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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The House of Torchy, by Sewell Ford
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The House of Torchy
+
+Author: Sewell Ford
+
+Illustrator: Arthur William Brown
+
+Release Date: June 21, 2007 [EBook #21882]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOUSE OF TORCHY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "'Don't!' says Vee. 'You'll spill the coffee.'"]
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+THE HOUSE OF TORCHY
+
+BY
+SEWELL FORD
+
+AUTHOR OF
+TORCHY, TRYING OUT TORCHY, SHORTY MCCABE, Etc.
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS BY
+ARTHUR WILLIAM BROWN
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP
+PUBLISHERS--NEW YORK
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Copyright, 1917, 1918, by
+SEWELL FORD
+
+Copyright 1918, by
+EDWARD J. CLODE
+
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER PAGE
+
+I Torchy and Vee on the Way 1
+
+II Vee with Variations 12
+
+III A Qualifying Turn for Torchy 25
+
+IV Switching Arts on Leon 44
+
+V A Recruit for the Eight-three 60
+
+VI Torchy in the Gazinkus Class 79
+
+VII Back with Clara Belle 96
+
+VIII When Torchy got the Call 114
+
+IX A Carry-on for Clara 134
+
+X All the Way with Anna 152
+
+XI At the Turn with Wilfred 172
+
+XII Vee Goes Over the Top 193
+
+XIII Late Returns on Rupert 214
+
+XIV Forsythe at the Finish 232
+
+XV The House of Torchy 250
+
+XVI Torchy gets the Thumb Grip 272
+
+XVII A Low Tackle by Torchy 288
+
+XVIII Tag Day at Torchy's 307
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+THE HOUSE OF TORCHY
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+TORCHY AND VEE ON THE WAY
+
+
+Say, I thought I'd taken a sportin' chance now and then before; but I
+was only kiddin' myself. Believe me, this gettin' married act is the big
+plunge. Uh-huh! Specially when it's done offhand and casual, the way we
+went at it.
+
+My first jolt is handed me early in the mornin' as we piles off the
+mountain express at this little flag stop up in Vermont, and a roly-poly
+gent in a horse-blanket ulster and a coonskin cap with a badge on it
+steps up and greets me cheerful.
+
+"Ottasumpsit Inn?" says he.
+
+"Why, I expect so," says I, "if that's the way you call it.
+Otto--Otta--Yep, that listens something like it."
+
+You see, Mr. Robert had said it only once, when he handed me the
+tickets, and I hadn't paid much attention.
+
+"Aye gorry!" says the chirky gent, gatherin' up our hand luggage. "Guess
+you're the ones we're lookin' for. Got yer trunk-checks handy?"
+
+With that I starts fishin' through my pockets panicky. I finds a
+railroad folder, our marriage certificate, the keys to the studio
+apartment I'd hired, the box the ring came in, and----
+
+"Gosh!" says I, sighin' relieved. "Sure I got it."
+
+The driver grins good-natured and stows us into a two-seated sleigh, and
+off we're whirled, bells jinglin', for half a mile or so through the
+stinging mornin' air. Next thing I know, I'm bein' towed up to a desk
+and a hotel register is shoved at me. Just like an old-timer, I dashes
+off my name--Richard T. Ballard.
+
+The mild-eyed gent with the close-cropped Vandyke and the gold-rimmed
+glasses glances over at Vee.
+
+"Ah--er--I thought Mrs. Ballard was with you!" says he.
+
+"That's so; she is," says I, grabbin' the pen again and tackin' "Mr. and
+Mrs." in front of my autograph.
+
+That's why, while we're fixin' up a bit before goin' down to breakfast,
+I has this little confidential confab with Vee.
+
+"It's no use, Vee," says I. "I'm a rank amateur. We might just as well
+have rice and confetti all over us. I've made two breaks already, and
+I'm liable to make more. We can't bluff 'em."
+
+"Who wants to?" says Vee. "I'm not ashamed of being on my honeymoon; are
+you?"
+
+"Good girl!" says I. "You bet I ain't. I thought the usual line, though,
+was to pretend you'd----"
+
+"I know," says Vee. "And I always thought that was perfectly silly.
+Besides, I don't believe we could fool anyone if we tried. It's much
+simpler not to bother. Let them guess."
+
+"And grin too, eh?" says I. "We'll grin back."
+
+Say, that's the happy hunch. Leaves you with nothing to worry about. All
+you got to do is go ahead and enjoy yourself, free and frolicsome. So
+when this imposin' head waitress with the forty-eight bust and the grand
+duchess air bears down on us majestic, and inquires dignified, "Two,
+sir?" I don't let it stagger me.
+
+"Two'll be enough," says I. "But whisper. Seein' as we're only startin'
+in on the twosome breakfast game, maybe you could find something nice
+and cheerful by a window. Eh?"
+
+It's some breakfast. M-m-m-m! Cute little country sausages, buckwheat
+cakes that would melt in your mouth, with strained honey to go on 'em.
+
+"Have a fourth buckwheat," says I.
+
+"No fair, keeping count!" says Vee. "I looked the other way when you
+took your fifth."
+
+Honest, I can't see where we acted much different than we did before.
+Somehow, we always could find things to giggle over. We sure had a good
+time takin' our first after-breakfast stroll together down Main Street,
+Vee in her silver-fox furs and me in my new mink-lined overcoat that Mr.
+Robert had wished on me casual just before we left.
+
+"Cunnin' little town, eh?" says I. "Looks like a birthday cake."
+
+"Or a Christmas card," says Vee. "Look at this old door with the brass
+knocker and the green fan-light above. Isn't that Colonial, though?"
+
+"It's an old-timer, all right," says I. "Hello! Here's a place worth
+rememberin'--the Woman's Exchange. Now I'll know where to go in case I
+should want to swap you off."
+
+For which crack I gets shoved into a snowdrift.
+
+It ain't until afternoon that I'm struck with the fact that neither of
+us knows a soul up here. Course, the landlord nods pleasant to me, and
+I'd talked to the young room clerk a bit, and the bell-hops had all
+smiled friendly, specially them I'd fed quarters to. But by then I was
+feelin' sort of folksy, so I begun takin' notice of the other guests and
+plannin' who I should get chummy with first.
+
+I drifts over by the fireplace, where two substantial old boys are
+toastin' their toes and smokin' their cigars.
+
+"Snappy brand of weather they pass out up here, eh?" I throws off,
+pullin' up a rocker.
+
+They turn, sort of surprised, and give me the once-over deliberate,
+after which one of them, a gent with juttin' eyebrows, clears his throat
+and remarks, "Quite bracing, indeed."
+
+Then he hitches around until I'm well out of view, and says to the
+other:
+
+"As I was observing, an immediate readjustment of international trade
+balances is inevitable. European bankers are preparing for it. We are
+not. Only last month one of the Barings cabled----"
+
+I'll admit my next stab at bein' sociable was kind of feeble. In front
+of the desk is a group of three gents, one of 'em not over fifty or so;
+but when I edges up close enough to hear what the debate is about, I
+finds it has something to do with a scheme for revivin' Italian opera in
+Boston, and I backs off so sudden I almost bumps into a hook-beaked old
+dame who is waddlin' up to the letter-box.
+
+"Sorry," says I. "I should have honked."
+
+She just glares at me, and if I hadn't side-stepped prompt she might
+have sunk that parrot bill into my shoulder.
+
+After that I sidles into a corner where I couldn't be hit from behind,
+and tries to dope out the cause of all this hostility. Did they take me
+for a German spy or what? Or was this really an old folks' home
+masqueradin' as a hotel, with Vee and me breakin' in under false
+pretenses?
+
+So far as I could see, the inmates was friendly enough with each other.
+The old girls sat around in the office and parlors, chattin' over their
+knittin' and crochet. The old boys paired off mostly, though some of
+them only read or played solitaire. A few people went out wrapped up in
+expensive furs and was loaded into sleighs. The others waved good-by to
+'em. But I might have been built out of window-glass. They didn't act
+as though I was visible.
+
+"Huh!" thinks I. "I'll bet they take notice of Vee when she comes down."
+
+If I'd put anything up on that proposition I'd owed myself money. They
+couldn't see her any more'n they could me. When we went out for another
+walk nobody even looked after us. I didn't say anything then, but I kept
+thinkin'. And all that evenin' we sat around amongst 'em without bein'
+disturbed.
+
+About eight o'clock an orchestra shows up and cuts loose with music in
+the ball-room, mostly classic stuff like the "Spring Song" and handfuls
+plucked from "Aïda." We slips in and listens. Then the leader gets his
+eye on us and turns on a fox-trot.
+
+"Looks like they was waitin' for us to start something," says I.
+"Let's."
+
+We'd gone around three or four times when Vee balks. About twenty-five
+old ladies, with a sprinklin' of white-whiskered old codgers, had filed
+in and was watchin' us solemn and critical from the side-lines. Some was
+squintin' disapprovin' through their lorgnettes, and I noticed a few
+whisperin' to each other. Vee quits right in the middle of a reverse.
+
+"Do they think we are giving an exhibition?" she pouts.
+
+"Maybe we're breakin' some of the rules and by-laws," says I. "Anyway, I
+think we ought to beat it before they call in the high sheriff."
+
+Next day it was just the same. We was out part of the time, indulgin' in
+walks and sleigh rides; but nobody seemed to see us, goin' or comin'.
+And I begun to get good and sore.
+
+"Nice place, this," says I to Vee, as we trails in to dinner that
+evenin'. "Almost as sociable as the Grand Central station."
+
+Vee tries to explain that it's always like this in these exclusive
+little all-the-year-round joints where about the same crowd of people
+come every season.
+
+"Then you have to be born in the house to be a reg'lar person, I
+suppose?" says I.
+
+Well, it's about then I notices this classy young couple who are makin'
+their way across the dinin'-room, bein' hailed right and left. And next
+thing I know, the young lady gets her eye on Vee, stops to take another
+look, then rushes over and gives her the fond clinch from behind.
+
+"Why you dear old Verona!" says she.
+
+"Judith!" gasps Vee, kind of smothery.
+
+"Whatever are you doing up----" And then Judith gets wise to me sittin'
+opposite. "Oh!" says she.
+
+Vee blushes and exhibits her left hand.
+
+"It only happened the other night," says she. "This is Mr. Ballard,
+Judith. And you?"
+
+"Oh, ages ago--last spring," says Judith. "Bert, come here."
+
+It's a case of old boardin'-school friends who'd lost track of each
+other. Quite a stunner, young Mrs. Nixon is, too, and Bert is a good
+match for her. The two girls hold quite a reunion, with us men standin'
+around lookin' foolish.
+
+"We're living in Springfield, you know," goes on Judith, "where Bert is
+helping to build another munition plant. Just ran up to spend the
+week-end with Auntie. You've met her, of course?"
+
+"We--we haven't met anyone," says Vee.
+
+"Why, how funny!" exclaims Mrs. Nixon. "Please come over right now."
+
+"My dear," says Auntie, pattin' Vee chummy on the hand, "we have all
+been wondering who you two young people were. I knew you must be nice,
+but--er---- Come, won't you join us at this table? We'll make just a
+splendid little family party. Now do!"
+
+Oh, yes, we did. And after dinner I'll be hanged if we ain't introduced
+to almost everybody in the hotel. It's a reg'lar reception, with folks
+standin' in line to shake hands with us. The old boy with the eye
+awnin's turns out to be an ex-Secretary of the Treasury; an antique with
+a patent ear-'phone has been justice of some State Supreme Court; and so
+on. Oh, lots of class to 'em. But after I'd been vouched for by someone
+they knew they all gives me the hearty grip, offers me cigars, and hopes
+I'm enjoyin' my stay.
+
+"And so you are a niece of dear Mrs. Hemmingway?" says old Parrot-Face,
+when her turn comes. "Think of that! And this is your husband!" And then
+she says how nice it is that some other young people will be up in the
+mornin'.
+
+That evenin' Judith gets busy plannin' things to do next day.
+
+"You haven't tried the toboggan chute?" says she. "Why, how absurd!"
+
+Yep, it was a big day, Saturday was. Half a dozen more young folks
+drifted in, includin' a couple of Harvard men that Vee knew, a girl
+she'd met abroad, and another she'd seen at a house-party. They was all
+live wires, too, ready for any sort of fun. And we had all kinds. Maybe
+we didn't keep that toboggan slide warm. Say, it's some sport, ain't it?
+
+Anyway, our honeymoon was turnin' out a great success. The Nixons
+concluded to stay over a few days, and three or four of the others
+found they could too, so we just went on whooping things up.
+
+Next I knew we'd been there a week, and was due to make a jump to
+Washington for a few days of sight-seein'.
+
+"I'm afraid that will not be half as nice as this has been," says Vee.
+
+"It couldn't," says I. "It's the reg'lar thing to do, though."
+
+"I hate doing the regular thing," says Vee. "Besides, I'm dying to see
+our little studio apartment and get settled in it. Why not--well, just
+go home?"
+
+"Vee," says I, "you got more good sense than I have red hair. Let's!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+VEE WITH VARIATIONS
+
+
+"But--but look here, Vee," says I, after I'd got my breath back, "you
+can't do a thing like that, you know."
+
+"But I have, Torchy," says she; "and, what is more, I mean to keep on
+doing it."
+
+She don't say it messy, understand--just states it quiet and pleasant.
+
+And there we are, hardly at the end of our first month, with the rocks
+loomin' ahead.
+
+Say, where did I collect all this bunk about gettin' married, anyway? I
+had an idea that after the honeymoon was over, you just settled down and
+lived happy, or otherwise, ever after. But, believe me, there's nothing
+to it. It ain't all over, not by a long shot. As a matter of fact,
+you've just begun to live, and you got to learn how.
+
+Here I am, discoverin' a new Vee every day or so, and almost dizzy
+tryin' to get acquainted with all of 'em. Do I show up that way to her?
+I doubt it. Now and then, though, I catch her watchin' me sort of
+puzzled.
+
+So there's nothing steady goin' or settled about us yet, thanks be. Home
+ain't a place to yawn in. Not ours. We don't get all our excitement out
+of changin' the furniture round, either. Oh, sure, we do that, too. You
+know, we're startin' in with a ready-made home--a studio apartment that
+Mr. Robert picked up for me at a bargain, all furnished.
+
+He was a near-artist, if you remember, this Waddy Crane party, who'd had
+a bale of coupon-bearin' certificates willed to him, and what was a
+van-load of furniture more or less to him? Course, I'm no judge of such
+junk, but Vee seems to think we've got something swell.
+
+"Just look at this noble old davenport, will you!" says she. "Isn't it a
+beauty? And that highboy! Real old San Domingo mahogany that is, with
+perfectly lovely crotch veneer in the panels. See?"
+
+"Uh-huh," says I.
+
+"And this four-poster with the pineapple tops and the canopy," she goes
+on. "Pure Colonial, a hundred years old."
+
+"Eh?" says I, gazin' at it doubtful. "Course, I was lookin' for
+second-hand stuff, but I don't think he ought to work off anything that
+ancient on me, do you?"
+
+"Silly!" says Vee. "It's a gem, and the older the better."
+
+"We'll need some new rugs, won't we," says I, "in place of some of these
+faded things?"
+
+"Faded!" says Vee. "Why, those are Bokharas. I will say for Mr. Crane
+that he has good taste. This is furnished so much better than most
+studios--nothing useless, no mixing of periods."
+
+"Oh, when I go out after a home," says I, "I'm some grand little
+shopper."
+
+"Pooh!" says Vee. "Who couldn't do it the way you did? Why, the place
+looks as if he'd just taken his hat and walked out. There are even
+cigars in the humidor. And his easel and paints and brushes! Do you know
+what I'm going to do, Torchy?"
+
+"Put pink and green stripes around the cigars, I expect," says I.
+
+"Smarty!" says she. "I'm going to paint pictures."
+
+"Why not?" says I. "There's no law against it, and here you got all the
+tools."
+
+"You know I used to try it a little," says she. "I took quite a lot of
+lessons."
+
+"Then go to it," says I. "I'll get a yearly rate from a pressing club
+to keep the spots off me. I'll bet you could do swell pictures."
+
+"I know!" says Vee, clappin' her hands. "I'll begin with a portrait of
+you. Let me try sketching in your head now."
+
+That's the way Vee generally goes at things--with a rush. Say, she had
+me sittin' with my chin up and my arms draped in one position until I
+had a neck-ache that ran clear to my heels.
+
+"Hal-lup!" says I, when both feet was sound asleep and my spine felt
+ossified. "Couldn't I put on a sub while I drew a long breath?"
+
+At that she lets me off, and after a fifth-innin' stretch I'm called
+round to pass on the result.
+
+"Hm-m-m!" says I, starin' at what she's done to a perfectly good piece
+of stretched canvas.
+
+"Well, what does it look like?" demands Vee.
+
+"Why," says I, "I should call it sort of a cross between the Kaiser and
+Billy Sunday."
+
+"Torchy!" says Vee. "I--I think you're just horrid!"
+
+For a whole week she sticks to it industrious, jottin' down studies of
+various parts of my map while I'm eatin' breakfast, and workin' over 'em
+until I come back from the office in the afternoon. Did I throw out any
+more comic cracks? Never a one--not even when the picture showed that
+my eyes toed in. All I did was pat her on the back and say she was a
+wonder. But say, I got so I dreaded to look at the thing.
+
+"You know your hair isn't really red," says Vee; "it--it's such an odd
+shade."
+
+"Sort of triple pink, eh?" says I.
+
+She squeezes out some more paints, stirs 'em vigorous, and makes another
+stab. This time she gets a bilious lavender with streaks of fire-box red
+in it.
+
+"Bother!" says she, chuckin' away the brushes. "What's the use
+pretending I'm an artist when I'm not? Look at that hideous mess! It's
+too awful for words. Take away that fire-screen, will you, Torchy?"
+
+And, with the help of a few matches and a sportin' extra, we made quite
+a cheerful little blaze in the coal grate.
+
+"There!" says Vee, as we watches the bonfire. "So that's over. And it's
+rather a relief to find out that I haven't got to be a lady artist,
+after all. What is more, I am positive I couldn't write a book. I'm
+afraid, Torchy, that I am a most every-day sort of person."
+
+"Maybe," says I, "you're one of the scarce ones that believes in home
+and hubby."
+
+"We-e-e-ell," says Vee, lockin' her fingers and restin' her chin on 'em
+thoughtful, "not precisely that type, either. My mind may not be
+particularly advanced, but the modified harem existence for women
+doesn't appeal to me. And I must confess that, with kitchenette
+breakfasts, dinners out, and one maid, I can't get wildly excited over a
+wholly domestic career. Torchy, I simply must have something to do."
+
+Me, I just sits there gawpin' at her.
+
+"Why," says I, "I thought that when a girl got married she--she----"
+
+"I know," says she. "You think you thought. So did I. But you really
+didn't think about it at all, and I'm only beginning to. Of course, you
+have your work. I suppose it's interesting, too. Isn't it?"
+
+"It's a great game," says I. "Specially these days, when doin' any kind
+of business is about as substantial as jugglin' six china plates while
+you're balanced on top of two chairs and a kitchen table. Honest, we got
+deals enough in the air to make you dizzy followin' 'em. If they all go
+through we'll stand to cut a melon that would pay off the national debt.
+If they should all go wrong--well, it would be some smash, believe me."
+
+Vee's gray eyes light up sudden.
+
+"Why couldn't you tell me all about some of these deals," she says, "so
+that I could be in it too? Why couldn't I help?"
+
+"Maybe you could," says I, "if you understood all the fine points."
+
+"Couldn't I learn?" demands Vee.
+
+"Well," says I, "I've been right in the thick of it for quite some
+years. If you could pick up in a week or so what it's taken me years
+to----"
+
+"I see," cuts in Vee. "I suppose you're right, too. But I'm sure that I
+should like to be in business. It must be fascinating, all that planning
+and scheming. It must make life so interesting."
+
+I nods. "It does," says I.
+
+"Then why shouldn't I try something of the kind, all my very own?" she
+asks. "Oh, in a small way, at first?"
+
+More gasps from me. This was gettin' serious.
+
+"You don't mean margin dabblin' at one of them parlor bucket-shops, do
+you?" I demands.
+
+"No fear," says Vee. "I think gambling is just plain stupid. I mean some
+sort of legitimate business--buying and selling things."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Like real estate, or imported hats, or somebody's
+home-made candy? Or maybe you mean startin' one of them Blue Goose
+novelty shops down in Greenwich Village. I'll tell you. Why not
+manufacture left-handed collar buttons for the south-paw trade? There's
+a field."
+
+Vee don't say any more. In fact, three or four days goes by without her
+mentionin' anything about havin' nothing to do, and I'd 'most forgot
+this batty talk of ours.
+
+And then, one afternoon when I comes home after a busy day at doin'
+nothing much and tryin' to look important over it, she greets me with a
+flyin' tackle and drags me over to a big wingchair by the window.
+
+"What do you think, Torchy?" says she. "I've found something!"
+
+"That trunk key you've been lookin' for?" says I.
+
+"No," says she. "A business opening."
+
+"A slot-machine to sell fudge?" says I.
+
+"You'd never guess," says she.
+
+"Then shoot it," says I.
+
+"I'm going to open a shoe-shinery," she announces.
+
+"Wha-a-a-at!" says I.
+
+"Only I'm not going to call it that," she goes on. "It isn't to be a
+'parlor,' either, nor a 'shine shop.' It's to be just a 'Boots.' Right
+here in the building. I've leased part of the basement. See?" And she
+waves a paper at me.
+
+"Quit your kiddin'," says I.
+
+But she insists that it's so. Sure enough, that's the way the lease
+reads.
+
+And that's when, as I was tellin' you, I rises up majestic and announces
+flat that she simply can't do a thing like that. Also she comes back at
+me just as prompt by sayin' that she can and will. It's the first time
+we've met head-on goin' different ways, and I had just sense enough to
+throw in my emergency before the crash came.
+
+"Now let's get this straight," says I. "I don't suppose you're plannin'
+to do shoe-shinin' yourself?"
+
+Vee smiles and shakes her head.
+
+"Or 'tend the cash register and sell shoelaces and gum to gentlemen
+customers?"
+
+"Oh, it's not to be that sort of place," says she. "It's to be an
+English 'boots,' on a large scale. You know what I mean."
+
+"No," says I.
+
+So she sketches out the enterprise for me. Instead of a reg'lar Tony
+joint with a row of chairs and a squad of blue-shirted Greeks jabberin'
+about the war, this is to be a chairless, spittoonless shine factory,
+where the customer only steps in to sign a monthly contract or register
+a kick. All the work is to be collected and delivered, same as laundry.
+
+"I would never have thought of it," explains Vee, "if it hadn't been for
+Tarkins. He's that pasty-faced, sharp-nosed young fellow who's been
+helping the janitor recently. A cousin, I believe. He's a war wreck,
+too. Just think, Torchy: he was in the trenches for more than a year,
+and has only been out of a base hospital two months. They wouldn't let
+him enlist again; so he came over here to his relatives.
+
+"It was while he was up trying to stop that radiator leak the other day
+that I asked him if he would take out a pair of my boots and find some
+place where they could be cleaned. He brought them back inside of half
+an hour, beautifully done. And when I insisted on being told where he'd
+taken them, so that I might send them to the same place again, he
+admitted that he had done the work himself. 'My old job, ma'am,' says
+he. 'I was boots at the Argyle Club, ma'am, before I went out to strafe
+the 'Uns. Seven years, ma'am. But they got a girl doin' it now, a
+flapper. Wouldn't take me back.' Just fancy! And Tarkins a trench hero!
+So I got to thinking."
+
+"I see," says I. "You're going to set Tarkins up, eh?"
+
+"I'm going to make him my manager," says Vee. "He will have charge of
+the shop and solicit orders. We are going to start with only two
+polishers; one for day work, the other for the night shift. And Tarkins
+will always be on the job. They're installing a 'phone now, and he will
+sleep on a cot in the back office. We will work this block first,
+something like four hundred apartments. Later on--well, we'll see."
+
+"I don't want to croak," says I, "but do you think folks will send out
+their footwear that way? You know, New Yorkers ain't used to gettin'
+their shines except on the hoof."
+
+"I mean to educate them to my 'boots' system," says Vee. "I'm getting up
+a circular now. I shall show them how much time they can save, how many
+tips they can avoid. You see, each customer will have a delivery box,
+with his name and address on it. No chance for mistakes. The boxes can
+be set outside the apartment doors. We will have four collections,
+perhaps; two in the daytime, two at night. And when they see the kind of
+work we do---- Well, you wait."
+
+"I'll admit it don't listen so worse," says I. "The scheme has its good
+points. But when you come to teachin' New York people new tricks, like
+sendin' out their shoes, you're goin' to be up against it."
+
+"Then you think I can't make 'boots' pay a profit?" asks Vee.
+
+"That would be my guess," says I. "If it was a question of underwritin'
+a stock issue for the scheme I'd have to turn it down."
+
+"Good!" says Vee. "Now I shall work all the harder. Tarkins will be
+around early in the morning to get you as our first customer."
+
+Say, for the next few days she certainly was a busy party--plannin' out
+her block campaign, lookin' over supply bills, and checkin' up Tarkins's
+reports.
+
+I don't know when I'd ever seen her so interested in anything, or so
+chirky. Her cheeks were pink all the time and her eyes dancin'. And
+somehow we had such a lot to talk about.
+
+Course, though, I didn't expect it to last. You wouldn't look for a girl
+like Vee, who'd never had any trainin' for that sort of thing, to start
+a new line and make a go of it right off the bat. But, so long as she
+wasn't investin' very heavy, it didn't matter.
+
+And then, here last night, after she'd been workin' over her
+account-books for an hour or so, she comes at me with a whoop, and waves
+a sheet of paper under my nose excited.
+
+"Now, Mister Business Man," says she, "what do you think of that?"
+
+"Eh?" says I, starin' at the figures.
+
+"One hundred and seventeen regular customers the first week," says she,
+"and a net profit of $23.45. Now how about underwriting that stock
+issue?"
+
+Well, it was a case of backin' up. She had it all figured out plain.
+She'd made good from the start. And, just to prove that it's real money
+that she's made all by herself, she insists on invitin' me out to a
+celebration dinner. It's a swell one, too, take it from me.
+
+And afterwards we sits up until long past midnight while Vee plans a
+chain of "boots" all over the city.
+
+"Gee!" says I. "Maybe you'll be gettin' yourself written up as 'The
+Shine Queen of New York' or something like that. Lucky Auntie's in
+Jamaica. Think what a jolt it would give her."
+
+"I don't care," says Vee. "I've found a job."
+
+"Guess you have," says I. "And, as I've remarked once or twice before,
+you're some girl."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A QUALIFYING TURN FOR TORCHY
+
+
+And here all along I'd been kiddin' myself that I was a perfectly good
+private sec. Also I had an idea the Corrugated Trust was one of the main
+piers that kept New York from slumpin' into the North River, and that
+the boss, Old Hickory Ellins, was sort of a human skyscraper who loomed
+up as imposin' in the financial foreground as the Metropolitan Tower
+does on the picture post-cards that ten-day trippers mail to the folks
+back home.
+
+Not that I'd been workin' up any extra chest measure since I've had an
+inside desk and had connected with a few shares of our preferred stock;
+I always did feel more or less that way about our concern. And the
+closer I got to things, seein' how wide our investments was scattered
+and how many big deals we stood behind, the surer I was that we was
+important people.
+
+And then, in trickles this smooth-haired young gent with the broad _a_'s
+and the full set of _thé dansant_ manners, to show me where I'm wrong
+on all counts. He'd succeeded in convincin' Vincent-on-the-gate that
+nobody around the shop would do but Mr. Ellins himself, so here was Old
+Hickory standin' in the door of his private office with the card in his
+hand and starin' puzzled at this immaculate symphony in browns.
+
+"Eh?" says he. "You're from Runyon, are you? Well, I wired him to stop
+off on his way through and have luncheon with me at the Union League.
+Know anything about that, do you?"
+
+"Mr. Runyon regrets very much," says the young gent, "that he will be
+unable to accept your kind invitation. He is on his way to Newport, you
+know, and----"
+
+"Yes, I understand all that," breaks in Old Hickory. "Daughter's
+wedding. But that isn't until next week, and while he was in town I
+thought we might have a little chat and settle a few things."
+
+"Quite so," says the symphony. "Precisely why he sent me up, sir--to
+talk over anything you might care to discuss."
+
+"With you!" snorts Old Hickory. "Who the brocaded buckboards are you?"
+
+"Mr. Runyon's secretary, sir," says the young gent. "Bixby's the name,
+sir, as you will see by the card, and----"
+
+"Ha!" growls old Hickory. "So that's Marc Runyon's answer to me, is it?
+Sends his secretary! Very well; you may talk with _my_ secretary.
+Torchy!"
+
+"Right here!" says I, slidin' to the front.
+
+"Take this person somewhere," says Mr. Ellins, jerkin' his thumb at
+Bixby; "instruct him what to tell his master about how we regard that
+terminal hold-up; then dust him off carefully and lead him to the
+elevator."
+
+"Got you!" says I, salutin'.
+
+You might think that would have jolted Mr. Bixby. But no. He gets the
+door shut in his face without even blinkin' or gettin' pink under the
+eyes. Don't even indulge in any shoulder shrugs or other signs of
+muffled emotion. He just turns to me calm and remarks businesslike:
+
+"At your service, sir."
+
+Now, say, this lubricated diplomacy act ain't my long suit as a general
+thing, but I couldn't figure a percentage in puttin' over any more rough
+stuff on Bixby. It rolled off him too easy. Course, it might be all
+right for Mr. Ellins to get messy or blow a gasket if he wanted to; but
+I couldn't see that it was gettin' us anywhere. He hadn't planned this
+luncheon affair just for the sake of being sociable--I knew that much.
+The big idea was to get next to Marcus T. Runyon and thresh out a
+certain proposition on a face-to-face basis. And if he chucked that
+overboard because of a whim, we stood to lose.
+
+It was up to me now, though. Maybe I couldn't be as smooth as this Bixby
+party, but I could make a stab along that line. It would be good
+practice, anyhow. So I tows him over to my corner, and arranges him easy
+in an armchair.
+
+"As between private secs, now," says I, "what's puttin' up the bars on
+this get-together motion, eh?"
+
+Well, considerin' that Bixby is English and don't understand the
+American language very well, we got along fine. Once or twice, there, I
+thought I should have to call in an interpreter; but by bein' careful to
+state things simple, and by goin' over some of the points two or three
+times slow, we managed to make out what each other meant.
+
+It seems that Marcus T. is more or less of a frail and tender party.
+Dashin' out for a Union League luncheon, fillin' himself up on _poulet
+en casserole_ and such truck, not to mention Martinis and demi-tasses
+and brunette perfectos, was clean out of the question.
+
+"My word!" says Bixby, rollin' his eyes. "His physician would never
+allow it, you know."
+
+"Suppose he took a chance and didn't tell the doc?" I suggests.
+
+"Impossible," says Bixby. "He is with him constantly--travels with him,
+you understand."
+
+I didn't get it all at first, but I sopped it up gradual. Marcus T.
+wasn't takin' any casual flit from his Palm Beach winter home to his
+Newport summer place. No jumpin' into a common Pullman for him, joinin'
+the smokin'-room bunch, and scrabblin' for his meals in the diner.
+Hardly.
+
+He was travelin' in his private car, with his private secretary, his
+private physician, his trained nurse, his private chef, and most likely,
+his private bootblack. And he was strictly under his doctor's orders. He
+wasn't even goin' to have a peek at Broadway or Fifth Avenue; for,
+although a suite had been engaged for him at the Plutoria, the Doc had
+ruled against it only that mornin'. No; he had to stay in the private
+car, that had been run on a special sidin' over in the Pennsylvania
+yards.
+
+"So you see," says Bixby, spreadin' out his varnished finger-nails
+helpless. "And yet, I am sure he would very much like to have a chat
+with his old friend Mr. Ellins."
+
+I had all I could do to choke back a haw-haw. His old friend, eh? Oh, I
+expect they might be called friends, in a way. They hadn't actually
+stuck any knives into each other. And 'way back, when they was both
+operatin' in Chicago, I understand they was together a good deal. But
+since---- Well, maybe at a circus you've seen a couple of old tigers
+pacin' back and forth in nearby cages and catchin' sight of one another
+now and then? Something like that.
+
+"Friend" wasn't the way Marcus T. was indexed on our books. If we
+spotted any suspicious moves in the market, or found one of our
+subsidiary companies being led astray by unseen hands, or a big contract
+slippin' away mysterious, the word was always passed to "watch the
+Runyon interests." And I'll admit that when the Corrugated saw an
+openin' to put a crimp in a Runyon deal, or overbid 'em on a franchise,
+or crack a ripe egg on one of their bond issues, we only waited long
+enough for it to get dark before gettin' busy. Oh, yes, we was real
+chummy that way.
+
+And then again, with the Runyon system touchin' ours in so many spots,
+we had a lot of open daylight dealin's. We interlocked here and there;
+we had joint leases, trackage agreements, and so on, where we was just
+as trustin' of each other as a couple of gentlemen crooks dividin' the
+souvenirs after an early mornin' call at a country-house.
+
+This terminal business Old Hickory had mentioned was a sample. Course, I
+only knew about it in a vague sort of way: something about ore docks up
+on the Lakes. Anyway, it was a case where the Runyon people had hogged
+the waterfront and was friskin' us for tonnage charges on every steamer
+we loaded.
+
+I know it was something that had to be renewed annual, for I'd heard Mr.
+Ellins beefin' about it more'n once. Last year, I remember, he was worse
+than usual, which was accounted for later by the fact that the ton rate
+had been jumped a couple of cents. And now it had been almost doubled.
+No wonder he wanted a confab with Marcus T. on the subject. And, from
+where I stood, it looked like he ought to have it, grouch or no grouch.
+
+"Bixby," says I, "Mr. Ellins would just grieve himself sick if this
+reunion he's planned don't come off. Now, what's the best you can do?"
+
+"If Mr. Ellins could come to the private car----" begins Bixby.
+
+"Say," I breaks in, "you wouldn't ask him to climb over freight-cars and
+dodge switch-engines just for old times' sake, would you?"
+
+Bixby holds up both hands and registers painful protest.
+
+"By no means," says he. "We would send the limousine for Mr. Ellins,
+have it wait his convenience, and drive him directly to the car steps. I
+think I can arrange the interview for any time between two-thirty and
+four o'clock this afternoon."
+
+"Now, that's talkin'!" says I. "I'll see what I can do with the boss.
+Wait, will you?"
+
+Oh, boy, though! That was about as tough a job as I ever tackled. Old
+Hickory still has his neck feathers ruffled, and he's chewin' savage on
+a black cigar when I go in to slip him the soothin' syrup. First off I
+explains elaborate what a sick man Mr. Runyon is, and all about the
+trained nurse and the private physician.
+
+"Bah!" says Old Hickory. "I'll bet he's no more an invalid than I am.
+Just coddling himself, that's all. Got the private car habit, too! Why,
+I knew Marc Runyon when he thought an upper berth was the very lap of
+luxury; knew him when he'd grind his teeth over payin' a ten-dollar fee
+to a doctor. And now he's trying to buy back his digestion by hiring a
+private physician, is he? The simple-minded old sinner!"
+
+"I expect you ain't seen much of him lately, Mr. Ellins?" I suggests.
+
+Old Hickory hunches his shoulders careless.
+
+"No," says he.
+
+Then he gazes reminiscent at the ceilin'. I could tell by watchin' his
+lower jaw sort of loosen up that he was thinkin' of the old days, or
+something like that. It struck me as a good time to let things simmer. I
+drops back a step and waits. All of a sudden he turns to me and demands:
+
+"Well, son?"
+
+"If you could get away about three," says I, "Mr. Runyon's limousine
+will be waiting."
+
+"Huh!" says he. "Well, I'll see. Perhaps."
+
+"Yes, sir," says I. "Then you'll be wanting the dope on that terminal
+lease. Shall I dig it up?"
+
+"Oh, you might as well," says Old Hickory. "There isn't much, but bring
+along anything you may find. You will have to serve as my entire
+retinue, Torchy. I expect you to behave like a regular high-toned
+secretary."
+
+"Gee!" says I. "That's some order. Mr. Bixby'll have me lookin' like an
+outside porter. But I'll go wind myself up."
+
+All I could think of, though, was to post myself on that terminal stuff.
+And, believe me, I waded into that strong. Inside of ten minutes after
+I'd sent Bixby on his way I had Piddie clawin' through the record safe,
+two stenographers searchin' the letter-files, and Vincent out buyin'
+maps of Lake Superior. I had about four hours to use in gettin' wise to
+the fine points of a deal that had been runnin' on for ten years; but I
+can absorb a lot of information in a short time when I really get my
+mind pores open.
+
+At that, though, I expect my head would have been just a junk-heap of
+back-number facts if I hadn't run across the name of this guy McClave in
+some of the correspondence. Seems he'd been assistant traffic agent for
+one of the Runyon lines, but had been dropped durin' a consolidation
+shake-up. And now he happens to be holdin' down a desk out in our
+general offices. Just on a chance, I pushes the button for him.
+
+Well, say, talk about tappin' the main feedpipe! Why, that quiet little
+Scotchman in the shiny black cutaway coat and the baggy plaid trousers,
+he knew more about how iron ore gets from the mines to the smelters than
+I do about puttin' on my own clothes. And as for the inside hist'ry of
+how we got that tonnage charge wished onto us, why, McClave had been
+called in when the merry little scheme was first plotted out.
+
+I made him start at the beginning and explain every item, while we
+munched fried-egg sandwiches as we went over reports, sorted out old
+letters, and marked up a perfectly good map of Minnesota. But by three
+P.M. I had a leather document case stuffed with papers and a cross-index
+of 'em in my so-called brain.
+
+"When you're ready, Mr. Ellins," says I, standin' by with my hat in my
+hand.
+
+"Oh, yes," says he, heavin' himself up reluctant from his desk chair.
+
+And, sure enough, there's a silk-lined limousine and a French chauffeur
+waitin' in front of the arcade. In no time at all, too, we're rolled
+across Seventh Avenue, down through a tunnel, and out alongside a shiny
+private car with a brass-bound bay-window on one end and flower-boxes
+hung on the side. They even had a carpet laid on the steps. It's a happy
+little home on wheels.
+
+Also there is Bixby the Busy, with his ear out for us.
+
+Talk about private seccing as a fine art! Why, say, I fairly held my
+breath watchin' him operate. Every move is as smooth and silent as a
+steel lathe runnin' in an oil bath. He don't exactly whisper, or give us
+the hush-up sign, but somehow he gets me steppin' soft and talkin'
+under my breath from the minute I hits the front vestibule.
+
+"So good of you, Mr. Ellins," he coos soothin'. "Will you come right in?
+Mr. Runyon will be with you in a moment. Just finishing a treatment, you
+know. This way, gentlemen."
+
+Say, it was like bein' ushered into church durin' the prayer. Once
+inside, you'd never guess it was just a car. More like the corner of a
+perfectly good drawin'-room--easy chairs, Turkish rugs, silver vases
+full of roses, double hangin's at the windows.
+
+"Will you sit here, Mr. Ellins?" murmurs Bixby. "And you here, sir.
+Pardon me a moment."
+
+Then he glides about, pullin' down a shade, movin' a vase, studyin' how
+the light is goin' to strike in, pattin' a cushion, shovin' out a
+foot-rest--like he was settin' the stage for the big scene. And right in
+the midst of it I near spilled the beans by pullin' an afternoon edition
+out of my pocket. Bixby swoops down on me panicky.
+
+"Oh, I'm so sorry!" says he, pluckin' the paper out of my fingers. "But
+may I put this outside? Mr. Runyon cannot stand the rustling of
+newspapers. Please don't mind. There! Now I think we are ready."
+
+I wanted to warn him that I hadn't quite stopped breathin' yet, but he's
+off to the other end of the room, where a nurse in a white cap is
+peekin' through the draperies.
+
+Bixby nods to her and stands one side. Then we waits a minute--two
+minutes. And finally the procession appears.
+
+First, a nurse carryin' a steamer rug; next, another nurse with a tray;
+and after them a valet and the private physician with the great Marcus
+T. walkin' slow between.
+
+He ain't so imposin' when you get that close, though. Kind of a short,
+poddy party, who looks like he'd been upholstered generous once but had
+shrunk a lot. There are heavy bags under his eyes, dewlaps at his
+mouth-corners, and deep seams across his clean-shaved face. He has sort
+of a cigar-ash complexion. And yet, under them shaggy brows is a keen
+pair of eyes that seem to take in everything.
+
+Old Hickory gets up right off, with his hand out. But it's a social
+error. Bixby blocks him off graceful. He's in full command, Bixby is.
+With a one-finger gesture he signals the nurse to drape her rug over the
+chair. Then he nods to the doctor and the valet to go ahead. They ease
+Runyon into his seat. Bixby motions 'em to wrap up his knees. By an
+eyelid flutter he shows the other nurse where to set her tray.
+
+It's almost as complicated a process as dockin' an ocean liner. When
+it's finished, Bixby waves one hand gentle, and they all fade back
+through the draperies.
+
+"Hello, Ellins," says Runyon. "Mighty good of you to hunt up a wreck
+like me."
+
+I almost gasped out loud. Somehow, after seem' him handled like a mummy
+that way, you didn't expect to hear him speak. It's a shock. Even Old
+Hickory must have felt something as I did.
+
+"I--I didn't know," says he. "When did it happen, Runyon?"
+
+"Oh, it's nothing," says Marcus T. "I am merely paying up for fifty-odd
+years of hard living by--by this. Ever try to exist on artificial sour
+milk and medicated hay, Ellins? Hope you never come to it. Don't look as
+though you would. But you were always tougher than I, even back in the
+State Street days, eh?"
+
+First thing I knew, they were chattin' away free and easy. Course, there
+was Bixby all the time, standin' behind watchful. And right in the
+middle of a sentence he didn't hesitate to butt in and hand Mr. Runyon a
+glass of what looked like thin whitewash. Marcus T. would take a sip
+obedient and then go on with his talk. At last he asks if there's
+anything special he can do for Mr. Ellins.
+
+"Why, yes," says Old Hickory, settin' his jaw. "You might call off your
+highwaymen on that Manitou terminal lease, Runyon. That is, unless you
+mean to take all of our mining profits."
+
+Marcus T.'s eyes brighten up. They almost twinkle.
+
+"Bixby," says he, "what about that? Has there been an increase in the
+tonnage rate to the Corrugated?"
+
+"I think so, sir," says Bixby. "I can look it up, sir."
+
+"Ah!" says Runyon. "Bixby will look it up."
+
+"He needn't," says Old Hickory. "It's been doubled, that's all. We had
+the notice last week. Torchy, did you----"
+
+"Yep!" says I, shootin' the letter at him.
+
+"Well, well!" says Runyon, after he's gazed at it. "There must have been
+some well founded cause for such an advance. Bixby, you must----"
+
+"It's because you think you've got us in a hole," breaks in Old Hickory.
+"We've got to load our boats and you control the docks."
+
+"Oh, yes!" chuckles Marcus T. "An unfortunate situation--for you. But I
+presume there are other dockage facilities available."
+
+"If there were," says Mr. Ellins sarcastic, "do you think we would be
+paying you from three to five millions a year?"
+
+"Bixby, I fear you must explain our position more fully," goes on Mr.
+Runyon.
+
+"Oh, certainly," says Bixby. "I will have a full report prepared
+and----"
+
+"Suppose you tell it to my secretary now," insists Old Hickory, glarin'
+menacin' at him.
+
+"Do so, Bixby," says Marcus T.
+
+"Why--er--you see," says Bixby, turnin' to me, "as I understand the
+case, the only outlet you have to deep water is over our tracks to----"
+
+"What about them docks at Three Harbors?" I cuts in.
+
+"Three Harbors?" repeats Bixby, starin' vague.
+
+"Precisely," says Marcus T. "As the young man suggests, there is plenty
+of unemployed dockage at that point. But your ore tracks do not connect
+with that port."
+
+"They would if we laid forty miles of rails, branchin' off at Tamarack
+Junction," says I. "That spur has all been surveyed and the right of way
+cleared."
+
+"Ah!" exclaims Bixby, comin' to life again. "I remember now. Tamarack
+Junction. We hold a charter for a railroad from there to Three Harbors."
+
+"You mean you did hold it," says I.
+
+"I beg pardon?" says Bixby, gawpin'.
+
+"It lapsed," says I, "eighteen months ago. Here's a copy, O. K.'d by a
+Minnesota notary public. See the date?"
+
+"Allow me," says Mr. Runyon, reachin' for it.
+
+Old Hickory gets up and rubbers over his shoulder. "By George!" says he.
+"It has lapsed, Runyon. Torchy, where's a map of----"
+
+"Here you are," says I. "You'll see the branch line sketched in there.
+That would cut our haul about fifteen miles."
+
+"And leave you with a lot of vacant ore docks on your hands, eh,
+Runyon?" puts in Old Hickory. "We could have those rails laid by the
+time the ice was out of the Soo. Well, well! Throws rather a new light
+on the situation, doesn't it?"
+
+Marcus T. turns slow and fixes them keen eyes of his on Bixby the Busy.
+
+"Hm-m-m!" says he. "It seems that we have overlooked a point, Bixby.
+Perhaps, though, you can offer----"
+
+He can. Some shifty private sec, Bixby is.
+
+"Your milk, sir," says he, grabbin' the tray and shovin' it in front of
+Runyon.
+
+For a second or so the great Marcus T. eyes it indignant. Then his
+shoulders sag, the fire dies out of his eyes, and he takes the glass.
+
+He's about the best trained plute I ever saw in captivity.
+
+"And I think the doctor should take your temperature now," adds Bixby.
+"I will call him."
+
+As he slips off toward the back end of the car Mr. Runyon lets out a
+sigh.
+
+"It's no use, Ellins," says he. "One can't pamper a ruined digestion and
+still enjoy these friendly little business bouts. One simply can't. Name
+your own terms for continuing that terminal lease."
+
+Old Hickory does prompt, for we don't want to buy rails at the price
+they're bringin' now.
+
+"And by the way, Runyon," says he, "may I ask what you pay your young
+man? I'm just curious."
+
+"Bixby?" says Runyon. "Oh, twenty-five hundred."
+
+"Huh!" says Mr. Ellins. "My secretary forgets my milk now and then, but
+he remembers such trifles as lapsed charters. He is drawing three
+thousand."
+
+I hope Marcus T. didn't hear the gasp I lets out--I tried to smother it.
+And the first thing I does when we gets back into the limousine is to
+grin at the boss.
+
+"Whaddye mean, three thousand?" says I.
+
+"Dollars," says he. "Beginning to-day."
+
+"Z-z-z-zing!" says I. "Going up, up! And there I was plannin' to take a
+special course in trained nursin', so I could hold my job."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SWITCHING ARTS ON LEON
+
+
+Oh, sure! We're coming along grand. Did you think we'd be heavin' the
+blue willow-ware at each other by this time? No. We've hardly displayed
+any before-breakfast dispositions yet.
+
+Not that we confine ourselves to the coo vocabulary, or advertise any
+continuous turtle-dove act. Gettin' married ain't jellied our brains, I
+hope. Besides, we're busy. I've got a new gilt-edged job to fill, you
+know; and Vee, she has one of her own, too.
+
+Well, I can't say that her scheme of runnin' a Boots, Limited, has
+mesmerized all New York into havin' its shoe-shinin' done out. There's
+something about this cloth top and white gaiter craze that's puttin' a
+crimp in her perfectly good plans. But she's doin' fairly well, and she
+don't have to think up ways of killin' time.
+
+Course, we have a few other things to think about, too. Just learnin'
+how to live in New York is a merry little game all by itself. That's
+one of my big surprises. I'd thought all along it was so simple.
+
+But say, we've been gettin' wise to a few facts this last month or so,
+for we've been tryin' to dope out which one of the forty-nine varieties
+of New York's home-sweet-home repertoire was the kind for us. I don't
+mean we've been changin' our street number, or testin' out different
+four-room-and-bath combinations. The studio apartment I got at a bargain
+suits first rate. It's the meal proposition.
+
+First off, we decides gay and reckless that we'll breakfast and lunch in
+and take our dinners out. That listened well and seemed easy
+enough--until Vee got to huntin' up a two-handed, light-footed female
+party who could boil eggs without scorchin' the shells, dish up such
+things as canned salmon with cream sauce, and put a few potatoes through
+the French fry process, doublin' in bed-makin' and dust-chasin' durin'
+her spare time. That shouldn't call for any prize-winnin' graduate from
+a cookin' college, should it?
+
+But say, the specimens that go in for general housework in this burg are
+a sad lot. I ain't goin' all through the list. I'll just touch lightly
+on Bertha.
+
+She was a cheerful soul, even when she was servin' soggy potatoes or
+rappin' me in the ear with her elbow as she reached across to fill my
+water glass.
+
+"He-he! Haw-haw! Oxcuse, Mister," was Bertha's repartee for such little
+breaks.
+
+Course, I could plead with her for the umpteenth time to try pourin'
+from the button hand side, but it would have been simpler to have worn a
+head guard durin' meals.
+
+And who would have the heart to put the ban on a yodel that begins in
+our kitchenette at 7 A.M., even on cloudy mornin's?
+
+If Bertha had been No. 1, or even No. 2, she'd have had her passports
+handed her about the second mornin'; but, as she was the last of a punk
+half dozen, we tried not to mind her musical interludes. So at the end
+of three weeks her friendly relations with us were still unbroken,
+though most of the dishes were otherwise.
+
+So you might have thought we'd been glad, when 6.30 P.M. came, to put on
+our things and join about a million or so other New Yorkers in findin' a
+dinner joint where the cooks and waiters made no claim to havin' an
+amateur standin'.
+
+But, believe me, while my domestic instincts may be sproutin' late,
+they're comin' strong. I'm beginnin' to yearn for nourishment that I
+don't have to learn the French for or pick off'm a menu. I'd like to eat
+without bein' surrounded by three-chinned female parties with high blood
+pressure, or bein' stared at by pop-eyed old sports who're givin' some
+kittenish cloak model a bright evenin'. And Vee feels more or less the
+same way.
+
+"Besides," says she, "I wish we could entertain some of our friends."
+
+"Just what I was wishin'," says I. "Say, couldn't we find a few simple
+things in the cook-book that Bertha couldn't queer?"
+
+"Such as canned baked beans and celery?" asks Vee, chucklin'. "And yet,
+if I stood by and read the directions to her--who knows?"
+
+"Let's try her on the Piddies," I suggests.
+
+Well, we did. And if the potatoes had been cooked a little more and the
+roast a little less, it wouldn't have been so bad. The olives were all
+right, even if Bertha did forget to serve 'em until she brought in the
+ice cream. But then, the Piddies are used to little slips like that,
+havin' lived so long out in Jersey.
+
+"You see," explains Vee to me afterwards, "Bertha was a bit flurried
+over her first dinner-party. She isn't much used to a gas oven, either.
+Don't you think we might try another?"
+
+"Sure!" says I. "What are friends for, anyway? How about askin' Mr. and
+Mrs. Robert Ellins?"
+
+"Oh, dear!" sighs Vee, lookin' scared. Then she is struck with a bright
+idea. "I'll tell you: we will rehearse the next one the night before."
+
+"Atta girl!" says I. "Swell thought."
+
+It was while she and Bertha was strugglin' over the cook-book, and
+gettin' advice from various sources, from housekeepin' magazines to the
+janitor's wife, that this Leon Battou party shows up with his sob
+hist'ry.
+
+"Oh, Torchy!" Vee hails me with, as I come home from the office here the
+other evenin'. "What becomes of people when they're dispossessed--when
+they're put out on the street with their things, you know?"
+
+"Why," says I, "they generally stay out until they can find a place
+where they can move in. Has anybody been threatenin' to chuck us out for
+not----"
+
+"Silly!" says she. "It's the Battous."
+
+"Don't know 'em," says I.
+
+"But surely," goes on Vee, "you've seen him. He's that funny little old
+Frenchman who's always dodging in and out of the elevator with
+odd-looking parcels under his arm."
+
+"Oh, yes!" says I. "The one with the twinklin' eyes and the curly
+iron-gray hair, who always bows so polite and shoots that bon-shure
+stuff at you. Him?"
+
+It was.
+
+It seems the agent had served notice on 'em that mornin'. They'd been
+havin' a grand pow-wow over it in the lower vestibule, when Vee had come
+along and got mixed up in the debate. She'd seen Mrs. Battou doin' the
+weep act on hubby's shoulder while he was tryin' to explain and makin'
+all sorts of promises. I expect the agent had heard such tales before.
+Anyway, he was kind of rough with 'em--at which Vee had sailed in and
+told him just what she thought.
+
+"I'm sure you would have done the same, Torchy," says she.
+
+"I might," says I, "if he hadn't been too husky. But what now?"
+
+"I told them not to worry a bit," says Vee, "and that when you came home
+you would tell them what to do. You will, won't you, Torchy?"
+
+Course, there was only one real sensible answer to that. Who was I, to
+step in casual and ditch a court order? But say, when the only girl in
+the universe tackles you with the clingin' clinch, hints that you're a
+big, brainy hero who can handle any proposition that's batted up to
+you--well, that's no time to be sensible.
+
+"I'll do any foolish little thing you name," says I.
+
+"Goody!" says Vee. "I just knew you would. We'll go right up and----"
+
+"Just a sec," says I. "Maybe I'd better have a private talk with this
+Mr. Battou first off. Suppose you run up and jolly the old lady while he
+comes down here."
+
+She agrees to that, and three minutes later I've struck a pose which is
+sort of a cross between that of a justice of the supreme court and a
+bush league umpire, while M. Leon Battou is sittin' on the edge of a
+chair opposite, conversin' rapid with both hands and a pair of eloquent
+eyebrows.
+
+"But consider, monsieur," he's sayin'. "Only because of owing so little!
+Can they not wait until I have found some good customers for my
+paintings?"
+
+"Oh! Then you're an artist, are you?"
+
+"I have the honor," says he. "I should be pleased to have you inspect
+some of my----"
+
+"It wouldn't help a bit," says I. "All I know about art is that as a
+rule it don't pay. Don't you do anything else?"
+
+He hunches his shoulders and spreads out both hands.
+
+"It is true, what you say of art," he goes on. "And so then I must do
+the decorating of walls--the wreaths of roses on the ceiling. That was
+my profession when we lived at Péronne. But here--there is trouble about
+the union. The greasy plumber will not work where I am, it seems. _Eh
+bien!_ I am forced out. So I return to my landscapes. Are there not many
+rich Americans who pay well for such things?"
+
+I waves him back into his chair.
+
+"How'd you come to wander so far from this Péronne place?" says I.
+
+"It was because of our son, Henri," says he. "You see, he preferred to
+be as my father was, a chef. I began that way, too. The Battous always
+do--a family of cooks. But I broke away. Henri would not. He became the
+pastry chef at the Hotel Gaspard in Péronne. And who shall say, too,
+that he was not an artist in his way? Yes, with a certain fame. At
+least, they heard here, in New York. You would not believe what they
+offered if he would leave Péronne. And after months of saying no he said
+yes. It was true. They paid as they promised--more. So Henri sends for
+us to come also. We found him living like a prince. Truly! For more than
+three years we enjoyed his good fortune.
+
+"And then--_la guerre_! Henri must go to join his regiment. True, he
+might have stayed. But we talked not of that. It was for France. So he
+went, not to return. Ah, yes! At Ypres, after only three months in the
+trenches. Then I say to the little mother, 'Courage! I, Leon Battou, am
+still a painter. The art which has been as a pastime shall be made to
+yield us bread. You shall see.' Ah, I believed--then."
+
+"Nothing doing, eh?" says I.
+
+Battou shakes his head.
+
+"Well," says I, "the surest bet just now would be to locate some
+wall-frescoin'. I'll see what can be done along that line."
+
+"Ah, that is noble of you, young man," exclaims Battou. "It is wonderful
+to find such a friend. A thousand thanks! I will tell the little mother
+that we are saved."
+
+With that he shakes me by both hands, gives me a bear hug, and rushes
+off.
+
+Pretty soon Vee comes down with smiles in her eyes.
+
+"I just knew you would find a way, Torchy," says she. "You don't know
+how happy you've made them. Now tell me all about it."
+
+And say, I couldn't convince her I hadn't done a blamed thing but shoot
+a little hot air, not after I'd nearly gone hoarse explainin'.
+
+"Oh, but you will," says she. "You'll do something."
+
+Who could help tryin', after that? I tackles the agent with a
+proposition that Battou should work out the back rent, but he's a
+fish-eyed gink.
+
+"Say," he growls out past his cigar, "if we tried to lug along every
+panhandling artist that wanted to graft rent off us, we'd be in fine
+shape by the end of the year, wouldn't we? Forget it."
+
+"How about his art stuff?" I asks Vee, when I got back.
+
+"Oh, utterly hopeless," says she. "But one can't tell him so. He doesn't
+know how bad it is. I suppose he is all right as a wall decorator. Do
+you know, Torchy, they must be in serious straits. Those two little
+rooms of theirs are almost bare, and I'm sure they've been living on
+cheese and crackers for days. What do you think I've done?"
+
+"Sent 'em an anonymous ham by parcels post?" says I.
+
+"No," says Vee. "I'm going to have them down to-night for the rehearsal
+dinner."
+
+"Fine dope!" says I. "And if they survive bein' practiced on----"
+
+But Vee has skipped off to the kitchenette without waitin' to hear the
+rest.
+
+"Is this to be a reg'lar dress rehearsal?" I asks, when I comes home
+again. "Should I doll up regardless?"
+
+Yes, she says I must. I was just strugglin' into my dinner coat, too,
+when the bell rings. I expect Vee had forgot to tell 'em that
+six-forty-five was our reg'lar hour. And say, M. Leon was right there
+with the boulevard costume--peg-top trousers, fancy vest, flowin' tie,
+and a silk tile. As for Madame Battou, she's all in gray and white.
+
+I'd towed 'em into the studio, and was havin' 'em shed their things,
+when Vee bounces in out of the kitchenette and announces impetuous:
+
+"Oh, Torchy! We've made a mess of everything. That horrid leg of lamb
+won't do anything but sozzle away in the pan; the string-beans have been
+scorched; and--oh, goodness!"
+
+She'd caught sight of our guests.
+
+"Please don't mind," says Vee. "We're not very good cooks, Bertha and I.
+We--we've spoiled everything, I guess."
+
+She's tryin' to be cheerful over it. And she sure is a picture, standin'
+there with a big apron coverin' up most of her evenin' dress, and her
+upper lip a bit trembly.
+
+"Buck up, Vee," says I. "Better luck next time. Chuck the whole shootin'
+match into the discards, and we'll all chase around to Roverti's
+and----"
+
+"Bother Roverti's!" breaks in Vee. "Can't we ever have a decent dinner
+in our own home? Am I too stupid for that? And there's that perfectly
+gug-good l-l-l-leg of--of----"
+
+"Pardon," says M. Battou, steppin' to the front; "but perhaps, if you
+would permit, I might assist with--with the lamb."
+
+It's a novel idea, I admit. No wonder Vee gasps a little.
+
+"Why not?" says I. "Course it ain't reg'lar, but if Mr. Battou wants to
+do some expert coachin', I expect you and Bertha could use it."
+
+"Do, Leon," urges Madame Battou. "Lamb, is it? Oh, he is wonderful with
+lamb."
+
+She hadn't overstated the case, either. Inside of two minutes he has his
+coat off, a bath towel draped over his fancy vest, and has sent Bertha
+skirmishin' down the avenue for garlic, cloves, parsley, carrots, and a
+few other things that had been overlooked, it seems.
+
+Well, we stands grouped around the kitchenette door for a while,
+watchin' him resuscitate that pale-lookin' leg of lamb, jab things into
+it, pour stuff over it, and mesmerize the gas oven into doin' its full
+duty.
+
+Once he gets started, he ain't satisfied with simply turnin' out the
+roast. He takes some string-beans and cuts 'em into shoelaces; he
+carves rosettes out of beets and carrots; he produces a swell salad out
+of nothing at all; and with a little flour and whipped cream he throws
+together some kind of puffy dessert that looked like it would melt in
+your mouth.
+
+And by seven-thirty we was sittin' down to a meal such as you don't meet
+up with outside of some of them Fifth Avenue joints where you have to
+own a head waiter before they let you in.
+
+"Whisper, Professor," says I, "did you work a spell on it, or what?"
+
+"Ah-h-h!" says Battou, chucklin' and rubbin' his hands together. "It is
+cooked _à la Paysan_, after the manner of Péronne, and with it is the
+sauce château."
+
+"That isn't mere cookery," says Vee; "that's art."
+
+It was quite a cheery evenin'. And after the Battous had gone, Vee and I
+asked each other, almost in chorus: "Do you suppose he'd do it again?"
+
+"He will if I'm any persuader," says I. "Wouldn't it be great to spring
+something like that on Mr. Robert?"
+
+And while I'm shavin' next mornin' I connect with the big idea. Do you
+ever get 'em that way? It cost me a nick under the ear, but I didn't
+care. While I'm usin' the alum stick I sketches out the scheme for Vee.
+
+"But, Torchy!" says she. "Do you think he would--really?"
+
+Before I can answer there's a ring at the door, and here is M. Leon
+Battou.
+
+"The agent once more!" says he, producin' a paper. "In three days, it
+says. But you have found me the wall-painting, yes?"
+
+"Professor," says I, "I hate to say it, but there's nothin' doing in the
+free-hand fresco line--absolutely."
+
+He slumps into a chair, and that pitiful, hunted look settles in his
+eyes.
+
+"Then--then we must go," says he.
+
+"Listen, Professor," says I, pattin' him soothin' on the shoulder. "Why
+not can this art stuff, that nobody wants, and switch to somethin'
+you're a wizard at?"
+
+"You--you mean," says he, "that I should--should turn chef? I--Leon
+Battou--in a big noisy hotel kitchen? Oh, but I could not. No, I could
+not!"
+
+"Professor," says I, "the only person in this town that I know of who's
+nutty enough to want to hire a wall decorator reg'lar is me!"
+
+"You!" gasps Battou, starin' around at our twelve by eighteen
+livin'-room.
+
+I nods.
+
+"What would you take it on for as a steady job?"
+
+"Oh, anything that would provide for us," says he, eager. "But how----"
+
+"That's just the point," says I. "When you wasn't paintin' could you
+cook a little on the side? Officially you'd be a decorator, but between
+times---- Eh?"
+
+He's a keen one, Mr. Battou.
+
+"For so charming young people," says he, bowin' low, "it would be a
+great pleasure. And the little mother--ah, you should see what a manager
+she is! She can make a franc go farther. Could she assist also?"
+
+"Could she!" exclaims Vee. "If she only would!"
+
+Well, say, inside of half an hour we'd fixed up the whole deal, I'd
+armed Battou with a check to shove under the nose of that agent, and Vee
+had given Bertha her permanent release. And believe me, compared to what
+was put before Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellins that evenin', the dress
+rehearsal dinner looked like Monday night at an actors' boardin'-house.
+
+"I say," whispers Mr. Robert, "your cook must be a real artist."
+
+"That's how he's carried on the family payroll," says I.
+
+"Of course," says Vee afterwards, "while we can afford it, I suppose, it
+does seem scandalously extravagant for us to have cooking like that
+every day."
+
+"Rather than have you worried with any more Bunglin' Berthas," says I,
+"I'd subsidize the whole of Péronne to come over. And just think of all
+I'll save by not havin' to buy my hat back from the coat-room boys every
+night."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A RECRUIT FOR THE EIGHT-THREE
+
+
+Have you a shiny little set of garden tools in your home? Have we? Well,
+I should seed catalogue. Honest to goodness! Here! I can show you a
+local time-table and my commuter's ticket. How about that, eh, for me?
+
+And I don't know now just what it was worked the sudden shift for
+us--the Battous, or our visit to the Robert Ellinses', or meetin' up
+with MacGregor Shinn, the consistent grouch.
+
+It begun with window-boxes. Professor Leon Battou, our official wall
+decorator and actin' cook, springs 'em on me timid one day after lunch.
+It had been some snack, too--onion soup sprinkled with croutons and
+sprayed with grated cheese; calf's brains _au buerre noir_; a mixed
+salad; and a couple of gooseberry tarts with the demi-tasse. Say, I'm
+gettin' so I can eat in French, even if I can't talk it.
+
+And while all that may listen expensive, I have Vee's word for it that
+since Madame Battou has been doin' the marketin' the high cost of
+livin' has been jarred off the roost. I don't know how accurate
+Professor Leon is at countin' up the calories in every meal, but I'm
+here to announce that he always produces something tasty, with no
+post-prandial regrets concealed in the bottom of the casserole.
+
+"Professor," says I, "I've been a stranger to this burry brains style of
+nourishment a long time, but you can ring an encore on that whenever you
+like."
+
+He smiles grateful, but shakes his head.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur," says he,--oh, yes, just like that,--"but if I had the
+fresh chives, the--the _fin herbes_--ah, then you should see!"
+
+"Well, can't Madame get what you need at the stores?" says I.
+
+"But at such a price!" says Leon. "And of so discouraging a quality.
+While, if we had but a few handfuls of good soil in some small boxes by
+the windows---- Come, I will show you. Here, and here, where the sun
+comes in the morning. I could secure them myself if you would not think
+them unlovely to have in view."
+
+"How about it, Vee?" I asks. "Are we too proud to grow our soup greens
+on the premises?"
+
+She says we ain't, so I tells Leon to breeze ahead with his hangin'
+garden. Course, I ain't lookin' for anything more'n a box on the ledge.
+But he's an ingenious old boy, Leon. With a hammer and saw and a few
+boxes from the grocery, he builds a rack that fits into one of the front
+windows; and the first thing I know, he has the space chuckful of
+shallow trays, and seeds planted in every one. A few days later, and the
+other window is blocked off similar. Also I get a bill from the florist
+for two bushels of dirt.
+
+Well, our front windows did look kind of odd, and our view out was
+pretty well barred off; but he had painted the things up neat, and he
+did all his waterin' and fussin' around early in the mornin', so we let
+it ride. When he starts in to use our bedroom windows the same way,
+though, I has to call him off.
+
+"See here, Professor," says I, "you ain't mistakin' this studio
+apartment for a New Jersey truck-farm, are you! Besides, we have to keep
+them windows open at night, and your green stuff is apt to get nipped."
+
+"Oh, but the night air is bad to breathe, Monsieur," says he.
+
+"Not for us," says I. "Anyway, we're used to it, so I guess you'll have
+to lay off this bedroom garden business."
+
+He takes away the boxes, but it's plain he's disappointed. I believe if
+I'd let him gone on he'd had cabbages growin' on the mantelpiece, a
+lettuce bed on the readin'-table, and maybe a potato patch on the
+fire-escape. I never knew gardenin' could be made such an indoor sport.
+
+"Poor chap!" says Vee. "He has been telling me what wonderful things he
+used to raise when he lived in Péronne. Isn't there some way, Torchy,
+that we could give him more room?"
+
+"We might rent the roof and glass it in for him," I suggests, "or get a
+permit to bridge over the street."
+
+"Silly!" says she, rumplin' my red hair reckless.
+
+That was about the time we was havin' some of that delayed winter
+weather, and it was touchin' to see Professor Battou nurse along them
+pale green shoots that he'd coaxed up in his window-boxes. Then it runs
+off warm and sunny again, just as we gets this week-end invite from Mr.
+Robert.
+
+Course, I'd been out to his Long Island place before, but somehow I
+hadn't got excited over it. This time it's different. Vee was goin'
+along, for one thing. And I expect the fact that spring had come
+bouncin' in on us after a hard winter had something to do with our
+enthusiasm for gettin' out of town. You know how it is. For eleven
+months you're absolutely sure the city's the only place to live in, and
+you feel sorry for them near-Rubes who have to catch trains to get home.
+And then, all of a sudden, about this time of year, you get that
+restless feelin', and wonder what it is ails you. I think it struck Vee
+harder than it did me.
+
+"Goody!" says she, when I tell her we're expected to go out Saturday
+noon and stay over until Monday mornin'. "It is real country out there,
+too, isn't it?"
+
+"Blamed near an hour away," says I. "Ought to be, hadn't it?"
+
+"I hope they have lilac bushes in bloom," says Vee. "Do you know,
+Torchy, if I lived in the country, I'd have those if nothing else.
+Wouldn't you?"
+
+"I expect so," says I, "though I ain't doped out just what I would do in
+a case like that. It ain't seemed worth while. But if lilacs are the
+proper stunt for a swell country place, I'll bet Mr. Robert's got 'em."
+
+By the time we'd been shot out to Harbor Hills station, though, I'd
+forgot whether it was lilacs or lilies-of-the-valley that Vee was
+particular about; for Mr. Robert goes along with us, and he's joshin'
+us about our livin' in a four-and-bath and sportin' a French chef.
+
+"Really," says he, "to live up to him you ought to move into a brewer's
+palace on Riverside Drive, at least."
+
+"Oh, Battou would be satisfied if I'd lease Madison Square park for him,
+so he could raise onions," says I.
+
+Which reminds Mr. Robert of something.
+
+"Oh, I say!" he goes on. "You must see my garden. I'm rather proud of
+it, you know."
+
+"Your garden!" says I, grinnin'. "You don't mean you've been gettin' the
+hoe and rake habit, Mr. Robert?"
+
+Honest, that's the last thing you'd look for from him, for until he got
+married about the only times he ever strayed from the pavements was when
+he went yachtin'. But by the way he talks now you'd think farmer was his
+middle name.
+
+"Now, over there," says he, after we've been picked up at the station by
+his machine and rolled off three or four miles, "over there I am raising
+a crop of Italian clover to plow in. That's a new hedge I'm setting out,
+too--hydrangeas, I think. It takes time to get things in shape, you
+see."
+
+"Looks all right to me, as it is," says I. "You got a front yard big
+enough to get lost in."
+
+Also the house ain't any small shack, with all its dormers and striped
+awnin's and deep verandas.
+
+But it's too nice an afternoon to spend much time inside, and after
+we've found Mrs. Robert, Vee asks to be shown the garden.
+
+"Certainly," says Mr. Robert. "I will exhibit it myself. That is--er--by
+the way, Gertrude, where the deuce is that garden of ours?"
+
+Come to find out, it was Mrs. Robert who was the pie-plant and radish
+expert. She could tell you which rows was beets and which was corn
+without lookin' it up on her chart.
+
+She'd been takin' a course in landscape-gardenin', too; and as she
+pilots us around the grounds, namin' the different bushes and things,
+she listens like a nursery pamphlet. And Vee falls for it hard.
+
+"How perfectly splendid," says she, "to be able to plan things like
+that, and to know so many shrubs by their long names. But haven't you
+anything as common as lilacs!"
+
+Mrs. Robert laughs and shakes her head.
+
+"They were never mentioned in my course, you see," says she. "But our
+nearest neighbor has some wonderful lilac bushes. Robert, don't you
+think we might walk down the east drive and ask your dear friend Mr.
+MacGregor Shinn if he'd mind----"
+
+"Decidedly no," cuts in Mr. Robert. "I'd much prefer not to trouble Mr.
+Shinn at all."
+
+"Oh, very well," says Mrs. Robert. And then, turnin' to us: "We haven't
+been particularly fortunate in our relations with Mr. Shinn; our fault,
+no doubt."
+
+But you know Vee. Half an hour later, when we've been left to ourselves,
+she announces:
+
+"Come along, Torchy. I am going to find that east drive."
+
+"It's a case of lilacs or bust, eh?" says I. "All right; I'm right
+behind you. But let's make it a sleuthy getaway, so they won't know."
+
+We let on it was a risky stunt, slippin' out a side terrace door,
+dodgin' past the garage, and finally strikin' a driveway different from
+the one we'd come in by. We follows along until we fetches up by some
+big stone gateposts.
+
+"There they are!" exclaims Vee. "Loads of them. And aren't they
+fragrant? Smell, Torchy."
+
+"I am," says I, sniffin' deep. "Don't you hear me?"
+
+"Yes; and that Mr. Shinn will too, if you're as noisy as that over it,"
+says she. "I suppose that is where he lives. Isn't it the cutest little
+cottage?"
+
+"It needs paint here and there," says I.
+
+"I know," says Vee. "But look at that old Dutch roof with the wide
+eaves, and the recessed doorway, and the trellises on either side, and
+that big clump of purple lilacs nestling against the gable end. Oh, and
+there's a cunning little pond in the rear, just where it ought to be! I
+do wish we might go in and walk around a bit."
+
+"Why not?" says I. "What would it hurt?"
+
+"But that Shinn person," protests Vee, "might--might not----"
+
+"Well, he couldn't any more'n shoo us off," says I, "and if he's nutty
+enough to do that after a good look at you, then he's hopeless."
+
+"You absurd boy!" says Vee, squeezin' my hand. "Well, anyway, we might
+venture in a step or two."
+
+As a matter of fact, there don't seem to be anyone in sight. You might
+almost think nobody lived there; for the new grass ain't been cut, the
+flower beds are full of dry weeds left over from last fall, and most of
+the green shutters are closed.
+
+There's smoke comin' from the kitchen chimney, though, so we wanders
+around front, bringin' up under the big lilac bush. It's just covered
+with blossoms--a truck-load, I should say; and it did seem a shame, Vee
+bein' so strong for 'em, that she couldn't have one little spray.
+
+"About a quarter a bunch, them would be on Broadway," says I, diggin' up
+some change. "Well, here's where Neighbor Shinn makes a sale."
+
+And, before Vee can object, I've snapped off the end of a twig.
+
+I'd just dropped the quarter in an envelop and was stickin' it on the
+end of the broken branch, when the front door opens, and out dashes this
+tall gink with the rusty Vandyke and the hectic face. Yep, it's a lurid
+map, all right. Some of it might have been from goin' without a hat in
+the wind and weather, for his forehead and bald spot are just as
+high-colored as the rest; but there's a lot of temper tint, too,
+lightin' up the tan, and the deep furrows between the eyes shows it
+ain't an uncommon state for him to be in. Quite a husk he is, costumed
+in a plaid golf suit, and he bores down on us just as gentle as a
+tornado.
+
+"I say, you!" he calls out. "Stop where you are."
+
+"Don't hurry," says I. "We'll wait for you."
+
+"Ye will, wull ye!" he snarls, as he comes stampin' up in front of us.
+"Ye'd best. And what have ye there, Miss? Hah! Pickin' me posies, eh?
+And trespassin', too."
+
+"That's right," says I. "Petty larceny and breakin' and enterin'. I'm
+the guilty party."
+
+"I'm sure there's nothing to make such a fuss about," says Vee, eyin'
+him scornful.
+
+"Oh, ho!" says he. "It's a light matter, I suppose, prowling around
+private grounds and pilfering? I ought to be taking it as a joke, eh?
+Don't ye know, you two, I could have you taken in charge for this?"
+
+"Breeze ahead, then," says I. "Call the high sheriff. Only let's not get
+all foamed up over it, Mr. MacGregor Shinn."
+
+"Ha!" says he. "Then ye know who I am? Maybe you're stopping up at the
+big house?"
+
+"We are guests of Mr. Ellins, your neighbor," puts in Vee.
+
+"He's no neighbor of mine," snaps Shinn. "Not him. His bulldog worries
+me cat, his roosters wake me up in the morning, and his Dago workmen
+chatter about all day long. No, I'll not own such a man as neighbor. Nor
+will I have his guests stealing my posies."
+
+"Then take it," says Vee, throwing the lilac spray on the ground.
+
+"You'll find a quarter stuck on the bush," says I. "Sorry, MacGregor, we
+couldn't make a trade. The young lady is mighty fond of lilacs."
+
+"Is she, now?" says Shinn, still scowlin' at us.
+
+"And she thinks your place here is pretty cute," I adds.
+
+"It's a rotten hole," says he.
+
+"Maybe you're a poor judge," says I. "If it was fixed up a bit I should
+think it might be quite spiffy."
+
+"What call has an old bachelor to be fixing things up?" he demands.
+"What do I care how the place looks? And what business is it of yours,
+anyway?"
+
+"Say, you're a consistent grouch, ain't you?" says I, givin' him the
+grin. "What's the particular trouble--was you toppin' your drive
+to-day?"
+
+"Slicin', mon," says he. "Hardly a tee shot found the fairway the whole
+round. And then you two come breaking me bushes."
+
+"My error," says I. "But you should have hung out a sign that you was
+inside chewin' nails."
+
+"I was doing nothing of the kind," says he. "I was waiting for that
+grinning idiot, Len Hung, to give me me tea."
+
+"Well, don't choke over it when you do get it," says I. "And if you
+ain't ready to sic the police on us we'll be trotting along back."
+
+"Ye wull not," says MacGregor; "ye'll have tea with me."
+
+It sounds like a threat, and I can see Vee gettin' ready to object
+strenuous. So I gives her the nudge.
+
+I expect it's because I'm so used to Old Hickory's blowin' out a fuse
+that I don't duck quicker when a gas-bomb disposition begins to sputter
+around. They don't mean half of it, these furious fizzers.
+
+Sometimes it's sciatica, more often a punk digestion, and seldom pure
+cussedness. If you don't humor 'em by comin' back messy yourself, but
+just jolly 'em along, they're apt to work out of it. And I'd seen sort
+of a human flicker in them blue-gray eyes of MacGregor Shinn's.
+
+"Vee," says I, "our peevish friend is invitin' us to take tea with him.
+Shall we chance it?"
+
+And you know what a good sport Vee is. She lets the curve come into her
+mouth corners again, both of her cheek dimples show, and she shoots a
+quizzin' smile at Mr. Shinn.
+
+"Does he say it real polite?" she asks.
+
+"Na," says MacGregor. "But there'll be hot scones and marmalade."
+
+"M-m-m-m!" says Vee. "Let's, Torchy."
+
+It's an odd finish to an affair that started so scrappy. Not that Shinn
+reverses himself entirely, or turns from a whiskered golf grump into a
+stage fairy in spangled skirts. He goes right on with his growlin' and
+grumblin'--about the way his Chink cook serves the tea, about havin' to
+live in a rotten hole like Harbor Hills, about everything in general.
+But a great deal of it is just to hear himself talk, I judge.
+
+We had a perfectly good high tea, and them buttered scones with
+marmalade couldn't be beat. Also he shows us all over the house, and Vee
+raves about it.
+
+"Look, Torchy!" says she. "That glimpse of water from the living-room
+windows. Isn't that dear? And one could have such a wonderful garden
+beyond. Such a splendid big fireplace, too. And what huge beams in the
+ceiling! It's a very old house, isn't it, Mr. Shinn?"
+
+"The rascally agent who sold it to me said it was," says MacGregor, "but
+I wouldn't believe a word of his on any subject. 'Did I ask you for an
+old house, at all?' I tells him. For what I wanted was just a place
+where I could live quiet, and maybe have me game of golf when I wanted
+it. But here I've gone off me game; and, besides, the country's no place
+to live quiet in. I should be in town, so I should, like any decent
+white man. I've a mind to look up a place at once. Try another scone,
+young lady."
+
+So it was long after six before we got away, and the last thing
+MacGregor does is to load Vee down with a whole armful of lilac
+blossoms.
+
+I suppose Mr. and Mrs. Robert thought we'd been makin' a wholesale raid
+when they saw us comin' in with the plunder. Mrs. Robert almost turns
+pale.
+
+"Mercy!" says she. "You don't mean to say you got all those from our
+neighbor's bushes, do you?"
+
+"Uh-huh," says I. "We've been mesmerizin' MacGregor. He's as tame a
+Scot now as you'd want to see."
+
+They could hardly believe it, and when they heard about our havin' tea
+with him they gasped.
+
+"Of all persons!" says Mrs. Robert. "Why, he has been glaring at us for
+a year, and sending us the most bristling messages. I don't understand."
+
+Mr. Robert, though, winks knowin'.
+
+"Some of Torchy's red-headed diplomacy, I suspect," says he. "I must
+engage you to make our peace with MacGregor."
+
+That's all we saw of him, though, durin' our stay. For one thing, we was
+kept fairly busy. I never knew you could have so much fun in the
+country. Ever watch a bunch of young ducks waddlin' about? Say, ain't
+they a circus! And them fluffy little chicks squabblin' over worms.
+Honest, I near laughed myself sick. Vee was for luggin' some of 'em home
+to the apartment. But she was thrilled over 'most everything out there,
+from the fat robins on the lawn to the new leaves on the trees.
+
+And, believe me, when we gets back to town again, our studio apartment
+seems cramped and stuffy. We talked over everything we'd seen and done
+at the Ellinses'.
+
+"That's really living, isn't it?" says Vee.
+
+"Why not," says I, "with a twenty-room house, and grounds half as big as
+Central Park?"
+
+"I know," says Vee. "But a little place like Mr. Shinn's would be large
+enough for us."
+
+"I expect it would," says I. "You don't really think you'd like to live
+out there, do you, though?"
+
+"Wouldn't I!" says Vee, her eyes sparklin'. "I'd love it."
+
+"What would you do all day alone?" I suggests.
+
+"I'd raise ducks and chickens and flowers," says Vee. "And Leon could
+have a garden. Just think!"
+
+Yep--I thought. I must have kept awake hours that night, tryin' not to.
+And the more I mulled it over---- Well, in the mornin' I had a talk with
+Mr. Robert, after which I got busy with the long-distance 'phone. I
+didn't say anything much at lunch about what I'd done, but around three
+o'clock I calls up the apartment.
+
+"I'm luggin' home someone to dinner," says I. "Guess who?"
+
+Vee couldn't.
+
+"MacGregor the grouch," says I.
+
+"Really!" says Vee. "How funny!"
+
+"It's part of the plot," says I. "Tell the Professor to spread himself
+on the eatings, and have the rooms all fixed up slick."
+
+Vee says she will. And she does. MacGregor falls for it, too. You should
+have seen him after dinner, leanin' back comfortable in our biggest
+chair, sippin' his coffee, and puffin' one of Old Hickory's special
+perfectos that I'd begged for the occasion.
+
+And still I didn't let on. What I'm after is to have him spring the
+proposition on me. Just before he's ready to go, too, he does.
+
+"I say," says he casual, "this isn't such a bad hole you have here."
+
+"Perfectly rotten," says I.
+
+"Then we might make a trade," says he. "What?"
+
+"There's no tellin'," says I. "You mean a swap, as things stand?"
+
+"That's it," says he. "I'm no hand for moving rubbish about."
+
+"Me either," says I. "But if you mean business, suppose you drop in
+to-morrow at the office, about ten-thirty, and talk it over."
+
+"Very well," says MacGregor. "I'll stop in town to-night."
+
+"Oh, Torchy!" says Vee, after he's gone. "Do--do you suppose he
+will--really?"
+
+"You're still for it, eh?" says I. "Sure, now?"
+
+"Oh, it would be almost too good to be true," says she. "That could be
+made just the dearest place!"
+
+"Yes," says I; "but my job is to talk MacGregor into lettin' it go
+cheap, or else we can't afford to touch it."
+
+Well, I can't claim it was all my smooth work that did the trick, for
+MacGregor had bought the place at a bargain first off, and now he was
+anxious to unload. Still, he hadn't been born north of Glasgow for
+nothing. But the figures Mr. Robert said would be about right I managed
+to shade by twenty per cent., and my lump invoice of that old mahogany
+of ours maybe was a bit generous. Anyway, when I goes home that night I
+tosses Vee a long envelop.
+
+"What's this?" says she.
+
+"That's your chicken permit," says I. "All aboard for Lilac Lodge! Gee!
+I wonder should I grow whiskers, livin' out there?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+TORCHY IN THE GAZINKUS CLASS
+
+
+I expect I'll get used to it all in time. This rural stuff, I mean. But
+it ain't goin' to come easy. When you've been brought up to think of
+home as some place where you've got a right to leave your trunk as long
+as you pay the rent prompt,--a joint where you have so many square feet
+of space on a certain floor, and maybe eight or ten inches of brick and
+plaster between you and a lot of strangers,--and then all of a sudden
+you switch to a whole house that's all yours, with gobs of land all
+around it, and trees and bushes and things that you can do what you like
+with--well, it's sort of staggerin' at first.
+
+Why, the day Vee and I moved into this Harbor Hills place that I'd made
+the swift trade for with MacGregor Shinn, we just had our baggage dumped
+in the middle of the livin'-room, chucked our wraps on some chairs, and
+went scoutin' around from one room to another for over an hour, kind of
+nutty and excited.
+
+"Oh, look, Torchy!" Vee would exclaim about twice a minute when she
+discovered something new.
+
+You know, we'd been in the house only once before, and then we'd looked
+around just casual. And if you want to find out how little you really
+see when you think you're lookin', you want to make a deal like that
+once--buy a joint just as it stands, and then, a few days after, camp
+down in it and tot up what you've really got. Why, say, you'd 'most
+thought we'd been blindfolded that first time.
+
+Course, this was different. Now we was takin' stock, you might say, of
+the things we was goin' to live with. And, believe me, I never had any
+idea I'd ever own such a collection, or so big a slice of the U. S. A.
+
+"Only think, Torchy," says Vee, after we've made the rounds inside. "Ten
+rooms, just for us!"
+
+"Twelve, countin' the cellar and attic," says I. "But there's more
+outside, ain't there?"
+
+Yep, there was. There was an old stable that had been turned into a
+garage, with a couple of rooms finished off upstairs. Then there was a
+carriage shed, with more rooms over that, also a chicken house beyond.
+And stowed away in odd corners was all kinds of junk that might be more
+or less useful to have: a couple of lawn-mowers, an old sleigh hoisted
+up on the rafters of the carriage house, a weird old buggy, a plow, a
+grindstone, a collection of old chairs and sofas that had seen better
+days, a birch-bark canoe--things like that.
+
+Then there was our lily pond. We had to walk all round that, poke in
+with a pole to see how deep it might be, and wonder if there was any
+fish in it. On beyond was some trees--apple and pear and cherry,
+accordin' to Vee, and 'way at the back a tall cedar hedge.
+
+"Why, it's almost an estate," says Vee. "Nearly five acres, you know.
+How does it seem, Torchy, to think that all this is ours?"
+
+"How?" says I. "Why, I feel like I was the Grand Gazinkus of Gazook."
+
+But, at that, my feelin's wa'n't a marker to the emotions Professor Leon
+Battou, our artist-chef, manages to work up. He's so tickled at gettin'
+back to the country and away from the city, where him and Madame Battou
+come so near starvin' on the street, that he goes skippin' around like a
+sunshine kid, pattin' the trees, droppin' down on his hands and knees in
+the grass to dig up dandelions, and keepin' up a steady stream of
+explosive French and rapid-fire English.
+
+"Ah, but it is all so good!" says he. "_Le bleu ciel, les fleurs, les
+oiseaux! C'est bonne, tres bonne. Ne c'est pas?_"
+
+"I expect it is, Leon," says I. "Although I might not state it just that
+way myself. Picked out a spot yet for your garden?"
+
+Foolish question! That was his first move, after taking a glance at the
+particular brand of cook-stove he'd got to wrestle with. Just to the
+left of the kitchen wing is a little plot shut in by privet bushes and a
+trellis, which is where he says the _fine herbes_ are meant to grow. He
+tows us around there and exhibits it chesty. Mostly it's full of last
+year's weeds; but he explains how he will soon have it in shape. And for
+the next week the only way we ever got any meals cooked was because
+Madame Battou used to go drag him in by the arm and make him quit
+diggin' long enough to hash up some of them tasty dishes for us.
+
+If all amateur gardeners are apt to go so dippy over it, I hope I don't
+catch the disease. No danger, I guess. I made my stab at it about the
+third day, when Vee wanted some ground spaded up for a pansy bed. And
+say, in half an hour, there, I'd worked up enough palm blisters and
+backache to last me a month. It may seem sport to some people, but to me
+it has all the ear-marks of plain, hard work, such as you can indulge
+in reg'lar by carryin' a foldin' dinner-pail and lettin' yourself out to
+a padrone.
+
+Leon, though, just couldn't seem to let it alone. He almost made a vice
+of it, to my mind. Why, say, he's out there at first crack of day,
+whenever that is; and in the evenin', as soon as he has served dinner,
+he sneaks out to put in a few more licks, and stays until it's so dark
+he can hardly find his way back.
+
+You know all them window-boxes he had clutterin' up the studio
+apartment. Well, he insists on cratin' every last one of 'em and
+expressin' 'em along; and now he has all that alleged lettuce and
+parsley and carrots and so on set out in neat little rows; and when he
+ain't sprinklin' 'em with the hose or dosin' 'em with fertilizer, he's
+out there ticklin' 'em with a rake.
+
+"Gee!" says I. "I thought all you had to do to a garden was just to
+chuck in the seeds and let 'em grow. But accordin' to your method it
+would be less trouble bringin' up a pair of twins."
+
+"Ah-h-h-h!" says he. "But monsieur has not the passion for growing green
+things."
+
+"Thanks be, then," says I. "It would land me in the liniment ward if I
+had."
+
+I must say, though, that Vee's 'most as bad with her flowers. Honest,
+when she shows me where she's planned to have this and that, and hints
+that I can get busy durin' my spare time with the spade, I almost wished
+we was back in town.
+
+"What?" I gasps. "Want me to excavate all that? Hal-lup!"
+
+"Pooh!" says Vee. "It will do you good."
+
+Maybe she thought so. But I knew it wouldn't. So I chases up the hill to
+the Ellins place, and broke in on Mr. Robert just as he's finishin'
+breakfast.
+
+"Say," says I, "you ain't got a baby-grand steam-shovel or anything like
+that around the place, have you?"
+
+He says he's sorry, but he ain't. When he hears what I'm up against,
+though, he comes to the rescue noble by lendin' me one of his expert
+Dago soil-disturbers, at $1.75 per--and with Vee bossin' him she got the
+whole job done in half a day. After that I begun to enjoy gardenin' a
+bit more. I'm gettin' to be a real shark at it, too. And ambitious! You
+ought to hear me.
+
+"How about havin' a couple more lanes of string-beans laid out?" I
+suggests. "And maybe a few hundred mounds of green corn, eh?"
+
+And then I can watch Joe start the enterprise with a plow and an old
+white horse, and I can go to the office feelin' that, no matter how much
+I seem to be soldierin', as a matter of fact I'm puttin' in a full day's
+work. When I get back in the afternoon, the first thing I want to see is
+how much I've got done.
+
+Not that I'm able to duck all kinds of labor that way. Believe me, a
+country place is no loafin' spot, especially when it's new, or you're
+new to it. Vee tends to that. Say, that girl can think up more odd forms
+of givin' me exercise than a bunch of football coaches--movin' bureaus,
+hangin' pictures, puttin' up curtain-rods, fixin' door-catches, and
+little things like that.
+
+Up to a few weeks ago all I knew about saws and screw-drivers and so on
+was that they were shiny things displayed in the hardware store windows.
+But if I keep on tacklin' all the odd jobs she sics me on to, I'll be
+able to qualify pretty soon as a boss carpenter, a master plumber, and
+an expert electrician.
+
+Course, I gouge myself now and then. My knuckles look like I'd been
+mixin' in a food riot, and I've spoiled two perfectly good suits of
+clothes. But I can point with pride to at least three doors that I've
+coaxed into shuttin', I've solved the mystery of what happens to a
+window-weight when the sash-cord breaks, and I've rigged up two
+drop-lights without gettin' myself electrocuted or askin' any advice
+from Mr. Edison.
+
+Which reminds me that what I can't seem to get used to about the country
+is the poor way it's lighted up at night. You know, our place is out a
+couple of miles from the village and the railroad station; and, while we
+got electric bulbs enough in the house, outside there ain't a lamp-post
+in sight. Dark! Say, after 8 P.M. you might as well be livin' in a
+sub-cellar with the sidewalk gratin' closed. Honest, the only glim we
+can see from our front porch is a flicker from the porte cochère at the
+Ellinses' up on the hill, and most of that is cut off by trees and lilac
+bushes.
+
+Vee don't seem to mind, though. These mild evenin's recent, she's
+dragged me out after dinner for a spell and made me sit with her
+watchin' for the moon to come up. I do it, but it ain't anything I'm
+strong for. I can't see the percentage in starin' out at nothing at all
+but black space and guessin' where the driveway is or what them dark
+streaks are. Then, there's so many weird sounds I can't account for.
+
+"What's all that jinglin' going on?" I asks the other evenin'. "Sounds
+like a squad of junkmen comin' up the pike."
+
+"Silly!" says Vee. "Frogs, of course."
+
+"Oh!" says I.
+
+Then I listens some more, until something else breaks loose. It's sort
+of a cross between the dyin' moan of a gyastacutus and the whine of a
+subway express roundin' a sharp curve.
+
+"For the love of Pete," I breaks out, "what do you call that?"
+
+Vee chuckles. "Didn't you see the calf up at Mr. Robert's?" she asks.
+"Well, that's the old cow calling to him."
+
+"If she feels as bad as that," says I, "I wish she'd wait until mornin'
+to express herself. That's the most doleful sound I ever heard. Come on;
+let's go in while you tinkle out something lively and cheerin' on the
+piano."
+
+I never thought I was one of the timid kind, either. Course, I'm no
+Carnegie hero, or anything like that; but I've always managed to get
+along in the city without developin' a case of nerves. Out here, though,
+it's different. Two or three evenin's now I've felt almost jumpy, just
+over nothing at all, it seems.
+
+Maybe that's why I didn't show up any better, here the other night, when
+Vee rings in this silent alarm on me. I was certainly poundin' my ear
+industrious when gradually I gets the idea that someone is shakin' me by
+the shoulders. It's Vee.
+
+"Torchy," she whispers husky. "Get up."
+
+"Eh?" says I, pryin' my eyes open reluctant. "Get up? Wha-wha' for?"
+
+"Oh, don't be stupid about it," says she. "I've been trying to rouse you
+for five minutes. Please get up and come to the window."
+
+"Nothing doing," says I snugglin' into the pillow again. "I--I'm busy."
+
+"But you must," says she. "Listen. I think someone is prowling around
+the house."
+
+"Let 'em ramble, then," says I. "What do we care?"
+
+"But suppose it's a--a burglar?" she whispers.
+
+I'll admit that gives me a goose-fleshy feelin' down the spine. It's
+such a disturbin' word to have sprung on you in the middle of the night.
+
+"Let's not suppose anything of the sort," says I.
+
+"But I'm sure I saw someone just now, when I got up to fix the shade,"
+insists Vee. "Someone who stepped out into the moonlight right there,
+between the shadows of those two trees. Then he disappeared out that
+way. Come and look."
+
+Well, I was up by then, and half awake, so I tries to peer out into the
+back yard. I'm all for grantin' a general alibi, though.
+
+"Maybe you was only dreamin', Vee," says I. "Anyway, let's wait until
+mornin', and then----"
+
+"There!" she breaks in excited. "Just beyond the garden trellis. See?"
+
+Yep. There's no denyin' that someone is sneakin' around out there. First
+off I thought it might be a female in a white skirt and a raincoat; but
+when we gets the head showin' plain above some bushes we can make out a
+mustache.
+
+"It's a man!" gasps Vee, clutchin' me by the sleeve.
+
+"Uh-huh," says I. "So it is."
+
+"Well?" says Vee.
+
+I expect that was my cue to come across with the bold and noble acts.
+But, somehow, I didn't yearn to dash out into the moonlight in my
+pajamas and mix in rough with a total stranger. But I didn't mean to
+give it away if I could help it.
+
+"Got a nerve, ain't he?" says I. "Let's wait; maybe he'll fall into the
+pond."
+
+"How absurd!" says Vee. "No; we must do something right away."
+
+"Of course," says I. "I'll shout and ask him what the blazes he thinks
+he's doin'."
+
+"Don't," says Vee. "There may be others--in the house. And before you
+let him know you see him, you ought to be armed. Get your revolver."
+
+At that I just gawped at Vee, for she knows well enough I don't own
+anything more deadly than a safety razor, and that all the gun-play I
+ever indulged in was once or twice at a Coney Island shootin' gallery
+where I slaughtered a clay pipe by aimin' at a glass ball.
+
+"Whaddye mean, revolver?" I asks.
+
+"S-s-s-sh!" says she. "There's that Turkish pistol, you know, that Mr.
+Shinn left hanging over the mantel in the living-room."
+
+"Think it's loaded?" I whispers.
+
+"It might be," says Vee. "Anyway, it's better than nothing. Let's get
+it."
+
+"All right," says I. "Soon as I get something on. Just a sec."
+
+So I jumps into a pair of trousers and a coat and some bath slippers,
+while Vee throws on a dressin'-sack. We feels our way sleuthy
+downstairs, and after rappin' my shins on a couple of rockers I gets
+down the old pistol. It's a curious, wicked-lookin' antique about two
+feet long, with a lot of carvin' and silver inlay on the barrel. I'd
+never examined the thing to see how it worked, but it feels sort of
+comfortin' just to grip it in my hand. We unlocks the back door easy.
+
+"Now you stay inside, Vee," says I, "while I go scoutin' and----"
+
+"No indeed," says Vee. "I am going too."
+
+"But you mustn't," I insists.
+
+"Hush!" says she. "I shall."
+
+And she did. So we begins our first burglar hunt as a twosome, and I
+must say there's other sports I enjoy more. Out across the lawn we
+sneaks, steppin' as easy as we can, and keepin' in the shadow most of
+the time.
+
+"Guess he must have skipped," says I.
+
+"But he was here only a moment ago," says Vee. "Don't you know, we saw
+him---- Oh, oh!"
+
+I don't blame her for gaspin'. Not twenty feet ahead of us, crouchin'
+down in the cabbage patch, is the villain. Just why he should be tryin'
+to hide among a lot of cabbage plants not over three inches high, I
+don't stop to think. All I knew was that here was someone prowlin'
+around at night on my premises, and all in a flash I begins to see red.
+Swingin' Vee behind me, I unlimbers the old pistol and cocks it. I
+didn't care whether this was the open season for burglars or not. I
+wanted to get this one, and get him hard.
+
+Must have been a minute or more that I had him covered, tryin' to steady
+my arm so I could keep the muzzle pointed straight at his back, when all
+of a sudden he lifts his right hand and begins scratchin' his ear.
+Somehow, that breaks the spell. Why should a burglar hump himself on his
+hands and knees in a truck patch and stop to scratch his ear?
+
+"Hey, you!" I sings out real crisp.
+
+Maybe that ain't quite the way to open a line of chat with a midnight
+marauder. I've been kidded about it some since; but at the time it
+sounded all right. And it had the proper effect. He comes up on his toes
+with his hands in the air, like he was worked by springs.
+
+"That's right; keep your paws up," says I. "And, remember, if you go to
+makin' any funny moves----"
+
+"Why, Torchy!" exclaims Vee, grabbin' my shootin' arm. "It's Leon!"
+
+"Wha-a-a-at!" says I, starin' at this wabbly party among the coldslaw.
+
+But it's Professor Battou, all right. He's costumed in a night-shirt, an
+old overcoat, and a pair of rubbers; and he certainly does look odd,
+standin' there in the moonlight with his elbows up and his knees
+knockin' one another.
+
+"Well, well, Leon!" says I, sighin' relieved. "So it's you, is it? And
+we had you all spotted as a second-story worker. All right; you don't
+need to hold the pose any longer. But maybe you'll tell us what you're
+crawlin' around out here in the garden for at this time of night."
+
+He tried to, but he's had such a scare thrown into him that his
+conversation works are all gummed up. After we've led him into the
+house, though, and he's had a drink of spring water, he does a little
+better.
+
+"It was to protect the cabbages, monsieur," says he.
+
+"Eh?" says I. "Protect 'em from what?"
+
+"There is a wicked worm," says Leon, "which does his evil work in the
+night. Ah, such a sly beast! And so destructive! Just at the top of the
+young root he eats--snip, snip! And in the morning I find that two,
+four, sometimes six tender plants he has cut off. I am enrage. 'Ha!' I
+say. 'I will discover you yet at your mischief.' So I cannot sleep for
+thinking. But I had found him; yes, two. And I was searching for more
+when monsieur----"
+
+"Yes, I know," says I. He's glancin' worried at the old pistol I'm still
+holdin' in my hand. "My error, Leon. I might have guessed. And as the
+clock's just strikin' three, I think we'd all better hit the hay again.
+Come on, Vee; it's all over."
+
+And, in spite of that half hour or so of time out, I was up earlier than
+usual in the mornin'. I had a little job to do that I'd planned out
+before I went to sleep again. As soon as I'm dressed I slips downstairs,
+takes that Turkish pistol, and chucks it into the middle of the pond.
+I'll never know whether it was loaded or not. I don't want to know. For
+if it had been---- Well, what's the use?
+
+Comin' back in through the kitchen, I finds Leon busy dishin' up toast
+and eggs. He glances at me nervous, and then hangs his head. But he gets
+out what he has to say man fashion.
+
+"I trust monsieur is not displeased," says he. "It was not wise for me
+to walk about at night. But those wicked worms! Still, if monsieur
+desires, it shall not occur again. I ask pardon."
+
+"Now, that's all right, Leon," says I soothin'. "Don't worry. When it
+comes to playin' the boob act, I guess we split about fifty-fifty. I'd a
+little rather you didn't, but if you must hunt the wicked worm at night,
+why, go to it. You won't run any more risk of being shot up by me. For
+I've disarmed."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+BACK WITH CLARA BELLE
+
+
+And me kiddin' myself I was fairly well parlor-broke. It seems not.
+You'd 'most think, though, I'd had enough front-room trainin' to stand
+me through in a place like Harbor Hills. I had a wild idea, too, that
+when we moved into the country we'd tagged the reg'lar social stuff
+good-by.
+
+That was a poor hunch. I'm just discoverin' that there's more tea fights
+and dinner dances and such goin's on out here in the commuter zone than
+in any five blocks of Fifth Avenue you can name. And it seems that
+anywhere within ten miles of this Piping Rock Club brings you into the
+most active sector. So here we are, right in the thick of things.
+
+At that, I expect it might have been quite some time before we was
+bothered any if it hadn't been for our bein' sort of backed by the
+Robert Ellinses. As their friends we're counted in right off the reel.
+I've been joshed into lettin' my name go on the waitin' list at the
+Country Club; I'm allowed to subscribe to this and that; some of the
+neighbors have begun payin' first calls on Vee.
+
+So I might have had sense enough to watch my step. Yet, here the other
+afternoon, when I makes an early getaway from the Corrugated and hops
+off the 5:17, I dashes across the back lots and comes into our place by
+the rear instead of the front drive. You see, I'd been watchin' a row of
+string-beans we had comin' along, and I wanted to spring the first ones
+on Vee. Sure enough, I finds three or four pods 'most big enough to eat;
+so I picks 'em and goes breezin' into the house, wavin' em gleeful.
+
+"Oh, Vee!" I sings out, openin' the terrace door. "Come have a look."
+
+And, as she don't appear on the jump, I keeps on into the livin'-room
+and calls:
+
+"Hey! What do you know about these? Beans! Perfectly good----"
+
+Well, that's as far as I gets, for there's Vee, sittin' behind the
+silver tea-urn, all dolled up; and Leon, in his black coat, holdin' a
+plate of dinky little cakes; and a couple of strange ladies starin' at
+me button-eyed. I'd crashed right into the midst of tea and callers.
+
+Do I pull some easy johndrew lines and exit graceful? Not me. My feet
+was glued to the rug.
+
+"Beans!" says I, grinnin' simple and danglin' the specimens. "Perfectly
+good string----"
+
+Then I catches the eye of the stiff-necked dame with the straight nose
+and the gun-metal hair. No, both eyes, it was; and a cold, suspicious,
+stabby look is what they shoots my way. No wonder I chokes off the
+feeble-minded remarks and turns sort of panicky to Vee, half expectin'
+to find her blushin' painful or signalin' me to clear out. Nothing like
+that from Vee, though.
+
+"Not ours, Torchy?" says she, slidin' out from behind the tea-table and
+rushin' over. "Not our very own?"
+
+"Uh-huh!" says I. "Just picked 'em."
+
+At which the other caller joins in unexpected.
+
+"From your own garden?" says she. "How interesting! Oh, do show them to
+me."
+
+"Why, sure," says I. "Guess we're doin' our bit, ain't we?"
+
+She's a wide, dumpy-built old girl, and dressed sort of freaky. Also her
+line of talk is a kind of purry, throaty gush that's almost too soothin'
+to be true. But anybody who makes only half a bluff at being interested
+in our garden wins us. And not until she's inspected our first
+string-beans through her gold lorgnette, and remarked twice more how
+wonderful it was for us to raise anything like that, does it occur to
+Vee to introduce me proper to both ladies.
+
+The tall, stiff-necked dame turns out to be Mrs. Pemberton Foote.
+Honest! Could you blame her for bein' jarred when I come bouncin' in
+with garden truck?
+
+Think of it! Why, she's one of the super-tax brigade and moves among the
+smartest of the smart-setters. And Pemmy, he's on the polo team, you
+know.
+
+Oh, reg'lar people, the Pembroke Footes are. And the very fact that Mrs.
+Foote is here callin' on Vee ought to have me thrilled to the bone.
+
+Yet all I got sense enough to do is wave half-grown string-beans at her,
+and then sit by gawpy, balancin' a cup of tea on my knee, and watch her
+apply the refrigeratin' process to the dumpy old girl whose name I
+didn't quite catch. Say, but she does it thorough and artistic. Only two
+or three times did the dumpy one try to kick in on the chat, and when
+she does, Mrs. Pemmy rolls them glittery eyes towards her slow, givin'
+her the up-and-down like she was some kind of fat worm that had strayed
+in from the cucumber bed.
+
+Can't these women throw the harpoon into each other ruthless, though?
+Why, you could see that old girl fairly squirm when she got one of them
+assault-and-battery glances. Her under lip would quiver a bit, she'd
+wink hard three or four times, and then she'd sort of collapse,
+smotherin' a sigh and not finishin' what she'd started out to say. She
+did want to be so folksy, too.
+
+Course, she's an odd-lookin' party, with that bucket-shaped lid
+decorated with pale green satin fruit, and the piles of thick blondine
+hair that was turnin' gray, and her foolish big eyes with the puffy
+rolls underneath and the crows'-feet in the corners. And of course
+anybody with ankles suggestin' piano legs really shouldn't go in for
+high-tide skirts and white silk stockin's with black butterflies worked
+on 'em. Should they?
+
+Still, she'd raved over our string-beans, so when she makes a last
+fluttery try at jimmyin' her way into the conversation, and Mrs. Foote
+squelches her prompt again, and she gives up for good, it's me jumpin'
+snappy to tow her out and tuck her in the limousine. Havin' made my
+escape, I stays outside until after Mrs. Pemmy has gone too, which
+don't happen for near half an hour later. But when I hears the front
+door shut on her, I sidles in at the back.
+
+"Zowie!" says I. "You must have made more of a hit with our swell
+neighbor than I did, Vee."
+
+Vee smiles quizzin' and shrugs her shoulders.
+
+"I'm not so sure," says she. "I almost feel as though we had been
+visited by the Probation Officer, or someone like that."
+
+"How do you mean?" says I.
+
+"Of course," she goes on, "Mrs. Foote did not actually say that we were
+on trial socially, but she hinted as much. And she made it quite plain
+that unless we got started in the right set our case would be utterly
+hopeless."
+
+"Just think of that!" says I. "Real sweet of her, eh? Sort of inspector
+general, is she? You should have asked her to show her badge, though."
+
+"Oh, there's no doubt that she speaks with authority," says Vee. "She
+wasn't snippy about it, either. And chiefly she was trying to warn me
+against Mrs. Ben Tupper."
+
+"The old girl with the pelican chin and the rovin' eyes?" I asks.
+"What's the matter with her besides her looks?"
+
+Well, accordin' to Mrs. Pemmy Foote, there was a lot. She had a past,
+for one thing. She was a pushing, presumptuous person, for another. And,
+besides, this Benjamin Tupper party--the male of the species--was wholly
+impossible.
+
+"You know who he is," adds Vee. "The tablet man."
+
+"What?" says I. "'Tupper's Tablets for Indigestion--on Everybody's
+Tongue.' Him?"
+
+Vee nods. "And they live in that barny stucco house just as you turn off
+Sagamore Boulevard--the one with the hideous red-tiled roof and the
+concrete lions in front."
+
+"Goodness Agnes!" says I. "Folks have been indicted for less than that.
+I've seen Tupper, too; someone pointed him out goin' in on the express
+only the other mornin'. Looks like a returned Nihilist who'd been
+nominated in one of the back wards of Petrograd to run for the Duma on a
+free-vodka platform. He's got wiry whiskers that he must trim with a
+pair of tin-shears, tufts in his ears, and the general build of a
+performin' chimpanzee. Oh, he's a rare one, Tupper."
+
+"Then," says Vee, sort of draggy, "I--I suppose Mrs. Foote is right.
+It's too bad, for that Mrs. Tupper did seem such a friendly old soul.
+And I shall feel so snobbish if I don't return her call."
+
+"Huh!" says I. "I don't see why Mrs. Pemmy couldn't let you find out
+about her for yourself. Even if the old girl don't belong, what's the
+use bein' so rough with her?"
+
+"Do you know, Torchy," says Vee, "I felt that way about it when Mrs.
+Foote was snubbing her. And yet--well, I wish I knew just what to do."
+
+"Clean out of my line," says I.
+
+I expect it was the roses that set me mullin' the case over again. They
+was sent over for Vee a couple of days later--half a dozen great
+busters, like young cabbages, with stems a yard long. They come with the
+compliments of Mrs. Ben Tupper.
+
+"I simply couldn't send them back," says Vee; "and yet----"
+
+"I get you," says I. "But don't worry. Let the thing ride a while. I got
+an idea."
+
+It wasn't anything staggerin'. It had just struck me that if Vee had to
+hand out any social smears she ought to do it on her own dope, and not
+accordin' to Mrs. Pemmy Foote's say-so. Which is why I begins pumpin'
+information out of anybody that came handy. Goin' into town next
+mornin', I tackled three or four on the 8:03 in an offhand way.
+
+Oh, yes, the Ben Tuppers! Business of hunchin' the shoulders. No, they
+didn't belong to the Country Club, nor the Hunt Association, nor figure
+on the Library or Hospital boards, or anything else. In fact, they don't
+mingle much. Hadn't made the grade. Barred? We-e-ell, in a way, perhaps.
+Why? Oh, there was Mrs. Ben. Wasn't she enough? An ex-actress with two
+or three hubbys in the discard! Could she expect people to swallow that?
+
+Only one gent, though, had anything definite to offer. He's a
+middle-aged sport that seems to make a specialty of wearin' checked
+suits and yellow gloves. He chuckles when I mentions Mrs. Tupper.
+
+"Grand old girl, Clara Belle," says he.
+
+"Eh?" says I. "Shoot the rest."
+
+"Couldn't think of it, son," says he. "You're too young. But in my day
+Clara Belle Kinney was some queen."
+
+And that's all I can get out of him except more chuckles. I files away
+the name, though; and that afternoon, while we was waitin' for a quorum
+of directors to straggle into the General Offices, I springs it on Old
+Hickory.
+
+"Mr. Ellins," says I, "did you ever know of a Clara Belle Kinney?"
+
+"Wha-a-at?" he gasps, almost swallowin' his cigar. "Listen to that,
+Mason. Here's a young innocent asking if we ever knew Clara Belle
+Kinney. Did we?"
+
+And old K. W. Mason, what does he do but throw back his shiny dome, open
+his mouth, and roar out:
+
+ "Yure right fut is crazy,
+ Yure left fut is lazy,
+ But if ye'll be aisy
+ I'll teach ye to waltz!"
+
+After which them two old cut-ups wink at each other rakish and slap
+their knees. All of which ain't so illuminatin'. But they keep on,
+mentionin' Koster Bial's and the Cork Room, until I can patch together
+quite a sketch of Mrs. Tupper's early career.
+
+Seems she'd made her first hit in this old-time concert-hall when she
+was a sweet young thing in her teens. One of her naughty stunts was
+kickin' her slipper into an upper box, and gettin' it tossed back with a
+mash note in it, or maybe a twenty-dollar bill. Then she'd graduated
+into comic opera.
+
+"Was there ever a Katishaw like her?" demands Old Hickory of K. W., who
+responds by hummin' husky:
+
+ "I dote upon a tiger
+ From the Congo or the Niger,
+ Especially when lashing of his tail."
+
+And, while they don't go into details, I gathered that they'd been Clara
+Belle fans--had sent her orchids on openin' nights, and maybe had set up
+wine suppers for her and her friends. They knew about a couple of her
+matrimonial splurges. One was with her manager, of course; the next was
+a young broker whose fam'ly got him to break it off. After that they'd
+lost track of her.
+
+"It seems to me," says Old Hickory, "that I heard she had married
+someone in Buffalo, or Rochester, and had quit the stage. A patent
+medicine chap, I think he was, who'd made a lot of money out of
+something or other. I wonder what has become of her?"
+
+That was my cue, all right, but I passes it up. I wasn't talkin' just
+then; I was listenin'.
+
+"Ah-h-h!" goes on Mr. Mason, foldin' his hands over his forward sponson
+and rollin' his eyes sentimental. "Dear Clara Belle! I say, Ellins,
+wouldn't you like to hear her sing that MacFadden song once more?"
+
+"I'd give fifty dollars," says Old Hickory.
+
+"I'd make it a hundred if she'd follow it with 'O Promise Me,'" says K.
+W. "What was her record--six hundred nights on Broadway, wasn't it?"
+
+Say, they went on reminiscin' so long, it's a wonder the monthly meetin'
+ever got started at all. I might have forgot them hot-air bids of
+theirs, too, if it hadn't been for something Vee announces that night
+across the dinner-table.
+
+Seems that Mrs. Robert Ellins had been rung into managin' one of these
+war benefit stunts, and she's decided to use their new east terrace for
+an outdoor stage and the big drawin'-room it opens off from as an
+auditorium. You know, Mrs. Robert used to give violin recitals and do
+concert work herself, so she ain't satisfied with amateur talent.
+Besides, she knows so many professional people.
+
+"And who do you think she is to have on the program?" demands Vee.
+"Farrar!"
+
+"Aw, come!" says I.
+
+"And perhaps Mischa Elman," adds Vee. "Isn't that thrilling?"
+
+I admits that it is.
+
+"But say," I goes on, "with them big names on the bill, what does she
+expect to tax people for the best seats?"
+
+Vee says how they'd figured they might ask ten dollars for a few choice
+chairs.
+
+"Huh!" says I. "That won't get you far. Why don't you soak 'em proper?"
+
+"But how?" asks Vee.
+
+"You put in a bald-headed row," says I, "and I'll find you a party
+who'll fill it at a hundred a throw."
+
+Vee stares at me like she thought I'd been touched with the heat, and
+wants to know who.
+
+"Clara Belle Kinney," says I.
+
+"Why, I never heard of any such person," says she.
+
+"Oh, yes, you have," says I. "Alias Mrs. Ben Tupper."
+
+Course, I had some job convincin' her I wasn't joshin'; and even after
+I'd sketched out the whole story, and showed her that Clara Belle's past
+wasn't anything to really shudder over, Vee is still doubtful.
+
+"But can she sing now?" she asks.
+
+"What's the odds," says I, "if a lot of them old-timers are willin' to
+pay to hear her try?"
+
+Vee shakes her head and suggests that we go up and talk it over with Mr.
+and Mrs. Robert. Which we does.
+
+"But if she has been off the stage for twenty years," suggests Mrs.
+Robert, "perhaps she wouldn't attempt it."
+
+"I'll bet she would for Vee," says I. "Any way, she wouldn't feel sore
+at being asked And if you could sting a bunch of twenty or thirty for a
+hundred apiece----"
+
+"Just fancy!" says Mrs. Robert, drawin' in a long breath and doin'
+rapid-fire mental arithmetic. "Verona, let's drive right over and see
+her at once."
+
+They're some hustlers, that pair. All I have to do is map out the
+scheme, and they goes after it with a rush.
+
+And say, I want to tell you that was a perfectly good charity concert,
+judged by the box-office receipts or any way you want to size it up.
+Bein' the official press-agent, who's got a better right to admit it?
+
+True, Elman didn't show up, but his alibi was sound. And not until the
+last minute was we sure whether the fair Geraldine would get there or
+not. But my contribution to the headliners was there from the first tap
+of the bell.
+
+Vee says she actually wept on her shoulder when the proposition was
+sprung on her. Seems she'd been livin' in Harbor Hills for nearly three
+years without havin' been let in on a thing--with nobody callin' on her,
+or even noddin' as she drove by. Most of her neighbors was a lot
+younger, folks who barely remembered that there had been such a party as
+Clara Belle Kinney, and who couldn't have told whether she'd been a
+singer or a bareback rider. They only knew her as a dumpy freakish
+dressed old girl whose drugged hair was turnin' gray.
+
+"Of course," she says, sort of timid and trembly, "I have kept up my
+singing as well as I could. Mr. Tupper likes to have me. But I know my
+voice isn't what it was once. It's dear of you to ask me, though,
+and--and I'll do my best."
+
+I don't take any credit for fillin' that double row of wicker chairs we
+put down front and had the nerve to ask that hold-up price for. When the
+word was passed around that Clara Belle Kinney was to be among the
+performers, they almost mobbed me for tickets. Why, I collected from
+two-thirds of the Corrugated directors without turnin' a hand, and for
+two days there about all I did was answer 'phone calls from Broad Street
+and the clubs--brokers, bank presidents, and so on, who wanted to know
+if there was any left.
+
+A fine bunch of silver-tops they was, too, when we got 'em all lined up.
+You wouldn't have suspected it of some of them dignified old scouts,
+either. Back of 'em, fillin' every corner of the long room and spillin'
+out into the big hall, was the top crust of our local smart set, come to
+hear Farrar at close range.
+
+Yep, Geraldine made quite a hit. Nothing strange about that. And that
+piece from "Madame Butterfly" she gave just brought 'em right up on
+their toes. But say, you should hear what breaks loose when it's
+announced that the third number will be an old favorite revival by Clara
+Belle Kinney. That's all the name we gave. What if most of the audience
+was simply starin' puzzled and stretchin' their necks to see who was
+comin'? Them old boys down front seemed to know what they was howlin'
+about.
+
+Yes, Clara Belle does show up a bit husky in evenin' dress. Talk about
+elbow dimples! And I was wishin' she'd forgot to do her hair that
+antique way, all piled up on her head, with a few coy ringlets over one
+ear. But she'd landscaped her facial scenery artistic, and she sure does
+know how to roll them big eyes of hers.
+
+I didn't much enjoy listenin' through them first few bars, though. There
+wasn't merely a crack here and there. Her voice went to a complete smash
+at times, besides bein' weak and wabbly. It's like listenin' to the
+ghost of a voice. I heard a few titters from the back rows.
+
+But them old boys don't seem to mind. It was a voice comin' to them from
+'way back in the '90's. And when she struggles through the first verse
+of "O Promise Me," and pauses to get her second wind, maybe they don't
+give her a hand. That seemed to pep her up a lot. She gets a better grip
+on the high notes, the tremolo effect wears off, and she goes to it like
+a winner. Begins to get the crowd with her, too. Why, say, even Farrar
+stands up and leads in the call for an encore. She ain't alone.
+
+"MacFadden! MacFadden!" K. W. Mason is shoutin'.
+
+So in a minute more Clara Belle, her eyes shinin', has swung into that
+raggy old tune, and when she gets to the chorus she beckons to the front
+rows and says: "Now, all together, boys!
+
+ "Wan--two--three!
+ Balance like me----"
+
+Did they come in on it? Say, they roared it out like so many young
+college hicks riotin' around the campus after a session at a
+rathskeller. You should have seen Old Hickory standin' out front with
+his arms wavin' and his face red.
+
+Then they demands some of the Katishaw stuff, and "Comrades," and
+"Little Annie Rooney." And with every encore Clara Belle seems to shake
+off five or ten years, until you could almost see what a footlight
+charmer she must have been.
+
+In the midst of it all Vee gives me the nudge.
+
+"Do look at Mr. Tupper, will you!"
+
+Yes, he's sittin' over in a corner, with his white shirt-front bulgin',
+his neck stretched forward eager, and his big hairy paws grippin' the
+chair-back in front. And hanged if a drop of brine ain't tricklin' down
+one side of his nose.
+
+"Gosh!" says I. "His emotions are leakin' into his whiskers. Maybe the
+old boy is human, after all."
+
+A minute later, as I slides easy out of my end seat, Vee asks:
+
+"Where are you going, Torchy?"
+
+"I want a glimpse of Mrs. Pemmy Foote's face, that's all," says I.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WHEN TORCHY GOT THE CALL
+
+
+No, I ain't said much about it before. There are some things you're apt
+to keep to yourself, specially the ones that root deep. And I'll admit
+that at first there I don't quite know where I was at. But as affairs
+got messier and messier, and the U-boats got busier, and I heard some
+first-hand details of what had happened to the Belgians--well, I got
+mighty restless. I expect I indulged in more serious thought stuff than
+I'd ever been guilty of.
+
+You see, it was along back when we were gettin' our first close-ups of
+the big scrap--some of our boats sunk, slinkers reported off Sandy Hook,
+bomb plots shown up, and Papa Joffre over here soundin' the S. O. S.
+earnest.
+
+Then there was Mr. Robert joinin' the Naval Reserves, and two young
+hicks from the bond room who'd volunteered. We'd had postals from 'em at
+the trainin' camp. Even Vee was busy with a first-aid class, learnin'
+how to tie bandages and put on splints.
+
+So private seccing seemed sort of tame and useless--like keepin' on
+sprinklin' the lawn after your chimney was bein' struck by lightnin'. I
+felt like I ought to be gettin' in the game somehow. Anyway, it seemed
+as if it was my ante.
+
+Not that I'd been rushed off my feet by all this buntin'-wavin' or
+khaki-wearin'. I'm no panicky Old Glory trail-hitter. Nor I didn't lug
+around the idea I was the missin' hero who was to romp through the
+barbed wire, stamp Hindenburg's whiskers in the mud, and lead the Allies
+across the Rhine. I didn't even kid myself I could swim out and kick a
+hole in a submarine, or do the darin' aviator act after a half-hour
+lesson at Mineola.
+
+In fact, I suspected that sheddin' the enemy's gore wasn't much in my
+line. I knew I should dislike quittin' the hay at dawn to sneak out and
+get mixed up with half a bushel of impetuous scrap-iron. Still, if it
+had to be done, why not me as well as the next party?
+
+I'd been meanin' to talk it over with Vee--sort of hint around, anyway,
+and see how she'd take it. But as a matter of fact I never could seem to
+find just the right openin' until, there one night after dinner, as she
+finishes a new piece she's tryin' over on the piano, I wanders up
+beside her and starts absent-minded tearin' little bits off a corner of
+the music.
+
+"Torchy!" she protests. "What an absurd thing to do."
+
+"Eh?" says I, twistin' it into a cornucopia. "But you know I can't go on
+warmin' the bench like this."
+
+She stares at me puzzled for a second.
+
+"Meaning what, for instance?" she asks.
+
+"I got to go help swat the Hun," says I.
+
+The flickery look in them gray eyes of hers steadies down, and she
+reaches out for one of my hands. That's all. No jumpy emotions--not even
+a lip quiver.
+
+"Must you?" says she, quiet.
+
+"I can't take it out in wearin' a button or hirin' someone to hoe
+potatoes in the back lot," says I.
+
+"No," says she.
+
+"Auntie would come, I suppose?" says I.
+
+Vee nods.
+
+"And with Leon here," I goes on, "and Mrs. Battou, you could----"
+
+"Yes, I could get along," she breaks in. "But--but when?"
+
+"Right away," says I. "As soon as they can use me."
+
+"You'll start training for a commission, then?" she asks.
+
+"Not me," says I. "I'd be poor enough as a private, but maybe I'd help
+fill in one of the back rows. I don't know much about it. I'll look it
+up to-morrow."
+
+"To-morrow? Oh!" says Vee, with just the suspicion of a break in her
+voice.
+
+And that's all we had to say about it. Every word. You'd thought we'd
+exhausted the subject, or got the tongue cramp. But I expect we each had
+a lot of thoughts that didn't get registered. I know I did. And next
+mornin' the breakaway came sort of hard.
+
+"I--I know just how you feel about it," says Vee.
+
+"I'm glad somebody does, then," says I.
+
+Puttin' the proposition up to Old Hickory was different. He shoots a
+quick glance at me from under them shaggy eyebrows, bites into his cigar
+savage, and grunts discontented.
+
+"You are exempt, you know," says he.
+
+"I know," says I. "If tags came with marriage licenses I might wear one
+on my watch-fob to show, I expect."
+
+"Huh!" says he. "It seems to me that rapid-fire brain of yours might be
+better utilized than by hiding it under a trench helmet."
+
+"Speedy thinkers seem to be a drug on the market just now," says I.
+"Anyway, I feel like it was up to me to deliver something--I can't say
+just what. But campin' behind a roll-top here on the nineteenth floor
+ain't going to help much, is it?"
+
+"Oh, well, if you have the fever!" says he.
+
+And half an hour later I've pushed in past the flag and am answerin'
+questions while the sergeant fills out the blank.
+
+Maybe you can guess I ain't in any frivolous mood. I don't believe I
+thought I was about to push back the invader, or turn the tide for
+civilization. Neither was I lookin' on this as a sportin' flier or a
+larky excursion that I was goin' to indulge in at public expense. My
+idea was that there'd been a general call for such as me, and that I was
+comin' across. I was more or less sober about it.
+
+They didn't seem much impressed at the recruitin' station. Course, you
+couldn't expect the sergeant to get thrilled over every party that
+drifted in. He'd been there for weeks, I suppose, answerin' the same
+fool questions over and over, knowin' all the time that half of them
+that came in was bluffin' and that a big per cent. of the others
+wouldn't do.
+
+But this other party with the zippy waistline, the swellin' chest, and
+the nifty shoulder-straps--why should he glare at me in that cold,
+suspicious way? I wasn't tryin' to break into the army with felonious
+intent. How could he be sure, just from a casual glance, that I was such
+vicious scum?
+
+Oh, yes; I've figured out since that he didn't mean more'n half of it,
+or couldn't help lookin' at civilians that way after four years at West
+Point, or thought he had to. But that's what I get handed to me when
+I've dropped all the little things that seemed important to me and walks
+in to chuck what I had to offer Uncle Sam on the recruitin' table.
+
+Some kind of inspectin' officer, I've found out he was, makin' the
+rounds to see that the sergeants didn't loaf on the job. And, just to
+show that no young patriot in a last year's Panama and a sport-cut suit
+could slip anything over on him, he shoots in a few crisp questions on
+his own account.
+
+"Married, you say?" says he. "Since when?"
+
+"Oh, this century," says I. "Last February, to get it nearer."
+
+He sniffs disagreeable without sayin' why. Also he takes a hand when it
+comes to testin' me to see whether I'm club-footed or spavined. Course,
+I'm no perfect male like you see in the knit underwear ads, but I've got
+the usual number of toes and teeth, my wind is fairly good, and I don't
+expect my arteries have begun to harden yet. He listens to my heart
+action and measures my chest expansion. Then I had to name the different
+colors and squint through a tube at some black dots on a card.
+
+And the further we went the more he scowled. Finally he shakes his head
+at the sergeant.
+
+"Rejected," says he.
+
+"Eh?" says I. "You--you don't mean I'm--turned down?"
+
+He nods. "Underweight, and your eyes don't focus," says he snappy.
+"Here's your card. That's all."
+
+Yes, it was a jolt. I expect I stood there blinkin' stupid at him for a
+minute or so before I had sense enough to drift out on the sidewalk. And
+I might as well admit I was feelin' mighty low. I didn't know whether to
+hunt up the nearest hospital, or sit down on the curb and wait until
+they came after me with the stretcher-cart. Anyway, I knew I must be a
+physical wreck. And to think I hadn't suspected it before!
+
+Somehow I dragged back to the office, and a while later Mr. Ellins
+discovers me slumped in my chair with my chin down.
+
+"Mars and Mercury!" says he. "You haven't been through a battle so soon,
+have you?"
+
+At that, I tries to brace up a bit and pass it off light.
+
+"Why didn't someone tell me I was a chronic invalid?" says I, after
+sketchin' out how my entry had been scratched by the chesty one. "I
+wonder where I could get a pair of crutches and a light-runnin' wheel
+chair?"
+
+"Bah!" says he. "Some of those army officers have red-tape brains and no
+more common sense than he guinea-pigs. What in the name of the Seven
+Shahs did he think was the matter with you?"
+
+"My eyes don't track and I weigh under the scale," says I. "I expect
+there's other things, too. Maybe my floatin' ribs are water-logged and
+my memory muscle-bound. But I'm a wreck, all right."
+
+"We'll see about that," says Old Hickory, pushin' a buzzer.
+
+And inside of an hour I felt a lot better. I'd been gone over by a life
+insurance expert, who said I hadn't a soft spot on me, and an eye
+specialist had reported that my sight was up to the average. Oh, the
+right lamp did range a little further, but he claims that's often the
+case.
+
+"Maybe my hair was too vivid for trench work," says I, "or else that
+captain was luggin' a grouch. Makes me feel like a wooden nickel at the
+bottom of the till, just the same; for I did hope I might be useful
+somehow. I'll look swell joinin' the home guards, won't I?"
+
+"Don't overlook the fact, young man," puts in Old Hickory, "that the
+Corrugated Trust is not altogether out of this affair, and that we are
+running short-handed as it is."
+
+I was too sore in my mind to be soothed much by that thought just then,
+though I did buckle into the work harder than ever.
+
+As for Vee, she don't have much to say, but she gives me the close
+tackle when she hears the news.
+
+"I don't care!" says she. "It was splendid of you to want to go. And I
+shall be just as proud of you as though you had been accepted."
+
+"Oh, sure!" says I. "Likely I'll be mentioned in despatches for the
+noble way I handled the correspondence all through a hot spell."
+
+That state of mind I didn't shake loose in a hurry, either. For three or
+four weeks, there, I was about the meekest commuter carried on the
+eight-three. I didn't do any gloatin' over the war news. I didn't join
+any of the volunteer boards of strategy that met every mornin' to tell
+each other how the subs ought to be suppressed, or what Haig should be
+doin' on the West front. I even stopped wearin' an enameled flag in my
+buttonhole. If that was all I could do, I wouldn't fourflush.
+
+The Corrugated was handlin' a lot of war contracts, too. Course, we was
+only gettin' our ten per cent., and from some we'd subbed out not even
+that. It didn't strike me there was any openin' for me until I'd heard
+Mr. Ellins, for about the fourth time that week, start beefin' about the
+kind of work we was gettin' done.
+
+"But ain't it all O. K.'d by government inspectors?" I asks.
+
+"Precisely why I am suspicious," says he. "Not three per cent. turned
+back! And on rush work that's too good to be true. Looks to me like
+careless inspecting--or worse. Yet every man I've sent out has brought
+in a clean bill; even for the Wonder Motors people, who have that
+sub-contract for five hundred tanks. And I wouldn't trust that crowd to
+pass the hat for an orphans' home. I wish I knew of a man who
+could--could---- By the Great Isosceles! Torchy!"
+
+I knew I was elected when he first begun squintin' at me that way. But I
+couldn't see where I'd be such a wonderful find.
+
+"A hot lot I know about buildin' armored motor-trucks, Mr. Ellins," says
+I. "They could feed me anything."
+
+"You let 'em," says he; "and meanwhile you unlimber that high-tension
+intellect of yours and see what you can pick up. Remember, I shall
+expect results from you, young man. When can you start for Cleveland?
+To-night, eh? Good! And just note this: It isn't merely the Corrugated
+Trust you are representing: it's Uncle Sam and the Allies generally. And
+if anything shoddy is being passed, you hunt it out. Understand?"
+
+Yep. I did. And I'll admit I was some thrilled with the idea. But I felt
+like a Boy Scout being sent to round up a gang of gunfighters. I skips
+home, though, packs my bag, and climbs aboard the night express.
+
+When I'd finally located the Wonder works, and had my credentials read
+by everyone, from the rookie sentry at the gate to the Assistant General
+Manager, and they was convinced I'd come direct from Old Hickory Ellins,
+they starts passin' out the smooth stuff. Oh, yes! Certainly! Anything
+special I wished to see?
+
+"Thanks," says I. "I'll go right through."
+
+"But we have four acres of shops, you know," suggests the A. G. M.,
+smilin' indulgent.
+
+"Maybe I can do an acre a day," says I. "I got lots of time."
+
+"That's the spirit," says he, clappin' me friendly on the shoulder.
+"Walter, call in Mr. Marvin."
+
+He was some grand little demonstrator, Mr. Marvin--one of these
+round-faced, pink-cheeked, chunky built young gents, who was as chummy
+and as entertainin' from the first handshake as if we'd been room-mates
+at college. I can't say how well posted he was on what was goin' on in
+the different departments he hustled me through, but he knew enough to
+smother me with machinery details.
+
+"Now, here we have a battery of six hogging machines," he'd say. "They
+cut the gears, you know."
+
+"Oh, yes," I'd say, tryin' to look wise.
+
+It was that way all through the trip. I saw two or three thousand sweaty
+men in smeared overalls and sleeveless undershirts putterin' around
+lathes and things that whittled shavings off shiny steel bars, or
+hammered red-hot chunks of it into different shapes, or bit holes in
+great sheets of steel. I watched electric cranes the size of trolley
+cars juggle chunks of metal that weighed tons. I listened to the roar
+and rattle and crash and bang, and at the end of two hours my head was
+whirlin' as fast as some of them big belt wheels; and I knew almost as
+much about what I'd seen as a two-year-old does about the tick-tock
+daddy holds up to her ear.
