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diff --git a/old/rbeem10.txt b/old/rbeem10.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9a00989 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/rbeem10.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5923 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Roast Beef, Medium, by Edna Ferber +(#6 in our series by Edna Ferber) + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Roast Beef, Medium + +Author: Edna Ferber + +Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6016] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on October 17, 2002] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, ROAST BEEF, MEDIUM *** + + + + +Carel Lyn Miske, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. + + + +ROAST BEEF, MEDIUM + +THE BUSINESS ADVENTURES OF EMMA McCHESNEY + +BY EDNA FERBER + +Author of "Dawn O'Hara," "Buttered Side Down," Etc. + +With twenty-seven illustrations by James Montgomery Flagg + + + + + +[Illustration: "'And they call that thing a petticoat!'"] + + + + + +FOREWORD + + + + +Roast Beef, Medium, is not only a food. It is a philosophy. + +Seated at Life's Dining Table, with the Menu of Morals before you, +your eye wanders a bit over the entrees, the hors d'oeuvres, and the +things _a la_, though you know that Roast Beef, Medium, is safe, and +sane, and sure. It agrees with you. As you hesitate there sounds in +your ear a soft and insinuating Voice. + +"You'll find the tongue in aspic very nice today," purrs the Voice. +"May I recommend the chicken pie, country style? Perhaps you'd relish +something light and tempting. Eggs Benedictine. Very fine. Or some +flaked crab meat, perhaps. With a special Russian sauce." + +Roast Beef, Medium! How unimaginative it sounds. How prosaic, and dry! +You cast the thought of it aside with the contempt that it deserves, +and you assume a fine air of the epicure as you order. There are set +before you things encased in pastry; things in frilly paper trousers; +things that prick the tongue; sauces that pique the palate. There are +strange vegetable garnishings, cunningly cut. This is not only Food. +These are Viands. + +"Everything satisfactory?" inquires the insinuating Voice. + +"Yes," you say, and take a hasty sip of water. That paprika has burned +your tongue. "Yes. Check, please." + +You eye the score, appalled. "Look here! Aren't you over-charging!" + +"Our regular price," and you catch a sneer beneath the smugness of the +Voice. "It is what every one pays, sir." + +You reach deep, deep into your pocket, and you pay. And you rise and +go, full but not fed. And later as you take your fifth Moral Pepsin +Tablet you say Fool! and Fool! and Fool! + +When next we dine we are not tempted by the Voice. We are wary of +weird sauces. We shun the cunning aspics. We look about at our +neighbor's table. He is eating of things French, and Russian and +Hungarian. Of food garnished, and garish and greasy. And with a little +sigh of Content and resignation we settle down to our Roast Beef, +Medium. + +E. F. + + + + +CONTENTS + + + I. ROAST BEEF, MEDIUM + II. REPRESENTING T. A. BUCK + III. CHICKENS + IV. HIS MOTHER'S SON + V. PINK TIGHTS AND GINGHAMS + VI. SIMPLY SKIRTS + VII. UNDERNEATH THE HIGH-CUT VEST + VIII. CATCHING UP WITH CHRISTMAS + IX. KNEE-DEEP IN KNICKERS + X. IN THE ABSENCE OF THE AGENT + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + +"'And they call that thing a petticoat!'" + +"'Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers,' he announced, glibly" + +"'That was a married kiss--a two-year-old married kiss at least'" + +"'I won't ask you to forgive a hound like me'" + +"'You'll never grow up, Emma McChesney'" + +"'Well, s'long then, Shrimp. See you at eight'" + +"'I'm still in a position to enforce that ordinance against pouting'" + +"'Son!' echoed the clerk, staring" + +"'Well!' gulped Jock, 'those two double-bedded, bloomin', blasted +Bisons--'" + +"'Come on out of here and I'll lick the shine off your shoes, you +blue-eyed babe, you!'" + +"'You can't treat me with your life's history. I'm going in'" + +"'Now, Lillian Russell and cold cream is one; and new potatoes and +brown crocks is another'" + +"'Why, girls, I couldn't hold down a job in a candy factory'" + +"'Honestly, I'd wear it myself!'" + +"'I've lived petticoats, I've talked petticoats, I've dreamed +petticoats--why, I've even worn the darn things!'" + +"And found himself addressing the backs of the letters on the door +marked 'Private'" + +"'Shut up, you blamed fool! Can't you see the lady's sick?'" + +"At his gaze that lady fled, sample-case banging at her knees" + +"In the exuberance of his young strength, he picked her up" + +"She read it again, dully, as though every selfish word had not +already stamped itself on her brain and heart" + +"'Not that you look your age--not by ten years!"' + +"'Christmas isn't a season ... it's a feeling; and, thank God, I've +got it!'" + +"No man will ever appreciate the fine points of this little garment, +but the women--" + +"Emma McChesney ... I believe in you now! Dad and I both believe in +you'" + +"It had been a whirlwind day" + +"'Emma,' he said, 'will you marry me?'" + +'"Welcome home!' she cried. 'Sketch in the furniture to suit +yourself"' + + + + +I + +ROAST BEEF, MEDIUM + + +There is a journey compared to which the travels of Bunyan's hero were +a summer-evening's stroll. The Pilgrims by whom this forced march is +taken belong to a maligned fraternity, and are known as traveling men. +Sample-case in hand, trunk key in pocket, cigar in mouth, brown derby +atilt at an angle of ninety, each young and untried traveler starts on +his journey down that road which leads through morasses of chicken _a +la_ Creole, over greasy mountains of queen fritters made doubly +perilous by slippery glaciers of rum sauce, into formidable jungles of +breaded veal chops threaded by sanguine and deadly streams of tomato +gravy, past sluggish mires of dreadful things _en casserole_, over +hills of corned-beef hash, across shaking quagmires of veal glace, +plunging into sloughs of slaw, until, haggard, weary, digestion +shattered, complexion gone, he reaches the safe haven of roast beef, +medium. Once there, he never again strays, although the pompadoured, +white-aproned siren sing-songs in his ear the praises of Irish stew, +and pork with apple sauce. + +Emma McChesney was eating her solitary supper at the Berger house at +Three Rivers, Michigan. She had arrived at the Roast Beef haven many +years before. She knew the digestive perils of a small town hotel +dining-room as a guide on the snow-covered mountain knows each +treacherous pitfall and chasm. Ten years on the road had taught her to +recognize the deadly snare that lurks in the seemingly calm bosom of +minced chicken with cream sauce. Not for her the impenetrable +mysteries of a hamburger and onions. It had been a struggle, brief but +terrible, from which Emma McChesney had emerged triumphant, her +complexion and figure saved. + +No more metaphor. On with the story, which left Emma at her safe and +solitary supper. + +She had the last number of the _Dry Goods Review_ propped up against +the vinegar cruet and the Worcestershire, and the salt shaker. Between +conscientious, but disinterested mouthfuls of medium roast beef, she +was reading the snappy ad set forth by her firm's bitterest +competitors, the Strauss Sans-silk Skirt Company. It was a good +reading ad. Emma McChesney, who had forgotten more about petticoats +than the average skirt salesman ever knew, presently allowed her luke- +warm beef to grow cold and flabby as she read. Somewhere in her +subconscious mind she realized that the lanky head waitress had placed +some one opposite her at the table. Also, subconsciously, she heard +him order liver and bacon, with onions. She told herself that as soon +as she reached the bottom of the column she'd look up to see who the +fool was. She never arrived at the column's end. + +"I just hate to tear you away from that love lyric; but if I might +trouble you for the vinegar--" + +Emma groped for it back of her paper and shoved it across the table +without looking up. "--and the Worcester--" + +One eye on the absorbing column, she passed the tall bottle. But at +its removal her prop was gone. The _Dry Goods Review_ was too weighty +for the salt shaker alone. + +"--and the salt. Thanks. Warm, isn't it?" + +There was a double vertical frown between Emma McChesney's eyes as she +glanced up over the top of her _Dry Goods Review_. The frown gave way +to a half smile. The glance settled into a stare. + +"But then, anybody would have stared. He expected it," she said, +afterwards, in telling about it. "I've seen matinee idols, and +tailors' supplies salesmen, and Julian Eltinge, but this boy had any +male professional beauty I ever saw, looking as handsome and dashing +as a bowl of cold oatmeal. And he knew it." + +Now, in the ten years that she had been out representing T. A. Buck's +Featherloom Petticoats Emma McChesney had found it necessary to make a +rule or two for herself. In the strict observance of one of these she +had become past mistress in the fine art of congealing the warm +advances of fresh and friendly salesmen of the opposite sex. But this +case was different, she told herself. The man across the table was +little more than a boy--an amazingly handsome, astonishingly impudent, +cockily confident boy, who was staring with insolent approval at Emma +McChesney's trim, shirt-waisted figure, and her fresh, attractive +coloring, and her well-cared-for hair beneath the smart summer hat. + +[Illustration: "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers," he +announced, glibly.] + +"It isn't in human nature to be as good-looking as you are," spake +Emma McChesney, suddenly, being a person who never trifled with half- +way measures. "I'll bet you have bad teeth, or an impediment in your +speech." + +The gorgeous young man smiled. His teeth were perfect. "Peter Piper +picked a peck of pickled peppers," he announced, glibly. "Nothing +missing there, is there?" + +"Must be your morals then," retorted Emma McChesney. "My! My! And on +the road! Why, the trail of bleeding hearts that you must leave all +the way from Maine to California would probably make the Red Sea turn +white with envy." + +The Fresh Young Kid speared a piece of liver and looked soulfully up +into the adoring eyes of the waitress who was hovering over him. "Got +any nice hot biscuits to-night, girlie?" he inquired. + +"I'll get you some; sure," wildly promised his handmaiden, and +disappeared kitchenward. + +"Brand new to the road, aren't you?" observed Emma McChesney, cruelly. + +"What makes you think--" + +"Liver and bacon, hot biscuits, Worcestershire," elucidated she. "No +old-timer would commit suicide that way. After you've been out for two +or three years you'll stick to the Rock of Gibraltar--roast beef, +medium. Oh, I get wild now and then, and order eggs if the girl says +she knows the hen that layed 'em, but plain roast beef, +unchloroformed, is the one best bet. You can't go wrong if you stick +to it." + +The god-like young man leaned forward, forgetting to eat. + +"You don't mean to tell me you're on the road!" + +"Why not?" demanded Emma McChesney, briskly. + +"Oh, fie, fie!" said the handsome youth, throwing her a languishing +look. "Any woman as pretty as you are, and with those eyes, and that +hair, and figure--Say, Little One, what are you going to do to-night?" + +Emma McChesney sugared her tea, and stirred it, slowly. Then she +looked up. "To-night, you fresh young kid, you!" she said calmly, "I'm +going to dictate two letters, explaining why business was rotten last +week, and why it's going to pick up next week, and then I'm going to +keep an engagement with a nine-hour beauty sleep." + +"Don't get sore at a fellow. You'd take pity on me if you knew how I +have to work to kill an evening in one of these little townpump burgs. +Kill 'em! It can't be done. They die harder than the heroine in a ten, +twenty, thirty. From supper to bedtime is twice as long as from +breakfast to supper. Honest!" + +But Emma McChesney looked inexorable, as women do just before they +relent. Said she: "Oh, I don't know. By the time I get through trying +to convince a bunch of customers that T. A. Buck's Featherloom +Petticoat has every other skirt in the market looking like a piece of +Fourth of July bunting that's been left out in the rain, I'm about +ready to turn down the spread and leave a call for six-thirty." + +"Be a good fellow," pleaded the unquenchable one. "Let's take in all +the nickel shows, and then see if we can't drown our sorrows in--er--" + +Emma McChesney slipped a coin under her plate, crumpled her napkin, +folded her arms on the table, and regarded the boy across the way with +what our best talent calls a long, level look. It was so long and so +level that even the airiness of the buoyant youngster at whom it was +directed began to lessen perceptibly, long before Emma began to talk. + +"Tell me, young 'un, did any one ever refuse you anything? I thought +not. I should think that when you realize what you've got to learn it +would scare you to look ahead. I don't expect you to believe me when I +tell you I never talk to fresh guys like you, but it's true. I don't +know why I'm breaking my rule for you, unless it's because you're so +unbelievably good-looking that I'm anxious to know where the blemish +is. The Lord don't make 'em perfect, you know. I'm going to get out +those letters, and then, if it's just the same to you, we'll take a +walk. These nickel shows are getting on my nerves. It seems to me that +if I have to look at one more Western picture about a fool girl with +her hair in a braid riding a show horse in the wilds of Clapham +Junction and being rescued from a band of almost-Indians by the +handsome, but despised Eastern tenderfoot, or if I see one more of +those historical pictures, with the women wearing costumes that are a +pass between early Egyptian and late State Street, I know I'll get +hysterics and have to be carried shrieking, up the aisle. Let's walk +down Main Street and look in the store windows, and up as far as the +park and back." + +"Great!" assented he. "Is there a park? + +"I don't know," replied Emma McChesney, "but there is. And for your +own good I'm going to tell you a few things. There's more to this +traveling game than just knocking down on expenses, talking to every +pretty woman you meet, and learning to ask for fresh white-bread heels +at the Palmer House in Chicago. I'll meet you in the lobby at eight." + +Emma McChesney talked steadily, and evenly, and generously, from eight +until eight-thirty. She talked from the great storehouse of practical +knowledge which she had accumulated in her ten years on the road. She +told the handsome young cub many things for which he should have been +undyingly thankful. But when they reached the park--the cool, dim, +moon-silvered park, its benches dotted with glimpses of white showing +close beside a blur of black, Emma McChesney stopped talking. Not only +did she stop talking, but she ceased to think of the boy seated beside +her on the bench. + +In the band-stand, under the arc-light, in the center of the pretty +little square, some neighborhood children were playing a noisy game, +with many shrill cries, and much shouting and laughter. Suddenly, from +one of the houses across the way, a woman's voice was heard, even +above the clamor of the children. + +"Fred-dee!" called the voice. "Maybelle! Come, now." + +And a boy's voice answered, as boys' voices have since Cain was a +child playing in the Garden of Eden, and as boys' voices will as long +as boys are: + +"Aw, ma, I ain't a bit sleepy. We just begun a new game, an' I'm +leader. Can't we just stay out a couple of minutes more?" + +"Well, five minutes," agreed the voice. "But don't let me call you +again." + +Emma McChesney leaned back on the rustic bench and clasped her strong, +white hands behind her head, and stared straight ahead into the soft +darkness. And if it had been light you could have seen that the bitter +lines showing faintly about her mouth were outweighed by the sweet and +gracious light which was glowing in her eyes. + +"Fred-dee!" came the voice of command again. "May-belle! This minute, +now!" + +One by one the flying little figures under the arc-light melted away +in the direction of the commanding voice and home and bed. And Emma +McChesney forgot all about fresh young kids and featherloom petticoats +and discounts and bills of lading and sample-cases and grouchy buyers. +After all, it had been her protecting maternal instinct which had been +aroused by the boy at supper, although she had not known it then. She +did not know it now, for that matter. She was busy remembering just +such evenings in her own life--summer evenings, filled with the high, +shrill laughter of children at play. She too, had stood in the +doorway, making a funnel of her hands, so that her clear call through +the twilight might be heard above the cries of the boys and girls. She +had known how loath the little feet had been to leave their play, and +how they had lagged up the porch stairs, and into the house. Years, +whose memory she had tried to keep behind her, now suddenly loomed +before her in the dim quiet of the little flower-scented park. + +A voice broke the silence, and sent her dream-thoughts scattering to +the winds. + +"Honestly, kid," said the voice, "I could be crazy about you, if you'd +let me." + +The forgotten figure beside her woke into sudden life. A strong arm +encircled her shoulders. A strong hand seized her own, which were +clasped behind her head. Two warm, eager lips were pressed upon her +lips, checking the little cry of surprise and wrath that rose in her +throat. + +Emma McChesney wrenched herself free with a violent jerk, and pushed +him from her. She did not storm. She did not even rise. She sat very +quietly, breathing fast. When she turned at last to look at the boy +beside her it seemed that her white profile cut the darkness. The man +shrank a little, and would have stammered something, but Emma +McChesney checked him. + +[Illustration: "'That was a married kiss--a two-year-old married kiss +at least.'"] + +"You nasty, good-for-nothing, handsome young devil, you!" she said. +"So you're married." + +He sat up with a jerk. "How did you--what makes you think so?" + +"That was a married kiss--a two-year-old married kiss, at least. No +boy would get as excited as that about kissing an old stager like me. +The chances are you're out of practise. I knew that if it wasn't teeth +or impediment it must be morals. And it is." + +She moved over on the bench until she was close beside him. "Now, +listen to me, boy." She leaned forward, impressively. "Are you +listening?" + +"Yes," answered the handsome young devil, sullenly. + +"What I've got to say to you isn't so much for your sake, as for your +wife's. I was married when I was eighteen, and stayed married eight +years. I've had my divorce ten years, and my boy is seventeen years +old. Figure it out. How old is Ann?" + +"I don't believe it," he flashed back. "You're not a day over twenty- +six--anyway, you don't look it. I--" + +"Thanks," drawled Emma. "That's because you've never seen me in +negligee. A woman's as old as she looks with her hair on the dresser +and bed only a few minutes away. Do you know why I was decent to you +in the first place? Because I was foolish enough to think that you +reminded me of my own kid. Every fond mama is gump enough to think +that every Greek god she sees looks like her own boy, even if her own +happens to squint and have two teeth missing--which mine hasn't, thank +the Lord! He's the greatest young--Well, now, look here, young 'un. +I'm going to return good for evil. Traveling men and geniuses should +never marry. But as long as you've done it, you might as well start +right. If you move from this spot till I get through with you, I'll +yell police and murder. Are you ready?" + +"I'm dead sorry, on the square, I am--" + +"Ten minutes late," interrupted Emma McChesney. "I'm dishing up a +sermon, hot, for one, and you've got to choke it down. Whenever I hear +a traveling man howling about his lonesome evenings, and what a dog's +life it is, and no way for a man to live, I always wonder what kind of +a summer picnic he thinks it is for his wife. She's really a widow +seven months in the year, without any of a widow's privileges. Did you +ever stop to think what she's doing evenings? No, you didn't. Well, +I'll tell you. She's sitting home, night after night, probably +embroidering monograms on your shirt sleeves by way of diversion. And +on Saturday night, which is the night when every married woman has the +inalienable right to be taken out by her husband, she can listen to +the woman in the flat upstairs getting ready to go to the theater. The +fact that there's a ceiling between 'em doesn't prevent her from +knowing just where they're going, and why he has worked himself into a +rage over his white lawn tie, and whether they're taking a taxi or the +car and who they're going to meet afterward at supper. Just by +listening to them coming downstairs she can tell how much Mrs. Third +Flat's silk stockings cost, and if she's wearing her new La Valliere +or not. Women have that instinct, you know. Or maybe you don't. +There's so much you've missed." + +"Say, look here--" broke from the man beside her. But Emma McChesney +laid her cool fingers on his lips. + +"Nothing from the side-lines, please," she said. "After they've gone +she can go to bed, or she can sit up, pretending to read, but really +wondering if that squeaky sound coming from the direction of the +kitchen is a loose screw in the storm door, or if it's some one trying +to break into the flat. And she'd rather sit there, scared green, than +go back through that long hall to find out. And when Tillie comes home +with her young man at eleven o'clock, though she promised not to stay +out later than ten, she rushes back to the kitchen and falls on her +neck, she's so happy to see her. Oh, it's a gay life. You talk about +the heroism of the early Pilgrim mothers! I'd like to know what they +had on the average traveling man's wife." + +"Bess goes to the matinee every Saturday," he began, in feeble +defense. + +"Matinee!" scoffed Emma McChesney. "Do you think any woman goes to +matinee by preference? Nobody goes but girls of sixteen, and confirmed +old maids without brothers, and traveling men's wives. Matinee! Say, +would you ever hesitate to choose between an all-day train and a +sleeper? It's the same idea. What a woman calls going to the theater +is something very