that slunk in from the hostile city.
|
|
|
|
He didn't in the least know what he was afraid of. The actual
|
|
Englishman whom he passed on the streets did not seem to
|
|
threaten his life, yet his friendly watch and familiar suit-case
|
|
seemed the only things he could trust in all the menacing world
|
|
as he sat there, so vividly conscious of his fear and loneliness
|
|
that he dared not move his cramped legs.
|
|
|
|
The tension could not last. For a time he was able to laugh at
|
|
himself, and he made pleasant pictures--Charley Carpenter
|
|
telling him a story at Drubel's; Morton companionably smoking on
|
|
the top deck; Lee Theresa flattering him during an evening walk.
|
|
Most of all he pictured the brown-eyed sweetheart he was going
|
|
to meet somewhere, sometime. He thought with sophomoric shame
|
|
of his futile affair with the waitress, then forgot her as he
|
|
seemed almost to touch the comforting hand of the brown-eyed girl.
|
|
|
|
"Friends, that's what I want. You bet!" That was the work
|
|
he was going to do--make acquaintances. A girl who would
|
|
understand him, with whom he could trot about, seeing
|
|
department-store windows and moving-picture shows.
|
|
|
|
It was then, probably, hunched up in the dowdy chair of faded
|
|
upholstery, that he created the two phrases which became his
|
|
formula for happiness. He desired "somebody to go home to evenings";
|
|
still more, "some one to work with and work for."
|
|
|
|
It seemed to him that he had mapped out his whole life. He sat
|
|
back, satisfied, and caught the sound of emptiness in his room,
|
|
emphasized by the stilly tick of his watch.
|
|
|
|
"Oh--Morton----" he cried.
|
|
|
|
He leaped up and raised the window. It was raining, but through
|
|
the slow splash came the night rattle of hostile London. Staring
|
|
down, he studied the desolate circle of light a street-lamp cast
|
|
on the wet pavement. A cat gray as dish-water, its fur worn off
|
|
in spots, lean and horrible, sneaked through the circle of light
|
|
like the spirit of unhappiness, like London's sneer at solitary
|
|
Americans in Russell Square rooms.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn gulped. Through the light skipped a man and a girl,
|
|
so little aware of him that they stopped, laughingly, wrestling
|
|
for an umbrella, then disappeared, and the street was like a
|
|
forgotten tomb. A hansom swung by, the hoofbeats sharp and
|
|
cheerless. The rain dripped. Nothing else. Mr. Wrenn slammed
|
|
down the window.
|
|
|
|
He smoothed the sides of his suit-case and reckoned the number
|
|
of miles it had traveled with him. He spun his watch about on
|
|
the table, and listened to its rapid mocking speech, "Friends,
|
|
friends; friends, friends."
|
|
|
|
Sobbing, he began to undress, laying down each garment as though
|
|
he were going to the scaffold. When the room was dark the great
|
|
shadowy forms of fear thronged unchecked about his narrow dingy bed.
|
|
|
|
Once during the night he woke. Some sound was threatening him.
|
|
It was London, coming to get him and torture him. The light in
|
|
his room was dusty, mottled, gray, lifeless. He saw his door,
|
|
half ajar, and for some moments lay motionless, watching stark
|
|
and bodiless heads thrust themselves through the opening and
|
|
withdraw with sinister alertness till he sprang up and opened
|
|
the door wide.
|
|
|
|
But he did not even stop to glance down the hall for the crowd
|
|
of phantoms that had gathered there. Some hidden manful scorn
|
|
of weakness made him sneer aloud, "Don't be a baby even if you
|
|
_are_ lonely."
|
|
|
|
His voice was deeper than usual, and he went to bed to sleep,
|
|
throwing himself down with a coarse wholesome scorn of his
|
|
nervousness.
|
|
|
|
He awoke after dawn, and for a moment curled in happy wriggles
|
|
of satisfaction over a good sleep. Then he remembered that he
|
|
was in the cold and friendless prison of England, and lay there
|
|
panting with desire to get away, to get back to America, where
|
|
he would be safe.
|
|
|
|
He wanted to leap out of bed, dash for the Liverpool train, and
|
|
take passage for America on the first boat. But perhaps the
|
|
officials in charge of the emigrants and the steerage (and of
|
|
course a fellow would go steerage to save money) would want to
|
|
know his religion and the color of his hair--as bad as trying to
|
|
ship. They might hold him up for a couple of days. There were
|
|
quarantines and customs and things, of which he had heard.
|
|
Perhaps for two or even three days more he would have to stay in
|
|
this nauseating prison-land.
|
|
|
|
This was the morning of August 3, 1910, two weeks after his
|
|
arrival in London, and twenty-two days after victoriously
|
|
reaching England, the land of romance.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII
|
|
HE MEETS A TEMPERAMENT
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn was sulkily breakfasting at Mrs. Cattermole's Tea
|
|
House, which Mrs. Cattermole kept in a genteel fashion in a
|
|
basement three doors from his rooming-house on Tavistock Place.
|
|
After his night of fear and tragic portents he resented the
|
|
general flowered-paper-napkin aspect of Mrs. Cattermole's
|
|
establishment. "Hungh!" he grunted, as he jabbed at the fringed
|
|
doily under the silly pink-and-white tea-cup on the
|
|
green-and-white lacquered tray brought him by a fat waitress in
|
|
a frilly apron which must have been made for a Christmas
|
|
pantomime fairy who was not fat. "Hurump!" he snorted at the
|
|
pictures of lambs and radishes and cathedrals and little duckies
|
|
on Mrs. Cattermole's pink-and-white wall.
|
|
|
|
He wished it were possible--which, of course, it was not--to go
|
|
back to the St. Brasten Cocoa House, where he could talk to the
|
|
honest flat-footed galumping waitress, and cross his feet under
|
|
his chair. For here he was daintily, yes, daintily, studied by
|
|
the tea-room habitues--two bouncing and talkative daughters of an
|
|
American tourist, a slender pale-haired English girl student of
|
|
Assyriology with large top-barred eye-glasses over her
|
|
protesting eyes, and a sprinkling of people living along
|
|
Tavistock Place, who looked as though they wanted to know if
|
|
your opinions on the National Gallery and abstinence were sound.
|
|
|
|
His disapproval of the lambiness of Mrs. Cattermole's was turned
|
|
to a feeling of comradeship with the other patrons as he turned,
|
|
with the rest, to stare hostilely at a girl just entering. The
|
|
talk in the room halted, startled.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn gasped. With his head solemnly revolving, his eyes
|
|
followed the young woman about his table to a table opposite.
|
|
"A freak! Gee, what red hair!" was his private comment.
|
|
|
|
A slender girl of twenty-eight or twenty-nine, clad in a
|
|
one-piece gown of sage-green, its lines unbroken by either belt
|
|
or collar-brooch, fitting her as though it had been pasted on,
|
|
and showing the long beautiful sweep of her fragile thighs and
|
|
long-curving breast. Her collar, of the material of the dress,
|
|
was so high that it touched her delicate jaw, and it was set off
|
|
only by a fine silver chain, with a La Valliere of silver and
|
|
carved Burmese jade. Her red hair, red as a poinsettia, parted
|
|
and drawn severely back, made a sweep about the fair dead-white
|
|
skin of her bored sensitive face. Bored blue-gray eyes, with
|
|
pathetic crescents of faintly violet-hued wrinkles beneath them,
|
|
and a scarce noticeable web of tinier wrinkles at the side.
|
|
Thin long cheeks, a delicate nose, and a straight strong mouth
|
|
of thin but startlingly red lips.
|
|
|
|
Such was the new patron of Mrs. Cattermole.
|
|
|
|
She stared about the tea-room like an officer inspecting raw
|
|
recruits, sniffed at the stare of the thin girl student, ordered
|
|
breakfast in a low voice, then languidly considered her toast
|
|
and marmalade. Once she glanced about the room. Her heavy
|
|
brows were drawn close for a second, making a deep-cleft wrinkle
|
|
of ennui over her nose, and two little indentations, like the
|
|
impressions of a box corner, in her forehead over her brows.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn's gaze ran down the line of her bosom again, and he
|
|
wondered at her hands, which touched the heavy bread-and-butter
|
|
knife as though it were a fine-point pen. Long hands, colored
|
|
like ivory; the joint wrinkles etched into her skin; orange
|
|
cigarette stains on the second finger; the nails----
|
|
|
|
He stared at them. To himself he commented, "Gee! I never did
|
|
see such freak finger-nails in my life." Instead of such
|
|
smoothly rounded nails as Theresa Zapp displayed, the new young
|
|
lady had nails narrow and sharp-pointed, the ends like little
|
|
triangles of stiff white writing-paper.
|
|
|
|
As she breakfasted she scanned Mr. Wrenn for a second. He was
|
|
too obviously caught staring to be able to drop his eyes. She
|
|
studied him all out, with almost as much interest as a policeman
|
|
gives to a passing trolley-car, yawned delicately, and forgot him.
|
|
|
|
Though you should penetrate Greenland or talk anarchism to the
|
|
daughter of a millionaire grocer, never shall you feel a more
|
|
devouring chill than enveloped Mr. Wrenn as the new young lady
|
|
glanced away from him, paid her check, rose slithily from her
|
|
table, and departed. She rounded his table; not stalking out of
|
|
its way, as Theresa would have done, but bending from the hips.
|
|
Thus was it revealed to Mr. Wrenn that----
|
|
|
|
He was almost too horrified to put it into words.... He had
|
|
noticed that there was something kind of funny in regard to her
|
|
waist; he had had an impression of remarkably smooth waist
|
|
curves and an unjagged sweep of back. Now he saw that---- It
|
|
was unheard of; not at all like Lee Theresa Zapp or ladies in
|
|
the Subway. For--the freak girl wasn't wearing corsets!
|
|
|
|
When she had passed him he again studied her back, swiftly and
|
|
covertly. No, sir. No question about it. It couldn't be
|
|
denied by any one now that the girl was a freak, for, charitable
|
|
though Our Mr. Wrenn was, he had to admit that there was no sign
|
|
of the midback ridge and little rounded knobbinesses of corseted
|
|
respectability. And he had a closer view of the texture of her
|
|
sage-green crash gown.
|
|
|
|
"Golly!" he said to himself; "of all the doggone cloth for a
|
|
dress! Reg'lar gunny - sacking. She's skinny, too. Bright-red
|
|
hair. She sure is the prize freak. Kind of good-looking,
|
|
but--get a brick!"
|
|
|
|
He hated to rule so clever-seeming a woman quite out of court.
|
|
But he remembered her scissors glance at him, and his soft
|
|
little heart became very hard.
|
|
|
|
How brittle are our steel resolves! When Mr. Wrenn walked out of
|
|
Mrs. Cattermole's excellent establishment and heavily inspected
|
|
the quiet Bloomsbury Street, with a cat's-meat-man stolidly
|
|
clopping along the pavement, as loneliness rushed on him and he
|
|
wondered what in the world he could do, he mused, "Gee! I bet
|
|
that red-headed lady would be interestin' to know."
|
|
|
|
A day of furtive darts out from his room to do London, which
|
|
glumly declined to be done. He went back to the Zoological
|
|
Gardens and made friends with a tiger which, though it
|
|
presumably came from an English colony, was the friendliest
|
|
thing he had seen for a week. It did yawn, but it let him talk
|
|
to it for a long while. He stood before the bars, peering in,
|
|
and whenever no one else was about he murmured: "Poor fella,
|
|
they won't let you go, heh? You got a worse boss 'n Goglefogle,
|
|
heh? Poor old fella."
|
|
|
|
He didn't at all mind the disorder and rancid smell of the cage;
|
|
he had no fear of the tiger's sleek murderous power. But he was
|
|
somewhat afraid of the sound of his own tremorous voice. He had
|
|
spoken aloud so little lately.
|
|
|
|
A man came, an Englishman in a high offensively well-fitting
|
|
waistcoat, and stood before the cage. Mr. Wrenn slunk away,
|
|
robbed of his new friend, the tiger, the forlornest person in all
|
|
London, kicking at pebbles in the path.
|
|
|
|
As half-dusk made the quiet street even more detached, he sat on
|
|
the steps of his rooming-house on Tavistock Place, keeping
|
|
himself from the one definite thing he wanted to do--the thing
|
|
he keenly imagined a happy Mr. Wrenn doing--dashing over to the
|
|
Euston Station to find out how soon and where he could get a
|
|
train for Liverpool and a boat for America.
|
|
|
|
A girl was approaching the house. He viewed her carelessly,
|
|
then intently. It was the freak lady of Mrs. Cattermole's Tea
|
|
House--the corsetless young woman of the tight-fitting crash gown
|
|
and flame-colored hair. She was coming up the steps of his house.
|
|
|
|
He made room for her with feverish courtesy. She lived in the
|
|
same house---- He instantly, without a bit of encouragement from
|
|
the uninterested way in which she snipped the door to, made up
|
|
a whole novel about her. Gee! She was a French countess, who
|
|
lived in a reg'lar chateau, and she was staying in Bloomsbury
|
|
incognito, seeing the sights. She was a noble. She was----
|
|
|
|
Above him a window opened. He glanced up. The countess incog.
|
|
was leaning out, scanning the street uncaringly. Why--her
|
|
windows were next to his! He was living next room to an unusual
|
|
person--as unusual as Dr. Mittyford.
|
|
|
|
He hurried up-stairs with a fervid but vague plan to meet her.
|
|
Maybe she really was a French countess or somepun'. All evening,
|
|
sitting by the window, he was comforted as he heard her move
|
|
about her room. He had a friend. He had started that great
|
|
work of making friends--well, not started, but started
|
|
starting--then he got confused, but the idea was a flame to warm
|
|
the fog-chilled spaces of the London street.
|
|
|
|
At his Cattermole breakfast he waited long. She did not come.
|
|
Another day--but why paint another day that was but a smear of
|
|
flat dull slate? Yet another breakfast, and the lady of mystery
|
|
came. Before he knew he was doing it he had bowed to her, a
|
|
slight uneasy bend of his neck. She peered at him, unseeing,
|
|
and sat down with her back to him.
|
|
|
|
He got much good healthy human vindictive satisfaction in
|
|
evicting her violently from the French chateau he had given her,
|
|
and remembering that, of course, she was just a "fool freak
|
|
Englishwoman--prob'ly a bloomin' stoodent" he scorned, and so
|
|
settled _her!_ Also he told her, by telepathy, that her new
|
|
gown was freakier than ever--a pale-green thing, with large
|
|
white buttons.
|
|
|
|
As he was coming in that evening he passed her in the hall. She
|
|
was clad in what he called a bathrobe, and what she called an
|
|
Arabian _burnoose_, of black embroidered with dull - gold
|
|
crescents and stars, showing a V of exquisite flesh at her
|
|
throat. A shred of tenuous lace straggled loose at the opening
|
|
of the _burnoose_. Her radiant hair, tangled over her forehead,
|
|
shone with a thousand various gleams from the gas-light over her
|
|
head as she moved back against the wall and stood waiting for
|
|
him to pass. She smiled very doubtfully, distantly--the smile,
|
|
he felt, of a great lady from Mayfair. He bobbed his head,
|
|
lowered his eyes abashedly, and noticed that along the shelf of
|
|
her forearm, held against her waist, she bore many silver toilet
|
|
articles, and such a huge heavy fringed Turkish bath-towel as he
|
|
had never seen before.
|
|
|
|
He lay awake to picture her brilliant throat and shining hair.
|
|
He rebuked himself for the lack of dignity in "thinking of that
|
|
freak, when she wouldn't even return a fellow's bow." But her
|
|
shimmering hair was the star of his dreams.
|
|
|
|
Napping in his room in the afternoon, Mr. Wrenn heard slight
|
|
active sounds from her, next room. He hurried down to the stoop.
|
|
|
|
She stood behind him on the door-step, glaring up and down the
|
|
street, as bored and as ready to spring as the Zoo tiger. Mr.
|
|
Wrenn heard himself saying to the girl, "Please, miss, do you
|
|
mind telling me--I'm an American; I'm a stranger in London--I
|
|
want to go to a good play or something and what would I--what
|
|
would be good----"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know, reahlly," she said, with much hauteur.
|
|
"Everything's rather rotten this season, I fancy." Her voice
|
|
ran fluting up and down the scale. Her a's were very broad.
|
|
|
|
"Oh--oh--y-you _are_ English, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes!"
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh----"
|
|
|
|
"_Yes!_"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I just had a fool idea maybe you might be French."
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps I am, y' know. I'm not reahlly English," she said, blandly.
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh----"
|
|
|
|
"What made you think I was French? Tell me; I'm interested."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I guess I was just--well, it was almost make-b'lieve--how
|
|
you had a castle in France--just a kind of a fool game."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, _don't_ be ashamed of imagination," she demanded, stamping
|
|
her foot, while her voice fluttered, low and beautifully
|
|
controlled, through half a dozen notes. "Tell me the rest of
|
|
your story about me."
|
|
|
|
She was sitting on the rail above him now. As he spoke she
|
|
cupped her chin with the palm of her delicate hand and observed
|
|
him curiously.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, nothing much more. You were a countess----"
|
|
|
|
"Please! Not just `were.' Please, sir, mayn't I be a countess now?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, of course you are!" he cried, delight submerging
|
|
timidity. "And your father was sick with somepun' mysterious,
|
|
and all the docs shook their heads and said `Gee! we dunno what
|
|
it is,' and so you sneaked down to the treasure-chamber--you
|
|
see, your dad--your father, I should say--he was a cranky old
|
|
Frenchman--just in the story, you know. He didn't think you
|
|
could do anything yourself about him being mysteriously sick.
|
|
So one night you----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, was it dark? Very _very_ dark? And silent? And my
|
|
footsteps rang on the hollow flagstones? And I swiped the gold
|
|
and went forth into the night?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, _yes!_ That's it."
|
|
|
|
"But why did I swipe it?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm just coming to that," he said, sternly.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, please, sir, I'm awful sorry I interrupted."
|
|
|
|
"It was like this: You wanted to come over here and study
|
|
medicine so's you could cure your father."
|
|
|
|
"But please, sir," said the girl, with immense gravity, "mayn't
|
|
I let him die, and not find out what's ailing him, so I can
|
|
marry the _maire?_"
|
|
|
|
"Nope," firmly, "you got to---- Say, _gee!_ I didn't expect to
|
|
tell you all this make-b'lieve.... I'm afraid you'll think
|
|
it's awful fresh of me."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I loved it--really I did--because you liked to make it up
|
|
about poor Istra. (My name is Istra Nash.) I'm sorry to say I'm
|
|
not reahlly"--her two "reallys" were quite different--"a countess,
|
|
you know. Tell me--you live in this same house, don't you?
|
|
Please tell me that you're not an interesting Person. Please!"
|
|
|
|
"I--gee! I guess I don't quite get you."
|
|
|
|
"Why, stupid, an Interesting Person is a writer or an artist or
|
|
an editor or a girl who's been in Holloway Jail or Canongate for
|
|
suffraging, or any one else who depends on an accident to be
|
|
tolerable."
|
|
|
|
"No, I'm afraid not; I'm just a kind of clerk."
|
|
|
|
"Good! Good! My dear sir--whom I've never seen before--have I?
|
|
By the way, please don't think I usually pick up stray gentlemen
|
|
and talk to them about my pure white soul. But you, you know,
|
|
made stories about me.... I was saying: If you could only know
|
|
how I loathe and hate and despise Interesting People just now!
|
|
I've seen so much of them. They talk and talk and talk--they're
|
|
just like Kipling's bandar-log--What is it?
|
|
|
|
"See us rise in a flung festoon
|
|
Half-way up to the jealous moon.
|
|
Don't you wish you--
|
|
|
|
could know all about art and economics as we do?' That's what
|
|
they say. Umph!"
|
|
|
|
Then she wriggled her fingers in the air like white butterflies,
|
|
shrugged her shoulders elaborately, rose from the rail, and sat
|
|
down beside him on the steps, quite matter-of-factly.
|
|
|
|
He gould feel his temple-pulses beat with excitement.
|
|
|
|
She turned her pale sensitive vivid face slowly toward him.
|
|
|
|
"When did you see me--to make up the story?"
|
|
|
|
"Breakfasts. At Mrs. Cattermole's."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes.... How is it you aren't out sight-seeing? Or is it
|
|
blessedly possible that you aren't a tripper -- a tourist?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, I dunno." He hunted uneasily for the right answer.
|
|
"Not exactly. I tried a stunt--coming over on a cattle-boat."
|
|
|
|
"That's good. Much better."
|
|
|
|
She sat silent while, with enormous and self-betraying pains to
|
|
avoid detection, he studied her firm thin brilliantly red lips.
|
|
At last he tried:
|
|
|
|
"Please tell me something about London. Some of you English----
|
|
Oh, I dunno. I can't get acquainted easily."
|
|
|
|
"My dear child, I'm not English! I'm quite as American as
|
|
yourself. I was born in California. I never saw England till two
|
|
years ago, on my way to Paris.
|
|
|
|
I'm an art student.... That's why my accent is so perishin'
|
|
English--I can't afford to be just _ordinary_ British, y' know."
|
|
|
|
Her laugh had an October tang of bitterness in it.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'll--say, what do you know about that!" he said, weakly.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me about yourself--since apparently we're now
|
|
acquainted.... Unless you want to go to that music-hall?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh no, no, no! Gee, I was just _crazy_ to have somebody to talk
|
|
to--somebody nice--I was just about nutty, I was so lonely," all
|
|
in a burst. He finished, hesitatingly, "I guess the English are
|
|
kinda hard to get acquainted with."
|
|
|
|
"Lonely, eh?" she mused, abrupt and bluffly kind as a man, for
|
|
all her modulating woman's voice. "You don't know any of the
|
|
people here in the house?"
|
|
|
|
"No'm. Say, I guess we got rooms next to each other."
|
|
|
|
"How romantic!" she mocked.
|
|
|
|
"Wrenn's my name; William Wrenn. I work for--I used to work for
|
|
the Souvenir and Art Novelty Company. In New York."
|
|
|
|
"Oh. I see. Novelties? Nice little ash-trays with `Love from
|
|
the Erie Station'? And woggly pin-cushions?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes! And fat pug-dogs with black eyes."
|
|
|
|
"Oh no-o-o! Please not black! Pale sympathetic blue eyes--nice
|
|
honest blue eyes!"
|
|
|
|
"Nope. Black. Awful black.... Say, gee, I ain't talking too
|
|
nutty, am I?"
|
|
|
|
"`Nutty'? You mean `idiotically'? The slang's changed
|
|
since---- Oh yes, of course; you've succeeded in talking quite
|
|
nice and `idiotic.'"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, say, gee, I didn't mean to---- When you been so nice and
|
|
all to me----"
|
|
|
|
"Don't apologize!" Istra Nash demanded, savagely. "Haven't they
|
|
taught you that?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes'm," he mumbled, apologetically.
|
|
|
|
She sat silent again, apparently not at all satisfied with the
|
|
architecture of the opposite side of Tavistock Place.
|
|
Diffidently he edged into speech:
|
|
|
|
"Honest, I did think you was English. You came from California?
|
|
Oh, say, I wonder if you've ever heard of Dr. Mittyford. He's
|
|
some kind of school-teacher. I think he teaches in Leland
|
|
Stamford College."
|
|
|
|
"Leland Stanford? You know him?" She dropped into interested
|
|
familiarity.
|
|
|
|
"I met him at Oxford."
|
|
|
|
"Really?... My brother was at Stanford. I think I've heard him
|
|
speak of---- Oh yes. He said that Mittyford was a cultural
|
|
climber, if you know what I mean; rather--oh, how shall I
|
|
express it?--oh, shall we put it, finicky about things people
|
|
have just told him to be finicky about."
|
|
|
|
"Yes!" glowed Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
To the luxury of feeling that he knew the unusual Miss Istra
|
|
Nash he sacrificed Dr. Mittyford, scholarship and eye-glasses
|
|
and Shelley and all, without mercy.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, he was awfully funny. Gee! I didn't care much for him."
|
|
|
|
"Of course you know he's a great man, however?" Istra was as
|
|
bland as though she had meant that all along, which left Mr.
|
|
Wrenn nowhere at all when it came to deciding what she meant.
|
|
|
|
Without warning she rose from the steps, flung at him "G' night,"
|
|
and was off down the street.
|
|
|
|
Sitting alone, all excited happiness, Mr. Wrenn muttered: "Ain't
|
|
she a wonder! Gee! she's striking-lookin'! Gee whittakers!"
|
|
|
|
Some hours later he said aloud, tossing about in bed: "I wonder
|
|
if I was too fresh. I hope I wasn't. I ought to be careful."
|
|
|
|
He was so worried about it that he got up and smoked a
|
|
cigarette, remembered that he was breaking still another rule by
|
|
smoking too much, then got angry and snapped defiantly at his
|
|
suit-case: "Well, what do I care if I _am_ smoking too much?
|
|
And I'll be as fresh as I want to." He threw a newspaper at the
|
|
censorious suit-case and, much relieved, went to bed to dream
|
|
that he was a rabbit making enormously amusing jests, at which
|
|
he laughed rollickingly in half-dream, till he realized that he
|
|
was being awakened by the sound of long sobs from the room of
|
|
Istra Nash.
|
|
|
|
Afternoon; Mr. Wrenn in his room. Miss Nash was back from tea,
|
|
but there was not a sound to be heard from her room, though he
|
|
listened with mouth open, bent forward in his chair, his hands
|
|
clutching the wooden seat, his finger-tips rubbing nervously
|
|
back and forth over the rough under-surface of the wood.
|
|
He wanted to help her--the wonderful lady who had been sobbing
|
|
in the night. He had a plan, in which he really believed,
|
|
to say to her, "Please let me help you, princess, jus' like I
|
|
was a knight."
|
|
|
|
At last he heard her moving about. He rushed downstairs and
|
|
waited on the stoop.
|
|
|
|
When she came out she glanced down and smiled contentedly.
|
|
He was flutteringly sure that she expected to see him there.
|
|
But all his plan of proffering assistance vanished as he saw
|
|
her impatient eyes and her splendors of dress -- another tight -
|
|
fitting gown, of smoky gray, with faint silvery lights gliding
|
|
along the fabric.
|
|
|
|
She sat on the rail above him, immediately, unhesitatingly, and
|
|
answered his "Evenin'" cheerfully.
|
|
|
|
He wanted so much to sit beside her, to be friends with her.
|
|
But, he felt, it took courage to sit beside her. She was likely
|
|
to stare haughtily at him. However, he did go up to the rail
|
|
and sit, shyly kicking his feet, beside her, and she did not
|
|
stare haughtily. Instead she moved over an inch or two, glanced
|
|
at him almost as though they were sharing a secret, and said, quietly:
|
|
|
|
"I thought quite a bit about you last evening. I believe you
|
|
really have an imagination, even though you are a salesman--I
|
|
mean so many don't; you know how it is."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes."
|
|
|
|
You see, Mr. Wrenn didn't know he was commonplace.
|
|
|
|
"After I left here last night I went over to Olympia Johns', and
|
|
she dragged me off to a play. I thought of you at it because
|
|
there was an imaginative butler in it. You don't mind my
|
|
comparing you to a butler, do you? He was really quite the
|
|
nicest person in the play, y' know. Most of it was gorgeously
|
|
rotten. It used to be a French farce, but they sent it to
|
|
Sunday-school and gave it a nice fresh frock. It seemed that a
|
|
gentleman-tabby had been trying to make a match between his
|
|
nephew and his ward. The ward arted. Personally I think it
|
|
was by tonsorial art. But, anyway, the uncle knew that nothing
|
|
brings people together so well as hating the same person. You know,
|
|
like hating the cousin, when you're a kiddy, hating the cousin
|
|
that always keeps her nails clean?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes! That's _so!_"
|
|
|
|
"So he turned nasty, and of course the nephew and ward clinched
|
|
till death did them part--which, I'm very sorry to have to tell
|
|
you, death wasn't decent enough to do on the stage. If the play
|
|
could only have ended with everybody's funeral I should have
|
|
called it a real happy ending."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn laughed gratefully, though uncertainly. He knew that she
|
|
had made jokes for him, but he didn't exactly know what they were.
|
|
|
|
"The imaginative butler, he was rather good. But the rest---- Ugh!"
|
|
|
|
"That must have been a funny play," he said, politely.
|
|
|
|
She looked at him sidewise and confided, "Will you do me a favor?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, I----"
|
|
|
|
"Ever been married?"
|
|
|
|
He was frightfully startled. His "No" sounded as though he
|
|
couldn't quite remember.
|
|
|
|
She seemed much amused. You wouldn't have believed that this
|
|
superior quizzical woman who tapped her fingers carelessly on
|
|
her slim exquisite knee had ever sobbed in the night.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that wasn't a personal question," she said. "I just wanted
|
|
to know what you're like. Don't you ever collect people? I
|
|
do--chloroform 'em quite cruelly and pin their poor little
|
|
corpses out on nice clean corks.... You live alone in New York,
|
|
do you?"
|
|
|
|
"Y-yes."
|
|
|
|
"Who do you play with--know?"
|
|
|
|
"Not--not much of anybody. Except maybe Charley Carpenter.
|
|
He's assistant bookkeeper for the Souvenir Company. "He had
|
|
wanted to, and immediately decided not to, invent _grandes
|
|
mondes_ whereof he was an intimate.
|
|
|
|
"What do--oh, you know--people in New York who don't go to
|
|
parties or read much--what do they do for amusement? I'm so
|
|
interested in types."
|
|
|
|
"Well----" said he.
|
|
|
|
That was all he could say till he had digested a pair of
|
|
thoughts: Just what did she mean by "types"? Had it something
|
|
to do with printing stories? And what could he say about the
|
|
people, anyway? He observed:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I don't know--just talk about--oh, cards and jobs and folks
|
|
and things and--oh, you know; go to moving pictures and
|
|
vaudeville and go to Coney Island and--oh, sleep."
|
|
|
|
"But you----?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I read a good deal. Quite a little. Shakespeare and
|
|
geography and a lot of stuff. I like reading."
|
|
|
|
"And how do you place Nietzsche?" she gravely desired to know.
|
|
|
|
"?"
|
|
|
|
"Nietzsche. You know--the German humorist."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes--uh--let me see now; he's--uh----"
|
|
|
|
"Why, you remember, don't you? Haeckel and he wrote the great
|
|
musical comedy of the century. And Matisse did the
|
|
music--Matisse and Rodin."
|
|
|
|
"I haven't been to it," he said, vaguely. "...I don't know
|
|
much German. Course I know a few words, like _Spricken Sie
|
|
Dutch_ and _Bitty, sir_, that Rabin at the Souvenir Company--he's
|
|
a German Jew, I guess--learnt me.... But, say, isn't Kipling
|
|
great! Gee! when I read _Kim_ I can imagine I'm hiking along one
|
|
of those roads in India just like I was there--you know, all
|
|
those magicians and so on.... Readin's wonderful, ain't it!"
|
|
|
|
"Um. Yes."
|
|
|
|
"I bet you read an awful lot."
|
|
|
|
"Very little. Oh--D'Annunzio and some Turgenev and a little
|
|
Tourgenieff.... That last was a joke, you know."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes," disconcertedly.
|
|
|
|
"What sorts of plays do you go to, Mr. Wrenn?"
|
|
|
|
"Moving pictures mostly," he said, easily, then bitterly wished
|
|
he hadn't confessed so low-life a habit.
|
|
|
|
"Well--tell me, my dear---- Oh, I didn't mean that; artists use
|
|
it a good deal; it just means `old chap.' You _don't_ mind my
|
|
asking such beastly personal questions, do you? I'm interested
|
|
in people.... And now I must go up and write a letter. I was
|
|
going over to Olympia's--she's one of the Interesting People I
|
|
spoke of--but you see you have been much more amusing. Good night.
|
|
You're lonely in London, aren't you? We'll have to go sightseeing
|
|
some day."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I am lonely!" he exploded. Then, meekly: "Oh, thank you!
|
|
I sh'd be awful pleased to.... Have you seen the Tower, Miss Nash?"
|
|
|
|
"No. Never. Have you?"
|
|
|
|
"No. You see, I thought it 'd be kind of a gloomy thing to see
|
|
all alone. Is that why you haven't never been there, too?"
|
|
|
|
"My dear man, I see I shall have to educate you. Shall I? I've
|
|
been taken in hand by so many people--it would be a pleasure to
|
|
pass on the implied slur. Shall I?"
|
|
|
|
"Please do."
|
|
|
|
"One simply doesn't go and see the Tower, because that's what
|
|
trippers do. Don't you understand, my dear? (Pardon the `my
|
|
dear' again.) The Tower is the sort of thing school
|
|
superintendents see and then go back and lecture on in school
|
|
assembly-room and the G. A. R. hall. I'll take you to the Tate
|
|
Gallery." Then, very abruptly, "G' night," and she was gone.
|
|
|
|
He stared after her smooth back, thinking: "Gee! I wonder if
|
|
she got sore at something I said. I don't think I was fresh
|
|
this time. But she beat it so quick.... Them lips of hers--I
|
|
never knew there was such red lips. And an artist--paints
|
|
pictures!... Read a lot--Nitchy--German musical comedy. Wonder
|
|
if that's that `Merry Widow' thing?... That gray dress of hers
|
|
makes me think of fog. Cur'ous."
|
|
|
|
In her room Istra Nash inspected her nose in a mirror, powdered,
|
|
and sat down to write, on thick creamy paper:
|
|
|
|
Skilly dear, I'm in a fierce Bloomsbury boarding-house--bores
|
|
--except for a Phe-nomenon--little man of 35 or 40 with
|
|
embryonic imagination & a virgin soul. I'll try to keep from
|
|
planting radical thoughts in the virgin soul, but I'm tempted.
|
|
|
|
Oh Skilly dear I'm lonely as the devil. Would it be too bromid.
|
|
to say I wish you were here? I put out my hand in the darkness,
|
|
& yours wasn't there. My dear, my dear, how desolate---- Oh you
|
|
understand it only too well with your supercilious grin & your
|
|
superior eye-glasses & your beatific Oxonian ignorance of poor
|
|
eager America.
|
|
|
|
I suppose I _am_ just a barbarous Californian kiddy. It's just
|
|
as Pere Dureon said at the atelier, "You haf a' onderstanding of
|
|
the 'igher immorality, but I 'ope you can cook--paint you cannot."
|
|
|
|
He wins. I can't sell a single thing to the art editors here or
|
|
get one single order. One horrid eye-glassed earnest youth who
|
|
Sees People at a magazine, he vouchsafed that they "didn't use
|
|
any Outsiders." Outsiders! And his hair was nearly as red as my
|
|
wretched mop. So I came home & howled & burned Milan tapers
|
|
before your picture. I did. Though you don't deserve it.
|
|
|
|
Oh damn it, am I getting sentimental? You'll read this at Petit
|
|
Monsard over your drip & grin at your poor unnietzschean barbarian.
|
|
I. N.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
|
HE TIFFINS
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn, chewing and chewing and chewing the cud of thought in
|
|
his room next evening, after an hour had proved two things; thus:
|
|
|
|
(a) The only thing he wanted to do was to go back to America at
|
|
once, because England was a country where every one--native or
|
|
American--was so unfriendly and so vastly wise that he could
|
|
never understand them.
|
|
|
|
(b) The one thing in the world that he wanted to do was to be
|
|
right here, for the most miraculous event of which he had ever
|
|
heard was meeting Miss Nash. First one, then the other, these
|
|
thoughts swashed back and forth like the swinging tides. He got
|
|
away from them only long enough to rejoice that somehow--he
|
|
didn't know how -- he was going to be her most intimate friend,
|
|
because they were both Americans in a strange land and because
|
|
they both could make-believe.
|
|
|
|
Then he was proving that Istra would, and would not, be the
|
|
perfect comrade among women when some one knocked at his door.
|
|
|
|
Electrified, his cramped body shot up from its crouch, and he
|
|
darted to the door.
|
|
|
|
Istra Nash stood there, tapping her foot on the sill with
|
|
apologetic haste in her manner. Abruptly she said:
|
|
|
|
"So sorry to bother you. I just wondered if you could let me
|
|
have a match? I'm all out."
|
|
|
|
"Oh _yes!_ Here's a whole box. Please take 'em. I got plenty
|
|
more." [Which was absolutely untrue.]
|
|
|
|
"Thank you. S' good o' you," she said, hurriedly. "G' night."
|
|
|
|
She turned away, but he followed her into the hall, bashfully
|
|
urging: "Have you been to another show? Gee! I hope you draw
|
|
a better one next time 'n the one about the guy with the nephew."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you."
|
|
|
|
She glanced back in the half dark hall from her door--some
|
|
fifteen feet from his. He was scratching at the wall - paper
|
|
with a diffident finger, hopeful for a talk.
|
|
|
|
"Won't you come in?" she said, hesitatingly.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, thank you, but I guess I hadn't better."
|
|
|
|
Suddenly she flashed out the humanest of smiles, her blue-gray
|
|
eyes crinkling with cheery friendship. "Come in, come in, child."
|
|
As he hesitatingly entered she warbled: "Needn't both be so
|
|
lonely all the time, after all, need we? Even if you _don't_
|
|
like poor Istra. You don't--do you?" Seemingly she didn't
|
|
expect an answer to her question, for she was busy lighting a
|
|
Russian cigarette. It was the first time in his life that he
|
|
had seen a woman smoke.
|
|
|
|
With embarrassed politeness he glanced away from her as she
|
|
threw back her head and inhaled deeply. He blushingly
|
|
scrutinized the room.
|
|
|
|
In the farther corner two trunks stood open. One had the tray
|
|
removed, and out of the lower part hung a confusion of lacey
|
|
things from which he turned away uncomfortable eyes. He
|
|
recognized the black-and-gold burnoose, which was tumbled on the
|
|
bed, with a nightgown of lace insertions and soft wrinkles in
|
|
the lawn, a green book with a paper label bearing the title
|
|
_Three Plays for Puritans_, a red slipper, and an open box of
|
|
chocolates.
|
|
|
|
On the plain kitchen-ware table was spread a cloth of Reseda
|
|
green, like a dull old leaf in color. On it lay a gold-mounted
|
|
fountain-pen, huge and stub-pointed; a medley of papers and torn
|
|
envelopes, a bottle of Creme Yvette, and a silver-framed portrait
|
|
of a lean smiling man with a single eye-glass.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn did not really see all these details, but he had an
|
|
impression of luxury and high artistic success. He considered
|
|
the Yvette flask the largest bottle of perfume he'd ever seen;
|
|
and remarked that there was "some guy's picture on the table."
|
|
He had but a moment to reconnoiter, for she was astonishingly saying:
|
|
|
|
"So you were lonely when I knocked?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, how----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I could see it. We all get lonely, don't we? I do, of
|
|
course. Just now I'm getting sorer and sorer on Interesting
|
|
People. I think I'll go back to Paris. There even the
|
|
Interesting People are--why, they're interesting. Savvy--you
|
|
see I _am_ an American--savvy?"