+
+Young Mr. Marvin don't seem discouraged, though. He suggests that we
+drive into town for lunch. We did, in a canary-colored roadster that
+purred along at about fifty most of the way. We fed at a swell club,
+along with a bunch of cheerful young lieutenants of industry who didn't
+seem worried about the high cost of anything. I gathered that most of
+'em was in the same line as Mr. Marvin--supplies or munitions. From the
+general talk, and the casual way they ordered pink cocktails and
+expensive cigars, I judged it wasn't exactly a losin' game.
+
+Nor they didn't seem anxious about gettin' back to punch in on the
+time-clocks. About two-thirty we adjourns to the Country Club, and if
+I'd been a mashie fiend I might have finished a hard day's work with a
+game of golf. I thought I ought to do some more shops, though. Why, to
+be sure! But at five we knocked off again, and I was towed to another
+club, where we had a plunge in a marble pool so as to be in shape for a
+little dinner Mr. Marvin was gettin' up for me. Quite some dinner! There
+was a jolly trip out to an amusement park later on. Oh, the Wonder folks
+were no tightwads when it came to showin' special agents of the
+Corrugated around.
+
+I tried another day of it before givin' up. It was no use. They had me
+buffaloed. So I thanked all hands and hinted that maybe I'd better be
+goin' back. I hope I didn't deceive anyone, for I did go back--to the
+hotel. But by night I'd invested $11.45 in a second-hand
+outfit--warranted steam-cleaned--and I had put up $6. more for a week's
+board with a Swede lady whose front porch faced the ten-foot fence
+guardin' the Wondor Motors' main plant. Also, Mrs. Petersen had said it
+was a cinch I could get a job. Her old man would show me where in the
+mornin'.
+
+And say, mornin' happens early out in places like that. By 5:30 A.M. I
+could smell bacon grease, and by six-fifteen breakfast was all over and
+Petersen had lit his corn-cob pipe.
+
+"Coom!" says he in pure Scandinavian.
+
+This trip, I didn't make my entrance in over the Turkish rugs of the
+private office. I was lined up with a couple of dozen others against a
+fence about tenth from a window where there was a "Men Wanted" sign out.
+Being about as much of a mechanic as I am a brunette, I made no wild
+bluffs. I just said I wanted a job. And I got it--riveter's helper,
+whatever that might be. By eight-thirty my name and number was on the
+payroll, and the foreman of shop No. 19 was introducin' me to my new
+boss.
+
+"Here, Mike," says he. "Give this one a try-out."
+
+His name wasn't Mike. It was something like Sneezowski. He was a Pole
+who'd come over three years ago to work for John D. at Bayonne, New
+Jersey, but had got into some kind of trouble there. I didn't wonder. He
+had wicked little eyes, one lopped ear, and a ragged mustache that stood
+out like tushes. But he sure could handle a pneumatic riveter rapid, and
+when it came to reprovin' me for not keepin' the pace he expressed
+himself fluent.
+
+In the course of a couple of hours, though, I got the hang of how to
+work them rivet tongs without droppin' 'em more 'n once every five
+minutes. But I think it was the grin I slipped Mike now and then that
+got him to overlookin' my awkward motions. Believe me, too, by six
+o'clock I felt less like grinnin' than any time I could remember. I
+never knew you could ache in so many places at once. From the ankles
+down I felt fine. And yet, before the week was out I was helpin' Mike
+speed up.
+
+It didn't look promisin' for sleuth work at first. Half a dozen times I
+was on the point of chuckin' the job. But the thoughts of havin' to face
+Old Hickory with a blank report kept me pluggin' away. I begun to get my
+bearin's a bit to see things, to put this and that together.
+
+We was workin' on shaped steel plates, armor for the tanks. Now and then
+one would come through with some of the holes only quarter or half
+punched. Course, you couldn't put rivets in them places.
+
+"How about these?" I asks.
+
+"Aw, wottell!" says Mike. "Forget it."
+
+"But what if the inspector sees?" I insists.
+
+Mike gurgles in his throat, indicatin' mirth.
+
+"Th' inspec'!" he chuckles. "Him wink by his eye, him. Ya! You see! Him
+coom Sat'day."
+
+And I swaps chuckles with Mike. Also, by settin' up the schooners at
+Carlouva's that evenin', I got Mike to let out more professional
+secrets along the same line. There was others who joined in. They
+bragged of chipped gears that was shipped through with the bad cogs
+covered with grease, of flawy drivin' shafts, of cheesy armor-plate that
+you could puncture with a tack-hammer.
+
+While it was all fresh that night I jotted down pages of such gossip in
+a little red note-book. I had names and dates. That bunch of
+piece-workers must have thought I was a bear for details, or else nutty
+in the head; but they was too polite to mention it so long as I insisted
+each time that it was my buy.
+
+Anyway, I got quite a lot of first-hand evidence as to the kind of
+inspectin' done by the army officer assigned to this particular plant. I
+had to smile, too, when I saw Mr. Marvin towin' him through our shop
+Saturday forenoon. Maybe they was three minutes breezin' through. And I
+didn't need the extra smear of smut on my face. Marvin never glanced my
+way. This was the same officer who'd been in on our dinner party, too.
+
+Yes, I found chattin' with Mike and his friends a lot more illuminatin'
+than listenin' to Mr. Marvin. So, when I drew down my second pay
+envelop, I told the clerk I was quittin'. I don't mind sayin', either,
+that it seemed good to splash around in a reg'lar bath-tub once more and
+to look a sirloin steak in the face again. A stiff collar did seem odd,
+though.
+
+Me and Mr. Ellins had some session. We went through that red note-book
+thorough. He was breathin' a bit heavy at times, and he chewed hard on
+his cigar all the way; but he never blew a fuse until forty-eight hours
+later. The General Manager of Wonder Motors, four department heads, and
+the army officer detailed as inspector was part of the audience. They'd
+been called on the carpet by wire, and was grouped around one end of our
+directors' table. At the other end was Old Hickory, Mr. Robert, Piddie,
+and me.
+
+Item by item, Mr. Ellins had sketched out to the Wonder crowd the bunk
+stuff they'd been slippin' over. First they tried protestin' indignant;
+then they made a stab at actin' hurt; but in the end they just looked
+plain foolish.
+
+"My dear Mr. Ellins," put in the General Manager, "one cannot watch
+every workman in a plant of that magnitude. Besides," here he hunches
+his shoulders, "if the government is satisfied----"
+
+"Hah!" snorts Old Hickory. "But it isn't. For I'm the government in this
+instance. I'm standing for Uncle Sam. That's what I meant when I took
+those ten per cent. contracts. I'm too old to go out and fight his
+enemies abroad, but I can stay behind and watch for yellow-livered
+buzzards such as you. Call that business, do you? Fattening your
+dividends by sending our boys up against the Prussian guns in junky
+motor-tanks covered with tin armor! Bah! Your ethics need chloride of
+lime on them. And you come here whining that you can't watch your men!
+By the great sizzling sisters, we'll see if you can't! You will put in
+every missing rivet, replace every flawy plate, and make every machine
+perfect, or I'll smash your little two-by-four concern so flat the
+bankruptcy courts won't find enough to tack a libel notice on. Now go
+back and get busy."
+
+They seemed in a hurry to start, too.
+
+An hour or so later, when Old Hickory had stopped steaming, he passes
+out a different set of remarks to me. Oh, the usual grateful boss stuff.
+Even says he's going to make the War Department give me a commission,
+with a special detail.
+
+"Wouldn't that be wonderful!" says Vee, clappin' her hands. "Do you
+really think he will? A lieutenant, perhaps?"
+
+"That's what he mentioned," says I.
+
+"Really!" says Vee, makin' a rush at me.
+
+"Wait up!" says I. "Halt, I mean. Now, as you were! Sal-ute!"
+
+"Pooh!" says Vee, continuin' her rush.
+
+But say, she knows how to salute, all right. Her way would break up an
+army, though. All the same, I guess I've earned it, for by Monday night
+I'll be up in a Syracuse shovel works, wearin' a one-piece business suit
+of the Never-rip brand, and I'll likely have enough grease on me to
+lubricate a switch-engine.
+
+"It's lucky you don't see me, Vee," says I, "when I'm out savin' the
+country. You'd wonder how you ever come to do it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+A CARRY-ON FOR CLARA
+
+
+"Now turn around," says Vee. "Oh, Torchy! Why, you look perfectly----"
+
+"Do I?" I cuts in. "Well, you don't think I'm goin' to the office like
+this, do you?"
+
+She does. Insists that Mr. Ellins will expect it.
+
+"Besides," says she, "it is in the army regulations that you must. If
+you don't--well, I'm not sure whether it is treason or mutiny."
+
+"Hal-lup!" says I. "I surrender."
+
+So I starts for town lookin' as warlike as if I'd just come from a front
+trench, and feelin' like a masquerader who'd lost his way to the
+ball-room.
+
+In the office, Old Hickory gives me the thorough up-and-down. It's a
+genial, fatherly sort of inspection, and he ends it with a satisfied
+grunt.
+
+"Good-morning, Lieutenant," says he. "I see you have--er--got 'em on.
+And, allow me to mention, rather a good fit, sir."
+
+I gasps. Sirred by Old Hickory! Do you wonder I got fussed? But he only
+chuckles easy, waves me to take a chair, and goes on with:
+
+"What's the word from the Syracuse sector?"
+
+At that, I gets my breath back.
+
+"Fairly good deal up there, sir," says I. "They're workin' in a carload
+or so of wormy ash for the shovel handles, and some of the steel runs
+below test; but most of their stuff grades well. I'll have my notes
+typed off right away."
+
+After I've filed my report I should have ducked. But this habit of
+stickin' around the shop is hard to break. And that's how I happen to be
+on hand when the lady in gray drifts in for her chatty confab with Mr.
+Ellins.
+
+Seems she held quite a block of our preferred, for when Vincent lugs in
+her card Old Hickory spots the name right away as being on our
+widow-and-orphan list that we wave at investigatin' committees.
+
+"Ah, yes!" says he. "Mrs. Parker Smith. Show her in, boy."
+
+Such a quiet, gentle, dignified party she is, her costume tonin' in with
+her gray hair, and an easy way of speakin' and all, that my first guess
+is she might be the head of an old ladies' home.
+
+"Mr. Ellins," says she, "I am looking for my niece."
+
+"Are you?" says Mr. Ellins, "Humph! Hardly think we could be of service
+in such a case."
+
+"Oh!" says she. "I--I am so sorry."
+
+"Lost, is she?" suggests Mr. Ellins, weakenin'.
+
+"She is somewhere in New York," goes on Mrs. Parker Smith. "Of course, I
+know it is an imposition to trouble you with such a matter. But I
+thought you might have someone in your office who--who----"
+
+"We have," says he. "Torchy,--er--I mean, Lieutenant,--Mrs. Parker
+Smith. Here, madam, is a young man who will find your niece for you at
+once. In private life he is my secretary; and as it happens that just
+now he is on special detail, his services are entirely at your
+disposal."
+
+She looks a little doubtful about bein' shunted like that, but she
+follows me into the next room, where I produces a pencil and pad and
+calls for details businesslike.
+
+"Let's see," says I. "What's the full description? Age?"
+
+"Why," says she, hesitatin', "Claire is about twenty-two."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Got beyond the flapper stage, then. Height--tall or
+short?"
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith shakes her head.
+
+"I'm sure I don't know," says she. "You see, Claire is not an own niece.
+She--well, she is a daughter of my first husband's second wife's
+step-sister."
+
+"Wha-a-at?" says I, gawpin' at her. "Daughter of your---- Oh, say, let's
+not go into it as deep as that. I'm dizzy already. Suppose we call her
+an in-law once removed and let it go at that?"
+
+"Thank you," says Mrs. Parker Smith, givin' me a quizzin' smile.
+"Perhaps it is enough to say that I have never seen her."
+
+She does go on to explain, though, that when Claire's step-uncle, or
+whatever he was, found his heart trouble gettin' worse, he wrote to Mrs.
+Parker Smith, askin' her to forget the past and look after the orphan
+girl that he's been tryin' to bring up. It's just as clear to me as the
+average movie plot, but I nods my head.
+
+"So for three years," says she, "while Claire was in boarding-school, I
+acted as her guardian; but since she has come of age I have been merely
+the executor of her small estate."
+
+"Oh, yes!" says I. "And now she's come to New York, and forgot to send
+you her address?"
+
+It was something like that. Claire had gone in for art. Looked like
+she'd splurged heavy on it, too; for the drain on her income had been
+something fierce. Meanwhile, Mrs. Parker Smith had doped out an entirely
+different future for Claire. The funds that had been tied up in a
+Vermont barrel-stave fact'ry, that was makin' less and less barrel
+staves every year, Auntie had pulled out and invested in a model dairy
+farm out near Rockford, Illinois. She'd made the capital turn over from
+fifteen to twenty per cent., too, by livin' right on the job and cashin'
+in the cream tickets herself.
+
+"You have!" says I. "Not a reg'lar cow farm?"
+
+She nods.
+
+"It did seem rather odd, at first," says she. "But I wanted to get away
+from--from everything. But now---- Well, I want Claire. I suppose I am a
+little lonesome. Besides, I want her to try taking charge. Recently,
+when she had drawn her income for half a year in advance and still
+asked for more, I was obliged to refuse."
+
+"And then?" says I.
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith shrugs her shoulders.
+
+"The foolish girl chose to quarrel with me," says she. "About ten days
+ago she sent me a curt note. I could keep her money; she was tired of
+being dictated to. I needn't write any more, for she had moved to
+another address, had changed her name."
+
+"Huh!" says I. "That does make it complicated. You don't know what she
+looks like, or what name she flags under, and I'm to find her in little
+New York?"
+
+But I finds myself tacklin this hopeless puzzle from every angle I could
+think of. I tried 'phonin' to Claire's old street number. Nothin' doin'.
+They didn't know anything about Miss Hunt.
+
+"What brand of art was she monkeyin' with?" I asks.
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith couldn't say. Claire hadn't been very chatty in her
+letters. Chiefly she had demanded checks.
+
+"But in one she did mention," says the lady in gray, "that---- Now, what
+was it! Oh, yes! Something about 'landing a cover.' What could that
+mean?"
+
+"Cover?" says I. "Why, for a magazine, maybe. That's it. And if we only
+knew what name she'd sign, we might---- Would she stick to the Claire
+part? I'll bet she would. Wait. I'll get a bunch of back numbers from
+the arcade news-stand and we'll go through 'em."
+
+We'd hunted through an armful, though, before we runs across this freaky
+sketch of a purple nymph, with bright yellow hair, bouncin' across a
+stretch of dark blue lawn.
+
+"Claire Lamar!" says I. "Would that be---- Eh? What's wrong?"
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith seems to be gettin' a jolt of some kind, but she
+steadies herself and almost gets back her smile.
+
+"I--I am sure it would," says she. "It's very odd, though."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," says I. "Listens kind of arty--Claire Lamar. Lemme
+see. This snappy fifteen-center has editorial offices on Fourth Avenue
+and---- Well, well! Barry Frost, ad. manager! Say, if I can get him on
+the wire----"
+
+Just by luck, I did. Would he pry some facts for me out of the art
+editor, facts about a certain party? Sure he would. And inside of ten
+minutes, without leavin' the Corrugated General Offices, I had a full
+description of Claire, includin' where she hung out.
+
+"Huh!" says I. "Greenwich Village, eh? You might know."
+
+"My dear Lieutenant," says Mrs. Parker Smith, "I think you are perfectly
+wonderful."
+
+"Swell thought!" says I. "But you needn't let on to Mr. Ellins how
+simple it was. And now, all you got to do is----"
+
+"I know," she cuts in. "And I really ought not to trouble you another
+moment. But, since Mr. Ellins has been so kind--well, I am going to ask
+you to help me just a trifle more."
+
+"Shoot," says I, unsuspicious.
+
+It ain't much, she says. But she's afraid, if she trails Claire to her
+rooms, the young lady might send down word she was out, or make a quick
+exit.
+
+"But if you would go," she suggests, "with a note from me asking her to
+join us somewhere at dinner----"
+
+I holds up both hands.
+
+"Sorry," says I, "but I got to duck. That's taking too many chances."
+
+Then I explains how, although I may look like a singleton, I'm really
+the other half of a very interestin' domestic sketch, and that Vee's
+expectin' me home to dinner.
+
+"Why, all the better!" says Mrs. Parker Smith. "Have her come in and
+join us. I'll tell you: we will have our little party down at the old
+Napoleon, where they have such delicious French cooking. Now, please."
+
+As I've hinted before, she is some persuader. I ain't mesmerized so
+strong, though, but what I got sense enough to play it safe by callin'
+up Vee first. I don't think she was strong for joinin' the reunion until
+I points out that I might be some shy at wanderin' down into the
+art-student colony and collectin' a strange young lady illustrator all
+by myself.
+
+"Course, I could do it alone if I had to," I throws in.
+
+"H-m-m-m!" says Vee. "If that bashfulness of yours is likely to be as
+bad as all that, perhaps I'd better come."
+
+So by six o 'clock Vee and I are in the dinky reception-room of one of
+them Belasco boardin'-houses, tryin' to convince a young female in a
+paint-splashed smock and a floppy boudoir cap that we ain't tryin' to
+kidnap or otherwise annoy her.
+
+"What's the big idea?" says she. "I don't get you at all."
+
+"Maybe if you'd read the note it would help," I suggests.
+
+"Oh!" says she, and takes it over by the window.
+
+She's a long-waisted, rangy young party, who walks with a Theda Bara
+slouch and tries to talk out of one side of her mouth. "Hello!" she goes
+on. "The Parker Smith person. That's enough. It's all off."
+
+"Just as you say," says I. "But, if you ask me, I wouldn't pass up an
+aunt like her without takin' a look."
+
+"Aunt!" says Claire Lamar, _alias_ Hunt. "Listen: she's about as much an
+aunt to me as I am to either of you. And I've never shed any tears over
+the fact, either. The only aunt that I'd ever own was one that my family
+would never tell me much about. I had to find out about her for myself.
+Take it from me, though, she was some aunt."
+
+"Tastes in aunts differ, I expect," says I. "And Mrs. Parker Smith don't
+claim to be a reg'lar aunt, anyway. She seems harmless, too. All she
+wants is a chance to give you a rosy prospectus of life on a cow farm
+and blow you to a dinner at the Napoleon."
+
+"Think of that!" says Claire. "And I've been living for weeks on
+window-sill meals, with now and then a ptomaine-defying gorge at the
+Pink Poodle's sixty-cent table d'hôte. Oh, I'll come, I'll come! But I
+warn you: the Parker Smith person will understand before the evening is
+over that I was born to no cow farm in Illinois."
+
+With that she glides off to do a dinner change.
+
+"I believe it is going to be quite an interesting party, don't you?"
+says Vee.
+
+"The signs point that way," says I. "But the old girl really ought to
+wear shock-absorbers if she wants to last through the evenin'. S-s-s-sh!
+Claire is comin' back."
+
+This time she's draped herself in a pale yellow kimono with blue
+triangles stenciled all over it.
+
+"Speaking of perfectly good aunts," says she, "there!" And she displays
+a silver-framed photo. It's an old-timer done in faded brown, and shows
+a dashin' young party wearin' funny sleeves, a ringlet cascade on one
+side of her head, and a saucy little pancake lid over one ear.
+
+"That," explains Claire, "was my aunt Clara Lamar; not my real aunt, you
+know, but near enough for me to claim her. This was taken in '82, I
+believe."
+
+"Really!" says Vee. "She must have been quite pretty."
+
+"That doesn't half tell it," says Claire. "She was a charmer, simply
+fascinating. Not beautiful, you know, but she had a way with her. She
+was brilliant, daring, one of the kind that men raved over. At twenty
+she married a Congressman, fat and forty. She hadn't lived in Washington
+six months before her receptions were crushes. She flirted
+industriously. A young French aide and an army officer fought a duel
+over her. And, while the capital was buzzing with that, she eloped with
+another diplomat, a Russian. For a year or two they lived in Paris. She
+had her salon. Then the Russian got himself killed in some way, and she
+soon married again--another American, quite wealthy. He brought her back
+to New York, and they lived in one of those old brown-stone mansions on
+lower Fifth Avenue. Her dinner parties were the talk of the
+town--champagne with the fish, vodka with the coffee, cigarettes for the
+women, cut-up stunts afterwards. I forget just who No. 3 was, but he
+succumbed. Couldn't stand the pace, I suppose. And then---- Well, Aunt
+Clara disappeared. But, say, she was a regular person. I wish I could
+find out what ever became of her."
+
+"Maybe Mrs. Parker Smith could give you a line," I suggests.
+
+"Her!" says Claire. "Fat chance! But I must finish dressing. Sorry to
+keep you waiting."
+
+We did get a bit restless durin' the next half hour, but the wait was
+worth while. For, believe me, when Claire comes down again she's some
+dolled.
+
+I don't mean she was any home-destroyer. That face of hers is too long
+and heavy for the front row of a song review. But she has plenty of zip
+to her get-up. After one glance I calls a taxi.
+
+The way I'd left it with Mrs. Parker Smith, we was to land Claire at the
+hotel first; then call her up, and proceed to order dinner. So we had
+another little stage wait, with only the three of us at the table.
+
+"I hope you don't mind if I have a puff or two," says Claire. "It goes
+here, you know."
+
+"Anything to make the evenin' a success," says I, signalin' a garçon.
+"My khaki lets me out of followin' you."
+
+So, when the head waiter finally tows in Mrs. Parker Smith, costumed in
+the same gray dress and lookin' meeker and gentler than ever, she is
+greeted with a sporty tableau. But she don't faint or anything. She just
+springs that twisty smile of hers and comes right on.
+
+"The missing one!" says I, wavin' at Claire.
+
+"Ah!" says Mrs. Parker Smith, beamin' on her. "So good of you to come!"
+
+"Wasn't it?" says Claire, removin' the cork tip languid.
+
+Well, as a get-together I must admit that the outlook was kind of
+frosty. Claire showed plenty of enthusiasm for the hors d'oeuvres
+and the low-tide soup and so on, but mighty little for this volunteer
+auntie, who starts to describe the subtle joys of the butter business.
+
+"Perhaps you have never seen a herd of registered Guernseys," says Mrs.
+Parker Smith, "when they are munching contentedly at milking time, with
+their big, dreamy eyes----"
+
+"Excuse me!" says Claire. "I don't have to. I spent a whole month's
+vacation on a Vermont farm."
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith only smiles indulgent.
+
+"We use electric milkers, you know," says she, "and most of our young
+men come from the agricultural colleges."
+
+"That listens alluring--some," admits Claire. "But I can't see myself
+planted ten miles out on an R. F. D. route, even with college-bred help.
+Pardon me if I light another dope-stick."
+
+I could get her idea easy enough, by then. Claire wasn't half so sporty
+as she hoped she was. It was just her way of doing the carry-on for Aunt
+Clara Lamar. But, at the same time, we couldn't help feelin' kind of
+sorry for Mrs. Parker Smith. She was tryin' to be so nice and friendly,
+and she wasn't gettin' anywhere.
+
+It was by way of switchin' the line of table chat, I expect, that Vee
+breaks in with that remark about the only piece of jewelry the old girl
+is wearin'.
+
+"What a duck of a bracelet!" says Vee. "An heirloom, is it?"
+
+"Almost," says Mrs. Parker Smith. "It was given to me on my
+twenty-second birthday, in Florence."
+
+She slips it off and passes it over for inspection. The part that goes
+around the wrist is all of fine chain-work, silver and gold, woven
+almost like cloth, and on top is a cameo, 'most as big as a clam.
+
+"How stunning! Look, Torchy. O-o-oh!" says Vee, gaspin' a little.
+
+In handling the thing she must have pressed a catch somewhere, for the
+cameo springs back, revealin' a locket effect underneath with a picture
+in it. Course, we couldn't help seein'.
+
+"Why--why----" says Vee, gazin' from the picture to Mrs. Parker Smith.
+"Isn't this a portrait of--of----"
+
+"Of a very silly young woman," cuts in Auntie. "We waited in Florence a
+week to have that finished."
+
+"Then--then it is you!" asks Vee.
+
+The lady in gray nods. Vee asks if she may show it to Claire.
+
+"Why not?" says Mrs. Parker Smith, smilin'.
+
+We didn't stop to explain. I passes it on to Claire, and then we both
+watches her face. For the dinky little picture under the cameo is a dead
+ringer for the one Claire had shown us in the silver frame. So it was
+Claire's turn to catch a short breath.
+
+"Don't tell me," says she, "that--that you are Clara Lamar?"
+
+Which was when Auntie got her big jolt. For a second the pink fades out
+of her cheeks, and the salad fork she'd been holdin' rattles into her
+plate. She makes a quick recovery, though.
+
+"I was--once," says she. "I had hoped, though, that the name had been
+forgotten. Tell me, how--how do you happen to----"
+
+"Why," says Claire, "uncle had the scrapbook habit. Anyway, I found this
+one in an old desk, and it was all about you. Your picture was in it,
+too. And say, Auntie, you were the real thing, weren't you?"
+
+After that it was a reg'lar reunion. For Claire had dug up her heroine.
+And, no matter how strong Auntie protests that she ain't that sort of a
+party now, and hasn't been for years and years, Claire keeps right on.
+She's a consistent admirer, even if she is a little late.
+
+"If I had only known it was you!" says she.
+
+"Then--then you'll come to Meadowbrae with me?" asks Mrs. Parker Smith.
+
+"You bet!" says Claire. "Between you and me, this art career of mine has
+rather fizzled out. Besides, keeping it up has got to be rather a bore.
+Honest, a spaghetti and cigarette life is a lot more romantic to read
+about than it is to follow. Whether I could learn to run a dairy farm or
+not, I don't know; but, with an aunt like you to coach me along, I'm
+blessed if I don't give it a try. When do we start?"
+
+"But," says Vee to me, later, "I can't imagine her on a farm."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," says I. "Didn't you notice she couldn't smoke
+without gettin' it up her nose?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+ALL THE WAY WITH ANNA
+
+
+Believe me, Belinda, this havin' a boss who's apt to stack you up casual
+against stuff that would worry a secret service corps recruited from
+seventh sons is a grand little cure for monotonous moments. Just because
+I happen to get a few easy breaks on my first special details seems to
+give Old Hickory the merry idea that when he wants someone to do the
+wizard act, all he has to do is press the button for me. I don't know
+whether my wearin' the khaki uniform helps out the notion or not. I
+shouldn't wonder.
+
+Now, here a week or ten days ago, when I leaves Vee and my peaceful
+little home after a week-end swing, I expects to be shot up to Amesbury,
+Mass., to inspect a gun-limber factory. Am I? Not at all. By 3 P.M. I'm
+in Bridgeport, Conn., wanderin' about sort of aimless, and tryin' to
+size up a proposition that I'm about as well qualified to handle as a
+plumber's helper called in to tune a pipe organ.
+
+Why was it that some three thousand hands in one of our sub-contractin'
+plants was bent on gettin' stirred up and messy about every so often, in
+spite of all that had been done to soothe 'em?
+
+Does that listen simple, or excitin', or even interestin'? It didn't to
+me. Specially after I'd given the once-over to this giddy mob of Wops
+and Hunkies and Sneezowskis.
+
+The office people didn't know how many brands of Czechs or Magyars or
+Polacks they had in the shops. What they was real sure of was that a
+third of the bunch had walked out twice within the last month, and if
+they quit again, as there was signs of their doin', we stood to drop
+about $200,000 in bonuses on shell contracts.
+
+It wasn't a matter of wage scales, either. Honest, some of them ginks
+with three z's in their names was runnin' up, with over-time and all,
+pay envelops that averaged as much as twelve a day. Why, some of the
+women and girls were pullin' down twenty-five a week. And they couldn't
+kick on the workin' conditions, either. Here was a brand-new concrete
+plant, clean as a new dish-pan, with half the sides swingin' glass
+sashes, and flower beds outside.
+
+"And still they threaten another strike," says the general manager. "If
+it comes, we might as well scrap this whole plant and transfer the
+equipment to Pennsylvania or somewhere else. Unless"--here he grins
+sarcastic--"you can find out what ails 'em, Lieutenant. But you are only
+the third bright young man the Corrugated has sent out to tell us what's
+what, you know."
+
+"Oh, well," says I. "There's luck in odd numbers. Cheer up."
+
+It was after this little chat that I sheds the army costume and wanders
+out disguised as a horny-handed workingman.
+
+Not that I'd decided to get a job right away. After my last stab I ain't
+so strong for this ten-hour cold-lunch trick as I was when I was new to
+the patriotic sleuthin' act. Besides, bein' no linguist, I couldn't see
+how workin' with such a mixed lot was goin' to get me anywhere. If I
+could only run across a good ambidextrous interpreter, now, one who
+could listen in ten languages and talk in six, it might help. And who
+was it I once knew that had moved to Bridgeport?
+
+I'd been mullin' on that mystery ever since I struck the town. Just a
+glimmer, somewhere in the back of my nut, that there had been such a
+party some time or other. I'll admit that wasn't much of a clue to start
+out trailin' in a place of this size, but it's all I had.
+
+I must have walked miles, readin' the signs on the stores, pushin' my
+way through the crowds, and finally droppin' into a fairly clean-lookin'
+restaurant for dinner. Half way through the goulash and noodles, I had
+this bright thought about consultin' the 'phone book. The cashier that
+let me have it eyed me suspicious as I props it up against the sugar
+bowl and starts in with the A's.
+
+Ever try readin' a telephone directory straight through? By the time I'd
+got through the M's I'd had to order another cup of coffee and a second
+piece of lemon pie. At that, the waitress was gettin' uneasy. She'd just
+shoved my check at me for the third time, and was addin' a glass of
+wooden tooth-picks, when I lets out this excited stage whisper.
+
+"Sobowski!" says I, grabbin' the book.
+
+The young lady in the frilled apron rests her thumbs on her hips
+dignified and shoots me a haughty glance. "Ring off, young feller," says
+she. "You got the wrong number."
+
+"Not so, Clarice," says I. "His first name is Anton, and he used to run
+a shine parlor in the arcade of the Corrugated buildin', New York, N. Y."
+
+"It's a small world, ain't it?" says she. "You can pay me or at the
+desk, just as you like."
+
+Clarice got her tip all right, and loaned me her pencil to write down
+Anton's street number.
+
+A stocky, bow-legged son of Kosciuszko, built close to the ground, and
+with a neck on him like a truck-horse, as I remembered Anton. But the
+hottest kind of a sport. Used to run a pool on the ball-games, and made
+a book on the ponies now and then. Always had a roll with him. He'd take
+a nickel tip from me and then bet a guy in the next chair fifty to
+thirty-five the Giants would score more'n three runs against the Cubs'
+new pitcher in to-morrow's game. That kind.
+
+Must have been two or three years back that Anton had told me about some
+openin' he had to go in with a brother-in-law up in Bridgeport. Likely I
+didn't pay much attention at the time. Anyway, he was missin' soon
+after; and if I hadn't been in the habit of callin' him Old Sobstuff I'd
+have forgotten that name of his entirely. But seein' it there in the
+book brought back the whole thing.
+
+"Anton Sobowski, saloon," was the way it was listed. So he was runnin' a
+suds parlor, eh? Well, it wasn't likely he'd know much about labor
+troubles, but it wouldn't do any harm to look him up. When I came to
+trail down the street number, though, blamed if it ain't within half a
+block of our branch works.
+
+And, sure enough, in a little office beyond the bar, leanin' back
+luxurious in a swivel-chair, and displayin' a pair of baby-blue armlets
+over his shirt sleeves, I discovers Mr. Sobowski himself. It ain't any
+brewery-staked hole-in-the-wall he's boss of, either. It's the Warsaw
+Café, bar and restaurant, all glittery and gorgeous, with lace curtains
+in the front windows, red, white, and blue mosquito nettin' draped
+artistic over the frosted mirrors, and three busy mixers behind the
+mahogany bar.
+
+Anton has fleshed up considerable since he quit jugglin' the brushes,
+and he's lost a little of the good-natured twinkle from his wide-set
+eyes. He glances up at me sort of surly when I first steps into the
+office; but the minute I takes off the straw lid and ducks my head at
+him, he lets loose a rumbly chuckle.
+
+"It is that Torchy, hey?" says he. "Well, well! It don't fade any, does
+it?"
+
+"Not that kind of dye," says I. "How's the boy?"
+
+"Me," says Anton. "Oh, fine like silk. How you like the place, hey?"
+
+I enthused over the Warsaw Café; and when he found I was still with the
+Corrugated, and didn't want to touch him for any coin, but had just
+happened to be in town and thought I'd look him up for old times'
+sake--well, Anton opened up considerable.
+
+"What!" says he. "They send you out? You must be comin' up?"
+
+"Only private sec. to Mr. Ellins," says I, "but he chases me around a
+good deal. We're busy people these days, you know."
+
+"The Corrugated Trust! I should say so," agrees Anton, waggin' his head
+earnest. "Big people, big money. I like to have my brother-in-law meet
+you. Wait."
+
+Seemed a good deal like wastin' time, but I spent the whole evenin' with
+Anton. I met not only the brother-in-law, but also Mrs. Sobowski, his
+wife; and another Mrs. Sobowski, an aunt or something; and Miss Anna
+Sobowski, his niece. Also I saw the three-story Sobowski boardin'-house
+that Anton conducted on the side; and the Alcazar movie joint, another
+Sobowski enterprise.
+
+That's where this Anna party was sellin' tickets--a peachy-cheeked,
+high-chested young lady with big, rollin' eyes, and her mud-colored hair
+waved something wonderful. I was introduced reg'lar and impressive.
+
+"Anna," says Anton, "take a good look at this young man. He's a friend
+of mine. Any time he comes by, pass him in free--any time at all. See?"
+
+And Anna, she flashes them high-powered eyes of hers at me kittenish.
+"Aw ri'," says she. "I'm on, Mr. Torchy."
+
+"That girl," confides Anton to me afterwards, "was eating black bread
+and cabbage soup in Poland less than three years ago. Now she buys high
+kid boots, two kinds of leather, at fourteen dollars. And makes goo-goo
+eyes at all the men. Yes, but never no mistakes with the change. Not
+Anna."
+
+All of which was interestin' enough, but it didn't seem to help any. You
+never can tell, though, can you? You see, it was kind of hard, breakin'
+away from Anton once he'd started to get folksy and show me what an
+important party he'd come to be. He wanted me to see the Warsaw when it
+was really doin' business, about ten o'clock, after the early
+picture-show crowds had let out and the meetin' in the hall overhead was
+in full swing.
+
+"What sort of meetin'?" I asks, just as a filler.
+
+"Oh, some kind of labor meetin'," says he. "I d'know. They chin a lot.
+That's thirsty work. Good for business, hey?"
+
+"Is it a labor union?" I insists.
+
+Anton shrugs his shoulders.
+
+"You wait," says he. "Mr. Stukey, he'll tell you all about it. Yes, an
+ear-full. He's a good spender, Stukey. Hires the hall, too."
+
+Somehow, that listened like it might be a lead. But an hour later, when
+I'd had a chance to look him over, I was for passin' Stukey up. For he
+sure was disappointin' to view. One of these thin, sallow, dyspeptic
+parties, with deep lines down either side of his mouth, a bristly, jutty
+little mustache, and ratty little eyes.
+
+I expect Anton meant well when he brings out strong, in introducin' me,
+how I'm connected with the Corrugated Trust. In fact, you might almost
+gather I _was_ the Corrugated. But it don't make any hit with Stukey.
+
+"Hah!" says he, glarin' at me hostile. "A minion."
+
+"Solid agate yourself," says I. "Wha'd'ye mean--minion?"
+
+"Aren't you a hireling of the capitalistic class?" demands Stukey.
+
+"Maybe," says I, "but I ain't above mixin' with lower-case minds now and
+then."
+
+"Case?" says he. "I don't understand."
+
+"Perhaps that's your trouble," says I.
+
+"Bah!" says he, real peevish.
+
+"Come, come, boys!" says Anton, clappin' us jovial on the shoulders.
+"What's this all about, hey? We are all friends here. Yes? Is it that
+the meetin' goes wrong, Mr. Stukey? Tell us, now."
+
+Stukey shakes his head at him warnin'. "What meetin'?" says he. "Don't
+be foolish. What time is it? Ten-twenty! I have an engagement."
+
+And with that he struts off important.
+
+Anton hunches his shoulders and lets out a grunt.
+
+"He has it bad--Stukey," says he. "It is that Anna. Every night he must
+walk home with her."
+
+"She ain't particular, is she?" I suggests.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," says Anton. "Yes, he is older, and not a strong
+hearty man, like some of these young fellows. But he is educated; oh,
+like the devil. You should hear him talk once."
+
+But Stukey had stirred up a stubborn streak in me.
+
+"Is he, though," says I, "or do you kid yourself?"
+
+I thought that would get a come-back out of Anton. And it does.
+
+"If I am so foolish," says he, "would I be here, with my name in gold
+above the door, or back shining shoes in the Corrugated arcade yet? Hey?
+I will tell you this. Nobodies don't come and hire my hall from me,
+fifty a week, in advance."
+
+"Cash or checks?" I puts in.
+
+"If the bank takes the checks, why should I worry?" asks Anton.
+
+"Oh, the first one might be all right," says I, "and the second;
+but--well, you know your own business, I expect."
+
+Anton gazes at me stupid for a minute, then turns to his desk and fishes
+out a bunch of returned checks. He goes through 'em rapid until he has
+run across the one he's lookin' for.
+
+"Maybe I do," says he, wavin' it under my nose triumphant.
+
+Which gives me the glimpse I'd been jockeyin' for. The name of that
+bank was enough. From then on I was mighty interested in this Mortimer
+J. Stukey; and while I didn't exactly use the pressure pump on Anton, I
+may have asked a few leadin' questions. Who was Stukey, where did he
+come from, and what was his idea--hirin' halls and so on? While Anton
+could recognize a dollar a long way off, he wasn't such a keen observer
+of folks.
+
+"I don't worry whether he's a Wilson man or not," says Anton, "or which
+movie star he likes best after Mary Pickford. If I did I should ask
+Anna."
+
+"Eh?" says I, sort of eager.
+
+"He tells her a lot he don't tell me," says Anton.
+
+"That's reasonable, too," says I. "Ask Anna. Say, that ain't a bad
+hunch. Much obliged."
+
+It wasn't so easy, though, with Stukey on the job, to get near enough to
+ask Anna anything. When they came in, and Anton invites me to join the
+fam'ly group in the boardin'-house dinin'-room while the cheese
+sandwiches and pickles was bein' passed around, I finds Stukey blockin'
+me off scientific.
+
+As Anton had said, he had it bad. Never took his eyes off Anna for a
+second. I suppose he thought he was registerin' tender emotions, but it
+struck me as more of a hungry look than anything else. Miss Sobowski
+seemed to like it, though.
+
+I expect a real lady's man wouldn't have had much trouble cuttin' in on
+Stukey and towin' Anna off into a corner. But that ain't my strong suit.
+The best I could do was to wait until the next day, when there was no
+opposition. Meantime I'd been usin' the long-distance reckless; so by
+the time Anna shows up at the Alcazar to open the window for the evenin'
+sale, I was primed with a good many more facts about a certain party
+than I had been the night before. Stukey wasn't quite such a man of
+mystery as he had been.
+
+Course, I might have gone straight to Anton; but, somehow, I wanted to
+try out a few hints on Anna. I couldn't say just why, either. The line
+of josh I opens with ain't a bit subtle. It don't have to be. Anna was
+tickled to pieces to be kidded about her feller. She invites me into the
+box-office, offers me chewin' gum, and proceeds to get quite frisky.
+
+"Ah, who was tellin' you that?" says she. "Can't a girl have a gentleman
+frien' without everybody's askin' is she engaged? Wotcher think?"
+
+"Tut-tut!" says I. "I suppose, when you two had your heads together so
+close, he was rehearsin' one of his speeches to you--the kind he makes
+up in the hall, eh?"
+
+"Mr. Stukey don't make no speeches there," says Anna. "He just tells the
+others what to say. You ought to hear him talk, though. My, sometimes
+he's just grand!"
+
+"Urgin' 'em not to quit work, I suppose?" says I.
+
+"Him?" says Anna. "Not much. He wants 'em to strike, all the time
+strike, until they own the shops. He's got no use for rich people. Calls
+'em blood-suckers and things like that. Oh, he's sump'n fierce when he
+talks about the rich."
+
+"Is he?" says I. "I wonder why?"
+
+"All the workers get like that," says Anna. "Mr. Stukey says that pretty
+soon everybody will join--all but the rich blood-suckers, and they'll be
+in jail. He was poor himself once. So was I, you know, in Poland. But we
+got along until the Germans came, and then---- Ugh! I don't like to
+remember."
+
+"Anton was tellin' me," says I. "You lost some of your folks."
+
+"Lost!" says Anna, a panicky look comin' into her big eyes. "You call it
+that? I saw my father shot, my two brothers dragged off to work in the
+trenches, and my sister--oh, I can't! I can't say it!"
+
+"Then don't tell Stukey," says I, "if you want to keep stringin' him
+along."
+
+"But why?" demands Anna.
+
+"Because," says I, "the money he's spendin' so free around here comes
+from them--the Germans."
+
+"No, no!" says Anna, whisperin' husky. "That--that's a lie!"
+
+"Sorry," says I; "but I got his number straight. He was workin' for a
+German insurance company up to 1915, bookkeepin' at ninety a month. Then
+he got the chuck. He came near starvin'. It was when he was almost in
+that he went crawlin' back to 'em, and they gave him this job. If you
+don't believe it's German money he's spendin' ask Anton to show you some
+of Stukey's canceled checks."
+
+"But--but he's English," protests Anna. "Anyway, his father was."
+
+"The Huns don't mind who they buy up," says I.
+
+She's still starin' at me, sort of stunned.
+
+"German money!" she repeats. "Him!"
+
+"Anton will show you the checks," says I. "He don't care where they
+come from, so long as he can cash 'em. But you might hint to him that if
+another big strike is pulled it's apt to be a long one, and in that case
+the movie business will get a crimp put in it. The Warsaw receipts, too.
+I take it that Stukey's tryin' to work the hands up to a point where
+they'll vote for----"
+
+"To-night they vote," breaks in Anna. "In two hours."
+
+I lets out a whistle. "Zowie!" says I. "Guess I'm a little late. Say,
+you got a 'phone here. Would it do any good if you called Anton up
+and----"
+
+"No," snaps Anna. "He thinks too slow. I must do this myself."
+
+"You?" says I. "What could you do?"
+
+"I don't know," says Anna. "But I must try. And quick. Hey, Marson!
+You--at the door. Come here and sell the tickets. Put an usher in your
+place."
+
+With that she bounces down off the tall chair, shoves the substitute
+into her place, and goes streamin' out bare-headed. I decides to follow.
+But she leaves me behind as though I'd been standin' still.
+
+At the Warsaw I finds Anton smokin' placid in his little office.
+
+"Seen Anna?" I asks.
+
+"Anna!" says he. "She should be selling tickets at the----"
+
+"She was," says I; "but just now she's upstairs in the hall."
+
+"At the meetin'?" gasps Anton. "Anna? Oh, no!"
+
+"Come, take a look," says I.
+
+And, for once in his life, Anton got a quick move on. He don't ask me to
+follow, but I trails along; and just as we strikes the top stair we
+hears a rousin' cheer go up. I suppose any other time we'd been barred
+out, but there's nobody to hold us up as we pushes through, for everyone
+has their eyes glued on the little stage at the far end of the hall.
+
+No wonder. For there, standin' up before more than three hundred yellin'
+men, is this high-colored young woman.
+
+Course, I couldn't get a word of it, my Polish education havin' been
+sadly neglected when I was young. But Anna seems to be tellin' some sort
+of story. My guess was that it's the one she'd hinted at to me--about
+her father and brothers and sister. But this time she seems to be
+throwin' in all the details.
+
+[Illustration: "Quick as a flash, Anna turns and points to Stukey. I
+caught his name as she hisses it out. Stukey, turnin' a sickly yellow,
+slumps in his chair."]
+
+There was nothin' frivolous about Anna's eyes now. It almost gave me a
+creepy feelin' to watch 'em--as if she was seein' things again that
+she'd like to forget--awful things. And she was makin' those three
+hundred men see the same things.
+
+All of a sudden she breaks off, covers her face with her hands, and
+shivers. Then, quick as a flash, she turns and points to Stukey. I
+caught his name as she hisses it out. Stukey, turnin' a sickly yellow,
+slumps in his chair. Another second, and she's turned back to the men
+out front. She is puttin' something up to them--a question, straight
+from the shoulder.
+
+The first to make a move is a squatty, thick-necked gent with one eye
+walled out. He jumps on a chair, shouts a few excited words, waves his
+long arms, and starts for the stage businesslike. The next thing I knew
+the riot was on, with Mortimer J. Stukey playin' the heavy lead and
+bein' tossed around like a rat.
+
+It must have been Anton that switched off the lights and sent for the
+police. I didn't stop to ask. Bein' near the door, I felt my way
+downstairs and made a quick exit. Course, the ceremonies promised to
+continue interestin', but somehow this struck me as a swell time for me
+to quit. So I strolls back to the hotel and goes to bed.
+
+Yes, I was some curious to know how the muss ended, but I didn't hurry
+around next mornin'. As a matter of fact, I'd enjoyed the society of the
+Sobowskis quite a lot durin' the past two days, and I thought I'd better
+stay away for a while. They're a strenuous bunch when they're stirred
+up--even a kittenish young thing like Anna.
+
+About noon I 'phoned the works, and found that all was serene there,
+with no signs of a strike yet.
+
+"No, and I got a hunch there won't be any, either," says I.
+
+I was plannin' to linger in Bridgeport another day or so; but when the
+afternoon paper came out I changed my mind. Accordin' to the
+police-court reporter's account, there'd been some little disturbance in
+Warsaw Hall the night before. Seems a stranger by the name of Stukey had
+butted into a meetin' of the Pulaski Social Club, and had proceeded to
+get so messy that it had been found necessary to throw him out. Half a
+dozen witnesses told how rude he'd been, includin' the well-known
+citizen, Mr. Anton Sobowski, who owned the premises. The said Stukey had
+been a bit damaged; but after he'd been patched up at the City Hospital
+he'd been promised a nice long rest--thirty days, to be exact.
+
+So I jumps the next train back to Broadway.
+
+"Ah, Lieutenant!" says Mr. Ellins, glancin' up from his desk. "Find
+anything up there?"
+
+"Uh-huh," says I. "His name was Stukey. Another case of drawin' his pay
+from Berlin."
+
+"Hah!" grunts Old Hickory, bitin' into his cigar. "The long arm again.
+But can't you recommend something?"
+
+"Sure!" says I. "If we could find a pair of gold boots about eighteen
+buttons high, we ought to send 'em to Anna Sobowski."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+AT THE TURN WITH WILFRED
+
+
+I expect Mr. Robert overstated the case a bit. He was more or less
+hectic back of the ears about then, havin' just broken away after a
+half-hour session with Mrs. Stanton Bliss.
+
+"That woman," says he, slumpin' into a chair and moppin' his brow, "has
+the mental equipment of a pet rabbit and the disposition of a setting
+hen. Good Lord!"
+
+I looks over at Vee and grins. Had to. It ain't often you see Mr. Robert
+like that. And him bein' all dolled up in his nifty navy uniform made it
+seem just that much funnier. But Vee don't grin back. She'd sympathize
+with 'most anybody. At that exact minute, I'll bet she was bein' sorry
+for both of 'em all in the same breath, as you might say.
+
+"But can't something be done--somehow?" she asks.
+
+"Not by me," says Mr. Robert, decided. "Great marlinspikes! I'm not the
+war department, am I? I'm only a first-grade lieutenant in command of a
+blessed, smelly old menhaden trawler that's posing as a mine-sweeper. I
+am supposed to be enjoying a twenty-four hour shore leave in the peace
+and quiet of my home, and I get--this."
+
+He waves his hand toward the other room, where the afore-mentioned Mrs.
+Stanton Bliss is sobbin, sniffin', and otherwise registerin' deep
+emotion by clawin' Mrs. Robert about the shoulders and wavin' away the
+smellin' salts.
+
+"If it was the first time," growls Mr. Robert. "But it isn't."
+
+That was true, too. You see, we'd heard somethin' about the other
+spasms. They'd begun along in July, when the awful news came out that
+Wilfred's red ink number had been plucked from the jar. Now you get it,
+don't you? Nothing unique. The same little old tragedy that was bein'
+staged in a million homes, includin' four-room flats, double-decker
+tenements, and boardin'-houses.
+
+Only this happened to hit the forty-room country house of the Stanton
+Blisses. Course, it was different. Look who was bein' stirred up by it.
+
+So mother had begun throwin' cat-fits. She'd tackled everyone she knew,
+demandin' to know what was to be done to keep Wilfred out of it. Among
+others, of course, she'd held up Mr. Robert. Wasn't he their nearest
+neighbor, and hadn't the Blisses entertained the Ellinses a lot? Not
+that she put it that way, exactly. But when she came with this hunch
+about gettin' sonny a snap job on some sort of naval construction work,
+why, of course, Mr. Robert couldn't duck. Yes, he thought he could place
+Wilfred. And he did--time-keeper, six-hour shift, and near enough so he
+could run back and forth every day in his machine.
+
+That might have been good enough for some folks. It meant dodgin' the
+draft for Wilfred, dead sure. But mother didn't stay satisfied long. She
+went investigatin' around the plant. She found the office stuffy,
+Wilfred's desk had no electric fan on it, she wasn't sure of the
+drinkin' water, and the foreman was quite an impossible sort of person
+who always sneered when he had anything to say to Wilfred. Couldn't Mr.
+Robert attend to some of these things? Mr. Robert said he'd try--if he
+had time. He didn't get the time. More visits from mother.
+
+Then this latest catastrophe. The Stanton Blisses had been away from
+home for three weeks or more, house-partyin' and motorin' through the
+mountains. Poor Wilfred had had to stay behind. What a stupidly
+distressin' thing war was, wasn't it? But he had been asked to spend his
+nights and Sundays with a college chum whose home was several miles
+nearer the works.
+
+And then they had come back to find this scribbled note. Things had been
+gettin' worse and worse, Wilfred wrote. Some young hoodlums around the
+plant had shouted after him as he drove off in his car. Even young
+girls. The men had been surly to him, and that beastly foreman---- Well,
+he wasn't goin' to stand for it, that was all. He didn't know just what
+he was goin' to do, but he was clearin' out. They'd hear from him later.
+
+They had. This six-word message from Philadelphia, dated nearly two
+weeks ago, was also waitin'. It said that he'd enlisted, was all right,
+and for them not to worry. Nothin' more.
+
+You couldn't blame mother for bein' stirred up. Her Wilfred had gone.
+Somewhere in some army camp or other, or at some naval trainin' station,
+the son and heir of the house of Bliss was minglin' with the coarse sons
+of the common people, was eatin' common food, was wearin' common
+clothes, was goin' up against the common thing generally. And that
+wasn't the worst of it. Where? Why didn't Mr. Robert tell her where? And
+couldn't he get him away at once? Mr. Robert had almost gone hoarse
+tryin' to explain why he couldn't. But after every try she'd come back
+with this wail:
+
+"Oh, but you don't understand what it is to be a mother!"
+
+"Thank the stars I don't!" says he, as he marches out of the room.
+
+I was for clearin' out so he'd be free to shoo her in any style he
+wanted to. We'd been havin' dinner with the Ellinses, Vee and I, and it
+was time to go home anyway. But there's no budgin' Vee.
+
+"Don't you think Torchy might find out where he is?" she suggests.
+"Bein' in the army himself, you know, and so clever at that sort of
+thing, I should think----"
+
+"Why, to be sure," breaks in Mr. Robert, perkin' up all of a sudden and
+starin' at me. "Lieutenant Torchy to the rescue, of course. He's the
+very one."
+
+"Ah, say, how'd you get that way?" says I. "Back up!"
+
+He's off, though, callin' Mrs. Stanton Bliss. And before I can escape
+he's sickin' her on real enthusiastic. Also there's Vee urgin' me to
+see if I can't do something to locate Wilfred. So I had to make the
+stab.
+
+"Got that wire with you?" I asks.
+
+Yes, Mrs. Bliss had all the documents right handy. I takes the yellow
+sheet over under the readin' lamp and squints at it sleuthy, partly to
+kill time, and partly because I couldn't think of anything else to do.
+And of course they all have to gather round and watch me close, as if I
+was about to pull some miracle. Foolish! It was a great deal worse than
+that.
+
+"H-m-m-m-m!" says I. "Philadelphia. I suppose there's some sort of naval
+trainin' station there, eh?"
+
+Mr. Robert says there is.
+
+"But if Wilfred was at it," I goes on, "and didn't want you to find him,
+he wouldn't have sent this from there, would he?"
+
+Mrs. Stanton Bliss sighs. "I'm sure I don't know," says she. "I--I
+suppose not."
+
+"Must be somewhere within strikin' distance of Philadelphia, though,"
+says I. "Now, what camp is near?"
+
+"Couldn't we wire someone in Washington and find out?" asks Mrs. Bliss.
+
+"Sure," says I. "And we'd get an official answer from the Secretary of
+War about 11 A.M. next spring. It'll be a lot quicker to call up Whitey
+Weeks."
+
+They don't know everything in newspaper offices, but there are mighty
+few things they can't find out. Whitey, though, didn't even have to
+consult the copy desk or the clippin' bureau.
+
+"About the nearest big one," says he, "is the Ambulance Corps Camp at
+Allentown. Somewhere up on the Lehigh. S'long."
+
+Here was another jolt for Mrs. Stanton Bliss. The Ambulance Corps! She
+near keeled over again, just hearin' me say it. Oh, oh! Did I really
+believe Wilfred could have been as rash as that?
+
+"Why," says she, "they drive right up to the trenches, don't they? Isn't
+that fearfully dangerous?"
+
+"War isn't a parlor pastime," puts in Mr. Robert. "And the ambulance
+drivers take their chances with the rest of the men. But there's no
+fightin' going on at Allentown. If Wilfred is there----"
+
+"If he is," cuts in Mrs. Bliss, "I must go to him this very moment."
+
+Some way that statement seemed to cheer Mr. Robert up a lot.
+
+"Naturally," says he. "I'll look up a train for you. Just a second. In
+the A's. Allentown--Allen. Ah, page 156. M-m-m. Here you are. First one
+starts at 2 A.M. and gets you in at 5.15. Will that do?"
+
+Mrs. Bliss turns on him sort of dazed, and blinks them round eyes of
+hers. She's a fairly well put up old girl, you know, built sort of on
+the pouter-pigeon type, but with good lines below the waist, and a
+complexion that she's taken lots of pains with. Dresses real classy,
+and, back to, she's often mistaken for daughter Marion. Travels in quite
+a gay bunch, I understand, with Mr. Stanton Bliss kind of trailin' along
+behind. Usually, when she ain't indulgin' in hysterics, she has very
+fetchin' kittenish ways. You know the kind. Their specialty's makin' the
+surroundin' males jump through the hoop for 'em. But when it comes to
+arrivin' anywhere at 5.15 A.M.--well, not for her.
+
+"I should be a sight," says she.
+
+"You'd still be a mother, wouldn't you?" asks Mr. Robert.
+
+It was rough of him, as he was given to understand by the looks of all
+three ladies present, includin' Mrs. Robert; so he tries to square
+himself by lookin' up a ten o'clock train, all Pullman, with diner and
+observation.
+
+"I would gladly take you up myself," says he, lyin' fluent, "if I
+didn't have to go back to my boat. But here is Torchy. He'll go, I
+suppose."
+
+"Of course," says Vee.
+
+And that's how I came to be occupyin' drawin'-room A, along with mother
+and sister Marion, as we breezes up into the Pennsylvania hills on this
+Wilfred hunt. A gushy, giggly young party Marion is, but she turns out
+to be quite a help. It was her who spots the two young soldiers driftin'
+through towards the smokin' compartment, and suggests that maybe they're
+goin' to the same camp.
+
+"And they would know if Wilfred was there, wouldn't they?" she adds.
+
+"Maybe," says I. "I'll go ask."
+
+Nice, clean-cut young chaps they was. They'd stretched out comfortable
+on the leather seats, and was enjoyin' a perfectly good smoke, until I
+shows up. The minute I appears, though, they chucks their cigars and
+jumps up, heels together, right hand to the hat-brim. That's what I get
+by havin' this dinky bar on my shoulders.
+
+"Can it, boys," says I. "This is unofficial."
+
+"At ease, sir?" suggests one.
+
+"As easy as you know how," says I.
+
+Yes, they says they're ambulancers; on their way back to Allentown,
+too. But they didn't happen to know of any Wilfred Stanton Bliss there.
+
+"You see, sir," says one, "there are about five thousand of us, so he
+might----"
+
+"Sure!" says I. "But mother'll want an affidavit. Would you mind
+droppin' in and bein' cross-examined? There's sister Marion, too."
+
+Obligin' chaps, they were; let me tow 'em into the drawin'-room,
+listened patient while Mrs. Bliss described just how Wilfred looked, and
+tried their best to remember havin' seen such a party. Also they gave
+her their expert opinion on how long the war was goin' to last, when
+Wilfred would be sent over, and what chances he stood of comin' back
+without a scratch.
+
+Once more it was Marion who threw the switch.
+
+"Tell me," says she, "will he be wearing a uniform just like yours?"
+
+They said he would.
+
+"Oh!" gurgles Marion, "I think it is perfectly spiffy. Don't you,
+mother? I'm just crazy to see Wilfred in one."
+
+Mother catches the enthusiasm. "My noble boy!" says she, rollin' her
+eyes up.
+
+From then on she's quite chipper. The idea of findin' sonny made over
+into a smart, dashin' soldier seemed to crowd out all the panicky
+thoughts she'd been havin'. From little hints she let drop, I judged
+that she was already picturin' him as a gallant hero, struttin' around
+haughty and givin' off stern commands. Maybe he'd been made a captain or
+something. Surely they would soon see that her Wilfred ought to be an
+officer of some kind.
+
+"And we must have his portrait painted," she remarks, claspin' her hands
+excited as the happy thought strikes her.
+
+The boys looked steady out of the window and managed to smother the
+smiles. I imagine they'd seen all sorts of mothers come to camp.
+
+It's a lively little burg, Allentown, even if I didn't know it was on
+the map before. At the station you take a trolley that runs straight
+through the town and out to the fair grounds, where the camp is located.
+Goin' up the hill, you pass through the square and by the Soldiers'
+Monument. Say, it's some monument, too. Then out a long street lined
+with nice, comfortable-lookin' homes, until you get a glimpse of blue
+hills rollin' away as far as you can see, and there you are.
+
+The boys piloted us past the guard at the gates, through a grove of
+trees, and left us at the information bureau, where a soldier wearin'
+shell-rimmed glasses listened patient while mother and sister both
+talked at once.
+
+"Bliss? Just a moment," says he, reachin' for a card-index box. "Yes,
+ma'am. Wilfred Stanton. He's here."
+
+"But where?" demands Mrs. Bliss.
+
+"Why," says the soldier, "he's listed with the casuals just now.
+Quartered in the cow-barn."
+
+"The--the cow-barn!" gasps Mrs. Bliss.
+
+The soldier grins.
+
+"It's over that way," says he, wavin' his hand. "Anyone will tell you."
+
+They did. We wandered on and on, past the parade ground that used to be
+the trottin' track, past new barracks that was being knocked together
+hasty, until we comes to this dingy white buildin' with all the
+underwear hung up to dry around it. I took one glance inside, where the
+cots was stacked in thick and soldiers was loafin' around in various
+stages of dress and undress, and then I shooed mother and sister off a
+ways while I went scoutin' in alone. At a desk made out of a
+packin'-box I found a chap hammerin' away at a typewriter. He salutes
+and goes to attention.
+
+"Yes, sir," says he, when I've told him who I'm lookin' for. "Squeaky
+Bliss. But he's on duty just now, sir."
+
+I suggests that his mother and sister are here and would like to have a
+glimpse of him right away.
+
+"They'd better wait until after five, sir," says he.
+
+"I wouldn't like to try holdin' 'em in that long," says I.
+
+"Very well, sir," says he. "Squeaky's on fatigue. Somewhere down at the
+further end of the grand stand you might catch him. But if it's his
+mother--well, I'd wait."
+
+I passes this advice on to Mrs. Bliss.
+
+"The idea!" says she. "I wish to see my noble soldier boy at once.
+Come."
+
+So we went. There was no scarcity of young fellows in olive drab. The
+place was thick with 'em. Squads were drillin' every way you looked, and
+out in the center of the field, where two or three hundred new
+ambulances were lined up, more squads were studyin' the insides of the
+motor, or practicin' loadin' in stretchers. Hundreds and hundreds of
+young fellows in uniform, all lookin' just alike. I didn't wonder that
+mother couldn't pick out sonny boy.
+
+"What was it that man said?" she asks. "Wilfred on fatigue. Does that
+mean he is resting?"
+
+"Not exactly," says I.
+
+About then sister Marion begins to exhibit jumpy emotions.
+
+"Mother! Mother!" says she, starin' straight ahead. "Look!"
+
+All I could see was a greasy old truck backed up in front of some low
+windows under the grand stand, with half a dozen young toughs in smeary
+blue overalls jugglin' a load of galvanized iron cans. Looked like
+garbage cans; smelled that way too. And the gang that was handlin'
+'em--well, most of 'em had had their heads shaved, and in that rig they
+certainly did look like a bunch from Sing Sing.
+
+I was just nudgin' sister to move along, when Mrs. Bliss lets out this
+choky cry:
+
+"Wilfred!" says she.
+
+She hadn't made any mistake, either. It was sonny, all right. And you
+should have seen his face as he swings around and finds who's watchin'
+him. If it hadn't been for the bunkie who was helpin' him lift that can
+of sloppy stuff on to the tail of the truck, there'd been a fine spill,
+too.
+
+"My boy! Wilfred!" calls Mrs. Stanton Bliss, holdin' out her arms
+invitin' and dramatic.
+
+Now, in the first place, Wilfred was in no shape to be the party of the
+second part in a motherly clinch act. It's messy work, loadin' garbage
+cans, and he's peeled down for it. He was costumed in a pair of overalls
+that would have stood in the corner all by themselves, and an army
+undershirt with one sleeve half ripped off.
+
+In the second place, all the rest of the bunch was wearin' broad grins,
+and he knew it. So he don't rush over at once. Instead he steps around
+to the front of the truck and salutes a husky, freckled-necked young
+sergeant who's sittin' behind the steerin' wheel.
+
+"Family, sir," says Wilfred. "What--what'll I do?"
+
+The sergeant takes one look over his shoulder.
+
+"Oh, well," says he, "drop out until next load."
+
+Not until Wilfred had led us around the corner does he express his
+feelin's.
+
+"For the love of Mike, mother!" says he. "Wasn't it bad enough without
+your springin' that 'muh boy!' stuff? Right before all the fellows,
+too. Good-night!"
+
+"But, Wilfred," insists mother, "what does this mean? Why do I find
+you--well, like this? Oh, it's too dreadful for words. Who has done this
+to you--and why?"
+
+Jerky, little by little, Wilfred sketches out the answer. Army life
+wasn't what he'd expected. Not at all. He was sore on the whole
+business. He'd been let in for it, that was all. It wasn't so bad for
+some of the fellows, but they'd been lucky. As for him--well, he'd come
+here to learn to be an ambulance driver, and he had spent his first week
+in the kitchen, peelin' potatoes. Then, when they'd let him off that,
+and given him his first pass to go to town, just because he'd been a
+little late comin' back they'd jumped on him somethin' fierce. They'd
+shoved him on this garbage detail. He'd been on it ever since.
+
+"It's that mucker of a top sergeant, Quigley," says Wilfred. "He's got
+it in for me."
+
+Mrs. Stanton Bliss straightens out her chin dimple as she glares after
+the garbage truck, which is rollin' away in the distance.
+
+"Has he, indeed!" says she. "We will see about that, then."
+
+"But you must handle him easy, mother," warns Wilfred.
+
+"That person!" snorts mother. "I shall have nothing to do with him
+whatever. I mean to get you out of this, Wilfred. I am going straight to
+the general."
+
+"Now, mother!" protests Wilfred. "Don't make a scene."
+
+When she was properly stirred up, though, that was mother's long suit.
+And she starts right in. Course, I tried to head her off, but it's no
+use. As there wasn't a general handy, she had to be satisfied with a
+major. Seemed like a mighty busy major, too; but when he heard his
+orderly tryin' to shunt the ladies, he gives the signal to let 'em in.
+You can bet I didn't follow. Didn't have to, for Mrs. Bliss wasn't doin'
+any whisperin' about then.
+
+And she sure made it plain to the major how little she thought of the U.
+S. Army, and specially that part of it located at Allentown, Pa. Havin'
+got that off her chest, and been listened to patient, she demands that
+Wilfred be excused from all his disgustin' duties, and be allowed to go
+home with her at once and for good.
+
+The major shakes his head. "Impossible!" says he.
+
+"Then," says Mrs. Stanton Bliss, tossin' her head, "I shall appeal to
+the Secretary of War; to the President, if necessary."
+
+The major smiles weary. "You'd best talk to his sergeant," says he. "If
+he recommends your son's discharge it may go through."
+
+"That person!" exclaims Mrs. Bliss. "Never! I--I might talk to his
+captain."
+
+"Useless, madam," says the major. "See his sergeant; he's the one."
+
+And he signifies polite that the interview is over.
+
+When mother tells sonny the result of this visit to headquarters, he
+shrugs his shoulders.
+
+"I knew it would be that way," says he. "They've got me, and I've got to
+stand for it. No use askin' Quigley. You might as well go home."
+
+"But at least you can get away long enough to have dinner with us," says
+mother.
+
+"Nothing doin'," says Wilfred. "Can't get out unless Quigley signs a
+pass, and he won't."
+
+"Oh, come!" says I. "He don't look so bad as all that. Let me see what I
+can do with him."
+
+Well, after I'd chased the ladies back to the hotel with instructions to
+wait hopeful, I hunts up Top Sergeant Quigley. Had quite a revealin'
+chat with him, too. Come to look at him close after he'd washed up, he's
+rather decent appearin'. Face seems sort of familiar, too.
+
+"Didn't you play first base for the Fordhams?" I asks.
+
+"Oh, that was back in '14," says he.
+
+"As I remember," says I, "you was some star on the bag, though. Now,
+about young Bliss. Case of mommer's pet, you know."
+
+"He had that tag all over him," says Quigley. "But we're knockin' a lot
+of that out of him. He's comin' on."
+
+"Good!" says I. "Would it stop the process to let him off for an evenin'
+with the folks--dinner and so on?"
+
+"Why, no; I guess not," says Quigley. "Might do him good. But he must
+apply himself. Send him along."
+
+So a half hour later I sat on a cot in the cow-barn and watched Wilfred,
+fresh from the shower bath, get into his army uniform.
+
+"Say," he remarks, strugglin' through his khaki shirt, "I didn't think
+old Quig would do it."
+
+"Seemed glad to," says I. "Said you was comin' on fine."
+
+"He did?" gasps Wilfred. "Quigley? Well, what do you know!"
+
+Not such a bad imitation of a soldier, Wilfred, when he'd laced up the
+leggins and got the snappy-cut coat buttoned tight. He's some different
+from what he was when sister first discovered him. And we had quite a
+gay dinner together.
+
+First off mother was for campin' right down there indefinitely, where
+she could see her darlin' boy every day; but between Wilfred and me we
+persuaded her different. I expect the hotel quarters had something to do
+with it, too. Anyway, after Wilfred had promised to try for a couple of
+days off soon, for a visit home, she consents to start back in the
+mornin'.
+
+"What I dread most, Wilfred," says she, "is leaving you at the mercy of
+that horrid sergeant."
+
+"Oh, I'll get along with him somehow," says Wilfred. "I'm goin' to try,
+anyway."
+
+And right there, as I understand it, Wilfred Stanton Bliss started to be
+a man and a soldier. He had a long way to go, though, it seemed to me.
+
+So here the other day, only a couple of weeks since we made our trip,
+I'm some surprised to see who it is givin' me the zippy salute on the
+station platform out home. Yes, it's Wilfred. And say, he's got his
+shoulders squared, he's carryin' his chin up, and he's wearin' his
+uniform like it grew on him.
+
+"Well, well!" says I. "Got your furlough, eh?"
+
+"Yes, sir," says he. "Seventy-two hours. Had a whale of a time, too. You
+can't guess who I brought home with me, I'll bet."
+
+I couldn't.
+
+"Our top sergeant--Quigley," says he. "Say, he's all right. He's had us
+transferred to the best barracks in camp. Guess we deserve it, too, for
+we're on the way to bein' the crackerjack section of them all. You ought
+to see us drill. Some class! And it's all due to Quigley. Do you know
+what he thinks? That we're slated among the next lot to go over. How
+about that, sir? Won't that be great?"
+
+"Huh!" says I. "How long ago was it you signed up, Wilfred?"
+
+"Just six weeks, sir," says he.
+
+"Whiffo!" says I, gawpin' at him. "If we had about a hundred thousand
+Quigleys!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+VEE GOES OVER THE TOP
+
+
+"But listen, Vee," says I. "If Hoover can't pull it off, with all the
+backin' he's got, what's the use of a few of you women mixin' in?"
+
+"At least we can try," says Vee. "The prices this Belcher person is
+charging are something outrageous. Eggs ninety cents!"
+
+"We should worry," says I. "Ain't we got nearly a hundred hens on the
+job?"
+
+"But others haven't," says Vee. "Those people in that row of little
+cottages down by the station. The Walters, for instance. He can't get
+more than twenty-five or thirty dollars a week, can he?"
+
+"There's so many cases you can't figure out," says I. "Maybe he scrubs
+along on small steaks or fried chicken."
+
+"It's no joking matter," protests Vee. "Of course there are plenty of
+people worse off then the Walters. That Mrs. Burke, whose two boys are
+in the Sixty-ninth. She must do her marketing at Belcher's, too. Think
+of her having to pay those awful prices!"
+
+"I would," says I, "if workin'up a case of glooms was any use; but I
+can't see----"
+
+"We can see enough," breaks in Vee. "The new Belcher limousine, the
+additions to their hideous big house. All made, too, out of food
+profiteering right here. It's got to stop, that's all."
+
+Which is where I should have shouted "Kamerad" and come runnin' out with
+my hands up, but I tried to show her that Belcher was only playin' the
+game like everyone else was playin' it.
+
+"He ain't springin' anything new," says I. "He's just followin' the mob.
+They're all doin' it, from the Steel Trust down to the push-cart men.
+And when you come to interferin' with business--well, that's serious."
+
+"Humph!" says Vee. "When it comes to taking advantage of poor people and
+depriving them of enough to eat, I call it plain piracy. And you ought
+to be ashamed of yourself, Torchy, standing up for such things."
+
+So you see I was about as convincin' as a jazz band tryin' to imitate
+the Metropolitan orchestra doin' the overture to "Lucia." If I hadn't
+finally had sense enough to switch the subject a little, there might
+have been a poutin' scene and maybe a double case of sulks. But when I
+got to askin' where she'd collected all this grouch against our local
+meat and provision octopus, she cheers up again.
+
+Seems she'd been to a Red Cross meetin' that afternoon, where a lot of
+the ladies was swappin' tales of woe about their kitchen expense
+accounts. Some of 'em had been keepin' track of prices in the city
+markets and was able to shoot the deadly parallel at Belcher. Anyway,
+they ditched the sweater-knittin' and bandage-rollin' for the time
+bein', and proceeded to organize the Woman's Economic League on the
+spot.
+
+"Sounds impressive," says I. "And what then? Did you try Belcher for
+treason, find him guilty, and sentence him to be shot at sunrise?"
+
+Vee proves that she's good-natured again by runnin' her tongue out at
+me.
+
+"We did not, Smarty," says she. "But we passed a resolution condemning
+such extortion severely."
+
+"How rough of you!" says I. "Anything else?"
+
+"Yes," says Vee. "We appointed a committee to tell him he'd better
+stop."
+
+"Fine!" says I. "I expect he'll have everything marked down about forty
+per cent. by to-morrow night."
+
+Somehow, it didn't work out just that way. Next report I got from Vee
+was that the committee had interviewed Belcher, but there was nothing
+doin'. He'd been awfully nice to 'em, even if he had talked through his
+cigar part of the time.
+
+Belcher says he feels just as bad as they about havin' to soak on such
+stiff prices. But how can he help it? The cold-storage people are
+boostin' their schedules every day. They ain't to blame, either. They're
+bein' held up by the farmers out West who are havin' their hair cut too
+often. Besides, all the hens in the country have quit layin' and joined
+the I. W. W., and every kind of meat is scarce on account of Pershing's
+men developin' such big appetites. He's sorry, but he's doin' his best,
+considerin' the war and everything. If people would only get the habit
+of usin' corn meal for their pie crusts, everything would be lovely once
+more.
+
+"An alibi on every count," says I. "I expect the committee apologized."
+
+"Very nearly that," says Vee. "The sillies! I just wish I'd been there.
+I don't believe half of what he said is true."
+
+"That's one thing," says I, "but provin' it on him would be another. And
+there's where Belcher's got you."
+
+Course, I like to watch Vee in action, for she sure is a humdinger when
+she gets started. As a rule, too, I don't believe in tryin' to block her
+off in any of her little enterprises.
+
+But here was once where it seemed to me she was up against a hopeless
+proposition. So I goes on to point out, sort of gentle and soothin', how
+war prices couldn't be helped, any more'n you could stop the tide from
+comin' in.
+
+Oh, I'm some smooth suggester, I am, when you get into fireside
+diplomacy. Anyway, the price of eggs wasn't mentioned again that
+evenin'. As a matter of fact, Vee ain't troubled much with marketin'
+details, for Madame Battou, wife of the little old Frenchman who does
+the cheffing for us so artistic, attends to layin' in the supplies. And,
+believe me, when she sails forth with her market basket you can be sure
+she's goin' to get sixteen ounces to the pound and the rock bottom price
+on everything. No 'phone orders for her. I don't believe Vee knew what
+the inside of Belcher's store looks like. I'm sure I didn't.
+
+So I thought the big drive on the roast beef and canned goods sector had
+been called off. About that time, too, I got another inspection detail
+handed me,--and I didn't see my happy home until another week-end.
+
+I lands back on Broadway at 9 A.M. Havin' reported at the Corrugated
+general offices and found Old Hickory out of town, I declares a special
+holiday and beats it out to the part of Long Island I'm beginnin' to
+know best. Struck me Professor Battou held his face kind of funny when
+he saw me blow in; and as I asks for Vee, him and the madam swaps
+glances. He say she's out.
+
+"Oh," says I. "Mornin' call up at the Ellinses', eh? I'll stroll up that
+way, myself, then."
+
+Leon hesitates a minute, like he was chokin' over something, and then
+remarks: "But no, M'sieur. Madame, I think, is in the village."
+
+"Why," says I, "I just came from the station. I didn't see the car
+around. How long has she been gone?"
+
+Another exchange of looks, and then Battou answers:
+
+"She goes at seven."
+
+"Whaddye mean goes?" says I. "It ain't a habit of hers, is it?"
+
+Leon nods.
+
+"All this week," says he. "She goes to the meat and grocery
+establishment, I understand."
+
+"Belcher's?" says I. "But what--what's the idea?"
+
+"I think it would be best if M'sieur asked Madame," says he.
+
+"That's right, too," says I.
+
+You can guess I was some puzzled. Was Vee doin' the spy act on Belcher,
+watchin' him open the store and spendin' the forenoon concealed in a
+crockery crate or something? No, that didn't sound reasonable. But what
+the---- Meanwhile I was leggin' it down towards the village.
+
+It's a busy place, Belcher's, specially on Saturday forenoon. Out front
+three or four delivery trucks was bein' loaded up, and inside a lot of
+clerks was jumpin' round. Among the customers was two Jap butlers, three
+or four Swedish maids, and some of the women from the village. But no
+Vee anywhere in sight.
+
+Loomin' prominent in the midst of all this active tradin' is Belcher
+himself, a thick-necked, ruddy-cheeked party, with bristly black hair
+cut shoe-brush style and growing down to a point in front. His big,
+bulgy eyes are cold and fishy, but they seem to take in everything
+that's goin' on. I hadn't been standin' around more'n half a minute
+before he snaps his finger, and a clerk comes hustlin' over to ask what
+I'll have.
+
+"Box of ginger-snaps," says I offhand; and a minute later I'm bein'
+shunted towards a wire-cage with a cash slip in my hand.
+
+I'd dug up a quarter, and was waitin' for the change to be passed out
+through the little window, when I hears a familiar snicker. Then I
+glances in to see who's presidin' at the cash register. And say, of all
+the sudden jolts I ever got! It's Vee.
+
+"Well, for the love of soup!" I gasps.
+
+"Twelve out--thirteen. That's right, isn't it? Thank you so much, sir,"
+says she, her gray eyes twinklin'.
+
+"Quit the kiddin'," says I, "and sketch out the plot of the piece."
+
+"Can't now," says Vee. "So run along. Please!"
+
+"But how long does this act of yours last?" I insists.
+
+"Until about noon, I think," says she. "It's such fun. You can't
+imagine."
+
+"What's it for, though?" says I. "Are you pullin' a sleuth stunt on----"
+
+"S-s-s-sh!" warns Vee. "He's coming. Pretend to be getting a bill
+changed or something."
+
+It's while I'm fishin' out a ten that this little dialogue at the meat
+counter begins to get conspicuous: A thin, stoop-shouldered female with
+gray streaks in her hair is puttin' up a howl at the price of corned
+beef. She'd asked for the cheapest piece they had, and it had been
+weighed for her, but still she wasn't satisfied.
+
+"It wasn't as high last Saturday," she objects.
+
+"No, ma'am," says the clerk. "It's gone up since."
+
+"Worse luck," says she, pokin' the piece with her finger. "And this is
+nearly all bone and fat. Now couldn't you----"
+
+"I'll ask the boss, ma'am," says the clerk. "Here he is."
+
+Belcher has come over and is listenin', glarin' hostile at the woman.
+
+"It's Mrs. Burke, the one whose sons are in the army," whispers Vee.
+
+"Well?" demands Belcher.
+
+"It's so much to pay for meat like that," says Mrs. Burke. "If you
+could----"
+
+"Take it or leave it," snaps Belcher.
+
+"Sure now," says she, "you know I can't afford to give----"
+
+"Then get out!" orders Belcher.
+
+At which Vee swings open the door of the cage, brushes past me, and
+faces him with her eyes snappin'.
+
+"Pig!" says she explosive.
+
+"Wha-a-a-at!" gasps Belcher, gawpin' at her.
+
+"I--I beg pardon," says Vee. "I shouldn't have said that, even if it was
+so."
+
+"You--you're discharged, you!" roars Belcher.
+
+"Isn't that nice?" says Vee, reachin' for her hat and coat. "Then I can
+go home with my husband, I suppose. And if I have earned any of that
+princely salary--five dollars a week, it was to be, wasn't it?--well,
+you may credit it to my account: Mrs. Richard Tabor Ballard, you know.
+Come, Torchy."
+
+Say, I always did suspect there was mighty few things Vee was afraid of,
+but I never thought she had so much clear grit stowed away in her
+system. For to sail past Belcher the way he looked then took a heap of
+nerve, believe me. But before he can get that thick tongue of his
+limbered up we're outside, with Vee snuggled up mufflin' the giggles
+against my coat sleeve.
+
+"Oh, it's been such a lark, Torchy!" says she. "I've passed as Miss
+Hemmingway for six days, and I don't believe more than three or four
+persons have suspected. Thank goodness, Belcher wasn't one of them. For
+I've learned--oh, such a lot!"
+
+"Let's start at the beginning," says I. "Why did you do it at all?"
+
+"Because the committee was so ready to believe the whoppers he told,"
+says Vee. "And they wanted to disband the League, especially that Mrs.
+Norton Plummer, whose husband is a lawyer. She was almost disagreeable
+about it. Truly. 'But, my dear,' she said to me, 'one can't act merely
+on rumor and prejudice. If we had a few facts or figures it might be
+different.' And you know that sour smile of hers. Well! That's why I did
+it. I asked them to give me ten days. And now----"
+
+Vee finishes by squeezin' my arm.
+
+"But how'd you come to break in so prompt?" I asks. "Did you mesmerize
+Belcher?"
+
+"I bought up his cashier--paid her to report that she was ill," says
+Vee. "Then I smoothed back my hair, put on this old black dress, and
+went begging for the job. That's when I began to know Mr. Belcher. He's
+quite a different person when he is hiring a cashier from the one you
+see talking to customers. Really, I've never been looked at that way
+before--as if I were some sort of insect. But when he found I would work
+cheap, and could get Mrs. Robert Ellins to go on my bond if I should
+turn out a thief, he took me on.
+
+"Getting up so early was a bit hard, and eating a cold luncheon harder
+still; but worst of all was having to hear him growl and snap at the
+clerks. Oh, he's perfectly horrid. I don't see how they stand it. Of
+course, I had my share. 'Miss Blockhead' was his pet name for me."
+
+"Huh!" says I, grittin' my teeth.
+
+"Meaning that you'd like to tell Belcher a few things yourself?" asks
+Vee. "Well, you needn't. I'd no right to be there, for one thing. And,
+for another, this is my own particular affair. I know what I am going to
+do to Mr. Belcher; at least, what I'm going to try to do. Anyway, I
+shall have some figures to put before our committee Monday. Then we
+shall see."
+
+Yep, she had the goods on him. I helped her straighten out the evidence:
+copies of commission-house bills showin' what he had paid for stuff, and
+duplicates of sales-slips givin' the retail prices he got. And say, all
+he was stickin' on was from thirty to sixty per cent. profit.
+
+He didn't always wait for the wholesaler to start the boostin', either.
+Vee points out where he has jacked up the price three times on the same
+shipment--just as the spell took him. He'd be readin' away in his
+_Morgen Blatherskite_, and all of a sudden he'd jump out of his chair.
+I'm no expert on provision prices, but some of them items had me
+bug-eyed.
+
+"Why," says I, "it looks like this Belcher party meant to discourage
+eatin' altogether. Couldn't do better if he was runnin' a dinin'-car."
+
+"It's robbery, that's what it is," says Vee. "And when you think that
+his chief victims are such helpless people as the Burkes and the
+Walters--well, it's little less than criminal."
+
+"It's a rough deal," I admits, "but one that's bein' pulled in the best
+circles. War profits are what everybody seems to be out after these
+days, and I don't see how you're going to stop it."
+
+"I mean to try to stop Belcher, anyway," says Vee, tossin' her chin up.
+
+"You ain't got much show," says I; "but go to it."
+
+Just how much fight there was in Vee, though, I didn't have any idea of
+until I saw her Monday evenin' after another meetin' of the League. It
+seems she'd met this Mrs. Norton Plummer on her own ground and had
+smeared her all over the map.
+
+"What do you suppose she wanted to do?" demands Vee. "Pass more
+resolutions! Well, I told her just what I thought of that. As well pin a
+'Please-keep-out' notice on your door to scare away burglars as to send
+resolutions to Belcher. And when I showed her what profits he was
+making, item by item, she hadn't another word to say. Then I proposed my
+plan."
+
+"Eh?" says I. "What's it like?"
+
+"We are going to start a store of our own," says Vee--just like that,
+offhand and casual.
+
+"You are!" says I. "But--but who's goin' to run it?"
+
+"They made me chairman of the sub-committee," says Vee. "And then I made
+them subscribe to a campaign fund. Five thousand. We raised it in as
+many minutes. And now--well, I suppose I'm in for it."
+
+"Listens that way to me," says I.
+
+"Then I may as well begin," says she.
+
+And say, there's nothin' draggy about Vee when she really goes over the
+top. While I'm dressin' for dinner she calls up a real estate dealer and
+leases a vacant store in the other end of the block from Belcher's.
+Between the roast and salad she uses the 'phone some more and drafts
+half a dozen young ladies from the Country Club set to act as relay
+clerks. Later on in the evenin' she rounds up Major Percy Thomson, who's
+been invalided home from the Quartermaster's Department on account of a
+game knee, and gets him to serve as buyin' agent for a week or so. Her
+next move is to charter a couple of three-ton motor-trucks to haul
+supplies out from town; and when I went to sleep she was still jottin'
+things down on a pad to be attended to in the mornin'.
+
+For two or three days nothin' much seemed to happen. The windows of that
+vacant store was whitened mysterious, carpenters were hammerin' away
+inside, and now and then a truck backed up and was unloaded. But no
+word was given out as to what was goin' to be sprung. Not until Friday
+mornin'. Then the commuters on the 8.03 was hit bang in the eye by a
+whalin' big red, white, and blue sign announcin' that the W. E. L.
+Supply Company was open for business.
+
+Course, it was kind of crude compared to Belcher's. No fancy counters or
+showcases or window displays of cracker-boxes. And the stock was limited
+to staples that could be handled easy. But the price bulletins posted up
+outside was what made some of them gents who'd been doin' the fam'ly
+marketin' stop and stare. A few of 'em turned halfway to the station and
+dashed back to leave their orders. Goin' into town they spread the news
+through the train. The story of that latest bag of U-boats, which the
+mornin' papers all carried screamers about, was almost thrown into the
+discard. If I hadn't been due for a ten o'clock committee meetin' at the
+Corrugated, I'd have stayed out and watched the openin'. Havin' told Old
+Hickory about it, though, I was on hand next mornin' with a whole day's
+furlough.
+
+"It ought to be our big day," says Vee.
+
+It was. For one thing, everybody was stockin' up for over Sunday, and
+with the backin' of the League the Supply Company could count on about
+fifty good customers as a starter. Most of the ladies came themselves,
+rollin' up in limousines or tourin' cars and cartin' home their own
+stuff. Also the cottage people, who'd got wind of the big mark-down
+bargains, begun to come in bunches, every woman with a basket.
+
+But they didn't swamp Vee. She'd already added to her force of young
+lady clerks a squad of hand-picked Boy Scouts, and it was my job to
+manage the youngsters.
+
+I'd worked out the system the night before. Each one had typed price
+lists in his pocket, and besides that I'd put 'em through an hour's
+drill on weights and measures before the show started.
+
+I don't know when it was Belcher begun to get wise and start his
+counter-attack; but the first time I had a chance to slip out and take a
+squint his way, I saw this whackin' big sign in front of his place:
+"Potatoes, 40 cents per peck." Which I promptly reports to Vee.
+
+"Very well," says she; "we'll make ours thirty-five."
+
+Inside of ten minutes we had a bulletin out twice as big as his.
+
+"Now I guess he'll be good," says I.
+
+But he had a scrap or two left in him, it seems. Pretty soon he cuts the
+price to thirty.
+
+"We'll make it twenty-five," says Vee.
+
+And by eleven o'clock Belcher has countered with potatoes at twenty
+cents.
+
+"Why," gasps Vee, "that's far less than they cost at wholesale. But we
+can't let him beat us. Make ours twenty, too."
+
+"Excuse me, ma'am," puts in one of the Scouts, salutin', "but we've run
+out of potatoes."
+
+"Oh, boy!" says I. "Where do we go from here!"
+
+Vee hesitates only long enough to draw a deep breath.
+
+"Torchy," says she, "I have it. Form your boys into a basket brigade,
+and buy out Belcher below the market."
+
+Talk about your frenzied finance! Wasn't that puttin' it over on him!
+For two hours, there, we went long on Belcher's potatoes at twenty,
+until his supply ran out too. Then he switched to sugar and butter.
+Quotations went off as fast as when the bottom drops out of a bull
+market. All we had to do to hammer down the prices of anything in the
+food line, whether we had it or not, was to stick out a cut-rate
+sign--Belcher was sure to go it one better; and when Vee got it far
+enough below cost, she started her buyin' corps, workin' in customers,
+clerks, and anybody that was handy. And by night if every fam'ly within
+five miles hadn't stocked up on bargain provisions it was their own
+fault; for if they didn't have cash of their own Vee was right there
+with the long-distance credit.
+
+[Illustration: "Belcher has come over and is listenin', glarin' hostile
+at the woman. 'It's Mrs. Burke, the one whose sons are in the army,'
+whispers Vee."]
+
+"I'll bet you've got old Belcher frothin' through his ears," says I.
+
+"I hope so," says Vee.
+
+The followin' Monday, though, he comes back at her with his big push. He
+had the whole front of his store plastered with below-cost bulletins.
+
+"Pooh!" says Vee. "I can have signs like that painted, too."
+
+And she did. It didn't bother her a bit if her stock ran out. She kept
+up on the cut-rate game, and when people asked for things she didn't
+have she just sent 'em to Belcher's.
+
+Maybe you saw what some of the papers printed. Course, they joshed the
+ladies more or less, but also they played up a peppery interview with
+Belcher which got him in bad with everybody. Vee wasn't so pleased at
+the publicity stuff, but she didn't squeal.
+
+What was worryin' me some was how soon the grand smash was comin'. I
+knew that the campaign fund had been whittled into considerable, and now
+that prices had been slashed there was no chance for profits.
+
+It was botherin' Vee some, too, for she'd promised not to assess the
+League members again unless she could show 'em where they were comin'
+out. By the middle of the week things looked squally. Belcher had given
+out word that he meant to bust up this fool woman's opposition, if it
+took his last cent.
+
+Then, here the other night, I comes home to find Vee wearin' a satisfied
+grin. As I comes in she jumps up from her desk and waves a check at me.
+
+"Look!" says she. "Five thousand! I've got it back, Torchy, every
+dollar."
+
+"Eh?" says I. "You ain't sold out to Belcher?"
+
+"I should say not," says she. "To the Noonan chain. Mr. Noonan came
+himself. He'd read about our fight in the newspapers, and said he'd be
+glad to take it off our hands. He's been wanting to establish a branch
+in this district. Five thousand for stock and good will. What do you
+think of that?"
+
+"I ain't thinkin'," says I. "I'm just gaspin' for breath. Noonan, eh?
+Then I see where Belcher gets off. And if you don't mind my whisperin'
+in your ear, Vee, you're some whizz."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+LATE RETURNS ON RUPERT
+
+
+Vee and I were goin' over some old snapshots the other night. It's done
+now and then, you know. Not deliberate. I'll admit that's a pastime you
+wouldn't get all worked up over plannin' ahead for. Tuesday mornin',
+say, you don't remark breathless: "I'll tell you: Saturday night at
+nine-thirty let's get out them last year's prints and give 'em the
+comp'ny front."
+
+It don't happen that way--not with our sketch. What I was grapplin' for
+in the bottom of the window-seat locker was something different--maybe a
+marshmallow fork, or a corn-popper, or a catalogue of bath-room
+fixtures. Anyway, it was something we thought we wanted a lot, when I
+digs up this album of views that Vee took durin' that treasure-huntin'
+cruise of ours last winter on the old _Agnes_, with Auntie and Old
+Hickory and Captain Rupert Killam and the rest of the bunch. I was just
+tossin' the book one side when a picture slips out, and of course I has
+to take a squint. Then I chuckles.
+
+"Look!" says I, luggin' it over to where Vee is curled up on the
+davenport in front of the fireplace. "Remember that?"
+
+A giggle from Vee.
+
+"'Auntie enjoying a half-hour eulogy of the dear departed, by Mrs.
+Mumford,' should be the title," says she. "She'd been sound asleep for
+twenty minutes."
+
+"Which is what you might call good defensive," says I. "But who's this
+gazin' over the rail beyond--J. Dudley Simms, or is that a ventilator?"
+
+"Let's see," says Vee, reachin' for the readin' glass. "Why, you silly!
+That's Captain Killam."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Reckless Rupert, the great mind-play hero."
+
+"I wonder what has become of him?" puts in Vee, restin' her chin on the
+knuckle of her forefinger and starin' into the fire.
+
+"Him?" says I. "Most likely he's back in St. Petersburg, Florida, all
+dolled in white flannels, givin' the tin-can tourists a treat. That
+would be Rupert's game."
+
+I don't know as you remember; but, in spite of Killam's havin' got
+balled up on the location of this pirate island, and Vee and me havin'
+to find it for him, he came in for his share of the loot. Must have been
+quite a nice little pot for Rupert, too--enough to keep him costumed for
+his mysterious hero act for a long time, providin' he don't overdress
+the part.
+
+Weird combination--Rupert: about 60 per cent. camouflage and the rest
+solemn boob. An ex-school-teacher from some little flag station in
+middle Illinois, who'd drifted down to the West Coast, and got to be a
+captain by ownin' an old cruiser that he took fishin' parties out to the
+grouper banks on. Them was the real facts in the life story of Rupert.
+
+But the picture he threw on the screen of himself must have been
+something else again--seasoned sailor, hardy adventurer, daredevil
+explorer, and who knows what else? Catch him in one of his silent,
+starey moods, with them buttermilk blue eyes of his opened wide and
+vacant, and you had the outline. But that's as far as you'd get. I
+always thought Rupert himself was a little vague about it, but he would
+insist on takin' himself so serious. That's why we never got along well,
+I expect. To me Rupert was a walkin' joke, except when he got to
+sleuthin' around Vee and me and made a nuisance of himself.
+
+"How completely people like that drop out of sight sometimes," says Vee,
+shuttin' up the album.
+
+"Yes," says I. "Contrary to old ladies who meet at summer resorts and in
+department-stores, it's a sizable world we live in. Thanks be for that,
+too."
+
+But you never can tell. It ain't more'n three days later, as I'm breezin
+through a cross street down in the cloak-and-suit and publishin' house
+district, when a taxi rolls up to the curb just ahead, and out piles a
+wide-shouldered gent with freckles on the back of his neck. Course, I
+don't let on I can spot anybody I've ever known just by a sectional
+glimpse like that. But this was no common case of freckles. This was a
+splotchy, spattery system of rust marks, like a bird's-eye view of the
+enemy's trenches after a week of drum fire. Besides, there was the pale
+carroty hair.
+
+Even then, the braid-bound cutaway and the biscuit-colored spats had me
+buffaloed. So I slows up until I can get a front view of the party who's
+almost tripped himself with the horn-handled walkin'-stick and is havin'
+a few last words with someone in the cab. Then I sees the washed out
+blue eyes, and I know there can't be any mistake. About then, too, he
+turns and recognizes me.
+
+"Well, for the love of beans!" says I. "Rupert!"
+
+The funny part of it is that I gets it off as cordial as if I was
+discoverin' an old trench mate. You know how you will. And, while I
+can't say Captain Killam registered any wild joy in his greetin', still
+he seemed pleased enough. He gives me a real hearty shake.
+
+"And here is someone else you know," says he, wavin' to the cab: "Mrs.
+Mumford."
+
+Blamed if it ain't the cooin' widow. She's right there with the old
+familiar purry gush, too, squeezin' my fingers kittenish and askin' me
+how "dear, sweet Verona" is. I was just noticin' that she'd ditched the
+half mournin' for some real zippy raiment when she leans back so as to
+exhibit a third party in the taxi--a young gent with one of these
+dead-white faces and a cute little black mustache--reg'lar lounge-lizard
+type.
+
+"Oh, and you must meet my dear friend, Mr. Vinton Bartley," she purrs.
+"Vinton, this is the Torchy I've spoken about so often."
+
+"Ah, ya-a-as," drawls Vinton, blowin' out a whiff of scented cigarette
+smoke lazy. "Quite so. But--er--hadn't we best be getting on, Lorina?"
+
+"Yes, yes," coos Mrs. Mumford. "By-by, Captain. Good-by, Torchy."
+
+And off they whirls, leavin' me with my mouth open and Rupert starin'
+after 'em gloomy.
+
+"Lorina, eh?" says I. "How touchin'!"
+
+Killam only grunts, but it struck me he has tinted up a bit under the
+eyes.
+
+"Say, Rupert," I goes on, "who's your languid friend with the
+cream-of-cabbage complexion?"
+
+"Bartley?" says he. "Oh, he's a friend of Mrs. Mumford; a drama-tist--so
+he says."
+
+Now, I might have let it ride at that and gone along about my own
+affairs, which ain't so pressin' just then. Yes, I might. But I don't.
+Maybe it was hornin' in where there was no welcome sign on the mat, and
+then again perhaps it was only a natural folksy feelin' for an old
+friend I hadn't seen for a long time. Anyway, I'm prompted sudden to
+take Rupert by the arm and insist that he must come and have lunch with
+me.
+
+"Why--er--thanks," says the Captain; "but I have a little business to
+attend to in here." And he nods to an office buildin'.
+
+"That'll be all right, too," says I. "I'll wait."
+
+"Will you?" says Rupert, beamin'. "I shall be pleased."
+
+So in less'n half an hour I have Rupert planted cozy at a corner table
+with a mixed grill in front of him, and I'm givin' him the cue for
+openin' any confidential chat he may have on hand. He's a good deal of a
+clam, though, Rupert. And suspicious! He must have been born lookin'
+over his shoulder. But in my own crude way I can sometimes josh 'em
+along.
+
+"Excuse me for mentionin' it, Rupert," says I, "but there's lots of
+class to you these days."
+
+"Eh?" says he. "You mean----"
+
+"The whole effect," says I, "from the gaiters to the new-model lid. Just
+like you'd strolled out from some Fifth Avenue club and was goin' to
+'phone your brokers to buy another block of Bethlehem at the market.
+Honest!"
+
+He pinks up and shakes his head, but I can see I've got the range.
+
+"And here Vee and I had it doped out," I goes on, "how you'd be down on
+the West Coast by this time, investin' your pile in orange groves and
+corner lots."
+
+"No," says Rupert; "I've been here all the while. You see, I--I've grown
+rather fond of New York."
+
+"You needn't apologize," says I. "There's a few million others with the
+same weakness, not countin' the ones that sleep in New Jersey but always
+register from here. Gone into some kind of business, have you?"
+
+Rupert does some fancy side-steppin' about then; but all of a sudden he
+changes his mind, and, after glancin' around to see that no one has an
+ear out, he starts his confession.
+
+"The fact is," says he, "I've been doing a little literary work."
+
+"Writin' ads," says I, "or solicitin' magazine subscriptions?"
+
+"I am getting out a book of poems," says Rupert, dignified.
+
+"Wh-a-a-at?" I gasps. "Not--not reg'lar limerick stuff?"
+
+I can see now that was a bad break. But Rupert was patient with me. He
+explains that these are all poems about sailors and ships and so on;
+real salt, tarry stuff. Also, he points out how it's built the new style
+way, with no foolish rhymes at the end, and with long lines or short,
+just as they happen to come. To make it clear, he digs up a roll of
+galley proofs he's just collected from the publishers. And say, he had
+the goods. There it was, yards of it, all printed neat in big fat type.
+"Sea Songs" is what he calls 'em, and each one has a separate tag of its
+own, such as "Kittywakes," "Close Hauled," and "Scuppers Under."
+
+"Looks like the real stuff," says I. "Let's hear how it listens. Ah,
+come on! Some of that last one, about scuppers, now."
+
+With a little more urgin', Rupert reads it to me. I should call him a
+good reader, too. Anyway, he can untie one of them deep, boomin' voices,
+and with that long, serious face of his helpin' out the general
+effect--well, it's kind of impressive. He spiels off two or three
+stickfuls and then stops.
+
+"Which way was you readin' that, backwards or forwards?" says I.
+
+Rupert begins to stiffen up, and I hurries on with the apology. "My
+mistake," says I. "I thought maybe you might have got mixed at the
+start. No offense. But say, Cap'n, what's the big idea? What does it all
+mean?"
+
+In some ways Rupert is good-natured. He was then. He explains how in
+this brand of verse you don't try to tell a story or anything like that.
+"I am merely giving my impressions," says he. "That is all.
+Interpreting my own feelings, as it were."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Then there's no goin' behind the returns. Who's to say
+you don't feel that way? I get you now. But that ain't the kind of stuff
+you can wish onto the magazines, is it?"
+
+Which shows just how far behind the bass-drum I am. Rupert tells me the
+different places where he's unloaded his pieces, most of 'em for real
+money. Also, I pumps out of him how he came to get into the game. Seems
+he'd been roomin' down in old Greenwich Village; just happened to drift
+in among them long-haired men and short-haired girls. It turns out that
+the book was a little enterprise that was being backed by Mrs. Mumford.
+Yes, it's that kind of a book--so much down in advance to the Grafter
+Press. You know, Mrs. Mumford always did fall for Rupert, and after
+she's read one of his sea spasms in a magazine she don't lose any time
+huntin' him out and renewin' their cruise acquaintance. A real poet!
+Say, I can just see her playin' that up among her friends. And when she
+finds he's mixin' in with all those dear, delightful Bohemians, she
+insists that Rupert tow her along too.
+
+From then on it was a common thing for her and Rupert to go browsin'
+around among them garlic and red-ink joints, defyin' ptomaines and
+learnin' to braid spaghetti on a fork. That was her idea of life. She
+hires an apartment right off Washington Square and moves in from
+Montclair for the winter. She begun to have what she called her "salon
+evenings," when she collected any kind of near-celebrity she could get.
+
+Mr. Vinton Bartley was generally one of the favored guests. I didn't
+need any second sight, either, to suspect that Vinton was sort of
+crowdin' in on this little romance of Rupert's. And by eggin' Rupert
+along judicious I got the whole tale.
+
+Seems it had been one of Mrs. Mumford's ambitions to spring Rupert on an
+unsuspectin' public. Her idea is to have Rupert called on, some night at
+the Purple Pup, to step up to the head of the long table and give one of
+his sea songs. She'd picked Vinton to do the callin'. And Vinton had
+balked.
+
+"But say," says I, "is this Vinton gent the only one of her friends
+that's got a voice? Why not pick another announcer?"
+
+"I'm sure I don't know," says Rupert. "She--she hasn't mentioned the
+subject recently."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Too busy listenin' to the voice of the viper, eh?"
+
+Rupert nods and stares sad into his empty demi-tasse. And, say, when
+Rupert gets that way he's an appealin' cuss.
+
+"See here, Rupert," says I; "if you got a call of that kind, would you
+come to the front and make a noise like a real poet?"
+
+"Why," says he, "I suppose I ought to. It would help the sale of the
+book, and perhaps----"
+
+"One alibi is enough," I breaks in. "Now, another thing: How'd you like
+to have me stage-manage this début of yours?"
+
+"Oh, would you?" says he, beamin'.
+
+"Providin' you'll follow directions," says I.
+
+"Why, certainly," says Rupert. "Any suggestions that you may make----"
+
+"Then we'll begin right now," says I. "You are to ditch that flossy
+floor-walker outfit of yours from this on."
+
+"You mean," says Rupert, "that I am not to wear these clothes?"
+
+"Just that," says I. "When you get to givin' mornin' readin's at the
+Plaza for the benefit of the Red Cross, you can dig 'em out again; but
+for the Purple Pup you got to be costumed different. Who ever heard of a
+goulash poet in a braid-bound cutaway and spats? Say, it's a wonder they
+let you live south of the Arch."
+
+"But--but what ought I to wear?" asks Rupert.
+
+"Foolish question!" says I. "Who are you, anyway? Answer: the Sailor
+Poet. There you are! Sea captain's togs for you--double-breasted blue
+coat, baggy-kneed blue trousers, and a yachtin' cap."
+
+"Very well," says Rupert. "But about my being asked to read. Just
+how----"
+
+"Leave it to me, Rupert," says I. "Leave everything to me."
+
+Which was a lot simpler than tellin' him I didn't know.
+
+You should have seen Vee's face when I tells her about Rupert's new
+line.
+
+"Captain Killam a poet!" says she. "Oh, really now, Torchy!"
+
+"Uh-huh!" says I. "He's done enough for a book. Read me some of it,
+too."
+
+"But--but what is it like?" asks Vee. "How does it sound?"
+
+"Why," says I, "it sounds batty to me--like a record made by a sailor
+who was simple in the head and talked a lot in his sleep. Course, I'm
+no judge. What's the difference, though? Rupert wants to spout it in
+public."
+
+"But the people in the restaurant," protests Vee. "Suppose they should
+laugh, or do something worse?"
+
+"That's where Rupert is takin' a chance," says I. "Personally, I think
+he'll be lucky if they don't throw plates at him. But we ain't
+underwritin' any accident policy; we're just bookin' him for a part he
+claims he can play. Are you on?"
+
+Vee gets that eye twinkle of hers workin'. "I think it will be perfectly
+lovely."
+
+I got to admit, too, that she's quite a help.
+
+"We must be sure Mrs. Mumford and that Bartley person are both there,"
+says she. "And we ought to have as many of Captain Killam's friends as
+possible. I'll tell you. Let's give a dinner-party."
+
+"Must we?" says I. "You know we ain't introducin' any London success.
+This is Rupert's first stab, remember."
+
+We set the date for the day the book was to be out, which gives Rupert
+an excuse for celebratin'. He'd invited Mrs. Mumford and Vinton to be
+his guests, and they'd promised to be on hand. As for us, we'd rounded
+up Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellins and J. Dudley Simms.
+
+Well, everybody showed up. And as it happens, it's one of the big nights
+at the Purple Pup. The long center table is surrounded by a gay bunch of
+assorted artists who are bein' financed by an out-of-town buyer who
+seems to be openin' Chianti reckless. We were over in one corner, as far
+away from the ukulele torturers as we could get, while at the other end
+of the room is Rupert with his two. I thought he looked kind of pallid,
+but it might have been only on account of the cigarette smoke.
+
+"Is it time yet, Torchy?" asks Mr. Robert, when we gets through to the
+striped ice cream and chicory essence.
+
+"Let's hold off," says I, "and see if someone else don't pull a
+curtain-raiser."
+
+Sure enough, they did. A bald-headed, red-faced old boy with a Liberty
+Bond button in his coat-lapel insists on everybody's drinkin' to our
+boys at the front. Followin' that, someone leads a slim, big-eyed young
+female to the piano and announces that she will do a couple of Serbian
+folk-songs. Maybe she did. I hope the Serbs forgive her.
+
+"If they can take that without squirmin'," says I, "I guess they can
+stand for Rupert. Go on, Mr. Robert. Shoot."
+
+Course, he's no spellbinder, but he can say what he wants to in a few
+words and make himself heard. And then, bein' in naval uniform helped.
+
+"I think we have with us to-night," says he, "Captain Rupert Killam, the
+sailor poet. I should like, if it pleases the company, to ask Captain
+Killam to read for us some of his popular verses. Does anyone second the
+motion?"
+
+"Killam! Killam!" roars out the sporty wine-opener.
+
+Others took up the chorus, and in the midst of it I dashes over to drag
+Rupert from his chair if necessary.
+
+But I wasn't needed. As a matter of fact, he beat me to it. Before I
+could get half way to him, he is standin' at the end of the long table,
+his eyes dropped modest, and a brand-new volume of "Sea Songs" held
+conspicuous over his chest.
+
+"This is indeed an unexpected honor," says Rupert, lyin' fluent. "I am a
+plain sailor-man, as you know, but if you insist----"
+
+And, before they could hedge, he has squared his shoulders, thrown his
+head well back, and has cut loose with that boomin' voice of his. Does
+he put it over? Say, honest, I finds myself listenin' with my mouth
+open, just as though I understood every word. And the first thing I know
+he's carryin' the house with him. Even some of the Hungarian waiters
+stopped to see what it's all about.
+
+ Tides!
+ Little, rushing, hurrying tides
+ Along the sloping deck.
+ And the bobstay smashing the big blue deep,
+ While under my hand
+ The kicking tiller groans
+ Its oaken soul out in a gray despair.
+
+That's part of it I copied down afterward. Yet that crowd just lapped it
+up.
+
+"Wow!" "Brava! Brava!" "What's the matter with Killam?" they yells.
+"More!"
+
+Rupert was flushin' clear up the back of his neck now. Also he was
+fumblin' with the book, hesitatin' what to give 'em next, when I pushes
+in and begins pumpin' his hand.
+
+"Shall--shall I----" he starts to ask.
+
+"No, you boob," I whispers. "Quit while the quittin's good. You got 'em
+buffaloed, all right. Let it ride."
+
+And I fairly shoves him over to his table, where Sister Mumford has
+already split out a new pair of gloves and is beamin' joyous, while
+Vinton is sittin' there with his chin on his necktie, lookin' like
+someone had beaned him with a bung-starter.
+
+But we wasn't wise just how strong Rupert had scored until we saw the
+half page Whitey Weeks had gotten out of it for the Sunday paper. "New
+Poet Captures Greenwich Village" is the top headline, and there's a
+three-column cut showin' Rupert spoutin' his "Sea Songs" through the
+cigarette smoke. Also, I gather from a casual remark Rupert let drop
+yesterday that the prospects of him and Mrs. Mumford enterin' the mixed
+doubles class soon are good. And, with her ownin' a big retail coal
+business over in Jersey, I expect Rupert can go on writin' his pomes as
+free as he likes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+FORSYTHE AT THE FINISH
+
+
+I expect I wouldn't have noticed Forsythe particular if it hadn't been
+for Mrs. Robert. It takes all kinds, you know, to make up a week-end
+house-party bunch; and in these days, when specimens of the razor-usin'
+sex are so scarce--well, that's when half portions like this T. Forsythe
+Hurd get by as full orders.
+
+Besides, Mrs. Robert had meant well. Her idea was to make the Captain's
+48-hour shore leave as gay and lively as possible. She'd had a hard time
+roundin' up any of his friends, too. Hence Forsythe. One of these slim,
+fine-haired, well manicured parlor Pomeranians, Forsythe is--the kind
+who raves over the sandwiches and whispers perfectly killin' things to
+the ladies as he flits about at afternoon teas.
+
+We were up at the Ellinses', Vee and me, fillin' out at Saturday
+luncheon, when Mr. Robert drifts in, about an hour behind schedule. You
+know, he's commandin' one of these coast patrol boats. Some of 'em are
+converted steam yachts, some are sea-goin' tugs, and then again some
+are just old menhaden fish-boats painted gray with a few three-inch guns
+stuck around on 'em casual. And this last is the sort of craft Mr.
+Robert had wished on him.
+
+Seems there'd been some weather off the Hook for the last few days, and,
+with a fresh U-boat scare on, him and his reformed glue barge had been
+havin' anything but a merry time. I don't know how the old fish-boat
+stood it, but Mr. Robert showed that he'd been on more or less active
+service. He had a three days' growth of stubble on his face, his navy
+uniform was wrinkled and brine-stained, and the knuckles on one hand
+were all barked up.
+
+"Why, Robert!" says young Mrs. Ellins, as she wriggles out of the clinch
+and gives him the once-over. "You're a sight."
+
+"Sorry, my dear," says Mr. Robert; "but the beauty parlor on the
+_Narcissus_ wasn't working when I left. But if you can give me half an
+hour to----"
+
+He got it. And when he shows up again in dry togs and with his face
+mowed he's almost fit to mingle with the guests. It was about then that
+T. Forsythe was pullin' his star act at the salad bowl. Course, when you
+have only ordinary people around, you let the kitchen help do such
+things. But when Forsythe is present he's asked to mix the salad
+dressin'.
+
+So there is Forsythe, wearin' a jade-green tie to match the color of the
+salad bowl, surrounded by cruets and pepper grinders and paprika
+bottles, and manipulatin' his own special olivewood spoon and fork as
+dainty and graceful as if he was conductin' an orchestra.
+
+"Oh, I say, Jevons," says he, signalin' the Ellinses' butler, "have
+someone conduct a clove of garlic to the back veranda, slice it, and
+gently rub it on a crust of fresh bread. Then bring me the bread. And do
+you mind very much, Mrs. Ellins, if I have those Papa Gontier roses
+removed? They clash with an otherwise perfect color scheme, and you've
+no idea how sensitive I am to such jarring notes. Besides, their perfume
+is so beastly obtrusive. At times I've been made quite ill by them.
+Really."
+
+"Take them away, Jevons," says Mr. Robert, smotherin' a sarcastic smile.
+
+"Huh!" grumbles Mr. Robert. "What a rotter you are, Forsythe. If I could
+only get you aboard the _Narcissus_ for a ten-day cruise! I'd introduce
+you to perfumes, the sort you could lean up against. You know, when a
+boat has carried mature fish for----"
+
+"Please, Bob!" protests Forsythe. "We admit you're a hero, and that
+you've been saving the country, but don't let's have the disgusting
+details; at least, not when the salad dressing is at its most critical
+stage."
+
+Havin' said which, Forsythe proceeds to finish what was for him a hard
+day's work.
+
+Discussin' his likes and dislikes was Forsythe's strong hold, and, if
+you could believe him, he had more finicky notions than a sanatorium
+full of nervous wrecks. He positively couldn't bear the sight of this,
+the touch of that, and the sound of the other thing. The rustle of a
+newspaper made him so fidgety he could hardly sit still. The smell of
+boiled cabbage made him faint. Someone had sent him a plaid necktie for
+Christmas. He had ordered his man to pick it up with the fire-tongs and
+throw it in the ash-can. Things like that.
+
+All through luncheon we listened while Forsythe described the awful
+agonies he'd gone through. We had to listen. You can guess what a joy it
+was. And, all the time, I could watch Mr. Robert gettin' sorer and
+sorer.
+
+"Entertainin' party, eh?" I remarks on the side, as we escapes from the
+dinin'-room.
+
+"Forsythe," says Mr. Robert, "is one of those persons you're always
+wanting to kick and never do. I could generally avoid him at the club,
+but here----"
+
+Mr. Robert shrugs his shoulders. Then he adds:
+
+"I say, Torchy, you have clever ideas now and then."
+
+"Who, me?" says I. "Someone's been kiddin' you."
+
+"Perhaps," says he; "but if anything should occur to you that might help
+toward putting Forsythe in a position where real work and genuine
+discomfort couldn't be dodged--well, I should be deeply grateful."
+
+"What a cruel thought!" says I. "Still, if a miracle like that could be
+pulled, it would be entertainin' to watch. Eh?"
+
+"Especially if it had to do with handling cold, slippery things,"
+chuckles Mr. Robert, "like iced eels or pickles."
+
+Then we both grins. I was tryin' to picture Forsythe servin' a sentence
+as helper in a fish market or assistant stirrer in a soap fact'ry. Not
+that anything like that could happen through me. Who was I to interfere
+with a brilliant drawin'-room performer like him? Honest, with Forsythe
+scintillatin' around, I felt like a Bolsheviki of the third class. And
+yet, the longer I watched him, the more I mulled over that hint Mr.
+Robert had thrown out.
+
+I was still wonderin' if I was all hollow above the eyes, when our
+placid afternoon gatherin' is busted complete by a big cream-colored
+limousine rollin' through the porte-cochère and a new arrival breezin'
+in. From the way Jevons swells his chest out as he helps her shed the
+mink-lined motor coat, I guessed she must be somebody important.
+
+"Why, it's Miss Gorman!" whispers Vee.
+
+"Not _the_ Miss Gorman--Miss Jane?" I says.
+
+Vee nods, and I stretches my neck out another kink. Who wouldn't? Not
+just because she's a society head-liner, or the richest old maid in the
+country, but because she's such a wonder at gettin' things done. You
+know, I expect--Red Cross work, suffrage campaignin', Polish relief.
+Say, I'll bet if she could be turned loose in Mexico or Russia for a
+couple of months, she'd have things runnin' as smooth as a directors'
+meetin' of the Standard Oil.
+
+Look at the things she's put through, since the war started, just by
+crashin' right in and stayin' on the job. They say she keeps four
+secretaries with their suitcases packed, ready to jump into their
+travelin' clothes and slide down the pole when she pushes the buzzer
+button.
+
+And now she's makin' straight for Mr. Robert.
+
+"What luck!" says she. "I wasn't at all sure of finding you. How much
+leave have you? Only until Monday morning? Oh, you overworked naval
+officers! But you must find some men for me, Robert; two, at least. I
+need them at once."
+
+"Might I ask, Miss Jane," says he, "if any particular qualifications
+are----"
+
+"What I would like," breaks in Miss Gorman, "would be two active,
+intelligent young men with some initiative and executive ability. You
+see, I am giving a going away dinner for some soldiers of the Rainbow
+Division who are about to be sent to the transports. It's an official
+secret, of course. No one is supposed to know that they are going to
+sail soon, but everyone does know. None of their friends or relatives
+are to be allowed to be there to wish them God-speed or anything like
+that, and they need cheering up just now. So I arrange one of these
+dinners when I can. My plans for this one, however, have been terribly
+rushed."
+
+"I see," says Mr. Robert. "And it's perfectly bully of you, Miss Jane.
+Splendid! I suppose there'll be a hundred or so."
+
+"Six eighty," says she, never battin' an eye. "We are not including the
+officers--only privates. And we don't want one of them to lift a finger
+for it. They've had enough fatigue duty. This time they're to be
+guests--honored guests. I have permission from the Brigadier in command.
+We are to have one of the mess halls for a whole day. The chef and
+waiters have been engaged, too. And an orchestra. But there'll be so
+many to manage--the telling of who to go where, and seeing that the
+entertainers don't get lost, and that the little dinner favors are put
+around, and all those details. So I must have help."
+
+I could see Mr. Robert rollin' his eyes around for me, so I steps up.
+Just from hearin' her talk a couple of minutes I'd caught the fever.
+That's a way she has, I understand. So the next thing I knew I'd been
+patted on the shoulder and taken on as a volunteer.
+
+"Precisely the sort of assistant I was hoping for," says Miss Gorman. "I
+can tell by his hair. I know just what I shall ask him to do. But
+there'll be so much more; decorating the tables, and----"
+
+Here I nudges Mr. Robert. "How about Forsythe?" I suggests.
+
+"Eh?" says he. "Why--why---- By Jove, though! Why not? Oh, I say,
+Forsythe! Just a moment."
+
+Maybe the same thought struck him as had come to me, which is that
+helpin' Miss Jane give a blowout to near seven hundred soldiers wouldn't
+be any rest-cure stunt. She's rated at about ninety horse-power herself,
+when she's speeded up, and anybody that happens to be on her staff has
+got to keep movin' in high. They'd have to be ready to tackle anything
+that turned up, too.
+
+But, to hear Mr. Robert explain it to Forsythe, you'd think it was just
+that his fame as an arranger of floral center-pieces had spread until
+Miss Gorman has decided nobody else would do.
+
+"Although, heaven knows, I never suspected you could be really useful,
+Forsythe," says Mr. Robert. "But if Miss Jane thinks you'd be a
+help----"
+
+"Oh, I am sure Mr. Hurd would be the very one," puts in Miss Gorman.
+
+"At last!" says Forsythe, strikin' a pose. "My virtues are about to be
+discovered. I shall be delighted to assist you, Miss Gorman, in any
+way."
+
+"Tut, tut, Forsythe!" says Mr. Robert. "Don't be too reckless. Miss Jane
+might take you at your word."
+
+"Go on. Slander me," says Forsythe. "Say that, when enlisted in a noble
+cause, I am a miserable shirker."
+
+"Indeed, I shouldn't believe a word of it, even if I had time to listen
+to him," declares Miss Jane. "And I must be at the camp within an hour.
+I shall need one of you young men now. Let me see. Suppose I take this
+one--Torchy, isn't it? Get your coat. I'll not promise to have you back
+for dinner, but I'll try. Thank you so much, Robert."
+
+And then it was a case of goin' on from there. Whew! I've sort of had
+the notion now and then, when I've been operatin' with Old Hickory
+Ellins at the Corrugated Trust on busy days, that I was some rapid
+private sec. But say, havin' followed Miss Jane Gorman through them
+dinner preliminaries, I know better.
+
+While that French chauffeur of hers is rollin' us down Long Island at
+from forty to fifty miles per hour, she has her note-book out and is
+pumpin' me full of things I'm expected to remember--what train the
+chef's gang is comin' on, how the supplies are to be carted over, who to
+see about knockin' up a stage for the cabaret talent, and where the
+buntin' has been ordered. I borrows a pad and pencil, and wishes I knew
+shorthand.
+
+By the time we lands at the camp, though, I have a fair idea of the job
+she's tackled; and while she's havin' an interview with the C. O. I
+starts explorin' the scene of the banquet. First off I finds that the
+mess-hall seats less than five hundred, the way they got the tables
+fixed; that there's no room for a stage without breakin' through one end
+and tackin' it on; and that the camp cooks will have the range ovens
+full of bread and the tops covered with oatmeal in double boilers as
+usual. Outside of that and a few other things, the arrangements was
+lovely.
+
+Miss Jane ain't a bit disturbed when I makes my report.
+
+"There!" says she. "Didn't I say you were just the assistant I needed?
+Now, please tell all those things to the Brigadier. He will know exactly
+what to do. Then you'd best be out here early Monday morning to see that
+they're done properly. And I think, Torchy, I shall make you my general
+manager for this occasion. Yes, I'll do it. Everyone will report first
+to you, and you will tell them exactly where to go and what to do."
+
+"You--you mean," says I, gaspin' a bit, "all the hired help?"
+
+"And the volunteers too," says Miss Jane. "Everyone."
+
+Maybe I grinned. I didn't know just how it was goin' to work out, but I
+could feel something comin'. Forsythe was goin' to get his. He stood to
+get it good, too. Not all on account of what I owed Mr. Robert for the
+friendly turns he'd done me. Some of it would be on my own hook, to pay
+up for the yawny half hours I'd had to sit through listenin' while
+Forsythe discoursed about himself. You should have seen the satisfied
+look on Mr. Robert's face when I hinted how Forsythe might be in line
+for new sensations.
+
+"If I could only be there to watch!" says he. "You must tell me all
+about it afterwards. They'll enjoy hearing of it at the club."
+
+But, at that, Forsythe wasn't the one to walk right into trouble. He's a
+shifty party, and he ain't been duckin' work all these years without
+gettin' expert at it. Accordin' to schedule he was to show up at the
+camp about nine-thirty Monday morning; but it's nearer noon when he
+rolls up in his car. And I don't hesitate a bit about givin' him the
+call.
+
+"You know it's this week, not next," says I, "that this dinner is comin'
+off. And there's four bolts of buntin' waitin' to be hung up."
+
+"Quite so," says Forsythe. "We must get to work right away."
+
+I had to chase down to the station again then, to see that the chef's
+outfit was bein' loaded on the trucks; but I was cheered up by the
+thought of Forsythe balanced on top of a tall step-ladder with his mouth
+full of tacks and his collar gettin' wilty.
+
+It's near an hour before I gets back, though. Do I find Forsythe in his
+shirt-sleeves climbin' around on the rafters? I do not. He's sittin'
+comfortable in a camp-chair on a fur motor robe, smokin' a cigarette
+calm, and surrounded by half a dozen classy young ladies that he's
+rounded up by 'phone from the nearest country club. The girls and three
+or four chauffeurs are doin' the work, while Forsythe is doin' the heavy
+directin'.
+
+He'd sketched out his decoratin' scheme on the back of an envelop, and
+now he was tellin' 'em how to carry it out. The worst of it is, too,
+that he's gettin' some stunnin' effects and is bein' congratulated
+enthusiastic by the girls.
+
+It's the same way with fixin' up the tables with ferns and flowers.
+Forsythe plans it out with a pencil, and his crew do the hustlin'
+around.
+
+Course, I had to let it ride. Besides, there was a dozen other things
+for me to look after. But I'm good at a waitin' game. I kept my eye on
+Forsythe, to see that he didn't slip away. He was still there at
+two-thirty, havin' organized a picnic luncheon with the young ladies,
+when Miss Jane blew in. And blamed if she don't fall for Forsythe's
+stuff, too.
+
+"Why, you've done wonders, Mr. Hurd," says she. "What a versatile genius
+you are?"
+
+"Oh, that!" says he, wavin' a sandwich careless. "But it's an
+inspiration to be doing anything at all for you, Miss Gorman."
+
+And here he hasn't so much as shed his overcoat.
+
+It must have been half an hour later when Sig. Zaretti, the head chef,
+comes huntin' me out with a desperate look in his eyes. I was consultin'
+Miss Jane about borrowin' a piano from the Y. M. C. A. tent, but he
+kicks right in.
+
+"Ah, I am distract," says he, puffin' out his cheeks. "Eet--eet ees too
+mooch!"
+
+"Go on," says I. "Shoot the tragedy. What's too much?"
+
+"That Pedro and that Salvatore," says he. "They have become lost, the
+worthless ones. They disappear on me. And in three hours I am to serve,
+in this crude place, a dinner of six courses to seven hundred men. They
+abandon me at such a time, with so much to be done."
+
+"Well, that's up to you," says I. "Can't some of your crowd double in
+brass? What about workin' in some of your waiters?"
+
+"But they are all employed," says Zaretti. "Besides, the union does not
+permit. If you could assist me with two men, even one. I implore."
+
+"There ain't a cook in sight," says I. "Sorry, but----"
+
+"Eet ees not for cook," he protests. "No; only to help make the peel
+from those so many potatoes. One who could make the peel. Please!"
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Peelin' potatoes! Why, 'most anybody could help out at
+that, I guess. I would myself if----"
+
+"No," breaks in Miss Jane. "You cannot be spared. And I'm sure I don't
+know who could."
+
+"Unless," I puts in, "Mr. Hurd is all through with his decoratin'."
+
+"Why, to be sure," says she. "Just tell him, will you?"
+
+"Suppose I send him over to you, Miss Gorman," says I, "while I hustle
+along that piano?"
+
+She nods, and I lose no time trailin' down Forsythe.
+
+"Emergency call for you from Miss Jane," says I, edgin' in among his
+admirers and tappin' him on the shoulder. "She's waitin' over by
+headquarters."
+
+"Oh, certainly," says Forsythe, startin' off brisk.
+
+"And say," I calls after him, "I hope it won't be anything that'll make
+you faint."
+
+"Please don't worry about me," says he.
+
+Well, I tried not to. In fact, I tried so hard that some folks might
+have thought I'd heard good news from home. But I'd had a peek or two
+into the camp kitchen since Zaretti's food construction squad had moved
+in, and, believe me, it was no place for an artistic temperament,
+subject to creeps up the back. There was about a ton of cold-storage
+turkeys bein' unpacked, bushels of onions goin' through the shuckin'
+process, buckets of soup stock standin' around, and half a dozen
+murderous-lookin' assistant chefs was sharpenin' long knives and
+jabberin' excited in four languages.
+
+Oh, yes; Forsythe was goin' to need all the inspiration he'd collected,
+if he lasted through.
+
+I kind of wanted to stick around and cheer him up with friendly words
+while he was fishin' potatoes out of the cold water and learnin' to use
+a peelin'-knife, but my job wouldn't let me. After I'd seen the piano
+landed on the new stage, there were chairs to be placed for the
+orchestra, and then other things. So it was some little time before I
+got around to the kitchen wing again, pretendin' to be lookin' for
+Zaretti. But nowhere in that steamin', hustlin', garlic-smellin' bunch
+could I see Forsythe.
+
+"Hey, chef!" I sings out. "Where's that expert potato-peeler I sent
+you?"
+
+"Ah!" says he, rubbin' his hands enthusiastic. "The signor with the
+yellow gloves? In the tent there you will find heem."
+
+So I steps over to the door of a sort of canvas annex and peers in. And
+say, it was a rude shock. Forsythe is there, all right. He's snuggled up
+cozy next to an oil heater, holdin' a watch in one hand and a cigarette
+in the other, while around him is grouped his faithful fluff
+body-guard, each with a pan in her lap and the potato-peelin's comin'
+off rapid. Forsythe? Oh, he seems to be speedin' 'em up and keepin'
+tally.
+
+I'd just let out my second gasp when I feels somebody at my elbow, and
+glances round to find it's Miss Jane.
+
+"Look!" says I, indicatin' Forsythe and his busy bees.
+
+"What a picture!" says Miss Jane.
+
+"Yes," says I, "illustratin' the manly art of lettin' the women do it."
+
+Miss Jane laughs easy.
+
+"It has been that way for ages," says she. "Mr. Hurd is only running
+true to type. But see! The potatoes are nearly all peeled and our dinner
+is going to be served on time. What splendid assistants you've both
+been!"
+
+At that, though, if there'd been a medal to be passed out, I guess it
+would have been pinned on Forsythe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE HOUSE OF TORCHY
+
+
+This trip it was a matter of tanks. No, not the ice-water variety, or
+the kind that absorbs high-balls. Army tanks--the sort that wallows out
+at daybreak and gives the Hun that chilly feelin' down his spine.
+
+Accordin' to my credentials, I was supposed to be inspectin' 'em for
+weak spots in the armor or punk work on the gears. And I can tell you
+now, on the side, that it was 90 per cent. bluff. What the Ordnance
+Department really wanted to know was whether the work was bein' speeded
+up proper, how many men on the shifts, and was the steel comin' through
+from the rollin' mills all right. Get me? Sleuth stuff.
+
+I'd been knockin' around there for four days, bein' towed about by the
+reserve major, who had a face on him like a stuffed owl, a nut full of
+decimal fractions, and a rubber-stamp mind. Oh, he was on the job, all
+right. So was everybody else in sight. I could see that after the first
+day. In fact, I coded in my O. K. the second noon and was plannin' to
+slip back home.
+
+But when I hinted as much to the Major he nearly threw a cat-fit. Why,
+he'd arranged a demonstration at 10 A.M. Thursday, for my special
+benefit. And there were the tests--horse-power, gun-ranges, resistance,
+and I don't know what all; technical junk that I savvied about as much
+as if he'd been tryin' to show me how to play the Chinese alphabet on a
+piccolo.
+
+Course, I couldn't tell him that, nor I didn't want to break his heart
+by refusin'. So I agrees to stick around a while longer. But say, I
+never enjoyed such a poor time doin' it. For there was just one spot on
+the map where I was anxious to be for the next few days. That was at
+home. It was one of the times when I ought to be there too, for----
+Well, I'll get to that later.
+
+Besides, this fact'ry joint where they were buildin' the tanks wasn't
+any allurin' spot. I can't advertise just where it was, either; the
+government wouldn't like it. But if there's any part of Connecticut
+that's less interestin' to loaf around in, I never got stranded there.
+You run a spur track out into the bare hills for fifteen miles from
+nowhere, slap up a row of cement barracks, and a few acres of machine
+shops, string a ten-foot barbed-wire fence around the plant, drape the
+whole outfit in soft-coal smoke, and you ain't got any Garden of Eden
+winter resort. Specially when it's full of low-brow mechanics who speak
+in seven different lingos and subsist mainly on cut plug and garlic.
+
+After I'd checked up all the dope I'd come for, and durin' the times
+when the Major was out plannin' more inspection stunts for me, I was
+left to drill around by myself. Hours and hours. And all there was to
+read in the Major's office was engineerin' magazines and the hist'ry of
+Essex County, Mass. Havin' been fed up on mechanics, I tackled the
+hist'ry. One chapter had a corkin' good Indian scalpin' story in it,
+about a Mrs. Hannah Dustin; and say, as a short-order hair remover she
+was a lady champ, all right. But the rest of the book wasn't so
+thrillin'.
+
+So I tried chattin' with the Major's secretary, a Lieutenant Barnes. The
+Major must have picked him out on account of that serious face of his.
+First off, I had an idea Barnes was sad just because he was detailed at
+this soggy place instead of bein' sent to France. I asks him sort of
+sympathizin' how long he's been here. He says three months.
+
+"In this hole?" says I. "How do you keep from goin' bug-house?"
+
+"I don't mind it," says he. "I find the work quite interesting."
+
+"But evenin's?" I suggests.
+
+"I write to my wife," says he.
+
+I wanted to ask him what about, but I choked it back. "Oh, yes," says I.
+"Of course. Any youngsters at home!"
+
+"No," says he prompt. "Life is complicated enough without children."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," says I. "They'd sort of help, I should think."
+
+He shakes his head and glares gloomy out of the window. "I cannot agree
+with you," says he. "Perhaps you have never seriously considered just
+what it means to be a parent."
+
+"Maybe not," says I, "but----"
+
+"Few seem to do so," he breaks in. "Just think: one begins by putting
+two lives in jeopardy."
+
+"Let's pass over that," I says hasty.
+
+He sighs. "If we only could," says he. "And then---- Well, there you
+are--saddled with the task of caring for another human being, of keeping
+him in good health, of molding his character, of planning and directing
+his whole career, from boyhood on."
+
+"Some are girls, though," I suggests.
+
+He shudders. "So much the worse," says he. "Girl babies are such
+delicate creatures; all babies are, in fact. Do you know the average
+rate of infant mortality in this country? Just think of the hundreds of
+thousands who do not survive the teething period. Imagine the anxieties,
+the sleepless nights, the sad little tragedies which come to so many
+homes. Then the epidemic diseases--measles, scarlet fever, meningitis.
+Let them survive all those, and what has the parent to face but the
+battle with other plagues, mental and moral? Think of the number of
+weak-minded children there are in the world; of perverts, criminally
+inclined. It is staggering. But if you escape all that, if your children
+are well and normal, as some are, then you must consider this: Suppose
+anything should happen to either or both of the parents? What of the
+little boy or girl? You have seen orphan asylums, I suppose. Have you
+ever stopped to----"
+
+And then, just as he had me feelin' like I ought to be led out and shot
+at sunrise, the old Major comes bustlin' in fussy. I could have fallen
+on his neck.
+
+"All ready!" says he. "Now I'll show you a fighting machine, young man,
+that is the last word in mechanical genius."
+
+"You can show me anything, Major," says I, "so long as it ain't a morgue
+or a State's prison."
+
+And he sure had some boiler-plate bus out there champin' at the bit. It
+looked just as frisky as the Flatiron Buildin', squattin' in the middle
+of the field, this young Fort Slocum with the caterpillar wheels sunk in
+the mud.