different. It means taking a nap in the afternoon, +so her eyes will be bright at night, and then starting at about five +o'clock to dress, and lay her husband's clean things out on the bed. +She loves it. She even enjoys getting his bath towels ready, and +putting his shaving things where he can lay his hands on 'em, and +telling the girl to have dinner ready promptly at six-thirty. It means +getting out her good dress that hangs in the closet with a cretonne +bag covering it, and her black satin coat, and her hat with the +paradise aigrettes that she bought with what she saved out of the +housekeeping money. It means her best silk stockings, and her diamond +sunburst that he's going to have made over into a La Valliere just as +soon as business is better. She loves it all, and her cheeks get +pinker and pinker, so that she really doesn't need the little dash of +rouge that she puts on 'because everybody does it, don't you know?' +She gets ready, all but her dress, and then she puts on a kimono and +slips out to the kitchen to make the gravy for the chicken because the +girl never can get it as smooth as he likes it. That's part of what +she calls going to the theater, and having a husband. And if there are +children--" + +There came a little, inarticulate sound from the boy. But Emma's quick +ear caught it. + +"No? Well, then, we'll call that one black mark less for you. But if +there are children--and for her sake I hope there will be--she's +father and mother to them. She brings them up, single-handed, while +he's on the road. And the worst she can do is to say to them, 'Just +wait until your father gets home. He'll hear of this.' But shucks! +When he comes home he can't whip the kids for what they did seven +weeks before, and that they've forgotten all about, and for what he +never saw, and can't imagine. Besides, he wants his comfort when he +gets home. He says he wants a little rest and peace, and he's darned +if he's going to run around evenings. Not much, he isn't! But he +doesn't object to her making a special effort to cook all those little +things that he's been longing for on the road. Oh, there'll be a seat +in Heaven for every traveling man's wife--though at that, I'll bet +most of 'em will find themselves stuck behind a post." + +"You're all right!" exclaimed Emma McChesney's listener, suddenly. +"How a woman like you can waste her time on the road is more than I +can see. And--I want to thank you. I'm not such a fool--" + +"I haven't let you finish a sentence so far and I'm not going to yet. +Wait a minute. There's one more paragraph to this sermon. You remember +what I told you about old stagers, and the roast beef diet? Well, that +applies right through life. It's all very well to trifle with the +little side-dishes at first, but there comes a time when you've got to +quit fooling with the minced chicken, and the imitation lamb chops of +this world, and settle down to plain, everyday, roast beef, medium. +That other stuff may tickle your palate for a while, but sooner or +later it will turn on you, and ruin your moral digestion. You stick to +roast beef, medium. It may sound prosaic, and unimaginative and dry, +but you'll find that it wears in the long run. You can take me over to +the hotel now. I've lost an hour's sleep, but I don't consider it +wasted. And you'll oblige me by putting the stopper on any +conversation that may occur to you between here and the hotel. I've +talked until I'm so low on words that I'll probably have to sell +featherlooms in sign language to-morrow." + +They walked to the very doors of the Berger House in silence. But at +the foot of the stairs that led to the parlor floor he stopped, and +looked into Emma McChesney's face. His own was rather white and tense. + +"Look here," he said. "I've got to thank you. That sounds idiotic, but +I guess you know what I mean. And I won't ask you to forgive a hound +like me. I haven't been so ashamed of myself since I was a kid. Why, +if you knew Bess--if you knew--" + +"I guess I know Bess, all right. I used to be a Bess, myself. Just +because I'm a traveling man it doesn't follow that I've forgotten the +Bess feeling. As far as that goes, I don't mind telling you that I've +got neuralgia from sitting in that park with my feet in the damp +grass. I can feel it in my back teeth, and by eleven o'clock it will +be camping over my left eye, with its little brothers doing a war +dance up the side of my face. And, boy, I'd give last week's +commissions if there was some one to whom I had the right to say: +'Henry, will you get up and get me a hot-water bag for my neuralgia? +It's something awful. And just open the left-hand lower drawer of the +chiffonier and get out one of those gauze vests and then get me a +safety pin from the tray on my dresser. I'm going to pin it around my +head.'" + +[Illustration: "'I won't ask you to forgive a hound like me'"] + + + + +II + +REPRESENTING T. A. BUCK + + +Emma McChesney, Mrs. (I place it in the background because she +generally did) swung off the 2:15, crossed the depot platform, and +dived into the hotel 'bus. She had to climb over the feet of a fat man +in brown and a lean man in black, to do it. Long practise had made her +perfect in the art. She knew that the fat man and the thin man were +hogging the end seats so that they could be the first to register and +get a choice of rooms when the 'bus reached the hotel. The vehicle +smelled of straw, and mold, and stables, and dampness, and tobacco, as +'buses have from old Jonas Chuzzlewit's time to this. Nine years on +the road had accustomed Emma McChesney's nostrils to 'bus smells. She +gazed stolidly out of the window, crossed one leg over the other, +remembered that her snug suit-skirt wasn't built for that attitude, +uncrossed them again, and caught the delighted and understanding eye +of the fat traveling man, who was a symphony in brown--brown suit, +brown oxfords, brown scarf, brown bat, brown-bordered handkerchief +just peeping over the edge of his pocket. He looked like a colossal +chocolate fudge. + +"Red-faced, grinning, and a naughty wink--I'll bet he sells coffins +and undertakers' supplies," mused Emma McChesney. "And the other one-- +the tall, lank, funereal affair in black--I suppose his line would be +sheet music, or maybe phonographs. Or perhaps he's a lyceum bureau +reader, scheduled to give an evening of humorous readings for the +Young Men's Sunday Evening Club course at the First M. E. Church." + +During those nine years on the road for the Featherloom Skirt Company +Emma McChesney had picked up a side line or two on human nature. + +She was not surprised to see the fat man in brown and the thin man in +black leap out of the 'bus and into the hotel before she had had time +to straighten her hat after the wheels had bumped up against the +curbing. By the time she reached the desk the two were disappearing in +the wake of a bell-boy. + +The sartorial triumph behind the desk, languidly read her signature +upside down, took a disinterested look at her, and yelled: + +"Front! Show the lady up to nineteen." + +Emma McChesney took three steps in the direction of the stairway +toward which the boy was headed with her bags. Then she stopped. + +"Wait a minute, boy," she said, pleasantly enough; and walked back to +the desk. She eyed the clerk, a half-smile on her lips, one arm, in +its neat tailored sleeve, resting on the marble, while her right +forefinger, trimly gloved, tapped an imperative little tattoo. +(Perhaps you think that last descriptive sentence is as unnecessary as +it is garbled. But don't you get a little picture of her--trim, taut, +tailored, mannish-booted, flat-heeled, linen-collared, sailor-hatted?) + +"You've made a mistake, haven't you?" she inquired. + +Mistake?" repeated the clerk, removing his eyes from their loving +contemplation of his right thumb-nail. "Guess not." + +"Oh, think it over," drawled Emma McChesney. "I've never seen +nineteen, but I can describe it with both eyes shut, and one hand tied +behind me. It's an inside room, isn't it, over the kitchen, and just +next to the water butt where the maids come to draw water for the +scrubbing at 5 A.M.? And the boiler room gets in its best bumps for +nineteen, and the patent ventilators work just next door, and there's +a pet rat that makes his headquarters in the wall between eighteen and +nineteen, and the housekeeper whose room is across the hail is +afflicted with a bronchial cough, nights. I'm wise to the brand of +welcome that you fellows hand out to us women on the road. This is new +territory for me--my first trip West. Think it over. Don't--er--say, +sixty-five strike you as being nearer my size?" + +The clerk stared at Emma McChesney, and Emma McChesney coolly stared +back at the clerk. + +"Our aim," began he, loftily, "is to make our guests as comfortable as +possible on all occasions. But the last lady drummer who--" + +"That's all right," interrupted Emma McChesney, "but I'm not the kind +that steals the towels, and I don't carry an electric iron with me, +either. Also I don't get chummy with the housekeeper and the dining- +room girls half an hour after I move in. Most women drummers are +living up to their reputations, but some of us are living 'em down. +I'm for revision downward. You haven't got my number, that's all." + +A slow gleam of unwilling admiration illumined the clerk's chill eye. +He turned and extracted another key with its jangling metal tag, from +one of the many pigeonholes behind him. + +"You win," he said. He leaned over the desk and lowered his voice +discreetly. "Say, girlie, go on into the cafe and have a drink on me." + +"Wrong again," answered Emma McChesney. "Never use it. Bad for the +complexion. Thanks just the same. Nice little hotel you've got here." + +In the corridor leading to sixty-five there was a great litter of +pails, and mops, and brooms, and damp rags, and one heard the sigh of +a vacuum cleaner. + +"Spring house-cleaning," explained the bellboy, hurdling a pail. + +Emma McChesney picked her way over a little heap of dust-cloths and a +ladder or so. + +"House-cleaning," she repeated dreamily; "spring house-cleaning." And +there came a troubled, yearning light into her eyes. It lingered there +after the boy had unlocked and thrown open the door of sixty-five, +pocketed his dime, and departed. + +Sixty-five was--well, you know what sixty-five generally is in a small +Middle-Western town. Iron bed--tan wall-paper--pine table--pine +dresser--pine chair--red carpet--stuffy smell--fly buzzing at window-- +sun beating in from the west. Emma McChesney saw it all in one +accustomed glance. + +"Lordy, I hate to think what nineteen must be," she told herself, and +unclasped her bag. Out came the first aid to the travel-stained--a jar +of cold cream. It was followed by powder, chamois, brush, comb, tooth- +brush. Emma McChesney dug four fingers into the cold cream jar, +slapped the stuff on her face, rubbed it in a bit, wiped it off with a +dry towel, straightened her hat, dusted the chamois over her face, +glanced at her watch and hurriedly whisked downstairs. + +"After all," she mused, "that thin guy might not be out for a music +house. Maybe his line is skirts, too. You never can tell. Anyway, I'll +beat him to it." + +Saturday afternoon and spring-time in a small town! Do you know it? +Main Street--on the right side--all a-bustle; farmers' wagons drawn up +at the curbing; farmers' wives in the inevitable rusty black with +dowdy hats furbished up with a red muslin rose in honor of spring; +grand opening at the new five-and-ten-cent store, with women streaming +in and streaming out again, each with a souvenir pink carnation pinned +to her coat; every one carrying bundles and yellow paper bags that +might contain bananas or hats or grass seed; the thirty-two +automobiles that the town boasts all dashing up and down the street, +driven by hatless youths in careful college clothes; a crowd of at +least eleven waiting at Jenson's drug-store corner for the next +interurban car. + +Emma McChesney found herself strolling when she should have been +hustling in the direction of the Novelty Cloak and Suit Store. She was +aware of a vague, strangely restless feeling in the region of her +heart--or was it her liver?--or her lungs? + +Reluctantly she turned in at the entrance of the Novelty Cloak and +Suit Store and asked for the buyer. (Here we might introduce one of +those side-splitting little business deal scenes. But there can be +paid no finer compliment to Emma McChesney's saleswomanship than to +state that she landed her man on a busy Saturday afternoon, with a +store full of customers and the head woman clerk dead against her from +the start.) + +As she was leaving: + +"Generally it's the other way around," smiled the boss, regarding +Emma's trim comeliness, "but seeing you're a lady, why, it'll be on +me." He reached for his hat. "Let's go and have--ah--a little +something." + +"Not any, thanks," Emma McChesney replied, a little wearily. + +On her way back to the hotel she frankly loitered. Just to look at her +made you certain that she was not of our town. Now, that doesn't imply +that the women of our town do not dress well, because they do. But +there was something about her--a flirt of chiffon at the throat, or +her hat quill stuck in a certain way, or the stitching on her gloves, +or the vamp of her shoe--that was of a style which had not reached us +yet. + +As Emma McChesney loitered, looking in at the shop windows and +watching the women hurrying by, intent on the purchase of their Sunday +dinners, that vaguely restless feeling seized her again. There were +rows of plump fowls in the butcher-shop windows, and juicy roasts. The +cunning hand of the butcher had enhanced the redness of the meat by +trimmings of curly parsley. Salad things and new vegetables glowed +behind the grocers' plate-glass. There were the tender green of +lettuces, the coral of tomatoes, the brown-green of stout asparagus +stalks, bins of spring peas and beans, and carrots, and bunches of +greens for soup. There came over the businesslike soul of Emma +McChesney a wild longing to go in and select a ten-pound roast, taking +care that there should be just the right proportion of creamy fat and +red meat. She wanted to go in and poke her fingers in the ribs of a +broiler. She wanted to order wildly of sweet potatoes and vegetables, +and soup bones, and apples for pies. She ached to turn back her +sleeves and don a blue-and-white checked apron and roll out noodles. + +She still was fighting that wild impulse as she walked back to the +hotel, went up to her stuffy room, and, without removing hat or coat, +seated herself on the edge of the bed and stared long and hard at the +tan wall-paper. + +There is this peculiarity about tan wall-paper. If you stare at it +long enough you begin to see things. Emma McChesney, who pulled down +something over thirty-two hundred a year selling Featherloom +Petticoats, saw this: + +A kitchen, very bright and clean, with a cluttered kind of cleanliness +that bespeaks many housewifely tasks under way. There were mixing +bowls, and saucepans, and a kettle or so, and from the oven there came +the sounds of sputtering and hissing. About the room there hung the +divinely delectable scent of freshly baked cookies. Emma McChesney saw +herself in an all-enveloping checked gingham apron, her sleeves rolled +up, her hair somewhat wild, and one lock powdered with white where she +had pushed it back with a floury hand. Her cheeks were surprisingly +pink, and her eyes were very bright, and she was scraping a baking +board and rolling-pin, and trimming the edges of pie tins, and turning +with a whirl to open the oven door, stooping to dip up spoonfuls of +gravy only to pour the rich brown liquid over the meat again. There +were things on top of the stove that required sticking into with a +fork, and other things that demanded tasting and stirring with a +spoon. A neighbor came in to borrow a cup of molasses, and Emma urged +upon her one of her freshly baked cookies. And there was a ring at the +front-door bell, and she had to rush away to do battle with a +persistent book agent.... + +The buzzing fly alighted on Emma McChesney's left eyebrow. She swatted +it with a hand that was not quite quick enough, spoiled the picture, +and slowly rose from her perch at the bedside. + +"Oh, damn!" she remarked, wearily, and went over to the dresser. Then +she pulled down her shirtwaist all around and went down to supper. + +The dining-room was very warm, and there came a smell of lardy things +from the kitchen. Those supping were doing so languidly. + +"I'm dying for something cool, and green, and fresh," remarked Emma to +the girl who filled her glass with iced water; "something springish +and tempting." + +"Well," sing-songed she of the ruffled, starched skirt, "we have +ham'n-aigs, mutton chops, cold veal, cold roast--" + +"Two, fried," interrupted Emma hopelessly, "and a pot of tea--black." + +Supper over she passed through the lobby on her way upstairs. The +place was filled with men. They were lolling in the big leather chairs +at the window, or standing about, smoking and talking. There was a +rattle of dice from the cigar counter, and a burst of laughter from +the men gathered about it. It all looked very bright, and cheery, and +sociable. Emma McChesney, turning to ascend the stairs to her room, +felt that she, too, would like to sit in one of the big leather chairs +in the window and talk to some one. + +Some one was playing the piano in the parlor. The doors were open. +Emma McChesney glanced in. Then she stopped. It was not the appearance +of the room that held her. You may have heard of the wilds of an +African jungle--the trackless wastes of the desert--the solitude of +the forest--the limitless stretch of the storm-tossed ocean; they are +cozy and snug when compared to the utter and soul-searing dreariness +of a small town hotel parlor. You know what it is--red carpet, red +plush and brocade furniture, full-length walnut mirror, battered piano +on which reposes a sheet of music given away with the Sunday +supplement of a city paper. + +A man was seated at the piano, playing. He was not playing the Sunday +supplement sheet music. His brown hat was pushed back on his head and +there was a fat cigar in his pursy mouth, and as he played he squinted +up through the smoke. He was playing Mendelssohn's Spring Song. Not as +you have heard it played by sweet young things; not as you have heard +it rendered by the Apollo String Quartette. Under his fingers it was a +fragrant, trembling, laughing, sobbing, exquisite thing. He was +playing it in a way to make you stare straight ahead and swallow hard. + +Emma McChesney leaned her head against the door. The man at the piano +did not turn. So she tip-toed in, found a chair in a corner, and +noiselessly slipped into it. She sat very still, listening, and the +past-that-might-have-been, and the future-that-was-to-be, stretched +behind and before her, as is strangely often the case when we are +listening to music. She stared ahead with eyes that were very wide +open and bright. Something in the attitude of the man sitting hunched +there over the piano keys, and something in the beauty and pathos of +the music brought a hot haze of tears to her eyes. She leaned her head +against the back of the chair, and shut her eyes and wept quietly and +heart-brokenly. The tears slid down her cheeks, and dropped on her +smart tailored waist and her Irish lace jabot, and she didn't care a +bit. + +The last lovely note died away. The fat man's hands dropped limply to +his sides. Emma McChesney stared at them, fascinated. They were quite +marvelous hands; not at all the sort of hands one would expect to see +attached to the wrists of a fat man. They were slim, nervous, +sensitive hands, pink-tipped, tapering, blue-veined, delicate. As Emma +McChesney stared at them the man turned slowly on the revolving stool. +His plump, pink face was dolorous, sagging, wan-eyed. + +He watched Emma McChesney as she sat up and dried her eyes. A +satisfied light dawned in his face. + +"Thanks," he said, and mopped his forehead and chin and neck with the +brown-edged handkerchief. + +"You--you can't be Paderewski. He's thin. But if he plays any better +than that, then I don't want to hear him. You've upset me for the rest +of the week. You've started me thinking about things--about things +that--that-" + +The fat man clasped his thin, nervous hands in front of him and leaned +forward. + +"About things that you're trying to forget. It starts me that way, +too. That's why sometimes I don't touch the keys for weeks. Say, what +do you think of a man who can play like that, and who is out on the +road for a living just because he knows it's a sure thing? Music! +That's my gift. And I've buried it. Why? Because the public won't take +a fat man seriously. When he sits down at the piano they begin to howl +for Italian rag. Why, I'd rather play the piano in a five-cent moving +picture house than do what I'm doing now. But the old man wanted his +son to be a business man, not a crazy, piano-playing galoot. That's +the way he put it. And I was darn fool enough to think he was right. +Why can't people stand up and do the things they're out to do! Not one +person in a thousand does. Why, take you--I don't know you from Eve, +but just from the way you shed the briny I know you're busy +regretting." + +"Regretting?" repeated Emma McChesney, in a wail. "Do you know what I +am? I'm a lady drummer. And do you know what I want to do this minute? +I want to clean house. I want to wind a towel around my head, and pin +up my skirt, and slosh around with a pail of hot, soapy water. I want +to pound a couple of mattresses in the back yard, and eat a cold +dinner off the kitchen table. That's what I want to do." + +"Well, go on and do it," said the fat man. + +"Do it? I haven't any house to clean. I got my divorce ten years ago, +and I've been on the road ever since. I don't know why I stick. I'm +pulling down a good, fat salary and commissions, but it's no life for +a woman, and I know it, but I'm not big enough to quit. It's different +with a man on the road. He can spend his evenings taking in two or +three nickel shows, or he can stand on the drug-store corner and watch +the pretty girls go by, or he can have a game of billiards, or maybe +cards. Or he can have a nice, quiet time just going up to his room, +and smoking a cigar and writing to his wife or his girl. D'you know +what I do?" + +"No," answered the fat man, interestedly. "What?" + +"Evenings I go up to my room and sew or read. Sew! Every hook and eye +and button on my clothes is moored so tight that even the hand