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh--uh--uh--I d-don't exactly get what you mean. How do
|
|
you mean about `Interesting People'?"
|
|
|
|
"My dear child, of course you don't get me." She went to the
|
|
mirror and patted her hair, then curled on the bed, with an
|
|
offhand "Won't you sit down?" and smoked elaborately, blowing
|
|
the blue tendrils toward the ceiling as she continued: "Of
|
|
course you don't get it. You're a nice sensible clerk who've
|
|
had enough real work to do to keep you from being afraid that
|
|
other people will think you're commonplace. You don't have to
|
|
coddle yourself into working enough to earn a living by talking
|
|
about temperament.
|
|
|
|
"Why, these Interesting People---- You find 'em in London and
|
|
New York and San Francisco just the same. They're convinced
|
|
they're the wisest people on earth. There's a few artists and
|
|
a bum novelist or two always, and some social workers. The
|
|
particular bunch that it amuses me to hate just now--and that I
|
|
apparently can't do without--they gather around Olympia Johns,
|
|
who makes a kind of salon out of her rooms on Great James
|
|
Street, off Theobald's Road.... They might just as well be in
|
|
New York; but they're even stodgier. They don't get sick of the
|
|
game of being on intellectual heights as soon as New-Yorkers do.
|
|
|
|
"I'll have to take you there. It's a cheery sensation, you
|
|
know, to find a man who has some imagination, but who has been
|
|
unspoiled by Interesting People, and take him to hear them
|
|
wamble. They sit around and growl and rush the growler--I hope
|
|
you know growler-rushing--and rejoice that they're free spirits.
|
|
Being Free, of course, they're not allowed to go and play with
|
|
nice people, for when a person is Free, you know, he is never
|
|
free to be anything but Free. That may seem confusing, but they
|
|
understand it at Olympia's.
|
|
|
|
"Of course there's different sorts of intellectuals, and each
|
|
cult despises all the others. Mostly, each cult consists of one
|
|
person, but sometimes there's two--a talker and an audience--or
|
|
even three. For instance, you may be a militant and a
|
|
vegetarian, but if some one is a militant and has a good figure,
|
|
why then--oof!... That's what I mean by `Interesting People.'
|
|
I loathe them! So, of course, being one of them, I go from one
|
|
bunch to another, and, upon my honor, every single time I think
|
|
that the new bunch _is_ interesting!"
|
|
|
|
Then she smoked in gloomy silence, while Mr. Wrenn remarked,
|
|
after some mental labor, "I guess they're like cattlemen--the
|
|
cattle-ier they are, the more romantic they look, and then when
|
|
you get to know them the chief trouble with them is that they're
|
|
cattlemen."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's it. They're-- why, they're---- Oh, poor dear, there,
|
|
there, there! It _sha'n't_ have so much intellekchool discussion,
|
|
_shall_ it!... I think you're a very nice person, and I'll tell you
|
|
what we'll do. We'll have a small fire, shall we? In the fireplace."
|
|
|
|
"Yes!"
|
|
|
|
She pulled the old-fashioned bell-cord, and the old-fashioned
|
|
North Country landlady came--tall, thin, parchment-faced,
|
|
musty-looking as though she had been dressed up in Victorian
|
|
garments in 1880 and left to stand in an unaired parlor ever since.
|
|
She glowered silent disapproval at the presence of Mr. Wrenn in
|
|
Istra's room, but sent a slavey to make the fire--"saxpence uxtry."
|
|
Mr. Wrenn felt guilty till the coming of the slavey, a perfect
|
|
Christmas-story-book slavey, a small and merry lump of soot, who
|
|
sang out, "Chilly t'-night, ayn't it?" and made a fire that was
|
|
soon singing "Chilly t'-night," like the slavey.
|
|
|
|
Istra sat on the floor before the fire, Turk-wise, her quick
|
|
delicate fingers drumming excitedly on her knees.
|
|
|
|
"Come sit by me. You, with your sense of the romantic, ought to
|
|
appreciate sitting by the fire. You know it's always done."
|
|
|
|
He slumped down by her, clasping his knees and trying to appear
|
|
the dignified American business man in his country-house.
|
|
|
|
She smiled at him intimately, and quizzed:
|
|
|
|
"Tell me about the last time you sat with a girl by the fire.
|
|
Tell poor Istra the dark secret. Was she the perfect among
|
|
pink faces?"
|
|
|
|
"I've -- never -- sat -- before -- any --fireplace --with
|
|
--any--one! Except when I was about nine--one Hallowe'en--at a
|
|
party in Parthenon--little town up York State."
|
|
|
|
"Really? Poor kiddy!"
|
|
|
|
She reached out her hand and took his. He was terrifically
|
|
conscious of the warm smoothness of her fingers playing a soft
|
|
tattoo on the back of his hand, while she said:
|
|
|
|
"But you have been in love? Drefful in love?"
|
|
|
|
"I never have."
|
|
|
|
"Dear child, you've missed so much of the tea and cakes of life,
|
|
haven't you? And you have an interest in life. Do you know,
|
|
when I think of the jaded Interesting People I've met---- Why do
|
|
I leave you to be spoiled by some shop-girl in a flowered hat?
|
|
She'd drag you to moving-picture shows.... Oh! You didn't tell
|
|
me that you went to moving pictures, did you?"
|
|
|
|
"No!" he lied, fervently, then, feeling guilty, "I used to, but
|
|
no more."
|
|
|
|
"It _shall_ go to the nice moving pictures if it wants to! It
|
|
shall take me, too. We'll forget there are any syndicalists or
|
|
broken-colorists for a while, won't we? We'll let the robins
|
|
cover us with leaves."
|
|
|
|
"You mean like the babes in the woods? But, say, I'm afraid you
|
|
ain't just a babe in the woods! You're the first person with
|
|
brains I ever met, 'cept, maybe, Dr. Mittyford; and the Doc never
|
|
would play games, I don't believe. The very first one, really."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you!" Her warm pressure on his hand tightened. His heart
|
|
was making the maddest gladdest leaps, and timidly, with a
|
|
feeling of historic daring, he ventured to explore with his
|
|
thumb-tip the fine lines of the side of her hand.... It
|
|
actually was he, sitting here with a princess, and he actually
|
|
did feel the softness of her hand, he pantingly assured himself.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly she gave his hand a parting pressure and sprang up.
|
|
|
|
"Come. We'll have tiffin, and then I'll send you away, and
|
|
to-morrow we'll go see the Tate Gallery."
|
|
|
|
While Istra was sending the slavey for cakes and a pint of light
|
|
wine Mr. Wrenn sat in a chair--just sat in it; he wanted to show
|
|
that he could be dignified and not take advantage of Miss Nash's
|
|
kindness by slouchin' round. Having read much Kipling, he had
|
|
an idea that tiffin was some kind of lunch in the afternoon, but
|
|
of course if Miss Nash used the word for evening supper, then he
|
|
had been wrong.
|
|
|
|
Istra whisked the writing-table with the Reseda-green cover over
|
|
before the fire, chucked its papers on the bed, and placed a
|
|
bunch of roses on one end, moving the small blue vase two inches
|
|
to the right, then two inches forward.
|
|
|
|
The wine she poured into a decanter. Wine was distinctly a
|
|
problem to him. He was excited over his sudden rise into a
|
|
society where one took wine as a matter of course. Mrs. Zapp
|
|
wouldn't take it as a matter of course. He rejoiced that he
|
|
wasn't narrow-minded, like Mrs. Zapp. He worked so hard at not
|
|
being narrow-minded like Mrs. Zapp that he started when he was
|
|
called out of his day-dream by a mocking voice:
|
|
|
|
"But you might look at the cakes. Just once, anyway.
|
|
|
|
They are very nice cakes."
|
|
|
|
"Uh----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I know the wine is wine. Beastly of it."
|
|
|
|
"Say, Miss Nash, I did get you this time."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, don't tell me that my presiding goddessship is over already."
|
|
|
|
"Uh--sure! Now I'm going to be a cruel boss."
|
|
|
|
"Dee-lighted! Are you going to be a caveman?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry. I don't quite get you on that."
|
|
|
|
"That's too bad, isn't it. I think I'd rather like to meet a caveman."
|
|
|
|
"Oh say, I know about that caveman--Jack London's guys. I'm
|
|
afraid I ain't one. Still -- on the cattle-boat---- Say, I wish
|
|
you could of seen it when the gang were tying up the bulls,
|
|
before starting. Dark close place 'tween-decks, with the steers
|
|
bellowin' and all parked tight together, and the stiffs gettin'
|
|
seasick--so seasick we just kind of staggered around; and we'd
|
|
get hold of a head rope and yank and then let go, and the
|
|
bosses, d yell, `Pull, or I'll brain you.' And then the
|
|
fo'c'sle--men packed in like herrings."
|
|
|
|
She was leaning over the table, making a labyrinth with the
|
|
currants from a cake and listening intently. He stopped
|
|
politely, feeling that he was talking too much. But, "Go on,
|
|
please do," she commanded, and he told simply, seeing it more
|
|
and more, of Satan and the Grenadier, of the fairies who had
|
|
beckoned to him from the Irish coast hills, and the comradeship
|
|
of Morton.
|
|
|
|
She interrupted only once, murmuring, "My dear, it's a good
|
|
thing you're articulate, anyway----" which didn't seem to have
|
|
any bearing on hay-bales.
|
|
|
|
She sent him away with a light "It's been a good party, hasn't
|
|
it, caveman? (If you _are_ a caveman.) Call for me tomorrow at
|
|
three. We'll go to the Tate Gallery."
|
|
|
|
She touched his hand in the fleetingest of grasps.
|
|
|
|
"Yes. Good night, Miss Nash," he quavered.
|
|
|
|
A morning of planning his conduct so that in accompanying Istra
|
|
Nash to the Tate Gallery he might be the faithful shadow and
|
|
beautiful transcript of Mittyford, Ph.D. As a result, when he
|
|
stood before the large canvases of Mr. Watts at the Tate he was
|
|
so heavy and correctly appreciative, so ready not to enjoy the
|
|
stories in the pictures of Millais, that Istra suddenly demanded:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, my dear child, I have taken a great deal on my hands.
|
|
You've got to learn to play. You don't know how to play. Come.
|
|
I shall teach you. I don't know why I should, either. But--come."
|
|
|
|
She explained as they left the gallery: "First, the art of
|
|
riding on the buses. Oh, it is an art, you know. You must
|
|
appreciate the flower-girls and the gr-r-rand young bobbies.
|
|
You must learn to watch for the blossoms on the restaurant
|
|
terraces and roll on the grass in the parks. You're much too
|
|
respectable to roll on the grass, aren't you? I'll try ever so
|
|
hard to teach you not to be. And we'll go to tea. How many
|
|
kinds of tea are there?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Ceylon and English Breakfast and--oh--Chinese."
|
|
|
|
"B----"
|
|
|
|
"And golf tees!" he added, excitedly, as they took a seat in
|
|
front atop the bus.
|
|
|
|
"Puns are a beginning at least," she reflected.
|
|
|
|
"But how many kinds of tea _are_ there, Istra?... Oh say, I
|
|
hadn't ought to----"
|
|
|
|
"Course; call me Istra or anything else. Only, you mustn't call
|
|
my bluff. What do I know about tea? All of us who play are
|
|
bluffers, more or less, and we are ever so polite in pretending
|
|
not to know the others are bluffing.... There's lots of kinds
|
|
of tea. In the New York Chinatown I saw once---- Do you know
|
|
Chinatown? Being a New-Yorker, I don't suppose you do."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes. And Italiantown. I used to wander round there."
|
|
|
|
"Well, down at the Seven Flowery Kingdoms Chop Suey and American
|
|
Cooking there's tea at five dollars a cup that they advertise is
|
|
grown on `cloud-covered mountain-tops.' I suppose when the tops
|
|
aren't cloud-covered they only charge three dollars a cup....
|
|
But, serious-like, there's really only two kinds of teas--those
|
|
you go to to meet the man you love and ought to hate, and those
|
|
you give to spite the women you hate but ought to--hate! Isn't
|
|
that lovely and complicated? That's playing. With words. My
|
|
aged parent calls it `talking too much and not saying anything.'
|
|
Note that last--not saying _anything!_ It's one of the rules in
|
|
playing that mustn't be broken."
|
|
|
|
He understood that better than most of the things she said.
|
|
"Why," he exclaimed, "it's kind of talking sideways."
|
|
|
|
"Why, yes. Of course. Talking sideways. Don't you see now?"
|
|
|
|
Gallant gentleman as he was, he let her think she had invented
|
|
the phrase.
|
|
|
|
She said many other things; things implying such vast learning
|
|
that he made gigantic resolves to "read like thunder."
|
|
|
|
Her great lesson was the art of taking tea. He found,
|
|
surprisedly, that they weren't really going to endanger their
|
|
clothes by rolling on park grass. Instead, she led him to a
|
|
tea-room behind a candy-shop on Tottenham Court Road, a low room
|
|
with white wicker chairs, colored tiles set in the wall, and
|
|
green Sedji-ware jugs with irregular bunches of white roses.
|
|
A waitress with wild-rose cheeks and a busy step brought Orange
|
|
Pekoe and lemon for her, Ceylon and Russian Caravan tea and a
|
|
jug of clotted cream for him, with a pile of cinnamon buns.
|
|
|
|
"But----" said Istra. "Isn't this like Alice in Wonderland!
|
|
But you must learn the buttering of English muffins most of all.
|
|
If you get to be very good at it the flunkies will let you take
|
|
tea at the Carleton. They are such hypercritical flunkies, and
|
|
the one that brings the gold butter-measuring rod to test your
|
|
skill, why, he always wears knee-breeches of silver gray.
|
|
So you can see, Billy, how careful you have to be. And eat them
|
|
without buttering your nose. For if you butter your nose
|
|
they'll think you're a Greek professor. And you wouldn't like
|
|
that, would you, honey?" He learned how to pat the butter into
|
|
the comfortable brown insides of the muffins that looked so cold
|
|
and floury without. But Istra seemed to have lost interest; and
|
|
he didn't in the least follow her when she observed:
|
|
|
|
"Doubtless it _was_ the best butter. But where, where, dear
|
|
dormouse, are the hatter and hare? Especially the sweet bunny
|
|
rabbit that wriggled his ears and loved Gralice, the _princesse
|
|
d' outre-mer._
|
|
|
|
"Where, where are the hatter and hare,
|
|
And where is the best butter gone?"
|
|
|
|
Presently: "Come on. Let's beat it down to Soho for dinner.
|
|
Or--no! Now you shall lead me. Show me where you'd go for
|
|
dinner. And you shall take me to a music-hall, and make me
|
|
enjoy it. Now _you_ teach _me_ to play."
|
|
|
|
"Gee! I'm afraid I don't know a single thing to teach you."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but---- See here! We are two lonely Western barbarians in
|
|
a strange land. We'll play together for a little while. We're
|
|
not used to each other's sort of play, but that will break up
|
|
the monotony of life all the more. I don't know how long we'll
|
|
play or---- Shall we?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes!"
|
|
|
|
"Now show me how you play."
|
|
|
|
"I don't believe I ever did much, really."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you shall take me to your kind of a restaurant."
|
|
|
|
"I don't believe you'd care much for penny meat-pies."
|
|
|
|
"Little meat-pies?"
|
|
|
|
"Um-huh."
|
|
|
|
"Little _crispy_ ones? With flaky covers?"
|
|
|
|
"Um-huh."
|
|
|
|
"Why, course I would! And ha'p'ny tea? Lead me to it, O brave
|
|
knight! And to a vaudeville."
|
|
|
|
He found that this devoted attendant of theaters had never seen
|
|
the beautiful Italians who pounce upon protesting zylophones
|
|
with small clubs, or the side-splitting juggler's assistant who
|
|
breaks up piles and piles of plates. And as to the top hat that
|
|
turns into an accordion and produces much melody, she was ecstatic.
|
|
|
|
At after-theater supper he talked of Theresa and South Beach, of
|
|
Charley Carpenter and Morton--Morton--Morton.
|
|
|
|
They sat, at midnight, on the steps of the house in Tavistock Place.
|
|
|
|
"I do know you now, "she mused. "It's curious how any two babes
|
|
in a strange-enough woods get acquainted. You _are_ a lonely
|
|
child, aren't you?" Her voice was mother-soft. "We will play
|
|
just a little----"
|
|
|
|
"I wish I had some games to teach. But you know so much."
|
|
|
|
"And I'm a perfect beauty, too, aren't I?" she said, gravely.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, you are!" stoutly.
|
|
|
|
"You would be loyal.... And I need some one's admiration....
|
|
Mostly, Paris and London hold their sides laughing at poor Istra."
|
|
|
|
He caught her hand. "Oh, don't! They _must_ 'preciate you.
|
|
I'd like to kill anybody that didn't!"
|
|
|
|
"Thanks." She gave his hand a return pressure and hastily
|
|
withdrew her own. "You'll be good to some sweet pink face....
|
|
And I'll go on being discontented. Oh, isn 't life the fiercest
|
|
proposition!... We seem different, you and I, but maybe it's
|
|
mostly surface--down deep we're alike in being desperately
|
|
unhappy because we never know what we're unhappy about. Well----"
|
|
|
|
He wanted to put his head down on her knees and rest there. But
|
|
he sat still, and presently their cold hands snuggled together.
|
|
|
|
After a silence, in which they were talking of themselves, he
|
|
burst out: "But I don't see how Paris could help 'preciating
|
|
you. I'll bet you're one of the best artists they ever saw....
|
|
The way you made up a picture in your mind about that juggler!"
|
|
|
|
"Nope. Sorry. Can't paint at all."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, stuff!" with a rudeness quite masterful. "I'll bet your
|
|
pictures are corkers."
|
|
|
|
"Um."
|
|
|
|
"Please, would you let me see some of them some time. I suppose
|
|
it would bother----"
|
|
|
|
"Come up-stairs. I feel inspired. You are about to hear some
|
|
great though nasty criticisms on the works of the unfortunate
|
|
Miss Nash."
|
|
|
|
She led the way, laughing to herself over something. She gave
|
|
him no time to blush and hesitate over the impropriety of
|
|
entering a lady's room at midnight, but stalked ahead with a
|
|
brief "Come in."
|
|
|
|
She opened a large portfolio covered with green-veined black
|
|
paper and yanked out a dozen unframed pastels and wash-drawings
|
|
which she scornfully tossed on the bed, saying, as she pointed to
|
|
a mass of Marseilles roofs:
|
|
|
|
"Do you see this sketch? The only good thing about it is the
|
|
thing that last art editor, that red-headed youth, probably
|
|
didn't like. Don't you hate red hair? You see these
|
|
ridiculous glaring purple shadows under the _clocher?_"
|
|
|
|
She stared down at the picture interestedly, forgetting him,
|
|
pinching her chin thoughtfully, while she murmured: "They're
|
|
rather nice. Rather good. Rather good."
|
|
|
|
Then, quickly twisting her shoulders about, she poured out:
|
|
|
|
"But look at this. Consider this arch. It's miserably out of
|
|
drawing. And see how I've faked this figure? It isn't a real
|
|
person at all. Don't you notice how I've juggled with this
|
|
stairway? Why, my dear man, every bit of the drawing in this
|
|
thing would disgrace a seventh-grade drawing-class in Dos
|
|
Puentes. And regard the bunch of lombardies in this other
|
|
picture. They look like umbrellas upside down in a silly
|
|
wash-basin. Uff! It's terrible. _Affreux!_ Don't act as though
|
|
you liked them. You really needn't, you know. Can't you see
|
|
now that they're hideously out of drawing?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn's fancy was walking down a green lane of old France
|
|
toward a white cottage with orange-trees gleaming against its
|
|
walls. In her pictures he had found the land of all his
|
|
forsaken dreams.
|
|
|
|
"I--I--I----" was all he could say, but admiration pulsed in it.
|
|
|
|
"Thank you.... Yes, we _will_ play. Good night. To-morrow!"
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX
|
|
HE ENCOUNTERS THE INTELLECTUALS
|
|
|
|
He wanted to find a cable office, stalk in, and nonchalantly
|
|
send to his bank for more money. He could see himself doing it.
|
|
Maybe the cable clerk would think he was a rich American. What
|
|
did he care if he spent all he had? A guy, he admonished
|
|
himself, just had to have coin when he was goin' with a girl
|
|
like Miss Istra. At least seven times he darted up from the
|
|
door-step, where he was on watch for her, and briskly trotted as
|
|
far as the corner. Each time his courage melted, and he slumped
|
|
back to the door-step. Sending for money--gee, he groaned, that
|
|
was pretty dangerous.
|
|
|
|
Besides, he didn't wish to go away. Istra might come down and
|
|
play with him.
|
|
|
|
For three hours he writhed on that door-step, till he came to
|
|
hate it; it was as much a prison as his room at the Zapps' had
|
|
been. He hated the areaway grill, and a big brown spot on the
|
|
pavement, and, as a truck-driver hates a motorman, so did he
|
|
hate a pudgy woman across the street who peeped out from a
|
|
second-story window and watched him with cynical interest.
|
|
He finally could endure no longer the world's criticism, as
|
|
expressed by the woman opposite. He started as though he were
|
|
going to go right now to some place he had been intending to go
|
|
to all the time, and stalked away, ignoring the woman.
|
|
|
|
He caught a bus, then another, then walked a while. Now that he
|
|
was moving, he was agonizedly considering his problem: What was
|
|
Istra to him, really? What could he be to her? He _was_ just
|
|
a clerk. She could never love him. "And of course," he explained
|
|
to himself, "you hadn't oughta love a person without you expected
|
|
to marry them; you oughtn't never even touch her hand." Yet he
|
|
did want to touch hers. He suddenly threw his chin back, high and
|
|
firm, in defiance. He didn't care if he was wicked, he declared.
|
|
He wanted to shout to Istra across all the city: Let us be great lovers!
|
|
Let us be mad! Let us stride over the hilltops. Though that was not
|
|
at all the way he phrased it.
|
|
|
|
Then he bumped into a knot of people standing on the walk, and
|
|
came down from the hilltops in one swoop.
|
|
|
|
A crowd was collecting before Rothsey Hall, which bore the sign:
|
|
|
|
GLORY--GLORY--GLORY
|
|
|
|
SPECIAL SALVATION ARMY JUBILEE MEETING
|
|
|
|
EXPERIENCES OF ADJUTANT CRABBENTHWAITE IN AFRICA
|
|
|
|
He gaped at the sign. A Salvationist in the crowd, trim and
|
|
well set up, his red-ribboned Salvation Army cap at a jaunty
|
|
angle, said, "Won't you come in, brother?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn meekly followed into the hall. Bill Wrenn was nowhere
|
|
in sight.
|
|
|
|
Now it chanced that Adjutant Crabbenthwaite told much of Houssas
|
|
and the N'Gombi, of saraweks and week-long treks, but Mr.
|
|
Wrenn's imagination was not for a second drawn to Africa, nor
|
|
did he even glance at the sun-bonneted Salvationist women packed
|
|
in the hall. He was going over and over the Adjutant's
|
|
denunciations of the Englishmen and Englishwomen who flirt on
|
|
the mail-boats.
|
|
|
|
Suppose it had been himself and his madness over Istra --at the
|
|
moment he quite called it madness--that the Adjutant had denounced!
|
|
|
|
A Salvationist near by was staring at him most accusingly....
|
|
|
|
He walked away from the jubilee reflectively. He ate his dinner
|
|
with a grave courtesy toward the food and the waiter. He was
|
|
positively courtly to his fork. For he was just reformed. He
|
|
was going to "steer clear" of mad artist women--of all but nice
|
|
good girls whom you could marry. He remembered the Adjutant's
|
|
thundered words:
|
|
|
|
"Flirting you call it--flirting! Look into your hearts. God
|
|
Himself hath looked into them and found flirtation the gateway
|
|
to hell. And I tell you that these army officers and the
|
|
bedizened women, with their wine and cigarettes, with their
|
|
devil's calling-cards and their jewels, with their hell-lighted
|
|
talk of the sacrilegious follies of socialism and art and
|
|
horse-racing, O my brothers, it was all but a cloak for looking
|
|
upon one another to lust after one another. Rotten is this
|
|
empire, and shall fall when our soldiers seek flirtation instead
|
|
of kneeling in prayer like the iron men of Cromwell."
|
|
|
|
Istra.... Card-playing.... Talk of socialism and art. Mr.
|
|
Wrenn felt very guilty. Istra.... Smoking and drinking
|
|
wine.... But his moral reflections brought the picture of Istra
|
|
the more clearly before him--the persuasive warmth of her
|
|
perfect fingers; the curve of her backward-bent throat as she
|
|
talked in her melodious voice of all the beautiful things made
|
|
by the wise hands of great men.
|
|
|
|
He dashed out of the restaurant. No matter what happened, good
|
|
or bad, he had to see her. While he was climbing to the upper
|
|
deck of a bus he was trying to invent an excuse for seeing
|
|
her.... Of course one couldn't "go and call on ladies in their
|
|
rooms without havin' some special excuse; they would think that
|
|
was awful fresh."
|
|
|
|
He left the bus midway, at the sign of a periodical shop, and
|
|
purchased a _Blackwood's_ and a _Nineteenth Century_. Morton had
|
|
told him these were the chief English "highbrow magazines."
|
|
|
|
He carried them to his room, rubbed his thumb in the lampblack
|
|
on the gas-fixture, and smeared the magazine covers, then cut
|
|
the leaves and ruffled the margins to make the magazines look
|
|
dog-eared with much reading; not because he wanted to appear to
|
|
have read them, but because he felt that Istra would not permit
|
|
him to buy things just for her.
|
|
|
|
All this business with details so calmed him that he wondered if
|
|
he really cared to see her at all. Besides, it was so
|
|
late--after half-past eight.
|
|
|
|
"Rats! Hang it all! I wish I was dead. I don't know what I do
|
|
want to do," he groaned, and cast himself upon his bed. He was
|
|
sure of nothing but the fact that he was unhappy. He considered
|
|
suicide in a dignified manner, but not for long enough to get
|
|
much frightened about it.
|
|
|
|
He did not know that he was the toy of forces which, working on
|
|
him through the strangeness of passionate womanhood, could have
|
|
made him a great cad or a petty hero as easily as they did make
|
|
him confusedly sorry for himself. That he wasn't very much of
|
|
a cad or anything of a hero is a detail, an accident resulting
|
|
from his thirty-five or thirty-six years of stodgy environment.
|
|
Cad or hero, filling scandal columns or histories, he would have
|
|
been the same William Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
He was thinking of Istra as he lay on his bed. In a few minutes
|
|
he dashed to his bureau and brushed his thinning hair so
|
|
nervously that he had to try three times for a straight parting.
|
|
While brushing his eyebrows and mustache he solemnly
|
|
contemplated himself in the mirror.
|
|
|
|
"I look like a damn rabbit," he scorned, and marched half-way to
|
|
Istra's room. He went back to change his tie to a navy-blue bow
|
|
which made him appear younger. He was feeling rather resentful
|
|
at everything, including Istra, as he finally knocked and heard
|
|
her "Yes? Come in."
|
|
|
|
There was in her room a wonderful being lolling in a wing-chair,
|
|
one leg over the chair-arm; a young young man, with broken brown
|
|
teeth, always seen in his perpetual grin, but a godlike Grecian
|
|
nose, a high forehead, and bristly yellow hair. The being wore
|
|
large round tortoise-shell spectacles, a soft shirt with a
|
|
gold-plated collar-pin, and delicately gray garments.
|
|
|
|
Istra was curled on the bed in a leaf-green silk kimono with a
|
|
great gold-mounted medallion pinned at her breast. Mr. Wrenn
|
|
tried not to be shocked at the kimono.
|
|
|
|
She had been frowning as he came in and fingering a long thin
|
|
green book of verses, but she glowed at Mr. Wrenn as though he
|
|
were her most familiar friend, murmuring, "Mouse dear, I'm _so_
|
|
glad you could come in."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn stood there awkwardly. He hadn't expected to find
|
|
another visitor. He seemed to have heard her call him "Mouse."
|
|
Yes, but what did Mouse mean? It wasn't his name at all. This
|
|
was all very confusing. But how awful glad she was to see him!
|
|
|
|
"Mouse dear, this is one of our best little indecent poets, Mr.
|
|
Carson Haggerty. From America--California--too. Mr. Hag'ty,
|
|
Mr. Wrenn."
|
|
|
|
"Pleased meet you," said both men in the same tone of annoyance.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn implored: "I--uh--I thought you might like to look at
|
|
these magazines. Just dropped in to give them to you." He was
|
|
ready to go.
|
|
|
|
"Thank you--so good of you. _Please_ sit down. Carson and I
|
|
were only fighting--he's going pretty soon. We knew each other
|
|
at art school in Berkeley. Now he knows all the toffs in London."
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Wrenn," said the best little poet, "I hope you'll back up
|
|
my contention. Izzy says th----"
|
|
|
|
"Carson, I have told you just about enough times that I do not
|
|
intend to stand for `Izzy' any more! I should think that even
|
|
_you_ would be able to outgrow the standard of wit that obtains in
|
|
first-year art class at Berkeley."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Haggerty showed quite all of his ragged teeth in a noisy
|
|
joyous grin and went on, unperturbed: "Miss Nash says that the
|
|
best European thought, personally gathered in the best salons,
|
|
shows that the Rodin vogue is getting the pickle-eye from all
|
|
the real yearners. What is your opinion?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn turned to Istra for protection. She promptly
|
|
announced: "Mr. Wrenn absolutely agrees with me. By the way,
|
|
he's doing a big book on the recrudescence of Kipling, after his
|
|
slump, and----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, come off, now! Kipling! Blatant imperialist, anti-Stirner!"
|
|
cried Carson Haggerty, kicking out each word with the assistance
|
|
of his swinging left foot.
|
|
|
|
Much relieved that the storm-center had passed over him, Mr.
|
|
Wrenn sat on the front edge of a cane-seated chair, with the
|
|
magazines between his hands, and his hands pressed between his
|
|
forward-cocked knees. Always, in the hundreds of times he went
|
|
over the scene in that room afterward, he remembered how cool
|
|
and smooth the magazine covers felt to the palms of his
|
|
flattened hands. For he associated the papery surfaces with the
|
|
apprehension he then had that Istra might give him up to the
|
|
jag-toothed grin of Carson Haggerty, who would laugh him out of
|
|
the room and out of Istra's world.
|
|
|
|
He hated the poetic youth, and would gladly have broken all of
|
|
Carson's teeth short off. Yet the dread of having to try the
|
|
feat himself made him admire the manner in which Carson tossed
|
|
about long creepy-sounding words, like a bush-ape playing with
|
|
scarlet spiders. He talked insultingly of Yeats and the
|
|
commutation of sex-energy and Isadora Duncan and the poetry of
|
|
Carson Haggerty.
|
|
|
|
Istra yawned openly on the bed, kicking a pillow, but she was
|
|
surprised into energetic discussion now and then, till Haggerty
|
|
intentionally called her Izzy again, when she sat up and
|
|
remarked to Mr. Wrenn: "Oh, don't go yet. You can tell me about
|
|
the article when Carson goes. Dear Carson said he was only
|
|
going to stay till ten."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn hadn't had any intention of going, so he merely smiled
|
|
and bobbed his head to the room in general, and stammered
|
|
"Y-yes," while he tried to remember what he had told her about
|
|
some article. Article. Perhaps it was a Souvenir Company
|
|
novelty article. Great idea! Perhaps she wanted to design a
|
|
motto for them. He decidedly hoped that he could fix it up for
|
|
her--he'd sure do his best. He'd be glad to write over to Mr.
|
|
Guilfogle about it. Anyway, she seemed willing to have him
|
|
stick here.
|
|
|
|
Yet when dear Carson had jauntily departed, leaving the room
|
|
still loud with the smack of his grin, Istra seemed to have
|
|
forgotten that Mr. Wrenn was alive. She was scowling at a book
|
|
on the bed as though it had said things to her. So he sat quiet
|
|
and crushed the magazine covers more closely till the silence
|
|
choked him, and he dared, "Mr. Carson is an awful well-educated man."
|
|
|
|
"He's a bounder," she snapped. She softened her voice as she
|
|
continued: "He was in the art school in California when I was
|
|
there, and he presumes on that.... It was good of you to stay
|
|
and help me get rid of him.... I'm getting---- I'm sorry I'm so
|
|
dull to-night. I suppose I'll get sent off to bed right now, if
|
|
I can't be more entertaining. It was sweet of you to come in,
|
|
Mouse.... You don't mind my calling you `Mouse,' do you? I
|
|
won't, if you do mind."
|
|
|
|
He awkwardly walked over and laid the magazines on the bed.
|
|
"Why, it's all right.... What was it about some novelty--some
|
|
article? If there's anything I could do--anything----"
|
|
|
|
"Article?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, yes. That you wanted to see me about."
|
|
|
|
"Oh! Oh, that was just to get rid of Carson.... His
|
|
_insufferable_ familiarity! The penalty for my having been a
|
|
naive kiddy, hungry for friendship, once. And now, good n----.
|
|
Oh, Mouse, he says my eyes--even with this green kimono on----
|
|
Come here, dear. tell me what color my eyes are."
|
|
|
|
She moved with a quick swing to the side of her bed. Thrusting
|
|
out her two arms, she laid ivory hands clutchingly on his
|
|
shoulder. He stood quaking, forgetting every one of the
|
|
Wrennish rules by which he had edged a shy polite way through
|
|
life. He fearfully reached out his hands toward her shoulders
|
|
in turn, but his arms were shorter than hers, and his hands
|
|
rested on the sensitive warmth of her upper arms. He peered at
|
|
those dear gray-blue eyes of hers, but he could not calm himself
|
|
enough to tell whether they were china-blue or basalt-black.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me," she demanded; "_aren't_ they green?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," he quavered.
|
|
|
|
"You're sweet," she said.
|
|
|
|
Leaning out from the side of her bed, she kissed him. She
|
|
sprang up, and hastened to the window, laughing nervously, and
|
|
deploring: "I shouldn't have done that! I shouldn't! Forgive
|
|
me!" Plaintively, like a child: "Istra was so bad, so bad. Now
|
|
you must go." As she turned back to him her eyes had the peace
|
|
of an old friend's.
|
|
|
|
Because he had wished to be kind to people, because he had been
|
|
pitiful toward Goaty Zapp, Mr. Wrenn was able to understand that
|
|
she was trying to be a kindly big sister to him, and he said
|
|
"Good night, Istra," and smiled in a lively way and walked out.
|
|
He got out the smile by wrenching his nerves, for which he paid
|
|
in agony as he knelt by his bed, acknowledging that Istra would
|
|
never love him and that therefore he was not to love, would be
|
|
a fool to love, never would love her--and seeing again her white
|
|
arms softly shadowed by her green kimono sleeves.
|
|
|
|
No sight of Istra, no scent of her hair, no sound of her
|
|
always-changing voice for two days. Twice, seeing a sliver of
|
|
light under her door as he came up the darkened stairs, he
|
|
knocked, but there was no answer, and he marched into his room
|
|
with the dignity of fury.
|
|
|
|
Numbers of times he quite gave her up, decided he wanted never
|
|
to see her again. But after one of the savagest of these
|
|
renunciations, while he was stamping defiantly down Tottenham
|
|
Court Road, he saw in a window a walking-stick that he was sure
|
|
she would like his carrying. And it cost only two-and-six.
|
|
Hastily, before he changed his mind, he rushed in and slammed
|
|
down his money. It was a very beautiful stick indeed, and of a
|
|
modesty to commend itself to Istra, just a plain straight stick
|
|
with a cap of metal curiously like silver. He was conscious
|
|
that the whole world was leering at him, demanding "What're _you_
|
|
carrying a cane for?" but he--the misunderstood--was willing
|
|
to wait for the reward of this martyrdom in Istra's approval.
|
|
|
|
The third night, as he stood at the window watching two children
|
|
playing in the dusk, there was a knock. It was Istra. She
|
|
stood at his door, smart and inconspicuous in a black suit with
|
|
a small toque that hid the flare of her red hair.
|
|
|
|
"Come," she said, abruptly. "I want you to take me to
|
|
Olympia's--Olympia Johns' flat. I've been reading all the
|
|
Balzac there is. I want to talk. Can you come?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, of course----"
|
|
|
|
"Hurry, then!"
|
|
|
|
He seized his small foolishly round hat, and he tucked his new
|
|
walking-stick under his arm without displaying it too proudly,
|
|
waiting for her comment.
|
|
|
|
She led the way down-stairs and across the quiet streets and
|
|
squares of Bloomsbury to Great James Street. She did not even
|
|
see the stick.
|
|
|
|
She said scarce a word beyond:
|
|
|
|
"I'm sick of Olympia's bunch--I never want to dine in Soho with
|
|
an inhibition and a varietistic sex instinct again --_jamais de
|
|
la vie._ But one has to play with somebody."
|
|
|
|
Then he was so cheered that he tapped the pavements boldly with
|
|
his stick and delicately touched her arm as they crossed the
|
|
street. For she added:
|
|
|
|
"We'll just run in and see them for a little while, and then you
|
|
can take me out and buy me a Rhine wine and seltzer.... Poor
|
|
Mouse, it shall have its play!"
|
|
|
|
Olympia Johns' residence consisted of four small rooms. When
|
|
Istra opened the door, after tapping, the living-room was
|
|
occupied by seven people, all interrupting one another and
|
|
drinking fourpenny ale; seven people and a fog of cigarette
|
|
smoke and a tangle of papers and books and hats. A swamp of
|
|
unwashed dishes appeared on a large table in the room just
|
|
beyond, divided off from the living-room by a burlap curtain to
|
|
which were pinned suffrage buttons and medallions. This last he
|
|
remembered afterward, thinking over the room, for the medals'
|
|
glittering points of light relieved his eyes from the
|
|
intolerable glances of the people as he was hastily introduced
|
|
to them. He was afraid that he would be dragged into a
|
|
discussion, and sat looking away from them to the medals, and to
|
|
the walls, on which were posters, showing mighty fists with
|
|
hammers and flaming torches, or hog-like men lolling on the
|
|
chests of workmen, which they seemed to enjoy more than the
|
|
workmen. By and by he ventured to scan the group.
|
|
|
|
Carson Haggerty, the American poet, was there. But the center
|
|
of them all was Olympia Johns herself--spinster, thirty-four, as
|
|
small and active and excitedly energetic as an ant trying to get
|
|
around a match. She had much of the ant's brownness and
|
|
slimness, too. Her pale hair was always falling from under her
|
|
fillet of worn black velvet (with the dingy under side of the
|
|
velvet showing curled up at the edges). A lock would tangle in
|
|
front of her eyes, and she would impatiently shove it back with
|
|
a jab of her thin rough hands, never stopping in her machine-gun
|
|
volley of words.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes, yes, yes," she would pour out. "Don't you _see?_
|
|
We must do something. I tell you the conditions are intolerable,
|
|
simply intolerable. We must _do_ something."
|
|
|
|
The conditions were, it seemed, intolerable in the several
|
|
branches of education of female infants, water rates in
|
|
Bloomsbury, the cutlery industry, and ballad-singing.
|
|
|
|
And mostly she was right. Only her rightness was so demanding,
|
|
so restless, that it left Mr. Wrenn gasping.
|
|
|
|
Olympia depended on Carson Haggerty for most of the "Yes, that's
|
|
so's," though he seemed to be trying to steal glances at another
|
|
woman, a young woman, a lazy smiling pretty girl of twenty, who,
|
|
Istra told Mr. Wrenn, studied Greek archaeology at the Museum.
|
|
No one knew why she studied it. She seemed peacefully ignorant
|
|
of everything but her kissable lips, and she adorably poked at
|
|
things with lazy graceful fingers, and talked the Little
|
|
Language to Carson Haggerty, at which Olympia shrugged her
|
|
shoulders and turned to the others.
|
|
|
|
There were a Mr. and Mrs. Stettinius--she a poet; he a bleached
|
|
man, with goatish whiskers and a sanctimonious white neck-cloth,
|
|
who was Puritanically, ethically, gloomily, religiously
|
|
atheistic. Items in the room were a young man who taught in Mr.
|
|
Jeney's Select School and an Established Church mission worker
|
|
from Whitechapel, who loved to be shocked.
|
|
|
|
It was Mr. Wrenn who was really shocked, however, not by the
|
|
noise and odor; not by the smoking of the women; not by the
|
|
demand that "we" tear down the state; no, not by these was Our
|
|
Mr. Wrenn of the Souvenir Company shocked, but by his own
|
|
fascinated interest in the frank talk of sex. He had always had
|
|
a quite undefined supposition that it was wicked to talk of sex
|
|
unless one made a joke of it.
|
|
|
|
Then came the superradicals, to confuse the radicals who
|
|
confused Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
For always there is a greater rebellion; and though you
|
|
sell your prayer-book to buy Bakunine, and esteem yourself
|
|
revolutionary to a point of madness, you shall find one who
|
|
calls you reactionary. The scorners came in together--Moe
|
|
Tchatzsky, the syndicalist and direct actionist, and Jane
|
|
Schott, the writer of impressionistic prose--and they sat
|
|
silently sneering on a couch.
|
|
|
|
Istra rose, nodded at Mr. Wrenn, and departed, despite Olympia's
|
|
hospitable shrieks after them of "Oh stay! It's only a little
|
|
after ten. Do stay and have something to eat."
|
|
|
|
Istra shut the door resolutely. The hall was dark. It was
|
|
gratefully quiet. She snatched up Mr. Wrenn's hand and held it
|
|
to her breast.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mouse dear, I'm so bored! I want some real things. They
|
|
talk and talk in there, and every night they settle all the fate
|
|
of all the nations, always the same way. I don't suppose
|
|
there's ever been a bunch that knew more things incorrectly.
|
|
You hated them, didn't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, I don't think you ought to talk about them so severe," he
|
|
implored, as they started down-stairs. "I don't mean they're
|
|
like you. They don't savvy like you do. I mean it! But I was
|
|
awful int'rested in what that Miss Johns said about kids in
|
|
school getting crushed into a mold. Gee! that's so; ain't it?
|
|
Never thought of it before. And that Mrs. Stettinius talked
|
|
about Yeats so beautiful."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, my dear, you make my task so much harder. I want you to
|
|
be different. Can't you see your cattle-boat experience is realer
|
|
than any of the things those half-baked thinkers have done? I
|
|
_know_. I'm half - baked myself."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I've never done nothing."
|
|
|
|
"But you're ready to. Oh, I don't know. I want---- I wish Jock
|
|
Seton--the filibuster I met in San Francisco--I wish he were
|
|
here. Mouse, maybe I can make a filibuster of you. I've got to
|
|
create something. Oh, those people! If you just knew them! That
|
|
fool Mary Stettinius is mad about that Tchatzsky person, and her
|
|
husband invites him to teas. Stettinius is mad about Olympia,
|
|
who'll probably take Carson out and marry him, and he'll keep on
|
|
hanging about the Greek girl. Ungh!"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know--I don't know----"
|
|
|
|
But as he didn't know what he didn't know she merely patted his
|
|
arm and said, soothingly: "I won't criticize your first
|
|
specimens of radicals any more. They are trying to do something,
|
|
anyway." Then she added, in an irrelevant tone, "You're exactly
|
|
as tall as I am. Mouse dear, you ought to be taller."
|
|
|
|
They were entering the drab stretch of Tavistock Place, after a
|
|
silence as drab, when she exclaimed: "Mouse, I am _so_ sick of
|
|
everything. I want to get out, away, anywhere, and do
|
|
something, anything, just so's it's different. Even the
|
|
country. I'd like---- Why couldn't we?"
|
|
|
|
"Let's go out on a picnic to-morrow, Istra."
|
|
|
|
"A picnic picnic? With pickles and a pillow cushion and several
|
|
kinds of cake?... I'm afraid the Bois Boulogne has spoiled me
|
|
for that.... Let me think."
|
|
|
|
She drooped down on the steps of their house. Her head back,
|
|
her supple strong throat arched with the passion of hating
|
|
boredom, she devoured the starlight dim over the stale old roofs
|
|
across the way.
|
|
|
|
"Stars," she said. "Out on the moors they would come down by
|
|
you.... What is _your_ adventure--your formula for it?... Let's
|
|
see; you take common roadside things seriously; you'd be dear
|
|
and excited over a Red Lion Inn."
|
|
|
|
"Are there more than one Red Li----"
|
|
|
|
"My dear Mouse, England is a menagerie of Red Lions and White
|
|
Lions and fuzzy Green Unicorns.... Why not, why not, _why not!_
|
|
Let's walk to Aengusmere. It's a fool colony of artists and so
|
|
on, up in Suffolk; but they _have_ got some beautiful cottages,
|
|
and they're more Celt than Dublin.... Start right now; take a
|
|
train to Chelmsford, say, and tramp all night. Take a couple
|
|
of days or so to get there. Think of it! Tramping through dawn,
|
|
past English fields. Think of it, Yankee. And not caring what
|
|
anybody in the world thinks. Gipsies. Shall we?"
|
|
|
|
"Wh-h-h-h-y----" He was sure she was mad. Tramping all night!
|
|
He couldn't let her do this.
|
|
|
|
She sprang up. She stared down at him in revulsion, her hands
|
|
clenched. Her voice was hostile as she demanded:
|
|
|
|
"What? Don't you want to? With _me?_"
|
|
|
|
He was up beside her, angry, dignified; a man.
|
|
|
|
"Look here. You know I want to. You're the elegantest--I mean
|
|
you're---- Oh, you ought to know! Can't you see how I feel
|
|
about you? Why, I'd rather do this than anything I ever heard
|
|
of in my life. I just don't want to do anything that would get
|
|
people to talking about you."
|
|
|
|
"Who would know? Besides, my dear man, I don't regard it as
|
|
exactly wicked to walk decently along a country road."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it isn't that. Oh, please, Istra, don't look at me like
|
|
that--like you hated me."
|
|
|
|
She calmed at once, drummed on his arm, sat down on the railing,
|
|
and drew him to a seat beside her.
|
|
|
|
"Of course, Mouse. It's silly to be angry. Yes, I do believe
|
|
you want to take care of me. But don't worry.... Come! Shall
|
|
we go?"
|
|
|
|
"But wouldn't you rather wait till to-morrow?"
|
|
|
|
"No. The whole thing's so mad that if I wait till then I'll
|
|
never want to do it. And you've got to come, so that I'll have
|
|
some one to quarrel with.... I hate the smugness of London,
|
|
especially the smugness of the anti-smug anti-bourgeois
|
|
radicals, so that I have the finest mad mood! Come. We'll go."
|
|
|
|
Even this logical exposition had not convinced him, but he did
|
|
not gainsay as they entered the hall and Istra rang for the
|
|
landlady. His knees grew sick and old and quavery as he heard
|
|
the landlady's voice loud below-stairs: "Now wot do they want?
|
|
It's eleven o'clock. Aren't they ever done a-ringing and
|
|
a-ringing?"
|
|
|
|
The landlady, the tired thin parchment-faced North Countrywoman,
|
|
whose god was Respectability of Lodgings, listened in a
|
|
frightened way to Istra's blandly superior statement: "Mr. Wrenn
|
|
and I have been invited to join an excursion out of town that
|
|
leaves to-night. We'll pay our rent and leave our things here."
|
|
|
|
"Going off together----"
|
|
|
|
"My good woman, we are going to Aengusmere. Here's two pound.
|
|
Don't allow any one in my room. And I may send for my things
|
|
from out of town. Be ready to pack them in my trunks and send
|
|
them to me. Do you understand?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, miss, but----"
|
|
|
|
"My good woman, do you realize that your `buts' are insulting?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I didn't go to be insulting----"
|
|
|
|
"Then that's all.... Hurry now, Mouse!"
|
|
|
|
On the stairs, ascending, she whispered, with the excitement not
|
|
of a tired woman, but of a tennis-and-dancing-mad girl: "We're
|
|
off! Just take a tooth-brush. Put on an outing suit--any old
|
|
thing--and an old cap."
|
|
|
|
She darted into her room.
|
|
|
|
Now Mr. Wrenn had, for any old thing, as well as for afternoon
|
|
and evening dress, only the sturdy undistinguished clothes he
|
|
was wearing, so he put on a cap, and hoped she wouldn't notice.
|
|
She didn't. She came knocking in fifteen minutes, trim in a
|
|
khaki suit, with low thick boots and a jolly tousled blue
|
|
tam-o'-shanter.
|
|
|
|
"Come on. There's a train for Chelmsford in half an hour, my
|
|
time-table confided to me. I feel like singing."