+
+"Stuck, ain't she?" I asked the Major.
+
+"We shall see," says he, noddin' to one of his staff, who proceeds to do
+a semaphore act with his arms.
+
+An answerin' snort comes from inside the thing, a purry sort of rumble
+that grows bigger and bigger, and next I knew, it starts wallowin' right
+at us. It keeps comin' and comin', gettin' up speed all the while, and
+if there hadn't been a four-foot stone wall between us I'd been lookin'
+for a tall tree. I thought it would turn when it came to the wall. But
+it don't. It gives a lurch, like a cow playin' leap-frog, and over she
+comes, still pointed our way.
+
+"Hey, Major!" I calls out above the roar. "Can they see where they're
+goin' in there? Hadn't we better give 'em room?"
+
+"Don't move, please," says he.
+
+"Just as you say," says I; "only I ain't strong for bein' rolled into
+pie-crust."
+
+"There's no danger," says he. "I merely wish you to see how---- There!
+Look!"
+
+And say, within twenty feet of us the blamed thing rears up on its
+haunches, its ugly nose high as a house above us, and, while I'm still
+holdin' my breath, it pivots on its tail and lumbers back, leavin' a
+path that looks like it had been paved with Belgian blocks.
+
+Course, that's only part of the performance. We watched it wallow into
+deep ditches and out, splash through a brook, and mow down trees more'n
+a foot thick. And all the time the crew were pokin' out wicked-lookin'
+guns, big and little, that swung round and hunted us out like so many
+murderous eyes.
+
+"Cute little beast, ain't it?" says I. "You got it trained so it'll
+almost do a waltz. If I was to pick my position, though, I think I'd
+rather be on the inside lookin' out."
+
+"Very well," says the Major. "You shall have a ride in it."
+
+"Excuse me," says I. "I was only foolin'. Honest, Major, I ain't
+yearnin'."
+
+"Telegram for you," breaks in Barnes, the secretary.
+
+"Oh!" says I, a bit gaspy, as I rips open the envelop.
+
+It's the one I'd been espectin'. All it says is: "Come at once. VEE."
+But I knew what that meant.
+
+"Sorry, Major," says I, "but I'll have to pass up the rest of the show.
+I--I'm called back."
+
+"Ah! To headquarters?" says he.
+
+"No," says I. "Home."
+
+He shakes his head and frowns. "That is a word which no officer is
+supposed to have in his vocabulary," says he.
+
+"It's in mine, all right," says I. "But then, I'm not much of an army
+officer, anyway. I'm mostly a camouflaged private sec. Besides, this
+ain't any ordinary call. It's a domestic S. O. S. that I've been sort of
+lookin' for."
+
+"I understand," says he. "The--the first?"
+
+I nods. Then I asks: "What's the quickest way across to Long Island?"
+
+"There isn't any quick way," says he, "unless you have wings. You can't
+even catch the branch line local that connects with the New York
+express now. There'll be one down at 8:36 to-morrow morning, though."
+
+"Wha-a-at!" says I, gawpin' at him. "How about gettin' a machine and
+shootin' down to the junction?"
+
+"My car is the only one here," says he, "and that is out of commission
+to-day--valves being ground."
+
+"But look," says I; "you got three or four of those motor-cycles with a
+bath-tub tacked on the side. Couldn't you let one of your sergeants----"
+
+"Strictly against orders," says he, "except for military purposes."
+
+"Ah, stretch it, Major," I goes on. "Have a heart. Just think! I want to
+get there to-night. Got to!"
+
+"Impossible," says he.
+
+"But listen----" I keeps on.
+
+Well, it's no use rehearsin' the swell arguments I put up. I said he had
+a rubber-stamp mind, didn't I? And I made about as much headway talkin'
+to him as I would if I'd been assaultin' that tank with a tack-hammer.
+He couldn't see any difference between havin' charge of a string of
+machine shops in Connecticut and commandin' a regiment in the front-line
+trenches. Besides, he didn't approve of junior officers bein' married.
+Not durin' war-time, anyway.
+
+And the worst of it was, I couldn't tell him just the particular kind of
+ossified old pinhead I thought he was. All I could do was grind my
+teeth, say "Yes, sir," and salute respectful.
+
+Also there was that undertaker-faced secretary standin' by with his ear
+out. The prospect of sittin' around watchin' him for the rest of the day
+wasn't fascinatin'. No; I'd had about all of Barnes I could stand. A few
+more of his cheerin' observations, and I'd want to jam his head into his
+typewriter and then tread on the keys. Nor I wasn't goin' to be fed on
+any more cog-wheel statistics by the Major, either.
+
+All I could keep on my mind then was this one thing: How could I get
+home? Looked like I was up against it, too. The nearest town was twelve
+miles off, and the main-line junction was some thirty-odd miles beyond
+that. Too far for an afternoon hike. But I couldn't just sit around and
+wait, or pace up and down inside the barbed-wire fence like an enemy
+alien that had been pastured out. So I wanders through the gate and down
+a road. I didn't know where it led, or care. Maybe I had a vague idea a
+car would come along. But none did.
+
+I must have been trampin' near an hour, with my chin down and my fists
+jammed into my overcoat pockets, when I catches a glimpse, out of the
+tail of my eye, of something yellow dodgin' behind a clump of cedars at
+one side of the road. First off I thought it might be a cow, as there
+was a farm-house a little ways ahead. Then it struck me no cow would
+move as quick as that, or have such a bright yellow hide. So I turns and
+makes straight for the cedars.
+
+It was a thick, bushy clump. I climbed the stone wall and walked all the
+way round. Nothin' in sight. Seemed as if I could see branches movin' in
+there, though, and hear a sound like heavy breathin'. Course, it might
+be a deer, or a fox. Then I remembered I had half a bag of peanuts
+somewhere about me. Maybe I could toll the thing out with 'em. I was
+just fishin' in my pockets when from the middle of the cedars comes this
+disgusted protest.
+
+"Oh, I say, old man," says a voice. "No shooting, please."
+
+And with that out steps a clean-cut, cheerful-faced young gent in a
+leather coat, goggled helmet, and spiral puttees. No wonder I stood
+starin'. Not that I hadn't seen plenty like him before, but I didn't
+know the woods was so full of 'em.
+
+"You were out looking for me, I suppose?" he goes on.
+
+"Depends on who you are," says I.
+
+"Oh, we might as well come down to cases," says he. "I'm the enemy."
+
+"You don't look it," says I, grinnin'.
+
+He shrugs his shoulders.
+
+"Fact, old man," says he. "I'm the one you were sent to watch
+for--Lieutenant Donald Allen, 26th Flying Corps Division, Squadron B."
+
+"Pleased to meet you," says I.
+
+"No doubt," says he. "Have a cigarette?" We lights up from the same
+match. "But say," he adds, "it was just a piece of tough luck, your
+catching me in this fix."
+
+"Oh, I ain't so sure," says I.
+
+"Of course," he says, "it won't go with the C. O. But really, now, what
+are you going to do when your observer insists that he's dying? I
+couldn't tell. Perhaps he was. Right in the middle of a perfect flight,
+too, the chump! Motor working sweet, air as smooth as silk, and no cross
+currents to speak of. But, with him howling about this awful pain in
+his tummy, what else could I do? Had to come down and---- Well, here we
+are. I'm behind the lines, I suppose, and you'll report my surrender."
+
+"Then what?" I asks.
+
+"Oh," says Allen, "as soon as I persuade this trolley-car aviator,
+Martin, that he isn't dead, I shall load him into the old bus and cart
+him back to Mineola."
+
+"Wha-a-t!" says I. "You--you're goin' back to Mineola--to-night?"
+
+"If Martin can forget his tummy," says he. "How I'll be guyed! Go to the
+foot of the eligible list too, and probably miss out on being sent over
+with my division. Oh, well!"
+
+I was beginning to dope out the mystery. More'n that, I had my fingers
+on the tail feathers of a hunch.
+
+"Why not leave Martin here?" I suggests. "Couldn't you show up in time?"
+
+"It wouldn't count," says the Lieutenant. "You must have an observer all
+the way."
+
+"How about me subbin' in?" says I.
+
+"You?" says he. "Why, you're on the other side."
+
+"That's where you're mixed," says I. "I'm on the wrong side of Long
+Island Sound, that's all."
+
+"Why," says he, "weren't you sent out to----"
+
+"No," I breaks in; "I'm no spotter. I'm on special detail from the
+Ordnance Department. And a mighty punk detail at that, if you ask me.
+The party who's sleuthin' for you, I expect, is the one I saw back at
+the plant, moonin' around with a pair of field glasses strapped to him.
+You ain't captured yet; not by me, anyway."
+
+"Honest?" says he. "Why, then--then----"
+
+"Uh-huh!" says I. "And if you can make it back to Mineola with a
+perfectly good passenger in the extra seat you'll qualify for scout work
+and most likely be over pluggin' Huns within a month or so. That won't
+tickle you a bit more'n it will me to get to Long Island to-night,
+for----"
+
+Well, then I tells him about Vee, and everything.
+
+"By George!" says he. "You're all right, Lieutenant--er----"
+
+"Ah, between friends, Donald," says I, "it's Torchy."
+
+At which we links arms chummy and goes marchin' close order down to the
+farm-house to see how this Martin party was gettin' on. We finds him
+rolled up in quilts on an old sofa that the folks had shoved up in front
+of the stove--a slim, nervous-lookin' young gink with sandy hair and a
+peaked nose.
+
+"Well, how about you?" asks Allen.
+
+Martin he only moans and reaches for a warm flat-iron that he'd been
+holdin' against his stomach.
+
+"Still dying, eh?" says Allen. "Why didn't you report sick this morning,
+instead of letting them send you up with me?"
+
+"I--I was all right then," whines Martin. "It--it must have been the
+altitude got me. I--I'd never been that high before, you know."
+
+"Bah!" says the Lieutenant. "Not over thirty-five hundred at any time.
+How do you expect me to take you back--on the hundred-foot level? You'll
+make a fine observer, you will!"
+
+"I've had enough observing," says Martin. "I--I'm going to get
+transferred to the mechanical department."
+
+"Oh, are you?" says Allen. "Then you'll be just as satisfied to make the
+trip back by rail."
+
+Martin nods.
+
+"And you won't be needing your helmet and things, eh?" goes on the
+Lieutenant. "I'll take those along, then," and he winks at me.
+
+All of a sudden, though, the sparkles fade out of his eyes. "Jinxed
+again!" says he. "There'd be no blessed map to hand in."
+
+"Eh?" says I. "Map of what!"
+
+He explains jerky. This scoutin' stunt of his was to locate the tank
+works and get close enough for an observer to draw a plan of it--all of
+which he'd done, only by then Martin had got past the drawin' stage.
+
+"So it's no use going back to-night."
+
+"Ain't it?" says I. "Say, if a map of that smoky hole is all you need, I
+guess I can produce that easy enough."
+
+"Can you?" he asks.
+
+"Why not?" says I. "Ain't I been cooped up there for nearly a week? I
+can put in a bird's-eye view of the Major in command; one of his
+secretary, too, if you like. Gimme some paper."
+
+And inside of five minutes I'd sketched out a diagram of the buildin's
+and the whole outfit. Then we poked Martin up long enough for him to
+sign it.
+
+"Fine work!" says Donald. "That earns you a hop, all right. Now buckle
+yourself into that cloud costume and I'll show you how a 110-horse-power
+crow would go from here to the middle of Long Island if he was in a
+hurry."
+
+"You can't make it any too speedy for me," says I, slippin' into the
+sheepskin jacket.
+
+"Ever been up before?" he asks.
+
+"Only once--in a hydro," says I; "but I ain't missed any chances."
+
+"That's the spirit!" says he. "Come along. The old bus is anchored down
+the field a ways."
+
+I couldn't hardly believe I was actually goin' to pull it off until he'd
+got the motor started and we went skimmin' along the ground. But as soon
+as we shook off the State of Connecticut and began climbin' up over a
+strip of woods, I settles back in the little cockpit, buttons the
+wind-shield over my mouth, and sighs contented.
+
+Allen and I didn't exchange much chat. You don't with an engine of that
+size roarin' a few feet in front of you and your ears buttoned down by
+three or four layers of wool and leather. Once he points out ahead and
+tries to shout something, I don't know what. But I nods and waves
+encouragin'. Later he points down and grins. I grins back.
+
+Next thing I knew, he's shut off the motor, and I gets a glimpse of the
+whole of Long Island behavin' odd. Seems as if it's swellin' and
+widenin' out, like one of these freaky toy balloons you blow up. It
+didn't seem as if we was divin' down--more like the map was rushin' up
+to meet us. Pretty soon I could make out a big open space with a lot of
+squatty buildin's at one end, and in a couple of minutes more the
+machine was rollin' along on its wheels and we taxied graceful up
+towards the hangars.
+
+It was just gettin' dusk as we piles out, and the first few yards I
+walked I felt like I was dressed in a divin' suit with a pair of lead
+boots on my feet. I saw Allen salute an officer, hand over the map, and
+heard him say something about Observer Martin wantin' to report sick.
+Then he steers me off toward the barracks, circles past' em, and leads
+me through a back gate.
+
+"I think we've put it over, old man," says he, givin' me the cordial
+grip. "I can't tell you what a good turn you've done me."
+
+"It's fifty-fifty," says I. "Where do I hit a station?"
+
+"You take this trolley that's coming," says he. "That junk you have on
+you can send back to-morrow, in my care. And I--I trust you'll find
+things all right at home."
+
+"Thanks," says I. "Hope you'll have the same luck yourself some day."
+
+"Oh, perhaps," says he, shakin' his head doubtful. "If I ever get back.
+But not until I'm past thirty, anyway."
+
+"Why so late?" asks I.
+
+"What would get my goat," says he, "would be the risk of breakin' into
+the grandfather class before I got ready."
+
+"Gee!" I gasps. "I hadn't thought of that."
+
+So, with this new idea, and the cheerin' views Barnes had pumped into
+me, I has plenty to chew over durin' the next hour or so that I'm
+speedin' towards home. I expect that accounts some for the long face I
+must have been wearin' when I finally dashes through the front gate of
+the Lilacs and am let into the house by Leon Battou, the little old
+Frenchman who cooks and buttles for us.
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu!_" says Leon, throwin' up his hands and starin' at me
+bug-eyed. "Monsieur!"
+
+"Go on," says I. "Tell me the worst. What is it?"
+
+"But no, M'sieur," says he. "It is only that M'sieur appears in so
+strange attire."
+
+"Oh! These?" says I. "Never mind my costume, Leon. What about Vee?"
+
+"Ah!" says he, his eyes beamin' once more and his hands washin' each
+other. "Madame is excellent. She herself will tell you. Come!"
+
+Upstairs I went, two steps at a time.
+
+"S-s-sh!" says the nurse, meetin' me at the door.
+
+But I brushes past her, and the next minute I'm over by the bed and Vee
+is smilin' up at me. It's only the ghost of a smile, but it means a lot
+to me. She slips one of her hands into mine.
+
+"Torchy," she whispers, "did you drop down out of--of the air?"
+
+"That was about it," says I. "I got here, though. Are you all right,
+girlie?"
+
+She nods and gives me another of them sketchy, happy smiles.
+
+"And how about the--the----" I starts to ask.
+
+She glances towards the corner where the nurse is bendin' over a pink
+and white basket. "He's splendid," she whispers.
+
+"He?" says I. "Then--then it's a boy?"
+
+She gives my hand a little squeeze.
+
+And ten minutes later, when I'm shooed out, I'm feelin' so chesty and
+happy that I'm tingly all over.
+
+Down in the livin'-room Leon is waitin' for me, wearin' a broad grin. He
+greets me with his hand out. And then, somehow, because he's so
+different, I expect, I remembers Barnes. I was wonderin' if Leon was
+just puttin' on.
+
+"Well," says I, "how about it?"
+
+"Ah, Monsieur!" says he, givin' me the hearty grip. "I make to you my
+best congratulations."
+
+"Then you don't feel," says I, "that bein' a parent is kind of a sad and
+solemn business?"
+
+"Sad!" says he. "_Non, non!_ It is the grand joy of life. It is when you
+have the best right to be proud and glad, for to you has come _la bonne
+chance_. Yes, _la bonne chance!_"
+
+And say, there's no mistakin' that Leon means every word of it, French
+and all.
+
+"Thanks, Leon," says I. "You ought to know. You've been through it
+yourself. I'll bet you wouldn't even feel bad at being a grandfather.
+No? Well, I guess I'll follow through on that line. Maybe I don't
+deserve so much luck, but I'm takin' it just as though I did. And say,
+Leon, let's us go out in the back yard and give three cheers for the son
+and heir of the house of Torchy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+TORCHY GETS THE THUMB GRIP
+
+
+I expect a lot of people thought it about me; but the one who really
+registered the idea was Auntie. Trust her. For of course, with an event
+of this kind staged in the house we couldn't expect to dodge a visit
+from the old girl. She came clear up from Miami--although, with so much
+trouble about through sleepers and everything, I kept tellin' Vee I was
+afraid she wouldn't think it worth while makin' the trip.
+
+"How absurd, Torchy!" says Vee. "Not want to see baby? To be sure, she
+will."
+
+You see, Vee had the right hunch from the very first--about the
+importance of this new member of the fam'ly, I mean. She took it as a
+matter of course that everybody who'd ever known or heard of us would be
+anxious to rush in and gaze awe-struck and reverent at this remarkable
+addition we'd made to the population of Long Island. Something like
+that. She don't have to work up to it. Seems to come natural. Why, say,
+she'd sit by and listen without crackin' a smile to these regular
+gushers who laid it on so thick you'd 'most thought the youngster
+himself would have turned over and run his tongue out at 'em.
+
+"Oh, the dear, darling 'ittle cherub!" they'd squeal. "Isn't he simp-ly
+the most won-der-ful baby you ev-er saw?"
+
+And Vee would never blink an eye. In fact, she'd beam on 'em grateful,
+and repeat to me afterwards what they'd said, like it was just a case of
+the vote bein' made unanimous, as she knew it was bound to be all along.
+
+Which wasn't a bit like any of the forty-seven varieties of Vee I
+thought I was so well acquainted with. No. I'll admit she'd shown whims
+and queer streaks now and then, and maybe a fault or so; but nothing
+that had anything to do with any tendency of the ego to stick its elbows
+out. Yet, when it comes to listenin' to flatterin' remarks about our son
+and heir--well, no Broadway star readin' over what his press-agent had
+smuggled into the dramatic notes had anything on her. She couldn't have
+it handed to her too strong.
+
+As for me, I guess I was in sort of a daze there for a week or so.
+Gettin' to be a parent had been sprung on me so sudden that it was sort
+of confusin'. I couldn't let on to be a judge of babies myself. I don't
+know as I'd ever examined one real near to before, anyway--not such a
+new one as this.
+
+And, between me and you, when I did get a chance to size him up real
+close once,--they'd all gone out of the room and left me standin' by the
+crib,--I was kind of disappointed. Uh-huh. No use kiddin' yourself. I
+couldn't see a thing wonderful about him, or where he was much different
+from others I'd glanced at casual. Such a small party to have so much
+fuss made over! Why, one of his hands wasn't much bigger'n a cat's paw.
+And his face was so red and little and the nose so sketchy that it
+didn't seem likely he'd ever amount to much. Here he'd had more'n a week
+to grow in, and I couldn't notice any change at all.
+
+Not that I was nutty enough to report any such thoughts. Hardly. I felt
+kind of guilty at just havin' 'em in my head. How was it, I asked
+myself, that I couldn't stand around with my hands clasped and my eyes
+dimmed up, as a perfectly good parent should when he gazes at his first
+and only chee-ild! Wasn't I human?
+
+All the alibi I can put up is that I wasn't used to bein' a father.
+Ain't there something in that? Just think, now. Why, I'd hardly got
+used to bein' married. Here, only a little over a year ago, I was
+floatin' around free and careless. And then, first thing I know, without
+any special coachin' in the act, I finds myself pushed out into the
+center of the stage with the spot-light on me, and I'm introduced as a
+daddy.
+
+The only thing I could do was try to make a noise like one. I didn't
+feel it, any more'n I felt like a stained-glass saint in a church
+window. And I didn't know the lines very well. But there was everybody
+watching,--Vee, and the nurse, and Madame Battou, and occasional
+callers,--so I proceeds to bluff it through the best I could.
+
+My merry little idea was to be familiar with the youngster, treat him as
+if he'd been a member of the fam'ly for a long time, and hide any
+embarrassin' feelin's I might have by addressin' him loud and joshin'. I
+expect it was kind of a poor performance, at that. But I seemed to be
+gettin' away with it, so I stuck to that line. Vee appears to take it
+all right, and, as nobody else gave me the call, I almost got to believe
+it was the real thing myself.
+
+So this particular afternoon, when I came breezin' in from town, I
+chases right up to the nursery, where I knew I'd find Vee, gives her
+the usual hail just behind the ear, and then turns hasty to the crib to
+show I haven't forgot who's there.
+
+"Hello, old sport!" says I, ticklin' him in the ribs. "How you hittin'
+'em, hey? Well, well! Look at the fistses doubled up! Who you goin' to
+hand a wallop to now? Oh, tryin' to punch yourself in the eye, are you?
+Come there, you young rough-houser, lay off that grouchy stuff and speak
+some kind words to your daddy. You won't, eh? Goin' to kick a little
+with the footsies. That's it. Mix in with all fours, you young----"
+
+And just then I hears a suppressed snort that sounds sort of familiar. I
+glances around panicky, and gets the full benefit of a disgusted glare
+from a set of chilled steel eyes, and discovers that there's someone
+besides Vee and the nurse present. Yep. It's Auntie.
+
+"May I ask," says she, "if this is your usual manner of greeting your
+offspring?"
+
+"Why," says I, "I--I expect it is."
+
+"Humph!" says she. "I might have known."
+
+"Now, Auntie," protests Vee, "you know very well that Torchy means----"
+
+"Whatever he means or doesn't mean," breaks in Auntie, "I am sure he
+has an astonishing way of showing parental affection. Calling the child
+an 'old scout,' a 'young rough-houser'! It's shocking."
+
+"Sorry," says I; "but I ain't taken any lessons in polite baby talk yet.
+Maybe in time I could learn this ittums-tweetums stuff, but I doubt it.
+Always made me sick, that did; and one of the things Vee and I agreed on
+was that----"
+
+"Oh, very well," says Auntie. "I do not intend to interfere in any way."
+
+As if she could help it! Why, say, she'd give St. Peter advice on
+gate-keepin'. But for the time bein', each of us havin' had our say, we
+calls it a draw and gets back to what looks like a peace footin'. But
+from then on I knew she had her eyes out at me. Every move I made was
+liable to get her breathin' short or set her squirmin' in her chair. And
+you know how it's apt to be in a case like that. I made more breaks than
+ever. I'd forget about the youngster bein' asleep and cut loose with
+something noisy at the wrong time. Or I'd jolt her some other way.
+
+But she held in until, one night after dinner, when the baby had
+indulged in too much day sleepin' and was carryin' on a bit, I takes a
+notion to soothe him with a few humorous antics while Auntie is safe
+downstairs. You see, I'd never been able to get him to take any notice
+of me before; but this time, after I'd done a swell imitation of a Fred
+Stone dance, I had him cooin' approvin', the nurse smotherin' a smile,
+and Vee snickerin'.
+
+Naturally, I has to follow it up with something else. I was down on my
+hands and knees doin' a buckin' bronco act across the floor, when there
+comes this gasp from the doorway. It seems Auntie was passin' by, and
+peeked in. Her eyebrows go up, her mouth corners come down, and she
+stiffens like she'd grabbed a high-voltage feed wire. I saw it comin',
+but the best I can do is steady myself on my fingers and toes and wish I
+had cotton in my ears.
+
+"Really!" says she. "Are you never to realize, young man, that you are
+now supposed to be a husband and a father?"
+
+And, before I can shoot back a word, she's sailed on, her chin in the
+air and her mouth about as smilin' as a crack in a vinegar bottle. But
+she'd said it. She'd pushed it home, too. And the worst of it was, I
+couldn't deny that she had the goods on me. I might pass as a husband,
+if you didn't expect too much. But as for the rest--well, I knew I
+wasn't meetin' the specifications.
+
+The only model I could think of was them fond parent groups you see in
+the movie close-ups--mother on the right, father at the left, and Little
+Bright Eyes squeezed in between and bein' mauled affectionate. Had we
+ever indulged in any such family clinch? Not up to date. Why? Was it
+because I was a failure as a daddy? Looked so. And here was Auntie
+taxin' me with it. Would other folks find out, too?
+
+I begun thinkin' over the way different ones had taken the news. Old
+Hickory, for instance. I was wearin' a wide grin and still feelin' sort
+of chesty when I broke into his private office and handed him the
+bulletin.
+
+"Eh?" he grunts, squintin' at me from under them bushy eyebrows. "A
+father! You? Good Lord!"
+
+"Why not?" says I. "It's still being done, ain't it?"
+
+"Oh, I suppose so. Yes, yes," he goes on, starin' at me. "But somehow,
+young man, I can hardly think of you as--as---- Well, congratulations,
+Torchy. You have frequently surprised me by rising to the occasion.
+Perhaps you will in this also."
+
+"Thanks, Mr. Ellins," says I. "It's nice of you to cheer me up that
+way."
+
+Piddie, of course, said the right and elegant thing, just as if he'd
+learned it out of a book. He always does, you know. Makes a reg'lar
+little speech, and finishes by givin' me the fraternal handclasp and a
+pat on the shoulder.
+
+But a minute after I caught him gazin' at me wonderin', and he goes off
+shakin' his head.
+
+Then I runs across my newspaper friend Whitey Weeks, who used to know me
+when I was a cub office-boy on the Sunday editor's door.
+
+"Well, Torchy," says he, "what you got on your mind?"
+
+"Nothing you could make copy out of," says I, "but it's a whale of an
+event for me."
+
+"You don't say," says he. "Somebody died and left you the business?"
+
+"Just the opposite," says I.
+
+"I don't get you," says he.
+
+"Ah, what's usually in the next column?" says I. "It's a case of
+somebody bein' born."
+
+"Why--why," says he, openin' his mouth, "you don't mean that----"
+
+"Uh-huh," says I, tryin' to look modest.
+
+[Illustration: "I was down on my knees doin' a buckin' bronco act, when
+there comes a gasp from the doorway."]
+
+"Haw-haw!" roars Whitey, usin' the steam siren effect. And, as it's
+right on the corner of Forty-second and Broadway, he comes near
+collectin' a crowd. Four or five people turn around to see what the
+merriment is all about, and a couple of 'em stops short in their tracks.
+One guy I spotted for a vaudeville artist lookin' for stuff that might
+fat up his act.
+
+"Say," Whitey goes on, poundin' me on the back jovial, "that's rich,
+that is!"
+
+"Glad it amuses you," says I, startin' to move off.
+
+"Oh, come, old chap!" says he, followin' along. "Don't get crabby.
+What--what is it, anyway?"
+
+"It's a baby," says I. "Quite a young one. Now go laugh your fat head
+off, you human hyena."
+
+With that shot I dashes through the traffic and catches a downtown car,
+leavin' him there with his silly face unhinged. And I did no more
+announcin' to anybody. I was through advertisin'. When some of the
+commuters on the eight-three heard the news and started springin' their
+comic tricks on me, I pretended I didn't understand.
+
+I don't know what they thought. I didn't give a whoop, either. I wasn't
+demandin' that anybody should pass solemn resolutions thankin' me for
+what I'd done for my country, or stand with their hats off as I went by.
+But I was overstocked on this joke-book junk.
+
+Maybe I didn't look like a father, or act like one; but I was doin' my
+best on the short notice I'd had.
+
+I will say for Vee that she stood by me noble. She seemed to think
+whatever I did was all right, even when I shied at holdin' the youngster
+for the first time.
+
+"I'm afraid I'll bend him in the wrong place," I protests.
+
+"Goose!" says she. "Of course you won't."
+
+"Suppose I should drop him?" says I.
+
+"You can't if you take him just as I show you," she goes on patient.
+"Now, sit down in that chair. Crook your left arm like this. Now hold
+your knees together, and we'll just put the little precious right in
+your---- There! Why, you're doing it splendidly."
+
+"Am I?" says I.
+
+I might have believed her if I hadn't caught a glimpse of myself in the
+glass. Say, I was sittin' there as easy and graceful as if I'd been made
+of structural iron and reinforced concrete. Stiff! Them stone lions in
+front of the Public Lib'ry was frolicsome lambs compared to me. And I
+was wearin' the same happy look on my face as if I was havin' a tooth
+plugged.
+
+Course that had to be just the time when Mr. Robert Ellins happened in
+for his first private view. Mrs. Robert had towed him down special. He's
+a reg'lar friend, though, Mr. Robert is. I can't say how much of a
+struggle he had to keep his face straight, but after the first spasm has
+worn off he don't show any more signs of wantin' to cackle. And he don't
+pull any end-man stuff.
+
+"Well, well, Torchy!" says he. "A son and heir, eh? I salute you."
+
+"Same to you and many of 'em," says I, grinnin' simple.
+
+It was the first thing that came into my head, but I guess I'd better
+not have let it out. Mrs. Robert pinks up, Vee snickers, and they both
+hurries into the next room.
+
+"Thank you, Torchy," says Mr. Robert. "Within certain limitations, I
+trust your wish comes true. But I say--how does it feel, being a
+father?"
+
+"Just plain foolish," says I.
+
+"Eh?" says he.
+
+"Honest, Mr. Robert," says I, "I never felt so much like a ham sandwich
+at a Chamber of Commerce banquet as I do right now. I'm beginnin' to
+suspect I've been miscast for the part."
+
+"Nonsense!" says he soothin'. "You appear to be getting along
+swimmingly. I'm sure I wouldn't know how to hold a baby at all."
+
+"You couldn't know less'n I do about it at present writing," says I. "I
+don't dare move, and both my legs are asleep from the knees down. Do me
+a favor and call for help, won't you?"
+
+"Oh, I say!" he calls out. "The starboard watch wants to be relieved."
+
+So Vee comes back and pries the baby out of my grip.
+
+"Isn't he absurd!" says she. "But he will soon learn. All men are like
+that at first, I suppose."
+
+"Hear that, Mr. Robert?" says I. "That's what I call a sun-cured
+disposition."
+
+She'd make a good animal-trainer, Vee; she's so persistent and patient.
+After dinner she jollies me into tryin' it again.
+
+"You needn't sit so rigid, you know," she coaches me. "Just relax
+naturally and let his little head rest easy in the hollow of your arm.
+No, you don't have to grab him with the other hand. Let him kick his
+legs if he wants to. See, he is looking up at you! Yes, I believe he
+is. Do you see Daddy? Do you, precious?"
+
+"Must be some sight," I murmurs. "What am I supposed to do now?"
+
+"Oh, you may rock him gently, if you like," says Vee. "And I don't
+suppose he'd mind if you sang a bit."
+
+"Wouldn't that be takin' a mean advantage?" says I.
+
+Vee laughs and goes off so I can practice alone, which was thoughtful of
+her.
+
+I didn't find it so bad this time. I discovers I can wiggle my toes
+occasionally without lettin' him crash on to the floor. And I begun to
+get used to lookin' at him at close range, too. His nose don't seem
+quite so hopeless as it did. I shouldn't wonder but what he'd grow a
+reg'lar nose there in time. And their little ears are cute, ain't they?
+But say, it was them big blue eyes that got me interested. First off
+they sort of wandered around the room aimless; but after a while they
+steadies down into gazin' at me sort of curious and admirin'. I rather
+liked that.
+
+"How about it, Snookums?" says I. "What do you think of your amateur
+daddy? Or are you wonderin' if your hair'll be as red as mine? Don't you
+care. There's worse things in life than bein' bright on top. Eh? Think
+you'd like to get your fingers in it? Might burny-burn. Well, try it
+once, if you like." And I ducks my head so he can reach that wavin'
+forelock of mine.
+
+"Googly-goo!" remarks Sonny, indicatin' 'most anything you're a mind to
+call it.
+
+Anyway, he seems to be entertained. We was gettin' acquainted fast.
+Pretty soon he pulls a smile on me. Say, it's the real thing in the
+smile line, too--confidential and chummy. I has to smile back.
+
+"That's the trick, Buster!" says I. "Friendly face motions is what wins."
+
+"Goo-oogly-goo!" says he.
+
+"True words!" says I. "I believe you."
+
+We must have kept that up for near half an hour, until he shows signs of
+gettin' sleepy. Just before he drops off, though, he was wavin' one of
+his hands around, and the first thing I know them soft little pink
+fingers has circled about my thumb.
+
+Say, that turned the trick--just that. Ever had a baby grip you that
+way? Your own, I mean? If you have, I expect you'll know what I'm
+drivin' at. And if you ain't--well, you got something comin' to you.
+It's a thing I couldn't tell you about. It's a gentle sort of thrill,
+that spreads and spreads until it gets 'way inside of you--under your
+vest, on the left side.
+
+When Vee finally comes in to see how we're gettin' along, he's snoozin'
+calm and peaceful, with a sketchy smile kind of flickerin' on and off
+that rosebud mouth of his, like he was indulgin' in pleasant dreams.
+Also, them little pink fingers was still wrapped around my thumb.
+
+"Well, if you aren't a picture, you two!" says Vee, bendin' over and
+whisperin' in my ear.
+
+"This ain't a pose," says I. "It's the real thing."
+
+"You mean----" begins Vee.
+
+"I mean I've qualified," says I. "Maybe I didn't show up so strong
+durin' the initiation, but I squeaked through. I'm a reg'lar daddy now.
+See! He's givin' me the inside brother grip--on my thumb. You can call
+Auntie in, if you like."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A LOW TACKLE BY TORCHY
+
+
+What I like about livin' out in the forty-minute-if-you're-lucky sector
+is that, once you get here, it's so nice and quiet. You don't have to
+worry, when you turn in at night, about manhole covers bein' blown
+through your front windows, or whether the basement floor will drop into
+the subway, or if some gun gang is going to use your street for a
+shootin' gallery. All you do is douse the lights and feel sure nothin's
+going to happen until breakfast.
+
+We were talkin' something along this line the other evenin', Vee and me,
+sayin' how restful and soothin' these spring nights in the country
+was--you know, sort of handin' it to ourselves. And it couldn't have
+been more'n two hours later that I'm routed rude out of the downy by the
+'phone bell. It's buzzin' away frantic. I scrambles out and fits the
+receiver to my ear just in time to get the full benefit of the last half
+of a long ring.
+
+"Ah, take your thumb off," I sings out to the night operator. "Who you
+think you're callin'--the fire house or some doctor?"
+
+"Here's your party," I hears her remark cheerful, and then this other
+voice comes in.
+
+Well, it's Norton Plummer, that fussy little lawyer neighbor of ours who
+lives about half a mile the other side of the railroad. Since he's been
+made chairman of the local Council of Defense and put me on as head of
+one of his committees, he's rung me up frequent, generally at
+dinner-time, to ask if I have anything to report. Seems to think, just
+because I'm a reserve lieutenant on special detail, that I ought to be
+discoverin' spies and diggin' out plots every few minutes.
+
+"Yes, yes," says I. "This is me. What then?"
+
+"Did you read about that German naval officer who escaped from an
+internment camp last week?" he asks.
+
+"But that was 'way down in North Carolina or somewhere, wasn't it?" says
+I.
+
+"Perhaps," says Plummer. "But he isn't there now. He's here."
+
+"Eh?" says I. "Where?"
+
+"Prowling around my house," says Plummer. "That is, he was a few moments
+ago. My chauffeur saw him. So did I. He's on his way down towards the
+trolley line now."
+
+"Why didn't you nab him?" I asks.
+
+"Me?" says Plummer. "Why, he's a huge fellow, and no doubt a desperate
+man. I presume he was after me: I don't know."
+
+"But how'd you come to spot him as a Hun officer?" says I.
+
+"By the description I read," says he. "It fits perfectly. There's no
+telling what he's up to around here. And listen: I have telephoned to
+the Secret Service headquarters in town for them to send some men out in
+a machine. But they'll be nearly an hour on the road, at best.
+Meanwhile, what we must do is to prevent him from catching that last
+trolley car, which goes in about twelve-fifteen. We must stop him, you
+see."
+
+"Oh, must we?" says I. "Listens to me like some he-sized job."
+
+"That's why I called you up," says Plummer. "You know where the line
+crosses the railroad? Well, he'll probably try to get on there. Hurry
+down and prevent him."
+
+"Is that all I have to do?" says I. "What's the scheme--do I trip him up
+and sit on his head?"
+
+"No, no!" says Plummer. "Don't attempt violence. He's a powerful man.
+Why, my chauffeur saw him break the chain on our back gate as if it had
+been nothing but twine. Just gave it a push--and snap it went. Oh, he's
+strong as a bull. Ill-tempered, too."
+
+"Huh!" says I. "And I'm to go down and---- Say, where do you come in on
+this?"
+
+"I'll be there with John just as soon as we can quiet Mrs. Plummer and
+the maids," says he. "They're almost in hysterics. In the meantime,
+though, if you could get there and---- Well, use strategy of some kind.
+Anything to keep him from catching that car. You understand?"
+
+"I get you," says I. "And it don't sound enticin' at all. But I'll see
+what I can do. If you find me smeared all over the road, though, you'll
+know I didn't pull it off. Also, I'd suggest that you make that soothin'
+act of yours speedy."
+
+Course this wakes Vee up, and she wants to know what it's all about.
+
+"Oh, a little private panic that Norton Plummer is indulgin' in," says
+I. "Nothin' to get fidgety over. I'll be back soon."
+
+"But--but you won't be reckless, will you, Torchy?" she asks.
+
+"Who, me?" says I. "How foolish. Why, I invented that 'Safety First'
+motto, and side-steppin' trouble is the easiest thing I do. Trust me."
+
+I expect she was some nervous, at that. But she's a good sport, Vee.
+
+"If you're needed," says she, "of course I want you to go. But do be
+careful."
+
+I didn't need any coaxin'. Somehow, I never could get used to roamin'
+around in the country after dark. Always seemed sort of spooky. Bein'
+brought up in the city, I expect, where the scenery is illuminated
+constant, accounts for that. So, as I slips out the front gate and down
+towards the station, I keeps in the middle of the road and glances
+suspicious at the tree shadows.
+
+Not that I was takin' Plummer's Hun scare real serious. He'd had a bad
+case of spy fever recent. Why, only last week he got all stirred up over
+what he announced was a private wireless outfit that he'd discovered
+somewhere in the outskirts of Flushing; and when they came to trail it
+down it turns out to be some new wire clothes-line strung up back of a
+flat buildin'.
+
+Besides, what would an escaped German naval officer be doin' up this
+way? He'd be more apt to strike for Mexico, wouldn't he? Still, long as
+I'd let Plummer put me on the committee, it was up to me to answer any
+calls. Might be entertainin' to see who he'd mistaken for an enemy alien
+this time. And if all I was expected to do was spill a little impromptu
+strategy--well, maybe I could, and then again maybe I couldn't. I'd take
+a look, anyway.
+
+It was seein' a light in Danny Shea's little cottage, back on a side
+lane, that gave me my original hunch. Danny is one of the important
+officials of the Long Island Railroad, if you let him tell it. He's the
+flagman down where the highway and trolley line cross the tracks at
+grade, and when his rheumatism ain't makin' him grouchy he's more or
+less amusin' to chin with.
+
+Danny had pestered the section boss until he'd got him to build a little
+square coop for him, there by the crossin'--a place where he could crawl
+in between trains, smoke his pipe, and toast himself over a sheet-iron
+stove about as big as a picnic coffee-pot.
+
+And that sentry-box effect was the pride of Danny's heart. Most of his
+spare time and all the money he could bone out of the commuters he spent
+in improvin' and decoratin' it. He'd cut a couple of round windows,
+like port-holes, and fitted 'em with swingin' sashes. Then he'd tacked
+on some flower-boxes underneath and filled 'em with geraniums.
+
+When he wasn't waterin' his flowers or coaxin' along his little
+grass-plot or addin' another shelf inside, he was paintin' the outside.
+Danny's idea of a swell color scheme seemed to be to get on as many
+different shades as possible. The roof was red, the sides a bright blue.
+But where he spread himself was on the trim. All you had to do to get on
+the right side of Danny was to lug him out a half-pound can of paint
+different from any he'd applied so far. He'd use it somehow.
+
+So the window-sashes was picked out in yellow, the side battens loomed
+up prominent as black lines, and the door-panels was a pale pink. Nearly
+all the commuters had been touched by Danny for something or other that
+could be added to the shack. Only a week or so before, I'd got in strong
+with him by contributin' a new padlock for the door--a vivid red one,
+like they have on the village jail in vaudeville plays.
+
+And it struck me now that if I had the key to that little box of Danny's
+it would make a perfectly good listenin'-post for any midnight
+sleuthin' I had to do. Most likely he was up dosin' himself or bathin'
+his joints.
+
+Well, he was. He didn't seem any too enthusiastic about lettin' me have
+the key, though.
+
+"I dunno," says he. "'Tis railroad property, y' understand, and I'd be
+afther riskin' me job if any thin' should----"
+
+"I know, Danny," says I. "But you tell 'em it was commandeered by the U.
+S. Army, which is me; and if that don't square you I'll have Mr. Baker
+come on and tell the section boss where he gets off."
+
+"Verra well," says Danny. And in less than five minutes more I'm down
+there at the crossin', all snug and cozy, peekin' out of them round
+windows into No Man's Land.
+
+For a while it was kind of excitin'; but after that it got sort of
+monotonous. There was about half of an old moon in the sky, and only a
+few clouds, so you could see fairly well--if there'd been anything to
+see. But nothing seemed to be stirrin', up or down the road.
+
+What a nut that Norton Plummer was, anyway, feedin' me up with his wild
+tales in the middle of the night! And why didn't he show up? Finally I
+got restless, and walked out where I could rubber up the trolley track.
+No sign or sound of a car. Then I looks at my watch again, and figures
+out it ain't due for twenty minutes or so. Next I strolls across the
+railroad to look for Plummer. And, just as I'm passin' a big maple tree,
+out steps this huge party with the whiskers. I nearly jumped out of my
+puttees.
+
+"Eh?" says I gaspy.
+
+"Gotta match?" says he.
+
+"I--I guess so," says I.
+
+I reached as far as I could when I hands him the box, too. He's a whale
+of a man, tall and bulky. And his whiskers are the bristly
+kind--straw-colored, I should say. He's wearin' a double-breasted blue
+coat and a sort of yachtin' cap. Uh-huh! Plummer must have been right.
+If this gink wasn't a Hun naval officer, then what was he? The ayes had
+it.
+
+He produces a pipe and starts to light up. One match broke, the second
+had no strikin' head on it, the third just fizzed.
+
+"Gr-r-r-r!" says he.
+
+Then he starts for the crossin', me trailin' along. I saw he had his eye
+on Danny's sentry-box, meanin' to get in the lee of it. Even then I
+didn't have any bright little idea.
+
+"Waitin' for the trolley?" I throws out.
+
+"What of it?" he growls.
+
+"Oh, no offense," says I hasty. "Maybe there are others."
+
+He just lets out another grunt, and tries one more match with his face
+up against the side of the shanty. And then, all in a jump, my bean got
+into gear.
+
+"You might have better luck inside," says I, swingin' open the door
+invitin'.
+
+He don't even say thank you. He ain't one of that kind. For a second or
+so I thought he wasn't goin' to take any notice; but after one more
+failure he steps around, inspects the inside of the shanty, and then
+squeezes himself through the door. At that, he wasn't all the way in,
+but by the time he had a match goin' I'd got my nerve back.
+
+"Ah, take the limit, Cap'n," says I.
+
+With that I plants one foot impulsive right where he was widest, gives a
+quick shove, slams the door shut behind him, and snaps the big padlock
+through the hasp.
+
+"Hey!" he sings out startled. "What the----"
+
+"Now, don't get messy, Cap'n," says I. "You're in, ain't you? Smoke up
+and be happy."
+
+"You--you loafer!" he gurgles throaty. "What do you mean?"
+
+"Just a playful little prank, Cap," says I. "Don't get excited. You're
+perfectly safe."
+
+Maybe he was. But some folks don't appreciate little attentions like
+that. The Cap'n starts in bumpin' and thrashin' violent in there, like a
+pup that's crawled into a drainpipe and got himself stuck. He hammers on
+the walls with his fists, throws his weight against the door, and tries
+to kick his way out.
+
+But the section boss must have used rail spikes and reinforced the
+studdin' with fishplates when he built that coop for Danny, or else the
+big Hun was too tight a fit to get full play for his strength. Anyway,
+all he did was make the little house rock until you'd thought Long
+Island was enjoyin' a young earthquake. Meanwhile I stands by, ready to
+do a sprint if he should break loose, and offers more or less cheerin'
+advice.
+
+"Easy with your elbows in there, Cap," says I. "You're assaultin'
+railroad property, you know, and if you do any damage you can be pinched
+for malicious mischief."
+
+"You--you better let me out of here quick!" he roars. "I gotta get
+back."
+
+"Oh, you'll get to town all right," says I. "I'll promise you that."
+
+"Loafer!" he snorts.
+
+"Say, how do you know I ain't sensitive on that point?" says I. "You
+might hurt my feelin's."
+
+"Gr-r-r!" says he. "I would wring your neck."
+
+"Such a disposition!" says I.
+
+Oh, yes, we swapped quite a little repartee, me and the Cap'n, or
+whatever he was. But, instead of his bein' soothed by it he gets more
+strenuous every minute. He had that shack rockin' like a boat.
+
+Next thing I saw was one of his big feet stickin' out under the bottom
+sill. Then I remembers that the sentry-box has only a dirt floor--on
+account of the stove, I expect. Course Danny has banked the outside up
+with sod for five or six inches, but that ain't enough to hold it down
+with a human tornado cuttin' loose inside. A minute more and another
+foot appears on the other side, and the next I knew the whole shootin'
+match begins to rise, wabbly but sure, until he's lifted it almost to
+his knees.
+
+Looked like the Cap'n was goin' to shed the coop over his head, as you'd
+shuck a shirt, and I was edgin' away prepared to make a run for it. But
+right there the elevatin' process stops, and after some violent squirms
+there comes an outburst of language that would only get the delete sign
+if I should give it. I could dope out what had happened. That plank seat
+across one side had caught the Cap'n about where he buckles his belt,
+and he couldn't budge it any further.
+
+"Want a shoe-horn, Cap'n?" I asks. "Say, next time you try wearin' a
+kiosk as a slip-on sweater you'd better train down for the act."
+
+"Gr-r-r-r!" says he. "I--I will teach you to play your jokes on me,
+young whipper-snap."
+
+He does some more writhin', and pretty soon manages to swing open one of
+the port-holes. With his face up to that, like a deep-sea diver peekin'
+out o' his copper bonnet, he starts for me, kickin' over the little
+stove as he gets under way, and tearin' the whole thing loose from the
+foundation.
+
+Course he's some handicapped by the hobble-skirt effect around his
+knees, and the weight above his shoulders makes him a bit topheavy; but,
+at that, he can get over the ground as fast as I can walk backwards.
+
+Must have been kind of a weird sight, there in the moonlight--me bein'
+pursued up the road by this shack with legs under it, the little tin
+smoke-pipe wavin' jaunty about nine feet in the air, and the geraniums
+in the flower-boxes noddin' jerky.
+
+"Say, what do you think you are?" I calls out. "A wooden tank goin' over
+the top?"
+
+I was sort of wonderin' how long he could keep this up, and what would
+be the finish, when from behind me I hears this spluttery line of
+exclamations indicatin' rage. It's Danny, who's got anxious about
+lettin' me have the use of his coop and has come down to see what's
+happenin' to it. Well, he saw.
+
+"Hey! Stop him, stop him!" he yells.
+
+"Stop him yourself, Danny," says I.
+
+"But he's runnin' away with me little flag-house, thief of the worruld!"
+howls Danny. "It's breakin' and enterin' and carryin' away th' property
+of the Long Island Railroad that he's guilty of."
+
+"Yes; I've explained all that to him," says I.
+
+"Go back and come'out of that, ye thievin' Dutchman!" orders Danny,
+rushin' up and bangin' on the door with his fists.
+
+"Just let me out, you Irish shrimp!" snarls the Cap'n.
+
+"Can't be done--not yet, Danny," says I.
+
+"But--but he's destroyin' me flowers and runnin' off with me little
+house," protested Danny. "I'll have the law on him, so I will."
+
+"Get out, Irisher, or I'll fall on you," warns the Cap'n.
+
+And right in the midst of this debate I sees Norton Plummer and his
+chauffeur hurryin' up from across the tracks. I skips back to meet 'em.
+
+"Well," says Plummer, "have you seen anything of the escaped prisoner?"
+
+"That's him," says I, pointin' to the wabblin' shack.
+
+"Whaddye mean?" says Plummer, starin' puzzled.
+
+"He's inside," says I. "You said use strategy, didn't you? Well, that's
+the best I had in stock. I got him boxed, all right, but he won't stay
+put. He insists on playin' the human turtle. What'll we do with him now?
+Come see."
+
+"My word!" says Plummer, as he gets a view of the Cap'n's legs and the
+big whiskered face at the little window. "So there you are, eh, you
+runaway Hun?"
+
+"Bah!" says the Cap'n. "Why do you call me Hun?"
+
+"Because I've identified you as an escaped German naval officer," says
+Plummer. "Do you deny it?"
+
+"Me?" says the Cap'n. "Bah!"
+
+"Who do you claim to be, then?" says I. "A tourist Eskimo or an
+out-of-town buyer from Patagonia?"
+
+"I'm Nels Petersen, that's who I am," says he, "and I'm chief engineer
+of a ferry-boat that's due to make her first run at five-thirty-three."
+
+"What!" says Plummer. "Are you the Swede engineer who has been writing
+love letters to---- Say, what is the name of Mrs. Plummer's maid?"
+
+"Selma," says the Cap'n.
+
+"By George!" says Plummer. "I believe the man's right. But see here:
+what were you doing prowling around my back yard to-night! Why didn't
+you go to the servants' entrance and ask the cook for Selma, if you're
+as much in love with her as you've written that you are?"
+
+"What do you know about it?" demands Petersen.
+
+"Good Lord!" gasps Plummer. "Haven't I had to puzzle out all those
+wretched scrawls of yours and read 'em to her? Such mushy letters, too!
+Come, if you're the man, why didn't you call Selma out and tell her all
+that to her face?"
+
+Nothing but heavy breathing from inside the shack.
+
+"You don't mean to say you were too bashful!" goes on Plummer. "A great
+big fellow like you!"
+
+If it hadn't been for the whiskers I believe we could have seen him
+blush.
+
+"Look here," says Plummer. "You may be what you say you are, and then
+again you may not. Perhaps you just guessed at the girl's name. We can't
+afford to take any chances. The only way to settle it is to send for
+Selma."
+
+"No, no!" pleads the big gink. "Please! Not like this."
+
+"Yes, just like that," insists Plummer. "Only, if you'd rather, you can
+carry your house back where it belongs and sit down. John, run home and
+bring Selma here."
+
+Well, we had our man nicely tamed now. With Selma liable to show up, he
+was ready to do as he was told. Just why, we couldn't make out. Anyway,
+he hobbles back to the crossin' and eases the shack down where he found
+it. Also, he slumps inside on the bench and waits, durin' which
+proceedin' the last trolley goes boomin' past.
+
+Inside of ten minutes John is back with the maid. Kind of a slim,
+classy-lookin' girl she is, too. And when Selma sees that big face at
+the round window there's no doubt about his being the chosen one.
+
+"Oh, Nels, Nels!" she wails out. "Vy you don'd coom by the house yet?"
+
+"I was scart, Selma," says Nels, "for fear you'd tell me to go away."
+
+"But--but I don'd, Nels," says Selma.
+
+"Shall I let him out for the fade-away scene?" says I.
+
+Plummer nods. And we had to turn our backs as they go to the fond
+clinch.
+
+Accordin' to Plummer, Selma had been waitin' for Nels to say the word
+for more'n a year, and for the last two months she'd been so
+absent-minded and moody that she hadn't been of much use around the
+house. But him gettin' himself boxed up as an escaped Hun had sort of
+broken the ice.
+
+"There, now!" says Plummer. "You two go back to the house and talk it
+over. You may have until three-fifteen to settle all details, and then
+I'll have John drive Petersen down to his ferry-boat. Be sure and fix
+the day, though. I don't want to go through another night like this."
+
+"But what about me little lawn," demands Danny, "that's tore up
+entirely? And who's to mend me stove-pipe and all?"
+
+"Oh, here's something that will cover all that, Danny," says Plummer,
+slippin' him a ten-spot. "And I've no doubt Petersen will contribute
+something, too."
+
+"Sure!" says Nels, fishin' in his pockets.
+
+"Two bits!" says Danny, pickin' up the quarter scornful. "Thim Swedes
+are the tightwads! And if ever I find this wan kidnappin' me little
+house again----"
+
+At which Danny breaks off and shakes his fist menacin'.
+
+When I gets back home I tiptoes upstairs; but Vee is only dozin', and
+wakes up with a jump.
+
+"Is that you, Torchy?" says she. "Has--has anything dreadful happened?"
+
+"Yes," says I. "I had to pull a low tackle, and Danny Shea's declared
+war on Sweden."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+TAG DAY AT TORCHY'S
+
+
+Course, in a way, it was our fault, I expect. We never should have let
+on that there was any hitch about what we was goin' to name the baby.
+Blessed if I know now just how it got around. I remember Vee and I
+havin' one or two little talks on the subject, but I don't think we'd
+tackled the proposition real serious.
+
+You see, at first we were too busy sort of gettin' used to havin' him
+around and framin' up a line on this parent act we was supposed to put
+over. Anyway, I was. And for three or four weeks, there, I called him
+anything that came handy, from Young Sport to Old Snoodlekins. Vee she
+sticks to Baby. Uh-huh--just plain Baby. But the way she says it,
+breathin' it out kind of soft and gentle, sounded perfectly all right to
+me.
+
+And the youngster didn't seem to have any kick comin'. He was gettin' so
+he'd look up and coo real intelligent when she speaks to him in that
+fashion. You couldn't blame him, for it was easy to listen to.
+
+As for the different things I called him--well, he didn't mind them,
+either. No matter what it was,--Old Pink Toes or Wiggle-heels,--he'd
+generally pass it off with a smile, providin' he wasn't too busy with
+his bottle or tryin' to get hold of his foot with both of his hands.
+
+Then one day Auntie, who's been listenin' disapprovin' all the while,
+just can't hold in any longer.
+
+"Isn't it high time," says she, "that you addressed the child properly
+by his right name?"
+
+"Eh?" says I, gawpin'. "Which one?"
+
+"You don't mean to say," she goes on, "that you have not yet decided on
+his baptismal name?"
+
+"I didn't know he was a Baptist," says I feeble.
+
+"We hadn't quite settled what to call him," says Vee.
+
+"Besides," I adds, "I don't see the use bein' in a rush about it. Maybe
+were're savin' that up."
+
+"Saving!" says Auntie. "For what reason?"
+
+"Oh, general conservation," says I. "Got the habit. We've had heatless
+Mondays and wheatless Wednesdays and fryless Fridays and sunless
+Sundays, so why not nameless babies?"
+
+Auntie sniffs and goes off with her nose in the air, as she always does
+whenever I spring any of my punk persiflage on her.
+
+But then Vee takes it up, and says Auntie is right and that we really
+ought to decide on a name and begin using it.
+
+"Oh, very well," says I. "I'll be thinking one up."
+
+Seemed simple enough. Course, I'd never named any babies before, but I
+had an idea I could dig out half a dozen good, serviceable monickers
+between then and dinner-time.
+
+Somehow, though, I couldn't seem to hit on anything that I was willing
+to wish on to the youngster offhand. When I got right up against the
+problem, it seemed kind of serious.
+
+Why, here was something he'd have to live with all his life; us, too.
+We'd have to say it over maybe a hundred times a day. And if he grew up
+and amounted to anything, as we was sure he would, it would mean that
+this front name of his that I had to pick out might be displayed more or
+less prominent. It would be on his office door, on his letterheads, on
+his cards. He'd sign it to checks.
+
+Maybe it would be printed in the newspapers, used in headlines, or
+painted on campaign banners. Might be displayed on billboards. Who could
+tell?
+
+And the deeper I got into the thing the more I wabbled about from one
+name to another, until I wondered how people had the nerve to give their
+children some of the tags you hear--Percy, Isadore, Lulu, Reginald, and
+so on. And do it so casual, too. Why, I knew of a couple who named their
+three girls after parlor-cars; and a gink in Brooklyn who called one of
+his boys Prospect, after the park. Think of loadin' a helpless youngster
+with anything freaky like that!
+
+Besides, how were you going to know that even the best name you could
+pick wouldn't turn out to be a misfit? About the only Percy I ever knew
+in real life was a great two-fisted husk who was foreman of a
+stereotypin' room; and here in the Corrugated Buildin', if you'll come
+in some night after five, I can show you a wide built scrub lady, with
+hair redder'n mine and a voice like a huckster--her front name is
+Violet. Yet I expect, when them two was babies, both those names sounded
+kind of cute. I could see where it would be easy enough for me to make
+a mistake that it would take a court order to straighten out.
+
+So, when Vee asks if I've made any choice yet I had to admit that I'm
+worse muddled up on the subject than when I started in. All I can do is
+hand over a list I've copied down on the back of an envelop with every
+one of 'em checked off as no good.
+
+"Let's see," says Vee, glancin' 'em over curious. "Lester. Why, I'm sure
+that is rather a nice name for a boy."
+
+"Yes," says I; "but after I put it down I remembered a Lester I knew
+once. He was a simp that wore pink neckties and used to write
+love-letters to Mary Pickford."
+
+"What about Earl?" she asks.
+
+"Too flossy," says I. "Sounds like you was tryin' to let on he belonged
+to the aristocracy."
+
+"Well, Donald, then," says she. "That's a good, sensible name."
+
+"But we ain't Scotch," I objects.
+
+"What's the matter with Philip?" says Vee.
+
+"I can never remember whether it has one _l_ and two _p_'s or the other
+way round."
+
+"But you haven't considered any of the common ones," goes on Vee, "such
+as John or William or Thomas or James or Arthur."
+
+"Because that would mean he'd be called Bill or Tom or Art," says I.
+"Besides, I kind of thought he ought to have something out of the usual
+run--one you wouldn't forget as soon as you heard it."
+
+"If I may suggest," breaks in Auntie, "the custom of giving the eldest
+son the family name of his mother is rather a good one. Had you
+considered Hemmingway?"
+
+I just gasps and glances at Vee. What if she should fall for anything
+like that! Think of smotherin' a baby under most of the alphabet all at
+one swoop! And imagine a boy strugglin' through schooldays and vacations
+with all that tied to him.
+
+Hemmingway! Why, he'd grow up round-shouldered and knock-kneed, and most
+likely turn out to be a floor-walker in the white goods department, or
+the manager of a gift-shop tearoom. Hemmingway!
+
+Just the thought of it made me dizzy; and I begun breathin' easier when
+I saw Vee shake her head.
+
+"He's such a little fellow, Auntie," says she. "Wouldn't that be--well,
+rather topheavy?"
+
+Which disposes of Auntie. She admits maybe it would. But from then on,
+as the news seems to spread that we was havin' a kind of deadlock with
+the namin' process, the volunteers got busy. Old Leon Battou, our
+butler-cook, hinted that his choice would be Emil.
+
+"For six generations," says he, "Emil has been the name of the
+first-born son in our family."
+
+"That's stickin' to tradition," says I. "It sounds perfectly swell, too,
+when you know how to pronounce it. But, you see, we're foundin' a new
+dynasty."
+
+Mr. Robert don't say so outright, but he suggests that Ellins Ballard
+wouldn't be such a bad combination.
+
+"True," he adds, "the governor and I deserve no such distinction; but
+I'm sure we would both be immensely flattered. And there's no telling
+how reckless we might be when it come to presenting christening cups and
+that sort of thing."
+
+"That's worth rememberin'," says I. "And I expect you wouldn't mind, in
+case you had a boy to name later on, callin' him Torchy, eh!"
+
+Mr. Robert grins. "Entry withdrawn," says he.
+
+How this Amelia Gaston Leroy got the call to crash in on our little
+family affair, though, I couldn't quite dope out. We never suspected
+before that she was such an intimate friend of ours. Course, since we'd
+been livin' out in the Piping Rock section we had seen more or less of
+her--more, as a rule. She was built that way.
+
+Oh, yes. Amelia was one of the kind that could bounce in among three or
+four people in a thirty by forty-five living-room and make the place
+seem crowded. Mr. Robert's favorite description of her was that one half
+of Amelia didn't know how the other half lived. To state it plain,
+Amelia was some whale of a girl. One look at her, and you did no more
+guessin' as to what caused the food shortage.
+
+I got the shock of my life, too, when they told me she was the one that
+wrote so much of this mushy magazine poetry you see printed. For all the
+lady poetesses I'd ever seen had been thin, shingled-chested parties
+with mud-colored hair and soulful eyes.
+
+There was nothing thin about Amelia. Her eyes might have been soulful
+enough at times, but mostly I'd seen 'em fixed on a tray of sandwiches
+or a plate of layer cake.
+
+They'd had her up at the Ellinses' once or twice when they were givin'
+one of their musical evenin's, and she'd spouted some of her stuff.
+
+Her first call on us, though, was when she blew in last Sunday afternoon
+and announced that she'd come to see "that dear, darling man child" of
+ours. And for a girl of her size Amelia is some breeze, take it from me.
+Honest, for the first ten minutes or so there I felt like our happy
+little home had been hit by a young tornado.
+
+"Where is he?" she demands. "Please take me at once into the regal
+presence of his youthful majesty."
+
+I noticed Vee sizin' her up panicky, and I knew she was thinkin' of what
+might happen to them spindle-legged white chairs in the nursery.
+
+"How nice of you to want to see him!" says Vee. "But let me have Baby
+brought down here. Just a moment."
+
+And she steers her towards a solid built davenport that we'd been
+meanin' to have reupholstered anyway. Then we was treated to a line of
+high-brow gush as Amelia inspects the youngster through her shell
+lorgnette and tries to tell us in impromptu blank verse how wonderful he
+is.
+
+"Ah, he is one of the sun children, loved of the high gods," says she,
+rollin' her eyes. "He comes to you wearing the tints of dawn and
+trailing clouds of glory. You remember how Wordsworth puts it?"
+
+As she fires this straight at me, I has to say something.
+
+"Does he?" I asks.
+
+"I am always impressed," she gurgles on, "by the calm serenity in the
+eyes of these little ones. It is as if they----"
+
+But just then Snoodlekins begins screwin' up his face. He's never been
+mauled around by a lady poetess before, or maybe it was just because
+there was so much of her. Anyway, he tears loose with a fine large howl
+and the serenity stuff is all off. It takes Vee four or five minutes to
+soothe him.
+
+Meanwhile Miss Leroy gets around to statin' the real reason why we're
+bein' honored.
+
+"I understand," says she, "that you have not as yet chosen a name for
+him. So I am going to help you. I adore it. I have always wanted to name
+a baby, and I've never been allowed. Think of that! My brother has five
+children, too; but he would not listen to any of my suggestions.
+
+"So I am aunt to a Walter who should have been called Clifford, and a
+Margaret whom I wanted to name Beryl, and so on. Even my laundress
+preferred to select names for her twins from some she had seen on a
+circus poster rather than let me do it for her.
+
+"But I am sure you are rational young people, and recognize that I have
+some natural talent in that direction. Names! Why, I have made a study
+of them. I must, you see, in my writing. And this dear little fellow
+deserves something fitting. Now let me see. Ah, I have it! He shall be
+Cedric--after Cedric the Red, you know."
+
+Accordin' to her, it was all settled. She heaves herself up off the
+davenport, straightens her hat, and prepares to leave, smilin'
+satisfied, like an expert who's been called in and has finished the job.
+
+"We--we will consider Cedric," says Vee. "Thank you so much."
+
+"Oh, not at all," says Amelia. "Of course, if I should happen to think
+of anything better within the next few days I will let you know at
+once." And out she floats.
+
+Vee gazes after her and sighs.
+
+"I suppose Cedric is rather a good name," says she, "but somehow I don't
+feel like using one that a stranger has picked out for us. Do you,
+Torchy?"
+
+"You've said it," says I. "I'd sooner let her buy my neckties, or tell
+me how I should have my eggs cooked for breakfast."
+
+"And yet," says Vee, "unless we can think of something better----"
+
+"We will," says I. "I'm goin' through them pages in the back of the big
+dictionary."
+
+In less'n half an hour there's a knock at the door, and here's a
+chauffeur come with a note from Amelia. On the way home she's had
+another hunch.
+
+"After all," she writes, "Cedric seems rather too harsh, too rough-shod.
+So I have decided on Lucian."
+
+"Huh!" says I. "She's decided, has she? Say, whose tag day is this,
+anyway--ours or hers?"
+
+Vee shrugs her shoulders.
+
+"I'm not sure that we should like calling him Lucian; it's so--so----"
+
+"I know," says I, "so perfectly sweet. Say, can't we block Amelia off
+somehow? Suppose I send back word that a rich step-uncle has promised to
+leave him a ton of coal if we call the baby Ebenezer after him?"
+
+Vee chuckles.
+
+"Oh, no doubt she'll forget all about it by morning," says she.
+
+Seems we'd just begun hearin' from the outside districts, though, or
+else they'd been savin' up their ideas for this particular afternoon and
+evenin'; for between then and nine o'clock no less'n half a dozen
+different parties dropped in, every last one of 'em with a name to
+register. And their contributions ranged all the way from Aaron to Xury.
+There were two rooters for Woodrow and one for Pershing.
+
+Some of the neighbors were real serious about it. They told us what a
+time they'd had namin' some of their children, brought up cases where
+families had been busted up over such discussions, and showed us where
+their choice couldn't be beat. One merry bunch from the Country Club
+thought they was pullin' something mighty humorous when they stopped in
+to tell us how they'd held a votin' contest on the subject, and that the
+winnin' combination was, Paul Roger.
+
+"After something you read on a cork, eh?" says I. "Much obliged. And I
+hope nobody strained his intellect."
+
+"The idea!" says Vee, after they've rolled off. "Voting on such a thing
+at a club! Just as if Baby was a battleship, or a--a new moving-picture
+place. I think that's perfectly horrid of them."
+
+"It was fresh, all right," says I. "But I expect we got to stand for
+such guff until we can give out that we've found a name that suits us.
+Lemme tackle that list again. Now, how would Russell do? Russell
+Ballard? No; too many _l_'s and _r_'s. Here's Chester. And I expect the
+boys would call him Chesty. Then there's Clyde. But there's steamship
+line by that name. What about Stanley? Oh, yes; he was an explorer."
+
+I admit I was gettin' desperate about then. I was flounderin' around in
+a whole ocean of names, long ones and short ones, fancy and plain, yet I
+couldn't quite make up my mind. I'd mussed my hair, shed my collar, and
+scribbled over sheets and sheets of paper, without gettin' anywhere at
+all. And when I gave up and turned in about eleven-thirty, my head was
+so muddled I wouldn't have had the nerve to have named a pet kitten.
+
+I must have just dozed off to sleep when I hears this bell ringin'
+somewhere. I couldn't quite make out whether it was a fire alarm, or the
+_z_'s in the back of the dictionary goin' off, when Vee calls out that
+it's the 'phone.
+
+I tumbles out and paws around for the extension.
+
+"Wha-what?" says I. "What the blazes! Ye-uh. This is me. Wha-wha's
+matter?"
+
+And then comes this gurgly voice at the other end of the wire. It's our
+old friend Amelia.
+
+"Do you know," says she, "I have just thought of the loveliest name for
+your dear baby."
+
+"Oh, have you?" says I, sort of crisp.
+
+"Yes," says she, "and I simply couldn't wait until morning to tell you.
+Now listen--it's Ethelbert."
+
+"Ethel-Bert!" says I, gaspy. "Say, you know he's no mixed foursome."
+
+"No, no," says she. Ethelbert--one name, after the old Saxon king.
+Ethelbert Ballard. "Isn't that just perfect? And I am so glad it came to
+me."
+
+I couldn't agree with her real enthusiastic, so it's lucky she hung up
+just as she did.
+
+"Huh!" I remarks to Vee. "Why not Maryjim or Daisybill? Say, I think our
+friend Amelia must have gone off her hinge."
+
+But Vee only yawns and advises me to go to sleep and forget it. Well, I
+tried. You know how it is, though, when you've been jolted out of the
+feathers just as you're halfway through the first reel of the slumber
+stuff. I couldn't get back, to save me.
+
+I counted sheep jumpin' over a wall, I tried lookin' down a railroad
+track until I could seen the rails meet, and I spelled Constantinople
+backwards. Nothing doing in the Morpheus act.
+
+I was wider awake then than a new taxi driver makin' his first trip up
+Broadway. I could think of swell names for seashore cottages, for new
+surburban additions, and for other people's babies. I invented an
+explosive pretzel that would win the war. I thought of bills I ought to
+pay next week sure, and of what I meant to tell the laundryman if he
+kept on making hash of my pet shirts.
+
+Then I got to wonderin' about this old-maid poetess. Was she through for
+the night, or did she work double shifts? If she wasn't any nearer sleep
+than I was she might think up half a dozen substitutes for Ethelbert
+before mornin'. Would she insist on springin' each one on me as they hit
+her?
+
+Maybe she was gettin' ready to call me again now. Should I pretend not
+to hear and let her ring, or would it be better to answer and let on
+that this was Police Headquarters?
+
+Honest, I got so fidgety waitin' for that buzzer to go off that I could
+almost hear the night operator pluggin' in on our wire.
+
+And then a thought struck me that wouldn't let go. So, slippin' out easy
+and throwin' on a bath-robe, I sneaked downstairs to the back hall
+'phone, turned on the light, and hunted up Miss Leroy's number in the
+book.
+
+"Give her a good strong ring, please," says I to Exchange, "and keep it
+up until you rouse somebody."
+
+"Leave it to me," says the operator. And in a minute or so I gets this
+throaty "Hello!"
+
+"Miss Leroy?" says I.
+
+"Yes," says she. "Who is calling?"
+
+"Ballard," says I. "I'm the fond parent of the nameless baby. And say,
+do you still stick to Ethelbert?"
+
+"Why," says she, "I--er----"
+
+"I just wanted to tell you," I goes on, "that this guessin' contest
+closes at 3 A.M., and if you want to make any more entries you got only
+forty minutes to get 'em in. Nighty-night."
+
+And I rings off just as she begins sputterin' indignant.
+
+That seems to help a lot, and inside of five minutes I'm snoozin'
+peaceful.
+
+It was next mornin' at breakfast that Vee observes offhand, as though
+the subject hadn't been mentioned before:
+
+"About naming the baby, now."
+
+"Ye-e-es?" says I, smotherin' a groan.
+
+"Why couldn't we call him after you?" she asks.
+
+"Not--not Richard Junior?" says I.
+
+"Well, after both of us, then," says she. "Richard Hemmingway. It--it is
+what I've wanted to name him all along."
+
+"You have?" says I. "Well, for the love of----"
+
+"You didn't ask me, that's why," says she.
+
+"Why--why, so I didn't," says I. "And say, Vee, I don't know who's got a
+better right. As for my part of the name, I've used it so little it's
+almost as good as new. Richard Hemmingway Ballard it shall be."
+
+"Oh, I'm so glad," says she. "Of course, I did want you to be the one to
+pick it out; but if you're satisfied with----"
+
+"Satisfied!" says I. "Why, I'm tickled to pieces. And here you had that
+up your sleeve all the while!"
+
+Vee smiles and nods.
+
+"We must have the christening very soon," says she, "so everyone will
+know."
+
+"You bet!" says I. "And I've a good notion to put it on the train
+bulletin down at the station, too. First off, though, we'd better tell
+young Richard himself and see how he likes it. I expect, though, unless
+his next crop of hair comes out a different tint from this one, that
+he'll have to answer to 'Young Torchy' for a good many years."
+
+"Oh, yes," says Vee; "but I'm sure he won't mind that in the least."
+
+"Good girl!" says I, movin' round where I can express my feelin's
+better.
+
+"Don't!" says Vee. "You'll spill the coffee."
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+SEWELL FORD'S STORIES
+
+May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list.
+
+
+SHORTY McCABE. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.
+
+A very humorous story. The hero, an independent and vigorous thinker,
+sees life, and tells about it in a very unconventional way.
+
+
+SIDE-STEPPING WITH SHORTY. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.
+
+Twenty skits, presenting people with their foibles. Sympathy with human
+nature and an abounding sense of humor are the requisites for
+"side-stepping with Shorty."
+
+
+SHORTY McCABE ON THE JOB. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.
+
+Shorty McCabe reappears with his figures of speech revamped right up to
+the minute. He aids in the right distribution of a "conscience fund,"
+and gives joy to all concerned.
+
+
+SHORTY McCABE'S ODD NUMBERS. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.
+
+These further chronicles of Shorty McCabe tell of his studio for
+physical culture, and of his experiences both on the East side and at
+swell yachting parties.
+
+
+TORCHY. Illus, by Geo. Biehm and Jas. Montgomery Flagg.
+
+A red-headed office boy, overflowing with wit and wisdom peculiar to the
+youths reared on the sidewalks of New York, tells the story of his
+experiences.
+
+
+TRYING OUT TORCHY. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.
+
+Torchy is just as deliriously funny in these stories as he was in the
+previous book.
+
+
+ON WITH TORCHY. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.
+
+Torchy falls desperately in love with "the only girl that ever was," but
+that young society woman's aunt tries to keep the young people apart,
+which brings about many hilariously funny situations.
+
+
+TORCHY, PRIVATE SEC. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.
+
+Torchy rises from the position of office boy to that of secretary for
+the Corrugated Iron Company. The story is full of humor and infectious
+American slang.
+
+
+WILT THOU TORCHY. Illus. by F. Snapp and A. W. Brown.
+
+Torchy goes on a treasure search expedition to the Florida West Coast,
+in company with a group of friends of the Corrugated Trust and with his
+friend's aunt, on which trip Torchy wins the aunt's permission to place
+an engagement ring on Vee's finger.
+
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+KATHLEEN NORRIS' STORIES
+
+May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list.
+
+
+MOTHER. Illustrated by F. C. Yohn.
+
+This book has a fairy-story touch, counterbalanced by the sturdy reality
+of struggle, sacrifice, and resulting peace and power of a mother's
+experiences.
+
+
+SATURDAY'S CHILD. Frontispiece by F. Graham Cootes.
+
+Out on the Pacific coast a normal girl, obscure and lovely, makes a
+quest for happiness. She passes through three stages--poverty, wealth
+and service--and works out a creditable salvation.
+
+
+THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE. Illustrated by Lucius H. Hitchcock.
+
+The story of a sensible woman who keeps within her means, refuses to be
+swamped by social engagements, lives a normal human life of varied
+interests, and has her own romance.
+
+
+THE STORY OF JULIA PAGE. Frontispiece by Allan Gilbert.
+
+How Julia Page, reared in rather unpromising surroundings, lifted
+herself through sheer determination to a higher plane of life.
+
+
+THE HEART OF RACHAEL. Frontispiece by Charles E. Chambers.
+
+Rachael is called upon to solve many problems, and in working out these,
+there is shown the beauty and strength of soul of one of fiction's most
+appealing characters.
+
+
+Ask for Complete free list of G. & D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+BOOTH TARKINGTON'S NOVELS
+
+May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list.
+
+
+SEVENTEEN. Illustrated by Arthur William Brown.
+
+No one but the creator of Penrod could have portrayed the immortal young
+people of this story. Its humor is irresistible and reminiscent of the
+time when the reader was Seventeen.
+
+
+PENROD. Illustrated by Gordon Grant.
+
+This is a picture of a boy's heart, full of the lovable, humorous,
+tragic things which are locked secrets to most older folks. It is a
+finished, exquisite work.
+
+
+PENROD AND SAM. Illustrated by Worth Brehm.
+
+Like "Penrod" and "Seventeen," this book contains some remarkable phases
+of real boyhood and some of the best stories of juvenile prankishness
+that have ever been written.
+
+
+THE TURMOIL. Illustrated by C. E. Chambers.
+
+Bibbs Sheridan is a dreamy, imaginative youth, who revolts against his
+father's plans for him to be a servitor of big business. The love of a
+fine girl turns Bibb's life from failure to success.
+
+
+THE GENTLEMAN FROM INDIANA. Frontispiece.
+
+A story of love and politics,--more especially a picture of a country
+editor's life in Indiana, but the charm of the book lies in the love
+interest.
+
+
+THE FLIRT. Illustrated by Clarence F. Underwood.
+
+The "Flirt," the younger of two sisters, breaks one girl's engagement,
+drives one man to suicide, causes the murder of another, leads another
+to lose his fortune, and in the end marries a stupid and unpromising
+suitor, leaving the really worthy one to marry her sister.
+
+
+Ask for Complete free list of G. & D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+NOVELS OF FRONTIER LIFE BY WILLIAM MacLEOD RAINE
+
+HANDSOMELY BOUND IN CLOTH. ILLUSTRATED.
+
+May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset and Dunlap's list.
+
+
+MAVERICKS.
+
+A tale of the western frontier, where the "rustler," whose depredations
+are so keenly resented by the early settlers of the range, abounds. One
+of the sweetest love stories ever told.
+
+
+A TEXAS RANGER.
+
+How a member of the most dauntless border police force carried law into
+the mesquit, saved the life of an innocent man after a series of
+thrilling adventures, followed a fugitive to Wyoming, and then passed
+through deadly peril to ultimate happiness.
+
+
+WYOMING.
+
+In this vivid story of the outdoor West the author has captured the
+breezy charm of "cattleland," and brings out the turbid life of the
+frontier with all its engaging dash and vigor.
+
+
+RIDGWAY OF MONTANA.
+
+The scene is laid in the mining centers of Montana, where politics and
+mining industries are the religion of the country. The political
+contest, the love scene, and the fine character drawing give this story
+great strength and charm.
+
+
+BUCKY O'CONNOR.
+
+Every chapter teems with "wholesome, stirring adventures, replete with
+the dashing spirit of the border, told with dramatic dash and absorbing
+fascination of style and plot.
+
+
+CROOKED TRAILS AND STRAIGHT.
+
+A story of Arizona; of swift-riding men and daring outlaws; of a bitter
+feud between cattle-men and sheep-herders. The heroine is a most unusual
+woman and her love story reaches a culmination that is fittingly
+characteristic of the great free West.
+
+
+BRAND BLOTTERS.
+
+A story of the Cattle Range. This story brings out the turbid life of
+the frontier, with all its engaging dash and vigor, with a charming love
+interest running through its 320 pages.
+
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The House of Torchy, by Sewell Ford
+
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+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The House of Torchy, by Sewell Ford.</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The House of Torchy, by Sewell Ford
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The House of Torchy
+
+Author: Sewell Ford
+
+Illustrator: Arthur William Brown
+
+Release Date: June 21, 2007 [EBook #21882]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOUSE OF TORCHY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="illus-000" id="illus-000"></a> <img src="images/illus-fpc.jpg" alt=
+ "&quot;'Don't!' says Vee. 'You'll spill the coffee.'&quot;" title="" />
+ <br />
+ <span class="caption">"'Don't!' says Vee. 'You'll spill the coffee.'"</span>
+ </div>
+ <hr class='major' />
+
+ <table style="margin: auto; border: black 1px solid; width: 400px;" summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 230%; margin-top: 30px;">THE HOUSE</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 230%; margin-bottom:30px;">OF TORCHY</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%; margin-bottom:5px;">BY</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 150%; margin-bottom:30px;">SEWELL FORD</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 80%; margin-bottom:5px;">AUTHOR OF</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%; margin-bottom:0px;">TORCHY, TRYING OUT TORCHY,</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%; margin-bottom:30px;">SHORTY MCCABE, Etc.</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 80%; margin-bottom:5px;">ILLUSTRATIONS BY</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 120%; margin-bottom:30px;">ARTHUR WILLIAM BROWN</p>
+ <div style='text-align: center'>
+ <img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-emb.png' />
+ </div>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%; margin-top: 30px; margin-bottom:10px;">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%; margin-bottom:30px;">PUBLISHERS&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class='major' />
+
+ <table style="margin: auto; width: 400px;" summary="">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%;">Copyright, 1917, 1918, by</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%; margin-bottom:10px;">SEWELL FORD</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%;">Copyright 1918, by</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%; margin-bottom:10px;">EDWARD J. CLODE</p>
+ <p class="titlepage" style="font-size: 100%;">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class='major' />
+
+ <h2 class="toc"><a name="Contents" id="Contents"></a>Contents</h2>
+
+ <table border="0" width="500" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
+ <col style="width:15%;" />
+ <col style="width:5%;" />
+ <col style="width:70%;" />
+ <col style="width:10%;" />
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right"><span style='font-size: x-small'>CHAPTER</span></td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="right"><span style='font-size: x-small'>PAGE</span></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">I</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">TORCHY AND VEE ON THE WAY</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#TORCHY_AND_VEE_ON_THE_WAY_59">1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">II</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">VEE WITH VARIATIONS</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#VEE_WITH_VARIATIONS_332">12</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">III</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">A QUALIFYING TURN FOR TORCHY</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#A_QUALIFYING_TURN_FOR_TORCHY_682">25</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">IV</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">SWITCHING ARTS ON LEON</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#SWITCHING_ARTS_ON_LEON_1156">44</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">V</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">A RECRUIT FOR THE EIGHT-THREE</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#A_RECRUIT_FOR_THE_EIGHT-THREE_1571">60</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">VI</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">TORCHY IN THE GAZINKUS CLASS</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#TORCHY_IN_THE_GAZINKUS_CLASS_2062">79</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">VII</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">BACK WITH CLARA BELLE</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#BACK_WITH_CLARA_BELLE_2471">96</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">VIII</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">WHEN TORCHY GOT THE CALL</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#WHEN_TORCHY_GOT_THE_CALL_2929">114</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">IX</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">A CARRY-ON FOR CLARA</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#A_CARRY-ON_FOR_CLARA_3415">134</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">X</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">ALL THE WAY WITH ANNA</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#ALL_THE_WAY_WITH_ANNA_3856">152</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XI</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">AT THE TURN WITH WILFRED</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#AT_THE_TURN_WITH_WILFRED_4346">172</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XII</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">VEE GOES OVER THE TOP</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#VEE_GOES_OVER_THE_TOP_4882">193</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XIII</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">LATE RETURNS ON RUPERT</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#LATE_RETURNS_ON_RUPERT_5389">214</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XIV</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">FORSYTHE AT THE FINISH</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#FORSYTHE_AT_THE_FINISH_5832">232</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XV</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">THE HOUSE OF TORCHY</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#THE_HOUSE_OF_TORCHY_6269">250</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XVI</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">TORCHY GETS THE THUMB GRIP</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#TORCHY_GETS_THE_THUMB_GRIP_6816">272</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XVII</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">A LOW TACKLE BY TORCHY</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#A_LOW_TACKLE_BY_TORCHY_7216">288</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XVIII</td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align="left">TAG DAY AT TORCHY'S</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#TAG_DAY_AT_TORCHYS_7701">307</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class='major' />
+
+ <h1>THE HOUSE OF TORCHY</h1>
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_1" title="1" id="page_1"></a>
+ <a name="TORCHY_AND_VEE_ON_THE_WAY_59" id="TORCHY_AND_VEE_ON_THE_WAY_59"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+ <h3>TORCHY AND VEE ON THE WAY</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Say, I thought I'd taken a sportin' chance now and then before; but I was only kiddin' myself. Believe me, this
+ gettin' married act is the big plunge. Uh-huh! Specially when it's done offhand and casual, the way we went at
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>My first jolt is handed me early in the mornin' as we piles off the mountain express at this little flag stop up
+ in Vermont, and a roly-poly gent in a horse-blanket ulster and a coonskin cap with a badge on it steps up and greets
+ me cheerful.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ottasumpsit Inn?" says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, I expect so," says I, "if that's the way you call it. Otto&mdash;Otta&mdash;Yep, that listens something like
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>You see, Mr. Robert had said it only once,<a class="pagenum" name="page_2" title="2" id="page_2"></a> when he
+ handed me the tickets, and I hadn't paid much attention.</p>
+
+ <p>"Aye gorry!" says the chirky gent, gatherin' up our hand luggage. "Guess you're the ones we're lookin' for. Got
+ yer trunk-checks handy?"</p>
+
+ <p>With that I starts fishin' through my pockets panicky. I finds a railroad folder, our marriage certificate, the
+ keys to the studio apartment I'd hired, the box the ring came in, and&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Gosh!" says I, sighin' relieved. "Sure I got it."</p>
+
+ <p>The driver grins good-natured and stows us into a two-seated sleigh, and off we're whirled, bells jinglin', for
+ half a mile or so through the stinging mornin' air. Next thing I know, I'm bein' towed up to a desk and a hotel
+ register is shoved at me. Just like an old-timer, I dashes off my name&mdash;Richard T. Ballard.</p>
+
+ <p>The mild-eyed gent with the close-cropped Vandyke and the gold-rimmed glasses glances over at Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah&mdash;er&mdash;I thought Mrs. Ballard was with you!" says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's so; she is," says I, grabbin' the pen again and tackin' "Mr. and Mrs." in front of my autograph.</p>
+
+ <p>That's why, while we're fixin' up a bit before<a class="pagenum" name="page_3" title="3" id="page_3"></a> goin'
+ down to breakfast, I has this little confidential confab with Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's no use, Vee," says I. "I'm a rank amateur. We might just as well have rice and confetti all over us. I've
+ made two breaks already, and I'm liable to make more. We can't bluff 'em."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who wants to?" says Vee. "I'm not ashamed of being on my honeymoon; are you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Good girl!" says I. "You bet I ain't. I thought the usual line, though, was to pretend you'd&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know," says Vee. "And I always thought that was perfectly silly. Besides, I don't believe we could fool anyone
+ if we tried. It's much simpler not to bother. Let them guess."</p>
+
+ <p>"And grin too, eh?" says I. "We'll grin back."</p>
+
+ <p>Say, that's the happy hunch. Leaves you with nothing to worry about. All you got to do is go ahead and enjoy
+ yourself, free and frolicsome. So when this imposin' head waitress with the forty-eight bust and the grand duchess
+ air bears down on us majestic, and inquires dignified, "Two, sir?" I don't let it stagger me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Two'll be enough," says I. "But whisper. Seein' as we're only startin' in on the twosome<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_4" title="4" id="page_4"></a> breakfast game, maybe you could find something nice and cheerful by a window.
+ Eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>It's some breakfast. M-m-m-m! Cute little country sausages, buckwheat cakes that would melt in your mouth, with
+ strained honey to go on 'em.</p>
+
+ <p>"Have a fourth buckwheat," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"No fair, keeping count!" says Vee. "I looked the other way when you took your fifth."</p>
+
+ <p>Honest, I can't see where we acted much different than we did before. Somehow, we always could find things to
+ giggle over. We sure had a good time takin' our first after-breakfast stroll together down Main Street, Vee in her
+ silver-fox furs and me in my new mink-lined overcoat that Mr. Robert had wished on me casual just before we left.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cunnin' little town, eh?" says I. "Looks like a birthday cake."</p>
+
+ <p>"Or a Christmas card," says Vee. "Look at this old door with the brass knocker and the green fan-light above.
+ Isn't that Colonial, though?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's an old-timer, all right," says I. "Hello! Here's a place worth rememberin'&mdash;the Woman's Exchange. Now
+ I'll know where to go in case I should want to swap you off."<a class="pagenum" name="page_5" title="5" id=
+ "page_5"></a></p>
+
+ <p>For which crack I gets shoved into a snowdrift.</p>
+
+ <p>It ain't until afternoon that I'm struck with the fact that neither of us knows a soul up here. Course, the
+ landlord nods pleasant to me, and I'd talked to the young room clerk a bit, and the bell-hops had all smiled
+ friendly, specially them I'd fed quarters to. But by then I was feelin' sort of folksy, so I begun takin' notice of
+ the other guests and plannin' who I should get chummy with first.</p>
+
+ <p>I drifts over by the fireplace, where two substantial old boys are toastin' their toes and smokin' their
+ cigars.</p>
+
+ <p>"Snappy brand of weather they pass out up here, eh?" I throws off, pullin' up a rocker.</p>
+
+ <p>They turn, sort of surprised, and give me the once-over deliberate, after which one of them, a gent with juttin'
+ eyebrows, clears his throat and remarks, "Quite bracing, indeed."</p>
+
+ <p>Then he hitches around until I'm well out of view, and says to the other:</p>
+
+ <p>"As I was observing, an immediate readjustment of international trade balances is inevitable. European bankers are
+ preparing for it. We are not. Only last month one of the Barings cabled&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>I'll admit my next stab at bein' sociable was<a class="pagenum" name="page_6" title="6" id="page_6"></a> kind of
+ feeble. In front of the desk is a group of three gents, one of 'em not over fifty or so; but when I edges up close
+ enough to hear what the debate is about, I finds it has something to do with a scheme for revivin' Italian opera in
+ Boston, and I backs off so sudden I almost bumps into a hook-beaked old dame who is waddlin' up to the
+ letter-box.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sorry," says I. "I should have honked."</p>
+
+ <p>She just glares at me, and if I hadn't side-stepped prompt she might have sunk that parrot bill into my
+ shoulder.</p>
+
+ <p>After that I sidles into a corner where I couldn't be hit from behind, and tries to dope out the cause of all this
+ hostility. Did they take me for a German spy or what? Or was this really an old folks' home masqueradin' as a hotel,
+ with Vee and me breakin' in under false pretenses?</p>
+
+ <p>So far as I could see, the inmates was friendly enough with each other. The old girls sat around in the office and
+ parlors, chattin' over their knittin' and crochet. The old boys paired off mostly, though some of them only read or
+ played solitaire. A few people went out wrapped up in expensive furs and was loaded into sleighs. The others waved
+ good-by to 'em. But I might have been built out of window-glass.<a class="pagenum" name="page_7" title="7" id=
+ "page_7"></a> They didn't act as though I was visible.</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" thinks I. "I'll bet they take notice of Vee when she comes down."</p>
+
+ <p>If I'd put anything up on that proposition I'd owed myself money. They couldn't see her any more'n they could me.
+ When we went out for another walk nobody even looked after us. I didn't say anything then, but I kept thinkin'. And
+ all that evenin' we sat around amongst 'em without bein' disturbed.</p>
+
+ <p>About eight o'clock an orchestra shows up and cuts loose with music in the ball-room, mostly classic stuff like
+ the "Spring Song" and handfuls plucked from "Aïda. " We slips in and listens. Then the leader gets his eye on us and
+ turns on a fox-trot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Looks like they was waitin' for us to start something," says I. "Let's."</p>
+
+ <p>We'd gone around three or four times when Vee balks. About twenty-five old ladies, with a sprinklin' of
+ white-whiskered old codgers, had filed in and was watchin' us solemn and critical from the side-lines. Some was
+ squintin' disapprovin' through their lorgnettes, and I noticed a few whisperin' to each other. Vee quits right in the
+ middle of a reverse.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do they think we are giving an exhibition?" she pouts.<a class="pagenum" name="page_8" title="8" id=
+ "page_8"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe we're breakin' some of the rules and by-laws," says I. "Anyway, I think we ought to beat it before they
+ call in the high sheriff."</p>
+
+ <p>Next day it was just the same. We was out part of the time, indulgin' in walks and sleigh rides; but nobody seemed
+ to see us, goin' or comin'. And I begun to get good and sore.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nice place, this," says I to Vee, as we trails in to dinner that evenin'. "Almost as sociable as the Grand
+ Central station."</p>
+
+ <p>Vee tries to explain that it's always like this in these exclusive little all-the-year-round joints where about
+ the same crowd of people come every season.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you have to be born in the house to be a reg'lar person, I suppose?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, it's about then I notices this classy young couple who are makin' their way across the dinin'-room, bein'
+ hailed right and left. And next thing I know, the young lady gets her eye on Vee, stops to take another look, then
+ rushes over and gives her the fond clinch from behind.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why you dear old Verona!" says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"Judith!" gasps Vee, kind of smothery.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whatever are you doing up&mdash;&mdash;" And then Judith gets wise to me sittin' opposite. "Oh!" says
+ she.<a class="pagenum" name="page_9" title="9" id="page_9"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Vee blushes and exhibits her left hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"It only happened the other night," says she. "This is Mr. Ballard, Judith. And you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, ages ago&mdash;last spring," says Judith. "Bert, come here."</p>
+
+ <p>It's a case of old boardin'-school friends who'd lost track of each other. Quite a stunner, young Mrs. Nixon is,
+ too, and Bert is a good match for her. The two girls hold quite a reunion, with us men standin' around lookin'
+ foolish.</p>
+
+ <p>"We're living in Springfield, you know," goes on Judith, "where Bert is helping to build another munition plant.
+ Just ran up to spend the week-end with Auntie. You've met her, of course?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We&mdash;we haven't met anyone," says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, how funny!" exclaims Mrs. Nixon. "Please come over right now."</p>
+
+ <p>"My dear," says Auntie, pattin' Vee chummy on the hand, "we have all been wondering who you two young people were.
+ I knew you must be nice, but&mdash;er&mdash;&mdash; Come, won't you join us at this table? We'll make just a splendid
+ little family party. Now do!"</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, yes, we did. And after dinner I'll be hanged if we ain't introduced to almost everybody in the hotel. It's a
+ reg'lar reception, with folks standin' in line to shake hands with us.<a class="pagenum" name="page_10" title="10"
+ id="page_10"></a> The old boy with the eye awnin's turns out to be an ex-Secretary of the Treasury; an antique with a
+ patent ear-'phone has been justice of some State Supreme Court; and so on. Oh, lots of class to 'em. But after I'd
+ been vouched for by someone they knew they all gives me the hearty grip, offers me cigars, and hopes I'm enjoyin' my
+ stay.</p>
+
+ <p>"And so you are a niece of dear Mrs. Hemmingway?" says old Parrot-Face, when her turn comes. "Think of that! And
+ this is your husband!" And then she says how nice it is that some other young people will be up in the mornin'.</p>
+
+ <p>That evenin' Judith gets busy plannin' things to do next day.</p>
+
+ <p>"You haven't tried the toboggan chute?" says she. "Why, how absurd!"</p>
+
+ <p>Yep, it was a big day, Saturday was. Half a dozen more young folks drifted in, includin' a couple of Harvard men
+ that Vee knew, a girl she'd met abroad, and another she'd seen at a house-party. They was all live wires, too, ready
+ for any sort of fun. And we had all kinds. Maybe we didn't keep that toboggan slide warm. Say, it's some sport, ain't
+ it?</p>
+
+ <p>Anyway, our honeymoon was turnin' out a great success. The Nixons concluded to stay<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_11" title="11" id="page_11"></a> over a few days, and three or four of the others found they could too, so we
+ just went on whooping things up.</p>
+
+ <p>Next I knew we'd been there a week, and was due to make a jump to Washington for a few days of sight-seein'.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm afraid that will not be half as nice as this has been," says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"It couldn't," says I. "It's the reg'lar thing to do, though."</p>
+
+ <p>"I hate doing the regular thing," says Vee. "Besides, I'm dying to see our little studio apartment and get settled
+ in it. Why not&mdash;well, just go home? "</p>
+
+ <p>"Vee," says I, "you got more good sense than I have red hair. Let's!"</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_12" title="12" id="page_12"></a>
+ <a name="VEE_WITH_VARIATIONS_332" id="VEE_WITH_VARIATIONS_332"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+ <h3>VEE WITH VARIATIONS</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;but look here, Vee," says I, after I'd got my breath back, "you can't do a thing like that, you
+ know."</p>
+
+ <p>"But I have, Torchy," says she; "and, what is more, I mean to keep on doing it."</p>
+
+ <p>She don't say it messy, understand&mdash;just states it quiet and pleasant.</p>
+
+ <p>And there we are, hardly at the end of our first month, with the rocks loomin' ahead.</p>
+
+ <p>Say, where did I collect all this bunk about gettin' married, anyway? I had an idea that after the honeymoon was
+ over, you just settled down and lived happy, or otherwise, ever after. But, believe me, there's nothing to it. It
+ ain't all over, not by a long shot. As a matter of fact, you've just begun to live, and you got to learn how.</p>
+
+ <p>Here I am, discoverin' a new Vee every day or so, and almost dizzy tryin' to get acquainted with all of 'em. Do I
+ show up that way to her?<a class="pagenum" name="page_13" title="13" id="page_13"></a> I doubt it. Now and then,
+ though, I catch her watchin' me sort of puzzled.</p>
+
+ <p>So there's nothing steady goin' or settled about us yet, thanks be. Home ain't a place to yawn in. Not ours. We
+ don't get all our excitement out of changin' the furniture round, either. Oh, sure, we do that, too. You know, we're
+ startin' in with a ready-made home&mdash;a studio apartment that Mr. Robert picked up for me at a bargain, all
+ furnished.</p>
+
+ <p>He was a near-artist, if you remember, this Waddy Crane party, who'd had a bale of coupon-bearin' certificates
+ willed to him, and what was a van-load of furniture more or less to him? Course, I'm no judge of such junk, but Vee
+ seems to think we've got something swell.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just look at this noble old davenport, will you!" says she. "Isn't it a beauty? And that highboy! Real old San
+ Domingo mahogany that is, with perfectly lovely crotch veneer in the panels. See?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Uh-huh," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"And this four-poster with the pineapple tops and the canopy," she goes on. "Pure Colonial, a hundred years
+ old."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I, gazin' at it doubtful. "Course, I was lookin' for second-hand stuff, but I don't<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_14" title="14" id="page_14"></a> think he ought to work off anything that ancient on me, do you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Silly!" says Vee. "It's a gem, and the older the better."</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll need some new rugs, won't we," says I, "in place of some of these faded things?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Faded!" says Vee. "Why, those are Bokharas. I will say for Mr. Crane that he has good taste. This is furnished so
+ much better than most studios&mdash;nothing useless, no mixing of periods."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, when I go out after a home," says I, "I'm some grand little shopper."</p>
+
+ <p>"Pooh!" says Vee. "Who couldn't do it the way you did? Why, the place looks as if he'd just taken his hat and
+ walked out. There are even cigars in the humidor. And his easel and paints and brushes! Do you know what I'm going to
+ do, Torchy?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Put pink and green stripes around the cigars, I expect," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Smarty!" says she. "I'm going to paint pictures."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?" says I. "There's no law against it, and here you got all the tools."</p>
+
+ <p>"You know I used to try it a little," says she. "I took quite a lot of lessons."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then go to it," says I. "I'll get a yearly<a class="pagenum" name="page_15" title="15" id="page_15"></a> rate
+ from a pressing club to keep the spots off me. I'll bet you could do swell pictures."</p>
+
+ <p>"I know!" says Vee, clappin' her hands. "I'll begin with a portrait of you. Let me try sketching in your head
+ now."</p>
+
+ <p>That's the way Vee generally goes at things&mdash;with a rush. Say, she had me sittin' with my chin up and my arms
+ draped in one position until I had a neck-ache that ran clear to my heels.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hal-lup!" says I, when both feet was sound asleep and my spine felt ossified. "Couldn't I put on a sub while I
+ drew a long breath?"</p>
+
+ <p>At that she lets me off, and after a fifth-innin' stretch I'm called round to pass on the result.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hm-m-m!" says I, starin' at what she's done to a perfectly good piece of stretched canvas.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, what does it look like?" demands Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says I, "I should call it sort of a cross between the Kaiser and Billy Sunday."</p>
+
+ <p>"Torchy!" says Vee. "I&mdash;I think you're just horrid!"</p>
+
+ <p>For a whole week she sticks to it industrious, jottin' down studies of various parts of my map while I'm eatin'
+ breakfast, and workin' over 'em until I come back from the office in the afternoon. Did I throw out any more
+ comic<a class="pagenum" name="page_16" title="16" id="page_16"></a> cracks? Never a one&mdash;not even when the
+ picture showed that my eyes toed in. All I did was pat her on the back and say she was a wonder. But say, I got so I
+ dreaded to look at the thing.</p>
+
+ <p>"You know your hair isn't really red," says Vee; "it&mdash;it's such an odd shade."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sort of triple pink, eh?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>She squeezes out some more paints, stirs 'em vigorous, and makes another stab. This time she gets a bilious
+ lavender with streaks of fire-box red in it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bother!" says she, chuckin' away the brushes. "What's the use pretending I'm an artist when I'm not? Look at that
+ hideous mess! It's too awful for words. Take away that fire-screen, will you, Torchy?"</p>
+
+ <p>And, with the help of a few matches and a sportin' extra, we made quite a cheerful little blaze in the coal
+ grate.</p>
+
+ <p>"There!" says Vee, as we watches the bonfire. "So that's over. And it's rather a relief to find out that I haven't
+ got to be a lady artist, after all. What is more, I am positive I couldn't write a book. I'm afraid, Torchy, that I
+ am a most every-day sort of person."</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe," says I, "you're one of the scarce ones that believes in home and hubby. "</p>
+
+ <p>"We-e-e-ell," says Vee, lockin' her fingers<a class="pagenum" name="page_17" title="17" id="page_17"></a> and
+ restin' her chin on 'em thoughtful, "not precisely that type, either. My mind may not be particularly advanced, but
+ the modified harem existence for women doesn't appeal to me. And I must confess that, with kitchenette breakfasts,
+ dinners out, and one maid, I can't get wildly excited over a wholly domestic career. Torchy, I simply must have
+ something to do."</p>
+
+ <p>Me, I just sits there gawpin' at her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says I, "I thought that when a girl got married she&mdash;she&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"I know," says she. "You think you thought. So did I. But you really didn't think about it at all, and I'm only
+ beginning to. Of course, you have your work. I suppose it's interesting, too. Isn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a great game," says I. "Specially these days, when doin' any kind of business is about as substantial as
+ jugglin' six china plates while you're balanced on top of two chairs and a kitchen table. Honest, we got deals enough
+ in the air to make you dizzy followin' 'em. If they all go through we'll stand to cut a melon that would pay off the
+ national debt. If they should all go wrong&mdash;well, it would be some smash, believe me."</p>
+
+ <p>Vee's gray eyes light up sudden.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why couldn't you tell me all about some of<a class="pagenum" name="page_18" title="18" id="page_18"></a> these
+ deals," she says, "so that I could be in it too? Why couldn't I help?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe you could," says I, "if you understood all the fine points."</p>
+
+ <p>"Couldn't I learn?" demands Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," says I, "I've been right in the thick of it for quite some years. If you could pick up in a week or so
+ what it's taken me years to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I see," cuts in Vee. "I suppose you're right, too. But I'm sure that I should like to be in business. It must be
+ fascinating, all that planning and scheming. It must make life so interesting."</p>
+
+ <p>I nods. "It does," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then why shouldn't I try something of the kind, all my very own?" she asks. "Oh, in a small way, at first?"</p>
+
+ <p>More gasps from me. This was gettin' serious.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't mean margin dabblin' at one of them parlor bucket-shops, do you?" I demands.</p>
+
+ <p>"No fear," says Vee. "I think gambling is just plain stupid. I mean some sort of legitimate business&mdash;buying
+ and selling things."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says I. "Like real estate, or imported hats, or somebody's home-made candy? Or maybe you mean startin' one
+ of them Blue<a class="pagenum" name="page_19" title="19" id="page_19"></a> Goose novelty shops down in Greenwich
+ Village. I'll tell you. Why not manufacture left-handed collar buttons for the south-paw trade? There's a field.
+ "</p>
+
+ <p>Vee don't say any more. In fact, three or four days goes by without her mentionin' anything about havin' nothing
+ to do, and I'd 'most forgot this batty talk of ours.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, one afternoon when I comes home after a busy day at doin' nothing much and tryin' to look important over
+ it, she greets me with a flyin' tackle and drags me over to a big wingchair by the window.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you think, Torchy?" says she. "I've found something!"</p>
+
+ <p>"That trunk key you've been lookin' for?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"No," says she. "A business opening."</p>
+
+ <p>"A slot-machine to sell fudge?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'd never guess," says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then shoot it," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm going to open a shoe-shinery," she announces.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wha-a-a-at!" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Only I'm not going to call it that," she goes on. "It isn't to be a 'parlor,' either, nor a 'shine shop.' It's to
+ be just a 'Boots.' Right here in the building. I've leased part of the<a class="pagenum" name="page_20" title="20"
+ id="page_20"></a> basement. See?" And she waves a paper at me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Quit your kiddin'," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>But she insists that it's so. Sure enough, that's the way the lease reads.</p>
+
+ <p>And that's when, as I was tellin' you, I rises up majestic and announces flat that she simply can't do a thing
+ like that. Also she comes back at me just as prompt by sayin' that she can and will. It's the first time we've met
+ head-on goin' different ways, and I had just sense enough to throw in my emergency before the crash came.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now let's get this straight," says I. "I don't suppose you're plannin' to do shoe-shinin' yourself?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee smiles and shakes her head.</p>
+
+ <p>"Or 'tend the cash register and sell shoelaces and gum to gentlemen customers?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, it's not to be that sort of place," says she. "It's to be an English 'boots,' on a large scale. You know what
+ I mean."</p>
+
+ <p>"No," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>So she sketches out the enterprise for me. Instead of a reg'lar Tony joint with a row of chairs and a squad of
+ blue-shirted Greeks jabberin' about the war, this is to be a chairless, spittoonless shine factory, where the
+ customer only steps in to sign a monthly contract or register<a class="pagenum" name="page_21" title="21" id=
+ "page_21"></a> a kick. All the work is to be collected and delivered, same as laundry.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would never have thought of it," explains Vee, "if it hadn't been for Tarkins. He's that pasty-faced,
+ sharp-nosed young fellow who's been helping the janitor recently. A cousin, I believe. He's a war wreck, too. Just
+ think, Torchy: he was in the trenches for more than a year, and has only been out of a base hospital two months. They
+ wouldn't let him enlist again; so he came over here to his relatives.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was while he was up trying to stop that radiator leak the other day that I asked him if he would take out a
+ pair of my boots and find some place where they could be cleaned. He brought them back inside of half an hour,
+ beautifully done. And when I insisted on being told where he'd taken them, so that I might send them to the same
+ place again, he admitted that he had done the work himself. 'My old job, ma'am,' says he. 'I was boots at the Argyle
+ Club, ma'am, before I went out to strafe the 'Uns. Seven years, ma'am. But they got a girl doin' it now, a flapper.
+ Wouldn't take me back.' Just fancy! And Tarkins a trench hero! So I got to thinking."</p>
+
+ <p>"I see," says I. "You're going to set Tarkins up, eh?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_22" title="22" id=
+ "page_22"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"I'm going to make him my manager," says Vee. "He will have charge of the shop and solicit orders. We are going to
+ start with only two polishers; one for day work, the other for the night shift. And Tarkins will always be on the
+ job. They're installing a 'phone now, and he will sleep on a cot in the back office. We will work this block first,
+ something like four hundred apartments. Later on&mdash;well, we'll see."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't want to croak," says I, "but do you think folks will send out their footwear that way? You know, New
+ Yorkers ain't used to gettin' their shines except on the hoof."</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean to educate them to my 'boots' system," says Vee. "I'm getting up a circular now. I shall show them how
+ much time they can save, how many tips they can avoid. You see, each customer will have a delivery box, with his name
+ and address on it. No chance for mistakes. The boxes can be set outside the apartment doors. We will have four
+ collections, perhaps; two in the daytime, two at night. And when they see the kind of work we do&mdash;&mdash; Well,
+ you wait. "</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll admit it don't listen so worse," says I. "The scheme has its good points. But when you come to teachin' New
+ York people new<a class="pagenum" name="page_23" title="23" id="page_23"></a> tricks, like sendin' out their shoes,
+ you're goin' to be up against it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you think I can't make 'boots' pay a profit?" asks Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"That would be my guess," says I. "If it was a question of underwritin' a stock issue for the scheme I'd have to
+ turn it down."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good!" says Vee. "Now I shall work all the harder. Tarkins will be around early in the morning to get you as our
+ first customer."</p>
+
+ <p>Say, for the next few days she certainly was a busy party&mdash;plannin' out her block campaign, lookin' over
+ supply bills, and checkin' up Tarkins's reports.</p>
+
+ <p>I don't know when I'd ever seen her so interested in anything, or so chirky. Her cheeks were pink all the time and
+ her eyes dancin'. And somehow we had such a lot to talk about.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, though, I didn't expect it to last. You wouldn't look for a girl like Vee, who'd never had any trainin'
+ for that sort of thing, to start a new line and make a go of it right off the bat. But, so long as she wasn't
+ investin' very heavy, it didn't matter.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, here last night, after she'd been workin' over her account-books for an hour or so, she comes at me with
+ a whoop, and waves a sheet of paper under my nose excited.<a class="pagenum" name="page_24" title="24" id=
+ "page_24"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Now, Mister Business Man," says she, "what do you think of that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I, starin' at the figures.</p>
+
+ <p>"One hundred and seventeen regular customers the first week," says she, "and a net profit of $23.45. Now how about
+ underwriting that stock issue?"</p>
+
+ <p>Well, it was a case of backin' up. She had it all figured out plain. She'd made good from the start. And, just to
+ prove that it's real money that she's made all by herself, she insists on invitin' me out to a celebration dinner.
+ It's a swell one, too, take it from me.</p>
+
+ <p>And afterwards we sits up until long past midnight while Vee plans a chain of "boots " all over the city.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gee!" says I. "Maybe you'll be gettin' yourself written up as 'The Shine Queen of New York' or something like
+ that. Lucky Auntie's in Jamaica. Think what a jolt it would give her."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't care," says Vee. "I've found a job."</p>
+
+ <p>"Guess you have," says I. "And, as I've remarked once or twice before, you're some girl."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_25" title="25" id="page_25"></a>
+ <a name="A_QUALIFYING_TURN_FOR_TORCHY_682" id="A_QUALIFYING_TURN_FOR_TORCHY_682"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+ <h3>A QUALIFYING TURN FOR TORCHY</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And here all along I'd been kiddin' myself that I was a perfectly good private sec. Also I had an idea the
+ Corrugated Trust was one of the main piers that kept New York from slumpin' into the North River, and that the boss,
+ Old Hickory Ellins, was sort of a human skyscraper who loomed up as imposin' in the financial foreground as the
+ Metropolitan Tower does on the picture post-cards that ten-day trippers mail to the folks back home.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that I'd been workin' up any extra chest measure since I've had an inside desk and had connected with a few
+ shares of our preferred stock; I always did feel more or less that way about our concern. And the closer I got to
+ things, seein' how wide our investments was scattered and how many big deals we stood behind, the surer I was that we
+ was important people.</p>
+
+ <p>And then, in trickles this smooth-haired young gent with the broad <i>a</i>'s and the full set of <i>thé
+ dansant</i> manners, to show me where I'm<a class="pagenum" name="page_26" title="26" id="page_26"></a> wrong on all
+ counts. He'd succeeded in convincin' Vincent-on-the-gate that nobody around the shop would do but Mr. Ellins himself,
+ so here was Old Hickory standin' in the door of his private office with the card in his hand and starin' puzzled at
+ this immaculate symphony in browns.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says he. "You're from Runyon, are you? Well, I wired him to stop off on his way through and have luncheon
+ with me at the Union League. Know anything about that, do you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Runyon regrets very much," says the young gent, "that he will be unable to accept your kind invitation. He is
+ on his way to Newport, you know, and&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I understand all that," breaks in Old Hickory. "Daughter's wedding. But that isn't until next week, and
+ while he was in town I thought we might have a little chat and settle a few things."</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite so," says the symphony. "Precisely why he sent me up, sir&mdash;to talk over anything you might care to
+ discuss."</p>
+
+ <p>"With you!" snorts Old Hickory. "Who the brocaded buckboards are you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Runyon's secretary, sir," says the young gent. "Bixby's the name, sir, as you will see by the card,
+ and&mdash;&mdash;"<a class="pagenum" name="page_27" title="27" id="page_27"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Ha!" growls old Hickory. "So that's Marc Runyon's answer to me, is it? Sends his secretary! Very well; you may
+ talk with <i>my</i> secretary. Torchy!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Right here!" says I, slidin' to the front.</p>
+
+ <p>"Take this person somewhere," says Mr. Ellins, jerkin' his thumb at Bixby; "instruct him what to tell his master
+ about how we regard that terminal hold-up; then dust him off carefully and lead him to the elevator."</p>
+
+ <p>"Got you!" says I, salutin'.</p>
+
+ <p>You might think that would have jolted Mr. Bixby. But no. He gets the door shut in his face without even blinkin'
+ or gettin' pink under the eyes. Don't even indulge in any shoulder shrugs or other signs of muffled emotion. He just
+ turns to me calm and remarks businesslike:</p>
+
+ <p>"At your service, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>Now, say, this lubricated diplomacy act ain't my long suit as a general thing, but I couldn't figure a percentage
+ in puttin' over any more rough stuff on Bixby. It rolled off him too easy. Course, it might be all right for Mr.
+ Ellins to get messy or blow a gasket if he wanted to; but I couldn't see that it was gettin' us anywhere. He hadn't
+ planned this luncheon affair just for the sake of being sociable&mdash;I knew that much.<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_28" title="28" id="page_28"></a> The big idea was to get next to Marcus T. Runyon and thresh out a certain
+ proposition on a face-to-face basis. And if he chucked that overboard because of a whim, we stood to lose.</p>
+
+ <p>It was up to me now, though. Maybe I couldn't be as smooth as this Bixby party, but I could make a stab along that
+ line. It would be good practice, anyhow. So I tows him over to my corner, and arranges him easy in an armchair.</p>
+
+ <p>"As between private secs, now," says I, "what's puttin' up the bars on this get-together motion, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>Well, considerin' that Bixby is English and don't understand the American language very well, we got along fine.
+ Once or twice, there, I thought I should have to call in an interpreter; but by bein' careful to state things simple,
+ and by goin' over some of the points two or three times slow, we managed to make out what each other meant.</p>
+
+ <p>It seems that Marcus T. is more or less of a frail and tender party. Dashin' out for a Union League luncheon,
+ fillin' himself up on <i>poulet en casserole</i> and such truck, not to mention Martinis and demi-tasses and brunette
+ perfectos, was clean out of the question.</p>
+
+ <p>"My word!" says Bixby, rollin' his eyes.<a class="pagenum" name="page_29" title="29" id="page_29"></a> "His
+ physician would never allow it, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Suppose he took a chance and didn't tell the doc?" I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>"Impossible," says Bixby. "He is with him constantly&mdash;travels with him, you understand."</p>
+
+ <p>I didn't get it all at first, but I sopped it up gradual. Marcus T. wasn't takin' any casual flit from his Palm
+ Beach winter home to his Newport summer place. No jumpin' into a common Pullman for him, joinin' the smokin'-room
+ bunch, and scrabblin' for his meals in the diner. Hardly.</p>
+
+ <p>He was travelin' in his private car, with his private secretary, his private physician, his trained nurse, his
+ private chef, and most likely, his private bootblack. And he was strictly under his doctor's orders. He wasn't even
+ goin' to have a peek at Broadway or Fifth Avenue; for, although a suite had been engaged for him at the Plutoria, the
+ Doc had ruled against it only that mornin'. No; he had to stay in the private car, that had been run on a special
+ sidin' over in the Pennsylvania yards.</p>
+
+ <p>"So you see," says Bixby, spreadin' out his varnished finger-nails helpless. "And yet, I am sure he would very
+ much like to have a chat with his old friend Mr. Ellins."<a class="pagenum" name="page_30" title="30" id=
+ "page_30"></a></p>
+
+ <p>I had all I could do to choke back a haw-haw. His old friend, eh? Oh, I expect they might be called friends, in a
+ way. They hadn't actually stuck any knives into each other. And 'way back, when they was both operatin' in Chicago, I
+ understand they was together a good deal. But since&mdash;&mdash; Well, maybe at a circus you've seen a couple of old
+ tigers pacin' back and forth in nearby cages and catchin' sight of one another now and then? Something like that.</p>
+
+ <p>"Friend" wasn't the way Marcus T. was indexed on our books. If we spotted any suspicious moves in the market, or
+ found one of our subsidiary companies being led astray by unseen hands, or a big contract slippin' away mysterious,
+ the word was always passed to "watch the Runyon interests." And I'll admit that when the Corrugated saw an openin' to
+ put a crimp in a Runyon deal, or overbid 'em on a franchise, or crack a ripe egg on one of their bond issues, we only
+ waited long enough for it to get dark before gettin' busy. Oh, yes, we was real chummy that way.</p>
+
+ <p>And then again, with the Runyon system touchin' ours in so many spots, we had a lot of open daylight dealin's. We
+ interlocked here and there; we had joint leases, trackage agreements, and so on, where we was just as<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_31" title="31" id="page_31"></a> trustin' of each other as a couple of gentlemen crooks dividin'
+ the souvenirs after an early mornin' call at a country-house.</p>
+
+ <p>This terminal business Old Hickory had mentioned was a sample. Course, I only knew about it in a vague sort of
+ way: something about ore docks up on the Lakes. Anyway, it was a case where the Runyon people had hogged the
+ waterfront and was friskin' us for tonnage charges on every steamer we loaded.</p>
+
+ <p>I know it was something that had to be renewed annual, for I'd heard Mr. Ellins beefin' about it more'n once. Last
+ year, I remember, he was worse than usual, which was accounted for later by the fact that the ton rate had been
+ jumped a couple of cents. And now it had been almost doubled. No wonder he wanted a confab with Marcus T. on the
+ subject. And, from where I stood, it looked like he ought to have it, grouch or no grouch.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bixby," says I, "Mr. Ellins would just grieve himself sick if this reunion he's planned don't come off. Now,
+ what's the best you can do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If Mr. Ellins could come to the private car&mdash;&mdash;" begins Bixby.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say," I breaks in, "you wouldn't ask him to climb over freight-cars and dodge switch-engines just for old times'
+ sake, would you?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_32" title="32" id="page_32"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Bixby holds up both hands and registers painful protest.</p>
+
+ <p>"By no means," says he. "We would send the limousine for Mr. Ellins, have it wait his convenience, and drive him
+ directly to the car steps. I think I can arrange the interview for any time between two-thirty and four o'clock this
+ afternoon."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, that's talkin'!" says I. "I'll see what I can do with the boss. Wait, will you?"</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, boy, though! That was about as tough a job as I ever tackled. Old Hickory still has his neck feathers ruffled,
+ and he's chewin' savage on a black cigar when I go in to slip him the soothin' syrup. First off I explains elaborate
+ what a sick man Mr. Runyon is, and all about the trained nurse and the private physician.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bah!" says Old Hickory. "I'll bet he's no more an invalid than I am. Just coddling himself, that's all. Got the
+ private car habit, too! Why, I knew Marc Runyon when he thought an upper berth was the very lap of luxury; knew him
+ when he'd grind his teeth over payin' a ten-dollar fee to a doctor. And now he's trying to buy back his digestion by
+ hiring a private physician, is he? The simple-minded old sinner!"<a class="pagenum" name="page_33" title="33" id=
+ "page_33"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"I expect you ain't seen much of him lately, Mr. Ellins?" I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Hickory hunches his shoulders careless.</p>
+
+ <p>"No," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he gazes reminiscent at the ceilin'. I could tell by watchin' his lower jaw sort of loosen up that he was
+ thinkin' of the old days, or something like that. It struck me as a good time to let things simmer. I drops back a
+ step and waits. All of a sudden he turns to me and demands:</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, son?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If you could get away about three," says I, "Mr. Runyon's limousine will be waiting."</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says he. "Well, I'll see. Perhaps."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir," says I. "Then you'll be wanting the dope on that terminal lease. Shall I dig it up?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, you might as well," says Old Hickory. "There isn't much, but bring along anything you may find. You will have
+ to serve as my entire retinue, Torchy. I expect you to behave like a regular high-toned secretary."</p>
+
+ <p>"Gee!" says I. "That's some order. Mr. Bixby'll have me lookin' like an outside porter. But I'll go wind myself
+ up."</p>
+
+ <p>All I could think of, though, was to post myself on that terminal stuff. And, believe me, I<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_34" title="34" id="page_34"></a> waded into that strong. Inside of ten minutes after I'd sent Bixby on his
+ way I had Piddie clawin' through the record safe, two stenographers searchin' the letter-files, and Vincent out
+ buyin' maps of Lake Superior. I had about four hours to use in gettin' wise to the fine points of a deal that had
+ been runnin' on for ten years; but I can absorb a lot of information in a short time when I really get my mind pores
+ open.</p>
+
+ <p>At that, though, I expect my head would have been just a junk-heap of back-number facts if I hadn't run across the
+ name of this guy McClave in some of the correspondence. Seems he'd been assistant traffic agent for one of the Runyon
+ lines, but had been dropped durin' a consolidation shake-up. And now he happens to be holdin' down a desk out in our
+ general offices. Just on a chance, I pushes the button for him.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, say, talk about tappin' the main feedpipe! Why, that quiet little Scotchman in the shiny black cutaway coat
+ and the baggy plaid trousers, he knew more about how iron ore gets from the mines to the smelters than I do about
+ puttin' on my own clothes. And as for the inside hist'ry of how we got that tonnage charge wished onto us, why,
+ McClave had been called in when the merry little scheme was first plotted out.<a class="pagenum" name="page_35"
+ title="35" id="page_35"></a></p>
+
+ <p>I made him start at the beginning and explain every item, while we munched fried-egg sandwiches as we went over
+ reports, sorted out old letters, and marked up a perfectly good map of Minnesota. But by three <span class=
+ "smcap">p.m</span> . I had a leather document case stuffed with papers and a cross-index of 'em in my so-called
+ brain.</p>
+
+ <p>"When you're ready, Mr. Ellins," says I, standin' by with my hat in my hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, yes," says he, heavin' himself up reluctant from his desk chair.</p>
+
+ <p>And, sure enough, there's a silk-lined limousine and a French chauffeur waitin' in front of the arcade. In no time
+ at all, too, we're rolled across Seventh Avenue, down through a tunnel, and out alongside a shiny private car with a
+ brass-bound bay-window on one end and flower-boxes hung on the side. They even had a carpet laid on the steps. It's a
+ happy little home on wheels.</p>
+
+ <p>Also there is Bixby the Busy, with his ear out for us.</p>
+
+ <p>Talk about private seccing as a fine art! Why, say, I fairly held my breath watchin' him operate. Every move is as
+ smooth and silent as a steel lathe runnin' in an oil bath. He don't exactly whisper, or give us the hush-up sign, but
+ somehow he gets me steppin' soft and talkin'<a class="pagenum" name="page_36" title="36" id="page_36"></a> under my
+ breath from the minute I hits the front vestibule.</p>
+
+ <p>"So good of you, Mr. Ellins," he coos soothin'. "Will you come right in? Mr. Runyon will be with you in a moment.
+ Just finishing a treatment, you know. This way, gentlemen."</p>
+
+ <p>Say, it was like bein' ushered into church durin' the prayer. Once inside, you'd never guess it was just a car.
+ More like the corner of a perfectly good drawin'-room&mdash;easy chairs, Turkish rugs, silver vases full of roses,
+ double hangin's at the windows.</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you sit here, Mr. Ellins?" murmurs Bixby. "And you here, sir. Pardon me a moment."</p>
+
+ <p>Then he glides about, pullin' down a shade, movin' a vase, studyin' how the light is goin' to strike in, pattin' a
+ cushion, shovin' out a foot-rest&mdash;like he was settin' the stage for the big scene. And right in the midst of it
+ I near spilled the beans by pullin' an afternoon edition out of my pocket. Bixby swoops down on me panicky.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I'm so sorry!" says he, pluckin' the paper out of my fingers. "But may I put this outside? Mr. Runyon cannot
+ stand the rustling of newspapers. Please don't mind. There! Now I think we are ready."<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_37" title="37" id="page_37"></a></p>
+
+ <p>I wanted to warn him that I hadn't quite stopped breathin' yet, but he's off to the other end of the room, where a
+ nurse in a white cap is peekin' through the draperies.</p>
+
+ <p>Bixby nods to her and stands one side. Then we waits a minute&mdash;two minutes. And finally the procession
+ appears.</p>
+
+ <p>First, a nurse carryin' a steamer rug; next, another nurse with a tray; and after them a valet and the private
+ physician with the great Marcus T. walkin' slow between.</p>
+
+ <p>He ain't so imposin' when you get that close, though. Kind of a short, poddy party, who looks like he'd been
+ upholstered generous once but had shrunk a lot. There are heavy bags under his eyes, dewlaps at his mouth-corners,
+ and deep seams across his clean-shaved face. He has sort of a cigar-ash complexion. And yet, under them shaggy brows
+ is a keen pair of eyes that seem to take in everything.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Hickory gets up right off, with his hand out. But it's a social error. Bixby blocks him off graceful. He's in
+ full command, Bixby is. With a one-finger gesture he signals the nurse to drape her rug over the chair. Then he nods
+ to the doctor and the valet to go ahead. They ease Runyon into his seat. Bixby motions 'em to wrap up his knees. By
+ an eyelid flutter<a class="pagenum" name="page_38" title="38" id="page_38"></a> he shows the other nurse where to set
+ her tray.</p>
+
+ <p>It's almost as complicated a process as dockin' an ocean liner. When it's finished, Bixby waves one hand gentle,
+ and they all fade back through the draperies.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello, Ellins," says Runyon. "Mighty good of you to hunt up a wreck like me."</p>
+
+ <p>I almost gasped out loud. Somehow, after seem' him handled like a mummy that way, you didn't expect to hear him
+ speak. It's a shock. Even Old Hickory must have felt something as I did.</p>
+
+ <p>"I&mdash;I didn't know," says he. "When did it happen, Runyon?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, it's nothing," says Marcus T. "I am merely paying up for fifty-odd years of hard living by&mdash;by this.
+ Ever try to exist on artificial sour milk and medicated hay, Ellins? Hope you never come to it. Don't look as though
+ you would. But you were always tougher than I, even back in the State Street days, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>First thing I knew, they were chattin' away free and easy. Course, there was Bixby all the time, standin' behind
+ watchful. And right in the middle of a sentence he didn't hesitate to butt in and hand Mr. Runyon a glass of
+ what<a class="pagenum" name="page_39" title="39" id="page_39"></a> looked like thin whitewash. Marcus T. would take a
+ sip obedient and then go on with his talk. At last he asks if there's anything special he can do for Mr. Ellins.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, yes," says Old Hickory, settin' his jaw. "You might call off your highwaymen on that Manitou terminal lease,
+ Runyon. That is, unless you mean to take all of our mining profits."</p>
+
+ <p>Marcus T.'s eyes brighten up. They almost twinkle.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bixby," says he, "what about that? Has there been an increase in the tonnage rate to the Corrugated?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I think so, sir," says Bixby. "I can look it up, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" says Runyon. "Bixby will look it up."</p>
+
+ <p>"He needn't," says Old Hickory. "It's been doubled, that's all. We had the notice last week. Torchy, did
+ you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yep!" says I, shootin' the letter at him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, well!" says Runyon, after he's gazed at it. "There must have been some well founded cause for such an
+ advance. Bixby, you must&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's because you think you've got us in a hole," breaks in Old Hickory. "We've got<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_40" title="40" id="page_40"></a> to load our boats and you control the docks."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, yes!" chuckles Marcus T. "An unfortunate situation&mdash;for you. But I presume there are other dockage
+ facilities available."</p>
+
+ <p>"If there were," says Mr. Ellins sarcastic, "do you think we would be paying you from three to five millions a
+ year?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Bixby, I fear you must explain our position more fully," goes on Mr. Runyon.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, certainly," says Bixby. "I will have a full report prepared and&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Suppose you tell it to my secretary now," insists Old Hickory, glarin' menacin' at him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do so, Bixby," says Marcus T.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;er&mdash;you see," says Bixby, turnin' to me, "as I understand the case, the only outlet you have to
+ deep water is over our tracks to&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"What about them docks at Three Harbors?" I cuts in.</p>
+
+ <p>"Three Harbors?" repeats Bixby, starin' vague.</p>
+
+ <p>"Precisely," says Marcus T. "As the young man suggests, there is plenty of unemployed dockage at that point. But
+ your ore tracks do not connect with that port."<a class="pagenum" name="page_41" title="41" id="page_41"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"They would if we laid forty miles of rails, branchin' off at Tamarack Junction, " says I. "That spur has all been
+ surveyed and the right of way cleared."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" exclaims Bixby, comin' to life again. "I remember now. Tamarack Junction. We hold a charter for a railroad
+ from there to Three Harbors."</p>
+
+ <p>"You mean you did hold it," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"I beg pardon?" says Bixby, gawpin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"It lapsed," says I, "eighteen months ago. Here's a copy, O. K.'d by a Minnesota notary public. See the date?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Allow me," says Mr. Runyon, reachin' for it.</p>
+
+ <p>Old Hickory gets up and rubbers over his shoulder. "By George!" says he. "It has lapsed, Runyon. Torchy, where's a
+ map of&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Here you are," says I. "You'll see the branch line sketched in there. That would cut our haul about fifteen
+ miles."</p>
+
+ <p>"And leave you with a lot of vacant ore docks on your hands, eh, Runyon?" puts in Old Hickory. "We could have
+ those rails laid by the time the ice was out of the Soo. Well, well! Throws rather a new light on the situation,
+ doesn't it?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_42" title="42" id="page_42"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Marcus T. turns slow and fixes them keen eyes of his on Bixby the Busy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hm-m-m!" says he. "It seems that we have overlooked a point, Bixby. Perhaps, though, you can
+ offer&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>He can. Some shifty private sec, Bixby is.</p>
+
+ <p>"Your milk, sir," says he, grabbin' the tray and shovin' it in front of Runyon.</p>
+
+ <p>For a second or so the great Marcus T. eyes it indignant. Then his shoulders sag, the fire dies out of his eyes,
+ and he takes the glass.</p>
+
+ <p>He's about the best trained plute I ever saw in captivity.</p>
+
+ <p>"And I think the doctor should take your temperature now," adds Bixby. "I will call him."</p>
+
+ <p>As he slips off toward the back end of the car Mr. Runyon lets out a sigh.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's no use, Ellins," says he. "One can't pamper a ruined digestion and still enjoy these friendly little
+ business bouts. One simply can't. Name your own terms for continuing that terminal lease."</p>
+
+ <p>Old Hickory does prompt, for we don't want to buy rails at the price they're bringin' now.</p>
+
+ <p>"And by the way, Runyon," says he, "may I ask what you pay your young man? I'm just curious."<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_43" title="43" id="page_43"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Bixby?" says Runyon. "Oh, twenty-five hundred."</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says Mr. Ellins. "My secretary forgets my milk now and then, but he remembers such trifles as lapsed
+ charters. He is drawing three thousand."</p>
+
+ <p>I hope Marcus T. didn't hear the gasp I lets out&mdash;I tried to smother it. And the first thing I does when we
+ gets back into the limousine is to grin at the boss.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whaddye mean, three thousand?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dollars," says he. "Beginning to-day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Z-z-z-zing!" says I. "Going up, up! And there I was plannin' to take a special course in trained nursin', so I
+ could hold my job."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_44" title="44" id="page_44"></a>
+ <a name="SWITCHING_ARTS_ON_LEON_1156" id="SWITCHING_ARTS_ON_LEON_1156"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+ <h3>SWITCHING ARTS ON LEON</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Oh, sure! We're coming along grand. Did you think we'd be heavin' the blue willow-ware at each other by this time?