laundry +can't tear 'em off. You couldn't pry those fastenings away with +dynamite. When I find a hole in my stockings I'm tickled to death, +because it's something to mend. And read? Everything from the Rules of +the House tacked up on the door to spelling out the French short story +in the back of the Swell Set Magazine. It's getting on my nerves. Do +you know what I do Sunday mornings? No, you don't. Well, I go to +church, that's what I do. And I get green with envy watching the other +women there getting nervous about 11:45 or so, when the minister is +still in knee-deep, and I know they're wondering if Lizzie has basted +the chicken often enough, and if she has put the celery in cold water, +and the ice-cream is packed in burlap in the cellar, and if she has +forgotten to mix in a tablespoon of flour to make it smooth. You can +tell by the look on their faces that there's company for dinner. And +you know that after dinner they'll sit around, and the men will smoke, +and the women folks will go upstairs, and she'll show the other woman +her new scalloped, monogrammed, hand-embroidered guest towels, and the +waist that her cousin Ethel brought from Paris. And maybe they'll slip +off their skirts and lie down on the spare-room bed for a ten minutes' +nap. And you can hear the hired girl rattling the dishes in the +kitchen, and talking to her lady friend who is helping her wipe up so +they can get out early. You can hear the two of them laughing above +the clatter of the dishes--" + +The fat man banged one fist down on the piano keys with a crash. + +"I'm through," he said. "I quit to-night. I've got my own life to +live. Here, will you shake on it? I'll quit if you will. You're a born +housekeeper. You don't belong on the road any more than I do. It's now +or never. And it's going to be now with me. When I strike the pearly +gates I'm not going to have Saint Peter say to me, 'Ed, old kid, what +have you done with your talents?'" + +"You're right," sobbed Emma McChesney, her face glowing. + +"By the way," interrupted the fat man, "what's your line?" + +"Petticoats. I'm out for T. A. Buck's Featherloom Skirts. What's +yours?" + +"Suffering cats!" shouted the fat man. "D' you mean to tell me that +you're the fellow who sold that bill to Blum, of the Novelty Cloak and +Suit concern, and spoiled a sale for me?" + +"You! Are you--" + +"You bet I am. I sell the best little skirt in the world. Strauss's +Sans-silk Petticoat, warranted not to crack, rip, or fall into holes. +Greatest little skirt in the country." + +Emma McChesney straightened her collar and jabot with a jerk, and sat +up. + +"Oh, now, don't give me that bunk. You've got a good little seller, +all right, but that guaranty don't hold water any more than the +petticoat contains silk. I know that stuff. It looms up big in the +window displays, but it's got a filler of glucose, or starch or +mucilage or something, and two days after you wear it it's as limp as +a cheesecloth rag. It's showy, but you take a line like mine, for +instance, why--" + +"My customers swear by me. I make DeKalb to-morrow, and there's +Nussbaum, of the Paris Emporium, the biggest store there, who just--" + +"I make DeKalb, too," remarked Emma McChesney, the light of battle in +her eye. + +"You mean," gently insinuated the fat man, "that you were going to, +but that's all over now." + +"Huh?" said Emma. + +"Our agreement, you know," the fat man reminded her, sweetly. "You +aren't going back on that. The cottage and the Sunday dinner for you, +remember." + +Of course," agreed Emma listlessly." I think I'll go up and get some +sleep now. Didn't get much last night on the road." + +"Won't you--er--come down and have a little something moist? Or we +could have it sent up here," suggested the fat man. + +"You're the third man that's asked me that to-day," snapped Emma +McChesney, somewhat crossly. "Say, what do I look like, anyway? I +guess I'll have to pin a white ribbon on my coat lapel." + +"No offense," put in the fat man, with haste. "I just thought it would +bind our bargain. I hope you'll be happy, and contented, and all that, +you know." + +"Let it go double," replied Emma McChesney, and shook his hand. + +"Guess I'll run down and get a smoke," remarked he. + +He ran down the stairs in a manner wonderfully airy for one so stout. +Emma watched him until he disappeared around a bend in the stairs. +Then she walked hastily in the direction of sixty-five. + +Down in the lobby the fat man, cigar in mouth, was cautioning the +clerk, and emphasizing his remarks with one forefinger. + +"I want to leave a call for six thirty," he was saying. "Not a minute +later. I've got to get out of here on that 7:35 for DeKalb. Got a +Sunday customer there." + +As he turned away a telephone bell tinkled at the desk. The clerk bent +his stately head. + +"Clerk. Yes, ma'am. No, ma'am, there's no train out of here to-night +for DeKalb. To-morrow morning. Seven thirty-five A.M. I sure will. At +six-thirty? Surest thing you know." + + + + +III + +CHICKENS + + +For the benefit of the bewildered reader it should be said that there +are two distinct species of chickens. There is the chicken which you +find in the barnyard, in the incubator, or on a hat. And there is the +type indigenous to State Street, Chicago. Each is known by its +feathers. The barnyard variety may puzzle the amateur fancier, but +there is no mistaking the State Street chicken. It is known by its +soiled, high, white canvas boots; by its tight, short black skirt; by +its slug pearl earrings; by its bewildering coiffure. By every line of +its slim young body, by every curve of its cheek and throat you know +it is adorably, pitifully young. By its carmined lip, its near-smart +hat, its babbling of "him," and by the knowledge which looks boldly +out of its eyes you know it is tragically old. + +Seated in the Pullman car, with a friendly newspaper protecting her +bright hair from the doubtful gray-white of the chair cover, Emma +McChesney, traveling saleswoman for T. A. Buck's Featherloom +Petticoats, was watching the telegraph poles chase each other back to +Duluth, Minnesota, and thinking fondly of Mary Cutting, who is the +mother-confessor and comforter of the State Street chicken. + +Now, Duluth, Minnesota, is trying to be a city. In watching its +struggles a hunger for a taste of the real city had come upon Emma +McChesney. She had been out with her late Fall line from May until +September. Every Middle-Western town of five thousand inhabitants or +over had received its share of Emma McChesney's attention and +petticoats. It had been a mystifyingly good season in a bad business +year. Even old T. A. himself was almost satisfied. Commissions piled +up with gratifying regularity for Emma McChesney. Then, quite +suddenly, the lonely evenings, the lack of woman companionship, and +the longing for a sight of her seventeen-year-old son had got on Emma +McChesney's nerves. + +She was two days ahead of her schedule, whereupon she wired her son, +thus: + +_"Dear Kid:_ + +"Meet me Chicago usual place Friday large time my treat. MOTHER." + +Then she had packed her bag, wired Mary Cutting that she would see her +Thursday, and had taken the first train out for Chicago. + +You might have found the car close, stuffy, and uninteresting. Ten +years on the road had taught Emma McChesney to extract a maximum of +enjoyment out of a minimum of material. Emma McChesney's favorite +occupation was selling T. A. Buck's Featherloom Petticoats, and her +favorite pastime was studying men and women. The two things went well +together. + +When the train stopped for a minute or two you could hear a faint +rattle and click from the direction of the smoking compartment where +three jewelry salesmen from Providence, Rhode Island, were indulging +in their beloved, but dangerous diversion of dice throwing. Just +across the aisle was a woman, with her daughter, Chicago-bound to buy +a trousseau. They were typical, wealthy small-town women smartly +garbed in a fashion not more than twenty minutes late. In the quieter +moments of the trip Emma McChesney could hear the mother's high- +pitched, East End Ladies' Reading Club voice saying: + +"I'd have the velvet suit made fussy, with a real fancy waist to for +afternoons. You can go anywhere in a handsome velvet three-piece +suit." + +The girl had smiled, dreamily, and gazed out of the car window. "I +wonder," she said, "if there'll be a letter from George. He said he +would sit right down and write." + +In the safe seclusion of her high-backed chair Emma McChesney smiled +approvingly. Seventeen years ago, when her son had been born, and ten +years ago, when she had got her divorce, Emma McChesney had thanked +her God that her boy had not been a girl. Sometimes, now, she was not +so sure about it. It must be fascinating work--selecting velvet suits, +made "fussy," for a daughter's trousseau. + +Just how fully those five months of small-town existence had got on +her nerves Emma McChesney did not realize until the train snorted into +the shed and she sniffed the mingled smell of smoke and stockyards and +found it sweet in her nostrils. An unholy joy seized her. She entered +the Biggest Store and made for the millinery department, yielding to +an uncontrollable desire to buy a hat. It was a pert, trim, smart +little hat. It made her thirty-six years seem less possible than ever, +and her seventeen-year-old son an absurdity. + +It was four-thirty when she took the elevator up to Mary Cutting's +office on the tenth floor. She knew she would find Mary Cutting there +--Mary Cutting, friend, counselor, adviser to every young girl in the +great store and to all Chicago's silly, helpless "chickens." + +A dragon sat before Mary Cutting's door and wrote names on slips. But +at sight of Emma McChesney she laid down her pencil. + +"Well," smiled the dragon, "you're a sight for sore eyes. There's +nobody in there with her. Just walk in and surprise her." + +At a rosewood desk in a tiny cozy office sat a pink-cheeked, white- +haired woman. You associated her in your mind with black velvet and +real lace. She did not look up as Emma McChesney entered. Emma +McChesney waited for one small moment. Then: + +"Cut out the bank president stuff, Mary Cutting, and make a fuss over +me," she commanded. + +The pink-cheeked, white-haired woman looked up. You saw that her eyes +were wonderfully young. She made three marks on a piece of paper, +pushed a call-button at her desk, rose, and hugged Emma McChesney +thoroughly and satisfactorily, then held her off a moment and demanded +to know where she had bought her hat. + +"Got it ten minutes ago, in the millinery department downstairs. Had +to. If I'd have come into New York after five months' exile like this +I'd probably have bought a brocade and fur-edged evening wrap, to +relieve this feeling of wild joy. For five months I've spent my +evenings in my hotel room, or watching the Maude Byrnes Stock Company +playing "Lena Rivers," with the ingenue coming out between the acts in +a calico apron and a pink sunbonnet and doing a thing they bill as +vaudeville. I'm dying to see a real show--a smart one that hasn't run +two hundred nights on Broadway--one with pretty girls, and pink +tights, and a lot of moonrises, and sunsets and things, and a prima +donna in a dress so stunning that all the women in the audience are +busy copying it so they can describe it to their home-dressmaker next +day." + +"Poor, poor child," said Mary Cutting, "I don't seem to recall any +such show." + +"Well, it will look that way to me, anyway," said Emma McChesney. +"I've wired Jock to meet me to-morrow, and I'm going to give the child +a really sizzling little vacation. But to-night you and I will have an +old-girl frolic. We'll have dinner together somewhere downtown, and +then we'll go to the theater, and after that I'm coming out to that +blessed flat of yours and sleep between real sheets. We'll have some +sandwiches and beer and other things out of the ice-box, and then +we'll have a bathroom bee. We'll let down our back hair, and slap cold +cream around, and tell our hearts' secrets and use up all the hot +water. Lordy! It will be a luxury to have a bath in a tub that doesn't +make you feel as though you wanted to scrub it out with lye and +carbolic. Come on, Mary Cutting." + +Mary Cutting's pink cheeks dimpled like a girl's. + +[Illustration: "'You'll never grow up, Emma McChesney'"] + +"You'll never grow up, Emma McChesney--at least, I hope you never +will. Sit there in the corner and be a good child, and I'll be ready +for you in ten minutes." + +Peace settled down on the tiny office. Emma McChesney, there in her +corner, surveyed the little room with entire approval. It breathed of +things restful, wholesome, comforting. There was a bowl of sweet peas +on the desk; there was an Indian sweet grass basket filled with autumn +leaves in the corner; there was an air of orderliness and good taste; +and there was the pink-cheeked, white-haired woman at the desk. + +"There!" said Mary Cutting, at last. She removed her glasses, snapped +them up on a little spring-chain near her shoulder, sat back, and +smiled upon Emma McChesney. + +Emma McChesney smiled back at her. Theirs was not a talking +friendship. It was a thing of depth and understanding, like the +friendship between two men. + +They sat looking into each other's eyes, and down beyond, where the +soul holds forth. And because what each saw there was beautiful and +sightly they were seized with a shyness such as two men feel when they +love each other, and so they awkwardly endeavored to cover up their +shyness with words. + +"You could stand a facial and a decent scalp massage, Emma," observed +Mary Cutting in a tone pregnant with love and devotion. "Your hair +looks a little dry. Those small-town manicures don't know how to give +a real treatment." + +"I'll have it to-morrow morning, before the Kid gets in at eleven. As +the Lily Russell of the traveling profession I can't afford to let my +beauty wane. That complexion of yours makes me mad, Mary. It goes +through a course of hard water and Chicago dirt and comes up looking +like a rose leaf with the morning dew on it. Where'll we have supper?" + +"I know a new place," replied Mary Cutting. "German, but not greasy." + +She was sorting, marking, and pigeonholing various papers and +envelopes. When her desk was quite tidy she shut and locked it, and +came over to Emma McChesney. + +"Something nice happened to me to-day," she said, softly. "Something +that made me realize how worth while life is. You know we have five +thousand women working here--almost double that during the holidays. A +lot of them are under twenty and, Emma, a working girl, under twenty, +in a city like this--Well, a brand new girl was looking for me today. +She didn't know the way to my office, and she didn't know my name. So +she stopped one of the older clerks, blushed a little, and said, 'Can +you tell me the way to the office of the Comfort Lady?' That's worth +working for, isn't it, Emma McChesney?" + +"It's worth living for," answered Emma McChesney, gravely. "It--it's +worth dying for. To think that those girls come to you with their +little sacred things, their troubles, and misfortunes, and +unhappinesses and--" + +"And their disgraces--sometimes," Mary Cutting finished for her. "Oh, +Emma McChesney, sometimes I wonder why there isn't a national school +for the education of mothers. I marvel at their ignorance more and +more every day. Remember, Emma, when we were kids our mothers used to +send us flying to the grocery on baking day? All the way from our +house to Hine's grocery I'd have to keep on saying, over and over: +'Sugar, butter, molasses; sugar, butter, molasses; sugar, butter, +molasses.' If I stopped for a minute I'd forget the whole thing. It +isn't so different now. Sometimes at night, going home in the car +after a day so bad that the whole world seems rotten, I make myself +say, over and over, as I used to repeat my 'Sugar, butter, and +molasses.' 'It's a glorious, good old world; it's a glorious, good old +world; it's a glorious, good old world.' And I daren't stop for a +minute for fear of forgetting my lesson." + +For the third time in that short half-hour a silence fell between the +two--a silence of perfect sympathy and understanding. + +Five little strokes, tripping over each other in their haste, came +from the tiny clock on Mary Cutting's desk. It roused them both. + +"Come on, old girl," said Mary Cutting. "I've a chore or two still to +do before my day is finished. Come along, if you like. There's a new +girl at the perfumes who wears too many braids, and puffs, and curls, +and in the basement misses' ready-to-wear there's another who likes to +break store rules about short-sleeved, lace-yoked lingerie waists. And +one of the floor managers tells me that a young chap of that callow, +semi-objectionable, high-school fraternity, flat-heeled shoe type has +been persistently hanging around the desk of the pretty little bundle +inspector at the veilings. We're trying to clear the store of that +type. They call girls of that description chickens. I wonder why some +one hasn't found a name for the masculine chicken." + +[Illustration: "'Well, s'long, then, Shrimp. See you at eight'"] + +"I'll give 'em one," said Emma McChesney as they swung down a broad, +bright aisle of the store. "Call 'em weasels. That covers their style, +occupation, and character." + +They swung around the corner to the veilings, and there they saw the +very pretty, very blond, very young "chicken" deep in conversation +with her weasel. The weasel's trousers were very tight and English, +and his hat was properly woolly and Alpine and dented very much on one +side and his heels were fashionably flat, and his hair was slickly +pompadour. + +Mary Cutting and Emma McChesney approached them very quietly just in +time to hear the weasel say: + +"Well, s' long then, Shrimp. See you at eight." + +And he swung around and faced them. + +That sick horror of uncertainty which had clutched at Emma McChesney +when first she saw the weasel's back held her with awful certainty +now. But ten years on the road had taught her self-control, among +other things. So she looked steadily and calmly into her son's scarlet +face. Jock's father had been a liar. + +She put her hand on the boy's arm. + +"You're a day ahead of schedule, Jock," she said evenly. + +"So are you," retorted Jock, sullenly, his hands jammed into his +pockets. + +"All the better for both of us, Kid. I was just going over to the +hotel to clean up, Jock. Come along, boy." + +The boy's jaw set. His eyes sought any haven but that of Emma +McChesney's eyes. "I can't," he said, his voice very low. "I've an +engagement to take dinner with a bunch of the fellows. We're going +down to the Inn. Sorry." + +A certain cold rigidity settled over Emma McChesney's face. She eyed +her son in silence until his miserable eyes, perforce, looked up into +hers. + +"I'm afraid you'll have to break your engagement," she said. + +She turned to face Mary Cutting's regretful, understanding gaze. Her +eyebrows lifted slightly. Her head inclined ever so little in the +direction of the half-scared, half-defiant "chicken." + +"You attend to your chicken, Mary," she said. "I'll see to my weasel." + +So Emma McChesney and her son Jock, looking remarkably like brother +and sister, walked down the broad store aisles and out into the +street. There was little conversation between them. When the pillared +entrance of the hotel came into sight Jock broke the silence, +sullenly: + +"Why do you stop at that old barracks? It's a rotten place for a +woman. No one stops there but clothing salesmen and boobs who still +think it's Chicago's leading hotel. No place for a lady." + +"Any place in the world is the place for a lady, Jock," said Emma +McChesney quietly. + +Automatically she started toward the clerk's desk. Then she +remembered, and stopped. "I'll wait here," she said. "Get the key for +five-eighteen, will you please? And tell the clerk that I'll want the +room adjoining beginning to-night, instead of to-morrow, as I first +intended. Tell him you're Mrs. McChesney's son." + +He turned away. Emma McChesney brought her handkerchief up to her +mouth and held it there a moment, and the skin showed white over the +knuckles of her hand. in that moment every one of her thirty-six years +were on the table, face up. + +"We'll wash up," said Emma McChesney, when he returned, "and then +we'll have dinner here." + +"I don't want to eat here," objected Jock McChesney. "Besides, there's +no reason why I can't keep my evening's engagements." + +"And after dinner," went on his mother, as though she had not heard, +"we'll get acquainted, Kid." + +It was a cheerless, rather tragic meal, though Emma McChesney saw it +through from soup to finger-bowls. When it was over she led the way +down the old-fashioned, red-carpeted corridors to her room. It was the +sort of room to get on its occupant's nerves at any time, with its red +plush arm-chairs, its black walnut bed, and its walnut center table +inlaid with an apoplectic slab of purplish marble. + +[Illustration: "'I'm still in position to enforce that ordinance +against pouting'"] + +Emma McChesney took off her hat before the dim old mirror, and stood +there, fluffing out her hair here, patting it there. Jock had thrown +his hat and coat on the bed. He stood now, leaning against the +footboard, his legs crossed, his chin on his breast, his whole +attitude breathing sullen defiance. + +"Jock," said his mother, still patting her hair, "perhaps you don't +know it, but you're pouting just as you used to when you wore +pinafores. I always hated pouting children. I'd rather hear them howl. +I used to spank you for it. I have prided myself on being a modern +mother, but I want to mention, in passing, that I'm still in a +position to enforce that ordinance against pouting." She turned around +abruptly. "Jock, tell me, how did you happen to come here a day ahead +of me, and how do you happen to be so chummy with that pretty, weak- +faced little thing at the veiling counter, and how, in the name of all +that's unbelievable, have you managed to become a grown-up in the last +few months?" + +Jock regarded the mercifully faded roses in the carpet. His lower lip +came forward again. + +"Oh, a fellow can't always be tied to his mother's apron strings. I +like to have a little fling myself. I know a lot of fellows here. They +are frat brothers. And anyway, I needed some new clothes." + +For one long moment Emma McChesney stared, in silence. Then: "Of +course," she began, slowly, "I knew you were seventeen years old. I've +even bragged about it. I've done