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X
|
|
HE GOES A-GIPSYING
|
|
|
|
They rode out of London in a third-class compartment, opposite
|
|
a curate and two stodgy people who were just people and defied
|
|
you (Istra cheerfully explained to Mr. Wrenn) to make anything
|
|
of them but just people.
|
|
|
|
"Wouldn't they stare if they knew what idiocy we're up to!"
|
|
she suggested.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn bobbed his head in entire agreement. He was trying,
|
|
without any slightest success, to make himself believe that Mr.
|
|
William Wrenn, Our Mr. Wrenn, late of the Souvenir Company, was
|
|
starting out for a country tramp at midnight with an artist girl.
|
|
|
|
The night foreman of the station, a person of bedizenment and
|
|
pride, stared at them as they alighted at Chelmsford and glanced
|
|
around like strangers. Mr. Wrenn stared back defiantly and
|
|
marched with Istra from the station, through the sleeping town,
|
|
past its ragged edges, into the country.
|
|
|
|
They tramped on, a bit wearily. Mr. Wrenn was beginning to
|
|
wonder if they'd better go back to Chelmsford. Mist was
|
|
dripping and blind and silent about them, weaving its heavy gray
|
|
with the night. Suddenly Istra caught his arm at the gate to a
|
|
farm-yard, and cried, "Look!"
|
|
|
|
"Gee!... Gee! we're in England. We're abroad!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes--abroad."
|
|
|
|
A paved courtyard with farm outbuildings thatched and ancient
|
|
was lit faintly by a lantern hung from a post that was thumbed to
|
|
a soft smoothness by centuries.
|
|
|
|
"That couldn't be America," he exulted. "Gee! I'm just
|
|
gettin' it! I'm so darn glad we came.... Here's real England.
|
|
No tourists. It's what I've always wanted --a country that's old.
|
|
And different.... Thatched houses!... And pretty soon it'll
|
|
be dawn, summer dawn; with you, with Istra! _Gee!_ It's the
|
|
darndest adventure."
|
|
|
|
"Yes.... Come on. Let's walk fast or we'll get sleepy, and
|
|
then your romantic heroine will be a grouchy Interesting
|
|
People!... Listen! There's a sleepy dog barking, a million
|
|
miles away.... I feel like telling you about myself. You don't
|
|
know me. Or do you?"
|
|
|
|
"I dunno just how you mean."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it shall have its romance! But some time I'll tell
|
|
you--perhaps I will--how I'm not really a clever person at all,
|
|
but just a savage from outer darkness, who pretends to
|
|
understand London and Paris and Munich, and gets frightfully
|
|
scared of them.... Wait! Listen! Hear the mist drip from that
|
|
tree. Are you nice and drowned?"
|
|
|
|
"Uh--kind of. But I been worrying about you being soaked."
|
|
|
|
"Let me see. Why, your sleeve is wet clear through. This khaki
|
|
of mine keeps out the water better.... But I don't mind getting
|
|
wet. All I mind is being bored. I'd like to run up this hill
|
|
without a thing on--just feeling the good healthy real mist on
|
|
my skin. But I'm afraid it isn't done."
|
|
|
|
Mile after mile. Mostly she talked of the boulevards and Pere
|
|
Dureon, of Debussy and artichokes, in little laughing sentences
|
|
that sprang like fire out of the dimness of the mist.
|
|
|
|
Dawn came. From a hilltop they made out the roofs of a town and
|
|
stopped to wonder at its silence, as though through long ages
|
|
past no happy footstep had echoed there. The fog lifted. The
|
|
morning was new-born and clean, and they fairly sang as they
|
|
clattered up to an old coaching inn and demanded breakfast of an
|
|
amazed rustic pottering about the inn yard in a smock. He did
|
|
not know that to a "thrilling" Mr. Wrenn he--or perhaps it was his
|
|
smock--was the hero in an English melodrama. Nor, doubtless,
|
|
did the English crisp bacon and eggs which a sleepy housemaid
|
|
prepared know that they were theater properties. Why, they were
|
|
English eggs, served at dawn in an English inn--a stone-floored
|
|
raftered room with a starling hanging in a little cage of withes
|
|
outside the latticed window. And there were no trippers to
|
|
bother them! (Mr. Wrenn really used the word "trippers" in his
|
|
cogitations; he had it from Istra.)
|
|
|
|
When he informed her of this occult fact she laughed, "You know
|
|
mighty well, Mouse, that you have a sneaking wish there were one
|
|
Yankee stranger here to see our glory."
|
|
|
|
"I guess that's right."
|
|
|
|
"But maybe I'm just as bad."
|
|
|
|
For once their tones had not been those of teacher and pupil,
|
|
but of comrades. They set out from the inn through the
|
|
brightening morning like lively boys on a vacation tramp.
|
|
|
|
The sun crept out, with the warmth and the dust, and Istra's
|
|
steps lagged. As they passed the outlying corner of a farm
|
|
where a straw-stack was secluded in a clump of willows Istra
|
|
smiled and sighed: "I'm pretty tired, dear. I'm going to sleep
|
|
in that straw-stack. I've always wanted to sleep in a
|
|
straw-stack. It's _comme il faut_ for vagabonds in the best set,
|
|
you know. And one can burrow. Exciting, eh?"
|
|
|
|
She made a pillow of her khaki jacket, while he dug down to a
|
|
dry place for her. He found another den on the other side of
|
|
the stack.
|
|
|
|
It was afternoon when he awoke. He sprang up and rushed around
|
|
the stack. Istra was still asleep, curled in a pathetically
|
|
small childish heap, her tired face in repose against the
|
|
brown-yellow of her khaki jacket. Her red hair had come down
|
|
and shone about her shoulders.
|
|
|
|
She looked so frail that he was frightened. Surely, too, she'd
|
|
be very angry with him for letting her come on this jaunt.
|
|
|
|
He scribbled on a leaf from his address-book--religiously carried
|
|
for six years, but containing only four addresses--this note:
|
|
|
|
Gone to get stuff for bxfst be right back.--W. W.
|
|
|
|
and, softly crawling up the straw, left the note by her head.
|
|
He hastened to a farm-house. The farm-wife was inclined to
|
|
be curious. O curious farm-wife, you of the cream-thick Essex
|
|
speech and the shuffling feet, you were brave indeed to face
|
|
Bill Wrenn the Great, with his curt self-possession, for he was
|
|
on a mission for Istra, and he cared not for the goggling eyes
|
|
of all England. What though he was a bunny-faced man with an
|
|
innocuous mustache? Istra would be awakening hungry. That was
|
|
why he bullied you into selling him a stew-pan and a bundle of
|
|
faggots along with the tea and eggs and a bread loaf and a jar
|
|
of the marmalade your husband's farm had been making these two
|
|
hundred years. And you should have had coffee for him, not tea,
|
|
woman of Essex.
|
|
|
|
When he returned to their outdoor inn the late afternoon glow
|
|
lay along the rich fields that sloped down from their
|
|
well-concealed nook. Istra was still asleep, but her cheek now
|
|
lay wistfully on the crook of her thin arm. He looked at the
|
|
auburn-framed paleness of her face, its lines of thought and
|
|
ambition, unmasked, unprotected by the swift changes of
|
|
expression which defended her while she was awake. He sobbed.
|
|
If he could only make her happy! But he was afraid of her moods.
|
|
|
|
He built a fire by a brooklet beyond the willows, boiled the
|
|
eggs and toasted the bread and made the tea, with cream ready in
|
|
a jar. He remembered boyhood camping days in Parthenon and old
|
|
camp lore. He returned to the stack and called, "Istra--oh, Is-tra!"
|
|
|
|
She shook her head, nestled closer into the straw, then sat up,
|
|
her hair about her shoulders. She smiled and called down:
|
|
"Good morning. Why, it's afternoon! Did you sleep well, dear?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes. Did you? Gee, I hope you did!"
|
|
|
|
"Never better in my life. I'm so sleepy yet. But comfy.
|
|
I needed a quiet sleep outdoors, and it's so peaceful here.
|
|
Breakfast! I roar for breakfast! Where's the nearest house?"
|
|
|
|
"Got breakfast all ready."
|
|
|
|
"You're a dear!"
|
|
|
|
She went to wash in the brook, and came back with eyes dancing
|
|
and hair trim, and they laughed over breakfast, glancing down
|
|
the slope of golden hazy fields. Only once did Istra pass out
|
|
of the land of their intimacy into some hinterland of
|
|
analysis--when she looked at him as he drank his tea aloud out
|
|
of the stew-pan, and wondered: "Is this really you here with
|
|
me? But you _aren't_ a boulevardier. I must say I don't
|
|
understand what you're doing here at all.... Nor a caveman,
|
|
either. I don't understand it.... But you _sha'n't_ be worried
|
|
by bad Istra. Let's see; we went to grammar-school together."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, and we were in college. Don't you remember when I was
|
|
baseball captain? You don't? Gee, you got a bad memory!"
|
|
|
|
At which she smiled properly, and they were away for Suffolk again.
|
|
|
|
"I suppose now it'll go and rain," said Istra, viciously, at
|
|
dusk. It was the first time she had spoken for a mile. Then,
|
|
after another quarter-mile: "Please don't mind my being silent.
|
|
I'm sort of stiff, and my feet hurt most unromantically. You
|
|
won't mind, will you?"
|
|
|
|
Of course he did mind, and of course he said he didn't.
|
|
He artfully skirted the field of conversation by very West
|
|
Sixteenth Street observations on a town through which they
|
|
passed, while she merely smiled wearily, and at best remarked
|
|
"Yes, that's so," whether it was so or not.
|
|
|
|
He was reflecting: "Istra's terrible tired. I ought to take
|
|
care of her." He stopped at the wood-pillared entrance of a
|
|
temperance inn and commanded: "Come! We'll have something to
|
|
eat here." To the astonishment of both of them, she meekly
|
|
obeyed with "If you wish."
|
|
|
|
It cannot be truthfully said that Mr. Wrenn proved himself a
|
|
person of _savoir faire_ in choosing a temperance hotel for their
|
|
dinner. Istra didn't seem so much to mind the fact that the
|
|
table-cloth was coarse and the water-glasses thick, and that
|
|
everywhere the elbow ran into a superfluity of greasy pepper and
|
|
salt castors. But when she raised her head wearily to peer
|
|
around the room she started, glared at Mr. Wrenn,and accused:
|
|
"Are you by any chance aware of the fact that this place is
|
|
crowded with tourists? There are two family parties from
|
|
Davenport or Omaha; I _know_ they are!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, they ain't such bad-looking people," protested Mr.
|
|
Wrenn.... Just because he had induced her to stop for dinner
|
|
the poor man thought his masculine superiority had been
|
|
recognized.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, they're _terrible!_ Can't you _see_ it? Oh, you're _hopeless_."
|
|
|
|
"Why, that big guy--that big man with the rimless spectacles
|
|
looks like he might be a good civil engineer, and I think that
|
|
lady opposite him----"
|
|
|
|
"They're Americans."
|
|
|
|
"So're we!"
|
|
|
|
"I'm not."
|
|
|
|
"I thought--why----"
|
|
|
|
"Of course I was born there, but----"
|
|
|
|
"Well, just the same, I think they're nice people."
|
|
|
|
"Now see here. Must I argue with you? Can I have no peace,
|
|
tired as I am? Those trippers are speaking of `quaint English
|
|
flavor.' Can you want anything more than that to damn them? And
|
|
they've been touring by motor--seeing every inn on the road."
|
|
|
|
"Maybe it's fun for----"
|
|
|
|
"Now _don't_ argue with me. I know what I'm talking about.
|
|
Why do I have to explain everything? They're hopeless!"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn felt a good wholesome desire to spank her, but he
|
|
said, most politely: "You're awful tired. Don't you want to
|
|
stay here tonight? Or maybe some other hotel; and I'll stay here."
|
|
|
|
"No. Don't want to stay any place. Want to get away from
|
|
myself," she said, exactly like a naughty child.
|
|
|
|
So they tramped on again.
|
|
|
|
Darkness was near. They had plunged into a country which in the
|
|
night seemed to be a stretch of desolate moorlands. As they
|
|
were silently plodding up a hill the rain came. It came with a
|
|
roar, a pitiless drenching against which they fought uselessly,
|
|
soaking them, slapping their faces, blinding their eyes. He
|
|
caught her arm and dragged her ahead. She would be furious with
|
|
him because it rained, of course, but this was no time to think
|
|
of that; he had to get her to a dry place.
|
|
|
|
Istra laughed: "Oh, isn't this great! We're real vagabonds now."
|
|
|
|
"Why! Doesn't that khaki soak through? Aren't you wet?"
|
|
|
|
"To the skin!" she shouted, gleefully. "And I don't care!
|
|
We're _doing_ something. Poor dear, is it worried? I'll race
|
|
you to the top of the hill."
|
|
|
|
The dark bulk of a building struck their sight at the top, and
|
|
they ran to it. Just now Mr. Wrenn was ready to devour alive
|
|
any irate householder who might try to turn them out. He found
|
|
the building to be a ruined stable--the door off the hinges, the
|
|
desolate thatch falling in. He struck a match and, holding it
|
|
up, standing straight, the master, all unconscious for once in
|
|
his deprecating life of the Wrennishness of Mr. Wrenn, he
|
|
discovered that the thatch above the horse-manger was fairly
|
|
waterproof.
|
|
|
|
"Come on! Up on the edge of the manger, Istra," he ordered.
|
|
|
|
"This is a perfectly good place for a murder," she grinned, as
|
|
they sat swinging their legs.
|
|
|
|
He could fancy her grinning. He was sure about it, and well content.
|
|
|
|
"Have I been so very grouchy, Mouse? Don't you want to murder
|
|
me? I'll try to find you a long pin."
|
|
|
|
"Nope; I don't think so, much. I guess we can get along without
|
|
it this time."
|
|
|
|
"Oh dear, dear! This is very dreadful. You're so used to me now
|
|
that you aren't even scared of me any more."
|
|
|
|
"Gee! I guess I'll be scared of you all right as soon as I get
|
|
you into a dry place, but I ain't got time now. Sitting on a
|
|
manger! Ain't this the funniest place!... Now I must beat it
|
|
out and find a house. There ought to be one somewheres near here."
|
|
|
|
"And leave me here in the darknesses and wetnesses? Not a chance.
|
|
The rain'll soon be over, anyway. Really, I don't mind a bit.
|
|
I think it's rather fun."
|
|
|
|
Her voice was natural again, natural and companionable and brave.
|
|
She laughed as she stroked her wet shoulder and held his hand,
|
|
sitting quietly and bidding him listen to the soft forlorn
|
|
sound of the rain on the thatch.
|
|
|
|
But the rain was not soon over, and their dangling position was
|
|
very much like riding a rail.
|
|
|
|
"I'm so uncomfortable!" fretted Istra.
|
|
|
|
"See here, Istra, please, I think I'd better go see if I can't
|
|
find a house for you to get dry in."
|
|
|
|
"I feel too wretched to go any place. Too wretched to move."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, I'll make a fire here. There ain't much danger."
|
|
|
|
"The place will catch fire," she began, querulously.
|
|
|
|
But he interrupted her. "Oh, _let_ the darn place catch fire!
|
|
I'm going to make a fire, I tell you!"
|
|
|
|
"I don't want to move. It'll just be another kind of
|
|
discomfort, that's all. Why couldn't you try and take a little
|
|
bit of care of me, anyway?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, hon-ey!" he wailed, in youthful bewilderment. "I did try
|
|
to get you to stay at that hotel in town and get some rest."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you ought to have made me. Don't you realize that I took
|
|
you along to take care of me?"
|
|
|
|
"Uh----"
|
|
|
|
"Now don't argue about it. I can't stand argument all the time."
|
|
|
|
He thought instantly of Lee Theresa Zapp quarreling with her
|
|
mother, but he said nothing. He gathered the driest bits of
|
|
thatch and wood he could find in the litter on the stable floor
|
|
and kindled a fire, while she sat sullenly glaring at him, her
|
|
face wrinkled and tired in the wan firelight. When the blaze
|
|
was going steadily, a compact and safe little fire, he spread
|
|
his coat as a seat for her, and called, cheerily, "Come on now,
|
|
honey; here's a regular home and hearthstone for you."
|
|
|
|
She slipped down from the manger edge and stood in front of him,
|
|
looking into his eyes--which were level with her own.
|
|
|
|
"You _are_ good to me," she half whispered, and smoothed his
|
|
cheek, then slipped down on the outspread coat, and murmured,
|
|
"Come; sit here by me, and we'll both get warm."
|
|
|
|
All night the rain dribbled, but no one came to drive them away
|
|
from the fire, and they dozed side by side, their hands close
|
|
and their garments steaming. Istra fell asleep, and her head
|
|
drooped on his shoulder. He straightened to bear its weight,
|
|
though his back twinged with stiffness, and there he sat
|
|
unmoving, through an hour of pain and happiness and confused
|
|
meditation, studying the curious background--the dark roof of
|
|
broken thatch, the age-corroded walls, the littered earthen
|
|
floor. His hand pressed lightly the clammy smoothness of the
|
|
wet khaki of her shoulder; his wet sleeve stuck to his arm, and
|
|
he wanted to pull it free. His eyes stung. But he sat tight,
|
|
while his mind ran round in circles, considering that he loved
|
|
Istra, and that he would not be entirely sorry when he was no
|
|
longer the slave to her moods; that this adventure was the
|
|
strangest and most romantic, also the most idiotic and useless,
|
|
in history.
|
|
|
|
Toward dawn she stirred, and, slipping stiffly from his
|
|
position, he moved her so that her back, which was still wet,
|
|
faced the fire. He built up the fire again, and sat brooding
|
|
beside her, dozing and starting awake, till morning. Then his
|
|
head bobbed, and he was dimly awake again, to find her sitting
|
|
up straight, looking at him in amazement.
|
|
|
|
"It simply can't be, that's all.... Did you curl me up? I'm
|
|
nice and dry all over now. It was very good of you. You've
|
|
been a most commendable person.... But I think we'll take a
|
|
train for the rest of our pilgrimage. It hasn't been entirely
|
|
successful, I'm afraid."
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps we'd better."
|
|
|
|
For a moment he hated her, with her smooth politeness, after a
|
|
night when she had been unbearable and human by turns. He hated
|
|
her bedraggled hair and tired face. Then he could have wept, so
|
|
deeply did he desire to pull her head down on his shoulder and
|
|
smooth the wrinkles of weariness out of her dear face, the
|
|
dearer because they had endured the weariness together. But he
|
|
said, "Well, let's try to get some breakfast first, Istra."
|
|
|
|
With their garments wrinkled from rain, half asleep and rather
|
|
cross, they arrived at the esthetic but respectable colony of
|
|
Aengusmere by the noon train.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI
|
|
HE BUYS AN ORANGE TIE
|
|
|
|
The Aengusmere Caravanserai is so unyieldingly cheerful and
|
|
artistic that it makes the ordinary person long for a dingy
|
|
old-fashioned room in which he can play solitaire and chew gum
|
|
without being rebuked with exasperating patience by the wall
|
|
stencils and clever etchings and polished brasses. It is
|
|
adjectiferous. The common room (which is uncommon for hotel
|
|
parlor) is all in superlatives and chintzes.
|
|
|
|
Istra had gone up to her room to sleep, bidding Mr. Wrenn do
|
|
likewise and avoid the wrong bunch at the Caravanserai; for
|
|
besides the wrong bunch of Interesting People there were, she
|
|
explained, a right bunch, of working artists. But he wanted to
|
|
get some new clothes, to replace his rain-wrinkled ready-mades.
|
|
He was tottering through the common room, wondering whether he
|
|
could find a clothing-shop in Aengusmere, when a shrill gurgle
|
|
from a wing-chair by the rough-brick fireplace halted him.
|
|
|
|
"Oh-h-h-h, _Mister_ Wrenn; Mr. _Wrenn!_" There sat Mrs. Stettinius,
|
|
the poet-lady of Olympia's rooms on Great James Street.
|
|
|
|
"Oh-h-h-h, Mr. Wrenn, you _bad_ man, _do_ come sit down and tell
|
|
me all _about_ your _wonderful_ trek with Istra Nash. I _just_ met
|
|
_dear_ Istra in the upper hall. Poor dear, she was _so_ crumpled,
|
|
but her hair was like a sunset over mountain peaks--you know, as
|
|
Yeats says:
|
|
|
|
"A stormy sunset were her lips,
|
|
A stormy sunset on doomed ships,
|
|
|
|
only of course this was her _hair_ and not her _lips_--and she
|
|
told me that you had tramped all the _way_ from London. I've
|
|
never heard of anything so romantic--or no, I won't say
|
|
`romantic'--I _do_ agree with dear Olympia--_isn't_ she a
|
|
mag_nificent_ woman--_so_ fearless and progressive--didn't you
|
|
_adore_ meeting her?--she is our modern Joan of Arc--such a _noble_
|
|
figure--I _do_ agree with her that _romantic_ love is _passe_,
|
|
that we have entered the era of glorious companionship that
|
|
regards varietism as _exactly_ as romantic as monogamy.
|
|
But--but--where was I?--I think your gipsying down from London
|
|
was _most_ exciting. Now _do_ tell us all about it, Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
First, I want you to meet Miss Saxonby and Mr. Gutch and _dear_
|
|
Yilyena Dourschetsky and Mr. Howard Bancock Binch--of course you
|
|
know his poetry."
|
|
|
|
And then she drew a breath and flopped back into the
|
|
wing-chair's muffling depths.
|
|
|
|
During all this Mr. Wrenn had stood, frightened and unprotected
|
|
and rain-wrinkled, before the gathering by the fireless
|
|
fireplace, wondering how Mrs. Stettinius could get her nose so
|
|
blue and yet so powdery. Despite her encouragement he gave no
|
|
fuller account of the "gipsying" than, "Why--uh--we just
|
|
tramped down," till Russian-Jewish Yilyena rolled her ebony eyes
|
|
at him and insisted, "Yez, you mus' tale us about it."
|
|
|
|
Now, Yilyena had a pretty neck, colored like a cigar of mild
|
|
flavor, and a trick of smiling. She was accustomed to having
|
|
men obey her. Mr. Wrenn stammered:
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh--we just walked, and we got caught in the rain. Say,
|
|
Miss Nash was a wonder. She never peeped when she got soaked
|
|
through--she just laughed and beat it like everything. And we
|
|
saw a lot of quaint English places along the road--got away from
|
|
all them tourists--trippers--you know."
|
|
|
|
A perfectly strange person, a heavy old man with horn spectacles
|
|
and a soft shirt, who had joined the group unbidden, cleared his
|
|
throat and interrupted:
|
|
|
|
"Is it not a strange paradox that in traveling, the most
|
|
observant of all pursuits, one should have to encounter the
|
|
eternal bourgeoisie!"
|
|
|
|
From the Cockney Greek chorus about the unlighted fire:
|
|
|
|
"Yes!"
|
|
|
|
"Everywhere."
|
|
|
|
"Uh----" began Mr. Gutch. He apparently had something to say.
|
|
But the chorus went on:
|
|
|
|
"And just as swelteringly monogamic in Port Said as in Brum."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's so."
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Wr-r-renn," thrilled Mrs. Stettinius, the lady poet, "didn't
|
|
you notice that they were perfectly oblivious of all economic
|
|
movements; that their observations never post-dated ruins?"
|
|
|
|
"I guess they wanted to make sure they were admirin' the right
|
|
things," ventured Mr. Wrenn, with secret terror.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's so," came so approvingly from the Greek chorus that
|
|
the personal pupil of Mittyford, Ph.D., made his first epigram:
|
|
|
|
"It isn't so much what you like as what you don't like that
|
|
shows if you're wise."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," they gurgled; and Mr. Wrenn, much pleased with himself,
|
|
smiled _au prince_ upon his new friends.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Stettinius was getting into her stride for a few remarks
|
|
upon the poetry of industrialism when Mr. Gutch, who had been
|
|
"Uh--"ing for some moments, trying to get in his remark, winked
|
|
with sly rudeness at Miss Saxonby and observed:
|
|
|
|
"I fancy romance isn't quite dead yet, y' know. Our friends
|
|
here seem to have had quite a ro-mantic little journey." Then he
|
|
winked again.
|
|
|
|
"Say, what do you mean?" demanded Bill Wrenn, hot-eyed, fists
|
|
clenched, but very quiet.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I'm not _blaming_ you and Miss Nash--quite the reverse!"
|
|
tittered the Gutch person, wagging his head sagely.
|
|
|
|
Then Bill Wrenn, with his fist at Mr. Gutch's nose, spoke his mind:
|
|
|
|
"Say, you white-faced unhealthy dirty-minded lump, I ain't much
|
|
of a fighter, but I'm going to muss you up so's you can't find
|
|
your ears if you don't apologize for those insinuations."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Mr. Wrenn----"
|
|
|
|
"He didn't mean----"
|
|
|
|
"I didn't mean----"
|
|
|
|
"He was just spoofing----"
|
|
|
|
"I was just spoofing----"
|
|
|
|
Bill Wrenn, watching the dramatization of himself as hero, was
|
|
enjoying the drama. "You apologize, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Why certainly, Mr. Wrenn. Let me explain----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, don't explain," snortled Miss Saxonby.
|
|
|
|
"Yes!" from Mr. Bancock Binch, "explanations are _so_
|
|
conventional, old chap."
|
|
|
|
Do you see them?--Mr. Wrenn, self-conscious and ready to turn
|
|
into a blind belligerent Bill Wrenn at the first disrespect; the
|
|
talkers sitting about and assassinating all the princes and
|
|
proprieties and, poor things, taking Mr. Wrenn quite seriously
|
|
because he had uncovered the great truth that the important
|
|
thing in sight-seeing is not to see sights. He was most
|
|
unhappy, Mr. Wrenn was, and wanted to be away from there.
|
|
He darted as from a spring when he heard Istra's voice, from
|
|
the edge of the group, calling, "Come here a sec', Billy."
|
|
|
|
She was standing with a chair-back for support, tired but smiling.
|
|
|
|
"I can't get to sleep yet. Don't you want me to show you some
|
|
of the buildings here?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh _yes!_"
|
|
|
|
"If Mrs. Stettinius can spare you!"
|
|
|
|
This by way of remarking on the fact that the female poet was
|
|
staring volubly.
|
|
|
|
"G-g-g-g-g-g----" said Mrs. Stettinius, which seemed to imply
|
|
perfect consent.
|
|
|
|
Istra took him to the belvedere on a little slope overlooking
|
|
the lawns of Aengusmere, scattered with low bungalows and
|
|
rose-gardens.
|
|
|
|
"It is beautiful, isn't it? Perhaps one could be happy here--if
|
|
one could kill all the people except the architect," she mused.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it is," he glowed.
|
|
|
|
Standing there beside her, happiness enveloping them, looking
|
|
across the marvelous sward, Bill Wrenn was at the climax of his
|
|
comedy of triumph. Admitted to a world of lawns and bungalows
|
|
and big studio windows, standing in a belvedere beside Istra
|
|
Nash as her friend----
|
|
|
|
"Mouse dear," she said, hesitatingly, "the reason why I wanted
|
|
to have you come out here, why I couldn't sleep, I wanted to
|
|
tell you how ashamed I am for having been peevish, being
|
|
petulant, last night. I'm so sorry, because you were very
|
|
patient with me, you were very good to me. I don't want you to
|
|
think of me just as a crochety woman who didn't appreciate you.
|
|
You are very kind, and when I hear that you're married to some
|
|
nice girl I'll be as happy as can be."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Istra," he cried, grasping her arm, "I don't want any girl
|
|
in the world--I mean--oh, I just want to be let go 'round with
|
|
you when you'll let me----"
|
|
|
|
"No, no, dear. You must have seen last night; that's impossible.
|
|
Please don't argue about it now; I'm too tired. I just wanted
|
|
to tell you I appreciated---- And when you get back to America
|
|
you won't be any the worse for playing around with poor Istra
|
|
because she told you about different things from what you've
|
|
played with, about rearing children as individuals and
|
|
painting in _tempera_ and all those things? And--and I don't
|
|
want you to get too fond of me, because we're--different....
|
|
But we have had an adventure, even if it was a little moist."
|
|
She paused; then, cheerily: "Well, I'm going to beat it back
|
|
and try to sleep again. Good-by, Mouse dear. No, don't come
|
|
back to the Cara-advanced-serai. Play around and see the
|
|
animiles. G'-by."
|
|
|
|
He watched her straight swaying figure swing across the lawn and up
|
|
the steps of the half-timbered inn. He watched her enter the door
|
|
before he hastened to the shops which clustered about the railway-
|
|
station, outside of the poetic preserves of the colony proper.
|
|
|
|
He noticed, as he went, that the men crossing the green were
|
|
mostly clad in Norfolk jackets and knickers, so he purchased the
|
|
first pair of unrespectable un-ankle-concealing trousers he had
|
|
owned since small boyhood, and a jacket of rough serge, with a
|
|
gaudy buckle on the belt. Also, he actually dared an orange tie!
|
|
|
|
He wanted something for Istra at dinner----"a s'prise," he
|
|
whispered under his breath, with fond babying. For the first
|
|
time in his life he entered a florist's shop.... Normally, you
|
|
know, the poor of the city cannot afford flowers till they are
|
|
dead, and then for but one day.... He came out with a bunch of
|
|
orchids, and remembered the days when he had envied the people
|
|
he had seen in florists' shops actually buying flowers. When he
|
|
was almost at the Caravanserai he wanted to go back and change
|
|
the orchids for simpler flowers, roses or carnations, but he got
|
|
himself not to.
|
|
|
|
The linen and glassware and silver of the Caravanserai were
|
|
almost as coarse as those of a temperance hotel, for all the
|
|
raftered ceiling and the etchings in the dining-room. Hunting up
|
|
the stewardess of the inn, a bustling young woman who was
|
|
reading Keats energetically at an office-like desk, Mr. Wrenn
|
|
begged: "I wonder could I get some special cups and plates and
|
|
stuff for high tea tonight. I got a kind of party----"
|
|
|
|
"How many?" The stewardess issued the words as though he had put
|
|
a penny in the slot.
|
|
|
|
"Just two. Kind of a birthday party." Mendacious Mr. Wrenn!
|
|
|
|
"Certainly. Of course there's a small extra charge. I have a
|
|
Royal Satsuma tea-service--practically Royal Satsuma, at
|
|
least--and some special Limoges."
|
|
|
|
"I think Royal Sats'ma would be nice. And some silverware?"
|
|
|
|
"Surely."
|
|
|
|
"And could we get some special stuff to eat?"
|
|
|
|
"What would you like?"
|
|
|
|
"Why----"
|
|
|
|
Mendacious Mr. Wrenn! as we have commented. He put his head on
|
|
one side, rubbed his chin with nice consideration, and
|
|
condescended, "What would you suggest?"
|
|
|
|
"For a party high tea? Why, perhaps consomme and omelet
|
|
Bergerac and a salad and a sweet and _cafe diable_. We have a
|
|
chef who does French eggs rather remarkably. That would be
|
|
simple, but----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that would be very good," gravely granted the patron of
|
|
cuisine. "At six; for two."
|
|
|
|
As he walked away he grinned within. "Gee! I talked to that
|
|
omelet Berg' rac like I'd known it all my life!"
|
|
|
|
Other s'prises for Istra's party he sought. Let's see; suppose
|
|
it really were her birthday, wouldn't she like to have a letter
|
|
from some important guy? he queried of himself. He'd write
|
|
her a make-b'lieve letter from a duke. Which he did.
|
|
Purchasing a stamp, he humped over a desk in the common room and
|
|
with infinite pains he inked the stamp in imitation of a
|
|
postmark and addressed the letter to "Lady Istra Nash, Mouse
|
|
Castle, Suffolk."
|
|
|
|
Some one sat down at the desk opposite him, and he jealously
|
|
carried the task upstairs to his room. He rang for pen and ink
|
|
as regally as though he had never sat at the wrong end of a
|
|
buzzer. After half an hour of trying to visualize a duke
|
|
writing a letter he produced this:
|
|
|
|
LADY ISTRA NASH,
|
|
Mouse Castle.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MADAM,--We hear from our friend Sir William Wrenn that some
|
|
folks are saying that to-day is not your birthday & want to stop
|
|
your celebration, so if you should need somebody to make them
|
|
believe to-day is your birthday we have sent our secretary, Sir
|
|
Percival Montague. Sir William Wrenn will hide him behind his
|
|
chair, and if they bother you just call for Sir Percival and he
|
|
will tell them. Permit us, dear Lady Nash, to wish you all the
|
|
greetings of the season, and in close we beg to remain, as ever,
|
|
Yours sincerely,
|
|
DUKE VERE DE VERE.
|
|
|
|
He was very tired. When he lay down for a minute, with a pillow
|
|
tucked over his head, he was almost asleep in ten seconds. But
|
|
he sprang up, washed his prickly eyes with cold water, and began
|
|
to dress. He was shy of the knickers and golf-stockings, but it
|
|
was the orange tie that gave him real alarm. He dared it,
|
|
though, and went downstairs to make sure they were setting the
|
|
table with glory befitting the party.
|
|
|
|
As he went through the common room he watched the three or four
|
|
groups scattered through it. They seemed to take his clothes as
|
|
a matter of course. He was glad. He wanted so much to be a
|
|
credit to Istra.
|
|
|
|
Returning from the dining-room to the common room, he passed a
|
|
group standing in a window recess and looking away from him.
|
|
He overheard:
|
|
|
|
"Who is the remarkable new person with the orange tie and the
|
|
rococo buckle on his jacket belt--the one that just went
|
|
through? Did you ever _see_ anything so funny!
|
|
|
|
His collar didn't come within an inch and a half of fitting
|
|
his neck. He must be a poet. I wonder if his verses are as
|
|
jerry-built as his garments!"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn stopped.
|
|
|
|
Another voice:
|
|
|
|
"And the beautiful lack of development of his legs! It's like
|
|
the good old cycling days, when every draper's assistant went
|
|
bank-holidaying.... I don't know him, but I suppose he's some
|
|
tuppeny-ha'p'ny illustrator."
|
|
|
|
"Or perhaps he has convictions about fried bananas, and dines on
|
|
a bean saute. O Aengusmere! Shades of Aengus!"
|
|
|
|
"Not at all. When they look as gentle as he they always hate
|
|
the capitalists as a militant hates a cabinet minister. He
|
|
probably dines on the left ear of a South-African millionaire
|
|
every evening before exercise at the barricades.... I say, look
|
|
over there; there's a real artist going across the green. You
|
|
can tell he's a real artist because he's dressed like a navvy
|
|
and----"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn was walking away, across the common room, quite sure
|
|
that every one was eying him with amusement. And it was too
|
|
late to change his clothes. It was six already.
|
|
|
|
He stuck out his jaw, and remembered that he had planned to hide
|
|
the "letter from the duke" in Istra's napkin that it might be
|
|
the greater surprise. He sat down at their table. He tucked
|
|
the letter into the napkin folds. He moved the vase of orchids
|
|
nearer the center of the table, and the table nearer the open
|
|
window giving on the green. He rebuked himself for not being
|
|
able to think of something else to change. He forgot his
|
|
clothes, and was happy.
|
|
|
|
At six-fifteen he summoned a boy and sent him up with a message
|
|
that Mr. Wrenn was waiting and high tea ready.
|
|
|
|
The boy came back muttering, "Miss Nash left this note for you,
|
|
sir, the stewardess says."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn opened the green-and-white Caravanserai letter
|
|
excitedly. Perhaps Istra, too, was dressing for the party!
|
|
He loved all s'prises just then. He read:
|
|
|
|
Mouse dear, I'm sorrier than I can tell you, but you know I
|
|
warrned you that bad Istra was a creature of moods, and just now
|
|
my mood orders me to beat it for Paris, which I'm doing, on the
|
|
5.17 train. I won't say good-by--I hate good-bys, they're so
|
|
stupid, don't you think? Write me some time, better make it
|
|
care Amer. Express Co., Paris, because I don't know yet just
|
|
where I'll be. And please don't look me up in Paris, because
|
|
it's always better to end up an affair without explanations,
|
|
don't you think? You have been wonderfully kind to me, and I'll
|
|
send you some good thought-forms, shall I?
|
|
I. N.
|
|
|
|
He walked to the office of the Caravanserai, blindly, quietly.
|
|
He paid his bill, and found that he had only fifty dollars left.
|
|
He could not get himself to eat the waiting high tea. There was
|
|
a seven-fourteen train for London. He took it. Meantime he
|
|
wrote out a cable to his New York bank for a hundred and fifty
|
|
dollars. To keep from thinking in the train he talked gravely
|
|
and gently to an old man about the brave days of England, when
|
|
men threw quoits. He kept thinking over and over, to the tune
|
|
set by the rattling of the train trucks: "Friends... I got to
|
|
make friends, now I know what they are.... Funny some guys don't
|
|
make friends. Mustn't forget. Got to make lots of 'em in
|
|
New York. Learn how to make 'em."
|
|
|
|
He arrived at his room on Tavistock Place about eleven, and
|
|
tried to think for the rest of the night of how deeply he was
|
|
missing Morton of the cattle-boat now that--now that he had no
|
|
friend in all the hostile world.