+ No. We've hardly displayed any before-breakfast dispositions yet.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that we confine ourselves to the coo vocabulary, or advertise any continuous turtle-dove act. Gettin' married
+ ain't jellied our brains, I hope. Besides, we're busy. I've got a new gilt-edged job to fill, you know; and Vee, she
+ has one of her own, too.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, I can't say that her scheme of runnin' a Boots, Limited, has mesmerized all New York into havin' its
+ shoe-shinin' done out. There's something about this cloth top and white gaiter craze that's puttin' a crimp in her
+ perfectly good plans. But she's doin' fairly well, and she don't have to think up ways of killin' time.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, we have a few other things to think about, too. Just learnin' how to live in New York is a merry little
+ game all by itself. That's<a class="pagenum" name="page_45" title="45" id="page_45"></a> one of my big surprises. I'd
+ thought all along it was so simple.</p>
+
+ <p>But say, we've been gettin' wise to a few facts this last month or so, for we've been tryin' to dope out which one
+ of the forty-nine varieties of New York's home-sweet-home repertoire was the kind for us. I don't mean we've been
+ changin' our street number, or testin' out different four-room-and-bath combinations. The studio apartment I got at a
+ bargain suits first rate. It's the meal proposition.</p>
+
+ <p>First off, we decides gay and reckless that we'll breakfast and lunch in and take our dinners out. That listened
+ well and seemed easy enough&mdash;until Vee got to huntin' up a two-handed, light-footed female party who could boil
+ eggs without scorchin' the shells, dish up such things as canned salmon with cream sauce, and put a few potatoes
+ through the French fry process, doublin' in bed-makin' and dust-chasin' durin' her spare time. That shouldn't call
+ for any prize-winnin' graduate from a cookin' college, should it?</p>
+
+ <p>But say, the specimens that go in for general housework in this burg are a sad lot. I ain't goin' all through the
+ list. I'll just touch lightly on Bertha.</p>
+
+ <p>She was a cheerful soul, even when she was<a class="pagenum" name="page_46" title="46" id="page_46"></a> servin'
+ soggy potatoes or rappin' me in the ear with her elbow as she reached across to fill my water glass.</p>
+
+ <p>"He-he! Haw-haw! Oxcuse, Mister," was Bertha's repartee for such little breaks.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I could plead with her for the umpteenth time to try pourin' from the button hand side, but it would have
+ been simpler to have worn a head guard durin' meals.</p>
+
+ <p>And who would have the heart to put the ban on a yodel that begins in our kitchenette at 7 <span class=
+ "smcap">A.M.</span> , even on cloudy mornin's?</p>
+
+ <p>If Bertha had been No. 1, or even No. 2, she'd have had her passports handed her about the second mornin'; but, as
+ she was the last of a punk half dozen, we tried not to mind her musical interludes. So at the end of three weeks her
+ friendly relations with us were still unbroken, though most of the dishes were otherwise.</p>
+
+ <p>So you might have thought we'd been glad, when 6.30 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> came, to put on our things and
+ join about a million or so other New Yorkers in findin' a dinner joint where the cooks and waiters made no claim to
+ havin' an amateur standin'.</p>
+
+ <p>But, believe me, while my domestic instincts may be sproutin' late, they're comin' strong. I'm beginnin' to yearn
+ for nourishment that I<a class="pagenum" name="page_47" title="47" id="page_47"></a> don't have to learn the French
+ for or pick off'm a menu. I'd like to eat without bein' surrounded by three-chinned female parties with high blood
+ pressure, or bein' stared at by pop-eyed old sports who're givin' some kittenish cloak model a bright evenin'. And
+ Vee feels more or less the same way.</p>
+
+ <p>"Besides," says she, "I wish we could entertain some of our friends."</p>
+
+ <p>"Just what I was wishin'," says I. "Say, couldn't we find a few simple things in the cook-book that Bertha
+ couldn't queer?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Such as canned baked beans and celery?" asks Vee, chucklin'. "And yet, if I stood by and read the directions to
+ her&mdash;who knows?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's try her on the Piddies," I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, we did. And if the potatoes had been cooked a little more and the roast a little less, it wouldn't have been
+ so bad. The olives were all right, even if Bertha did forget to serve 'em until she brought in the ice cream. But
+ then, the Piddies are used to little slips like that, havin' lived so long out in Jersey.</p>
+
+ <p>"You see," explains Vee to me afterwards, "Bertha was a bit flurried over her first dinner-party. She isn't much
+ used to a gas oven, either. Don't you think we might try another?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure!" says I. "What are friends for, anyway? How<a class="pagenum" name="page_48" title="48" id="page_48"></a>
+ about askin' Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellins?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, dear!" sighs Vee, lookin' scared. Then she is struck with a bright idea. "I'll tell you: we will rehearse the
+ next one the night before."</p>
+
+ <p>"Atta girl!" says I. "Swell thought."</p>
+
+ <p>It was while she and Bertha was strugglin' over the cook-book, and gettin' advice from various sources, from
+ housekeepin' magazines to the janitor's wife, that this Leon Battou party shows up with his sob hist'ry.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Torchy!" Vee hails me with, as I come home from the office here the other evenin'. "What becomes of people
+ when they're dispossessed&mdash;when they're put out on the street with their things, you know?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says I, "they generally stay out until they can find a place where they can move in. Has anybody been
+ threatenin' to chuck us out for not&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Silly!" says she. "It's the Battous."</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't know 'em," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"But surely," goes on Vee, "you've seen him. He's that funny little old Frenchman who's always dodging in and out
+ of the elevator with odd-looking parcels under his arm."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, yes!" says I. "The one with the twinklin' eyes and the curly iron-gray hair, who<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_49" title="49" id="page_49"></a> always bows so polite and shoots that bon-shure stuff at you. Him?"</p>
+
+ <p>It was.</p>
+
+ <p>It seems the agent had served notice on 'em that mornin'. They'd been havin' a grand pow-wow over it in the lower
+ vestibule, when Vee had come along and got mixed up in the debate. She'd seen Mrs. Battou doin' the weep act on
+ hubby's shoulder while he was tryin' to explain and makin' all sorts of promises. I expect the agent had heard such
+ tales before. Anyway, he was kind of rough with 'em&mdash;at which Vee had sailed in and told him just what she
+ thought.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure you would have done the same, Torchy," says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"I might," says I, "if he hadn't been too husky. But what now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I told them not to worry a bit," says Vee, "and that when you came home you would tell them what to do. You will,
+ won't you, Torchy?"</p>
+
+ <p>Course, there was only one real sensible answer to that. Who was I, to step in casual and ditch a court order? But
+ say, when the only girl in the universe tackles you with the clingin' clinch, hints that you're a big, brainy hero
+ who can handle any proposition that's batted up to you&mdash;well, that's no time to be sensible.<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_50" title="50" id="page_50"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"I'll do any foolish little thing you name," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Goody!" says Vee. "I just knew you would. We'll go right up and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just a sec," says I. "Maybe I'd better have a private talk with this Mr. Battou first off. Suppose you run up and
+ jolly the old lady while he comes down here."</p>
+
+ <p>She agrees to that, and three minutes later I've struck a pose which is sort of a cross between that of a justice
+ of the supreme court and a bush league umpire, while M. Leon Battou is sittin' on the edge of a chair opposite,
+ conversin' rapid with both hands and a pair of eloquent eyebrows.</p>
+
+ <p>"But consider, monsieur," he's sayin'. "Only because of owing so little! Can they not wait until I have found some
+ good customers for my paintings?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh! Then you're an artist, are you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have the honor," says he. "I should be pleased to have you inspect some of my&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"It wouldn't help a bit," says I. "All I know about art is that as a rule it don't pay. Don't you do anything
+ else?"</p>
+
+ <p>He hunches his shoulders and spreads out both hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is true, what you say of art," he goes<a class="pagenum" name="page_51" title="51" id="page_51"></a> on. "And
+ so then I must do the decorating of walls&mdash;the wreaths of roses on the ceiling. That was my profession when we
+ lived at Péronne. But here&mdash;there is trouble about the union. The greasy plumber will not work where I am, it
+ seems. <i>Eh bien!</i> I am forced out. So I return to my landscapes. Are there not many rich Americans who pay well
+ for such things?"</p>
+
+ <p>I waves him back into his chair.</p>
+
+ <p>"How'd you come to wander so far from this Péronne place?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was because of our son, Henri," says he. "You see, he preferred to be as my father was, a chef. I began that
+ way, too. The Battous always do&mdash;a family of cooks. But I broke away. Henri would not. He became the pastry chef
+ at the Hotel Gaspard in Péronne. And who shall say, too, that he was not an artist in his way? Yes, with a certain
+ fame. At least, they heard here, in New York. You would not believe what they offered if he would leave Péronne. And
+ after months of saying no he said yes. It was true. They paid as they promised&mdash;more. So Henri sends for us to
+ come also. We found him living like a prince. Truly! For more than three years we enjoyed his good fortune.</p>
+
+ <p>"And then&mdash;<i>la guerre</i>! Henri must go to<a class="pagenum" name="page_52" title="52" id="page_52"></a>
+ join his regiment. True, he might have stayed. But we talked not of that. It was for France. So he went, not to
+ return. Ah, yes! At Ypres, after only three months in the trenches. Then I say to the little mother, 'Courage! I,
+ Leon Battou, am still a painter. The art which has been as a pastime shall be made to yield us bread. You shall see.'
+ Ah, I believed&mdash;then."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing doing, eh?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Battou shakes his head.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," says I, "the surest bet just now would be to locate some wall-frescoin'. I'll see what can be done along
+ that line."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, that is noble of you, young man," exclaims Battou. "It is wonderful to find such a friend. A thousand thanks!
+ I will tell the little mother that we are saved."</p>
+
+ <p>With that he shakes me by both hands, gives me a bear hug, and rushes off.</p>
+
+ <p>Pretty soon Vee comes down with smiles in her eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"I just knew you would find a way, Torchy," says she. "You don't know how happy you've made them. Now tell me all
+ about it."</p>
+
+ <p>And say, I couldn't convince her I hadn't done a blamed thing but shoot a little hot air, not after I'd nearly
+ gone hoarse explainin'.<a class="pagenum" name="page_53" title="53" id="page_53"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but you will," says she. "You'll do something."</p>
+
+ <p>Who could help tryin', after that? I tackles the agent with a proposition that Battou should work out the back
+ rent, but he's a fish-eyed gink.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say," he growls out past his cigar, "if we tried to lug along every panhandling artist that wanted to graft rent
+ off us, we'd be in fine shape by the end of the year, wouldn't we? Forget it."</p>
+
+ <p>"How about his art stuff?" I asks Vee, when I got back.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, utterly hopeless," says she. "But one can't tell him so. He doesn't know how bad it is. I suppose he is all
+ right as a wall decorator. Do you know, Torchy, they must be in serious straits. Those two little rooms of theirs are
+ almost bare, and I'm sure they've been living on cheese and crackers for days. What do you think I've done?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sent 'em an anonymous ham by parcels post?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"No," says Vee. "I'm going to have them down to-night for the rehearsal dinner."</p>
+
+ <p>"Fine dope!" says I. "And if they survive bein' practiced on&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>But Vee has skipped off to the kitchenette without waitin' to hear the rest.<a class="pagenum" name="page_54"
+ title="54" id="page_54"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Is this to be a reg'lar dress rehearsal?" I asks, when I comes home again. "Should I doll up regardless?"</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, she says I must. I was just strugglin' into my dinner coat, too, when the bell rings. I expect Vee had forgot
+ to tell 'em that six-forty-five was our reg'lar hour. And say, M. Leon was right there with the boulevard
+ costume&mdash;peg-top trousers, fancy vest, flowin' tie, and a silk tile. As for Madame Battou, she's all in gray and
+ white.</p>
+
+ <p>I'd towed 'em into the studio, and was havin' 'em shed their things, when Vee bounces in out of the kitchenette
+ and announces impetuous:</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Torchy! We've made a mess of everything. That horrid leg of lamb won't do anything but sozzle away in the
+ pan; the string-beans have been scorched; and&mdash;oh, goodness!"</p>
+
+ <p>She'd caught sight of our guests.</p>
+
+ <p>"Please don't mind," says Vee. "We're not very good cooks, Bertha and I. We&mdash;we've spoiled everything, I
+ guess."</p>
+
+ <p>She's tryin' to be cheerful over it. And she sure is a picture, standin' there with a big apron coverin' up most
+ of her evenin' dress, and her upper lip a bit trembly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Buck up, Vee," says I. "Better luck next time. Chuck the whole shootin' match into the<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_55" title="55" id="page_55"></a> discards, and we'll all chase around to Roverti's and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Bother Roverti's!" breaks in Vee. "Can't we ever have a decent dinner in our own home? Am I too stupid for that?
+ And there's that perfectly gug-good l-l-l-leg of&mdash;of&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Pardon," says M. Battou, steppin' to the front; "but perhaps, if you would permit, I might assist with&mdash;with
+ the lamb."</p>
+
+ <p>It's a novel idea, I admit. No wonder Vee gasps a little.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?" says I. "Course it ain't reg'lar, but if Mr. Battou wants to do some expert coachin', I expect you and
+ Bertha could use it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do, Leon," urges Madame Battou. "Lamb, is it? Oh, he is wonderful with lamb."</p>
+
+ <p>She hadn't overstated the case, either. Inside of two minutes he has his coat off, a bath towel draped over his
+ fancy vest, and has sent Bertha skirmishin' down the avenue for garlic, cloves, parsley, carrots, and a few other
+ things that had been overlooked, it seems.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, we stands grouped around the kitchenette door for a while, watchin' him resuscitate that pale-lookin' leg of
+ lamb, jab things into it, pour stuff over it, and mesmerize the gas oven into doin' its full duty.</p>
+
+ <p>Once he gets started, he ain't satisfied with<a class="pagenum" name="page_56" title="56" id="page_56"></a> simply
+ turnin' out the roast. He takes some string-beans and cuts 'em into shoelaces; he carves rosettes out of beets and
+ carrots; he produces a swell salad out of nothing at all; and with a little flour and whipped cream he throws
+ together some kind of puffy dessert that looked like it would melt in your mouth.</p>
+
+ <p>And by seven-thirty we was sittin' down to a meal such as you don't meet up with outside of some of them Fifth
+ Avenue joints where you have to own a head waiter before they let you in.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whisper, Professor," says I, "did you work a spell on it, or what?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah-h-h!" says Battou, chucklin' and rubbin' his hands together. "It is cooked <i>à la Paysan</i>, after the
+ manner of Péronne, and with it is the sauce château. "</p>
+
+ <p>"That isn't mere cookery," says Vee; "that's art."</p>
+
+ <p>It was quite a cheery evenin'. And after the Battous had gone, Vee and I asked each other, almost in chorus: "Do
+ you suppose he'd do it again?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He will if I'm any persuader," says I. "Wouldn't it be great to spring something like that on Mr. Robert?"</p>
+
+ <p>And while I'm shavin' next mornin' I connect<a class="pagenum" name="page_57" title="57" id="page_57"></a> with
+ the big idea. Do you ever get 'em that way? It cost me a nick under the ear, but I didn't care. While I'm usin' the
+ alum stick I sketches out the scheme for Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"But, Torchy!" says she. "Do you think he would&mdash;really?"</p>
+
+ <p>Before I can answer there's a ring at the door, and here is M. Leon Battou.</p>
+
+ <p>"The agent once more!" says he, producin' a paper. "In three days, it says. But you have found me the
+ wall-painting, yes?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Professor," says I, "I hate to say it, but there's nothin' doing in the free-hand fresco
+ line&mdash;absolutely."</p>
+
+ <p>He slumps into a chair, and that pitiful, hunted look settles in his eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then&mdash;then we must go," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Listen, Professor," says I, pattin' him soothin' on the shoulder. "Why not can this art stuff, that nobody wants,
+ and switch to somethin' you're a wizard at?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You&mdash;you mean," says he, "that I should&mdash;should turn chef? I&mdash;Leon Battou&mdash;in a big noisy
+ hotel kitchen? Oh, but I could not. No, I could not! "</p>
+
+ <p>"Professor," says I, "the only person in this town that I know of who's nutty enough to want to hire a wall
+ decorator reg'lar is me!"<a class="pagenum" name="page_58" title="58" id="page_58"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"You!" gasps Battou, starin' around at our twelve by eighteen livin'-room.</p>
+
+ <p>I nods.</p>
+
+ <p>"What would you take it on for as a steady job?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, anything that would provide for us," says he, eager. "But how&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"That's just the point," says I. "When you wasn't paintin' could you cook a little on the side? Officially you'd
+ be a decorator, but between times&mdash;&mdash; Eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>He's a keen one, Mr. Battou.</p>
+
+ <p>"For so charming young people," says he, bowin' low, "it would be a great pleasure. And the little
+ mother&mdash;ah, you should see what a manager she is! She can make a franc go farther. Could she assist also?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Could she!" exclaims Vee. "If she only would!"</p>
+
+ <p>Well, say, inside of half an hour we'd fixed up the whole deal, I'd armed Battou with a check to shove under the
+ nose of that agent, and Vee had given Bertha her permanent release. And believe me, compared to what was put before
+ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellins that evenin', the dress rehearsal dinner looked like Monday night at an actors'
+ boardin'-house.<a class="pagenum" name="page_59" title="59" id="page_59"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"I say," whispers Mr. Robert, "your cook must be a real artist."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's how he's carried on the family payroll," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course," says Vee afterwards, "while we can afford it, I suppose, it does seem scandalously extravagant for us
+ to have cooking like that every day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Rather than have you worried with any more Bunglin' Berthas," says I, "I'd subsidize the whole of Péronne to come
+ over. And just think of all I'll save by not havin' to buy my hat back from the coat-room boys every night."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_60" title="60" id="page_60"></a>
+ <a name="A_RECRUIT_FOR_THE_EIGHT-THREE_1571" id="A_RECRUIT_FOR_THE_EIGHT-THREE_1571"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+ <h3>A RECRUIT FOR THE EIGHT-THREE</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Have you a shiny little set of garden tools in your home? Have we? Well, I should seed catalogue. Honest to
+ goodness! Here! I can show you a local time-table and my commuter's ticket. How about that, eh, for me?</p>
+
+ <p>And I don't know now just what it was worked the sudden shift for us&mdash;the Battous, or our visit to the Robert
+ Ellinses', or meetin' up with MacGregor Shinn, the consistent grouch.</p>
+
+ <p>It begun with window-boxes. Professor Leon Battou, our official wall decorator and actin' cook, springs 'em on me
+ timid one day after lunch. It had been some snack, too&mdash;onion soup sprinkled with croutons and sprayed with
+ grated cheese; calf's brains <i>au buerre noir</i>; a mixed salad; and a couple of gooseberry tarts with the
+ demi-tasse. Say, I'm gettin' so I can eat in French, even if I can't talk it.</p>
+
+ <p>And while all that may listen expensive, I have Vee's word for it that since Madame Battou<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_61" title="61" id="page_61"></a> has been doin' the marketin' the high cost of livin' has been jarred off the
+ roost. I don't know how accurate Professor Leon is at countin' up the calories in every meal, but I'm here to
+ announce that he always produces something tasty, with no post-prandial regrets concealed in the bottom of the
+ casserole.</p>
+
+ <p>"Professor," says I, "I've been a stranger to this burry brains style of nourishment a long time, but you can ring
+ an encore on that whenever you like."</p>
+
+ <p>He smiles grateful, but shakes his head.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Monsieur," says he,&mdash;oh, yes, just like that,&mdash;"but if I had the fresh chives, the&mdash;the <i>fin
+ herbes</i>&mdash;ah, then you should see!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, can't Madame get what you need at the stores?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"But at such a price!" says Leon. "And of so discouraging a quality. While, if we had but a few handfuls of good
+ soil in some small boxes by the windows&mdash;&mdash; Come, I will show you. Here, and here, where the sun comes in
+ the morning. I could secure them myself if you would not think them unlovely to have in view."</p>
+
+ <p>"How about it, Vee?" I asks. "Are we too proud to grow our soup greens on the premises?"</p>
+
+ <p>She says we ain't, so I tells Leon to breeze<a class="pagenum" name="page_62" title="62" id="page_62"></a> ahead
+ with his hangin' garden. Course, I ain't lookin' for anything more'n a box on the ledge. But he's an ingenious old
+ boy, Leon. With a hammer and saw and a few boxes from the grocery, he builds a rack that fits into one of the front
+ windows; and the first thing I know, he has the space chuckful of shallow trays, and seeds planted in every one. A
+ few days later, and the other window is blocked off similar. Also I get a bill from the florist for two bushels of
+ dirt.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, our front windows did look kind of odd, and our view out was pretty well barred off; but he had painted the
+ things up neat, and he did all his waterin' and fussin' around early in the mornin', so we let it ride. When he
+ starts in to use our bedroom windows the same way, though, I has to call him off.</p>
+
+ <p>"See here, Professor," says I, "you ain't mistakin' this studio apartment for a New Jersey truck-farm, are you!
+ Besides, we have to keep them windows open at night, and your green stuff is apt to get nipped."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but the night air is bad to breathe, Monsieur," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not for us," says I. "Anyway, we're used to it, so I guess you'll have to lay off this bedroom garden
+ business."<a class="pagenum" name="page_63" title="63" id="page_63"></a></p>
+
+ <p>He takes away the boxes, but it's plain he's disappointed. I believe if I'd let him gone on he'd had cabbages
+ growin' on the mantelpiece, a lettuce bed on the readin'-table, and maybe a potato patch on the fire-escape. I never
+ knew gardenin' could be made such an indoor sport.</p>
+
+ <p>"Poor chap!" says Vee. "He has been telling me what wonderful things he used to raise when he lived in Péronne.
+ Isn't there some way, Torchy, that we could give him more room?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We might rent the roof and glass it in for him," I suggests, "or get a permit to bridge over the street."</p>
+
+ <p>"Silly!" says she, rumplin' my red hair reckless.</p>
+
+ <p>That was about the time we was havin' some of that delayed winter weather, and it was touchin' to see Professor
+ Battou nurse along them pale green shoots that he'd coaxed up in his window-boxes. Then it runs off warm and sunny
+ again, just as we gets this week-end invite from Mr. Robert.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I'd been out to his Long Island place before, but somehow I hadn't got excited over it. This time it's
+ different. Vee was goin' along, for one thing. And I expect the fact that spring had come bouncin' in on us after
+ a<a class="pagenum" name="page_64" title="64" id="page_64"></a> hard winter had something to do with our enthusiasm
+ for gettin' out of town. You know how it is. For eleven months you're absolutely sure the city's the only place to
+ live in, and you feel sorry for them near-Rubes who have to catch trains to get home. And then, all of a sudden,
+ about this time of year, you get that restless feelin', and wonder what it is ails you. I think it struck Vee harder
+ than it did me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Goody!" says she, when I tell her we're expected to go out Saturday noon and stay over until Monday mornin'. "It
+ is real country out there, too, isn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Blamed near an hour away," says I. "Ought to be, hadn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope they have lilac bushes in bloom," says Vee. "Do you know, Torchy, if I lived in the country, I'd have
+ those if nothing else. Wouldn't you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I expect so," says I, "though I ain't doped out just what I would do in a case like that. It ain't seemed worth
+ while. But if lilacs are the proper stunt for a swell country place, I'll bet Mr. Robert's got 'em."</p>
+
+ <p>By the time we'd been shot out to Harbor Hills station, though, I'd forgot whether it was lilacs or
+ lilies-of-the-valley that Vee was particular about; for Mr. Robert goes along<a class="pagenum" name="page_65" title=
+ "65" id="page_65"></a> with us, and he's joshin' us about our livin' in a four-and-bath and sportin' a French
+ chef.</p>
+
+ <p>"Really," says he, "to live up to him you ought to move into a brewer's palace on Riverside Drive, at least."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Battou would be satisfied if I'd lease Madison Square park for him, so he could raise onions," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Which reminds Mr. Robert of something.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I say!" he goes on. "You must see my garden. I'm rather proud of it, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your garden!" says I, grinnin'. "You don't mean you've been gettin' the hoe and rake habit, Mr. Robert?"</p>
+
+ <p>Honest, that's the last thing you'd look for from him, for until he got married about the only times he ever
+ strayed from the pavements was when he went yachtin'. But by the way he talks now you'd think farmer was his middle
+ name.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, over there," says he, after we've been picked up at the station by his machine and rolled off three or four
+ miles, "over there I am raising a crop of Italian clover to plow in. That's a new hedge I'm setting out,
+ too&mdash;hydrangeas, I think. It takes time to get things in shape, you see."</p>
+
+ <p>"Looks all right to me, as it is," says I.<a class="pagenum" name="page_66" title="66" id="page_66"></a> "You got
+ a front yard big enough to get lost in."</p>
+
+ <p>Also the house ain't any small shack, with all its dormers and striped awnin's and deep verandas.</p>
+
+ <p>But it's too nice an afternoon to spend much time inside, and after we've found Mrs. Robert, Vee asks to be shown
+ the garden.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly," says Mr. Robert. "I will exhibit it myself. That is&mdash;er&mdash;by the way, Gertrude, where the
+ deuce is that garden of ours?"</p>
+
+ <p>Come to find out, it was Mrs. Robert who was the pie-plant and radish expert. She could tell you which rows was
+ beets and which was corn without lookin' it up on her chart.</p>
+
+ <p>She'd been takin' a course in landscape-gardenin', too; and as she pilots us around the grounds, namin' the
+ different bushes and things, she listens like a nursery pamphlet. And Vee falls for it hard.</p>
+
+ <p>"How perfectly splendid," says she, "to be able to plan things like that, and to know so many shrubs by their long
+ names. But haven't you anything as common as lilacs!"</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Robert laughs and shakes her head.</p>
+
+ <p>"They were never mentioned in my course, you see," says she. "But our nearest neighbor has some wonderful lilac
+ bushes. Robert, don't<a class="pagenum" name="page_67" title="67" id="page_67"></a> you think we might walk down the
+ east drive and ask your dear friend Mr. MacGregor Shinn if he'd mind&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Decidedly no," cuts in Mr. Robert. "I'd much prefer not to trouble Mr. Shinn at all."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, very well," says Mrs. Robert. And then, turnin' to us: "We haven't been particularly fortunate in our
+ relations with Mr. Shinn; our fault, no doubt."</p>
+
+ <p>But you know Vee. Half an hour later, when we've been left to ourselves, she announces:</p>
+
+ <p>"Come along, Torchy. I am going to find that east drive."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a case of lilacs or bust, eh?" says I. "All right; I'm right behind you. But let's make it a sleuthy
+ getaway, so they won't know."</p>
+
+ <p>We let on it was a risky stunt, slippin' out a side terrace door, dodgin' past the garage, and finally strikin' a
+ driveway different from the one we'd come in by. We follows along until we fetches up by some big stone
+ gateposts.</p>
+
+ <p>"There they are!" exclaims Vee. "Loads of them. And aren't they fragrant? Smell, Torchy."<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_68" title="68" id="page_68"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"I am," says I, sniffin' deep. "Don't you hear me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes; and that Mr. Shinn will too, if you're as noisy as that over it," says she. "I suppose that is where he
+ lives. Isn't it the cutest little cottage?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It needs paint here and there," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know," says Vee. "But look at that old Dutch roof with the wide eaves, and the recessed doorway, and the
+ trellises on either side, and that big clump of purple lilacs nestling against the gable end. Oh, and there's a
+ cunning little pond in the rear, just where it ought to be! I do wish we might go in and walk around a bit."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?" says I. "What would it hurt?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But that Shinn person," protests Vee, "might&mdash;might not&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, he couldn't any more'n shoo us off," says I, "and if he's nutty enough to do that after a good look at you,
+ then he's hopeless."</p>
+
+ <p>"You absurd boy!" says Vee, squeezin' my hand. "Well, anyway, we might venture in a step or two."</p>
+
+ <p>As a matter of fact, there don't seem to be anyone in sight. You might almost think nobody lived there; for the
+ new grass ain't been<a class="pagenum" name="page_69" title="69" id="page_69"></a> cut, the flower beds are full of
+ dry weeds left over from last fall, and most of the green shutters are closed.</p>
+
+ <p>There's smoke comin' from the kitchen chimney, though, so we wanders around front, bringin' up under the big lilac
+ bush. It's just covered with blossoms&mdash;a truck-load, I should say; and it did seem a shame, Vee bein' so strong
+ for 'em, that she couldn't have one little spray.</p>
+
+ <p>"About a quarter a bunch, them would be on Broadway," says I, diggin' up some change. "Well, here's where Neighbor
+ Shinn makes a sale."</p>
+
+ <p>And, before Vee can object, I've snapped off the end of a twig.</p>
+
+ <p>I'd just dropped the quarter in an envelop and was stickin' it on the end of the broken branch, when the front
+ door opens, and out dashes this tall gink with the rusty Vandyke and the hectic face. Yep, it's a lurid map, all
+ right. Some of it might have been from goin' without a hat in the wind and weather, for his forehead and bald spot
+ are just as high-colored as the rest; but there's a lot of temper tint, too, lightin' up the tan, and the deep
+ furrows between the eyes shows it ain't an uncommon state for him to be in. Quite a husk he is, costumed<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_70" title="70" id="page_70"></a> in a plaid golf suit, and he bores down on us just as gentle as
+ a tornado.</p>
+
+ <p>"I say, you!" he calls out. "Stop where you are."</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't hurry," says I. "We'll wait for you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye will, wull ye!" he snarls, as he comes stampin' up in front of us. "Ye'd best. And what have ye there, Miss?
+ Hah! Pickin' me posies, eh? And trespassin', too."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's right," says I. "Petty larceny and breakin' and enterin'. I'm the guilty party."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure there's nothing to make such a fuss about," says Vee, eyin' him scornful.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, ho!" says he. "It's a light matter, I suppose, prowling around private grounds and pilfering? I ought to be
+ taking it as a joke, eh? Don't ye know, you two, I could have you taken in charge for this?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Breeze ahead, then," says I. "Call the high sheriff. Only let's not get all foamed up over it, Mr. MacGregor
+ Shinn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ha!" says he. "Then ye know who I am? Maybe you're stopping up at the big house? "</p>
+
+ <p>"We are guests of Mr. Ellins, your neighbor," puts in Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's no neighbor of mine," snaps Shinn.<a class="pagenum" name="page_71" title="71" id="page_71"></a> "Not him.
+ His bulldog worries me cat, his roosters wake me up in the morning, and his Dago workmen chatter about all day long.
+ No, I'll not own such a man as neighbor. Nor will I have his guests stealing my posies."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then take it," says Vee, throwing the lilac spray on the ground.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll find a quarter stuck on the bush," says I. "Sorry, MacGregor, we couldn't make a trade. The young lady is
+ mighty fond of lilacs."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is she, now?" says Shinn, still scowlin' at us.</p>
+
+ <p>"And she thinks your place here is pretty cute," I adds.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a rotten hole," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe you're a poor judge," says I. "If it was fixed up a bit I should think it might be quite spiffy."</p>
+
+ <p>"What call has an old bachelor to be fixing things up?" he demands. "What do I care how the place looks? And what
+ business is it of yours, anyway?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Say, you're a consistent grouch, ain't you?" says I, givin' him the grin. "What's the particular
+ trouble&mdash;was you toppin' your drive to-day?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Slicin', mon," says he. "Hardly a tee shot<a class="pagenum" name="page_72" title="72" id="page_72"></a> found
+ the fairway the whole round. And then you two come breaking me bushes."</p>
+
+ <p>"My error," says I. "But you should have hung out a sign that you was inside chewin' nails."</p>
+
+ <p>"I was doing nothing of the kind," says he. "I was waiting for that grinning idiot, Len Hung, to give me me
+ tea."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, don't choke over it when you do get it," says I. "And if you ain't ready to sic the police on us we'll be
+ trotting along back."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye wull not," says MacGregor; "ye'll have tea with me."</p>
+
+ <p>It sounds like a threat, and I can see Vee gettin' ready to object strenuous. So I gives her the nudge.</p>
+
+ <p>I expect it's because I'm so used to Old Hickory's blowin' out a fuse that I don't duck quicker when a gas-bomb
+ disposition begins to sputter around. They don't mean half of it, these furious fizzers.</p>
+
+ <p>Sometimes it's sciatica, more often a punk digestion, and seldom pure cussedness. If you don't humor 'em by comin'
+ back messy yourself, but just jolly 'em along, they're apt to work out of it. And I'd seen sort of a human flicker in
+ them blue-gray eyes of MacGregor Shinn's.<a class="pagenum" name="page_73" title="73" id="page_73"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Vee," says I, "our peevish friend is invitin' us to take tea with him. Shall we chance it?"</p>
+
+ <p>And you know what a good sport Vee is. She lets the curve come into her mouth corners again, both of her cheek
+ dimples show, and she shoots a quizzin' smile at Mr. Shinn.</p>
+
+ <p>"Does he say it real polite?" she asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Na," says MacGregor. "But there'll be hot scones and marmalade."</p>
+
+ <p>"M-m-m-m!" says Vee. "Let's, Torchy."</p>
+
+ <p>It's an odd finish to an affair that started so scrappy. Not that Shinn reverses himself entirely, or turns from a
+ whiskered golf grump into a stage fairy in spangled skirts. He goes right on with his growlin' and
+ grumblin'&mdash;about the way his Chink cook serves the tea, about havin' to live in a rotten hole like Harbor Hills,
+ about everything in general. But a great deal of it is just to hear himself talk, I judge.</p>
+
+ <p>We had a perfectly good high tea, and them buttered scones with marmalade couldn't be beat. Also he shows us all
+ over the house, and Vee raves about it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look, Torchy!" says she. "That glimpse of water from the living-room windows. Isn't that dear? And one could have
+ such a wonderful<a class="pagenum" name="page_74" title="74" id="page_74"></a> garden beyond. Such a splendid big
+ fireplace, too. And what huge beams in the ceiling! It's a very old house, isn't it, Mr. Shinn?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The rascally agent who sold it to me said it was," says MacGregor, "but I wouldn't believe a word of his on any
+ subject. 'Did I ask you for an old house, at all?' I tells him. For what I wanted was just a place where I could live
+ quiet, and maybe have me game of golf when I wanted it. But here I've gone off me game; and, besides, the country's
+ no place to live quiet in. I should be in town, so I should, like any decent white man. I've a mind to look up a
+ place at once. Try another scone, young lady."</p>
+
+ <p>So it was long after six before we got away, and the last thing MacGregor does is to load Vee down with a whole
+ armful of lilac blossoms.</p>
+
+ <p>I suppose Mr. and Mrs. Robert thought we'd been makin' a wholesale raid when they saw us comin' in with the
+ plunder. Mrs. Robert almost turns pale.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mercy!" says she. "You don't mean to say you got all those from our neighbor's bushes, do you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Uh-huh," says I. "We've been mesmerizin'<a class="pagenum" name="page_75" title="75" id="page_75"></a> MacGregor.
+ He's as tame a Scot now as you'd want to see."</p>
+
+ <p>They could hardly believe it, and when they heard about our havin' tea with him they gasped.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of all persons!" says Mrs. Robert. "Why, he has been glaring at us for a year, and sending us the most bristling
+ messages. I don't understand."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Robert, though, winks knowin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"Some of Torchy's red-headed diplomacy, I suspect," says he. "I must engage you to make our peace with
+ MacGregor."</p>
+
+ <p>That's all we saw of him, though, durin' our stay. For one thing, we was kept fairly busy. I never knew you could
+ have so much fun in the country. Ever watch a bunch of young ducks waddlin' about? Say, ain't they a circus! And them
+ fluffy little chicks squabblin' over worms. Honest, I near laughed myself sick. Vee was for luggin' some of 'em home
+ to the apartment. But she was thrilled over 'most everything out there, from the fat robins on the lawn to the new
+ leaves on the trees.</p>
+
+ <p>And, believe me, when we gets back to town again, our studio apartment seems cramped and stuffy. We talked over
+ everything we'd seen and done at the Ellinses'. <a class="pagenum" name="page_76" title="76" id="page_76"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"That's really living, isn't it?" says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not," says I, "with a twenty-room house, and grounds half as big as Central Park?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know," says Vee. "But a little place like Mr. Shinn's would be large enough for us."</p>
+
+ <p>"I expect it would," says I. "You don't really think you'd like to live out there, do you, though?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wouldn't I!" says Vee, her eyes sparklin'. "I'd love it."</p>
+
+ <p>"What would you do all day alone?" I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd raise ducks and chickens and flowers," says Vee. "And Leon could have a garden. Just think!"</p>
+
+ <p>Yep&mdash;I thought. I must have kept awake hours that night, tryin' not to. And the more I mulled it
+ over&mdash;&mdash; Well, in the mornin' I had a talk with Mr. Robert, after which I got busy with the long-distance
+ 'phone. I didn't say anything much at lunch about what I'd done, but around three o'clock I calls up the
+ apartment.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm luggin' home someone to dinner," says I. "Guess who?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee couldn't.</p>
+
+ <p>"MacGregor the grouch," says I.<a class="pagenum" name="page_77" title="77" id="page_77"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Really!" says Vee. "How funny!"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's part of the plot," says I. "Tell the Professor to spread himself on the eatings, and have the rooms all
+ fixed up slick."</p>
+
+ <p>Vee says she will. And she does. MacGregor falls for it, too. You should have seen him after dinner, leanin' back
+ comfortable in our biggest chair, sippin' his coffee, and puffin' one of Old Hickory's special perfectos that I'd
+ begged for the occasion.</p>
+
+ <p>And still I didn't let on. What I'm after is to have him spring the proposition on me. Just before he's ready to
+ go, too, he does.</p>
+
+ <p>"I say," says he casual, "this isn't such a bad hole you have here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perfectly rotten," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then we might make a trade," says he. "What?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There's no tellin'," says I. "You mean a swap, as things stand?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's it," says he. "I'm no hand for moving rubbish about."</p>
+
+ <p>"Me either," says I. "But if you mean business, suppose you drop in to-morrow at the office, about ten-thirty, and
+ talk it over."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well," says MacGregor. "I'll stop in town to-night."<a class="pagenum" name="page_78" title="78" id=
+ "page_78"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Torchy!" says Vee, after he's gone. "Do&mdash;do you suppose he will&mdash;really? "</p>
+
+ <p>"You're still for it, eh?" says I. "Sure, now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, it would be almost too good to be true," says she. "That could be made just the dearest place!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," says I; "but my job is to talk MacGregor into lettin' it go cheap, or else we can't afford to touch
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>Well, I can't claim it was all my smooth work that did the trick, for MacGregor had bought the place at a bargain
+ first off, and now he was anxious to unload. Still, he hadn't been born north of Glasgow for nothing. But the figures
+ Mr. Robert said would be about right I managed to shade by twenty per cent., and my lump invoice of that old mahogany
+ of ours maybe was a bit generous. Anyway, when I goes home that night I tosses Vee a long envelop.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's this?" says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's your chicken permit," says I. "All aboard for Lilac Lodge! Gee! I wonder should I grow whiskers, livin'
+ out there?"</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_79" title="79" id="page_79"></a>
+ <a name="TORCHY_IN_THE_GAZINKUS_CLASS_2062" id="TORCHY_IN_THE_GAZINKUS_CLASS_2062"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+ <h3>TORCHY IN THE GAZINKUS CLASS</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I expect I'll get used to it all in time. This rural stuff, I mean. But it ain't goin' to come easy. When you've
+ been brought up to think of home as some place where you've got a right to leave your trunk as long as you pay the
+ rent prompt,&mdash;a joint where you have so many square feet of space on a certain floor, and maybe eight or ten
+ inches of brick and plaster between you and a lot of strangers,&mdash;and then all of a sudden you switch to a whole
+ house that's all yours, with gobs of land all around it, and trees and bushes and things that you can do what you
+ like with&mdash;well, it's sort of staggerin' at first.</p>
+
+ <p>Why, the day Vee and I moved into this Harbor Hills place that I'd made the swift trade for with MacGregor Shinn,
+ we just had our baggage dumped in the middle of the livin'-room, chucked our wraps on some chairs, and went scoutin'
+ around from one room to another for over an hour, kind of nutty and excited.<a class="pagenum" name="page_80" title=
+ "80" id="page_80"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, look, Torchy!" Vee would exclaim about twice a minute when she discovered something new.</p>
+
+ <p>You know, we'd been in the house only once before, and then we'd looked around just casual. And if you want to
+ find out how little you really see when you think you're lookin', you want to make a deal like that once&mdash;buy a
+ joint just as it stands, and then, a few days after, camp down in it and tot up what you've really got. Why, say,
+ you'd 'most thought we'd been blindfolded that first time.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, this was different. Now we was takin' stock, you might say, of the things we was goin' to live with. And,
+ believe me, I never had any idea I'd ever own such a collection, or so big a slice of the U. S. A.</p>
+
+ <p>"Only think, Torchy," says Vee, after we've made the rounds inside. "Ten rooms, just for us!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Twelve, countin' the cellar and attic," says I. "But there's more outside, ain't there?"</p>
+
+ <p>Yep, there was. There was an old stable that had been turned into a garage, with a couple of rooms finished off
+ upstairs. Then there was a carriage shed, with more rooms over that, also a chicken house beyond. And stowed away in
+ odd corners was all kinds of junk that might be<a class="pagenum" name="page_81" title="81" id="page_81"></a> more or
+ less useful to have: a couple of lawn-mowers, an old sleigh hoisted up on the rafters of the carriage house, a weird
+ old buggy, a plow, a grindstone, a collection of old chairs and sofas that had seen better days, a birch-bark
+ canoe&mdash;things like that.</p>
+
+ <p>Then there was our lily pond. We had to walk all round that, poke in with a pole to see how deep it might be, and
+ wonder if there was any fish in it. On beyond was some trees&mdash;apple and pear and cherry, accordin' to Vee, and
+ 'way at the back a tall cedar hedge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, it's almost an estate," says Vee. "Nearly five acres, you know. How does it seem, Torchy, to think that all
+ this is ours?"</p>
+
+ <p>"How?" says I. "Why, I feel like I was the Grand Gazinkus of Gazook."</p>
+
+ <p>But, at that, my feelin's wa'n't a marker to the emotions Professor Leon Battou, our artist-chef, manages to work
+ up. He's so tickled at gettin' back to the country and away from the city, where him and Madame Battou come so near
+ starvin' on the street, that he goes skippin' around like a sunshine kid, pattin' the trees, droppin' down on his
+ hands and knees in the grass to dig up dandelions, and keepin' up a steady stream of explosive French and rapid-fire
+ English.<a class="pagenum" name="page_82" title="82" id="page_82"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, but it is all so good!" says he. "<i>Le bleu ciel, les fleurs, les oiseaux! C'est bonne, tres bonne. Ne c'est
+ pas?</i>"</p>
+
+ <p>"I expect it is, Leon," says I. "Although I might not state it just that way myself. Picked out a spot yet for
+ your garden?"</p>
+
+ <p>Foolish question! That was his first move, after taking a glance at the particular brand of cook-stove he'd got to
+ wrestle with. Just to the left of the kitchen wing is a little plot shut in by privet bushes and a trellis, which is
+ where he says the <i>fine herbes</i> are meant to grow. He tows us around there and exhibits it chesty. Mostly it's
+ full of last year's weeds; but he explains how he will soon have it in shape. And for the next week the only way we
+ ever got any meals cooked was because Madame Battou used to go drag him in by the arm and make him quit diggin' long
+ enough to hash up some of them tasty dishes for us.</p>
+
+ <p>If all amateur gardeners are apt to go so dippy over it, I hope I don't catch the disease. No danger, I guess. I
+ made my stab at it about the third day, when Vee wanted some ground spaded up for a pansy bed. And say, in half an
+ hour, there, I'd worked up enough palm blisters and backache to last me a month. It may seem sport to some people,
+ but to me it has<a class="pagenum" name="page_83" title="83" id="page_83"></a> all the ear-marks of plain, hard work,
+ such as you can indulge in reg'lar by carryin' a foldin' dinner-pail and lettin' yourself out to a padrone.</p>
+
+ <p>Leon, though, just couldn't seem to let it alone. He almost made a vice of it, to my mind. Why, say, he's out
+ there at first crack of day, whenever that is; and in the evenin', as soon as he has served dinner, he sneaks out to
+ put in a few more licks, and stays until it's so dark he can hardly find his way back.</p>
+
+ <p>You know all them window-boxes he had clutterin' up the studio apartment. Well, he insists on cratin' every last
+ one of 'em and expressin' 'em along; and now he has all that alleged lettuce and parsley and carrots and so on set
+ out in neat little rows; and when he ain't sprinklin' 'em with the hose or dosin' 'em with fertilizer, he's out there
+ ticklin' 'em with a rake.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gee!" says I. "I thought all you had to do to a garden was just to chuck in the seeds and let 'em grow. But
+ accordin' to your method it would be less trouble bringin' up a pair of twins."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah-h-h-h!" says he. "But monsieur has not the passion for growing green things. "</p>
+
+ <p>"Thanks be, then," says I. "It would land me in the liniment ward if I had."<a class="pagenum" name="page_84"
+ title="84" id="page_84"></a></p>
+
+ <p>I must say, though, that Vee's 'most as bad with her flowers. Honest, when she shows me where she's planned to
+ have this and that, and hints that I can get busy durin' my spare time with the spade, I almost wished we was back in
+ town.</p>
+
+ <p>"What?" I gasps. "Want me to excavate all that? Hal-lup!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Pooh!" says Vee. "It will do you good."</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe she thought so. But I knew it wouldn't. So I chases up the hill to the Ellins place, and broke in on Mr.
+ Robert just as he's finishin' breakfast.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say," says I, "you ain't got a baby-grand steam-shovel or anything like that around the place, have you?"</p>
+
+ <p>He says he's sorry, but he ain't. When he hears what I'm up against, though, he comes to the rescue noble by
+ lendin' me one of his expert Dago soil-disturbers, at $1.75 per&mdash;and with Vee bossin' him she got the whole job
+ done in half a day. After that I begun to enjoy gardenin' a bit more. I'm gettin' to be a real shark at it, too. And
+ ambitious! You ought to hear me.</p>
+
+ <p>"How about havin' a couple more lanes of string-beans laid out?" I suggests. "And <a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_85" title="85" id="page_85"></a> maybe a few hundred mounds of green corn, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>And then I can watch Joe start the enterprise with a plow and an old white horse, and I can go to the office
+ feelin' that, no matter how much I seem to be soldierin', as a matter of fact I'm puttin' in a full day's work. When
+ I get back in the afternoon, the first thing I want to see is how much I've got done.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that I'm able to duck all kinds of labor that way. Believe me, a country place is no loafin' spot, especially
+ when it's new, or you're new to it. Vee tends to that. Say, that girl can think up more odd forms of givin' me
+ exercise than a bunch of football coaches&mdash;movin' bureaus, hangin' pictures, puttin' up curtain-rods, fixin'
+ door-catches, and little things like that.</p>
+
+ <p>Up to a few weeks ago all I knew about saws and screw-drivers and so on was that they were shiny things displayed
+ in the hardware store windows. But if I keep on tacklin' all the odd jobs she sics me on to, I'll be able to qualify
+ pretty soon as a boss carpenter, a master plumber, and an expert electrician.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I gouge myself now and then. My knuckles look like I'd been mixin' in a food riot, and I've spoiled two
+ perfectly good suits<a class="pagenum" name="page_86" title="86" id="page_86"></a> of clothes. But I can point with
+ pride to at least three doors that I've coaxed into shuttin', I've solved the mystery of what happens to a
+ window-weight when the sash-cord breaks, and I've rigged up two drop-lights without gettin' myself electrocuted or
+ askin' any advice from Mr. Edison.</p>
+
+ <p>Which reminds me that what I can't seem to get used to about the country is the poor way it's lighted up at night.
+ You know, our place is out a couple of miles from the village and the railroad station; and, while we got electric
+ bulbs enough in the house, outside there ain't a lamp-post in sight. Dark! Say, after 8 <span class=
+ "smcap">p.m.</span> you might as well be livin' in a sub-cellar with the sidewalk gratin' closed. Honest, the only
+ glim we can see from our front porch is a flicker from the porte cochère at the Ellinses' up on the hill, and most of
+ that is cut off by trees and lilac bushes.</p>
+
+ <p>Vee don't seem to mind, though. These mild evenin's recent, she's dragged me out after dinner for a spell and made
+ me sit with her watchin' for the moon to come up. I do it, but it ain't anything I'm strong for. I can't see the
+ percentage in starin' out at nothing at all but black space and guessin' where the driveway is or what them dark
+ streaks are. Then,<a class="pagenum" name="page_87" title="87" id="page_87"></a> there's so many weird sounds I can't
+ account for.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's all that jinglin' going on?" I asks the other evenin'. "Sounds like a squad of junkmen comin' up the
+ pike."</p>
+
+ <p>"Silly!" says Vee. "Frogs, of course."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Then I listens some more, until something else breaks loose. It's sort of a cross between the dyin' moan of a
+ gyastacutus and the whine of a subway express roundin' a sharp curve.</p>
+
+ <p>"For the love of Pete," I breaks out, "what do you call that?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee chuckles. "Didn't you see the calf up at Mr. Robert's?" she asks. "Well, that's the old cow calling to
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p>"If she feels as bad as that," says I, "I wish she'd wait until mornin' to express herself. That's the most
+ doleful sound I ever heard. Come on; let's go in while you tinkle out something lively and cheerin' on the
+ piano."</p>
+
+ <p>I never thought I was one of the timid kind, either. Course, I'm no Carnegie hero, or anything like that; but I've
+ always managed to get along in the city without developin' a case of nerves. Out here, though, it's different. Two or
+ three evenin's now I've felt almost jumpy, just over nothing at all, it seems.<a class="pagenum" name="page_88"
+ title="88" id="page_88"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Maybe that's why I didn't show up any better, here the other night, when Vee rings in this silent alarm on me. I
+ was certainly poundin' my ear industrious when gradually I gets the idea that someone is shakin' me by the shoulders.
+ It's Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Torchy," she whispers husky. "Get up."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I, pryin' my eyes open reluctant. "Get up? Wha-wha' for?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, don't be stupid about it," says she. "I've been trying to rouse you for five minutes. Please get up and come
+ to the window."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing doing," says I snugglin' into the pillow again. "I&mdash;I'm busy."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you must," says she. "Listen. I think someone is prowling around the house. "</p>
+
+ <p>"Let 'em ramble, then," says I. "What do we care?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But suppose it's a&mdash;a burglar?" she whispers.</p>
+
+ <p>I'll admit that gives me a goose-fleshy feelin' down the spine. It's such a disturbin' word to have sprung on you
+ in the middle of the night.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's not suppose anything of the sort," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"But I'm sure I saw someone just now, when I got up to fix the shade," insists Vee. "Someone<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_89" title="89" id="page_89"></a> who stepped out into the moonlight right there, between the shadows of
+ those two trees. Then he disappeared out that way. Come and look."</p>
+
+ <p>Well, I was up by then, and half awake, so I tries to peer out into the back yard. I'm all for grantin' a general
+ alibi, though.</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe you was only dreamin', Vee," says I. "Anyway, let's wait until mornin', and then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"There!" she breaks in excited. "Just beyond the garden trellis. See?"</p>
+
+ <p>Yep. There's no denyin' that someone is sneakin' around out there. First off I thought it might be a female in a
+ white skirt and a raincoat; but when we gets the head showin' plain above some bushes we can make out a mustache.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a man!" gasps Vee, clutchin' me by the sleeve.</p>
+
+ <p>"Uh-huh," says I. "So it is."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well?" says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>I expect that was my cue to come across with the bold and noble acts. But, somehow, I didn't yearn to dash out
+ into the moonlight in my pajamas and mix in rough with a total stranger. But I didn't mean to give it away if I could
+ help it.<a class="pagenum" name="page_90" title="90" id="page_90"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Got a nerve, ain't he?" says I. "Let's wait; maybe he'll fall into the pond."</p>
+
+ <p>"How absurd!" says Vee. "No; we must do something right away."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course," says I. "I'll shout and ask him what the blazes he thinks he's doin'. "</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't," says Vee. "There may be others&mdash;in the house. And before you let him know you see him, you ought to
+ be armed. Get your revolver."</p>
+
+ <p>At that I just gawped at Vee, for she knows well enough I don't own anything more deadly than a safety razor, and
+ that all the gun-play I ever indulged in was once or twice at a Coney Island shootin' gallery where I slaughtered a
+ clay pipe by aimin' at a glass ball.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whaddye mean, revolver?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"S-s-s-sh!" says she. "There's that Turkish pistol, you know, that Mr. Shinn left hanging over the mantel in the
+ living-room."</p>
+
+ <p>"Think it's loaded?" I whispers.</p>
+
+ <p>"It might be," says Vee. "Anyway, it's better than nothing. Let's get it."</p>
+
+ <p>"All right," says I. "Soon as I get something on. Just a sec."</p>
+
+ <p>So I jumps into a pair of trousers and a coat and some bath slippers, while Vee throws on a dressin'-sack. We
+ feels our way sleuthy downstairs,<a class="pagenum" name="page_91" title="91" id="page_91"></a> and after rappin' my
+ shins on a couple of rockers I gets down the old pistol. It's a curious, wicked-lookin' antique about two feet long,
+ with a lot of carvin' and silver inlay on the barrel. I'd never examined the thing to see how it worked, but it feels
+ sort of comfortin' just to grip it in my hand. We unlocks the back door easy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now you stay inside, Vee," says I, "while I go scoutin' and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No indeed," says Vee. "I am going too."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you mustn't," I insists.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hush!" says she. "I shall."</p>
+
+ <p>And she did. So we begins our first burglar hunt as a twosome, and I must say there's other sports I enjoy more.
+ Out across the lawn we sneaks, steppin' as easy as we can, and keepin' in the shadow most of the time.</p>
+
+ <p>"Guess he must have skipped," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"But he was here only a moment ago," says Vee. "Don't you know, we saw him&mdash;&mdash; Oh, oh!"</p>
+
+ <p>I don't blame her for gaspin'. Not twenty feet ahead of us, crouchin' down in the cabbage patch, is the villain.
+ Just why he should be tryin' to hide among a lot of cabbage plants not over three inches high, I don't stop to think.
+ All I knew was that here was someone prowlin'<a class="pagenum" name="page_92" title="92" id="page_92"></a> around at
+ night on my premises, and all in a flash I begins to see red. Swingin' Vee behind me, I unlimbers the old pistol and
+ cocks it. I didn't care whether this was the open season for burglars or not. I wanted to get this one, and get him
+ hard.</p>
+
+ <p>Must have been a minute or more that I had him covered, tryin' to steady my arm so I could keep the muzzle pointed
+ straight at his back, when all of a sudden he lifts his right hand and begins scratchin' his ear. Somehow, that
+ breaks the spell. Why should a burglar hump himself on his hands and knees in a truck patch and stop to scratch his
+ ear?</p>
+
+ <p>"Hey, you!" I sings out real crisp.</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe that ain't quite the way to open a line of chat with a midnight marauder. I've been kidded about it some
+ since; but at the time it sounded all right. And it had the proper effect. He comes up on his toes with his hands in
+ the air, like he was worked by springs.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's right; keep your paws up," says I. "And, remember, if you go to makin' any funny moves&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, Torchy!" exclaims Vee, grabbin' my shootin' arm. "It's Leon!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wha-a-a-at!" says I, starin' at this wabbly party among the coldslaw.<a class="pagenum" name="page_93" title="93"
+ id="page_93"></a></p>
+
+ <p>But it's Professor Battou, all right. He's costumed in a night-shirt, an old overcoat, and a pair of rubbers; and
+ he certainly does look odd, standin' there in the moonlight with his elbows up and his knees knockin' one
+ another.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, well, Leon!" says I, sighin' relieved. "So it's you, is it? And we had you all spotted as a second-story
+ worker. All right; you don't need to hold the pose any longer. But maybe you'll tell us what you're crawlin' around
+ out here in the garden for at this time of night."</p>
+
+ <p>He tried to, but he's had such a scare thrown into him that his conversation works are all gummed up. After we've
+ led him into the house, though, and he's had a drink of spring water, he does a little better.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was to protect the cabbages, monsieur," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I. "Protect 'em from what?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There is a wicked worm," says Leon, "which does his evil work in the night. Ah, such a sly beast! And so
+ destructive! Just at the top of the young root he eats&mdash;snip, snip! And in the morning I find that two, four,
+ sometimes six tender plants he has cut off. I am enrage. 'Ha!' I say. 'I will discover you yet at your mischief.' So
+ I cannot sleep for thinking.<a class="pagenum" name="page_94" title="94" id="page_94"></a> But I had found him; yes,
+ two. And I was searching for more when monsieur&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I know," says I. He's glancin' worried at the old pistol I'm still holdin' in my hand. "My error, Leon. I
+ might have guessed. And as the clock's just strikin' three, I think we'd all better hit the hay again. Come on, Vee;
+ it's all over."</p>
+
+ <p>And, in spite of that half hour or so of time out, I was up earlier than usual in the mornin'. I had a little job
+ to do that I'd planned out before I went to sleep again. As soon as I'm dressed I slips downstairs, takes that
+ Turkish pistol, and chucks it into the middle of the pond. I'll never know whether it was loaded or not. I don't want
+ to know. For if it had been&mdash;&mdash; Well, what's the use?</p>
+
+ <p>Comin' back in through the kitchen, I finds Leon busy dishin' up toast and eggs. He glances at me nervous, and
+ then hangs his head. But he gets out what he has to say man fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>"I trust monsieur is not displeased," says he. "It was not wise for me to walk about at night. But those wicked
+ worms! Still, if monsieur desires, it shall not occur again. I ask pardon."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, that's all right, Leon," says I soothin'.<a class="pagenum" name="page_95" title="95" id="page_95"></a>
+ "Don't worry. When it comes to playin' the boob act, I guess we split about fifty-fifty. I'd a little rather you
+ didn't, but if you must hunt the wicked worm at night, why, go to it. You won't run any more risk of being shot up by
+ me. For I've disarmed."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_96" title="96" id="page_96"></a>
+ <a name="BACK_WITH_CLARA_BELLE_2471" id="BACK_WITH_CLARA_BELLE_2471"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+ <h3>BACK WITH CLARA BELLE</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And me kiddin' myself I was fairly well parlor-broke. It seems not. You'd 'most think, though, I'd had enough
+ front-room trainin' to stand me through in a place like Harbor Hills. I had a wild idea, too, that when we moved into
+ the country we'd tagged the reg'lar social stuff good-by.</p>
+
+ <p>That was a poor hunch. I'm just discoverin' that there's more tea fights and dinner dances and such goin's on out
+ here in the commuter zone than in any five blocks of Fifth Avenue you can name. And it seems that anywhere within ten
+ miles of this Piping Rock Club brings you into the most active sector. So here we are, right in the thick of
+ things.</p>
+
+ <p>At that, I expect it might have been quite some time before we was bothered any if it hadn't been for our bein'
+ sort of backed by the Robert Ellinses. As their friends we're counted in right off the reel. I've been joshed into
+ lettin'<a class="pagenum" name="page_97" title="97" id="page_97"></a> my name go on the waitin' list at the Country
+ Club; I'm allowed to subscribe to this and that; some of the neighbors have begun payin' first calls on Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>So I might have had sense enough to watch my step. Yet, here the other afternoon, when I makes an early getaway
+ from the Corrugated and hops off the 5:17, I dashes across the back lots and comes into our place by the rear instead
+ of the front drive. You see, I'd been watchin' a row of string-beans we had comin' along, and I wanted to spring the
+ first ones on Vee. Sure enough, I finds three or four pods 'most big enough to eat; so I picks 'em and goes breezin'
+ into the house, wavin' em gleeful.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Vee!" I sings out, openin' the terrace door. "Come have a look."</p>
+
+ <p>And, as she don't appear on the jump, I keeps on into the livin'-room and calls:</p>
+
+ <p>"Hey! What do you know about these? Beans! Perfectly good&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Well, that's as far as I gets, for there's Vee, sittin' behind the silver tea-urn, all dolled up; and Leon, in his
+ black coat, holdin' a plate of dinky little cakes; and a couple of strange ladies starin' at me button-eyed. I'd
+ crashed right into the midst of tea and callers.</p>
+
+ <p>Do I pull some easy johndrew lines and exit<a class="pagenum" name="page_98" title="98" id="page_98"></a>
+ graceful? Not me. My feet was glued to the rug.</p>
+
+ <p>"Beans!" says I, grinnin' simple and danglin' the specimens. "Perfectly good string&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Then I catches the eye of the stiff-necked dame with the straight nose and the gun-metal hair. No, both eyes, it
+ was; and a cold, suspicious, stabby look is what they shoots my way. No wonder I chokes off the feeble-minded remarks
+ and turns sort of panicky to Vee, half expectin' to find her blushin' painful or signalin' me to clear out. Nothing
+ like that from Vee, though.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not ours, Torchy?" says she, slidin' out from behind the tea-table and rushin' over. "Not our very own?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Uh-huh!" says I. "Just picked 'em."</p>
+
+ <p>At which the other caller joins in unexpected.</p>
+
+ <p>"From your own garden?" says she. "How interesting! Oh, do show them to me."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, sure," says I. "Guess we're doin' our bit, ain't we?"</p>
+
+ <p>She's a wide, dumpy-built old girl, and dressed sort of freaky. Also her line of talk is a kind of purry, throaty
+ gush that's almost too soothin' to be true. But anybody who makes only half a bluff at being interested in<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_99" title="99" id="page_99"></a> our garden wins us. And not until she's inspected our first
+ string-beans through her gold lorgnette, and remarked twice more how wonderful it was for us to raise anything like
+ that, does it occur to Vee to introduce me proper to both ladies.</p>
+
+ <p>The tall, stiff-necked dame turns out to be Mrs. Pemberton Foote. Honest! Could you blame her for bein' jarred
+ when I come bouncin' in with garden truck?</p>
+
+ <p>Think of it! Why, she's one of the super-tax brigade and moves among the smartest of the smart-setters. And Pemmy,
+ he's on the polo team, you know.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, reg'lar people, the Pembroke Footes are. And the very fact that Mrs. Foote is here callin' on Vee ought to
+ have me thrilled to the bone.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet all I got sense enough to do is wave half-grown string-beans at her, and then sit by gawpy, balancin' a cup of
+ tea on my knee, and watch her apply the refrigeratin' process to the dumpy old girl whose name I didn't quite catch.
+ Say, but she does it thorough and artistic. Only two or three times did the dumpy one try to kick in on the chat, and
+ when she does, Mrs. Pemmy rolls them glittery eyes towards her slow, givin' her the up-and-down like she was<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_100" title="100" id="page_100"></a> some kind of fat worm that had strayed in from the cucumber
+ bed.</p>
+
+ <p>Can't these women throw the harpoon into each other ruthless, though? Why, you could see that old girl fairly
+ squirm when she got one of them assault-and-battery glances. Her under lip would quiver a bit, she'd wink hard three
+ or four times, and then she'd sort of collapse, smotherin' a sigh and not finishin' what she'd started out to say.
+ She did want to be so folksy, too.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, she's an odd-lookin' party, with that bucket-shaped lid decorated with pale green satin fruit, and the
+ piles of thick blondine hair that was turnin' gray, and her foolish big eyes with the puffy rolls underneath and the
+ crows'-feet in the corners. And of course anybody with ankles suggestin' piano legs really shouldn't go in for
+ high-tide skirts and white silk stockin's with black butterflies worked on 'em. Should they?</p>
+
+ <p>Still, she'd raved over our string-beans, so when she makes a last fluttery try at jimmyin' her way into the
+ conversation, and Mrs. Foote squelches her prompt again, and she gives up for good, it's me jumpin' snappy to tow her
+ out and tuck her in the limousine. Havin' made my escape, I stays outside until after Mrs. Pemmy<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_101" title="101" id="page_101"></a> has gone too, which don't happen for near half an hour later. But when
+ I hears the front door shut on her, I sidles in at the back.</p>
+
+ <p>"Zowie!" says I. "You must have made more of a hit with our swell neighbor than I did, Vee."</p>
+
+ <p>Vee smiles quizzin' and shrugs her shoulders.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm not so sure," says she. "I almost feel as though we had been visited by the Probation Officer, or someone
+ like that."</p>
+
+ <p>"How do you mean?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course," she goes on, "Mrs. Foote did not actually say that we were on trial socially, but she hinted as much.
+ And she made it quite plain that unless we got started in the right set our case would be utterly hopeless."</p>
+
+ <p>"Just think of that!" says I. "Real sweet of her, eh? Sort of inspector general, is she? You should have asked her
+ to show her badge, though."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, there's no doubt that she speaks with authority," says Vee. "She wasn't snippy about it, either. And chiefly
+ she was trying to warn me against Mrs. Ben Tupper."</p>
+
+ <p>"The old girl with the pelican chin and the rovin' eyes?" I asks. "What's the matter with her besides her
+ looks?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_102" title="102" id="page_102"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Well, accordin' to Mrs. Pemmy Foote, there was a lot. She had a past, for one thing. She was a pushing,
+ presumptuous person, for another. And, besides, this Benjamin Tupper party&mdash;the male of the species&mdash;was
+ wholly impossible.</p>
+
+ <p>"You know who he is," adds Vee. "The tablet man."</p>
+
+ <p>"What?" says I. "'Tupper's Tablets for Indigestion&mdash;on Everybody's Tongue.' Him?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee nods. "And they live in that barny stucco house just as you turn off Sagamore Boulevard&mdash;the one with the
+ hideous red-tiled roof and the concrete lions in front."</p>
+
+ <p>"Goodness Agnes!" says I. "Folks have been indicted for less than that. I've seen Tupper, too; someone pointed him
+ out goin' in on the express only the other mornin'. Looks like a returned Nihilist who'd been nominated in one of the
+ back wards of Petrograd to run for the Duma on a free-vodka platform. He's got wiry whiskers that he must trim with a
+ pair of tin-shears, tufts in his ears, and the general build of a performin' chimpanzee. Oh, he's a rare one,
+ Tupper."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then," says Vee, sort of draggy, "I&mdash;I suppose Mrs. Foote is right. It's too bad, for that Mrs. Tupper did
+ seem such a friendly old<a class="pagenum" name="page_103" title="103" id="page_103"></a> soul. And I shall feel so
+ snobbish if I don't return her call."</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says I. "I don't see why Mrs. Pemmy couldn't let you find out about her for yourself. Even if the old girl
+ don't belong, what's the use bein' so rough with her?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you know, Torchy," says Vee, "I felt that way about it when Mrs. Foote was snubbing her. And yet&mdash;well, I
+ wish I knew just what to do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Clean out of my line," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>I expect it was the roses that set me mullin' the case over again. They was sent over for Vee a couple of days
+ later&mdash;half a dozen great busters, like young cabbages, with stems a yard long. They come with the compliments
+ of Mrs. Ben Tupper.</p>
+
+ <p>"I simply couldn't send them back," says Vee; "and yet&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I get you," says I. "But don't worry. Let the thing ride a while. I got an idea. "</p>
+
+ <p>It wasn't anything staggerin'. It had just struck me that if Vee had to hand out any social smears she ought to do
+ it on her own dope, and not accordin' to Mrs. Pemmy Foote's say-so. Which is why I begins pumpin' information out of
+ anybody that came handy. Goin'<a class="pagenum" name="page_104" title="104" id="page_104"></a> into town next
+ mornin', I tackled three or four on the 8:03 in an offhand way.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, yes, the Ben Tuppers! Business of hunchin' the shoulders. No, they didn't belong to the Country Club, nor the
+ Hunt Association, nor figure on the Library or Hospital boards, or anything else. In fact, they don't mingle much.
+ Hadn't made the grade. Barred? We-e-ell, in a way, perhaps. Why? Oh, there was Mrs. Ben. Wasn't she enough? An
+ ex-actress with two or three hubbys in the discard! Could she expect people to swallow that?</p>
+
+ <p>Only one gent, though, had anything definite to offer. He's a middle-aged sport that seems to make a specialty of
+ wearin' checked suits and yellow gloves. He chuckles when I mentions Mrs. Tupper.</p>
+
+ <p>"Grand old girl, Clara Belle," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I. "Shoot the rest."</p>
+
+ <p>"Couldn't think of it, son," says he. "You're too young. But in my day Clara Belle Kinney was some queen."</p>
+
+ <p>And that's all I can get out of him except more chuckles. I files away the name, though; and that afternoon, while
+ we was waitin' for a quorum of directors to straggle into the General Offices, I springs it on Old Hickory.<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_105" title="105" id="page_105"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Ellins," says I, "did you ever know of a Clara Belle Kinney?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wha-a-at?" he gasps, almost swallowin' his cigar. "Listen to that, Mason. Here's a young innocent asking if we
+ ever knew Clara Belle Kinney. Did we?"</p>
+
+ <p>And old K. W. Mason, what does he do but throw back his shiny dome, open his mouth, and roar out:</p>
+
+ <table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>"Yure right fut is crazy,</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Yure left fut is lazy,</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>But if ye'll be aisy</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td><span style='margin-left: 20px'>I'll teach ye to waltz!"</span></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>After which them two old cut-ups wink at each other rakish and slap their knees. All of which ain't so
+ illuminatin'. But they keep on, mentionin' Koster Bial's and the Cork Room, until I can patch together quite a sketch
+ of Mrs. Tupper's early career.</p>
+
+ <p>Seems she'd made her first hit in this old-time concert-hall when she was a sweet young thing in her teens. One of
+ her naughty stunts was kickin' her slipper into an upper box, and gettin' it tossed back with a mash note in it, or
+ maybe a twenty-dollar bill. Then she'd graduated into comic opera.</p>
+
+ <p>"Was there ever a Katishaw like her?" demands<a class="pagenum" name="page_106" title="106" id="page_106"></a> Old
+ Hickory of K. W., who responds by hummin' husky:</p>
+
+ <table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>"I dote upon a tiger</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>From the Congo or the Niger,</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Especially when lashing of his tail."</td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>And, while they don't go into details, I gathered that they'd been Clara Belle fans&mdash;had sent her orchids on
+ openin' nights, and maybe had set up wine suppers for her and her friends. They knew about a couple of her
+ matrimonial splurges. One was with her manager, of course; the next was a young broker whose fam'ly got him to break
+ it off. After that they'd lost track of her.</p>
+
+ <p>"It seems to me," says Old Hickory, "that I heard she had married someone in Buffalo, or Rochester, and had quit
+ the stage. A patent medicine chap, I think he was, who'd made a lot of money out of something or other. I wonder what
+ has become of her?"</p>
+
+ <p>That was my cue, all right, but I passes it up. I wasn't talkin' just then; I was listenin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah-h-h!" goes on Mr. Mason, foldin' his hands over his forward sponson and rollin' his eyes sentimental. "Dear
+ Clara Belle! I say, Ellins, wouldn't you like to hear her sing that MacFadden song once more?"<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_107" title="107" id="page_107"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"I'd give fifty dollars," says Old Hickory.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'd make it a hundred if she'd follow it with 'O Promise Me,'" says K. W. "What was her record&mdash;six hundred
+ nights on Broadway, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>Say, they went on reminiscin' so long, it's a wonder the monthly meetin' ever got started at all. I might have
+ forgot them hot-air bids of theirs, too, if it hadn't been for something Vee announces that night across the
+ dinner-table.</p>
+
+ <p>Seems that Mrs. Robert Ellins had been rung into managin' one of these war benefit stunts, and she's decided to
+ use their new east terrace for an outdoor stage and the big drawin'-room it opens off from as an auditorium. You
+ know, Mrs. Robert used to give violin recitals and do concert work herself, so she ain't satisfied with amateur
+ talent. Besides, she knows so many professional people.</p>
+
+ <p>"And who do you think she is to have on the program?" demands Vee. "Farrar!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw, come!" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"And perhaps Mischa Elman," adds Vee. "Isn't that thrilling?"</p>
+
+ <p>I admits that it is.</p>
+
+ <p>"But say," I goes on, "with them big names on the bill, what does she expect to tax people for the best
+ seats?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_108" title="108" id="page_108"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Vee says how they'd figured they might ask ten dollars for a few choice chairs.</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says I. "That won't get you far. Why don't you soak 'em proper?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But how?" asks Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"You put in a bald-headed row," says I, "and I'll find you a party who'll fill it at a hundred a throw."</p>
+
+ <p>Vee stares at me like she thought I'd been touched with the heat, and wants to know who.</p>
+
+ <p>"Clara Belle Kinney," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, I never heard of any such person," says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, yes, you have," says I. "Alias Mrs. Ben Tupper."</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I had some job convincin' her I wasn't joshin'; and even after I'd sketched out the whole story, and
+ showed her that Clara Belle's past wasn't anything to really shudder over, Vee is still doubtful.</p>
+
+ <p>"But can she sing now?" she asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the odds," says I, "if a lot of them old-timers are willin' to pay to hear her try?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee shakes her head and suggests that we go up and talk it over with Mr. and Mrs. Robert. Which we does.</p>
+
+ <p>"But if she has been off the stage for twenty<a class="pagenum" name="page_109" title="109" id="page_109"></a>
+ years," suggests Mrs. Robert, "perhaps she wouldn't attempt it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll bet she would for Vee," says I. "Any way, she wouldn't feel sore at being asked And if you could sting a
+ bunch of twenty or thirty for a hundred apiece&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Just fancy!" says Mrs. Robert, drawin' in a long breath and doin' rapid-fire mental arithmetic. "Verona, let's
+ drive right over and see her at once."</p>
+
+ <p>They're some hustlers, that pair. All I have to do is map out the scheme, and they goes after it with a rush.</p>
+
+ <p>And say, I want to tell you that was a perfectly good charity concert, judged by the box-office receipts or any
+ way you want to size it up. Bein' the official press-agent, who's got a better right to admit it?</p>
+
+ <p>True, Elman didn't show up, but his alibi was sound. And not until the last minute was we sure whether the fair
+ Geraldine would get there or not. But my contribution to the headliners was there from the first tap of the bell.</p>
+
+ <p>Vee says she actually wept on her shoulder when the proposition was sprung on her. Seems she'd been livin' in
+ Harbor Hills for nearly three years without havin' been let in on a thing&mdash;with nobody callin' on her, or
+ even<a class="pagenum" name="page_110" title="110" id="page_110"></a> noddin' as she drove by. Most of her neighbors
+ was a lot younger, folks who barely remembered that there had been such a party as Clara Belle Kinney, and who
+ couldn't have told whether she'd been a singer or a bareback rider. They only knew her as a dumpy freakish dressed
+ old girl whose drugged hair was turnin' gray.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course," she says, sort of timid and trembly, "I have kept up my singing as well as I could. Mr. Tupper likes
+ to have me. But I know my voice isn't what it was once. It's dear of you to ask me, though, and&mdash;and I'll do my
+ best."</p>
+
+ <p>I don't take any credit for fillin' that double row of wicker chairs we put down front and had the nerve to ask
+ that hold-up price for. When the word was passed around that Clara Belle Kinney was to be among the performers, they
+ almost mobbed me for tickets. Why, I collected from two-thirds of the Corrugated directors without turnin' a hand,
+ and for two days there about all I did was answer 'phone calls from Broad Street and the clubs&mdash;brokers, bank
+ presidents, and so on, who wanted to know if there was any left.</p>
+
+ <p>A fine bunch of silver-tops they was, too, when we got 'em all lined up. You wouldn't<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_111" title="111" id="page_111"></a> have suspected it of some of them dignified old scouts, either. Back of
+ 'em, fillin' every corner of the long room and spillin' out into the big hall, was the top crust of our local smart
+ set, come to hear Farrar at close range.</p>
+
+ <p>Yep, Geraldine made quite a hit. Nothing strange about that. And that piece from "Madame Butterfly" she gave just
+ brought 'em right up on their toes. But say, you should hear what breaks loose when it's announced that the third
+ number will be an old favorite revival by Clara Belle Kinney. That's all the name we gave. What if most of the
+ audience was simply starin' puzzled and stretchin' their necks to see who was comin'? Them old boys down front seemed
+ to know what they was howlin' about.</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, Clara Belle does show up a bit husky in evenin' dress. Talk about elbow dimples! And I was wishin' she'd
+ forgot to do her hair that antique way, all piled up on her head, with a few coy ringlets over one ear. But she'd
+ landscaped her facial scenery artistic, and she sure does know how to roll them big eyes of hers.</p>
+
+ <p>I didn't much enjoy listenin' through them first few bars, though. There wasn't merely a crack here and there. Her
+ voice went to a complete smash at times, besides bein' weak and<a class="pagenum" name="page_112" title="112" id=
+ "page_112"></a> wabbly. It's like listenin' to the ghost of a voice. I heard a few titters from the back rows.</p>
+
+ <p>But them old boys don't seem to mind. It was a voice comin' to them from 'way back in the '90's. And when she
+ struggles through the first verse of "O Promise Me," and pauses to get her second wind, maybe they don't give her a
+ hand. That seemed to pep her up a lot. She gets a better grip on the high notes, the tremolo effect wears off, and
+ she goes to it like a winner. Begins to get the crowd with her, too. Why, say, even Farrar stands up and leads in the
+ call for an encore. She ain't alone.</p>
+
+ <p>"MacFadden! MacFadden!" K. W. Mason is shoutin'.</p>
+
+ <p>So in a minute more Clara Belle, her eyes shinin', has swung into that raggy old tune, and when she gets to the
+ chorus she beckons to the front rows and says: "Now, all together, boys!</p>
+
+ <table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>"Wan&mdash;two&mdash;three!</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Balance like me&mdash;&mdash;"</td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>Did they come in on it? Say, they roared it out like so many young college hicks riotin' around the campus after a
+ session at a rathskeller. You should have seen Old Hickory<a class="pagenum" name="page_113" title="113" id=
+ "page_113"></a> standin' out front with his arms wavin' and his face red.</p>
+
+ <p>Then they demands some of the Katishaw stuff, and "Comrades," and "Little Annie Rooney." And with every encore
+ Clara Belle seems to shake off five or ten years, until you could almost see what a footlight charmer she must have
+ been.</p>
+
+ <p>In the midst of it all Vee gives me the nudge.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do look at Mr. Tupper, will you!"</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, he's sittin' over in a corner, with his white shirt-front bulgin', his neck stretched forward eager, and his
+ big hairy paws grippin' the chair-back in front. And hanged if a drop of brine ain't tricklin' down one side of his
+ nose.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gosh!" says I. "His emotions are leakin' into his whiskers. Maybe the old boy is human, after all."</p>
+
+ <p>A minute later, as I slides easy out of my end seat, Vee asks:</p>
+
+ <p>"Where are you going, Torchy?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I want a glimpse of Mrs. Pemmy Foote's face, that's all," says I.</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_114" title="114" id="page_114"></a>
+ <a name="WHEN_TORCHY_GOT_THE_CALL_2929" id="WHEN_TORCHY_GOT_THE_CALL_2929"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+ <h3>WHEN TORCHY GOT THE CALL</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>No, I ain't said much about it before. There are some things you're apt to keep to yourself, specially the ones
+ that root deep. And I'll admit that at first there I don't quite know where I was at. But as affairs got messier and
+ messier, and the U-boats got busier, and I heard some first-hand details of what had happened to the
+ Belgians&mdash;well, I got mighty restless. I expect I indulged in more serious thought stuff than I'd ever been
+ guilty of.</p>
+
+ <p>You see, it was along back when we were gettin' our first close-ups of the big scrap&mdash;some of our boats sunk,
+ slinkers reported off Sandy Hook, bomb plots shown up, and Papa Joffre over here soundin' the S. O. S. earnest.</p>
+
+ <p>Then there was Mr. Robert joinin' the Naval Reserves, and two young hicks from the bond room who'd volunteered.
+ We'd had postals from 'em at the trainin' camp. Even Vee was busy with a first-aid class, learnin' how to tie
+ bandages and put on splints.<a class="pagenum" name="page_115" title="115" id="page_115"></a></p>
+
+ <p>So private seccing seemed sort of tame and useless&mdash;like keepin' on sprinklin' the lawn after your chimney
+ was bein' struck by lightnin'. I felt like I ought to be gettin' in the game somehow. Anyway, it seemed as if it was
+ my ante.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that I'd been rushed off my feet by all this buntin'-wavin' or khaki-wearin'. I'm no panicky Old Glory
+ trail-hitter. Nor I didn't lug around the idea I was the missin' hero who was to romp through the barbed wire, stamp
+ Hindenburg's whiskers in the mud, and lead the Allies across the Rhine. I didn't even kid myself I could swim out and
+ kick a hole in a submarine, or do the darin' aviator act after a half-hour lesson at Mineola.</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, I suspected that sheddin' the enemy's gore wasn't much in my line. I knew I should dislike quittin' the
+ hay at dawn to sneak out and get mixed up with half a bushel of impetuous scrap-iron. Still, if it had to be done,
+ why not me as well as the next party?</p>
+
+ <p>I'd been meanin' to talk it over with Vee&mdash;sort of hint around, anyway, and see how she'd take it. But as a
+ matter of fact I never could seem to find just the right openin' until, there one night after dinner, as she finishes
+ a new<a class="pagenum" name="page_116" title="116" id="page_116"></a> piece she's tryin' over on the piano, I
+ wanders up beside her and starts absent-minded tearin' little bits off a corner of the music.</p>
+
+ <p>"Torchy!" she protests. "What an absurd thing to do."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I, twistin' it into a cornucopia. "But you know I can't go on warmin' the bench like this."</p>
+
+ <p>She stares at me puzzled for a second.</p>
+
+ <p>"Meaning what, for instance?" she asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"I got to go help swat the Hun," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>The flickery look in them gray eyes of hers steadies down, and she reaches out for one of my hands. That's all. No
+ jumpy emotions&mdash;not even a lip quiver.</p>
+
+ <p>"Must you?" says she, quiet.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can't take it out in wearin' a button or hirin' someone to hoe potatoes in the back lot," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"No," says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"Auntie would come, I suppose?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Vee nods.</p>
+
+ <p>"And with Leon here," I goes on, "and Mrs. Battou, you could&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I could get along," she breaks in. "But&mdash;but when?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Right away," says I. "As soon as they can use me."<a class="pagenum" name="page_117" title="117" id=
+ "page_117"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"You'll start training for a commission, then?" she asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not me," says I. "I'd be poor enough as a private, but maybe I'd help fill in one of the back rows. I don't know
+ much about it. I'll look it up to-morrow."</p>
+
+ <p>"To-morrow? Oh!" says Vee, with just the suspicion of a break in her voice.</p>
+
+ <p>And that's all we had to say about it. Every word. You'd thought we'd exhausted the subject, or got the tongue
+ cramp. But I expect we each had a lot of thoughts that didn't get registered. I know I did. And next mornin' the
+ breakaway came sort of hard.</p>
+
+ <p>"I&mdash;I know just how you feel about it," says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm glad somebody does, then," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Puttin' the proposition up to Old Hickory was different. He shoots a quick glance at me from under them shaggy
+ eyebrows, bites into his cigar savage, and grunts discontented.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are exempt, you know," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know," says I. "If tags came with marriage licenses I might wear one on my watch-fob to show, I expect."</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says he. "It seems to me that rapid-fire brain of yours might be better utilized than by hiding it under a
+ trench helmet."<a class="pagenum" name="page_118" title="118" id="page_118"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Speedy thinkers seem to be a drug on the market just now," says I. "Anyway, I feel like it was up to me to
+ deliver something&mdash;I can't say just what. But campin' behind a roll-top here on the nineteenth floor ain't going
+ to help much, is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, well, if you have the fever!" says he.</p>
+
+ <p>And half an hour later I've pushed in past the flag and am answerin' questions while the sergeant fills out the
+ blank.</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe you can guess I ain't in any frivolous mood. I don't believe I thought I was about to push back the invader,
+ or turn the tide for civilization. Neither was I lookin' on this as a sportin' flier or a larky excursion that I was
+ goin' to indulge in at public expense. My idea was that there'd been a general call for such as me, and that I was
+ comin' across. I was more or less sober about it.</p>
+
+ <p>They didn't seem much impressed at the recruitin' station. Course, you couldn't expect the sergeant to get
+ thrilled over every party that drifted in. He'd been there for weeks, I suppose, answerin' the same fool questions
+ over and over, knowin' all the time that half of them that came in was bluffin' and that a big per cent. of the
+ others wouldn't do.</p>
+
+ <p>But this other party with the zippy waistline,<a class="pagenum" name="page_119" title="119" id="page_119"></a>
+ the swellin' chest, and the nifty shoulder-straps&mdash;why should he glare at me in that cold, suspicious way? I
+ wasn't tryin' to break into the army with felonious intent. How could he be sure, just from a casual glance, that I
+ was such vicious scum?</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, yes; I've figured out since that he didn't mean more'n half of it, or couldn't help lookin' at civilians that
+ way after four years at West Point, or thought he had to. But that's what I get handed to me when I've dropped all
+ the little things that seemed important to me and walks in to chuck what I had to offer Uncle Sam on the recruitin'
+ table.</p>
+
+ <p>Some kind of inspectin' officer, I've found out he was, makin' the rounds to see that the sergeants didn't loaf on
+ the job. And, just to show that no young patriot in a last year's Panama and a sport-cut suit could slip anything
+ over on him, he shoots in a few crisp questions on his own account.</p>
+
+ <p>"Married, you say?" says he. "Since when?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, this century," says I. "Last February, to get it nearer."</p>
+
+ <p>He sniffs disagreeable without sayin' why. Also he takes a hand when it comes to testin' me to see whether I'm
+ club-footed or spavined.<a class="pagenum" name="page_120" title="120" id="page_120"></a> Course, I'm no perfect male
+ like you see in the knit underwear ads, but I've got the usual number of toes and teeth, my wind is fairly good, and
+ I don't expect my arteries have begun to harden yet. He listens to my heart action and measures my chest expansion.
+ Then I had to name the different colors and squint through a tube at some black dots on a card.</p>
+
+ <p>And the further we went the more he scowled. Finally he shakes his head at the sergeant.</p>
+
+ <p>"Rejected," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I. "You&mdash;you don't mean I'm&mdash;turned down?"</p>
+
+ <p>He nods. "Underweight, and your eyes don't focus," says he snappy. "Here's your card. That's all."</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, it was a jolt. I expect I stood there blinkin' stupid at him for a minute or so before I had sense enough to
+ drift out on the sidewalk. And I might as well admit I was feelin' mighty low. I didn't know whether to hunt up the
+ nearest hospital, or sit down on the curb and wait until they came after me with the stretcher-cart. Anyway, I knew I
+ must be a physical wreck. And to think I hadn't suspected it before!</p>
+
+ <p>Somehow I dragged back to the office, and a<a class="pagenum" name="page_121" title="121" id="page_121"></a> while
+ later Mr. Ellins discovers me slumped in my chair with my chin down.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mars and Mercury!" says he. "You haven't been through a battle so soon, have you?"</p>
+
+ <p>At that, I tries to brace up a bit and pass it off light.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why didn't someone tell me I was a chronic invalid?" says I, after sketchin' out how my entry had been scratched
+ by the chesty one. "I wonder where I could get a pair of crutches and a light-runnin' wheel chair?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Bah!" says he. "Some of those army officers have red-tape brains and no more common sense than he guinea-pigs.
+ What in the name of the Seven Shahs did he think was the matter with you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My eyes don't track and I weigh under the scale," says I. "I expect there's other things, too. Maybe my floatin'
+ ribs are water-logged and my memory muscle-bound. But I'm a wreck, all right."</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll see about that," says Old Hickory, pushin' a buzzer.</p>
+
+ <p>And inside of an hour I felt a lot better. I'd been gone over by a life insurance expert, who said I hadn't a soft
+ spot on me, and an eye specialist had reported that my sight was up to the average. Oh, the right lamp did range
+ a<a class="pagenum" name="page_122" title="122" id="page_122"></a> little further, but he claims that's often the
+ case.</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe my hair was too vivid for trench work," says I, "or else that captain was luggin' a grouch. Makes me feel
+ like a wooden nickel at the bottom of the till, just the same; for I did hope I might be useful somehow. I'll look
+ swell joinin' the home guards, won't I?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't overlook the fact, young man," puts in Old Hickory, "that the Corrugated Trust is not altogether out of
+ this affair, and that we are running short-handed as it is."</p>
+
+ <p>I was too sore in my mind to be soothed much by that thought just then, though I did buckle into the work harder
+ than ever.</p>
+
+ <p>As for Vee, she don't have much to say, but she gives me the close tackle when she hears the news.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't care!" says she. "It was splendid of you to want to go. And I shall be just as proud of you as though you
+ had been accepted."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, sure!" says I. "Likely I'll be mentioned in despatches for the noble way I handled the correspondence all
+ through a hot spell."</p>
+
+ <p>That state of mind I didn't shake loose in a hurry, either. For three or four weeks, there, I was about the
+ meekest commuter carried on<a class="pagenum" name="page_123" title="123" id="page_123"></a> the eight-three. I
+ didn't do any gloatin' over the war news. I didn't join any of the volunteer boards of strategy that met every
+ mornin' to tell each other how the subs ought to be suppressed, or what Haig should be doin' on the West front. I
+ even stopped wearin' an enameled flag in my buttonhole. If that was all I could do, I wouldn't fourflush.</p>
+
+ <p>The Corrugated was handlin' a lot of war contracts, too. Course, we was only gettin' our ten per cent., and from
+ some we'd subbed out not even that. It didn't strike me there was any openin' for me until I'd heard Mr. Ellins, for
+ about the fourth time that week, start beefin' about the kind of work we was gettin' done.</p>
+
+ <p>"But ain't it all O. K.'d by government inspectors?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Precisely why I am suspicious," says he. "Not three per cent. turned back! And on rush work that's too good to be
+ true. Looks to me like careless inspecting&mdash;or worse. Yet every man I've sent out has brought in a clean bill;
+ even for the Wonder Motors people, who have that sub-contract for five hundred tanks. And I wouldn't trust that crowd
+ to pass the hat for an orphans' home. I wish I knew of a man who could&mdash;could&mdash;&mdash; By the Great
+ Isosceles! Torchy!"<a class="pagenum" name="page_124" title="124" id="page_124"></a></p>
+
+ <p>I knew I was elected when he first begun squintin' at me that way. But I couldn't see where I'd be such a
+ wonderful find.</p>
+
+ <p>"A hot lot I know about buildin' armored motor-trucks, Mr. Ellins," says I. "They could feed me anything."</p>
+
+ <p>"You let 'em," says he; "and meanwhile you unlimber that high-tension intellect of yours and see what you can pick
+ up. Remember, I shall expect results from you, young man. When can you start for Cleveland? To-night, eh? Good! And
+ just note this: It isn't merely the Corrugated Trust you are representing: it's Uncle Sam and the Allies generally.
+ And if anything shoddy is being passed, you hunt it out. Understand?"</p>
+
+ <p>Yep. I did. And I'll admit I was some thrilled with the idea. But I felt like a Boy Scout being sent to round up a
+ gang of gunfighters. I skips home, though, packs my bag, and climbs aboard the night express.</p>
+
+ <p>When I'd finally located the Wonder works, and had my credentials read by everyone, from the rookie sentry at the
+ gate to the Assistant General Manager, and they was convinced I'd come direct from Old Hickory Ellins, they starts
+ passin' out the smooth stuff. Oh, yes! Certainly! Anything special I wished to see?<a class="pagenum" name="page_125"
+ title="125" id="page_125"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Thanks," says I. "I'll go right through."</p>
+
+ <p>"But we have four acres of shops, you know," suggests the A. G. M., smilin' indulgent.</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe I can do an acre a day," says I. "I got lots of time."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's the spirit," says he, clappin' me friendly on the shoulder. "Walter, call in Mr. Marvin."</p>
+
+ <p>He was some grand little demonstrator, Mr. Marvin&mdash;one of these round-faced, pink-cheeked, chunky built young
+ gents, who was as chummy and as entertainin' from the first handshake as if we'd been room-mates at college. I can't
+ say how well posted he was on what was goin' on in the different departments he hustled me through, but he knew
+ enough to smother me with machinery details.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, here we have a battery of six hogging machines," he'd say. "They cut the gears, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, yes," I'd say, tryin' to look wise.</p>
+
+ <p>It was that way all through the trip. I saw two or three thousand sweaty men in smeared overalls and sleeveless
+ undershirts putterin' around lathes and things that whittled shavings off shiny steel bars, or hammered red-hot
+ chunks of it into different shapes, or bit holes<a class="pagenum" name="page_126" title="126" id="page_126"></a> in
+ great sheets of steel. I watched electric cranes the size of trolley cars juggle chunks of metal that weighed tons. I
+ listened to the roar and rattle and crash and bang, and at the end of two hours my head was whirlin' as fast as some
+ of them big belt wheels; and I knew almost as much about what I'd seen as a two-year-old does about the tick-tock
+ daddy holds up to her ear.</p>
+
+ <p>Young Mr. Marvin don't seem discouraged, though. He suggests that we drive into town for lunch. We did, in a
+ canary-colored roadster that purred along at about fifty most of the way. We fed at a swell club, along with a bunch
+ of cheerful young lieutenants of industry who didn't seem worried about the high cost of anything. I gathered that
+ most of 'em was in the same line as Mr. Marvin&mdash;supplies or munitions. From the general talk, and the casual way
+ they ordered pink cocktails and expensive cigars, I judged it wasn't exactly a losin' game.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor they didn't seem anxious about gettin' back to punch in on the time-clocks. About two-thirty we adjourns to
+ the Country Club, and if I'd been a mashie fiend I might have finished a hard day's work with a game of golf. I
+ thought I ought to do some more shops,<a class="pagenum" name="page_127" title="127" id="page_127"></a> though. Why,
+ to be sure! But at five we knocked off again, and I was towed to another club, where we had a plunge in a marble pool
+ so as to be in shape for a little dinner Mr. Marvin was gettin' up for me. Quite some dinner! There was a jolly trip
+ out to an amusement park later on. Oh, the Wonder folks were no tightwads when it came to showin' special agents of
+ the Corrugated around.</p>
+
+ <p>I tried another day of it before givin' up. It was no use. They had me buffaloed. So I thanked all hands and
+ hinted that maybe I'd better be goin' back. I hope I didn't deceive anyone, for I did go back&mdash;to the hotel. But
+ by night I'd invested $11.45 in a second-hand outfit&mdash;warranted steam-cleaned&mdash;and I had put up $6. more
+ for a week's board with a Swede lady whose front porch faced the ten-foot fence guardin' the Wondor Motors' main
+ plant. Also, Mrs. Petersen had said it was a cinch I could get a job. Her old man would show me where in the
+ mornin'.</p>
+
+ <p>And say, mornin' happens early out in places like that. By 5:30 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> I could smell
+ bacon grease, and by six-fifteen breakfast was all over and Petersen had lit his corn-cob pipe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Coom!" says he in pure Scandinavian.</p>
+
+ <p>This trip, I didn't make my entrance in over<a class="pagenum" name="page_128" title="128" id="page_128"></a> the
+ Turkish rugs of the private office. I was lined up with a couple of dozen others against a fence about tenth from a
+ window where there was a "Men Wanted" sign out. Being about as much of a mechanic as I am a brunette, I made no wild
+ bluffs. I just said I wanted a job. And I got it&mdash;riveter's helper, whatever that might be. By eight-thirty my
+ name and number was on the payroll, and the foreman of shop No. 19 was introducin' me to my new boss.</p>
+
+ <p>"Here, Mike," says he. "Give this one a try-out."</p>
+
+ <p>His name wasn't Mike. It was something like Sneezowski. He was a Pole who'd come over three years ago to work for
+ John D. at Bayonne, New Jersey, but had got into some kind of trouble there. I didn't wonder. He had wicked little
+ eyes, one lopped ear, and a ragged mustache that stood out like tushes. But he sure could handle a pneumatic riveter
+ rapid, and when it came to reprovin' me for not keepin' the pace he expressed himself fluent.</p>
+
+ <p>In the course of a couple of hours, though, I got the hang of how to work them rivet tongs without droppin' 'em
+ more 'n once every five minutes. But I think it was the grin I<a class="pagenum" name="page_129" title="129" id=
+ "page_129"></a> slipped Mike now and then that got him to overlookin' my awkward motions. Believe me, too, by six
+ o'clock I felt less like grinnin' than any time I could remember. I never knew you could ache in so many places at
+ once. From the ankles down I felt fine. And yet, before the week was out I was helpin' Mike speed up.</p>
+
+ <p>It didn't look promisin' for sleuth work at first. Half a dozen times I was on the point of chuckin' the job. But
+ the thoughts of havin' to face Old Hickory with a blank report kept me pluggin' away. I begun to get my bearin's a
+ bit to see things, to put this and that together.</p>
+
+ <p>We was workin' on shaped steel plates, armor for the tanks. Now and then one would come through with some of the
+ holes only quarter or half punched. Course, you couldn't put rivets in them places.</p>
+
+ <p>"How about these?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Aw, wottell!" says Mike. "Forget it."</p>
+
+ <p>"But what if the inspector sees?" I insists.</p>
+
+ <p>Mike gurgles in his throat, indicatin' mirth.</p>
+
+ <p>"Th' inspec'!" he chuckles. "Him wink by his eye, him. Ya! You see! Him coom Sat'day. "</p>
+
+ <p>And I swaps chuckles with Mike. Also, by settin' up the schooners at Carlouva's that evenin',<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_130" title="130" id="page_130"></a> I got Mike to let out more professional secrets along the same line.
+ There was others who joined in. They bragged of chipped gears that was shipped through with the bad cogs covered with
+ grease, of flawy drivin' shafts, of cheesy armor-plate that you could puncture with a tack-hammer.</p>
+
+ <p>While it was all fresh that night I jotted down pages of such gossip in a little red note-book. I had names and
+ dates. That bunch of piece-workers must have thought I was a bear for details, or else nutty in the head; but they
+ was too polite to mention it so long as I insisted each time that it was my buy.</p>
+
+ <p>Anyway, I got quite a lot of first-hand evidence as to the kind of inspectin' done by the army officer assigned to
+ this particular plant. I had to smile, too, when I saw Mr. Marvin towin' him through our shop Saturday forenoon.
+ Maybe they was three minutes breezin' through. And I didn't need the extra smear of smut on my face. Marvin never
+ glanced my way. This was the same officer who'd been in on our dinner party, too.</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, I found chattin' with Mike and his friends a lot more illuminatin' than listenin' to Mr. Marvin. So, when I
+ drew down my second pay envelop, I told the clerk I was quittin'.<a class="pagenum" name="page_131" title="131" id=
+ "page_131"></a> I don't mind sayin', either, that it seemed good to splash around in a reg'lar bath-tub once more and
+ to look a sirloin steak in the face again. A stiff collar did seem odd, though.</p>
+
+ <p>Me and Mr. Ellins had some session. We went through that red note-book thorough. He was breathin' a bit heavy at
+ times, and he chewed hard on his cigar all the way; but he never blew a fuse until forty-eight hours later. The
+ General Manager of Wonder Motors, four department heads, and the army officer detailed as inspector was part of the
+ audience. They'd been called on the carpet by wire, and was grouped around one end of our directors' table. At the
+ other end was Old Hickory, Mr. Robert, Piddie, and me.</p>
+
+ <p>Item by item, Mr. Ellins had sketched out to the Wonder crowd the bunk stuff they'd been slippin' over. First they
+ tried protestin' indignant; then they made a stab at actin' hurt; but in the end they just looked plain foolish.</p>
+
+ <p>"My dear Mr. Ellins," put in the General Manager, "one cannot watch every workman in a plant of that magnitude.
+ Besides," here he hunches his shoulders, "if the government is satisfied&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Hah!" snorts Old Hickory. "But it isn't. For I'm the government in this instance. I'm<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_132" title="132" id="page_132"></a> standing for Uncle Sam. That's what I meant when I took those ten per cent.
+ contracts. I'm too old to go out and fight his enemies abroad, but I can stay behind and watch for yellow-livered
+ buzzards such as you. Call that business, do you? Fattening your dividends by sending our boys up against the
+ Prussian guns in junky motor-tanks covered with tin armor! Bah! Your ethics need chloride of lime on them. And you
+ come here whining that you can't watch your men! By the great sizzling sisters, we'll see if you can't! You will put
+ in every missing rivet, replace every flawy plate, and make every machine perfect, or I'll smash your little
+ two-by-four concern so flat the bankruptcy courts won't find enough to tack a libel notice on. Now go back and get
+ busy."</p>
+
+ <p>They seemed in a hurry to start, too.</p>
+
+ <p>An hour or so later, when Old Hickory had stopped steaming, he passes out a different set of remarks to me. Oh,
+ the usual grateful boss stuff. Even says he's going to make the War Department give me a commission, with a special
+ detail.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wouldn't that be wonderful!" says Vee, clappin' her hands. "Do you really think he will? A lieutenant,
+ perhaps?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what he mentioned," says I.<a class="pagenum" name="page_133" title="133" id="page_133"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Really!" says Vee, makin' a rush at me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wait up!" says I. "Halt, I mean. Now, as you were! Sal-ute!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Pooh!" says Vee, continuin' her rush.</p>
+
+ <p>But say, she knows how to salute, all right. Her way would break up an army, though. All the same, I guess I've
+ earned it, for by Monday night I'll be up in a Syracuse shovel works, wearin' a one-piece business suit of the
+ Never-rip brand, and I'll likely have enough grease on me to lubricate a switch-engine.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's lucky you don't see me, Vee," says I, "when I'm out savin' the country. You'd wonder how you ever come to do
+ it."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_134" title="134" id="page_134"></a>
+ <a name="A_CARRY-ON_FOR_CLARA_3415" id="A_CARRY-ON_FOR_CLARA_3415"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+ <h3>A CARRY-ON FOR CLARA</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Now turn around," says Vee. "Oh, Torchy! Why, you look perfectly&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Do I?" I cuts in. "Well, you don't think I'm goin' to the office like this, do you?"</p>
+
+ <p>She does. Insists that Mr. Ellins will expect it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Besides," says she, "it is in the army regulations that you must. If you don't&mdash;well, I'm not sure whether
+ it is treason or mutiny."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hal-lup!" says I. "I surrender."</p>
+
+ <p>So I starts for town lookin' as warlike as if I'd just come from a front trench, and feelin' like a masquerader
+ who'd lost his way to the ball-room.</p>
+
+ <p>In the office, Old Hickory gives me the thorough up-and-down. It's a genial, fatherly sort of inspection, and he
+ ends it with a satisfied grunt.</p>
+
+ <p>"Good-morning, Lieutenant," says he. "I see you have&mdash;er&mdash;got 'em on. And, allow me to mention, rather a
+ good fit, sir."<a class="pagenum" name="page_135" title="135" id="page_135"></a></p>
+
+ <p>I gasps. Sirred by Old Hickory! Do you wonder I got fussed? But he only chuckles easy, waves me to take a chair,
+ and goes on with:</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the word from the Syracuse sector?"</p>
+
+ <p>At that, I gets my breath back.</p>
+
+ <p>"Fairly good deal up there, sir," says I. "They're workin' in a carload or so of wormy ash for the shovel handles,
+ and some of the steel runs below test; but most of their stuff grades well. I'll have my notes typed off right
+ away."</p>
+
+ <p>After I've filed my report I should have ducked. But this habit of stickin' around the shop is hard to break. And
+ that's how I happen to be on hand when the lady in gray drifts in for her chatty confab with Mr. Ellins.</p>
+
+ <p>Seems she held quite a block of our preferred, for when Vincent lugs in her card Old Hickory spots the name right
+ away as being on our widow-and-orphan list that we wave at investigatin' committees.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, yes!" says he. "Mrs. Parker Smith. Show her in, boy."</p>
+
+ <p>Such a quiet, gentle, dignified party she is, her costume tonin' in with her gray hair, and an easy way of
+ speakin' and all, that my first<a class="pagenum" name="page_136" title="136" id="page_136"></a> guess is she might
+ be the head of an old ladies' home.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Ellins," says she, "I am looking for my niece."</p>
+
+ <p>"Are you?" says Mr. Ellins, "Humph! Hardly think we could be of service in such a case."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says she. "I&mdash;I am so sorry."</p>
+
+ <p>"Lost, is she?" suggests Mr. Ellins, weakenin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"She is somewhere in New York," goes on Mrs. Parker Smith. "Of course, I know it is an imposition to trouble you
+ with such a matter. But I thought you might have someone in your office who&mdash;who&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"We have," says he. "Torchy,&mdash;er&mdash;I mean, Lieutenant,&mdash;Mrs. Parker Smith. Here, madam, is a young
+ man who will find your niece for you at once. In private life he is my secretary; and as it happens that just now he
+ is on special detail, his services are entirely at your disposal."</p>
+
+ <p>She looks a little doubtful about bein' shunted like that, but she follows me into the next room, where I produces
+ a pencil and pad and calls for details businesslike.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's see," says I. "What's the full description? Age?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_137" title="137" id=
+ "page_137"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says she, hesitatin', "Claire is about twenty-two."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says I. "Got beyond the flapper stage, then. Height&mdash;tall or short?"</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Parker Smith shakes her head.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure I don't know," says she. "You see, Claire is not an own niece. She&mdash;well, she is a daughter of my
+ first husband's second wife's step-sister."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wha-a-at?" says I, gawpin' at her. "Daughter of your&mdash;&mdash; Oh, say, let's not go into it as deep as that.
+ I'm dizzy already. Suppose we call her an in-law once removed and let it go at that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you," says Mrs. Parker Smith, givin' me a quizzin' smile. "Perhaps it is enough to say that I have never
+ seen her."</p>
+
+ <p>She does go on to explain, though, that when Claire's step-uncle, or whatever he was, found his heart trouble
+ gettin' worse, he wrote to Mrs. Parker Smith, askin' her to forget the past and look after the orphan girl that he's
+ been tryin' to bring up. It's just as clear to me as the average movie plot, but I nods my head.</p>
+
+ <p>"So for three years," says she, "while Claire was in boarding-school, I acted as her guardian; but since she has
+ come of age I have<a class="pagenum" name="page_138" title="138" id="page_138"></a> been merely the executor of her
+ small estate."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, yes!" says I. "And now she's come to New York, and forgot to send you her address?"</p>
+
+ <p>It was something like that. Claire had gone in for art. Looked like she'd splurged heavy on it, too; for the drain
+ on her income had been something fierce. Meanwhile, Mrs. Parker Smith had doped out an entirely different future for
+ Claire. The funds that had been tied up in a Vermont barrel-stave fact'ry, that was makin' less and less barrel
+ staves every year, Auntie had pulled out and invested in a model dairy farm out near Rockford, Illinois. She'd made
+ the capital turn over from fifteen to twenty per cent., too, by livin' right on the job and cashin' in the cream
+ tickets herself.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have!" says I. "Not a reg'lar cow farm?"</p>
+
+ <p>She nods.</p>
+
+ <p>"It did seem rather odd, at first," says she. "But I wanted to get away from&mdash;from everything. But
+ now&mdash;&mdash; Well, I want Claire. I suppose I am a little lonesome. Besides, I want her to try taking charge.
+ Recently, when she had drawn her income for half a year in<a class="pagenum" name="page_139" title="139" id=
+ "page_139"></a> advance and still asked for more, I was obliged to refuse."</p>
+
+ <p>"And then?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Parker Smith shrugs her shoulders.</p>
+
+ <p>"The foolish girl chose to quarrel with me," says she. "About ten days ago she sent me a curt note. I could keep
+ her money; she was tired of being dictated to. I needn't write any more, for she had moved to another address, had
+ changed her name."</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says I. "That does make it complicated. You don't know what she looks like, or what name she flags under,
+ and I'm to find her in little New York?"</p>
+
+ <p>But I finds myself tacklin this hopeless puzzle from every angle I could think of. I tried 'phonin' to Claire's
+ old street number. Nothin' doin'. They didn't know anything about Miss Hunt.</p>
+
+ <p>"What brand of art was she monkeyin' with?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Parker Smith couldn't say. Claire hadn't been very chatty in her letters. Chiefly she had demanded
+ checks.</p>
+
+ <p>"But in one she did mention," says the lady in gray, "that&mdash;&mdash; Now, what was it! Oh, yes! Something
+ about 'landing a cover.' What could that mean?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_140" title="140" id="page_140"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Cover?" says I. "Why, for a magazine, maybe. That's it. And if we only knew what name she'd sign, we
+ might&mdash;&mdash; Would she stick to the Claire part? I'll bet she would. Wait. I'll get a bunch of back numbers
+ from the arcade news-stand and we'll go through 'em."</p>
+
+ <p>We'd hunted through an armful, though, before we runs across this freaky sketch of a purple nymph, with bright
+ yellow hair, bouncin' across a stretch of dark blue lawn.</p>
+
+ <p>"Claire Lamar!" says I. "Would that be&mdash;&mdash; Eh? What's wrong?"</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Parker Smith seems to be gettin' a jolt of some kind, but she steadies herself and almost gets back her
+ smile.</p>
+
+ <p>"I&mdash;I am sure it would," says she. "It's very odd, though."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I don't know," says I. "Listens kind of arty&mdash;Claire Lamar. Lemme see. This snappy fifteen-center has
+ editorial offices on Fourth Avenue and&mdash;&mdash; Well, well! Barry Frost, ad. manager! Say, if I can get him on
+ the wire&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>Just by luck, I did. Would he pry some facts for me out of the art editor, facts about a certain party? Sure he
+ would. And inside of ten minutes, without leavin' the Corrugated<a class="pagenum" name="page_141" title="141" id=
+ "page_141"></a> General Offices, I had a full description of Claire, includin' where she hung out.</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says I. "Greenwich Village, eh? You might know."</p>
+
+ <p>"My dear Lieutenant," says Mrs. Parker Smith, "I think you are perfectly wonderful."</p>
+
+ <p>"Swell thought!" says I. "But you needn't let on to Mr. Ellins how simple it was. And now, all you got to do
+ is&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know," she cuts in. "And I really ought not to trouble you another moment. But, since Mr. Ellins has been so
+ kind&mdash;well, I am going to ask you to help me just a trifle more."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shoot," says I, unsuspicious.</p>
+
+ <p>It ain't much, she says. But she's afraid, if she trails Claire to her rooms, the young lady might send down word
+ she was out, or make a quick exit.</p>
+
+ <p>"But if you would go," she suggests, "with a note from me asking her to join us somewhere at
+ dinner&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>I holds up both hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sorry," says I, "but I got to duck. That's taking too many chances."</p>
+
+ <p>Then I explains how, although I may look like a singleton, I'm really the other half of a<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_142" title="142" id="page_142"></a> very interestin' domestic sketch, and that Vee's expectin' me home to
+ dinner.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, all the better!" says Mrs. Parker Smith. "Have her come in and join us. I'll tell you: we will have our
+ little party down at the old Napoleon, where they have such delicious French cooking. Now, please."</p>
+
+ <p>As I've hinted before, she is some persuader. I ain't mesmerized so strong, though, but what I got sense enough to
+ play it safe by callin' up Vee first. I don't think she was strong for joinin' the reunion until I points out that I
+ might be some shy at wanderin' down into the art-student colony and collectin' a strange young lady illustrator all
+ by myself.</p>
+
+ <p>"Course, I could do it alone if I had to," I throws in.</p>
+
+ <p>"H-m-m-m!" says Vee. "If that bashfulness of yours is likely to be as bad as all that, perhaps I'd better
+ come."</p>
+
+ <p>So by six o 'clock Vee and I are in the dinky reception-room of one of them Belasco boardin'-houses, tryin' to
+ convince a young female in a paint-splashed smock and a floppy boudoir cap that we ain't tryin' to kidnap or
+ otherwise annoy her.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the big idea?" says she. "I don't get you at all."<a class="pagenum" name="page_143" title="143" id=
+ "page_143"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe if you'd read the note it would help," I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says she, and takes it over by the window.</p>
+
+ <p>She's a long-waisted, rangy young party, who walks with a Theda Bara slouch and tries to talk out of one side of
+ her mouth. "Hello!" she goes on. "The Parker Smith person. That's enough. It's all off."</p>
+
+ <p>"Just as you say," says I. "But, if you ask me, I wouldn't pass up an aunt like her without takin' a look."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aunt!" says Claire Lamar, <i>alias</i> Hunt. "Listen: she's about as much an aunt to me as I am to either of you.
+ And I've never shed any tears over the fact, either. The only aunt that I'd ever own was one that my family would
+ never tell me much about. I had to find out about her for myself. Take it from me, though, she was some aunt."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tastes in aunts differ, I expect," says I. "And Mrs. Parker Smith don't claim to be a reg'lar aunt, anyway. She
+ seems harmless, too. All she wants is a chance to give you a rosy prospectus of life on a cow farm and blow you to a
+ dinner at the Napoleon."</p>
+
+ <p>"Think of that!" says Claire. "And I've been living for weeks on window-sill meals,<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_144" title="144" id="page_144"></a> with now and then a ptomaine-defying gorge at the Pink Poodle's sixty-cent
+ table d'hôte. Oh, I'll come, I'll come! But I warn you: the Parker Smith person will understand before the evening is
+ over that I was born to no cow farm in Illinois. "</p>
+
+ <p>With that she glides off to do a dinner change.</p>
+
+ <p>"I believe it is going to be quite an interesting party, don't you?" says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"The signs point that way," says I. "But the old girl really ought to wear shock-absorbers if she wants to last
+ through the evenin'. S-s-s-sh! Claire is comin' back."</p>
+
+ <p>This time she's draped herself in a pale yellow kimono with blue triangles stenciled all over it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Speaking of perfectly good aunts," says she, "there!" And she displays a silver-framed photo. It's an old-timer
+ done in faded brown, and shows a dashin' young party wearin' funny sleeves, a ringlet cascade on one side of her
+ head, and a saucy little pancake lid over one ear.</p>
+
+ <p>"That," explains Claire, "was my aunt Clara Lamar; not my real aunt, you know, but near enough for me to claim
+ her. This was taken in '82, I believe."<a class="pagenum" name="page_145" title="145" id="page_145"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Really!" says Vee. "She must have been quite pretty."</p>
+
+ <p>"That doesn't half tell it," says Claire. "She was a charmer, simply fascinating. Not beautiful, you know, but she
+ had a way with her. She was brilliant, daring, one of the kind that men raved over. At twenty she married a
+ Congressman, fat and forty. She hadn't lived in Washington six months before her receptions were crushes. She flirted
+ industriously. A young French aide and an army officer fought a duel over her. And, while the capital was buzzing
+ with that, she eloped with another diplomat, a Russian. For a year or two they lived in Paris. She had her salon.
+ Then the Russian got himself killed in some way, and she soon married again&mdash;another American, quite wealthy. He
+ brought her back to New York, and they lived in one of those old brown-stone mansions on lower Fifth Avenue. Her
+ dinner parties were the talk of the town&mdash;champagne with the fish, vodka with the coffee, cigarettes for the
+ women, cut-up stunts afterwards. I forget just who No. 3 was, but he succumbed. Couldn't stand the pace, I suppose.
+ And then&mdash;&mdash; Well, Aunt Clara disappeared. But, say, she was a regular<a class="pagenum" name="page_146"
+ title="146" id="page_146"></a> person. I wish I could find out what ever became of her."</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe Mrs. Parker Smith could give you a line," I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>"Her!" says Claire. "Fat chance! But I must finish dressing. Sorry to keep you waiting."</p>
+
+ <p>We did get a bit restless durin' the next half hour, but the wait was worth while. For, believe me, when Claire
+ comes down again she's some dolled.</p>
+
+ <p>I don't mean she was any home-destroyer. That face of hers is too long and heavy for the front row of a song
+ review. But she has plenty of zip to her get-up. After one glance I calls a taxi.</p>
+
+ <p>The way I'd left it with Mrs. Parker Smith, we was to land Claire at the hotel first; then call her up, and
+ proceed to order dinner. So we had another little stage wait, with only the three of us at the table.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope you don't mind if I have a puff or two," says Claire. "It goes here, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Anything to make the evenin' a success," says I, signalin' a garçon. "My khaki lets me out of followin' you."</p>
+
+ <p>So, when the head waiter finally tows in Mrs. Parker Smith, costumed in the same gray<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_147" title="147" id="page_147"></a> dress and lookin' meeker and gentler than ever, she is greeted with a
+ sporty tableau. But she don't faint or anything. She just springs that twisty smile of hers and comes right on.</p>
+
+ <p>"The missing one!" says I, wavin' at Claire.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" says Mrs. Parker Smith, beamin' on her. "So good of you to come!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wasn't it?" says Claire, removin' the cork tip languid.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, as a get-together I must admit that the outlook was kind of frosty. Claire showed plenty of enthusiasm for
+ the <i>hors d'&oelig;uvres</i> and the low-tide soup and so on, but mighty little for this volunteer auntie, who
+ starts to describe the subtle joys of the butter business.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you have never seen a herd of registered Guernseys," says Mrs. Parker Smith, "when they are munching
+ contentedly at milking time, with their big, dreamy eyes&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Excuse me!" says Claire. "I don't have to. I spent a whole month's vacation on a Vermont farm."</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Parker Smith only smiles indulgent.</p>
+
+ <p>"We use electric milkers, you know," says she, "and most of our young men come from the agricultural
+ colleges."</p>
+
+ <p>"That listens alluring&mdash;some," admits Claire.<a class="pagenum" name="page_148" title="148" id=
+ "page_148"></a> "But I can't see myself planted ten miles out on an R. F. D. route, even with college-bred help.
+ Pardon me if I light another dope-stick."</p>
+
+ <p>I could get her idea easy enough, by then. Claire wasn't half so sporty as she hoped she was. It was just her way
+ of doing the carry-on for Aunt Clara Lamar. But, at the same time, we couldn't help feelin' kind of sorry for Mrs.
+ Parker Smith. She was tryin' to be so nice and friendly, and she wasn't gettin' anywhere.</p>
+
+ <p>It was by way of switchin' the line of table chat, I expect, that Vee breaks in with that remark about the only
+ piece of jewelry the old girl is wearin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"What a duck of a bracelet!" says Vee. "An heirloom, is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Almost," says Mrs. Parker Smith. "It was given to me on my twenty-second birthday, in Florence."</p>
+
+ <p>She slips it off and passes it over for inspection. The part that goes around the wrist is all of fine chain-work,
+ silver and gold, woven almost like cloth, and on top is a cameo, 'most as big as a clam.</p>
+
+ <p>"How stunning! Look, Torchy. O-o-oh!" says Vee, gaspin' a little.<a class="pagenum" name="page_149" title="149"
+ id="page_149"></a></p>
+
+ <p>In handling the thing she must have pressed a catch somewhere, for the cameo springs back, revealin' a locket
+ effect underneath with a picture in it. Course, we couldn't help seein'.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;why&mdash;&mdash;" says Vee, gazin' from the picture to Mrs. Parker Smith. "Isn't this a portrait
+ of&mdash;of&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Of a very silly young woman," cuts in Auntie. "We waited in Florence a week to have that finished."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then&mdash;then it is you!" asks Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>The lady in gray nods. Vee asks if she may show it to Claire.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?" says Mrs. Parker Smith, smilin'.</p>
+
+ <p>We didn't stop to explain. I passes it on to Claire, and then we both watches her face. For the dinky little
+ picture under the cameo is a dead ringer for the one Claire had shown us in the silver frame. So it was Claire's turn
+ to catch a short breath.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't tell me," says she, "that&mdash;that you are Clara Lamar?"</p>
+
+ <p>Which was when Auntie got her big jolt. For a second the pink fades out of her cheeks, and the salad fork she'd
+ been holdin' rattles<a class="pagenum" name="page_150" title="150" id="page_150"></a> into her plate. She makes a
+ quick recovery, though.</p>
+
+ <p>"I was&mdash;once," says she. "I had hoped, though, that the name had been forgotten. Tell me, how&mdash;how do
+ you happen to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says Claire, "uncle had the scrapbook habit. Anyway, I found this one in an old desk, and it was all about
+ you. Your picture was in it, too. And say, Auntie, you were the real thing, weren't you?"</p>
+
+ <p>After that it was a reg'lar reunion. For Claire had dug up her heroine. And, no matter how strong Auntie protests
+ that she ain't that sort of a party now, and hasn't been for years and years, Claire keeps right on. She's a
+ consistent admirer, even if she is a little late.</p>
+
+ <p>"If I had only known it was you!" says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then&mdash;then you'll come to Meadowbrae with me?" asks Mrs. Parker Smith.</p>
+
+ <p>"You bet!" says Claire. "Between you and me, this art career of mine has rather fizzled out. Besides, keeping it
+ up has got to be rather a bore. Honest, a spaghetti and cigarette life is a lot more romantic to read about than it
+ is to follow. Whether I could learn to run a dairy farm or not, I don't know; but, with an aunt like you to coach me
+ along, I'm<a class="pagenum" name="page_151" title="151" id="page_151"></a> blessed if I don't give it a try. When do
+ we start?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But," says Vee to me, later, "I can't imagine her on a farm."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I don't know," says I. "Didn't you notice she couldn't smoke without gettin' it up her nose?"</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_152" title="152" id="page_152"></a>
+ <a name="ALL_THE_WAY_WITH_ANNA_3856" id="ALL_THE_WAY_WITH_ANNA_3856"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+ <h3>ALL THE WAY WITH ANNA</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Believe me, Belinda, this havin' a boss who's apt to stack you up casual against stuff that would worry a secret
+ service corps recruited from seventh sons is a grand little cure for monotonous moments. Just because I happen to get
+ a few easy breaks on my first special details seems to give Old Hickory the merry idea that when he wants someone to
+ do the wizard act, all he has to do is press the button for me. I don't know whether my wearin' the khaki uniform
+ helps out the notion or not. I shouldn't wonder.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, here a week or ten days ago, when I leaves Vee and my peaceful little home after a week-end swing, I expects
+ to be shot up to Amesbury, Mass., to inspect a gun-limber factory. Am I? Not at all. By 3 <span class=
+ "smcap">P.M.</span> I'm in Bridgeport, Conn., wanderin' about sort of aimless, and tryin' to size up a proposition
+ that I'm about as well qualified to handle as<a class="pagenum" name="page_153" title="153" id="page_153"></a> a
+ plumber's helper called in to tune a pipe organ.</p>
+
+ <p>Why was it that some three thousand hands in one of our sub-contractin' plants was bent on gettin' stirred up and
+ messy about every so often, in spite of all that had been done to soothe 'em?</p>
+
+ <p>Does that listen simple, or excitin', or even interestin'? It didn't to me. Specially after I'd given the
+ once-over to this giddy mob of Wops and Hunkies and Sneezowskis.</p>
+
+ <p>The office people didn't know how many brands of Czechs or Magyars or Polacks they had in the shops. What they was
+ real sure of was that a third of the bunch had walked out twice within the last month, and if they quit again, as
+ there was signs of their doin', we stood to drop about $200,000 in bonuses on shell contracts.</p>
+
+ <p>It wasn't a matter of wage scales, either. Honest, some of them ginks with three z's in their names was runnin'
+ up, with over-time and all, pay envelops that averaged as much as twelve a day. Why, some of the women and girls were
+ pullin' down twenty-five a week. And they couldn't kick on the workin' conditions, either. Here was a brand-new
+ concrete plant, clean as a new dish-pan, with half the<a class="pagenum" name="page_154" title="154" id=
+ "page_154"></a> sides swingin' glass sashes, and flower beds outside.</p>
+
+ <p>"And still they threaten another strike," says the general manager. "If it comes, we might as well scrap this
+ whole plant and transfer the equipment to Pennsylvania or somewhere else. Unless"&mdash;here he grins
+ sarcastic&mdash;"you can find out what ails 'em, Lieutenant. But you are only the third bright young man the
+ Corrugated has sent out to tell us what's what, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, well," says I. "There's luck in odd numbers. Cheer up."</p>
+
+ <p>It was after this little chat that I sheds the army costume and wanders out disguised as a horny-handed
+ workingman.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that I'd decided to get a job right away. After my last stab I ain't so strong for this ten-hour cold-lunch
+ trick as I was when I was new to the patriotic sleuthin' act. Besides, bein' no linguist, I couldn't see how workin'
+ with such a mixed lot was goin' to get me anywhere. If I could only run across a good ambidextrous interpreter, now,
+ one who could listen in ten languages and talk in six, it might help. And who was it I once knew that had moved to
+ Bridgeport?</p>
+
+ <p>I'd been mullin' on that mystery ever since<a class="pagenum" name="page_155" title="155" id="page_155"></a> I
+ struck the town. Just a glimmer, somewhere in the back of my nut, that there had been such a party some time or
+ other. I'll admit that wasn't much of a clue to start out trailin' in a place of this size, but it's all I had.</p>
+
+ <p>I must have walked miles, readin' the signs on the stores, pushin' my way through the crowds, and finally droppin'
+ into a fairly clean-lookin' restaurant for dinner. Half way through the goulash and noodles, I had this bright
+ thought about consultin' the 'phone book. The cashier that let me have it eyed me suspicious as I props it up against
+ the sugar bowl and starts in with the A's.</p>
+
+ <p>Ever try readin' a telephone directory straight through? By the time I'd got through the M's I'd had to order
+ another cup of coffee and a second piece of lemon pie. At that, the waitress was gettin' uneasy. She'd just shoved my
+ check at me for the third time, and was addin' a glass of wooden tooth-picks, when I lets out this excited stage
+ whisper.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sobowski!" says I, grabbin' the book.</p>
+
+ <p>The young lady in the frilled apron rests her thumbs on her hips dignified and shoots me a haughty glance. "Ring
+ off, young feller," says she. "You got the wrong number."<a class="pagenum" name="page_156" title="156" id=
+ "page_156"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Not so, Clarice," says I. "His first name is Anton, and he used to run a shine parlor in the arcade of the
+ Corrugated buildin', New York, N. Y."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a small world, ain't it?" says she. "You can pay me or at the desk, just as you like."</p>
+
+ <p>Clarice got her tip all right, and loaned me her pencil to write down Anton's street number.</p>
+
+ <p>A stocky, bow-legged son of Kosciuszko, built close to the ground, and with a neck on him like a truck-horse, as I
+ remembered Anton. But the hottest kind of a sport. Used to run a pool on the ball-games, and made a book on the
+ ponies now and then. Always had a roll with him. He'd take a nickel tip from me and then bet a guy in the next chair
+ fifty to thirty-five the Giants would score more'n three runs against the Cubs' new pitcher in to-morrow's game. That
+ kind.</p>
+
+ <p>Must have been two or three years back that Anton had told me about some openin' he had to go in with a
+ brother-in-law up in Bridgeport. Likely I didn't pay much attention at the time. Anyway, he was missin' soon after;
+ and if I hadn't been in the habit of callin' him Old Sobstuff I'd have forgotten that name of<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_157" title="157" id="page_157"></a> his entirely. But seein' it there in the book brought back the whole
+ thing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Anton Sobowski, saloon," was the way it was listed. So he was runnin' a suds parlor, eh? Well, it wasn't likely
+ he'd know much about labor troubles, but it wouldn't do any harm to look him up. When I came to trail down the street
+ number, though, blamed if it ain't within half a block of our branch works.</p>
+
+ <p>And, sure enough, in a little office beyond the bar, leanin' back luxurious in a swivel-chair, and displayin' a
+ pair of baby-blue armlets over his shirt sleeves, I discovers Mr. Sobowski himself. It ain't any brewery-staked
+ hole-in-the-wall he's boss of, either. It's the Warsaw Café, bar and restaurant, all glittery and gorgeous, with lace
+ curtains in the front windows, red, white, and blue mosquito nettin' draped artistic over the frosted mirrors, and
+ three busy mixers behind the mahogany bar.</p>
+
+ <p>Anton has fleshed up considerable since he quit jugglin' the brushes, and he's lost a little of the good-natured
+ twinkle from his wide-set eyes. He glances up at me sort of surly when I first steps into the office; but the minute
+ I takes off the straw lid and ducks my head at him, he lets loose a rumbly chuckle.<a class="pagenum" name="page_158"
+ title="158" id="page_158"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"It is that Torchy, hey?" says he. "Well, well! It don't fade any, does it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not that kind of dye," says I. "How's the boy?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Me," says Anton. "Oh, fine like silk. How you like the place, hey?"</p>
+
+ <p>I enthused over the Warsaw Café; and when he found I was still with the Corrugated, and didn't want to touch him
+ for any coin, but had just happened to be in town and thought I'd look him up for old times' sake&mdash;well, Anton
+ opened up considerable.</p>
+
+ <p>"What!" says he. "They send you out? You must be comin' up?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Only private sec. to Mr. Ellins," says I, "but he chases me around a good deal. We're busy people these days, you
+ know."</p>
+
+ <p>"The Corrugated Trust! I should say so," agrees Anton, waggin' his head earnest. "Big people, big money. I like to
+ have my brother-in-law meet you. Wait."</p>
+
+ <p>Seemed a good deal like wastin' time, but I spent the whole evenin' with Anton. I met not only the brother-in-law,
+ but also Mrs. Sobowski, his wife; and another Mrs. Sobowski, an aunt or something; and Miss Anna Sobowski, his niece.
+ Also I saw the three-story Sobowski boardin'-house that Anton conducted on the<a class="pagenum" name="page_159"
+ title="159" id="page_159"></a> side; and the Alcazar movie joint, another Sobowski enterprise.</p>
+
+ <p>That's where this Anna party was sellin' tickets&mdash;a peachy-cheeked, high-chested young lady with big, rollin'
+ eyes, and her mud-colored hair waved something wonderful. I was introduced reg'lar and impressive.</p>
+
+ <p>"Anna," says Anton, "take a good look at this young man. He's a friend of mine. Any time he comes by, pass him in
+ free&mdash;any time at all. See?"</p>
+
+ <p>And Anna, she flashes them high-powered eyes of hers at me kittenish. "Aw ri'," says she. "I'm on, Mr.
+ Torchy."</p>
+
+ <p>"That girl," confides Anton to me afterwards, "was eating black bread and cabbage soup in Poland less than three
+ years ago. Now she buys high kid boots, two kinds of leather, at fourteen dollars. And makes goo-goo eyes at all the
+ men. Yes, but never no mistakes with the change. Not Anna."</p>
+
+ <p>All of which was interestin' enough, but it didn't seem to help any. You never can tell, though, can you? You see,
+ it was kind of hard, breakin' away from Anton once he'd started to get folksy and show me what an important party
+ he'd come to be. He wanted me to see the Warsaw when it was really doin' business,<a class="pagenum" name="page_160"
+ title="160" id="page_160"></a> about ten o'clock, after the early picture-show crowds had let out and the meetin' in
+ the hall overhead was in full swing.</p>
+
+ <p>"What sort of meetin'?" I asks, just as a filler.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, some kind of labor meetin'," says he. "I d'know. They chin a lot. That's thirsty work. Good for business,
+ hey?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Is it a labor union?" I insists.</p>
+
+ <p>Anton shrugs his shoulders.</p>
+
+ <p>"You wait," says he. "Mr. Stukey, he'll tell you all about it. Yes, an ear-full. He's a good spender, Stukey.
+ Hires the hall, too."</p>
+
+ <p>Somehow, that listened like it might be a lead. But an hour later, when I'd had a chance to look him over, I was
+ for passin' Stukey up. For he sure was disappointin' to view. One of these thin, sallow, dyspeptic parties, with deep
+ lines down either side of his mouth, a bristly, jutty little mustache, and ratty little eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>I expect Anton meant well when he brings out strong, in introducin' me, how I'm connected with the Corrugated
+ Trust. In fact, you might almost gather I <i>was</i> the Corrugated. But it don't make any hit with Stukey.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hah!" says he, glarin' at me hostile. "A minion."<a class="pagenum" name="page_161" title="161" id=
+ "page_161"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Solid agate yourself," says I. "Wha'd'ye mean&mdash;minion?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Aren't you a hireling of the capitalistic class?" demands Stukey.</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe," says I, "but I ain't above mixin' with lower-case minds now and then."</p>
+
+ <p>"Case?" says he. "I don't understand."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps that's your trouble," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bah!" says he, real peevish.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come, come, boys!" says Anton, clappin' us jovial on the shoulders. "What's this all about, hey? We are all
+ friends here. Yes? Is it that the meetin' goes wrong, Mr. Stukey? Tell us, now."</p>
+
+ <p>Stukey shakes his head at him warnin'. "What meetin'?" says he. "Don't be foolish. What time is it? Ten-twenty! I
+ have an engagement."</p>
+
+ <p>And with that he struts off important.</p>
+
+ <p>Anton hunches his shoulders and lets out a grunt.</p>
+
+ <p>"He has it bad&mdash;Stukey," says he. "It is that Anna. Every night he must walk home with her."</p>
+
+ <p>"She ain't particular, is she?" I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I don't know," says Anton. "Yes, he is older, and not a strong hearty man, like some of these young fellows.
+ But he is educated;<a class="pagenum" name="page_162" title="162" id="page_162"></a> oh, like the devil. You should
+ hear him talk once."</p>
+
+ <p>But Stukey had stirred up a stubborn streak in me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is he, though," says I, "or do you kid yourself?"</p>
+
+ <p>I thought that would get a come-back out of Anton. And it does.</p>
+
+ <p>"If I am so foolish," says he, "would I be here, with my name in gold above the door, or back shining shoes in the
+ Corrugated arcade yet? Hey? I will tell you this. Nobodies don't come and hire my hall from me, fifty a week, in
+ advance."</p>
+
+ <p>"Cash or checks?" I puts in.</p>
+
+ <p>"If the bank takes the checks, why should I worry?" asks Anton.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, the first one might be all right," says I, "and the second; but&mdash;well, you know your own business, I
+ expect."</p>
+
+ <p>Anton gazes at me stupid for a minute, then turns to his desk and fishes out a bunch of returned checks. He goes
+ through 'em rapid until he has run across the one he's lookin' for.</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe I do," says he, wavin' it under my nose triumphant.</p>
+
+ <p>Which gives me the glimpse I'd been jockeyin'<a class="pagenum" name="page_163" title="163" id="page_163"></a>
+ for. The name of that bank was enough. From then on I was mighty interested in this Mortimer J. Stukey; and while I
+ didn't exactly use the pressure pump on Anton, I may have asked a few leadin' questions. Who was Stukey, where did he
+ come from, and what was his idea&mdash;hirin' halls and so on? While Anton could recognize a dollar a long way off,
+ he wasn't such a keen observer of folks.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't worry whether he's a Wilson man or not," says Anton, "or which movie star he likes best after Mary
+ Pickford. If I did I should ask Anna."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I, sort of eager.</p>
+
+ <p>"He tells her a lot he don't tell me," says Anton.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's reasonable, too," says I. "Ask Anna. Say, that ain't a bad hunch. Much obliged."</p>
+
+ <p>It wasn't so easy, though, with Stukey on the job, to get near enough to ask Anna anything. When they came in, and
+ Anton invites me to join the fam'ly group in the boardin'-house dinin'-room while the cheese sandwiches and pickles
+ was bein' passed around, I finds Stukey blockin' me off scientific.</p>
+
+ <p>As Anton had said, he had it bad. Never took his eyes off Anna for a second. I suppose<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_164" title="164" id="page_164"></a> he thought he was registerin' tender emotions, but it struck me as more of
+ a hungry look than anything else. Miss Sobowski seemed to like it, though.</p>
+
+ <p>I expect a real lady's man wouldn't have had much trouble cuttin' in on Stukey and towin' Anna off into a corner.
+ But that ain't my strong suit. The best I could do was to wait until the next day, when there was no opposition.