more than that--I've gloried in it. +But somehow, whenever I thought of you in my heart--and that was a +great deal of the time it was as though you still were a little tyke +in knee-pants, with your cap on the back of your head, and a chunk of +apple bulging your cheek. Jock, I've been earning close to six +thousand a year since I put in that side line of garters. Just how +much spending money have I been providing you with?" + +Jock twirled a coat button uncomfortably "Well, quite a lot. But a +fellow's got to have money to keep up appearances. A lot of the +fellows in my crowd have more than I. There are clothes, and tobacco, +and then flowers and cabs for the skirts--girls, I mean, and--" + +"Kid," impressively, "I want you to sit down over there in that plush +chair--the red one, with the lumps in the back. I want you to be +uncomfortable. From where I am sitting I can see that in you there is +the making of a first-class cad. That's no pleasant thing for a mother +to realize. Now don't interrupt me. I'm going to be chairman, speaker, +program, and ways-and-means committee of this meeting. Jock, I got my +divorce from your father ten years ago. Now, I'm not going to say +anything about him. Just this one thing. You're not going to follow in +his footsteps, Kid. Not if I have to take you to pieces like a nickel +watch and put you all together again. You're Emma McChesney's son, and +ten years from now I intend to be able to brag about it, or I'll want +to know the reason why--and it'll have to be a blamed good reason." + +"I'd like to know what I've done!" blurted the boy. "Just because I +happened to come here a few hours before you expected me, and just +because you saw me talking to a girl! Why--" + +"It isn't what you've done. It's what those things stand for. I've +been at fault. But I'm willing to admit it. Your mother is a working +woman, Jock. You don't like that idea, do you? But you don't mind +spending the money that the working woman provides you with, do you? +I'm earning a man's salary. But Jock, you oughtn't to be willing to +live on it. + +"What do you want me to do?" demanded Jock. "I'm not out of high +school yet. Other fellows whose fathers aren't earning as much--" + +"Fathers," interrupted Emma McChesney. "There you are. Jock, I don't +have to make the distinction for you. You're sufficiently my son to +know it, in your heart. I had planned to give you a college education, +if you showed yourself deserving. I don't believe in sending a boy in +your position to college unless he shows some special leaning toward a +profession." + +"Mother, you know how wild I am about machines, and motors, and +engineering, and all that goes with it. Why I'd work--" + +"You'll have to, Jock. That's the only thing that will make a man of +you. I've started you wrong, but it isn't too late yet. It's all very +well for boys with rich fathers to run to clothes, and city jaunts, +and 'chickens,' and cabs and flowers. Your mother is working tooth and +nail to earn her six thousand, and when you realize just what it means +for a woman to battle against men in a man's game, you'll stop being a +spender, and become an earner--because you'll want to. I'll tell you +what I'm going to do, Kid. I'm going to take you on the road with me +for two weeks. You'll learn so many things that at the end of that +time the sides of your head will be bulging." + +"I'd like it!" exclaimed the boy, sitting up. "It will be regular +fun." + +"No, it won't," said Emma McChesney; "not after the first three or +four days. But it will be worth more to you than a foreign tour and a +private tutor." + +She came over to him and put her hand on his shoulder. "Your room's +just next to mine," she said. "You and I are going to sleep on this. +To-morrow we'll have a real day of it, as I promised. If you want to +spend it with the fellows, say so. I'm not going to spoil this little +lark that I promised you." + +"I think," said the boy, looking up into his mother's face, "I think +that I'll spend it with you." + +The door slammed after him. + +Emma McChesney remained standing there, in the center of the room. She +raised her arms and passed a hand over her forehead and across her +hair until it rested on the glossy knot at the back of her head. It +was the weary little gesture of a weary, heart-sick woman. + +There came a ring at the 'phone. + +Emma McChesney crossed the room and picked up the receiver. + +"Hello, Mary Cutting," she said, without waiting for the voice at the +other end. "What? Oh, I just knew. No, it's all right. I've had some +high-class little theatricals of my own, right here, with me in the +roles of leading lady, ingenue, villainess, star, and heavy mother. +I've got Mrs. Fiske looking like a First Reader Room kid that's +forgotten her Friday piece. What's that?" + +There was no sound in the room but the hollow cackle of the voice at +the other end of the wire, many miles away. + +Then: "Oh, that's all right, Mary Cutting. I owe you a great big debt +of gratitude, bless your pink cheeks and white hair! And, Mary," she +lowered her voice and glanced in the direction of the room next door, +"I don't know how a hard, dry sob would go through the 'phone, so I +won't try to get it over. But, Mary, it's been 'sugar, butter, and +molasses' for me for the last ten minutes, and I'm dead scared to stop +for fear I'll forget it. I guess it's 'sugar, butter, and molasses' +for me for the rest of the night, Mary Cutting; just as hard and fast +as I can say it, 'sugar, butter, molasses.'" + + + + +IV + +HIS MOTHER'S SON + + +"Full?" repeated Emma McChesney (and if it weren't for the compositor +there'd be an exclamation point after that question mark). + +"Sorry, Mrs. McChesney," said the clerk, and he actually looked it, +"but there's absolutely nothing stirring. We're full up. The +Benevolent Brotherhood of Bisons is holding its regular annual state +convention here. We're putting up cots in the hall." + +Emma McChesney's keen blue eyes glanced up from their inspection of +the little bunch of mail which had just been handed her. "Well, pick +out a hall with a southern exposure and set up a cot or so for me," +she said, agreeably; "because I've come to stay. After selling +Featherloom Petticoats on the road for ten years I don't see myself +trailing up and down this town looking for a place to lay my head. +I've learned this one large, immovable truth, and that is, that a +hotel clerk is a hotel clerk. It makes no difference whether he is +stuck back of a marble pillar and hidden by a gold vase full of +thirty-six-inch American Beauty roses at the Knickerbocker, or setting +the late fall fashions for men in Galesburg, Illinois." + +By one small degree was the perfect poise of the peerless personage +behind the register jarred. But by only one. He was a hotel night +clerk. + +"It won't do you any good to get sore, Mrs. McChesney," he began, +suavely. "Now a man would--" + +"But I'm not a man," interrupted Emma McChesney. "I'm only doing a +man's work and earning a man's salary and demanding to be treated with +as much consideration as you'd show a man." + +The personage busied himself mightily with a pen, and a blotter, and +sundry papers, as is the manner of personages when annoyed. "I'd like +to accommodate you; I'd like to do it." + +"Cheer up," said Emma McChesney, "you're going to. I don't mind a +little discomfort. Though I want to mention in passing that if there +are any lady Bisons present you needn't bank on doubling me up with +them. I've had one experience of that kind. It was in Albia, Iowa. I'd +sleep in the kitchen range before I'd go through another." + +Up went the erstwhile falling poise. "You're badly mistaken, madam. +I'm a member of this order myself, and a finer lot of fellows it has +never been my pleasure to know." + +"Yes, I know," drawled Emma McChesney. "Do you know, the thing that +gets me is the inconsistency of it. Along come a lot of boobs who +never use a hotel the year around except to loaf in the lobby, and +wear out the leather chairs, and use up the matches and toothpicks and +get the baseball returns, and immediately you turn away a traveling +man who uses a three-dollar-a-day room, with a sample room downstairs +for his stuff, who tips every porter and bell-boy in the place, asks +for no favors, and who, if you give him a half-way decent cup of +coffee for breakfast, will fall in love with the place and boom it all +over the country. Half of your Benevolent Bisons are here on the +European plan, with a view to patronizing the free-lunch counters or +being asked to take dinner at the home of some local Bison whose wife +has been cooking up on pies, and chicken salad and veal roast for the +last week." + +[Illustration: "'Son!' echoed the clerk, staring"] + +Emma McChesney leaned over the desk a little, and lowered her voice to +the tone of confidence. "Now, I'm not in the habit of making a +nuisance of myself like this. I don't get so chatty as a rule, and I +know that I could jump over to Monmouth and get first-class +accommodations there. But just this once I've a good reason for +wanting to make you and myself a little miserable. Y'see, my son is +traveling with me this trip." + +"Son!" echoed the clerk, staring. + +"Thanks. That's what they all do. After a while I'll begin to believe +that there must be something hauntingly beautiful and girlish about me +or every one wouldn't petrify when I announce that I've a six-foot son +attached to my apron-strings. He looks twenty-one, but he's seventeen. +He thinks the world's rotten because he can't grow one of those fuzzy +little mustaches that the men are cultivating to match their hats. +He's down at the depot now, straightening out our baggage. Now I want +to say this before he gets here. He's been out with me just four days. +Those four days have been a revelation, an eye-opener, and a series of +rude jolts. He used to think that his mother's job consisted of +traveling in Pullmans, eating delicate viands turned out by the hotel +chefs, and strewing Featherloom Petticoats along the path. I gave him +plenty of money, and he got into the habit of looking lightly upon +anything more trifling than a five-dollar bill. He's changing his mind +by great leaps. I'm prepared to spend the night in the coal cellar if +you'll just fix him up--not too comfortably. It'll be a great lesson +for him. There he is now. Just coming in. Fuzzy coat and hat and +English stick. Hist! As they say on the stage." + +The boy crossed the crowded lobby. There was a little worried, annoyed +frown between his eyes. He laid a protecting hand on his mother's arm. +Emma McChesney was conscious of a little thrill of pride as she +realized that he did not have to look up to meet her gaze. + +"Look here, Mother, they tell me there's some sort of a convention +here, and the town's packed. That's what all those banners and things +were for. I hope they've got something decent for us here. I came up +with a man who said he didn't think there was a hole left to sleep +in." + +"You don't say!" exclaimed Emma McChesney, and turned to the clerk. +"This is my son, Jock McChesney--Mr. Sims. Is this true?" + +"Glad to know you, sir," said Mr. Sims. "Why, yes, I'm afraid we are +pretty well filled up, but seeing it's you maybe we can do something +for you." + +He ruminated, tapping his teeth with a pen-holder, and eying the pair +before him with a maddening blankness of gaze. Finally: + +"I'll do my best, but you can't expect much. I guess I can squeeze +another cot into eighty-seven for the young man. There's--let's see +now--who's in eighty-seven? Well, there's two Bisons in the double +bed, and one in the single, and Fat Ed Meyers in the cot and--" + +Emma McChesney stiffened into acute attention. "Meyers?" she +interrupted. "Do you mean Ed Meyers of the Strauss Sans-silk Skirt +Company?" + +"That's so. You two are in the same line, aren't you? He's a great +little piano player, Ed is. Ever hear him play?" + +"When did he get in?" + +"Oh, he just came in fifteen minutes ago on the Ashland division. He's +in at supper." "Oh," said Emma McChesney. The two letters breathed +relief. + +But relief had no place in the voice, or on the countenance of Jock +McChesney. He bristled with belligerence. "This cattle-car style of +sleeping don't make a hit. I haven't had a decent night's rest for +three nights. I never could sleep on a sleeper. Can't you fix us up +better than that?" + +"Best I can do." + +"But where's mother going? I see you advertise three 'large and +commodious steam-heated sample rooms in connection.' I suppose +mother's due to sleep on one of the tables there." + +"Jock," Emma McChesney reproved him, "Mr. Sims is doing us a great +favor. There isn't another hotel in town that would--" + +"You're right, there isn't," agreed Mr. Sims. "I guess the young man +is new to this traveling game. As I said, I'd like to accommodate you, +but--Let's see now. Tell you what I'll do. If I can get the +housekeeper to go over and sleep in the maids' quarters just for to- +night, you can use her room. There you are! Of course, it's over the +kitchen, and there may be some little noise early in the morning--" + +Emma McChesney raised a protesting hand. "Don't mention it. Just lead +me thither. I'm so tired I could sleep in an excursion special that +was switching at Pittsburgh. Jock, me child, we're in luck. That's +twice in the same place. The first time was when we were inspired to +eat our supper on the diner instead of waiting until we reached here +to take the leftovers from the Bisons' grazing. I hope that +housekeeper hasn't a picture of her departed husband dangling, life- +size, on the wall at the foot of the bed. But they always have. Good- +night, son. Don't let the Bisons bite you. I'll be up at seven." + +But it was just 6:30 A.M. when Emma McChesney turned the little bend +in the stairway that led to the office. The scrub-woman was still in +possession. The cigar-counter girl had not yet made her appearance. +There was about the place a general air of the night before. All but +the night clerk. He was as spruce and trim, and alert and smooth- +shaven as only a night clerk can be after a night's vigil. + +"'Morning!" Emma McChesney called to him. She wore blue serge, and a +smart fall hat. The late autumn morning was not crisper and sunnier +than she. + +"Good-morning, Mrs. McChesney," returned Mr. Sims, sonorously. "Have a +good night's sleep? I hope the kitchen noises didn't wake you." + +Emma McChesney paused with her hand on the door. "Kitchen? Oh, no. I +could sleep through a vaudeville china-juggling act. But---what an +extraordinarily unpleasant-looking man that housekeeper's husband must +have been." + +That November morning boasted all those qualities which November- +morning writers are so prone to bestow upon the month. But the words +wine, and sparkle, and sting, and glow, and snap do not seem to cover +it. Emma McChesney stood on the bottom step, looking up and down Main +Street and breathing in great draughts of that unadjectivable air. Her +complexion stood the test of the merciless, astringent morning and +came up triumphantly and healthily firm and pink and smooth. The town +was still asleep. She started to walk briskly down the bare and ugly +Main Street of the little town. In her big, generous heart, and her +keen, alert mind, there were many sensations and myriad thoughts, but +varied and diverse as they were they all led back to the boy up there +in the stuffy, over-crowded hotel room--the boy who was learning his +lesson. + +Half an hour later she reentered the hotel, her cheeks glowing. Jock +was not yet down. So she ordered and ate her wise and cautious +breakfast of fruit and cereal and toast and coffee, skimming over her +morning paper as she ate. At 7:30 she was back in the lobby, newspaper +in hand. The Bisons were already astir. She seated herself in a deep +chair in a quiet corner, her eyes glancing up over the top of her +paper toward the stairway. At eight o'clock Jock McChesney came down. + +There was nothing of jauntiness about him. His eyelids were red. His +face had the doughy look of one whose sleep has been brief and +feverish. As he came toward his mother you noticed a stain on his +coat, and a sunburst of wrinkles across one leg of his modish brown +trousers. + +"Good-morning, son!" said Emma McChesney. "Was it as bad as that?" + +Jock McChesney's long fingers curled into a fist. + +"Say," he began, his tone venomous, "do you know what those--those-- +those--" + +"Say it!" commanded Emma McChesney. "I'm only your mother. If you keep +that in your system your breakfast will curdle in your stomach." + +Jock McChesney said it. I know no phrase better fitted to describe his +tone than that old favorite of the erotic novelties. It was vibrant +with passion. It breathed bitterness. It sizzled with savagery. It-- +Oh, alliteration is useless. + +"Well," said Emma McChesney, encouragingly, "go on." + +[Illustration: "'Well!' gulped Jock, 'those two double-bedded, +bloomin' blasted Bisons--'"] + +"Well!" gulped Jock McChesney, and glared; "those two double-bedded, +bloomin', blasted Bisons came in at twelve, and the single one about +fifteen minutes later. They didn't surprise me. There was a herd of +about ninety-three of 'em in the hall, all saying good-night to each +other, and planning where they'd meet in the morning, and the time, +and place and probable weather conditions. For that matter, there were +droves of 'em pounding up and down the halls all night. I never saw +such restless cattle. If you'll tell me what makes more noise in the +middle of the night than the metal disk of a hotel key banging and +clanging up against a door, I'd like to know what it is. My three +Bisons were all dolled up with fool ribbons and badges and striped +paper canes. When they switched on the light I gave a crack imitation +of a tired working man trying to get a little sleep. I breathed +regularly and heavily, with an occasional moaning snore. But if those +two hippopotamus Bisons had been alone on their native plains they +couldn't have cared less. They bellowed, and pawed the earth, and +threw their shoes around, and yawned, and stretched and discussed +their plans for the next day, and reviewed all their doings of that +day. Then one of them said something about turning in, and I was so +happy I forgot to snore. Just then another key clanged at the door, in +walked a fat man in a brown suit and a brown derby, and stuff was +off." + +"That," said Emma McChesney, "would be Ed Meyers, of the Strauss Sans- +silk Skirt Company." + +"None other than our hero." Jock's tone had an added acidity. "It took +those four about two minutes to get acquainted. In three minutes they +had told their real names, and it turned out that Meyers belonged to +an organization that was a second cousin of the Bisons. In five +minutes they had got together a deck and a pile of chips and were +shirt-sleeving it around a game of pinochle. I would doze off to the +slap of cards, and the click of chips, and wake up when the bell-boy +came in with another round, which he did every six minutes. When I got +up this morning I found that Fat Ed Meyers had been sitting on the +chair over which I trustingly had draped my trousers. This sunburst of +wrinkles is where he mostly sat. This spot on my coat is where a Bison +drank his beer." + +Emma McChesney folded her paper and rose, smiling. "It is sort of +trying, I suppose, if you're not used to it." + +"Used to it!" shouted the outraged Jock. "Used to it! Do you mean to +tell me there's nothing unusual about--" + +"Not a thing. Oh, of course you don't strike a bunch of Bisons every +day. But it happens a good many times. The world is full of Ancient +Orders and they're everlastingly getting together and drawing up +resolutions and electing officers. Don't you think you'd better go in +to breakfast before the Bisons begin to forage? I've had mine." + +The gloom which had overspread Jock McChesney's face lifted a little. +The hungry boy in him was uppermost. "That's so. I'm going to have +some wheat cakes, and steak, and eggs, and coffee, and fruit, and +toast, and rolls." + +"Why slight the fish?" inquired his mother. Then, as he turned toward +the dining-room, "I've two letters to get out. Then I'm going down the +street to see a customer. I'll be up at the Sulzberg-Stein department +store at nine sharp. There's no use trying to see old Sulzberg before +ten, but I'll be there, anyway, and so will Ed Meyers, or I'm no skirt +salesman. I want you to meet me there. It will do you good to watch +how the overripe orders just drop, ker-plunk, into my lap." + +Maybe you know Sulzberg & Stein's big store? No? That's because you've +always lived in the city. Old Sulzberg sends his buyers to the New +York market twice a year, and they need two floor managers on the main +floor now. The money those people spend for red and green decorations +at Christmas time, and apple-blossoms and pink crepe paper shades in +the spring, must be something awful. Young Stein goes to Chicago to +have his clothes made, and old Sulzberg likes to keep the traveling +men waiting in the little ante-room outside his private office. + +Jock McChesney finished his huge breakfast, strolled over to Sulzberg +& Stein's, and inquired his way to the office only to find that his +mother was not yet there. There were three men in the little waiting- +room. One of them was Fat Ed Meyers. His huge bulk overflowed the +spindle-legged chair on which he sat. His brown derby was in his +hands. His eyes were on the closed door at the other side of the room. +So were the eyes of the other two travelers. Jock took a vacant seat +next to Fat Ed Meyers so that he might, in his mind's eye, pick out a +particularly choice spot upon which his hard young fist might land--if +only he had the chance. Breaking up a man's sleep like that, the great +big overgrown mutt! + +"What's your line?" said Ed Meyers, suddenly turning toward Jock. + +Prompted by some imp--"Skirts," answered Jock. "Ladies' petticoats." +("As if men ever wore 'em!" he giggled inwardly.) + +Ed Meyers shifted around in his chair so that he might better stare at +this new foe in the field. His little red mouth was open ludicrously. + +"Who're you out for?" he demanded next. + +There was a look of Emma McChesney on Jock's face. "Why--er--the Union +Underskirt and Hosiery Company of Chicago. New concern." + +"Must be," ruminated Ed Meyers. "I never heard of 'em, and I know 'em +all. You're starting in young, ain't you, kid! Well, it'll never hurt +you. You'll learn something new every day. Now me, I--" + +In breezed Emma McChesney. Her quick glance rested immediately upon +Meyers