|
|
|
|
In a London A. B. C. restaurant Mr. Wrenn was talking to an
|
|
American who had a clipped mustache, brisk manners, a
|
|
Knight-of-Pythias pin, and a mind for duck-shooting,
|
|
hardware-selling, and cigars.
|
|
|
|
"No more England for mine," the American snapped,
|
|
good-humoredly. "I'm going to get out of this foggy hole and
|
|
get back to God's country just as soon as I can.
|
|
|
|
I want to find out what's doing at the store, and I want to sit
|
|
down to a plate of flapjacks. I'm good and plenty sick of tea
|
|
and marmalade. Why, I wouldn't take this fool country for a gift.
|
|
No, sir! Me for God's country--Sleepy Eye, Brown County, Minnesota.
|
|
You bet!"
|
|
|
|
"You don't like England much, then?" Mr. Wrenn carefully reasoned.
|
|
|
|
"Like it? Like this damp crowded hole, where they can't talk
|
|
English, and have a fool coinage---- Say, that's a great system,
|
|
that metric system they've got over in France, but here--why,
|
|
they don't know whether Kansas City is in Kansas or Missouri or
|
|
both.... `Right as rain'--that's what a fellow said to me for
|
|
`all right'! Ever hear such nonsense?.... And tea for breakfast!
|
|
Not for me! No, sir! I'm going to take the first steamer!"
|
|
|
|
With a gigantic smoke-puff of disgust the man from Sleepy Eye
|
|
stalked out, jingling the keys in his trousers pocket, cocking
|
|
up his cigar, and looking as though he owned the restaurant.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn, picturing him greeting the Singer Tower from an
|
|
incoming steamer, longed to see the tower.
|
|
|
|
"Gee! I'll do it!"
|
|
|
|
He rose and, from that table in the basement of an A. B. C.
|
|
restaurant, he fled to America.
|
|
|
|
He dashed up-stairs, fidgeted while the cashier made his change,
|
|
rang for a bus, whisked into his room, slammed his things into
|
|
his suit-case, announced to it wildly that they were going home,
|
|
and scampered to the Northwestem Station. He walked nervously
|
|
up and down till the Liverpool train departed. "Suppose Istra
|
|
wanted to make up, and came back to London?" was a terrifying
|
|
thought that hounded him. He dashed into the waiting-room and
|
|
wrote to her, on a souvenir post-card showing the Abbey: "Called
|
|
back to America--will write. Address care of Souvenir Company,
|
|
Twenty-eighth Street." But he didn't mail the card.
|
|
|
|
Once settled in a second-class compartment, with the train in
|
|
motion, he seemed already much nearer America, and, humming, to
|
|
the great annoyance of a lady with bangs, he planned his new
|
|
great work--the making of friends; the discovery, some day, if
|
|
Istra should not relent, of "somebody to go home to." There was
|
|
no end to the "societies and lodges and stuff" he was going to
|
|
join directly he landed.
|
|
|
|
At Liverpool he suddenly stopped at a post-box and mailed his
|
|
card to Istra. That ended his debate. Of course after that he
|
|
had to go back to America.
|
|
|
|
He sailed exultantly, one month and seventeen days after leaving
|
|
Portland.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII
|
|
HE DISCOVERS AMERICA
|
|
|
|
In his white-painted steerage berth Mr. Wrenn lay, with a
|
|
scratch - pad on his raised knees and a small mean pillow
|
|
doubled under his head, writing sample follow-up letters to
|
|
present to the Souvenir and Art Novelty Company, interrupting
|
|
his work at intervals to add to a list of the books which,
|
|
beginning about five minutes after he landed in New York, he was
|
|
going to master. He puzzled over Marie Corelli. Morton liked
|
|
Miss Corelli so much; but would her works appeal to Istra Nash?
|
|
|
|
He had worked for many hours on a letter to Istra in which he
|
|
avoided mention of such indecent matters as steerages and
|
|
immigrants. He was grateful, he told her, for "all you learned
|
|
me," and he had thought that Aengusmere was a beautiful place,
|
|
though he now saw "what you meant about them interesting
|
|
people," and his New York address would be the Souvenir Company.
|
|
|
|
He tore up the several pages that repeated that oldest most
|
|
melancholy cry of the lover, which rang among the deodars, from
|
|
viking ships, from the moonlit courtyards of Provence, the cry
|
|
which always sounded about Mr. Wrenn as he walked the deck:
|
|
"I want you so much; I miss you so unendingly; I am so lonely for
|
|
you, dear." For no more clearly, no more nobly did the golden
|
|
Aucassin or lean Dante word that cry in their thoughts than did
|
|
Mr. William Wrenn, Our Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
A third - class steward with a mangy mustache and setter - like
|
|
tan eyes came teetering down - stairs, each step like a nervous
|
|
pencil tap on a table, and peered over the side of Mr. Wrenn's
|
|
berth. He loved Mr. Wrenn, who was proven a scholar by the
|
|
reading of real bound books--an English history and a
|
|
second-hand copy of _Haunts of Historic English Writers_,
|
|
purchased in Liverpool--and who was willing to listen to the
|
|
steward's serial story of how his woman, Mrs. Wargle,
|
|
faithlessly consorted with Foddle, the cat's-meat man, when the
|
|
steward was away, and, when he was home, cooked for him lights
|
|
and liver that unquestionably were purchased from the same
|
|
cat's-meat man. He now leered with a fond and watery gaze upon
|
|
Mr. Wrenn's scholarly pursuits, and announced in a whisper:
|
|
|
|
"They've sighted land."
|
|
|
|
"Land?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh aye."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn sat up so vigorously that he bumped his head.
|
|
He chucked his papers beneath the pillow with his right hand,
|
|
while the left was feeling for the side of the berth.
|
|
"Land!" he bellowed to drowsing cabin-mates as he vaulted out.
|
|
|
|
The steerage promenade-deck, iron-sided, black-floored, ending
|
|
in the iron approaches to the galley at one end and the iron
|
|
superstructures about a hatch at the other, was like a grim
|
|
swart oilily clean machine-shop aisle, so inclosed, so
|
|
over-roofed, that the side toward the sea seemed merely a long
|
|
factory window. But he loved it and, except when he had
|
|
guiltily remembered the books he had to read, he had stayed on
|
|
deck, worshiping the naive bright attire of immigrants and the
|
|
dark roll and glory of the sea.
|
|
|
|
Now, out there was a blue shading, made by a magic pencil; land,
|
|
his land, where he was going to become the beloved comrade of
|
|
all the friends whose likenesses he saw in the white-caps
|
|
flashing before him.
|
|
|
|
Humming, he paraded down to the buffet, where small
|
|
beer and smaller tobacco were sold, to buy another pound of
|
|
striped candy for the offspring of the Russian Jews.
|
|
|
|
The children knew he was coming. "Fat rascals," he chuckled,
|
|
touching their dark cheeks, pretending to be frightened as they
|
|
pounded soft fists against the iron side of the ship or rolled
|
|
unregarded in the scuppers. Their shawled mothers knew him,
|
|
too, and as he shyly handed about the candy the chattering
|
|
stately line of Jewish elders nodded their beards like the
|
|
forest primeval in a breeze, saying words of blessing in a
|
|
strange tongue.
|
|
|
|
He smiled back and made gestures, and shouted "Land! Land!" with
|
|
several variations in key, to make it sound foreign.
|
|
|
|
But he withdrew for the sacred moment of seeing the Land of
|
|
Promise he was newly discovering--the Long Island shore; the
|
|
grass-clad redouts at Fort Wadsworth; the vast pile of New York
|
|
sky-scrapers, standing in a mist like an enormous burned forest.
|
|
|
|
"Singer Tower.... Butterick Building," he murmured, as they
|
|
proceeded toward their dock. "That's something like.... Let's
|
|
see; yes, sir, by golly, right up there between the Met. Tower
|
|
and the _Times_--good old Souvenir Company office. Jiminy! `One
|
|
Dollar to Albany'--something _like_ a sign, that is--good old
|
|
dollar! To thunder with their darn shillings. Home!... Gee!
|
|
there's where I used to moon on a wharf!... Gosh! the old town
|
|
looks good."
|
|
|
|
And all this was his to conquer, for friendship's sake.
|
|
|
|
He went to a hotel. While he had to go back to the Zapps', of
|
|
course, he did not wish, by meeting those old friends, to spoil
|
|
his first day. No, it was cheerfuler to stand at a window of
|
|
his cheap hotel on Seventh Avenue, watching the "good old
|
|
American crowd"--Germans, Irishmen, Italians, and Jews. He
|
|
went to the Nickelorion and grasped the hand of the ticket -
|
|
taker, the Brass-button Man, ejaculating: "How are you? Well,
|
|
how's things going with the old show?... I been away couple
|
|
of months."
|
|
|
|
"Fine and dandy! Been away, uh? Well, it's good to get back to
|
|
the old town, heh? Summer hotel?"
|
|
|
|
"Unk?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, you're the waiter at Pat Maloney's, ain't you?"
|
|
|
|
Next morning Mr. Wrenn made himself go to the Souvenir and Art
|
|
Novelty Company. He wanted to get the teasing, due him for
|
|
staying away so short a time, over as soon as possible. The
|
|
office girl, addressing circulars, seemed surprised when he
|
|
stepped from the elevator, and blushed her usual shy gratitude
|
|
to the men of the office for allowing her to exist and take away
|
|
six dollars weekly.
|
|
|
|
Then into the entry-room ran Rabin, one of the traveling salesmen.
|
|
|
|
"Why, hul-lo, Wrenn! Wondered if that could be you. Back so
|
|
soon? Thought you were going to Europe."
|
|
|
|
"Just got back. Couldn't stand it away from you, old scout!"
|
|
|
|
"You must have been learning to sass back real smart, in the Old
|
|
Country, heh? Going to be with us again? Well, see you again
|
|
soon. Glad see you back."
|
|
|
|
He was not madly excited at seeing Rabin; still, the drummer was
|
|
part of the good old Souvenir Company, the one place in the
|
|
world on which he could absolutely depend, the one place where
|
|
they always wanted him.
|
|
|
|
He had been absently staring at the sample-tables, noting new
|
|
novelties. The office girl, speaking sweetly, but as to an
|
|
outsider, inquired, "Who did you wish to see, Mr. Wrenn?"
|
|
|
|
"Why! Mr. Guilfogle."
|
|
|
|
"He's busy, but if you'll sit down I think you can see him in a
|
|
few minutes."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn felt like the prodigal son, with no calf in sight, at
|
|
having to wait on the callers' bench, but he shook with faint
|
|
excited gurgles of mirth at the thought of the delightful
|
|
surprise Mr. Mortimer R. Guilfogle, the office manager,
|
|
was going to have. He kept an eye out for Charley Carpenter.
|
|
If Charley didn't come through the entry-room he'd go into the
|
|
bookkeeping-room, and--"talk about your surprises----"
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Guilfogle will see you now," said the office girl.
|
|
|
|
As he entered the manager's office Mr. Guilfogle made much of
|
|
glancing up with busy amazement.
|
|
|
|
"Well, well, Wrenn! Back so soon? Thought you were going to be
|
|
gone quite a while."
|
|
|
|
"Couldn't keep away from the office, Mr. Guilfogle," with an
|
|
uneasy smile.
|
|
|
|
"Have a good trip?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, a dandy."
|
|
|
|
"How'd you happen to get back so soon?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I wanted to---- Say, Mr. Guilfogle, I really wanted to get
|
|
back to the office again. I'm awfully glad to see it again."
|
|
|
|
"Glad see _you_. Well, where did you go? I got the card you
|
|
sent me from Chesterton with the picture of the old church on it."
|
|
|
|
"Why, I went to Liverpool and Oxford and London and --well--Kew
|
|
and Ealing and places and---- And I tramped through Essex and
|
|
Suffolk--all through--on foot. Aengusmere and them places."
|
|
|
|
"Just a moment. (Well, Rabin, what is it? Why certainly. I've
|
|
told you that already about five times. _Yes_, I said--that's
|
|
what I had the samples made up for. I wish you'd be a little
|
|
more careful, d' ye hear?) You went to London, did you, Wrenn?
|
|
Say, did you notice any novelties we could copy?"
|
|
|
|
"No, I'm afraid I didn't, Mr. Guilfogle. I'm awfully sorry. I
|
|
hunted around, but I couldn't find a thing we could use. I mean
|
|
I couldn't find anything that began to come up to our line.
|
|
Them English are pretty slow."
|
|
|
|
"Didn't, eh? Well, what's your plans now?"
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh--I kind of thought---- Honestly, Mr. Guilfogle, I'd
|
|
like to get back on my old job. You remember--it was to be
|
|
fixed so----"
|
|
|
|
"Afraid there's nothing doing just now, Wrenn. Not a thing.
|
|
Course I can't tell what may happen, and you want to keep in
|
|
touch with us, but we're pretty well filled up just now. Jake
|
|
is getting along better than we thought. He's learning----"
|
|
Not one word regarding Jake's excellence did Mr. Wrenn hear.
|
|
|
|
Not get the job back? He sat down and stammered:
|
|
|
|
"Gee! I hadn't thought of that. I'd kind of banked on the
|
|
Souvenir Company, Mr. Guilfogle."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you know I told you I thought you were an idiot to go.
|
|
I warned you."
|
|
|
|
He timidly agreed, mourning: "Yes, that so; I know you did.
|
|
But uh--well----"
|
|
|
|
"Sorry, Wrenn. That's the way it goes in business, though. If
|
|
you will go beating it around---- A rolling stone don't gather any
|
|
moss. Well, cheer up! Possibly there may be something doing
|
|
in----"
|
|
|
|
"Tr-r-r-r-r-r-r," said the telephone.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Guilfogle remarked into it: "Hello. Yes, it's me. Well,
|
|
who did you think it was? The cat? Yuh. Sure. No. Well,
|
|
to-morrow, probably. All right. Good-by."
|
|
|
|
Then he glanced at his watch and up at Mr. Wrenn impatiently.
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mr. Guilfogle, you say there'll be--when will there be
|
|
likely to be an opening?"
|
|
|
|
"Now, how can I tell, my boy? We'll work you in if we can--you
|
|
ain't a bad clerk; or at least you wouldn't be if you'd be a
|
|
little more careful. By the way, of course you understand that
|
|
if we try to work you in it'll take lots of trouble, and we'll
|
|
expect you to not go flirting round with other firms, looking
|
|
for a job. Understand that?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, sir."
|
|
|
|
"All right. We appreciate your work all right, but of
|
|
course you can 't expect us to fire any of our present force
|
|
just because you take the notion to come back whenever you want
|
|
to.... Hiking off to Europe, leaving a good job!... You didn't
|
|
get on the Continent, did you?"
|
|
|
|
"No, I----"
|
|
|
|
"Well.... Oh, say, how's the grub in London? Cheaper than it
|
|
is here? The wife was saying this morning we'd have to stop
|
|
eating if the high cost of living goes on going up."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, it's quite a little cheaper. You can get fine tea for two
|
|
and three cents a cup. Clothes is cheaper, too. But I don't
|
|
care much for the English, though there is all sorts of quaint
|
|
places with a real flavor.... Say, Mr. Guilfogle, you know I
|
|
inherited a little money, and I can wait awhile, and you'll kind
|
|
of keep me in mind for a place if one----"
|
|
|
|
"Didn't I _say_ I would?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but----"
|
|
|
|
"You come around and see me a week from now. And leave your
|
|
address with Rosey. I don't know, though, as we can afford to
|
|
pay you quite the same salary at first, even if we can work you
|
|
in--the season's been very slack. But I'll do what I can for
|
|
you. Come in and see me in about a week. Goo' day."
|
|
|
|
Rabin, the salesman, waylaid Mr. Wrenn in the corridor.
|
|
|
|
"You look kind of peeked, Wrenn. Old Goglefogle been lighting
|
|
into you? Say, I ought to have told you first. I forgot it.
|
|
The old rat, he's been planning to stick the knife into you all
|
|
the while. 'Bout two weeks ago me and him had a couple of
|
|
cocktails at Mouquin's. You know how chummy he always gets
|
|
after a couple of smiles. Well, he was talking about--I was
|
|
saying you're a good man and hoping you were having a good
|
|
time--and he said, `Yes,' he says, `he's a good man, but he sure
|
|
did lay himself wide open by taking this trip. I've got him
|
|
dead to rights,' he says to me. `I've got a hunch he'll be
|
|
back here in three or four months,' he says to me. `And do you
|
|
think he'll walk in and get what he wants? Not him. I'll keep
|
|
him waiting a month before I give him back his job, and then you
|
|
watch, Rabin,' he says to me, `you'll see he'll be tickled to
|
|
death to go back to work at less salary than he was getting, and
|
|
he'll have sense enough to not try this stunt of getting off the
|
|
job again after that. And the trip'll be good for him,
|
|
anyway--he'll do better work--vacation at his own expense--save
|
|
us money all round. I tell you, Rabin,' he says to me, `if any
|
|
of you boys think you can get the best of the company or me you
|
|
just want to try it, that's all.' Yessir, that's what the old
|
|
rat told me. You want to watch out for him."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I will; indeed I will----"
|
|
|
|
"Did he spring any of this fairy tale just now?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, kind of. Say, thanks, I'm awful obliged to----"
|
|
|
|
"Say, for the love of Mike, don't let him know I told you."
|
|
|
|
"No, no, I sure won't."
|
|
|
|
They parted. Eager though he was for the great moment of again
|
|
seeing his comrade, Charley Carpenter, Mr. Wrenn dribbled toward
|
|
the bookkeeping-room mournfully, planning to tell Charley of
|
|
Guilfogle's wickedness.
|
|
|
|
The head bookkeeper shook his head at Mr. Wrenn's inquiry:
|
|
|
|
"Charley ain't here any longer."
|
|
|
|
"Ain't _here?_"
|
|
|
|
"No. He got through. He got to boozing pretty bad, and one
|
|
morning about three weeks ago, when he had a pretty bad
|
|
hang-over, he told Guilfogle what he thought of him, so of
|
|
course Guilfogle fired him."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that's too _bad_. Say, you don't know his address, do you?"
|
|
|
|
"---- East a Hundred and Eighteenth.... Well, I'm glad to see
|
|
you back, Wrenn. Didn't expect to see you back so soon, but
|
|
always glad to see you. Going to be with us?"
|
|
|
|
"I ain't sure," said Mr. Wrenn, crabbedly, then shook hands
|
|
warmly with the bookkeeper, to show there was nothing personal
|
|
in his snippishness.
|
|
|
|
For nearly a hundred blocks Mr. Wrenn scowled at an
|
|
advertisement of Corn Flakes in the Third Avenue Elevated without
|
|
really seeing it.... Should he go back to the Souvenir Company
|
|
at all?
|
|
|
|
Yes. He would. That was the best way to start making friends.
|
|
But he would "get our friend Guilfogle at recess," he assured
|
|
himself, with an out-thrust of the jaw like that of the great
|
|
Bill Wrenn. He knew Guilfogle's lead now, and he would show
|
|
that gentleman that he could play the game. He'd take that
|
|
lower salary and pretend to be frightened, but when he got the
|
|
chance----
|
|
|
|
He did not proclaim even to himself what dreadful thing he was
|
|
going to do, but as he left the Elevated he said over and over,
|
|
shaking his closed fist inside his coat pocket:
|
|
|
|
"When I get the chance--when I _get_ it----"
|
|
|
|
The flat-building where Charley Carpenter lived was one of
|
|
hundreds of pressed-brick structures, apparently all turned out
|
|
of the same mold. It was filled with the smells of steamy
|
|
washing and fried fish. Languid with the heat, Mr. Wrenn
|
|
crawled up an infinity of iron steps and knocked three times at
|
|
Charley's door. No answer. He crawled down again and sought
|
|
out the janitress, who stopped watching an ice-wagon in the
|
|
street to say:
|
|
|
|
"I guess you'll be finding him asleep up there, sir. He do be
|
|
lying there drunk most of the day. His wife's left him. The
|
|
landlord's give him notice to quit, end of August. Warm day,
|
|
sir. Be you a bill - collector? Mostly, it's bill-collectors
|
|
that----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, it is hot."
|
|
|
|
Superior in manner, but deeply dejected, Mr. Wrenn rang the
|
|
down-stairs bell long enough to wake Charley, pantingly got
|
|
himself up the interminable stairs, and kicked the door till
|
|
Charley's voice quavered inside:
|
|
|
|
"Who zhat?"
|
|
|
|
"It's me, Charley. Wrenn."
|
|
|
|
"You're in Yurp. Can't fool me. G' 'way from there."
|
|
|
|
Three other doors on the same landing were now partly open and
|
|
blocked with the heads of frowsy inquisitive women. The steamy
|
|
smell was thicker in the darkness. Mr. Wrenn felt prickly, then
|
|
angry at this curiosity, and again demanded:
|
|
|
|
"Lemme in, I say."
|
|
|
|
"Tell you it ain't you. I know you!"
|
|
|
|
Charley Carpenter's pale face leered out. His tousled hair was
|
|
stuck to his forehead by perspiration; his eyes were red and
|
|
vaguely staring. His clothes were badlv wrinkled. He wore a
|
|
collarless shirt with a frilled bosom of virulent pink, its
|
|
cuffs grimy and limp.
|
|
|
|
"It's ol' Wrenn. C'm in. C'm in quick. Collectors always
|
|
hanging around. They can't catch me. You bet."
|
|
|
|
He closed the door and wabbled swiftly down the long drab hall
|
|
of the "railroad flat," evidently trying to walk straight. The
|
|
reeking stifling main room at the end of the hall was terrible
|
|
as Charley's eyes. Flies boomed everywhere. The oak table,
|
|
which Charley and his bride had once spent four happy hours in
|
|
selecting, was littered with half a dozen empty whisky-flasks,
|
|
collars, torn sensational newspapers, dirty plates and
|
|
coffee-cups. The cheap brocade cover, which a bride had once
|
|
joyed to embroider with red and green roses, was half pulled off
|
|
and dragged on the floor amid the cigarette butts, Durham
|
|
tobacco, and bacon rinds which covered the green-and-yellow
|
|
carpet-rug.
|
|
|
|
This much Mr. Wrenn saw. Then he set himself to the hard task
|
|
of listening to Charley, who was muttering:
|
|
|
|
"Back quick, ain't you, ol' Wrenn? You come up to see me,
|
|
didn't you? You're m' friend, ain't you, eh? I got an awful
|
|
hang-over, ain't I? You don't care, do you, ol' Wrenn?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn stared at him weakly, but only for a minute.
|
|
Perhaps it was his cattle-boat experience which now made
|
|
him deal directly with such drunkenness as would have
|
|
nauseated him three months before; perhaps his attendance
|
|
on a weary Istra.
|
|
|
|
"Come now, Charley, you got to buck up," he crooned.
|
|
|
|
"_All_ ri'."
|
|
|
|
"What's the trouble? How did you get going like this?"
|
|
|
|
"Wife left me. I was drinking. You think I'm drunk, don't you?
|
|
But I ain't. She went off with her sister--always hated me. She
|
|
took my money out of savings-bank--three hundred; all money I had
|
|
'cept fifty dollars. I'll fix her. I'll kill her. Took to
|
|
hitting the booze. Goglefogle fired me. Don't care. Drink all
|
|
I want. Keep young fellows from getting it! Say, go down and
|
|
get me pint. Just finished up pint. Got to have one-die of
|
|
thirst. Bourbon. Get----"
|
|
|
|
"I'll go and get you a drink, Charley--just one drink,
|
|
savvy?--if you'll promise to get cleaned up, like I tell
|
|
you, afterward."
|
|
|
|
"_All_ ri'."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn hastened out with a whisky-flask, muttering,
|
|
feverishly, "Gee! I got to save him." Returning, he poured out
|
|
one drink, as though it were medicine for a refractory patient,
|
|
and said, soothingly:
|
|
|
|
"Now we'll take a cold bath, heh? and get cleaned up and
|
|
sobered up. Then we'll talk about a job, heh?"
|
|
|
|
"Aw, don't want a bath. Say, I feel better now. Let's go out
|
|
and have a drink. Gimme that flask. Where j' yuh put it?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn went to the bathroom, turned on the cold-water tap,
|
|
returned, and undressed Charley, who struggled and laughed and
|
|
let his whole inert weight rest against Mr. Wrenn's shoulder.
|
|
Though normally Charley could have beaten three Mr. Wrenns, he
|
|
was run into the bath-room and poked into the tub.
|
|
|
|
Instantly he began to splash, throwing up water in handfuls,
|
|
singing. The water poured over the side of the tub. Mr. Wrenn
|
|
tried to hold him still, but the wet sleek shoulders slipped
|
|
through his hand like a wet platter. Wholesomely vexed, he
|
|
turned off the water and slammed the bathroom door.
|
|
|
|
In the bedroom he found an unwrinkled winter-weight suit and one
|
|
clean shirt. In the living-room he hung up his coat, covering
|
|
it with a newspaper, pulled the broom from under the table, and
|
|
prepared to sweep.
|
|
|
|
The disorder was so great that he made one of the inevitable
|
|
discoveries of every housekeeper, and admitted to himself that
|
|
he "didn't know where to begin." He stumblingly lugged a heavy
|
|
pile of dishes from the center-table to the kitchen, shook and
|
|
beat and folded the table-cover, stuck the chairs atop the table,
|
|
and began to sweep.
|
|
|
|
At the door a shining wet naked figure stood, bellowing:
|
|
|
|
"Hey! What d' yuh think you're doing? Cut it out."
|
|
|
|
"Just sweeping, Charley," from Mr. Wrenn, and an uninterrupted
|
|
"Tuff, tuff, tuff" from the broom.
|
|
|
|
"Cut it out, I said. Whose house _is_ this?"
|
|
|
|
"Gwan back in the bath-tub, Charley."
|
|
|
|
"Say, d' yuh think you can run me? Get out of this, or I'll
|
|
throw you out. Got house way I want it."
|
|
|
|
Bill Wrenn, the cattleman, rushed at him, smacked him with the
|
|
broom, drove him back into the tub, and waited. He laughed.
|
|
It was all a good joke; his friend Charley and he were playing
|
|
a little game. Charley also laughed and splashed some more.
|
|
Then he wept and said that the water was cold, and that he was now
|
|
deserted by his only friend.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, shut up," remarked Bill Wrenn, and swept the bathroom floor.
|
|
|
|
Charley stopped swashing about to sneer:
|
|
|
|
"Li'l ministering angel, ain't you? You think you're awful
|
|
good, don't you? Come up here and bother me.
|
|
|
|
When I ain't well. Salvation Army. You---- ---- ----. Aw,
|
|
lemme _'lone_, will you?" Bill Wrenn kept on sweeping. "Get out,
|
|
you ---- ---- ----."
|
|
|
|
There was enough energy in Charley's voice to indicate that he
|
|
was getting sober. Bill Wrenn soused him under once more, so
|
|
thoroughly that his own cuffs were reduced to a state of
|
|
flabbiness. He dragged Charley out, helped him dry himself,
|
|
and drove him to bed.
|
|
|
|
He went out and bought dish-towels, soap, washing-powder, and
|
|
collars of Charley's size, which was an inch larger than his own.
|
|
He finished sweeping and dusting and washing the dishes--all
|
|
of them. He--who had learned to comfort Istra--he really
|
|
enjoyed it. His sense of order made it a pleasure to see
|
|
a plate yellow with dried egg glisten iridescently and flash
|
|
into shining whiteness; or a room corner filled with dust and
|
|
tobacco flakes become again a "nice square clean corner with
|
|
the baseboard shining, gee! just like it was new."
|
|
|
|
An irate grocer called with a bill for fifteen dollars. Mr.
|
|
Wrenn blandly heard his threats all through, pretending to
|
|
himself that this was his home, whose honor was his honor.
|
|
He paid the man eight dollars on account and loftily dismissed him.
|
|
He sat down to wait for Charley, reading a newspaper most of the
|
|
time, but rising to pursue stray flies furiously, stumbling over
|
|
chairs, and making murderous flappings with a folded newspaper.
|
|
|
|
When Charley awoke, after three hours, clear of mind but not at
|
|
all clear as regards the roof of his mouth, Mr. Wrenn gave him
|
|
a very little whisky, with considerable coffee, toast, and bacon.
|
|
The toast was not bad.
|
|
|
|
"Now, Charley," he said, cheerfully, "your bat's over, ain't it,
|
|
old man?"
|
|
|
|
"Say, you been darn' decent to me, old man. Lord! how you've
|
|
been sweeping up! How was I--was I pretty soused?"
|
|
|
|
"Honest, you were fierce. You will sober up, now, won't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, it's no wonder I had a classy hang-over, Wrenn. I was at
|
|
the Amusieren Rathskeller till four this morning, and then I had
|
|
a couple of nips before breakfast, and then I didn't have any
|
|
breakfast. But sa-a-a-ay, man, I sure did have some fiesta last
|
|
night. There was a little peroxide blonde that----"
|
|
|
|
"Now you look here, Carpenter; you listen to me. You're sober
|
|
now. Have you tried to find another job?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I did. But I got down in the mouth. Didn't feel like I
|
|
had a friend left."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you h----"
|
|
|
|
"But I guess I have now, old Wrennski."
|
|
|
|
"Look here, Charley, you know I don't want to pull off no
|
|
Charity Society stunt or talk like I was a preacher. But I like
|
|
you so darn much I want to see you sober up and get another job.
|
|
Honestly I do, Charley. Are you broke?"
|
|
|
|
"Prett' nearly. Only got about ten dollars to my name....
|
|
I _will_ take a brace, old man. I know you ain't no preacher.
|
|
Course if you came around with any `holierthan-thou' stunt I'd
|
|
have to go right out and get soused on general principles....
|
|
Yuh--I'll try to get a job."
|
|
|
|
"Here's ten dollars. Please take it--aw--please, Charley."
|
|
|
|
"_All_ right; anything to oblige."
|
|
|
|
"What 've you got in sight in the job line?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, there's a chance at night clerking in a little hotel
|
|
where I was a bell-hop long time ago. The night clerk's going to
|
|
get through, but I don't know just when--prob'ly in a week or two."
|
|
|
|
"Well, keep after it. And _please_ come down to see me --the old
|
|
place--West Sixteenth Street."
|
|
|
|
"What about the old girl with the ingrowing grouch? What's her
|
|
name? She ain't stuck on me."
|
|
|
|
"Mrs. Zapp? Oh--hope she chokes. She can just kick all she
|
|
wants to. I'm just going to have all the visitors I want to."
|
|
|
|
"All right. Say, tell us something about your trip."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I had a great time. Lots of nice fellows on the cattle-boat.
|
|
I went over on one, you know. Fellow named Morton--awfully
|
|
nice fellow. Say, Charley, you ought to seen me being butler
|
|
to the steers. Handing 'em hay. But say, the sea was fine;
|
|
all kinds of colors. Awful dirty on the cattle-boat, though."
|
|
|
|
"Hard work?"
|
|
|
|
"Yuh--kind of hard. Oh, not so very."
|
|
|
|
"What did you see in England?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, a lot of different places. Say, I seen some great
|
|
vaudeville in Liverpool, Charley, with Morton--he's a
|
|
slick fellow; works for the Pennsylvania, here in town.
|
|
I got to look him up. Say, I wish we had an agency for
|
|
college sofa-pillows and banners and souvenir stuff in
|
|
Oxford. There's a whole bunch of colleges there, all
|
|
right in the same town. I met a prof. there from some
|
|
American college--he hired an automobubble and took me
|
|
down to a reg'lar old inn----"
|
|
|
|
"Well, well!"
|
|
|
|
"----like you read about; sanded floor!"
|
|
|
|
"Get to London?"
|
|
|
|
"Yuh. Gee! it's a big place. Say, that Westminster
|
|
Abbey's a great place. I was in there a couple of times.
|
|
More darn tombs of kings and stuff. And I see a bishop,
|
|
with leggins on! But I got kind of lonely. I thought of
|
|
you a lot of times. Wished we could go out and get an ale
|
|
together. Maybe pick up a couple of pretty girls."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you sport!... Say, didn't get over to gay Paree, did you?"
|
|
|
|
"Nope.... Well, I guess I'd better beat it now.
|
|
Got to move in--I'm at a hotel. You will come down and see
|
|
me to-night, won't you?"
|
|
|
|
"So you thought of me, eh?... Yuh--sure, old socks.
|
|
I'll be down to-night. And I'll get right after that job."
|
|
|
|
It is doubtful whether Mr. Wrenn would ever have returned
|
|
to the Zapps' had he not promised to see Charley there.
|
|
Even while he was carrying his suit-case down West Sixteenth,
|
|
broiling by degrees in the sunshine, he felt like rushing
|
|
up to Charley's and telling him to come to the hotel instead.
|
|
|
|
Lee Theresa, taking the day off with a headache,
|
|
answered the bell, and ejaculated:
|
|
|
|
"Well! So it's you, is it?"
|
|
|
|
"I guess it is."
|
|
|
|
"What, are you back so soon? Why, you ain't been gone more
|
|
than a month and a half, have you?"
|
|
|
|
Beware, daughter of Southern pride! The little Yankee is
|
|
regarding your full-blown curves and empty eyes with rebellion,
|
|
though he says, ever so meekly:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I guess it is about that, Miss Theresa."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I just knew you couldn't stand it away from us.
|
|
I suppose you'll want your room back. Ma, here's Mr. Wrenn
|
|
back again--Mr. Wrenn! _Ma!_"
|
|
|
|
"Oh-h-h-h!" sounded Goaty Zapp's voice, in impish
|
|
disdain, below. "Mr. Wrenn's back. Hee, hee! Couldn't
|
|
stand it. Ain't that like a Yankee!"
|
|
|
|
A slap, a wail, then Mrs. Zapp's elephantine slowness
|
|
on the stairs from the basement. She appeared, buttoning
|
|
her collar, smiling almost pleasantly, for she disliked
|
|
Mr. Wrenn less than she did any other of her lodgers.
|
|
|
|
"Back already, Mist' Wrenn? Ah declare, Ah was
|
|
saying to Lee Theresa just yest'day, Ah just knew you'd
|
|
be wishing you was back with us. Won't you come in?"
|
|
|
|
He edged into the parlor with, "How is the sciatica, Mrs. Zapp?"
|
|
|
|
"Ah ain't feeling right smart."
|
|
|
|
"My room occupied yet?"
|
|
|
|
He was surveying the airless parlor rather heavily, and
|
|
his curt manner was not pleasing to the head of the house
|
|
of Zapp, who remarked, funereally:
|
|
|
|
"It ain't taken just now, Mist' Wrenn, but Ah dunno.
|
|
There was a gennulman a-looking at it just yesterday, and
|
|
he said he'd be permanent if he came. Ah declare, Mist' Wrenn,
|
|
Ah dunno's Ah like to have my gennulmen just get up and
|
|
go without giving me notice."
|
|
|
|
Lee Theresa scowled at her.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn retorted, "I _did_ give you notice."
|
|
|
|
"Ah know, but--well, Ah reckon Ah can let you have it, but Ah'll
|
|
have to have four and a half a week instead of four. Prices is
|
|
all going up so, Ah declare, Ah was just saying to Lee T'resa Ah
|
|
dunno what we're all going to do if the dear Lord don't look out
|
|
for us. And, Mist' Wrenn, Ah dunno's Ah like to have you coming
|
|
in so late nights. But Ah reckon Ah can accommodate you."
|
|
|
|
"It's a good deal of a favor, isn't it, Mrs. Zapp?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn was dangerously polite. Let gentility look out for
|
|
the sharp practices of the Yankee.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but----"
|
|
|
|
It was our hero, our madman of the seven and seventy seas, our
|
|
revolutionist friend of Istra, who leaped straight from the
|
|
salt-incrusted decks of his laboring steamer to the musty parlor
|
|
and declared, quietly but unmovably-practically
|
|
unmovably--"Well, then, I guess I'd better not take it at all."
|
|
|
|
"So that's the way you're going to treat us!" bellowed Mrs.
|
|
Zapp. "You go off and leave us with an unoccupied room and----
|
|
Oh! You poor white trash--you----"
|
|
|
|
"_Ma!_ You shut up and go down-stairs-s-s-s-s!" Theresa hissed.
|
|
"Go on."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Zapp wabbled regally out. Lee Theresa spoke to Mr. Wrenn:
|
|
|
|
"Ma ain't feeling a bit well this afternoon. I'm sorry she
|
|
talked like that. You will come back, won't you?" She showed
|
|
all her teeth in a genuine smile, and in her anxiety reached
|
|
his heart. "Remember, you promised you would."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I will, but----"
|
|
|
|
Bill Wrenn was fading, an affrighted specter. The "but" was
|
|
the last glimpse of him, and that Theresa overlooked, as she
|
|
bustlingly chirruped: "I _knew_ you would understand. I'll skip
|
|
right up and look at the room and put on fresh sheets."
|
|
|
|
One month, one hot New York month, passed before the imperial
|
|
Mr. Guilfogle gave him back The Job, and then at seventeen
|
|
dollars and fifty cents a week instead of his former nineteen
|
|
dollars. Mr. Wrenn refused, upon pretexts, to go out with the
|
|
manager for a drink, and presented him with twenty suggestions
|
|
for new novelties and circular letters. He rearranged the
|
|
unsystematic methods of Jake, the cub, and two days later he was
|
|
at work as though he had never in his life been farther from the
|
|
Souvenir Company than Newark.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
|
HE IS "OUR MR. WRENN"
|
|
|
|
DEAR ISTRA,--I am back in New York feeling very well & hope this
|
|
finds you the same. I have been wanting to write to you for
|
|
quite a while now but there has not been much news of any kind
|
|
& so I have not written to you. But now I am back working for
|
|
the Souvenir Company. I hope you are having a good time in
|
|
Paris it must be a very pretty city & I have often wished to be
|
|
there perhaps some day I shall go. I [several erasures here]
|
|
have been reading quite a few books since I got back & think now
|
|
I shall get on better with my reading. You told me so many
|
|
things about books & so on & I do appreciate it. In closing, I
|
|
am yours very sincerely,
|
|
WILLIAM WRENN.
|
|
|
|
There was nothing else he could say. But there were a
|
|
terrifying number of things he could think as he crouched by the
|
|
window overlooking West Sixteenth Street, whose dull hue had not
|
|
changed during the centuries while he had been tramping England.
|
|
Her smile he remembered--and he cried, "Oh, I want to see her so
|
|
much." Her gallant dash through the rain--and again the cry.
|
|
|
|
At last he cursed himself, "Why don't you _do_ something that 'd
|
|
count for her, and not sit around yammering for her like a fool?"
|
|
|
|
He worked on his plan to "bring the South into line"--the
|
|
Souvenir Company's line. Again and again he sprang up from the
|
|
writing-table in his hot room when the presence of Istra came
|
|
and stood compellingly by his chair. But he worked.
|
|
|
|
The Souvenir Company salesmen had not been able to get from the
|
|
South the business which the company deserved if right and
|
|
justice were to prevail. On the steamer from England Mr. Wrenn
|
|
had conceived the idea that a Dixieland Ink-well, with the
|
|
Confederate and Union flags draped in graceful cast iron, would
|
|
make an admirable present with which to draw the attention of
|
|
the Southem trade. The ink-well was to be followed by a series
|
|
of letters, sent on the slightest provocation, on order or
|
|
re-order, tactfully hoping the various healths of the Southland
|
|
were good and the baseball season important; all to insure a
|
|
welcome to the salesmen on the Southem route.
|
|
|
|
He drew up his letters; he sketched his ink-well; he got up the
|
|
courage to talk with the office manager.... To forget love and
|
|
the beloved, men have ascended in aeroplanes and conquered
|
|
African tribes. To forget love, a new, busy, much absorbed Mr.
|
|
Wrenn, very much Ours, bustled into Mr. Guilfogle's office,
|
|
slapped down his papers on the desk, and demanded: "Here's that
|
|
plan about gettin' the South interested that I was telling you
|
|
about. Say, honest, I'd like awful much to try it on. I'd just
|
|
have to have part time of one stenographer."
|
|
|
|
"Well, you know our stenographers are pretty well crowded.
|
|
But you can leave the outline with me. I'll look it over,"
|
|
said Mr. Guilfogle.
|
|
|
|
That same afternoon the manager enthusiastically O. K.'d the
|
|
plan. To enthusiastically--O. K. is an office technology for
|
|
saying, gloomily, "Well, I don't suppose it 'd hurt to try it,
|
|
anyway, but for the love of Mike be careful, and let me see any
|
|
letters you send out."
|
|
|
|
So Mr. Wrenn dictated a letter to each of their Southern
|
|
merchants, sending him a Dixieland Ink-well and inquiring about
|
|
the crops. He had a stenographer, an efficient intolerant young
|
|
woman who wrote down his halting words as though they were
|
|
examples of bad English she wanted to show her friends, and
|
|
waited for the next word with cynical amusement.
|
|
|
|
"By gosh!" growled Bill Wrenn, the cattleman, "I'll show her I'm
|
|
running this. I'll show her she's got another think coming."
|
|
But he dictated so busily and was so hot to get results that he
|
|
forgot the girl's air of high-class martyrdom.
|
|
|
|
He watched the Southern baseball results in the papers. He
|
|
seized on every salesman on the Southern route as he came in, and
|
|
inquired about the religion and politics of the merchants in his
|
|
district. He even forgot to worry about his next rise in
|
|
salary, and found it much more exciting to rush back for an
|
|
important letter after a quick lunch than to watch the time and
|
|
make sure that he secured every minute of his lunch-hour.