+ Meantime I'd been usin' the long-distance reckless; so by the time Anna shows up at the Alcazar to open the window
+ for the evenin' sale, I was primed with a good many more facts about a certain party than I had been the night
+ before. Stukey wasn't quite such a man of mystery as he had been.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I might have gone straight to Anton; but, somehow, I wanted to try out a few hints on Anna. I couldn't say
+ just why, either. The line of josh I opens with ain't a bit subtle. It don't have to be. Anna was tickled to pieces
+ to be kidded about her feller. She invites me into the box-office, offers me chewin' gum, and proceeds to get quite
+ frisky.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, who was tellin' you that?" says she. "Can't a girl have a gentleman frien' without everybody's askin' is she
+ engaged? Wotcher think?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_165" title="165" id="page_165"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Tut-tut!" says I. "I suppose, when you two had your heads together so close, he was rehearsin' one of his
+ speeches to you&mdash;the kind he makes up in the hall, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Stukey don't make no speeches there," says Anna. "He just tells the others what to say. You ought to hear him
+ talk, though. My, sometimes he's just grand!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Urgin' 'em not to quit work, I suppose?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Him?" says Anna. "Not much. He wants 'em to strike, all the time strike, until they own the shops. He's got no
+ use for rich people. Calls 'em blood-suckers and things like that. Oh, he's sump'n fierce when he talks about the
+ rich."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is he?" says I. "I wonder why?"</p>
+
+ <p>"All the workers get like that," says Anna. "Mr. Stukey says that pretty soon everybody will join&mdash;all but
+ the rich blood-suckers, and they'll be in jail. He was poor himself once. So was I, you know, in Poland. But we got
+ along until the Germans came, and then&mdash;&mdash; Ugh! I don't like to remember."</p>
+
+ <p>"Anton was tellin' me," says I. "You lost some of your folks."</p>
+
+ <p>"Lost!" says Anna, a panicky look comin' into her big eyes. "You call it that? I saw<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_166" title="166" id="page_166"></a> my father shot, my two brothers dragged off to work in the trenches, and my
+ sister&mdash;oh, I can't! I can't say it!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then don't tell Stukey," says I, "if you want to keep stringin' him along."</p>
+
+ <p>"But why?" demands Anna.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because," says I, "the money he's spendin' so free around here comes from them&mdash;the Germans."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no!" says Anna, whisperin' husky. "That&mdash;that's a lie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sorry," says I; "but I got his number straight. He was workin' for a German insurance company up to 1915,
+ bookkeepin' at ninety a month. Then he got the chuck. He came near starvin'. It was when he was almost in that he
+ went crawlin' back to 'em, and they gave him this job. If you don't believe it's German money he's spendin' ask Anton
+ to show you some of Stukey's canceled checks."</p>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;but he's English," protests Anna. "Anyway, his father was."</p>
+
+ <p>"The Huns don't mind who they buy up," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>She's still starin' at me, sort of stunned.</p>
+
+ <p>"German money!" she repeats. "Him!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Anton will show you the checks," says I.<a class="pagenum" name="page_167" title="167" id="page_167"></a> "He
+ don't care where they come from, so long as he can cash 'em. But you might hint to him that if another big strike is
+ pulled it's apt to be a long one, and in that case the movie business will get a crimp put in it. The Warsaw
+ receipts, too. I take it that Stukey's tryin' to work the hands up to a point where they'll vote
+ for&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"To-night they vote," breaks in Anna. "In two hours."</p>
+
+ <p>I lets out a whistle. "Zowie!" says I. "Guess I'm a little late. Say, you got a 'phone here. Would it do any good
+ if you called Anton up and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No," snaps Anna. "He thinks too slow. I must do this myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"You?" says I. "What could you do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know," says Anna. "But I must try. And quick. Hey, Marson! You&mdash;at the door. Come here and sell the
+ tickets. Put an usher in your place."</p>
+
+ <p>With that she bounces down off the tall chair, shoves the substitute into her place, and goes streamin' out
+ bare-headed. I decides to follow. But she leaves me behind as though I'd been standin' still.</p>
+
+ <p>At the Warsaw I finds Anton smokin' placid in his little office.<a class="pagenum" name="page_168" title="168" id=
+ "page_168"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Seen Anna?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Anna!" says he. "She should be selling tickets at the&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"She was," says I; "but just now she's upstairs in the hall."</p>
+
+ <p>"At the meetin'?" gasps Anton. "Anna? Oh, no!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Come, take a look," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>And, for once in his life, Anton got a quick move on. He don't ask me to follow, but I trails along; and just as
+ we strikes the top stair we hears a rousin' cheer go up. I suppose any other time we'd been barred out, but there's
+ nobody to hold us up as we pushes through, for everyone has their eyes glued on the little stage at the far end of
+ the hall.</p>
+
+ <p>No wonder. For there, standin' up before more than three hundred yellin' men, is this high-colored young
+ woman.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I couldn't get a word of it, my Polish education havin' been sadly neglected when I was young. But Anna
+ seems to be tellin' some sort of story. My guess was that it's the one she'd hinted at to me&mdash;about her father
+ and brothers and sister. But this time she seems to be throwin' in all the details.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="illus-001" id="illus-001"></a> <img src="images/illus-168.jpg" alt=
+ "&quot;Quick as a flash, Anna turns and points to Stukey. I caught his name as she hisses it out. Stukey, turnin' a sickly yellow, slumps in his chair.&quot;"
+ title="" />
+ <br />
+ <span class="caption">"Quick as a flash, Anna turns and points to Stukey. I caught his name as she hisses it out.
+ Stukey, turnin' a sickly yellow, slumps in his chair."</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" name="page_169" title="169" id="page_169"></a>There was nothin' frivolous about Anna's eyes
+ now. It almost gave me a creepy feelin' to watch 'em&mdash;as if she was seein' things again that she'd like to
+ forget&mdash;awful things. And she was makin' those three hundred men see the same things.</p>
+
+ <p>All of a sudden she breaks off, covers her face with her hands, and shivers. Then, quick as a flash, she turns and
+ points to Stukey. I caught his name as she hisses it out. Stukey, turnin' a sickly yellow, slumps in his chair.
+ Another second, and she's turned back to the men out front. She is puttin' something up to them&mdash;a question,
+ straight from the shoulder.</p>
+
+ <p>The first to make a move is a squatty, thick-necked gent with one eye walled out. He jumps on a chair, shouts a
+ few excited words, waves his long arms, and starts for the stage businesslike. The next thing I knew the riot was on,
+ with Mortimer J. Stukey playin' the heavy lead and bein' tossed around like a rat.</p>
+
+ <p>It must have been Anton that switched off the lights and sent for the police. I didn't stop to ask. Bein' near the
+ door, I felt my way downstairs and made a quick exit. Course, the ceremonies promised to continue interestin', but
+ somehow this struck me as a swell time for me to quit. So I strolls back to the hotel and goes to bed.<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_170" title="170" id="page_170"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Yes, I was some curious to know how the muss ended, but I didn't hurry around next mornin'. As a matter of fact,
+ I'd enjoyed the society of the Sobowskis quite a lot durin' the past two days, and I thought I'd better stay away for
+ a while. They're a strenuous bunch when they're stirred up&mdash;even a kittenish young thing like Anna.</p>
+
+ <p>About noon I 'phoned the works, and found that all was serene there, with no signs of a strike yet.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, and I got a hunch there won't be any, either," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>I was plannin' to linger in Bridgeport another day or so; but when the afternoon paper came out I changed my mind.
+ Accordin' to the police-court reporter's account, there'd been some little disturbance in Warsaw Hall the night
+ before. Seems a stranger by the name of Stukey had butted into a meetin' of the Pulaski Social Club, and had
+ proceeded to get so messy that it had been found necessary to throw him out. Half a dozen witnesses told how rude
+ he'd been, includin' the well-known citizen, Mr. Anton Sobowski, who owned the premises. The said Stukey had been a
+ bit damaged; but after he'd been patched up at<a class="pagenum" name="page_171" title="171" id="page_171"></a> the
+ City Hospital he'd been promised a nice long rest&mdash;thirty days, to be exact.</p>
+
+ <p>So I jumps the next train back to Broadway.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Lieutenant!" says Mr. Ellins, glancin' up from his desk. "Find anything up there?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Uh-huh," says I. "His name was Stukey. Another case of drawin' his pay from Berlin."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hah!" grunts Old Hickory, bitin' into his cigar. "The long arm again. But can't you recommend something?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure!" says I. "If we could find a pair of gold boots about eighteen buttons high, we ought to send 'em to Anna
+ Sobowski."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_172" title="172" id="page_172"></a>
+ <a name="AT_THE_TURN_WITH_WILFRED_4346" id="AT_THE_TURN_WITH_WILFRED_4346"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+ <h3>AT THE TURN WITH WILFRED</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I expect Mr. Robert overstated the case a bit. He was more or less hectic back of the ears about then, havin' just
+ broken away after a half-hour session with Mrs. Stanton Bliss.</p>
+
+ <p>"That woman," says he, slumpin' into a chair and moppin' his brow, "has the mental equipment of a pet rabbit and
+ the disposition of a setting hen. Good Lord! "</p>
+
+ <p>I looks over at Vee and grins. Had to. It ain't often you see Mr. Robert like that. And him bein' all dolled up in
+ his nifty navy uniform made it seem just that much funnier. But Vee don't grin back. She'd sympathize with 'most
+ anybody. At that exact minute, I'll bet she was bein' sorry for both of 'em all in the same breath, as you might
+ say.</p>
+
+ <p>"But can't something be done&mdash;somehow?" she asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not by me," says Mr. Robert, decided. "Great marlinspikes! I'm not the war department, am I? I'm only a
+ first-grade lieutenant<a class="pagenum" name="page_173" title="173" id="page_173"></a> in command of a blessed,
+ smelly old menhaden trawler that's posing as a mine-sweeper. I am supposed to be enjoying a twenty-four hour shore
+ leave in the peace and quiet of my home, and I get&mdash;this."</p>
+
+ <p>He waves his hand toward the other room, where the afore-mentioned Mrs. Stanton Bliss is sobbin, sniffin', and
+ otherwise registerin' deep emotion by clawin' Mrs. Robert about the shoulders and wavin' away the smellin' salts.</p>
+
+ <p>"If it was the first time," growls Mr. Robert. "But it isn't."</p>
+
+ <p>That was true, too. You see, we'd heard somethin' about the other spasms. They'd begun along in July, when the
+ awful news came out that Wilfred's red ink number had been plucked from the jar. Now you get it, don't you? Nothing
+ unique. The same little old tragedy that was bein' staged in a million homes, includin' four-room flats,
+ double-decker tenements, and boardin'-houses.</p>
+
+ <p>Only this happened to hit the forty-room country house of the Stanton Blisses. Course, it was different. Look who
+ was bein' stirred up by it.</p>
+
+ <p>So mother had begun throwin' cat-fits. She'd tackled everyone she knew, demandin' to know what was to be done to
+ keep Wilfred<a class="pagenum" name="page_174" title="174" id="page_174"></a> out of it. Among others, of course,
+ she'd held up Mr. Robert. Wasn't he their nearest neighbor, and hadn't the Blisses entertained the Ellinses a lot?
+ Not that she put it that way, exactly. But when she came with this hunch about gettin' sonny a snap job on some sort
+ of naval construction work, why, of course, Mr. Robert couldn't duck. Yes, he thought he could place Wilfred. And he
+ did&mdash;time-keeper, six-hour shift, and near enough so he could run back and forth every day in his machine.</p>
+
+ <p>That might have been good enough for some folks. It meant dodgin' the draft for Wilfred, dead sure. But mother
+ didn't stay satisfied long. She went investigatin' around the plant. She found the office stuffy, Wilfred's desk had
+ no electric fan on it, she wasn't sure of the drinkin' water, and the foreman was quite an impossible sort of person
+ who always sneered when he had anything to say to Wilfred. Couldn't Mr. Robert attend to some of these things? Mr.
+ Robert said he'd try&mdash;if he had time. He didn't get the time. More visits from mother.</p>
+
+ <p>Then this latest catastrophe. The Stanton Blisses had been away from home for three weeks or more, house-partyin'
+ and motorin' through the mountains. Poor Wilfred had had<a class="pagenum" name="page_175" title="175" id=
+ "page_175"></a> to stay behind. What a stupidly distressin' thing war was, wasn't it? But he had been asked to spend
+ his nights and Sundays with a college chum whose home was several miles nearer the works.</p>
+
+ <p>And then they had come back to find this scribbled note. Things had been gettin' worse and worse, Wilfred wrote.
+ Some young hoodlums around the plant had shouted after him as he drove off in his car. Even young girls. The men had
+ been surly to him, and that beastly foreman&mdash;&mdash; Well, he wasn't goin' to stand for it, that was all. He
+ didn't know just what he was goin' to do, but he was clearin' out. They'd hear from him later.</p>
+
+ <p>They had. This six-word message from Philadelphia, dated nearly two weeks ago, was also waitin'. It said that he'd
+ enlisted, was all right, and for them not to worry. Nothin' more.</p>
+
+ <p>You couldn't blame mother for bein' stirred up. Her Wilfred had gone. Somewhere in some army camp or other, or at
+ some naval trainin' station, the son and heir of the house of Bliss was minglin' with the coarse sons of the common
+ people, was eatin' common food, was wearin' common clothes, was goin' up against the common thing generally. And
+ that<a class="pagenum" name="page_176" title="176" id="page_176"></a> wasn't the worst of it. Where? Why didn't Mr.
+ Robert tell her where? And couldn't he get him away at once? Mr. Robert had almost gone hoarse tryin' to explain why
+ he couldn't. But after every try she'd come back with this wail:</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but you don't understand what it is to be a mother!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank the stars I don't!" says he, as he marches out of the room.</p>
+
+ <p>I was for clearin' out so he'd be free to shoo her in any style he wanted to. We'd been havin' dinner with the
+ Ellinses, Vee and I, and it was time to go home anyway. But there's no budgin' Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't you think Torchy might find out where he is?" she suggests. "Bein' in the army himself, you know, and so
+ clever at that sort of thing, I should think&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, to be sure," breaks in Mr. Robert, perkin' up all of a sudden and starin' at me. "Lieutenant Torchy to the
+ rescue, of course. He's the very one."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, say, how'd you get that way?" says I. "Back up!"</p>
+
+ <p>He's off, though, callin' Mrs. Stanton Bliss. And before I can escape he's sickin' her on real enthusiastic. Also
+ there's Vee urgin' me<a class="pagenum" name="page_177" title="177" id="page_177"></a> to see if I can't do something
+ to locate Wilfred. So I had to make the stab.</p>
+
+ <p>"Got that wire with you?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, Mrs. Bliss had all the documents right handy. I takes the yellow sheet over under the readin' lamp and
+ squints at it sleuthy, partly to kill time, and partly because I couldn't think of anything else to do. And of course
+ they all have to gather round and watch me close, as if I was about to pull some miracle. Foolish! It was a great
+ deal worse than that.</p>
+
+ <p>"H-m-m-m-m!" says I. "Philadelphia. I suppose there's some sort of naval trainin' station there, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Robert says there is.</p>
+
+ <p>"But if Wilfred was at it," I goes on, "and didn't want you to find him, he wouldn't have sent this from there,
+ would he?"</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Stanton Bliss sighs. "I'm sure I don't know," says she. "I&mdash;I suppose not."</p>
+
+ <p>"Must be somewhere within strikin' distance of Philadelphia, though," says I. "Now, what camp is near?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Couldn't we wire someone in Washington and find out?" asks Mrs. Bliss.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure," says I. "And we'd get an official answer from the Secretary of War about 11<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_178" title="178" id="page_178"></a> <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> next spring. It'll be a lot quicker to call
+ up Whitey Weeks."</p>
+
+ <p>They don't know everything in newspaper offices, but there are mighty few things they can't find out. Whitey,
+ though, didn't even have to consult the copy desk or the clippin' bureau.</p>
+
+ <p>"About the nearest big one," says he, "is the Ambulance Corps Camp at Allentown. Somewhere up on the Lehigh.
+ S'long."</p>
+
+ <p>Here was another jolt for Mrs. Stanton Bliss. The Ambulance Corps! She near keeled over again, just hearin' me say
+ it. Oh, oh! Did I really believe Wilfred could have been as rash as that?</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says she, "they drive right up to the trenches, don't they? Isn't that fearfully dangerous?"</p>
+
+ <p>"War isn't a parlor pastime," puts in Mr. Robert. "And the ambulance drivers take their chances with the rest of
+ the men. But there's no fightin' going on at Allentown. If Wilfred is there&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"If he is," cuts in Mrs. Bliss, "I must go to him this very moment."</p>
+
+ <p>Some way that statement seemed to cheer Mr. Robert up a lot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Naturally," says he. "I'll look up a train<a class="pagenum" name="page_179" title="179" id="page_179"></a> for
+ you. Just a second. In the A's. Allentown&mdash;Allen. Ah, page 156. M-m-m. Here you are. First one starts at 2
+ <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> and gets you in at 5.15. Will that do?"</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Bliss turns on him sort of dazed, and blinks them round eyes of hers. She's a fairly well put up old girl,
+ you know, built sort of on the pouter-pigeon type, but with good lines below the waist, and a complexion that she's
+ taken lots of pains with. Dresses real classy, and, back to, she's often mistaken for daughter Marion. Travels in
+ quite a gay bunch, I understand, with Mr. Stanton Bliss kind of trailin' along behind. Usually, when she ain't
+ indulgin' in hysterics, she has very fetchin' kittenish ways. You know the kind. Their specialty's makin' the
+ surroundin' males jump through the hoop for 'em. But when it comes to arrivin' anywhere at 5.15 <span class=
+ "smcap">A.M.</span> &mdash;well, not for her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should be a sight," says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"You'd still be a mother, wouldn't you?" asks Mr. Robert.</p>
+
+ <p>It was rough of him, as he was given to understand by the looks of all three ladies present, includin' Mrs.
+ Robert; so he tries to square himself by lookin' up a ten o'clock train, all Pullman, with diner and observation.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would gladly take you up myself," says<a class="pagenum" name="page_180" title="180" id="page_180"></a> he,
+ lyin' fluent, "if I didn't have to go back to my boat. But here is Torchy. He'll go, I suppose."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course," says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>And that's how I came to be occupyin' drawin'-room A, along with mother and sister Marion, as we breezes up into
+ the Pennsylvania hills on this Wilfred hunt. A gushy, giggly young party Marion is, but she turns out to be quite a
+ help. It was her who spots the two young soldiers driftin' through towards the smokin' compartment, and suggests that
+ maybe they're goin' to the same camp.</p>
+
+ <p>"And they would know if Wilfred was there, wouldn't they?" she adds.</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe," says I. "I'll go ask."</p>
+
+ <p>Nice, clean-cut young chaps they was. They'd stretched out comfortable on the leather seats, and was enjoyin' a
+ perfectly good smoke, until I shows up. The minute I appears, though, they chucks their cigars and jumps up, heels
+ together, right hand to the hat-brim. That's what I get by havin' this dinky bar on my shoulders.</p>
+
+ <p>"Can it, boys," says I. "This is unofficial."</p>
+
+ <p>"At ease, sir?" suggests one.</p>
+
+ <p>"As easy as you know how," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Yes, they says they're ambulancers; on their<a class="pagenum" name="page_181" title="181" id="page_181"></a> way
+ back to Allentown, too. But they didn't happen to know of any Wilfred Stanton Bliss there.</p>
+
+ <p>"You see, sir," says one, "there are about five thousand of us, so he might&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure!" says I. "But mother'll want an affidavit. Would you mind droppin' in and bein' cross-examined? There's
+ sister Marion, too."</p>
+
+ <p>Obligin' chaps, they were; let me tow 'em into the drawin'-room, listened patient while Mrs. Bliss described just
+ how Wilfred looked, and tried their best to remember havin' seen such a party. Also they gave her their expert
+ opinion on how long the war was goin' to last, when Wilfred would be sent over, and what chances he stood of comin'
+ back without a scratch.</p>
+
+ <p>Once more it was Marion who threw the switch.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell me," says she, "will he be wearing a uniform just like yours?"</p>
+
+ <p>They said he would.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" gurgles Marion, "I think it is perfectly spiffy. Don't you, mother? I'm just crazy to see Wilfred in
+ one."</p>
+
+ <p>Mother catches the enthusiasm. "My noble boy!" says she, rollin' her eyes up.<a class="pagenum" name="page_182"
+ title="182" id="page_182"></a></p>
+
+ <p>From then on she's quite chipper. The idea of findin' sonny made over into a smart, dashin' soldier seemed to
+ crowd out all the panicky thoughts she'd been havin'. From little hints she let drop, I judged that she was already
+ picturin' him as a gallant hero, struttin' around haughty and givin' off stern commands. Maybe he'd been made a
+ captain or something. Surely they would soon see that her Wilfred ought to be an officer of some kind.</p>
+
+ <p>"And we must have his portrait painted," she remarks, claspin' her hands excited as the happy thought strikes
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>The boys looked steady out of the window and managed to smother the smiles. I imagine they'd seen all sorts of
+ mothers come to camp.</p>
+
+ <p>It's a lively little burg, Allentown, even if I didn't know it was on the map before. At the station you take a
+ trolley that runs straight through the town and out to the fair grounds, where the camp is located. Goin' up the
+ hill, you pass through the square and by the Soldiers' Monument. Say, it's some monument, too. Then out a long street
+ lined with nice, comfortable-lookin' homes, until you get a glimpse of blue hills rollin' away as far as you can see,
+ and there you are.<a class="pagenum" name="page_183" title="183" id="page_183"></a></p>
+
+ <p>The boys piloted us past the guard at the gates, through a grove of trees, and left us at the information bureau,
+ where a soldier wearin' shell-rimmed glasses listened patient while mother and sister both talked at once.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bliss? Just a moment," says he, reachin' for a card-index box. "Yes, ma'am. Wilfred Stanton. He's here."</p>
+
+ <p>"But where?" demands Mrs. Bliss.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says the soldier, "he's listed with the casuals just now. Quartered in the cow-barn."</p>
+
+ <p>"The&mdash;the cow-barn!" gasps Mrs. Bliss.</p>
+
+ <p>The soldier grins.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's over that way," says he, wavin' his hand. "Anyone will tell you."</p>
+
+ <p>They did. We wandered on and on, past the parade ground that used to be the trottin' track, past new barracks that
+ was being knocked together hasty, until we comes to this dingy white buildin' with all the underwear hung up to dry
+ around it. I took one glance inside, where the cots was stacked in thick and soldiers was loafin' around in various
+ stages of dress and undress, and then I shooed mother and sister off a ways while I went scoutin' in alone. At a desk
+ made out of a packin'-box<a class="pagenum" name="page_184" title="184" id="page_184"></a> I found a chap hammerin'
+ away at a typewriter. He salutes and goes to attention.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir," says he, when I've told him who I'm lookin' for. "Squeaky Bliss. But he's on duty just now, sir."</p>
+
+ <p>I suggests that his mother and sister are here and would like to have a glimpse of him right away.</p>
+
+ <p>"They'd better wait until after five, sir," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wouldn't like to try holdin' 'em in that long," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well, sir," says he. "Squeaky's on fatigue. Somewhere down at the further end of the grand stand you might
+ catch him. But if it's his mother&mdash;well, I'd wait."</p>
+
+ <p>I passes this advice on to Mrs. Bliss.</p>
+
+ <p>"The idea!" says she. "I wish to see my noble soldier boy at once. Come."</p>
+
+ <p>So we went. There was no scarcity of young fellows in olive drab. The place was thick with 'em. Squads were
+ drillin' every way you looked, and out in the center of the field, where two or three hundred new ambulances were
+ lined up, more squads were studyin' the insides of the motor, or practicin' loadin' in stretchers. Hundreds and
+ hundreds of young fellows in uniform, all lookin' just<a class="pagenum" name="page_185" title="185" id=
+ "page_185"></a> alike. I didn't wonder that mother couldn't pick out sonny boy.</p>
+
+ <p>"What was it that man said?" she asks. "Wilfred on fatigue. Does that mean he is resting?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not exactly," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>About then sister Marion begins to exhibit jumpy emotions.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mother! Mother!" says she, starin' straight ahead. "Look!"</p>
+
+ <p>All I could see was a greasy old truck backed up in front of some low windows under the grand stand, with half a
+ dozen young toughs in smeary blue overalls jugglin' a load of galvanized iron cans. Looked like garbage cans; smelled
+ that way too. And the gang that was handlin' 'em&mdash;well, most of 'em had had their heads shaved, and in that rig
+ they certainly did look like a bunch from Sing Sing.</p>
+
+ <p>I was just nudgin' sister to move along, when Mrs. Bliss lets out this choky cry:</p>
+
+ <p>"Wilfred!" says she.</p>
+
+ <p>She hadn't made any mistake, either. It was sonny, all right. And you should have seen his face as he swings
+ around and finds who's watchin' him. If it hadn't been for the bunkie who was helpin' him lift that can of<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_186" title="186" id="page_186"></a> sloppy stuff on to the tail of the truck, there'd been a
+ fine spill, too.</p>
+
+ <p>"My boy! Wilfred!" calls Mrs. Stanton Bliss, holdin' out her arms invitin' and dramatic.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, in the first place, Wilfred was in no shape to be the party of the second part in a motherly clinch act. It's
+ messy work, loadin' garbage cans, and he's peeled down for it. He was costumed in a pair of overalls that would have
+ stood in the corner all by themselves, and an army undershirt with one sleeve half ripped off.</p>
+
+ <p>In the second place, all the rest of the bunch was wearin' broad grins, and he knew it. So he don't rush over at
+ once. Instead he steps around to the front of the truck and salutes a husky, freckled-necked young sergeant who's
+ sittin' behind the steerin' wheel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Family, sir," says Wilfred. "What&mdash;what'll I do?"</p>
+
+ <p>The sergeant takes one look over his shoulder.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, well," says he, "drop out until next load."</p>
+
+ <p>Not until Wilfred had led us around the corner does he express his feelin's.</p>
+
+ <p>"For the love of Mike, mother!" says he. "Wasn't it bad enough without your springin'<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_187" title="187" id="page_187"></a> that 'muh boy!' stuff? Right before all the fellows, too. Good-night!"</p>
+
+ <p>"But, Wilfred," insists mother, "what does this mean? Why do I find you&mdash;well, like this? Oh, it's too
+ dreadful for words. Who has done this to you&mdash;and why?"</p>
+
+ <p>Jerky, little by little, Wilfred sketches out the answer. Army life wasn't what he'd expected. Not at all. He was
+ sore on the whole business. He'd been let in for it, that was all. It wasn't so bad for some of the fellows, but
+ they'd been lucky. As for him&mdash;well, he'd come here to learn to be an ambulance driver, and he had spent his
+ first week in the kitchen, peelin' potatoes. Then, when they'd let him off that, and given him his first pass to go
+ to town, just because he'd been a little late comin' back they'd jumped on him somethin' fierce. They'd shoved him on
+ this garbage detail. He'd been on it ever since.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's that mucker of a top sergeant, Quigley," says Wilfred. "He's got it in for me."</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Stanton Bliss straightens out her chin dimple as she glares after the garbage truck, which is rollin' away in
+ the distance.</p>
+
+ <p>"Has he, indeed!" says she. "We will see about that, then."<a class="pagenum" name="page_188" title="188" id=
+ "page_188"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"But you must handle him easy, mother," warns Wilfred.</p>
+
+ <p>"That person!" snorts mother. "I shall have nothing to do with him whatever. I mean to get you out of this,
+ Wilfred. I am going straight to the general."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, mother!" protests Wilfred. "Don't make a scene."</p>
+
+ <p>When she was properly stirred up, though, that was mother's long suit. And she starts right in. Course, I tried to
+ head her off, but it's no use. As there wasn't a general handy, she had to be satisfied with a major. Seemed like a
+ mighty busy major, too; but when he heard his orderly tryin' to shunt the ladies, he gives the signal to let 'em in.
+ You can bet I didn't follow. Didn't have to, for Mrs. Bliss wasn't doin' any whisperin' about then.</p>
+
+ <p>And she sure made it plain to the major how little she thought of the U. S. Army, and specially that part of it
+ located at Allentown, Pa. Havin' got that off her chest, and been listened to patient, she demands that Wilfred be
+ excused from all his disgustin' duties, and be allowed to go home with her at once and for good.</p>
+
+ <p>The major shakes his head. "Impossible!" says he.<a class="pagenum" name="page_189" title="189" id=
+ "page_189"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Then," says Mrs. Stanton Bliss, tossin' her head, "I shall appeal to the Secretary of War; to the President, if
+ necessary."</p>
+
+ <p>The major smiles weary. "You'd best talk to his sergeant," says he. "If he recommends your son's discharge it may
+ go through."</p>
+
+ <p>"That person!" exclaims Mrs. Bliss. "Never! I&mdash;I might talk to his captain. "</p>
+
+ <p>"Useless, madam," says the major. "See his sergeant; he's the one."</p>
+
+ <p>And he signifies polite that the interview is over.</p>
+
+ <p>When mother tells sonny the result of this visit to headquarters, he shrugs his shoulders.</p>
+
+ <p>"I knew it would be that way," says he. "They've got me, and I've got to stand for it. No use askin' Quigley. You
+ might as well go home."</p>
+
+ <p>"But at least you can get away long enough to have dinner with us," says mother.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing doin'," says Wilfred. "Can't get out unless Quigley signs a pass, and he won't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, come!" says I. "He don't look so bad as all that. Let me see what I can do with him."</p>
+
+ <p>Well, after I'd chased the ladies back to the hotel with instructions to wait hopeful, I hunts<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_190" title="190" id="page_190"></a> up Top Sergeant Quigley. Had quite a revealin' chat with him, too.
+ Come to look at him close after he'd washed up, he's rather decent appearin'. Face seems sort of familiar, too.</p>
+
+ <p>"Didn't you play first base for the Fordhams?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, that was back in '14," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"As I remember," says I, "you was some star on the bag, though. Now, about young Bliss. Case of mommer's pet, you
+ know."</p>
+
+ <p>"He had that tag all over him," says Quigley. "But we're knockin' a lot of that out of him. He's comin' on."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good!" says I. "Would it stop the process to let him off for an evenin' with the folks&mdash;dinner and so
+ on?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, no; I guess not," says Quigley. "Might do him good. But he must apply himself. Send him along."</p>
+
+ <p>So a half hour later I sat on a cot in the cow-barn and watched Wilfred, fresh from the shower bath, get into his
+ army uniform.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say," he remarks, strugglin' through his khaki shirt, "I didn't think old Quig would do it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Seemed glad to," says I. "Said you was comin' on fine."<a class="pagenum" name="page_191" title="191" id=
+ "page_191"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"He did?" gasps Wilfred. "Quigley? Well, what do you know!"</p>
+
+ <p>Not such a bad imitation of a soldier, Wilfred, when he'd laced up the leggins and got the snappy-cut coat
+ buttoned tight. He's some different from what he was when sister first discovered him. And we had quite a gay dinner
+ together.</p>
+
+ <p>First off mother was for campin' right down there indefinitely, where she could see her darlin' boy every day; but
+ between Wilfred and me we persuaded her different. I expect the hotel quarters had something to do with it, too.
+ Anyway, after Wilfred had promised to try for a couple of days off soon, for a visit home, she consents to start back
+ in the mornin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"What I dread most, Wilfred," says she, "is leaving you at the mercy of that horrid sergeant."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I'll get along with him somehow," says Wilfred. "I'm goin' to try, anyway."</p>
+
+ <p>And right there, as I understand it, Wilfred Stanton Bliss started to be a man and a soldier. He had a long way to
+ go, though, it seemed to me.</p>
+
+ <p>So here the other day, only a couple of weeks since we made our trip, I'm some surprised to see who it is givin'
+ me the zippy salute on the<a class="pagenum" name="page_192" title="192" id="page_192"></a> station platform out
+ home. Yes, it's Wilfred. And say, he's got his shoulders squared, he's carryin' his chin up, and he's wearin' his
+ uniform like it grew on him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, well!" says I. "Got your furlough, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir," says he. "Seventy-two hours. Had a whale of a time, too. You can't guess who I brought home with me,
+ I'll bet."</p>
+
+ <p>I couldn't.</p>
+
+ <p>"Our top sergeant&mdash;Quigley," says he. "Say, he's all right. He's had us transferred to the best barracks in
+ camp. Guess we deserve it, too, for we're on the way to bein' the crackerjack section of them all. You ought to see
+ us drill. Some class! And it's all due to Quigley. Do you know what he thinks? That we're slated among the next lot
+ to go over. How about that, sir? Won't that be great?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says I. "How long ago was it you signed up, Wilfred?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just six weeks, sir," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whiffo!" says I, gawpin' at him. "If we had about a hundred thousand Quigleys!"</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_193" title="193" id="page_193"></a>
+ <a name="VEE_GOES_OVER_THE_TOP_4882" id="VEE_GOES_OVER_THE_TOP_4882"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+ <h3>VEE GOES OVER THE TOP</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"But listen, Vee," says I. "If Hoover can't pull it off, with all the backin' he's got, what's the use of a few of
+ you women mixin' in?"</p>
+
+ <p>"At least we can try," says Vee. "The prices this Belcher person is charging are something outrageous. Eggs ninety
+ cents!"</p>
+
+ <p>"We should worry," says I. "Ain't we got nearly a hundred hens on the job?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But others haven't," says Vee. "Those people in that row of little cottages down by the station. The Walters, for
+ instance. He can't get more than twenty-five or thirty dollars a week, can he?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There's so many cases you can't figure out," says I. "Maybe he scrubs along on small steaks or fried
+ chicken."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's no joking matter," protests Vee. "Of course there are plenty of people worse off then the Walters. That Mrs.
+ Burke, whose two boys are in the Sixty-ninth. She must do her<a class="pagenum" name="page_194" title="194" id=
+ "page_194"></a> marketing at Belcher's, too. Think of her having to pay those awful prices!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I would," says I, "if workin'up a case of glooms was any use; but I can't see&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"We can see enough," breaks in Vee. "The new Belcher limousine, the additions to their hideous big house. All
+ made, too, out of food profiteering right here. It's got to stop, that's all."</p>
+
+ <p>Which is where I should have shouted "Kamerad" and come runnin' out with my hands up, but I tried to show her that
+ Belcher was only playin' the game like everyone else was playin' it.</p>
+
+ <p>"He ain't springin' anything new," says I. "He's just followin' the mob. They're all doin' it, from the Steel
+ Trust down to the push-cart men. And when you come to interferin' with business&mdash;well, that's serious."</p>
+
+ <p>"Humph!" says Vee. "When it comes to taking advantage of poor people and depriving them of enough to eat, I call
+ it plain piracy. And you ought to be ashamed of yourself, Torchy, standing up for such things."</p>
+
+ <p>So you see I was about as convincin' as a jazz band tryin' to imitate the Metropolitan orchestra doin' the
+ overture to "Lucia." If I hadn't finally had sense enough to switch the<a class="pagenum" name="page_195" title="195"
+ id="page_195"></a> subject a little, there might have been a poutin' scene and maybe a double case of sulks. But when
+ I got to askin' where she'd collected all this grouch against our local meat and provision octopus, she cheers up
+ again.</p>
+
+ <p>Seems she'd been to a Red Cross meetin' that afternoon, where a lot of the ladies was swappin' tales of woe about
+ their kitchen expense accounts. Some of 'em had been keepin' track of prices in the city markets and was able to
+ shoot the deadly parallel at Belcher. Anyway, they ditched the sweater-knittin' and bandage-rollin' for the time
+ bein', and proceeded to organize the Woman's Economic League on the spot.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sounds impressive," says I. "And what then? Did you try Belcher for treason, find him guilty, and sentence him to
+ be shot at sunrise?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee proves that she's good-natured again by runnin' her tongue out at me.</p>
+
+ <p>"We did not, Smarty," says she. "But we passed a resolution condemning such extortion severely."</p>
+
+ <p>"How rough of you!" says I. "Anything else?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," says Vee. "We appointed a committee to tell him he'd better stop."<a class="pagenum" name="page_196" title=
+ "196" id="page_196"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Fine!" says I. "I expect he'll have everything marked down about forty per cent. by to-morrow night."</p>
+
+ <p>Somehow, it didn't work out just that way. Next report I got from Vee was that the committee had interviewed
+ Belcher, but there was nothing doin'. He'd been awfully nice to 'em, even if he had talked through his cigar part of
+ the time.</p>
+
+ <p>Belcher says he feels just as bad as they about havin' to soak on such stiff prices. But how can he help it? The
+ cold-storage people are boostin' their schedules every day. They ain't to blame, either. They're bein' held up by the
+ farmers out West who are havin' their hair cut too often. Besides, all the hens in the country have quit layin' and
+ joined the I. W. W., and every kind of meat is scarce on account of Pershing's men developin' such big appetites.
+ He's sorry, but he's doin' his best, considerin' the war and everything. If people would only get the habit of usin'
+ corn meal for their pie crusts, everything would be lovely once more.</p>
+
+ <p>"An alibi on every count," says I. "I expect the committee apologized."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very nearly that," says Vee. "The sillies!<a class="pagenum" name="page_197" title="197" id="page_197"></a> I
+ just wish I'd been there. I don't believe half of what he said is true."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's one thing," says I, "but provin' it on him would be another. And there's where Belcher's got you."</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I like to watch Vee in action, for she sure is a humdinger when she gets started. As a rule, too, I don't
+ believe in tryin' to block her off in any of her little enterprises.</p>
+
+ <p>But here was once where it seemed to me she was up against a hopeless proposition. So I goes on to point out, sort
+ of gentle and soothin', how war prices couldn't be helped, any more'n you could stop the tide from comin' in.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, I'm some smooth suggester, I am, when you get into fireside diplomacy. Anyway, the price of eggs wasn't
+ mentioned again that evenin'. As a matter of fact, Vee ain't troubled much with marketin' details, for Madame Battou,
+ wife of the little old Frenchman who does the cheffing for us so artistic, attends to layin' in the supplies. And,
+ believe me, when she sails forth with her market basket you can be sure she's goin' to get sixteen ounces to the
+ pound and the rock bottom price on everything. No 'phone orders for her. I don't believe Vee knew what the inside of
+ Belcher's store looks like. I'm sure I didn't.<a class="pagenum" name="page_198" title="198" id="page_198"></a></p>
+
+ <p>So I thought the big drive on the roast beef and canned goods sector had been called off. About that time, too, I
+ got another inspection detail handed me,&mdash;and I didn't see my happy home until another week-end.</p>
+
+ <p>I lands back on Broadway at 9 <span class="smcap">a.m</span> . Havin' reported at the Corrugated general offices
+ and found Old Hickory out of town, I declares a special holiday and beats it out to the part of Long Island I'm
+ beginnin' to know best. Struck me Professor Battou held his face kind of funny when he saw me blow in; and as I asks
+ for Vee, him and the madam swaps glances. He say she's out.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh," says I. "Mornin' call up at the Ellinses', eh? I'll stroll up that way, myself, then."</p>
+
+ <p>Leon hesitates a minute, like he was chokin' over something, and then remarks: "But no, M'sieur. Madame, I think,
+ is in the village."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says I, "I just came from the station. I didn't see the car around. How long has she been gone?"</p>
+
+ <p>Another exchange of looks, and then Battou answers:</p>
+
+ <p>"She goes at seven."</p>
+
+ <p>"Whaddye mean goes?" says I. "It ain't a habit of hers, is it?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_199" title="199" id=
+ "page_199"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Leon nods.</p>
+
+ <p>"All this week," says he. "She goes to the meat and grocery establishment, I understand."</p>
+
+ <p>"Belcher's?" says I. "But what&mdash;what's the idea?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I think it would be best if M'sieur asked Madame," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's right, too," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>You can guess I was some puzzled. Was Vee doin' the spy act on Belcher, watchin' him open the store and spendin'
+ the forenoon concealed in a crockery crate or something? No, that didn't sound reasonable. But what the&mdash;&mdash;
+ Meanwhile I was leggin' it down towards the village.</p>
+
+ <p>It's a busy place, Belcher's, specially on Saturday forenoon. Out front three or four delivery trucks was bein'
+ loaded up, and inside a lot of clerks was jumpin' round. Among the customers was two Jap butlers, three or four
+ Swedish maids, and some of the women from the village. But no Vee anywhere in sight.</p>
+
+ <p>Loomin' prominent in the midst of all this active tradin' is Belcher himself, a thick-necked, ruddy-cheeked party,
+ with bristly black hair cut shoe-brush style and growing down<a class="pagenum" name="page_200" title="200" id=
+ "page_200"></a> to a point in front. His big, bulgy eyes are cold and fishy, but they seem to take in everything
+ that's goin' on. I hadn't been standin' around more'n half a minute before he snaps his finger, and a clerk comes
+ hustlin' over to ask what I'll have.</p>
+
+ <p>"Box of ginger-snaps," says I offhand; and a minute later I'm bein' shunted towards a wire-cage with a cash slip
+ in my hand.</p>
+
+ <p>I'd dug up a quarter, and was waitin' for the change to be passed out through the little window, when I hears a
+ familiar snicker. Then I glances in to see who's presidin' at the cash register. And say, of all the sudden jolts I
+ ever got! It's Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, for the love of soup!" I gasps.</p>
+
+ <p>"Twelve out&mdash;thirteen. That's right, isn't it? Thank you so much, sir," says she, her gray eyes
+ twinklin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"Quit the kiddin'," says I, "and sketch out the plot of the piece."</p>
+
+ <p>"Can't now," says Vee. "So run along. Please!"</p>
+
+ <p>"But how long does this act of yours last?" I insists.</p>
+
+ <p>"Until about noon, I think," says she. "It's such fun. You can't imagine."<a class="pagenum" name="page_201"
+ title="201" id="page_201"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"What's it for, though?" says I. "Are you pullin' a sleuth stunt on&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"S-s-s-sh!" warns Vee. "He's coming. Pretend to be getting a bill changed or something."</p>
+
+ <p>It's while I'm fishin' out a ten that this little dialogue at the meat counter begins to get conspicuous: A thin,
+ stoop-shouldered female with gray streaks in her hair is puttin' up a howl at the price of corned beef. She'd asked
+ for the cheapest piece they had, and it had been weighed for her, but still she wasn't satisfied.</p>
+
+ <p>"It wasn't as high last Saturday," she objects.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, ma'am," says the clerk. "It's gone up since."</p>
+
+ <p>"Worse luck," says she, pokin' the piece with her finger. "And this is nearly all bone and fat. Now couldn't
+ you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll ask the boss, ma'am," says the clerk. "Here he is."</p>
+
+ <p>Belcher has come over and is listenin', glarin' hostile at the woman.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's Mrs. Burke, the one whose sons are in the army," whispers Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well?" demands Belcher.<a class="pagenum" name="page_202" title="202" id="page_202"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"It's so much to pay for meat like that," says Mrs. Burke. "If you could&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Take it or leave it," snaps Belcher.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure now," says she, "you know I can't afford to give&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then get out!" orders Belcher.</p>
+
+ <p>At which Vee swings open the door of the cage, brushes past me, and faces him with her eyes snappin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"Pig!" says she explosive.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wha-a-a-at!" gasps Belcher, gawpin' at her.</p>
+
+ <p>"I&mdash;I beg pardon," says Vee. "I shouldn't have said that, even if it was so. "</p>
+
+ <p>"You&mdash;you're discharged, you!" roars Belcher.</p>
+
+ <p>"Isn't that nice?" says Vee, reachin' for her hat and coat. "Then I can go home with my husband, I suppose. And if
+ I have earned any of that princely salary&mdash;five dollars a week, it was to be, wasn't it?&mdash;well, you may
+ credit it to my account: Mrs. Richard Tabor Ballard, you know. Come, Torchy."</p>
+
+ <p>Say, I always did suspect there was mighty few things Vee was afraid of, but I never thought she had so much clear
+ grit stowed away in her system. For to sail past Belcher the way he looked then took a heap of nerve,<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_203" title="203" id="page_203"></a> believe me. But before he can get that thick tongue of his
+ limbered up we're outside, with Vee snuggled up mufflin' the giggles against my coat sleeve.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, it's been such a lark, Torchy!" says she. "I've passed as Miss Hemmingway for six days, and I don't believe
+ more than three or four persons have suspected. Thank goodness, Belcher wasn't one of them. For I've
+ learned&mdash;oh, such a lot!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's start at the beginning," says I. "Why did you do it at all?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Because the committee was so ready to believe the whoppers he told," says Vee. "And they wanted to disband the
+ League, especially that Mrs. Norton Plummer, whose husband is a lawyer. She was almost disagreeable about it. Truly.
+ 'But, my dear,' she said to me, 'one can't act merely on rumor and prejudice. If we had a few facts or figures it
+ might be different.' And you know that sour smile of hers. Well! That's why I did it. I asked them to give me ten
+ days. And now&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>Vee finishes by squeezin' my arm.</p>
+
+ <p>"But how'd you come to break in so prompt?" I asks. "Did you mesmerize Belcher?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_204"
+ title="204" id="page_204"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"I bought up his cashier&mdash;paid her to report that she was ill," says Vee. "Then I smoothed back my hair, put
+ on this old black dress, and went begging for the job. That's when I began to know Mr. Belcher. He's quite a
+ different person when he is hiring a cashier from the one you see talking to customers. Really, I've never been
+ looked at that way before&mdash;as if I were some sort of insect. But when he found I would work cheap, and could get
+ Mrs. Robert Ellins to go on my bond if I should turn out a thief, he took me on.</p>
+
+ <p>"Getting up so early was a bit hard, and eating a cold luncheon harder still; but worst of all was having to hear
+ him growl and snap at the clerks. Oh, he's perfectly horrid. I don't see how they stand it. Of course, I had my
+ share. 'Miss Blockhead' was his pet name for me."</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says I, grittin' my teeth.</p>
+
+ <p>"Meaning that you'd like to tell Belcher a few things yourself?" asks Vee. "Well, you needn't. I'd no right to be
+ there, for one thing. And, for another, this is my own particular affair. I know what I am going to do to Mr.
+ Belcher; at least, what I'm going to try to do. Anyway, I shall have some figures<a class="pagenum" name="page_205"
+ title="205" id="page_205"></a> to put before our committee Monday. Then we shall see."</p>
+
+ <p>Yep, she had the goods on him. I helped her straighten out the evidence: copies of commission-house bills showin'
+ what he had paid for stuff, and duplicates of sales-slips givin' the retail prices he got. And say, all he was
+ stickin' on was from thirty to sixty per cent. profit.</p>
+
+ <p>He didn't always wait for the wholesaler to start the boostin', either. Vee points out where he has jacked up the
+ price three times on the same shipment&mdash;just as the spell took him. He'd be readin' away in his <i>Morgen
+ Blatherskite</i>, and all of a sudden he'd jump out of his chair. I'm no expert on provision prices, but some of them
+ items had me bug-eyed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says I, "it looks like this Belcher party meant to discourage eatin' altogether. Couldn't do better if he
+ was runnin' a dinin'-car."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's robbery, that's what it is," says Vee. "And when you think that his chief victims are such helpless people
+ as the Burkes and the Walters&mdash;well, it's little less than criminal."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a rough deal," I admits, "but one that's bein' pulled in the best circles. War profits are what everybody
+ seems to be out<a class="pagenum" name="page_206" title="206" id="page_206"></a> after these days, and I don't see
+ how you're going to stop it. "</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean to try to stop Belcher, anyway," says Vee, tossin' her chin up.</p>
+
+ <p>"You ain't got much show," says I; "but go to it."</p>
+
+ <p>Just how much fight there was in Vee, though, I didn't have any idea of until I saw her Monday evenin' after
+ another meetin' of the League. It seems she'd met this Mrs. Norton Plummer on her own ground and had smeared her all
+ over the map.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you suppose she wanted to do?" demands Vee. "Pass more resolutions! Well, I told her just what I thought
+ of that. As well pin a 'Please-keep-out' notice on your door to scare away burglars as to send resolutions to
+ Belcher. And when I showed her what profits he was making, item by item, she hadn't another word to say. Then I
+ proposed my plan."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I. "What's it like?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We are going to start a store of our own," says Vee&mdash;just like that, offhand and casual.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are!" says I. "But&mdash;but who's goin' to run it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"They made me chairman of the sub-committee," says Vee. "And then I made them<a class="pagenum" name="page_207"
+ title="207" id="page_207"></a> subscribe to a campaign fund. Five thousand. We raised it in as many minutes. And
+ now&mdash;well, I suppose I'm in for it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Listens that way to me," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then I may as well begin," says she.</p>
+
+ <p>And say, there's nothin' draggy about Vee when she really goes over the top. While I'm dressin' for dinner she
+ calls up a real estate dealer and leases a vacant store in the other end of the block from Belcher's. Between the
+ roast and salad she uses the 'phone some more and drafts half a dozen young ladies from the Country Club set to act
+ as relay clerks. Later on in the evenin' she rounds up Major Percy Thomson, who's been invalided home from the
+ Quartermaster's Department on account of a game knee, and gets him to serve as buyin' agent for a week or so. Her
+ next move is to charter a couple of three-ton motor-trucks to haul supplies out from town; and when I went to sleep
+ she was still jottin' things down on a pad to be attended to in the mornin'.</p>
+
+ <p>For two or three days nothin' much seemed to happen. The windows of that vacant store was whitened mysterious,
+ carpenters were hammerin' away inside, and now and then a truck backed up and was unloaded. But no<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_208" title="208" id="page_208"></a> word was given out as to what was goin' to be sprung. Not until Friday
+ mornin'. Then the commuters on the 8.03 was hit bang in the eye by a whalin' big red, white, and blue sign announcin'
+ that the W. E. L. Supply Company was open for business.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, it was kind of crude compared to Belcher's. No fancy counters or showcases or window displays of
+ cracker-boxes. And the stock was limited to staples that could be handled easy. But the price bulletins posted up
+ outside was what made some of them gents who'd been doin' the fam'ly marketin' stop and stare. A few of 'em turned
+ halfway to the station and dashed back to leave their orders. Goin' into town they spread the news through the train.
+ The story of that latest bag of U-boats, which the mornin' papers all carried screamers about, was almost thrown into
+ the discard. If I hadn't been due for a ten o'clock committee meetin' at the Corrugated, I'd have stayed out and
+ watched the openin'. Havin' told Old Hickory about it, though, I was on hand next mornin' with a whole day's
+ furlough.</p>
+
+ <p>"It ought to be our big day," says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>It was. For one thing, everybody was stockin' up for over Sunday, and with the backin'<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_209" title="209" id="page_209"></a> of the League the Supply Company could count on about fifty good customers
+ as a starter. Most of the ladies came themselves, rollin' up in limousines or tourin' cars and cartin' home their own
+ stuff. Also the cottage people, who'd got wind of the big mark-down bargains, begun to come in bunches, every woman
+ with a basket.</p>
+
+ <p>But they didn't swamp Vee. She'd already added to her force of young lady clerks a squad of hand-picked Boy
+ Scouts, and it was my job to manage the youngsters.</p>
+
+ <p>I'd worked out the system the night before. Each one had typed price lists in his pocket, and besides that I'd put
+ 'em through an hour's drill on weights and measures before the show started.</p>
+
+ <p>I don't know when it was Belcher begun to get wise and start his counter-attack; but the first time I had a chance
+ to slip out and take a squint his way, I saw this whackin' big sign in front of his place: "Potatoes, 40 cents per
+ peck." Which I promptly reports to Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well," says she; "we'll make ours thirty-five."</p>
+
+ <p>Inside of ten minutes we had a bulletin out twice as big as his.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now I guess he'll be good," says I.<a class="pagenum" name="page_210" title="210" id="page_210"></a></p>
+
+ <p>But he had a scrap or two left in him, it seems. Pretty soon he cuts the price to thirty.</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll make it twenty-five," says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>And by eleven o'clock Belcher has countered with potatoes at twenty cents.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," gasps Vee, "that's far less than they cost at wholesale. But we can't let him beat us. Make ours twenty,
+ too."</p>
+
+ <p>"Excuse me, ma'am," puts in one of the Scouts, salutin', "but we've run out of potatoes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, boy!" says I. "Where do we go from here!"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee hesitates only long enough to draw a deep breath.</p>
+
+ <p>"Torchy," says she, "I have it. Form your boys into a basket brigade, and buy out Belcher below the market."</p>
+
+ <p>Talk about your frenzied finance! Wasn't that puttin' it over on him! For two hours, there, we went long on
+ Belcher's potatoes at twenty, until his supply ran out too. Then he switched to sugar and butter. Quotations went off
+ as fast as when the bottom drops out of a bull market. All we had to do to hammer down the prices of anything in the
+ food line, whether we had it or not, was to stick out a cut-rate sign&mdash;Belcher was sure to go it one better; and
+ when Vee got it far enough below cost, she started her buyin' corps, workin' in customers, clerks, and anybody that
+ was handy. And by night if every fam'ly within five miles hadn't stocked up on bargain provisions it was their own
+ fault; for if they didn't have cash of their own Vee was right there with the long-distance credit.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="illus-002" id="illus-002"></a> <img src="images/illus-210.jpg" alt=
+ "&quot;Belcher has come over and is listenin', glarin' hostile at the woman. 'It's Mrs. Burke, the one whose sons are in the army,' whispers Vee.&quot;"
+ title="" />
+ <br />
+ <span class="caption">"Belcher has come over and is listenin', glarin' hostile at the woman. 'It's Mrs. Burke, the
+ one whose sons are in the army,' whispers Vee."</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" name="page_211" title="211" id="page_211"></a>"I'll bet you've got old Belcher frothin' through
+ his ears," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope so," says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>The followin' Monday, though, he comes back at her with his big push. He had the whole front of his store
+ plastered with below-cost bulletins.</p>
+
+ <p>"Pooh!" says Vee. "I can have signs like that painted, too."</p>
+
+ <p>And she did. It didn't bother her a bit if her stock ran out. She kept up on the cut-rate game, and when people
+ asked for things she didn't have she just sent 'em to Belcher's.</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe you saw what some of the papers printed. Course, they joshed the ladies more or less, but also they played
+ up a peppery interview with Belcher which got him in bad with everybody. Vee wasn't so pleased at the publicity
+ stuff, but she didn't squeal.<a class="pagenum" name="page_212" title="212" id="page_212"></a></p>
+
+ <p>What was worryin' me some was how soon the grand smash was comin'. I knew that the campaign fund had been whittled
+ into considerable, and now that prices had been slashed there was no chance for profits.</p>
+
+ <p>It was botherin' Vee some, too, for she'd promised not to assess the League members again unless she could show
+ 'em where they were comin' out. By the middle of the week things looked squally. Belcher had given out word that he
+ meant to bust up this fool woman's opposition, if it took his last cent.</p>
+
+ <p>Then, here the other night, I comes home to find Vee wearin' a satisfied grin. As I comes in she jumps up from her
+ desk and waves a check at me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look!" says she. "Five thousand! I've got it back, Torchy, every dollar."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I. "You ain't sold out to Belcher?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I should say not," says she. "To the Noonan chain. Mr. Noonan came himself. He'd read about our fight in the
+ newspapers, and said he'd be glad to take it off our hands. He's been wanting to establish a branch in this district.
+ Five thousand for stock and good will. What do you think of that?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_213" title="213" id=
+ "page_213"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"I ain't thinkin'," says I. "I'm just gaspin' for breath. Noonan, eh? Then I see where Belcher gets off. And if
+ you don't mind my whisperin' in your ear, Vee, you're some whizz."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_214" title="214" id="page_214"></a>
+ <a name="LATE_RETURNS_ON_RUPERT_5389" id="LATE_RETURNS_ON_RUPERT_5389"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+ <h3>LATE RETURNS ON RUPERT</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Vee and I were goin' over some old snapshots the other night. It's done now and then, you know. Not deliberate.
+ I'll admit that's a pastime you wouldn't get all worked up over plannin' ahead for. Tuesday mornin', say, you don't
+ remark breathless: "I'll tell you: Saturday night at nine-thirty let's get out them last year's prints and give 'em
+ the comp'ny front."</p>
+
+ <p>It don't happen that way&mdash;not with our sketch. What I was grapplin' for in the bottom of the window-seat
+ locker was something different&mdash;maybe a marshmallow fork, or a corn-popper, or a catalogue of bath-room
+ fixtures. Anyway, it was something we thought we wanted a lot, when I digs up this album of views that Vee took
+ durin' that treasure-huntin' cruise of ours last winter on the old <i>Agnes</i>, with Auntie and Old Hickory and
+ Captain Rupert Killam and the rest of the bunch. I was just tossin' the book one side when a<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_215" title="215" id="page_215"></a> picture slips out, and of course I has to take a squint. Then I
+ chuckles.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look!" says I, luggin' it over to where Vee is curled up on the davenport in front of the fireplace. "Remember
+ that?"</p>
+
+ <p>A giggle from Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Auntie enjoying a half-hour eulogy of the dear departed, by Mrs. Mumford,' should be the title," says she.
+ "She'd been sound asleep for twenty minutes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Which is what you might call good defensive," says I. "But who's this gazin' over the rail beyond&mdash;J. Dudley
+ Simms, or is that a ventilator?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's see," says Vee, reachin' for the readin' glass. "Why, you silly! That's Captain Killam."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says I. "Reckless Rupert, the great mind-play hero."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wonder what has become of him?" puts in Vee, restin' her chin on the knuckle of her forefinger and starin' into
+ the fire.</p>
+
+ <p>"Him?" says I. "Most likely he's back in St. Petersburg, Florida, all dolled in white flannels, givin' the tin-can
+ tourists a treat. That would be Rupert's game. "</p>
+
+ <p>I don't know as you remember; but, in spite of Killam's havin' got balled up on the location<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_216" title="216" id="page_216"></a> of this pirate island, and Vee and me havin' to find it for him, he
+ came in for his share of the loot. Must have been quite a nice little pot for Rupert, too&mdash;enough to keep him
+ costumed for his mysterious hero act for a long time, providin' he don't overdress the part.</p>
+
+ <p>Weird combination&mdash;Rupert: about 60 per cent. camouflage and the rest solemn boob. An ex-school-teacher from
+ some little flag station in middle Illinois, who'd drifted down to the West Coast, and got to be a captain by ownin'
+ an old cruiser that he took fishin' parties out to the grouper banks on. Them was the real facts in the life story of
+ Rupert.</p>
+
+ <p>But the picture he threw on the screen of himself must have been something else again&mdash;seasoned sailor, hardy
+ adventurer, daredevil explorer, and who knows what else? Catch him in one of his silent, starey moods, with them
+ buttermilk blue eyes of his opened wide and vacant, and you had the outline. But that's as far as you'd get. I always
+ thought Rupert himself was a little vague about it, but he would insist on takin' himself so serious. That's why we
+ never got along well, I expect. To me Rupert was a walkin' joke, except when he got to sleuthin' around Vee and me
+ and made a nuisance of himself.<a class="pagenum" name="page_217" title="217" id="page_217"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"How completely people like that drop out of sight sometimes," says Vee, shuttin' up the album.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," says I. "Contrary to old ladies who meet at summer resorts and in department-stores, it's a sizable world
+ we live in. Thanks be for that, too."</p>
+
+ <p>But you never can tell. It ain't more'n three days later, as I'm breezin through a cross street down in the
+ cloak-and-suit and publishin' house district, when a taxi rolls up to the curb just ahead, and out piles a
+ wide-shouldered gent with freckles on the back of his neck. Course, I don't let on I can spot anybody I've ever known
+ just by a sectional glimpse like that. But this was no common case of freckles. This was a splotchy, spattery system
+ of rust marks, like a bird's-eye view of the enemy's trenches after a week of drum fire. Besides, there was the pale
+ carroty hair.</p>
+
+ <p>Even then, the braid-bound cutaway and the biscuit-colored spats had me buffaloed. So I slows up until I can get a
+ front view of the party who's almost tripped himself with the horn-handled walkin'-stick and is havin' a few last
+ words with someone in the cab. Then I sees the washed out blue eyes, and I know<a class="pagenum" name="page_218"
+ title="218" id="page_218"></a> there can't be any mistake. About then, too, he turns and recognizes me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, for the love of beans!" says I. "Rupert!"</p>
+
+ <p>The funny part of it is that I gets it off as cordial as if I was discoverin' an old trench mate. You know how you
+ will. And, while I can't say Captain Killam registered any wild joy in his greetin', still he seemed pleased enough.
+ He gives me a real hearty shake.</p>
+
+ <p>"And here is someone else you know," says he, wavin' to the cab: "Mrs. Mumford."</p>
+
+ <p>Blamed if it ain't the cooin' widow. She's right there with the old familiar purry gush, too, squeezin' my fingers
+ kittenish and askin' me how "dear, sweet Verona" is. I was just noticin' that she'd ditched the half mournin' for
+ some real zippy raiment when she leans back so as to exhibit a third party in the taxi&mdash;a young gent with one of
+ these dead-white faces and a cute little black mustache&mdash;reg'lar lounge-lizard type.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, and you must meet my dear friend, Mr. Vinton Bartley," she purrs. "Vinton, this is the Torchy I've spoken
+ about so often."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, ya-a-as," drawls Vinton, blowin' out a whiff of scented cigarette smoke lazy. "Quite<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_219" title="219" id="page_219"></a> so. But&mdash;er&mdash;hadn't we best be getting on, Lorina?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes," coos Mrs. Mumford. "By-by, Captain. Good-by, Torchy."</p>
+
+ <p>And off they whirls, leavin' me with my mouth open and Rupert starin' after 'em gloomy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Lorina, eh?" says I. "How touchin'!"</p>
+
+ <p>Killam only grunts, but it struck me he has tinted up a bit under the eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say, Rupert," I goes on, "who's your languid friend with the cream-of-cabbage complexion?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Bartley?" says he. "Oh, he's a friend of Mrs. Mumford; a drama-tist&mdash;so he says."</p>
+
+ <p>Now, I might have let it ride at that and gone along about my own affairs, which ain't so pressin' just then. Yes,
+ I might. But I don't. Maybe it was hornin' in where there was no welcome sign on the mat, and then again perhaps it
+ was only a natural folksy feelin' for an old friend I hadn't seen for a long time. Anyway, I'm prompted sudden to
+ take Rupert by the arm and insist that he must come and have lunch with me.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;er&mdash;thanks," says the Captain; "but I have a little business to attend to in here." And he nods to
+ an office buildin'.<a class="pagenum" name="page_220" title="220" id="page_220"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"That'll be all right, too," says I. "I'll wait."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you?" says Rupert, beamin'. "I shall be pleased."</p>
+
+ <p>So in less'n half an hour I have Rupert planted cozy at a corner table with a mixed grill in front of him, and I'm
+ givin' him the cue for openin' any confidential chat he may have on hand. He's a good deal of a clam, though, Rupert.
+ And suspicious! He must have been born lookin' over his shoulder. But in my own crude way I can sometimes josh 'em
+ along.</p>
+
+ <p>"Excuse me for mentionin' it, Rupert," says I, "but there's lots of class to you these days."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says he. "You mean&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"The whole effect," says I, "from the gaiters to the new-model lid. Just like you'd strolled out from some Fifth
+ Avenue club and was goin' to 'phone your brokers to buy another block of Bethlehem at the market. Honest!"</p>
+
+ <p>He pinks up and shakes his head, but I can see I've got the range.</p>
+
+ <p>"And here Vee and I had it doped out," I goes on, "how you'd be down on the West Coast by this time, investin'
+ your pile in orange groves and corner lots."<a class="pagenum" name="page_221" title="221" id="page_221"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"No," says Rupert; "I've been here all the while. You see, I&mdash;I've grown rather fond of New York."</p>
+
+ <p>"You needn't apologize," says I. "There's a few million others with the same weakness, not countin' the ones that
+ sleep in New Jersey but always register from here. Gone into some kind of business, have you?"</p>
+
+ <p>Rupert does some fancy side-steppin' about then; but all of a sudden he changes his mind, and, after glancin'
+ around to see that no one has an ear out, he starts his confession.</p>
+
+ <p>"The fact is," says he, "I've been doing a little literary work."</p>
+
+ <p>"Writin' ads," says I, "or solicitin' magazine subscriptions?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am getting out a book of poems," says Rupert, dignified.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wh-a-a-at?" I gasps. "Not&mdash;not reg'lar limerick stuff?"</p>
+
+ <p>I can see now that was a bad break. But Rupert was patient with me. He explains that these are all poems about
+ sailors and ships and so on; real salt, tarry stuff. Also, he points out how it's built the new style way, with no
+ foolish rhymes at the end, and with long lines or short, just as they happen to come. To make it clear, he digs up a
+ roll<a class="pagenum" name="page_222" title="222" id="page_222"></a> of galley proofs he's just collected from the
+ publishers. And say, he had the goods. There it was, yards of it, all printed neat in big fat type. "Sea Songs" is
+ what he calls 'em, and each one has a separate tag of its own, such as "Kittywakes, " "Close Hauled," and "Scuppers
+ Under."</p>
+
+ <p>"Looks like the real stuff," says I. "Let's hear how it listens. Ah, come on! Some of that last one, about
+ scuppers, now."</p>
+
+ <p>With a little more urgin', Rupert reads it to me. I should call him a good reader, too. Anyway, he can untie one
+ of them deep, boomin' voices, and with that long, serious face of his helpin' out the general effect&mdash;well, it's
+ kind of impressive. He spiels off two or three stickfuls and then stops.</p>
+
+ <p>"Which way was you readin' that, backwards or forwards?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Rupert begins to stiffen up, and I hurries on with the apology. "My mistake," says I. "I thought maybe you might
+ have got mixed at the start. No offense. But say, Cap'n, what's the big idea? What does it all mean?"</p>
+
+ <p>In some ways Rupert is good-natured. He was then. He explains how in this brand of verse you don't try to tell a
+ story or anything like that. "I am merely giving my impressions,"<a class="pagenum" name="page_223" title="223" id=
+ "page_223"></a> says he. "That is all. Interpreting my own feelings, as it were."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says I. "Then there's no goin' behind the returns. Who's to say you don't feel that way? I get you now. But
+ that ain't the kind of stuff you can wish onto the magazines, is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>Which shows just how far behind the bass-drum I am. Rupert tells me the different places where he's unloaded his
+ pieces, most of 'em for real money. Also, I pumps out of him how he came to get into the game. Seems he'd been
+ roomin' down in old Greenwich Village; just happened to drift in among them long-haired men and short-haired girls.
+ It turns out that the book was a little enterprise that was being backed by Mrs. Mumford. Yes, it's that kind of a
+ book&mdash;so much down in advance to the Grafter Press. You know, Mrs. Mumford always did fall for Rupert, and after
+ she's read one of his sea spasms in a magazine she don't lose any time huntin' him out and renewin' their cruise
+ acquaintance. A real poet! Say, I can just see her playin' that up among her friends. And when she finds he's mixin'
+ in with all those dear, delightful Bohemians, she insists that Rupert tow her along too.<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_224" title="224" id="page_224"></a></p>
+
+ <p>From then on it was a common thing for her and Rupert to go browsin' around among them garlic and red-ink joints,
+ defyin' ptomaines and learnin' to braid spaghetti on a fork. That was her idea of life. She hires an apartment right
+ off Washington Square and moves in from Montclair for the winter. She begun to have what she called her "salon
+ evenings," when she collected any kind of near-celebrity she could get.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Vinton Bartley was generally one of the favored guests. I didn't need any second sight, either, to suspect
+ that Vinton was sort of crowdin' in on this little romance of Rupert's. And by eggin' Rupert along judicious I got
+ the whole tale.</p>
+
+ <p>Seems it had been one of Mrs. Mumford's ambitions to spring Rupert on an unsuspectin' public. Her idea is to have
+ Rupert called on, some night at the Purple Pup, to step up to the head of the long table and give one of his sea
+ songs. She'd picked Vinton to do the callin'. And Vinton had balked.</p>
+
+ <p>"But say," says I, "is this Vinton gent the only one of her friends that's got a voice? Why not pick another
+ announcer?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sure I don't know," says Rupert.<a class="pagenum" name="page_225" title="225" id="page_225"></a>
+ "She&mdash;she hasn't mentioned the subject recently."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says I. "Too busy listenin' to the voice of the viper, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>Rupert nods and stares sad into his empty demi-tasse. And, say, when Rupert gets that way he's an appealin'
+ cuss.</p>
+
+ <p>"See here, Rupert," says I; "if you got a call of that kind, would you come to the front and make a noise like a
+ real poet?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says he, "I suppose I ought to. It would help the sale of the book, and perhaps&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"One alibi is enough," I breaks in. "Now, another thing: How'd you like to have me stage-manage this début of
+ yours?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, would you?" says he, beamin'.</p>
+
+ <p>"Providin' you'll follow directions," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, certainly," says Rupert. "Any suggestions that you may make&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then we'll begin right now," says I. "You are to ditch that flossy floor-walker outfit of yours from this
+ on."</p>
+
+ <p>"You mean," says Rupert, "that I am not to wear these clothes?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just that," says I. "When you get to givin' mornin' readin's at the Plaza for the benefit of the Red Cross, you
+ can dig 'em out<a class="pagenum" name="page_226" title="226" id="page_226"></a> again; but for the Purple Pup you
+ got to be costumed different. Who ever heard of a goulash poet in a braid-bound cutaway and spats? Say, it's a wonder
+ they let you live south of the Arch."</p>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;but what ought I to wear?" asks Rupert.</p>
+
+ <p>"Foolish question!" says I. "Who are you, anyway? Answer: the Sailor Poet. There you are! Sea captain's togs for
+ you&mdash;double-breasted blue coat, baggy-kneed blue trousers, and a yachtin' cap."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well," says Rupert. "But about my being asked to read. Just how&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Leave it to me, Rupert," says I. "Leave everything to me."</p>
+
+ <p>Which was a lot simpler than tellin' him I didn't know.</p>
+
+ <p>You should have seen Vee's face when I tells her about Rupert's new line.</p>
+
+ <p>"Captain Killam a poet!" says she. "Oh, really now, Torchy!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Uh-huh!" says I. "He's done enough for a book. Read me some of it, too."</p>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;but what is it like?" asks Vee. "How does it sound?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says I, "it sounds batty to me&mdash;like a record made by a sailor who was simple<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_227" title="227" id="page_227"></a> in the head and talked a lot in his sleep. Course, I'm no judge. What's the
+ difference, though? Rupert wants to spout it in public."</p>
+
+ <p>"But the people in the restaurant," protests Vee. "Suppose they should laugh, or do something worse?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's where Rupert is takin' a chance," says I. "Personally, I think he'll be lucky if they don't throw plates
+ at him. But we ain't underwritin' any accident policy; we're just bookin' him for a part he claims he can play. Are
+ you on?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee gets that eye twinkle of hers workin'. "I think it will be perfectly lovely. "</p>
+
+ <p>I got to admit, too, that she's quite a help.</p>
+
+ <p>"We must be sure Mrs. Mumford and that Bartley person are both there," says she. "And we ought to have as many of
+ Captain Killam's friends as possible. I'll tell you. Let's give a dinner-party."</p>
+
+ <p>"Must we?" says I. "You know we ain't introducin' any London success. This is Rupert's first stab, remember."</p>
+
+ <p>We set the date for the day the book was to be out, which gives Rupert an excuse for celebratin'. He'd invited
+ Mrs. Mumford and Vinton to be his guests, and they'd promised to be on hand. As for us, we'd rounded up<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_228" title="228" id="page_228"></a> Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellins and J. Dudley Simms.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, everybody showed up. And as it happens, it's one of the big nights at the Purple Pup. The long center table
+ is surrounded by a gay bunch of assorted artists who are bein' financed by an out-of-town buyer who seems to be
+ openin' Chianti reckless. We were over in one corner, as far away from the ukulele torturers as we could get, while
+ at the other end of the room is Rupert with his two. I thought he looked kind of pallid, but it might have been only
+ on account of the cigarette smoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is it time yet, Torchy?" asks Mr. Robert, when we gets through to the striped ice cream and chicory essence.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's hold off," says I, "and see if someone else don't pull a curtain-raiser."</p>
+
+ <p>Sure enough, they did. A bald-headed, red-faced old boy with a Liberty Bond button in his coat-lapel insists on
+ everybody's drinkin' to our boys at the front. Followin' that, someone leads a slim, big-eyed young female to the
+ piano and announces that she will do a couple of Serbian folk-songs. Maybe she did. I hope the Serbs forgive her.</p>
+
+ <p>"If they can take that without squirmin',"<a class="pagenum" name="page_229" title="229" id="page_229"></a> says
+ I, "I guess they can stand for Rupert. Go on, Mr. Robert. Shoot."</p>
+
+ <p>Course, he's no spellbinder, but he can say what he wants to in a few words and make himself heard. And then,
+ bein' in naval uniform helped.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think we have with us to-night," says he, "Captain Rupert Killam, the sailor poet. I should like, if it pleases
+ the company, to ask Captain Killam to read for us some of his popular verses. Does anyone second the motion?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Killam! Killam!" roars out the sporty wine-opener.</p>
+
+ <p>Others took up the chorus, and in the midst of it I dashes over to drag Rupert from his chair if necessary.</p>
+
+ <p>But I wasn't needed. As a matter of fact, he beat me to it. Before I could get half way to him, he is standin' at
+ the end of the long table, his eyes dropped modest, and a brand-new volume of "Sea Songs" held conspicuous over his
+ chest.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is indeed an unexpected honor," says Rupert, lyin' fluent. "I am a plain sailor-man, as you know, but if you
+ insist&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>And, before they could hedge, he has squared his shoulders, thrown his head well back, and<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_230" title="230" id="page_230"></a> has cut loose with that boomin' voice of his. Does he put it over? Say,
+ honest, I finds myself listenin' with my mouth open, just as though I understood every word. And the first thing I
+ know he's carryin' the house with him. Even some of the Hungarian waiters stopped to see what it's all about.</p>
+
+ <table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>Tides!</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Little, rushing, hurrying tides</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Along the sloping deck.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>And the bobstay smashing the big blue deep,</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>While under my hand</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>The kicking tiller groans</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Its oaken soul out in a gray despair.</td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+
+ <p>That's part of it I copied down afterward. Yet that crowd just lapped it up.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wow!" "Brava! Brava!" "What's the matter with Killam?" they yells. "More!"</p>
+
+ <p>Rupert was flushin' clear up the back of his neck now. Also he was fumblin' with the book, hesitatin' what to give
+ 'em next, when I pushes in and begins pumpin' his hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall&mdash;shall I&mdash;&mdash;" he starts to ask.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, you boob," I whispers. "Quit while the quittin's good. You got 'em buffaloed, all right. Let it ride."</p>
+
+ <p>And I fairly shoves him over to his table,<a class="pagenum" name="page_231" title="231" id="page_231"></a> where
+ Sister Mumford has already split out a new pair of gloves and is beamin' joyous, while Vinton is sittin' there with
+ his chin on his necktie, lookin' like someone had beaned him with a bung-starter.</p>
+
+ <p>But we wasn't wise just how strong Rupert had scored until we saw the half page Whitey Weeks had gotten out of it
+ for the Sunday paper. "New Poet Captures Greenwich Village" is the top headline, and there's a three-column cut
+ showin' Rupert spoutin' his "Sea Songs" through the cigarette smoke. Also, I gather from a casual remark Rupert let
+ drop yesterday that the prospects of him and Mrs. Mumford enterin' the mixed doubles class soon are good. And, with
+ her ownin' a big retail coal business over in Jersey, I expect Rupert can go on writin' his pomes as free as he
+ likes.</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_232" title="232" id="page_232"></a>
+ <a name="FORSYTHE_AT_THE_FINISH_5832" id="FORSYTHE_AT_THE_FINISH_5832"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+ <h3>FORSYTHE AT THE FINISH</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I expect I wouldn't have noticed Forsythe particular if it hadn't been for Mrs. Robert. It takes all kinds, you
+ know, to make up a week-end house-party bunch; and in these days, when specimens of the razor-usin' sex are so
+ scarce&mdash;well, that's when half portions like this T. Forsythe Hurd get by as full orders.</p>
+
+ <p>Besides, Mrs. Robert had meant well. Her idea was to make the Captain's 48-hour shore leave as gay and lively as
+ possible. She'd had a hard time roundin' up any of his friends, too. Hence Forsythe. One of these slim, fine-haired,
+ well manicured parlor Pomeranians, Forsythe is&mdash;the kind who raves over the sandwiches and whispers perfectly
+ killin' things to the ladies as he flits about at afternoon teas.</p>
+
+ <p>We were up at the Ellinses', Vee and me, fillin' out at Saturday luncheon, when Mr. Robert drifts in, about an
+ hour behind schedule. You know, he's commandin' one of these coast patrol boats. Some of 'em are converted<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_233" title="233" id="page_233"></a> steam yachts, some are sea-goin' tugs, and then again some
+ are just old menhaden fish-boats painted gray with a few three-inch guns stuck around on 'em casual. And this last is
+ the sort of craft Mr. Robert had had wished on him.</p>
+
+ <p>Seems there'd been some weather off the Hook for the last few days, and, with a fresh U-boat scare on, him and his
+ reformed glue barge had been havin' anything but a merry time. I don't know how the old fish-boat stood it, but Mr.
+ Robert showed that he'd been on more or less active service. He had a three days' growth of stubble on his face, his
+ navy uniform was wrinkled and brine-stained, and the knuckles on one hand were all barked up.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, Robert!" says young Mrs. Ellins, as she wriggles out of the clinch and gives him the once-over. "You're a
+ sight."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sorry, my dear," says Mr. Robert; "but the beauty parlor on the <i>Narcissus</i> wasn't working when I left. But
+ if you can give me half an hour to&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>He got it. And when he shows up again in dry togs and with his face mowed he's almost fit to mingle with the
+ guests. It was about then that T. Forsythe was pullin' his star act at the salad bowl. Course, when you have<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_234" title="234" id="page_234"></a> only ordinary people around, you let the kitchen help do
+ such things. But when Forsythe is present he's asked to mix the salad dressin'.</p>
+
+ <p>So there is Forsythe, wearin' a jade-green tie to match the color of the salad bowl, surrounded by cruets and
+ pepper grinders and paprika bottles, and manipulatin' his own special olivewood spoon and fork as dainty and graceful
+ as if he was conductin' an orchestra.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I say, Jevons," says he, signalin' the Ellinses' butler, "have someone conduct a clove of garlic to the back
+ veranda, slice it, and gently rub it on a crust of fresh bread. Then bring me the bread. And do you mind very much,
+ Mrs. Ellins, if I have those Papa Gontier roses removed? They clash with an otherwise perfect color scheme, and
+ you've no idea how sensitive I am to such jarring notes. Besides, their perfume is so beastly obtrusive. At times
+ I've been made quite ill by them. Really."</p>
+
+ <p>"Take them away, Jevons," says Mr. Robert, smotherin' a sarcastic smile.</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" grumbles Mr. Robert. "What a rotter you are, Forsythe. If I could only get you aboard the <i>Narcissus</i>
+ for a ten-day cruise! I'd introduce you to perfumes, the sort you<a class="pagenum" name="page_235" title="235" id=
+ "page_235"></a> could lean up against. You know, when a boat has carried mature fish for&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Please, Bob!" protests Forsythe. "We admit you're a hero, and that you've been saving the country, but don't
+ let's have the disgusting details; at least, not when the salad dressing is at its most critical stage."</p>
+
+ <p>Havin' said which, Forsythe proceeds to finish what was for him a hard day's work.</p>
+
+ <p>Discussin' his likes and dislikes was Forsythe's strong hold, and, if you could believe him, he had more finicky
+ notions than a sanatorium full of nervous wrecks. He positively couldn't bear the sight of this, the touch of that,
+ and the sound of the other thing. The rustle of a newspaper made him so fidgety he could hardly sit still. The smell
+ of boiled cabbage made him faint. Someone had sent him a plaid necktie for Christmas. He had ordered his man to pick
+ it up with the fire-tongs and throw it in the ash-can. Things like that.</p>
+
+ <p>All through luncheon we listened while Forsythe described the awful agonies he'd gone through. We had to listen.
+ You can guess what a joy it was. And, all the time, I could watch Mr. Robert gettin' sorer and sorer.<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_236" title="236" id="page_236"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Entertainin' party, eh?" I remarks on the side, as we escapes from the dinin'-room.</p>
+
+ <p>"Forsythe," says Mr. Robert, "is one of those persons you're always wanting to kick and never do. I could
+ generally avoid him at the club, but here&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Robert shrugs his shoulders. Then he adds:</p>
+
+ <p>"I say, Torchy, you have clever ideas now and then."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who, me?" says I. "Someone's been kiddin' you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps," says he; "but if anything should occur to you that might help toward putting Forsythe in a position
+ where real work and genuine discomfort couldn't be dodged&mdash;well, I should be deeply grateful."</p>
+
+ <p>"What a cruel thought!" says I. "Still, if a miracle like that could be pulled, it would be entertainin' to watch.
+ Eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Especially if it had to do with handling cold, slippery things," chuckles Mr. Robert, "like iced eels or
+ pickles."</p>
+
+ <p>Then we both grins. I was tryin' to picture Forsythe servin' a sentence as helper in a fish market or assistant
+ stirrer in a soap fact'ry. Not that anything like that could happen through me. Who was I to interfere<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_237" title="237" id="page_237"></a> with a brilliant drawin'-room performer like him? Honest,
+ with Forsythe scintillatin' around, I felt like a Bolsheviki of the third class. And yet, the longer I watched him,
+ the more I mulled over that hint Mr. Robert had thrown out.</p>
+
+ <p>I was still wonderin' if I was all hollow above the eyes, when our placid afternoon gatherin' is busted complete
+ by a big cream-colored limousine rollin' through the porte-cochère and a new arrival breezin' in. From the way Jevons
+ swells his chest out as he helps her shed the mink-lined motor coat, I guessed she must be somebody important.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, it's Miss Gorman!" whispers Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not <i>the</i> Miss Gorman&mdash;Miss Jane?" I says.</p>
+
+ <p>Vee nods, and I stretches my neck out another kink. Who wouldn't? Not just because she's a society head-liner, or
+ the richest old maid in the country, but because she's such a wonder at gettin' things done. You know, I
+ expect&mdash;Red Cross work, suffrage campaignin', Polish relief. Say, I'll bet if she could be turned loose in
+ Mexico or Russia for a couple of months, she'd have things runnin' as smooth as a directors' meetin' of the Standard
+ Oil.</p>
+
+ <p>Look at the things she's put through, since the war started, just by crashin' right in and<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_238" title="238" id="page_238"></a> stayin' on the job. They say she keeps four secretaries with their
+ suitcases packed, ready to jump into their travelin' clothes and slide down the pole when she pushes the buzzer
+ button.</p>
+
+ <p>And now she's makin' straight for Mr. Robert.</p>
+
+ <p>"What luck!" says she. "I wasn't at all sure of finding you. How much leave have you? Only until Monday morning?
+ Oh, you overworked naval officers! But you must find some men for me, Robert; two, at least. I need them at
+ once."</p>
+
+ <p>"Might I ask, Miss Jane," says he, "if any particular qualifications are&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"What I would like," breaks in Miss Gorman, "would be two active, intelligent young men with some initiative and
+ executive ability. You see, I am giving a going away dinner for some soldiers of the Rainbow Division who are about
+ to be sent to the transports. It's an official secret, of course. No one is supposed to know that they are going to
+ sail soon, but everyone does know. None of their friends or relatives are to be allowed to be there to wish them
+ God-speed or anything like that, and they need cheering up just now. So I arrange one of these dinners when I can. My
+ plans<a class="pagenum" name="page_239" title="239" id="page_239"></a> for this one, however, have been terribly
+ rushed."</p>
+
+ <p>"I see," says Mr. Robert. "And it's perfectly bully of you, Miss Jane. Splendid! I suppose there'll be a hundred
+ or so."</p>
+
+ <p>"Six eighty," says she, never battin' an eye. "We are not including the officers&mdash;only privates. And we don't
+ want one of them to lift a finger for it. They've had enough fatigue duty. This time they're to be
+ guests&mdash;honored guests. I have permission from the Brigadier in command. We are to have one of the mess halls
+ for a whole day. The chef and waiters have been engaged, too. And an orchestra. But there'll be so many to
+ manage&mdash;the telling of who to go where, and seeing that the entertainers don't get lost, and that the little
+ dinner favors are put around, and all those details. So I must have help."</p>
+
+ <p>I could see Mr. Robert rollin' his eyes around for me, so I steps up. Just from hearin' her talk a couple of
+ minutes I'd caught the fever. That's a way she has, I understand. So the next thing I knew I'd been patted on the
+ shoulder and taken on as a volunteer.</p>
+
+ <p>"Precisely the sort of assistant I was hoping for," says Miss Gorman. "I can tell by his hair. I know just what I
+ shall ask him to<a class="pagenum" name="page_240" title="240" id="page_240"></a> do. But there'll be so much more;
+ decorating the tables, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Here I nudges Mr. Robert. "How about Forsythe?" I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says he. "Why&mdash;why&mdash;&mdash; By Jove, though! Why not? Oh, I say, Forsythe! Just a moment."</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe the same thought struck him as had come to me, which is that helpin' Miss Jane give a blowout to near seven
+ hundred soldiers wouldn't be any rest-cure stunt. She's rated at about ninety horse-power herself, when she's speeded
+ up, and anybody that happens to be on her staff has got to keep movin' in high. They'd have to be ready to tackle
+ anything that turned up, too.</p>
+
+ <p>But, to hear Mr. Robert explain it to Forsythe, you'd think it was just that his fame as an arranger of floral
+ center-pieces had spread until Miss Gorman has decided nobody else would do.</p>
+
+ <p>"Although, heaven knows, I never suspected you could be really useful, Forsythe, " says Mr. Robert. "But if Miss
+ Jane thinks you'd be a help&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I am sure Mr. Hurd would be the very one," puts in Miss Gorman.</p>
+
+ <p>"At last!" says Forsythe, strikin' a pose.<a class="pagenum" name="page_241" title="241" id="page_241"></a> "My
+ virtues are about to be discovered. I shall be delighted to assist you, Miss Gorman, in any way."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tut, tut, Forsythe!" says Mr. Robert. "Don't be too reckless. Miss Jane might take you at your word."</p>
+
+ <p>"Go on. Slander me," says Forsythe. "Say that, when enlisted in a noble cause, I am a miserable shirker."</p>
+
+ <p>"Indeed, I shouldn't believe a word of it, even if I had time to listen to him," declares Miss Jane. "And I must
+ be at the camp within an hour. I shall need one of you young men now. Let me see. Suppose I take this
+ one&mdash;Torchy, isn't it? Get your coat. I'll not promise to have you back for dinner, but I'll try. Thank you so
+ much, Robert."</p>
+
+ <p>And then it was a case of goin' on from there. Whew! I've sort of had the notion now and then, when I've been
+ operatin' with Old Hickory Ellins at the Corrugated Trust on busy days, that I was some rapid private sec. But say,
+ havin' followed Miss Jane Gorman through them dinner preliminaries, I know better.</p>
+
+ <p>While that French chauffeur of hers is rollin' us down Long Island at from forty to fifty miles per hour, she has
+ her note-book out and<a class="pagenum" name="page_242" title="242" id="page_242"></a> is pumpin' me full of things
+ I'm expected to remember&mdash;what train the chef's gang is comin' on, how the supplies are to be carted over, who
+ to see about knockin' up a stage for the cabaret talent, and where the buntin' has been ordered. I borrows a pad and
+ pencil, and wishes I knew shorthand.</p>
+
+ <p>By the time we lands at the camp, though, I have a fair idea of the job she's tackled; and while she's havin' an
+ interview with the C. O. I starts explorin' the scene of the banquet. First off I finds that the mess-hall seats less
+ than five hundred, the way they got the tables fixed; that there's no room for a stage without breakin' through one
+ end and tackin' it on; and that the camp cooks will have the range ovens full of bread and the tops covered with
+ oatmeal in double boilers as usual. Outside of that and a few other things, the arrangements was lovely.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Jane ain't a bit disturbed when I makes my report.</p>
+
+ <p>"There!" says she. "Didn't I say you were just the assistant I needed? Now, please tell all those things to the
+ Brigadier. He will know exactly what to do. Then you'd best be out here early Monday morning to see that they're done
+ properly. And I think, Torchy, I shall<a class="pagenum" name="page_243" title="243" id="page_243"></a> make you my
+ general manager for this occasion. Yes, I'll do it. Everyone will report first to you, and you will tell them exactly
+ where to go and what to do."</p>
+
+ <p>"You&mdash;you mean," says I, gaspin' a bit, "all the hired help?"</p>
+
+ <p>"And the volunteers too," says Miss Jane. "Everyone."</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe I grinned. I didn't know just how it was goin' to work out, but I could feel something comin'. Forsythe was
+ goin' to get his. He stood to get it good, too. Not all on account of what I owed Mr. Robert for the friendly turns
+ he'd done me. Some of it would be on my own hook, to pay up for the yawny half hours I'd had to sit through listenin'
+ while Forsythe discoursed about himself. You should have seen the satisfied look on Mr. Robert's face when I hinted
+ how Forsythe might be in line for new sensations.</p>
+
+ <p>"If I could only be there to watch!" says he. "You must tell me all about it afterwards. They'll enjoy hearing of
+ it at the club."</p>
+
+ <p>But, at that, Forsythe wasn't the one to walk right into trouble. He's a shifty party, and he ain't been duckin'
+ work all these years without gettin' expert at it. Accordin' to<a class="pagenum" name="page_244" title="244" id=
+ "page_244"></a> schedule he was to show up at the camp about nine-thirty Monday morning; but it's nearer noon when he
+ rolls up in his car. And I don't hesitate a bit about givin' him the call.</p>
+
+ <p>"You know it's this week, not next," says I, "that this dinner is comin' off. And there's four bolts of buntin'
+ waitin' to be hung up."</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite so," says Forsythe. "We must get to work right away."</p>
+
+ <p>I had to chase down to the station again then, to see that the chef's outfit was bein' loaded on the trucks; but I
+ was cheered up by the thought of Forsythe balanced on top of a tall step-ladder with his mouth full of tacks and his
+ collar gettin' wilty.</p>
+
+ <p>It's near an hour before I gets back, though. Do I find Forsythe in his shirt-sleeves climbin' around on the
+ rafters? I do not. He's sittin' comfortable in a camp-chair on a fur motor robe, smokin' a cigarette calm, and
+ surrounded by half a dozen classy young ladies that he's rounded up by 'phone from the nearest country club. The
+ girls and three or four chauffeurs are doin' the work, while Forsythe is doin' the heavy directin'.</p>
+
+ <p>He'd sketched out his decoratin' scheme on the back of an envelop, and now he was tellin' 'em how to carry it out.
+ The worst of it is,<a class="pagenum" name="page_245" title="245" id="page_245"></a> too, that he's gettin' some
+ stunnin' effects and is bein' congratulated enthusiastic by the girls.</p>
+
+ <p>It's the same way with fixin' up the tables with ferns and flowers. Forsythe plans it out with a pencil, and his
+ crew do the hustlin' around.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I had to let it ride. Besides, there was a dozen other things for me to look after. But I'm good at a
+ waitin' game. I kept my eye on Forsythe, to see that he didn't slip away. He was still there at two-thirty, havin'
+ organized a picnic luncheon with the young ladies, when Miss Jane blew in. And blamed if she don't fall for
+ Forsythe's stuff, too.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, you've done wonders, Mr. Hurd," says she. "What a versatile genius you are? "</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, that!" says he, wavin' a sandwich careless. "But it's an inspiration to be doing anything at all for you,
+ Miss Gorman."</p>
+
+ <p>And here he hasn't so much as shed his overcoat.</p>
+
+ <p>It must have been half an hour later when Sig. Zaretti, the head chef, comes huntin' me out with a desperate look
+ in his eyes. I was consultin' Miss Jane about borrowin' a piano from the Y. M. C. A. tent, but he kicks right in.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, I am distract," says he, puffin' out his cheeks. "Eet&mdash;eet ees too mooch!"<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_246" title="246" id="page_246"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Go on," says I. "Shoot the tragedy. What's too much?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That Pedro and that Salvatore," says he. "They have become lost, the worthless ones. They disappear on me. And in
+ three hours I am to serve, in this crude place, a dinner of six courses to seven hundred men. They abandon me at such
+ a time, with so much to be done."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, that's up to you," says I. "Can't some of your crowd double in brass? What about workin' in some of your
+ waiters?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But they are all employed," says Zaretti. "Besides, the union does not permit. If you could assist me with two
+ men, even one. I implore."</p>
+
+ <p>"There ain't a cook in sight," says I. "Sorry, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eet ees not for cook," he protests. "No; only to help make the peel from those so many potatoes. One who could
+ make the peel. Please!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says I. "Peelin' potatoes! Why, 'most anybody could help out at that, I guess. I would myself
+ if&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No," breaks in Miss Jane. "You cannot be spared. And I'm sure I don't know who could."<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_247" title="247" id="page_247"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Unless," I puts in, "Mr. Hurd is all through with his decoratin'."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, to be sure," says she. "Just tell him, will you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Suppose I send him over to you, Miss Gorman," says I, "while I hustle along that piano?"</p>
+
+ <p>She nods, and I lose no time trailin' down Forsythe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Emergency call for you from Miss Jane," says I, edgin' in among his admirers and tappin' him on the shoulder.
+ "She's waitin' over by headquarters."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, certainly," says Forsythe, startin' off brisk.</p>
+
+ <p>"And say," I calls after him, "I hope it won't be anything that'll make you faint."</p>
+
+ <p>"Please don't worry about me," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, I tried not to. In fact, I tried so hard that some folks might have thought I'd heard good news from home.
+ But I'd had a peek or two into the camp kitchen since Zaretti's food construction squad had moved in, and, believe
+ me, it was no place for an artistic temperament, subject to creeps up the back. There was about a ton of cold-storage
+ turkeys bein' unpacked, bushels of onions goin' through the shuckin' process, buckets of soup stock standin'<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_248" title="248" id="page_248"></a> around, and half a dozen murderous-lookin' assistant chefs
+ was sharpenin' long knives and jabberin' excited in four languages.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, yes; Forsythe was goin' to need all the inspiration he'd collected, if he lasted through.</p>
+
+ <p>I kind of wanted to stick around and cheer him up with friendly words while he was fishin' potatoes out of the
+ cold water and learnin' to use a peelin'-knife, but my job wouldn't let me. After I'd seen the piano landed on the
+ new stage, there were chairs to be placed for the orchestra, and then other things. So it was some little time before
+ I got around to the kitchen wing again, pretendin' to be lookin' for Zaretti. But nowhere in that steamin', hustlin',
+ garlic-smellin' bunch could I see Forsythe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hey, chef!" I sings out. "Where's that expert potato-peeler I sent you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" says he, rubbin' his hands enthusiastic. "The signor with the yellow gloves? In the tent there you will find
+ heem."</p>
+
+ <p>So I steps over to the door of a sort of canvas annex and peers in. And say, it was a rude shock. Forsythe is
+ there, all right. He's snuggled up cozy next to an oil heater, holdin' a watch in one hand and a cigarette in the
+ other, while around him is grouped his faithful<a class="pagenum" name="page_249" title="249" id="page_249"></a>
+ fluff body-guard, each with a pan in her lap and the potato-peelin's comin' off rapid. Forsythe? Oh, he seems to be
+ speedin' 'em up and keepin' tally.</p>
+
+ <p>I'd just let out my second gasp when I feels somebody at my elbow, and glances round to find it's Miss Jane.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look!" says I, indicatin' Forsythe and his busy bees.</p>
+
+ <p>"What a picture!" says Miss Jane.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," says I, "illustratin' the manly art of lettin' the women do it."</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Jane laughs easy.</p>
+
+ <p>"It has been that way for ages," says she. "Mr. Hurd is only running true to type. But see! The potatoes are
+ nearly all peeled and our dinner is going to be served on time. What splendid assistants you've both been!"</p>
+
+ <p>At that, though, if there'd been a medal to be passed out, I guess it would have been pinned on Forsythe.</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_250" title="250" id="page_250"></a>
+ <a name="THE_HOUSE_OF_TORCHY_6269" id="THE_HOUSE_OF_TORCHY_6269"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+ <h3>THE HOUSE OF TORCHY</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>This trip it was a matter of tanks. No, not the ice-water variety, or the kind that absorbs high-balls. Army
+ tanks&mdash;the sort that wallows out at daybreak and gives the Hun that chilly feelin' down his spine.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordin' to my credentials, I was supposed to be inspectin' 'em for weak spots in the armor or punk work on the
+ gears. And I can tell you now, on the side, that it was 90 per cent. bluff. What the Ordnance Department really
+ wanted to know was whether the work was bein' speeded up proper, how many men on the shifts, and was the steel comin'
+ through from the rollin' mills all right. Get me? Sleuth stuff.</p>
+
+ <p>I'd been knockin' around there for four days, bein' towed about by the reserve major, who had a face on him like a
+ stuffed owl, a nut full of decimal fractions, and a rubber-stamp mind. Oh, he was on the job, all right. So was
+ everybody else in sight. I could see<a class="pagenum" name="page_251" title="251" id="page_251"></a> that after the
+ first day. In fact, I coded in my O. K. the second noon and was plannin' to slip back home.</p>
+
+ <p>But when I hinted as much to the Major he nearly threw a cat-fit. Why, he'd arranged a demonstration at 10
+ <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> Thursday, for my special benefit. And there were the tests&mdash;horse-power,
+ gun-ranges, resistance, and I don't know what all; technical junk that I savvied about as much as if he'd been tryin'
+ to show me how to play the Chinese alphabet on a piccolo.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, I couldn't tell him that, nor I didn't want to break his heart by refusin'. So I agrees to stick around a
+ while longer. But say, I never enjoyed such a poor time doin' it. For there was just one spot on the map where I was
+ anxious to be for the next few days. That was at home. It was one of the times when I ought to be there too,
+ for&mdash;&mdash; Well, I'll get to that later.</p>
+
+ <p>Besides, this fact'ry joint where they were buildin' the tanks wasn't any allurin' spot. I can't advertise just
+ where it was, either; the government wouldn't like it. But if there's any part of Connecticut that's less interestin'
+ to loaf around in, I never got stranded there. You run a spur track out into the bare hills<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_252" title="252" id="page_252"></a> for fifteen miles from nowhere, slap up a row of cement barracks, and a few
+ acres of machine shops, string a ten-foot barbed-wire fence around the plant, drape the whole outfit in soft-coal
+ smoke, and you ain't got any Garden of Eden winter resort. Specially when it's full of low-brow mechanics who speak
+ in seven different lingos and subsist mainly on cut plug and garlic.</p>
+
+ <p>After I'd checked up all the dope I'd come for, and durin' the times when the Major was out plannin' more
+ inspection stunts for me, I was left to drill around by myself. Hours and hours. And all there was to read in the
+ Major's office was engineerin' magazines and the hist'ry of Essex County, Mass. Havin' been fed up on mechanics, I
+ tackled the hist'ry. One chapter had a corkin' good Indian scalpin' story in it, about a Mrs. Hannah Dustin; and say,
+ as a short-order hair remover she was a lady champ, all right. But the rest of the book wasn't so thrillin'.</p>
+
+ <p>So I tried chattin' with the Major's secretary, a Lieutenant Barnes. The Major must have picked him out on account
+ of that serious face of his. First off, I had an idea Barnes was sad just because he was detailed at this soggy place
+ instead of bein' sent to France.<a class="pagenum" name="page_253" title="253" id="page_253"></a> I asks him sort of
+ sympathizin' how long he's been here. He says three months.</p>
+
+ <p>"In this hole?" says I. "How do you keep from goin' bug-house?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't mind it," says he. "I find the work quite interesting."</p>
+
+ <p>"But evenin's?" I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>"I write to my wife," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>I wanted to ask him what about, but I choked it back. "Oh, yes," says I. "Of course. Any youngsters at home!"</p>
+
+ <p>"No," says he prompt. "Life is complicated enough without children."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I don't know," says I. "They'd sort of help, I should think."</p>
+
+ <p>He shakes his head and glares gloomy out of the window. "I cannot agree with you, " says he. "Perhaps you have
+ never seriously considered just what it means to be a parent."</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe not," says I, "but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Few seem to do so," he breaks in. "Just think: one begins by putting two lives in jeopardy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's pass over that," I says hasty.</p>
+
+ <p>He sighs. "If we only could," says he. "And then&mdash;&mdash; Well, there you are&mdash;saddled with the task of
+ caring for another human being, of keeping him in good health, of molding<a class="pagenum" name="page_254" title=
+ "254" id="page_254"></a> his character, of planning and directing his whole career, from boyhood on."</p>
+
+ <p>"Some are girls, though," I suggests.</p>
+
+ <p>He shudders. "So much the worse," says he. "Girl babies are such delicate creatures; all babies are, in fact. Do
+ you know the average rate of infant mortality in this country? Just think of the hundreds of thousands who do not
+ survive the teething period. Imagine the anxieties, the sleepless nights, the sad little tragedies which come to so
+ many homes. Then the epidemic diseases&mdash;measles, scarlet fever, meningitis. Let them survive all those, and what
+ has the parent to face but the battle with other plagues, mental and moral? Think of the number of weak-minded
+ children there are in the world; of perverts, criminally inclined. It is staggering. But if you escape all that, if
+ your children are well and normal, as some are, then you must consider this: Suppose anything should happen to either
+ or both of the parents? What of the little boy or girl? You have seen orphan asylums, I suppose. Have you ever
+ stopped to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>And then, just as he had me feelin' like I ought to be led out and shot at sunrise, the old Major comes bustlin'
+ in fussy. I could have fallen on his neck.<a class="pagenum" name="page_255" title="255" id="page_255"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"All ready!" says he. "Now I'll show you a fighting machine, young man, that is the last word in mechanical
+ genius."</p>
+
+ <p>"You can show me anything, Major," says I, "so long as it ain't a morgue or a State's prison."</p>
+
+ <p>And he sure had some boiler-plate bus out there champin' at the bit. It looked just as frisky as the Flatiron
+ Buildin', squattin' in the middle of the field, this young Fort Slocum with the caterpillar wheels sunk in the
+ mud.</p>
+
+ <p>"Stuck, ain't she?" I asked the Major.</p>
+
+ <p>"We shall see," says he, noddin' to one of his staff, who proceeds to do a semaphore act with his arms.</p>
+
+ <p>An answerin' snort comes from inside the thing, a purry sort of rumble that grows bigger and bigger, and next I
+ knew, it starts wallowin' right at us. It keeps comin' and comin', gettin' up speed all the while, and if there
+ hadn't been a four-foot stone wall between us I'd been lookin' for a tall tree. I thought it would turn when it came
+ to the wall. But it don't. It gives a lurch, like a cow playin' leap-frog, and over she comes, still pointed our
+ way.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hey, Major!" I calls out above the roar.<a class="pagenum" name="page_256" title="256" id="page_256"></a> "Can
+ they see where they're goin' in there? Hadn't we better give 'em room?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't move, please," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just as you say," says I; "only I ain't strong for bein' rolled into pie-crust. "</p>
+
+ <p>"There's no danger," says he. "I merely wish you to see how&mdash;&mdash; There! Look!"</p>
+
+ <p>And say, within twenty feet of us the blamed thing rears up on its haunches, its ugly nose high as a house above
+ us, and, while I'm still holdin' my breath, it pivots on its tail and lumbers back, leavin' a path that looks like it
+ had been paved with Belgian blocks.</p>
+
+ <p>Course, that's only part of the performance. We watched it wallow into deep ditches and out, splash through a
+ brook, and mow down trees more'n a foot thick. And all the time the crew were pokin' out wicked-lookin' guns, big and
+ little, that swung round and hunted us out like so many murderous eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cute little beast, ain't it?" says I. "You got it trained so it'll almost do a waltz. If I was to pick my
+ position, though, I think I'd rather be on the inside lookin' out."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well," says the Major. "You shall have a ride in it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Excuse me," says I. "I was only foolin'. Honest, Major, I ain't yearnin'."<a class="pagenum" name="page_257"
+ title="257" id="page_257"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Telegram for you," breaks in Barnes, the secretary.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh!" says I, a bit gaspy, as I rips open the envelop.</p>
+
+ <p>It's the one I'd been espectin'. All it says is: "Come at once. <span class="smcap">Vee</span> ." But I knew what
+ that meant.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sorry, Major," says I, "but I'll have to pass up the rest of the show. I&mdash;I'm called back."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! To headquarters?" says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"No," says I. "Home."</p>
+
+ <p>He shakes his head and frowns. "That is a word which no officer is supposed to have in his vocabulary," says
+ he.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's in mine, all right," says I. "But then, I'm not much of an army officer, anyway. I'm mostly a camouflaged
+ private sec. Besides, this ain't any ordinary call. It's a domestic S. O. S. that I've been sort of lookin' for."</p>
+
+ <p>"I understand," says he. "The&mdash;the first?"</p>
+
+ <p>I nods. Then I asks: "What's the quickest way across to Long Island?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There isn't any quick way," says he, "unless you have wings. You can't even catch the branch line local that
+ connects with the<a class="pagenum" name="page_258" title="258" id="page_258"></a> New York express now. There'll be
+ one down at 8:36 to-morrow morning, though."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wha-a-at!" says I, gawpin' at him. "How about gettin' a machine and shootin' down to the junction?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My car is the only one here," says he, "and that is out of commission to-day&mdash;valves being ground."</p>
+
+ <p>"But look," says I; "you got three or four of those motor-cycles with a bath-tub tacked on the side. Couldn't you
+ let one of your sergeants&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Strictly against orders," says he, "except for military purposes."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, stretch it, Major," I goes on. "Have a heart. Just think! I want to get there to-night. Got to!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Impossible," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"But listen&mdash;&mdash;" I keeps on.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, it's no use rehearsin' the swell arguments I put up. I said he had a rubber-stamp mind, didn't I? And I made
+ about as much headway talkin' to him as I would if I'd been assaultin' that tank with a tack-hammer. He couldn't see
+ any difference between havin' charge of a string of machine shops in Connecticut and commandin' a regiment in the
+ front-line trenches. Besides, he didn't approve<a class="pagenum" name="page_259" title="259" id="page_259"></a> of
+ junior officers bein' married. Not durin' war-time, anyway.</p>
+
+ <p>And the worst of it was, I couldn't tell him just the particular kind of ossified old pinhead I thought he was.
+ All I could do was grind my teeth, say "Yes, sir," and salute respectful.</p>
+
+ <p>Also there was that undertaker-faced secretary standin' by with his ear out. The prospect of sittin' around
+ watchin' him for the rest of the day wasn't fascinatin'. No; I'd had about all of Barnes I could stand. A few more of
+ his cheerin' observations, and I'd want to jam his head into his typewriter and then tread on the keys. Nor I wasn't
+ goin' to be fed on any more cog-wheel statistics by the Major, either.</p>
+
+ <p>All I could keep on my mind then was this one thing: How could I get home? Looked like I was up against it, too.
+ The nearest town was twelve miles off, and the main-line junction was some thirty-odd miles beyond that. Too far for
+ an afternoon hike. But I couldn't just sit around and wait, or pace up and down inside the barbed-wire fence like an
+ enemy alien that had been pastured out. So I wanders through the gate and down a road. I didn't know where it led, or
+ care. Maybe I<a class="pagenum" name="page_260" title="260" id="page_260"></a> had a vague idea a car would come
+ along. But none did.</p>
+
+ <p>I must have been trampin' near an hour, with my chin down and my fists jammed into my overcoat pockets, when I
+ catches a glimpse, out of the tail of my eye, of something yellow dodgin' behind a clump of cedars at one side of the
+ road. First off I thought it might be a cow, as there was a farm-house a little ways ahead. Then it struck me no cow
+ would move as quick as that, or have such a bright yellow hide. So I turns and makes straight for the cedars.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a thick, bushy clump. I climbed the stone wall and walked all the way round. Nothin' in sight. Seemed as if
+ I could see branches movin' in there, though, and hear a sound like heavy breathin'. Course, it might be a deer, or a
+ fox. Then I remembered I had half a bag of peanuts somewhere about me. Maybe I could toll the thing out with 'em. I
+ was just fishin' in my pockets when from the middle of the cedars comes this disgusted protest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I say, old man," says a voice. "No shooting, please."</p>
+
+ <p>And with that out steps a clean-cut, cheerful-faced young gent in a leather coat, goggled<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_261" title="261" id="page_261"></a> helmet, and spiral puttees. No wonder I stood starin'. Not that I hadn't
+ seen plenty like him before, but I didn't know the woods was so full of 'em.</p>
+
+ <p>"You were out looking for me, I suppose?" he goes on.</p>
+
+ <p>"Depends on who you are," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, we might as well come down to cases," says he. "I'm the enemy."</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't look it," says I, grinnin'.</p>
+
+ <p>He shrugs his shoulders.</p>
+
+ <p>"Fact, old man," says he. "I'm the one you were sent to watch for&mdash;Lieutenant Donald Allen, 26th Flying Corps
+ Division, Squadron B."</p>
+
+ <p>"Pleased to meet you," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"No doubt," says he. "Have a cigarette?" We lights up from the same match. "But say," he adds, "it was just a
+ piece of tough luck, your catching me in this fix. "</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I ain't so sure," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course," he says, "it won't go with the C. O. But really, now, what are you going to do when your observer
+ insists that he's dying? I couldn't tell. Perhaps he was. Right in the middle of a perfect flight, too, the chump!
+ Motor working sweet, air as smooth as silk, and no cross currents to speak of. But,<a class="pagenum" name="page_262"
+ title="262" id="page_262"></a> with him howling about this awful pain in his tummy, what else could I do? Had to come
+ down and&mdash;&mdash; Well, here we are. I'm behind the lines, I suppose, and you'll report my surrender."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then what?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh," says Allen, "as soon as I persuade this trolley-car aviator, Martin, that he isn't dead, I shall load him
+ into the old bus and cart him back to Mineola."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wha-a-t!" says I. "You&mdash;you're goin' back to Mineola&mdash;to-night?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If Martin can forget his tummy," says he. "How I'll be guyed! Go to the foot of the eligible list too, and
+ probably miss out on being sent over with my division. Oh, well!"</p>
+
+ <p>I was beginning to dope out the mystery. More'n that, I had my fingers on the tail feathers of a hunch.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not leave Martin here?" I suggests. "Couldn't you show up in time?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It wouldn't count," says the Lieutenant. "You must have an observer all the way. "</p>
+
+ <p>"How about me subbin' in?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"You?" says he. "Why, you're on the other side."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's where you're mixed," says I. "I'm<a class="pagenum" name="page_263" title="263" id="page_263"></a> on the
+ wrong side of Long Island Sound, that's all."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says he, "weren't you sent out to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No," I breaks in; "I'm no spotter. I'm on special detail from the Ordnance Department. And a mighty punk detail
+ at that, if you ask me. The party who's sleuthin' for you, I expect, is the one I saw back at the plant, moonin'
+ around with a pair of field glasses strapped to him. You ain't captured yet; not by me, anyway."</p>
+
+ <p>"Honest?" says he. "Why, then&mdash;then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Uh-huh!" says I. "And if you can make it back to Mineola with a perfectly good passenger in the extra seat you'll
+ qualify for scout work and most likely be over pluggin' Huns within a month or so. That won't tickle you a bit more'n
+ it will me to get to Long Island to-night, for&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Well, then I tells him about Vee, and everything.</p>
+
+ <p>"By George!" says he. "You're all right, Lieutenant&mdash;er&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, between friends, Donald," says I, "it's Torchy."</p>
+
+ <p>At which we links arms chummy and goes marchin' close order down to the farm-house <a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_264" title="264" id="page_264"></a> to see how this Martin party was gettin' on. We finds him rolled up in
+ quilts on an old sofa that the folks had shoved up in front of the stove&mdash;a slim, nervous-lookin' young gink
+ with sandy hair and a peaked nose.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, how about you?" asks Allen.</p>
+
+ <p>Martin he only moans and reaches for a warm flat-iron that he'd been holdin' against his stomach.</p>
+
+ <p>"Still dying, eh?" says Allen. "Why didn't you report sick this morning, instead of letting them send you up with
+ me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I&mdash;I was all right then," whines Martin. "It&mdash;it must have been the altitude got me. I&mdash;I'd never
+ been that high before, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bah!" says the Lieutenant. "Not over thirty-five hundred at any time. How do you expect me to take you
+ back&mdash;on the hundred-foot level? You'll make a fine observer, you will!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I've had enough observing," says Martin. "I&mdash;I'm going to get transferred to the mechanical department."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, are you?" says Allen. "Then you'll be just as satisfied to make the trip back by rail."</p>
+
+ <p>Martin nods.<a class="pagenum" name="page_265" title="265" id="page_265"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"And you won't be needing your helmet and things, eh?" goes on the Lieutenant. "I'll take those along, then," and
+ he winks at me.</p>
+
+ <p>All of a sudden, though, the sparkles fade out of his eyes. "Jinxed again!" says he. "There'd be no blessed map to
+ hand in."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I. "Map of what!"</p>
+
+ <p>He explains jerky. This scoutin' stunt of his was to locate the tank works and get close enough for an observer to
+ draw a plan of it&mdash;all of which he'd done, only by then Martin had got past the drawin' stage.</p>
+
+ <p>"So it's no use going back to-night."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ain't it?" says I. "Say, if a map of that smoky hole is all you need, I guess I can produce that easy
+ enough."</p>
+
+ <p>"Can you?" he asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?" says I. "Ain't I been cooped up there for nearly a week? I can put in a bird's-eye view of the Major in
+ command; one of his secretary, too, if you like. Gimme some paper."</p>
+
+ <p>And inside of five minutes I'd sketched out a diagram of the buildin's and the whole outfit. Then we poked Martin
+ up long enough for him to sign it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Fine work!" says Donald. "That earns<a class="pagenum" name="page_266" title="266" id="page_266"></a> you a hop,
+ all right. Now buckle yourself into that cloud costume and I'll show you how a 110-horse-power crow would go from
+ here to the middle of Long Island if he was in a hurry."</p>
+
+ <p>"You can't make it any too speedy for me," says I, slippin' into the sheepskin jacket.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ever been up before?" he asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Only once&mdash;in a hydro," says I; "but I ain't missed any chances."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's the spirit!" says he. "Come along. The old bus is anchored down the field a ways."</p>
+
+ <p>I couldn't hardly believe I was actually goin' to pull it off until he'd got the motor started and we went
+ skimmin' along the ground. But as soon as we shook off the State of Connecticut and began climbin' up over a strip of
+ woods, I settles back in the little cockpit, buttons the wind-shield over my mouth, and sighs contented.</p>
+
+ <p>Allen and I didn't exchange much chat. You don't with an engine of that size roarin' a few feet in front of you
+ and your ears buttoned down by three or four layers of wool and leather. Once he points out ahead and tries to shout
+ something, I don't know what. But I nods and waves encouragin'.<a class="pagenum" name="page_267" title="267" id=
+ "page_267"></a> Later he points down and grins. I grins back.</p>
+
+ <p>Next thing I knew, he's shut off the motor, and I gets a glimpse of the whole of Long Island behavin' odd. Seems
+ as if it's swellin' and widenin' out, like one of these freaky toy balloons you blow up. It didn't seem as if we was
+ divin' down&mdash;more like the map was rushin' up to meet us. Pretty soon I could make out a big open space with a
+ lot of squatty buildin's at one end, and in a couple of minutes more the machine was rollin' along on its wheels and
+ we taxied graceful up towards the hangars.</p>
+
+ <p>It was just gettin' dusk as we piles out, and the first few yards I walked I felt like I was dressed in a divin'
+ suit with a pair of lead boots on my feet. I saw Allen salute an officer, hand over the map, and heard him say
+ something about Observer Martin wantin' to report sick. Then he steers me off toward the barracks, circles past' em,
+ and leads me through a back gate.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think we've put it over, old man," says he, givin' me the cordial grip. "I can't tell you what a good turn
+ you've done me."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's fifty-fifty," says I. "Where do I hit a station?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_268" title="268" id=
+ "page_268"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"You take this trolley that's coming," says he. "That junk you have on you can send back to-morrow, in my care.
+ And I&mdash;I trust you'll find things all right at home."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thanks," says I. "Hope you'll have the same luck yourself some day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, perhaps," says he, shakin' his head doubtful. "If I ever get back. But not until I'm past thirty,
+ anyway."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why so late?" asks I.</p>
+
+ <p>"What would get my goat," says he, "would be the risk of breakin' into the grandfather class before I got
+ ready."</p>
+
+ <p>"Gee!" I gasps. "I hadn't thought of that."</p>
+
+ <p>So, with this new idea, and the cheerin' views Barnes had pumped into me, I has plenty to chew over durin' the
+ next hour or so that I'm speedin' towards home. I expect that accounts some for the long face I must have been
+ wearin' when I finally dashes through the front gate of the Lilacs and am let into the house by Leon Battou, the
+ little old Frenchman who cooks and buttles for us.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, <i>mon Dieu!</i>" says Leon, throwin' up his hands and starin' at me bug-eyed. "Monsieur!"<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_269" title="269" id="page_269"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Go on," says I. "Tell me the worst. What is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But no, M'sieur," says he. "It is only that M'sieur appears in so strange attire."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh! These?" says I. "Never mind my costume, Leon. What about Vee?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah!" says he, his eyes beamin' once more and his hands washin' each other. "Madame is excellent. She herself will
+ tell you. Come!"</p>
+
+ <p>Upstairs I went, two steps at a time.</p>
+
+ <p>"S-s-sh!" says the nurse, meetin' me at the door.</p>
+
+ <p>But I brushes past her, and the next minute I'm over by the bed and Vee is smilin' up at me. It's only the ghost
+ of a smile, but it means a lot to me. She slips one of her hands into mine.</p>
+
+ <p>"Torchy," she whispers, "did you drop down out of&mdash;of the air?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That was about it," says I. "I got here, though. Are you all right, girlie?"</p>
+
+ <p>She nods and gives me another of them sketchy, happy smiles.</p>
+
+ <p>"And how about the&mdash;the&mdash;&mdash;" I starts to ask.</p>
+
+ <p>She glances towards the corner where the nurse is bendin' over a pink and white basket. "He's splendid," she
+ whispers.<a class="pagenum" name="page_270" title="270" id="page_270"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"He?" says I. "Then&mdash;then it's a boy?"</p>
+
+ <p>She gives my hand a little squeeze.</p>
+
+ <p>And ten minutes later, when I'm shooed out, I'm feelin' so chesty and happy that I'm tingly all over.</p>
+
+ <p>Down in the livin'-room Leon is waitin' for me, wearin' a broad grin. He greets me with his hand out. And then,
+ somehow, because he's so different, I expect, I remembers Barnes. I was wonderin' if Leon was just puttin' on.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," says I, "how about it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Monsieur!" says he, givin' me the hearty grip. "I make to you my best congratulations."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you don't feel," says I, "that bein' a parent is kind of a sad and solemn business?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sad!" says he. "<i>Non, non!</i> It is the grand joy of life. It is when you have the best right to be proud and
+ glad, for to you has come <i>la bonne chance</i>. Yes, <i>la bonne chance!</i>"</p>
+
+ <p>And say, there's no mistakin' that Leon means every word of it, French and all.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thanks, Leon," says I. "You ought to know. You've been through it yourself. I'll bet you wouldn't even feel bad
+ at being a grandfather. No? Well, I guess I'll follow through<a class="pagenum" name="page_271" title="271" id=
+ "page_271"></a> on that line. Maybe I don't deserve so much luck, but I'm takin' it just as though I did. And say,
+ Leon, let's us go out in the back yard and give three cheers for the son and heir of the house of Torchy."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_272" title="272" id="page_272"></a>
+ <a name="TORCHY_GETS_THE_THUMB_GRIP_6816" id="TORCHY_GETS_THE_THUMB_GRIP_6816"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+ <h3>TORCHY GETS THE THUMB GRIP</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I expect a lot of people thought it about me; but the one who really registered the idea was Auntie. Trust her.
+ For of course, with an event of this kind staged in the house we couldn't expect to dodge a visit from the old girl.
+ She came clear up from Miami&mdash;although, with so much trouble about through sleepers and everything, I kept
+ tellin' Vee I was afraid she wouldn't think it worth while makin' the trip.</p>
+
+ <p>"How absurd, Torchy!" says Vee. "Not want to see baby? To be sure, she will."</p>
+
+ <p>You see, Vee had the right hunch from the very first&mdash;about the importance of this new member of the fam'ly,
+ I mean. She took it as a matter of course that everybody who'd ever known or heard of us would be anxious to rush in
+ and gaze awe-struck and reverent at this remarkable addition we'd made to the population of Long Island. Something
+ like that. She don't have to work up to it. Seems to come<a class="pagenum" name="page_273" title="273" id=
+ "page_273"></a> natural. Why, say, she'd sit by and listen without crackin' a smile to these regular gushers who laid
+ it on so thick you'd 'most thought the youngster himself would have turned over and run his tongue out at 'em.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, the dear, darling 'ittle cherub!" they'd squeal. "Isn't he simp-ly the most won-der-ful baby you ev-er
+ saw?"</p>
+
+ <p>And Vee would never blink an eye. In fact, she'd beam on 'em grateful, and repeat to me afterwards what they'd
+ said, like it was just a case of the vote bein' made unanimous, as she knew it was bound to be all along.</p>
+
+ <p>Which wasn't a bit like any of the forty-seven varieties of Vee I thought I was so well acquainted with. No. I'll
+ admit she'd shown whims and queer streaks now and then, and maybe a fault or so; but nothing that had anything to do
+ with any tendency of the ego to stick its elbows out. Yet, when it comes to listenin' to flatterin' remarks about our
+ son and heir&mdash;well, no Broadway star readin' over what his press-agent had smuggled into the dramatic notes had
+ anything on her. She couldn't have it handed to her too strong.</p>
+
+ <p>As for me, I guess I was in sort of a daze there for a week or so. Gettin' to be a parent had been sprung on me so
+ sudden that it was<a class="pagenum" name="page_274" title="274" id="page_274"></a> sort of confusin'. I couldn't let
+ on to be a judge of babies myself. I don't know as I'd ever examined one real near to before, anyway&mdash;not such a
+ new one as this.</p>
+
+ <p>And, between me and you, when I did get a chance to size him up real close once,&mdash;they'd all gone out of the
+ room and left me standin' by the crib,&mdash;I was kind of disappointed. Uh-huh. No use kiddin' yourself. I couldn't
+ see a thing wonderful about him, or where he was much different from others I'd glanced at casual. Such a small party
+ to have so much fuss made over! Why, one of his hands wasn't much bigger'n a cat's paw. And his face was so red and
+ little and the nose so sketchy that it didn't seem likely he'd ever amount to much. Here he'd had more'n a week to
+ grow in, and I couldn't notice any change at all.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that I was nutty enough to report any such thoughts. Hardly. I felt kind of guilty at just havin' 'em in my
+ head. How was it, I asked myself, that I couldn't stand around with my hands clasped and my eyes dimmed up, as a
+ perfectly good parent should when he gazes at his first and only chee-ild! Wasn't I human?</p>
+
+ <p>All the alibi I can put up is that I wasn't used to bein' a father. Ain't there something<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_275" title="275" id="page_275"></a> in that? Just think, now. Why, I'd hardly got used to bein' married. Here,
+ only a little over a year ago, I was floatin' around free and careless. And then, first thing I know, without any
+ special coachin' in the act, I finds myself pushed out into the center of the stage with the spot-light on me, and
+ I'm introduced as a daddy.</p>
+
+ <p>The only thing I could do was try to make a noise like one. I didn't feel it, any more'n I felt like a
+ stained-glass saint in a church window. And I didn't know the lines very well. But there was everybody
+ watching,&mdash;Vee, and the nurse, and Madame Battou, and occasional callers,&mdash;so I proceeds to bluff it
+ through the best I could.</p>
+
+ <p>My merry little idea was to be familiar with the youngster, treat him as if he'd been a member of the fam'ly for a
+ long time, and hide any embarrassin' feelin's I might have by addressin' him loud and joshin'. I expect it was kind
+ of a poor performance, at that. But I seemed to be gettin' away with it, so I stuck to that line. Vee appears to take
+ it all right, and, as nobody else gave me the call, I almost got to believe it was the real thing myself.</p>
+
+ <p>So this particular afternoon, when I came breezin' in from town, I chases right up to<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_276" title="276" id="page_276"></a> the nursery, where I knew I'd find Vee, gives her the usual hail just
+ behind the ear, and then turns hasty to the crib to show I haven't forgot who's there.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hello, old sport!" says I, ticklin' him in the ribs. "How you hittin' 'em, hey? Well, well! Look at the fistses
+ doubled up! Who you goin' to hand a wallop to now? Oh, tryin' to punch yourself in the eye, are you? Come there, you
+ young rough-houser, lay off that grouchy stuff and speak some kind words to your daddy. You won't, eh? Goin' to kick
+ a little with the footsies. That's it. Mix in with all fours, you young&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>And just then I hears a suppressed snort that sounds sort of familiar. I glances around panicky, and gets the full
+ benefit of a disgusted glare from a set of chilled steel eyes, and discovers that there's someone besides Vee and the
+ nurse present. Yep. It's Auntie.</p>
+
+ <p>"May I ask," says she, "if this is your usual manner of greeting your offspring? "</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says I, "I&mdash;I expect it is."</p>
+
+ <p>"Humph!" says she. "I might have known."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, Auntie," protests Vee, "you know very well that Torchy means&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Whatever he means or doesn't mean,"<a class="pagenum" name="page_277" title="277" id="page_277"></a> breaks in
+ Auntie, "I am sure he has an astonishing way of showing parental affection. Calling the child an 'old scout,' a
+ 'young rough-houser'! It's shocking."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sorry," says I; "but I ain't taken any lessons in polite baby talk yet. Maybe in time I could learn this
+ ittums-tweetums stuff, but I doubt it. Always made me sick, that did; and one of the things Vee and I agreed on was
+ that&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, very well," says Auntie. "I do not intend to interfere in any way."</p>
+
+ <p>As if she could help it! Why, say, she'd give St. Peter advice on gate-keepin'. But for the time bein', each of us
+ havin' had our say, we calls it a draw and gets back to what looks like a peace footin'. But from then on I knew she
+ had her eyes out at me. Every move I made was liable to get her breathin' short or set her squirmin' in her chair.
+ And you know how it's apt to be in a case like that. I made more breaks than ever. I'd forget about the youngster
+ bein' asleep and cut loose with something noisy at the wrong time. Or I'd jolt her some other way.</p>
+
+ <p>But she held in until, one night after dinner, when the baby had indulged in too much day sleepin' and was
+ carryin' on a bit, I takes a<a class="pagenum" name="page_278" title="278" id="page_278"></a> notion to soothe him
+ with a few humorous antics while Auntie is safe downstairs. You see, I'd never been able to get him to take any
+ notice of me before; but this time, after I'd done a swell imitation of a Fred Stone dance, I had him cooin'
+ approvin', the nurse smotherin' a smile, and Vee snickerin'.</p>
+
+ <p>Naturally, I has to follow it up with something else. I was down on my hands and knees doin' a buckin' bronco act
+ across the floor, when there comes this gasp from the doorway. It seems Auntie was passin' by, and peeked in. Her
+ eyebrows go up, her mouth corners come down, and she stiffens like she'd grabbed a high-voltage feed wire. I saw it
+ comin', but the best I can do is steady myself on my fingers and toes and wish I had cotton in my ears.</p>
+
+ <p>"Really!" says she. "Are you never to realize, young man, that you are now supposed to be a husband and a
+ father?"</p>
+
+ <p>And, before I can shoot back a word, she's sailed on, her chin in the air and her mouth about as smilin' as a
+ crack in a vinegar bottle. But she'd said it. She'd pushed it home, too. And the worst of it was, I couldn't deny
+ that she had the goods on me. I might pass as a husband, if you didn't expect too much. But<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_279" title="279" id="page_279"></a> as for the rest&mdash;well, I knew I wasn't meetin' the specifications.</p>
+
+ <p>The only model I could think of was them fond parent groups you see in the movie close-ups&mdash;mother on the
+ right, father at the left, and Little Bright Eyes squeezed in between and bein' mauled affectionate. Had we ever
+ indulged in any such family clinch? Not up to date. Why? Was it because I was a failure as a daddy? Looked so. And
+ here was Auntie taxin' me with it. Would other folks find out, too?</p>
+
+ <p>I begun thinkin' over the way different ones had taken the news. Old Hickory, for instance. I was wearin' a wide
+ grin and still feelin' sort of chesty when I broke into his private office and handed him the bulletin.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" he grunts, squintin' at me from under them bushy eyebrows. "A father! You? Good Lord!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why not?" says I. "It's still being done, ain't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I suppose so. Yes, yes," he goes on, starin' at me. "But somehow, young man, I can hardly think of you
+ as&mdash;as&mdash;&mdash; Well, congratulations, Torchy. You have frequently surprised me by rising to the occasion.
+ Perhaps you will in this also. "<a class="pagenum" name="page_280" title="280" id="page_280"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Thanks, Mr. Ellins," says I. "It's nice of you to cheer me up that way."</p>
+
+ <p>Piddie, of course, said the right and elegant thing, just as if he'd learned it out of a book. He always does, you
+ know. Makes a reg'lar little speech, and finishes by givin' me the fraternal handclasp and a pat on the shoulder.</p>
+
+ <p>But a minute after I caught him gazin' at me wonderin', and he goes off shakin' his head.</p>
+
+ <p>Then I runs across my newspaper friend Whitey Weeks, who used to know me when I was a cub office-boy on the Sunday
+ editor's door.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, Torchy," says he, "what you got on your mind?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing you could make copy out of," says I, "but it's a whale of an event for me."</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't say," says he. "Somebody died and left you the business?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just the opposite," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't get you," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, what's usually in the next column?" says I. "It's a case of somebody bein' born."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;why," says he, openin' his mouth, "you don't mean that&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Uh-huh," says I, tryin' to look modest.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter">
+ <a name="illus-003" id="illus-003"></a> <img src="images/illus-280.jpg" alt=
+ "&quot;I was down on my knees doin' a buckin' bronco act, when there comes a gasp from the doorway.&quot;" title=
+ "" />
+ <br />
+ <span class="caption">"I was down on my knees doin' a buckin' bronco act, when there comes a gasp from the
+ doorway."</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" name="page_281" title="281" id="page_281"></a>"Haw-haw!" roars Whitey, usin' the steam siren
+ effect. And, as it's right on the corner of Forty-second and Broadway, he comes near collectin' a crowd. Four or five
+ people turn around to see what the merriment is all about, and a couple of 'em stops short in their tracks. One guy I
+ spotted for a vaudeville artist lookin' for stuff that might fat up his act.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say," Whitey goes on, poundin' me on the back jovial, "that's rich, that is!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Glad it amuses you," says I, startin' to move off.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, come, old chap!" says he, followin' along. "Don't get crabby. What&mdash;what is it, anyway?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a baby," says I. "Quite a young one. Now go laugh your fat head off, you human hyena."</p>
+
+ <p>With that shot I dashes through the traffic and catches a downtown car, leavin' him there with his silly face
+ unhinged. And I did no more announcin' to anybody. I was through advertisin'. When some of the commuters on the
+ eight-three heard the news and started springin' their comic tricks on me, I pretended I didn't understand.</p>
+
+ <p>I don't know what they thought. I didn't give a whoop, either. I wasn't demandin' that anybody should pass solemn
+ resolutions thankin'<a class="pagenum" name="page_282" title="282" id="page_282"></a> me for what I'd done for my
+ country, or stand with their hats off as I went by. But I was overstocked on this joke-book junk.</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe I didn't look like a father, or act like one; but I was doin' my best on the short notice I'd had.</p>
+
+ <p>I will say for Vee that she stood by me noble. She seemed to think whatever I did was all right, even when I shied
+ at holdin' the youngster for the first time.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm afraid I'll bend him in the wrong place," I protests.</p>
+
+ <p>"Goose!" says she. "Of course you won't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Suppose I should drop him?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"You can't if you take him just as I show you," she goes on patient. "Now, sit down in that chair. Crook your left
+ arm like this. Now hold your knees together, and we'll just put the little precious right in your&mdash;&mdash;
+ There! Why, you're doing it splendidly."</p>
+
+ <p>"Am I?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>I might have believed her if I hadn't caught a glimpse of myself in the glass. Say, I was sittin' there as easy
+ and graceful as if I'd been made of structural iron and reinforced concrete. Stiff! Them stone lions in front of the
+ Public Lib'ry was frolicsome lambs compared to me. And I was wearin' the same happy<a class="pagenum" name="page_283"
+ title="283" id="page_283"></a> look on my face as if I was havin' a tooth plugged.</p>
+
+ <p>Course that had to be just the time when Mr. Robert Ellins happened in for his first private view. Mrs. Robert had
+ towed him down special. He's a reg'lar friend, though, Mr. Robert is. I can't say how much of a struggle he had to
+ keep his face straight, but after the first spasm has worn off he don't show any more signs of wantin' to cackle. And
+ he don't pull any end-man stuff.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, well, Torchy!" says he. "A son and heir, eh? I salute you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Same to you and many of 'em," says I, grinnin' simple.</p>
+
+ <p>It was the first thing that came into my head, but I guess I'd better not have let it out. Mrs. Robert pinks up,
+ Vee snickers, and they both hurries into the next room.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, Torchy," says Mr. Robert. "Within certain limitations, I trust your wish comes true. But I
+ say&mdash;how does it feel, being a father?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just plain foolish," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"Honest, Mr. Robert," says I, "I never felt so much like a ham sandwich at a Chamber of Commerce banquet as I do
+ right now. I'm<a class="pagenum" name="page_284" title="284" id="page_284"></a> beginnin' to suspect I've been
+ miscast for the part."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nonsense!" says he soothin'. "You appear to be getting along swimmingly. I'm sure I wouldn't know how to hold a
+ baby at all."</p>
+
+ <p>"You couldn't know less'n I do about it at present writing," says I. "I don't dare move, and both my legs are
+ asleep from the knees down. Do me a favor and call for help, won't you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I say!" he calls out. "The starboard watch wants to be relieved."</p>
+
+ <p>So Vee comes back and pries the baby out of my grip.</p>
+
+ <p>"Isn't he absurd!" says she. "But he will soon learn. All men are like that at first, I suppose."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hear that, Mr. Robert?" says I. "That's what I call a sun-cured disposition."</p>
+
+ <p>She'd make a good animal-trainer, Vee; she's so persistent and patient. After dinner she jollies me into tryin' it
+ again.</p>
+
+ <p>"You needn't sit so rigid, you know," she coaches me. "Just relax naturally and let his little head rest easy in
+ the hollow of your arm. No, you don't have to grab him with the other hand. Let him kick his legs if he wants
+ to.<a class="pagenum" name="page_285" title="285" id="page_285"></a> See, he is looking up at you! Yes, I believe he
+ is. Do you see Daddy? Do you, precious?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Must be some sight," I murmurs. "What am I supposed to do now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, you may rock him gently, if you like," says Vee. "And I don't suppose he'd mind if you sang a bit."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wouldn't that be takin' a mean advantage?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Vee laughs and goes off so I can practice alone, which was thoughtful of her.</p>
+
+ <p>I didn't find it so bad this time. I discovers I can wiggle my toes occasionally without lettin' him crash on to
+ the floor. And I begun to get used to lookin' at him at close range, too. His nose don't seem quite so hopeless as it
+ did. I shouldn't wonder but what he'd grow a reg'lar nose there in time. And their little ears are cute, ain't they?