and the boy. And in that moment some instinct prompted Jock +McChesney to shake his head, ever so slightly, and assume a blankness +of expression. And Emma McChesney, with that shrewdness which had made +her one of the best salesmen on the road, saw, and miraculously +understood. + +"How do, Mrs. McChesney," grinned Fat Ed Meyers. "You see I beat you +to it." + +"So I see," smiled Emma, cheerfully. "I was delayed. Just sold a nice +little bill to Watkins down the Street." She seated herself across the +way, and kept her eyes on that closed door. + +"Say, kid," Meyers began, in the husky whisper of the fat man, "I'm +going to put you wise to something, seeing you're new to this game. +See that lady over there?" He nodded discreetly in Emma McChesney's +direction. + +"Pretty, isn't she?" said Jock, appreciatively. + +"Know who she is?" + +"Well--I--she does look familiar but--" + +"Oh, come now, quit your bluffing. If you'd ever met that dame you'd +remember it. Her name's McChesney--Emma McChesney, and she sells T. A. +Buck's Featherloom Petticoats. I'll give her her dues; she's the best +little salesman on the road. I'll bet that girl could sell a ruffled, +accordion-plaited underskirt to a fat woman who was trying to reduce. +She's got the darndest way with her. And at that she's straight, too." + +If Ed Meyers had not been gazing so intently into his hat, trying at +the same time to look cherubically benign he might have seen a quick +and painful scarlet sweep the face of the boy, coupled with a certain +tense look of the muscles around the jaw. + +"Well, now, look here," he went on, still in a whisper. "We're both +skirt men, you and me. Everything's fair in this game. Maybe you don't +know it, but when there's a bunch of the boys waiting around to see +the head of the store like this, and there happens to be a lady +traveler in the crowd, why, it's considered kind of a professional +courtesy to let the lady have the first look-in. See? It ain't so +often that three people in the same line get together like this. She +knows it, and she's sitting on the edge of her chair, waiting to bolt +when that door opens, even if she does act like she was hanging on the +words of that lady clerk there. The minute it does open a crack she'll +jump up and give me a fleeting, grateful smile, and sail in and cop a +fat order away from the old man and his skirt buyer. I'm wise. Say, he +may be an oyster, but he knows a pretty woman when he sees one. By the +time she's through with him he'll have enough petticoats on hand to +last him from now until Turkey goes suffrage. Get me?" + +"I get you," answered Jock. + +"I say, this is business, and good manners be hanged. When a woman +breaks into a man's game like this, let her take her chances like a +man. Ain't that straight?" + +"You've said something," agreed Jock. + +"Now, look here, kid. When that door opens I get up. See? And shoot +straight for the old man's office. See? Like a duck. See? Say, I may +be fat, kid, but I'm what they call light on my feet, and when I see +an order getting away from me I can be so fleet that I have Diana +looking like old Weston doing a stretch of muddy country road in a +coast to coast hike. See? Now you help me out on this and I'll see +that you don't suffer for it. I'll stick in a good word for you, +believe me. You take the word of an old stager like me and you won't +go far--" + +The door opened. Simultaneously three figures sprang into action. Jock +had the seat nearest the door. With marvelous clumsiness he managed to +place himself in Ed Meyers' path, then reddened, began an apology, +stepped on both of Ed's feet, jabbed his elbow into his stomach, and +dropped his hat. A second later the door of old Sulzberg's private +office closed upon Emma McChesney's smart, erect, confident figure. + +Now, Ed Meyers' hands were peculiar hands for a fat man. They were +tapering, slender, delicate, blue-veined, temperamental hands. At this +moment, despite his purpling face, and his staring eyes, they were the +most noticeable thing about him. His fingers clawed the empty air, +quivering, vibrant, as though poised to clutch at Jock's throat. + +Then words came. They spluttered from his lips. They popped like corn +kernels in the heat of his wrath; they tripped over each other; they +exploded. + +"You darned kid, you!" he began, with fascinating fluency. "You +thousand-legged, double-jointed, ox-footed truck horse. Come on out of +here and I'll lick the shine off your shoes, you blue-eyed babe, you! +What did you get up for, huh? What did you think this was going to be +--a flag drill?" + +With a whoop of pure joy Jock McChesney turned and fled. + +They dined together at one o'clock, Emma McChesney and her son Jock. +Suddenly Jock stopped eating. His eyes were on the door. "There's that +fathead now," he said, excitedly. "The nerve of him! He's coming over +here." + +Ed Meyers was waddling toward them with the quick light step of the +fat man. His pink, full-jowled face was glowing. His eyes were bright +as a boy's. He stopped at their table and paused for one dramatic +moment. + +"So, me beauty, you two were in cahoots, huh? That's the second low- +down deal you've handed me. I haven't forgotten that trick you turned +with Nussbaum at DeKalb. Never mind, little girl. I'll get back at you +yet." + +He nodded a contemptuous head in Jock's direction. "Carrying a +packer?" + +[Illustration: "'Come on out of here, and I'll lick the shine off your +shoes, you blue-eyed babe, you!'"] + +Emma McChesney wiped her fingers daintily on her napkin, crushed it on +the table, and leaned back in her chair. "Men," she observed, +wonderingly, "are the cussedest creatures. This chap occupied the same +room with you last night and you don't even know his name. Funny! If +two strange women had found themselves occupying the same room for a +night they wouldn't have got to the kimono and back hair stage before +they would not only have known each other's name, but they'd have +tried on each other's hats, swapped corset cover patterns, found +mutual friends living in Dayton, Ohio, taught each other a new Irish +crochet stitch, showed their family photographs, told how their +married sister's little girl nearly died with swollen glands, and +divided off the mirror into two sections to paste their newly washed +handkerchiefs on. Don't tell _me_ men have a genius for friendship." + +"Well, who is he?" insisted Ed Meyers. "He told me everything but his +name this morning. I wish I had throttled him with a bunch of Bisons' +badges last night." + +"His name," smiled Emma McChesney, "is Jock McChesney. He's my one and +only son, and he's put through his first little business deal this +morning just to show his mother that he can be a help to his folks if +he wants to. Now, Ed Meyers, if you're going to have apoplexy don't +you go and have it around this table. My boy is only on his second +piece of pie, and I won't have his appetite spoiled." + + + + +V + +PINK TIGHTS AND GINGHAMS + + +Some one--probably one of those Frenchmen whose life job it was to +make epigrams---once said that there are but two kinds of women: good +women, and bad women. Ever since then problem playwrights have been +putting that fiction into the mouths of wronged husbands and building +their "big scene" around it. But don't you believe it. There are four +kinds: good women, bad women, good bad women, and bad good women. And +the worst of these is the last. This should be a story of all four +kinds, and when it is finished I defy you to discover which is which. + +When the red stuff in the thermometer waxes ambitious, so that fat men +stand, bulging-eyed, before it and beginning with the ninety mark +count up with a horrible satisfaction--ninety-one--ninety-two--ninety- +three--NINETY FOUR! by gosh! and the cinders are filtering into your +berth, and even the porter is wandering restlessly up and down the +aisle like a black soul in purgatory and a white duck coat, then the +thing to do is to don those mercifully few garments which the laxity +of sleeping-car etiquette permits, slip out between the green curtains +and fare forth in search of draughts, liquid and atmospheric. + +At midnight Emma McChesney, inured as she was to sleepers and all +their horrors, found her lower eight unbearable. With the bravery of +desperation she groped about for her cinder-strewn belongings, donned +slippers and kimono, waited until the tortured porter's footsteps had +squeaked their way to the far end of the car, then sped up the dim +aisle toward the back platform. She wrenched open the door, felt the +rush of air, drew in a long, grateful, smoke-steam-dust laden lungful +of it, felt the breath of it on spine and chest, sneezed, realized +that she would be the victim of a summer cold next day, and, knowing, +cared not. + +"Great, ain't it?" said a voice in the darkness. (Nay, reader. A +woman's voice.) + +Emma McChesney was of the non-screaming type. But something inside of +her suspended action for the fraction of a second. She peered into the +darkness. + +"'J' get scared?" inquired the voice. Its owner lurched forward from +the corner in which she had been crouching, into the half-light cast +by the vestibule night-globe. + +Even as men judge one another by a Masonic emblem, an Elk pin, or the +band of a cigar, so do women in sleeping-cars weigh each other +according to the rules of the Ancient Order of the Kimono. Seven +seconds after Emma McChesney first beheld the negligee that stood +revealed in the dim light she had its wearer neatly weighed, marked, +listed, docketed and placed. + +It was the kind of kimono that is associated with straw-colored hair, +and French-heeled shoes, and over-fed dogs at the end of a leash. The +Japanese are wrongly accused of having perpetrated it. In pattern it +showed bright green flowers-that-never-were sprawling on a purple +background. A diamond bar fastened it not too near the throat. + +It was one of Emma McChesney's boasts that she was the only living +woman who could get off a sleeper at Bay City, Michigan, at 5 A.M., +without looking like a Swedish immigrant just dumped at Ellis Island. +Traveling had become a science with her, as witness her serviceable +dark-blue silk kimono, and her hair in a schoolgirl braid down her +back. The blonde woman cast upon Emma McChesney an admiring eye. + +"Gawd, ain't it hot!" she said, sociably. + +"I wonder," mused Emma McChesney, "if that porter could be hypnotized +into making some lemonade--a pitcherful, with a lot of ice in it, and +the cold sweat breaking out all over the glass? + +"Lemonade!" echoed the other, wonder and amusement in her tone. "Are +they still usin' it?" She leaned against the door, swaying with the +motion of the car, and hugging her. plump, bare arms. "Travelin' +alone?" she asked. + +"Oh, yes," replied Emma McChesney, and decided it was time to go in. + +"Lonesome, ain't it, without company? Goin' far?" + +"I'm accustomed to it. I travel on business, not pleasure. I'm on the +road, representing T. A. Buck's Featherloom Petticoats!" + +The once handsome violet eyes of the plump blonde widened with +surprise. Then they narrowed to critical slits. + +"On the road! Sellin' goods! And I thought you was only a kid. It's +the way your hair's fixed, I suppose. Say, that must be a hard life +for a woman--buttin' into a man's game like that." + +"Oh, I suppose any work that takes a woman out into the world--" began +Emma McChesney vaguely, her hand on the door-knob. + +"Sure," agreed the other. "I ought to know. The hotels and time-tables +alone are enough to kill. Who do you suppose makes up train schedules? +They don't seem to think no respectable train ought to leave anywhere +before eleven-fifty A.M., or arrive after six A.M. We played Ottumwa, +Iowa, last night, and here we are jumpin' to Illinois." + +In surprise Emma McChesney turned at the door for another look at the +hair, figure, complexion and kimono. + +"Oh, you're an actress! Well, if you think mine is a hard life for a +woman, why--" + +"Me!" said the green-gold blonde, and laughed not prettily. "I ain't a +woman. I'm a queen of burlesque. + +"Burlesque? You mean one of those--" Emma McChesney stopped, her +usually deft tongue floundering. + +"One of those 'men only' troupes? You guessed it. I'm Blanche LeHaye, +of the Sam Levin Crackerjack Belles. We get into North Bend at six to- +morrow morning, and we play there to-morrow night, Sunday." She took a +step forward so that her haggard face and artificially tinted hair +were very near Emma McChesney. "Know what I was thinkin' just one +second before you come out here?" + +"No; what?" + +"I was thinkin' what a cinch it would be to just push aside that +canvas thing there by the steps and try what the newspaper accounts +call 'jumping into the night.' Say, if I'd had on my other lawnjerie +I'll bet I'd have done it." + +Into Emma McChesney's understanding heart there swept a wave of pity. +But she answered lightly: "Is that supposed to be funny?" + +The plump blonde yawned. "It depends on your funny bone. Mine's got +blunted. I'm the lady that the Irish comedy guy slaps in the face with +a bunch of lettuce. Say, there's something about you that makes a +person get gabby and tell things. You'd make a swell clairvoyant." + +Beneath the comedy of the bleached hair, and the flaccid face, and the +bizarre wrapper; behind the coarseness and vulgarity and ignorance, +Emma McChesney's keen mental eye saw something decent and clean and +beautiful. And something pitiable, and something tragic. + +"I guess you'd better come in and get some sleep," said Emma +McChesney; and somehow found her hand resting on the woman's shoulder. +So they stood, on the swaying, jolting platform. Blanche LeHaye, of +the Sam Levin Crackerjack Belles, looked down, askance, at the hand on +her shoulder, as at some strange and interesting object. + +"Ten years ago," she said, "that would have started me telling the +story of my life, with all the tremolo stops on, and the orchestra in +tears. Now it only makes me mad." + +Emma McChesney's hand seemed to snatch itself away from the woman's +shoulder. + +"You can't treat me with your life's history. I'm going in." + +"Wait a minute. Don't go away sore, kid. On the square, I guess I +liked the feel of your hand on my arm, like that. Say, I've done the +same thing myself to a strange dog that looked up at me, pitiful. You +know, the way you reach down, and pat 'm on the head, and say, 'Nice +doggie, nice doggie, old fellow,' even if it is a street cur, with a +chawed ear, and no tail. They growl and show their teeth, but they +like it. A woman--Lordy! there comes the brakeman. Let's beat it. +Ain't we the nervy old hens!" + +The female of the species as she is found in sleeping-car dressing- +rooms had taught Emma McChesney to rise betimes that she might avoid +contact with certain frowsy, shapeless beings armed with bottles of +milky liquids, and boxes of rosy pastes, and pencils that made arched +and inky lines; beings redolent of bitter almond, and violet toilette +water; beings in doubtful corsets and green silk petticoats perfect as +to accordion-plaited flounce, but showing slits and tatters farther +up; beings jealously guarding their ten inches of mirror space and +consenting to move for no one; ladies who had come all the way from +Texas and who insisted on telling about it, despite a mouthful of +hairpins; doubtful sisters who called one dearie and required to be +hooked up; distracted mothers with three small children who wiped +their hands on your shirt-waist. + +[Illustration: "'You can't treat me with your life's history. I'm +going in'"] + +So it was that Emma McChesney, hatted and veiled by 5:45, saw the +curtains of the berth opposite rent asunder to disclose the rumpled, +shapeless figure of Miss Blanche LeHaye. The queen of burlesque bore +in her arms a conglomerate mass of shoes, corset, purple skirt, bag +and green-plumed hat. She paused to stare at Emma McChesney's trim, +cool preparedness. + +"You must have started to dress as soon's you come in last night. I +never slep' a wink till just about half a hour ago. I bet I ain't got +more than eleven minutes to dress in. Ain't this a scorcher!" + +When the train stopped at North Bend, Emma McChesney, on her way out, +collided with a vision in a pongee duster, rose-colored chiffon veil, +chamois gloves, and plumed hat. Miss Blanche LeHaye had made the most +of her eleven minutes. Her baggage attended to, Emma McChesney climbed +into a hotel 'bus. It bore no other passengers. From her corner in the +vehicle she could see the queen of burlesque standing in the center of +the depot platform, surrounded by her company. It was a tawdry, +miserable, almost tragic group, the men undersized, be-diamonded, +their skulls oddly shaped, their clothes a satire on the fashions for +men, their chins unshaven, their loose lips curved contentedly over +cigarettes; the women dreadfully unreal with the pitiless light of the +early morning sun glaring down on their bedizened faces, their +spotted, garish clothes, their run-down heels, their vivid veils, +their matted hair. They were quarreling among themselves, and a flame +of hate for the moment lighted up those dull, stupid, vicious faces. +Blanche LeHaye appeared to be the center about which the strife waged, +for suddenly she flung through the shrill group and walked swiftly +over to the 'bus and climbed into it heavily. One of the women turned, +her face lived beneath the paint, to scream a great oath after her. +The 'bus driver climbed into his seat and took up the reins. After a +moment's indecision the little group on the platform turned and +trailed off down the street, the women sagging under the weight of +their bags, the men, for the most part, hurrying on ahead. When the +'bus lurched past them the woman who had screamed the oath after +Blanche LeHaye laughed shrilly and made a face, like a naughty child, +whereupon the others laughed in falsetto chorus. + +A touch of real color showed in Blanche LeHaye's flabby cheek. "I'll +show'm she snarled. That hussy of a Zella Dacre thinkin' she can get +my part away from me the last week or so, the lyin' sneak. I'll show'm +a leadin' lady's a leadin' lady. Let 'em go to their hash hotels. I'm +goin' to the real inn in this town just to let 'em know that I got my +dignity to keep up, and that I don't have to mix in with scum like +that. You see that there? She pointed at something in the street. Emma +McChesney turned to look. The cheap lithographs of the Sam Levin +Crackerjack Belles Company glared at one from the bill-boards. + +"That's our paper," explained Blanche LeHaye. "That's me, in the +center of the bunch, with the pink reins in my hands, drivin' that +four-in-hand of johnnies. Hot stuff! Just let Dacre try to get it away +from me, that's all. I'll show'm." + +She sank back into her corner. Her anger left her with the suddenness +characteristic of her type. + +"Ain't this heat fierce?" she fretted, and closed her eyes. + +Now, Emma McChesney was a broad-minded woman. The scars that she had +received in her ten years' battle with business reminded her to be +tender at sight of the wounds of others. But now, as she studied the +woman huddled there in the corner, she was conscious of a shuddering +disgust of her--of the soiled blouse, of the cheap finery, of the +sunken places around the jaw-bone, of the swollen places beneath the +eyes, of the thin, carmined lips, of the-- + +Blanche LeHaye opened her eyes suddenly and caught the look on Emma +McChesney's face. Caught it, and comprehended it. Her eyes narrowed, +and she laughed shortly. + +"Oh, I dunno," drawled Blanche LeHaye. "I wouldn't go's far's that, +kid. Say, when I was your age I didn't plan to be no bum burlesquer +neither. I was going to be an actress, with a farm on Long Island, +like the rest of 'em. Every real actress has got a farm on Long +Island, if it's only there in the mind of the press agent. It's a kind +of a religion with 'em. I was goin' to build a house on mine that was +goin' to be a cross between a California bungalow and the +Horticultural Building at the World's Fair. Say, I ain't the worst, +kid. There's others outside of my smear, understand, that I wouldn't +change places with." + +A dozen apologies surged to Emma McChesney's lips just as the driver +drew up at the curbing outside the hotel and jumped down to open the +door. She found herself hoping that the hotel clerk would not class +her with her companion. + +At eleven o'clock that morning Emma McChesney unlocked her door and +walked down the red-carpeted hotel corridor. She had had two hours of +restful sleep. She had bathed, and breakfasted, and donned clean +clothes. She had brushed the cinders out of her hair, and manicured. +She felt as alert, and cool and refreshed as she looked, which speaks +well for her comfort. + +Halfway down the hail a bedroom door stood open. Emma McChesney +glanced in. What she saw made her stop. The next moment she would have +hurried on, but the figure within called out to her. + +Miss Blanche LeHaye had got into her kimono again. She was slumped in +a dejected heap in a chair before the window. There was a tray, with a +bottle and some glasses on the table by her side. + +"Gawd, ain't it hot!" she whined miserably. "Come on in a minute. I +left the door open to catch the breeze, but there ain't any. You look +like a peach just off the ice. Got a gent friend in town?" + +"No," answered Emma McChesney hurriedly, and turned to go. + +"Wait a minute," said Blanche LeHaye, sharply, and rose. She slouched +over to where Emma McChesney stood and looked up at her sullenly. + +"Why!" gasped Emma McChesney, and involuntarily put out her hand, +"why--my dear--you've been crying! Is there--" + +"No, there ain't. I can bawl, can't I, if I _am_ a bum burlesquer?" +She put down the squat little glass she had in her hand and stared +resentfully at Emma McChesney's cool, fragrant freshness. + +"Say," she demanded suddenly, "whatja mean by lookin' at me the way +you did this morning, h'm? Whatja mean? You got a nerve turnin' up +your nose at me, you have. I'll just bet you ain't no better than you +might be, neither. What the--" + +Swiftly Emma McChesney crossed the room and closed the door. Then she +came back to where Blanche LeHaye stood. + +"Now listen to me," she said. "You shed that purple kimono of yours +and hustle into some clothes and come along with me. I mean it. +Whenever I'm anywhere near this town I make a jump and Sunday here. +I've a friend here named Morrissey--Ethel Morrissey--and she's the +biggest-hearted, most understanding friend that a woman ever had. +She's skirt and suit buyer at Barker & Fisk's