|
|
|
|
When October came--October of the vagabond, with the leaves
|
|
brilliant out on the Palisades, and Sixth Avenue moving-picture
|
|
palaces cool again and gay--Mr. Wrenn stayed late, under the
|
|
mercury-vapor lights, making card cross-files of the Southern
|
|
merchants, their hobbies and prejudices, and whistling as he
|
|
worked, stopping now and then to slap the desk and mutter,
|
|
"By gosh! I'm gettin' 'em--gettin' 'em."
|
|
|
|
He rarely thought of Istra till he was out on the street again,
|
|
proud of having worked so late that his eyes ached. In fact,
|
|
his chief troubles these days came when Mr. Guilfogle wouldn't
|
|
"let him put through an idea."
|
|
|
|
Their first battle was over Mr. Wrenn's signing the letters
|
|
personally; for the letters, the office manager felt, were as
|
|
much Ours as was Mr. Wrenn, and should be signed by the firm.
|
|
After some difficulty Mr. Wrenn persuaded him that one of the
|
|
best ways to handle a personal letter was to make it personal.
|
|
They nearly cursed each other before Mr. Wrenn was allowed to
|
|
use his own judgment.
|
|
|
|
It's not at all certain that Mr. Guilfogle should have yielded.
|
|
What's the use of a manager if his underlings use judgment?
|
|
|
|
The next battle Mr. Wrenn lost. He had demanded a monthly
|
|
holiday for his stenographer. Mr. Guilfogle pointed out that
|
|
she'd merely be the worse off for a holiday, that it 'd make her
|
|
discontented, that it was a kindness to her to keep her mind
|
|
occupied. Mr. Wrenn was, however, granted a new typewriter, in
|
|
a manner which revealed the fact that the Souvenir Company was
|
|
filled with almost too much mercy in permitting an employee to
|
|
follow his own selfish and stubborn desires.
|
|
|
|
You cannot trust these employees. Mr. Wrenn was getting so
|
|
absorbed in his work that he didn't even act as though it was a
|
|
favor when Mr. Guilfogle allowed him to have his letters to the
|
|
trade copied by carbon paper instead of having them blurred by
|
|
the wet tissue-paper of a copy-book. The manager did grant the
|
|
request, but he was justly indignant at the curt manner of the
|
|
rascal, whereupon our bumptious revolutionist, our friend to
|
|
anarchists and red-headed artists, demanded a "raise" and said
|
|
that he didn't care a hang if the [qualified] letters never went
|
|
out. The kindness of chiefs! For Mr. Guilfogle apologized and
|
|
raised the madman's wage from seventeen dollars and fifty cents
|
|
a week to his former nineteen dollars. [He had expected
|
|
eighteen dollars; he had demanded twenty-two dollars and fifty
|
|
cents; he was worth on the labor market from twenty - five to
|
|
thirty dollars; while the profit to the Souvenir Company from
|
|
his work was about sixty dollars minus whatever salary he got.]
|
|
|
|
Not only that. Mr. Guilfogle slapped him on the back and said:
|
|
"You're doing good work, old man. It's fine. I just don't want
|
|
you to be too reckless."
|
|
|
|
That night Wrenn worked till eight.
|
|
|
|
After his raise he could afford to go to the theater, since he
|
|
was not saving money for travel. He wrote small letters to
|
|
Istra and read the books he believed she would approve--a Paris
|
|
Baedeker and the second volume of Tolstoi's _War and Peace_,
|
|
which he bought at a second-hand book-stall for five cents.
|
|
He became interested in popular and inaccurate French and English
|
|
histories, and secreted any amount of footnote anecdotes about
|
|
Guy Fawkes and rush-lights and the divine right of kings.
|
|
He thought almost every night about making friends, which he
|
|
intended--just as much as ever--to do as soon as Sometime arrived.
|
|
|
|
On the day on which one of the Southern merchants wrote him about
|
|
his son-- "fine young fellow, sir--has every chance of rising
|
|
to a lieutenancy on the Atlanta police force"--Mr. Wrenn's eyes
|
|
were moist. Here was a friend already. Sure. He would make
|
|
friends. Then there was the cripple with the Capitol Corner News
|
|
and Souvenir Stand in Austin, Texas. Mr. Wrenn secreted two
|
|
extra Dixieland Ink-wells and a Yale football banner and sent
|
|
them to the cripple for his brothers, who were in the
|
|
Agricultural College.
|
|
|
|
The orders--yes, they were growing larger. The Southern salesmen
|
|
took him out to dinner sometimes. But he was shy of them. They
|
|
were so knowing and had so many smoking-room stories. He still
|
|
had not found the friends he desired.
|
|
|
|
Miggleton's restaurant, on Forty-second Street, was a romantic
|
|
discovery. Though it had "popular prices"--plain omelet,
|
|
fifteen cents--it had red and green bracket lights,
|
|
mission-style tables, and music played by a sparrowlike pianist
|
|
and a violinist. Mr. Wrenn never really heard the music, but
|
|
while it was quavering he had a happier appreciation of the
|
|
Silk-Hat-Harry humorous pictures in the _Journal_, which he
|
|
always propped up against an oil-cruet. [That never caused him
|
|
inconvenience; he had no convictions in regard to salads.]
|
|
He would drop the paper to look out of the window at the Lazydays
|
|
Improvement Company's electric sign, showing gardens of paradise
|
|
on the instalment plan, and dream of--well, he hadn't the
|
|
slightest idea what--something distant and deliciously likely to
|
|
become intimate. Once or twice he knew that he was visioning
|
|
the girl in soft brown whom he would "go home to," and who, in
|
|
a Lazydays suburban residence, would play just such music for
|
|
him and the friends who lived near by. She would be as clever
|
|
as Istra, but "oh, more so's you can go regular places with
|
|
her."... Often he got good ideas about letters South, to be
|
|
jotted down on envelope backs, from that music.
|
|
|
|
At last comes the historic match-box incident.
|
|
|
|
On that October evening in 1910 he dined early at Miggleton's.
|
|
The thirty-cent table d'hote was perfect. The cream-of-corn soup
|
|
was, he went so far as to remark to the waitress, "simply slick";
|
|
the Waldorf salad had two whole walnuts in his portion alone.
|
|
|
|
The fat man with the white waistcoat, whom he had often noted as
|
|
dining in this same corner of the restaurant, smiled at him and
|
|
said "Pleasant evening" as he sat down opposite Mr. Wrenn and
|
|
smoothed the two sleek bangs which decorated the front of his
|
|
nearly bald head.
|
|
|
|
The music included a "potpourri of airs from `The Merry Widow,'"
|
|
which set his foot tapping. All the while he was conscious
|
|
that he'd made the Seattle Novelty and Stationery Corner Store
|
|
come through with a five-hundred-dollar order on one of his letters.
|
|
|
|
The _Journal_ contained an editorial essay on "Friendship" which
|
|
would have been, and was, a credit to Cicero.
|
|
|
|
He laid down the paper, stirred his large cup of coffee, and
|
|
stared at the mother-of-pearl buttons on the waistcoat of the
|
|
fat man, who was now gulping down soup, opposite him. "My
|
|
land!" he was thinking, "friendship! I ain't even begun to
|
|
make all those friends I was going to. Haven't done a thing.
|
|
Oh, I will; I must!"
|
|
|
|
"Nice night," said the fat man.
|
|
|
|
"Yuh--it sure is," brightly agreed Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
"Reg'lar Indian-Summer weather."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, isn't it! I feel like taking a walk on Riverside
|
|
Drive--b'lieve I will."
|
|
|
|
"Wish I had time. But I gotta get down to the
|
|
store--cigar-store. I'm on nights, three times a week."
|
|
|
|
"Yuh. I've seen you here most every time I eat early,"
|
|
Mr. Wrenn purred.
|
|
|
|
"Yuh. The rest of the time I eat at the boarding-house."
|
|
|
|
Silence. But Mr. Wrenn was fighting for things to say, means of
|
|
approach, for the chance to become acquainted with a new person,
|
|
for all the friendly human ways he had desired in nights of
|
|
loneliness.
|
|
|
|
"Wonder when they'll get the Grand Central done?" asked the fat man.
|
|
|
|
"I s'pose it'll take quite a few years," said Mr. Wrenn,
|
|
conversationally.
|
|
|
|
"Yuh. I s'pose it will."
|
|
|
|
Silence.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn sat trying to think of something else to say. Lonely
|
|
people in city restaurants simply do not get acquainted. Yet he
|
|
did manage to observe, "Great building that'll be," in the
|
|
friendliest manner.
|
|
|
|
Silence.
|
|
|
|
Then the fat man went on:
|
|
|
|
"Wonder what Wolgast will do in his mill? Don't believe he can
|
|
stand up."
|
|
|
|
Wolgast was, Mr. Wrenn seemed to remember, a pugilist. He
|
|
agreed vaguely:
|
|
|
|
"Pretty hard, all right."
|
|
|
|
"Go out to the areoplane meet?" asked the fat man.
|
|
|
|
"No. But I'd like to see it. Gee! there must be kind of--kind
|
|
of adventure in them things, heh?"
|
|
|
|
"Yuh--sure is. First machine I saw, though--I was just getting
|
|
off the train at Belmont Park, and there was an areoplane up in
|
|
the air, and it looked like one of them big mechanical beetles
|
|
these fellows sell on the street buzzing around up there. I was
|
|
kind of disappointed. But what do you think? It was that J.
|
|
A. D. McCurdy, in a Curtiss biplane--I think it was--and by
|
|
golly! he got to circling around and racing and tipping so's I
|
|
thought I'd loose my hat off, I was so excited. And, say, what
|
|
do you think? I see McCurdy himself, afterward, standing near
|
|
one of the--the handgars--handsome young chap, not over
|
|
twenty-eight or thirty, built like a half-miler. And then I see
|
|
Ralph Johnstone and Arch Hoxey----"
|
|
|
|
"Gee!" Mr. Wrenn was breathing.
|
|
|
|
"----dipping and doing the--what do you call it?--Dutch
|
|
sausage-roll or something like that. Yelled my head off."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it must have been great to see 'em, and so close, too."
|
|
|
|
"Yuh--it sure was."
|
|
|
|
There seemed to be no other questions to settle. Mr. Wrenn
|
|
slowly folded up his paper, pursued his check under three plates
|
|
and the menu-card to its hiding-place beyond the catsup-bottle,
|
|
and left the table with a regretful "Good night."
|
|
|
|
At the desk of the cashier, a decorative blonde, he put a cent
|
|
in the machine which good-naturedly drops out boxes of matches.
|
|
No box dropped this time, though he worked the lever noisily.
|
|
|
|
"Out of order?" asked the cashier lady. "Here's two boxes of
|
|
matches. Guess you've earned them."
|
|
|
|
"Well, well, well, well!" sounded the voice of his friend, the
|
|
fat man, who stood at the desk paying his bill. "Pretty easy,
|
|
heh? Two boxes for one cent! Sting the restaurant." Cocking his
|
|
head, he carefully inserted a cent in the slot and clattered the
|
|
lever, turning to grin at Mr. Wrenn, who grinned back as the
|
|
machine failed to work.
|
|
|
|
"Let me try it," caroled Mr. Wrenn, and pounded the lever with
|
|
the enthusiasm of comradeship.
|
|
|
|
"Nothing doing, lady," crowed the fat man to the cashier.
|
|
|
|
"I guess _I_ draw two boxes, too, eh? And I'm in a cigar-store.
|
|
How's that for stinging your competitors, heh? Ho, ho, ho!"
|
|
|
|
The cashier handed him two boxes, with an embarrassed simper,
|
|
and the fat man clapped Mr. Wrenn's shoulder joyously.
|
|
|
|
"My turn!" shouted a young man in a fuzzy green hat and a
|
|
bright-brown suit, who had been watching with the sudden
|
|
friendship which unites a crowd brought together by an accident.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn was glowing. "No, it ain't--it's mine," he achieved.
|
|
"I invented this game." Never had he so stood forth in a crowd.
|
|
He was a Bill Wrenn with the cosmopolitan polish of a
|
|
floor-walker. He stood beside the fat man as a friend of sorts,
|
|
a person to be taken perfectly seriously.
|
|
|
|
It is true that he didn't add to this spiritual triumph the
|
|
triumph of getting two more boxes of matches, for the
|
|
cashier-girl exclaimed, "No indeedy; it's my turn!" and lifted
|
|
the match machine to a high shelf behind her. But Mr. Wrenn
|
|
went out of the restaurant with his old friend, the fat man,
|
|
saying to him quite as would a wit, "I guess we get stung, eh?"
|
|
|
|
"Yuh!" gurgled the fat man.
|
|
|
|
Walking down to your store?"
|
|
|
|
"Yuh--sure--won't you walk down a piece?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I would like to. Which way is it?"
|
|
|
|
"Fourth Avenue and Twenty-eighth."
|
|
|
|
"Walk down with you."
|
|
|
|
"Fine!"
|
|
|
|
And the fat man seemed to mean it. He confided to Mr. Wrenn
|
|
that the fishing was something elegant at Trulen, New Jersey;
|
|
that he was some punkins at the casting of flies in fishing;
|
|
that he wished exceedingly to be at Trulen fishing with flies,
|
|
but was prevented by the manager of the cigar-store; that the
|
|
manager was an old devil; that his (the fat man's own) name was
|
|
Tom Poppins; that the store had a slick new brand of Manila
|
|
cigars, kept in a swell new humidor bought upon the advice of
|
|
himself (Mr. Poppins); that one of the young clerks in the store
|
|
had done fine in the Modified Marathon; that the Cubs had had a
|
|
great team this year; that he'd be glad to give Mr. -- Mr.
|
|
Wrenn, eh?-- one of those Manila cigars--great cigars they were,
|
|
too; and that he hadn't "laughed so much for a month of Sundays
|
|
as he had over the way they stung Miggleton's on them matches."
|
|
|
|
All this in the easy, affectionate, slightly wistful manner of
|
|
fat men. Mr. Poppins's large round friendly childish eyes were
|
|
never sarcastic. He was the man who makes of a crowd in the
|
|
Pullman smoking-room old friends in half an hour. In turn, Mr.
|
|
Wrenn did not shy off; he hinted at most of his lifelong
|
|
ambitions and a fair number of his sorrows and, when they
|
|
reached the store, not only calmly accepted, but even sneezingly
|
|
ignited one of the "slick new Manila cigars."
|
|
|
|
As he left the store he knew that the golden age had begun.
|
|
He had a friend!
|
|
|
|
He was to see Tom Poppins the coming Thursday at Miggleton's.
|
|
And now he was going to find Morton! He laughed so loudly that
|
|
the policeman at Thirty-fourth Street looked self-conscious and
|
|
felt secretively to find out what was the matter with his
|
|
uniform. Now, this evening, he'd try to get on the track of
|
|
Morton. Well, perhaps not this evening--the Pennsylvania
|
|
offices wouldn't be open, but some time this week, anyway.
|
|
|
|
Two nights later, as he waited for Tom Poppins at Miggleton's,
|
|
he lashed himself with the thought that he had not started to
|
|
find Morton; good old Morton of the cattle-boat. But that was
|
|
forgotten in the wonder of Tom Poppins's account of Mrs. Arty's,
|
|
a boarding-house "where all the folks likes each other."
|
|
|
|
"You've never fed at a boarding-house, eh?" said Tom. "Well, I
|
|
guess most of 'em are pretty poor feed. And pretty sad bunch.
|
|
But Mrs. Arty's is about as near like home as most of us poor
|
|
bachelors ever gets. Nice crowd there. If Mrs. Arty--Mrs. R.
|
|
T. Ferrard is her name, but we always call her Mrs. Arty--if she
|
|
don't take to you she don't mind letting you know she won't take
|
|
you in at all; but if she does she'll worry over the holes in your
|
|
socks as if they was her husband's. All the bunch there drop into
|
|
the parlor when they come in, pretty near any time clear up till
|
|
twelve-thirty, and talk and laugh and rush the growler and play
|
|
Five Hundred. Just like home!
|
|
|
|
"Mrs. Arty's nearly as fat as I am, but she can be pretty spry
|
|
if there's something she can do for you. Nice crowd there, too
|
|
except that Teddem--he's one of these here Willy-boy actors,
|
|
always out of work; I guess Mrs. Arty is kind of sorry for him.
|
|
Say, Wrenn--you seem to me like a good fellow--why don't you get
|
|
acquainted with the bunch? Maybe you'd like to move up there
|
|
some time. You was telling me about what a cranky old party
|
|
your landlady is. Anyway, come on up there to dinner. On me.
|
|
Got anything on for next Monday evening?"
|
|
|
|
"N-no."
|
|
|
|
"Come on up then-- ---- East Thirtieth."
|
|
|
|
"Gee, I'd like to!"
|
|
|
|
"Well, why don't you, then? Get there about six. Ask for me.
|
|
Monday. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday I don't have to get to the
|
|
store evenings. Come on; you'll find out if you like the place."
|
|
|
|
"By jiminy, I will!" Mr. Wrenn slapped the table, socially.
|
|
|
|
At last he was "through, just _through_ with loafing around and
|
|
not getting acquainted," he told himself. He was tired of
|
|
Zapps. There was nothing to Zapps. He would go up to Mrs.
|
|
Arty's and now--he was going to find Morton. Next morning,
|
|
marveling at himself for not having done this easy task before,
|
|
he telephoned to the Pennsylvania Railroad offices, asked for
|
|
Morton, and in one-half minute heard:
|
|
|
|
"Yes? This is Harry Morton."
|
|
|
|
"Hullo, Mr. Morton! I'll just bet you can't guess who this is."
|
|
|
|
"I guess you've got me."
|
|
|
|
"Well, who do you think it----"
|
|
|
|
"Jack?"
|
|
|
|
"Hunka."
|
|
|
|
"Uncle Henry?"
|
|
|
|
"Nope." Mr. Wrenn felt lonely at finding himself so completely
|
|
outside Morton's own world that he was not thought of.
|
|
He hastened to claim a part in that world:
|
|
|
|
"Say, Mr. Morton, I wonder if you've ever heard of a cattle-boat
|
|
called the _Merian?_"
|
|
|
|
"I---- Say! Is this Bill Wrenn?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Well, well, well! Where areyou? When'd you get back?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I been back quite a little while, Morty. Tried to get hold
|
|
of you--almost called up couple of times. I'm in my
|
|
office--Souvenir Company--now. Back on the old job. Say, I'd
|
|
like to see you."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'd like to see _you_, old Bill!"
|
|
|
|
"Got a date for dinner this evening, Morty?"
|
|
|
|
"N-no. No, I don't _think_ I've got anything on." Morton's voice
|
|
seemed to sound a doubt. Mr. Wrenn reflected that Morton must
|
|
be a society person; and he made his invitation highly polite:
|
|
|
|
"Well, say, old man, I'd be awful happy if you could come over
|
|
and feed on me. Can't you come over and meet me, Morty?"
|
|
|
|
"Y-yes, I guess I can. Yes, I'll do it. Where'll I meet you?"
|
|
|
|
"How about Twenty-eighth and Sixth Avenue?"
|
|
|
|
"That'll be all right, Bill. 'Bout six o'clock?"
|
|
|
|
"Fine! Be awful nice to see you again, old Morty."
|
|
|
|
"Same here. Goo'-by."
|
|
|
|
Gazing across the table at Miggleton's, Mr. Wrenn saw, in the
|
|
squat familiar body and sturdy face of Morton of the cattle-boat,
|
|
a stranger, slightly uneasy and very quiet, wearing garments that
|
|
had nothing whatever to do with the cattle-boats--a crimson scarf
|
|
with a horseshoe-pin of "Brazilian diamonds," and sleek brown
|
|
ready-made clothes with ornately curved cuffs and pocket flaps.
|
|
|
|
Morton would say nothing of his wanderings after their parting
|
|
in Liverpool beyond: "Oh, I just bummed around. Places....
|
|
Warm to-night. For this time of year." Thrice he explained, "I
|
|
was kind of afraid you'd be sore at me for the way I left you;
|
|
that's why I've never looked you up." Thrice Mr. Wrenn declared
|
|
that he had not been "sore," then ceased trying to make himself
|
|
understood.
|
|
|
|
Their talk wilted. Both of them played with their knives a good
|
|
deal. Morton built a set of triangles out of toothpicks while
|
|
pretending to give hushed attention to the pianist's rendition
|
|
of "Mammy's Little Cootsie Bootsie Coon," while Mr. Wrenn
|
|
stared out of the window as though he expected to see the
|
|
building across get afire immediately. When either of them
|
|
invented something to say they started chattering with guilty
|
|
haste, and each agreed hectically with any opinion the other
|
|
advanced.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn surprised himself in the thought that Morton hadn't
|
|
anything very new to say, which made him feel so disloyal that
|
|
he burst out, effusively:
|
|
|
|
"Say, come on now, old man; I just got to hear about what you
|
|
did after you left Liverpool."
|
|
|
|
"I----"
|
|
|
|
"Well----"
|
|
|
|
"I never got out of Liverpool! Worked in a restaurant.... But
|
|
next time----! I'll go clean to Constantinople!" Morton
|
|
exploded. "And I did see a lot of English life in Liverpool."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn talked long and rapidly of the world's baseball
|
|
series, and Regal _vs._ Walkover shoes.
|
|
|
|
He tried to think of something they could do. Suddenly:
|
|
|
|
"Say, Morty, I know an awful nice guy down here in a
|
|
cigar-store. Let's go down and see him."
|
|
|
|
"All right."
|
|
|
|
Tom Poppins was very cordial to them. He dragged brown canvas
|
|
stools out of the tobacco-scented room where cigars were made,
|
|
and the three of them squatted in the back of the store, while
|
|
Tom gossiped of the Juarez races, Taft, cigar-wrappers, and Jews.
|
|
Morton was aroused to tell the time-mellowed story of the judge
|
|
and the darky. He was cheerful and laughed much and frequently
|
|
said "Ah there, cull!" in general commendation. But he kept
|
|
looking at the clock on the jog in the wall over the
|
|
watercooler. Just at ten he rose abashedly, hesitated, and
|
|
murmured, "Well, I guess I'll have to be beating it home."
|
|
|
|
From Mr. Wrenn: "Oh, Morty! So early?"
|
|
|
|
Tom: "What's the big hurry?"
|
|
|
|
"I've got to run clear over to Jersey City." Morton was cordial,
|
|
but not convincing.
|
|
|
|
"Say--uh--Morton," said Tom, kindly of face, his bald head
|
|
shining behind his twin bangs, as he rose, "I'm going to have
|
|
Wrenn up to dinner at my boarding-house next Monday. Like to
|
|
have you come along. It's a fine place--Mrs. Arty--she's the
|
|
landlady--she's a wonder. There's going to be a vacant room
|
|
there--maybe you two fellows could frame it up to take it, heh?
|
|
Understand, I don't get no rake-off on this, but we all like to
|
|
do what we can for M----"
|
|
|
|
"No, no!" said Morton. "Sorry. Couldn't do it. Staying with
|
|
my brother-in-law--costs me only 'bout half as much as it would
|
|
I don't do much chasing around when I'm in town.... I'm going
|
|
to save up enough money for a good long hike. I'm going clean
|
|
to St. Petersburg!... But I've had a good time to-night."
|
|
|
|
"Glad. Great stuff about you fellows on the cattle-ship," said Tom.
|
|
|
|
Morton hastened on, protectively, a bit critically: "You fellows
|
|
sport around a good deal, don't you?... I can't afford to....
|
|
Well, good night. Glad to met you, Mr. Poppins. G' night, old Wr----"
|
|
|
|
"Going to the ferry? For Jersey? I'll walk over with you,"
|
|
said Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
Their walk was quiet and, for Mr. Wrenn, tragically sad. He saw
|
|
Morton (presumably) doing the wandering he had once planned. He
|
|
felt that, while making his vast new circle of friends, he was
|
|
losing all the wild adventurousness of Bill Wrenn. And he was
|
|
parting with his first friend.
|
|
|
|
At the ferry-house Morton pronounced his "Well, so long, old
|
|
fellow" with an affection that meant finality.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn fled back to Tom Poppins's store. On the way he was
|
|
shocked to find himself relieved at having parted with Morton.
|
|
The cigar-store was closed.
|
|
|
|
At home Mrs. Zapp waylaid him for his rent (a day overdue), and
|
|
he was very curt. That was to keep back the "O God, how rotten
|
|
I feel!" with which, in his room, he voiced the desolation of
|
|
loneliness.
|
|
|
|
The ghost of Morton, dead and forgotten, was with him all next
|
|
day, till he got home and unbelievably found on the staid
|
|
black-walnut Zapp hat-rack a letter from Paris, in a gray
|
|
foreign-appearing envelope with Istra's intensely black scrawl
|
|
on it.
|
|
|
|
He put off the luxury of opening the letter till after the rites
|
|
of brushing his teeth, putting on his slippers, pounding his
|
|
rocking-chair cushion into softness. Panting with the joy to
|
|
come, he stared out of the window at a giant and glorious figure
|
|
of Istra--the laughing Istra of breakfast camp-fire--which
|
|
towered from the street below. He sighed joyously and read:
|
|
|
|
Mouse dear, just a word to let you know I haven't forgotten you
|
|
and am very glad indeed to get your letters. Not much to write
|
|
about. Frightfully busy with work and fool parties. You _are_
|
|
a dear good soul and I hope you'll keep on writing me. In
|
|
haste,
|
|
I. N.
|
|
Longer letter next time.
|
|
|
|
He came to the end so soon. Istra was gone again.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
|
HE ENTERS SOCIETY
|
|
|
|
England, in all its Istra - ness, scarce gave Mr. Wrenn a better
|
|
thrill for his collection than the thrill he received on the
|
|
November evening when he saw the white doorway of Mrs. R. T.
|
|
Ferrard, in a decorous row of houses on Thirtieth Street near
|
|
Lexington Avenue.
|
|
|
|
It is a block where the citizens have civic pride. A newspaper
|
|
has not the least chance of lying about on the asphalt--some
|
|
householder with a frequently barbered mustache will indignantly
|
|
pounce upon it inside of an hour. No awe. is caused by the
|
|
sight of vestibules floored with marble in alternate black and
|
|
white tiles, scrubbed not by landladies, but by maids. There
|
|
are dotted Swiss curtains at the basement windows and Irish
|
|
point curtains on the first floors. There are two polished
|
|
brass doorplates in a stretch of less than eight houses.
|
|
Distinctly, it is not a quarter where children fill the street
|
|
with shouting and little sticks.
|
|
|
|
Occasionally a taxicab drives up to some door without a crowd of
|
|
small boys gathering; and young men in evening clothes are not
|
|
infrequently seen to take out young ladies wearing tight-fitting
|
|
gowns of black, and light scarfs over their heads. A Middle
|
|
Western college fraternity has a club-house in the block, and four
|
|
of the houses are private--one of them belonging to a police
|
|
inspector and one to a school principal who wears spats.
|
|
|
|
It is a block that is satisfied with itself; as different from
|
|
the Zapp district, where landladies in gingham run out to squabble
|
|
with berry-venders, as the Zapp district is from the Ghetto.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Arty Ferrard's house is a poor relation to most of the
|
|
residences there. The black areaway rail is broken, and the
|
|
basement-door grill is rusty. But at the windows are
|
|
red-and-white-figured chintz curtains, with a $2.98 bisque
|
|
figurine of an unclothed lady between them; the door is of
|
|
spotless white, with a bell-pull of polished brass.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn yanked this bell-pull with an urbane briskness which,
|
|
he hoped, would conceal his nervousness and delight in dining
|
|
out. For he was one of the lonely men in New York. He had
|
|
dined out four times in eight years.
|
|
|
|
The woman of thirty-five or thirty-eight who opened the door to
|
|
him was very fat, two-thirds as fat as Mrs. Zapp, but she had
|
|
young eyes. Her mouth was small, arched, and quivering in a grin.
|
|
|
|
"This is Mr. Wrenn, isn't it?" she gurgled, and leaned against
|
|
the doorpost, merry, apparently indolent. "I'm Mrs. Ferrard.
|
|
Mr. Poppins told me you were coming, and he said you were a
|
|
terribly nice man, and I was to be sure and welcome you. Come
|
|
right in."
|
|
|
|
Her indolence turned to energy as she charged down the hall to
|
|
the large double door on the right and threw it open, revealing
|
|
to him a scene of splendor and revelry by night.
|
|
|
|
Several persons [they seemed dozens, in their liveliness] were
|
|
singing and shouting to piano music, in the midst of a general
|
|
redness and brightness of furnishings--red paper and worn red
|
|
carpet and a high ceiling with circular moldings tinted in pink.
|
|
Hand-painted pictures of old mills and ladies brooding over
|
|
salmon sunsets, and an especially hand-painted Christmas scene
|
|
with snow of inlaid mother-of-pearl, animated the walls. On a
|
|
golden-oak center-table was a large lamp with a mosaic shade, and
|
|
through its mingled bits of green and red and pearl glass
|
|
stormed the brilliance of a mantle-light.
|
|
|
|
The room was crowded with tufted plush and imitation-leather
|
|
chairs, side-tables and corner brackets, a couch and a "lady's
|
|
desk." Green and red and yellow vases adorned with figures of
|
|
youthful lovers crammed the top of the piano at the farther end
|
|
of the room and the polished black-marble mantel of the
|
|
fireplace. The glaring gas raced the hearth-fire for snap and
|
|
glare and excitement. The profusion of furniture was like a
|
|
tumult; the redness and oakness and polishedness of furniture
|
|
was a dizzying activity; and it was all overwhelmingly magnified
|
|
by the laughter and singing about the piano.
|
|
|
|
Tom Poppins lumbered up from a couch of terrifically new and red
|
|
leather, and Mr. Wrenn was introduced to the five new people in
|
|
the room with dismaying swiftness. There seemed to be fifty
|
|
times five unapproachable and magnificent strangers from whom he
|
|
wanted to flee. Of them all he was sure of only two--a Miss Nelly
|
|
somebody and what sounded like Horatio Hood Tem (Teddem it was).
|
|
|
|
He wished that he had caught Miss Nelly's last name (which, at
|
|
dinner, proved to be Croubel), for he was instantly taken by her
|
|
sweetness as she smiled, held out a well-shaped hand, and said,
|
|
"So pleased meet you, Mr. Wrenn."
|
|
|
|
She returned to the front of the room and went on talking to a
|
|
lank spinster about ruchings, but Mr. Wrenn felt that he had
|
|
known her long and as intimately as it was possible to know so
|
|
clever a young woman.
|
|
|
|
Nelly Croubel gave him the impression of a delicate prettiness,
|
|
a superior sort of prettiness, like that of the daughter of the
|
|
Big White House on the Hill, the Squire's house, at Parthenon;
|
|
though Nelly was not unusually pretty. Indeed, her mouth was
|
|
too large, her hair of somewhat ordinary brown. But her face
|
|
was always changing with emotions of kindliness and life. Her
|
|
skin was perfect; her features fine, rather Greek; her smile,
|
|
quick yet sensitive. She was several inches shorter than Mr.
|
|
Wrenn, and all curves. Her blouse of white silk lay tenderly
|
|
along the adorably smooth softness of her young shoulders. A
|
|
smart patent-leather belt encircled her sleek waist. Thin black
|
|
lisle stockings showed a modestly arched and rather small foot
|
|
in a black pump.
|
|
|
|
She looked as though she were trained for business; awake,
|
|
self-reliant, self-respecting, expecting to have to get things
|
|
done, all done, yet she seemed indestructibly gentle,
|
|
indestructibly good and believing, and just a bit shy.
|
|
|
|
Nelly Croubel was twenty-four or twenty-five in years, older in
|
|
business, and far younger in love. She was born in Upton's
|
|
Grove, Pennsylvania. There, for eighteen years, she had played
|
|
Skip to Malue at parties, hid away the notes with which the boys
|
|
invited her to picnics at Baptist Beach, read much Walter Scott,
|
|
and occasionally taught Sunday-school. Her parents died when
|
|
she was beginning her fourth year in high school, and she came
|
|
to New York to work in Wanamacy's toy department at six dollars
|
|
a week during the holiday rush. Her patience with fussy old
|
|
shoppers and her large sales-totals had gained her a permanent
|
|
place in the store.
|
|
|
|
She had loftily climbed to the position of second assistant
|
|
buyer in the lingerie department, at fourteen dollars and eighty
|
|
cents a week That was quite all of her history except that she
|
|
attended a Presbyterian church nearly every Sunday. The only
|
|
person she hated was Horatio Hood Teddem, the cheap actor who
|
|
was playing the piano at Mr. Wrenn's entrance.
|
|
|
|
Just now Horatio was playing ragtime with amazing rapidity,
|
|
stamping his foot and turning his head to smirk at the others.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Arty led her chattering flock to the basement dining-room,
|
|
which had pink wall-paper and a mountainous sideboard. Mr.
|
|
Wrenn was placed between Mrs. Arty and Nelly Croubel. Out of
|
|
the mist of strangeness presently emerged the personality of
|
|
Miss Mary Proudfoot, a lively but religious spinster of forty
|
|
who made doilies for the Dorcas Women's Exchange and had two
|
|
hundred dollars a year family income. To the right of the
|
|
red-glass pickle-dish were the elderly Ebbitts--Samuel Ebbitt,
|
|
Esq., also Mrs. Ebbitt. Mr. Ebbitt had come from Hartford five
|
|
years before, but he always seemed just to have come from there.
|
|
He was in a real-estate office; he was gray, ill-tempered,
|
|
impatiently honest, and addicted to rheumatism and the
|
|
newspapers. Mrs. Ebbitt was addicted only to Mr. Ebbitt.
|
|
|
|
Across the table was felt the presence of James T. Duncan, who
|
|
looked like a dignified red-mustached Sunday-school
|
|
superintendent, but who traveled for a cloak and suit house,
|
|
gambled heavily on poker and auction pinochle, and was esteemed
|
|
for his straight back and knowledge of trains.
|
|
|
|
Which is all of them.
|
|
|
|
As soon as Mrs. Arty had guided Annie, the bashful maid, in
|
|
serving the vegetable soup, and had coaxed her into bringing Mr.
|
|
Wrenn a napkin, she took charge of the conversation, a luxury
|
|
which she would never have intrusted to her flock's amateurish
|
|
efforts. Mr. Poppins, said she, had spoken of meeting a friend
|
|
of Mr. Wrenn's; Mr. Morton, was it not? A very nice man, she
|
|
understood. Was it true that Mr. Wrenn and Mr. Morton had gone
|
|
clear across the Atlantic on a cattle-boat? It really was?
|
|
|
|
"Oh, how interesting!" contributed pretty Nelly Croubel, beside
|
|
Mr. Wrenn, her young eyes filled with an admiration which caused
|
|
him palpitation and difficulty in swallowing his soup. He was
|
|
confused by hearing old Samuel Ebbitt state:
|
|
|
|
"Uh-h-h-h--back in 18--uh--1872 the vessel _Prissie_--no, it was
|
|
1873; no, it must have been '72----"
|
|
|
|
"It was 1872, father," said Mrs. Ebbitt.
|
|
|
|
"1873. I was on a coasting-vessel, young man. But we didn't
|
|
carry cattle." Mr. Ebbitt inspected Horatio Hood Teddem darkly,
|
|
clicked his spectacle case sharply shut, and fell to eating,
|
|
as though he had settled all this nonsense.
|
|
|
|
With occasional witty interruptions from the actor, Mr. Wrenn
|
|
told of pitching hay, of the wit of Morton, and the wickedness
|
|
of Satan, the boss.
|
|
|
|
"But you haven't told us about the brave things _you_ did," cooed
|
|
Mrs. Arty. She appealed to Nelly Croubel: "I'll bet he was a
|
|
cool one. Don't you think he was, Nelly?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm sure he was." Nelly's voice was like a flute.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn knew that there was just one thing in the world that
|
|
he wanted to do; to persuade Miss Nelly Croubel that (though he
|
|
was a solid business man, indeed yes, and honorable) he was a
|
|
cool one, who had chosen, in wandering o'er this world so wide,
|
|
the most perilous and cattle-boaty places. He tried to think of
|
|
something modest yet striking to say, while Tom was arguing with
|
|
Miss Mary Proudfoot, the respectable spinster, about the ethics
|
|
of giving away street-car transfers.
|
|
|
|
As they finished their floating custard Mr. Wrenn achieved,
|
|
"Do you come from New York, Miss Croubel?" and listened to the
|
|
tale of sleighing-parties in Upton's Grove, Pennsylvania. He was
|
|
absolutely happy.
|
|
|
|
"This is like getting home," he thought. "And they're classy
|
|
folks to get home to--now that I can tell 'em apart. Gee!
|
|
Miss Croubel is a peach. And brains--golly!"
|
|
|
|
He had a frightened hope that after dinner he would be able to
|
|
get into a corner and talk with Nelly, but Tom Poppins conferred
|
|
with Horatio Hood Teddenm and called Mr. Wrenn aside. Teddem
|
|
had been acting with a moving-picture company for a week, and
|
|
had three passes to the celebrated Waldorf Photoplay Theater.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn had bloodthirstily disapproved Horatio Hood's
|
|
effeminate remarks, such as "Tee _hee!_" and "Oh, you naughty
|
|
man," but when he heard that this molly-coddle had shared in the
|
|
glory of making moving pictures he went proudly forth with him
|
|
and Tom. He had no chance to speak to Mrs. Arty about taking
|
|
the room to be vacated.
|
|
|
|
He wished that Charley Carpenter or the Zapps could see him
|
|
sitting right beside an actor who was shown in the pictures
|
|
miraculously there before them, asking him how they made movies,
|
|
just as friendly as though they had known each other always.
|
|
|
|
He wanted to do something to entertain his friends beyond taking
|
|
them out for a drink. He invited them down to his room, and
|
|
they came.
|
|
|
|
Teddem was in wonderful form; he mimicked every one they saw so
|
|
amiably that Tom Poppins knew the actor wanted to borrow money.
|
|
The party were lovingly humming the popular song of the
|
|
time--"Any Little Girl That's a Nice Little Girl is the Right
|
|
Little Girl for Me"--as they frisked up the gloomy steps of the
|
|
Zapps. Entering, Poppins and Teddem struck attitudes on the
|
|
inside stairs and sang aloud.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn felt enormously conscious of Mrs. Zapp down below. He
|
|
kept listening, as he led them up-stairs and lighted the gas.
|
|
But Teddem so imitated Colonel Roosevelt, with two water-glasses
|
|
for eye-glasses and a small hat-brush for mustache, that Mr.
|
|
Wrenn was moved wrigglingly to exclaim: "Say, I'm going out and
|
|
get some beer. Or 'd you rather have something else? Some
|
|
cheese sandwiches? How about 'em?"
|
|
|
|
"Fine," said Tom and Teddem together.
|
|
|
|
Not only did Mr. Wrenn buy a large newspaper-covered bundle of
|
|
bottles of beer and Swiss-cheese sandwiches, but also a small
|
|
can of caviar and salty crackers. In his room he spread a clean
|
|
towel, then two clean towels, on the bureau, and arrayed the
|
|
feast, with two water-glasses and a shaving-mug for cups.
|
|
|
|
Horatio Hood Teddem, spreading caviar on a sandwich, and loudly
|
|
singing his masterpiece, "Waal I swan," stopped short and fixed
|
|
amazed eyes on the door of the room.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn hastily turned. The light fell--as on a cliff of
|
|
crumbly gray rock--on Mrs. Zapp, in the open door, vast in her
|
|
ungirdled gray wrapper, her arms folded, glowering speechlessly.
|
|
|
|
"Mist' Wrenn," she began, in a high voice that promised to burst
|
|
into passion.
|
|
|
|
But she was addressing the formidable adventurer, Bill Wrenn.
|
|
He had to protect his friends. He sprang up and walked across
|
|
to her.
|
|
|
|
He said, quietly, "I didn't hear you knock, Mrs. Zapp."
|
|
|
|
"Ah _didn't_ knock, and Ah want you should----"
|
|
|
|
"Then please do knock, unless you want me to give notice."
|
|
|
|
He was quivering. His voice was shrill.
|
|
|
|
From the hall below Theresa called up, "Ma, come down here. _Ma!_"
|
|
|
|
But Mrs. Zapp was too well started. " If you think Ah'm going
|
|
to stand for a lazy sneaking little drunkard keeping the whole
|
|
street awake, and here it is prett' nearly midnight----"
|
|
|
|
Just then Mr. William Wrenn saw and heard the most astounding
|
|
thing of his life, and became an etemal slave to Tom Poppins.
|
|
|
|
Tom's broad face became hard, his voice businesslike. He
|
|
shouted at Mrs. Zapp:
|
|
|
|
"Beat it or I'll run you in. Trouble with you is, you old hag,
|
|
you don't appreciate a nice quiet little chap like Wrenn, and
|
|
you try to bully him--and him here for years. Get out or I'll
|
|
put you out. I'm no lamb, and I won't stand for any of your
|
|
monkey-shines. Get out. This ain't your room; he's rented
|
|
it--he's paid the rent--it's his room. Get out!"
|
|
|
|
Kindly Tom Poppins worked in a cigar-store and was accustomed to
|
|
talk back to drunken men six feet tall. His voice was
|
|
tremendous, and he was fatly immovable; he didn't a bit mind the
|
|
fact that Mrs. Zapp was still "glaring speechless."
|
|
|
|
But behold an ally to the forlorn lady. When Theresa, in the
|
|
hall below, heard Tom, she knew that Mr. Wrenn would room here
|
|
no more. She galloped up-stairs and screeched over her mother's
|
|
shoulder:
|
|
|
|
"You will pick on a lady, will you, you drunken scum--you--you
|
|
cads---- I'll have you arrested so quick you----"
|
|
|
|
"Look here, lady," said Tom, gently. "I'm a plain-clothes man,
|
|
a detective." His large voice purred like a tiger-tabby's. "I
|
|
don't want to run you in, but I will if you don't get out of
|
|
here and shut that door. Or you might go down and call the cop
|
|
on this block. He'll run you in--for breaking Code 2762 of the
|
|
Penal Law! Trespass and flotsam--that's what it is!"
|
|
|
|
Uneasy, frightened, then horrified, Mrs. Zapp swung bulkily
|
|
about and slammed the door.
|
|
|
|
Sick, guilty, banished from home though he felt, Mr. Wrenn's
|
|
voice quavered, with an attempt at dignity:
|
|
|
|
"I'm awful sorry she butted in while you fellows was here.
|
|
I don't know how to apologize "
|
|
|
|
"Forget it, old man," rolled out Tom's bass. "Come on, let's go
|
|
up to Mrs. Arty's."
|
|
|
|
"But, gee! it's nearly a quarter to eleven."
|
|
|
|
"That's all right. We can get up there by a little after, and
|
|
Mrs. Arty stays up playing cards till after twelve."
|
|
|
|
"Golly!" Mr. Wrenn agitatedly ejaculated under his breath, as
|
|
they noisily entered Mrs. Arty's--though not noisily on his part.
|
|
|
|
The parlor door was open. Mrs. Arty's broad back was toward
|
|
them, and she was announcing to James T. Duncan and Miss
|
|
Proudfoot, with whom she was playing three-handed Five Hundred,
|
|
"Well, I'll just bid seven on hearts if you're going to get so
|
|
set up." She glanced back, nodded, said, "Come in, children,"
|
|
picked up the "widow," and discarded with quick twitches of
|
|
the cards. The frightened Mr. Wrenn, feeling like a shipwrecked
|
|
land-lubber, compared this gaming smoking woman unfavorably with
|
|
the intense respectability of his dear lost patron, Mrs. Zapp.
|
|
He sat uneasy till the hand of cards was finished, feeling as
|
|
though they were only tolerating him. And Nelly Croubel was
|
|
nowhere in sight.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly said Mrs. Arty, "And now you would like to look at that
|
|
room, Mr. Wrenn, unless I'm wrong."