+ But say, it was them big blue eyes that got me interested. First off they sort of wandered around the room aimless;
+ but after a while they steadies down into gazin' at me sort of curious and admirin'. I rather liked that.</p>
+
+ <p>"How about it, Snookums?" says I. "What do you think of your amateur daddy? Or are you wonderin' if your hair'll
+ be as red as mine? Don't you care. There's worse things<a class="pagenum" name="page_286" title="286" id=
+ "page_286"></a> in life than bein' bright on top. Eh? Think you'd like to get your fingers in it? Might burny-burn.
+ Well, try it once, if you like." And I ducks my head so he can reach that wavin' forelock of mine.</p>
+
+ <p>"Googly-goo!" remarks Sonny, indicatin' 'most anything you're a mind to call it.</p>
+
+ <p>Anyway, he seems to be entertained. We was gettin' acquainted fast. Pretty soon he pulls a smile on me. Say, it's
+ the real thing in the smile line, too&mdash;confidential and chummy. I has to smile back.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's the trick, Buster!" says I. "Friendly face motions is what wins."</p>
+
+ <p>"Goo-oogly-goo!" says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"True words!" says I. "I believe you."</p>
+
+ <p>We must have kept that up for near half an hour, until he shows signs of gettin' sleepy. Just before he drops off,
+ though, he was wavin' one of his hands around, and the first thing I know them soft little pink fingers has circled
+ about my thumb.</p>
+
+ <p>Say, that turned the trick&mdash;just that. Ever had a baby grip you that way? Your own, I mean? If you have, I
+ expect you'll know what I'm drivin' at. And if you ain't&mdash;well, you got something comin' to you. It's a thing I
+ couldn't tell you about. It's a gentle sort of<a class="pagenum" name="page_287" title="287" id="page_287"></a>
+ thrill, that spreads and spreads until it gets 'way inside of you&mdash;under your vest, on the left side.</p>
+
+ <p>When Vee finally comes in to see how we're gettin' along, he's snoozin' calm and peaceful, with a sketchy smile
+ kind of flickerin' on and off that rosebud mouth of his, like he was indulgin' in pleasant dreams. Also, them little
+ pink fingers was still wrapped around my thumb.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, if you aren't a picture, you two!" says Vee, bendin' over and whisperin' in my ear.</p>
+
+ <p>"This ain't a pose," says I. "It's the real thing."</p>
+
+ <p>"You mean&mdash;&mdash;" begins Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"I mean I've qualified," says I. "Maybe I didn't show up so strong durin' the initiation, but I squeaked through.
+ I'm a reg'lar daddy now. See! He's givin' me the inside brother grip&mdash;on my thumb. You can call Auntie in, if
+ you like."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_288" title="288" id="page_288"></a>
+ <a name="A_LOW_TACKLE_BY_TORCHY_7216" id="A_LOW_TACKLE_BY_TORCHY_7216"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+ <h3>A LOW TACKLE BY TORCHY</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>What I like about livin' out in the forty-minute-if-you're-lucky sector is that, once you get here, it's so nice
+ and quiet. You don't have to worry, when you turn in at night, about manhole covers bein' blown through your front
+ windows, or whether the basement floor will drop into the subway, or if some gun gang is going to use your street for
+ a shootin' gallery. All you do is douse the lights and feel sure nothin's going to happen until breakfast.</p>
+
+ <p>We were talkin' something along this line the other evenin', Vee and me, sayin' how restful and soothin' these
+ spring nights in the country was&mdash;you know, sort of handin' it to ourselves. And it couldn't have been more'n
+ two hours later that I'm routed rude out of the downy by the 'phone bell. It's buzzin' away frantic. I scrambles out
+ and fits the receiver to my ear just in time to get the full benefit of the last half of a long ring.<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_289" title="289" id="page_289"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, take your thumb off," I sings out to the night operator. "Who you think you're callin'&mdash;the fire house
+ or some doctor?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Here's your party," I hears her remark cheerful, and then this other voice comes in.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, it's Norton Plummer, that fussy little lawyer neighbor of ours who lives about half a mile the other side of
+ the railroad. Since he's been made chairman of the local Council of Defense and put me on as head of one of his
+ committees, he's rung me up frequent, generally at dinner-time, to ask if I have anything to report. Seems to think,
+ just because I'm a reserve lieutenant on special detail, that I ought to be discoverin' spies and diggin' out plots
+ every few minutes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes," says I. "This is me. What then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Did you read about that German naval officer who escaped from an internment camp last week?" he asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"But that was 'way down in North Carolina or somewhere, wasn't it?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps," says Plummer. "But he isn't there now. He's here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I. "Where?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Prowling around my house," says Plummer. "That is, he was a few moments ago.<a class="pagenum" name="page_290"
+ title="290" id="page_290"></a> My chauffeur saw him. So did I. He's on his way down towards the trolley line
+ now."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why didn't you nab him?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Me?" says Plummer. "Why, he's a huge fellow, and no doubt a desperate man. I presume he was after me: I don't
+ know."</p>
+
+ <p>"But how'd you come to spot him as a Hun officer?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"By the description I read," says he. "It fits perfectly. There's no telling what he's up to around here. And
+ listen: I have telephoned to the Secret Service headquarters in town for them to send some men out in a machine. But
+ they'll be nearly an hour on the road, at best. Meanwhile, what we must do is to prevent him from catching that last
+ trolley car, which goes in about twelve-fifteen. We must stop him, you see."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, must we?" says I. "Listens to me like some he-sized job."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's why I called you up," says Plummer. "You know where the line crosses the railroad? Well, he'll probably
+ try to get on there. Hurry down and prevent him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is that all I have to do?" says I. "What's the scheme&mdash;do I trip him up and sit on his head?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no!" says Plummer. "Don't attempt<a class="pagenum" name="page_291" title="291" id="page_291"></a> violence.
+ He's a powerful man. Why, my chauffeur saw him break the chain on our back gate as if it had been nothing but twine.
+ Just gave it a push&mdash;and snap it went. Oh, he's strong as a bull. Ill-tempered, too."</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says I. "And I'm to go down and&mdash;&mdash; Say, where do you come in on this?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll be there with John just as soon as we can quiet Mrs. Plummer and the maids, " says he. "They're almost in
+ hysterics. In the meantime, though, if you could get there and&mdash;&mdash; Well, use strategy of some kind.
+ Anything to keep him from catching that car. You understand?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I get you," says I. "And it don't sound enticin' at all. But I'll see what I can do. If you find me smeared all
+ over the road, though, you'll know I didn't pull it off. Also, I'd suggest that you make that soothin' act of yours
+ speedy."</p>
+
+ <p>Course this wakes Vee up, and she wants to know what it's all about.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, a little private panic that Norton Plummer is indulgin' in," says I. "Nothin' to get fidgety over. I'll be
+ back soon."</p>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;but you won't be reckless, will you, Torchy?" she asks.<a class="pagenum" name="page_292" title="292"
+ id="page_292"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Who, me?" says I. "How foolish. Why, I invented that 'Safety First' motto, and side-steppin' trouble is the
+ easiest thing I do. Trust me."</p>
+
+ <p>I expect she was some nervous, at that. But she's a good sport, Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"If you're needed," says she, "of course I want you to go. But do be careful."</p>
+
+ <p>I didn't need any coaxin'. Somehow, I never could get used to roamin' around in the country after dark. Always
+ seemed sort of spooky. Bein' brought up in the city, I expect, where the scenery is illuminated constant, accounts
+ for that. So, as I slips out the front gate and down towards the station, I keeps in the middle of the road and
+ glances suspicious at the tree shadows.</p>
+
+ <p>Not that I was takin' Plummer's Hun scare real serious. He'd had a bad case of spy fever recent. Why, only last
+ week he got all stirred up over what he announced was a private wireless outfit that he'd discovered somewhere in the
+ outskirts of Flushing; and when they came to trail it down it turns out to be some new wire clothes-line strung up
+ back of a flat buildin'.</p>
+
+ <p>Besides, what would an escaped German naval officer be doin' up this way? He'd be<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_293" title="293" id="page_293"></a> more apt to strike for Mexico, wouldn't he? Still, long as I'd let Plummer
+ put me on the committee, it was up to me to answer any calls. Might be entertainin' to see who he'd mistaken for an
+ enemy alien this time. And if all I was expected to do was spill a little impromptu strategy&mdash;well, maybe I
+ could, and then again maybe I couldn't. I'd take a look, anyway.</p>
+
+ <p>It was seein' a light in Danny Shea's little cottage, back on a side lane, that gave me my original hunch. Danny
+ is one of the important officials of the Long Island Railroad, if you let him tell it. He's the flagman down where
+ the highway and trolley line cross the tracks at grade, and when his rheumatism ain't makin' him grouchy he's more or
+ less amusin' to chin with.</p>
+
+ <p>Danny had pestered the section boss until he'd got him to build a little square coop for him, there by the
+ crossin'&mdash;a place where he could crawl in between trains, smoke his pipe, and toast himself over a sheet-iron
+ stove about as big as a picnic coffee-pot.</p>
+
+ <p>And that sentry-box effect was the pride of Danny's heart. Most of his spare time and all the money he could bone
+ out of the commuters he spent in improvin' and decoratin'<a class="pagenum" name="page_294" title="294" id=
+ "page_294"></a> it. He'd cut a couple of round windows, like port-holes, and fitted 'em with swingin' sashes. Then
+ he'd tacked on some flower-boxes underneath and filled 'em with geraniums.</p>
+
+ <p>When he wasn't waterin' his flowers or coaxin' along his little grass-plot or addin' another shelf inside, he was
+ paintin' the outside. Danny's idea of a swell color scheme seemed to be to get on as many different shades as
+ possible. The roof was red, the sides a bright blue. But where he spread himself was on the trim. All you had to do
+ to get on the right side of Danny was to lug him out a half-pound can of paint different from any he'd applied so
+ far. He'd use it somehow.</p>
+
+ <p>So the window-sashes was picked out in yellow, the side battens loomed up prominent as black lines, and the
+ door-panels was a pale pink. Nearly all the commuters had been touched by Danny for something or other that could be
+ added to the shack. Only a week or so before, I'd got in strong with him by contributin' a new padlock for the
+ door&mdash;a vivid red one, like they have on the village jail in vaudeville plays.</p>
+
+ <p>And it struck me now that if I had the key to that little box of Danny's it would make a perfectly good
+ listenin'-post for any midnight<a class="pagenum" name="page_295" title="295" id="page_295"></a> sleuthin' I had to
+ do. Most likely he was up dosin' himself or bathin' his joints.</p>
+
+ <p>Well, he was. He didn't seem any too enthusiastic about lettin' me have the key, though.</p>
+
+ <p>"I dunno," says he. "'Tis railroad property, y' understand, and I'd be afther riskin' me job if any thin'
+ should&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I know, Danny," says I. "But you tell 'em it was commandeered by the U. S. Army, which is me; and if that don't
+ square you I'll have Mr. Baker come on and tell the section boss where he gets off."</p>
+
+ <p>"Verra well," says Danny. And in less than five minutes more I'm down there at the crossin', all snug and cozy,
+ peekin' out of them round windows into No Man's Land.</p>
+
+ <p>For a while it was kind of excitin'; but after that it got sort of monotonous. There was about half of an old moon
+ in the sky, and only a few clouds, so you could see fairly well&mdash;if there'd been anything to see. But nothing
+ seemed to be stirrin', up or down the road.</p>
+
+ <p>What a nut that Norton Plummer was, anyway, feedin' me up with his wild tales in the middle of the night! And why
+ didn't he show up? Finally I got restless, and walked out where I could rubber up the trolley track.<a class=
+ "pagenum" name="page_296" title="296" id="page_296"></a> No sign or sound of a car. Then I looks at my watch again,
+ and figures out it ain't due for twenty minutes or so. Next I strolls across the railroad to look for Plummer. And,
+ just as I'm passin' a big maple tree, out steps this huge party with the whiskers. I nearly jumped out of my
+ puttees.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I gaspy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gotta match?" says he.</p>
+
+ <p>"I&mdash;I guess so," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>I reached as far as I could when I hands him the box, too. He's a whale of a man, tall and bulky. And his whiskers
+ are the bristly kind&mdash;straw-colored, I should say. He's wearin' a double-breasted blue coat and a sort of
+ yachtin' cap. Uh-huh! Plummer must have been right. If this gink wasn't a Hun naval officer, then what was he? The
+ ayes had it.</p>
+
+ <p>He produces a pipe and starts to light up. One match broke, the second had no strikin' head on it, the third just
+ fizzed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gr-r-r-r!" says he.</p>
+
+ <p>Then he starts for the crossin', me trailin' along. I saw he had his eye on Danny's sentry-box, meanin' to get in
+ the lee of it. Even then I didn't have any bright little idea.</p>
+
+ <p>"Waitin' for the trolley?" I throws out.</p>
+
+ <p>"What of it?" he growls.<a class="pagenum" name="page_297" title="297" id="page_297"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, no offense," says I hasty. "Maybe there are others."</p>
+
+ <p>He just lets out another grunt, and tries one more match with his face up against the side of the shanty. And
+ then, all in a jump, my bean got into gear.</p>
+
+ <p>"You might have better luck inside," says I, swingin' open the door invitin'.</p>
+
+ <p>He don't even say thank you. He ain't one of that kind. For a second or so I thought he wasn't goin' to take any
+ notice; but after one more failure he steps around, inspects the inside of the shanty, and then squeezes himself
+ through the door. At that, he wasn't all the way in, but by the time he had a match goin' I'd got my nerve back.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, take the limit, Cap'n," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>With that I plants one foot impulsive right where he was widest, gives a quick shove, slams the door shut behind
+ him, and snaps the big padlock through the hasp.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hey!" he sings out startled. "What the&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, don't get messy, Cap'n," says I. "You're in, ain't you? Smoke up and be happy."</p>
+
+ <p>"You&mdash;you loafer!" he gurgles throaty. "What do you mean?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_298" title="298" id=
+ "page_298"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Just a playful little prank, Cap," says I. "Don't get excited. You're perfectly safe."</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe he was. But some folks don't appreciate little attentions like that. The Cap'n starts in bumpin' and
+ thrashin' violent in there, like a pup that's crawled into a drainpipe and got himself stuck. He hammers on the walls
+ with his fists, throws his weight against the door, and tries to kick his way out.</p>
+
+ <p>But the section boss must have used rail spikes and reinforced the studdin' with fishplates when he built that
+ coop for Danny, or else the big Hun was too tight a fit to get full play for his strength. Anyway, all he did was
+ make the little house rock until you'd thought Long Island was enjoyin' a young earthquake. Meanwhile I stands by,
+ ready to do a sprint if he should break loose, and offers more or less cheerin' advice.</p>
+
+ <p>"Easy with your elbows in there, Cap," says I. "You're assaultin' railroad property, you know, and if you do any
+ damage you can be pinched for malicious mischief."</p>
+
+ <p>"You&mdash;you better let me out of here quick!" he roars. "I gotta get back."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, you'll get to town all right," says I. "I'll promise you that."</p>
+
+ <p>"Loafer!" he snorts.<a class="pagenum" name="page_299" title="299" id="page_299"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Say, how do you know I ain't sensitive on that point?" says I. "You might hurt my feelin's."</p>
+
+ <p>"Gr-r-r!" says he. "I would wring your neck."</p>
+
+ <p>"Such a disposition!" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, yes, we swapped quite a little repartee, me and the Cap'n, or whatever he was. But, instead of his bein'
+ soothed by it he gets more strenuous every minute. He had that shack rockin' like a boat.</p>
+
+ <p>Next thing I saw was one of his big feet stickin' out under the bottom sill. Then I remembers that the sentry-box
+ has only a dirt floor&mdash;on account of the stove, I expect. Course Danny has banked the outside up with sod for
+ five or six inches, but that ain't enough to hold it down with a human tornado cuttin' loose inside. A minute more
+ and another foot appears on the other side, and the next I knew the whole shootin' match begins to rise, wabbly but
+ sure, until he's lifted it almost to his knees.</p>
+
+ <p>Looked like the Cap'n was goin' to shed the coop over his head, as you'd shuck a shirt, and I was edgin' away
+ prepared to make a run for it. But right there the elevatin' process stops, and after some violent squirms
+ there<a class="pagenum" name="page_300" title="300" id="page_300"></a> comes an outburst of language that would only
+ get the delete sign if I should give it. I could dope out what had happened. That plank seat across one side had
+ caught the Cap'n about where he buckles his belt, and he couldn't budge it any further.</p>
+
+ <p>"Want a shoe-horn, Cap'n?" I asks. "Say, next time you try wearin' a kiosk as a slip-on sweater you'd better train
+ down for the act."</p>
+
+ <p>"Gr-r-r-r!" says he. "I&mdash;I will teach you to play your jokes on me, young whipper-snap."</p>
+
+ <p>He does some more writhin', and pretty soon manages to swing open one of the port-holes. With his face up to that,
+ like a deep-sea diver peekin' out o' his copper bonnet, he starts for me, kickin' over the little stove as he gets
+ under way, and tearin' the whole thing loose from the foundation.</p>
+
+ <p>Course he's some handicapped by the hobble-skirt effect around his knees, and the weight above his shoulders makes
+ him a bit topheavy; but, at that, he can get over the ground as fast as I can walk backwards.</p>
+
+ <p>Must have been kind of a weird sight, there in the moonlight&mdash;me bein' pursued up the road by this shack with
+ legs under it, the little tin smoke-pipe wavin' jaunty about nine feet in<a class="pagenum" name="page_301" title=
+ "301" id="page_301"></a> the air, and the geraniums in the flower-boxes noddin' jerky.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say, what do you think you are?" I calls out. "A wooden tank goin' over the top? "</p>
+
+ <p>I was sort of wonderin' how long he could keep this up, and what would be the finish, when from behind me I hears
+ this spluttery line of exclamations indicatin' rage. It's Danny, who's got anxious about lettin' me have the use of
+ his coop and has come down to see what's happenin' to it. Well, he saw.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hey! Stop him, stop him!" he yells.</p>
+
+ <p>"Stop him yourself, Danny," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"But he's runnin' away with me little flag-house, thief of the worruld!" howls Danny. "It's breakin' and enterin'
+ and carryin' away th' property of the Long Island Railroad that he's guilty of."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes; I've explained all that to him," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Go back and come'out of that, ye thievin' Dutchman!" orders Danny, rushin' up and bangin' on the door with his
+ fists.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just let me out, you Irish shrimp!" snarls the Cap'n.</p>
+
+ <p>"Can't be done&mdash;not yet, Danny," says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;but he's destroyin' me flowers and runnin' off with me little house," protested Danny. "I'll have the
+ law on him, so I will."<a class="pagenum" name="page_302" title="302" id="page_302"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Get out, Irisher, or I'll fall on you," warns the Cap'n.</p>
+
+ <p>And right in the midst of this debate I sees Norton Plummer and his chauffeur hurryin' up from across the tracks.
+ I skips back to meet 'em.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," says Plummer, "have you seen anything of the escaped prisoner?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's him," says I, pointin' to the wabblin' shack.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whaddye mean?" says Plummer, starin' puzzled.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's inside," says I. "You said use strategy, didn't you? Well, that's the best I had in stock. I got him boxed,
+ all right, but he won't stay put. He insists on playin' the human turtle. What'll we do with him now? Come see."</p>
+
+ <p>"My word!" says Plummer, as he gets a view of the Cap'n's legs and the big whiskered face at the little window.
+ "So there you are, eh, you runaway Hun?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Bah!" says the Cap'n. "Why do you call me Hun?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Because I've identified you as an escaped German naval officer," says Plummer. "Do you deny it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Me?" says the Cap'n. "Bah!"<a class="pagenum" name="page_303" title="303" id="page_303"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Who do you claim to be, then?" says I. "A tourist Eskimo or an out-of-town buyer from Patagonia?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm Nels Petersen, that's who I am," says he, "and I'm chief engineer of a ferry-boat that's due to make her
+ first run at five-thirty-three."</p>
+
+ <p>"What!" says Plummer. "Are you the Swede engineer who has been writing love letters to&mdash;&mdash; Say, what is
+ the name of Mrs. Plummer's maid?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Selma," says the Cap'n.</p>
+
+ <p>"By George!" says Plummer. "I believe the man's right. But see here: what were you doing prowling around my back
+ yard to-night! Why didn't you go to the servants' entrance and ask the cook for Selma, if you're as much in love with
+ her as you've written that you are?"</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you know about it?" demands Petersen.</p>
+
+ <p>"Good Lord!" gasps Plummer. "Haven't I had to puzzle out all those wretched scrawls of yours and read 'em to her?
+ Such mushy letters, too! Come, if you're the man, why didn't you call Selma out and tell her all that to her
+ face?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_304" title="304" id="page_304"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Nothing but heavy breathing from inside the shack.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't mean to say you were too bashful!" goes on Plummer. "A great big fellow like you!"</p>
+
+ <p>If it hadn't been for the whiskers I believe we could have seen him blush.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look here," says Plummer. "You may be what you say you are, and then again you may not. Perhaps you just guessed
+ at the girl's name. We can't afford to take any chances. The only way to settle it is to send for Selma."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no!" pleads the big gink. "Please! Not like this."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, just like that," insists Plummer. "Only, if you'd rather, you can carry your house back where it belongs and
+ sit down. John, run home and bring Selma here."</p>
+
+ <p>Well, we had our man nicely tamed now. With Selma liable to show up, he was ready to do as he was told. Just why,
+ we couldn't make out. Anyway, he hobbles back to the crossin' and eases the shack down where he found it. Also, he
+ slumps inside on the bench and waits, durin' which proceedin' the last trolley goes boomin' past.</p>
+
+ <p>Inside of ten minutes John is back with<a class="pagenum" name="page_305" title="305" id="page_305"></a> the maid.
+ Kind of a slim, classy-lookin' girl she is, too. And when Selma sees that big face at the round window there's no
+ doubt about his being the chosen one.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Nels, Nels!" she wails out. "Vy you don'd coom by the house yet?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I was scart, Selma," says Nels, "for fear you'd tell me to go away."</p>
+
+ <p>"But&mdash;but I don'd, Nels," says Selma.</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall I let him out for the fade-away scene?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>Plummer nods. And we had to turn our backs as they go to the fond clinch.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordin' to Plummer, Selma had been waitin' for Nels to say the word for more'n a year, and for the last two
+ months she'd been so absent-minded and moody that she hadn't been of much use around the house. But him gettin'
+ himself boxed up as an escaped Hun had sort of broken the ice.</p>
+
+ <p>"There, now!" says Plummer. "You two go back to the house and talk it over. You may have until three-fifteen to
+ settle all details, and then I'll have John drive Petersen down to his ferry-boat. Be sure and fix the day, though. I
+ don't want to go through another night like this."</p>
+
+ <p>"But what about me little lawn," demands<a class="pagenum" name="page_306" title="306" id="page_306"></a> Danny,
+ "that's tore up entirely? And who's to mend me stove-pipe and all?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, here's something that will cover all that, Danny," says Plummer, slippin' him a ten-spot. "And I've no doubt
+ Petersen will contribute something, too."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sure!" says Nels, fishin' in his pockets.</p>
+
+ <p>"Two bits!" says Danny, pickin' up the quarter scornful. "Thim Swedes are the tightwads! And if ever I find this
+ wan kidnappin' me little house again&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>At which Danny breaks off and shakes his fist menacin'.</p>
+
+ <p>When I gets back home I tiptoes upstairs; but Vee is only dozin', and wakes up with a jump.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is that you, Torchy?" says she. "Has&mdash;has anything dreadful happened?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," says I. "I had to pull a low tackle, and Danny Shea's declared war on Sweden."</p>
+ <hr class="major" />
+
+ <div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em">
+ <a class="pagenum" name="page_307" title="307" id="page_307"></a>
+ <a name="TAG_DAY_AT_TORCHYS_7701" id="TAG_DAY_AT_TORCHYS_7701"></a>
+ <h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+ <h3>TAG DAY AT TORCHY'S</h3>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Course, in a way, it was our fault, I expect. We never should have let on that there was any hitch about what we
+ was goin' to name the baby. Blessed if I know now just how it got around. I remember Vee and I havin' one or two
+ little talks on the subject, but I don't think we'd tackled the proposition real serious.</p>
+
+ <p>You see, at first we were too busy sort of gettin' used to havin' him around and framin' up a line on this parent
+ act we was supposed to put over. Anyway, I was. And for three or four weeks, there, I called him anything that came
+ handy, from Young Sport to Old Snoodlekins. Vee she sticks to Baby. Uh-huh&mdash;just plain Baby. But the way she
+ says it, breathin' it out kind of soft and gentle, sounded perfectly all right to me.</p>
+
+ <p>And the youngster didn't seem to have any kick comin'. He was gettin' so he'd look up and coo real intelligent
+ when she speaks to him<a class="pagenum" name="page_308" title="308" id="page_308"></a> in that fashion. You couldn't
+ blame him, for it was easy to listen to.</p>
+
+ <p>As for the different things I called him&mdash;well, he didn't mind them, either. No matter what it was,&mdash;Old
+ Pink Toes or Wiggle-heels,&mdash;he'd generally pass it off with a smile, providin' he wasn't too busy with his
+ bottle or tryin' to get hold of his foot with both of his hands.</p>
+
+ <p>Then one day Auntie, who's been listenin' disapprovin' all the while, just can't hold in any longer.</p>
+
+ <p>"Isn't it high time," says she, "that you addressed the child properly by his right name?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" says I, gawpin'. "Which one?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't mean to say," she goes on, "that you have not yet decided on his baptismal name?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I didn't know he was a Baptist," says I feeble.</p>
+
+ <p>"We hadn't quite settled what to call him," says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"Besides," I adds, "I don't see the use bein' in a rush about it. Maybe were're savin' that up."</p>
+
+ <p>"Saving!" says Auntie. "For what reason?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, general conservation," says I. "Got<a class="pagenum" name="page_309" title="309" id="page_309"></a> the
+ habit. We've had heatless Mondays and wheatless Wednesdays and fryless Fridays and sunless Sundays, so why not
+ nameless babies?"</p>
+
+ <p>Auntie sniffs and goes off with her nose in the air, as she always does whenever I spring any of my punk
+ persiflage on her.</p>
+
+ <p>But then Vee takes it up, and says Auntie is right and that we really ought to decide on a name and begin using
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, very well," says I. "I'll be thinking one up."</p>
+
+ <p>Seemed simple enough. Course, I'd never named any babies before, but I had an idea I could dig out half a dozen
+ good, serviceable monickers between then and dinner-time.</p>
+
+ <p>Somehow, though, I couldn't seem to hit on anything that I was willing to wish on to the youngster offhand. When I
+ got right up against the problem, it seemed kind of serious.</p>
+
+ <p>Why, here was something he'd have to live with all his life; us, too. We'd have to say it over maybe a hundred
+ times a day. And if he grew up and amounted to anything, as we was sure he would, it would mean that this front name
+ of his that I had to pick out might be displayed more or less prominent. It would be on his office door, on his
+ letterheads, on his cards. He'd sign it to checks.<a class="pagenum" name="page_310" title="310" id=
+ "page_310"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Maybe it would be printed in the newspapers, used in headlines, or painted on campaign banners. Might be displayed
+ on billboards. Who could tell?</p>
+
+ <p>And the deeper I got into the thing the more I wabbled about from one name to another, until I wondered how people
+ had the nerve to give their children some of the tags you hear&mdash;Percy, Isadore, Lulu, Reginald, and so on. And
+ do it so casual, too. Why, I knew of a couple who named their three girls after parlor-cars; and a gink in Brooklyn
+ who called one of his boys Prospect, after the park. Think of loadin' a helpless youngster with anything freaky like
+ that!</p>
+
+ <p>Besides, how were you going to know that even the best name you could pick wouldn't turn out to be a misfit? About
+ the only Percy I ever knew in real life was a great two-fisted husk who was foreman of a stereotypin' room; and here
+ in the Corrugated Buildin', if you'll come in some night after five, I can show you a wide built scrub lady, with
+ hair redder'n mine and a voice like a huckster&mdash;her front name is Violet. Yet I expect, when them two was
+ babies, both those names sounded kind of cute. I could see where it would be easy<a class="pagenum" name="page_311"
+ title="311" id="page_311"></a> enough for me to make a mistake that it would take a court order to straighten
+ out.</p>
+
+ <p>So, when Vee asks if I've made any choice yet I had to admit that I'm worse muddled up on the subject than when I
+ started in. All I can do is hand over a list I've copied down on the back of an envelop with every one of 'em checked
+ off as no good.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's see," says Vee, glancin' 'em over curious. "Lester. Why, I'm sure that is rather a nice name for a
+ boy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," says I; "but after I put it down I remembered a Lester I knew once. He was a simp that wore pink neckties
+ and used to write love-letters to Mary Pickford."</p>
+
+ <p>"What about Earl?" she asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Too flossy," says I. "Sounds like you was tryin' to let on he belonged to the aristocracy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, Donald, then," says she. "That's a good, sensible name."</p>
+
+ <p>"But we ain't Scotch," I objects.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the matter with Philip?" says Vee.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can never remember whether it has one <i>l</i> and two <i>p</i>'s or the other way round."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you haven't considered any of the common ones," goes on Vee, "such as John or William or Thomas or James or
+ Arthur."<a class="pagenum" name="page_312" title="312" id="page_312"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Because that would mean he'd be called Bill or Tom or Art," says I. "Besides, I kind of thought he ought to have
+ something out of the usual run&mdash;one you wouldn't forget as soon as you heard it."</p>
+
+ <p>"If I may suggest," breaks in Auntie, "the custom of giving the eldest son the family name of his mother is rather
+ a good one. Had you considered Hemmingway?"</p>
+
+ <p>I just gasps and glances at Vee. What if she should fall for anything like that! Think of smotherin' a baby under
+ most of the alphabet all at one swoop! And imagine a boy strugglin' through schooldays and vacations with all that
+ tied to him.</p>
+
+ <p>Hemmingway! Why, he'd grow up round-shouldered and knock-kneed, and most likely turn out to be a floor-walker in
+ the white goods department, or the manager of a gift-shop tearoom. Hemmingway!</p>
+
+ <p>Just the thought of it made me dizzy; and I begun breathin' easier when I saw Vee shake her head.</p>
+
+ <p>"He's such a little fellow, Auntie," says she. "Wouldn't that be&mdash;well, rather topheavy?"</p>
+
+ <p>Which disposes of Auntie. She admits maybe it would. But from then on, as the<a class="pagenum" name="page_313"
+ title="313" id="page_313"></a> news seems to spread that we was havin' a kind of deadlock with the namin' process,
+ the volunteers got busy. Old Leon Battou, our butler-cook, hinted that his choice would be Emil.</p>
+
+ <p>"For six generations," says he, "Emil has been the name of the first-born son in our family."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's stickin' to tradition," says I. "It sounds perfectly swell, too, when you know how to pronounce it. But,
+ you see, we're foundin' a new dynasty."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Robert don't say so outright, but he suggests that Ellins Ballard wouldn't be such a bad combination.</p>
+
+ <p>"True," he adds, "the governor and I deserve no such distinction; but I'm sure we would both be immensely
+ flattered. And there's no telling how reckless we might be when it come to presenting christening cups and that sort
+ of thing."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's worth rememberin'," says I. "And I expect you wouldn't mind, in case you had a boy to name later on,
+ callin' him Torchy, eh!"</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Robert grins. "Entry withdrawn," says he.</p>
+
+ <p>How this Amelia Gaston Leroy got the call to crash in on our little family affair, though,<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_314" title="314" id="page_314"></a> I couldn't quite dope out. We never suspected before that she was such an
+ intimate friend of ours. Course, since we'd been livin' out in the Piping Rock section we had seen more or less of
+ her&mdash;more, as a rule. She was built that way.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, yes. Amelia was one of the kind that could bounce in among three or four people in a thirty by forty-five
+ living-room and make the place seem crowded. Mr. Robert's favorite description of her was that one half of Amelia
+ didn't know how the other half lived. To state it plain, Amelia was some whale of a girl. One look at her, and you
+ did no more guessin' as to what caused the food shortage.</p>
+
+ <p>I got the shock of my life, too, when they told me she was the one that wrote so much of this mushy magazine
+ poetry you see printed. For all the lady poetesses I'd ever seen had been thin, shingled-chested parties with
+ mud-colored hair and soulful eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>There was nothing thin about Amelia. Her eyes might have been soulful enough at times, but mostly I'd seen 'em
+ fixed on a tray of sandwiches or a plate of layer cake.</p>
+
+ <p>They'd had her up at the Ellinses' once or twice when they were givin' one of their musical<a class="pagenum"
+ name="page_315" title="315" id="page_315"></a> evenin's, and she'd spouted some of her stuff.</p>
+
+ <p>Her first call on us, though, was when she blew in last Sunday afternoon and announced that she'd come to see
+ "that dear, darling man child" of ours. And for a girl of her size Amelia is some breeze, take it from me. Honest,
+ for the first ten minutes or so there I felt like our happy little home had been hit by a young tornado.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where is he?" she demands. "Please take me at once into the regal presence of his youthful majesty."</p>
+
+ <p>I noticed Vee sizin' her up panicky, and I knew she was thinkin' of what might happen to them spindle-legged white
+ chairs in the nursery.</p>
+
+ <p>"How nice of you to want to see him!" says Vee. "But let me have Baby brought down here. Just a moment."</p>
+
+ <p>And she steers her towards a solid built davenport that we'd been meanin' to have reupholstered anyway. Then we
+ was treated to a line of high-brow gush as Amelia inspects the youngster through her shell lorgnette and tries to
+ tell us in impromptu blank verse how wonderful he is.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, he is one of the sun children, loved of<a class="pagenum" name="page_316" title="316" id="page_316"></a> the
+ high gods," says she, rollin' her eyes. "He comes to you wearing the tints of dawn and trailing clouds of glory. You
+ remember how Wordsworth puts it?"</p>
+
+ <p>As she fires this straight at me, I has to say something.</p>
+
+ <p>"Does he?" I asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"I am always impressed," she gurgles on, "by the calm serenity in the eyes of these little ones. It is as if
+ they&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>But just then Snoodlekins begins screwin' up his face. He's never been mauled around by a lady poetess before, or
+ maybe it was just because there was so much of her. Anyway, he tears loose with a fine large howl and the serenity
+ stuff is all off. It takes Vee four or five minutes to soothe him.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile Miss Leroy gets around to statin' the real reason why we're bein' honored.</p>
+
+ <p>"I understand," says she, "that you have not as yet chosen a name for him. So I am going to help you. I adore it.
+ I have always wanted to name a baby, and I've never been allowed. Think of that! My brother has five children, too;
+ but he would not listen to any of my suggestions.</p>
+
+ <p>"So I am aunt to a Walter who should have been called Clifford, and a Margaret whom<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_317" title="317" id="page_317"></a> I wanted to name Beryl, and so on. Even my laundress preferred to select
+ names for her twins from some she had seen on a circus poster rather than let me do it for her.</p>
+
+ <p>"But I am sure you are rational young people, and recognize that I have some natural talent in that direction.
+ Names! Why, I have made a study of them. I must, you see, in my writing. And this dear little fellow deserves
+ something fitting. Now let me see. Ah, I have it! He shall be Cedric&mdash;after Cedric the Red, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>Accordin' to her, it was all settled. She heaves herself up off the davenport, straightens her hat, and prepares
+ to leave, smilin' satisfied, like an expert who's been called in and has finished the job.</p>
+
+ <p>"We&mdash;we will consider Cedric," says Vee. "Thank you so much."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, not at all," says Amelia. "Of course, if I should happen to think of anything better within the next few days
+ I will let you know at once." And out she floats.</p>
+
+ <p>Vee gazes after her and sighs.</p>
+
+ <p>"I suppose Cedric is rather a good name," says she, "but somehow I don't feel like using one that a stranger has
+ picked out for us. Do you, Torchy?"<a class="pagenum" name="page_318" title="318" id="page_318"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"You've said it," says I. "I'd sooner let her buy my neckties, or tell me how I should have my eggs cooked for
+ breakfast."</p>
+
+ <p>"And yet," says Vee, "unless we can think of something better&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"We will," says I. "I'm goin' through them pages in the back of the big dictionary."</p>
+
+ <p>In less'n half an hour there's a knock at the door, and here's a chauffeur come with a note from Amelia. On the
+ way home she's had another hunch.</p>
+
+ <p>"After all," she writes, "Cedric seems rather too harsh, too rough-shod. So I have decided on Lucian."</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" says I. "She's decided, has she? Say, whose tag day is this, anyway&mdash;ours or hers?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee shrugs her shoulders.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm not sure that we should like calling him Lucian; it's so&mdash;so&mdash;&mdash; "</p>
+
+ <p>"I know," says I, "so perfectly sweet. Say, can't we block Amelia off somehow? Suppose I send back word that a
+ rich step-uncle has promised to leave him a ton of coal if we call the baby Ebenezer after him?"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee chuckles.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, no doubt she'll forget all about it by morning," says she.<a class="pagenum" name="page_319" title="319" id=
+ "page_319"></a></p>
+
+ <p>Seems we'd just begun hearin' from the outside districts, though, or else they'd been savin' up their ideas for
+ this particular afternoon and evenin'; for between then and nine o'clock no less'n half a dozen different parties
+ dropped in, every last one of 'em with a name to register. And their contributions ranged all the way from Aaron to
+ Xury. There were two rooters for Woodrow and one for Pershing.</p>
+
+ <p>Some of the neighbors were real serious about it. They told us what a time they'd had namin' some of their
+ children, brought up cases where families had been busted up over such discussions, and showed us where their choice
+ couldn't be beat. One merry bunch from the Country Club thought they was pullin' something mighty humorous when they
+ stopped in to tell us how they'd held a votin' contest on the subject, and that the winnin' combination was, Paul
+ Roger.</p>
+
+ <p>"After something you read on a cork, eh?" says I. "Much obliged. And I hope nobody strained his intellect."</p>
+
+ <p>"The idea!" says Vee, after they've rolled off. "Voting on such a thing at a club! Just as if Baby was a
+ battleship, or a&mdash;a new moving-picture place. I think that's perfectly horrid of them."<a class="pagenum" name=
+ "page_320" title="320" id="page_320"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"It was fresh, all right," says I. "But I expect we got to stand for such guff until we can give out that we've
+ found a name that suits us. Lemme tackle that list again. Now, how would Russell do? Russell Ballard? No; too many
+ <i>l</i>'s and <i>r</i>'s. Here's Chester. And I expect the boys would call him Chesty. Then there's Clyde. But
+ there's steamship line by that name. What about Stanley? Oh, yes; he was an explorer."</p>
+
+ <p>I admit I was gettin' desperate about then. I was flounderin' around in a whole ocean of names, long ones and
+ short ones, fancy and plain, yet I couldn't quite make up my mind. I'd mussed my hair, shed my collar, and scribbled
+ over sheets and sheets of paper, without gettin' anywhere at all. And when I gave up and turned in about
+ eleven-thirty, my head was so muddled I wouldn't have had the nerve to have named a pet kitten.</p>
+
+ <p>I must have just dozed off to sleep when I hears this bell ringin' somewhere. I couldn't quite make out whether it
+ was a fire alarm, or the <i>z</i>'s in the back of the dictionary goin' off, when Vee calls out that it's the
+ 'phone.</p>
+
+ <p>I tumbles out and paws around for the extension.<a class="pagenum" name="page_321" title="321" id=
+ "page_321"></a></p>
+
+ <p>"Wha-what?" says I. "What the blazes! Ye-uh. This is me. Wha-wha's matter?"</p>
+
+ <p>And then comes this gurgly voice at the other end of the wire. It's our old friend Amelia.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you know," says she, "I have just thought of the loveliest name for your dear baby."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, have you?" says I, sort of crisp.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," says she, "and I simply couldn't wait until morning to tell you. Now listen&mdash;it's Ethelbert."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ethel-Bert!" says I, gaspy. "Say, you know he's no mixed foursome."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no," says she. Ethelbert&mdash;one name, after the old Saxon king. Ethelbert Ballard. "Isn't that just
+ perfect? And I am so glad it came to me."</p>
+
+ <p>I couldn't agree with her real enthusiastic, so it's lucky she hung up just as she did.</p>
+
+ <p>"Huh!" I remarks to Vee. "Why not Maryjim or Daisybill? Say, I think our friend Amelia must have gone off her
+ hinge."</p>
+
+ <p>But Vee only yawns and advises me to go to sleep and forget it. Well, I tried. You know how it is, though, when
+ you've been jolted out of the feathers just as you're halfway through<a class="pagenum" name="page_322" title="322"
+ id="page_322"></a> the first reel of the slumber stuff. I couldn't get back, to save me.</p>
+
+ <p>I counted sheep jumpin' over a wall, I tried lookin' down a railroad track until I could seen the rails meet, and
+ I spelled Constantinople backwards. Nothing doing in the Morpheus act.</p>
+
+ <p>I was wider awake then than a new taxi driver makin' his first trip up Broadway. I could think of swell names for
+ seashore cottages, for new surburban additions, and for other people's babies. I invented an explosive pretzel that
+ would win the war. I thought of bills I ought to pay next week sure, and of what I meant to tell the laundryman if he
+ kept on making hash of my pet shirts.</p>
+
+ <p>Then I got to wonderin' about this old-maid poetess. Was she through for the night, or did she work double shifts?
+ If she wasn't any nearer sleep than I was she might think up half a dozen substitutes for Ethelbert before mornin'.
+ Would she insist on springin' each one on me as they hit her?</p>
+
+ <p>Maybe she was gettin' ready to call me again now. Should I pretend not to hear and let her ring, or would it be
+ better to answer and let on that this was Police Headquarters?</p>
+
+ <p>Honest, I got so fidgety waitin' for that<a class="pagenum" name="page_323" title="323" id="page_323"></a> buzzer
+ to go off that I could almost hear the night operator pluggin' in on our wire.</p>
+
+ <p>And then a thought struck me that wouldn't let go. So, slippin' out easy and throwin' on a bath-robe, I sneaked
+ downstairs to the back hall 'phone, turned on the light, and hunted up Miss Leroy's number in the book.</p>
+
+ <p>"Give her a good strong ring, please," says I to Exchange, "and keep it up until you rouse somebody."</p>
+
+ <p>"Leave it to me," says the operator. And in a minute or so I gets this throaty "Hello! "</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Leroy?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," says she. "Who is calling?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ballard," says I. "I'm the fond parent of the nameless baby. And say, do you still stick to Ethelbert?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why," says she, "I&mdash;er&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I just wanted to tell you," I goes on, "that this guessin' contest closes at 3 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> ,
+ and if you want to make any more entries you got only forty minutes to get 'em in. Nighty-night."</p>
+
+ <p>And I rings off just as she begins sputterin' indignant.</p>
+
+ <p>That seems to help a lot, and inside of five minutes I'm snoozin' peaceful.</p>
+
+ <p>It was next mornin' at breakfast that Vee<a class="pagenum" name="page_324" title="324" id="page_324"></a>
+ observes offhand, as though the subject hadn't been mentioned before:</p>
+
+ <p>"About naming the baby, now."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye-e-es?" says I, smotherin' a groan.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why couldn't we call him after you?" she asks.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not&mdash;not Richard Junior?" says I.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, after both of us, then," says she. "Richard Hemmingway. It&mdash;it is what I've wanted to name him all
+ along."</p>
+
+ <p>"You have?" says I. "Well, for the love of&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"You didn't ask me, that's why," says she.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;why, so I didn't," says I. "And say, Vee, I don't know who's got a better right. As for my part of the
+ name, I've used it so little it's almost as good as new. Richard Hemmingway Ballard it shall be."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I'm so glad," says she. "Of course, I did want you to be the one to pick it out; but if you're satisfied
+ with&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Satisfied!" says I. "Why, I'm tickled to pieces. And here you had that up your sleeve all the while!"</p>
+
+ <p>Vee smiles and nods.</p>
+
+ <p>"We must have the christening very soon," says she, "so everyone will know."</p>
+
+ <p>"You bet!" says I. "And I've a good notion<a class="pagenum" name="page_325" title="325" id="page_325"></a> to put
+ it on the train bulletin down at the station, too. First off, though, we'd better tell young Richard himself and see
+ how he likes it. I expect, though, unless his next crop of hair comes out a different tint from this one, that he'll
+ have to answer to 'Young Torchy' for a good many years."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, yes," says Vee; "but I'm sure he won't mind that in the least."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good girl!" says I, movin' round where I can express my feelin's better.</p>
+
+ <p style='margin-bottom:60px'>"Don't!" says Vee. "You'll spill the coffee."</p>
+ <hr class='full' />
+
+ <h2>SEWELL FORD'S STORIES</h2>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center; font-weight: bold;">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for
+ Grosset &amp; Dunlap's list.</p>
+
+ <p>SHORTY McCABE. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.</p>
+
+ <p>A very humorous story. The hero, an independent and vigorous thinker, sees life, and tells about it in a very
+ unconventional way.</p>
+
+ <p>SIDE-STEPPING WITH SHORTY. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.</p>
+
+ <p>Twenty skits, presenting people with their foibles. Sympathy with human nature and an abounding sense of humor are
+ the requisites for "side-stepping with Shorty."</p>
+
+ <p>SHORTY McCABE ON THE JOB. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.</p>
+
+ <p>Shorty McCabe reappears with his figures of speech revamped right up to the minute. He aids in the right
+ distribution of a "conscience fund," and gives joy to all concerned.</p>
+
+ <p>SHORTY McCABE'S ODD NUMBERS. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.</p>
+
+ <p>These further chronicles of Shorty McCabe tell of his studio for physical culture, and of his experiences both on
+ the East side and at swell yachting parties.</p>
+
+ <p>TORCHY. Illus, by Geo. Biehm and Jas. Montgomery Flagg.</p>
+
+ <p>A red-headed office boy, overflowing with wit and wisdom peculiar to the youths reared on the sidewalks of New
+ York, tells the story of his experiences.</p>
+
+ <p>TRYING OUT TORCHY. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.</p>
+
+ <p>Torchy is just as deliriously funny in these stories as he was in the previous book.</p>
+
+ <p>ON WITH TORCHY. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.</p>
+
+ <p>Torchy falls desperately in love with "the only girl that ever was," but that young society woman's aunt tries to
+ keep the young people apart, which brings about many hilariously funny situations.</p>
+
+ <p>TORCHY, PRIVATE SEC. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.</p>
+
+ <p>Torchy rises from the position of office boy to that of secretary for the Corrugated Iron Company. The story is
+ full of humor and infectious American slang.</p>
+
+ <p>WILT THOU TORCHY. Illus. by F. Snapp and A. W. Brown.</p>
+
+ <p>Torchy goes on a treasure search expedition to the Florida West Coast, in company with a group of friends of the
+ Corrugated Trust and with his friend's aunt, on which trip Torchy wins the aunt's permission to place an engagement
+ ring on Vee's finger.</p>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center;">Grosset &amp; Dunlap, Publishers, New York</p>
+ <hr class='full' />
+
+ <h2>KATHLEEN NORRIS' STORIES</h2>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center; font-weight: bold;">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for
+ Grosset &amp; Dunlap's list.</p>
+
+ <p>MOTHER. Illustrated by F. C. Yohn.</p>
+
+ <p>This book has a fairy-story touch, counterbalanced by the sturdy reality of struggle, sacrifice, and resulting
+ peace and power of a mother's experiences.</p>
+
+ <p>SATURDAY'S CHILD. Frontispiece by F. Graham Cootes.</p>
+
+ <p>Out on the Pacific coast a normal girl, obscure and lovely, makes a quest for happiness. She passes through three
+ stages&mdash;poverty, wealth and service&mdash;and works out a creditable salvation.</p>
+
+ <p>THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE. Illustrated by Lucius H. Hitchcock.</p>
+
+ <p>The story of a sensible woman who keeps within her means, refuses to be swamped by social engagements, lives a
+ normal human life of varied interests, and has her own romance.</p>
+
+ <p>THE STORY OF JULIA PAGE. Frontispiece by Allan Gilbert.</p>
+
+ <p>How Julia Page, reared in rather unpromising surroundings, lifted herself through sheer determination to a higher
+ plane of life.</p>
+
+ <p>THE HEART OF RACHAEL. Frontispiece by Charles E. Chambers.</p>
+
+ <p>Rachael is called upon to solve many problems, and in working out these, there is shown the beauty and strength of
+ soul of one of fiction's most appealing characters.</p>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center;"><i>Ask for Complete free list of G. &amp; D. Popular Copyrighted
+ Fiction</i></p>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center;">Grosset &amp; Dunlap, Publishers, New York</p>
+ <hr class='full' />
+
+ <h2>BOOTH TARKINGTON'S NOVELS</h2>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center; font-weight: bold;">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for
+ Grosset &amp; Dunlap's list.</p>
+
+ <p>SEVENTEEN. Illustrated by Arthur William Brown.</p>
+
+ <p>No one but the creator of Penrod could have portrayed the immortal young people of this story. Its humor is
+ irresistible and reminiscent of the time when the reader was Seventeen.</p>
+
+ <p>PENROD. Illustrated by Gordon Grant.</p>
+
+ <p>This is a picture of a boy's heart, full of the lovable, humorous, tragic things which are locked secrets to most
+ older folks. It is a finished, exquisite work.</p>
+
+ <p>PENROD AND SAM. Illustrated by Worth Brehm.</p>
+
+ <p>Like "Penrod" and "Seventeen," this book contains some remarkable phases of real boyhood and some of the best
+ stories of juvenile prankishness that have ever been written.</p>
+
+ <p>THE TURMOIL. Illustrated by C. E. Chambers.</p>
+
+ <p>Bibbs Sheridan is a dreamy, imaginative youth, who revolts against his father's plans for him to be a servitor of
+ big business. The love of a fine girl turns Bibb's life from failure to success.</p>
+
+ <p>THE GENTLEMAN FROM INDIANA. Frontispiece.</p>
+
+ <p>A story of love and politics,&mdash;more especially a picture of a country editor's life in Indiana, but the charm
+ of the book lies in the love interest.</p>
+
+ <p>THE FLIRT. Illustrated by Clarence F. Underwood.</p>
+
+ <p>The "Flirt," the younger of two sisters, breaks one girl's engagement, drives one man to suicide, causes the
+ murder of another, leads another to lose his fortune, and in the end marries a stupid and unpromising suitor, leaving
+ the really worthy one to marry her sister.</p>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center;"><i>Ask for Complete free list of G. &amp; D. Popular Copyrighted
+ Fiction</i></p>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center;">Grosset &amp; Dunlap, Publishers, New York</p>
+ <hr class='full' />
+
+ <h2>NOVELS OF FRONTIER LIFE BY WILLIAM MacLEOD RAINE</h2>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center;">HANDSOMELY BOUND IN CLOTH. ILLUSTRATED.</p>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center; font-weight: bold;">May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for
+ Grosset and Dunlap's list.</p>
+
+ <p>MAVERICKS.</p>
+
+ <p>A tale of the western frontier, where the "rustler," whose depredations are so keenly resented by the early
+ settlers of the range, abounds. One of the sweetest love stories ever told.</p>
+
+ <p>A TEXAS RANGER.</p>
+
+ <p>How a member of the most dauntless border police force carried law into the mesquit, saved the life of an innocent
+ man after a series of thrilling adventures, followed a fugitive to Wyoming, and then passed through deadly peril to
+ ultimate happiness.</p>
+
+ <p>WYOMING.</p>
+
+ <p>In this vivid story of the outdoor West the author has captured the breezy charm of "cattleland," and brings out
+ the turbid life of the frontier with all its engaging dash and vigor.</p>
+
+ <p>RIDGWAY OF MONTANA.</p>
+
+ <p>The scene is laid in the mining centers of Montana, where politics and mining industries are the religion of the
+ country. The political contest, the love scene, and the fine character drawing give this story great strength and
+ charm.</p>
+
+ <p>BUCKY O'CONNOR.</p>
+
+ <p>Every chapter teems with "wholesome, stirring adventures, replete with the dashing spirit of the border, told with
+ dramatic dash and absorbing fascination of style and plot.</p>
+
+ <p>CROOKED TRAILS AND STRAIGHT.</p>
+
+ <p>A story of Arizona; of swift-riding men and daring outlaws; of a bitter feud between cattle-men and sheep-herders.
+ The heroine is a most unusual woman and her love story reaches a culmination that is fittingly characteristic of the
+ great free West.</p>
+
+ <p>BRAND BLOTTERS.</p>
+
+ <p>A story of the Cattle Range. This story brings out the turbid life of the frontier, with all its engaging dash and
+ vigor, with a charming love interest running through its 320 pages.</p>
+
+ <p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: center;">Grosset &amp; Dunlap, Publishers, New York</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The House of Torchy, by Sewell Ford
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The House of Torchy, by Sewell Ford
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The House of Torchy
+
+Author: Sewell Ford
+
+Illustrator: Arthur William Brown
+
+Release Date: June 21, 2007 [EBook #21882]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOUSE OF TORCHY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "'Don't!' says Vee. 'You'll spill the coffee.'"]
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+THE HOUSE OF TORCHY
+
+BY
+SEWELL FORD
+
+AUTHOR OF
+TORCHY, TRYING OUT TORCHY, SHORTY MCCABE, Etc.
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS BY
+ARTHUR WILLIAM BROWN
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP
+PUBLISHERS--NEW YORK
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Copyright, 1917, 1918, by
+SEWELL FORD
+
+Copyright 1918, by
+EDWARD J. CLODE
+
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER PAGE
+
+I Torchy and Vee on the Way 1
+
+II Vee with Variations 12
+
+III A Qualifying Turn for Torchy 25
+
+IV Switching Arts on Leon 44
+
+V A Recruit for the Eight-three 60
+
+VI Torchy in the Gazinkus Class 79
+
+VII Back with Clara Belle 96
+
+VIII When Torchy got the Call 114
+
+IX A Carry-on for Clara 134
+
+X All the Way with Anna 152
+
+XI At the Turn with Wilfred 172
+
+XII Vee Goes Over the Top 193
+
+XIII Late Returns on Rupert 214
+
+XIV Forsythe at the Finish 232
+
+XV The House of Torchy 250
+
+XVI Torchy gets the Thumb Grip 272
+
+XVII A Low Tackle by Torchy 288
+
+XVIII Tag Day at Torchy's 307
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+THE HOUSE OF TORCHY
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+TORCHY AND VEE ON THE WAY
+
+
+Say, I thought I'd taken a sportin' chance now and then before; but I
+was only kiddin' myself. Believe me, this gettin' married act is the big
+plunge. Uh-huh! Specially when it's done offhand and casual, the way we
+went at it.
+
+My first jolt is handed me early in the mornin' as we piles off the
+mountain express at this little flag stop up in Vermont, and a roly-poly
+gent in a horse-blanket ulster and a coonskin cap with a badge on it
+steps up and greets me cheerful.
+
+"Ottasumpsit Inn?" says he.
+
+"Why, I expect so," says I, "if that's the way you call it.
+Otto--Otta--Yep, that listens something like it."
+
+You see, Mr. Robert had said it only once, when he handed me the
+tickets, and I hadn't paid much attention.
+
+"Aye gorry!" says the chirky gent, gatherin' up our hand luggage. "Guess
+you're the ones we're lookin' for. Got yer trunk-checks handy?"
+
+With that I starts fishin' through my pockets panicky. I finds a
+railroad folder, our marriage certificate, the keys to the studio
+apartment I'd hired, the box the ring came in, and----
+
+"Gosh!" says I, sighin' relieved. "Sure I got it."
+
+The driver grins good-natured and stows us into a two-seated sleigh, and
+off we're whirled, bells jinglin', for half a mile or so through the
+stinging mornin' air. Next thing I know, I'm bein' towed up to a desk
+and a hotel register is shoved at me. Just like an old-timer, I dashes
+off my name--Richard T. Ballard.
+
+The mild-eyed gent with the close-cropped Vandyke and the gold-rimmed
+glasses glances over at Vee.
+
+"Ah--er--I thought Mrs. Ballard was with you!" says he.
+
+"That's so; she is," says I, grabbin' the pen again and tackin' "Mr. and
+Mrs." in front of my autograph.
+
+That's why, while we're fixin' up a bit before goin' down to breakfast,
+I has this little confidential confab with Vee.
+
+"It's no use, Vee," says I. "I'm a rank amateur. We might just as well
+have rice and confetti all over us. I've made two breaks already, and
+I'm liable to make more. We can't bluff 'em."
+
+"Who wants to?" says Vee. "I'm not ashamed of being on my honeymoon; are
+you?"
+
+"Good girl!" says I. "You bet I ain't. I thought the usual line, though,
+was to pretend you'd----"
+
+"I know," says Vee. "And I always thought that was perfectly silly.
+Besides, I don't believe we could fool anyone if we tried. It's much
+simpler not to bother. Let them guess."
+
+"And grin too, eh?" says I. "We'll grin back."
+
+Say, that's the happy hunch. Leaves you with nothing to worry about. All
+you got to do is go ahead and enjoy yourself, free and frolicsome. So
+when this imposin' head waitress with the forty-eight bust and the grand
+duchess air bears down on us majestic, and inquires dignified, "Two,
+sir?" I don't let it stagger me.
+
+"Two'll be enough," says I. "But whisper. Seein' as we're only startin'
+in on the twosome breakfast game, maybe you could find something nice
+and cheerful by a window. Eh?"
+
+It's some breakfast. M-m-m-m! Cute little country sausages, buckwheat
+cakes that would melt in your mouth, with strained honey to go on 'em.
+
+"Have a fourth buckwheat," says I.
+
+"No fair, keeping count!" says Vee. "I looked the other way when you
+took your fifth."
+
+Honest, I can't see where we acted much different than we did before.
+Somehow, we always could find things to giggle over. We sure had a good
+time takin' our first after-breakfast stroll together down Main Street,
+Vee in her silver-fox furs and me in my new mink-lined overcoat that Mr.
+Robert had wished on me casual just before we left.
+
+"Cunnin' little town, eh?" says I. "Looks like a birthday cake."
+
+"Or a Christmas card," says Vee. "Look at this old door with the brass
+knocker and the green fan-light above. Isn't that Colonial, though?"
+
+"It's an old-timer, all right," says I. "Hello! Here's a place worth
+rememberin'--the Woman's Exchange. Now I'll know where to go in case I
+should want to swap you off."
+
+For which crack I gets shoved into a snowdrift.
+
+It ain't until afternoon that I'm struck with the fact that neither of
+us knows a soul up here. Course, the landlord nods pleasant to me, and
+I'd talked to the young room clerk a bit, and the bell-hops had all
+smiled friendly, specially them I'd fed quarters to. But by then I was
+feelin' sort of folksy, so I begun takin' notice of the other guests and
+plannin' who I should get chummy with first.
+
+I drifts over by the fireplace, where two substantial old boys are
+toastin' their toes and smokin' their cigars.
+
+"Snappy brand of weather they pass out up here, eh?" I throws off,
+pullin' up a rocker.
+
+They turn, sort of surprised, and give me the once-over deliberate,
+after which one of them, a gent with juttin' eyebrows, clears his throat
+and remarks, "Quite bracing, indeed."
+
+Then he hitches around until I'm well out of view, and says to the
+other:
+
+"As I was observing, an immediate readjustment of international trade
+balances is inevitable. European bankers are preparing for it. We are
+not. Only last month one of the Barings cabled----"
+
+I'll admit my next stab at bein' sociable was kind of feeble. In front
+of the desk is a group of three gents, one of 'em not over fifty or so;
+but when I edges up close enough to hear what the debate is about, I
+finds it has something to do with a scheme for revivin' Italian opera in
+Boston, and I backs off so sudden I almost bumps into a hook-beaked old
+dame who is waddlin' up to the letter-box.
+
+"Sorry," says I. "I should have honked."
+
+She just glares at me, and if I hadn't side-stepped prompt she might
+have sunk that parrot bill into my shoulder.
+
+After that I sidles into a corner where I couldn't be hit from behind,
+and tries to dope out the cause of all this hostility. Did they take me
+for a German spy or what? Or was this really an old folks' home
+masqueradin' as a hotel, with Vee and me breakin' in under false
+pretenses?
+
+So far as I could see, the inmates was friendly enough with each other.
+The old girls sat around in the office and parlors, chattin' over their
+knittin' and crochet. The old boys paired off mostly, though some of
+them only read or played solitaire. A few people went out wrapped up in
+expensive furs and was loaded into sleighs. The others waved good-by to
+'em. But I might have been built out of window-glass. They didn't act
+as though I was visible.
+
+"Huh!" thinks I. "I'll bet they take notice of Vee when she comes down."
+
+If I'd put anything up on that proposition I'd owed myself money. They
+couldn't see her any more'n they could me. When we went out for another
+walk nobody even looked after us. I didn't say anything then, but I kept
+thinkin'. And all that evenin' we sat around amongst 'em without bein'
+disturbed.
+
+About eight o'clock an orchestra shows up and cuts loose with music in
+the ball-room, mostly classic stuff like the "Spring Song" and handfuls
+plucked from "Aida." We slips in and listens. Then the leader gets his
+eye on us and turns on a fox-trot.
+
+"Looks like they was waitin' for us to start something," says I.
+"Let's."
+
+We'd gone around three or four times when Vee balks. About twenty-five
+old ladies, with a sprinklin' of white-whiskered old codgers, had filed
+in and was watchin' us solemn and critical from the side-lines. Some was
+squintin' disapprovin' through their lorgnettes, and I noticed a few
+whisperin' to each other. Vee quits right in the middle of a reverse.
+
+"Do they think we are giving an exhibition?" she pouts.
+
+"Maybe we're breakin' some of the rules and by-laws," says I. "Anyway, I
+think we ought to beat it before they call in the high sheriff."
+
+Next day it was just the same. We was out part of the time, indulgin' in
+walks and sleigh rides; but nobody seemed to see us, goin' or comin'.
+And I begun to get good and sore.
+
+"Nice place, this," says I to Vee, as we trails in to dinner that
+evenin'. "Almost as sociable as the Grand Central station."
+
+Vee tries to explain that it's always like this in these exclusive
+little all-the-year-round joints where about the same crowd of people
+come every season.
+
+"Then you have to be born in the house to be a reg'lar person, I
+suppose?" says I.
+
+Well, it's about then I notices this classy young couple who are makin'
+their way across the dinin'-room, bein' hailed right and left. And next
+thing I know, the young lady gets her eye on Vee, stops to take another
+look, then rushes over and gives her the fond clinch from behind.
+
+"Why you dear old Verona!" says she.
+
+"Judith!" gasps Vee, kind of smothery.
+
+"Whatever are you doing up----" And then Judith gets wise to me sittin'
+opposite. "Oh!" says she.
+
+Vee blushes and exhibits her left hand.
+
+"It only happened the other night," says she. "This is Mr. Ballard,
+Judith. And you?"
+
+"Oh, ages ago--last spring," says Judith. "Bert, come here."
+
+It's a case of old boardin'-school friends who'd lost track of each
+other. Quite a stunner, young Mrs. Nixon is, too, and Bert is a good
+match for her. The two girls hold quite a reunion, with us men standin'
+around lookin' foolish.
+
+"We're living in Springfield, you know," goes on Judith, "where Bert is
+helping to build another munition plant. Just ran up to spend the
+week-end with Auntie. You've met her, of course?"
+
+"We--we haven't met anyone," says Vee.
+
+"Why, how funny!" exclaims Mrs. Nixon. "Please come over right now."
+
+"My dear," says Auntie, pattin' Vee chummy on the hand, "we have all
+been wondering who you two young people were. I knew you must be nice,
+but--er---- Come, won't you join us at this table? We'll make just a
+splendid little family party. Now do!"
+
+Oh, yes, we did. And after dinner I'll be hanged if we ain't introduced
+to almost everybody in the hotel. It's a reg'lar reception, with folks
+standin' in line to shake hands with us. The old boy with the eye
+awnin's turns out to be an ex-Secretary of the Treasury; an antique with
+a patent ear-'phone has been justice of some State Supreme Court; and so
+on. Oh, lots of class to 'em. But after I'd been vouched for by someone
+they knew they all gives me the hearty grip, offers me cigars, and hopes
+I'm enjoyin' my stay.
+
+"And so you are a niece of dear Mrs. Hemmingway?" says old Parrot-Face,
+when her turn comes. "Think of that! And this is your husband!" And then
+she says how nice it is that some other young people will be up in the
+mornin'.
+
+That evenin' Judith gets busy plannin' things to do next day.
+
+"You haven't tried the toboggan chute?" says she. "Why, how absurd!"
+
+Yep, it was a big day, Saturday was. Half a dozen more young folks
+drifted in, includin' a couple of Harvard men that Vee knew, a girl
+she'd met abroad, and another she'd seen at a house-party. They was all
+live wires, too, ready for any sort of fun. And we had all kinds. Maybe
+we didn't keep that toboggan slide warm. Say, it's some sport, ain't it?
+
+Anyway, our honeymoon was turnin' out a great success. The Nixons
+concluded to stay over a few days, and three or four of the others
+found they could too, so we just went on whooping things up.
+
+Next I knew we'd been there a week, and was due to make a jump to
+Washington for a few days of sight-seein'.
+
+"I'm afraid that will not be half as nice as this has been," says Vee.
+
+"It couldn't," says I. "It's the reg'lar thing to do, though."
+
+"I hate doing the regular thing," says Vee. "Besides, I'm dying to see
+our little studio apartment and get settled in it. Why not--well, just
+go home?"
+
+"Vee," says I, "you got more good sense than I have red hair. Let's!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+VEE WITH VARIATIONS
+
+
+"But--but look here, Vee," says I, after I'd got my breath back, "you
+can't do a thing like that, you know."
+
+"But I have, Torchy," says she; "and, what is more, I mean to keep on
+doing it."
+
+She don't say it messy, understand--just states it quiet and pleasant.
+
+And there we are, hardly at the end of our first month, with the rocks
+loomin' ahead.
+
+Say, where did I collect all this bunk about gettin' married, anyway? I
+had an idea that after the honeymoon was over, you just settled down and
+lived happy, or otherwise, ever after. But, believe me, there's nothing
+to it. It ain't all over, not by a long shot. As a matter of fact,
+you've just begun to live, and you got to learn how.
+
+Here I am, discoverin' a new Vee every day or so, and almost dizzy
+tryin' to get acquainted with all of 'em. Do I show up that way to her?
+I doubt it. Now and then, though, I catch her watchin' me sort of
+puzzled.
+
+So there's nothing steady goin' or settled about us yet, thanks be. Home
+ain't a place to yawn in. Not ours. We don't get all our excitement out
+of changin' the furniture round, either. Oh, sure, we do that, too. You
+know, we're startin' in with a ready-made home--a studio apartment that
+Mr. Robert picked up for me at a bargain, all furnished.
+
+He was a near-artist, if you remember, this Waddy Crane party, who'd had
+a bale of coupon-bearin' certificates willed to him, and what was a
+van-load of furniture more or less to him? Course, I'm no judge of such
+junk, but Vee seems to think we've got something swell.
+
+"Just look at this noble old davenport, will you!" says she. "Isn't it a
+beauty? And that highboy! Real old San Domingo mahogany that is, with
+perfectly lovely crotch veneer in the panels. See?"
+
+"Uh-huh," says I.
+
+"And this four-poster with the pineapple tops and the canopy," she goes
+on. "Pure Colonial, a hundred years old."
+
+"Eh?" says I, gazin' at it doubtful. "Course, I was lookin' for
+second-hand stuff, but I don't think he ought to work off anything that
+ancient on me, do you?"
+
+"Silly!" says Vee. "It's a gem, and the older the better."
+
+"We'll need some new rugs, won't we," says I, "in place of some of these
+faded things?"
+
+"Faded!" says Vee. "Why, those are Bokharas. I will say for Mr. Crane
+that he has good taste. This is furnished so much better than most
+studios--nothing useless, no mixing of periods."
+
+"Oh, when I go out after a home," says I, "I'm some grand little
+shopper."
+
+"Pooh!" says Vee. "Who couldn't do it the way you did? Why, the place
+looks as if he'd just taken his hat and walked out. There are even
+cigars in the humidor. And his easel and paints and brushes! Do you know
+what I'm going to do, Torchy?"
+
+"Put pink and green stripes around the cigars, I expect," says I.
+
+"Smarty!" says she. "I'm going to paint pictures."
+
+"Why not?" says I. "There's no law against it, and here you got all the
+tools."
+
+"You know I used to try it a little," says she. "I took quite a lot of
+lessons."
+
+"Then go to it," says I. "I'll get a yearly rate from a pressing club
+to keep the spots off me. I'll bet you could do swell pictures."
+
+"I know!" says Vee, clappin' her hands. "I'll begin with a portrait of
+you. Let me try sketching in your head now."
+
+That's the way Vee generally goes at things--with a rush. Say, she had
+me sittin' with my chin up and my arms draped in one position until I
+had a neck-ache that ran clear to my heels.
+
+"Hal-lup!" says I, when both feet was sound asleep and my spine felt
+ossified. "Couldn't I put on a sub while I drew a long breath?"
+
+At that she lets me off, and after a fifth-innin' stretch I'm called
+round to pass on the result.
+
+"Hm-m-m!" says I, starin' at what she's done to a perfectly good piece
+of stretched canvas.
+
+"Well, what does it look like?" demands Vee.
+
+"Why," says I, "I should call it sort of a cross between the Kaiser and
+Billy Sunday."
+
+"Torchy!" says Vee. "I--I think you're just horrid!"
+
+For a whole week she sticks to it industrious, jottin' down studies of
+various parts of my map while I'm eatin' breakfast, and workin' over 'em
+until I come back from the office in the afternoon. Did I throw out any
+more comic cracks? Never a one--not even when the picture showed that
+my eyes toed in. All I did was pat her on the back and say she was a
+wonder. But say, I got so I dreaded to look at the thing.
+
+"You know your hair isn't really red," says Vee; "it--it's such an odd
+shade."
+
+"Sort of triple pink, eh?" says I.
+
+She squeezes out some more paints, stirs 'em vigorous, and makes another
+stab. This time she gets a bilious lavender with streaks of fire-box red
+in it.
+
+"Bother!" says she, chuckin' away the brushes. "What's the use
+pretending I'm an artist when I'm not? Look at that hideous mess! It's
+too awful for words. Take away that fire-screen, will you, Torchy?"
+
+And, with the help of a few matches and a sportin' extra, we made quite
+a cheerful little blaze in the coal grate.
+
+"There!" says Vee, as we watches the bonfire. "So that's over. And it's
+rather a relief to find out that I haven't got to be a lady artist,
+after all. What is more, I am positive I couldn't write a book. I'm
+afraid, Torchy, that I am a most every-day sort of person."
+
+"Maybe," says I, "you're one of the scarce ones that believes in home
+and hubby."
+
+"We-e-e-ell," says Vee, lockin' her fingers and restin' her chin on 'em
+thoughtful, "not precisely that type, either. My mind may not be
+particularly advanced, but the modified harem existence for women
+doesn't appeal to me. And I must confess that, with kitchenette
+breakfasts, dinners out, and one maid, I can't get wildly excited over a
+wholly domestic career. Torchy, I simply must have something to do."
+
+Me, I just sits there gawpin' at her.
+
+"Why," says I, "I thought that when a girl got married she--she----"
+
+"I know," says she. "You think you thought. So did I. But you really
+didn't think about it at all, and I'm only beginning to. Of course, you
+have your work. I suppose it's interesting, too. Isn't it?"
+
+"It's a great game," says I. "Specially these days, when doin' any kind
+of business is about as substantial as jugglin' six china plates while
+you're balanced on top of two chairs and a kitchen table. Honest, we got
+deals enough in the air to make you dizzy followin' 'em. If they all go
+through we'll stand to cut a melon that would pay off the national debt.
+If they should all go wrong--well, it would be some smash, believe me."
+
+Vee's gray eyes light up sudden.
+
+"Why couldn't you tell me all about some of these deals," she says, "so
+that I could be in it too? Why couldn't I help?"
+
+"Maybe you could," says I, "if you understood all the fine points."
+
+"Couldn't I learn?" demands Vee.
+
+"Well," says I, "I've been right in the thick of it for quite some
+years. If you could pick up in a week or so what it's taken me years
+to----"
+
+"I see," cuts in Vee. "I suppose you're right, too. But I'm sure that I
+should like to be in business. It must be fascinating, all that planning
+and scheming. It must make life so interesting."
+
+I nods. "It does," says I.
+
+"Then why shouldn't I try something of the kind, all my very own?" she
+asks. "Oh, in a small way, at first?"
+
+More gasps from me. This was gettin' serious.
+
+"You don't mean margin dabblin' at one of them parlor bucket-shops, do
+you?" I demands.
+
+"No fear," says Vee. "I think gambling is just plain stupid. I mean some
+sort of legitimate business--buying and selling things."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Like real estate, or imported hats, or somebody's
+home-made candy? Or maybe you mean startin' one of them Blue Goose
+novelty shops down in Greenwich Village. I'll tell you. Why not
+manufacture left-handed collar buttons for the south-paw trade? There's
+a field."
+
+Vee don't say any more. In fact, three or four days goes by without her
+mentionin' anything about havin' nothing to do, and I'd 'most forgot
+this batty talk of ours.
+
+And then, one afternoon when I comes home after a busy day at doin'
+nothing much and tryin' to look important over it, she greets me with a
+flyin' tackle and drags me over to a big wingchair by the window.
+
+"What do you think, Torchy?" says she. "I've found something!"
+
+"That trunk key you've been lookin' for?" says I.
+
+"No," says she. "A business opening."
+
+"A slot-machine to sell fudge?" says I.
+
+"You'd never guess," says she.
+
+"Then shoot it," says I.
+
+"I'm going to open a shoe-shinery," she announces.
+
+"Wha-a-a-at!" says I.
+
+"Only I'm not going to call it that," she goes on. "It isn't to be a
+'parlor,' either, nor a 'shine shop.' It's to be just a 'Boots.' Right
+here in the building. I've leased part of the basement. See?" And she
+waves a paper at me.
+
+"Quit your kiddin'," says I.
+
+But she insists that it's so. Sure enough, that's the way the lease
+reads.
+
+And that's when, as I was tellin' you, I rises up majestic and announces
+flat that she simply can't do a thing like that. Also she comes back at
+me just as prompt by sayin' that she can and will. It's the first time
+we've met head-on goin' different ways, and I had just sense enough to
+throw in my emergency before the crash came.
+
+"Now let's get this straight," says I. "I don't suppose you're plannin'
+to do shoe-shinin' yourself?"
+
+Vee smiles and shakes her head.
+
+"Or 'tend the cash register and sell shoelaces and gum to gentlemen
+customers?"
+
+"Oh, it's not to be that sort of place," says she. "It's to be an
+English 'boots,' on a large scale. You know what I mean."
+
+"No," says I.
+
+So she sketches out the enterprise for me. Instead of a reg'lar Tony
+joint with a row of chairs and a squad of blue-shirted Greeks jabberin'
+about the war, this is to be a chairless, spittoonless shine factory,
+where the customer only steps in to sign a monthly contract or register
+a kick. All the work is to be collected and delivered, same as laundry.
+
+"I would never have thought of it," explains Vee, "if it hadn't been for
+Tarkins. He's that pasty-faced, sharp-nosed young fellow who's been
+helping the janitor recently. A cousin, I believe. He's a war wreck,
+too. Just think, Torchy: he was in the trenches for more than a year,
+and has only been out of a base hospital two months. They wouldn't let
+him enlist again; so he came over here to his relatives.
+
+"It was while he was up trying to stop that radiator leak the other day
+that I asked him if he would take out a pair of my boots and find some
+place where they could be cleaned. He brought them back inside of half
+an hour, beautifully done. And when I insisted on being told where he'd
+taken them, so that I might send them to the same place again, he
+admitted that he had done the work himself. 'My old job, ma'am,' says
+he. 'I was boots at the Argyle Club, ma'am, before I went out to strafe
+the 'Uns. Seven years, ma'am. But they got a girl doin' it now, a
+flapper. Wouldn't take me back.' Just fancy! And Tarkins a trench hero!
+So I got to thinking."
+
+"I see," says I. "You're going to set Tarkins up, eh?"
+
+"I'm going to make him my manager," says Vee. "He will have charge of
+the shop and solicit orders. We are going to start with only two
+polishers; one for day work, the other for the night shift. And Tarkins
+will always be on the job. They're installing a 'phone now, and he will
+sleep on a cot in the back office. We will work this block first,
+something like four hundred apartments. Later on--well, we'll see."
+
+"I don't want to croak," says I, "but do you think folks will send out
+their footwear that way? You know, New Yorkers ain't used to gettin'
+their shines except on the hoof."
+
+"I mean to educate them to my 'boots' system," says Vee. "I'm getting up
+a circular now. I shall show them how much time they can save, how many
+tips they can avoid. You see, each customer will have a delivery box,
+with his name and address on it. No chance for mistakes. The boxes can
+be set outside the apartment doors. We will have four collections,
+perhaps; two in the daytime, two at night. And when they see the kind of
+work we do---- Well, you wait."
+
+"I'll admit it don't listen so worse," says I. "The scheme has its good
+points. But when you come to teachin' New York people new tricks, like
+sendin' out their shoes, you're goin' to be up against it."
+
+"Then you think I can't make 'boots' pay a profit?" asks Vee.
+
+"That would be my guess," says I. "If it was a question of underwritin'
+a stock issue for the scheme I'd have to turn it down."
+
+"Good!" says Vee. "Now I shall work all the harder. Tarkins will be
+around early in the morning to get you as our first customer."
+
+Say, for the next few days she certainly was a busy party--plannin' out
+her block campaign, lookin' over supply bills, and checkin' up Tarkins's
+reports.
+
+I don't know when I'd ever seen her so interested in anything, or so
+chirky. Her cheeks were pink all the time and her eyes dancin'. And
+somehow we had such a lot to talk about.
+
+Course, though, I didn't expect it to last. You wouldn't look for a girl
+like Vee, who'd never had any trainin' for that sort of thing, to start
+a new line and make a go of it right off the bat. But, so long as she
+wasn't investin' very heavy, it didn't matter.
+
+And then, here last night, after she'd been workin' over her
+account-books for an hour or so, she comes at me with a whoop, and waves
+a sheet of paper under my nose excited.
+
+"Now, Mister Business Man," says she, "what do you think of that?"
+
+"Eh?" says I, starin' at the figures.
+
+"One hundred and seventeen regular customers the first week," says she,
+"and a net profit of $23.45. Now how about underwriting that stock
+issue?"
+
+Well, it was a case of backin' up. She had it all figured out plain.
+She'd made good from the start. And, just to prove that it's real money
+that she's made all by herself, she insists on invitin' me out to a
+celebration dinner. It's a swell one, too, take it from me.
+
+And afterwards we sits up until long past midnight while Vee plans a
+chain of "boots" all over the city.
+
+"Gee!" says I. "Maybe you'll be gettin' yourself written up as 'The
+Shine Queen of New York' or something like that. Lucky Auntie's in
+Jamaica. Think what a jolt it would give her."
+
+"I don't care," says Vee. "I've found a job."
+
+"Guess you have," says I. "And, as I've remarked once or twice before,
+you're some girl."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A QUALIFYING TURN FOR TORCHY
+
+
+And here all along I'd been kiddin' myself that I was a perfectly good
+private sec. Also I had an idea the Corrugated Trust was one of the main
+piers that kept New York from slumpin' into the North River, and that
+the boss, Old Hickory Ellins, was sort of a human skyscraper who loomed
+up as imposin' in the financial foreground as the Metropolitan Tower
+does on the picture post-cards that ten-day trippers mail to the folks
+back home.
+
+Not that I'd been workin' up any extra chest measure since I've had an
+inside desk and had connected with a few shares of our preferred stock;
+I always did feel more or less that way about our concern. And the
+closer I got to things, seein' how wide our investments was scattered
+and how many big deals we stood behind, the surer I was that we was
+important people.
+
+And then, in trickles this smooth-haired young gent with the broad _a_'s
+and the full set of _the dansant_ manners, to show me where I'm wrong
+on all counts. He'd succeeded in convincin' Vincent-on-the-gate that
+nobody around the shop would do but Mr. Ellins himself, so here was Old
+Hickory standin' in the door of his private office with the card in his
+hand and starin' puzzled at this immaculate symphony in browns.
+
+"Eh?" says he. "You're from Runyon, are you? Well, I wired him to stop
+off on his way through and have luncheon with me at the Union League.
+Know anything about that, do you?"
+
+"Mr. Runyon regrets very much," says the young gent, "that he will be
+unable to accept your kind invitation. He is on his way to Newport, you
+know, and----"
+
+"Yes, I understand all that," breaks in Old Hickory. "Daughter's
+wedding. But that isn't until next week, and while he was in town I
+thought we might have a little chat and settle a few things."
+
+"Quite so," says the symphony. "Precisely why he sent me up, sir--to
+talk over anything you might care to discuss."
+
+"With you!" snorts Old Hickory. "Who the brocaded buckboards are you?"
+
+"Mr. Runyon's secretary, sir," says the young gent. "Bixby's the name,
+sir, as you will see by the card, and----"
+
+"Ha!" growls old Hickory. "So that's Marc Runyon's answer to me, is it?
+Sends his secretary! Very well; you may talk with _my_ secretary.
+Torchy!"
+
+"Right here!" says I, slidin' to the front.
+
+"Take this person somewhere," says Mr. Ellins, jerkin' his thumb at
+Bixby; "instruct him what to tell his master about how we regard that
+terminal hold-up; then dust him off carefully and lead him to the
+elevator."
+
+"Got you!" says I, salutin'.
+
+You might think that would have jolted Mr. Bixby. But no. He gets the
+door shut in his face without even blinkin' or gettin' pink under the
+eyes. Don't even indulge in any shoulder shrugs or other signs of
+muffled emotion. He just turns to me calm and remarks businesslike:
+
+"At your service, sir."
+
+Now, say, this lubricated diplomacy act ain't my long suit as a general
+thing, but I couldn't figure a percentage in puttin' over any more rough
+stuff on Bixby. It rolled off him too easy. Course, it might be all
+right for Mr. Ellins to get messy or blow a gasket if he wanted to; but
+I couldn't see that it was gettin' us anywhere. He hadn't planned this
+luncheon affair just for the sake of being sociable--I knew that much.
+The big idea was to get next to Marcus T. Runyon and thresh out a
+certain proposition on a face-to-face basis. And if he chucked that
+overboard because of a whim, we stood to lose.
+
+It was up to me now, though. Maybe I couldn't be as smooth as this Bixby
+party, but I could make a stab along that line. It would be good
+practice, anyhow. So I tows him over to my corner, and arranges him easy
+in an armchair.
+
+"As between private secs, now," says I, "what's puttin' up the bars on
+this get-together motion, eh?"
+
+Well, considerin' that Bixby is English and don't understand the
+American language very well, we got along fine. Once or twice, there, I
+thought I should have to call in an interpreter; but by bein' careful to
+state things simple, and by goin' over some of the points two or three
+times slow, we managed to make out what each other meant.
+
+It seems that Marcus T. is more or less of a frail and tender party.
+Dashin' out for a Union League luncheon, fillin' himself up on _poulet
+en casserole_ and such truck, not to mention Martinis and demi-tasses
+and brunette perfectos, was clean out of the question.
+
+"My word!" says Bixby, rollin' his eyes. "His physician would never
+allow it, you know."
+
+"Suppose he took a chance and didn't tell the doc?" I suggests.
+
+"Impossible," says Bixby. "He is with him constantly--travels with him,
+you understand."
+
+I didn't get it all at first, but I sopped it up gradual. Marcus T.
+wasn't takin' any casual flit from his Palm Beach winter home to his
+Newport summer place. No jumpin' into a common Pullman for him, joinin'
+the smokin'-room bunch, and scrabblin' for his meals in the diner.
+Hardly.
+
+He was travelin' in his private car, with his private secretary, his
+private physician, his trained nurse, his private chef, and most likely,
+his private bootblack. And he was strictly under his doctor's orders. He
+wasn't even goin' to have a peek at Broadway or Fifth Avenue; for,
+although a suite had been engaged for him at the Plutoria, the Doc had
+ruled against it only that mornin'. No; he had to stay in the private
+car, that had been run on a special sidin' over in the Pennsylvania
+yards.
+
+"So you see," says Bixby, spreadin' out his varnished finger-nails
+helpless. "And yet, I am sure he would very much like to have a chat
+with his old friend Mr. Ellins."
+
+I had all I could do to choke back a haw-haw. His old friend, eh? Oh, I
+expect they might be called friends, in a way. They hadn't actually
+stuck any knives into each other. And 'way back, when they was both
+operatin' in Chicago, I understand they was together a good deal. But
+since---- Well, maybe at a circus you've seen a couple of old tigers
+pacin' back and forth in nearby cages and catchin' sight of one another
+now and then? Something like that.
+
+"Friend" wasn't the way Marcus T. was indexed on our books. If we
+spotted any suspicious moves in the market, or found one of our
+subsidiary companies being led astray by unseen hands, or a big contract
+slippin' away mysterious, the word was always passed to "watch the
+Runyon interests." And I'll admit that when the Corrugated saw an
+openin' to put a crimp in a Runyon deal, or overbid 'em on a franchise,
+or crack a ripe egg on one of their bond issues, we only waited long
+enough for it to get dark before gettin' busy. Oh, yes, we was real
+chummy that way.
+
+And then again, with the Runyon system touchin' ours in so many spots,
+we had a lot of open daylight dealin's. We interlocked here and there;
+we had joint leases, trackage agreements, and so on, where we was just
+as trustin' of each other as a couple of gentlemen crooks dividin' the
+souvenirs after an early mornin' call at a country-house.
+
+This terminal business Old Hickory had mentioned was a sample. Course, I
+only knew about it in a vague sort of way: something about ore docks up
+on the Lakes. Anyway, it was a case where the Runyon people had hogged
+the waterfront and was friskin' us for tonnage charges on every steamer
+we loaded.
+
+I know it was something that had to be renewed annual, for I'd heard Mr.
+Ellins beefin' about it more'n once. Last year, I remember, he was worse
+than usual, which was accounted for later by the fact that the ton rate
+had been jumped a couple of cents. And now it had been almost doubled.
+No wonder he wanted a confab with Marcus T. on the subject. And, from
+where I stood, it looked like he ought to have it, grouch or no grouch.
+
+"Bixby," says I, "Mr. Ellins would just grieve himself sick if this
+reunion he's planned don't come off. Now, what's the best you can do?"
+
+"If Mr. Ellins could come to the private car----" begins Bixby.
+
+"Say," I breaks in, "you wouldn't ask him to climb over freight-cars and
+dodge switch-engines just for old times' sake, would you?"
+
+Bixby holds up both hands and registers painful protest.
+
+"By no means," says he. "We would send the limousine for Mr. Ellins,
+have it wait his convenience, and drive him directly to the car steps. I
+think I can arrange the interview for any time between two-thirty and
+four o'clock this afternoon."
+
+"Now, that's talkin'!" says I. "I'll see what I can do with the boss.
+Wait, will you?"
+
+Oh, boy, though! That was about as tough a job as I ever tackled. Old
+Hickory still has his neck feathers ruffled, and he's chewin' savage on
+a black cigar when I go in to slip him the soothin' syrup. First off I
+explains elaborate what a sick man Mr. Runyon is, and all about the
+trained nurse and the private physician.
+
+"Bah!" says Old Hickory. "I'll bet he's no more an invalid than I am.
+Just coddling himself, that's all. Got the private car habit, too! Why,
+I knew Marc Runyon when he thought an upper berth was the very lap of
+luxury; knew him when he'd grind his teeth over payin' a ten-dollar fee
+to a doctor. And now he's trying to buy back his digestion by hiring a
+private physician, is he? The simple-minded old sinner!"
+
+"I expect you ain't seen much of him lately, Mr. Ellins?" I suggests.
+
+Old Hickory hunches his shoulders careless.
+
+"No," says he.
+
+Then he gazes reminiscent at the ceilin'. I could tell by watchin' his
+lower jaw sort of loosen up that he was thinkin' of the old days, or
+something like that. It struck me as a good time to let things simmer. I
+drops back a step and waits. All of a sudden he turns to me and demands:
+
+"Well, son?"
+
+"If you could get away about three," says I, "Mr. Runyon's limousine
+will be waiting."
+
+"Huh!" says he. "Well, I'll see. Perhaps."
+
+"Yes, sir," says I. "Then you'll be wanting the dope on that terminal
+lease. Shall I dig it up?"
+
+"Oh, you might as well," says Old Hickory. "There isn't much, but bring
+along anything you may find. You will have to serve as my entire
+retinue, Torchy. I expect you to behave like a regular high-toned
+secretary."
+
+"Gee!" says I. "That's some order. Mr. Bixby'll have me lookin' like an
+outside porter. But I'll go wind myself up."
+
+All I could think of, though, was to post myself on that terminal stuff.
+And, believe me, I waded into that strong. Inside of ten minutes after
+I'd sent Bixby on his way I had Piddie clawin' through the record safe,
+two stenographers searchin' the letter-files, and Vincent out buyin'
+maps of Lake Superior. I had about four hours to use in gettin' wise to
+the fine points of a deal that had been runnin' on for ten years; but I
+can absorb a lot of information in a short time when I really get my
+mind pores open.
+
+At that, though, I expect my head would have been just a junk-heap of
+back-number facts if I hadn't run across the name of this guy McClave in
+some of the correspondence. Seems he'd been assistant traffic agent for
+one of the Runyon lines, but had been dropped durin' a consolidation
+shake-up. And now he happens to be holdin' down a desk out in our
+general offices. Just on a chance, I pushes the button for him.
+
+Well, say, talk about tappin' the main feedpipe! Why, that quiet little
+Scotchman in the shiny black cutaway coat and the baggy plaid trousers,
+he knew more about how iron ore gets from the mines to the smelters than
+I do about puttin' on my own clothes. And as for the inside hist'ry of
+how we got that tonnage charge wished onto us, why, McClave had been
+called in when the merry little scheme was first plotted out.
+
+I made him start at the beginning and explain every item, while we
+munched fried-egg sandwiches as we went over reports, sorted out old
+letters, and marked up a perfectly good map of Minnesota. But by three
+P.M. I had a leather document case stuffed with papers and a cross-index
+of 'em in my so-called brain.
+
+"When you're ready, Mr. Ellins," says I, standin' by with my hat in my
+hand.
+
+"Oh, yes," says he, heavin' himself up reluctant from his desk chair.
+
+And, sure enough, there's a silk-lined limousine and a French chauffeur
+waitin' in front of the arcade. In no time at all, too, we're rolled
+across Seventh Avenue, down through a tunnel, and out alongside a shiny
+private car with a brass-bound bay-window on one end and flower-boxes
+hung on the side. They even had a carpet laid on the steps. It's a happy
+little home on wheels.
+
+Also there is Bixby the Busy, with his ear out for us.
+
+Talk about private seccing as a fine art! Why, say, I fairly held my
+breath watchin' him operate. Every move is as smooth and silent as a
+steel lathe runnin' in an oil bath. He don't exactly whisper, or give us
+the hush-up sign, but somehow he gets me steppin' soft and talkin'
+under my breath from the minute I hits the front vestibule.
+
+"So good of you, Mr. Ellins," he coos soothin'. "Will you come right in?
+Mr. Runyon will be with you in a moment. Just finishing a treatment, you
+know. This way, gentlemen."
+
+Say, it was like bein' ushered into church durin' the prayer. Once
+inside, you'd never guess it was just a car. More like the corner of a
+perfectly good drawin'-room--easy chairs, Turkish rugs, silver vases
+full of roses, double hangin's at the windows.
+
+"Will you sit here, Mr. Ellins?" murmurs Bixby. "And you here, sir.
+Pardon me a moment."
+
+Then he glides about, pullin' down a shade, movin' a vase, studyin' how
+the light is goin' to strike in, pattin' a cushion, shovin' out a
+foot-rest--like he was settin' the stage for the big scene. And right in
+the midst of it I near spilled the beans by pullin' an afternoon edition
+out of my pocket. Bixby swoops down on me panicky.
+
+"Oh, I'm so sorry!" says he, pluckin' the paper out of my fingers. "But
+may I put this outside? Mr. Runyon cannot stand the rustling of
+newspapers. Please don't mind. There! Now I think we are ready."
+
+I wanted to warn him that I hadn't quite stopped breathin' yet, but he's
+off to the other end of the room, where a nurse in a white cap is
+peekin' through the draperies.
+
+Bixby nods to her and stands one side. Then we waits a minute--two
+minutes. And finally the procession appears.
+
+First, a nurse carryin' a steamer rug; next, another nurse with a tray;
+and after them a valet and the private physician with the great Marcus
+T. walkin' slow between.
+
+He ain't so imposin' when you get that close, though. Kind of a short,
+poddy party, who looks like he'd been upholstered generous once but had
+shrunk a lot. There are heavy bags under his eyes, dewlaps at his
+mouth-corners, and deep seams across his clean-shaved face. He has sort
+of a cigar-ash complexion. And yet, under them shaggy brows is a keen
+pair of eyes that seem to take in everything.
+
+Old Hickory gets up right off, with his hand out. But it's a social
+error. Bixby blocks him off graceful. He's in full command, Bixby is.
+With a one-finger gesture he signals the nurse to drape her rug over the
+chair. Then he nods to the doctor and the valet to go ahead. They ease
+Runyon into his seat. Bixby motions 'em to wrap up his knees. By an
+eyelid flutter he shows the other nurse where to set her tray.
+
+It's almost as complicated a process as dockin' an ocean liner. When
+it's finished, Bixby waves one hand gentle, and they all fade back
+through the draperies.
+
+"Hello, Ellins," says Runyon. "Mighty good of you to hunt up a wreck
+like me."
+
+I almost gasped out loud. Somehow, after seem' him handled like a mummy
+that way, you didn't expect to hear him speak. It's a shock. Even Old
+Hickory must have felt something as I did.
+
+"I--I didn't know," says he. "When did it happen, Runyon?"
+
+"Oh, it's nothing," says Marcus T. "I am merely paying up for fifty-odd
+years of hard living by--by this. Ever try to exist on artificial sour
+milk and medicated hay, Ellins? Hope you never come to it. Don't look as
+though you would. But you were always tougher than I, even back in the
+State Street days, eh?"
+
+First thing I knew, they were chattin' away free and easy. Course, there
+was Bixby all the time, standin' behind watchful. And right in the
+middle of a sentence he didn't hesitate to butt in and hand Mr. Runyon a
+glass of what looked like thin whitewash. Marcus T. would take a sip
+obedient and then go on with his talk. At last he asks if there's
+anything special he can do for Mr. Ellins.
+
+"Why, yes," says Old Hickory, settin' his jaw. "You might call off your
+highwaymen on that Manitou terminal lease, Runyon. That is, unless you
+mean to take all of our mining profits."
+
+Marcus T.'s eyes brighten up. They almost twinkle.
+
+"Bixby," says he, "what about that? Has there been an increase in the
+tonnage rate to the Corrugated?"
+
+"I think so, sir," says Bixby. "I can look it up, sir."
+
+"Ah!" says Runyon. "Bixby will look it up."
+
+"He needn't," says Old Hickory. "It's been doubled, that's all. We had
+the notice last week. Torchy, did you----"
+
+"Yep!" says I, shootin' the letter at him.
+
+"Well, well!" says Runyon, after he's gazed at it. "There must have been
+some well founded cause for such an advance. Bixby, you must----"
+
+"It's because you think you've got us in a hole," breaks in Old Hickory.
+"We've got to load our boats and you control the docks."
+
+"Oh, yes!" chuckles Marcus T. "An unfortunate situation--for you. But I
+presume there are other dockage facilities available."
+
+"If there were," says Mr. Ellins sarcastic, "do you think we would be
+paying you from three to five millions a year?"
+
+"Bixby, I fear you must explain our position more fully," goes on Mr.
+Runyon.
+
+"Oh, certainly," says Bixby. "I will have a full report prepared
+and----"
+
+"Suppose you tell it to my secretary now," insists Old Hickory, glarin'
+menacin' at him.
+
+"Do so, Bixby," says Marcus T.
+
+"Why--er--you see," says Bixby, turnin' to me, "as I understand the
+case, the only outlet you have to deep water is over our tracks to----"
+
+"What about them docks at Three Harbors?" I cuts in.
+
+"Three Harbors?" repeats Bixby, starin' vague.
+
+"Precisely," says Marcus T. "As the young man suggests, there is plenty
+of unemployed dockage at that point. But your ore tracks do not connect
+with that port."
+
+"They would if we laid forty miles of rails, branchin' off at Tamarack
+Junction," says I. "That spur has all been surveyed and the right of way
+cleared."
+
+"Ah!" exclaims Bixby, comin' to life again. "I remember now. Tamarack
+Junction. We hold a charter for a railroad from there to Three Harbors."
+
+"You mean you did hold it," says I.
+
+"I beg pardon?" says Bixby, gawpin'.
+
+"It lapsed," says I, "eighteen months ago. Here's a copy, O. K.'d by a
+Minnesota notary public. See the date?"
+
+"Allow me," says Mr. Runyon, reachin' for it.
+
+Old Hickory gets up and rubbers over his shoulder. "By George!" says he.
+"It has lapsed, Runyon. Torchy, where's a map of----"
+
+"Here you are," says I. "You'll see the branch line sketched in there.
+That would cut our haul about fifteen miles."
+
+"And leave you with a lot of vacant ore docks on your hands, eh,
+Runyon?" puts in Old Hickory. "We could have those rails laid by the
+time the ice was out of the Soo. Well, well! Throws rather a new light
+on the situation, doesn't it?"
+
+Marcus T. turns slow and fixes them keen eyes of his on Bixby the Busy.
+
+"Hm-m-m!" says he. "It seems that we have overlooked a point, Bixby.
+Perhaps, though, you can offer----"
+
+He can. Some shifty private sec, Bixby is.
+
+"Your milk, sir," says he, grabbin' the tray and shovin' it in front of
+Runyon.
+
+For a second or so the great Marcus T. eyes it indignant. Then his
+shoulders sag, the fire dies out of his eyes, and he takes the glass.
+
+He's about the best trained plute I ever saw in captivity.
+
+"And I think the doctor should take your temperature now," adds Bixby.
+"I will call him."
+
+As he slips off toward the back end of the car Mr. Runyon lets out a
+sigh.
+
+"It's no use, Ellins," says he. "One can't pamper a ruined digestion and
+still enjoy these friendly little business bouts. One simply can't. Name
+your own terms for continuing that terminal lease."
+
+Old Hickory does prompt, for we don't want to buy rails at the price
+they're bringin' now.
+
+"And by the way, Runyon," says he, "may I ask what you pay your young
+man? I'm just curious."
+
+"Bixby?" says Runyon. "Oh, twenty-five hundred."
+
+"Huh!" says Mr. Ellins. "My secretary forgets my milk now and then, but
+he remembers such trifles as lapsed charters. He is drawing three
+thousand."
+
+I hope Marcus T. didn't hear the gasp I lets out--I tried to smother it.
+And the first thing I does when we gets back into the limousine is to
+grin at the boss.
+
+"Whaddye mean, three thousand?" says I.
+
+"Dollars," says he. "Beginning to-day."
+
+"Z-z-z-zing!" says I. "Going up, up! And there I was plannin' to take a
+special course in trained nursin', so I could hold my job."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SWITCHING ARTS ON LEON
+
+
+Oh, sure! We're coming along grand. Did you think we'd be heavin' the
+blue willow-ware at each other by this time? No. We've hardly displayed
+any before-breakfast dispositions yet.
+
+Not that we confine ourselves to the coo vocabulary, or advertise any
+continuous turtle-dove act. Gettin' married ain't jellied our brains, I
+hope. Besides, we're busy. I've got a new gilt-edged job to fill, you
+know; and Vee, she has one of her own, too.
+
+Well, I can't say that her scheme of runnin' a Boots, Limited, has
+mesmerized all New York into havin' its shoe-shinin' done out. There's
+something about this cloth top and white gaiter craze that's puttin' a
+crimp in her perfectly good plans. But she's doin' fairly well, and she
+don't have to think up ways of killin' time.
+
+Course, we have a few other things to think about, too. Just learnin'
+how to live in New York is a merry little game all by itself. That's
+one of my big surprises. I'd thought all along it was so simple.
+
+But say, we've been gettin' wise to a few facts this last month or so,
+for we've been tryin' to dope out which one of the forty-nine varieties
+of New York's home-sweet-home repertoire was the kind for us. I don't
+mean we've been changin' our street number, or testin' out different
+four-room-and-bath combinations. The studio apartment I got at a bargain
+suits first rate. It's the meal proposition.
+
+First off, we decides gay and reckless that we'll breakfast and lunch in
+and take our dinners out. That listened well and seemed easy
+enough--until Vee got to huntin' up a two-handed, light-footed female
+party who could boil eggs without scorchin' the shells, dish up such
+things as canned salmon with cream sauce, and put a few potatoes through
+the French fry process, doublin' in bed-makin' and dust-chasin' durin'
+her spare time. That shouldn't call for any prize-winnin' graduate from
+a cookin' college, should it?
+
+But say, the specimens that go in for general housework in this burg are
+a sad lot. I ain't goin' all through the list. I'll just touch lightly
+on Bertha.
+
+She was a cheerful soul, even when she was servin' soggy potatoes or
+rappin' me in the ear with her elbow as she reached across to fill my
+water glass.
+
+"He-he! Haw-haw! Oxcuse, Mister," was Bertha's repartee for such little
+breaks.
+
+Course, I could plead with her for the umpteenth time to try pourin'
+from the button hand side, but it would have been simpler to have worn a
+head guard durin' meals.
+
+And who would have the heart to put the ban on a yodel that begins in
+our kitchenette at 7 A.M., even on cloudy mornin's?
+
+If Bertha had been No. 1, or even No. 2, she'd have had her passports
+handed her about the second mornin'; but, as she was the last of a punk
+half dozen, we tried not to mind her musical interludes. So at the end
+of three weeks her friendly relations with us were still unbroken,
+though most of the dishes were otherwise.
+
+So you might have thought we'd been glad, when 6.30 P.M. came, to put on
+our things and join about a million or so other New Yorkers in findin' a
+dinner joint where the cooks and waiters made no claim to havin' an
+amateur standin'.
+
+But, believe me, while my domestic instincts may be sproutin' late,
+they're comin' strong. I'm beginnin' to yearn for nourishment that I
+don't have to learn the French for or pick off'm a menu. I'd like to eat
+without bein' surrounded by three-chinned female parties with high blood
+pressure, or bein' stared at by pop-eyed old sports who're givin' some
+kittenish cloak model a bright evenin'. And Vee feels more or less the
+same way.
+
+"Besides," says she, "I wish we could entertain some of our friends."
+
+"Just what I was wishin'," says I. "Say, couldn't we find a few simple
+things in the cook-book that Bertha couldn't queer?"
+
+"Such as canned baked beans and celery?" asks Vee, chucklin'. "And yet,
+if I stood by and read the directions to her--who knows?"
+
+"Let's try her on the Piddies," I suggests.
+
+Well, we did. And if the potatoes had been cooked a little more and the
+roast a little less, it wouldn't have been so bad. The olives were all
+right, even if Bertha did forget to serve 'em until she brought in the
+ice cream. But then, the Piddies are used to little slips like that,
+havin' lived so long out in Jersey.
+
+"You see," explains Vee to me afterwards, "Bertha was a bit flurried
+over her first dinner-party. She isn't much used to a gas oven, either.
+Don't you think we might try another?"
+
+"Sure!" says I. "What are friends for, anyway? How about askin' Mr. and
+Mrs. Robert Ellins?"
+
+"Oh, dear!" sighs Vee, lookin' scared. Then she is struck with a bright
+idea. "I'll tell you: we will rehearse the next one the night before."
+
+"Atta girl!" says I. "Swell thought."
+
+It was while she and Bertha was strugglin' over the cook-book, and
+gettin' advice from various sources, from housekeepin' magazines to the
+janitor's wife, that this Leon Battou party shows up with his sob
+hist'ry.
+
+"Oh, Torchy!" Vee hails me with, as I come home from the office here the
+other evenin'. "What becomes of people when they're dispossessed--when
+they're put out on the street with their things, you know?"
+
+"Why," says I, "they generally stay out until they can find a place
+where they can move in. Has anybody been threatenin' to chuck us out for
+not----"
+
+"Silly!" says she. "It's the Battous."
+
+"Don't know 'em," says I.
+
+"But surely," goes on Vee, "you've seen him. He's that funny little old
+Frenchman who's always dodging in and out of the elevator with
+odd-looking parcels under his arm."
+
+"Oh, yes!" says I. "The one with the twinklin' eyes and the curly
+iron-gray hair, who always bows so polite and shoots that bon-shure
+stuff at you. Him?"
+
+It was.
+
+It seems the agent had served notice on 'em that mornin'. They'd been
+havin' a grand pow-wow over it in the lower vestibule, when Vee had come
+along and got mixed up in the debate. She'd seen Mrs. Battou doin' the
+weep act on hubby's shoulder while he was tryin' to explain and makin'
+all sorts of promises. I expect the agent had heard such tales before.
+Anyway, he was kind of rough with 'em--at which Vee had sailed in and
+told him just what she thought.
+
+"I'm sure you would have done the same, Torchy," says she.
+
+"I might," says I, "if he hadn't been too husky. But what now?"
+
+"I told them not to worry a bit," says Vee, "and that when you came home
+you would tell them what to do. You will, won't you, Torchy?"
+
+Course, there was only one real sensible answer to that. Who was I, to
+step in casual and ditch a court order? But say, when the only girl in
+the universe tackles you with the clingin' clinch, hints that you're a
+big, brainy hero who can handle any proposition that's batted up to
+you--well, that's no time to be sensible.
+
+"I'll do any foolish little thing you name," says I.
+
+"Goody!" says Vee. "I just knew you would. We'll go right up and----"
+
+"Just a sec," says I. "Maybe I'd better have a private talk with this
+Mr. Battou first off. Suppose you run up and jolly the old lady while he
+comes down here."
+
+She agrees to that, and three minutes later I've struck a pose which is
+sort of a cross between that of a justice of the supreme court and a
+bush league umpire, while M. Leon Battou is sittin' on the edge of a
+chair opposite, conversin' rapid with both hands and a pair of eloquent
+eyebrows.
+
+"But consider, monsieur," he's sayin'. "Only because of owing so little!
+Can they not wait until I have found some good customers for my
+paintings?"
+
+"Oh! Then you're an artist, are you?"
+
+"I have the honor," says he. "I should be pleased to have you inspect
+some of my----"
+
+"It wouldn't help a bit," says I. "All I know about art is that as a
+rule it don't pay. Don't you do anything else?"
+
+He hunches his shoulders and spreads out both hands.
+
+"It is true, what you say of art," he goes on. "And so then I must do
+the decorating of walls--the wreaths of roses on the ceiling. That was
+my profession when we lived at Peronne. But here--there is trouble about
+the union. The greasy plumber will not work where I am, it seems. _Eh
+bien!_ I am forced out. So I return to my landscapes. Are there not many
+rich Americans who pay well for such things?"
+
+I waves him back into his chair.
+
+"How'd you come to wander so far from this Peronne place?" says I.
+
+"It was because of our son, Henri," says he. "You see, he preferred to
+be as my father was, a chef. I began that way, too. The Battous always
+do--a family of cooks. But I broke away. Henri would not. He became the
+pastry chef at the Hotel Gaspard in Peronne. And who shall say, too,
+that he was not an artist in his way? Yes, with a certain fame. At
+least, they heard here, in New York. You would not believe what they
+offered if he would leave Peronne. And after months of saying no he said
+yes. It was true. They paid as they promised--more. So Henri sends for
+us to come also. We found him living like a prince. Truly! For more than
+three years we enjoyed his good fortune.
+
+"And then--_la guerre_! Henri must go to join his regiment. True, he
+might have stayed. But we talked not of that. It was for France. So he
+went, not to return. Ah, yes! At Ypres, after only three months in the
+trenches. Then I say to the little mother, 'Courage! I, Leon Battou, am
+still a painter. The art which has been as a pastime shall be made to
+yield us bread. You shall see.' Ah, I believed--then."
+
+"Nothing doing, eh?" says I.
+
+Battou shakes his head.
+
+"Well," says I, "the surest bet just now would be to locate some
+wall-frescoin'. I'll see what can be done along that line."
+
+"Ah, that is noble of you, young man," exclaims Battou. "It is wonderful
+to find such a friend. A thousand thanks! I will tell the little mother
+that we are saved."
+
+With that he shakes me by both hands, gives me a bear hug, and rushes
+off.
+
+Pretty soon Vee comes down with smiles in her eyes.
+
+"I just knew you would find a way, Torchy," says she. "You don't know
+how happy you've made them. Now tell me all about it."
+
+And say, I couldn't convince her I hadn't done a blamed thing but shoot
+a little hot air, not after I'd nearly gone hoarse explainin'.
+
+"Oh, but you will," says she. "You'll do something."
+
+Who could help tryin', after that? I tackles the agent with a
+proposition that Battou should work out the back rent, but he's a
+fish-eyed gink.
+
+"Say," he growls out past his cigar, "if we tried to lug along every
+panhandling artist that wanted to graft rent off us, we'd be in fine
+shape by the end of the year, wouldn't we? Forget it."
+
+"How about his art stuff?" I asks Vee, when I got back.
+
+"Oh, utterly hopeless," says she. "But one can't tell him so. He doesn't
+know how bad it is. I suppose he is all right as a wall decorator. Do
+you know, Torchy, they must be in serious straits. Those two little
+rooms of theirs are almost bare, and I'm sure they've been living on
+cheese and crackers for days. What do you think I've done?"
+
+"Sent 'em an anonymous ham by parcels post?" says I.
+
+"No," says Vee. "I'm going to have them down to-night for the rehearsal
+dinner."
+
+"Fine dope!" says I. "And if they survive bein' practiced on----"
+
+But Vee has skipped off to the kitchenette without waitin' to hear the
+rest.
+
+"Is this to be a reg'lar dress rehearsal?" I asks, when I comes home
+again. "Should I doll up regardless?"
+
+Yes, she says I must. I was just strugglin' into my dinner coat, too,
+when the bell rings. I expect Vee had forgot to tell 'em that
+six-forty-five was our reg'lar hour. And say, M. Leon was right there
+with the boulevard costume--peg-top trousers, fancy vest, flowin' tie,
+and a silk tile. As for Madame Battou, she's all in gray and white.
+
+I'd towed 'em into the studio, and was havin' 'em shed their things,
+when Vee bounces in out of the kitchenette and announces impetuous:
+
+"Oh, Torchy! We've made a mess of everything. That horrid leg of lamb
+won't do anything but sozzle away in the pan; the string-beans have been
+scorched; and--oh, goodness!"
+
+She'd caught sight of our guests.
+
+"Please don't mind," says Vee. "We're not very good cooks, Bertha and I.
+We--we've spoiled everything, I guess."
+
+She's tryin' to be cheerful over it. And she sure is a picture, standin'
+there with a big apron coverin' up most of her evenin' dress, and her
+upper lip a bit trembly.
+
+"Buck up, Vee," says I. "Better luck next time. Chuck the whole shootin'
+match into the discards, and we'll all chase around to Roverti's
+and----"
+
+"Bother Roverti's!" breaks in Vee. "Can't we ever have a decent dinner
+in our own home? Am I too stupid for that? And there's that perfectly
+gug-good l-l-l-leg of--of----"
+
+"Pardon," says M. Battou, steppin' to the front; "but perhaps, if you
+would permit, I might assist with--with the lamb."
+
+It's a novel idea, I admit. No wonder Vee gasps a little.
+
+"Why not?" says I. "Course it ain't reg'lar, but if Mr. Battou wants to
+do some expert coachin', I expect you and Bertha could use it."
+
+"Do, Leon," urges Madame Battou. "Lamb, is it? Oh, he is wonderful with
+lamb."
+
+She hadn't overstated the case, either. Inside of two minutes he has his
+coat off, a bath towel draped over his fancy vest, and has sent Bertha
+skirmishin' down the avenue for garlic, cloves, parsley, carrots, and a
+few other things that had been overlooked, it seems.
+
+Well, we stands grouped around the kitchenette door for a while,
+watchin' him resuscitate that pale-lookin' leg of lamb, jab things into
+it, pour stuff over it, and mesmerize the gas oven into doin' its full
+duty.
+
+Once he gets started, he ain't satisfied with simply turnin' out the
+roast. He takes some string-beans and cuts 'em into shoelaces; he
+carves rosettes out of beets and carrots; he produces a swell salad out
+of nothing at all; and with a little flour and whipped cream he throws
+together some kind of puffy dessert that looked like it would melt in
+your mouth.
+
+And by seven-thirty we was sittin' down to a meal such as you don't meet
+up with outside of some of them Fifth Avenue joints where you have to
+own a head waiter before they let you in.
+
+"Whisper, Professor," says I, "did you work a spell on it, or what?"
+
+"Ah-h-h!" says Battou, chucklin' and rubbin' his hands together. "It is
+cooked _a la Paysan_, after the manner of Peronne, and with it is the
+sauce chateau."
+
+"That isn't mere cookery," says Vee; "that's art."
+
+It was quite a cheery evenin'. And after the Battous had gone, Vee and I
+asked each other, almost in chorus: "Do you suppose he'd do it again?"
+
+"He will if I'm any persuader," says I. "Wouldn't it be great to spring
+something like that on Mr. Robert?"
+
+And while I'm shavin' next mornin' I connect with the big idea. Do you
+ever get 'em that way? It cost me a nick under the ear, but I didn't
+care. While I'm usin' the alum stick I sketches out the scheme for Vee.
+
+"But, Torchy!" says she. "Do you think he would--really?"
+
+Before I can answer there's a ring at the door, and here is M. Leon
+Battou.
+
+"The agent once more!" says he, producin' a paper. "In three days, it
+says. But you have found me the wall-painting, yes?"
+
+"Professor," says I, "I hate to say it, but there's nothin' doing in the
+free-hand fresco line--absolutely."
+
+He slumps into a chair, and that pitiful, hunted look settles in his
+eyes.
+
+"Then--then we must go," says he.
+
+"Listen, Professor," says I, pattin' him soothin' on the shoulder. "Why
+not can this art stuff, that nobody wants, and switch to somethin'
+you're a wizard at?"
+
+"You--you mean," says he, "that I should--should turn chef? I--Leon
+Battou--in a big noisy hotel kitchen? Oh, but I could not. No, I could
+not!"
+
+"Professor," says I, "the only person in this town that I know of who's
+nutty enough to want to hire a wall decorator reg'lar is me!"
+
+"You!" gasps Battou, starin' around at our twelve by eighteen
+livin'-room.
+
+I nods.
+
+"What would you take it on for as a steady job?"
+
+"Oh, anything that would provide for us," says he, eager. "But how----"
+
+"That's just the point," says I. "When you wasn't paintin' could you
+cook a little on the side? Officially you'd be a decorator, but between
+times---- Eh?"
+
+He's a keen one, Mr. Battou.
+
+"For so charming young people," says he, bowin' low, "it would be a
+great pleasure. And the little mother--ah, you should see what a manager
+she is! She can make a franc go farther. Could she assist also?"
+
+"Could she!" exclaims Vee. "If she only would!"
+
+Well, say, inside of half an hour we'd fixed up the whole deal, I'd
+armed Battou with a check to shove under the nose of that agent, and Vee
+had given Bertha her permanent release. And believe me, compared to what
+was put before Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellins that evenin', the dress
+rehearsal dinner looked like Monday night at an actors' boardin'-house.
+
+"I say," whispers Mr. Robert, "your cook must be a real artist."
+
+"That's how he's carried on the family payroll," says I.
+
+"Of course," says Vee afterwards, "while we can afford it, I suppose, it
+does seem scandalously extravagant for us to have cooking like that
+every day."
+
+"Rather than have you worried with any more Bunglin' Berthas," says I,
+"I'd subsidize the whole of Peronne to come over. And just think of all
+I'll save by not havin' to buy my hat back from the coat-room boys every
+night."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A RECRUIT FOR THE EIGHT-THREE
+
+
+Have you a shiny little set of garden tools in your home? Have we? Well,
+I should seed catalogue. Honest to goodness! Here! I can show you a
+local time-table and my commuter's ticket. How about that, eh, for me?
+
+And I don't know now just what it was worked the sudden shift for
+us--the Battous, or our visit to the Robert Ellinses', or meetin' up
+with MacGregor Shinn, the consistent grouch.
+
+It begun with window-boxes. Professor Leon Battou, our official wall
+decorator and actin' cook, springs 'em on me timid one day after lunch.
+It had been some snack, too--onion soup sprinkled with croutons and
+sprayed with grated cheese; calf's brains _au buerre noir_; a mixed
+salad; and a couple of gooseberry tarts with the demi-tasse. Say, I'm
+gettin' so I can eat in French, even if I can't talk it.
+
+And while all that may listen expensive, I have Vee's word for it that
+since Madame Battou has been doin' the marketin' the high cost of
+livin' has been jarred off the roost. I don't know how accurate
+Professor Leon is at countin' up the calories in every meal, but I'm
+here to announce that he always produces something tasty, with no
+post-prandial regrets concealed in the bottom of the casserole.
+
+"Professor," says I, "I've been a stranger to this burry brains style of
+nourishment a long time, but you can ring an encore on that whenever you
+like."
+
+He smiles grateful, but shakes his head.
+
+"Ah, Monsieur," says he,--oh, yes, just like that,--"but if I had the
+fresh chives, the--the _fin herbes_--ah, then you should see!"
+
+"Well, can't Madame get what you need at the stores?" says I.
+
+"But at such a price!" says Leon. "And of so discouraging a quality.
+While, if we had but a few handfuls of good soil in some small boxes by
+the windows---- Come, I will show you. Here, and here, where the sun
+comes in the morning. I could secure them myself if you would not think
+them unlovely to have in view."
+
+"How about it, Vee?" I asks. "Are we too proud to grow our soup greens
+on the premises?"
+
+She says we ain't, so I tells Leon to breeze ahead with his hangin'
+garden. Course, I ain't lookin' for anything more'n a box on the ledge.
+But he's an ingenious old boy, Leon. With a hammer and saw and a few
+boxes from the grocery, he builds a rack that fits into one of the front
+windows; and the first thing I know, he has the space chuckful of
+shallow trays, and seeds planted in every one. A few days later, and the
+other window is blocked off similar. Also I get a bill from the florist
+for two bushels of dirt.
+
+Well, our front windows did look kind of odd, and our view out was
+pretty well barred off; but he had painted the things up neat, and he
+did all his waterin' and fussin' around early in the mornin', so we let
+it ride. When he starts in to use our bedroom windows the same way,
+though, I has to call him off.
+
+"See here, Professor," says I, "you ain't mistakin' this studio
+apartment for a New Jersey truck-farm, are you! Besides, we have to keep
+them windows open at night, and your green stuff is apt to get nipped."
+
+"Oh, but the night air is bad to breathe, Monsieur," says he.
+
+"Not for us," says I. "Anyway, we're used to it, so I guess you'll have
+to lay off this bedroom garden business."
+
+He takes away the boxes, but it's plain he's disappointed. I believe if
+I'd let him gone on he'd had cabbages growin' on the mantelpiece, a
+lettuce bed on the readin'-table, and maybe a potato patch on the
+fire-escape. I never knew gardenin' could be made such an indoor sport.
+
+"Poor chap!" says Vee. "He has been telling me what wonderful things he
+used to raise when he lived in Peronne. Isn't there some way, Torchy,
+that we could give him more room?"
+
+"We might rent the roof and glass it in for him," I suggests, "or get a
+permit to bridge over the street."
+
+"Silly!" says she, rumplin' my red hair reckless.
+
+That was about the time we was havin' some of that delayed winter
+weather, and it was touchin' to see Professor Battou nurse along them
+pale green shoots that he'd coaxed up in his window-boxes. Then it runs
+off warm and sunny again, just as we gets this week-end invite from Mr.
+Robert.
+
+Course, I'd been out to his Long Island place before, but somehow I
+hadn't got excited over it. This time it's different. Vee was goin'
+along, for one thing. And I expect the fact that spring had come
+bouncin' in on us after a hard winter had something to do with our
+enthusiasm for gettin' out of town. You know how it is. For eleven
+months you're absolutely sure the city's the only place to live in, and
+you feel sorry for them near-Rubes who have to catch trains to get home.
+And then, all of a sudden, about this time of year, you get that
+restless feelin', and wonder what it is ails you. I think it struck Vee
+harder than it did me.
+
+"Goody!" says she, when I tell her we're expected to go out Saturday
+noon and stay over until Monday mornin'. "It is real country out there,
+too, isn't it?"
+
+"Blamed near an hour away," says I. "Ought to be, hadn't it?"
+
+"I hope they have lilac bushes in bloom," says Vee. "Do you know,
+Torchy, if I lived in the country, I'd have those if nothing else.
+Wouldn't you?"
+
+"I expect so," says I, "though I ain't doped out just what I would do in
+a case like that. It ain't seemed worth while. But if lilacs are the
+proper stunt for a swell country place, I'll bet Mr. Robert's got 'em."
+
+By the time we'd been shot out to Harbor Hills station, though, I'd
+forgot whether it was lilacs or lilies-of-the-valley that Vee was
+particular about; for Mr. Robert goes along with us, and he's joshin'
+us about our livin' in a four-and-bath and sportin' a French chef.
+
+"Really," says he, "to live up to him you ought to move into a brewer's
+palace on Riverside Drive, at least."
+
+"Oh, Battou would be satisfied if I'd lease Madison Square park for him,
+so he could raise onions," says I.
+
+Which reminds Mr. Robert of something.
+
+"Oh, I say!" he goes on. "You must see my garden. I'm rather proud of
+it, you know."
+
+"Your garden!" says I, grinnin'. "You don't mean you've been gettin' the
+hoe and rake habit, Mr. Robert?"
+
+Honest, that's the last thing you'd look for from him, for until he got
+married about the only times he ever strayed from the pavements was when
+he went yachtin'. But by the way he talks now you'd think farmer was his
+middle name.
+
+"Now, over there," says he, after we've been picked up at the station by
+his machine and rolled off three or four miles, "over there I am raising
+a crop of Italian clover to plow in. That's a new hedge I'm setting out,
+too--hydrangeas, I think. It takes time to get things in shape, you
+see."
+
+"Looks all right to me, as it is," says I. "You got a front yard big
+enough to get lost in."
+
+Also the house ain't any small shack, with all its dormers and striped
+awnin's and deep verandas.
+
+But it's too nice an afternoon to spend much time inside, and after
+we've found Mrs. Robert, Vee asks to be shown the garden.
+
+"Certainly," says Mr. Robert. "I will exhibit it myself. That is--er--by
+the way, Gertrude, where the deuce is that garden of ours?"
+
+Come to find out, it was Mrs. Robert who was the pie-plant and radish
+expert. She could tell you which rows was beets and which was corn
+without lookin' it up on her chart.
+
+She'd been takin' a course in landscape-gardenin', too; and as she
+pilots us around the grounds, namin' the different bushes and things,
+she listens like a nursery pamphlet. And Vee falls for it hard.
+
+"How perfectly splendid," says she, "to be able to plan things like
+that, and to know so many shrubs by their long names. But haven't you
+anything as common as lilacs!"
+
+Mrs. Robert laughs and shakes her head.
+
+"They were never mentioned in my course, you see," says she. "But our
+nearest neighbor has some wonderful lilac bushes. Robert, don't you
+think we might walk down the east drive and ask your dear friend Mr.
+MacGregor Shinn if he'd mind----"
+
+"Decidedly no," cuts in Mr. Robert. "I'd much prefer not to trouble Mr.
+Shinn at all."
+
+"Oh, very well," says Mrs. Robert. And then, turnin' to us: "We haven't
+been particularly fortunate in our relations with Mr. Shinn; our fault,
+no doubt."
+
+But you know Vee. Half an hour later, when we've been left to ourselves,
+she announces:
+
+"Come along, Torchy. I am going to find that east drive."
+
+"It's a case of lilacs or bust, eh?" says I. "All right; I'm right
+behind you. But let's make it a sleuthy getaway, so they won't know."
+
+We let on it was a risky stunt, slippin' out a side terrace door,
+dodgin' past the garage, and finally strikin' a driveway different from
+the one we'd come in by. We follows along until we fetches up by some
+big stone gateposts.
+
+"There they are!" exclaims Vee. "Loads of them. And aren't they
+fragrant? Smell, Torchy."
+
+"I am," says I, sniffin' deep. "Don't you hear me?"
+
+"Yes; and that Mr. Shinn will too, if you're as noisy as that over it,"
+says she. "I suppose that is where he lives. Isn't it the cutest little
+cottage?"
+
+"It needs paint here and there," says I.
+
+"I know," says Vee. "But look at that old Dutch roof with the wide
+eaves, and the recessed doorway, and the trellises on either side, and
+that big clump of purple lilacs nestling against the gable end. Oh, and
+there's a cunning little pond in the rear, just where it ought to be! I
+do wish we might go in and walk around a bit."
+
+"Why not?" says I. "What would it hurt?"
+
+"But that Shinn person," protests Vee, "might--might not----"
+
+"Well, he couldn't any more'n shoo us off," says I, "and if he's nutty
+enough to do that after a good look at you, then he's hopeless."
+
+"You absurd boy!" says Vee, squeezin' my hand. "Well, anyway, we might
+venture in a step or two."
+
+As a matter of fact, there don't seem to be anyone in sight. You might
+almost think nobody lived there; for the new grass ain't been cut, the
+flower beds are full of dry weeds left over from last fall, and most of
+the green shutters are closed.
+
+There's smoke comin' from the kitchen chimney, though, so we wanders
+around front, bringin' up under the big lilac bush. It's just covered
+with blossoms--a truck-load, I should say; and it did seem a shame, Vee
+bein' so strong for 'em, that she couldn't have one little spray.
+
+"About a quarter a bunch, them would be on Broadway," says I, diggin' up
+some change. "Well, here's where Neighbor Shinn makes a sale."
+
+And, before Vee can object, I've snapped off the end of a twig.
+
+I'd just dropped the quarter in an envelop and was stickin' it on the
+end of the broken branch, when the front door opens, and out dashes this
+tall gink with the rusty Vandyke and the hectic face. Yep, it's a lurid
+map, all right. Some of it might have been from goin' without a hat in
+the wind and weather, for his forehead and bald spot are just as
+high-colored as the rest; but there's a lot of temper tint, too,
+lightin' up the tan, and the deep furrows between the eyes shows it
+ain't an uncommon state for him to be in. Quite a husk he is, costumed
+in a plaid golf suit, and he bores down on us just as gentle as a
+tornado.
+
+"I say, you!" he calls out. "Stop where you are."
+
+"Don't hurry," says I. "We'll wait for you."
+
+"Ye will, wull ye!" he snarls, as he comes stampin' up in front of us.
+"Ye'd best. And what have ye there, Miss? Hah! Pickin' me posies, eh?
+And trespassin', too."
+
+"That's right," says I. "Petty larceny and breakin' and enterin'. I'm
+the guilty party."
+
+"I'm sure there's nothing to make such a fuss about," says Vee, eyin'
+him scornful.
+
+"Oh, ho!" says he. "It's a light matter, I suppose, prowling around
+private grounds and pilfering? I ought to be taking it as a joke, eh?
+Don't ye know, you two, I could have you taken in charge for this?"
+
+"Breeze ahead, then," says I. "Call the high sheriff. Only let's not get
+all foamed up over it, Mr. MacGregor Shinn."
+
+"Ha!" says he. "Then ye know who I am? Maybe you're stopping up at the
+big house?"
+
+"We are guests of Mr. Ellins, your neighbor," puts in Vee.
+
+"He's no neighbor of mine," snaps Shinn. "Not him. His bulldog worries
+me cat, his roosters wake me up in the morning, and his Dago workmen
+chatter about all day long. No, I'll not own such a man as neighbor. Nor
+will I have his guests stealing my posies."
+
+"Then take it," says Vee, throwing the lilac spray on the ground.
+
+"You'll find a quarter stuck on the bush," says I. "Sorry, MacGregor, we
+couldn't make a trade. The young lady is mighty fond of lilacs."
+
+"Is she, now?" says Shinn, still scowlin' at us.
+
+"And she thinks your place here is pretty cute," I adds.
+
+"It's a rotten hole," says he.
+
+"Maybe you're a poor judge," says I. "If it was fixed up a bit I should
+think it might be quite spiffy."
+
+"What call has an old bachelor to be fixing things up?" he demands.
+"What do I care how the place looks? And what business is it of yours,
+anyway?"
+
+"Say, you're a consistent grouch, ain't you?" says I, givin' him the
+grin. "What's the particular trouble--was you toppin' your drive
+to-day?"
+
+"Slicin', mon," says he. "Hardly a tee shot found the fairway the whole
+round. And then you two come breaking me bushes."
+
+"My error," says I. "But you should have hung out a sign that you was
+inside chewin' nails."
+
+"I was doing nothing of the kind," says he. "I was waiting for that
+grinning idiot, Len Hung, to give me me tea."
+
+"Well, don't choke over it when you do get it," says I. "And if you
+ain't ready to sic the police on us we'll be trotting along back."
+
+"Ye wull not," says MacGregor; "ye'll have tea with me."
+
+It sounds like a threat, and I can see Vee gettin' ready to object
+strenuous. So I gives her the nudge.
+
+I expect it's because I'm so used to Old Hickory's blowin' out a fuse
+that I don't duck quicker when a gas-bomb disposition begins to sputter
+around. They don't mean half of it, these furious fizzers.
+
+Sometimes it's sciatica, more often a punk digestion, and seldom pure
+cussedness. If you don't humor 'em by comin' back messy yourself, but
+just jolly 'em along, they're apt to work out of it. And I'd seen sort
+of a human flicker in them blue-gray eyes of MacGregor Shinn's.
+
+"Vee," says I, "our peevish friend is invitin' us to take tea with him.
+Shall we chance it?"
+
+And you know what a good sport Vee is. She lets the curve come into her
+mouth corners again, both of her cheek dimples show, and she shoots a
+quizzin' smile at Mr. Shinn.
+
+"Does he say it real polite?" she asks.
+
+"Na," says MacGregor. "But there'll be hot scones and marmalade."
+
+"M-m-m-m!" says Vee. "Let's, Torchy."
+
+It's an odd finish to an affair that started so scrappy. Not that Shinn
+reverses himself entirely, or turns from a whiskered golf grump into a
+stage fairy in spangled skirts. He goes right on with his growlin' and
+grumblin'--about the way his Chink cook serves the tea, about havin' to
+live in a rotten hole like Harbor Hills, about everything in general.
+But a great deal of it is just to hear himself talk, I judge.
+
+We had a perfectly good high tea, and them buttered scones with
+marmalade couldn't be beat. Also he shows us all over the house, and Vee
+raves about it.
+
+"Look, Torchy!" says she. "That glimpse of water from the living-room
+windows. Isn't that dear? And one could have such a wonderful garden
+beyond. Such a splendid big fireplace, too. And what huge beams in the
+ceiling! It's a very old house, isn't it, Mr. Shinn?"
+
+"The rascally agent who sold it to me said it was," says MacGregor, "but
+I wouldn't believe a word of his on any subject. 'Did I ask you for an
+old house, at all?' I tells him. For what I wanted was just a place
+where I could live quiet, and maybe have me game of golf when I wanted
+it. But here I've gone off me game; and, besides, the country's no place
+to live quiet in. I should be in town, so I should, like any decent
+white man. I've a mind to look up a place at once. Try another scone,
+young lady."