here. I have a standing +invitation to spend Sunday at her house. She knows I'm coming. I help +get dinner if I feel like it, and wash my hair if I want to, and sit +out in the back yard, and fool with the dog, and act like a human +being for one day. After you've been on the road for ten years a real +Sunday dinner in a real home has got Sherry's flossiest efforts +looking like a picnic collation with ants in the pie. You're coming +with me, more for my sake than for yours, because the thought of you +sitting here, like this, would sour the day for me." + +Blanche LeHaye's fingers were picking at the pin which fastened her +gown. She smiled, uncertainly. + +"What's your game?" she inquired. + +"I'll wait for you downstairs," said Emma McChesney, pleasantly. "Do +you ever have any luck with caramel icing? Ethel's and mine always +curdles." + +"Do I?" yelled the queen of burlesque. "I invented it." And she was +down on her knees, her fingers fumbling with the lock of her suitcase. + +Only an Ethel Morrissey, inured to the weird workings of humanity by +years of shrewd skirt and suit buying, could have stood the test of +having a Blanche LeHaye thrust upon her, an unexpected guest, and with +the woman across the street sitting on her front porch taking it all +in. + +At the door--"This is Miss Blanche LeHaye of the--er--Simon--" + +"Sam Levin Crackerjack Belles," put in Miss LeHaye. "Pleased to meet +you." + +"Come in," said Miss Ethel Morrissey without batting an eye. "I just +'phoned the hotel. Thought you'd gone back on me, Emma. I'm baking a +caramel cake. Don't slam the door. This your first visit here, Miss +LeHaye? Excuse me for not shaking hands. I'm all flour. Lay your +things in there. Ma's spending the day with Aunt Gus at Forest City +and I'm the whole works around here. It's got skirts and suits beat a +mile. Hot, ain't it? Say, suppose you girls slip off your waists and +I'll give you each an all-over apron that's loose and let's the breeze +slide around." + +Blanche LeHaye, the garrulous, was strangely silent. When she stepped +about it was in the manner of one who is fearful of wakening a +sleeper. When she caught the eyes of either of the other women her own +glance dropped. + +When Ethel Morrissey came in with the blue-and-white gingham aprons +Blanche LeHaye hesitated a long minute before picking hers up. Then +she held it by both sleeves and looked at it long, and curiously. When +she looked up again she found the eyes of the other two upon her. She +slipped the apron over her head with a nervous little laugh. + +"I've been a pair of pink tights so long," she said, "that I guess +I've almost forgotten how to be a woman. But once I get this on I'll +bet I can come back." + +She proved it from the moment that she measured out the first cupful +of brown sugar for the caramel icing. She shed her rings, and pinned +her hair back from her forehead, and tucked up her sleeves, and as +Emma McChesney watched her a resolve grew in her mind. + +The cake disposed of--"Give me some potatoes to peel, will you?" said +Blanche LeHaye, suddenly. "Give 'em to me in a brown crock, with a +chip out of the side. There's certain things always goes hand-in-hand +in your mind. You can't think of one without the other. Now, Lillian +Russell and cold cream is one; and new potatoes and brown crocks is +another." + +[Illustration: "'Now, Lillian Russell and cold cream is one; and new +potatoes and brown crocks is another'"] + +She peeled potatoes, sitting hunched up on the kitchen chair with her +high heels caught back of the top rung. She chopped spinach until her +face was scarlet, and her hair hung in limp strands at the back of her +neck. She skinned tomatoes. She scoured pans. She wiped up the white +oilcloth table-top with a capable and soapy hand. The heat and bustle +of the little kitchen seemed to work some miraculous change in her. +Her eyes brightened. Her lips smiled. Once, Emma McChesney and Ethel +Morrissey exchanged covert looks when they heard her crooning one of +those tuneless chants that women hum when they wring out dishcloths in +soapy water. + +After dinner, in the cool of the sitting-room, with the shades drawn, +and their skirts tucked halfway to their knees, things looked +propitious for that first stroke in the plan which had worked itself +out in Emma McChesney's alert mind. She caught Blanche LeHaye's eye, +and smiled. + +"This beats burlesquing, doesn't it?" she said. She leaned forward a +bit in her chair. "Tell me, Miss LeHaye, haven't you ever thought of +quitting that--the stage--and turning to something--something--" + +"Something decent?" Blanche LeHaye finished for her. "I used to. I've +got over that. Now all I ask is to get a laugh when I kick the +comedian's hat off with my toe." + +"But there must have been a time--" insinuated Emma McChesney, gently. + +Blanche LeHaye grinned broadly at the two women who were watching her +so intently. + +"I think I ought to tell you," she began, "that I never was a +minister's daughter, and I don't remember ever havin' been deserted by +my sweetheart when I was young and trusting. If I was to draw a +picture of my life it would look like one of those charts that the +weather bureau gets out--one of those high and low barometer things, +all uphill and downhill like a chain of mountains in a kid's +geography." + +She shut her eyes and lay back in the depths of the leather-cushioned +chair. The three sat in silence for a moment. + +"Look here," said Emma McChesney, suddenly, rising and coming over to +the woman in the big chair, "that's not the life for a woman like you. +I can get you a place in our office--not much, perhaps, but something +decent--something to start with. If you--" + +"For that matter," put in Ethel Morrissey, quickly, "I could get you +something right here in our store. I've been there long enough to have +some say-so, and if I recommend you they'd start you in the basement +at first, and then, if you made good, they advance you right along." + +Blanche LeHaye stood up and, twisting her arm around at the back, +began to unbutton her gingham apron. + +"I guess you think I'm a bad one, don't you? Well, maybe I am. But I'm +not the worst. I've got a brother. He lives out West, and he's rich, +and married, and respectable. You know the way a man can climb out of +the mud, while a woman just can't wade out of it? Well, that's the way +it was with us. His wife's a regular society bug. She wouldn't admit +that there was any such truck as me, unless, maybe, the Municipal +Protective League, or something, of her town, got to waging a war +against burlesque shows. I hadn't seen Len--that's my brother---in +years and years. Then one night in Omaha, I glimmed him sitting down +in the B. H. row. His face just seemed to rise up at me out of the +audience. He recognized me, too. Say, men are all alike. What they see +in a dingy, half-fed, ignorant bunch like us, I don't know. But the +minute a man goes to Cleveland, or Pittsburgh, or somewhere on +business he'll hunt up a burlesque show, and what's more, he'll enjoy +it. Funny. Well, Len waited for me after the show, and we had a talk. +He told me his troubles, and I told him some of mine, and when we got +through I wouldn't have swapped with him. His wife's a wonder. She's +climbed to the top of the ladder in her town. And she's pretty, and +young-looking, and a regular swell. Len says their home is one of the +kind where the rubberneck auto stops while the spieler tells the crowd +who lives there, and how he made his money. But they haven't any kids, +Len told me. He's crazy about 'em. But his wife don't want any. I wish +you could have seen Len's face when he was talking about it." + +She dropped the gingham apron in a circle at her feet, and stepped out +of it. She walked over to where her own clothes lay in a gaudy heap. + +"Exit the gingham. But it's been great." She paused before slipping +her skirt over her head. The silence of the other two women seemed to +anger her a little. + +[Illustration: '"Why, girls, I couldn't hold down a job in a candy +factory'"] + +"I guess you think I'm a bad one, clear through, don't you? Well, I +ain't. I don't hurt anybody but myself. Len's wife--that's what I call +bad." + +"But I _don't_ think you're bad clear through," tried Emma McChesney. +"I don't. That's why I made that proposition to you. That's why I want +you to get away from all this, and start over again." + +"Me?" laughed Blanche LeHaye. "Me! In a office! With ledgers, and sale +bills, and accounts, and all that stuff! Why, girls, I couldn't hold +down a job in a candy factory. I ain't got any intelligence. I never +had. You don't find women with brains in a burlesque troupe. If they +had 'em they wouldn't be there. Why, we're the dumbest, most ignorant +bunch there is. Most of us are just hired girls, dressed up. That's +why you find the Woman's Uplift Union having such a blamed hard time +savin' souls. The souls they try to save know just enough to be wise +to the fact that they couldn't hold down a five-per-week job. Don't +you feel sorry for me. I'm doing the only thing I'm good for." + +Emma McChesney put out her hand. "I'm sorry," she said. "I only meant +it for--" + +"Why, of course," agreed Blanche LeHaye, heartily. "And you, too." She +turned so that her broad, good-natured smile included Ethel Morrissey. +"I've had a whale of a time. My fingers are all stained up with new +potatoes, and my nails is full of strawberry juice, and I hope it +won't come off for a week. And I want to thank you both. I'd like to +stay, but I'm going to hump over to the theater. That Dacre's got the +nerve to swipe the star's dressing-room if I don't get my trunks in +first." + +They walked with her to the front porch, making talk as they went. +Resentment and discomfiture and a sort of admiration all played across +the faces of the two women, whose kindness had met with rebuff. At the +foot of the steps Blanche LeHaye, prima donna of the Sam Levin +Crackerjack Belles turned. + +"Oh, say," she called. "I almost forgot. I want to tell you that if +you wait until your caramel is off the stove, and then add your +butter, when the stuff's hot, but not boilin', it won't lump so. H'm? +Don't mention it." + + + + +VI + +SIMPLY SKIRTS + + +They may differ on the subjects of cigars, samples, hotels, ball teams +and pinochle hands, but two things there are upon which they stand +united. Every member of that fraternity which is condemned to a hotel +bedroom, or a sleeper berth by night, and chained to a sample case by +day agrees in this, first: That it isn't what it used to be. Second: +If only they could find an opening for a nice, paying gents' +furnishing business in a live little town that wasn't swamped with +that kind of thing already they'd buy it and settle down like a white +man, by George! and quit this peddling. The missus hates it anyhow; +and the kids know the iceman better than they do their own dad. + +On the morning that Mrs. Emma McChesney (representing T. A. Buck, +Featherloom Petticoats) finished her talk with Miss Hattie Stitch, +head of Kiser & Bloch's skirt and suit department, she found herself +in a rare mood. She hated her job; she loathed her yellow sample +cases; she longed to call Miss Stitch a green-eyed cat; and she wished +that she had chosen some easy and pleasant way of earning a living, +like doing plain and fancy washing and ironing. Emma McChesney had +been selling Featherloom Petticoats on the road for almost ten years, +and she was famed throughout her territory for her sane sunniness, and +her love of her work. Which speaks badly for Miss Hattie Stitch. + +Miss Hattie Stitch hated Emma McChesney with all the hate that a flat- +chested, thin-haired woman has for one who can wear a large thirty-six +without one inch of alteration, and a hat that turns sharply away from +the face. For forty-six weeks in the year Miss Stitch existed in Kiser +& Bloch's store at River Falls. For six weeks, two in spring, two in +fall, and two in mid-winter, Hattie lived in New York, with a capital +L. She went there to select the season's newest models (slightly +modified for River Falls), but incidentally she took a regular +trousseau with her. + +All day long Hattie picked skirt and suit models with unerring good +taste and business judgment. At night she was a creature transformed. +Every house of which Hattie bought did its duty like a soldier and a +gentleman. Nightly Hattie powdered her neck and arms, performed sacred +rites over her hair and nails, donned a gown so complicated that a +hotel maid had to hook her up the back, and was ready for her +evening's escort at eight. There wasn't a hat in a grill room from one +end of the Crooked Cow-path to the other that was more wildly barbaric +than Hattie's, even in these sane and simple days when the bird of +paradise has become the national bird. The buyer of suits for a +thriving department store in a hustling little Middle-Western town +isn't to be neglected. Whenever a show came to River Falls Hattie +would look bored, pass a weary hand over her glossy coiffure and say: +"Oh, yes. Clever little show. Saw it two winters ago in New York. This +won't be the original company, of course." The year that Hattie came +back wearing a set of skunk everyone thought it was lynx until Hattie +drew attention to what she called the "brown tone" in it. After that +Old Lady Heinz got her old skunk furs out of the moth balls and +tobacco and newspapers that had preserved them, and her daughter cut +them up into bands for the bottom of her skirt, and the cuffs of her +coat. When Kiser & Bloch had their fall and spring openings the town +came ostensibly to see the new styles, but really to gaze at Hattie in +a new confection, undulating up and down the department, talking with +a heavy Eastern accent about this or that being "smart" or "good this +year," or having "a world of style," and sort of trailing her toes +after her to give a clinging, Grecian line, like pictures of Ethel +Barrymore when she was thin. The year that Hattie confided to some one +that she was wearing only scant bloomers beneath her slinky silk the +floor was mobbed, and they had to call in reserves from the basement +ladies-and-misses-ready-to-wear. + +Miss Stitch came to New York in March. On the evening of her arrival +she dined with Fat Ed Meyers, of the Strauss Sans-silk Skirt Company. +He informed her that she looked like a kid, and that that was some +classy little gown, and it wasn't every woman who could wear that kind +of thing and get away with it. It took a certain style. Hattie smiled, +and hummed off-key to the tune the orchestra was playing, and Ed told +her it was a shame she didn't do something with that voice. + +"I have something to tell you," said Hattie. "Just before I left I had +a talk with old Kiser. Or rather, he had a talk with me. You know I +have pretty much my own way in my department. Pity if I couldn't have. +I made it. Well, Kiser wanted to know why I didn't buy Featherlooms. I +said we had no call for 'em, and he came back with figures to prove +we're losing a good many hundreds a year by not carrying them. He said +the Strauss Sans-silk skirt isn't what it used to be. And he's right." + +"Oh, say--" objected Ed Meyers. + +"It's true," insisted Hattie. "But I couldn't tell him that I didn't +buy Featherlooms because McChesney made me tired. Besides, she never +entertains me when I'm in New York. Not that I'd go to the theater in +the evening with a woman, because I wouldn't, but--Say, listen. Why +don't you make a play for her job? As long as I've got to put in a +heavy line of Featherlooms you may as well get the benefit of it. You +could double your commissions. I'll bet that woman makes her I-don't +know-how-many thousands a year." + +Ed Meyers' naturally ruddy complexion took on a richer tone, and he +dropped his fork hastily. As he gazed at Miss Stitch his glance was +not more than half flattering. "How you women do love each other, +don't you! You don't. I don't mind telling you my firm's cutting down +its road force, and none of us knows who's going to be beheaded next. +But--well--a guy wouldn't want to take a job away from a woman-- +especially a square little trick like McChesney. Of course she's +played me a couple of low-down deals and I promised to get back at +her, but that's business. But--" + +"So's this," interrupted Miss Hattie Stitch. "And I don't know that +she is so square. Let me tell you that I heard she's no better than +she might be. I have it on good authority that three weeks ago, at the +River House, in our town--" + +Their heads came close together over the little, rose-shaded +restaurant table. + +At eleven o'clock next morning Fat Ed Meyers walked into the office of +the T. A. Buck Featherloom Petticoat Company and asked to see old T. +A. + +"He's in Europe," a stenographer informed him, "spaing, and +sprudeling, and badening. Want to see T. A. Junior?" + +"T. A. Junior!" almost shouted Ed Meyers. "You don't mean to tell me +_that_ fellow's taken hold--" + +"Believe _me_. That's why Featherlooms are soaring and Sans-silks are +sinking. Nobody would have believed it. T. A. Junior's got a live wire +looking like a stick of licorice. When they thought old T. A. was +going to die, young T. A. seemed to straighten out all of a sudden and +take hold. It's about time. He must be almost forty, but he don't show +it. I don't know, he ain't so good-looking, but he's got swell eyes." + +Ed Meyers turned the knob of the door marked "Private," and entered, +smiling. Ed Meyers had a smile so cherubic that involuntarily you +armed yourself against it. + +"Hel-lo Buck!" he called jovially. "I hear that at last you're taking +an interest in skirts--other than on the hoof." And he offered young +T. A. a large, dark cigar with a fussy-looking band encircling its +middle. Young T. A. looked at it disinterestedly, and spake, saying: + +"What are you after?" + +"Why, I just dropped in--" began Ed Meyers lamely. + +"The dropping," observed T. A. Junior, "is bad around here this +morning. I have one little formula for all visitors to-day, regardless +of whether they're book agents or skirt salesmen. That is, what can I +do for you?" + +Ed Meyers tucked his cigar neatly into the extreme right corner of his +mouth, pushed his brown derby far back on his head, rested his +strangely lean hands on his plump knees, and fixed T. A. Junior with a +shrewd blue eye. "That suits me fine," he agreed. "I never was one to +beat around the bush. Look here. I know skirts from the draw-string to +the ruffle. It's a woman's garment, but a man's line. There's fifty +reasons why a woman can't handle it like a man. For one thing the +packing cases weigh twenty-five pounds each, and she's as dependent on +a packer and a porter as a baby is on its mother. Another is that if a +man has to get up to make a train at 4 A.M. he don't require twenty- +five minutes to fasten down three sets of garters, and braid his hair, +and hook his waist up the back, and miss his train. And he don't have +neuralgic headaches. Then, the head of a skirt department in a store +is a woman, ten times out of ten. And lemme tell you," he leaned +forward earnestly, "a woman don't like to buy of a woman. Don't ask me +why. I'm too modest. But it's the truth." + +"Well?" said young T. A., with the rising inflection. + +"Well," finished Ed Meyers, "I like your stuff. I think it's great. +It's a seller, with the right man to push it. I'd like to handle it. +And I'll guarantee I could double the returns from your Middle-Western +territory." T. A. Junior had strangely translucent eyes. Their +luminous quality had an odd effect upon any one on whom he happened to +turn them. He had been scrawling meaningless curlycues on a piece of +paper as Ed Meyers talked. Now he put down the pencil, turned, and +looked Ed Meyers fairly in the eye. + +"You mean you want Mrs. McChesney's territory?" he asked quietly. + +"Well, yes, I do," confessed Ed Meyers, without a blush. + +Young T. A. swung back to his desk, tore from the pad before him the +piece of paper on which he had been scrawling, crushed it, and tossed +it into the wastebasket with an air of finality. + +"Take the second elevator down," he said. "The nearest one's out of +order." + +For a moment Ed Meyers stared, his fat face purpling. "Oh, very well," +he said, rising. "I just made you a business proposition, that's all. +I thought I was talking to a business man. Now, old T. A.