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh--yes, I guess I would like to."
|
|
|
|
"Come with me, child," she said, in pretended severity. "Tom,
|
|
you take my hand in the game, and don't let me hear you've been
|
|
bidding ten on no suit without the joker." She led Mr. Wrenn to
|
|
the settee hat-rack in the hall. "The third-floor-back will be
|
|
vacant in two weeks, Mr. Wrenn. We can go up and look at it now
|
|
if you'd like to. The man who has it now works nights--he's
|
|
some kind of a head waiter at Rector's, or something like that,
|
|
and he's out till three or four. Come."
|
|
|
|
When he saw that third-floor-back, the room that the smart
|
|
people at Mrs. Arty's were really willing to let him have, he
|
|
felt like a man just engaged. It was all in soft
|
|
green--grass-green matting, pale-green walls, chairs of white
|
|
wicker with green cushions; the bed, a couch with a denim cover
|
|
and four sofa pillows. It gave him the impression of being a
|
|
guest on Fifth Avenue.
|
|
|
|
"It's kind of a plain room," Mrs. Arty said, doubtfully. "The
|
|
furniture is kind of plain. But my head-waiter man--it was
|
|
furnished for a friend of his--he says he likes it better than
|
|
any other room in the house. It _is_ comfortable, and you get
|
|
lots of sunlight and----"
|
|
|
|
"I'll take---- How much is it, please, with board?"
|
|
|
|
She spoke with a take-it-or-leave-it defiance. "Eleven-fifty a week."
|
|
|
|
It was a terrible extravagance; much like marrying a sick woman
|
|
on a salary of ten a week, he reflected; nine-teen minus
|
|
eleven-fifty left him only seven-fifty for clothes and savings
|
|
and things and--but----" I'll take it," he said, hastily. He
|
|
was frightened at himself, but glad, very glad. He was to live
|
|
in this heaven; he was going to be away from that Zapp woman;
|
|
and Nelly Croubel---- Was she engaged to some man? he wondered.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Arty was saying: "First, I want to ask you some questions,
|
|
though. Please sit down." As she creaked into one of the wicker
|
|
chairs she suddenly changed from the cigarette-rolling chaffing
|
|
card-player to a woman dignified, reserved, commanding. "Mr.
|
|
Wrenn, you see, Miss Proudfoot and Miss Croubel are on this
|
|
floor. Miss Proudfoot can take care of herself, all right, but
|
|
Nelly is such a trusting little thing---- She's like my
|
|
daughter. She's the only one I've ever given a reduced rate
|
|
to--and I swore I never would to anybody!... Do
|
|
you--uh--drink--drink much, I mean?"
|
|
|
|
Nelly on this floor! Near him! Now! He had to have this room.
|
|
He forced himself to speak directly.
|
|
|
|
"I know how you mean, Mrs. Ferrard. No, I don't drink much of
|
|
any--hardly at all; just a glass of beer now and then; sometimes
|
|
I don't even touch that a week at a time. And I don't gamble
|
|
and--and I do try to keep--er--straight--and all that sort of thing."
|
|
|
|
"That's good."
|
|
|
|
"I work for the Souvenir and Art Novelty Company on
|
|
Twenty-eighth Street. If you want to call them up I guess the
|
|
manager'll give me a pretty good recommend."
|
|
|
|
"I don't believe I'll need it, Mr. Wrenn. It's my business to
|
|
find out what sort of animiles men are by just talking to them."
|
|
She rose, smiled, plumped out her hand. "You _will_ be nice to
|
|
Nelly, _won't_ you! I'm going to fire that Teddem out--don't tell
|
|
him, but I am--because he gets too fresh with her."
|
|
|
|
"Yes!"
|
|
|
|
She suddenly broke into laughter, and ejaculated: "_Say_, that
|
|
was hard work! Don't you _hate_ to have to be serious? Let's trot
|
|
down, and I'll make Tom or Duncan rush us a growler of beer to
|
|
welcome you to our midst.... I'll bet your socks aren't darned
|
|
properly. I'm going to sneak in and take a look at them, once I
|
|
get you caged up here.... But I won't read your love-letters!
|
|
Now let's go down by the fire, where it's comfy."
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XV
|
|
HE STUDIES FIVE HUNDRED, SAVOUIR FAIRE, AND LOTSA-SNAP OFFICE MOTTOES
|
|
|
|
On a couch of glossy red leather with glossy black buttons and
|
|
stiff fringes also of glossy red leather, Mr. William Wrenn sat
|
|
upright and was very confiding to Miss Nelly Croubel, who was
|
|
curled among the satin pillows with her skirts drawn carefully
|
|
about her ankles. He had been at Mrs. Arty's for two weeks now.
|
|
He wore a new light-blue tie, and his trousers were pressed like
|
|
sheet steel.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I suppose you're engaged to some one, Miss Nelly, and
|
|
you'll go off and leave us--go off to that blamed Upton's Grove
|
|
or some place."
|
|
|
|
"I am _not_ engaged. I've told you so. Who would want to marry
|
|
me? You stop teasing me--you're mean as can be; I'll just have
|
|
to get Tom to protect me!"
|
|
|
|
"Course you're engaged."
|
|
|
|
"Ain't."
|
|
|
|
"Are."
|
|
|
|
"Ain't. Who would want to marry poor little me?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, anybody, of course."
|
|
|
|
"You _stop_ teasing me.... Besides, probably you're in love with
|
|
twenty girls."
|
|
|
|
"I am _not_. Why, I've never hardly known but just two girls in
|
|
my life. One was just a girl I went to theaters with once or
|
|
twice--she was the daughter of the landlady I used to have
|
|
before I came here."
|
|
|
|
"If you don't make love to the landlady's daughter
|
|
You won't get a second piece of pie!"
|
|
|
|
quoted Nelly, out of the treasure-house of literature.
|
|
|
|
"Sure. That's it. But I bet you----"
|
|
|
|
"Who was the other girl?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh! She.... She was a--an artist. I liked her--a lot.
|
|
But she was--oh, awful highbrow. Gee! if---- But----"
|
|
|
|
A sympathetic silence, which Nelly broke with:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, they're funny people. Artists.... Do you have your
|
|
lesson in Five Hundred tonight? Your very first one?"
|
|
|
|
"I think so. Say, is it much like this here bridge-whist? Oh
|
|
say, Miss Nelly, why do they call it Five Hundred?"
|
|
|
|
"That's what you have to make to go out. No, I guess it isn't
|
|
very much like bridge; though, to tell the truth, I haven't ever
|
|
played bridge. . My! it must be a nice game, though."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I thought prob'ly you could play it. You can do 'most
|
|
everything. Honest, I've never seen nothing like it."
|
|
|
|
"Now you stop, Mr. Wrenn. I know I'm a--what was it Mr. Teddem
|
|
used to call me? A minx. But----"
|
|
|
|
"Miss _Nelly!_ You _aren't_ a minx!"
|
|
|
|
"Well----"
|
|
|
|
"Or a mink, either. You're a--let's see--an antelope."
|
|
|
|
"I am not! Even if I can wriggle my nose like a rabbit.
|
|
Besides, it sounds like a muskmelon. But, anyway, the head
|
|
buyer said I was crazy to-day."
|
|
|
|
"If I heard him say you were crazy----"
|
|
|
|
"Would you beat him for me?" She cuddled a cushion and smiled
|
|
gratefully. Her big eyes seemed to fill with light.
|
|
|
|
He caught himself wanting to kiss the softness of her shoulder,
|
|
but he said only, "Well, I ain't much of a scrapper, but I'd try
|
|
to make it interesting for him."
|
|
|
|
"Tell me, did you ever have a fight? When you were a boy? Were
|
|
you _such_ a bad boy?"
|
|
|
|
"I never did when I was a boy, but--well--I did have a couple of
|
|
fights when I was on the cattle-boat and in England. Neither of
|
|
them amounted to very much, though, I guess. I was scared stiff!"
|
|
|
|
"Don't believe it!"
|
|
|
|
"Sure I was."
|
|
|
|
"I don't believe you'd be scared. You're too earnest."
|
|
|
|
"Me, Miss Nelly? Why, I'm a regular cut-up."
|
|
|
|
"You stop making fun of yourself! I _like_ it when you're
|
|
earnest--like when you saw that beautiful snowfall last
|
|
night.... Oh dear, isn't it hard to have to miss so many
|
|
beautiful things here in the city--there's just the parks, and
|
|
even there there aren't any birds, real wild birds, like we used
|
|
to have in Pennsylvania."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, isn't it! Isn't it hard!" Mr. Wrenn drew nearer and looked
|
|
sympathy.
|
|
|
|
"I'm afraid I'm getting gushy. Miss Hartenstein--she's in my
|
|
department--she'd laugh at me.... But I do love birds and
|
|
squirrels and pussy-willows and all those things. In summer
|
|
I love to go on picnics on Staten Island or tramp in Van
|
|
Cortlandt Park."
|
|
|
|
"Would you go on a picnic with me some day next spring?"
|
|
Hastily, "I mean with Miss Proudfoot and Mrs. Arty and me?"
|
|
|
|
"I should be pleased to." She was prim but trusting about it.
|
|
"Oh, listen, Mr. Wrenn; did you ever tramp along the Palisades
|
|
as far as Englewood? It's lovely there--the woods and the river
|
|
and all those funny little tugs puffing along, way _way_ down
|
|
below you--why, I could lie on the rocks up there and just dream
|
|
and dream for hours. After I've spent Sunday up there"--she
|
|
was dreaming now, he saw, and his heart was passionately tender
|
|
toward her--"I don't hardly mind a bit having to go back to the
|
|
store Monday morning.... You've been up along there, haven't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Me? Why, I guess I'm the guy that discovered the Palisades!...
|
|
Yes, it is _won_-derful up there!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you are, are you? I read about that in American history!...
|
|
But honestly, Mr. Wrenn, I do believe you care for tramps and
|
|
things--not like that Teddem or Mr. Duncan--they always want
|
|
to just stay in town--or even Tom, though he's an old dear."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn looked jealous, with a small hot jealousy. She
|
|
hastened on with: "Of course, I mean he's just like a big
|
|
brother. To all of us."
|
|
|
|
It was sweet to both of them, to her to declare and to him to
|
|
hear, that neither Tom nor any other possessed her heart. Their
|
|
shy glances were like an outreach of tenderly touching hands as
|
|
she confided, "Mrs. Arty and he get up picnics, and when we're
|
|
out on the Palisades he says to me--you know, sometimes he
|
|
almost makes me think he _is_ sleepy, though I do believe he just
|
|
sneaks off under a tree and talks to Mrs. Arty or reads a
|
|
magazine--but I was saying: he always says to me, ` Well, sister,
|
|
I suppose you want to mousey round and dream by yourself--you
|
|
won't talk to a growly old bear like me. Well, I'm glad of it.
|
|
I want to sleep. I don't want to be bothered by you and your
|
|
everlasting chatter. Get out!' I b'lieve he just says that
|
|
'cause he knows I wouldn't want to run off by myself if they
|
|
didn't think it was proper."
|
|
|
|
As he heard her lively effort to imitate Tom's bass Mr. Wrenn
|
|
laughed and pounded his knee and agreed: "Yes, Tom's an awfully
|
|
fine fellow, isn't he!... I love to get out some place by
|
|
myself, too. I like to wander round places and make up the
|
|
doggondest fool little stories to myself about them; just as bad
|
|
as a kiddy, that way."
|
|
|
|
"And you read such an awful lot, Mr. Wrenn! My! Oh, tell me,
|
|
have you ever read anything by Harold Bell Wright or Myrtle
|
|
Reed, Mr. Wrenn? They write such sweet stories."
|
|
|
|
He had not, but he expressed an unconquerable resolve so to do,
|
|
and with immediateness. She went on:
|
|
|
|
"Mrs. Arty told me you had a real big library--nearly a
|
|
hundred books and---- Do you mind? I went in your room and peeked
|
|
at them."
|
|
|
|
"No, course I don't mind! If there's any of them you'd like to
|
|
borrow any time, Miss Nelly, I would be awful glad to lend them
|
|
to you.... But, rats! Why, I haven't got hardly any books."
|
|
|
|
"That's why you haven't wasted any time learning Five Hundred and
|
|
things, isn't it? Because you've been so busy reading and so on?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, kind of." Mr. Wrenn looked modest.
|
|
|
|
"Haven't you always been lots of--oh, haven't you always
|
|
'magined lots?"
|
|
|
|
She really seemed to care.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn felt excitedly sure of that, and imparted: "Yes, I
|
|
guess I have.... And I've always wanted to travel a lot."
|
|
|
|
"So have I! Isn't it wonderful to go around and see new places!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, _isn't_ it!" he breathed. "It was great to be in
|
|
England--though the people there are kind of chilly some ways.
|
|
Even when I'm on a wharf here in New York I feel just like I was
|
|
off in China or somewheres. I'd like to see China. And
|
|
India.... Gee! when I hear the waves down at Coney Island or
|
|
some place--you know how the waves sound when they come in.
|
|
Well, sometimes I almost feel like they was talking to a
|
|
guy--you know--telling about ships. And, oh say, you know the
|
|
whitecaps--aren't they just like the waves was motioning at
|
|
you--they want you to come and beat it with you--over to China
|
|
and places."
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mr. Wrenn, you're a regular poet!"
|
|
|
|
He looked doubtful.
|
|
|
|
"Honest; I'm not teasing you; you are a poet. And I think it's
|
|
fine that Mr. Teddem was saying that nobody could be a poet or
|
|
like that unless they drank an awful lot and--uh--oh, not be
|
|
honest and be on a job. But you aren't like that. _Are_ you?"
|
|
|
|
He looked self-conscious and mumbled, earnestly, "Well, I try
|
|
not to be."
|
|
|
|
"But I am going to make you go to church. You'll be a socialist
|
|
or something like that if you get to be too much of a poet and
|
|
don't----"
|
|
|
|
"Miss Nelly, please _may_ I go to church with you?"
|
|
|
|
"Why----"
|
|
|
|
"Next Sunday?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, yes, I should be pleased. Are you a Presbyterian, though?"
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh--I guess I'm kind of a Congregationalist; but still,
|
|
they're all so much alike."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, they really are. And besides, what does it matter if we
|
|
all believe the same and try to do right; and sometimes that's hard,
|
|
when you're poor, and it seems like--like----"
|
|
|
|
"Seems like what?" Mr. Wrenn insisted.
|
|
|
|
"Oh--nothing.... My, you'll have to get up awful early Sunday
|
|
morning if you'd like to go with me. My church starts at
|
|
ten-thirty."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I'd get up at five to go with you."
|
|
|
|
"Stupid! Now you're just trying to jolly me; you _are_;
|
|
because you men aren't as fond of church as all that, I know you
|
|
aren't. You're real lazy Sunday mornings, and just want to sit
|
|
around and read the papers and leave the poor women---- But
|
|
please tell me some more about your reading and all that."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I'll be all ready to go at nine-thirty.... I don't know;
|
|
why, I haven't done much reading. But I would like to travel
|
|
and---- Say, wouldn't it be great to--I suppose I'm sort of a
|
|
kid about it; of course, a guy has to tend right to business,
|
|
but it would be great---- Say a man was in Europe with--with--a
|
|
friend, and they both knew a lot of history--say, they both knew
|
|
a lot about Guy Fawkes (he was the guy that tried to blow up
|
|
the English Parliament), and then when they were there in London
|
|
they could almost think they saw him, and they could go round
|
|
together and look at Shelley's window--he was a poet at
|
|
Oxford---- Oh, it would be great with a --with a friend."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, wouldn't it?... I wanted to work in the book department
|
|
one time. It's so nice your being----"
|
|
|
|
"Ready for Five Hundred?" bellowed Tom Poppins in the hall
|
|
below. "Ready partner--you, Wrenn?"
|
|
|
|
Tom was to initiate Mr. Wrenn into the game, playing with him
|
|
against Mrs. Arty and Miss Mary Proudfoot.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Arty sounded the occasion's pitch of high merriment by
|
|
delivering from the doorway the sacred old saying, "Well, the
|
|
ladies against the men, eh?"
|
|
|
|
A general grunt that might be spelled "Hmmmmhm " assented.
|
|
|
|
"I'm a good suffragette," she added. "Watch us squat the men, Mary."
|
|
|
|
"Like to smash windows? Let's see--it's red fours, black fives
|
|
up?" remarked Tom, as he prepared the pack of cards for playing.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I would! It makes me so tired," asseverated Mrs. Arty, "to
|
|
think of the old goats that men put up for candidates when they
|
|
_know_ they're solemn old fools! I'd just like to get out and
|
|
vote my head off."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I think the woman's place is in the home," sniffed Miss
|
|
Proudfoot, decisively, tucking away a doily she was finishing
|
|
for the Women's Exchange and jabbing at her bangs.
|
|
|
|
They settled themselves about the glowing, glancing, glittering,
|
|
golden-oak center-table. Miss Proudfoot shuffled sternly. Mr.
|
|
Wrenn sat still and frightened, like a shipwrecked professor on
|
|
a raft with two gamblers and a press-agent, though Nelly was
|
|
smiling encouragingly at him from the couch where she had
|
|
started her embroidery--a large Christmas lamp mat for the wife
|
|
of the Presbyterian pastor at Upton's Grove.
|
|
|
|
"Don't you wish your little friend Horatio Hood Teddem was here
|
|
to play with you?" remarked Tom.
|
|
|
|
"I _do_ not," declared Mrs. Arty. "Still, there was one thing
|
|
about Horatio. I never had to look up his account to find out
|
|
how much he owed me. He stopped calling me, Little Buttercup,
|
|
when he owed me ten dollars, and he even stopped slamming the
|
|
front door when he got up to twenty. O Mr. Wrenn, did I ever
|
|
tell you about the time I asked him if he wanted to have Annie
|
|
sweep----"
|
|
|
|
"Gerty!" protested Miss Proudfoot, while Nelly, on the couch,
|
|
ejaculated mechanically, "That story!" but Mrs. Arty chuckled
|
|
fatly, and continued:
|
|
|
|
"I asked him if he wanted me to have Annie sweep his nightshirt
|
|
when she swept his room. He changed it next day."
|
|
|
|
"Your bid, Mr. Poppins, "said Miss Proudfoot, severely.
|
|
|
|
"First, I want to tell Wrenn how to play. You see, Wrenn,
|
|
here's the schedule. We play Avondale Schedule, you know."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes," said Mr. Wrenn, timorously.... He had once heard of
|
|
Carbondale--in New Jersey or Pennsylvania or somewhere--but that
|
|
didn't seem to help much.
|
|
|
|
"Well, you see, you either make or go back," continued Tom.
|
|
"Plus and minus, you know. Joker is high, then right bower,
|
|
left, and ace. Then--uh--let's see; high bid takes the
|
|
cat--widdie, you know--and discards. Ten tricks. Follow suit
|
|
like whist, of course. I guess that's all--that ought to give
|
|
you the hang of it, anyway. I bid six on no trump."
|
|
|
|
As Tom Poppins finished these instructions, given in the
|
|
card-player's rapid don't-ask-me-any-more-fool-questions manner,
|
|
Mr. Wrenn felt that he was choking. He craned up his neck,
|
|
trying to ease his stiff collar. So, then, he was a failure, a
|
|
social outcast already.
|
|
|
|
So, then, he couldn't learn Five Hundred! And he had been very
|
|
proud of knowing one card from another perfectly, having played
|
|
a number of games of two-handed poker with Tim on the cattle-boat.
|
|
But what the dickens did "left--cat--follow suit" mean?
|
|
|
|
And to fail with Nelly watching him! He pulled at his collar again.
|
|
|
|
Thus he reflected while Mrs. Arty and Tom were carrying on the
|
|
following brilliant but cryptic society-dialogue:
|
|
|
|
_Mrs. Arty:_ Well, I don't know.
|
|
|
|
_Tom:_ Not failure, but low bid is crime, little one.
|
|
|
|
_Mrs. Arty:_ Mary, shall I make----
|
|
|
|
_Tom:_ Hey! No talking 'cross table!
|
|
|
|
_Mrs. Arty:_ Um--let--me--see.
|
|
|
|
_Tom:_ Bid up, bid up! Bid a little seven on hearts?
|
|
|
|
_Mrs. Arty:_ Just for that I _will_ bid seven on hearts, smarty!
|
|
|
|
_Tom:_ Oh, how we will squat you!... What you bidding, Wrenn?
|
|
|
|
Behind Mr. Wrenn, Nelly Croubel whispered to him: "Bid seven on
|
|
no suit. You've got the joker." Her delicate forefinger, its
|
|
nail shining, was pointing at a curious card in his hand.
|
|
|
|
"Seven nosut," he mumbled.
|
|
|
|
"Eight hearts," snapped Miss Proudfoot.
|
|
|
|
Nelly drew up a chair behind Mr. Wrenn's. He listened to her
|
|
soft explanations with the desperate respect and affection which
|
|
a green subaltern would give to a general in battle.
|
|
|
|
Tom and he won the hand. He glanced back at Nelly with awe,
|
|
then clutched his new hand, fearfully, dizzily, staring at it as
|
|
though it might conceal one of those malevolent deceivers of
|
|
which Nelly had just warned him--a left bower.
|
|
|
|
"Good! Spades--see," said Nelly.
|
|
|
|
Fifteen minutes later Mr. Wrenn felt that Tom was hoping he
|
|
would lead a club. He played one, and the whole table said:
|
|
"That's right. Fine!"
|
|
|
|
On his shoulder he felt a light tap, and he blushed like a
|
|
sunset as he peeped back at Nelly.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn, the society light, was Our Mr. Wrenn of the Souvenir
|
|
Company all this time. Indeed, at present he intended to keep
|
|
on taking The Job seriously until that most mistily distant time,
|
|
which we all await, "when something turns up." His fondling of
|
|
the Southern merchants was showing such results that he had grown
|
|
from an interest in whatever papers were on his desk to a belief
|
|
in the divine necessity of The Job as a whole. Not now, as of old,
|
|
did he keep the personal letters in his desk tied up, ready for a
|
|
sudden departure for Vienna or Kamchatka. Also, he wished to earn
|
|
much more money for his new career of luxury. Mr. Guilfogle had
|
|
assured him that there might be chances ahead--business had been
|
|
prospering, two new road salesmen and a city-trade man had been
|
|
added to the staff, and whereas the firm had formerly been jobbers
|
|
only, buying their novelties from manufacturers, now they were
|
|
having printed for them their own Lotsa - Snap Cardboard Office
|
|
Mottoes, which were making a big hit with the trade.
|
|
|
|
Through his friend Rabin, the salesman, Mr. Wrenn got better
|
|
acquainted with two great men--Mr. L. J. Glover, the
|
|
purchasing agent of the Souvenir Company, and John Hensen, the
|
|
newly engaged head of motto manufacturing. He "wanted to get
|
|
onto all the different lines of the business so's he could step
|
|
right in anywhere"; and from these men he learned the valuable
|
|
secrets of business wherewith the marts of trade build up
|
|
prosperity for all of us: how to seat a selling agent facing the
|
|
light, so you can see his face better than he can see yours.
|
|
How much ahead of time to telephone the motto-printer that
|
|
"we've simply got to have proof this afternoon; what's the matter
|
|
with you, down there? Don't you want our business any more?" He
|
|
also learned something of the various kinds of cardboard and
|
|
ink-well glass, though these, of course, were merely matters of
|
|
knowledge, not of brilliant business tactics, and far less
|
|
important than what Tom Poppins and Rabin called "handing out a
|
|
snappy line of talk."
|
|
|
|
"Say, you're getting quite chummy lately--reg'lar society
|
|
leader," Rabin informed him.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn's answer was in itself a proof of the soundness of
|
|
Rabin's observation:
|
|
|
|
"Sure--I'm going to borrow some money from you fellows. Got to
|
|
make an impression, see?"
|
|
|
|
A few hours after this commendation came Istra's second letter:
|
|
|
|
Mouse dear, I'm so glad to hear about the simpatico boarding-
|
|
house. Yes indeed I would like to hear about the people in it.
|
|
And you are reading history? That's good. I'm getting sick of
|
|
Paris and some day I'm going to stop an absinthe on the
|
|
boulevard and slap its face to show I'm a sturdy moving-picture
|
|
Western Amurrican and then leap to saddle and pursue the bandit.
|
|
I'm working like the devil but what's the use. That is I mean
|
|
unless one is doing the job well, as I'm glad you are. My Dear,
|
|
keep it up. You know I want you to be _real_ whatever you are.
|
|
I didn't mean to preach but you know I hate people who aren't
|
|
real--that's why I haven't much of a flair for myself.
|
|
_Au recrire_,
|
|
I. N.
|
|
|
|
After he had read her letter for the third time he was horribly
|
|
shocked and regarded himself as a traitor, because he found that
|
|
he was only pretending to be enjoyably excited over it.... It
|
|
seemed so detached from himself. "Flair" -- "_au recrire_."
|
|
Now, what did those mean? And Istra was always so discontented.
|
|
"What 'd she do if she had to be on the job like Nelly?... Oh,
|
|
Istra _is_ wonderful. But--gee!--I dunno----"
|
|
|
|
And when he who has valorously loved says "But--gee!--I
|
|
dunno----" love flees in panic.
|
|
|
|
He walked home thoughtfully.
|
|
|
|
After dinner he said abruptly to Nelly, "I had a letter from
|
|
Paris to-day."
|
|
|
|
"Honestly? Who is she?"
|
|
|
|
"G-g-g-g----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it's always a she."
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh--it _is_ from a girl. I started to tell you about
|
|
her one day. She's an artist, and once we took a long tramp in
|
|
the country. I met her--she was staying at the same place as I
|
|
was in London. But--oh, gee! I dunno; she's so blame literary.
|
|
She _is_ a _fine_ person---- Do you think you'd like a girl like that?"
|
|
|
|
"Maybe I would."
|
|
|
|
"If she was a man?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes-s! Artists are so romantic."
|
|
|
|
"But they ain't on the job more 'n half the time," he said, jealously.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's _so_."
|
|
|
|
His hand stole secretly, craftily skirting a cushion, to touch
|
|
hers--which she withdrew, laughing:
|
|
|
|
"Hump-a! You go hold your artist's hand!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Miss Nelly! When I _told_ you about her _myself!_"
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, of course."
|
|
|
|
She was contrite, and they played Five Hundred animatedly all evening.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVI
|
|
HE BECOMES MILDLY RELIGIOUS AND HIGHLY LITERARY
|
|
|
|
The hero of the one-act play at Hammerstein's Victoria
|
|
vaudeville theater on that December evening was, it appeared, a
|
|
wealthy young mine-owner in disguise. He was working for the
|
|
"fake mine promoter" because he loved the promoter's daughter
|
|
with a love that passed all understanding except that of the
|
|
girls in the gallery. When the postal authorities were about to
|
|
arrest the promoter our young hero saved him by giving him a
|
|
real mine, and the ensuing kiss of the daughter ended the
|
|
suspense in which Mr. Wrenn and Nelly, Mrs. Arty and Tom had
|
|
watched the play from the sixth row of the balcony.
|
|
|
|
Sighing happily, Nelly cried to the group: "Wasn't that grand?
|
|
I got so excited! Wasn't that young miner a dear?"
|
|
|
|
"Awfully nice," said Mr. Wrenn. "And, gee! wasn't that great,
|
|
that office scene--with that safe and the rest of the
|
|
stuff--just like you was in a real office. But, say, they
|
|
wouldn't have a copying-press in an office like that; those fake
|
|
mine promoters send out such swell letters; they'd use carbon
|
|
copies and not muss the letters all up."
|
|
|
|
"By gosh, that's right!" and Tom nodded his chin toward his
|
|
right shoulder in approval. Nelly cried, "That's so; they
|
|
would"; while Mrs. Arty, not knowing what a copying-press was,
|
|
appeared highly commendatory, and said nothing at all.
|
|
|
|
During the moving pictures that followed, Mr. Wrenn felt
|
|
proudly that he was taken seriously, though he had known
|
|
them but little over a month. He followed up his conversational
|
|
advantage by leading the chorus in wondering, "which one of them
|
|
two actors the heroine was married to?" and "how much a week
|
|
they get for acting in that thing?" It was Tom who invited them
|
|
to Miggleton's for coffee and fried oysters. Mr. Wrenn was
|
|
silent for a while. But as they were stamping through the
|
|
rivulets of wheel - tracks that crisscrossed on a slushy
|
|
street-crossing Mr. Wrenn regained his advantage by crying,
|
|
"Say, don't you think that play 'd have been better if the
|
|
promoter 'd had an awful grouch on the young miner and 'd had to
|
|
crawfish when the miner saved him?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, yes; it would!" Nelly glowed at him.
|
|
|
|
"Wouldn't wonder if it would," agreed Tom, kicking the December
|
|
slush off his feet and patting Mr. Wrenn's back.
|
|
|
|
"Well, look here," said Mr. Wrenn, as they left Broadway, with
|
|
its crowds betokening the approach of Christmas, and stamped to
|
|
the quieter side of Forty-second, "why wouldn't this make a
|
|
slick play: say there's an awfully rich old guy; say he's a
|
|
railway president or something, d' you see? Well, he's got a
|
|
secretary there in the office--on the stage, see? The scene is
|
|
his office. Well, this guy's --the rich old guy's--daughter
|
|
comes in and says she's married to a poor man and she won't tell
|
|
his name, but she wants some money from her dad. You see, her
|
|
dad's been planning for her to marry a marquise or some kind of
|
|
a lord, and he's sore as can be, and he won't listen to her, and
|
|
he just cusses her out something fierce, see? Course he doesn't
|
|
really cuss, but he's awful sore; and she tells him didn't he
|
|
marry her mother when he was a poor young man; but he won't
|
|
listen. Then the secretary butts in--my idea is he's been kind
|
|
of keeping in the background, see--and _he's_ the daughter's
|
|
husband all the while, see? and he tells the old codger how
|
|
he's got some of his--some of the old fellow's--papers that give
|
|
it away how he done something that was crooked--some kind of
|
|
deal--rebates and stuff, see how I mean?--and the secretary's
|
|
going to spring this stuff on the newspapers if the old man
|
|
don't come through and forgive them; so of course the president
|
|
has to forgive them, see?"
|
|
|
|
"You mean the secretary was the daughter's husband all along,
|
|
and he heard what the president said right there?" Nelly panted,
|
|
stopping outside Miggleton's, in the light from the
|
|
oyster-filled window.
|
|
|
|
"Yes; and he heard it all."
|
|
|
|
"Why, I think that's just a _fine_ idea," declared Nelly, as they
|
|
entered the restaurant. Though her little manner of dignity and
|
|
even restraint was evident as ever, she seemed keenly joyous
|
|
over his genius.
|
|
|
|
"Say, that's a corking idea for a play, Wrenn," exclaimed Tom,
|
|
at their table, gallantly removing the ladies' wraps.
|
|
|
|
"It surely is," agreed Mrs. Arty.
|
|
|
|
"Why don't you write it?" asked Nelly.
|
|
|
|
"Aw--I couldn't write it!"
|
|
|
|
"Why, sure you could, Bill," insisted Tom. "Straight; you
|
|
ought to write it. (Hey, waiter! Four fries and coffee!)
|
|
You ought to write it. Why, it's a wonder; it 'd make a dev----
|
|
'Scuse me, ladies. It'd make a howling hit. You might make a
|
|
lot of money out of it."
|
|
|
|
The renewed warmth of their wet feet on the red-tile floor, the
|
|
scent of fried oysters, the din of "Any Little Girl" on the
|
|
piano, these added color to this moment of Mr. Wrenn's great
|
|
resolve. The four stared at one another excitedly. Mr. Wrenn's
|
|
eyelids fluttered. Tom brought his hand down on the table with
|
|
a soft flat "plob" and declared: "Say, there might be a lot
|
|
of money in it. Why, I've heard that Harry Smith--writes the
|
|
words for these musical comedies--makes a _mint_ of money."
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Poppins ought to help you in it--he's seen such a lot of
|
|
plays," Mrs. Arty anxiously advised.
|
|
|
|
"That's a good idea," said Mr. Wrenn. It had, apparently, been
|
|
ordained that he was to write it. They were now settling
|
|
important details. So when Nelly cried, "I think it's just a
|
|
fine idea; I knew you had lots of imagination," Tom interrupted
|
|
her with:
|
|
|
|
"No; you write it, Bill. I'll help you all I can, of course....
|
|
Tell you what you ought to do: get hold of Teddem--he's had a
|
|
lot of stage experience; he'd help you about seeing the managers.
|
|
That 'd be the hard part--you can write it, all right, but you'd
|
|
have to get next to the guys on the inside, and Teddem---- Say,
|
|
you cer_tain_ly ought to write this thing, Bill. Might make a lot
|
|
of money."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, a lot!" breathed Nelly.
|
|
|
|
"Heard about a fellow," continued Tom-- " fellow named Gene
|
|
Wolf, I think it was--that was so broke he was sleeping in
|
|
Bryant Park, and he made a _hundred thousand dollars_ on his
|
|
first play--or, no; tell you how it was: he sold it outright for
|
|
ten thousand--something like that, anyway. I got that right
|
|
from a fellow that's met him."
|
|
|
|
"Still, an author's got to go to college and stuff like that."
|
|
Mr. Wrenn spoke as though he would be pleased to have the
|
|
objection overruled at once, which it was with a universal:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, rats!"
|
|
|
|
Crunching oysters in a brown jacket of flour, whose every lump
|
|
was a crisp delight, hearing his genius lauded and himself
|
|
called Bill thrice in a quarter-hour, Mr. Wrenn was beatified.
|
|
He asked the waiter for some paper, and while the four hotly
|
|
discussed things which "it would be slick to have the
|
|
president's daughter do" he drew up a list of characters on a
|
|
sheet of paper he still keeps. It is headed, "Miggleton's
|
|
Forty-second Street Branch." At the bottom appear numerous
|
|
scribblings of the name Nelly.
|
|
|
|
{the full page is covered with doodling as well}
|
|
|
|
"I think I'll call the heroine `Nelly,' " he mused.
|
|
|
|
Nelly Croubel blushed. Mrs. Arty and Tom glanced at each other.
|
|
Mr. Wrenn realized that he had, even at this moment of social
|
|
triumph, "made a break."
|
|
|
|
He said, hastily; "I always liked that name. I--I had an aunt
|
|
named that!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh----" started Nelly.
|
|
|
|
"She was fine to me when I was a kid, "Mr. Wrenn added, trying
|
|
to remember whether it was right to lie when in such need.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it's a horrid name," declared Nelly. "Why don't you call
|
|
her something nice, like Hazel--or--oh--Dolores."
|
|
|
|
"Nope; Nelly's an elegant name--an _elegant_ name."
|
|
|
|
He walked with Nelly behind the others, along Forty-second
|
|
Street. To the outsider's eye he was a small respectable clerk,
|
|
slightly stooped, with a polite mustache and the dignity that
|
|
comes from knowing well a narrow world; wearing an overcoat too
|
|
light for winter; too busily edging out of the way of people and
|
|
guiding the nice girl beside him into clear spaces by
|
|
diffidently touching her elbow, too pettily busy to cast a
|
|
glance out of the crowd and spy the passing poet or king, or the
|
|
iron night sky. He was as undistinguishable a bit of the
|
|
evening street life as any of the file of street-cars slashing
|
|
through the wet snow. Yet, he was the chivalrous squire to the
|
|
greatest lady of all his realm; he was a society author, and a
|
|
man of great prospective wealth and power over mankind!
|
|
|
|
"Say, we'll have the grandest dinner you ever saw if I get away
|
|
with the play," he was saying. "Will you come, Miss Nelly?"
|
|
|
|
"Indeed I will! Oh, you sha'n't leave me out! Wasn't I there when----"
|
|
|
|
"Indeed you were! Oh, we'll have a reg'lar feast at the
|
|
Astor--artichokes and truffles and all sorts of stuff....
|
|
Would--would you like it if I sold the play?"
|
|
|
|
"_Course_ I would, silly!"
|
|
|
|
"I'd buy the business and make Rabin manager--the Souvenir Company.
|
|
|
|
"So he came to relate all those intimacies of The Job; and he was
|
|
overwhelmed at the ease with which she "got onto old Goglefogle."
|
|
|
|
His preparations for writing the play were elaborate.
|
|
|
|
He paced Tom's room till twelve-thirty, consulting as to whether
|
|
he had to plan the stage-setting; smoking cigarettes in
|
|
attitudes on chair arms. Next morning in the office he made
|
|
numerous plans of the setting on waste half-sheets of paper.
|
|
At noon he was telephoning at Tom regarding the question of
|
|
whether there ought to be one desk or two on the stage.
|
|
|
|
He skipped the evening meal at Mrs. Arty's, dining with literary
|
|
pensiveness at the Armenian, for he had subtle problems to
|
|
meditate. He bought a dollar fountain-pen, which had large
|
|
gold-like bands and a rather scratchy pen-point, and a box of
|
|
fairly large sheets of paper. Pressing his literary impedimenta
|
|
tenderly under his arm, he attended four moving-picture and
|
|
vaudeville theaters. By eleven he had seen three more one-act
|
|
plays and a dramatic playlet.
|
|
|
|
He slipped by the parlor door at Mrs. Arty's.
|
|
|
|
His room was quiet. The lamplight on the delicately green walls
|
|
was like that of a regular author's den, he was quite sure. He
|
|
happily tested the fountain-pen by writing the names Nelly and
|
|
William Wrenn on a bit of wrapping-paper (which he guiltily
|
|
burned in an ash-tray); washed his face with water which he let
|
|
run for a minute to cool; sat down before his table with a grunt
|
|
of content; went back and washed his hands; fiercely threw off
|
|
the bourgeois encumbrances of coat and collar; sat down again;
|
|
got up to straighten a picture; picked up his pen; laid it down,
|
|
and glowed as he thought of Nelly, slumbering there, near at
|
|
hand, her exquisite cheek nestling silkenly against her arm,
|
|
perhaps, and her white dreams----
|
|
|
|
Suddenly he roared at himself, "Get on the job there, will yuh?"
|
|
He picked up the pen and wrote:
|
|
|
|
THE MILLIONAIRE'S DAUGHTER
|
|
|
|
A ONE ACT DRAMATIC PLAYLET
|
|
by
|
|
|
|
WILLIAM WRENN
|
|
|
|
CHARACTERS
|
|
|
|
_John Warrington_, a railway president; quite rich.
|
|
_Nelty Warrington_, Mr. Warrington's daughter.
|
|
_Reginald Thorne_, his secretary.
|
|
|
|
He was jubilant. His pen whined at top speed, scattering a
|
|
shower of tiny drops of ink.
|
|
|
|
_Stage Scene: An office. Very expensive. Mr. Warrington and Mr.
|
|
Thorne are sitting there. Miss Warrington comes in. She says:_
|
|
|
|
He stopped. He thought. He held his head. He went over to the
|
|
stationary bowl and soaked his hair with water. He lay on the
|
|
bed and kicked his heels, slowly and gravely smoothing his
|
|
mustache. Fifty minutes later he gave a portentous groan and
|
|
went to bed.
|
|
|
|
He hadn't been able to think of what Miss Warrington says beyond
|
|
"I have come to tell you that I am married, papa," and that
|
|
didn't sound just right; not for a first line it didn't, anyway.
|
|
|
|
At dinner next night--Saturday--Tom was rather inclined to make
|
|
references to "our author," and to remark: "Well, I know where
|
|
somebody was last night, but of course I won't tell. Say, them
|
|
authors are a wild lot."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn, who had permitted the teasing of even Tim, the
|
|
hatter, "wasn't going to stand for no kidding from nobody--not
|
|
when Nelly was there," and he called for a glass of water with
|
|
the air of a Harvard assistant professor forced to eat in a
|
|
lunch-wagon and slapped on the back by the cook.