+
+So it was long after six before we got away, and the last thing
+MacGregor does is to load Vee down with a whole armful of lilac
+blossoms.
+
+I suppose Mr. and Mrs. Robert thought we'd been makin' a wholesale raid
+when they saw us comin' in with the plunder. Mrs. Robert almost turns
+pale.
+
+"Mercy!" says she. "You don't mean to say you got all those from our
+neighbor's bushes, do you?"
+
+"Uh-huh," says I. "We've been mesmerizin' MacGregor. He's as tame a
+Scot now as you'd want to see."
+
+They could hardly believe it, and when they heard about our havin' tea
+with him they gasped.
+
+"Of all persons!" says Mrs. Robert. "Why, he has been glaring at us for
+a year, and sending us the most bristling messages. I don't understand."
+
+Mr. Robert, though, winks knowin'.
+
+"Some of Torchy's red-headed diplomacy, I suspect," says he. "I must
+engage you to make our peace with MacGregor."
+
+That's all we saw of him, though, durin' our stay. For one thing, we was
+kept fairly busy. I never knew you could have so much fun in the
+country. Ever watch a bunch of young ducks waddlin' about? Say, ain't
+they a circus! And them fluffy little chicks squabblin' over worms.
+Honest, I near laughed myself sick. Vee was for luggin' some of 'em home
+to the apartment. But she was thrilled over 'most everything out there,
+from the fat robins on the lawn to the new leaves on the trees.
+
+And, believe me, when we gets back to town again, our studio apartment
+seems cramped and stuffy. We talked over everything we'd seen and done
+at the Ellinses'.
+
+"That's really living, isn't it?" says Vee.
+
+"Why not," says I, "with a twenty-room house, and grounds half as big as
+Central Park?"
+
+"I know," says Vee. "But a little place like Mr. Shinn's would be large
+enough for us."
+
+"I expect it would," says I. "You don't really think you'd like to live
+out there, do you, though?"
+
+"Wouldn't I!" says Vee, her eyes sparklin'. "I'd love it."
+
+"What would you do all day alone?" I suggests.
+
+"I'd raise ducks and chickens and flowers," says Vee. "And Leon could
+have a garden. Just think!"
+
+Yep--I thought. I must have kept awake hours that night, tryin' not to.
+And the more I mulled it over---- Well, in the mornin' I had a talk with
+Mr. Robert, after which I got busy with the long-distance 'phone. I
+didn't say anything much at lunch about what I'd done, but around three
+o'clock I calls up the apartment.
+
+"I'm luggin' home someone to dinner," says I. "Guess who?"
+
+Vee couldn't.
+
+"MacGregor the grouch," says I.
+
+"Really!" says Vee. "How funny!"
+
+"It's part of the plot," says I. "Tell the Professor to spread himself
+on the eatings, and have the rooms all fixed up slick."
+
+Vee says she will. And she does. MacGregor falls for it, too. You should
+have seen him after dinner, leanin' back comfortable in our biggest
+chair, sippin' his coffee, and puffin' one of Old Hickory's special
+perfectos that I'd begged for the occasion.
+
+And still I didn't let on. What I'm after is to have him spring the
+proposition on me. Just before he's ready to go, too, he does.
+
+"I say," says he casual, "this isn't such a bad hole you have here."
+
+"Perfectly rotten," says I.
+
+"Then we might make a trade," says he. "What?"
+
+"There's no tellin'," says I. "You mean a swap, as things stand?"
+
+"That's it," says he. "I'm no hand for moving rubbish about."
+
+"Me either," says I. "But if you mean business, suppose you drop in
+to-morrow at the office, about ten-thirty, and talk it over."
+
+"Very well," says MacGregor. "I'll stop in town to-night."
+
+"Oh, Torchy!" says Vee, after he's gone. "Do--do you suppose he
+will--really?"
+
+"You're still for it, eh?" says I. "Sure, now?"
+
+"Oh, it would be almost too good to be true," says she. "That could be
+made just the dearest place!"
+
+"Yes," says I; "but my job is to talk MacGregor into lettin' it go
+cheap, or else we can't afford to touch it."
+
+Well, I can't claim it was all my smooth work that did the trick, for
+MacGregor had bought the place at a bargain first off, and now he was
+anxious to unload. Still, he hadn't been born north of Glasgow for
+nothing. But the figures Mr. Robert said would be about right I managed
+to shade by twenty per cent., and my lump invoice of that old mahogany
+of ours maybe was a bit generous. Anyway, when I goes home that night I
+tosses Vee a long envelop.
+
+"What's this?" says she.
+
+"That's your chicken permit," says I. "All aboard for Lilac Lodge! Gee!
+I wonder should I grow whiskers, livin' out there?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+TORCHY IN THE GAZINKUS CLASS
+
+
+I expect I'll get used to it all in time. This rural stuff, I mean. But
+it ain't goin' to come easy. When you've been brought up to think of
+home as some place where you've got a right to leave your trunk as long
+as you pay the rent prompt,--a joint where you have so many square feet
+of space on a certain floor, and maybe eight or ten inches of brick and
+plaster between you and a lot of strangers,--and then all of a sudden
+you switch to a whole house that's all yours, with gobs of land all
+around it, and trees and bushes and things that you can do what you like
+with--well, it's sort of staggerin' at first.
+
+Why, the day Vee and I moved into this Harbor Hills place that I'd made
+the swift trade for with MacGregor Shinn, we just had our baggage dumped
+in the middle of the livin'-room, chucked our wraps on some chairs, and
+went scoutin' around from one room to another for over an hour, kind of
+nutty and excited.
+
+"Oh, look, Torchy!" Vee would exclaim about twice a minute when she
+discovered something new.
+
+You know, we'd been in the house only once before, and then we'd looked
+around just casual. And if you want to find out how little you really
+see when you think you're lookin', you want to make a deal like that
+once--buy a joint just as it stands, and then, a few days after, camp
+down in it and tot up what you've really got. Why, say, you'd 'most
+thought we'd been blindfolded that first time.
+
+Course, this was different. Now we was takin' stock, you might say, of
+the things we was goin' to live with. And, believe me, I never had any
+idea I'd ever own such a collection, or so big a slice of the U. S. A.
+
+"Only think, Torchy," says Vee, after we've made the rounds inside. "Ten
+rooms, just for us!"
+
+"Twelve, countin' the cellar and attic," says I. "But there's more
+outside, ain't there?"
+
+Yep, there was. There was an old stable that had been turned into a
+garage, with a couple of rooms finished off upstairs. Then there was a
+carriage shed, with more rooms over that, also a chicken house beyond.
+And stowed away in odd corners was all kinds of junk that might be more
+or less useful to have: a couple of lawn-mowers, an old sleigh hoisted
+up on the rafters of the carriage house, a weird old buggy, a plow, a
+grindstone, a collection of old chairs and sofas that had seen better
+days, a birch-bark canoe--things like that.
+
+Then there was our lily pond. We had to walk all round that, poke in
+with a pole to see how deep it might be, and wonder if there was any
+fish in it. On beyond was some trees--apple and pear and cherry,
+accordin' to Vee, and 'way at the back a tall cedar hedge.
+
+"Why, it's almost an estate," says Vee. "Nearly five acres, you know.
+How does it seem, Torchy, to think that all this is ours?"
+
+"How?" says I. "Why, I feel like I was the Grand Gazinkus of Gazook."
+
+But, at that, my feelin's wa'n't a marker to the emotions Professor Leon
+Battou, our artist-chef, manages to work up. He's so tickled at gettin'
+back to the country and away from the city, where him and Madame Battou
+come so near starvin' on the street, that he goes skippin' around like a
+sunshine kid, pattin' the trees, droppin' down on his hands and knees in
+the grass to dig up dandelions, and keepin' up a steady stream of
+explosive French and rapid-fire English.
+
+"Ah, but it is all so good!" says he. "_Le bleu ciel, les fleurs, les
+oiseaux! C'est bonne, tres bonne. Ne c'est pas?_"
+
+"I expect it is, Leon," says I. "Although I might not state it just that
+way myself. Picked out a spot yet for your garden?"
+
+Foolish question! That was his first move, after taking a glance at the
+particular brand of cook-stove he'd got to wrestle with. Just to the
+left of the kitchen wing is a little plot shut in by privet bushes and a
+trellis, which is where he says the _fine herbes_ are meant to grow. He
+tows us around there and exhibits it chesty. Mostly it's full of last
+year's weeds; but he explains how he will soon have it in shape. And for
+the next week the only way we ever got any meals cooked was because
+Madame Battou used to go drag him in by the arm and make him quit
+diggin' long enough to hash up some of them tasty dishes for us.
+
+If all amateur gardeners are apt to go so dippy over it, I hope I don't
+catch the disease. No danger, I guess. I made my stab at it about the
+third day, when Vee wanted some ground spaded up for a pansy bed. And
+say, in half an hour, there, I'd worked up enough palm blisters and
+backache to last me a month. It may seem sport to some people, but to me
+it has all the ear-marks of plain, hard work, such as you can indulge
+in reg'lar by carryin' a foldin' dinner-pail and lettin' yourself out to
+a padrone.
+
+Leon, though, just couldn't seem to let it alone. He almost made a vice
+of it, to my mind. Why, say, he's out there at first crack of day,
+whenever that is; and in the evenin', as soon as he has served dinner,
+he sneaks out to put in a few more licks, and stays until it's so dark
+he can hardly find his way back.
+
+You know all them window-boxes he had clutterin' up the studio
+apartment. Well, he insists on cratin' every last one of 'em and
+expressin' 'em along; and now he has all that alleged lettuce and
+parsley and carrots and so on set out in neat little rows; and when he
+ain't sprinklin' 'em with the hose or dosin' 'em with fertilizer, he's
+out there ticklin' 'em with a rake.
+
+"Gee!" says I. "I thought all you had to do to a garden was just to
+chuck in the seeds and let 'em grow. But accordin' to your method it
+would be less trouble bringin' up a pair of twins."
+
+"Ah-h-h-h!" says he. "But monsieur has not the passion for growing green
+things."
+
+"Thanks be, then," says I. "It would land me in the liniment ward if I
+had."
+
+I must say, though, that Vee's 'most as bad with her flowers. Honest,
+when she shows me where she's planned to have this and that, and hints
+that I can get busy durin' my spare time with the spade, I almost wished
+we was back in town.
+
+"What?" I gasps. "Want me to excavate all that? Hal-lup!"
+
+"Pooh!" says Vee. "It will do you good."
+
+Maybe she thought so. But I knew it wouldn't. So I chases up the hill to
+the Ellins place, and broke in on Mr. Robert just as he's finishin'
+breakfast.
+
+"Say," says I, "you ain't got a baby-grand steam-shovel or anything like
+that around the place, have you?"
+
+He says he's sorry, but he ain't. When he hears what I'm up against,
+though, he comes to the rescue noble by lendin' me one of his expert
+Dago soil-disturbers, at $1.75 per--and with Vee bossin' him she got the
+whole job done in half a day. After that I begun to enjoy gardenin' a
+bit more. I'm gettin' to be a real shark at it, too. And ambitious! You
+ought to hear me.
+
+"How about havin' a couple more lanes of string-beans laid out?" I
+suggests. "And maybe a few hundred mounds of green corn, eh?"
+
+And then I can watch Joe start the enterprise with a plow and an old
+white horse, and I can go to the office feelin' that, no matter how much
+I seem to be soldierin', as a matter of fact I'm puttin' in a full day's
+work. When I get back in the afternoon, the first thing I want to see is
+how much I've got done.
+
+Not that I'm able to duck all kinds of labor that way. Believe me, a
+country place is no loafin' spot, especially when it's new, or you're
+new to it. Vee tends to that. Say, that girl can think up more odd forms
+of givin' me exercise than a bunch of football coaches--movin' bureaus,
+hangin' pictures, puttin' up curtain-rods, fixin' door-catches, and
+little things like that.
+
+Up to a few weeks ago all I knew about saws and screw-drivers and so on
+was that they were shiny things displayed in the hardware store windows.
+But if I keep on tacklin' all the odd jobs she sics me on to, I'll be
+able to qualify pretty soon as a boss carpenter, a master plumber, and
+an expert electrician.
+
+Course, I gouge myself now and then. My knuckles look like I'd been
+mixin' in a food riot, and I've spoiled two perfectly good suits of
+clothes. But I can point with pride to at least three doors that I've
+coaxed into shuttin', I've solved the mystery of what happens to a
+window-weight when the sash-cord breaks, and I've rigged up two
+drop-lights without gettin' myself electrocuted or askin' any advice
+from Mr. Edison.
+
+Which reminds me that what I can't seem to get used to about the country
+is the poor way it's lighted up at night. You know, our place is out a
+couple of miles from the village and the railroad station; and, while we
+got electric bulbs enough in the house, outside there ain't a lamp-post
+in sight. Dark! Say, after 8 P.M. you might as well be livin' in a
+sub-cellar with the sidewalk gratin' closed. Honest, the only glim we
+can see from our front porch is a flicker from the porte cochere at the
+Ellinses' up on the hill, and most of that is cut off by trees and lilac
+bushes.
+
+Vee don't seem to mind, though. These mild evenin's recent, she's
+dragged me out after dinner for a spell and made me sit with her
+watchin' for the moon to come up. I do it, but it ain't anything I'm
+strong for. I can't see the percentage in starin' out at nothing at all
+but black space and guessin' where the driveway is or what them dark
+streaks are. Then, there's so many weird sounds I can't account for.
+
+"What's all that jinglin' going on?" I asks the other evenin'. "Sounds
+like a squad of junkmen comin' up the pike."
+
+"Silly!" says Vee. "Frogs, of course."
+
+"Oh!" says I.
+
+Then I listens some more, until something else breaks loose. It's sort
+of a cross between the dyin' moan of a gyastacutus and the whine of a
+subway express roundin' a sharp curve.
+
+"For the love of Pete," I breaks out, "what do you call that?"
+
+Vee chuckles. "Didn't you see the calf up at Mr. Robert's?" she asks.
+"Well, that's the old cow calling to him."
+
+"If she feels as bad as that," says I, "I wish she'd wait until mornin'
+to express herself. That's the most doleful sound I ever heard. Come on;
+let's go in while you tinkle out something lively and cheerin' on the
+piano."
+
+I never thought I was one of the timid kind, either. Course, I'm no
+Carnegie hero, or anything like that; but I've always managed to get
+along in the city without developin' a case of nerves. Out here, though,
+it's different. Two or three evenin's now I've felt almost jumpy, just
+over nothing at all, it seems.
+
+Maybe that's why I didn't show up any better, here the other night, when
+Vee rings in this silent alarm on me. I was certainly poundin' my ear
+industrious when gradually I gets the idea that someone is shakin' me by
+the shoulders. It's Vee.
+
+"Torchy," she whispers husky. "Get up."
+
+"Eh?" says I, pryin' my eyes open reluctant. "Get up? Wha-wha' for?"
+
+"Oh, don't be stupid about it," says she. "I've been trying to rouse you
+for five minutes. Please get up and come to the window."
+
+"Nothing doing," says I snugglin' into the pillow again. "I--I'm busy."
+
+"But you must," says she. "Listen. I think someone is prowling around
+the house."
+
+"Let 'em ramble, then," says I. "What do we care?"
+
+"But suppose it's a--a burglar?" she whispers.
+
+I'll admit that gives me a goose-fleshy feelin' down the spine. It's
+such a disturbin' word to have sprung on you in the middle of the night.
+
+"Let's not suppose anything of the sort," says I.
+
+"But I'm sure I saw someone just now, when I got up to fix the shade,"
+insists Vee. "Someone who stepped out into the moonlight right there,
+between the shadows of those two trees. Then he disappeared out that
+way. Come and look."
+
+Well, I was up by then, and half awake, so I tries to peer out into the
+back yard. I'm all for grantin' a general alibi, though.
+
+"Maybe you was only dreamin', Vee," says I. "Anyway, let's wait until
+mornin', and then----"
+
+"There!" she breaks in excited. "Just beyond the garden trellis. See?"
+
+Yep. There's no denyin' that someone is sneakin' around out there. First
+off I thought it might be a female in a white skirt and a raincoat; but
+when we gets the head showin' plain above some bushes we can make out a
+mustache.
+
+"It's a man!" gasps Vee, clutchin' me by the sleeve.
+
+"Uh-huh," says I. "So it is."
+
+"Well?" says Vee.
+
+I expect that was my cue to come across with the bold and noble acts.
+But, somehow, I didn't yearn to dash out into the moonlight in my
+pajamas and mix in rough with a total stranger. But I didn't mean to
+give it away if I could help it.
+
+"Got a nerve, ain't he?" says I. "Let's wait; maybe he'll fall into the
+pond."
+
+"How absurd!" says Vee. "No; we must do something right away."
+
+"Of course," says I. "I'll shout and ask him what the blazes he thinks
+he's doin'."
+
+"Don't," says Vee. "There may be others--in the house. And before you
+let him know you see him, you ought to be armed. Get your revolver."
+
+At that I just gawped at Vee, for she knows well enough I don't own
+anything more deadly than a safety razor, and that all the gun-play I
+ever indulged in was once or twice at a Coney Island shootin' gallery
+where I slaughtered a clay pipe by aimin' at a glass ball.
+
+"Whaddye mean, revolver?" I asks.
+
+"S-s-s-sh!" says she. "There's that Turkish pistol, you know, that Mr.
+Shinn left hanging over the mantel in the living-room."
+
+"Think it's loaded?" I whispers.
+
+"It might be," says Vee. "Anyway, it's better than nothing. Let's get
+it."
+
+"All right," says I. "Soon as I get something on. Just a sec."
+
+So I jumps into a pair of trousers and a coat and some bath slippers,
+while Vee throws on a dressin'-sack. We feels our way sleuthy
+downstairs, and after rappin' my shins on a couple of rockers I gets
+down the old pistol. It's a curious, wicked-lookin' antique about two
+feet long, with a lot of carvin' and silver inlay on the barrel. I'd
+never examined the thing to see how it worked, but it feels sort of
+comfortin' just to grip it in my hand. We unlocks the back door easy.
+
+"Now you stay inside, Vee," says I, "while I go scoutin' and----"
+
+"No indeed," says Vee. "I am going too."
+
+"But you mustn't," I insists.
+
+"Hush!" says she. "I shall."
+
+And she did. So we begins our first burglar hunt as a twosome, and I
+must say there's other sports I enjoy more. Out across the lawn we
+sneaks, steppin' as easy as we can, and keepin' in the shadow most of
+the time.
+
+"Guess he must have skipped," says I.
+
+"But he was here only a moment ago," says Vee. "Don't you know, we saw
+him---- Oh, oh!"
+
+I don't blame her for gaspin'. Not twenty feet ahead of us, crouchin'
+down in the cabbage patch, is the villain. Just why he should be tryin'
+to hide among a lot of cabbage plants not over three inches high, I
+don't stop to think. All I knew was that here was someone prowlin'
+around at night on my premises, and all in a flash I begins to see red.
+Swingin' Vee behind me, I unlimbers the old pistol and cocks it. I
+didn't care whether this was the open season for burglars or not. I
+wanted to get this one, and get him hard.
+
+Must have been a minute or more that I had him covered, tryin' to steady
+my arm so I could keep the muzzle pointed straight at his back, when all
+of a sudden he lifts his right hand and begins scratchin' his ear.
+Somehow, that breaks the spell. Why should a burglar hump himself on his
+hands and knees in a truck patch and stop to scratch his ear?
+
+"Hey, you!" I sings out real crisp.
+
+Maybe that ain't quite the way to open a line of chat with a midnight
+marauder. I've been kidded about it some since; but at the time it
+sounded all right. And it had the proper effect. He comes up on his toes
+with his hands in the air, like he was worked by springs.
+
+"That's right; keep your paws up," says I. "And, remember, if you go to
+makin' any funny moves----"
+
+"Why, Torchy!" exclaims Vee, grabbin' my shootin' arm. "It's Leon!"
+
+"Wha-a-a-at!" says I, starin' at this wabbly party among the coldslaw.
+
+But it's Professor Battou, all right. He's costumed in a night-shirt, an
+old overcoat, and a pair of rubbers; and he certainly does look odd,
+standin' there in the moonlight with his elbows up and his knees
+knockin' one another.
+
+"Well, well, Leon!" says I, sighin' relieved. "So it's you, is it? And
+we had you all spotted as a second-story worker. All right; you don't
+need to hold the pose any longer. But maybe you'll tell us what you're
+crawlin' around out here in the garden for at this time of night."
+
+He tried to, but he's had such a scare thrown into him that his
+conversation works are all gummed up. After we've led him into the
+house, though, and he's had a drink of spring water, he does a little
+better.
+
+"It was to protect the cabbages, monsieur," says he.
+
+"Eh?" says I. "Protect 'em from what?"
+
+"There is a wicked worm," says Leon, "which does his evil work in the
+night. Ah, such a sly beast! And so destructive! Just at the top of the
+young root he eats--snip, snip! And in the morning I find that two,
+four, sometimes six tender plants he has cut off. I am enrage. 'Ha!' I
+say. 'I will discover you yet at your mischief.' So I cannot sleep for
+thinking. But I had found him; yes, two. And I was searching for more
+when monsieur----"
+
+"Yes, I know," says I. He's glancin' worried at the old pistol I'm still
+holdin' in my hand. "My error, Leon. I might have guessed. And as the
+clock's just strikin' three, I think we'd all better hit the hay again.
+Come on, Vee; it's all over."
+
+And, in spite of that half hour or so of time out, I was up earlier than
+usual in the mornin'. I had a little job to do that I'd planned out
+before I went to sleep again. As soon as I'm dressed I slips downstairs,
+takes that Turkish pistol, and chucks it into the middle of the pond.
+I'll never know whether it was loaded or not. I don't want to know. For
+if it had been---- Well, what's the use?
+
+Comin' back in through the kitchen, I finds Leon busy dishin' up toast
+and eggs. He glances at me nervous, and then hangs his head. But he gets
+out what he has to say man fashion.
+
+"I trust monsieur is not displeased," says he. "It was not wise for me
+to walk about at night. But those wicked worms! Still, if monsieur
+desires, it shall not occur again. I ask pardon."
+
+"Now, that's all right, Leon," says I soothin'. "Don't worry. When it
+comes to playin' the boob act, I guess we split about fifty-fifty. I'd a
+little rather you didn't, but if you must hunt the wicked worm at night,
+why, go to it. You won't run any more risk of being shot up by me. For
+I've disarmed."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+BACK WITH CLARA BELLE
+
+
+And me kiddin' myself I was fairly well parlor-broke. It seems not.
+You'd 'most think, though, I'd had enough front-room trainin' to stand
+me through in a place like Harbor Hills. I had a wild idea, too, that
+when we moved into the country we'd tagged the reg'lar social stuff
+good-by.
+
+That was a poor hunch. I'm just discoverin' that there's more tea fights
+and dinner dances and such goin's on out here in the commuter zone than
+in any five blocks of Fifth Avenue you can name. And it seems that
+anywhere within ten miles of this Piping Rock Club brings you into the
+most active sector. So here we are, right in the thick of things.
+
+At that, I expect it might have been quite some time before we was
+bothered any if it hadn't been for our bein' sort of backed by the
+Robert Ellinses. As their friends we're counted in right off the reel.
+I've been joshed into lettin' my name go on the waitin' list at the
+Country Club; I'm allowed to subscribe to this and that; some of the
+neighbors have begun payin' first calls on Vee.
+
+So I might have had sense enough to watch my step. Yet, here the other
+afternoon, when I makes an early getaway from the Corrugated and hops
+off the 5:17, I dashes across the back lots and comes into our place by
+the rear instead of the front drive. You see, I'd been watchin' a row of
+string-beans we had comin' along, and I wanted to spring the first ones
+on Vee. Sure enough, I finds three or four pods 'most big enough to eat;
+so I picks 'em and goes breezin' into the house, wavin' em gleeful.
+
+"Oh, Vee!" I sings out, openin' the terrace door. "Come have a look."
+
+And, as she don't appear on the jump, I keeps on into the livin'-room
+and calls:
+
+"Hey! What do you know about these? Beans! Perfectly good----"
+
+Well, that's as far as I gets, for there's Vee, sittin' behind the
+silver tea-urn, all dolled up; and Leon, in his black coat, holdin' a
+plate of dinky little cakes; and a couple of strange ladies starin' at
+me button-eyed. I'd crashed right into the midst of tea and callers.
+
+Do I pull some easy johndrew lines and exit graceful? Not me. My feet
+was glued to the rug.
+
+"Beans!" says I, grinnin' simple and danglin' the specimens. "Perfectly
+good string----"
+
+Then I catches the eye of the stiff-necked dame with the straight nose
+and the gun-metal hair. No, both eyes, it was; and a cold, suspicious,
+stabby look is what they shoots my way. No wonder I chokes off the
+feeble-minded remarks and turns sort of panicky to Vee, half expectin'
+to find her blushin' painful or signalin' me to clear out. Nothing like
+that from Vee, though.
+
+"Not ours, Torchy?" says she, slidin' out from behind the tea-table and
+rushin' over. "Not our very own?"
+
+"Uh-huh!" says I. "Just picked 'em."
+
+At which the other caller joins in unexpected.
+
+"From your own garden?" says she. "How interesting! Oh, do show them to
+me."
+
+"Why, sure," says I. "Guess we're doin' our bit, ain't we?"
+
+She's a wide, dumpy-built old girl, and dressed sort of freaky. Also her
+line of talk is a kind of purry, throaty gush that's almost too soothin'
+to be true. But anybody who makes only half a bluff at being interested
+in our garden wins us. And not until she's inspected our first
+string-beans through her gold lorgnette, and remarked twice more how
+wonderful it was for us to raise anything like that, does it occur to
+Vee to introduce me proper to both ladies.
+
+The tall, stiff-necked dame turns out to be Mrs. Pemberton Foote.
+Honest! Could you blame her for bein' jarred when I come bouncin' in
+with garden truck?
+
+Think of it! Why, she's one of the super-tax brigade and moves among the
+smartest of the smart-setters. And Pemmy, he's on the polo team, you
+know.
+
+Oh, reg'lar people, the Pembroke Footes are. And the very fact that Mrs.
+Foote is here callin' on Vee ought to have me thrilled to the bone.
+
+Yet all I got sense enough to do is wave half-grown string-beans at her,
+and then sit by gawpy, balancin' a cup of tea on my knee, and watch her
+apply the refrigeratin' process to the dumpy old girl whose name I
+didn't quite catch. Say, but she does it thorough and artistic. Only two
+or three times did the dumpy one try to kick in on the chat, and when
+she does, Mrs. Pemmy rolls them glittery eyes towards her slow, givin'
+her the up-and-down like she was some kind of fat worm that had strayed
+in from the cucumber bed.
+
+Can't these women throw the harpoon into each other ruthless, though?
+Why, you could see that old girl fairly squirm when she got one of them
+assault-and-battery glances. Her under lip would quiver a bit, she'd
+wink hard three or four times, and then she'd sort of collapse,
+smotherin' a sigh and not finishin' what she'd started out to say. She
+did want to be so folksy, too.
+
+Course, she's an odd-lookin' party, with that bucket-shaped lid
+decorated with pale green satin fruit, and the piles of thick blondine
+hair that was turnin' gray, and her foolish big eyes with the puffy
+rolls underneath and the crows'-feet in the corners. And of course
+anybody with ankles suggestin' piano legs really shouldn't go in for
+high-tide skirts and white silk stockin's with black butterflies worked
+on 'em. Should they?
+
+Still, she'd raved over our string-beans, so when she makes a last
+fluttery try at jimmyin' her way into the conversation, and Mrs. Foote
+squelches her prompt again, and she gives up for good, it's me jumpin'
+snappy to tow her out and tuck her in the limousine. Havin' made my
+escape, I stays outside until after Mrs. Pemmy has gone too, which
+don't happen for near half an hour later. But when I hears the front
+door shut on her, I sidles in at the back.
+
+"Zowie!" says I. "You must have made more of a hit with our swell
+neighbor than I did, Vee."
+
+Vee smiles quizzin' and shrugs her shoulders.
+
+"I'm not so sure," says she. "I almost feel as though we had been
+visited by the Probation Officer, or someone like that."
+
+"How do you mean?" says I.
+
+"Of course," she goes on, "Mrs. Foote did not actually say that we were
+on trial socially, but she hinted as much. And she made it quite plain
+that unless we got started in the right set our case would be utterly
+hopeless."
+
+"Just think of that!" says I. "Real sweet of her, eh? Sort of inspector
+general, is she? You should have asked her to show her badge, though."
+
+"Oh, there's no doubt that she speaks with authority," says Vee. "She
+wasn't snippy about it, either. And chiefly she was trying to warn me
+against Mrs. Ben Tupper."
+
+"The old girl with the pelican chin and the rovin' eyes?" I asks.
+"What's the matter with her besides her looks?"
+
+Well, accordin' to Mrs. Pemmy Foote, there was a lot. She had a past,
+for one thing. She was a pushing, presumptuous person, for another. And,
+besides, this Benjamin Tupper party--the male of the species--was wholly
+impossible.
+
+"You know who he is," adds Vee. "The tablet man."
+
+"What?" says I. "'Tupper's Tablets for Indigestion--on Everybody's
+Tongue.' Him?"
+
+Vee nods. "And they live in that barny stucco house just as you turn off
+Sagamore Boulevard--the one with the hideous red-tiled roof and the
+concrete lions in front."
+
+"Goodness Agnes!" says I. "Folks have been indicted for less than that.
+I've seen Tupper, too; someone pointed him out goin' in on the express
+only the other mornin'. Looks like a returned Nihilist who'd been
+nominated in one of the back wards of Petrograd to run for the Duma on a
+free-vodka platform. He's got wiry whiskers that he must trim with a
+pair of tin-shears, tufts in his ears, and the general build of a
+performin' chimpanzee. Oh, he's a rare one, Tupper."
+
+"Then," says Vee, sort of draggy, "I--I suppose Mrs. Foote is right.
+It's too bad, for that Mrs. Tupper did seem such a friendly old soul.
+And I shall feel so snobbish if I don't return her call."
+
+"Huh!" says I. "I don't see why Mrs. Pemmy couldn't let you find out
+about her for yourself. Even if the old girl don't belong, what's the
+use bein' so rough with her?"
+
+"Do you know, Torchy," says Vee, "I felt that way about it when Mrs.
+Foote was snubbing her. And yet--well, I wish I knew just what to do."
+
+"Clean out of my line," says I.
+
+I expect it was the roses that set me mullin' the case over again. They
+was sent over for Vee a couple of days later--half a dozen great
+busters, like young cabbages, with stems a yard long. They come with the
+compliments of Mrs. Ben Tupper.
+
+"I simply couldn't send them back," says Vee; "and yet----"
+
+"I get you," says I. "But don't worry. Let the thing ride a while. I got
+an idea."
+
+It wasn't anything staggerin'. It had just struck me that if Vee had to
+hand out any social smears she ought to do it on her own dope, and not
+accordin' to Mrs. Pemmy Foote's say-so. Which is why I begins pumpin'
+information out of anybody that came handy. Goin' into town next
+mornin', I tackled three or four on the 8:03 in an offhand way.
+
+Oh, yes, the Ben Tuppers! Business of hunchin' the shoulders. No, they
+didn't belong to the Country Club, nor the Hunt Association, nor figure
+on the Library or Hospital boards, or anything else. In fact, they don't
+mingle much. Hadn't made the grade. Barred? We-e-ell, in a way, perhaps.
+Why? Oh, there was Mrs. Ben. Wasn't she enough? An ex-actress with two
+or three hubbys in the discard! Could she expect people to swallow that?
+
+Only one gent, though, had anything definite to offer. He's a
+middle-aged sport that seems to make a specialty of wearin' checked
+suits and yellow gloves. He chuckles when I mentions Mrs. Tupper.
+
+"Grand old girl, Clara Belle," says he.
+
+"Eh?" says I. "Shoot the rest."
+
+"Couldn't think of it, son," says he. "You're too young. But in my day
+Clara Belle Kinney was some queen."
+
+And that's all I can get out of him except more chuckles. I files away
+the name, though; and that afternoon, while we was waitin' for a quorum
+of directors to straggle into the General Offices, I springs it on Old
+Hickory.
+
+"Mr. Ellins," says I, "did you ever know of a Clara Belle Kinney?"
+
+"Wha-a-at?" he gasps, almost swallowin' his cigar. "Listen to that,
+Mason. Here's a young innocent asking if we ever knew Clara Belle
+Kinney. Did we?"
+
+And old K. W. Mason, what does he do but throw back his shiny dome, open
+his mouth, and roar out:
+
+ "Yure right fut is crazy,
+ Yure left fut is lazy,
+ But if ye'll be aisy
+ I'll teach ye to waltz!"
+
+After which them two old cut-ups wink at each other rakish and slap
+their knees. All of which ain't so illuminatin'. But they keep on,
+mentionin' Koster Bial's and the Cork Room, until I can patch together
+quite a sketch of Mrs. Tupper's early career.
+
+Seems she'd made her first hit in this old-time concert-hall when she
+was a sweet young thing in her teens. One of her naughty stunts was
+kickin' her slipper into an upper box, and gettin' it tossed back with a
+mash note in it, or maybe a twenty-dollar bill. Then she'd graduated
+into comic opera.
+
+"Was there ever a Katishaw like her?" demands Old Hickory of K. W., who
+responds by hummin' husky:
+
+ "I dote upon a tiger
+ From the Congo or the Niger,
+ Especially when lashing of his tail."
+
+And, while they don't go into details, I gathered that they'd been Clara
+Belle fans--had sent her orchids on openin' nights, and maybe had set up
+wine suppers for her and her friends. They knew about a couple of her
+matrimonial splurges. One was with her manager, of course; the next was
+a young broker whose fam'ly got him to break it off. After that they'd
+lost track of her.
+
+"It seems to me," says Old Hickory, "that I heard she had married
+someone in Buffalo, or Rochester, and had quit the stage. A patent
+medicine chap, I think he was, who'd made a lot of money out of
+something or other. I wonder what has become of her?"
+
+That was my cue, all right, but I passes it up. I wasn't talkin' just
+then; I was listenin'.
+
+"Ah-h-h!" goes on Mr. Mason, foldin' his hands over his forward sponson
+and rollin' his eyes sentimental. "Dear Clara Belle! I say, Ellins,
+wouldn't you like to hear her sing that MacFadden song once more?"
+
+"I'd give fifty dollars," says Old Hickory.
+
+"I'd make it a hundred if she'd follow it with 'O Promise Me,'" says K.
+W. "What was her record--six hundred nights on Broadway, wasn't it?"
+
+Say, they went on reminiscin' so long, it's a wonder the monthly meetin'
+ever got started at all. I might have forgot them hot-air bids of
+theirs, too, if it hadn't been for something Vee announces that night
+across the dinner-table.
+
+Seems that Mrs. Robert Ellins had been rung into managin' one of these
+war benefit stunts, and she's decided to use their new east terrace for
+an outdoor stage and the big drawin'-room it opens off from as an
+auditorium. You know, Mrs. Robert used to give violin recitals and do
+concert work herself, so she ain't satisfied with amateur talent.
+Besides, she knows so many professional people.
+
+"And who do you think she is to have on the program?" demands Vee.
+"Farrar!"
+
+"Aw, come!" says I.
+
+"And perhaps Mischa Elman," adds Vee. "Isn't that thrilling?"
+
+I admits that it is.
+
+"But say," I goes on, "with them big names on the bill, what does she
+expect to tax people for the best seats?"
+
+Vee says how they'd figured they might ask ten dollars for a few choice
+chairs.
+
+"Huh!" says I. "That won't get you far. Why don't you soak 'em proper?"
+
+"But how?" asks Vee.
+
+"You put in a bald-headed row," says I, "and I'll find you a party
+who'll fill it at a hundred a throw."
+
+Vee stares at me like she thought I'd been touched with the heat, and
+wants to know who.
+
+"Clara Belle Kinney," says I.
+
+"Why, I never heard of any such person," says she.
+
+"Oh, yes, you have," says I. "Alias Mrs. Ben Tupper."
+
+Course, I had some job convincin' her I wasn't joshin'; and even after
+I'd sketched out the whole story, and showed her that Clara Belle's past
+wasn't anything to really shudder over, Vee is still doubtful.
+
+"But can she sing now?" she asks.
+
+"What's the odds," says I, "if a lot of them old-timers are willin' to
+pay to hear her try?"
+
+Vee shakes her head and suggests that we go up and talk it over with Mr.
+and Mrs. Robert. Which we does.
+
+"But if she has been off the stage for twenty years," suggests Mrs.
+Robert, "perhaps she wouldn't attempt it."
+
+"I'll bet she would for Vee," says I. "Any way, she wouldn't feel sore
+at being asked And if you could sting a bunch of twenty or thirty for a
+hundred apiece----"
+
+"Just fancy!" says Mrs. Robert, drawin' in a long breath and doin'
+rapid-fire mental arithmetic. "Verona, let's drive right over and see
+her at once."
+
+They're some hustlers, that pair. All I have to do is map out the
+scheme, and they goes after it with a rush.
+
+And say, I want to tell you that was a perfectly good charity concert,
+judged by the box-office receipts or any way you want to size it up.
+Bein' the official press-agent, who's got a better right to admit it?
+
+True, Elman didn't show up, but his alibi was sound. And not until the
+last minute was we sure whether the fair Geraldine would get there or
+not. But my contribution to the headliners was there from the first tap
+of the bell.
+
+Vee says she actually wept on her shoulder when the proposition was
+sprung on her. Seems she'd been livin' in Harbor Hills for nearly three
+years without havin' been let in on a thing--with nobody callin' on her,
+or even noddin' as she drove by. Most of her neighbors was a lot
+younger, folks who barely remembered that there had been such a party as
+Clara Belle Kinney, and who couldn't have told whether she'd been a
+singer or a bareback rider. They only knew her as a dumpy freakish
+dressed old girl whose drugged hair was turnin' gray.
+
+"Of course," she says, sort of timid and trembly, "I have kept up my
+singing as well as I could. Mr. Tupper likes to have me. But I know my
+voice isn't what it was once. It's dear of you to ask me, though,
+and--and I'll do my best."
+
+I don't take any credit for fillin' that double row of wicker chairs we
+put down front and had the nerve to ask that hold-up price for. When the
+word was passed around that Clara Belle Kinney was to be among the
+performers, they almost mobbed me for tickets. Why, I collected from
+two-thirds of the Corrugated directors without turnin' a hand, and for
+two days there about all I did was answer 'phone calls from Broad Street
+and the clubs--brokers, bank presidents, and so on, who wanted to know
+if there was any left.
+
+A fine bunch of silver-tops they was, too, when we got 'em all lined up.
+You wouldn't have suspected it of some of them dignified old scouts,
+either. Back of 'em, fillin' every corner of the long room and spillin'
+out into the big hall, was the top crust of our local smart set, come to
+hear Farrar at close range.
+
+Yep, Geraldine made quite a hit. Nothing strange about that. And that
+piece from "Madame Butterfly" she gave just brought 'em right up on
+their toes. But say, you should hear what breaks loose when it's
+announced that the third number will be an old favorite revival by Clara
+Belle Kinney. That's all the name we gave. What if most of the audience
+was simply starin' puzzled and stretchin' their necks to see who was
+comin'? Them old boys down front seemed to know what they was howlin'
+about.
+
+Yes, Clara Belle does show up a bit husky in evenin' dress. Talk about
+elbow dimples! And I was wishin' she'd forgot to do her hair that
+antique way, all piled up on her head, with a few coy ringlets over one
+ear. But she'd landscaped her facial scenery artistic, and she sure does
+know how to roll them big eyes of hers.
+
+I didn't much enjoy listenin' through them first few bars, though. There
+wasn't merely a crack here and there. Her voice went to a complete smash
+at times, besides bein' weak and wabbly. It's like listenin' to the
+ghost of a voice. I heard a few titters from the back rows.
+
+But them old boys don't seem to mind. It was a voice comin' to them from
+'way back in the '90's. And when she struggles through the first verse
+of "O Promise Me," and pauses to get her second wind, maybe they don't
+give her a hand. That seemed to pep her up a lot. She gets a better grip
+on the high notes, the tremolo effect wears off, and she goes to it like
+a winner. Begins to get the crowd with her, too. Why, say, even Farrar
+stands up and leads in the call for an encore. She ain't alone.
+
+"MacFadden! MacFadden!" K. W. Mason is shoutin'.
+
+So in a minute more Clara Belle, her eyes shinin', has swung into that
+raggy old tune, and when she gets to the chorus she beckons to the front
+rows and says: "Now, all together, boys!
+
+ "Wan--two--three!
+ Balance like me----"
+
+Did they come in on it? Say, they roared it out like so many young
+college hicks riotin' around the campus after a session at a
+rathskeller. You should have seen Old Hickory standin' out front with
+his arms wavin' and his face red.
+
+Then they demands some of the Katishaw stuff, and "Comrades," and
+"Little Annie Rooney." And with every encore Clara Belle seems to shake
+off five or ten years, until you could almost see what a footlight
+charmer she must have been.
+
+In the midst of it all Vee gives me the nudge.
+
+"Do look at Mr. Tupper, will you!"
+
+Yes, he's sittin' over in a corner, with his white shirt-front bulgin',
+his neck stretched forward eager, and his big hairy paws grippin' the
+chair-back in front. And hanged if a drop of brine ain't tricklin' down
+one side of his nose.
+
+"Gosh!" says I. "His emotions are leakin' into his whiskers. Maybe the
+old boy is human, after all."
+
+A minute later, as I slides easy out of my end seat, Vee asks:
+
+"Where are you going, Torchy?"
+
+"I want a glimpse of Mrs. Pemmy Foote's face, that's all," says I.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+WHEN TORCHY GOT THE CALL
+
+
+No, I ain't said much about it before. There are some things you're apt
+to keep to yourself, specially the ones that root deep. And I'll admit
+that at first there I don't quite know where I was at. But as affairs
+got messier and messier, and the U-boats got busier, and I heard some
+first-hand details of what had happened to the Belgians--well, I got
+mighty restless. I expect I indulged in more serious thought stuff than
+I'd ever been guilty of.
+
+You see, it was along back when we were gettin' our first close-ups of
+the big scrap--some of our boats sunk, slinkers reported off Sandy Hook,
+bomb plots shown up, and Papa Joffre over here soundin' the S. O. S.
+earnest.
+
+Then there was Mr. Robert joinin' the Naval Reserves, and two young
+hicks from the bond room who'd volunteered. We'd had postals from 'em at
+the trainin' camp. Even Vee was busy with a first-aid class, learnin'
+how to tie bandages and put on splints.
+
+So private seccing seemed sort of tame and useless--like keepin' on
+sprinklin' the lawn after your chimney was bein' struck by lightnin'. I
+felt like I ought to be gettin' in the game somehow. Anyway, it seemed
+as if it was my ante.
+
+Not that I'd been rushed off my feet by all this buntin'-wavin' or
+khaki-wearin'. I'm no panicky Old Glory trail-hitter. Nor I didn't lug
+around the idea I was the missin' hero who was to romp through the
+barbed wire, stamp Hindenburg's whiskers in the mud, and lead the Allies
+across the Rhine. I didn't even kid myself I could swim out and kick a
+hole in a submarine, or do the darin' aviator act after a half-hour
+lesson at Mineola.
+
+In fact, I suspected that sheddin' the enemy's gore wasn't much in my
+line. I knew I should dislike quittin' the hay at dawn to sneak out and
+get mixed up with half a bushel of impetuous scrap-iron. Still, if it
+had to be done, why not me as well as the next party?
+
+I'd been meanin' to talk it over with Vee--sort of hint around, anyway,
+and see how she'd take it. But as a matter of fact I never could seem to
+find just the right openin' until, there one night after dinner, as she
+finishes a new piece she's tryin' over on the piano, I wanders up
+beside her and starts absent-minded tearin' little bits off a corner of
+the music.
+
+"Torchy!" she protests. "What an absurd thing to do."
+
+"Eh?" says I, twistin' it into a cornucopia. "But you know I can't go on
+warmin' the bench like this."
+
+She stares at me puzzled for a second.
+
+"Meaning what, for instance?" she asks.
+
+"I got to go help swat the Hun," says I.
+
+The flickery look in them gray eyes of hers steadies down, and she
+reaches out for one of my hands. That's all. No jumpy emotions--not even
+a lip quiver.
+
+"Must you?" says she, quiet.
+
+"I can't take it out in wearin' a button or hirin' someone to hoe
+potatoes in the back lot," says I.
+
+"No," says she.
+
+"Auntie would come, I suppose?" says I.
+
+Vee nods.
+
+"And with Leon here," I goes on, "and Mrs. Battou, you could----"
+
+"Yes, I could get along," she breaks in. "But--but when?"
+
+"Right away," says I. "As soon as they can use me."
+
+"You'll start training for a commission, then?" she asks.
+
+"Not me," says I. "I'd be poor enough as a private, but maybe I'd help
+fill in one of the back rows. I don't know much about it. I'll look it
+up to-morrow."
+
+"To-morrow? Oh!" says Vee, with just the suspicion of a break in her
+voice.
+
+And that's all we had to say about it. Every word. You'd thought we'd
+exhausted the subject, or got the tongue cramp. But I expect we each had
+a lot of thoughts that didn't get registered. I know I did. And next
+mornin' the breakaway came sort of hard.
+
+"I--I know just how you feel about it," says Vee.
+
+"I'm glad somebody does, then," says I.
+
+Puttin' the proposition up to Old Hickory was different. He shoots a
+quick glance at me from under them shaggy eyebrows, bites into his cigar
+savage, and grunts discontented.
+
+"You are exempt, you know," says he.
+
+"I know," says I. "If tags came with marriage licenses I might wear one
+on my watch-fob to show, I expect."
+
+"Huh!" says he. "It seems to me that rapid-fire brain of yours might be
+better utilized than by hiding it under a trench helmet."
+
+"Speedy thinkers seem to be a drug on the market just now," says I.
+"Anyway, I feel like it was up to me to deliver something--I can't say
+just what. But campin' behind a roll-top here on the nineteenth floor
+ain't going to help much, is it?"
+
+"Oh, well, if you have the fever!" says he.
+
+And half an hour later I've pushed in past the flag and am answerin'
+questions while the sergeant fills out the blank.
+
+Maybe you can guess I ain't in any frivolous mood. I don't believe I
+thought I was about to push back the invader, or turn the tide for
+civilization. Neither was I lookin' on this as a sportin' flier or a
+larky excursion that I was goin' to indulge in at public expense. My
+idea was that there'd been a general call for such as me, and that I was
+comin' across. I was more or less sober about it.
+
+They didn't seem much impressed at the recruitin' station. Course, you
+couldn't expect the sergeant to get thrilled over every party that
+drifted in. He'd been there for weeks, I suppose, answerin' the same
+fool questions over and over, knowin' all the time that half of them
+that came in was bluffin' and that a big per cent. of the others
+wouldn't do.
+
+But this other party with the zippy waistline, the swellin' chest, and
+the nifty shoulder-straps--why should he glare at me in that cold,
+suspicious way? I wasn't tryin' to break into the army with felonious
+intent. How could he be sure, just from a casual glance, that I was such
+vicious scum?
+
+Oh, yes; I've figured out since that he didn't mean more'n half of it,
+or couldn't help lookin' at civilians that way after four years at West
+Point, or thought he had to. But that's what I get handed to me when
+I've dropped all the little things that seemed important to me and walks
+in to chuck what I had to offer Uncle Sam on the recruitin' table.
+
+Some kind of inspectin' officer, I've found out he was, makin' the
+rounds to see that the sergeants didn't loaf on the job. And, just to
+show that no young patriot in a last year's Panama and a sport-cut suit
+could slip anything over on him, he shoots in a few crisp questions on
+his own account.
+
+"Married, you say?" says he. "Since when?"
+
+"Oh, this century," says I. "Last February, to get it nearer."
+
+He sniffs disagreeable without sayin' why. Also he takes a hand when it
+comes to testin' me to see whether I'm club-footed or spavined. Course,
+I'm no perfect male like you see in the knit underwear ads, but I've got
+the usual number of toes and teeth, my wind is fairly good, and I don't
+expect my arteries have begun to harden yet. He listens to my heart
+action and measures my chest expansion. Then I had to name the different
+colors and squint through a tube at some black dots on a card.
+
+And the further we went the more he scowled. Finally he shakes his head
+at the sergeant.
+
+"Rejected," says he.
+
+"Eh?" says I. "You--you don't mean I'm--turned down?"
+
+He nods. "Underweight, and your eyes don't focus," says he snappy.
+"Here's your card. That's all."
+
+Yes, it was a jolt. I expect I stood there blinkin' stupid at him for a
+minute or so before I had sense enough to drift out on the sidewalk. And
+I might as well admit I was feelin' mighty low. I didn't know whether to
+hunt up the nearest hospital, or sit down on the curb and wait until
+they came after me with the stretcher-cart. Anyway, I knew I must be a
+physical wreck. And to think I hadn't suspected it before!
+
+Somehow I dragged back to the office, and a while later Mr. Ellins
+discovers me slumped in my chair with my chin down.
+
+"Mars and Mercury!" says he. "You haven't been through a battle so soon,
+have you?"
+
+At that, I tries to brace up a bit and pass it off light.
+
+"Why didn't someone tell me I was a chronic invalid?" says I, after
+sketchin' out how my entry had been scratched by the chesty one. "I
+wonder where I could get a pair of crutches and a light-runnin' wheel
+chair?"
+
+"Bah!" says he. "Some of those army officers have red-tape brains and no
+more common sense than he guinea-pigs. What in the name of the Seven
+Shahs did he think was the matter with you?"
+
+"My eyes don't track and I weigh under the scale," says I. "I expect
+there's other things, too. Maybe my floatin' ribs are water-logged and
+my memory muscle-bound. But I'm a wreck, all right."
+
+"We'll see about that," says Old Hickory, pushin' a buzzer.
+
+And inside of an hour I felt a lot better. I'd been gone over by a life
+insurance expert, who said I hadn't a soft spot on me, and an eye
+specialist had reported that my sight was up to the average. Oh, the
+right lamp did range a little further, but he claims that's often the
+case.
+
+"Maybe my hair was too vivid for trench work," says I, "or else that
+captain was luggin' a grouch. Makes me feel like a wooden nickel at the
+bottom of the till, just the same; for I did hope I might be useful
+somehow. I'll look swell joinin' the home guards, won't I?"
+
+"Don't overlook the fact, young man," puts in Old Hickory, "that the
+Corrugated Trust is not altogether out of this affair, and that we are
+running short-handed as it is."
+
+I was too sore in my mind to be soothed much by that thought just then,
+though I did buckle into the work harder than ever.
+
+As for Vee, she don't have much to say, but she gives me the close
+tackle when she hears the news.
+
+"I don't care!" says she. "It was splendid of you to want to go. And I
+shall be just as proud of you as though you had been accepted."
+
+"Oh, sure!" says I. "Likely I'll be mentioned in despatches for the
+noble way I handled the correspondence all through a hot spell."
+
+That state of mind I didn't shake loose in a hurry, either. For three or
+four weeks, there, I was about the meekest commuter carried on the
+eight-three. I didn't do any gloatin' over the war news. I didn't join
+any of the volunteer boards of strategy that met every mornin' to tell
+each other how the subs ought to be suppressed, or what Haig should be
+doin' on the West front. I even stopped wearin' an enameled flag in my
+buttonhole. If that was all I could do, I wouldn't fourflush.
+
+The Corrugated was handlin' a lot of war contracts, too. Course, we was
+only gettin' our ten per cent., and from some we'd subbed out not even
+that. It didn't strike me there was any openin' for me until I'd heard
+Mr. Ellins, for about the fourth time that week, start beefin' about the
+kind of work we was gettin' done.
+
+"But ain't it all O. K.'d by government inspectors?" I asks.
+
+"Precisely why I am suspicious," says he. "Not three per cent. turned
+back! And on rush work that's too good to be true. Looks to me like
+careless inspecting--or worse. Yet every man I've sent out has brought
+in a clean bill; even for the Wonder Motors people, who have that
+sub-contract for five hundred tanks. And I wouldn't trust that crowd to
+pass the hat for an orphans' home. I wish I knew of a man who
+could--could---- By the Great Isosceles! Torchy!"
+
+I knew I was elected when he first begun squintin' at me that way. But I
+couldn't see where I'd be such a wonderful find.
+
+"A hot lot I know about buildin' armored motor-trucks, Mr. Ellins," says
+I. "They could feed me anything."
+
+"You let 'em," says he; "and meanwhile you unlimber that high-tension
+intellect of yours and see what you can pick up. Remember, I shall
+expect results from you, young man. When can you start for Cleveland?
+To-night, eh? Good! And just note this: It isn't merely the Corrugated
+Trust you are representing: it's Uncle Sam and the Allies generally. And
+if anything shoddy is being passed, you hunt it out. Understand?"
+
+Yep. I did. And I'll admit I was some thrilled with the idea. But I felt
+like a Boy Scout being sent to round up a gang of gunfighters. I skips
+home, though, packs my bag, and climbs aboard the night express.
+
+When I'd finally located the Wonder works, and had my credentials read
+by everyone, from the rookie sentry at the gate to the Assistant General
+Manager, and they was convinced I'd come direct from Old Hickory Ellins,
+they starts passin' out the smooth stuff. Oh, yes! Certainly! Anything
+special I wished to see?
+
+"Thanks," says I. "I'll go right through."
+
+"But we have four acres of shops, you know," suggests the A. G. M.,
+smilin' indulgent.
+
+"Maybe I can do an acre a day," says I. "I got lots of time."
+
+"That's the spirit," says he, clappin' me friendly on the shoulder.
+"Walter, call in Mr. Marvin."
+
+He was some grand little demonstrator, Mr. Marvin--one of these
+round-faced, pink-cheeked, chunky built young gents, who was as chummy
+and as entertainin' from the first handshake as if we'd been room-mates
+at college. I can't say how well posted he was on what was goin' on in
+the different departments he hustled me through, but he knew enough to
+smother me with machinery details.
+
+"Now, here we have a battery of six hogging machines," he'd say. "They
+cut the gears, you know."
+
+"Oh, yes," I'd say, tryin' to look wise.
+
+It was that way all through the trip. I saw two or three thousand sweaty
+men in smeared overalls and sleeveless undershirts putterin' around
+lathes and things that whittled shavings off shiny steel bars, or
+hammered red-hot chunks of it into different shapes, or bit holes in
+great sheets of steel. I watched electric cranes the size of trolley
+cars juggle chunks of metal that weighed tons. I listened to the roar
+and rattle and crash and bang, and at the end of two hours my head was
+whirlin' as fast as some of them big belt wheels; and I knew almost as
+much about what I'd seen as a two-year-old does about the tick-tock
+daddy holds up to her ear.
+
+Young Mr. Marvin don't seem discouraged, though. He suggests that we
+drive into town for lunch. We did, in a canary-colored roadster that
+purred along at about fifty most of the way. We fed at a swell club,
+along with a bunch of cheerful young lieutenants of industry who didn't
+seem worried about the high cost of anything. I gathered that most of
+'em was in the same line as Mr. Marvin--supplies or munitions. From the
+general talk, and the casual way they ordered pink cocktails and
+expensive cigars, I judged it wasn't exactly a losin' game.
+
+Nor they didn't seem anxious about gettin' back to punch in on the
+time-clocks. About two-thirty we adjourns to the Country Club, and if
+I'd been a mashie fiend I might have finished a hard day's work with a
+game of golf. I thought I ought to do some more shops, though. Why, to
+be sure! But at five we knocked off again, and I was towed to another
+club, where we had a plunge in a marble pool so as to be in shape for a
+little dinner Mr. Marvin was gettin' up for me. Quite some dinner! There
+was a jolly trip out to an amusement park later on. Oh, the Wonder folks
+were no tightwads when it came to showin' special agents of the
+Corrugated around.
+
+I tried another day of it before givin' up. It was no use. They had me
+buffaloed. So I thanked all hands and hinted that maybe I'd better be
+goin' back. I hope I didn't deceive anyone, for I did go back--to the
+hotel. But by night I'd invested $11.45 in a second-hand
+outfit--warranted steam-cleaned--and I had put up $6. more for a week's
+board with a Swede lady whose front porch faced the ten-foot fence
+guardin' the Wondor Motors' main plant. Also, Mrs. Petersen had said it
+was a cinch I could get a job. Her old man would show me where in the
+mornin'.
+
+And say, mornin' happens early out in places like that. By 5:30 A.M. I
+could smell bacon grease, and by six-fifteen breakfast was all over and
+Petersen had lit his corn-cob pipe.
+
+"Coom!" says he in pure Scandinavian.
+
+This trip, I didn't make my entrance in over the Turkish rugs of the
+private office. I was lined up with a couple of dozen others against a
+fence about tenth from a window where there was a "Men Wanted" sign out.
+Being about as much of a mechanic as I am a brunette, I made no wild
+bluffs. I just said I wanted a job. And I got it--riveter's helper,
+whatever that might be. By eight-thirty my name and number was on the
+payroll, and the foreman of shop No. 19 was introducin' me to my new
+boss.
+
+"Here, Mike," says he. "Give this one a try-out."
+
+His name wasn't Mike. It was something like Sneezowski. He was a Pole
+who'd come over three years ago to work for John D. at Bayonne, New
+Jersey, but had got into some kind of trouble there. I didn't wonder. He
+had wicked little eyes, one lopped ear, and a ragged mustache that stood
+out like tushes. But he sure could handle a pneumatic riveter rapid, and
+when it came to reprovin' me for not keepin' the pace he expressed
+himself fluent.
+
+In the course of a couple of hours, though, I got the hang of how to
+work them rivet tongs without droppin' 'em more 'n once every five
+minutes. But I think it was the grin I slipped Mike now and then that
+got him to overlookin' my awkward motions. Believe me, too, by six
+o'clock I felt less like grinnin' than any time I could remember. I
+never knew you could ache in so many places at once. From the ankles
+down I felt fine. And yet, before the week was out I was helpin' Mike
+speed up.
+
+It didn't look promisin' for sleuth work at first. Half a dozen times I
+was on the point of chuckin' the job. But the thoughts of havin' to face
+Old Hickory with a blank report kept me pluggin' away. I begun to get my
+bearin's a bit to see things, to put this and that together.
+
+We was workin' on shaped steel plates, armor for the tanks. Now and then
+one would come through with some of the holes only quarter or half
+punched. Course, you couldn't put rivets in them places.
+
+"How about these?" I asks.
+
+"Aw, wottell!" says Mike. "Forget it."
+
+"But what if the inspector sees?" I insists.
+
+Mike gurgles in his throat, indicatin' mirth.
+
+"Th' inspec'!" he chuckles. "Him wink by his eye, him. Ya! You see! Him
+coom Sat'day."
+
+And I swaps chuckles with Mike. Also, by settin' up the schooners at
+Carlouva's that evenin', I got Mike to let out more professional
+secrets along the same line. There was others who joined in. They
+bragged of chipped gears that was shipped through with the bad cogs
+covered with grease, of flawy drivin' shafts, of cheesy armor-plate that
+you could puncture with a tack-hammer.
+
+While it was all fresh that night I jotted down pages of such gossip in
+a little red note-book. I had names and dates. That bunch of
+piece-workers must have thought I was a bear for details, or else nutty
+in the head; but they was too polite to mention it so long as I insisted
+each time that it was my buy.
+
+Anyway, I got quite a lot of first-hand evidence as to the kind of
+inspectin' done by the army officer assigned to this particular plant. I
+had to smile, too, when I saw Mr. Marvin towin' him through our shop
+Saturday forenoon. Maybe they was three minutes breezin' through. And I
+didn't need the extra smear of smut on my face. Marvin never glanced my
+way. This was the same officer who'd been in on our dinner party, too.
+
+Yes, I found chattin' with Mike and his friends a lot more illuminatin'
+than listenin' to Mr. Marvin. So, when I drew down my second pay
+envelop, I told the clerk I was quittin'. I don't mind sayin', either,
+that it seemed good to splash around in a reg'lar bath-tub once more and
+to look a sirloin steak in the face again. A stiff collar did seem odd,
+though.
+
+Me and Mr. Ellins had some session. We went through that red note-book
+thorough. He was breathin' a bit heavy at times, and he chewed hard on
+his cigar all the way; but he never blew a fuse until forty-eight hours
+later. The General Manager of Wonder Motors, four department heads, and
+the army officer detailed as inspector was part of the audience. They'd
+been called on the carpet by wire, and was grouped around one end of our
+directors' table. At the other end was Old Hickory, Mr. Robert, Piddie,
+and me.
+
+Item by item, Mr. Ellins had sketched out to the Wonder crowd the bunk
+stuff they'd been slippin' over. First they tried protestin' indignant;
+then they made a stab at actin' hurt; but in the end they just looked
+plain foolish.
+
+"My dear Mr. Ellins," put in the General Manager, "one cannot watch
+every workman in a plant of that magnitude. Besides," here he hunches
+his shoulders, "if the government is satisfied----"
+
+"Hah!" snorts Old Hickory. "But it isn't. For I'm the government in this
+instance. I'm standing for Uncle Sam. That's what I meant when I took
+those ten per cent. contracts. I'm too old to go out and fight his
+enemies abroad, but I can stay behind and watch for yellow-livered
+buzzards such as you. Call that business, do you? Fattening your
+dividends by sending our boys up against the Prussian guns in junky
+motor-tanks covered with tin armor! Bah! Your ethics need chloride of
+lime on them. And you come here whining that you can't watch your men!
+By the great sizzling sisters, we'll see if you can't! You will put in
+every missing rivet, replace every flawy plate, and make every machine
+perfect, or I'll smash your little two-by-four concern so flat the
+bankruptcy courts won't find enough to tack a libel notice on. Now go
+back and get busy."
+
+They seemed in a hurry to start, too.
+
+An hour or so later, when Old Hickory had stopped steaming, he passes
+out a different set of remarks to me. Oh, the usual grateful boss stuff.
+Even says he's going to make the War Department give me a commission,
+with a special detail.
+
+"Wouldn't that be wonderful!" says Vee, clappin' her hands. "Do you
+really think he will? A lieutenant, perhaps?"
+
+"That's what he mentioned," says I.
+
+"Really!" says Vee, makin' a rush at me.
+
+"Wait up!" says I. "Halt, I mean. Now, as you were! Sal-ute!"
+
+"Pooh!" says Vee, continuin' her rush.
+
+But say, she knows how to salute, all right. Her way would break up an
+army, though. All the same, I guess I've earned it, for by Monday night
+I'll be up in a Syracuse shovel works, wearin' a one-piece business suit
+of the Never-rip brand, and I'll likely have enough grease on me to
+lubricate a switch-engine.
+
+"It's lucky you don't see me, Vee," says I, "when I'm out savin' the
+country. You'd wonder how you ever come to do it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+A CARRY-ON FOR CLARA
+
+
+"Now turn around," says Vee. "Oh, Torchy! Why, you look perfectly----"
+
+"Do I?" I cuts in. "Well, you don't think I'm goin' to the office like
+this, do you?"
+
+She does. Insists that Mr. Ellins will expect it.
+
+"Besides," says she, "it is in the army regulations that you must. If
+you don't--well, I'm not sure whether it is treason or mutiny."
+
+"Hal-lup!" says I. "I surrender."
+
+So I starts for town lookin' as warlike as if I'd just come from a front
+trench, and feelin' like a masquerader who'd lost his way to the
+ball-room.
+
+In the office, Old Hickory gives me the thorough up-and-down. It's a
+genial, fatherly sort of inspection, and he ends it with a satisfied
+grunt.
+
+"Good-morning, Lieutenant," says he. "I see you have--er--got 'em on.
+And, allow me to mention, rather a good fit, sir."
+
+I gasps. Sirred by Old Hickory! Do you wonder I got fussed? But he only
+chuckles easy, waves me to take a chair, and goes on with:
+
+"What's the word from the Syracuse sector?"
+
+At that, I gets my breath back.
+
+"Fairly good deal up there, sir," says I. "They're workin' in a carload
+or so of wormy ash for the shovel handles, and some of the steel runs
+below test; but most of their stuff grades well. I'll have my notes
+typed off right away."
+
+After I've filed my report I should have ducked. But this habit of
+stickin' around the shop is hard to break. And that's how I happen to be
+on hand when the lady in gray drifts in for her chatty confab with Mr.
+Ellins.
+
+Seems she held quite a block of our preferred, for when Vincent lugs in
+her card Old Hickory spots the name right away as being on our
+widow-and-orphan list that we wave at investigatin' committees.
+
+"Ah, yes!" says he. "Mrs. Parker Smith. Show her in, boy."
+
+Such a quiet, gentle, dignified party she is, her costume tonin' in with
+her gray hair, and an easy way of speakin' and all, that my first guess
+is she might be the head of an old ladies' home.
+
+"Mr. Ellins," says she, "I am looking for my niece."
+
+"Are you?" says Mr. Ellins, "Humph! Hardly think we could be of service
+in such a case."
+
+"Oh!" says she. "I--I am so sorry."
+
+"Lost, is she?" suggests Mr. Ellins, weakenin'.
+
+"She is somewhere in New York," goes on Mrs. Parker Smith. "Of course, I
+know it is an imposition to trouble you with such a matter. But I
+thought you might have someone in your office who--who----"
+
+"We have," says he. "Torchy,--er--I mean, Lieutenant,--Mrs. Parker
+Smith. Here, madam, is a young man who will find your niece for you at
+once. In private life he is my secretary; and as it happens that just
+now he is on special detail, his services are entirely at your
+disposal."
+
+She looks a little doubtful about bein' shunted like that, but she
+follows me into the next room, where I produces a pencil and pad and
+calls for details businesslike.
+
+"Let's see," says I. "What's the full description? Age?"
+
+"Why," says she, hesitatin', "Claire is about twenty-two."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Got beyond the flapper stage, then. Height--tall or
+short?"
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith shakes her head.
+
+"I'm sure I don't know," says she. "You see, Claire is not an own niece.
+She--well, she is a daughter of my first husband's second wife's
+step-sister."
+
+"Wha-a-at?" says I, gawpin' at her. "Daughter of your---- Oh, say, let's
+not go into it as deep as that. I'm dizzy already. Suppose we call her
+an in-law once removed and let it go at that?"
+
+"Thank you," says Mrs. Parker Smith, givin' me a quizzin' smile.
+"Perhaps it is enough to say that I have never seen her."
+
+She does go on to explain, though, that when Claire's step-uncle, or
+whatever he was, found his heart trouble gettin' worse, he wrote to Mrs.
+Parker Smith, askin' her to forget the past and look after the orphan
+girl that he's been tryin' to bring up. It's just as clear to me as the
+average movie plot, but I nods my head.
+
+"So for three years," says she, "while Claire was in boarding-school, I
+acted as her guardian; but since she has come of age I have been merely
+the executor of her small estate."
+
+"Oh, yes!" says I. "And now she's come to New York, and forgot to send
+you her address?"
+
+It was something like that. Claire had gone in for art. Looked like
+she'd splurged heavy on it, too; for the drain on her income had been
+something fierce. Meanwhile, Mrs. Parker Smith had doped out an entirely
+different future for Claire. The funds that had been tied up in a
+Vermont barrel-stave fact'ry, that was makin' less and less barrel
+staves every year, Auntie had pulled out and invested in a model dairy
+farm out near Rockford, Illinois. She'd made the capital turn over from
+fifteen to twenty per cent., too, by livin' right on the job and cashin'
+in the cream tickets herself.
+
+"You have!" says I. "Not a reg'lar cow farm?"
+
+She nods.
+
+"It did seem rather odd, at first," says she. "But I wanted to get away
+from--from everything. But now---- Well, I want Claire. I suppose I am a
+little lonesome. Besides, I want her to try taking charge. Recently,
+when she had drawn her income for half a year in advance and still
+asked for more, I was obliged to refuse."
+
+"And then?" says I.
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith shrugs her shoulders.
+
+"The foolish girl chose to quarrel with me," says she. "About ten days
+ago she sent me a curt note. I could keep her money; she was tired of
+being dictated to. I needn't write any more, for she had moved to
+another address, had changed her name."
+
+"Huh!" says I. "That does make it complicated. You don't know what she
+looks like, or what name she flags under, and I'm to find her in little
+New York?"
+
+But I finds myself tacklin this hopeless puzzle from every angle I could
+think of. I tried 'phonin' to Claire's old street number. Nothin' doin'.
+They didn't know anything about Miss Hunt.
+
+"What brand of art was she monkeyin' with?" I asks.
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith couldn't say. Claire hadn't been very chatty in her
+letters. Chiefly she had demanded checks.
+
+"But in one she did mention," says the lady in gray, "that---- Now, what
+was it! Oh, yes! Something about 'landing a cover.' What could that
+mean?"
+
+"Cover?" says I. "Why, for a magazine, maybe. That's it. And if we only
+knew what name she'd sign, we might---- Would she stick to the Claire
+part? I'll bet she would. Wait. I'll get a bunch of back numbers from
+the arcade news-stand and we'll go through 'em."
+
+We'd hunted through an armful, though, before we runs across this freaky
+sketch of a purple nymph, with bright yellow hair, bouncin' across a
+stretch of dark blue lawn.
+
+"Claire Lamar!" says I. "Would that be---- Eh? What's wrong?"
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith seems to be gettin' a jolt of some kind, but she
+steadies herself and almost gets back her smile.
+
+"I--I am sure it would," says she. "It's very odd, though."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," says I. "Listens kind of arty--Claire Lamar. Lemme
+see. This snappy fifteen-center has editorial offices on Fourth Avenue
+and---- Well, well! Barry Frost, ad. manager! Say, if I can get him on
+the wire----"
+
+Just by luck, I did. Would he pry some facts for me out of the art
+editor, facts about a certain party? Sure he would. And inside of ten
+minutes, without leavin' the Corrugated General Offices, I had a full
+description of Claire, includin' where she hung out.
+
+"Huh!" says I. "Greenwich Village, eh? You might know."
+
+"My dear Lieutenant," says Mrs. Parker Smith, "I think you are perfectly
+wonderful."
+
+"Swell thought!" says I. "But you needn't let on to Mr. Ellins how
+simple it was. And now, all you got to do is----"
+
+"I know," she cuts in. "And I really ought not to trouble you another
+moment. But, since Mr. Ellins has been so kind--well, I am going to ask
+you to help me just a trifle more."
+
+"Shoot," says I, unsuspicious.
+
+It ain't much, she says. But she's afraid, if she trails Claire to her
+rooms, the young lady might send down word she was out, or make a quick
+exit.
+
+"But if you would go," she suggests, "with a note from me asking her to
+join us somewhere at dinner----"
+
+I holds up both hands.
+
+"Sorry," says I, "but I got to duck. That's taking too many chances."
+
+Then I explains how, although I may look like a singleton, I'm really
+the other half of a very interestin' domestic sketch, and that Vee's
+expectin' me home to dinner.
+
+"Why, all the better!" says Mrs. Parker Smith. "Have her come in and
+join us. I'll tell you: we will have our little party down at the old
+Napoleon, where they have such delicious French cooking. Now, please."
+
+As I've hinted before, she is some persuader. I ain't mesmerized so
+strong, though, but what I got sense enough to play it safe by callin'
+up Vee first. I don't think she was strong for joinin' the reunion until
+I points out that I might be some shy at wanderin' down into the
+art-student colony and collectin' a strange young lady illustrator all
+by myself.
+
+"Course, I could do it alone if I had to," I throws in.
+
+"H-m-m-m!" says Vee. "If that bashfulness of yours is likely to be as
+bad as all that, perhaps I'd better come."
+
+So by six o 'clock Vee and I are in the dinky reception-room of one of
+them Belasco boardin'-houses, tryin' to convince a young female in a
+paint-splashed smock and a floppy boudoir cap that we ain't tryin' to
+kidnap or otherwise annoy her.
+
+"What's the big idea?" says she. "I don't get you at all."
+
+"Maybe if you'd read the note it would help," I suggests.
+
+"Oh!" says she, and takes it over by the window.
+
+She's a long-waisted, rangy young party, who walks with a Theda Bara
+slouch and tries to talk out of one side of her mouth. "Hello!" she goes
+on. "The Parker Smith person. That's enough. It's all off."
+
+"Just as you say," says I. "But, if you ask me, I wouldn't pass up an
+aunt like her without takin' a look."
+
+"Aunt!" says Claire Lamar, _alias_ Hunt. "Listen: she's about as much an
+aunt to me as I am to either of you. And I've never shed any tears over
+the fact, either. The only aunt that I'd ever own was one that my family
+would never tell me much about. I had to find out about her for myself.
+Take it from me, though, she was some aunt."
+
+"Tastes in aunts differ, I expect," says I. "And Mrs. Parker Smith don't
+claim to be a reg'lar aunt, anyway. She seems harmless, too. All she
+wants is a chance to give you a rosy prospectus of life on a cow farm
+and blow you to a dinner at the Napoleon."
+
+"Think of that!" says Claire. "And I've been living for weeks on
+window-sill meals, with now and then a ptomaine-defying gorge at the
+Pink Poodle's sixty-cent table d'hote. Oh, I'll come, I'll come! But I
+warn you: the Parker Smith person will understand before the evening is
+over that I was born to no cow farm in Illinois."
+
+With that she glides off to do a dinner change.
+
+"I believe it is going to be quite an interesting party, don't you?"
+says Vee.
+
+"The signs point that way," says I. "But the old girl really ought to
+wear shock-absorbers if she wants to last through the evenin'. S-s-s-sh!
+Claire is comin' back."
+
+This time she's draped herself in a pale yellow kimono with blue
+triangles stenciled all over it.
+
+"Speaking of perfectly good aunts," says she, "there!" And she displays
+a silver-framed photo. It's an old-timer done in faded brown, and shows
+a dashin' young party wearin' funny sleeves, a ringlet cascade on one
+side of her head, and a saucy little pancake lid over one ear.
+
+"That," explains Claire, "was my aunt Clara Lamar; not my real aunt, you
+know, but near enough for me to claim her. This was taken in '82, I
+believe."
+
+"Really!" says Vee. "She must have been quite pretty."
+
+"That doesn't half tell it," says Claire. "She was a charmer, simply
+fascinating. Not beautiful, you know, but she had a way with her. She
+was brilliant, daring, one of the kind that men raved over. At twenty
+she married a Congressman, fat and forty. She hadn't lived in Washington
+six months before her receptions were crushes. She flirted
+industriously. A young French aide and an army officer fought a duel
+over her. And, while the capital was buzzing with that, she eloped with
+another diplomat, a Russian. For a year or two they lived in Paris. She
+had her salon. Then the Russian got himself killed in some way, and she
+soon married again--another American, quite wealthy. He brought her back
+to New York, and they lived in one of those old brown-stone mansions on
+lower Fifth Avenue. Her dinner parties were the talk of the
+town--champagne with the fish, vodka with the coffee, cigarettes for the
+women, cut-up stunts afterwards. I forget just who No. 3 was, but he
+succumbed. Couldn't stand the pace, I suppose. And then---- Well, Aunt
+Clara disappeared. But, say, she was a regular person. I wish I could
+find out what ever became of her."
+
+"Maybe Mrs. Parker Smith could give you a line," I suggests.
+
+"Her!" says Claire. "Fat chance! But I must finish dressing. Sorry to
+keep you waiting."
+
+We did get a bit restless durin' the next half hour, but the wait was
+worth while. For, believe me, when Claire comes down again she's some
+dolled.
+
+I don't mean she was any home-destroyer. That face of hers is too long
+and heavy for the front row of a song review. But she has plenty of zip
+to her get-up. After one glance I calls a taxi.
+
+The way I'd left it with Mrs. Parker Smith, we was to land Claire at the
+hotel first; then call her up, and proceed to order dinner. So we had
+another little stage wait, with only the three of us at the table.
+
+"I hope you don't mind if I have a puff or two," says Claire. "It goes
+here, you know."
+
+"Anything to make the evenin' a success," says I, signalin' a garcon.
+"My khaki lets me out of followin' you."
+
+So, when the head waiter finally tows in Mrs. Parker Smith, costumed in
+the same gray dress and lookin' meeker and gentler than ever, she is
+greeted with a sporty tableau. But she don't faint or anything. She just
+springs that twisty smile of hers and comes right on.
+
+"The missing one!" says I, wavin' at Claire.
+
+"Ah!" says Mrs. Parker Smith, beamin' on her. "So good of you to come!"
+
+"Wasn't it?" says Claire, removin' the cork tip languid.
+
+Well, as a get-together I must admit that the outlook was kind of
+frosty. Claire showed plenty of enthusiasm for the hors d'oeuvres
+and the low-tide soup and so on, but mighty little for this volunteer
+auntie, who starts to describe the subtle joys of the butter business.
+
+"Perhaps you have never seen a herd of registered Guernseys," says Mrs.
+Parker Smith, "when they are munching contentedly at milking time, with
+their big, dreamy eyes----"
+
+"Excuse me!" says Claire. "I don't have to. I spent a whole month's
+vacation on a Vermont farm."
+
+Mrs. Parker Smith only smiles indulgent.
+
+"We use electric milkers, you know," says she, "and most of our young
+men come from the agricultural colleges."
+
+"That listens alluring--some," admits Claire. "But I can't see myself
+planted ten miles out on an R. F. D. route, even with college-bred help.
+Pardon me if I light another dope-stick."
+
+I could get her idea easy enough, by then. Claire wasn't half so sporty
+as she hoped she was. It was just her way of doing the carry-on for Aunt
+Clara Lamar. But, at the same time, we couldn't help feelin' kind of
+sorry for Mrs. Parker Smith. She was tryin' to be so nice and friendly,
+and she wasn't gettin' anywhere.
+
+It was by way of switchin' the line of table chat, I expect, that Vee
+breaks in with that remark about the only piece of jewelry the old girl
+is wearin'.
+
+"What a duck of a bracelet!" says Vee. "An heirloom, is it?"
+
+"Almost," says Mrs. Parker Smith. "It was given to me on my
+twenty-second birthday, in Florence."
+
+She slips it off and passes it over for inspection. The part that goes
+around the wrist is all of fine chain-work, silver and gold, woven
+almost like cloth, and on top is a cameo, 'most as big as a clam.
+
+"How stunning! Look, Torchy. O-o-oh!" says Vee, gaspin' a little.
+
+In handling the thing she must have pressed a catch somewhere, for the
+cameo springs back, revealin' a locket effect underneath with a picture
+in it. Course, we couldn't help seein'.
+
+"Why--why----" says Vee, gazin' from the picture to Mrs. Parker Smith.
+"Isn't this a portrait of--of----"
+
+"Of a very silly young woman," cuts in Auntie. "We waited in Florence a
+week to have that finished."
+
+"Then--then it is you!" asks Vee.
+
+The lady in gray nods. Vee asks if she may show it to Claire.
+
+"Why not?" says Mrs. Parker Smith, smilin'.
+
+We didn't stop to explain. I passes it on to Claire, and then we both
+watches her face. For the dinky little picture under the cameo is a dead
+ringer for the one Claire had shown us in the silver frame. So it was
+Claire's turn to catch a short breath.
+
+"Don't tell me," says she, "that--that you are Clara Lamar?"
+
+Which was when Auntie got her big jolt. For a second the pink fades out
+of her cheeks, and the salad fork she'd been holdin' rattles into her
+plate. She makes a quick recovery, though.
+
+"I was--once," says she. "I had hoped, though, that the name had been
+forgotten. Tell me, how--how do you happen to----"
+
+"Why," says Claire, "uncle had the scrapbook habit. Anyway, I found this
+one in an old desk, and it was all about you. Your picture was in it,
+too. And say, Auntie, you were the real thing, weren't you?"
+
+After that it was a reg'lar reunion. For Claire had dug up her heroine.
+And, no matter how strong Auntie protests that she ain't that sort of a
+party now, and hasn't been for years and years, Claire keeps right on.
+She's a consistent admirer, even if she is a little late.
+
+"If I had only known it was you!" says she.
+
+"Then--then you'll come to Meadowbrae with me?" asks Mrs. Parker Smith.
+
+"You bet!" says Claire. "Between you and me, this art career of mine has
+rather fizzled out. Besides, keeping it up has got to be rather a bore.
+Honest, a spaghetti and cigarette life is a lot more romantic to read
+about than it is to follow. Whether I could learn to run a dairy farm or
+not, I don't know; but, with an aunt like you to coach me along, I'm
+blessed if I don't give it a try. When do we start?"
+
+"But," says Vee to me, later, "I can't imagine her on a farm."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," says I. "Didn't you notice she couldn't smoke
+without gettin' it up her nose?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+ALL THE WAY WITH ANNA
+
+
+Believe me, Belinda, this havin' a boss who's apt to stack you up casual
+against stuff that would worry a secret service corps recruited from
+seventh sons is a grand little cure for monotonous moments. Just because
+I happen to get a few easy breaks on my first special details seems to
+give Old Hickory the merry idea that when he wants someone to do the
+wizard act, all he has to do is press the button for me. I don't know
+whether my wearin' the khaki uniform helps out the notion or not. I
+shouldn't wonder.
+
+Now, here a week or ten days ago, when I leaves Vee and my peaceful
+little home after a week-end swing, I expects to be shot up to Amesbury,
+Mass., to inspect a gun-limber factory. Am I? Not at all. By 3 P.M. I'm
+in Bridgeport, Conn., wanderin' about sort of aimless, and tryin' to
+size up a proposition that I'm about as well qualified to handle as a
+plumber's helper called in to tune a pipe organ.
+
+Why was it that some three thousand hands in one of our sub-contractin'
+plants was bent on gettin' stirred up and messy about every so often, in
+spite of all that had been done to soothe 'em?
+
+Does that listen simple, or excitin', or even interestin'? It didn't to
+me. Specially after I'd given the once-over to this giddy mob of Wops
+and Hunkies and Sneezowskis.
+
+The office people didn't know how many brands of Czechs or Magyars or
+Polacks they had in the shops. What they was real sure of was that a
+third of the bunch had walked out twice within the last month, and if
+they quit again, as there was signs of their doin', we stood to drop
+about $200,000 in bonuses on shell contracts.
+
+It wasn't a matter of wage scales, either. Honest, some of them ginks
+with three z's in their names was runnin' up, with over-time and all,
+pay envelops that averaged as much as twelve a day. Why, some of the
+women and girls were pullin' down twenty-five a week. And they couldn't
+kick on the workin' conditions, either. Here was a brand-new concrete
+plant, clean as a new dish-pan, with half the sides swingin' glass
+sashes, and flower beds outside.
+
+"And still they threaten another strike," says the general manager. "If
+it comes, we might as well scrap this whole plant and transfer the
+equipment to Pennsylvania or somewhere else. Unless"--here he grins
+sarcastic--"you can find out what ails 'em, Lieutenant. But you are only
+the third bright young man the Corrugated has sent out to tell us what's
+what, you know."
+
+"Oh, well," says I. "There's luck in odd numbers. Cheer up."
+
+It was after this little chat that I sheds the army costume and wanders
+out disguised as a horny-handed workingman.
+
+Not that I'd decided to get a job right away. After my last stab I ain't
+so strong for this ten-hour cold-lunch trick as I was when I was new to
+the patriotic sleuthin' act. Besides, bein' no linguist, I couldn't see
+how workin' with such a mixed lot was goin' to get me anywhere. If I
+could only run across a good ambidextrous interpreter, now, one who
+could listen in ten languages and talk in six, it might help. And who
+was it I once knew that had moved to Bridgeport?
+
+I'd been mullin' on that mystery ever since I struck the town. Just a
+glimmer, somewhere in the back of my nut, that there had been such a
+party some time or other. I'll admit that wasn't much of a clue to start
+out trailin' in a place of this size, but it's all I had.
+
+I must have walked miles, readin' the signs on the stores, pushin' my
+way through the crowds, and finally droppin' into a fairly clean-lookin'
+restaurant for dinner. Half way through the goulash and noodles, I had
+this bright thought about consultin' the 'phone book. The cashier that
+let me have it eyed me suspicious as I props it up against the sugar
+bowl and starts in with the A's.
+
+Ever try readin' a telephone directory straight through? By the time I'd
+got through the M's I'd had to order another cup of coffee and a second
+piece of lemon pie. At that, the waitress was gettin' uneasy. She'd just
+shoved my check at me for the third time, and was addin' a glass of
+wooden tooth-picks, when I lets out this excited stage whisper.
+
+"Sobowski!" says I, grabbin' the book.
+
+The young lady in the frilled apron rests her thumbs on her hips
+dignified and shoots me a haughty glance. "Ring off, young feller," says
+she. "You got the wrong number."
+
+"Not so, Clarice," says I. "His first name is Anton, and he used to run
+a shine parlor in the arcade of the Corrugated buildin', New York, N. Y."
+
+"It's a small world, ain't it?" says she. "You can pay me or at the
+desk, just as you like."
+
+Clarice got her tip all right, and loaned me her pencil to write down
+Anton's street number.
+
+A stocky, bow-legged son of Kosciuszko, built close to the ground, and
+with a neck on him like a truck-horse, as I remembered Anton. But the
+hottest kind of a sport. Used to run a pool on the ball-games, and made
+a book on the ponies now and then. Always had a roll with him. He'd take
+a nickel tip from me and then bet a guy in the next chair fifty to
+thirty-five the Giants would score more'n three runs against the Cubs'
+new pitcher in to-morrow's game. That kind.
+
+Must have been two or three years back that Anton had told me about some
+openin' he had to go in with a brother-in-law up in Bridgeport. Likely I
+didn't pay much attention at the time. Anyway, he was missin' soon
+after; and if I hadn't been in the habit of callin' him Old Sobstuff I'd
+have forgotten that name of his entirely. But seein' it there in the
+book brought back the whole thing.
+
+"Anton Sobowski, saloon," was the way it was listed. So he was runnin' a
+suds parlor, eh? Well, it wasn't likely he'd know much about labor
+troubles, but it wouldn't do any harm to look him up. When I came to
+trail down the street number, though, blamed if it ain't within half a
+block of our branch works.
+
+And, sure enough, in a little office beyond the bar, leanin' back
+luxurious in a swivel-chair, and displayin' a pair of baby-blue armlets
+over his shirt sleeves, I discovers Mr. Sobowski himself. It ain't any
+brewery-staked hole-in-the-wall he's boss of, either. It's the Warsaw
+Cafe, bar and restaurant, all glittery and gorgeous, with lace curtains
+in the front windows, red, white, and blue mosquito nettin' draped
+artistic over the frosted mirrors, and three busy mixers behind the
+mahogany bar.
+
+Anton has fleshed up considerable since he quit jugglin' the brushes,
+and he's lost a little of the good-natured twinkle from his wide-set
+eyes. He glances up at me sort of surly when I first steps into the
+office; but the minute I takes off the straw lid and ducks my head at
+him, he lets loose a rumbly chuckle.
+
+"It is that Torchy, hey?" says he. "Well, well! It don't fade any, does
+it?"
+
+"Not that kind of dye," says I. "How's the boy?"
+
+"Me," says Anton. "Oh, fine like silk. How you like the place, hey?"
+
+I enthused over the Warsaw Cafe; and when he found I was still with the
+Corrugated, and didn't want to touch him for any coin, but had just
+happened to be in town and thought I'd look him up for old times'
+sake--well, Anton opened up considerable.
+
+"What!" says he. "They send you out? You must be comin' up?"
+
+"Only private sec. to Mr. Ellins," says I, "but he chases me around a
+good deal. We're busy people these days, you know."
+
+"The Corrugated Trust! I should say so," agrees Anton, waggin' his head
+earnest. "Big people, big money. I like to have my brother-in-law meet
+you. Wait."
+
+Seemed a good deal like wastin' time, but I spent the whole evenin' with
+Anton. I met not only the brother-in-law, but also Mrs. Sobowski, his
+wife; and another Mrs. Sobowski, an aunt or something; and Miss Anna
+Sobowski, his niece. Also I saw the three-story Sobowski boardin'-house
+that Anton conducted on the side; and the Alcazar movie joint, another
+Sobowski enterprise.
+
+That's where this Anna party was sellin' tickets--a peachy-cheeked,
+high-chested young lady with big, rollin' eyes, and her mud-colored hair
+waved something wonderful. I was introduced reg'lar and impressive.
+
+"Anna," says Anton, "take a good look at this young man. He's a friend
+of mine. Any time he comes by, pass him in free--any time at all. See?"
+
+And Anna, she flashes them high-powered eyes of hers at me kittenish.
+"Aw ri'," says she. "I'm on, Mr. Torchy."
+
+"That girl," confides Anton to me afterwards, "was eating black bread
+and cabbage soup in Poland less than three years ago. Now she buys high
+kid boots, two kinds of leather, at fourteen dollars. And makes goo-goo
+eyes at all the men. Yes, but never no mistakes with the change. Not
+Anna."
+
+All of which was interestin' enough, but it didn't seem to help any. You
+never can tell, though, can you? You see, it was kind of hard, breakin'
+away from Anton once he'd started to get folksy and show me what an
+important party he'd come to be. He wanted me to see the Warsaw when it
+was really doin' business, about ten o'clock, after the early
+picture-show crowds had let out and the meetin' in the hall overhead was
+in full swing.
+
+"What sort of meetin'?" I asks, just as a filler.
+
+"Oh, some kind of labor meetin'," says he. "I d'know. They chin a lot.
+That's thirsty work. Good for business, hey?"
+
+"Is it a labor union?" I insists.
+
+Anton shrugs his shoulders.
+
+"You wait," says he. "Mr. Stukey, he'll tell you all about it. Yes, an
+ear-full. He's a good spender, Stukey. Hires the hall, too."
+
+Somehow, that listened like it might be a lead. But an hour later, when
+I'd had a chance to look him over, I was for passin' Stukey up. For he
+sure was disappointin' to view. One of these thin, sallow, dyspeptic
+parties, with deep lines down either side of his mouth, a bristly, jutty
+little mustache, and ratty little eyes.
+
+I expect Anton meant well when he brings out strong, in introducin' me,
+how I'm connected with the Corrugated Trust. In fact, you might almost
+gather I _was_ the Corrugated. But it don't make any hit with Stukey.
+
+"Hah!" says he, glarin' at me hostile. "A minion."
+
+"Solid agate yourself," says I. "Wha'd'ye mean--minion?"
+
+"Aren't you a hireling of the capitalistic class?" demands Stukey.
+
+"Maybe," says I, "but I ain't above mixin' with lower-case minds now and
+then."
+
+"Case?" says he. "I don't understand."
+
+"Perhaps that's your trouble," says I.
+
+"Bah!" says he, real peevish.
+
+"Come, come, boys!" says Anton, clappin' us jovial on the shoulders.
+"What's this all about, hey? We are all friends here. Yes? Is it that
+the meetin' goes wrong, Mr. Stukey? Tell us, now."
+
+Stukey shakes his head at him warnin'. "What meetin'?" says he. "Don't
+be foolish. What time is it? Ten-twenty! I have an engagement."
+
+And with that he struts off important.
+
+Anton hunches his shoulders and lets out a grunt.
+
+"He has it bad--Stukey," says he. "It is that Anna. Every night he must
+walk home with her."
+
+"She ain't particular, is she?" I suggests.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," says Anton. "Yes, he is older, and not a strong
+hearty man, like some of these young fellows. But he is educated; oh,
+like the devil. You should hear him talk once."
+
+But Stukey had stirred up a stubborn streak in me.
+
+"Is he, though," says I, "or do you kid yourself?"
+
+I thought that would get a come-back out of Anton. And it does.
+
+"If I am so foolish," says he, "would I be here, with my name in gold
+above the door, or back shining shoes in the Corrugated arcade yet? Hey?
+I will tell you this. Nobodies don't come and hire my hall from me,
+fifty a week, in advance."
+
+"Cash or checks?" I puts in.
+
+"If the bank takes the checks, why should I worry?" asks Anton.
+
+"Oh, the first one might be all right," says I, "and the second;
+but--well, you know your own business, I expect."
+
+Anton gazes at me stupid for a minute, then turns to his desk and fishes
+out a bunch of returned checks. He goes through 'em rapid until he has
+run across the one he's lookin' for.
+
+"Maybe I do," says he, wavin' it under my nose triumphant.
+
+Which gives me the glimpse I'd been jockeyin' for. The name of that
+bank was enough. From then on I was mighty interested in this Mortimer
+J. Stukey; and while I didn't exactly use the pressure pump on Anton, I
+may have asked a few leadin' questions. Who was Stukey, where did he
+come from, and what was his idea--hirin' halls and so on? While Anton
+could recognize a dollar a long way off, he wasn't such a keen observer
+of folks.
+
+"I don't worry whether he's a Wilson man or not," says Anton, "or which
+movie star he likes best after Mary Pickford. If I did I should ask
+Anna."
+
+"Eh?" says I, sort of eager.
+
+"He tells her a lot he don't tell me," says Anton.
+
+"That's reasonable, too," says I. "Ask Anna. Say, that ain't a bad
+hunch. Much obliged."
+
+It wasn't so easy, though, with Stukey on the job, to get near enough to
+ask Anna anything. When they came in, and Anton invites me to join the
+fam'ly group in the boardin'-house dinin'-room while the cheese
+sandwiches and pickles was bein' passed around, I finds Stukey blockin'
+me off scientific.
+
+As Anton had said, he had it bad. Never took his eyes off Anna for a
+second. I suppose he thought he was registerin' tender emotions, but it
+struck me as more of a hungry look than anything else. Miss Sobowski
+seemed to like it, though.
+
+I expect a real lady's man wouldn't have had much trouble cuttin' in on
+Stukey and towin' Anna off into a corner. But that ain't my strong suit.
+The best I could do was to wait until the next day, when there was no
+opposition. Meantime I'd been usin' the long-distance reckless; so by
+the time Anna shows up at the Alcazar to open the window for the evenin'
+sale, I was primed with a good many more facts about a certain party
+than I had been the night before. Stukey wasn't quite such a man of
+mystery as he had been.
+
+Course, I might have gone straight to Anton; but, somehow, I wanted to
+try out a few hints on Anna. I couldn't say just why, either. The line
+of josh I opens with ain't a bit subtle. It don't have to be. Anna was
+tickled to pieces to be kidded about her feller. She invites me into the
+box-office, offers me chewin' gum, and proceeds to get quite frisky.
+
+"Ah, who was tellin' you that?" says she. "Can't a girl have a gentleman
+frien' without everybody's askin' is she engaged? Wotcher think?"
+
+"Tut-tut!" says I. "I suppose, when you two had your heads together so
+close, he was rehearsin' one of his speeches to you--the kind he makes
+up in the hall, eh?"
+
+"Mr. Stukey don't make no speeches there," says Anna. "He just tells the
+others what to say. You ought to hear him talk, though. My, sometimes
+he's just grand!"
+
+"Urgin' 'em not to quit work, I suppose?" says I.
+
+"Him?" says Anna. "Not much. He wants 'em to strike, all the time
+strike, until they own the shops. He's got no use for rich people. Calls
+'em blood-suckers and things like that. Oh, he's sump'n fierce when he
+talks about the rich."
+
+"Is he?" says I. "I wonder why?"
+
+"All the workers get like that," says Anna. "Mr. Stukey says that pretty
+soon everybody will join--all but the rich blood-suckers, and they'll be
+in jail. He was poor himself once. So was I, you know, in Poland. But we
+got along until the Germans came, and then---- Ugh! I don't like to
+remember."
+
+"Anton was tellin' me," says I. "You lost some of your folks."
+
+"Lost!" says Anna, a panicky look comin' into her big eyes. "You call it
+that? I saw my father shot, my two brothers dragged off to work in the
+trenches, and my sister--oh, I can't! I can't say it!"
+
+"Then don't tell Stukey," says I, "if you want to keep stringin' him
+along."
+
+"But why?" demands Anna.
+
+"Because," says I, "the money he's spendin' so free around here comes
+from them--the Germans."
+
+"No, no!" says Anna, whisperin' husky. "That--that's a lie!"
+
+"Sorry," says I; "but I got his number straight. He was workin' for a
+German insurance company up to 1915, bookkeepin' at ninety a month. Then
+he got the chuck. He came near starvin'. It was when he was almost in
+that he went crawlin' back to 'em, and they gave him this job. If you
+don't believe it's German money he's spendin' ask Anton to show you some
+of Stukey's canceled checks."
+
+"But--but he's English," protests Anna. "Anyway, his father was."
+
+"The Huns don't mind who they buy up," says I.
+
+She's still starin' at me, sort of stunned.
+
+"German money!" she repeats. "Him!"
+
+"Anton will show you the checks," says I. "He don't care where they
+come from, so long as he can cash 'em. But you might hint to him that if
+another big strike is pulled it's apt to be a long one, and in that case
+the movie business will get a crimp put in it. The Warsaw receipts, too.
+I take it that Stukey's tryin' to work the hands up to a point where
+they'll vote for----"
+
+"To-night they vote," breaks in Anna. "In two hours."
+
+I lets out a whistle. "Zowie!" says I. "Guess I'm a little late. Say,
+you got a 'phone here. Would it do any good if you called Anton up
+and----"
+
+"No," snaps Anna. "He thinks too slow. I must do this myself."
+
+"You?" says I. "What could you do?"
+
+"I don't know," says Anna. "But I must try. And quick. Hey, Marson!
+You--at the door. Come here and sell the tickets. Put an usher in your
+place."
+
+With that she bounces down off the tall chair, shoves the substitute
+into her place, and goes streamin' out bare-headed. I decides to follow.
+But she leaves me behind as though I'd been standin' still.
+
+At the Warsaw I finds Anton smokin' placid in his little office.
+
+"Seen Anna?" I asks.
+
+"Anna!" says he. "She should be selling tickets at the----"
+
+"She was," says I; "but just now she's upstairs in the hall."
+
+"At the meetin'?" gasps Anton. "Anna? Oh, no!"
+
+"Come, take a look," says I.
+
+And, for once in his life, Anton got a quick move on. He don't ask me to
+follow, but I trails along; and just as we strikes the top stair we
+hears a rousin' cheer go up. I suppose any other time we'd been barred
+out, but there's nobody to hold us up as we pushes through, for everyone
+has their eyes glued on the little stage at the far end of the hall.
+
+No wonder. For there, standin' up before more than three hundred yellin'
+men, is this high-colored young woman.
+
+Course, I couldn't get a word of it, my Polish education havin' been
+sadly neglected when I was young. But Anna seems to be tellin' some sort
+of story. My guess was that it's the one she'd hinted at to me--about
+her father and brothers and sister. But this time she seems to be
+throwin' in all the details.
+
+[Illustration: "Quick as a flash, Anna turns and points to Stukey. I
+caught his name as she hisses it out. Stukey, turnin' a sickly yellow,
+slumps in his chair."]
+
+There was nothin' frivolous about Anna's eyes now. It almost gave me a
+creepy feelin' to watch 'em--as if she was seein' things again that
+she'd like to forget--awful things. And she was makin' those three
+hundred men see the same things.
+
+All of a sudden she breaks off, covers her face with her hands, and
+shivers. Then, quick as a flash, she turns and points to Stukey. I
+caught his name as she hisses it out. Stukey, turnin' a sickly yellow,
+slumps in his chair. Another second, and she's turned back to the men
+out front. She is puttin' something up to them--a question, straight
+from the shoulder.
+
+The first to make a move is a squatty, thick-necked gent with one eye
+walled out. He jumps on a chair, shouts a few excited words, waves his
+long arms, and starts for the stage businesslike. The next thing I knew
+the riot was on, with Mortimer J. Stukey playin' the heavy lead and
+bein' tossed around like a rat.
+
+It must have been Anton that switched off the lights and sent for the
+police. I didn't stop to ask. Bein' near the door, I felt my way
+downstairs and made a quick exit. Course, the ceremonies promised to
+continue interestin', but somehow this struck me as a swell time for me
+to quit. So I strolls back to the hotel and goes to bed.
+
+Yes, I was some curious to know how the muss ended, but I didn't hurry
+around next mornin'. As a matter of fact, I'd enjoyed the society of the
+Sobowskis quite a lot durin' the past two days, and I thought I'd better
+stay away for a while. They're a strenuous bunch when they're stirred
+up--even a kittenish young thing like Anna.
+
+About noon I 'phoned the works, and found that all was serene there,
+with no signs of a strike yet.
+
+"No, and I got a hunch there won't be any, either," says I.
+
+I was plannin' to linger in Bridgeport another day or so; but when the
+afternoon paper came out I changed my mind. Accordin' to the
+police-court reporter's account, there'd been some little disturbance in
+Warsaw Hall the night before. Seems a stranger by the name of Stukey had
+butted into a meetin' of the Pulaski Social Club, and had proceeded to
+get so messy that it had been found necessary to throw him out. Half a
+dozen witnesses told how rude he'd been, includin' the well-known
+citizen, Mr. Anton Sobowski, who owned the premises. The said Stukey had
+been a bit damaged; but after he'd been patched up at the City Hospital
+he'd been promised a nice long rest--thirty days, to be exact.
+
+So I jumps the next train back to Broadway.
+
+"Ah, Lieutenant!" says Mr. Ellins, glancin' up from his desk. "Find
+anything up there?"
+
+"Uh-huh," says I. "His name was Stukey. Another case of drawin' his pay
+from Berlin."
+
+"Hah!" grunts Old Hickory, bitin' into his cigar. "The long arm again.
+But can't you recommend something?"
+
+"Sure!" says I. "If we could find a pair of gold boots about eighteen
+buttons high, we ought to send 'em to Anna Sobowski."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+AT THE TURN WITH WILFRED
+
+
+I expect Mr. Robert overstated the case a bit. He was more or less
+hectic back of the ears about then, havin' just broken away after a
+half-hour session with Mrs. Stanton Bliss.
+
+"That woman," says he, slumpin' into a chair and moppin' his brow, "has
+the mental equipment of a pet rabbit and the disposition of a setting
+hen. Good Lord!"
+
+I looks over at Vee and grins. Had to. It ain't often you see Mr. Robert
+like that. And him bein' all dolled up in his nifty navy uniform made it
+seem just that much funnier. But Vee don't grin back. She'd sympathize
+with 'most anybody. At that exact minute, I'll bet she was bein' sorry
+for both of 'em all in the same breath, as you might say.
+
+"But can't something be done--somehow?" she asks.
+
+"Not by me," says Mr. Robert, decided. "Great marlinspikes! I'm not the
+war department, am I? I'm only a first-grade lieutenant in command of a
+blessed, smelly old menhaden trawler that's posing as a mine-sweeper. I
+am supposed to be enjoying a twenty-four hour shore leave in the peace
+and quiet of my home, and I get--this."
+
+He waves his hand toward the other room, where the afore-mentioned Mrs.
+Stanton Bliss is sobbin, sniffin', and otherwise registerin' deep
+emotion by clawin' Mrs. Robert about the shoulders and wavin' away the
+smellin' salts.
+
+"If it was the first time," growls Mr. Robert. "But it isn't."
+
+That was true, too. You see, we'd heard somethin' about the other
+spasms. They'd begun along in July, when the awful news came out that
+Wilfred's red ink number had been plucked from the jar. Now you get it,
+don't you? Nothing unique. The same little old tragedy that was bein'
+staged in a million homes, includin' four-room flats, double-decker
+tenements, and boardin'-houses.
+
+Only this happened to hit the forty-room country house of the Stanton
+Blisses. Course, it was different. Look who was bein' stirred up by it.
+
+So mother had begun throwin' cat-fits. She'd tackled everyone she knew,
+demandin' to know what was to be done to keep Wilfred out of it. Among
+others, of course, she'd held up Mr. Robert. Wasn't he their nearest
+neighbor, and hadn't the Blisses entertained the Ellinses a lot? Not
+that she put it that way, exactly. But when she came with this hunch
+about gettin' sonny a snap job on some sort of naval construction work,
+why, of course, Mr. Robert couldn't duck. Yes, he thought he could place
+Wilfred. And he did--time-keeper, six-hour shift, and near enough so he
+could run back and forth every day in his machine.
+
+That might have been good enough for some folks. It meant dodgin' the
+draft for Wilfred, dead sure. But mother didn't stay satisfied long. She
+went investigatin' around the plant. She found the office stuffy,
+Wilfred's desk had no electric fan on it, she wasn't sure of the
+drinkin' water, and the foreman was quite an impossible sort of person
+who always sneered when he had anything to say to Wilfred. Couldn't Mr.
+Robert attend to some of these things? Mr. Robert said he'd try--if he
+had time. He didn't get the time. More visits from mother.
+
+Then this latest catastrophe. The Stanton Blisses had been away from
+home for three weeks or more, house-partyin' and motorin' through the
+mountains. Poor Wilfred had had to stay behind. What a stupidly
+distressin' thing war was, wasn't it? But he had been asked to spend his
+nights and Sundays with a college chum whose home was several miles
+nearer the works.
+
+And then they had come back to find this scribbled note. Things had been
+gettin' worse and worse, Wilfred wrote. Some young hoodlums around the
+plant had shouted after him as he drove off in his car. Even young
+girls. The men had been surly to him, and that beastly foreman---- Well,
+he wasn't goin' to stand for it, that was all. He didn't know just what
+he was goin' to do, but he was clearin' out. They'd hear from him later.
+
+They had. This six-word message from Philadelphia, dated nearly two
+weeks ago, was also waitin'. It said that he'd enlisted, was all right,
+and for them not to worry. Nothin' more.
+
+You couldn't blame mother for bein' stirred up. Her Wilfred had gone.
+Somewhere in some army camp or other, or at some naval trainin' station,
+the son and heir of the house of Bliss was minglin' with the coarse sons
+of the common people, was eatin' common food, was wearin' common
+clothes, was goin' up against the common thing generally. And that
+wasn't the worst of it. Where? Why didn't Mr. Robert tell her where? And
+couldn't he get him away at once? Mr. Robert had almost gone hoarse
+tryin' to explain why he couldn't. But after every try she'd come back
+with this wail:
+
+"Oh, but you don't understand what it is to be a mother!"
+
+"Thank the stars I don't!" says he, as he marches out of the room.
+
+I was for clearin' out so he'd be free to shoo her in any style he
+wanted to. We'd been havin' dinner with the Ellinses, Vee and I, and it
+was time to go home anyway. But there's no budgin' Vee.
+
+"Don't you think Torchy might find out where he is?" she suggests.
+"Bein' in the army himself, you know, and so clever at that sort of
+thing, I should think----"
+
+"Why, to be sure," breaks in Mr. Robert, perkin' up all of a sudden and
+starin' at me. "Lieutenant Torchy to the rescue, of course. He's the
+very one."
+
+"Ah, say, how'd you get that way?" says I. "Back up!"
+
+He's off, though, callin' Mrs. Stanton Bliss. And before I can escape
+he's sickin' her on real enthusiastic. Also there's Vee urgin' me to
+see if I can't do something to locate Wilfred. So I had to make the
+stab.
+
+"Got that wire with you?" I asks.
+
+Yes, Mrs. Bliss had all the documents right handy. I takes the yellow
+sheet over under the readin' lamp and squints at it sleuthy, partly to
+kill time, and partly because I couldn't think of anything else to do.
+And of course they all have to gather round and watch me close, as if I
+was about to pull some miracle. Foolish! It was a great deal worse than
+that.
+
+"H-m-m-m-m!" says I. "Philadelphia. I suppose there's some sort of naval
+trainin' station there, eh?"
+
+Mr. Robert says there is.
+
+"But if Wilfred was at it," I goes on, "and didn't want you to find him,
+he wouldn't have sent this from there, would he?"
+
+Mrs. Stanton Bliss sighs. "I'm sure I don't know," says she. "I--I
+suppose not."
+
+"Must be somewhere within strikin' distance of Philadelphia, though,"
+says I. "Now, what camp is near?"
+
+"Couldn't we wire someone in Washington and find out?" asks Mrs. Bliss.
+
+"Sure," says I. "And we'd get an official answer from the Secretary of
+War about 11 A.M. next spring. It'll be a lot quicker to call up Whitey
+Weeks."
+
+They don't know everything in newspaper offices, but there are mighty
+few things they can't find out. Whitey, though, didn't even have to
+consult the copy desk or the clippin' bureau.
+
+"About the nearest big one," says he, "is the Ambulance Corps Camp at
+Allentown. Somewhere up on the Lehigh. S'long."
+
+Here was another jolt for Mrs. Stanton Bliss. The Ambulance Corps! She
+near keeled over again, just hearin' me say it. Oh, oh! Did I really
+believe Wilfred could have been as rash as that?
+
+"Why," says she, "they drive right up to the trenches, don't they? Isn't
+that fearfully dangerous?"
+
+"War isn't a parlor pastime," puts in Mr. Robert. "And the ambulance
+drivers take their chances with the rest of the men. But there's no
+fightin' going on at Allentown. If Wilfred is there----"
+
+"If he is," cuts in Mrs. Bliss, "I must go to him this very moment."
+
+Some way that statement seemed to cheer Mr. Robert up a lot.
+
+"Naturally," says he. "I'll look up a train for you. Just a second. In
+the A's. Allentown--Allen. Ah, page 156. M-m-m. Here you are. First one
+starts at 2 A.M. and gets you in at 5.15. Will that do?"
+
+Mrs. Bliss turns on him sort of dazed, and blinks them round eyes of
+hers. She's a fairly well put up old girl, you know, built sort of on
+the pouter-pigeon type, but with good lines below the waist, and a
+complexion that she's taken lots of pains with. Dresses real classy,
+and, back to, she's often mistaken for daughter Marion. Travels in quite
+a gay bunch, I understand, with Mr. Stanton Bliss kind of trailin' along
+behind. Usually, when she ain't indulgin' in hysterics, she has very
+fetchin' kittenish ways. You know the kind. Their specialty's makin' the
+surroundin' males jump through the hoop for 'em. But when it comes to
+arrivin' anywhere at 5.15 A.M.--well, not for her.
+
+"I should be a sight," says she.
+
+"You'd still be a mother, wouldn't you?" asks Mr. Robert.
+
+It was rough of him, as he was given to understand by the looks of all
+three ladies present, includin' Mrs. Robert; so he tries to square
+himself by lookin' up a ten o'clock train, all Pullman, with diner and
+observation.
+
+"I would gladly take you up myself," says he, lyin' fluent, "if I
+didn't have to go back to my boat. But here is Torchy. He'll go, I
+suppose."
+
+"Of course," says Vee.
+
+And that's how I came to be occupyin' drawin'-room A, along with mother
+and sister Marion, as we breezes up into the Pennsylvania hills on this
+Wilfred hunt. A gushy, giggly young party Marion is, but she turns out
+to be quite a help. It was her who spots the two young soldiers driftin'
+through towards the smokin' compartment, and suggests that maybe they're
+goin' to the same camp.
+
+"And they would know if Wilfred was there, wouldn't they?" she adds.
+
+"Maybe," says I. "I'll go ask."
+
+Nice, clean-cut young chaps they was. They'd stretched out comfortable
+on the leather seats, and was enjoyin' a perfectly good smoke, until I
+shows up. The minute I appears, though, they chucks their cigars and
+jumps up, heels together, right hand to the hat-brim. That's what I get
+by havin' this dinky bar on my shoulders.
+
+"Can it, boys," says I. "This is unofficial."
+
+"At ease, sir?" suggests one.
+
+"As easy as you know how," says I.
+
+Yes, they says they're ambulancers; on their way back to Allentown,
+too. But they didn't happen to know of any Wilfred Stanton Bliss there.
+
+"You see, sir," says one, "there are about five thousand of us, so he
+might----"
+
+"Sure!" says I. "But mother'll want an affidavit. Would you mind
+droppin' in and bein' cross-examined? There's sister Marion, too."
+
+Obligin' chaps, they were; let me tow 'em into the drawin'-room,
+listened patient while Mrs. Bliss described just how Wilfred looked, and
+tried their best to remember havin' seen such a party. Also they gave
+her their expert opinion on how long the war was goin' to last, when
+Wilfred would be sent over, and what chances he stood of comin' back
+without a scratch.
+
+Once more it was Marion who threw the switch.
+
+"Tell me," says she, "will he be wearing a uniform just like yours?"
+
+They said he would.
+
+"Oh!" gurgles Marion, "I think it is perfectly spiffy. Don't you,
+mother? I'm just crazy to see Wilfred in one."
+
+Mother catches the enthusiasm. "My noble boy!" says she, rollin' her
+eyes up.
+
+From then on she's quite chipper. The idea of findin' sonny made over
+into a smart, dashin' soldier seemed to crowd out all the panicky
+thoughts she'd been havin'. From little hints she let drop, I judged
+that she was already picturin' him as a gallant hero, struttin' around
+haughty and givin' off stern commands. Maybe he'd been made a captain or
+something. Surely they would soon see that her Wilfred ought to be an
+officer of some kind.
+
+"And we must have his portrait painted," she remarks, claspin' her hands
+excited as the happy thought strikes her.
+
+The boys looked steady out of the window and managed to smother the
+smiles. I imagine they'd seen all sorts of mothers come to camp.
+
+It's a lively little burg, Allentown, even if I didn't know it was on
+the map before. At the station you take a trolley that runs straight
+through the town and out to the fair grounds, where the camp is located.
+Goin' up the hill, you pass through the square and by the Soldiers'
+Monument. Say, it's some monument, too. Then out a long street lined
+with nice, comfortable-lookin' homes, until you get a glimpse of blue
+hills rollin' away as far as you can see, and there you are.
+
+The boys piloted us past the guard at the gates, through a grove of
+trees, and left us at the information bureau, where a soldier wearin'
+shell-rimmed glasses listened patient while mother and sister both
+talked at once.
+
+"Bliss? Just a moment," says he, reachin' for a card-index box. "Yes,
+ma'am. Wilfred Stanton. He's here."
+
+"But where?" demands Mrs. Bliss.
+
+"Why," says the soldier, "he's listed with the casuals just now.
+Quartered in the cow-barn."
+
+"The--the cow-barn!" gasps Mrs. Bliss.
+
+The soldier grins.
+
+"It's over that way," says he, wavin' his hand. "Anyone will tell you."
+
+They did. We wandered on and on, past the parade ground that used to be
+the trottin' track, past new barracks that was being knocked together
+hasty, until we comes to this dingy white buildin' with all the
+underwear hung up to dry around it. I took one glance inside, where the
+cots was stacked in thick and soldiers was loafin' around in various
+stages of dress and undress, and then I shooed mother and sister off a
+ways while I went scoutin' in alone. At a desk made out of a
+packin'-box I found a chap hammerin' away at a typewriter. He salutes
+and goes to attention.
+
+"Yes, sir," says he, when I've told him who I'm lookin' for. "Squeaky
+Bliss. But he's on duty just now, sir."
+
+I suggests that his mother and sister are here and would like to have a
+glimpse of him right away.
+
+"They'd better wait until after five, sir," says he.
+
+"I wouldn't like to try holdin' 'em in that long," says I.
+
+"Very well, sir," says he. "Squeaky's on fatigue. Somewhere down at the
+further end of the grand stand you might catch him. But if it's his
+mother--well, I'd wait."
+
+I passes this advice on to Mrs. Bliss.
+
+"The idea!" says she. "I wish to see my noble soldier boy at once.
+Come."
+
+So we went. There was no scarcity of young fellows in olive drab. The
+place was thick with 'em. Squads were drillin' every way you looked, and
+out in the center of the field, where two or three hundred new
+ambulances were lined up, more squads were studyin' the insides of the
+motor, or practicin' loadin' in stretchers. Hundreds and hundreds of
+young fellows in uniform, all lookin' just alike. I didn't wonder that
+mother couldn't pick out sonny boy.
+
+"What was it that man said?" she asks. "Wilfred on fatigue. Does that
+mean he is resting?"
+
+"Not exactly," says I.
+
+About then sister Marion begins to exhibit jumpy emotions.
+
+"Mother! Mother!" says she, starin' straight ahead. "Look!"
+
+All I could see was a greasy old truck backed up in front of some low
+windows under the grand stand, with half a dozen young toughs in smeary
+blue overalls jugglin' a load of galvanized iron cans. Looked like
+garbage cans; smelled that way too. And the gang that was handlin'
+'em--well, most of 'em had had their heads shaved, and in that rig they
+certainly did look like a bunch from Sing Sing.
+
+I was just nudgin' sister to move along, when Mrs. Bliss lets out this
+choky cry:
+
+"Wilfred!" says she.
+
+She hadn't made any mistake, either. It was sonny, all right. And you
+should have seen his face as he swings around and finds who's watchin'
+him. If it hadn't been for the bunkie who was helpin' him lift that can
+of sloppy stuff on to the tail of the truck, there'd been a fine spill,
+too.
+
+"My boy! Wilfred!" calls Mrs. Stanton Bliss, holdin' out her arms
+invitin' and dramatic.
+
+Now, in the first place, Wilfred was in no shape to be the party of the
+second part in a motherly clinch act. It's messy work, loadin' garbage
+cans, and he's peeled down for it. He was costumed in a pair of overalls
+that would have stood in the corner all by themselves, and an army
+undershirt with one sleeve half ripped off.
+
+In the second place, all the rest of the bunch was wearin' broad grins,
+and he knew it. So he don't rush over at once. Instead he steps around
+to the front of the truck and salutes a husky, freckled-necked young
+sergeant who's sittin' behind the steerin' wheel.
+
+"Family, sir," says Wilfred. "What--what'll I do?"
+
+The sergeant takes one look over his shoulder.
+
+"Oh, well," says he, "drop out until next load."
+
+Not until Wilfred had led us around the corner does he express his
+feelin's.
+
+"For the love of Mike, mother!" says he. "Wasn't it bad enough without
+your springin' that 'muh boy!' stuff? Right before all the fellows,
+too. Good-night!"
+
+"But, Wilfred," insists mother, "what does this mean? Why do I find
+you--well, like this? Oh, it's too dreadful for words. Who has done this
+to you--and why?"
+
+Jerky, little by little, Wilfred sketches out the answer. Army life
+wasn't what he'd expected. Not at all. He was sore on the whole
+business. He'd been let in for it, that was all. It wasn't so bad for
+some of the fellows, but they'd been lucky. As for him--well, he'd come
+here to learn to be an ambulance driver, and he had spent his first week
+in the kitchen, peelin' potatoes. Then, when they'd let him off that,
+and given him his first pass to go to town, just because he'd been a
+little late comin' back they'd jumped on him somethin' fierce. They'd
+shoved him on this garbage detail. He'd been on it ever since.
+
+"It's that mucker of a top sergeant, Quigley," says Wilfred. "He's got
+it in for me."
+
+Mrs. Stanton Bliss straightens out her chin dimple as she glares after
+the garbage truck, which is rollin' away in the distance.
+
+"Has he, indeed!" says she. "We will see about that, then."
+
+"But you must handle him easy, mother," warns Wilfred.
+
+"That person!" snorts mother. "I shall have nothing to do with him
+whatever. I mean to get you out of this, Wilfred. I am going straight to
+the general."
+
+"Now, mother!" protests Wilfred. "Don't make a scene."
+
+When she was properly stirred up, though, that was mother's long suit.
+And she starts right in. Course, I tried to head her off, but it's no
+use. As there wasn't a general handy, she had to be satisfied with a
+major. Seemed like a mighty busy major, too; but when he heard his
+orderly tryin' to shunt the ladies, he gives the signal to let 'em in.
+You can bet I didn't follow. Didn't have to, for Mrs. Bliss wasn't doin'
+any whisperin' about then.
+
+And she sure made it plain to the major how little she thought of the U.
+S. Army, and specially that part of it located at Allentown, Pa. Havin'
+got that off her chest, and been listened to patient, she demands that
+Wilfred be excused from all his disgustin' duties, and be allowed to go
+home with her at once and for good.
+
+The major shakes his head. "Impossible!" says he.
+
+"Then," says Mrs. Stanton Bliss, tossin' her head, "I shall appeal to
+the Secretary of War; to the President, if necessary."
+
+The major smiles weary. "You'd best talk to his sergeant," says he. "If
+he recommends your son's discharge it may go through."
+
+"That person!" exclaims Mrs. Bliss. "Never! I--I might talk to his
+captain."
+
+"Useless, madam," says the major. "See his sergeant; he's the one."
+
+And he signifies polite that the interview is over.
+
+When mother tells sonny the result of this visit to headquarters, he
+shrugs his shoulders.
+
+"I knew it would be that way," says he. "They've got me, and I've got to
+stand for it. No use askin' Quigley. You might as well go home."
+
+"But at least you can get away long enough to have dinner with us," says
+mother.
+
+"Nothing doin'," says Wilfred. "Can't get out unless Quigley signs a
+pass, and he won't."
+
+"Oh, come!" says I. "He don't look so bad as all that. Let me see what I
+can do with him."
+
+Well, after I'd chased the ladies back to the hotel with instructions to
+wait hopeful, I hunts up Top Sergeant Quigley. Had quite a revealin'
+chat with him, too. Come to look at him close after he'd washed up, he's
+rather decent appearin'. Face seems sort of familiar, too.
+
+"Didn't you play first base for the Fordhams?" I asks.
+
+"Oh, that was back in '14," says he.
+
+"As I remember," says I, "you was some star on the bag, though. Now,
+about young Bliss. Case of mommer's pet, you know."
+
+"He had that tag all over him," says Quigley. "But we're knockin' a lot
+of that out of him. He's comin' on."
+
+"Good!" says I. "Would it stop the process to let him off for an evenin'
+with the folks--dinner and so on?"
+
+"Why, no; I guess not," says Quigley. "Might do him good. But he must
+apply himself. Send him along."
+
+So a half hour later I sat on a cot in the cow-barn and watched Wilfred,
+fresh from the shower bath, get into his army uniform.
+
+"Say," he remarks, strugglin' through his khaki shirt, "I didn't think
+old Quig would do it."
+
+"Seemed glad to," says I. "Said you was comin' on fine."
+
+"He did?" gasps Wilfred. "Quigley? Well, what do you know!"
+
+Not such a bad imitation of a soldier, Wilfred, when he'd laced up the
+leggins and got the snappy-cut coat buttoned tight. He's some different
+from what he was when sister first discovered him. And we had quite a
+gay dinner together.
+
+First off mother was for campin' right down there indefinitely, where
+she could see her darlin' boy every day; but between Wilfred and me we
+persuaded her different. I expect the hotel quarters had something to do
+with it, too. Anyway, after Wilfred had promised to try for a couple of
+days off soon, for a visit home, she consents to start back in the
+mornin'.
+
+"What I dread most, Wilfred," says she, "is leaving you at the mercy of
+that horrid sergeant."
+
+"Oh, I'll get along with him somehow," says Wilfred. "I'm goin' to try,
+anyway."
+
+And right there, as I understand it, Wilfred Stanton Bliss started to be
+a man and a soldier. He had a long way to go, though, it seemed to me.
+
+So here the other day, only a couple of weeks since we made our trip,
+I'm some surprised to see who it is givin' me the zippy salute on the
+station platform out home. Yes, it's Wilfred. And say, he's got his
+shoulders squared, he's carryin' his chin up, and he's wearin' his
+uniform like it grew on him.
+
+"Well, well!" says I. "Got your furlough, eh?"
+
+"Yes, sir," says he. "Seventy-two hours. Had a whale of a time, too. You
+can't guess who I brought home with me, I'll bet."
+
+I couldn't.
+
+"Our top sergeant--Quigley," says he. "Say, he's all right. He's had us
+transferred to the best barracks in camp. Guess we deserve it, too, for
+we're on the way to bein' the crackerjack section of them all. You ought
+to see us drill. Some class! And it's all due to Quigley. Do you know
+what he thinks? That we're slated among the next lot to go over. How
+about that, sir? Won't that be great?"
+
+"Huh!" says I. "How long ago was it you signed up, Wilfred?"
+
+"Just six weeks, sir," says he.
+
+"Whiffo!" says I, gawpin' at him. "If we had about a hundred thousand
+Quigleys!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+VEE GOES OVER THE TOP
+
+
+"But listen, Vee," says I. "If Hoover can't pull it off, with all the
+backin' he's got, what's the use of a few of you women mixin' in?"
+
+"At least we can try," says Vee. "The prices this Belcher person is
+charging are something outrageous. Eggs ninety cents!"
+
+"We should worry," says I. "Ain't we got nearly a hundred hens on the
+job?"
+
+"But others haven't," says Vee. "Those people in that row of little
+cottages down by the station. The Walters, for instance. He can't get
+more than twenty-five or thirty dollars a week, can he?"
+
+"There's so many cases you can't figure out," says I. "Maybe he scrubs
+along on small steaks or fried chicken."
+
+"It's no joking matter," protests Vee. "Of course there are plenty of
+people worse off then the Walters. That Mrs. Burke, whose two boys are
+in the Sixty-ninth. She must do her marketing at Belcher's, too. Think
+of her having to pay those awful prices!"
+
+"I would," says I, "if workin'up a case of glooms was any use; but I
+can't see----"
+
+"We can see enough," breaks in Vee. "The new Belcher limousine, the
+additions to their hideous big house. All made, too, out of food
+profiteering right here. It's got to stop, that's all."
+
+Which is where I should have shouted "Kamerad" and come runnin' out with
+my hands up, but I tried to show her that Belcher was only playin' the
+game like everyone else was playin' it.
+
+"He ain't springin' anything new," says I. "He's just followin' the mob.
+They're all doin' it, from the Steel Trust down to the push-cart men.
+And when you come to interferin' with business--well, that's serious."
+
+"Humph!" says Vee. "When it comes to taking advantage of poor people and
+depriving them of enough to eat, I call it plain piracy. And you ought
+to be ashamed of yourself, Torchy, standing up for such things."
+
+So you see I was about as convincin' as a jazz band tryin' to imitate
+the Metropolitan orchestra doin' the overture to "Lucia." If I hadn't
+finally had sense enough to switch the subject a little, there might
+have been a poutin' scene and maybe a double case of sulks. But when I
+got to askin' where she'd collected all this grouch against our local
+meat and provision octopus, she cheers up again.
+
+Seems she'd been to a Red Cross meetin' that afternoon, where a lot of
+the ladies was swappin' tales of woe about their kitchen expense
+accounts. Some of 'em had been keepin' track of prices in the city
+markets and was able to shoot the deadly parallel at Belcher. Anyway,
+they ditched the sweater-knittin' and bandage-rollin' for the time
+bein', and proceeded to organize the Woman's Economic League on the
+spot.
+
+"Sounds impressive," says I. "And what then? Did you try Belcher for
+treason, find him guilty, and sentence him to be shot at sunrise?"
+
+Vee proves that she's good-natured again by runnin' her tongue out at
+me.
+
+"We did not, Smarty," says she. "But we passed a resolution condemning
+such extortion severely."
+
+"How rough of you!" says I. "Anything else?"
+
+"Yes," says Vee. "We appointed a committee to tell him he'd better
+stop."
+
+"Fine!" says I. "I expect he'll have everything marked down about forty
+per cent. by to-morrow night."
+
+Somehow, it didn't work out just that way. Next report I got from Vee
+was that the committee had interviewed Belcher, but there was nothing
+doin'. He'd been awfully nice to 'em, even if he had talked through his
+cigar part of the time.
+
+Belcher says he feels just as bad as they about havin' to soak on such
+stiff prices. But how can he help it? The cold-storage people are
+boostin' their schedules every day. They ain't to blame, either. They're
+bein' held up by the farmers out West who are havin' their hair cut too
+often. Besides, all the hens in the country have quit layin' and joined
+the I. W. W., and every kind of meat is scarce on account of Pershing's
+men developin' such big appetites. He's sorry, but he's doin' his best,
+considerin' the war and everything. If people would only get the habit
+of usin' corn meal for their pie crusts, everything would be lovely once
+more.
+
+"An alibi on every count," says I. "I expect the committee apologized."
+
+"Very nearly that," says Vee. "The sillies! I just wish I'd been there.
+I don't believe half of what he said is true."
+
+"That's one thing," says I, "but provin' it on him would be another. And
+there's where Belcher's got you."
+
+Course, I like to watch Vee in action, for she sure is a humdinger when
+she gets started. As a rule, too, I don't believe in tryin' to block her
+off in any of her little enterprises.
+
+But here was once where it seemed to me she was up against a hopeless
+proposition. So I goes on to point out, sort of gentle and soothin', how
+war prices couldn't be helped, any more'n you could stop the tide from
+comin' in.
+
+Oh, I'm some smooth suggester, I am, when you get into fireside
+diplomacy. Anyway, the price of eggs wasn't mentioned again that
+evenin'. As a matter of fact, Vee ain't troubled much with marketin'
+details, for Madame Battou, wife of the little old Frenchman who does
+the cheffing for us so artistic, attends to layin' in the supplies. And,
+believe me, when she sails forth with her market basket you can be sure
+she's goin' to get sixteen ounces to the pound and the rock bottom price
+on everything. No 'phone orders for her. I don't believe Vee knew what
+the inside of Belcher's store looks like. I'm sure I didn't.
+
+So I thought the big drive on the roast beef and canned goods sector had
+been called off. About that time, too, I got another inspection detail
+handed me,--and I didn't see my happy home until another week-end.
+
+I lands back on Broadway at 9 A.M. Havin' reported at the Corrugated
+general offices and found Old Hickory out of town, I declares a special
+holiday and beats it out to the part of Long Island I'm beginnin' to
+know best. Struck me Professor Battou held his face kind of funny when
+he saw me blow in; and as I asks for Vee, him and the madam swaps
+glances. He say she's out.
+
+"Oh," says I. "Mornin' call up at the Ellinses', eh? I'll stroll up that
+way, myself, then."
+
+Leon hesitates a minute, like he was chokin' over something, and then
+remarks: "But no, M'sieur. Madame, I think, is in the village."
+
+"Why," says I, "I just came from the station. I didn't see the car
+around. How long has she been gone?"
+
+Another exchange of looks, and then Battou answers:
+
+"She goes at seven."
+
+"Whaddye mean goes?" says I. "It ain't a habit of hers, is it?"
+
+Leon nods.
+
+"All this week," says he. "She goes to the meat and grocery
+establishment, I understand."
+
+"Belcher's?" says I. "But what--what's the idea?"
+
+"I think it would be best if M'sieur asked Madame," says he.
+
+"That's right, too," says I.
+
+You can guess I was some puzzled. Was Vee doin' the spy act on Belcher,
+watchin' him open the store and spendin' the forenoon concealed in a
+crockery crate or something? No, that didn't sound reasonable. But what
+the---- Meanwhile I was leggin' it down towards the village.
+
+It's a busy place, Belcher's, specially on Saturday forenoon. Out front
+three or four delivery trucks was bein' loaded up, and inside a lot of
+clerks was jumpin' round. Among the customers was two Jap butlers, three
+or four Swedish maids, and some of the women from the village. But no
+Vee anywhere in sight.
+
+Loomin' prominent in the midst of all this active tradin' is Belcher
+himself, a thick-necked, ruddy-cheeked party, with bristly black hair
+cut shoe-brush style and growing down to a point in front. His big,
+bulgy eyes are cold and fishy, but they seem to take in everything
+that's goin' on. I hadn't been standin' around more'n half a minute
+before he snaps his finger, and a clerk comes hustlin' over to ask what
+I'll have.
+
+"Box of ginger-snaps," says I offhand; and a minute later I'm bein'
+shunted towards a wire-cage with a cash slip in my hand.
+
+I'd dug up a quarter, and was waitin' for the change to be passed out
+through the little window, when I hears a familiar snicker. Then I
+glances in to see who's presidin' at the cash register. And say, of all
+the sudden jolts I ever got! It's Vee.
+
+"Well, for the love of soup!" I gasps.
+
+"Twelve out--thirteen. That's right, isn't it? Thank you so much, sir,"
+says she, her gray eyes twinklin'.
+
+"Quit the kiddin'," says I, "and sketch out the plot of the piece."
+
+"Can't now," says Vee. "So run along. Please!"
+
+"But how long does this act of yours last?" I insists.
+
+"Until about noon, I think," says she. "It's such fun. You can't
+imagine."
+
+"What's it for, though?" says I. "Are you pullin' a sleuth stunt on----"
+
+"S-s-s-sh!" warns Vee. "He's coming. Pretend to be getting a bill
+changed or something."
+
+It's while I'm fishin' out a ten that this little dialogue at the meat
+counter begins to get conspicuous: A thin, stoop-shouldered female with
+gray streaks in her hair is puttin' up a howl at the price of corned
+beef. She'd asked for the cheapest piece they had, and it had been
+weighed for her, but still she wasn't satisfied.
+
+"It wasn't as high last Saturday," she objects.
+
+"No, ma'am," says the clerk. "It's gone up since."
+
+"Worse luck," says she, pokin' the piece with her finger. "And this is
+nearly all bone and fat. Now couldn't you----"
+
+"I'll ask the boss, ma'am," says the clerk. "Here he is."
+
+Belcher has come over and is listenin', glarin' hostile at the woman.
+
+"It's Mrs. Burke, the one whose sons are in the army," whispers Vee.
+
+"Well?" demands Belcher.
+
+"It's so much to pay for meat like that," says Mrs. Burke. "If you
+could----"
+
+"Take it or leave it," snaps Belcher.
+
+"Sure now," says she, "you know I can't afford to give----"
+
+"Then get out!" orders Belcher.
+
+At which Vee swings open the door of the cage, brushes past me, and
+faces him with her eyes snappin'.
+
+"Pig!" says she explosive.
+
+"Wha-a-a-at!" gasps Belcher, gawpin' at her.
+
+"I--I beg pardon," says Vee. "I shouldn't have said that, even if it was
+so."
+
+"You--you're discharged, you!" roars Belcher.