--" + +"That'll be about all," observed T. A. Junior, from his desk. + +Ed Meyers started toward the door. Then he paused, turned, and came +back to his chair. His heavy jaw jutted out threateningly. + +"No, it ain't all, either. I didn't want to mention it, and if you'd +treated me like a gentleman, I wouldn't have. But I want to say to you +that McChesney's giving this firm a black eye. Morals don't figure +with a man on the road, but when a woman breaks into this game, she's +got to be on the level." + +T. A. Junior rose. The blonde stenographer who had made the admiring +remark anent his eyes would have appreciated those features now. They +glowed luminously into Ed Meyers' pale blue ones until that gentleman +dropped his eyelids in confusion. He seemed at a disadvantage in every +way, as T. A. Junior's lean, graceful height towered over the fat +man's bulk. "I don't know Mrs. McChesney," said T. A. Junior. "I +haven't even seen her in six years. My interest in the business is +very recent. I do know that my father swears she's the best salesman +he has on the road. Before you go any further I want to tell you that +you'll have to prove what you just implied, so definitely, and +conclusively, and convincingly that when you finish you'll have an +ordinary engineering blue-print looking like a Turner landscape. +Begin." + +Ed Meyers, still standing, clutched his derby tightly and began. + +"She's a looker, Emma is. And smooth! As the top of your desk. But +she's getting careless. Now a decent, hard-working, straight girl like +Miss Hattie Stitch, of Kiser & Bloch's, River Falls, won't buy of her. +You'll find you don't sell that firm. And they buy big, too. Why, last +summer I had it from the clerk of the hotel in that town that she ran +around all day with a woman named LeHaye--Blanche LeHaye, of an +aggregation of bum burlesquers called the Sam Levin Crackerjack +Belles. And say, for a whole month there, she had a tough young kid +traveling with her that she called her son. Oh, she's queering your +line, all right. The days are past when it used to be a signal for a +loud, merry laugh if you mentioned you were selling goods on the road. +It's a fine art, and a science these days, and the name of T. A. Buck +has always stood for--" + +Downstairs a trim, well-dressed, attractive woman stepped into the +elevator and smiled radiantly upon the elevator man, who had smiled +first. + +"Hello, Jake," she said. "What's old in New York? I haven't been here +in three months. It's good to be back." + +"Seems grand t' see you, Mis' McChesney," returned Jake." Well, +nothin' much stirrin'. Whatcha think of the Grand Central? I +understand they're going to have a contrivance so you can stand on a +mat in the waiting-room and wish yourself down to the track an' train +that you're leavin' on. The G'ints have picked a bunch of shines this +season. T. A. Junior's got a new sixty-power auto. Genevieve--that +yella-headed steno--was married last month to Henry, the shipping +clerk. My wife presented me with twin girls Monday. Well, thank _you_, +Mrs. McChesney. I guess that'll help some." + +Emma McChesney swung down the hall and into the big, bright office. +She paused at the head bookkeeper's desk. The head bookkeeper was a +woman. Old Man Buck had learned something about the faithfulness of +women employees. The head bookkeeper looked up and said some +convincing things. + +"Thanks," said Emma, in return. "It's mighty good to be here. Is it +true that skirts are going to be full in the back? How's business? T. +A. in?" + +"Young T. A. is. But I think he's busy just now. You know T. A. Senior +isn't back yet. He had a tight squeeze, I guess. Everybody's talking +about the way young T. A. took hold. You know he spent years running +around Europe, and he made a specialty of first nights, and first +editions, and French cars when he did show up here. But now! He's +changed the advertising, and designing, and cutting departments around +here until there's as much difference between this place now and the +place it was three months ago as there is between a hoop-skirt and a +hobble. He designed one skirt--Here, Miss Kelly! Just go in and get +one of those embroidery flounce models for Mrs. McChesney. How's that? +Honestly, I'd wear it myself." + +Emma McChesney held the garment in her two hands and looked it over +critically. Her eyes narrowed thoughtfully. She looked up to reply +when the door of T. A. Buck's private office opened, and Ed Meyers +walked briskly out. Emma McChesney put down the skirt and crossed the +office so that she and he met just in front of the little gate that +formed an entrance along the railing. + +Ed Meyers' mouth twisted itself into a smile. He put out a welcoming +hand. + +"Why, hello, stranger! When did you drive in? How's every little +thing? I'm darned if you don't grow prettier and younger every day of +your sweet life." + +"Quit Sans-silks?" inquired Mrs. McChesney briefly. + +[Illustration: "'Honestly. I'd wear it myself!'"] + +"Why--no. But I was just telling young T. A. in there that if I could +only find a nice, paying little gents' furnishing business in a live +little town that wasn't swamped with that kind of thing already I'd +buy it, by George! I'm tired of this peddling." + +"Sing that," said Emma McChesney. "It might sound better," and marched +into the office marked "Private." + +T. A. Junior's good-looking back and semi-bald head were toward her as +she entered. She noted, approvingly, woman-fashion, that his neck +would never lap over the edge of his collar in the back. Then Young T. +A. turned about. He gazed at Emma McChesney, his eyebrows raised +inquiringly. Emma McChesney's honest blue eyes, with no translucent +nonsense about them, gazed straight back at T. A. Junior. + +"I'm Mrs. McChesney. I got in half an hour ago. It's been a good +little trip, considering business, and politics, and all that. I'm +sorry to hear your father's still ill. He and I always talked over +things after my long trip." + +Young T. A.'s expert eye did not miss a single point, from the tip of +Mrs. McChesney's smart spring hat to the toes of her well-shod feet, +with full stops for the fit of her tailored suit, the freshness of her +gloves, the clearness of her healthy pink skin, the wave of her soft, +bright hair. + +"How do you do, Mrs. McChesney," said Young T. A. emphatically. +"Please sit down. It's a good idea--this talking over your trip. There +are several little things--now Kiser & Bloch, of River Falls, for +instance. We ought to be selling them. The head of their skirt and +suit department is named Stitch, isn't she? Now, what would you say of +Miss Stitch?" + +"Say?" repeated Emma McChesney quickly. "As a woman, or a buyer?" + +T. A. Junior thought a minute. "As a woman." + +Mrs. McChesney thoughtfully regarded the tips of her neatly gloved +hands. Then she looked up. "The kindest and gentlest thing I can say +about her is that if she'd let her hair grow out gray maybe her face +wouldn't look so hard." + +T. A. Junior flung himself back in his chair and threw back his head +and laughed at the ceiling. + +Then, "How old is your son?" with disconcerting suddenness. + +"Jock's scandalously near eighteen." In her quick mind Emma McChesney +was piecing odds and ends together, and shaping the whole to fit Fat +Ed Meyers. A little righteous anger was rising within her. + +T. A. Junior searched her face with his glowing eyes. + +"Does my father know that you have a young man son? Queer you never +mentioned it. + +"Queer? Maybe. Also, I don't remember ever having mentioned what +church my folks belonged to, or where I was born, or whether I like my +steak rare or medium, or what my maiden name was, or the size of my +shoes, or whether I take my coffee with or without. That's because I +don't believe in dragging private and family affairs into the business +relation. I think I ought to tell you that on the way in I met Ed +Meyers, of the Strauss Sans-silk Skirt Company, coming out. So +anything you say won't surprise me." + +"You wouldn't be surprised," asked T. A. Junior smoothly, "if I were +to say that I'm considering giving a man your territory?" Emma +McChesney's eyes--those eyes that had seen so much of the world and +its ways, and that still could return your gaze so clearly and +honestly--widened until they looked so much like those of a hurt +child, or a dumb animal that has received a death wound, that young T. +A. dropped his gaze in confusion. + +Emma McChesney stood up. Her breath came a little quickly. But when +she spoke, her voice was low and almost steady. + +"If you expect me to beg you for my job, you're mistaken. T. A. Buck's +Featherloom Petticoats have been my existence for almost ten years. +I've sold Featherlooms six days in the week, and seven when I had a +Sunday customer. They've not only been my business and my means of +earning a livelihood, they've been my religion, my diversion, my life, +my pet pastime. I've lived petticoats, I've talked petticoats, I've +sold petticoats, I've dreamed petticoats--why, I've even worn the +darned things! And that's more than any man will ever do for you." + +[Illustration: "'I've lived petticoats, I've talked petticoats, I've +dreamed petticoats--why, I've even worn the darn things!'"] + +Young T. A. rose. He laughed a little laugh of sheer admiration. +Admiration shone, too, in those eyes of his which so many women found +irresistible. He took a step forward and laid one well-shaped hand on +Emma McChesney's arm. She did not shrink, so he let his hand slip down +the neat blue serge sleeve until it reached her snugly gloved hand. + +"You're all right!" he said. His voice was very low, and there was a +new note in it. "Listen, girlie. I've just bought a new sixty-power +machine. Have dinner with me to-night, will you? And we'll take a run +out in the country somewhere. It's warm, even for March. I'll bring +along a fur coat for you. H'm?" + +Mrs. McChesney stood thoughtfully regarding the hand that covered her +own. The blue of her eyes and the pink of her cheeks were a marvel to +behold. + +"It's a shame," she began slowly, "that you're not twenty-five years +younger, so that your father could give you the licking you deserve +when he comes home. I shouldn't be surprised if he'd do it anyway. The +Lord preserve me from these quiet, deep devils with temperamental +hands and luminous eyes. Give me one of the bull-necked, red-faced, +hoarse-voiced, fresh kind every time. You know what they're going to +say, at least, and you're prepared for them. If I were to tell you how +the hand you're holding is tingling to box your ears you'd marvel that +any human being could have that much repression and live. I've heard +of this kind of thing, but I didn't know it happened often off the +stage and outside of novels. Let's get down to cases. If I let you +make love to me, I keep my job. Is that it?" + +"Why--no--I--to tell the truth I was only--" + +"Don't embarrass yourself. I just want to tell you that before I'd +accept your auto ride I'd open a little fancy art goods and needlework +store in Menominee, Michigan, and get out the newest things in +Hardanger work and Egyptian embroidery. And that's my notion of zero +in occupation. Besides, no plain, everyday workingwoman could enjoy +herself in your car because her conscience wouldn't let her. She'd be +thinking all the time how she was depriving some poor, hard-working +chorus girl of her legitimate pastime, and that would spoil +everything. The elevator man told me that you had a new motor car, but +the news didn't interest me half as much as that of his having new +twin girls. Anything with five thousand dollars can have a sixty-power +machine, but only an elevator man on eight dollars a week can afford +the luxury of twins." + +"My dear Mrs. McChesney--" + +"Don't," said Emma McChesney sharply. "I couldn't stand much more. I +joke, you know, when other women cry. It isn't so wearing." + +She turned abruptly and walked toward the door. T. A. Junior overtook +her in three long strides, and placed himself directly before her. + +"My cue," said Emma McChesney, with a weary brightness, "to say, 'Let +me pass, sir!'" + +"Please don't," pleaded T. A. Junior. "I'll remember this the rest of +my life. I thought I was a statue of modern business methods, but +after to-day I'm going to ask the office boy to help me run this +thing. If I could only think of some special way to apologize to you-- +" + +"Oh, it's all right," said Emma McChesney indifferently. + +"But it isn't! It isn't! You don't understand. That human jellyfish of +a Meyers said some things, and I thought I'd be clever and prove them. +I can't ask your pardon. There aren't words enough in the language. +Why, you're the finest little woman--you're--you'd restore the faith +of a cynic who had chronic indigestion. I wish I--Say, let me relieve +you of a couple of those small towns that you hate to make, and give +you Cleveland and Cincinnati. And let me--Why say, Mrs. McChesney! +Please! Don't! This isn't the time to--" + +"I can't help it," sobbed Emma McChesney, her two hands before her +face. "I'll stop in a minute. There; I'm stopping now. For Heaven's +sake, stop patting me on the head!" + +"Please don't be so decent to me," entreated T. A. Junior, his fine +eyes more luminous than ever." If only you'd try to get back at me I +wouldn't feel so cut up about it." Emma McChesney looked up at him, a +smile shining radiantly through the tears. "Very well. I'll do it. +Just before I came in they showed me that new embroidery flounced +model you just designed. Maybe you don't know it, but women wear only +one limp petticoat nowadays. And buttoned shoes. The eyelets in that +embroidery are just big enough to catch on the top button of a woman's +shoe, and tear, and trip her. I ought to have let you make up a couple +of million of them, and then watch them come back on your hands. I was +going to tell you, anyway, for T. A. Senior's sake. Now I'm doing it +for your own." + +[Illustration: "And found himself addressing the backs of the letters +on the door marked 'Private'"] + +"For--" began T. A. Junior excitedly. And found himself addressing the +backs of the letters on the door marked "Private," as it slammed after +the trim, erect figure in blue. + + + + +VII + +UNDERNEATH THE HIGH-CUT VEST + + +We all carry with us into the one-night-stand country called +Sleepland, a practical working nightmare that we use again and again, +no matter how varied the theme or setting of our dream-drama. Your +surgeon, tossing uneasily on his bed, sees himself cutting to remove +an appendix, only to discover that that unpopular portion of his +patient's anatomy already bobs in alcoholic glee in a bottle on the +top shelf of the laboratory of a more alert professional brother. Your +civil engineer constructs imaginary bridges which slump and fall as +quickly as they are completed. Your stage favorite, in the throes of a +post-lobster nightmare, has a horrid vision of herself "resting" in +January. But when he who sells goods on the road groans and tosses in +the clutches of a dreadful dream, it is, strangely enough, never of +canceled orders, maniacal train schedules, lumpy mattresses, or vilely +cooked food. These everyday things he accepts with a philosopher's +cheerfulness. No--his nightmare is always a vision of himself, sick on +the road, at a country hotel in the middle of a Spring season. + +On the third day that she looked with more than ordinary indifference +upon hotel and dining-car food Mrs. Emma McChesney, representing the +T. A. Buck Featherloom Petticoat Company, wondered if, perhaps, she +did not need a bottle of bitter tonic. On the fifth day she noticed +that there were chills chasing up and down her spine, and back and +forth from legs to shoulder-blades when other people were wiping their +chins and foreheads with bedraggled-looking handkerchiefs, and +demanding to know how long this heat was going to last, anyway. On the +sixth day she lost all interest in T. A. Buck's Featherloom +Petticoats. And then she knew that something was seriously wrong. On +the seventh day, when the blonde and nasal waitress approached her in +the dining-room of the little hotel at Glen Rock, Minnesota, Emma +McChesney's mind somehow failed to grasp the meaning of the all too +obvious string of questions which were put to her--questions ending in +the inevitable "Tea, coffee 'r milk?" At that juncture Emma McChesney +had looked up into the girl's face in a puzzled, uncomprehending way, +had passed one hand dazedly over her hot forehead, and replied, with +great earnestness: + +"Yours of the twelfth at hand and contents noted ... the greatest +little skirt on the market ... he's going to be a son to be proud of, +God bless him ... Want to leave a call for seven sharp--" + +The lank waitress's face took on an added blankness. One of the two +traveling men at the same table started to laugh, but the other put +out his hand quickly, rose, and said, "Shut up, you blamed fool! Can't +you see the lady's sick?" And started in the direction of her chair. + +Even then there came into Emma McChesney's ordinarily well-ordered, +alert mind the uncomfortable thought that she was talking nonsense. +She made a last effort to order her brain into its usual sane +clearness, failed, and saw the coarse white table-cloth rising swiftly +and slantingly to meet her head. + +[Illustration: "'Shut up, you blamed fool! Can't you see the lady's +sick?'"] + +It speaks well for Emma McChesney's balance that when she found +herself in bed, two strange women, and one strange man, and an all- +too-familiar bell-boy in the room, she did not say, "Where am I? What +happened?" Instead she told herself that the amazingly and +unbelievably handsome young man bending over her with a stethoscope +was a doctor; that the plump, bleached blonde in the white shirtwaist +was the hotel housekeeper; that the lank ditto was a waitress; and +that the expression on the face of each was that of apprehension, +tinged with a pleasurable excitement. So she sat up, dislodging the +stethoscope, and ignoring the purpose of the thermometer which had +reposed under her tongue. + +"Look here!" she said, addressing the doctor in a high, queer voice. +"I can't be sick, young man. Haven't time. Not just now. Put it off +until August and I'll be as sick as you like. Why, man, this is the +middle of June, and I'm due in Minneapolis now." + +"Lie down, please," said the handsome young doctor, "and don't dare +remove this thermometer again until I tell you to. This can't be put +off until August. You're sick right now." + +Mrs. McChesney shut her lips over the little glass tube, and watched +the young doctor's impassive face (it takes them no time to learn that +trick) and, woman-wise, jumped to her own conclusion. + +"How sick?" she demanded, the thermometer read. + +"Oh, it won't be so bad," said the very young doctor, with a +professionally cheerful smile. + +Emma McChesney sat up in bed with a jerk. "You mean--sick! Not ill, or +grippy, or run down, but sick! Trained-nurse sick! Hospital sick! +Doctor-twice-a-day sick! Table-by-the-bedside-with-bottles-on-it +sick!" + +"Well--a--" hesitated the doctor, and then took shelter behind a +bristling hedge of Latin phrases. Emma McChesney hurdled it at a leap. + +"Never mind," she said. "I know." She looked at the faces of those +four strangers. Sympathy--real, human sympathy--was uppermost in each. +She smiled a faint and friendly little smile at the group. And at that +the housekeeper began tucking in the covers at the foot of the bed, +and the lank waitress walked to the window and pulled down the shade, +and the bell-boy muttered something about ice-water. The doctor patted +her wrist lightly and reassuringly. + +"You're all awfully good," said Emma McChesney, her eyes glowing with +something other than fever. "I've something to say. It's just this. If +I'm going to be sick I'd prefer to be sick right here, unless it's +something catching. No hospital. Don't ask me why. I don't know. We +people on the road are all alike. Wire T. A. Buck, Junior, of the +Featherloom Petticoat Company, New York. You'll find plenty of clean +nightgowns in the left-hand tray of my trunk, covered with white +tissue paper. Get a nurse that doesn't sniffle, or talk about the +palace she nursed in last, where they treated her like a queen and +waited on her hand and foot. For goodness' sake, put my switch where +nothing will happen to it, and if I die and they run my picture in the +_Dry Goods Review_ under the caption, 'Veteran Traveling Saleswoman +Succumbs at Glen Rock,' I'll haunt the editor." She paused a moment. + +"Everything will be all right," said the housekeeper, soothingly. +"You'll think you're right at home, it'll be so comfortable. Was there +anything else, now?" + +"Yes," said Emma McChesney. "The most important of all. My son, Jock +McChesney, is fishing up in the Canadian woods. A telegram may not +reach him for three weeks. They're shifting about from camp to camp. +Try to get him, but don't scare him too much. You'll find the address +under J. in my address book in my handbag. Poor kid. Perhaps it's just +as well he doesn't know." + +Perhaps it was. At any rate it was true that had the tribe of +McChesney been as the leaves of the trees, and had it held a family +reunion in Emma McChesney's little hotel bedroom, it would have +mattered not at all to her. For she _was_ sick--doctor-three-times-a- +day-trained-nurse-bottles-by-the-bedside sick, her head, with its +bright hair rumpled and dry with the fever, tossing from side to side +on the lumpy hotel pillow, or lying terribly silent and inert against +the gray-white of the bed linen. She never quite knew how narrowly she +escaped that picture in the _Dry Goods Review_. + +Then one day the fever began to recede, slowly, whence fevers come, +and the indefinable air of suspense and repression that lingers about +a sick-room at such a crisis began to lift imperceptibly. There came a +time when Emma McChesney asked in a weak but sane voice: + +"Did Jock come? Did they cut off my hair?" + +"Not yet, dear," the nurse had answered to the first, "but we'll hear +in a day or so, I'm sure." And, "Your lovely hair! Well, not if I know +it!" to the second. + +The spirit of small-town kindliness took Emma McChesney in its arms. +The dingy little hotel room glowed with flowers. The story of the sick +woman fighting there alone in the terrors of delirium had gone up and +down about the town. Housewives with a fine contempt for hotel soups +sent broths of chicken and beef. The local members of the U. C. T. +sent roses enough to tax every vase and wash-pitcher that the hotel +could muster, and asked their wives to call at the hotel and see what +they could do. The wives came, obediently, but with suspicion and +distrust in their eyes, and remained to pat Emma McChesney's arm, ask +to read aloud to her, and to indulge generally in that process known +as "cheering her up." Every traveling man who stopped at the little +hotel on his way to Minneapolis added to the heaped-up offerings at +Emma McChesney's shrine. Books and magazines assumed the proportions +of a library. One could see the hand of T. A. Buck, Junior, in the +cases of mineral water, quarts of wine, cunning cordials and tiny +bottles of liqueur that stood in convivial rows on the closet shelf +and floor. There came letters, too, and telegrams with such phrases as +"let nothing be left undone" and "spare no expense" under T. A. Buck, +Junior's, signature. + +So Emma McChesney climbed the long, weary hill of illness and pain, +reached the top, panting and almost spent, rested there, and began the +easy descent on the other side that led to recovery and strength. But +something was lacking. That sunny optimism that had been Emma +McChesney's most valuable asset was absent. The blue eyes had lost +their brave laughter. A despondent droop lingered in the corners of +the mouth that had been such a rare mixture of firmness and +tenderness. Even the advent of Fat Ed Meyers, her keenest competitor, +and representative of the Strauss Sans-silk Company, failed to awaken +in her the proper spirit of antagonism. Fat Ed Meyers sent a bunch of +violets that devastated the violet beds at the local greenhouse. Emma +McChesney regarded them listlessly when the nurse lifted them out of +their tissue wrappings. But the name on the card brought a tiny smile +to her lips. + +"He says he'd like to see you, if you feel able," said Miss Haney, the +nurse, when she came up from dinner. + +Emma McChesney thought a minute. "Better tell him it's catching," she +said. + +"He knows it isn't," returned Miss Haney. "But if you don't want him, +why--" + +"Tell him to come up," interrupted Emma McChesney, suddenly. + +A faint gleam of the old humor lighted up her face when Fat Ed Meyers +painfully tip-toed in, brown derby in hand, his red face properly +doleful, brown