|
|
|
|
Nelly soothed him. "The play _is_ going well, _isn't_ it?"
|
|
|
|
When he had, with a detached grandeur of which he was
|
|
immediately ashamed, vouchsafed that he was already "getting
|
|
right down to brass tacks on it," that he had already
|
|
investigated four more plays and begun the actual writing,
|
|
every one looked awed and asked him assorted questions.
|
|
|
|
At nine-thirty that evening he combed and tightly brushed his
|
|
hair, which he had been pawing angrily for an hour and a half,
|
|
went down the hall to Nelly's hall bedroom, and knocked with:
|
|
"It's Mr. Wrenn. May I ask you something about the play?"
|
|
|
|
"Just a moment," he heard her say.
|
|
|
|
He waited, panting softly, his lips apart. This was to be the
|
|
first time he had ever seen Nelly's room. She opened the door
|
|
part way, smiling shyly, timidly, holding her pale-blue
|
|
dressing-gown close. The pale blueness was a modestly brilliant
|
|
spot against the whiteness of the room--white bureau, hung with
|
|
dance programs and a yellow Upton's Grove High School banner,
|
|
white tiny rocker, pale-yellow matting, white-and-silver
|
|
wall-paper, and a glimpse of a white soft bed.
|
|
|
|
He was dizzy with the exaltation of that purity, but he got
|
|
himself to say:
|
|
|
|
"I'm kind of stuck on the first part of the play, Miss Nelly.
|
|
Please tell me how you think the heroine would speak to her dad.
|
|
Would she call him `papa' or `sir,' do you think?"
|
|
|
|
"Why--let me see----"
|
|
|
|
"They're such awful high society----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's so. Why, I should think she'd say `sir.' Maybe oh,
|
|
what was it I heard in a play at the Academy of Music?
|
|
`Father, I have come back to you!'"
|
|
|
|
"Sa-a-ay, that's a fine line! That'll get the crowd going right
|
|
from the first.... I _told_ you you'd help me a lot."
|
|
|
|
"I'm awfully glad if I _have_ helped you," she said, earnestly.
|
|
Good night--and good, "awfully glad, but luck with the play.
|
|
Good night."
|
|
|
|
"Good night. Thank you a lot, Miss Nelly. Church in the
|
|
morning, remember! Good night."
|
|
|
|
"Good night."
|
|
|
|
As it is well known that all playwrights labor with toy theaters
|
|
before them for working models, Mr. Wrenn ran to earth a fine
|
|
unbroken pasteboard box in which a ninety-eight-cent alarm-clock
|
|
had recently arrived. He went out for some glue and three small
|
|
corks. Setting up his box stage, he glued a pill-box and a
|
|
match-box on the floor--the side of the box it had always been
|
|
till now--and there he had the mahogany desks. He thrust three
|
|
matches into the corks, and behold three graceful
|
|
actors--graceful for corks, at least. There was fascination in
|
|
having them enter, through holes punched in the back of the box,
|
|
frisk up to their desks and deliver magic emotional speeches
|
|
that would cause any audience to weep; speeches regarding which
|
|
he knew everything but the words; a detail of which he was still
|
|
quite ignorant after half an hour of playing with his marionettes.
|
|
|
|
Before he went despairingly to bed that Saturday night he had
|
|
added to his manuscript:
|
|
|
|
_Mr. Thorne_ says: Here are the papers, sir. As a great railway
|
|
president you should----
|
|
|
|
The rest of that was to be filled in later. How the dickens
|
|
could he let the public know how truly great his president was?
|
|
|
|
(_Daughter, Miss Nelly, comes in._)
|
|
|
|
_Miss Nelly:_ Father, I have come back to you, sir.
|
|
|
|
_Mr. Warrington:_ My Daughter!
|
|
|
|
_Nelly:_ Father, I have something to tell you; something----
|
|
|
|
Breakfast at Mrs. Arty's was always an inspiration. In contrast
|
|
to the lonely dingy meal at the Hustler Dairy Lunch of his Zapp
|
|
days, he sat next to a trimly shirtwaisted Nelly, fresh and
|
|
enthusiastic after nine hours' sleep. So much for ordinary
|
|
days. But Sunday morning--that was paradise! The oil-stove
|
|
glowed and purred like a large tin pussy cat; it toasted their
|
|
legs into dreamy comfort, while they methodically stuffed
|
|
themselves with toast and waffles and coffee. Nelly and he
|
|
always felt gently superior to Tom Poppins, who would be
|
|
a-sleeping late, as they talked of the joy of not having to go
|
|
to the office, of approaching Christmas, and of the superiority
|
|
of Upton's Grove and Parthenon.
|
|
|
|
This morning was to be Mr. Wrenn's first attendance at church
|
|
with Nelly. The previous time they had planned to go, Mr. Wrenn
|
|
had spent Sunday morning in unreligious fervor at the Chelsea
|
|
Dental Parlors with a young man in a white jacket instead of at
|
|
church with Nelly.
|
|
|
|
This was also the first time that he had attended a church
|
|
service in nine years, except for mass at St. Patrick's, which
|
|
he regarded not as church, but as beauty. He felt tremendously
|
|
reformed, set upon new paths of virtue and achievement. He
|
|
thought slightingly of those lonely bachelors, Morton and
|
|
Mittyford, Ph. D. They just didn't know what it meant to a
|
|
fellow to be going to church with a girl like Miss Nelly, he
|
|
reflected, as he re brushed his hair after breakfast.
|
|
|
|
He walked proudly beside her, and made much of the gentility of
|
|
entering the church, as one of the well-to-do and intensely
|
|
bathed congregation. He even bowed to an almost painfully
|
|
washed and brushed young usher with gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
|
|
He thought scornfully of his salad days, when he had bowed to
|
|
the Brass-button Man at the Nickelorion.
|
|
|
|
The church interior was as comfortable as Sunday-morning toast
|
|
and marmalade--half a block of red carpet in the aisles; shiny
|
|
solid-oak pews, gorgeous stained-glass windows, and a general
|
|
polite creaking of ladies' best stays and gentlemen's stiff
|
|
shirt-bosoms, and an odor of the best cologne and moth-balls.
|
|
|
|
It lacked but six days till Christmas. Mr. Wrenn's heart was a
|
|
little garden, and his eyes were moist, and he peeped tenderly
|
|
at Nelly as he saw the holly and ivy and the frosted Christmas
|
|
mottoes, "Peace on Earth, Good Will to Men," and the rest, that
|
|
brightened the spaces between windows.
|
|
|
|
Christmas--happy homes--laughter.... Since, as a boy, he had
|
|
attended the Christmas festivities of the Old Church
|
|
Sunday-school at Parthenon, and got highly colored candy in a
|
|
net bag, his holidays had been celebrated by buying himself plum
|
|
pudding at lonely Christmas dinners at large cheap restaurants,
|
|
where there was no one to wish him "Merry Christmas" except
|
|
his waiter, whom he would quite probably never see again, nor
|
|
ever wish to see.
|
|
|
|
But this Christmas--he surprised himself and Nelly suddenly by
|
|
hotly thrusting out his hand and touching her sleeve with the
|
|
searching finger-tips of a child comforted from night fears.
|
|
|
|
During the sermon he had an idea. What was it Nelly had told
|
|
him about "Peter Pan"? Oh yes; somebody in it had said "Do you
|
|
believe in fairies?" _Say_, why wouldn't it be great to have the
|
|
millionaire's daughter say to her father, "Do you believe in love?"
|
|
|
|
"Gee, _I_ believe in love!" he yearned to himself, as he felt
|
|
Nelly's arm unconsciously touch his.
|
|
|
|
Tom Poppins had Horatio Hood Teddem in that afternoon for a hot
|
|
toddy. Horatio looked very boyish, very confiding, and borrowed
|
|
five dollars from Mr. Wrenn almost painlessly, so absorbed was
|
|
Mr. Wrenn in learning from Horatio how to sell a play. To know
|
|
the address of the firm of Wendelbaum & Schirtz, play-brokers,
|
|
located in a Broadway theater building, seemed next door to
|
|
knowing a Broadway manager.
|
|
|
|
When Horatio had gone Tom presented an idea which he had
|
|
ponderously conceived during his Sunday noon-hour at the
|
|
cigar-store.
|
|
|
|
"Why not have three of us--say me and you and Mrs. Arty--talk
|
|
the play, just like we was acting it?"
|
|
|
|
He enthusiastically forced the plan on Mr. Wrenn. He pounded
|
|
down-stairs and brought up Mrs. Arty. He dashed about the room,
|
|
shouting directions. He dragged out his bureau for the
|
|
railroad-president's desk, and a table for the secretary, and,
|
|
after some consideration and much rubbing of his chin, with two
|
|
slams and a bang he converted his hard green Morris-chair into
|
|
an office safe.
|
|
|
|
The play was on. Mr. T. Poppins, in the role of the president,
|
|
entered, with a stern high expression on his face, threw a "Good
|
|
morning, Thorne," at Wrenn, his secretary, and peeled off his gloves.
|
|
(Mr. Wrenn noted the gloves; they were a Touch.)
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn approached diffidently, his face expressionless, lest
|
|
Mrs. Arty laugh at him. "Here----
|
|
|
|
"Say, what do you think would be a good way for the secretary to
|
|
tell the crowd that the other guy is the president? Say, how
|
|
about this: `The vice-president of the railway would like to
|
|
have you sign these, sir, as president'?"
|
|
|
|
"That's fine!" exclaimed Mrs. Arty, whose satin dress was
|
|
carefully spread over her swelling knees, as she sat in the oak
|
|
rocker, like a cheerful bronze monument to Sunday propriety.
|
|
"But don't you think he'd say, `when it's convenient to you, sir'?"
|
|
|
|
"Gee, that's dandy!"
|
|
|
|
The play was on.
|
|
|
|
It ended at seven. Mr. Wrenn took but fifteen minutes for
|
|
Sunday supper, and wrote till one of the morning, finishing the
|
|
first draft of his manuscript.
|
|
|
|
Revision was delightful, for it demanded many conferences with
|
|
Nelly, sitting at the parlor table, with shoulders
|
|
confidentially touching. They were the more intimate because
|
|
Tom had invited Mr. Wrenn, Nelly, and Mrs. Arty to the Grand
|
|
Christmas Eve Ball of the Cigar-Makers' Union at Melpomene Hall.
|
|
Nelly asked of Mr. Wrenn, almost as urgently as of Mrs. Arty,
|
|
whether she should wear her new white mull or her older
|
|
rose-colored China silk.
|
|
|
|
Two days before Christmas he timidly turned over the play for
|
|
typing to a haughty public stenographer who looked like Lee
|
|
Theresa Zapp. She yawned at him when he begged her to be
|
|
careful of the manuscript. The gloriously pink-bound and
|
|
red-underlined typed manuscript of the play was mailed to
|
|
Messrs. Wendelbaum & Schirtz, play-brokers, at 6.15 P.M.,
|
|
Christmas Eve.
|
|
|
|
The four walked down Sixth Avenue to the Cigar-Makers' Ball.
|
|
They made an Indian file through the Christmas shopping crowds,
|
|
and stopped frequently and noisily before the street-booths'
|
|
glamour of tinsel and teddy-bears. They shrieked all with one
|
|
rotund mad laughter as Tom Poppins capered over and bought for
|
|
seven cents a pink bisque doll, which he pinned to the lapel of
|
|
his plaid overcoat. They drank hot chocolate at the Olympic
|
|
Confectionery Store, pretending to each other that they were
|
|
shivering with cold.
|
|
|
|
It was here that Nelly reached up and patted Mr. Wrenn's
|
|
pale-blue tie into better lines. In her hair was the scent
|
|
which he had come to identify as hers. Her white furs brushed
|
|
against his overcoat.
|
|
|
|
The cigar-makers, with seven of them in full evening-dress and
|
|
two in dinner-coats, were already dancing on the waxy floor of
|
|
Melpomene Hall when they arrived. A full orchestra was pounding
|
|
and scraping itself into an hysteria of merriment on the
|
|
platform under the red stucco-fronted balcony, and at the bar
|
|
behind the balcony there was a spirit of beer and revelry by night.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn embarrassedly passed large groups of pretty girls.
|
|
He felt very light and insecure in his new gun-metal-finish
|
|
pumps now that he had taken off his rubbers and essayed the
|
|
slippery floor. He tried desperately not to use his handkerchief
|
|
too conspicuously, though he had a cold.
|
|
|
|
It was not till the choosing of partners for the next dance,
|
|
when Tom Poppins stood up beside Nelly, their arms swaying a
|
|
little, their feet tapping, that Mr. Wrenn quite got the fact
|
|
that he could not dance.
|
|
|
|
He had casually said to the others, a week before, that he knew
|
|
only the square dances which, as a boy, he had learned at
|
|
parties at Parthenon. But they had reassured him: "Oh, come
|
|
on--we'll teach you how to dance at the ball--it won't be formal.
|
|
Besides, we'll give you some lessons before we go."
|
|
Playwriting and playing Five Hundred had prevented their giving
|
|
him the lessons. So he now sat terrified as a two-step began
|
|
and he saw what seemed to be thousands of glittering youths and
|
|
maidens whirling deftly in a most involved course, getting
|
|
themselves past each other in a way which he was sure he could
|
|
never imitate. The orchestra yearned over music as rich and
|
|
smooth as milk chocolate, which made him intensely lonely for
|
|
Nelly, though she was only across the room from him.
|
|
|
|
Tom Poppins immediately introduced Nelly to a facetious cigar
|
|
salesman, who introduced her to three of the beaux in evening
|
|
clothes, while Tom led out Mrs. Arty. Mr. Wrenn, sitting in a
|
|
row of persons who were not at all interested in his sorrows,
|
|
glowered out across the hall, and wished, oh! so bitterly, to
|
|
flee home. Nelly came up, glowing, laughing, with
|
|
black-mustached and pearl-waistcoated men, and introduced him to
|
|
them, but he glanced at them disapprovingly; and always she was
|
|
carried off to dance again.
|
|
|
|
She found and hopefully introduced to Mr. Wrenn a wallflower who
|
|
came from Yonkers and had never heard of Tom Poppins or
|
|
aeroplanes or Oxford or any other topic upon which Mr. Wrenn
|
|
uneasily tried to discourse as he watched Nelly waltz and smile
|
|
up at her partners. Presently the two sat silent. The wallflower
|
|
excused herself and went back to her mama from Yonkers.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn sat sulking, hating his friends for having brought
|
|
him, hating the sweetness of Nelly Croubel, and saying to
|
|
himself, "Oh--_sure_--she dances with all those other men--me,
|
|
I'm only the poor fool that talks to her when she's tired and
|
|
tries to cheer her up."
|
|
|
|
He did not answer when Tom came and told him a new story he had
|
|
just heard in the barroom.
|
|
|
|
Once Nelly landed beside him and bubblingly insisted on his
|
|
coming out and trying to learn to dance. He brightened, but
|
|
shyly remarked, "Oh no, I don't think I'd better." Just then the
|
|
blackest-mustached and pearl-waistcoatedest of all the cigar
|
|
salesmen came begging for a dance, and she was gone, with only:
|
|
"Now get up your courage. I'm going to _make_ you dance."
|
|
|
|
At the intermission he watched her cross the floor with the
|
|
hateful cigar salesman, slender in her tight crisp new white
|
|
mull, flourishing her fan and talking with happy rapidity.
|
|
She sat down beside him. He said nothing; he still stared out
|
|
across the glassy floor. She peeped at him curiously several
|
|
times, and made a low tapping with her fan on the side of her chair.
|
|
|
|
She sighed a little. Cautiously, but very casually, she said,
|
|
"Aren't you going to take me out for some refreshments, Mr. Wrenn?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh sure--I'm good enough to buy refreshments for her!" he said
|
|
to himself.
|
|
|
|
Poor Mr. Wrenn; he had not gone to enough parties in Parthenon,
|
|
and he hadn't gone to any in New York. At nearly forty he was
|
|
just learning the drab sulkiness and churlishness and black
|
|
jealousy of the lover.... To her: "Why didn't you go out with
|
|
that guy with the black mustache?" He still stared straight ahead.
|
|
|
|
She was big-eyed, a tear showing. "Why, Billy----" was all she
|
|
answered.
|
|
|
|
He clenched his hands to keep from bursting out with all the
|
|
pitiful tears which were surging in his eyes. But he said nothing.
|
|
|
|
"Billy, what----"
|
|
|
|
He turned shyly around to her; his hand touched hers softly.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I'm a beast," he said, rapidly, low, his undertone
|
|
trembling to her ears through the laughter of a group next to
|
|
them. "I didn't mean that, but I was--I felt like such a
|
|
mutt--not being able to dance. Oh, Nelly, I'm awfully sorry.
|
|
You know I didn't mean---- _Come on!_ Let's go get something to eat!"
|
|
|
|
As they consumed ice-cream, fudge, doughnuts, and chicken
|
|
sandwiches at the refreshment counter they were very intimate,
|
|
resenting the presence of others. Tom and Mrs. Arty joined
|
|
them. Tom made Nelly light her first cigarette. Mr. Wrenn
|
|
admired the shy way in which, taking the tiniest of puffs, she
|
|
kept drawing out her cigarette with little pouts and nose
|
|
wriggles and pretended sneezes, but he felt a lofty gladness
|
|
when she threw it away after a minute, declaring that she'd
|
|
never smoke again, and that she was going to make all three of
|
|
her companions stop smoking, "now that she knew how horrid and
|
|
sneezy it was, so there!"
|
|
|
|
With what he intended to be deep subtlety Mr. Wrenn drew her
|
|
away to the barroom, and these two children, over two glasses of
|
|
ginger-ale, looked their innocent and rustic love so plainly
|
|
that Mrs. Arty and Tom sneaked away. Nelly cut out a dance,
|
|
which she had promised to a cigar-maker, and started homeward
|
|
with Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
"Let's not take a car--I want some fresh air after that smoky
|
|
place," she said. "But it _was_ grand.... Let's walk up
|
|
Fifth Avenue."
|
|
|
|
"Fine.... Tired, Nelly?"
|
|
|
|
"A little."
|
|
|
|
He thought her voice somewhat chilly.
|
|
|
|
"Nelly--I'm so sorry--I didn't really have the chance to tell
|
|
you in there how sorry I was for the way I spoke to you.
|
|
Gee! it was fierce of me--but I felt--I couldn't dance, and--oh----"
|
|
|
|
No answer.
|
|
|
|
"And you did mind it, didn't you?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, I didn't think you were so very nice about it--when I'd
|
|
tried so hard to have you have a good time----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Nelly, I'm so sorry----"
|
|
|
|
There was tragedy in his voice. His shoulders, which he always
|
|
tried to keep as straight as though they were in a vise when he
|
|
walked with her, were drooping.
|
|
|
|
She touched his glove. "Oh don't, Billy; it's all right now.
|
|
I understand. Let's forget----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you're too good to me!"
|
|
|
|
Silence.
|
|
|
|
As they crossed Twenty-third on Fifth Avenue she took his arm.
|
|
He squeezed her hand. Suddenly the world was all young and
|
|
beautiful and wonderful. It was the first time in his life that
|
|
he had ever walked thus, with the arm of a girl for whom he
|
|
cared cuddled in his. He glanced down at her cheap white furs.
|
|
Snowflakes, tremulous on the fur, were turned into diamond dust
|
|
in the light from a street-lamp which showed as well a tiny
|
|
place where her collar had been torn and mended ever so
|
|
carefully. Then, in a millionth of a second, he who had been a
|
|
wanderer in the lonely gray regions of a detached man's heart
|
|
knew the pity of love, all its emotion, and the infinite care
|
|
for the beloved that makes a man of a rusty sales-clerk.
|
|
He lifted a face of adoration to the misty wonder of the bare
|
|
trees, whose tracery of twigs filled Madison Square; to the
|
|
Metropolitan Tower, with its vast upward stretch toward the
|
|
ruddy sky of the city's winter night. All these mysteries he
|
|
knew and sang. What he _said_ was:
|
|
|
|
"Gee, those trees look like a reg'lar picture!... The Tower
|
|
just kind of fades away. Don't it?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, it is pretty," she said, doubtfully, but with a pressure
|
|
of his arm.
|
|
|
|
Then they talked like a summer-time brook, planning that he was
|
|
to buy a Christmas bough of evergreen, which she would smuggle
|
|
to breakfast in the morning. Through their chatter persisted
|
|
the new intimacy which had been born in the pain of their
|
|
misunderstanding.
|
|
|
|
On January 10th the manuscript of "The Millionaire's Daughter"
|
|
was returned by play-brokers Wendelbaum & Schirtz with this letter:
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIR,--We regret to say that we do not find play available.
|
|
We inclose our reader's report on the same. Also inclose bill
|
|
for ten dollars for reading-fee, which kindly remit at early
|
|
convenience.
|
|
|
|
He stood in the hall at Mrs. Arty's just before dinner.
|
|
He reread the letter and slowly opened the reader's report,
|
|
which announced:
|
|
|
|
"Millionaire's Daughter." One-act vlle. Utterly impos.
|
|
Amateurish to the limit. Dialogue sounds like burlesque of
|
|
Laura Jean Libbey. Can it.
|
|
|
|
Nelly was coming down-stairs. He handed her the letter and
|
|
report, then tried to stick out his jaw. She read them. Her
|
|
hand slipped into his. He went quickly toward the basement and
|
|
made himself read the letter--though not the report--to the
|
|
tableful. He burned the manuscript of his play before going to
|
|
bed. The next morning he waded into The Job as he never had
|
|
before. He was gloomily certain that he would never get away
|
|
from The Job. But he thought of Nelly a hundred times a day and
|
|
hoped that sometime, some spring night of a burning moon, he
|
|
might dare the great adventure and kiss her. Istra----
|
|
Theoretically, he remembered her as a great experience.
|
|
But what nebulous bodies these theories are!
|
|
|
|
That slow but absolutely accurate Five-Hundred player, Mr.
|
|
William Wrenn, known as Billy, glanced triumphantly at Miss
|
|
Proudfoot, who was his partner against Mrs. Arty and James
|
|
T. Duncan,the traveling-man, on that night of late February.
|
|
His was the last bid in the crucial hand of the rubber game.
|
|
The others waited respectfully. Confidently, he bid "Nine
|
|
on no trump."
|
|
|
|
"Good Lord, Billl" exclaimed James T. Duncan.
|
|
|
|
"I'll make it."
|
|
|
|
And he did. He arose a victor. There was no uneasiness, but
|
|
rather all the social polish of Mrs. Arty's at its best, in his
|
|
manner, as he crossed to Mrs. Ebbitt's chair and asked: "How is
|
|
Mr. Ebbitt to-night? Pretty rheumatic?" Miss Proudfoot offered
|
|
him a lime tablet, and he accepted it judicially. "I believe
|
|
these tablets are just about as good as Park & Tilford's," he
|
|
said, cocking his head. "Say, Dunk, I'll match you to see who
|
|
rushes a growler of beer. Tom'll be here pretty soon--store
|
|
ought to be closed by now. We'll have some ready for him."
|
|
|
|
"Right, Bill," agreed James T. Duncan.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn lost. He departed, after secretively obtaining not
|
|
one, but two pitchers, in one of which he got a "pint of dark"
|
|
and in the other a surprise. He bawled upstairs to Nelly,
|
|
"Come on down, Nelly, can't you? Got a growler of ice-cream
|
|
soda for the ladies!"
|
|
|
|
It is true that when Tom arrived and fell to conversational
|
|
blows with James T. Duncan over the merits of a Tom Collins Mr.
|
|
Wrenn was not brilliant, for the reason that he took Tom Collins
|
|
to be a man instead of the drink he really is.
|
|
|
|
Yet, as they went up-stairs Miss Proudfoot said to Nelly:
|
|
"Mr. Wrenn is quiet, but I do think in some ways he's one of the
|
|
nicest men I've seen in the house for years. And he is so earnest.
|
|
And I think he'll make a good pinochle player, besides Five Hundred."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Nelly.
|
|
|
|
"I think he was a little shy at first.... _I_ was always
|
|
shy.... But he likes us, and I like folks that like folks."
|
|
|
|
"_Yes!_" said Nelly.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVII
|
|
HE IS BLOWN BY THE WHIRLWIND
|
|
|
|
"He was blown by the whirlwind and followed a wandering flame
|
|
through perilous seas to a happy shore."--_Quoth Francois._
|
|
|
|
On an April Monday evening, when a small moon passed shyly over
|
|
the city and the streets were filled with the sound of
|
|
hurdy-gurdies and the spring cries of dancing children, Mr.
|
|
Wrenn pranced down to the basement dining-room early, for Nelly
|
|
Croubel would be down there talking to Mrs. Arty, and he gaily
|
|
wanted to make plans for a picnic to occur the coming Sunday.
|
|
He had a shy unacknowledged hope that he might kiss Nelly after
|
|
such a picnic; he even had the notion that he might some
|
|
day--well, other fellows had been married; why not?
|
|
|
|
Miss Mary Proudfoot was mending a rent in the current
|
|
table-cloth with delicate swift motions of her silvery-skinned
|
|
hands. She informed him: "Mr. Duncan will be back from his
|
|
Southern trip in five days. We'll have to have a grand closing
|
|
progressive Five Hundred tournament." Mr. Wrenn was too much
|
|
absorbed in wondering whether Miss Proudfoot would make some of
|
|
her celebrated--and justly celebrated--minced-ham sandwiches
|
|
for the picnic to be much interested. He was not much more
|
|
interested when she said, "Mrs. Ferrard's got a letter or
|
|
something for you."
|
|
|
|
Then, as dinner began, Mrs. Ferrard rushed in dramatically and
|
|
said, "There's a telegram for you, Mr. Wrenn!"
|
|
|
|
Was it death? Whose death? The table panted, Mr. Wrenn with
|
|
them.... That's what a telegram meant to them.
|
|
|
|
Their eyes were like a circle of charging bayonets as he opened
|
|
and read the message--a ship's wireless.
|
|
|
|
Meet me _Hesperida._--ISTRA.
|
|
|
|
"It's just--a--a business message," he managed to say, and
|
|
splashed his soup. This was not the place to take the feelings
|
|
out of his thumping heart and examine them.
|
|
|
|
Dinner was begun. Picnics were conversationally considered in
|
|
all their more important phases--historical, dietetical, and
|
|
social. Mr. Wrenn talked much and a little wildly. After
|
|
dinner he galloped out to buy a paper. The S.S. _Hesperiida_ was
|
|
due at ten next morning.
|
|
|
|
It was an evening of frightened confusion. He tottered along
|
|
Lexington Avenue on a furtive walk. He knew only that he was
|
|
very fond of Nelly, yet pantingly eager to see Istra. He damned
|
|
himself--"damned" is literal--every other minute for a cad, a
|
|
double-faced traitor, and all the other horrifying things a man
|
|
is likely to declare himself to be for making the discovery that
|
|
two women may be different and yet equally likable. And every
|
|
other minute he reveled in an adventurous gladness that he was
|
|
going to see Istra--actually, incredibly going to see her, just
|
|
the next day! He returned to find Nelly sitting on the steps of
|
|
Mrs. Arty's.
|
|
|
|
"Hello."
|
|
|
|
"Hello."
|
|
|
|
Both good sound observations, and all they could say for a time,
|
|
while Mr. Wrenn examined the under side of the iron steps rail
|
|
minutely.
|
|
|
|
"Billy--was it something serious, the telegram?"
|
|
|
|
"No, it was---- Miss Nash, the artist I told you about, asked me
|
|
to meet her at the boat. I suppose she wants me to help her
|
|
with her baggage and the customs and all them things. She's
|
|
just coming from Paris."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, I see."
|
|
|
|
So lacking in jealousy was Nelly that Mr. Wrenn was
|
|
disappointed, though he didn't know why. It always hurts to
|
|
have one's thunderous tragedies turn out realistic dialogues.
|
|
|
|
"I wonder if you would like to meet her. She's awful well
|
|
educated, but I dunno--maybe she'd strike you as kind of
|
|
snobbish. But she dresses I don't think I ever seen anybody so
|
|
elegant. In dressing, I mean. Course"--hastily--"she's got
|
|
money, and so she can afford to. But she's--oh, awful nice,
|
|
some ways. I hope you like---- I hope she won't----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I sha'n't mind if she's a snob. Of course a lady gets used
|
|
to that, working in a department store," she said, chillily;
|
|
then repented swiftly and begged: "Oh, I _didn't_ mean to be
|
|
snippy, Billy. Forgive me! I'm sure Miss Nash will be real
|
|
nice. Does she live here in New York?"
|
|
|
|
"No--in California.... I don't know how long she's going to
|
|
stay here."
|
|
|
|
"Well--well--hum-m-m. I'm getting _so_ sleepy. I guess I'd
|
|
better go up to bed. Good night."
|
|
|
|
Uneasy because he was away from the office, displeased because
|
|
he had to leave his beloved letters to the Southern trade, angry
|
|
because he had had difficulty in getting a pass to the wharf,
|
|
and furious, finally, because he hadn't slept, Mr. Wrenn nursed
|
|
all these cumulative emotions attentively and waited for the
|
|
coming of the _Hesperida_. He was wondering if he'd want to see
|
|
Istra at all. He couldn't remember just how she looked. Would
|
|
he like her?
|
|
|
|
The great steamer swung side-to and was coaxed alongside the
|
|
wharf. Peering out between rows of crowding shoulders, Mr.
|
|
Wrenn coldly inspected the passengers lining the decks. Istra
|
|
was not in sight. Then he knew that he was wildly agitated
|
|
about her. Suppose something had happened to her!
|
|
|
|
The smallish man who had been edging into the crowd so politely
|
|
suddenly dashed to the group forming at the gang-plank and
|
|
pushed his way rudely into the front rank. His elbow dug into
|
|
the proper waistcoat of a proper plump old gentleman, but he
|
|
didn't know it. He stood grasping the rope rail of the plank,
|
|
gazing goggle-eyed while the plank was lifted to the steamer's
|
|
deck and the long line of smiling and waving passengers
|
|
disembarked. Then he saw her--tall, graceful, nonchalant,
|
|
uninterested, in a smart check suit with a lively hat of black
|
|
straw, carrying a new Gladstone bag.
|
|
|
|
He stared at her. "Gee!" he gasped. "I'm crazy about her.
|
|
I am, all right."
|
|
|
|
She saw him, and their smiles of welcome made them one.
|
|
She came from the plank and hastily kissed him.
|
|
|
|
"Really here!" she laughed.
|
|
|
|
"Well, well, well, well! I'm so glad to see you!"
|
|
|
|
"Glad to see you, Mouse dear."
|
|
|
|
"Have good tr----"
|
|
|
|
"Don't ask me about it! There was a married man _sans_ wife who
|
|
persecuted me all the way over. I'm glad _you_ aren't going to
|
|
fall in love with me."
|
|
|
|
"Why--uh----"
|
|
|
|
"Let's hustle over and get through the customs as soon as we
|
|
can. Where's N? Oh, how clever of it, it's right by M.
|
|
There's one of my trunks already. How are you, Mouse dear?"
|
|
|
|
But she didn't seem really to care so very much, and the old
|
|
bewilderment she always caused was over him.
|
|
|
|
"It is good to get back after all, and--Mouse dear, I know you
|
|
won't mind finding me a place to live the next few days, will
|
|
you?" She quite took it for granted. "We'll find a place this
|
|
morning, _n'est-ce pas?_ Not too expensive. I've got just about
|
|
enough to get back to California."
|
|
|
|
Man fashion, he saw with acute clearness the pile of work on his
|
|
desk, and, man fashion, responded, "No; be glad tuh."
|
|
|
|
"How about the place where you're living? You spoke about its
|
|
being so clean and all."
|
|
|
|
The thought of Nelly and Istra together frightened him.
|
|
|
|
"Why, I don't know as you'd like it so very much."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it'll be all right for a few days, anyway. Is there a
|
|
room vacant."
|
|
|
|
He was sulky about it. He saw much trouble ahead.
|
|
|
|
"Why, yes, I suppose there is."
|
|
|
|
"Mouse dear!" Istra plumped down on a trunk in the confused
|
|
billows of incoming baggage, customs officials, and indignant
|
|
passengers that surged about them on the rough floor of the vast
|
|
dock-house. She stared up at him with real sorrow in her fine eyes.
|
|
|
|
"Why, Mouse! I thought you'd be glad to see me. I've never
|
|
rowed with you, have I? I've tried not to be temperamental with
|
|
you. That's why I wired you, when there are others I've known
|
|
for years."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I didn't mean to seem grouchy; I didn't! I just wondered if
|
|
you'd like the house."
|
|
|
|
He could have knelt in repentance before his goddess, what time
|
|
she was but a lonely girl in the clatter of New York. He went on:
|
|
|
|
"And we've got kind of separated, and I didn't know---- But I guess
|
|
I'll always--oh--kind of worship you."
|
|
|
|
"It's all right, Mouse. It's---- Here's the customs men."
|
|
|
|
Now Istra Nash knew perfectly that the customs persons were not
|
|
ready to examine her baggage as yet. But the discussion was
|
|
ended, and they seemed to understand each other.
|
|
|
|
"Gee, there's a lot of rich Jew ladies coming back this time!"
|
|
said he.
|
|
|
|
"Yes. They had diamonds three times a day," she assented.
|
|
|
|
"Gee, this is a big place!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes." So did they testify to fixity of friendship till they
|
|
reached the house and Istra was welcomed to "that Teddem's" room
|
|
as a new guest.
|
|
|
|
Dinner began with the ceremony due Mrs. Arty. There was no lack
|
|
of the sacred old jokes. Tom Poppins did not fail to bellow
|
|
"Bring on the dish-water," nor Miss Mary Proudfoot to cheep
|
|
demurely "Don't y' knaow" in a tone which would have been
|
|
recognized as fascinatingly English anywhere on the American
|
|
stage. Then the talk stopped dead as Istra Nash stood agaze in
|
|
the doorway--pale and intolerant, her red hair twisted high on
|
|
her head, tall and slim and uncorseted in a gray tight-fitting
|
|
gown. Every head turned as on a pivot, first to Istra, then to
|
|
Mr. Wrenn. He blushed and bowed as if he had been called on for
|
|
a speech, stumblingly arose, and said: "Uh--uh--uh--you met
|
|
Mrs. Ferrard, didn't you, Istra? She'll introduce you to the rest."
|
|
|
|
He sat down, wondering why the deuce he'd stood up, and
|
|
unhappily realized that Nelly was examining Istra and himself
|
|
with cool hostility. In a flurry he glowered at Istra as she
|
|
nonchalantly sat down opposite him, beside Mrs. Arty, and
|
|
incuriously unfolded her napkin. He thought that in her
|
|
cheerful face there was an expression of devilish amusement.
|
|
|
|
He blushed. He furiously buttered his bread as Mrs. Arty
|
|
remarked to the assemblage:
|
|
|
|
"Ladies and gentlemen, I want you all to meet Miss Istra Nash.
|
|
Miss Nash--you've met Mr. Wrenn; Miss Nelly Croubel, our baby;
|
|
Tom Poppins, the great Five-Hundred player; Mrs. Ebbitt, Mr.
|
|
Ebbitt, Miss Proudfoot."
|
|
|
|
Istra Nash lifted her bowed eyes with what seemed shyness,
|
|
hesitated, said "Thank you" in a clear voice with a precise
|
|
pronunciation, and returned to her soup, as though her pleasant
|
|
communion with it had been unpleasantly interrupted.
|
|
|
|
The others began talking and eating very fast and rather noisily.
|
|
Miss Mary Proudfoot's thin voice pierced the clamor:
|
|
|
|
"I hear you have just come to New York, Miss Nash."
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Is this your first visit to----"
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
Miss Proudfoot rancorously took a long drink of water.
|
|
|
|
Nelly attempted, bravely:
|
|
|
|
"Do you like New York, Miss Nash?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
Nelly and Miss Proudfoot and Tom Poppins began discussing
|
|
shoe-stores, all at once and very rapidly, while hot and
|
|
uncomfortable Mr. Wrenn tried to think of something to say....
|
|
Good Lord, suppose Istra "queered" him at Mrs. Arty's!...
|
|
Then he was angry at himself and all of them for not
|
|
appreciating her. How exquisite she looked, with her tired
|
|
white face!
|
|
|
|
As the soup-plates were being removed by Annie, the maid, with
|
|
an elaborate confusion and a general passing of plates down the
|
|
line, Istra Nash peered at the maid petulantly. Mrs. Arty
|
|
frowned, then grew artificially pleasant and said:
|
|
|
|
"Miss Nash has just come back from Paris. She's a regular
|
|
European traveler, just like Mr. Wrenn."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Samuel Ebbitt piped: "Mr. Ebbitt was to Europe. In 1882."
|
|
|
|
"No 'twa'n't, Fannie; 'twas in 1881," complained Mr. Ebbitt.
|
|
|
|
Miss Nash waited for the end of this interruption as though it
|
|
were a noise which merely had to be endured, like the Elevated.
|
|
|
|
Twice she drew in her breath to speak, and the whole table laid
|
|
its collective knife and fork down to listen. All she said was:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, will you pardon me if I speak of it now, Mrs. Ferrard, but
|
|
would you mind letting me have my breakfast in my room
|
|
to-morrow? About nine? Just something simple--a canteloupe
|
|
and some shirred eggs and chocolate?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh no; why, yes, certainly, "mumbled Mrs. Arty, while the table
|
|
held its breaths and underneath them gasped:
|
|
|
|
"Chocolate!"
|
|
|
|
"A canteloupe!"
|
|
|
|
"Shirred eggs!"
|
|
|
|
"_In her room--at nine!_"
|
|
|
|
All this was very terrible to Mr. Wrenn. He found himself in
|
|
the position of a man scheduled to address the Brewers'
|
|
Association and the W. C. T. U. at the same hour.
|
|
Valiantly he attempted:
|
|
|
|
"Miss Nash oughta be a good person for our picnics. She's a
|
|
regular shark for outdoor tramping."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, Mr. Wrenn and I tramped most all night in England one
|
|
time," said Istra, innocently.
|
|
|
|
The eyes of the table asked Mr. Wrenn what he meant by it.
|
|
He tried to look at Nelly, but something hurt inside him.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," he mumbled. "Quite a long walk."
|
|
|
|
Miss Mary Proudfoot tried again:
|
|
|
|
"is it pleasant to study in Paris? Mrs. Arty said you were an artist."