+
+"Isn't that nice?" says Vee, reachin' for her hat and coat. "Then I can
+go home with my husband, I suppose. And if I have earned any of that
+princely salary--five dollars a week, it was to be, wasn't it?--well,
+you may credit it to my account: Mrs. Richard Tabor Ballard, you know.
+Come, Torchy."
+
+Say, I always did suspect there was mighty few things Vee was afraid of,
+but I never thought she had so much clear grit stowed away in her
+system. For to sail past Belcher the way he looked then took a heap of
+nerve, believe me. But before he can get that thick tongue of his
+limbered up we're outside, with Vee snuggled up mufflin' the giggles
+against my coat sleeve.
+
+"Oh, it's been such a lark, Torchy!" says she. "I've passed as Miss
+Hemmingway for six days, and I don't believe more than three or four
+persons have suspected. Thank goodness, Belcher wasn't one of them. For
+I've learned--oh, such a lot!"
+
+"Let's start at the beginning," says I. "Why did you do it at all?"
+
+"Because the committee was so ready to believe the whoppers he told,"
+says Vee. "And they wanted to disband the League, especially that Mrs.
+Norton Plummer, whose husband is a lawyer. She was almost disagreeable
+about it. Truly. 'But, my dear,' she said to me, 'one can't act merely
+on rumor and prejudice. If we had a few facts or figures it might be
+different.' And you know that sour smile of hers. Well! That's why I did
+it. I asked them to give me ten days. And now----"
+
+Vee finishes by squeezin' my arm.
+
+"But how'd you come to break in so prompt?" I asks. "Did you mesmerize
+Belcher?"
+
+"I bought up his cashier--paid her to report that she was ill," says
+Vee. "Then I smoothed back my hair, put on this old black dress, and
+went begging for the job. That's when I began to know Mr. Belcher. He's
+quite a different person when he is hiring a cashier from the one you
+see talking to customers. Really, I've never been looked at that way
+before--as if I were some sort of insect. But when he found I would work
+cheap, and could get Mrs. Robert Ellins to go on my bond if I should
+turn out a thief, he took me on.
+
+"Getting up so early was a bit hard, and eating a cold luncheon harder
+still; but worst of all was having to hear him growl and snap at the
+clerks. Oh, he's perfectly horrid. I don't see how they stand it. Of
+course, I had my share. 'Miss Blockhead' was his pet name for me."
+
+"Huh!" says I, grittin' my teeth.
+
+"Meaning that you'd like to tell Belcher a few things yourself?" asks
+Vee. "Well, you needn't. I'd no right to be there, for one thing. And,
+for another, this is my own particular affair. I know what I am going to
+do to Mr. Belcher; at least, what I'm going to try to do. Anyway, I
+shall have some figures to put before our committee Monday. Then we
+shall see."
+
+Yep, she had the goods on him. I helped her straighten out the evidence:
+copies of commission-house bills showin' what he had paid for stuff, and
+duplicates of sales-slips givin' the retail prices he got. And say, all
+he was stickin' on was from thirty to sixty per cent. profit.
+
+He didn't always wait for the wholesaler to start the boostin', either.
+Vee points out where he has jacked up the price three times on the same
+shipment--just as the spell took him. He'd be readin' away in his
+_Morgen Blatherskite_, and all of a sudden he'd jump out of his chair.
+I'm no expert on provision prices, but some of them items had me
+bug-eyed.
+
+"Why," says I, "it looks like this Belcher party meant to discourage
+eatin' altogether. Couldn't do better if he was runnin' a dinin'-car."
+
+"It's robbery, that's what it is," says Vee. "And when you think that
+his chief victims are such helpless people as the Burkes and the
+Walters--well, it's little less than criminal."
+
+"It's a rough deal," I admits, "but one that's bein' pulled in the best
+circles. War profits are what everybody seems to be out after these
+days, and I don't see how you're going to stop it."
+
+"I mean to try to stop Belcher, anyway," says Vee, tossin' her chin up.
+
+"You ain't got much show," says I; "but go to it."
+
+Just how much fight there was in Vee, though, I didn't have any idea of
+until I saw her Monday evenin' after another meetin' of the League. It
+seems she'd met this Mrs. Norton Plummer on her own ground and had
+smeared her all over the map.
+
+"What do you suppose she wanted to do?" demands Vee. "Pass more
+resolutions! Well, I told her just what I thought of that. As well pin a
+'Please-keep-out' notice on your door to scare away burglars as to send
+resolutions to Belcher. And when I showed her what profits he was
+making, item by item, she hadn't another word to say. Then I proposed my
+plan."
+
+"Eh?" says I. "What's it like?"
+
+"We are going to start a store of our own," says Vee--just like that,
+offhand and casual.
+
+"You are!" says I. "But--but who's goin' to run it?"
+
+"They made me chairman of the sub-committee," says Vee. "And then I made
+them subscribe to a campaign fund. Five thousand. We raised it in as
+many minutes. And now--well, I suppose I'm in for it."
+
+"Listens that way to me," says I.
+
+"Then I may as well begin," says she.
+
+And say, there's nothin' draggy about Vee when she really goes over the
+top. While I'm dressin' for dinner she calls up a real estate dealer and
+leases a vacant store in the other end of the block from Belcher's.
+Between the roast and salad she uses the 'phone some more and drafts
+half a dozen young ladies from the Country Club set to act as relay
+clerks. Later on in the evenin' she rounds up Major Percy Thomson, who's
+been invalided home from the Quartermaster's Department on account of a
+game knee, and gets him to serve as buyin' agent for a week or so. Her
+next move is to charter a couple of three-ton motor-trucks to haul
+supplies out from town; and when I went to sleep she was still jottin'
+things down on a pad to be attended to in the mornin'.
+
+For two or three days nothin' much seemed to happen. The windows of that
+vacant store was whitened mysterious, carpenters were hammerin' away
+inside, and now and then a truck backed up and was unloaded. But no
+word was given out as to what was goin' to be sprung. Not until Friday
+mornin'. Then the commuters on the 8.03 was hit bang in the eye by a
+whalin' big red, white, and blue sign announcin' that the W. E. L.
+Supply Company was open for business.
+
+Course, it was kind of crude compared to Belcher's. No fancy counters or
+showcases or window displays of cracker-boxes. And the stock was limited
+to staples that could be handled easy. But the price bulletins posted up
+outside was what made some of them gents who'd been doin' the fam'ly
+marketin' stop and stare. A few of 'em turned halfway to the station and
+dashed back to leave their orders. Goin' into town they spread the news
+through the train. The story of that latest bag of U-boats, which the
+mornin' papers all carried screamers about, was almost thrown into the
+discard. If I hadn't been due for a ten o'clock committee meetin' at the
+Corrugated, I'd have stayed out and watched the openin'. Havin' told Old
+Hickory about it, though, I was on hand next mornin' with a whole day's
+furlough.
+
+"It ought to be our big day," says Vee.
+
+It was. For one thing, everybody was stockin' up for over Sunday, and
+with the backin' of the League the Supply Company could count on about
+fifty good customers as a starter. Most of the ladies came themselves,
+rollin' up in limousines or tourin' cars and cartin' home their own
+stuff. Also the cottage people, who'd got wind of the big mark-down
+bargains, begun to come in bunches, every woman with a basket.
+
+But they didn't swamp Vee. She'd already added to her force of young
+lady clerks a squad of hand-picked Boy Scouts, and it was my job to
+manage the youngsters.
+
+I'd worked out the system the night before. Each one had typed price
+lists in his pocket, and besides that I'd put 'em through an hour's
+drill on weights and measures before the show started.
+
+I don't know when it was Belcher begun to get wise and start his
+counter-attack; but the first time I had a chance to slip out and take a
+squint his way, I saw this whackin' big sign in front of his place:
+"Potatoes, 40 cents per peck." Which I promptly reports to Vee.
+
+"Very well," says she; "we'll make ours thirty-five."
+
+Inside of ten minutes we had a bulletin out twice as big as his.
+
+"Now I guess he'll be good," says I.
+
+But he had a scrap or two left in him, it seems. Pretty soon he cuts the
+price to thirty.
+
+"We'll make it twenty-five," says Vee.
+
+And by eleven o'clock Belcher has countered with potatoes at twenty
+cents.
+
+"Why," gasps Vee, "that's far less than they cost at wholesale. But we
+can't let him beat us. Make ours twenty, too."
+
+"Excuse me, ma'am," puts in one of the Scouts, salutin', "but we've run
+out of potatoes."
+
+"Oh, boy!" says I. "Where do we go from here!"
+
+Vee hesitates only long enough to draw a deep breath.
+
+"Torchy," says she, "I have it. Form your boys into a basket brigade,
+and buy out Belcher below the market."
+
+Talk about your frenzied finance! Wasn't that puttin' it over on him!
+For two hours, there, we went long on Belcher's potatoes at twenty,
+until his supply ran out too. Then he switched to sugar and butter.
+Quotations went off as fast as when the bottom drops out of a bull
+market. All we had to do to hammer down the prices of anything in the
+food line, whether we had it or not, was to stick out a cut-rate
+sign--Belcher was sure to go it one better; and when Vee got it far
+enough below cost, she started her buyin' corps, workin' in customers,
+clerks, and anybody that was handy. And by night if every fam'ly within
+five miles hadn't stocked up on bargain provisions it was their own
+fault; for if they didn't have cash of their own Vee was right there
+with the long-distance credit.
+
+[Illustration: "Belcher has come over and is listenin', glarin' hostile
+at the woman. 'It's Mrs. Burke, the one whose sons are in the army,'
+whispers Vee."]
+
+"I'll bet you've got old Belcher frothin' through his ears," says I.
+
+"I hope so," says Vee.
+
+The followin' Monday, though, he comes back at her with his big push. He
+had the whole front of his store plastered with below-cost bulletins.
+
+"Pooh!" says Vee. "I can have signs like that painted, too."
+
+And she did. It didn't bother her a bit if her stock ran out. She kept
+up on the cut-rate game, and when people asked for things she didn't
+have she just sent 'em to Belcher's.
+
+Maybe you saw what some of the papers printed. Course, they joshed the
+ladies more or less, but also they played up a peppery interview with
+Belcher which got him in bad with everybody. Vee wasn't so pleased at
+the publicity stuff, but she didn't squeal.
+
+What was worryin' me some was how soon the grand smash was comin'. I
+knew that the campaign fund had been whittled into considerable, and now
+that prices had been slashed there was no chance for profits.
+
+It was botherin' Vee some, too, for she'd promised not to assess the
+League members again unless she could show 'em where they were comin'
+out. By the middle of the week things looked squally. Belcher had given
+out word that he meant to bust up this fool woman's opposition, if it
+took his last cent.
+
+Then, here the other night, I comes home to find Vee wearin' a satisfied
+grin. As I comes in she jumps up from her desk and waves a check at me.
+
+"Look!" says she. "Five thousand! I've got it back, Torchy, every
+dollar."
+
+"Eh?" says I. "You ain't sold out to Belcher?"
+
+"I should say not," says she. "To the Noonan chain. Mr. Noonan came
+himself. He'd read about our fight in the newspapers, and said he'd be
+glad to take it off our hands. He's been wanting to establish a branch
+in this district. Five thousand for stock and good will. What do you
+think of that?"
+
+"I ain't thinkin'," says I. "I'm just gaspin' for breath. Noonan, eh?
+Then I see where Belcher gets off. And if you don't mind my whisperin'
+in your ear, Vee, you're some whizz."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+LATE RETURNS ON RUPERT
+
+
+Vee and I were goin' over some old snapshots the other night. It's done
+now and then, you know. Not deliberate. I'll admit that's a pastime you
+wouldn't get all worked up over plannin' ahead for. Tuesday mornin',
+say, you don't remark breathless: "I'll tell you: Saturday night at
+nine-thirty let's get out them last year's prints and give 'em the
+comp'ny front."
+
+It don't happen that way--not with our sketch. What I was grapplin' for
+in the bottom of the window-seat locker was something different--maybe a
+marshmallow fork, or a corn-popper, or a catalogue of bath-room
+fixtures. Anyway, it was something we thought we wanted a lot, when I
+digs up this album of views that Vee took durin' that treasure-huntin'
+cruise of ours last winter on the old _Agnes_, with Auntie and Old
+Hickory and Captain Rupert Killam and the rest of the bunch. I was just
+tossin' the book one side when a picture slips out, and of course I has
+to take a squint. Then I chuckles.
+
+"Look!" says I, luggin' it over to where Vee is curled up on the
+davenport in front of the fireplace. "Remember that?"
+
+A giggle from Vee.
+
+"'Auntie enjoying a half-hour eulogy of the dear departed, by Mrs.
+Mumford,' should be the title," says she. "She'd been sound asleep for
+twenty minutes."
+
+"Which is what you might call good defensive," says I. "But who's this
+gazin' over the rail beyond--J. Dudley Simms, or is that a ventilator?"
+
+"Let's see," says Vee, reachin' for the readin' glass. "Why, you silly!
+That's Captain Killam."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Reckless Rupert, the great mind-play hero."
+
+"I wonder what has become of him?" puts in Vee, restin' her chin on the
+knuckle of her forefinger and starin' into the fire.
+
+"Him?" says I. "Most likely he's back in St. Petersburg, Florida, all
+dolled in white flannels, givin' the tin-can tourists a treat. That
+would be Rupert's game."
+
+I don't know as you remember; but, in spite of Killam's havin' got
+balled up on the location of this pirate island, and Vee and me havin'
+to find it for him, he came in for his share of the loot. Must have been
+quite a nice little pot for Rupert, too--enough to keep him costumed for
+his mysterious hero act for a long time, providin' he don't overdress
+the part.
+
+Weird combination--Rupert: about 60 per cent. camouflage and the rest
+solemn boob. An ex-school-teacher from some little flag station in
+middle Illinois, who'd drifted down to the West Coast, and got to be a
+captain by ownin' an old cruiser that he took fishin' parties out to the
+grouper banks on. Them was the real facts in the life story of Rupert.
+
+But the picture he threw on the screen of himself must have been
+something else again--seasoned sailor, hardy adventurer, daredevil
+explorer, and who knows what else? Catch him in one of his silent,
+starey moods, with them buttermilk blue eyes of his opened wide and
+vacant, and you had the outline. But that's as far as you'd get. I
+always thought Rupert himself was a little vague about it, but he would
+insist on takin' himself so serious. That's why we never got along well,
+I expect. To me Rupert was a walkin' joke, except when he got to
+sleuthin' around Vee and me and made a nuisance of himself.
+
+"How completely people like that drop out of sight sometimes," says Vee,
+shuttin' up the album.
+
+"Yes," says I. "Contrary to old ladies who meet at summer resorts and in
+department-stores, it's a sizable world we live in. Thanks be for that,
+too."
+
+But you never can tell. It ain't more'n three days later, as I'm breezin
+through a cross street down in the cloak-and-suit and publishin' house
+district, when a taxi rolls up to the curb just ahead, and out piles a
+wide-shouldered gent with freckles on the back of his neck. Course, I
+don't let on I can spot anybody I've ever known just by a sectional
+glimpse like that. But this was no common case of freckles. This was a
+splotchy, spattery system of rust marks, like a bird's-eye view of the
+enemy's trenches after a week of drum fire. Besides, there was the pale
+carroty hair.
+
+Even then, the braid-bound cutaway and the biscuit-colored spats had me
+buffaloed. So I slows up until I can get a front view of the party who's
+almost tripped himself with the horn-handled walkin'-stick and is havin'
+a few last words with someone in the cab. Then I sees the washed out
+blue eyes, and I know there can't be any mistake. About then, too, he
+turns and recognizes me.
+
+"Well, for the love of beans!" says I. "Rupert!"
+
+The funny part of it is that I gets it off as cordial as if I was
+discoverin' an old trench mate. You know how you will. And, while I
+can't say Captain Killam registered any wild joy in his greetin', still
+he seemed pleased enough. He gives me a real hearty shake.
+
+"And here is someone else you know," says he, wavin' to the cab: "Mrs.
+Mumford."
+
+Blamed if it ain't the cooin' widow. She's right there with the old
+familiar purry gush, too, squeezin' my fingers kittenish and askin' me
+how "dear, sweet Verona" is. I was just noticin' that she'd ditched the
+half mournin' for some real zippy raiment when she leans back so as to
+exhibit a third party in the taxi--a young gent with one of these
+dead-white faces and a cute little black mustache--reg'lar lounge-lizard
+type.
+
+"Oh, and you must meet my dear friend, Mr. Vinton Bartley," she purrs.
+"Vinton, this is the Torchy I've spoken about so often."
+
+"Ah, ya-a-as," drawls Vinton, blowin' out a whiff of scented cigarette
+smoke lazy. "Quite so. But--er--hadn't we best be getting on, Lorina?"
+
+"Yes, yes," coos Mrs. Mumford. "By-by, Captain. Good-by, Torchy."
+
+And off they whirls, leavin' me with my mouth open and Rupert starin'
+after 'em gloomy.
+
+"Lorina, eh?" says I. "How touchin'!"
+
+Killam only grunts, but it struck me he has tinted up a bit under the
+eyes.
+
+"Say, Rupert," I goes on, "who's your languid friend with the
+cream-of-cabbage complexion?"
+
+"Bartley?" says he. "Oh, he's a friend of Mrs. Mumford; a drama-tist--so
+he says."
+
+Now, I might have let it ride at that and gone along about my own
+affairs, which ain't so pressin' just then. Yes, I might. But I don't.
+Maybe it was hornin' in where there was no welcome sign on the mat, and
+then again perhaps it was only a natural folksy feelin' for an old
+friend I hadn't seen for a long time. Anyway, I'm prompted sudden to
+take Rupert by the arm and insist that he must come and have lunch with
+me.
+
+"Why--er--thanks," says the Captain; "but I have a little business to
+attend to in here." And he nods to an office buildin'.
+
+"That'll be all right, too," says I. "I'll wait."
+
+"Will you?" says Rupert, beamin'. "I shall be pleased."
+
+So in less'n half an hour I have Rupert planted cozy at a corner table
+with a mixed grill in front of him, and I'm givin' him the cue for
+openin' any confidential chat he may have on hand. He's a good deal of a
+clam, though, Rupert. And suspicious! He must have been born lookin'
+over his shoulder. But in my own crude way I can sometimes josh 'em
+along.
+
+"Excuse me for mentionin' it, Rupert," says I, "but there's lots of
+class to you these days."
+
+"Eh?" says he. "You mean----"
+
+"The whole effect," says I, "from the gaiters to the new-model lid. Just
+like you'd strolled out from some Fifth Avenue club and was goin' to
+'phone your brokers to buy another block of Bethlehem at the market.
+Honest!"
+
+He pinks up and shakes his head, but I can see I've got the range.
+
+"And here Vee and I had it doped out," I goes on, "how you'd be down on
+the West Coast by this time, investin' your pile in orange groves and
+corner lots."
+
+"No," says Rupert; "I've been here all the while. You see, I--I've grown
+rather fond of New York."
+
+"You needn't apologize," says I. "There's a few million others with the
+same weakness, not countin' the ones that sleep in New Jersey but always
+register from here. Gone into some kind of business, have you?"
+
+Rupert does some fancy side-steppin' about then; but all of a sudden he
+changes his mind, and, after glancin' around to see that no one has an
+ear out, he starts his confession.
+
+"The fact is," says he, "I've been doing a little literary work."
+
+"Writin' ads," says I, "or solicitin' magazine subscriptions?"
+
+"I am getting out a book of poems," says Rupert, dignified.
+
+"Wh-a-a-at?" I gasps. "Not--not reg'lar limerick stuff?"
+
+I can see now that was a bad break. But Rupert was patient with me. He
+explains that these are all poems about sailors and ships and so on;
+real salt, tarry stuff. Also, he points out how it's built the new style
+way, with no foolish rhymes at the end, and with long lines or short,
+just as they happen to come. To make it clear, he digs up a roll of
+galley proofs he's just collected from the publishers. And say, he had
+the goods. There it was, yards of it, all printed neat in big fat type.
+"Sea Songs" is what he calls 'em, and each one has a separate tag of its
+own, such as "Kittywakes," "Close Hauled," and "Scuppers Under."
+
+"Looks like the real stuff," says I. "Let's hear how it listens. Ah,
+come on! Some of that last one, about scuppers, now."
+
+With a little more urgin', Rupert reads it to me. I should call him a
+good reader, too. Anyway, he can untie one of them deep, boomin' voices,
+and with that long, serious face of his helpin' out the general
+effect--well, it's kind of impressive. He spiels off two or three
+stickfuls and then stops.
+
+"Which way was you readin' that, backwards or forwards?" says I.
+
+Rupert begins to stiffen up, and I hurries on with the apology. "My
+mistake," says I. "I thought maybe you might have got mixed at the
+start. No offense. But say, Cap'n, what's the big idea? What does it all
+mean?"
+
+In some ways Rupert is good-natured. He was then. He explains how in
+this brand of verse you don't try to tell a story or anything like that.
+"I am merely giving my impressions," says he. "That is all.
+Interpreting my own feelings, as it were."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Then there's no goin' behind the returns. Who's to say
+you don't feel that way? I get you now. But that ain't the kind of stuff
+you can wish onto the magazines, is it?"
+
+Which shows just how far behind the bass-drum I am. Rupert tells me the
+different places where he's unloaded his pieces, most of 'em for real
+money. Also, I pumps out of him how he came to get into the game. Seems
+he'd been roomin' down in old Greenwich Village; just happened to drift
+in among them long-haired men and short-haired girls. It turns out that
+the book was a little enterprise that was being backed by Mrs. Mumford.
+Yes, it's that kind of a book--so much down in advance to the Grafter
+Press. You know, Mrs. Mumford always did fall for Rupert, and after
+she's read one of his sea spasms in a magazine she don't lose any time
+huntin' him out and renewin' their cruise acquaintance. A real poet!
+Say, I can just see her playin' that up among her friends. And when she
+finds he's mixin' in with all those dear, delightful Bohemians, she
+insists that Rupert tow her along too.
+
+From then on it was a common thing for her and Rupert to go browsin'
+around among them garlic and red-ink joints, defyin' ptomaines and
+learnin' to braid spaghetti on a fork. That was her idea of life. She
+hires an apartment right off Washington Square and moves in from
+Montclair for the winter. She begun to have what she called her "salon
+evenings," when she collected any kind of near-celebrity she could get.
+
+Mr. Vinton Bartley was generally one of the favored guests. I didn't
+need any second sight, either, to suspect that Vinton was sort of
+crowdin' in on this little romance of Rupert's. And by eggin' Rupert
+along judicious I got the whole tale.
+
+Seems it had been one of Mrs. Mumford's ambitions to spring Rupert on an
+unsuspectin' public. Her idea is to have Rupert called on, some night at
+the Purple Pup, to step up to the head of the long table and give one of
+his sea songs. She'd picked Vinton to do the callin'. And Vinton had
+balked.
+
+"But say," says I, "is this Vinton gent the only one of her friends
+that's got a voice? Why not pick another announcer?"
+
+"I'm sure I don't know," says Rupert. "She--she hasn't mentioned the
+subject recently."
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Too busy listenin' to the voice of the viper, eh?"
+
+Rupert nods and stares sad into his empty demi-tasse. And, say, when
+Rupert gets that way he's an appealin' cuss.
+
+"See here, Rupert," says I; "if you got a call of that kind, would you
+come to the front and make a noise like a real poet?"
+
+"Why," says he, "I suppose I ought to. It would help the sale of the
+book, and perhaps----"
+
+"One alibi is enough," I breaks in. "Now, another thing: How'd you like
+to have me stage-manage this debut of yours?"
+
+"Oh, would you?" says he, beamin'.
+
+"Providin' you'll follow directions," says I.
+
+"Why, certainly," says Rupert. "Any suggestions that you may make----"
+
+"Then we'll begin right now," says I. "You are to ditch that flossy
+floor-walker outfit of yours from this on."
+
+"You mean," says Rupert, "that I am not to wear these clothes?"
+
+"Just that," says I. "When you get to givin' mornin' readin's at the
+Plaza for the benefit of the Red Cross, you can dig 'em out again; but
+for the Purple Pup you got to be costumed different. Who ever heard of a
+goulash poet in a braid-bound cutaway and spats? Say, it's a wonder they
+let you live south of the Arch."
+
+"But--but what ought I to wear?" asks Rupert.
+
+"Foolish question!" says I. "Who are you, anyway? Answer: the Sailor
+Poet. There you are! Sea captain's togs for you--double-breasted blue
+coat, baggy-kneed blue trousers, and a yachtin' cap."
+
+"Very well," says Rupert. "But about my being asked to read. Just
+how----"
+
+"Leave it to me, Rupert," says I. "Leave everything to me."
+
+Which was a lot simpler than tellin' him I didn't know.
+
+You should have seen Vee's face when I tells her about Rupert's new
+line.
+
+"Captain Killam a poet!" says she. "Oh, really now, Torchy!"
+
+"Uh-huh!" says I. "He's done enough for a book. Read me some of it,
+too."
+
+"But--but what is it like?" asks Vee. "How does it sound?"
+
+"Why," says I, "it sounds batty to me--like a record made by a sailor
+who was simple in the head and talked a lot in his sleep. Course, I'm
+no judge. What's the difference, though? Rupert wants to spout it in
+public."
+
+"But the people in the restaurant," protests Vee. "Suppose they should
+laugh, or do something worse?"
+
+"That's where Rupert is takin' a chance," says I. "Personally, I think
+he'll be lucky if they don't throw plates at him. But we ain't
+underwritin' any accident policy; we're just bookin' him for a part he
+claims he can play. Are you on?"
+
+Vee gets that eye twinkle of hers workin'. "I think it will be perfectly
+lovely."
+
+I got to admit, too, that she's quite a help.
+
+"We must be sure Mrs. Mumford and that Bartley person are both there,"
+says she. "And we ought to have as many of Captain Killam's friends as
+possible. I'll tell you. Let's give a dinner-party."
+
+"Must we?" says I. "You know we ain't introducin' any London success.
+This is Rupert's first stab, remember."
+
+We set the date for the day the book was to be out, which gives Rupert
+an excuse for celebratin'. He'd invited Mrs. Mumford and Vinton to be
+his guests, and they'd promised to be on hand. As for us, we'd rounded
+up Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellins and J. Dudley Simms.
+
+Well, everybody showed up. And as it happens, it's one of the big nights
+at the Purple Pup. The long center table is surrounded by a gay bunch of
+assorted artists who are bein' financed by an out-of-town buyer who
+seems to be openin' Chianti reckless. We were over in one corner, as far
+away from the ukulele torturers as we could get, while at the other end
+of the room is Rupert with his two. I thought he looked kind of pallid,
+but it might have been only on account of the cigarette smoke.
+
+"Is it time yet, Torchy?" asks Mr. Robert, when we gets through to the
+striped ice cream and chicory essence.
+
+"Let's hold off," says I, "and see if someone else don't pull a
+curtain-raiser."
+
+Sure enough, they did. A bald-headed, red-faced old boy with a Liberty
+Bond button in his coat-lapel insists on everybody's drinkin' to our
+boys at the front. Followin' that, someone leads a slim, big-eyed young
+female to the piano and announces that she will do a couple of Serbian
+folk-songs. Maybe she did. I hope the Serbs forgive her.
+
+"If they can take that without squirmin'," says I, "I guess they can
+stand for Rupert. Go on, Mr. Robert. Shoot."
+
+Course, he's no spellbinder, but he can say what he wants to in a few
+words and make himself heard. And then, bein' in naval uniform helped.
+
+"I think we have with us to-night," says he, "Captain Rupert Killam, the
+sailor poet. I should like, if it pleases the company, to ask Captain
+Killam to read for us some of his popular verses. Does anyone second the
+motion?"
+
+"Killam! Killam!" roars out the sporty wine-opener.
+
+Others took up the chorus, and in the midst of it I dashes over to drag
+Rupert from his chair if necessary.
+
+But I wasn't needed. As a matter of fact, he beat me to it. Before I
+could get half way to him, he is standin' at the end of the long table,
+his eyes dropped modest, and a brand-new volume of "Sea Songs" held
+conspicuous over his chest.
+
+"This is indeed an unexpected honor," says Rupert, lyin' fluent. "I am a
+plain sailor-man, as you know, but if you insist----"
+
+And, before they could hedge, he has squared his shoulders, thrown his
+head well back, and has cut loose with that boomin' voice of his. Does
+he put it over? Say, honest, I finds myself listenin' with my mouth
+open, just as though I understood every word. And the first thing I know
+he's carryin' the house with him. Even some of the Hungarian waiters
+stopped to see what it's all about.
+
+ Tides!
+ Little, rushing, hurrying tides
+ Along the sloping deck.
+ And the bobstay smashing the big blue deep,
+ While under my hand
+ The kicking tiller groans
+ Its oaken soul out in a gray despair.
+
+That's part of it I copied down afterward. Yet that crowd just lapped it
+up.
+
+"Wow!" "Brava! Brava!" "What's the matter with Killam?" they yells.
+"More!"
+
+Rupert was flushin' clear up the back of his neck now. Also he was
+fumblin' with the book, hesitatin' what to give 'em next, when I pushes
+in and begins pumpin' his hand.
+
+"Shall--shall I----" he starts to ask.
+
+"No, you boob," I whispers. "Quit while the quittin's good. You got 'em
+buffaloed, all right. Let it ride."
+
+And I fairly shoves him over to his table, where Sister Mumford has
+already split out a new pair of gloves and is beamin' joyous, while
+Vinton is sittin' there with his chin on his necktie, lookin' like
+someone had beaned him with a bung-starter.
+
+But we wasn't wise just how strong Rupert had scored until we saw the
+half page Whitey Weeks had gotten out of it for the Sunday paper. "New
+Poet Captures Greenwich Village" is the top headline, and there's a
+three-column cut showin' Rupert spoutin' his "Sea Songs" through the
+cigarette smoke. Also, I gather from a casual remark Rupert let drop
+yesterday that the prospects of him and Mrs. Mumford enterin' the mixed
+doubles class soon are good. And, with her ownin' a big retail coal
+business over in Jersey, I expect Rupert can go on writin' his pomes as
+free as he likes.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+FORSYTHE AT THE FINISH
+
+
+I expect I wouldn't have noticed Forsythe particular if it hadn't been
+for Mrs. Robert. It takes all kinds, you know, to make up a week-end
+house-party bunch; and in these days, when specimens of the razor-usin'
+sex are so scarce--well, that's when half portions like this T. Forsythe
+Hurd get by as full orders.
+
+Besides, Mrs. Robert had meant well. Her idea was to make the Captain's
+48-hour shore leave as gay and lively as possible. She'd had a hard time
+roundin' up any of his friends, too. Hence Forsythe. One of these slim,
+fine-haired, well manicured parlor Pomeranians, Forsythe is--the kind
+who raves over the sandwiches and whispers perfectly killin' things to
+the ladies as he flits about at afternoon teas.
+
+We were up at the Ellinses', Vee and me, fillin' out at Saturday
+luncheon, when Mr. Robert drifts in, about an hour behind schedule. You
+know, he's commandin' one of these coast patrol boats. Some of 'em are
+converted steam yachts, some are sea-goin' tugs, and then again some
+are just old menhaden fish-boats painted gray with a few three-inch guns
+stuck around on 'em casual. And this last is the sort of craft Mr.
+Robert had wished on him.
+
+Seems there'd been some weather off the Hook for the last few days, and,
+with a fresh U-boat scare on, him and his reformed glue barge had been
+havin' anything but a merry time. I don't know how the old fish-boat
+stood it, but Mr. Robert showed that he'd been on more or less active
+service. He had a three days' growth of stubble on his face, his navy
+uniform was wrinkled and brine-stained, and the knuckles on one hand
+were all barked up.
+
+"Why, Robert!" says young Mrs. Ellins, as she wriggles out of the clinch
+and gives him the once-over. "You're a sight."
+
+"Sorry, my dear," says Mr. Robert; "but the beauty parlor on the
+_Narcissus_ wasn't working when I left. But if you can give me half an
+hour to----"
+
+He got it. And when he shows up again in dry togs and with his face
+mowed he's almost fit to mingle with the guests. It was about then that
+T. Forsythe was pullin' his star act at the salad bowl. Course, when you
+have only ordinary people around, you let the kitchen help do such
+things. But when Forsythe is present he's asked to mix the salad
+dressin'.
+
+So there is Forsythe, wearin' a jade-green tie to match the color of the
+salad bowl, surrounded by cruets and pepper grinders and paprika
+bottles, and manipulatin' his own special olivewood spoon and fork as
+dainty and graceful as if he was conductin' an orchestra.
+
+"Oh, I say, Jevons," says he, signalin' the Ellinses' butler, "have
+someone conduct a clove of garlic to the back veranda, slice it, and
+gently rub it on a crust of fresh bread. Then bring me the bread. And do
+you mind very much, Mrs. Ellins, if I have those Papa Gontier roses
+removed? They clash with an otherwise perfect color scheme, and you've
+no idea how sensitive I am to such jarring notes. Besides, their perfume
+is so beastly obtrusive. At times I've been made quite ill by them.
+Really."
+
+"Take them away, Jevons," says Mr. Robert, smotherin' a sarcastic smile.
+
+"Huh!" grumbles Mr. Robert. "What a rotter you are, Forsythe. If I could
+only get you aboard the _Narcissus_ for a ten-day cruise! I'd introduce
+you to perfumes, the sort you could lean up against. You know, when a
+boat has carried mature fish for----"
+
+"Please, Bob!" protests Forsythe. "We admit you're a hero, and that
+you've been saving the country, but don't let's have the disgusting
+details; at least, not when the salad dressing is at its most critical
+stage."
+
+Havin' said which, Forsythe proceeds to finish what was for him a hard
+day's work.
+
+Discussin' his likes and dislikes was Forsythe's strong hold, and, if
+you could believe him, he had more finicky notions than a sanatorium
+full of nervous wrecks. He positively couldn't bear the sight of this,
+the touch of that, and the sound of the other thing. The rustle of a
+newspaper made him so fidgety he could hardly sit still. The smell of
+boiled cabbage made him faint. Someone had sent him a plaid necktie for
+Christmas. He had ordered his man to pick it up with the fire-tongs and
+throw it in the ash-can. Things like that.
+
+All through luncheon we listened while Forsythe described the awful
+agonies he'd gone through. We had to listen. You can guess what a joy it
+was. And, all the time, I could watch Mr. Robert gettin' sorer and
+sorer.
+
+"Entertainin' party, eh?" I remarks on the side, as we escapes from the
+dinin'-room.
+
+"Forsythe," says Mr. Robert, "is one of those persons you're always
+wanting to kick and never do. I could generally avoid him at the club,
+but here----"
+
+Mr. Robert shrugs his shoulders. Then he adds:
+
+"I say, Torchy, you have clever ideas now and then."
+
+"Who, me?" says I. "Someone's been kiddin' you."
+
+"Perhaps," says he; "but if anything should occur to you that might help
+toward putting Forsythe in a position where real work and genuine
+discomfort couldn't be dodged--well, I should be deeply grateful."
+
+"What a cruel thought!" says I. "Still, if a miracle like that could be
+pulled, it would be entertainin' to watch. Eh?"
+
+"Especially if it had to do with handling cold, slippery things,"
+chuckles Mr. Robert, "like iced eels or pickles."
+
+Then we both grins. I was tryin' to picture Forsythe servin' a sentence
+as helper in a fish market or assistant stirrer in a soap fact'ry. Not
+that anything like that could happen through me. Who was I to interfere
+with a brilliant drawin'-room performer like him? Honest, with Forsythe
+scintillatin' around, I felt like a Bolsheviki of the third class. And
+yet, the longer I watched him, the more I mulled over that hint Mr.
+Robert had thrown out.
+
+I was still wonderin' if I was all hollow above the eyes, when our
+placid afternoon gatherin' is busted complete by a big cream-colored
+limousine rollin' through the porte-cochere and a new arrival breezin'
+in. From the way Jevons swells his chest out as he helps her shed the
+mink-lined motor coat, I guessed she must be somebody important.
+
+"Why, it's Miss Gorman!" whispers Vee.
+
+"Not _the_ Miss Gorman--Miss Jane?" I says.
+
+Vee nods, and I stretches my neck out another kink. Who wouldn't? Not
+just because she's a society head-liner, or the richest old maid in the
+country, but because she's such a wonder at gettin' things done. You
+know, I expect--Red Cross work, suffrage campaignin', Polish relief.
+Say, I'll bet if she could be turned loose in Mexico or Russia for a
+couple of months, she'd have things runnin' as smooth as a directors'
+meetin' of the Standard Oil.
+
+Look at the things she's put through, since the war started, just by
+crashin' right in and stayin' on the job. They say she keeps four
+secretaries with their suitcases packed, ready to jump into their
+travelin' clothes and slide down the pole when she pushes the buzzer
+button.
+
+And now she's makin' straight for Mr. Robert.
+
+"What luck!" says she. "I wasn't at all sure of finding you. How much
+leave have you? Only until Monday morning? Oh, you overworked naval
+officers! But you must find some men for me, Robert; two, at least. I
+need them at once."
+
+"Might I ask, Miss Jane," says he, "if any particular qualifications
+are----"
+
+"What I would like," breaks in Miss Gorman, "would be two active,
+intelligent young men with some initiative and executive ability. You
+see, I am giving a going away dinner for some soldiers of the Rainbow
+Division who are about to be sent to the transports. It's an official
+secret, of course. No one is supposed to know that they are going to
+sail soon, but everyone does know. None of their friends or relatives
+are to be allowed to be there to wish them God-speed or anything like
+that, and they need cheering up just now. So I arrange one of these
+dinners when I can. My plans for this one, however, have been terribly
+rushed."
+
+"I see," says Mr. Robert. "And it's perfectly bully of you, Miss Jane.
+Splendid! I suppose there'll be a hundred or so."
+
+"Six eighty," says she, never battin' an eye. "We are not including the
+officers--only privates. And we don't want one of them to lift a finger
+for it. They've had enough fatigue duty. This time they're to be
+guests--honored guests. I have permission from the Brigadier in command.
+We are to have one of the mess halls for a whole day. The chef and
+waiters have been engaged, too. And an orchestra. But there'll be so
+many to manage--the telling of who to go where, and seeing that the
+entertainers don't get lost, and that the little dinner favors are put
+around, and all those details. So I must have help."
+
+I could see Mr. Robert rollin' his eyes around for me, so I steps up.
+Just from hearin' her talk a couple of minutes I'd caught the fever.
+That's a way she has, I understand. So the next thing I knew I'd been
+patted on the shoulder and taken on as a volunteer.
+
+"Precisely the sort of assistant I was hoping for," says Miss Gorman. "I
+can tell by his hair. I know just what I shall ask him to do. But
+there'll be so much more; decorating the tables, and----"
+
+Here I nudges Mr. Robert. "How about Forsythe?" I suggests.
+
+"Eh?" says he. "Why--why---- By Jove, though! Why not? Oh, I say,
+Forsythe! Just a moment."
+
+Maybe the same thought struck him as had come to me, which is that
+helpin' Miss Jane give a blowout to near seven hundred soldiers wouldn't
+be any rest-cure stunt. She's rated at about ninety horse-power herself,
+when she's speeded up, and anybody that happens to be on her staff has
+got to keep movin' in high. They'd have to be ready to tackle anything
+that turned up, too.
+
+But, to hear Mr. Robert explain it to Forsythe, you'd think it was just
+that his fame as an arranger of floral center-pieces had spread until
+Miss Gorman has decided nobody else would do.
+
+"Although, heaven knows, I never suspected you could be really useful,
+Forsythe," says Mr. Robert. "But if Miss Jane thinks you'd be a
+help----"
+
+"Oh, I am sure Mr. Hurd would be the very one," puts in Miss Gorman.
+
+"At last!" says Forsythe, strikin' a pose. "My virtues are about to be
+discovered. I shall be delighted to assist you, Miss Gorman, in any
+way."
+
+"Tut, tut, Forsythe!" says Mr. Robert. "Don't be too reckless. Miss Jane
+might take you at your word."
+
+"Go on. Slander me," says Forsythe. "Say that, when enlisted in a noble
+cause, I am a miserable shirker."
+
+"Indeed, I shouldn't believe a word of it, even if I had time to listen
+to him," declares Miss Jane. "And I must be at the camp within an hour.
+I shall need one of you young men now. Let me see. Suppose I take this
+one--Torchy, isn't it? Get your coat. I'll not promise to have you back
+for dinner, but I'll try. Thank you so much, Robert."
+
+And then it was a case of goin' on from there. Whew! I've sort of had
+the notion now and then, when I've been operatin' with Old Hickory
+Ellins at the Corrugated Trust on busy days, that I was some rapid
+private sec. But say, havin' followed Miss Jane Gorman through them
+dinner preliminaries, I know better.
+
+While that French chauffeur of hers is rollin' us down Long Island at
+from forty to fifty miles per hour, she has her note-book out and is
+pumpin' me full of things I'm expected to remember--what train the
+chef's gang is comin' on, how the supplies are to be carted over, who to
+see about knockin' up a stage for the cabaret talent, and where the
+buntin' has been ordered. I borrows a pad and pencil, and wishes I knew
+shorthand.
+
+By the time we lands at the camp, though, I have a fair idea of the job
+she's tackled; and while she's havin' an interview with the C. O. I
+starts explorin' the scene of the banquet. First off I finds that the
+mess-hall seats less than five hundred, the way they got the tables
+fixed; that there's no room for a stage without breakin' through one end
+and tackin' it on; and that the camp cooks will have the range ovens
+full of bread and the tops covered with oatmeal in double boilers as
+usual. Outside of that and a few other things, the arrangements was
+lovely.
+
+Miss Jane ain't a bit disturbed when I makes my report.
+
+"There!" says she. "Didn't I say you were just the assistant I needed?
+Now, please tell all those things to the Brigadier. He will know exactly
+what to do. Then you'd best be out here early Monday morning to see that
+they're done properly. And I think, Torchy, I shall make you my general
+manager for this occasion. Yes, I'll do it. Everyone will report first
+to you, and you will tell them exactly where to go and what to do."
+
+"You--you mean," says I, gaspin' a bit, "all the hired help?"
+
+"And the volunteers too," says Miss Jane. "Everyone."
+
+Maybe I grinned. I didn't know just how it was goin' to work out, but I
+could feel something comin'. Forsythe was goin' to get his. He stood to
+get it good, too. Not all on account of what I owed Mr. Robert for the
+friendly turns he'd done me. Some of it would be on my own hook, to pay
+up for the yawny half hours I'd had to sit through listenin' while
+Forsythe discoursed about himself. You should have seen the satisfied
+look on Mr. Robert's face when I hinted how Forsythe might be in line
+for new sensations.
+
+"If I could only be there to watch!" says he. "You must tell me all
+about it afterwards. They'll enjoy hearing of it at the club."
+
+But, at that, Forsythe wasn't the one to walk right into trouble. He's a
+shifty party, and he ain't been duckin' work all these years without
+gettin' expert at it. Accordin' to schedule he was to show up at the
+camp about nine-thirty Monday morning; but it's nearer noon when he
+rolls up in his car. And I don't hesitate a bit about givin' him the
+call.
+
+"You know it's this week, not next," says I, "that this dinner is comin'
+off. And there's four bolts of buntin' waitin' to be hung up."
+
+"Quite so," says Forsythe. "We must get to work right away."
+
+I had to chase down to the station again then, to see that the chef's
+outfit was bein' loaded on the trucks; but I was cheered up by the
+thought of Forsythe balanced on top of a tall step-ladder with his mouth
+full of tacks and his collar gettin' wilty.
+
+It's near an hour before I gets back, though. Do I find Forsythe in his
+shirt-sleeves climbin' around on the rafters? I do not. He's sittin'
+comfortable in a camp-chair on a fur motor robe, smokin' a cigarette
+calm, and surrounded by half a dozen classy young ladies that he's
+rounded up by 'phone from the nearest country club. The girls and three
+or four chauffeurs are doin' the work, while Forsythe is doin' the heavy
+directin'.
+
+He'd sketched out his decoratin' scheme on the back of an envelop, and
+now he was tellin' 'em how to carry it out. The worst of it is, too,
+that he's gettin' some stunnin' effects and is bein' congratulated
+enthusiastic by the girls.
+
+It's the same way with fixin' up the tables with ferns and flowers.
+Forsythe plans it out with a pencil, and his crew do the hustlin'
+around.
+
+Course, I had to let it ride. Besides, there was a dozen other things
+for me to look after. But I'm good at a waitin' game. I kept my eye on
+Forsythe, to see that he didn't slip away. He was still there at
+two-thirty, havin' organized a picnic luncheon with the young ladies,
+when Miss Jane blew in. And blamed if she don't fall for Forsythe's
+stuff, too.
+
+"Why, you've done wonders, Mr. Hurd," says she. "What a versatile genius
+you are?"
+
+"Oh, that!" says he, wavin' a sandwich careless. "But it's an
+inspiration to be doing anything at all for you, Miss Gorman."
+
+And here he hasn't so much as shed his overcoat.
+
+It must have been half an hour later when Sig. Zaretti, the head chef,
+comes huntin' me out with a desperate look in his eyes. I was consultin'
+Miss Jane about borrowin' a piano from the Y. M. C. A. tent, but he
+kicks right in.
+
+"Ah, I am distract," says he, puffin' out his cheeks. "Eet--eet ees too
+mooch!"
+
+"Go on," says I. "Shoot the tragedy. What's too much?"
+
+"That Pedro and that Salvatore," says he. "They have become lost, the
+worthless ones. They disappear on me. And in three hours I am to serve,
+in this crude place, a dinner of six courses to seven hundred men. They
+abandon me at such a time, with so much to be done."
+
+"Well, that's up to you," says I. "Can't some of your crowd double in
+brass? What about workin' in some of your waiters?"
+
+"But they are all employed," says Zaretti. "Besides, the union does not
+permit. If you could assist me with two men, even one. I implore."
+
+"There ain't a cook in sight," says I. "Sorry, but----"
+
+"Eet ees not for cook," he protests. "No; only to help make the peel
+from those so many potatoes. One who could make the peel. Please!"
+
+"Oh!" says I. "Peelin' potatoes! Why, 'most anybody could help out at
+that, I guess. I would myself if----"
+
+"No," breaks in Miss Jane. "You cannot be spared. And I'm sure I don't
+know who could."
+
+"Unless," I puts in, "Mr. Hurd is all through with his decoratin'."
+
+"Why, to be sure," says she. "Just tell him, will you?"
+
+"Suppose I send him over to you, Miss Gorman," says I, "while I hustle
+along that piano?"
+
+She nods, and I lose no time trailin' down Forsythe.
+
+"Emergency call for you from Miss Jane," says I, edgin' in among his
+admirers and tappin' him on the shoulder. "She's waitin' over by
+headquarters."
+
+"Oh, certainly," says Forsythe, startin' off brisk.
+
+"And say," I calls after him, "I hope it won't be anything that'll make
+you faint."
+
+"Please don't worry about me," says he.
+
+Well, I tried not to. In fact, I tried so hard that some folks might
+have thought I'd heard good news from home. But I'd had a peek or two
+into the camp kitchen since Zaretti's food construction squad had moved
+in, and, believe me, it was no place for an artistic temperament,
+subject to creeps up the back. There was about a ton of cold-storage
+turkeys bein' unpacked, bushels of onions goin' through the shuckin'
+process, buckets of soup stock standin' around, and half a dozen
+murderous-lookin' assistant chefs was sharpenin' long knives and
+jabberin' excited in four languages.
+
+Oh, yes; Forsythe was goin' to need all the inspiration he'd collected,
+if he lasted through.
+
+I kind of wanted to stick around and cheer him up with friendly words
+while he was fishin' potatoes out of the cold water and learnin' to use
+a peelin'-knife, but my job wouldn't let me. After I'd seen the piano
+landed on the new stage, there were chairs to be placed for the
+orchestra, and then other things. So it was some little time before I
+got around to the kitchen wing again, pretendin' to be lookin' for
+Zaretti. But nowhere in that steamin', hustlin', garlic-smellin' bunch
+could I see Forsythe.
+
+"Hey, chef!" I sings out. "Where's that expert potato-peeler I sent
+you?"
+
+"Ah!" says he, rubbin' his hands enthusiastic. "The signor with the
+yellow gloves? In the tent there you will find heem."
+
+So I steps over to the door of a sort of canvas annex and peers in. And
+say, it was a rude shock. Forsythe is there, all right. He's snuggled up
+cozy next to an oil heater, holdin' a watch in one hand and a cigarette
+in the other, while around him is grouped his faithful fluff
+body-guard, each with a pan in her lap and the potato-peelin's comin'
+off rapid. Forsythe? Oh, he seems to be speedin' 'em up and keepin'
+tally.
+
+I'd just let out my second gasp when I feels somebody at my elbow, and
+glances round to find it's Miss Jane.
+
+"Look!" says I, indicatin' Forsythe and his busy bees.
+
+"What a picture!" says Miss Jane.
+
+"Yes," says I, "illustratin' the manly art of lettin' the women do it."
+
+Miss Jane laughs easy.
+
+"It has been that way for ages," says she. "Mr. Hurd is only running
+true to type. But see! The potatoes are nearly all peeled and our dinner
+is going to be served on time. What splendid assistants you've both
+been!"
+
+At that, though, if there'd been a medal to be passed out, I guess it
+would have been pinned on Forsythe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE HOUSE OF TORCHY
+
+
+This trip it was a matter of tanks. No, not the ice-water variety, or
+the kind that absorbs high-balls. Army tanks--the sort that wallows out
+at daybreak and gives the Hun that chilly feelin' down his spine.
+
+Accordin' to my credentials, I was supposed to be inspectin' 'em for
+weak spots in the armor or punk work on the gears. And I can tell you
+now, on the side, that it was 90 per cent. bluff. What the Ordnance
+Department really wanted to know was whether the work was bein' speeded
+up proper, how many men on the shifts, and was the steel comin' through
+from the rollin' mills all right. Get me? Sleuth stuff.
+
+I'd been knockin' around there for four days, bein' towed about by the
+reserve major, who had a face on him like a stuffed owl, a nut full of
+decimal fractions, and a rubber-stamp mind. Oh, he was on the job, all
+right. So was everybody else in sight. I could see that after the first
+day. In fact, I coded in my O. K. the second noon and was plannin' to
+slip back home.
+
+But when I hinted as much to the Major he nearly threw a cat-fit. Why,
+he'd arranged a demonstration at 10 A.M. Thursday, for my special
+benefit. And there were the tests--horse-power, gun-ranges, resistance,
+and I don't know what all; technical junk that I savvied about as much
+as if he'd been tryin' to show me how to play the Chinese alphabet on a
+piccolo.
+
+Course, I couldn't tell him that, nor I didn't want to break his heart
+by refusin'. So I agrees to stick around a while longer. But say, I
+never enjoyed such a poor time doin' it. For there was just one spot on
+the map where I was anxious to be for the next few days. That was at
+home. It was one of the times when I ought to be there too, for----
+Well, I'll get to that later.
+
+Besides, this fact'ry joint where they were buildin' the tanks wasn't
+any allurin' spot. I can't advertise just where it was, either; the
+government wouldn't like it. But if there's any part of Connecticut
+that's less interestin' to loaf around in, I never got stranded there.
+You run a spur track out into the bare hills for fifteen miles from
+nowhere, slap up a row of cement barracks, and a few acres of machine
+shops, string a ten-foot barbed-wire fence around the plant, drape the
+whole outfit in soft-coal smoke, and you ain't got any Garden of Eden
+winter resort. Specially when it's full of low-brow mechanics who speak
+in seven different lingos and subsist mainly on cut plug and garlic.
+
+After I'd checked up all the dope I'd come for, and durin' the times
+when the Major was out plannin' more inspection stunts for me, I was
+left to drill around by myself. Hours and hours. And all there was to
+read in the Major's office was engineerin' magazines and the hist'ry of
+Essex County, Mass. Havin' been fed up on mechanics, I tackled the
+hist'ry. One chapter had a corkin' good Indian scalpin' story in it,
+about a Mrs. Hannah Dustin; and say, as a short-order hair remover she
+was a lady champ, all right. But the rest of the book wasn't so
+thrillin'.
+
+So I tried chattin' with the Major's secretary, a Lieutenant Barnes. The
+Major must have picked him out on account of that serious face of his.
+First off, I had an idea Barnes was sad just because he was detailed at
+this soggy place instead of bein' sent to France. I asks him sort of
+sympathizin' how long he's been here. He says three months.
+
+"In this hole?" says I. "How do you keep from goin' bug-house?"
+
+"I don't mind it," says he. "I find the work quite interesting."
+
+"But evenin's?" I suggests.
+
+"I write to my wife," says he.
+
+I wanted to ask him what about, but I choked it back. "Oh, yes," says I.
+"Of course. Any youngsters at home!"
+
+"No," says he prompt. "Life is complicated enough without children."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," says I. "They'd sort of help, I should think."
+
+He shakes his head and glares gloomy out of the window. "I cannot agree
+with you," says he. "Perhaps you have never seriously considered just
+what it means to be a parent."
+
+"Maybe not," says I, "but----"
+
+"Few seem to do so," he breaks in. "Just think: one begins by putting
+two lives in jeopardy."
+
+"Let's pass over that," I says hasty.
+
+He sighs. "If we only could," says he. "And then---- Well, there you
+are--saddled with the task of caring for another human being, of keeping
+him in good health, of molding his character, of planning and directing
+his whole career, from boyhood on."
+
+"Some are girls, though," I suggests.
+
+He shudders. "So much the worse," says he. "Girl babies are such
+delicate creatures; all babies are, in fact. Do you know the average
+rate of infant mortality in this country? Just think of the hundreds of
+thousands who do not survive the teething period. Imagine the anxieties,
+the sleepless nights, the sad little tragedies which come to so many
+homes. Then the epidemic diseases--measles, scarlet fever, meningitis.
+Let them survive all those, and what has the parent to face but the
+battle with other plagues, mental and moral? Think of the number of
+weak-minded children there are in the world; of perverts, criminally
+inclined. It is staggering. But if you escape all that, if your children
+are well and normal, as some are, then you must consider this: Suppose
+anything should happen to either or both of the parents? What of the
+little boy or girl? You have seen orphan asylums, I suppose. Have you
+ever stopped to----"
+
+And then, just as he had me feelin' like I ought to be led out and shot
+at sunrise, the old Major comes bustlin' in fussy. I could have fallen
+on his neck.
+
+"All ready!" says he. "Now I'll show you a fighting machine, young man,
+that is the last word in mechanical genius."
+
+"You can show me anything, Major," says I, "so long as it ain't a morgue
+or a State's prison."
+
+And he sure had some boiler-plate bus out there champin' at the bit. It
+looked just as frisky as the Flatiron Buildin', squattin' in the middle
+of the field, this young Fort Slocum with the caterpillar wheels sunk in
+the mud.
+
+"Stuck, ain't she?" I asked the Major.
+
+"We shall see," says he, noddin' to one of his staff, who proceeds to do
+a semaphore act with his arms.
+
+An answerin' snort comes from inside the thing, a purry sort of rumble
+that grows bigger and bigger, and next I knew, it starts wallowin' right
+at us. It keeps comin' and comin', gettin' up speed all the while, and
+if there hadn't been a four-foot stone wall between us I'd been lookin'
+for a tall tree. I thought it would turn when it came to the wall. But
+it don't. It gives a lurch, like a cow playin' leap-frog, and over she
+comes, still pointed our way.
+
+"Hey, Major!" I calls out above the roar. "Can they see where they're
+goin' in there? Hadn't we better give 'em room?"
+
+"Don't move, please," says he.
+
+"Just as you say," says I; "only I ain't strong for bein' rolled into
+pie-crust."
+
+"There's no danger," says he. "I merely wish you to see how---- There!
+Look!"
+
+And say, within twenty feet of us the blamed thing rears up on its
+haunches, its ugly nose high as a house above us, and, while I'm still
+holdin' my breath, it pivots on its tail and lumbers back, leavin' a
+path that looks like it had been paved with Belgian blocks.
+
+Course, that's only part of the performance. We watched it wallow into
+deep ditches and out, splash through a brook, and mow down trees more'n
+a foot thick. And all the time the crew were pokin' out wicked-lookin'
+guns, big and little, that swung round and hunted us out like so many
+murderous eyes.
+
+"Cute little beast, ain't it?" says I. "You got it trained so it'll
+almost do a waltz. If I was to pick my position, though, I think I'd
+rather be on the inside lookin' out."
+
+"Very well," says the Major. "You shall have a ride in it."
+
+"Excuse me," says I. "I was only foolin'. Honest, Major, I ain't
+yearnin'."
+
+"Telegram for you," breaks in Barnes, the secretary.
+
+"Oh!" says I, a bit gaspy, as I rips open the envelop.
+
+It's the one I'd been espectin'. All it says is: "Come at once. VEE."
+But I knew what that meant.
+
+"Sorry, Major," says I, "but I'll have to pass up the rest of the show.
+I--I'm called back."
+
+"Ah! To headquarters?" says he.
+
+"No," says I. "Home."
+
+He shakes his head and frowns. "That is a word which no officer is
+supposed to have in his vocabulary," says he.
+
+"It's in mine, all right," says I. "But then, I'm not much of an army
+officer, anyway. I'm mostly a camouflaged private sec. Besides, this
+ain't any ordinary call. It's a domestic S. O. S. that I've been sort of
+lookin' for."
+
+"I understand," says he. "The--the first?"
+
+I nods. Then I asks: "What's the quickest way across to Long Island?"
+
+"There isn't any quick way," says he, "unless you have wings. You can't
+even catch the branch line local that connects with the New York
+express now. There'll be one down at 8:36 to-morrow morning, though."
+
+"Wha-a-at!" says I, gawpin' at him. "How about gettin' a machine and
+shootin' down to the junction?"
+
+"My car is the only one here," says he, "and that is out of commission
+to-day--valves being ground."
+
+"But look," says I; "you got three or four of those motor-cycles with a
+bath-tub tacked on the side. Couldn't you let one of your sergeants----"
+
+"Strictly against orders," says he, "except for military purposes."
+
+"Ah, stretch it, Major," I goes on. "Have a heart. Just think! I want to
+get there to-night. Got to!"
+
+"Impossible," says he.
+
+"But listen----" I keeps on.
+
+Well, it's no use rehearsin' the swell arguments I put up. I said he had
+a rubber-stamp mind, didn't I? And I made about as much headway talkin'
+to him as I would if I'd been assaultin' that tank with a tack-hammer.
+He couldn't see any difference between havin' charge of a string of
+machine shops in Connecticut and commandin' a regiment in the front-line
+trenches. Besides, he didn't approve of junior officers bein' married.
+Not durin' war-time, anyway.
+
+And the worst of it was, I couldn't tell him just the particular kind of
+ossified old pinhead I thought he was. All I could do was grind my
+teeth, say "Yes, sir," and salute respectful.
+
+Also there was that undertaker-faced secretary standin' by with his ear
+out. The prospect of sittin' around watchin' him for the rest of the day
+wasn't fascinatin'. No; I'd had about all of Barnes I could stand. A few
+more of his cheerin' observations, and I'd want to jam his head into his
+typewriter and then tread on the keys. Nor I wasn't goin' to be fed on
+any more cog-wheel statistics by the Major, either.
+
+All I could keep on my mind then was this one thing: How could I get
+home? Looked like I was up against it, too. The nearest town was twelve
+miles off, and the main-line junction was some thirty-odd miles beyond
+that. Too far for an afternoon hike. But I couldn't just sit around and
+wait, or pace up and down inside the barbed-wire fence like an enemy
+alien that had been pastured out. So I wanders through the gate and down
+a road. I didn't know where it led, or care. Maybe I had a vague idea a
+car would come along. But none did.
+
+I must have been trampin' near an hour, with my chin down and my fists
+jammed into my overcoat pockets, when I catches a glimpse, out of the
+tail of my eye, of something yellow dodgin' behind a clump of cedars at
+one side of the road. First off I thought it might be a cow, as there
+was a farm-house a little ways ahead. Then it struck me no cow would
+move as quick as that, or have such a bright yellow hide. So I turns and
+makes straight for the cedars.
+
+It was a thick, bushy clump. I climbed the stone wall and walked all the
+way round. Nothin' in sight. Seemed as if I could see branches movin' in
+there, though, and hear a sound like heavy breathin'. Course, it might
+be a deer, or a fox. Then I remembered I had half a bag of peanuts
+somewhere about me. Maybe I could toll the thing out with 'em. I was
+just fishin' in my pockets when from the middle of the cedars comes this
+disgusted protest.
+
+"Oh, I say, old man," says a voice. "No shooting, please."
+
+And with that out steps a clean-cut, cheerful-faced young gent in a
+leather coat, goggled helmet, and spiral puttees. No wonder I stood
+starin'. Not that I hadn't seen plenty like him before, but I didn't
+know the woods was so full of 'em.
+
+"You were out looking for me, I suppose?" he goes on.
+
+"Depends on who you are," says I.
+
+"Oh, we might as well come down to cases," says he. "I'm the enemy."
+
+"You don't look it," says I, grinnin'.
+
+He shrugs his shoulders.
+
+"Fact, old man," says he. "I'm the one you were sent to watch
+for--Lieutenant Donald Allen, 26th Flying Corps Division, Squadron B."
+
+"Pleased to meet you," says I.
+
+"No doubt," says he. "Have a cigarette?" We lights up from the same
+match. "But say," he adds, "it was just a piece of tough luck, your
+catching me in this fix."
+
+"Oh, I ain't so sure," says I.
+
+"Of course," he says, "it won't go with the C. O. But really, now, what
+are you going to do when your observer insists that he's dying? I
+couldn't tell. Perhaps he was. Right in the middle of a perfect flight,
+too, the chump! Motor working sweet, air as smooth as silk, and no cross
+currents to speak of. But, with him howling about this awful pain in
+his tummy, what else could I do? Had to come down and---- Well, here we
+are. I'm behind the lines, I suppose, and you'll report my surrender."
+
+"Then what?" I asks.
+
+"Oh," says Allen, "as soon as I persuade this trolley-car aviator,
+Martin, that he isn't dead, I shall load him into the old bus and cart
+him back to Mineola."
+
+"Wha-a-t!" says I. "You--you're goin' back to Mineola--to-night?"
+
+"If Martin can forget his tummy," says he. "How I'll be guyed! Go to the
+foot of the eligible list too, and probably miss out on being sent over
+with my division. Oh, well!"
+
+I was beginning to dope out the mystery. More'n that, I had my fingers
+on the tail feathers of a hunch.
+
+"Why not leave Martin here?" I suggests. "Couldn't you show up in time?"
+
+"It wouldn't count," says the Lieutenant. "You must have an observer all
+the way."
+
+"How about me subbin' in?" says I.
+
+"You?" says he. "Why, you're on the other side."
+
+"That's where you're mixed," says I. "I'm on the wrong side of Long
+Island Sound, that's all."
+
+"Why," says he, "weren't you sent out to----"
+
+"No," I breaks in; "I'm no spotter. I'm on special detail from the
+Ordnance Department. And a mighty punk detail at that, if you ask me.
+The party who's sleuthin' for you, I expect, is the one I saw back at
+the plant, moonin' around with a pair of field glasses strapped to him.
+You ain't captured yet; not by me, anyway."
+
+"Honest?" says he. "Why, then--then----"
+
+"Uh-huh!" says I. "And if you can make it back to Mineola with a
+perfectly good passenger in the extra seat you'll qualify for scout work
+and most likely be over pluggin' Huns within a month or so. That won't
+tickle you a bit more'n it will me to get to Long Island to-night,
+for----"
+
+Well, then I tells him about Vee, and everything.
+
+"By George!" says he. "You're all right, Lieutenant--er----"
+
+"Ah, between friends, Donald," says I, "it's Torchy."
+
+At which we links arms chummy and goes marchin' close order down to the
+farm-house to see how this Martin party was gettin' on. We finds him
+rolled up in quilts on an old sofa that the folks had shoved up in front
+of the stove--a slim, nervous-lookin' young gink with sandy hair and a
+peaked nose.
+
+"Well, how about you?" asks Allen.
+
+Martin he only moans and reaches for a warm flat-iron that he'd been
+holdin' against his stomach.
+
+"Still dying, eh?" says Allen. "Why didn't you report sick this morning,
+instead of letting them send you up with me?"
+
+"I--I was all right then," whines Martin. "It--it must have been the
+altitude got me. I--I'd never been that high before, you know."
+
+"Bah!" says the Lieutenant. "Not over thirty-five hundred at any time.
+How do you expect me to take you back--on the hundred-foot level? You'll
+make a fine observer, you will!"
+
+"I've had enough observing," says Martin. "I--I'm going to get
+transferred to the mechanical department."
+
+"Oh, are you?" says Allen. "Then you'll be just as satisfied to make the
+trip back by rail."
+
+Martin nods.
+
+"And you won't be needing your helmet and things, eh?" goes on the
+Lieutenant. "I'll take those along, then," and he winks at me.
+
+All of a sudden, though, the sparkles fade out of his eyes. "Jinxed
+again!" says he. "There'd be no blessed map to hand in."
+
+"Eh?" says I. "Map of what!"
+
+He explains jerky. This scoutin' stunt of his was to locate the tank
+works and get close enough for an observer to draw a plan of it--all of
+which he'd done, only by then Martin had got past the drawin' stage.
+
+"So it's no use going back to-night."
+
+"Ain't it?" says I. "Say, if a map of that smoky hole is all you need, I
+guess I can produce that easy enough."
+
+"Can you?" he asks.
+
+"Why not?" says I. "Ain't I been cooped up there for nearly a week? I
+can put in a bird's-eye view of the Major in command; one of his
+secretary, too, if you like. Gimme some paper."
+
+And inside of five minutes I'd sketched out a diagram of the buildin's
+and the whole outfit. Then we poked Martin up long enough for him to
+sign it.
+
+"Fine work!" says Donald. "That earns you a hop, all right. Now buckle
+yourself into that cloud costume and I'll show you how a 110-horse-power
+crow would go from here to the middle of Long Island if he was in a
+hurry."
+
+"You can't make it any too speedy for me," says I, slippin' into the
+sheepskin jacket.
+
+"Ever been up before?" he asks.
+
+"Only once--in a hydro," says I; "but I ain't missed any chances."
+
+"That's the spirit!" says he. "Come along. The old bus is anchored down
+the field a ways."
+
+I couldn't hardly believe I was actually goin' to pull it off until he'd
+got the motor started and we went skimmin' along the ground. But as soon
+as we shook off the State of Connecticut and began climbin' up over a
+strip of woods, I settles back in the little cockpit, buttons the
+wind-shield over my mouth, and sighs contented.
+
+Allen and I didn't exchange much chat. You don't with an engine of that
+size roarin' a few feet in front of you and your ears buttoned down by
+three or four layers of wool and leather. Once he points out ahead and
+tries to shout something, I don't know what. But I nods and waves
+encouragin'. Later he points down and grins. I grins back.
+
+Next thing I knew, he's shut off the motor, and I gets a glimpse of the
+whole of Long Island behavin' odd. Seems as if it's swellin' and
+widenin' out, like one of these freaky toy balloons you blow up. It
+didn't seem as if we was divin' down--more like the map was rushin' up
+to meet us. Pretty soon I could make out a big open space with a lot of
+squatty buildin's at one end, and in a couple of minutes more the
+machine was rollin' along on its wheels and we taxied graceful up
+towards the hangars.
+
+It was just gettin' dusk as we piles out, and the first few yards I
+walked I felt like I was dressed in a divin' suit with a pair of lead
+boots on my feet. I saw Allen salute an officer, hand over the map, and
+heard him say something about Observer Martin wantin' to report sick.
+Then he steers me off toward the barracks, circles past' em, and leads
+me through a back gate.
+
+"I think we've put it over, old man," says he, givin' me the cordial
+grip. "I can't tell you what a good turn you've done me."
+
+"It's fifty-fifty," says I. "Where do I hit a station?"
+
+"You take this trolley that's coming," says he. "That junk you have on
+you can send back to-morrow, in my care. And I--I trust you'll find
+things all right at home."
+
+"Thanks," says I. "Hope you'll have the same luck yourself some day."
+
+"Oh, perhaps," says he, shakin' his head doubtful. "If I ever get back.
+But not until I'm past thirty, anyway."
+
+"Why so late?" asks I.
+
+"What would get my goat," says he, "would be the risk of breakin' into
+the grandfather class before I got ready."
+
+"Gee!" I gasps. "I hadn't thought of that."
+
+So, with this new idea, and the cheerin' views Barnes had pumped into
+me, I has plenty to chew over durin' the next hour or so that I'm
+speedin' towards home. I expect that accounts some for the long face I
+must have been wearin' when I finally dashes through the front gate of
+the Lilacs and am let into the house by Leon Battou, the little old
+Frenchman who cooks and buttles for us.
+
+"Ah, _mon Dieu!_" says Leon, throwin' up his hands and starin' at me
+bug-eyed. "Monsieur!"
+
+"Go on," says I. "Tell me the worst. What is it?"
+
+"But no, M'sieur," says he. "It is only that M'sieur appears in so
+strange attire."
+
+"Oh! These?" says I. "Never mind my costume, Leon. What about Vee?"
+
+"Ah!" says he, his eyes beamin' once more and his hands washin' each
+other. "Madame is excellent. She herself will tell you. Come!"
+
+Upstairs I went, two steps at a time.
+
+"S-s-sh!" says the nurse, meetin' me at the door.
+
+But I brushes past her, and the next minute I'm over by the bed and Vee
+is smilin' up at me. It's only the ghost of a smile, but it means a lot
+to me. She slips one of her hands into mine.
+
+"Torchy," she whispers, "did you drop down out of--of the air?"
+
+"That was about it," says I. "I got here, though. Are you all right,
+girlie?"
+
+She nods and gives me another of them sketchy, happy smiles.
+
+"And how about the--the----" I starts to ask.
+
+She glances towards the corner where the nurse is bendin' over a pink
+and white basket. "He's splendid," she whispers.
+
+"He?" says I. "Then--then it's a boy?"
+
+She gives my hand a little squeeze.
+
+And ten minutes later, when I'm shooed out, I'm feelin' so chesty and
+happy that I'm tingly all over.
+
+Down in the livin'-room Leon is waitin' for me, wearin' a broad grin. He
+greets me with his hand out. And then, somehow, because he's so
+different, I expect, I remembers Barnes. I was wonderin' if Leon was
+just puttin' on.
+
+"Well," says I, "how about it?"
+
+"Ah, Monsieur!" says he, givin' me the hearty grip. "I make to you my
+best congratulations."
+
+"Then you don't feel," says I, "that bein' a parent is kind of a sad and
+solemn business?"
+
+"Sad!" says he. "_Non, non!_ It is the grand joy of life. It is when you
+have the best right to be proud and glad, for to you has come _la bonne
+chance_. Yes, _la bonne chance!_"
+
+And say, there's no mistakin' that Leon means every word of it, French
+and all.
+
+"Thanks, Leon," says I. "You ought to know. You've been through it
+yourself. I'll bet you wouldn't even feel bad at being a grandfather.
+No? Well, I guess I'll follow through on that line. Maybe I don't
+deserve so much luck, but I'm takin' it just as though I did. And say,
+Leon, let's us go out in the back yard and give three cheers for the son
+and heir of the house of Torchy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+TORCHY GETS THE THUMB GRIP
+
+
+I expect a lot of people thought it about me; but the one who really
+registered the idea was Auntie. Trust her. For of course, with an event
+of this kind staged in the house we couldn't expect to dodge a visit
+from the old girl. She came clear up from Miami--although, with so much
+trouble about through sleepers and everything, I kept tellin' Vee I was
+afraid she wouldn't think it worth while makin' the trip.
+
+"How absurd, Torchy!" says Vee. "Not want to see baby? To be sure, she
+will."
+
+You see, Vee had the right hunch from the very first--about the
+importance of this new member of the fam'ly, I mean. She took it as a
+matter of course that everybody who'd ever known or heard of us would be
+anxious to rush in and gaze awe-struck and reverent at this remarkable
+addition we'd made to the population of Long Island. Something like
+that. She don't have to work up to it. Seems to come natural. Why, say,
+she'd sit by and listen without crackin' a smile to these regular
+gushers who laid it on so thick you'd 'most thought the youngster
+himself would have turned over and run his tongue out at 'em.
+
+"Oh, the dear, darling 'ittle cherub!" they'd squeal. "Isn't he simp-ly
+the most won-der-ful baby you ev-er saw?"
+
+And Vee would never blink an eye. In fact, she'd beam on 'em grateful,
+and repeat to me afterwards what they'd said, like it was just a case of
+the vote bein' made unanimous, as she knew it was bound to be all along.
+
+Which wasn't a bit like any of the forty-seven varieties of Vee I
+thought I was so well acquainted with. No. I'll admit she'd shown whims
+and queer streaks now and then, and maybe a fault or so; but nothing
+that had anything to do with any tendency of the ego to stick its elbows
+out. Yet, when it comes to listenin' to flatterin' remarks about our son
+and heir--well, no Broadway star readin' over what his press-agent had
+smuggled into the dramatic notes had anything on her. She couldn't have
+it handed to her too strong.
+
+As for me, I guess I was in sort of a daze there for a week or so.
+Gettin' to be a parent had been sprung on me so sudden that it was sort
+of confusin'. I couldn't let on to be a judge of babies myself. I don't
+know as I'd ever examined one real near to before, anyway--not such a
+new one as this.
+
+And, between me and you, when I did get a chance to size him up real
+close once,--they'd all gone out of the room and left me standin' by the
+crib,--I was kind of disappointed. Uh-huh. No use kiddin' yourself. I
+couldn't see a thing wonderful about him, or where he was much different
+from others I'd glanced at casual. Such a small party to have so much
+fuss made over! Why, one of his hands wasn't much bigger'n a cat's paw.
+And his face was so red and little and the nose so sketchy that it
+didn't seem likely he'd ever amount to much. Here he'd had more'n a week
+to grow in, and I couldn't notice any change at all.
+
+Not that I was nutty enough to report any such thoughts. Hardly. I felt
+kind of guilty at just havin' 'em in my head. How was it, I asked
+myself, that I couldn't stand around with my hands clasped and my eyes
+dimmed up, as a perfectly good parent should when he gazes at his first
+and only chee-ild! Wasn't I human?
+
+All the alibi I can put up is that I wasn't used to bein' a father.
+Ain't there something in that? Just think, now. Why, I'd hardly got
+used to bein' married. Here, only a little over a year ago, I was
+floatin' around free and careless. And then, first thing I know, without
+any special coachin' in the act, I finds myself pushed out into the
+center of the stage with the spot-light on me, and I'm introduced as a
+daddy.
+
+The only thing I could do was try to make a noise like one. I didn't
+feel it, any more'n I felt like a stained-glass saint in a church
+window. And I didn't know the lines very well. But there was everybody
+watching,--Vee, and the nurse, and Madame Battou, and occasional
+callers,--so I proceeds to bluff it through the best I could.
+
+My merry little idea was to be familiar with the youngster, treat him as
+if he'd been a member of the fam'ly for a long time, and hide any
+embarrassin' feelin's I might have by addressin' him loud and joshin'. I
+expect it was kind of a poor performance, at that. But I seemed to be
+gettin' away with it, so I stuck to that line. Vee appears to take it
+all right, and, as nobody else gave me the call, I almost got to believe
+it was the real thing myself.
+
+So this particular afternoon, when I came breezin' in from town, I
+chases right up to the nursery, where I knew I'd find Vee, gives her
+the usual hail just behind the ear, and then turns hasty to the crib to
+show I haven't forgot who's there.
+
+"Hello, old sport!" says I, ticklin' him in the ribs. "How you hittin'
+'em, hey? Well, well! Look at the fistses doubled up! Who you goin' to
+hand a wallop to now? Oh, tryin' to punch yourself in the eye, are you?
+Come there, you young rough-houser, lay off that grouchy stuff and speak
+some kind words to your daddy. You won't, eh? Goin' to kick a little
+with the footsies. That's it. Mix in with all fours, you young----"
+
+And just then I hears a suppressed snort that sounds sort of familiar. I
+glances around panicky, and gets the full benefit of a disgusted glare
+from a set of chilled steel eyes, and discovers that there's someone
+besides Vee and the nurse present. Yep. It's Auntie.
+
+"May I ask," says she, "if this is your usual manner of greeting your
+offspring?"
+
+"Why," says I, "I--I expect it is."
+
+"Humph!" says she. "I might have known."
+
+"Now, Auntie," protests Vee, "you know very well that Torchy means----"
+
+"Whatever he means or doesn't mean," breaks in Auntie, "I am sure he
+has an astonishing way of showing parental affection. Calling the child
+an 'old scout,' a 'young rough-houser'! It's shocking."
+
+"Sorry," says I; "but I ain't taken any lessons in polite baby talk yet.
+Maybe in time I could learn this ittums-tweetums stuff, but I doubt it.
+Always made me sick, that did; and one of the things Vee and I agreed on
+was that----"
+
+"Oh, very well," says Auntie. "I do not intend to interfere in any way."
+
+As if she could help it! Why, say, she'd give St. Peter advice on
+gate-keepin'. But for the time bein', each of us havin' had our say, we
+calls it a draw and gets back to what looks like a peace footin'. But
+from then on I knew she had her eyes out at me. Every move I made was
+liable to get her breathin' short or set her squirmin' in her chair. And
+you know how it's apt to be in a case like that. I made more breaks than
+ever. I'd forget about the youngster bein' asleep and cut loose with
+something noisy at the wrong time. Or I'd jolt her some other way.
+
+But she held in until, one night after dinner, when the baby had
+indulged in too much day sleepin' and was carryin' on a bit, I takes a
+notion to soothe him with a few humorous antics while Auntie is safe
+downstairs. You see, I'd never been able to get him to take any notice
+of me before; but this time, after I'd done a swell imitation of a Fred
+Stone dance, I had him cooin' approvin', the nurse smotherin' a smile,
+and Vee snickerin'.
+
+Naturally, I has to follow it up with something else. I was down on my
+hands and knees doin' a buckin' bronco act across the floor, when there
+comes this gasp from the doorway. It seems Auntie was passin' by, and
+peeked in. Her eyebrows go up, her mouth corners come down, and she
+stiffens like she'd grabbed a high-voltage feed wire. I saw it comin',
+but the best I can do is steady myself on my fingers and toes and wish I
+had cotton in my ears.
+
+"Really!" says she. "Are you never to realize, young man, that you are
+now supposed to be a husband and a father?"
+
+And, before I can shoot back a word, she's sailed on, her chin in the
+air and her mouth about as smilin' as a crack in a vinegar bottle. But
+she'd said it. She'd pushed it home, too. And the worst of it was, I
+couldn't deny that she had the goods on me. I might pass as a husband,
+if you didn't expect too much. But as for the rest--well, I knew I
+wasn't meetin' the specifications.
+
+The only model I could think of was them fond parent groups you see in
+the movie close-ups--mother on the right, father at the left, and Little
+Bright Eyes squeezed in between and bein' mauled affectionate. Had we
+ever indulged in any such family clinch? Not up to date. Why? Was it
+because I was a failure as a daddy? Looked so. And here was Auntie
+taxin' me with it. Would other folks find out, too?
+
+I begun thinkin' over the way different ones had taken the news. Old
+Hickory, for instance. I was wearin' a wide grin and still feelin' sort
+of chesty when I broke into his private office and handed him the
+bulletin.
+
+"Eh?" he grunts, squintin' at me from under them bushy eyebrows. "A
+father! You? Good Lord!"
+
+"Why not?" says I. "It's still being done, ain't it?"
+
+"Oh, I suppose so. Yes, yes," he goes on, starin' at me. "But somehow,
+young man, I can hardly think of you as--as---- Well, congratulations,
+Torchy. You have frequently surprised me by rising to the occasion.
+Perhaps you will in this also."
+
+"Thanks, Mr. Ellins," says I. "It's nice of you to cheer me up that
+way."
+
+Piddie, of course, said the right and elegant thing, just as if he'd
+learned it out of a book. He always does, you know. Makes a reg'lar
+little speech, and finishes by givin' me the fraternal handclasp and a
+pat on the shoulder.
+
+But a minute after I caught him gazin' at me wonderin', and he goes off
+shakin' his head.
+
+Then I runs across my newspaper friend Whitey Weeks, who used to know me
+when I was a cub office-boy on the Sunday editor's door.
+
+"Well, Torchy," says he, "what you got on your mind?"
+
+"Nothing you could make copy out of," says I, "but it's a whale of an
+event for me."
+
+"You don't say," says he. "Somebody died and left you the business?"
+
+"Just the opposite," says I.
+
+"I don't get you," says he.
+
+"Ah, what's usually in the next column?" says I. "It's a case of
+somebody bein' born."
+
+"Why--why," says he, openin' his mouth, "you don't mean that----"
+
+"Uh-huh," says I, tryin' to look modest.
+
+[Illustration: "I was down on my knees doin' a buckin' bronco act, when
+there comes a gasp from the doorway."]
+
+"Haw-haw!" roars Whitey, usin' the steam siren effect. And, as it's
+right on the corner of Forty-second and Broadway, he comes near
+collectin' a crowd. Four or five people turn around to see what the
+merriment is all about, and a couple of 'em stops short in their tracks.
+One guy I spotted for a vaudeville artist lookin' for stuff that might
+fat up his act.
+
+"Say," Whitey goes on, poundin' me on the back jovial, "that's rich,
+that is!"
+
+"Glad it amuses you," says I, startin' to move off.
+
+"Oh, come, old chap!" says he, followin' along. "Don't get crabby.
+What--what is it, anyway?"
+
+"It's a baby," says I. "Quite a young one. Now go laugh your fat head
+off, you human hyena."
+
+With that shot I dashes through the traffic and catches a downtown car,
+leavin' him there with his silly face unhinged. And I did no more
+announcin' to anybody. I was through advertisin'. When some of the
+commuters on the eight-three heard the news and started springin' their
+comic tricks on me, I pretended I didn't understand.
+
+I don't know what they thought. I didn't give a whoop, either. I wasn't
+demandin' that anybody should pass solemn resolutions thankin' me for
+what I'd done for my country, or stand with their hats off as I went by.
+But I was overstocked on this joke-book junk.
+
+Maybe I didn't look like a father, or act like one; but I was doin' my
+best on the short notice I'd had.
+
+I will say for Vee that she stood by me noble. She seemed to think
+whatever I did was all right, even when I shied at holdin' the youngster
+for the first time.
+
+"I'm afraid I'll bend him in the wrong place," I protests.
+
+"Goose!" says she. "Of course you won't."
+
+"Suppose I should drop him?" says I.
+
+"You can't if you take him just as I show you," she goes on patient.
+"Now, sit down in that chair. Crook your left arm like this. Now hold
+your knees together, and we'll just put the little precious right in
+your---- There! Why, you're doing it splendidly."
+
+"Am I?" says I.
+
+I might have believed her if I hadn't caught a glimpse of myself in the
+glass. Say, I was sittin' there as easy and graceful as if I'd been made
+of structural iron and reinforced concrete. Stiff! Them stone lions in
+front of the Public Lib'ry was frolicsome lambs compared to me. And I
+was wearin' the same happy look on my face as if I was havin' a tooth
+plugged.
+
+Course that had to be just the time when Mr. Robert Ellins happened in
+for his first private view. Mrs. Robert had towed him down special. He's
+a reg'lar friend, though, Mr. Robert is. I can't say how much of a
+struggle he had to keep his face straight, but after the first spasm has
+worn off he don't show any more signs of wantin' to cackle. And he don't
+pull any end-man stuff.
+
+"Well, well, Torchy!" says he. "A son and heir, eh? I salute you."
+
+"Same to you and many of 'em," says I, grinnin' simple.
+
+It was the first thing that came into my head, but I guess I'd better
+not have let it out. Mrs. Robert pinks up, Vee snickers, and they both
+hurries into the next room.
+
+"Thank you, Torchy," says Mr. Robert. "Within certain limitations, I
+trust your wish comes true. But I say--how does it feel, being a
+father?"
+
+"Just plain foolish," says I.
+
+"Eh?" says he.
+
+"Honest, Mr. Robert," says I, "I never felt so much like a ham sandwich
+at a Chamber of Commerce banquet as I do right now. I'm beginnin' to
+suspect I've been miscast for the part."
+
+"Nonsense!" says he soothin'. "You appear to be getting along
+swimmingly. I'm sure I wouldn't know how to hold a baby at all."
+
+"You couldn't know less'n I do about it at present writing," says I. "I
+don't dare move, and both my legs are asleep from the knees down. Do me
+a favor and call for help, won't you?"
+
+"Oh, I say!" he calls out. "The starboard watch wants to be relieved."
+
+So Vee comes back and pries the baby out of my grip.
+
+"Isn't he absurd!" says she. "But he will soon learn. All men are like
+that at first, I suppose."
+
+"Hear that, Mr. Robert?" says I. "That's what I call a sun-cured
+disposition."
+
+She'd make a good animal-trainer, Vee; she's so persistent and patient.
+After dinner she jollies me into tryin' it again.
+
+"You needn't sit so rigid, you know," she coaches me. "Just relax
+naturally and let his little head rest easy in the hollow of your arm.
+No, you don't have to grab him with the other hand. Let him kick his
+legs if he wants to. See, he is looking up at you! Yes, I believe he
+is. Do you see Daddy? Do you, precious?"
+
+"Must be some sight," I murmurs. "What am I supposed to do now?"
+
+"Oh, you may rock him gently, if you like," says Vee. "And I don't
+suppose he'd mind if you sang a bit."
+
+"Wouldn't that be takin' a mean advantage?" says I.
+
+Vee laughs and goes off so I can practice alone, which was thoughtful of
+her.
+
+I didn't find it so bad this time. I discovers I can wiggle my toes
+occasionally without lettin' him crash on to the floor. And I begun to
+get used to lookin' at him at close range, too. His nose don't seem
+quite so hopeless as it did. I shouldn't wonder but what he'd grow a
+reg'lar nose there in time. And their little ears are cute, ain't they?
+But say, it was them big blue eyes that got me interested. First off
+they sort of wandered around the room aimless; but after a while they
+steadies down into gazin' at me sort of curious and admirin'. I rather
+liked that.
+
+"How about it, Snookums?" says I. "What do you think of your amateur
+daddy? Or are you wonderin' if your hair'll be as red as mine? Don't you
+care. There's worse things in life than bein' bright on top. Eh? Think
+you'd like to get your fingers in it? Might burny-burn. Well, try it
+once, if you like." And I ducks my head so he can reach that wavin'
+forelock of mine.
+
+"Googly-goo!" remarks Sonny, indicatin' 'most anything you're a mind to
+call it.
+
+Anyway, he seems to be entertained. We was gettin' acquainted fast.
+Pretty soon he pulls a smile on me. Say, it's the real thing in the
+smile line, too--confidential and chummy. I has to smile back.
+
+"That's the trick, Buster!" says I. "Friendly face motions is what wins."
+
+"Goo-oogly-goo!" says he.
+
+"True words!" says I. "I believe you."
+
+We must have kept that up for near half an hour, until he shows signs of
+gettin' sleepy. Just before he drops off, though, he was wavin' one of
+his hands around, and the first thing I know them soft little pink
+fingers has circled about my thumb.
+
+Say, that turned the trick--just that. Ever had a baby grip you that
+way? Your own, I mean? If you have, I expect you'll know what I'm
+drivin' at. And if you ain't--well, you got something comin' to you.
+It's a thing I couldn't tell you about. It's a gentle sort of thrill,
+that spreads and spreads until it gets 'way inside of you--under your
+vest, on the left side.
+
+When Vee finally comes in to see how we're gettin' along, he's snoozin'
+calm and peaceful, with a sketchy smile kind of flickerin' on and off
+that rosebud mouth of his, like he was indulgin' in pleasant dreams.
+Also, them little pink fingers was still wrapped around my thumb.
+
+"Well, if you aren't a picture, you two!" says Vee, bendin' over and
+whisperin' in my ear.
+
+"This ain't a pose," says I. "It's the real thing."
+
+"You mean----" begins Vee.
+
+"I mean I've qualified," says I. "Maybe I didn't show up so strong
+durin' the initiation, but I squeaked through. I'm a reg'lar daddy now.
+See! He's givin' me the inside brother grip--on my thumb. You can call
+Auntie in, if you like."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A LOW TACKLE BY TORCHY
+
+
+What I like about livin' out in the forty-minute-if-you're-lucky sector
+is that, once you get here, it's so nice and quiet. You don't have to
+worry, when you turn in at night, about manhole covers bein' blown
+through your front windows, or whether the basement floor will drop into
+the subway, or if some gun gang is going to use your street for a
+shootin' gallery. All you do is douse the lights and feel sure nothin's
+going to happen until breakfast.
+
+We were talkin' something along this line the other evenin', Vee and me,
+sayin' how restful and soothin' these spring nights in the country
+was--you know, sort of handin' it to ourselves. And it couldn't have
+been more'n two hours later that I'm routed rude out of the downy by the
+'phone bell. It's buzzin' away frantic. I scrambles out and fits the
+receiver to my ear just in time to get the full benefit of the last half
+of a long ring.
+
+"Ah, take your thumb off," I sings out to the night operator. "Who you
+think you're callin'--the fire house or some doctor?"
+
+"Here's your party," I hears her remark cheerful, and then this other
+voice comes in.
+
+Well, it's Norton Plummer, that fussy little lawyer neighbor of ours who
+lives about half a mile the other side of the railroad. Since he's been
+made chairman of the local Council of Defense and put me on as head of
+one of his committees, he's rung me up frequent, generally at
+dinner-time, to ask if I have anything to report. Seems to think, just
+because I'm a reserve lieutenant on special detail, that I ought to be
+discoverin' spies and diggin' out plots every few minutes.
+
+"Yes, yes," says I. "This is me. What then?"
+
+"Did you read about that German naval officer who escaped from an
+internment camp last week?" he asks.
+
+"But that was 'way down in North Carolina or somewhere, wasn't it?" says
+I.
+
+"Perhaps," says Plummer. "But he isn't there now. He's here."
+
+"Eh?" says I. "Where?"
+
+"Prowling around my house," says Plummer. "That is, he was a few moments
+ago. My chauffeur saw him. So did I. He's on his way down towards the
+trolley line now."
+
+"Why didn't you nab him?" I asks.
+
+"Me?" says Plummer. "Why, he's a huge fellow, and no doubt a desperate
+man. I presume he was after me: I don't know."
+
+"But how'd you come to spot him as a Hun officer?" says I.
+
+"By the description I read," says he. "It fits perfectly. There's no
+telling what he's up to around here. And listen: I have telephoned to
+the Secret Service headquarters in town for them to send some men out in
+a machine. But they'll be nearly an hour on the road, at best.
+Meanwhile, what we must do is to prevent him from catching that last
+trolley car, which goes in about twelve-fifteen. We must stop him, you
+see."
+
+"Oh, must we?" says I. "Listens to me like some he-sized job."
+
+"That's why I called you up," says Plummer. "You know where the line
+crosses the railroad? Well, he'll probably try to get on there. Hurry
+down and prevent him."
+
+"Is that all I have to do?" says I. "What's the scheme--do I trip him up
+and sit on his head?"
+
+"No, no!" says Plummer. "Don't attempt violence. He's a powerful man.
+Why, my chauffeur saw him break the chain on our back gate as if it had
+been nothing but twine. Just gave it a push--and snap it went. Oh, he's
+strong as a bull. Ill-tempered, too."
+
+"Huh!" says I. "And I'm to go down and---- Say, where do you come in on
+this?"
+
+"I'll be there with John just as soon as we can quiet Mrs. Plummer and
+the maids," says he. "They're almost in hysterics. In the meantime,
+though, if you could get there and---- Well, use strategy of some kind.
+Anything to keep him from catching that car. You understand?"
+
+"I get you," says I. "And it don't sound enticin' at all. But I'll see
+what I can do. If you find me smeared all over the road, though, you'll
+know I didn't pull it off. Also, I'd suggest that you make that soothin'
+act of yours speedy."
+
+Course this wakes Vee up, and she wants to know what it's all about.
+
+"Oh, a little private panic that Norton Plummer is indulgin' in," says
+I. "Nothin' to get fidgety over. I'll be back soon."
+
+"But--but you won't be reckless, will you, Torchy?" she asks.
+
+"Who, me?" says I. "How foolish. Why, I invented that 'Safety First'
+motto, and side-steppin' trouble is the easiest thing I do. Trust me."
+
+I expect she was some nervous, at that. But she's a good sport, Vee.
+
+"If you're needed," says she, "of course I want you to go. But do be
+careful."
+
+I didn't need any coaxin'. Somehow, I never could get used to roamin'
+around in the country after dark. Always seemed sort of spooky. Bein'
+brought up in the city, I expect, where the scenery is illuminated
+constant, accounts for that. So, as I slips out the front gate and down
+towards the station, I keeps in the middle of the road and glances
+suspicious at the tree shadows.
+
+Not that I was takin' Plummer's Hun scare real serious. He'd had a bad
+case of spy fever recent. Why, only last week he got all stirred up over
+what he announced was a private wireless outfit that he'd discovered
+somewhere in the outskirts of Flushing; and when they came to trail it
+down it turns out to be some new wire clothes-line strung up back of a
+flat buildin'.
+
+Besides, what would an escaped German naval officer be doin' up this
+way? He'd be more apt to strike for Mexico, wouldn't he? Still, long as
+I'd let Plummer put me on the committee, it was up to me to answer any
+calls. Might be entertainin' to see who he'd mistaken for an enemy alien
+this time. And if all I was expected to do was spill a little impromptu
+strategy--well, maybe I could, and then again maybe I couldn't. I'd take
+a look, anyway.
+
+It was seein' a light in Danny Shea's little cottage, back on a side
+lane, that gave me my original hunch. Danny is one of the important
+officials of the Long Island Railroad, if you let him tell it. He's the
+flagman down where the highway and trolley line cross the tracks at
+grade, and when his rheumatism ain't makin' him grouchy he's more or
+less amusin' to chin with.
+
+Danny had pestered the section boss until he'd got him to build a little
+square coop for him, there by the crossin'--a place where he could crawl
+in between trains, smoke his pipe, and toast himself over a sheet-iron
+stove about as big as a picnic coffee-pot.
+
+And that sentry-box effect was the pride of Danny's heart. Most of his
+spare time and all the money he could bone out of the commuters he spent
+in improvin' and decoratin' it. He'd cut a couple of round windows,
+like port-holes, and fitted 'em with swingin' sashes. Then he'd tacked
+on some flower-boxes underneath and filled 'em with geraniums.
+
+When he wasn't waterin' his flowers or coaxin' along his little
+grass-plot or addin' another shelf inside, he was paintin' the outside.
+Danny's idea of a swell color scheme seemed to be to get on as many
+different shades as possible. The roof was red, the sides a bright blue.
+But where he spread himself was on the trim. All you had to do to get on
+the right side of Danny was to lug him out a half-pound can of paint
+different from any he'd applied so far. He'd use it somehow.
+
+So the window-sashes was picked out in yellow, the side battens loomed
+up prominent as black lines, and the door-panels was a pale pink. Nearly
+all the commuters had been touched by Danny for something or other that
+could be added to the shack. Only a week or so before, I'd got in strong
+with him by contributin' a new padlock for the door--a vivid red one,
+like they have on the village jail in vaudeville plays.
+
+And it struck me now that if I had the key to that little box of Danny's
+it would make a perfectly good listenin'-post for any midnight
+sleuthin' I had to do. Most likely he was up dosin' himself or bathin'
+his joints.
+
+Well, he was. He didn't seem any too enthusiastic about lettin' me have
+the key, though.
+
+"I dunno," says he. "'Tis railroad property, y' understand, and I'd be
+afther riskin' me job if any thin' should----"
+
+"I know, Danny," says I. "But you tell 'em it was commandeered by the U.
+S. Army, which is me; and if that don't square you I'll have Mr. Baker
+come on and tell the section boss where he gets off."
+
+"Verra well," says Danny. And in less than five minutes more I'm down
+there at the crossin', all snug and cozy, peekin' out of them round
+windows into No Man's Land.
+
+For a while it was kind of excitin'; but after that it got sort of
+monotonous. There was about half of an old moon in the sky, and only a
+few clouds, so you could see fairly well--if there'd been anything to
+see. But nothing seemed to be stirrin', up or down the road.
+
+What a nut that Norton Plummer was, anyway, feedin' me up with his wild
+tales in the middle of the night! And why didn't he show up? Finally I
+got restless, and walked out where I could rubber up the trolley track.
+No sign or sound of a car. Then I looks at my watch again, and figures
+out it ain't due for twenty minutes or so. Next I strolls across the
+railroad to look for Plummer. And, just as I'm passin' a big maple tree,
+out steps this huge party with the whiskers. I nearly jumped out of my
+puttees.
+
+"Eh?" says I gaspy.
+
+"Gotta match?" says he.
+
+"I--I guess so," says I.
+
+I reached as far as I could when I hands him the box, too. He's a whale
+of a man, tall and bulky. And his whiskers are the bristly
+kind--straw-colored, I should say. He's wearin' a double-breasted blue
+coat and a sort of yachtin' cap. Uh-huh! Plummer must have been right.
+If this gink wasn't a Hun naval officer, then what was he? The ayes had
+it.
+
+He produces a pipe and starts to light up. One match broke, the second
+had no strikin' head on it, the third just fizzed.
+
+"Gr-r-r-r!" says he.
+
+Then he starts for the crossin', me trailin' along. I saw he had his eye
+on Danny's sentry-box, meanin' to get in the lee of it. Even then I
+didn't have any bright little idea.
+
+"Waitin' for the trolley?" I throws out.
+
+"What of it?" he growls.
+
+"Oh, no offense," says I hasty. "Maybe there are others."
+
+He just lets out another grunt, and tries one more match with his face
+up against the side of the shanty. And then, all in a jump, my bean got
+into gear.
+
+"You might have better luck inside," says I, swingin' open the door
+invitin'.
+
+He don't even say thank you. He ain't one of that kind. For a second or
+so I thought he wasn't goin' to take any notice; but after one more
+failure he steps around, inspects the inside of the shanty, and then
+squeezes himself through the door. At that, he wasn't all the way in,
+but by the time he had a match goin' I'd got my nerve back.
+
+"Ah, take the limit, Cap'n," says I.
+
+With that I plants one foot impulsive right where he was widest, gives a
+quick shove, slams the door shut behind him, and snaps the big padlock
+through the hasp.
+
+"Hey!" he sings out startled. "What the----"
+
+"Now, don't get messy, Cap'n," says I. "You're in, ain't you? Smoke up
+and be happy."
+
+"You--you loafer!" he gurgles throaty. "What do you mean?"
+
+"Just a playful little prank, Cap," says I. "Don't get excited. You're
+perfectly safe."
+
+Maybe he was. But some folks don't appreciate little attentions like
+that. The Cap'n starts in bumpin' and thrashin' violent in there, like a
+pup that's crawled into a drainpipe and got himself stuck. He hammers on
+the walls with his fists, throws his weight against the door, and tries
+to kick his way out.
+
+But the section boss must have used rail spikes and reinforced the
+studdin' with fishplates when he built that coop for Danny, or else the
+big Hun was too tight a fit to get full play for his strength. Anyway,
+all he did was make the little house rock until you'd thought Long
+Island was enjoyin' a young earthquake. Meanwhile I stands by, ready to
+do a sprint if he should break loose, and offers more or less cheerin'
+advice.
+
+"Easy with your elbows in there, Cap," says I. "You're assaultin'
+railroad property, you know, and if you do any damage you can be pinched
+for malicious mischief."
+
+"You--you better let me out of here quick!" he roars. "I gotta get
+back."
+
+"Oh, you'll get to town all right," says I. "I'll promise you that."
+
+"Loafer!" he snorts.
+
+"Say, how do you know I ain't sensitive on that point?" says I. "You
+might hurt my feelin's."
+
+"Gr-r-r!" says he. "I would wring your neck."
+
+"Such a disposition!" says I.
+
+Oh, yes, we swapped quite a little repartee, me and the Cap'n, or
+whatever he was. But, instead of his bein' soothed by it he gets more
+strenuous every minute. He had that shack rockin' like a boat.
+
+Next thing I saw was one of his big feet stickin' out under the bottom
+sill. Then I remembers that the sentry-box has only a dirt floor--on
+account of the stove, I expect. Course Danny has banked the outside up
+with sod for five or six inches, but that ain't enough to hold it down
+with a human tornado cuttin' loose inside. A minute more and another
+foot appears on the other side, and the next I knew the whole shootin'
+match begins to rise, wabbly but sure, until he's lifted it almost to
+his knees.
+
+Looked like the Cap'n was goin' to shed the coop over his head, as you'd
+shuck a shirt, and I was edgin' away prepared to make a run for it. But
+right there the elevatin' process stops, and after some violent squirms
+there comes an outburst of language that would only get the delete sign
+if I should give it. I could dope out what had happened. That plank seat
+across one side had caught the Cap'n about where he buckles his belt,
+and he couldn't budge it any further.
+
+"Want a shoe-horn, Cap'n?" I asks. "Say, next time you try wearin' a
+kiosk as a slip-on sweater you'd better train down for the act."
+
+"Gr-r-r-r!" says he. "I--I will teach you to play your jokes on me,
+young whipper-snap."
+
+He does some more writhin', and pretty soon manages to swing open one of
+the port-holes. With his face up to that, like a deep-sea diver peekin'
+out o' his copper bonnet, he starts for me, kickin' over the little
+stove as he gets under way, and tearin' the whole thing loose from the
+foundation.
+
+Course he's some handicapped by the hobble-skirt effect around his
+knees, and the weight above his shoulders makes him a bit topheavy; but,
+at that, he can get over the ground as fast as I can walk backwards.
+
+Must have been kind of a weird sight, there in the moonlight--me bein'
+pursued up the road by this shack with legs under it, the little tin
+smoke-pipe wavin' jaunty about nine feet in the air, and the geraniums
+in the flower-boxes noddin' jerky.
+
+"Say, what do you think you are?" I calls out. "A wooden tank goin' over
+the top?"
+
+I was sort of wonderin' how long he could keep this up, and what would
+be the finish, when from behind me I hears this spluttery line of
+exclamations indicatin' rage. It's Danny, who's got anxious about
+lettin' me have the use of his coop and has come down to see what's
+happenin' to it. Well, he saw.
+
+"Hey! Stop him, stop him!" he yells.
+
+"Stop him yourself, Danny," says I.
+
+"But he's runnin' away with me little flag-house, thief of the worruld!"
+howls Danny. "It's breakin' and enterin' and carryin' away th' property
+of the Long Island Railroad that he's guilty of."
+
+"Yes; I've explained all that to him," says I.
+
+"Go back and come'out of that, ye thievin' Dutchman!" orders Danny,
+rushin' up and bangin' on the door with his fists.
+
+"Just let me out, you Irish shrimp!" snarls the Cap'n.
+
+"Can't be done--not yet, Danny," says I.
+
+"But--but he's destroyin' me flowers and runnin' off with me little
+house," protested Danny. "I'll have the law on him, so I will."
+
+"Get out, Irisher, or I'll fall on you," warns the Cap'n.
+
+And right in the midst of this debate I sees Norton Plummer and his
+chauffeur hurryin' up from across the tracks. I skips back to meet 'em.
+
+"Well," says Plummer, "have you seen anything of the escaped prisoner?"
+
+"That's him," says I, pointin' to the wabblin' shack.
+
+"Whaddye mean?" says Plummer, starin' puzzled.
+
+"He's inside," says I. "You said use strategy, didn't you? Well, that's
+the best I had in stock. I got him boxed, all right, but he won't stay
+put. He insists on playin' the human turtle. What'll we do with him now?
+Come see."
+
+"My word!" says Plummer, as he gets a view of the Cap'n's legs and the
+big whiskered face at the little window. "So there you are, eh, you
+runaway Hun?"
+
+"Bah!" says the Cap'n. "Why do you call me Hun?"
+
+"Because I've identified you as an escaped German naval officer," says
+Plummer. "Do you deny it?"
+
+"Me?" says the Cap'n. "Bah!"
+
+"Who do you claim to be, then?" says I. "A tourist Eskimo or an
+out-of-town buyer from Patagonia?"
+
+"I'm Nels Petersen, that's who I am," says he, "and I'm chief engineer
+of a ferry-boat that's due to make her first run at five-thirty-three."
+
+"What!" says Plummer. "Are you the Swede engineer who has been writing
+love letters to---- Say, what is the name of Mrs. Plummer's maid?"
+
+"Selma," says the Cap'n.
+
+"By George!" says Plummer. "I believe the man's right. But see here:
+what were you doing prowling around my back yard to-night! Why didn't
+you go to the servants' entrance and ask the cook for Selma, if you're
+as much in love with her as you've written that you are?"
+
+"What do you know about it?" demands Petersen.
+
+"Good Lord!" gasps Plummer. "Haven't I had to puzzle out all those
+wretched scrawls of yours and read 'em to her? Such mushy letters, too!
+Come, if you're the man, why didn't you call Selma out and tell her all
+that to her face?"
+
+Nothing but heavy breathing from inside the shack.
+
+"You don't mean to say you were too bashful!" goes on Plummer. "A great
+big fellow like you!"
+
+If it hadn't been for the whiskers I believe we could have seen him
+blush.
+
+"Look here," says Plummer. "You may be what you say you are, and then
+again you may not. Perhaps you just guessed at the girl's name. We can't
+afford to take any chances. The only way to settle it is to send for
+Selma."
+
+"No, no!" pleads the big gink. "Please! Not like this."
+
+"Yes, just like that," insists Plummer. "Only, if you'd rather, you can
+carry your house back where it belongs and sit down. John, run home and
+bring Selma here."
+
+Well, we had our man nicely tamed now. With Selma liable to show up, he
+was ready to do as he was told. Just why, we couldn't make out. Anyway,
+he hobbles back to the crossin' and eases the shack down where he found
+it. Also, he slumps inside on the bench and waits, durin' which
+proceedin' the last trolley goes boomin' past.
+
+Inside of ten minutes John is back with the maid. Kind of a slim,
+classy-lookin' girl she is, too. And when Selma sees that big face at
+the round window there's no doubt about his being the chosen one.
+
+"Oh, Nels, Nels!" she wails out. "Vy you don'd coom by the house yet?"
+
+"I was scart, Selma," says Nels, "for fear you'd tell me to go away."
+
+"But--but I don'd, Nels," says Selma.
+
+"Shall I let him out for the fade-away scene?" says I.
+
+Plummer nods. And we had to turn our backs as they go to the fond
+clinch.
+
+Accordin' to Plummer, Selma had been waitin' for Nels to say the word
+for more'n a year, and for the last two months she'd been so
+absent-minded and moody that she hadn't been of much use around the
+house. But him gettin' himself boxed up as an escaped Hun had sort of
+broken the ice.
+
+"There, now!" says Plummer. "You two go back to the house and talk it
+over. You may have until three-fifteen to settle all details, and then
+I'll have John drive Petersen down to his ferry-boat. Be sure and fix
+the day, though. I don't want to go through another night like this."
+
+"But what about me little lawn," demands Danny, "that's tore up
+entirely? And who's to mend me stove-pipe and all?"
+
+"Oh, here's something that will cover all that, Danny," says Plummer,
+slippin' him a ten-spot. "And I've no doubt Petersen will contribute
+something, too."
+
+"Sure!" says Nels, fishin' in his pockets.
+
+"Two bits!" says Danny, pickin' up the quarter scornful. "Thim Swedes
+are the tightwads! And if ever I find this wan kidnappin' me little
+house again----"
+
+At which Danny breaks off and shakes his fist menacin'.
+
+When I gets back home I tiptoes upstairs; but Vee is only dozin', and
+wakes up with a jump.
+
+"Is that you, Torchy?" says she. "Has--has anything dreadful happened?"
+
+"Yes," says I. "I had to pull a low tackle, and Danny Shea's declared
+war on Sweden."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+TAG DAY AT TORCHY'S
+
+
+Course, in a way, it was our fault, I expect. We never should have let
+on that there was any hitch about what we was goin' to name the baby.
+Blessed if I know now just how it got around. I remember Vee and I
+havin' one or two little talks on the subject, but I don't think we'd
+tackled the proposition real serious.
+
+You see, at first we were too busy sort of gettin' used to havin' him
+around and framin' up a line on this parent act we was supposed to put
+over. Anyway, I was. And for three or four weeks, there, I called him
+anything that came handy, from Young Sport to Old Snoodlekins. Vee she
+sticks to Baby. Uh-huh--just plain Baby. But the way she says it,
+breathin' it out kind of soft and gentle, sounded perfectly all right to
+me.
+
+And the youngster didn't seem to have any kick comin'. He was gettin' so
+he'd look up and coo real intelligent when she speaks to him in that
+fashion. You couldn't blame him, for it was easy to listen to.
+
+As for the different things I called him--well, he didn't mind them,
+either. No matter what it was,--Old Pink Toes or Wiggle-heels,--he'd
+generally pass it off with a smile, providin' he wasn't too busy with
+his bottle or tryin' to get hold of his foot with both of his hands.
+
+Then one day Auntie, who's been listenin' disapprovin' all the while,
+just can't hold in any longer.
+
+"Isn't it high time," says she, "that you addressed the child properly
+by his right name?"
+
+"Eh?" says I, gawpin'. "Which one?"
+
+"You don't mean to say," she goes on, "that you have not yet decided on
+his baptismal name?"
+
+"I didn't know he was a Baptist," says I feeble.
+
+"We hadn't quite settled what to call him," says Vee.
+
+"Besides," I adds, "I don't see the use bein' in a rush about it. Maybe
+were're savin' that up."
+
+"Saving!" says Auntie. "For what reason?"
+
+"Oh, general conservation," says I. "Got the habit. We've had heatless
+Mondays and wheatless Wednesdays and fryless Fridays and sunless
+Sundays, so why not nameless babies?"
+
+Auntie sniffs and goes off with her nose in the air, as she always does
+whenever I spring any of my punk persiflage on her.
+
+But then Vee takes it up, and says Auntie is right and that we really
+ought to decide on a name and begin using it.
+
+"Oh, very well," says I. "I'll be thinking one up."
+
+Seemed simple enough. Course, I'd never named any babies before, but I
+had an idea I could dig out half a dozen good, serviceable monickers
+between then and dinner-time.
+
+Somehow, though, I couldn't seem to hit on anything that I was willing
+to wish on to the youngster offhand. When I got right up against the
+problem, it seemed kind of serious.
+
+Why, here was something he'd have to live with all his life; us, too.
+We'd have to say it over maybe a hundred times a day. And if he grew up
+and amounted to anything, as we was sure he would, it would mean that
+this front name of his that I had to pick out might be displayed more or
+less prominent. It would be on his office door, on his letterheads, on
+his cards. He'd sign it to checks.
+
+Maybe it would be printed in the newspapers, used in headlines, or
+painted on campaign banners. Might be displayed on billboards. Who could
+tell?
+
+And the deeper I got into the thing the more I wabbled about from one
+name to another, until I wondered how people had the nerve to give their
+children some of the tags you hear--Percy, Isadore, Lulu, Reginald, and
+so on. And do it so casual, too. Why, I knew of a couple who named their
+three girls after parlor-cars; and a gink in Brooklyn who called one of
+his boys Prospect, after the park. Think of loadin' a helpless youngster
+with anything freaky like that!
+
+Besides, how were you going to know that even the best name you could
+pick wouldn't turn out to be a misfit? About the only Percy I ever knew
+in real life was a great two-fisted husk who was foreman of a
+stereotypin' room; and here in the Corrugated Buildin', if you'll come
+in some night after five, I can show you a wide built scrub lady, with
+hair redder'n mine and a voice like a huckster--her front name is
+Violet. Yet I expect, when them two was babies, both those names sounded
+kind of cute. I could see where it would be easy enough for me to make
+a mistake that it would take a court order to straighten out.
+
+So, when Vee asks if I've made any choice yet I had to admit that I'm
+worse muddled up on the subject than when I started in. All I can do is
+hand over a list I've copied down on the back of an envelop with every
+one of 'em checked off as no good.
+
+"Let's see," says Vee, glancin' 'em over curious. "Lester. Why, I'm sure
+that is rather a nice name for a boy."
+
+"Yes," says I; "but after I put it down I remembered a Lester I knew
+once. He was a simp that wore pink neckties and used to write
+love-letters to Mary Pickford."
+
+"What about Earl?" she asks.
+
+"Too flossy," says I. "Sounds like you was tryin' to let on he belonged
+to the aristocracy."
+
+"Well, Donald, then," says she. "That's a good, sensible name."
+
+"But we ain't Scotch," I objects.
+
+"What's the matter with Philip?" says Vee.
+
+"I can never remember whether it has one _l_ and two _p_'s or the other
+way round."
+
+"But you haven't considered any of the common ones," goes on Vee, "such
+as John or William or Thomas or James or Arthur."
+
+"Because that would mean he'd be called Bill or Tom or Art," says I.
+"Besides, I kind of thought he ought to have something out of the usual
+run--one you wouldn't forget as soon as you heard it."
+
+"If I may suggest," breaks in Auntie, "the custom of giving the eldest
+son the family name of his mother is rather a good one. Had you
+considered Hemmingway?"
+
+I just gasps and glances at Vee. What if she should fall for anything
+like that! Think of smotherin' a baby under most of the alphabet all at
+one swoop! And imagine a boy strugglin' through schooldays and vacations
+with all that tied to him.
+
+Hemmingway! Why, he'd grow up round-shouldered and knock-kneed, and most
+likely turn out to be a floor-walker in the white goods department, or
+the manager of a gift-shop tearoom. Hemmingway!
+
+Just the thought of it made me dizzy; and I begun breathin' easier when
+I saw Vee shake her head.
+
+"He's such a little fellow, Auntie," says she. "Wouldn't that be--well,
+rather topheavy?"
+
+Which disposes of Auntie. She admits maybe it would. But from then on,
+as the news seems to spread that we was havin' a kind of deadlock with
+the namin' process, the volunteers got busy. Old Leon Battou, our
+butler-cook, hinted that his choice would be Emil.
+
+"For six generations," says he, "Emil has been the name of the
+first-born son in our family."
+
+"That's stickin' to tradition," says I. "It sounds perfectly swell, too,
+when you know how to pronounce it. But, you see, we're foundin' a new
+dynasty."
+
+Mr. Robert don't say so outright, but he suggests that Ellins Ballard
+wouldn't be such a bad combination.
+
+"True," he adds, "the governor and I deserve no such distinction; but
+I'm sure we would both be immensely flattered. And there's no telling
+how reckless we might be when it come to presenting christening cups and
+that sort of thing."
+
+"That's worth rememberin'," says I. "And I expect you wouldn't mind, in
+case you had a boy to name later on, callin' him Torchy, eh!"
+
+Mr. Robert grins. "Entry withdrawn," says he.
+
+How this Amelia Gaston Leroy got the call to crash in on our little
+family affair, though, I couldn't quite dope out. We never suspected
+before that she was such an intimate friend of ours. Course, since we'd
+been livin' out in the Piping Rock section we had seen more or less of
+her--more, as a rule. She was built that way.
+
+Oh, yes. Amelia was one of the kind that could bounce in among three or
+four people in a thirty by forty-five living-room and make the place
+seem crowded. Mr. Robert's favorite description of her was that one half
+of Amelia didn't know how the other half lived. To state it plain,
+Amelia was some whale of a girl. One look at her, and you did no more
+guessin' as to what caused the food shortage.
+
+I got the shock of my life, too, when they told me she was the one that
+wrote so much of this mushy magazine poetry you see printed. For all the
+lady poetesses I'd ever seen had been thin, shingled-chested parties
+with mud-colored hair and soulful eyes.
+
+There was nothing thin about Amelia. Her eyes might have been soulful
+enough at times, but mostly I'd seen 'em fixed on a tray of sandwiches
+or a plate of layer cake.
+
+They'd had her up at the Ellinses' once or twice when they were givin'
+one of their musical evenin's, and she'd spouted some of her stuff.
+
+Her first call on us, though, was when she blew in last Sunday afternoon
+and announced that she'd come to see "that dear, darling man child" of
+ours. And for a girl of her size Amelia is some breeze, take it from me.
+Honest, for the first ten minutes or so there I felt like our happy
+little home had been hit by a young tornado.
+
+"Where is he?" she demands. "Please take me at once into the regal
+presence of his youthful majesty."
+
+I noticed Vee sizin' her up panicky, and I knew she was thinkin' of what
+might happen to them spindle-legged white chairs in the nursery.
+
+"How nice of you to want to see him!" says Vee. "But let me have Baby
+brought down here. Just a moment."
+
+And she steers her towards a solid built davenport that we'd been
+meanin' to have reupholstered anyway. Then we was treated to a line of
+high-brow gush as Amelia inspects the youngster through her shell
+lorgnette and tries to tell us in impromptu blank verse how wonderful he
+is.
+
+"Ah, he is one of the sun children, loved of the high gods," says she,
+rollin' her eyes. "He comes to you wearing the tints of dawn and
+trailing clouds of glory. You remember how Wordsworth puts it?"
+
+As she fires this straight at me, I has to say something.
+
+"Does he?" I asks.
+
+"I am always impressed," she gurgles on, "by the calm serenity in the
+eyes of these little ones. It is as if they----"
+
+But just then Snoodlekins begins screwin' up his face. He's never been
+mauled around by a lady poetess before, or maybe it was just because
+there was so much of her. Anyway, he tears loose with a fine large howl
+and the serenity stuff is all off. It takes Vee four or five minutes to
+soothe him.
+
+Meanwhile Miss Leroy gets around to statin' the real reason why we're
+bein' honored.
+
+"I understand," says she, "that you have not as yet chosen a name for
+him. So I am going to help you. I adore it. I have always wanted to name
+a baby, and I've never been allowed. Think of that! My brother has five
+children, too; but he would not listen to any of my suggestions.
+
+"So I am aunt to a Walter who should have been called Clifford, and a
+Margaret whom I wanted to name Beryl, and so on. Even my laundress
+preferred to select names for her twins from some she had seen on a
+circus poster rather than let me do it for her.
+
+"But I am sure you are rational young people, and recognize that I have
+some natural talent in that direction. Names! Why, I have made a study
+of them. I must, you see, in my writing. And this dear little fellow
+deserves something fitting. Now let me see. Ah, I have it! He shall be
+Cedric--after Cedric the Red, you know."
+
+Accordin' to her, it was all settled. She heaves herself up off the
+davenport, straightens her hat, and prepares to leave, smilin'
+satisfied, like an expert who's been called in and has finished the job.
+
+"We--we will consider Cedric," says Vee. "Thank you so much."
+
+"Oh, not at all," says Amelia. "Of course, if I should happen to think
+of anything better within the next few days I will let you know at
+once." And out she floats.
+
+Vee gazes after her and sighs.
+
+"I suppose Cedric is rather a good name," says she, "but somehow I don't
+feel like using one that a stranger has picked out for us. Do you,
+Torchy?"
+
+"You've said it," says I. "I'd sooner let her buy my neckties, or tell
+me how I should have my eggs cooked for breakfast."
+
+"And yet," says Vee, "unless we can think of something better----"
+
+"We will," says I. "I'm goin' through them pages in the back of the big
+dictionary."
+
+In less'n half an hour there's a knock at the door, and here's a
+chauffeur come with a note from Amelia. On the way home she's had
+another hunch.
+
+"After all," she writes, "Cedric seems rather too harsh, too rough-shod.
+So I have decided on Lucian."
+
+"Huh!" says I. "She's decided, has she? Say, whose tag day is this,
+anyway--ours or hers?"
+
+Vee shrugs her shoulders.
+
+"I'm not sure that we should like calling him Lucian; it's so--so----"
+
+"I know," says I, "so perfectly sweet. Say, can't we block Amelia off
+somehow? Suppose I send back word that a rich step-uncle has promised to
+leave him a ton of coal if we call the baby Ebenezer after him?"
+
+Vee chuckles.
+
+"Oh, no doubt she'll forget all about it by morning," says she.
+
+Seems we'd just begun hearin' from the outside districts, though, or
+else they'd been savin' up their ideas for this particular afternoon and
+evenin'; for between then and nine o'clock no less'n half a dozen
+different parties dropped in, every last one of 'em with a name to
+register. And their contributions ranged all the way from Aaron to Xury.
+There were two rooters for Woodrow and one for Pershing.
+
+Some of the neighbors were real serious about it. They told us what a
+time they'd had namin' some of their children, brought up cases where
+families had been busted up over such discussions, and showed us where
+their choice couldn't be beat. One merry bunch from the Country Club
+thought they was pullin' something mighty humorous when they stopped in
+to tell us how they'd held a votin' contest on the subject, and that the
+winnin' combination was, Paul Roger.
+
+"After something you read on a cork, eh?" says I. "Much obliged. And I
+hope nobody strained his intellect."
+
+"The idea!" says Vee, after they've rolled off. "Voting on such a thing
+at a club! Just as if Baby was a battleship, or a--a new moving-picture
+place. I think that's perfectly horrid of them."
+
+"It was fresh, all right," says I. "But I expect we got to stand for
+such guff until we can give out that we've found a name that suits us.
+Lemme tackle that list again. Now, how would Russell do? Russell
+Ballard? No; too many _l_'s and _r_'s. Here's Chester. And I expect the
+boys would call him Chesty. Then there's Clyde. But there's steamship
+line by that name. What about Stanley? Oh, yes; he was an explorer."
+
+I admit I was gettin' desperate about then. I was flounderin' around in
+a whole ocean of names, long ones and short ones, fancy and plain, yet I
+couldn't quite make up my mind. I'd mussed my hair, shed my collar, and
+scribbled over sheets and sheets of paper, without gettin' anywhere at
+all. And when I gave up and turned in about eleven-thirty, my head was
+so muddled I wouldn't have had the nerve to have named a pet kitten.
+
+I must have just dozed off to sleep when I hears this bell ringin'
+somewhere. I couldn't quite make out whether it was a fire alarm, or the
+_z_'s in the back of the dictionary goin' off, when Vee calls out that
+it's the 'phone.
+
+I tumbles out and paws around for the extension.
+
+"Wha-what?" says I. "What the blazes! Ye-uh. This is me. Wha-wha's
+matter?"
+
+And then comes this gurgly voice at the other end of the wire. It's our
+old friend Amelia.
+
+"Do you know," says she, "I have just thought of the loveliest name for
+your dear baby."
+
+"Oh, have you?" says I, sort of crisp.
+
+"Yes," says she, "and I simply couldn't wait until morning to tell you.
+Now listen--it's Ethelbert."
+
+"Ethel-Bert!" says I, gaspy. "Say, you know he's no mixed foursome."
+
+"No, no," says she. Ethelbert--one name, after the old Saxon king.
+Ethelbert Ballard. "Isn't that just perfect? And I am so glad it came to
+me."
+
+I couldn't agree with her real enthusiastic, so it's lucky she hung up
+just as she did.
+
+"Huh!" I remarks to Vee. "Why not Maryjim or Daisybill? Say, I think our
+friend Amelia must have gone off her hinge."
+
+But Vee only yawns and advises me to go to sleep and forget it. Well, I
+tried. You know how it is, though, when you've been jolted out of the
+feathers just as you're halfway through the first reel of the slumber
+stuff. I couldn't get back, to save me.
+
+I counted sheep jumpin' over a wall, I tried lookin' down a railroad
+track until I could seen the rails meet, and I spelled Constantinople
+backwards. Nothing doing in the Morpheus act.
+
+I was wider awake then than a new taxi driver makin' his first trip up
+Broadway. I could think of swell names for seashore cottages, for new
+surburban additions, and for other people's babies. I invented an
+explosive pretzel that would win the war. I thought of bills I ought to
+pay next week sure, and of what I meant to tell the laundryman if he
+kept on making hash of my pet shirts.
+
+Then I got to wonderin' about this old-maid poetess. Was she through for
+the night, or did she work double shifts? If she wasn't any nearer sleep
+than I was she might think up half a dozen substitutes for Ethelbert
+before mornin'. Would she insist on springin' each one on me as they hit
+her?
+
+Maybe she was gettin' ready to call me again now. Should I pretend not
+to hear and let her ring, or would it be better to answer and let on
+that this was Police Headquarters?
+
+Honest, I got so fidgety waitin' for that buzzer to go off that I could
+almost hear the night operator pluggin' in on our wire.
+
+And then a thought struck me that wouldn't let go. So, slippin' out easy
+and throwin' on a bath-robe, I sneaked downstairs to the back hall
+'phone, turned on the light, and hunted up Miss Leroy's number in the
+book.
+
+"Give her a good strong ring, please," says I to Exchange, "and keep it
+up until you rouse somebody."
+
+"Leave it to me," says the operator. And in a minute or so I gets this
+throaty "Hello!"
+
+"Miss Leroy?" says I.
+
+"Yes," says she. "Who is calling?"
+
+"Ballard," says I. "I'm the fond parent of the nameless baby. And say,
+do you still stick to Ethelbert?"
+
+"Why," says she, "I--er----"
+
+"I just wanted to tell you," I goes on, "that this guessin' contest
+closes at 3 A.M., and if you want to make any more entries you got only
+forty minutes to get 'em in. Nighty-night."
+
+And I rings off just as she begins sputterin' indignant.
+
+That seems to help a lot, and inside of five minutes I'm snoozin'
+peaceful.
+
+It was next mornin' at breakfast that Vee observes offhand, as though
+the subject hadn't been mentioned before:
+
+"About naming the baby, now."
+
+"Ye-e-es?" says I, smotherin' a groan.
+
+"Why couldn't we call him after you?" she asks.
+
+"Not--not Richard Junior?" says I.
+
+"Well, after both of us, then," says she. "Richard Hemmingway. It--it is
+what I've wanted to name him all along."
+
+"You have?" says I. "Well, for the love of----"
+
+"You didn't ask me, that's why," says she.
+
+"Why--why, so I didn't," says I. "And say, Vee, I don't know who's got a
+better right. As for my part of the name, I've used it so little it's
+almost as good as new. Richard Hemmingway Ballard it shall be."
+
+"Oh, I'm so glad," says she. "Of course, I did want you to be the one to
+pick it out; but if you're satisfied with----"
+
+"Satisfied!" says I. "Why, I'm tickled to pieces. And here you had that
+up your sleeve all the while!"
+
+Vee smiles and nods.
+
+"We must have the christening very soon," says she, "so everyone will
+know."
+
+"You bet!" says I. "And I've a good notion to put it on the train
+bulletin down at the station, too. First off, though, we'd better tell
+young Richard himself and see how he likes it. I expect, though, unless
+his next crop of hair comes out a different tint from this one, that
+he'll have to answer to 'Young Torchy' for a good many years."
+
+"Oh, yes," says Vee; "but I'm sure he won't mind that in the least."
+
+"Good girl!" says I, movin' round where I can express my feelin's
+better.
+
+"Don't!" says Vee. "You'll spill the coffee."
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+SEWELL FORD'S STORIES
+
+May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list.
+
+
+SHORTY McCABE. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.
+
+A very humorous story. The hero, an independent and vigorous thinker,
+sees life, and tells about it in a very unconventional way.
+
+
+SIDE-STEPPING WITH SHORTY. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.
+
+Twenty skits, presenting people with their foibles. Sympathy with human
+nature and an abounding sense of humor are the requisites for
+"side-stepping with Shorty."
+
+
+SHORTY McCABE ON THE JOB. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.
+
+Shorty McCabe reappears with his figures of speech revamped right up to
+the minute. He aids in the right distribution of a "conscience fund,"
+and gives joy to all concerned.
+
+
+SHORTY McCABE'S ODD NUMBERS. Illustrated by Francis Vaux Wilson.
+
+These further chronicles of Shorty McCabe tell of his studio for
+physical culture, and of his experiences both on the East side and at
+swell yachting parties.
+
+
+TORCHY. Illus, by Geo. Biehm and Jas. Montgomery Flagg.
+
+A red-headed office boy, overflowing with wit and wisdom peculiar to the
+youths reared on the sidewalks of New York, tells the story of his
+experiences.
+
+
+TRYING OUT TORCHY. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.
+
+Torchy is just as deliriously funny in these stories as he was in the
+previous book.
+
+
+ON WITH TORCHY. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.
+
+Torchy falls desperately in love with "the only girl that ever was," but
+that young society woman's aunt tries to keep the young people apart,
+which brings about many hilariously funny situations.
+
+
+TORCHY, PRIVATE SEC. Illustrated by F. Foster Lincoln.
+
+Torchy rises from the position of office boy to that of secretary for
+the Corrugated Iron Company. The story is full of humor and infectious
+American slang.
+
+
+WILT THOU TORCHY. Illus. by F. Snapp and A. W. Brown.
+
+Torchy goes on a treasure search expedition to the Florida West Coast,
+in company with a group of friends of the Corrugated Trust and with his
+friend's aunt, on which trip Torchy wins the aunt's permission to place
+an engagement ring on Vee's finger.
+
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+KATHLEEN NORRIS' STORIES
+
+May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list.
+
+
+MOTHER. Illustrated by F. C. Yohn.
+
+This book has a fairy-story touch, counterbalanced by the sturdy reality
+of struggle, sacrifice, and resulting peace and power of a mother's
+experiences.
+
+
+SATURDAY'S CHILD. Frontispiece by F. Graham Cootes.
+
+Out on the Pacific coast a normal girl, obscure and lovely, makes a
+quest for happiness. She passes through three stages--poverty, wealth
+and service--and works out a creditable salvation.
+
+
+THE RICH MRS. BURGOYNE. Illustrated by Lucius H. Hitchcock.
+
+The story of a sensible woman who keeps within her means, refuses to be
+swamped by social engagements, lives a normal human life of varied
+interests, and has her own romance.
+
+
+THE STORY OF JULIA PAGE. Frontispiece by Allan Gilbert.
+
+How Julia Page, reared in rather unpromising surroundings, lifted
+herself through sheer determination to a higher plane of life.
+
+
+THE HEART OF RACHAEL. Frontispiece by Charles E. Chambers.
+
+Rachael is called upon to solve many problems, and in working out these,
+there is shown the beauty and strength of soul of one of fiction's most
+appealing characters.
+
+
+Ask for Complete free list of G. & D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+BOOTH TARKINGTON'S NOVELS
+
+May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset & Dunlap's list.
+
+
+SEVENTEEN. Illustrated by Arthur William Brown.
+
+No one but the creator of Penrod could have portrayed the immortal young
+people of this story. Its humor is irresistible and reminiscent of the
+time when the reader was Seventeen.
+
+
+PENROD. Illustrated by Gordon Grant.
+
+This is a picture of a boy's heart, full of the lovable, humorous,
+tragic things which are locked secrets to most older folks. It is a
+finished, exquisite work.
+
+
+PENROD AND SAM. Illustrated by Worth Brehm.
+
+Like "Penrod" and "Seventeen," this book contains some remarkable phases
+of real boyhood and some of the best stories of juvenile prankishness
+that have ever been written.
+
+
+THE TURMOIL. Illustrated by C. E. Chambers.
+
+Bibbs Sheridan is a dreamy, imaginative youth, who revolts against his
+father's plans for him to be a servitor of big business. The love of a
+fine girl turns Bibb's life from failure to success.
+
+
+THE GENTLEMAN FROM INDIANA. Frontispiece.
+
+A story of love and politics,--more especially a picture of a country
+editor's life in Indiana, but the charm of the book lies in the love
+interest.
+
+
+THE FLIRT. Illustrated by Clarence F. Underwood.
+
+The "Flirt," the younger of two sisters, breaks one girl's engagement,
+drives one man to suicide, causes the murder of another, leads another
+to lose his fortune, and in the end marries a stupid and unpromising
+suitor, leaving the really worthy one to marry her sister.
+
+
+Ask for Complete free list of G. & D. Popular Copyrighted Fiction
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
+
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+NOVELS OF FRONTIER LIFE BY WILLIAM MacLEOD RAINE
+
+HANDSOMELY BOUND IN CLOTH. ILLUSTRATED.
+
+May be had wherever books are sold. Ask for Grosset and Dunlap's list.
+
+
+MAVERICKS.
+
+A tale of the western frontier, where the "rustler," whose depredations
+are so keenly resented by the early settlers of the range, abounds. One
+of the sweetest love stories ever told.
+
+
+A TEXAS RANGER.
+
+How a member of the most dauntless border police force carried law into
+the mesquit, saved the life of an innocent man after a series of
+thrilling adventures, followed a fugitive to Wyoming, and then passed
+through deadly peril to ultimate happiness.
+
+
+WYOMING.
+
+In this vivid story of the outdoor West the author has captured the
+breezy charm of "cattleland," and brings out the turbid life of the
+frontier with all its engaging dash and vigor.
+
+
+RIDGWAY OF MONTANA.
+
+The scene is laid in the mining centers of Montana, where politics and
+mining industries are the religion of the country. The political
+contest, the love scene, and the fine character drawing give this story
+great strength and charm.
+
+
+BUCKY O'CONNOR.
+
+Every chapter teems with "wholesome, stirring adventures, replete with
+the dashing spirit of the border, told with dramatic dash and absorbing
+fascination of style and plot.
+
+
+CROOKED TRAILS AND STRAIGHT.
+
+A story of Arizona; of swift-riding men and daring outlaws; of a bitter
+feud between cattle-men and sheep-herders. The heroine is a most unusual
+woman and her love story reaches a culmination that is fittingly
+characteristic of the great free West.
+
+
+BRAND BLOTTERS.
+
+A story of the Cattle Range. This story brings out the turbid life of
+the frontier, with all its engaging dash and vigor, with a charming love
+interest running through its 320 pages.
+
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The House of Torchy, by Sewell Ford
+
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