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
Then they were all silent, and the rest of the dinner Mr. Wrenn
|
|
alternately discussed Olympia Johns with Istra and picnics with
|
|
Nelly. There was an undertone of pleading in his voice which
|
|
made Nelly glance at him and even become kind. With quiet
|
|
insistence she dragged Istra into a discussion of rue de la Paix
|
|
fashions which nearly united the shattered table and won Mr.
|
|
Wrenn's palpitating thankfulness.
|
|
|
|
After dessert Istra slowly drew a plain gold cigarette-case from
|
|
a brocade bag of silvery gray. She took out a match and a thin
|
|
Russian cigarette, which she carefully lighted. She sat smoking
|
|
in one of her best attitudes, pointed elbows on the table,
|
|
coolly contemplating a huge picture called "Hunting the Stag"
|
|
on the wall behind Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Arty snapped to the servant, "Annie, bring me _my_ cigarettes."
|
|
But Mrs. Arty always was penitent when she had been nasty,
|
|
and--though Istra did not at once seem to know that the
|
|
landlady _had_ been nasty--Mrs. Arty invited her up to the parlor
|
|
for after-dinner so cordially that Istra could but grant
|
|
"Perhaps I will," and she even went so far as to say, "I think
|
|
you're all to be envied, having such a happy family."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's so," reflected Mrs. Arty.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," added Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
And Nelly: "That's so."
|
|
|
|
The whole table nodded gravely, "Yes, that's so."
|
|
|
|
"I'm sure"--Istra smiled at Mrs. Arty--"that it's because a
|
|
woman is running things. Now think what cat-and-dog lives you'd
|
|
lead if Mr. Wrenn or Mr.--Popple, was it?--were ruling."
|
|
|
|
They applauded. They felt that she had been humorous. She was
|
|
again and publicly invited up to the parlor, and she came,
|
|
though she said, rather shortly, that she didn't play Five
|
|
Hundred, but only bumblepuppy bridge, a variety of whist which
|
|
Mr. Wrenn instantly resolved to learn. She reclined ("reclined"
|
|
is perfectly accurate) on the red-leather couch, among the
|
|
pillows, and smoked two cigarettes, relapsing into "No?"'s for
|
|
conversation.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn said to himself, almost spitefully, as she snubbed
|
|
Nelly, "Too good for us, is she?" But he couldn't keep away from
|
|
her. The realization that Istra was in the room made him forget
|
|
most of his melds at pinochle; and when Miss Proudfoot inquired
|
|
his opinion as to whether the coming picnic should be held on
|
|
Staten island or the Palisades he said, vaguely, "Yes, I guess
|
|
that would be better."
|
|
|
|
For he was wanting to sit down beside Istra Nash, just be near her;
|
|
he _had_ to be! So he ventured over and was instantly regarding
|
|
all the rest as outsiders whom his wise comrade and himself
|
|
were studying.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me, Mouse dear, why do you like the people here? The
|
|
peepul, I mean. They don't seem so very remarkable. Enlighten
|
|
poor Istra."
|
|
|
|
"Well, they're awful kind. I've always lived in a house where
|
|
the folks didn't hardly know each other at all, except Mrs.
|
|
Zapp--she was the landlady--and I didn't like her very much.
|
|
But here Tom Poppins and Mrs. Arty and--the rest--they really
|
|
like folks, and they make it just like a home.... Miss Croubel
|
|
is a very nice girl. She works for Wanamacy's--she has quite a
|
|
big job there. She is assistant buyer in the----"
|
|
|
|
He stopped in horror. He had nearly said "in the lingery
|
|
department." He changed it to "in the clothing department," and
|
|
went on, doubtfully: "Mr. Duncan is a traveling-man. He's
|
|
away on a trip."
|
|
|
|
"Which one do you play with? So Nelly likes to--well, make
|
|
b'lieve--'magine?"
|
|
|
|
"How did you----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I watched her looking at you. I think she's a terribly
|
|
nice pink-face. And just now you're comparing her and me."
|
|
|
|
"Gee!" he said.
|
|
|
|
She was immensely pleased with herself. "Tell me, what do these
|
|
people think about; at least, what do you talk about?"
|
|
|
|
"_Say!_"
|
|
|
|
"'S-s-s-h! Not so loud, my dear."
|
|
|
|
"Say, I know how you mean. You feel something like what I did
|
|
in England. You can't get next to what the folks are thinking,
|
|
and it makes you sort of lonely."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I----"
|
|
|
|
Just then Tom Poppins rolled jovially up to the couch. He had
|
|
carried his many and perspiring pounds over to Third Avenue
|
|
because Miss Proudfoot reflected, "I've got a regular sweet
|
|
tooth to-night." He stood before Istra and Mr. Wrenn
|
|
theatrically holding out a bag of chocolate drops in one hand
|
|
and peanut brittle in the other; and grandiloquently:
|
|
|
|
"Which shall it be, your Highness? Nobody loves a fat man, so
|
|
he has to buy candy so's they'll let him stick around. Le's
|
|
see; you take chocolates, Bill. Name your drink, Miss Nash."
|
|
She looked up at him, gravely and politely--too gravely and
|
|
politely. She didn't seem to consider him a nice person.
|
|
|
|
"Neither, thank you," sharply, as he still stood there.
|
|
He moved away, hurt, bewildered.
|
|
|
|
Istra was going on, "I haven't been here long enough to be
|
|
lonely yet, but in any case----" when Mr. Wrenn interrupted:
|
|
|
|
"You've hurt Tom's feelings by not taking any candy; and, gee,
|
|
he's awful kind!"
|
|
|
|
"Have I?" mockingly.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, you _have_. And there ain't any too many kind people in
|
|
this world."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, of course you' re right. I _am_ sorry, really I am."
|
|
|
|
She dived after Tom's retreat and cheerfully addressed him:
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I do want some of those chocolates. Will you let me change
|
|
my mind? Please do."
|
|
|
|
"Yes _ma'am_, you sure can!" said broad Tom, all one pleased
|
|
chuckle, poking out the two bags.
|
|
|
|
Istra stopped beside the Five-Hundred table to smile in a lordly
|
|
way down at Mrs. Arty and say, quite humanly:
|
|
|
|
"I'm so sorry I can't play a decent game of cards. I'm afraid
|
|
I'm too stupid to learn. You are very lucky, I think."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn on the couch was horribly agitated.... Wasn't Istra
|
|
coming back?
|
|
|
|
She was. She detached herself from the hubbub of invitations
|
|
to learn to play Five Hundred and wandered back to the couch,
|
|
murmuring: "Was bad Istra good? Am I forgiven? Mouse dear,
|
|
I didn't mean to be rude to your friends."
|
|
|
|
As the bubbles rise through water in a cooking-pot, as the
|
|
surface writhes, and then, after the long wait, suddenly the
|
|
water is aboil, so was the emotion of Mr. Wrenn now that Istra,
|
|
the lordly, had actually done something he suggested.
|
|
|
|
"Istra----" That was all he could say, but from his eyes had
|
|
gone all reserve.
|
|
|
|
Her glance back was as frank as his--only it had more of the
|
|
mother in it; it was like a kindly pat on the head; and she was
|
|
the mother as she mused:
|
|
|
|
"So you _have_ missed me, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Missed you----"
|
|
|
|
"Did you think of me after you came here? Oh, I know--I was
|
|
forgotten; poor Istra abdicates to the pretty pink-face."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Istra, _don't_. I--can't we just go out for a little walk
|
|
so--so we can talk?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, we can talk here."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, gee!--there's so many people around.... Golly! when I
|
|
came back to America--gee!--I couldn't hardly sleep nights----"
|
|
|
|
From across the room came the boisterous, somewhat
|
|
coarse-timbred voice of Tom, speaking to Nelly:
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, of course you think you're the only girl that ever seen
|
|
a vodville show. _We_ ain't never seen a vodville show. Oh no!"
|
|
|
|
Nelly and Miss Proudfoot dissolved in giggles at the wit.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn gazed at them, detached; these were not his people,
|
|
and with startled pride he glanced at Istra's face, delicately
|
|
carven by thought, as he stumbled hotly on.
|
|
|
|
"----just couldn't sleep nights at all.... Then I got on the job...."
|
|
|
|
"Let's see, you're still with that same company?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes. Souvenir and Art Novelty Company. And I got awfully on
|
|
the job there, and so I managed to forget for a little while
|
|
and----"
|
|
|
|
"So you really do like me even after I was so beastly to you in
|
|
England."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that wasn't nothing.... But I was always thinking of you,
|
|
even when I was on the job----"
|
|
|
|
"It's gratifying to have some one continue taking me
|
|
seriously.... Really, dear, I do appreciate it. But you
|
|
mustn't--you mustn't----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, gee! I just can't get over it--you here by me --ain't it
|
|
curious!... "Then he persisted with the tale of his longing,
|
|
which she had so carefully interrupted: "The people here are
|
|
_awful_ kind and good, and you can bank on 'em. But--oh----"
|
|
|
|
From across the room,Tom's pretended jeers, lighted up with Miss
|
|
Proudfoot's giggles, as paper lanterns illumine Coney Island.
|
|
From Tom:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, you're a hot dancer, all right. I suppose you can do the
|
|
Boston and all them swell dances. Wah-h-h-h-h!"
|
|
|
|
"----but Istra, oh, gee! you're like poetry--like all them
|
|
things a feller can't get but he tries to when he reads
|
|
Shakespeare and all those poets."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, dear boy, you mustn't! We will be good friends. I do
|
|
appreciate having some one care whether I'm alive or not.
|
|
But I thought it was all understood that we weren't to take
|
|
playing together seriously; that it was to be merely
|
|
playing--nothing more."
|
|
|
|
"But, anyway, you will let me play with you here in New York as
|
|
much as I can? Oh, come on, _let's_ go for a walk--let's--let's
|
|
go to a show."
|
|
|
|
"I'm awf'ly sorry, but I promised--a man's going to call for me,
|
|
and we're going to a stupid studio party on Bryant Park. Bore,
|
|
isn't it, the day of landing? And poor Istra dreadfully landsick."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, then," hopefully, "don't go. Let's----"
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry, Mouse dear, but I'm afraid I can't break the
|
|
date.... Fact, I must go up and primp now----"
|
|
|
|
"Don't you care a bit?" he said, sulkily.
|
|
|
|
"Why, yes, of course. But you wouldn't have Istra disappoint a
|
|
nice Johnny after he's bought him a cunnin' new weskit, would
|
|
you?... Good night, dear." She smiled--the mother smile--and
|
|
was gone with a lively good night to the room in general.
|
|
|
|
Nelly went up to bed early. She was tired, she said. He had no
|
|
chance for a word with her. He sat on the steps outside alone
|
|
a long time. Sometimes he yearned for a sight of Istra's ivory
|
|
face. Sometimes, with a fierce compassion that longed to take
|
|
the burden from her, he pictured Nelly working all day in the
|
|
rushing department store on which the fetid city summer would
|
|
soon descend.
|
|
|
|
They did have their walk the next night, Istra and Mr. Wrenn,
|
|
but Istra kept the talk to laughing burlesques of their tramp in
|
|
England. Somehow--he couldn't tell exactly why--he couldn't
|
|
seem to get in all the remarks he had inside him about how much
|
|
he had missed her.
|
|
|
|
Wednesday--Thursday--Friday; he saw her only at one dinner, or
|
|
on the stairs, departing volubly with clever-looking men in
|
|
evening clothes to taxis waiting before the house.
|
|
|
|
Nelly was very pleasant; just that--pleasant. She pleasantly
|
|
sat as his partner at Five Hundred, and pleasantly declined to
|
|
go to the moving pictures with him. She was getting more and
|
|
more tired, staying till seven at the store, preparing what she
|
|
called "special stunts" for the summer white sale. Friday
|
|
evening he saw her soft fresh lips drooping sadly as she toiled
|
|
up the front steps before dinner. She went to bed at eight, at
|
|
which time Istra was going out to dinner with a thin,
|
|
hatchet-faced sarcastic-looking man in a Norfolk jacket and a
|
|
fluffy black tie. Mr. Wrenn resented the Norfolk jacket. Of
|
|
course, the kingly men in evening dress would be expected to
|
|
take Istra away from him, but a Norfolk jacket---- He did not
|
|
call it that. Though he had worn one in the fair village of
|
|
Aengusmere, it was still to him a "coat with a belt."
|
|
|
|
He thought of Nelly all evening. He heard her--there on the
|
|
same floor with him--talking to Miss Proudfoot, who stood at
|
|
Nelly's door, three hours after she was supposed to be asleep.
|
|
|
|
"No," Nelly was saying with evidently fictitious cheerfulness,
|
|
"no, it was just a little headache.... It's much better. I
|
|
think I can sleep now. Thank you very much for coming."
|
|
|
|
Nelly hadn't told Mr. Wrenn that she had a severe headache--she
|
|
who had once, a few weeks before, run to him with a cut in her
|
|
soft small finger, demanding that he bind it up.... He went
|
|
slowly to bed.
|
|
|
|
He had lain awake half an hour before his agony so overpowered
|
|
him that he flung out of bed. He crouched low by the bed, like
|
|
a child, his legs curled under him, the wooden sideboard pressing
|
|
into his chest in one long line of hot pain, while he prayed:
|
|
|
|
"O God, O God, forgive me, forgive me, oh, forgive me! Here I
|
|
been forgetting Nelly (and I _love_ her) and comparing her with
|
|
Istra and not appreciating her, and Nelly always so sweet to me
|
|
and trusting me so---- O God, keep me away from wickedness!"
|
|
|
|
He huddled there many minutes, praying, the scorching pressure
|
|
of the bedside growing more painful. All the while the
|
|
camp-fire he had shared with Istra was burning within his closed
|
|
eyes, and Istra was visibly lording it in a London flat filled
|
|
with clever people, and he was passionately aware that the line
|
|
of her slim breast was like the lip of a shell; the line of her
|
|
pallid cheek, defined by her flame-colored hair, something
|
|
utterly fine, something he could not express.
|
|
|
|
"Oh," he groaned, "she is like that poetry stuff in Shakespeare
|
|
that's so hard to get.... I'll be extra nice to Nelly at the
|
|
picnic Sunday.... Her trusting me so, and then me---- O God,
|
|
keep me away from wickedness!"
|
|
|
|
As he was going out Saturday morning he found a note from Istra
|
|
waiting in the hall on the hat-rack:
|
|
|
|
Do you want to play with poor Istra tomorrow Sat. afternoon and
|
|
perhaps evening, Mouse? You have Saturday afternoon off, don't
|
|
you? Leave me a note if you can call for me at 1.30.
|
|
I. N.
|
|
|
|
He didn't have Saturday afternoon off, but he said he did in his
|
|
note, and at one-thirty he appeared at her door in a new spring
|
|
suit (purchased on Tuesday), a new spring hat, very fuzzy and
|
|
gay (purchased Saturday noon), and the walking-stick he had
|
|
bought on Tottenham Court Road, but decently concealed from the
|
|
boarding-house.
|
|
|
|
Istra took him to what she called a "futurist play." She
|
|
explained it all to him several times, and she stood him tea and
|
|
muffins, and recalled Mrs. Cattermole's establishment with full
|
|
attention to Mrs. Cattermole's bulbous but earnest nose. They
|
|
dined at the Brevoort, and were back at nine-thirty; for, said
|
|
Istra, she was "just a bit tired, Mouse."
|
|
|
|
They stood at the door of Istra's room. Istra said, "You may
|
|
come in--just for a minute."
|
|
|
|
It was the first time he had even peeped into her room in New
|
|
York. The old shyness was on him, and he glanced back.
|
|
|
|
Nelly was just coming up-stairs, staring at him where he stood
|
|
inside the door, her lips apart with amazement.
|
|
|
|
Ladies distinctly did not entertain in their rooms at Mrs. Arty's.
|
|
|
|
He wanted to rush out, to explain, to invite her in, to--to----
|
|
He stuttered in his thought, and by now Nelly had hastened past,
|
|
her face turned from them.
|
|
|
|
Uneasily he tilted on the front of a cane-seated rocking-chair,
|
|
glaring at a pile of books before one of Istra's trunks. Istra
|
|
sat on the bedside nursing her knee. She burst out:
|
|
|
|
"O Mouse dear, I'm so bored by everybody--every sort of
|
|
everybody.... Of course I don't mean you; you're a good pal....
|
|
Oh--Paris is _too_ complex--especially when you can't quite get
|
|
the nasal vowels--and New York is too youthful and earnest; and
|
|
Dos Puentes, California, will be plain hell.... And all my
|
|
little parties--I start out on them happily, always, as naive as
|
|
a kiddy going to a birthday party, and then I get there and find
|
|
I can't even dance square dances, as the kiddy does, and go
|
|
home---- Oh damn it, damn it, damn it! Am I shocking you? Well,
|
|
what do I care if I shock everybody!"
|
|
|
|
Her slim pliant length was flung out along the bed, and she was
|
|
crying. Her beautiful hands clutched the corners of a pillow
|
|
bitterly.
|
|
|
|
He crept over to the bed, patting her shoulder, slowly and
|
|
regularly, too frightened of her mood even to want to kiss her.
|
|
|
|
She looked up, laughing tearfully. "Please say, `There, there,
|
|
there; don't cry.' It always goes with pats for weepy girls, you
|
|
know.... O Mouse, you will be good to some woman some day."
|
|
|
|
Her long strong arms reached up and drew him down. It was his
|
|
head that rested on her shoulder. It seemed to both of them
|
|
that it was he who was to be petted, not she. He pressed his
|
|
cheek against the comforting hollow of her curving shoulder and
|
|
rested there, abandoned to a forlorn and growing happiness, the
|
|
happiness of getting so far outside of his tight world of
|
|
Wrennishness that he could give comfort and take comfort with no
|
|
prim worried thoughts of Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
Istra murmured: "Perhaps that's what I need--some one to need
|
|
me. Only----" She stroked his hair. "Now you must go, dear."
|
|
|
|
"You---- It's better now? I'm afraid I ain't helped you much.
|
|
It's kinda t' other way round."
|
|
|
|
"Oh yes, indeed, it's all right now! Just nerves. Nothing more.
|
|
Now, good night."
|
|
|
|
"Please, won't you come to the picnic to-morrow? It's----"
|
|
|
|
"No. Sorry, but can't possibly."
|
|
|
|
"Please think it over."
|
|
|
|
"No, no, no, no, dear! You go and forget me and enjoy yourself
|
|
and be good to your pink-face--Nelly, isn't it? She seems to be
|
|
terribly nice, and I know you two will have a good party. You
|
|
must forget me. I'm just a teacher of playing games who hasn't
|
|
been successful at any game whatever. Not that it matters.
|
|
I don't care. I don't, really. Now, good night."
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVIII
|
|
AND FOLLOWS A WANDERING FLAME THROUGH PERILOUS SEAS
|
|
|
|
They had picnic dinner early up there on the Palisades:
|
|
|
|
Nelly and Mr. Wrenn, Mrs. Arty and Tom, Miss Proudfoot and Mrs.
|
|
Samuel Ebbitt, the last of whom kept ejaculating: "Well! I
|
|
ain't run off like this in ten years!" They squatted about a
|
|
red-cotton table-cloth spread on a rock, broadly discussing the
|
|
sandwiches and cold chicken and lemonade and stuffed olives, and
|
|
laughing almost to a point of distress over Tom's accusation
|
|
that Miss Proudfoot had secreted about her person a bottle of
|
|
rye whisky.
|
|
|
|
Nelly was very pleasant to Mr. Wrenn, but she called him neither
|
|
Billy nor anything else, and mostly she talked to Miss Proudfoot,
|
|
smiling at him, but saying nothing when he managed to get out a
|
|
jest about Mrs. Arty's chewing-gum. When he moved to her side
|
|
with a wooden plate of cream-cheese sandwiches (which Tom
|
|
humorously termed "cold-cream wafers") Mr. Wrenn started to
|
|
explain how he had come to enter Istra's room.
|
|
|
|
"Why shouldn't you?" Nelly asked, curtly, and turned to Miss
|
|
Proudfoot.
|
|
|
|
"She doesn't seem to care much," he reflected, relieved and
|
|
stabbed in his humble vanity and reattracted to Nelly, all at
|
|
once. He was anxious about her opinion of Istra and her opinion
|
|
of himself, and slightly defiant, as she continued to regard him
|
|
as a respectable person whose name she couldn't exactly
|
|
remember.
|
|
|
|
Hadn't he the right to love Istra if he wanted to? he desired
|
|
to know of himself. Besides, what had he _done?_ Just gone out
|
|
walking with his English hotel acquaintance Istra! He hadn't
|
|
been in her room but just a few minutes. Fine reason that was
|
|
for Nelly to act like a blooming iceberg! Besides, it wasn't
|
|
as if he were engaged to Nelly, or anything like that.
|
|
Besides, of course Istra would never care for him. There were
|
|
several other besideses with which he harrowed himself while
|
|
trying to appear picnically agreeable. He was getting very much
|
|
confused, and was slightly abrupt as he said to Nelly, "Let's
|
|
walk over to that high rock on the edge."
|
|
|
|
A dusky afterglow filled the sky before them as they silently
|
|
trudged to the rock and from the top of the sheer cliff
|
|
contemplated the smooth and steely-gray Hudson below. Nelly
|
|
squeaked her fear at the drop and clutched his arm, but suddenly
|
|
let go and drew back without his aid.
|
|
|
|
He groaned within, "I haven't the right to help her." He took her
|
|
arm as she hesitatingly climbed from the rock down to the ground.
|
|
|
|
She jerked it free, curtly saying, "No, thank you."
|
|
|
|
She was repentant in a moment, and, cheerfully:
|
|
|
|
"Miss Nash took me in her room yesterday and showed me her
|
|
things. My, she's got such be-_yoo_-ti-ful jewels! La V'lieres
|
|
and pearls and a swell amethyst brooch. My! She told me all
|
|
about how the girls used to study in Paris, and how sorry she
|
|
would be to go back to California and keep house."
|
|
|
|
"Keep house?"
|
|
|
|
Nelly let him suffer for a moment before she relieved him with,
|
|
"For her father."
|
|
|
|
"Oh.... Did she say she was going back to California soon?"
|
|
|
|
"Not till the end of the summer, maybe."
|
|
|
|
"Oh.... Oh, Nelly----"
|
|
|
|
For the first time that day he was perfectly sincere. He was
|
|
trying to confide in her. But the shame of having emotions was
|
|
on him. He got no farther.
|
|
|
|
To his amazement, Nelly mused, "She is very nice."
|
|
|
|
He tried hard to be gallant. "Yes, she is interesting, but of
|
|
course she ain't anywheres near as nice as you are, Nelly, be----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, don't, Billy!"
|
|
|
|
The quick agony in her voice almost set them both weeping. The
|
|
shared sorrow of separation drew them together for a moment.
|
|
Then she started off, with short swift steps, and he tagged
|
|
after. He found little to say. He tried to comment on the
|
|
river. He remarked that the apartment-houses across in New York
|
|
were bright in the sunset; that, in fact, the upper windows
|
|
looked "like there was a fire in there." Her sole comment was "Yes."
|
|
|
|
When they rejoined the crowd he was surprised to hear her
|
|
talking volubly to Miss Proudfoot. He rejoiced that she was
|
|
"game," but he did not rejoice long. For a frightened feeling
|
|
that he had to hurry home and see Istra at once was turning him
|
|
weak and cold. He didn't want to see her; she was intruding;
|
|
but he had to go--go at once; and the agony held him all the way
|
|
home, while he was mechanically playing the part of stern
|
|
reformer and agreeing with Tom Poppins that the horrors of the
|
|
recent Triangle shirt-waist-factory fire showed that "something
|
|
oughta be done--something sure oughta be."
|
|
|
|
He trembled on the ferry till Nelly, with a burst of motherly
|
|
tenderness in her young voice, suddenly asked: "Why, you're
|
|
shivering dreadfully! Did you get a chill?"
|
|
|
|
Naturally, he wanted the credit of being known as an invalid,
|
|
and pitied and nursed, but he reluctantly smiled and said, "Oh
|
|
no, it ain't anything at all."
|
|
|
|
Then Istra called him again, and he fumed over the slowness of
|
|
their landing.
|
|
|
|
And, at home, Istra was out.
|
|
|
|
He went resolutely down and found Nelly alone, sitting on a
|
|
round pale-yellow straw mat on the steps.
|
|
|
|
He sat by her. He was very quiet; not at all the jovial young
|
|
man of the picnic properly following the boarding-house-district
|
|
rule that males should be jocular and show their appreciation of
|
|
the ladies by "kidding them." And he spoke with a quiet
|
|
graciousness that was almost courtly, with a note of weariness
|
|
and spiritual experience such as seldom comes into the
|
|
boarding-houses, to slay joy and bring wisdom and give words shyness.
|
|
|
|
He had, as he sat down, intended to ask her to go with him to a
|
|
moving-picture show. But inspiration was on him. He merely sat
|
|
and talked.
|
|
|
|
When Mr. Wrenn returned from the office, two evenings later, he
|
|
found this note awaiting him:
|
|
|
|
DEAR MOUSE,--Friend has asked me to join her in studio & have
|
|
beat it. Sorry not see you & say good-by. Come see me
|
|
sometime--phone before and see if I'm in--Spring xxx--address xx
|
|
South Washington Sq. In haste, ISTRA.
|
|
|
|
He spent the evening in not going to the studio. Several times
|
|
he broke away from a pinochle game to rush upstairs and see if
|
|
the note was as chilly as he remembered. It always was.
|
|
|
|
Then for a week he awaited a more definite invitation from her,
|
|
which did not come. He was uneasily polite to Nelly these days,
|
|
and tremulously appreciative of her gentleness. He wanted to
|
|
brood, but he did not take to his old habit of long solitary
|
|
walks. Every afternoon he planned one for the evening; every
|
|
evening found that he "wanted to be around with folks."
|
|
|
|
He had a sort of youthful defiant despair, so he jested much at
|
|
the card-table, by way of practising his new game of keeping
|
|
people from knowing what he was thinking. He took sophisticated
|
|
pleasure in noting that Mrs. Arty no longer condescended to him.
|
|
He managed to imitate Tom's writing on a card which he left with
|
|
a bunch of jonquils in Nelly's room, and nearly persuaded even
|
|
Tom himself that Tom was the donor. Probably because he didn't
|
|
much care what happened he was able to force Mr. Mortimer R.
|
|
Guilfogle to raise his salary to twenty-three dollars a week.
|
|
Mr. Guilfogle went out of his way to admit that the letters to
|
|
the Southern trade had been "a first-rate stunt, son."
|
|
|
|
John Henson, the head of the Souvenir Company's manufacturing
|
|
department, invited Mr. Wrenn home to dinner, and the account of
|
|
the cattle-boat was much admired by Mrs. Henson and the three
|
|
young Hensons.
|
|
|
|
A few days later, in mid-June, there was an unusually cheerful
|
|
dinner at the boarding-house. Nelly turned to Mr. Wrenn--yes,
|
|
he was quite sure about it; she was speaking exclusively to him,
|
|
with a lengthy and most merry account of the manner in which the
|
|
floor superintendent had "called down" the unkindest of the
|
|
aislesmen.
|
|
|
|
He longed to give his whole self in his answer, to be in the
|
|
absolute community of thought that lovers know. But the image
|
|
of Istra was behind his chair. Istra--he had to see her--now,
|
|
this evening. He rushed out to the corner drug-store and
|
|
reached her by telephone.
|
|
|
|
Yes-s, admitted Istra, a little grudgingly, she was going to be
|
|
at the studio that evening, though she--well, there was going to
|
|
be a little party--some friends--but--yes, she'd be glad to have
|
|
him come.
|
|
|
|
Grimly, Mr. Wrenn set out for Washington Square.
|
|
|
|
Since this scientific treatise has so exhaustively examined Mr.
|
|
Wrenn's reactions toward the esthetic, one need give but three
|
|
of his impressions of the studio and people he found on
|
|
Washington Square--namely:
|
|
|
|
(a) That the big room was bare, ill kept, and not comparable to
|
|
the red-plush splendor of Mrs. Arty's, for all its pretension to
|
|
superiority. Why, a lot of the pictures weren't framed! And you
|
|
should have seen the giltness and fruit-borderness of the frames
|
|
at Mrs. Arty's!
|
|
|
|
(b) That the people were brothers-in-talk to the inmates of the
|
|
flat on Great James Street, London, only far less, and friendly.
|
|
|
|
(c) That Mr. Wrenn was now a man of friends, and if the
|
|
"blooming Bohemians," as he called them, didn't like him they
|
|
were permitted to go to the dickens.
|
|
|
|
Istra was always across the room from him somehow. He found
|
|
himself glad. It made their parting definite.
|
|
|
|
He was going back to his own people, he was deciding.
|
|
|
|
As he rose with elaborate boarding-house apologies to the room
|
|
at large for going, and a cheerful but not intimate "Good night"
|
|
to Istra, she followed him to the door and into the dark long
|
|
hallway without.
|
|
|
|
"Good night, Mouse dear. I'm glad you got a chance to talk to
|
|
the Silver Girl. But was Mr. Hargis rude to you? I heard him
|
|
talking Single Tax--or was it Matisse?--and he's usually rude
|
|
when he talks about them."
|
|
|
|
"No. He was all right."
|
|
|
|
"Then what _is_ worrying you?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh--nothing. Good ni----"
|
|
|
|
"You _are_ going off angry. _Aren't_ you?"
|
|
|
|
"No, but--oh, there ain't any use of our--of me being----
|
|
_Is_ there?"
|
|
|
|
"N-no----"
|
|
|
|
"Matisse--the guy you just spoke about--and these artists here
|
|
tonight in bobtail dress-suits--I wouldn't know when to wear one
|
|
of them things, and when a swallow-tail--if I had one, even--or
|
|
when a Prince Albert or----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, not a Prince Albert, Mouse dear. Say, a frock-coat."
|
|
|
|
"Sure. That's what I mean. It's like that Matisse guy. I
|
|
don't know about none of the things you're interested in. While
|
|
you've been away from Mrs. Arty's--Lord, I've missed you so! But
|
|
when I try to train with your bunch, or when you spring Matisse"
|
|
(he seemed peculiarly to resent the unfortunate French artist)
|
|
"on me I sort of get onto myself--and now it ain't like it was
|
|
in England; I've got a bunch of my own I can chase around with.
|
|
Anyway, I got onto myself tonight. I s'pose it's partly because
|
|
I been thinking you didn't care much for _my_ friends."
|
|
|
|
"But, Mouse dear, all this isn't news to me. Surely you, who've
|
|
gipsied with me, aren't going to be so obvious, so banal, as to
|
|
blame _me_ because you've cared for me, are you, child?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh no, no, no! I didn't mean to do that. I just wanted--oh,
|
|
gee! I dunno--well, I wanted to have things between us definite."
|
|
|
|
"I do understand. You're quite right. And now we're just
|
|
friends, aren't we?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Then good-by. And sometime when I'm back in New York--I'm
|
|
going to California in a few days--I think I'll be able to get
|
|
back here--I certainly hope so--though of course I'll have to
|
|
keep house for friend father for a while, and maybe I'll marry
|
|
myself with a local magnate in desperation--but, as I was
|
|
saying, dear, when I get back here we'll have a good dinner,
|
|
_nicht wahr?_"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, and--good-by."
|
|
|
|
She stood at the top of the stairs looking down. He slowly
|
|
clumped down the wooden treads, boiling with the amazing
|
|
discoveries that he had said good-by to Istra, that he was not
|
|
sorry, and that now he could offer to Nelly Croubel everything.
|
|
|
|
Istra suddenly called, "O Mouse, wait just a moment."
|
|
|
|
She darted like a swallow. She threw her arm about his shoulder
|
|
and kissed his cheek. Instantly she was running up-stairs
|
|
again, and had disappeared into the studio.
|
|
|
|
Mr. William Wrenn was walking rapidly up Riverside Drive,
|
|
thinking about his letters to the Southern merchants.
|
|
|
|
While he was leaving the studio building he had perfectly seen
|
|
himself as one who was about to go through a tumultuous agony,
|
|
after which he would be free of all the desire for Istra and
|
|
ready to serve Nelly sincerely and humbly.
|
|
|
|
But he found that the agony was all over. Even to save his
|
|
dignity as one who was being dramatic, he couldn't keep his
|
|
thoughts on Istra.
|
|
|
|
Every time he thought of Nelly his heart was warm and he
|
|
chuckled softly. Several times out of nothing came pictures of
|
|
the supercilious persons whom he had heard solving the problems
|
|
of the world at the studio on Washington Square, and he
|
|
muttered: "Oh, hope they choke. Istra's all right, though; she
|
|
learnt me an awful lot. But--gee! I'm glad she ain't in the same
|
|
house; I suppose I'd ag'nize round if she was."
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, at no particular street corner on Riverside Drive, just
|
|
_a_ street, he fled over to Broadway and the Subway. He had to
|
|
be under the same roof with Nelly. If it were only possible to
|
|
see her that night! But it was midnight. However, he formulated
|
|
a plan. The next morning he would leave the office, find her at
|
|
her department store, and make her go out to Manhattan Beach
|
|
with him for dinner that night.
|
|
|
|
He was home. He went happily up the stairs. He would dream of
|
|
Nelly, and----
|
|
|
|
Nelly's door opened, and she peered out, drawing her _peignoir_
|
|
about her.
|
|
|
|
"Oh," she said, softly, "is it you?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes. My, you're up late."
|
|
|
|
"Do you---- Are you all right?"
|
|
|
|
He dashed down the hall and stood shyly scratching at the straw
|
|
of his newest hat.
|
|
|
|
"Why yes, Nelly, course. Poor---- Oh, don't tell me you have a
|
|
headache again?"
|
|
|
|
"No---- I was awful foolish, of course, but I saw you when you
|
|
went out this evening, and you looked so savage, and you didn't
|
|
look very well."
|
|
|
|
"But now it's all right."
|
|
|
|
"Then good night."
|
|
|
|
"Oh no--listen--please do! I went over to the place Miss Nash is
|
|
living at, because I was pretty sure that I ain't hipped on
|
|
her--sort of hypnotized by her--any more. And I found I ain't!
|
|
_I ain't!_ I don't know what to say, I want to--I want you to
|
|
know that from going to try and see if I can't get you to care
|
|
for me." He was dreadfully earnest, and rather quiet, with the
|
|
dignity of the man who has found himself. "I'm scared," he went
|
|
on, "about saying this, because maybe you'll think I've got an
|
|
idea I'm kind of a little tin god, and all I've got to do is to
|
|
say which girl I'll want and she'll come a-running, but it isn't
|
|
that; _it isn't_. It's just that I want you to know I'm going
|
|
to give _all_ of me to you now if I can get you to want me. And
|
|
I _am_ glad I knew Istra--she learnt me a lot about books and all,
|
|
so I have more to me, or maybe will have, for you. It's
|
|
--Nelly--promise you'll be--my friend--promise---- If you knew how
|
|
I rushed back here tonight to see you!"
|
|
|
|
"Billy----"
|
|
|
|
She held out her hand, and he grasped it as though it were the
|
|
sacred symbol of his dreams.
|
|
|
|
"To-morrow," she smiled, with a hint of tears, "I'll be a
|
|
reg'lar lady, I guess, and make you explain and explain like
|
|
everything, but now I'm just glad. Yes," defiantly, "I _will_
|
|
admit it if I want to! I _am_ glad!"
|
|
|
|
Her door closed.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIX
|
|
TO A HAPPY SHORE
|
|
|
|
Upon an evening of November, 1911, it chanced that of Mrs. Arty's
|
|
flock only Nelly and Mr. Wrenn were at home. They had finished
|
|
two hot games of pinochle, and sat with their feet on a small
|
|
amiable oil-stove. Mr. Wrenn laid her hand against his cheek
|
|
with infinite content. He was outlining the situation at the
|
|
office.
|
|
|
|
The business had so increased that Mr. Mortimer R. Guilfogle,
|
|
the manager, had told Rabin, the head traveling-salesman, that
|
|
he was going to appoint an assistant manager. Should he, Mr.
|
|
Wrenn queried, try to get the position? The other candidates,
|
|
Rabin and Henson and Glover, were all good friends of his, and,
|
|
furthermore, could he "run a bunch of guys if he was over them?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, of course you can, Billy. I remember when you came here
|
|
you were sort of shy. But now you're 'most the star boarder!
|
|
And won't those others be trying to get the job away from you?
|
|
Of course!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that's so."
|
|
|
|
"Why, Billy, some day you might be manager!"
|
|
|
|
"Say, that would be great, wouldn't it! But hones', Nell, do you
|
|
think I might have a chance to land the assistant's job?"
|
|
|
|
"I certainly do."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, Nelly--gee! you make me--oh, learn to bank on myself----"
|
|
|
|
He kissed her for the second time in his life.
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Guilfogle," stated Mr. Wrenn, next day, "I want to talk to
|
|
you about that assistant managership."
|
|
|
|
The manager, in his new office and his new flowered waistcoat,
|
|
had acted interested when Our steady and reliable Mr. Wrenn came
|
|
in. But now he tried to appear dignified and impatient.
|
|
|
|
"That----" he began.
|
|
|
|
"I've been here longer than any of the other men, and I know
|
|
every line of the business now, even the manufacturing. You
|
|
remember I held down Henson's job when his wife was sick."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but----"
|
|
|
|
"And I guess Jake thinks I can boss all right, and Miss
|
|
Leavenbetz, too."
|
|
|
|
"Now will you kindly 'low _me_ to talk a little, Wrenn? I know
|
|
a _little_ something about how things go in the office myself!
|
|
I don't deny you're a good man. Maybe some day you may get to be
|
|
assistant manager. But I'm going to give the first try at it to
|
|
Glover. He's had so much more experience with meeting people
|
|
directly--personally. But you're a good man----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I've heard that before, but I'll be gol-darned if I'll
|
|
stick at one desk all my life just because I save you all the
|
|
trouble in that department, Guilfogle, and now----"
|
|
|
|
"Now, now, now, now! Calm down; hold your horses, my boy. This
|
|
ain't a melodrama, you know."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I know; I didn't mean to get sore, but you know----"
|
|
|
|
"Well, now I'll tell you what I'm going to do. I'm going to
|
|
make you head of the manufacturing department instead of getting
|
|
in a new man, and shift Henson to purchasing. I'll put Jake on
|
|
your old job, and expect you to give him a lift when he needs
|
|
it. And you'd better keep up the most important of the
|
|
jollying-letters, I guess."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I like that all right. I appreciate it. But of course
|
|
I expect more pay--two men's work----"
|
|
|
|
"Let's see; what you getting now?"
|
|
|
|
"Twenty-three."
|
|
|
|
"Well, that's a good deal, you know. The overhead expenses have
|
|
been increasing a lot faster than our profits, and we've----"
|
|
|
|
"Huh!"
|
|
|
|
"----got to see where new business is coming in to justify the
|
|
liberal way we've treated you men before we can afford to do
|
|
much salary-raising--though we're just as glad to do it as you
|
|
men to get it; but----"
|
|
|
|
"Huh!"
|
|
|
|
"----if we go to getting extravagant we'll go bankrupt, and then
|
|
we won't any of us have jobs.... Still, I _am_ willing to raise
|
|
you to twenty-five, though----"
|
|
|
|
"Thirty-five!"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Wrenn stood straight. The manager tried to stare him down.
|
|
Panic was attacking Mr. Wrenn, and he had to think of Nelly to
|
|
keep up his defiance. At last Mr. Guilfogle glared, then roared:
|
|
"Well, confound it, Wrenn, I'll give you twenty-nine-fifty, and not
|
|
a cent more for at least a year. That's final. _Understand?_"
|
|
|
|
"All right," chirped Mr. Wrenn.
|
|
|
|
"Gee!" he was exulting to himself, "never thought I'd get
|
|
anything like that. Twenty-nine-fifty! More 'n enough to marry
|
|
on now! I'm going to get _twenty-nine-fifty!_"
|
|
|
|
"Married five months ago to-night, honey," said Mr. Wrenn to
|
|
Nelly, his wife, in their Bronx flat, and thus set down October
|
|
17, 1913, as a great date in history.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I _know_ it, Billy. I wondered if you'd remember. You just
|
|
ought to see the dessert I'm making--but that's a s'prise."
|
|
|
|
"Remember! Should say I did! See what I've got for somebody!"
|
|
|
|
He opened a parcel and displayed a pair of red-worsted
|
|
bed-slippers, a creation of one of the greatest red-worsted
|
|
artists in the whole land. Yes, and he could afford them, too.
|
|
Was he not making thirty-two dollars a week--he who had been poor!
|
|
And his chances for the assistant managership "looked good."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, they'll be so comfy when it gets cold. You're a dear! Oh,
|
|
Billy, the janitress says the Jewish lady across the court in
|
|
number seventy is so lazy she wears her corsets to bed!"
|
|
|
|
"Did the janitress get the coal put in, Nell?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but her husband is laid off again. I was talking to her
|
|
quite a while this afternoon.... Oh, dear, I do get so lonely
|
|
for you, sweetheart, with nothing to do. But I did read some
|
|
_Kim_ this afternoon. I liked it."
|
|
|
|
"That's fine!"
|
|
|
|
"But it's kind of hard. Maybe I'll---- Oh, I don't know.
|
|
I guess I'll have to read a lot."
|
|
|
|
He patted her back softly, and hoped: "Maybe some day we can get
|
|
a little house out of town, and then you can garden.... Sorry
|
|
old Siddons is laid off again.... Is the gas-stove working all
|
|
right now?"
|
|
|
|
"Um-huh, honey. I fixed it."
|
|
|
|
"Say, let me make the coffee, Nell. You'll have enough to do
|
|
with setting the table and watching the sausages."
|
|
|
|
"All rightee, hun. But, oh, Billy, I'm so, shamed. I was going
|
|
to get some potato salad, and I've just remembered I forgot."
|
|
She hung her head, with a fingertip to her pretty lips, and
|
|
pretended to look dreadfully ashamed. "Would you mind so ver-ee
|
|
much skipping down to Bachmeyer's for some? Ah-h, is it just
|
|
fearful neglected when it comes home all tired out?"
|
|
|
|
"No, indeedy. But you got to kiss me first, else I won't go at all."
|
|
|
|
Nelly turned to him and, as he held her, her head bent far back.
|
|
She lay tremblingly inert against his arms, staring up at him,
|
|
panting. With her head on his shoulder--a soft burden of love
|
|
that his shoulder rejoiced to bear--they stood gazing out of the
|
|
narrow kitchen window of their sixth-story flat and noticed for
|
|
the hundredth time that the trees in a vacant lot across were
|
|
quite as red and yellow as the millionaire trees in Central Park
|
|
along Fifth Avenue.
|
|
|
|
"Sometime," mused Mr. Wrenn, "we'll live in Jersey, where
|
|
there's trees and trees and trees--and maybe there'll be kiddies
|
|
to play under them, and then you won't be lonely, honey; they'll
|
|
keep you some busy!"
|
|
|
|
"You skip along now, and don't be talking nonsense, or I'll not
|
|
give you one single wee bit of dinner!" Then she blushed adorably,
|
|
with infinite hope.
|
|
|
|
He hastened out of the kitchen, with the happy glance he never
|
|
failed to give the living-room--its red-papered walls with shiny
|
|
imitation-oak woodwork; the rows of steins on the plate-rack;
|
|
the imitation-oak dining-table, with a vase of newly dusted
|
|
paper roses; the Morris chair, with Nelly's sewing on a tiny
|
|
wicker table beside it; the large gilt-framed oleograph of
|
|
"Pike's Peak by Moonlight."
|
|
|
|
He clattered down the slate treads of the stairs. He fairly
|
|
vaulted out of doors. He stopped, startled.
|
|
|
|
Across the ragged vacant lots to the west a vast sunset
|
|
processional marched down the sky. It had not been visible from
|
|
their flat, which looked across East River to the tame grassy
|
|
shore of a real-estate boomer's suburb. "Gee!" he mourned,
|
|
"it's the first time I've noticed a sunset for a month! I used
|
|
to see knights' flags and Mandalay and all sorts of stuff in
|
|
sunsets!"
|
|
|
|
Wistfully the exile gazed at his lost kingdom, till the October
|
|
chill aroused him.
|
|
|
|
But he learned a new way to cook eggs from the proprietor of the
|
|
delicatessen store; and his plans for spending the evening
|
|
playing pinochle with Nelly, and reading the evening paper
|
|
aloud, set him chuckling softly to himself as he hurried home
|
|
through the brisk autumn breeze with seven cents' worth of
|
|
potato salad.
|
|
|
|
[End.]
|
|
.
|