shoes squeaking. His figure loomed mountainous in a +light-brown summer suit. + +"Ain't you ashamed of yourself?" he began, heavily humorous. "Couldn't +you find anything better to do in the middle of the season? Say, on +the square, girlie, I'm dead sorry. Hard luck, by gosh! Young T. A. +himself went out with a line in your territory, didn't he? I didn't +think that guy had it in him, darned if I did." + +"It was sweet of you to send all those violets, Mr. Meyers. I hope +you're not disappointed that they couldn't have been worked in the +form of a pillow, with 'At Rest' done in white curlycues." + +"Mrs. McChesney!" Ed Meyers' round face expressed righteous reproof, +pain, and surprise. "You and I may have had a word, now and then, and +I will say that you dealt me a couple of low-down tricks on the road, +but that's all in the game. I never held it up against you. Say, +nobody ever admired you or appreciated you more than I did--" + +"Look out!" said Emma McChesney. "You're speaking in the past tense. +Please don't. It makes me nervous." + +Ed Meyers laughed, uncomfortably, and glanced yearningly toward the +door. He seemed at a loss to account for something he failed to find +in the manner and conversation of Mrs. McChesney. + +"Son here with you, I suppose," he asked, cheerily, sure that he was +on safe ground at last. + +Emma McChesney closed her eyes. The little room became very still. In +a panic Ed Meyers looked helplessly from the white face, with its +hollow cheeks and closed eyelids to the nurse who sat at the window. +That discreet damsel put her finger swiftly to her lips, and shook her +head. Ed Meyers rose, hastily, his face a shade redder than usual. + +"Well, I guess I gotta be running along. I'm tickled to death to find +you looking so fat and sassy. I got an idea you were just stalling for +a rest, that's all. Say, Mrs. McChesney, there's a swell little dame +in the house named Riordon. She's on the road, too. I don't know what +her line is, but she's a friendly kid, with a bunch of talk. A woman +always likes to have another woman fussin' around when she's sick. I +told her about you, and how I'd bet you'd be crazy to get a chance to +talk shop and Featherlooms again. I guess you ain't lost your interest +in Featherlooms, eh, what?" + +Emma McChesney's face indicated not the faintest knowledge of +Featherloom Petticoats. Ed Meyers stared, aghast. And as he stared +there came a little knock at the door--a series of staccato raps, with +feminine knuckles back of them. The nurse went to the door, +disapproval on her face. At the turning of the knob there bounced into +the room a vision in an Alice-blue suit, plumes to match, pearl +earrings, elaborate coiffure of reddish-gold and a complexion that +showed an unbelievable trust in the credulity of mankind. + +"How-do, dearie!" exclaimed the vision. "You poor kid, you! I heard +you was sick, and I says, 'I'm going up to cheer her up if I have to +miss my train out to do it.' Say, I was laid up two years ago in Idaho +Falls, Idaho, and believe me, I'll never forget it. I don't know how +sick I was, but I don't even want to remember how lonesome I was. I +just clung to the chamber-maid like she was my own sister. If your +nurse wants to go out for an airing I'll sit with you. Glad to." + +"That's a grand little idea," agreed Ed Meyers. "I told 'em you'd +brighten things up. Well, I'll be going. You'll be as good as new in a +week, Mrs. McChesney, don't you worry. So long." And he closed the +door after himself with apparent relief. + +Miss Haney, the nurse, was already preparing to go out. It was her +regular hour for exercise. Mrs. McChesney watched her go with a +sinking heart. + +"Now!" said Miss Riordon, comfortably, "we girls can have a real, old- +fashioned talk. A nurse isn't human. The one I had in Idaho Falls was +strictly prophylactic, and antiseptic, and she certainly could give +the swell alcohol rubs, but you can't get chummy with a human +disinfectant. Your line's skirts, isn't it?" + +"Yes." + +"Land, I've heard an awful lot about you. The boys on the road +certainly speak something grand of you. I'm really jealous. Say, I'd +love to show you some of my samples for this season. They're just +great. I'll just run down the hall to my room--" + +She was gone. Emma McChesney shut her eyes, wearily. Her nerves were +twitching. Her thoughts were far, far away from samples and sample +cases. So he had turned out to be his worthless father's son after +all! He must have got some news of her by now. And he ignored it. He +was content to amuse himself up there in the Canadian woods, while his +mother-- + +Miss Riordon, flushed, and panting a little, burst into the room +again, sample-case in hand. + +"Lordy, that's heavy! It's a wonder I haven't killed myself before +now, wrestling with those blamed things." + +Mrs. McChesney sat up on one elbow as Miss Riordon tugged at the +sample-case cover. Then she leaned forward, interested in spite of +herself at sight of the pile of sheer, white, exquisitely embroidered +and lacy garments that lay disclosed as the cover fell back. + +"Oh, lingerie! That's an ideal line for a woman. Let's see the yoke in +that first nightgown. It's a really wonderful design." + +Miss Riordon laughed and shook out the folds of the topmost garment. +"Nightgown!" she said, and laughed again. "Take another look." + +"Why, what--" began Emma McChesney. + +"Shrouds!" announced Miss Riordon complacently. + +"Shrouds!" shrieked Mrs. McChesney, and her elbow gave way. She fell +back on the pillow. + +"Beautiful, ain't they?" Miss Riordon twirled the white garment in her +hand. "They're the very newest thing. You'll notice they're made up +slightly hobble, with a French back, and high waist-line in the front. +Last season kimono sleeves was all the go, but they're not used this +season. This one--" + +"Take them away!" screamed Emma McChesney hysterically. "Take them +away! Take them away!" And buried her face in her trembling white +hands. + +Miss Riordon stared. Then she slammed the cover of the case, rose, and +started toward the door. But before she reached it, and while the sick +woman's sobs were still sounding hysterically the door flew open to +admit a tall, slim, miraculously well-dressed young man. The next +instant Emma McChesney's lace nightgown was crushed against the top of +a correctly high-cut vest, and her tears coursed, unmolested, down the +folds of an exquisitely shaded lavender silk necktie. + +"Jock!" cried Emma McChesney; and then, "Oh, my son, my son, my +beautiful boy!" like a woman in a play. + +Jock was holding her tight, and patting her shoulder, and pressing his +healthy, glowing cheek close to hers that was so gaunt and pale. + +"I got seven wires, all at the same time. They'd been chasing me for +days, up there in the woods. I thought I'd never get here." + +And at that a wonderful thing happened to Emma McChesney. She lifted +her face, and showed dimples where lines had been, smiles where tears +had coursed, a glow where there had been a grayish pallor. She leaned +back a bit to survey this son of hers. + +"Ugh! how black you are!" It was the old Emma McChesney that spoke. +"You young devil, you're actually growing a mustache! There's +something hard in your left-hand vest pocket. If it's your fountain +pen you'd better rescue it, because I'm going to hug you again." + +But Jock McChesney was not smiling. He glanced around the stuffy +little hotel room. It looked stuffier and drearier than ever in +contrast with his radiant youth, his glowing freshness, his outdoor +tan, his immaculate attire. He looked at the astonished Miss Riordon. +At his gaze that lady muttered something, and fled, sample-case +banging at her knees. At the look in his eyes his mother hastened, +woman-wise, to reassure him. + +[Illustration: "At his gaze that lady fled, sample-case banging at her +knees"] + +"It wasn't so bad, Jock. Now that you're here, it's all right. Jock, I +didn't realize just what you meant to me until you didn't come. I +didn't realize--" + +Jock sat down at the edge of the bed, and slid one arm under his +mother's head. There was a grim line about his mouth. + +"And I've been fishing," he said. "I've been sprawling under a tree in +front of a darned fool stream and wondering whether to fry 'em for +lunch now, or to put my hat over my eyes and fall asleep." + +His mother reached up and patted his shoulder. But the line around +Jock's jaw did not soften. He turned his head to gaze down at his +mother. + +"Two of those telegrams, and one letter, were from T. A. Buck, +Junior," he said. "He met me at Detroit. I never thought I'd stand +from a total stranger what I stood from that man." + +"Why, what do you mean?" Alarm, dismay, astonishment were in her eyes. + +"He said things. And he meant 'em. He showed me, in a perfectly well- +bred, cleancut, and most convincing way just what a miserable, +selfish, low-down, worthless young hound I am." + +"He--dared!--" + +"You bet he dared. And then some. And I hadn't an argument to come +back with. I don't know just where he got all his information from, +but it was straight." + +He got up, strode to the window, and came back to the bed. Both hands +thrust deep in his pockets, he announced his life plans, thus: + +"I'm eighteen years old. And I look twenty-three, and act twenty-five +--when I'm with twenty-five-year-olds. I've been as much help and +comfort to you as a pet alligator. You've always said that I was to go +to college, and I've sort of trained myself to believe I was. Well, +I'm not. I want to get into business, with a capital B. And I want to +jump in now. This minute. I've started out to be a first-class slob, +with you keeping me in pocket money, and clothes, and the Lord knows +what all. Why, I--" + +"Jock McChesney," said that young man's bewildered mother, "just what +did T. A. Buck, Junior, say to you anyway?" + +"Plenty. Enough to make me see things. I used to think that I wanted +to get into one of the professions. Professions! You talk about the +romance of a civil engineer's life! Why, to be a successful business +man these days you've got to be a buccaneer, and a diplomat, and a +detective, and a clairvoyant, and an expert mathematician, and a +wizard. Business--just plain everyday business--is the gamiest, +chanciest, most thrilling line there is to-day, and I'm for it. Let +the other guy hang out his shingle and wait for 'em. I'm going out and +get mine." + +"Any particular line, or just planning to corner the business market +generally?" came a cool, not too amused voice from the bed. + +"Advertising," replied Jock crisply. "Magazine advertising, to start +with. I met a fellow up in the woods--named O'Rourke. He was a star +football man at Yale. He's bucking the advertising line now for the +_Mastodon Magazine_. He's crazy about it, and says it's the greatest +game ever. I want to get into it now--not four years from now." + +He stopped abruptly. Emma McChesney regarded him, eyes glowing. Then +she gave a happy little laugh, reached for her kimono at the foot of +the bed, and prepared to kick off the bedclothes. + +"Just run into the hall a second, son," she announced. "I'm going to +get up." + +"Up! No, you're not!" shouted Jock, making a rush at her. Then, in the +exuberance of his splendid young strength, he picked her up, swathed +snugly in a roll of sheeting and light blanket, carried her to the big +chair by the window, and seated himself, with his surprised and +laughing mother in his arms. + +But Mrs. McChesney was serious again in a moment. She lay with her +head against her boy's breast for a while. Then she spoke what was in +her sane, far-seeing mind. + +[Illustration: "In the exuberance of his young strength, be picked her +up"] + +"Jock, if I've ever wished you were a girl, I take it all back now. +I'd rather have heard what you just said than any piece of +unbelievable good fortune in the world. God bless you for it, dear. +But, Jock, you're going to college. No--wait a minute. You'll have a +chance to prove the things you just said by getting through in three +years instead of the usual four. If you're in earnest you can do it. I +want my boy to start into this business war equipped with every means +of defense. You called it a game. It's more than that--it's a battle. +Compared to the successful business man of to-day the Revolutionary +Minute Men were as keen and alert as the Seven Sleepers. I know that +there are more non-college men driving street-cars than there are +college men. But that doesn't influence me. You could get a job now. +Not much of a position, perhaps, but something self-respecting and +fairly well-paying. It would teach you many things. You might get a +knowledge of human nature that no college could give you. But there's +something--poise--self-confidence--assurance--that nothing but college +can give you. You will find yourself in those three years. After you +finish college you'll have difficulty in fitting into your proper +niche, perhaps, and you'll want to curse the day on which you heeded +my advice. It'll look as though you had simply wasted those three +precious years. But in five or six years after, when your character +has jelled, and you've hit your pace, you'll bless me for it. As for a +knowledge of humanity, and of business tricks--well, your mother is +fairly familiar with the busy marts of trade. If you want to learn +folks you can spend your summers selling Featherlooms with me." + +"But, mother, you don't understand just why--" + +"Yes, dear 'un, I do. After all, remember you're only eighteen. You'll +probably spend part of your time rushing around at class proms with a +red ribbon in your coat lapel to show you're on the floor committee. +And you'll be girl-fussing, too. But you'd be attracted to girls, in +or out of college, and I'd rather, just now, that it would be some +pretty, nice-thinking college girl in a white sweater and a blue serge +skirt, whose worst thought was wondering if you could be cajoled into +taking her to the Freshman-Sophomore basketball game, than some red- +lipped, black-jet-earringed siren gazing at you across the table in +some basement cafe. And, goodness knows, Jock, you wear your clothes +so beautifully that even the haberdashers' salesmen eye you with +respect. I've seen 'em. That's one course you needn't take at +college." + +Jock sat silent, his face grave with thought. "But when I'm earning +money--real money--it's off the road for you," he said, at last. "I +don't want this to sound like a scene from East Lynne, but, mother--" + +"Um-m-m-m--ye-ee-es," assented Emma McChesney, with no alarming +enthusiasm. "Jock dear, carry me back to bed again, will you? And then +open the closet door and pull out that big sample-case to the side of +my bed. The newest Fall Featherlooms are in it, and somehow, I've just +a whimsy notion that I'd like to look 'em over." + + + + +VIII + +CATCHING UP WITH CHRISTMAS + + +Temptation himself is not much of a spieler. Raucous-voiced, red- +faced, greasy, he stands outside his gaudy tent, dilating on the +wonders within. One or two, perhaps, straggle in. But the crowd, made +wary by bitter experience of the sham and cheap fraud behind the +tawdry canvas flap, stops a moment, laughs, and passes on. Then +Temptation, in a panic, seeing his audience drifting away, summons +from inside the tent his bespangled and bewitching partner, Mlle. +Psychological Moment, the Hypnotic Charmer. She leaps to the platform, +bows, pirouettes. The crowd surges toward the ticket-window, nickel in +hand. + +Six months of bad luck had dogged the footsteps of Mrs. Emma +McChesney, traveling saleswoman for the T. A. Buck Featherloom +Petticoat Company, New York. It had started with a six-weeks' illness +endured in the discomfort of a stuffy little hotel bedroom at Glen +Rock, Minnesota. By August she was back in New York, attending to out- +of-town buyers. + +Those friendly Middle-Western persona showed dismay at her pale, +hollow-eyed appearance. They spoke to her of teaspoonfuls of olive-oil +taken thrice a day, of mountain air, of cold baths, and, above all, of +the advisability of leaving the road and taking an inside position. At +that Emma McChesney always showed signs of unmistakable irritation. + +In September her son, Jock McChesney, just turned eighteen, went +blithely off to college, disguised as a millionaire's son in a blue +Norfolk, silk hose, flat-heeled shoes, correctly mounted walrus bag, +and next-week's style in fall hats. As the train glided out of the +great shed Emma McChesney had waved her handkerchief, smiling like +fury and seeing nothing but an indistinct blur as the observation +platform slipped around the curve. She had not felt that same +clutching, desolate sense of loss since the time, thirteen years +before, when she had cut off his curls and watched him march sturdily +off to kindergarten. + +In October it was plain that spring skirts, instead of being full as +predicted, were as scant and plaitless as ever. That spelled gloom for +the petticoat business. It was necessary to sell three of the present +absurd style to make the profit that had come from the sale of one +skirt five years before. + +The last week in November, tragedy stalked upon the scene in the death +at Marienbad of old T. A. Buck, Mrs. McChesney's stanch friend and +beloved employer. Emma McChesney had wept for him as one weeps at the +loss of a father. + +They had understood each other, those two, from the time that Emma +McChesney, divorced, penniless, refusing support from the man she had +married eight years before, had found work in the office of the T. A. +Buck Featherloom Petticoat Company. + +Old Buck had watched her rise from stenographer to head stenographer, +from head stenographer to inside saleswoman, from that to a minor road +territory, and finally to the position of traveling representative +through the coveted Middle-Western territory. + +Old T. A. Buck, gruff, grim, direct, far-seeing, kindly, shrewd--he +had known Emma McChesney for what she was worth. Once, when she had +been disclosing to him a clever business scheme which might be turned +into good advertising material, old Buck had slapped his knee with one +broad, thick palm and had said: + +"Emma McChesney, you ought to have been a man. With that head on a +man's shoulders, you could put us out of business." + +"I could do it anyway," Mrs. McChesney had retorted. + +Old Buck had regarded her a moment over his tortoise-shell rimmed +glasses. Then, "I believe you could," he had said, quietly and +thoughtfully. + +That brings her up to December. To some few millions of people D-e-c- +e-m-b-e-r spells Christmas. But to Emma McChesney it spelled the +dreaded spring trip. It spelled trains stalled in snowdrifts, baggage +delayed, cold hotel bedrooms, harassed, irritable buyers. + +It was just six o'clock on the evening of December ninth when Mrs. +Emma McChesney swung off the train at Columbus, Ohio, five hours late. +As she walked down the broad platform her eyes unconsciously searched +the loaded trucks for her own trunks. She'd have recognized them in +the hold of a Nile steamer--those grim, travel-scarred sample-trunks. +They had a human look to her. She had a way of examining them after +each trip, as a fond mother examines her child for stray scratches and +bruises when she puts it to bed for the night. She knew each nook and +corner of the great trunks as another woman knows her linen-closet or +her preserve-shelves. + +Columbus, Ohio, was a Featherloom town. Emma McChesney had a fondness +for it, with its half rustic, half metropolitan air. Sometimes she +likened it to a country girl in a velvet gown, and sometimes to a city +girl in white muslin and blue sash. Singer & French always had a +Featherloom window twice a year. + +The hotel lobby wore a strangely deserted look. December is a slack +month for actors and traveling men. Mrs. McChesney registered +automatically, received her mail, exchanged greetings with the affable +clerk. + +"Send my trunks up to my sample-room as soon as they get in. Three of +'em--two sample-trunks and my personal trunk. And I want to see a +porter about putting up some extra tables. You see, I'm two days late +now. I expect two buyers to-morrow morning. + +"Send 'em right up, Mrs. McChesney," the clerk assured her. "Jo'll +attend to those tables. Too bad about old Buck. How's the skirt +business?" + +"Skirts? There is no such thing," corrected Emma McChesney gently." +Sausage-casing business, you mean." + +"Guess you're right, at that. By the way, how's that handsome +youngster of yours? He's not traveling with you this trip?" + +There came a wonderful glow into Emma McChesney's tired face. + +"Jock's at college. Coming home for the holidays. We're going to have +a dizzy week in New York. I'm wild to see if those three months of +college have done anything to him, bless his heart! Oh, kind sir, +forgive a mother's fond ravings! Where'd that youngster go with my +bag?" + +Up at last in the stuffy, unfriendly, steam-smelling hotel bedroom +Emma McChesney prepared to make herself comfortable. A cocky bell-boy +switched on the lights, adjusted a shade, straightened a curtain. Mrs. +McChesney reached for her pocket-book. + +"Just open that window, will you?" + +"Pretty cold," remonstrated the bell-boy. "Beginning to snow, too." + +"Can't help it. I'll shut it in a minute. The last man that had this +room left a dead cigar around somewhere. Send up a waiter, please. I'm +going to treat myself to dinner in my room." + +The boy gone, she unfastened her collar, loosened a shoe that had +pressed a bit too tightly over the instep, took a kimono and toilette +articles out of her bag. + +"I'll run through my mail," she told herself. "Then I'll get into +something loose, see to my trunks, have dinner, and turn in early. +Wish Jock were here. We'd have a steak, and some French fried, and a +salad, and I'd let the kid make the dressing, even if he does always +get in too much vinegar--" + +She was glancing through her mail. Two from the firm--one from Mary +Cutting--one from the Sure-White Laundry at Dayton (hope they found +that corset-cover)--one from--why, from Jock! From Jock! And he'd +written only two days before. Well! + +Sitting there on the edge of the bed she regarded the dear scrawl +lovingly, savoring it, as is the way of a woman. Then she took a +hairpin from the knot of bright hair (also as is the way of woman) and +slit the envelope with a quick, sure rip. M-m-m--it wasn't much as to +length. Just a scrawled page. Emma McChesney's eye plunged into it +hungrily, a smile of anticipation dimpling her lips, lighting up her +face. + +"_Dearest Blonde_," it began. + +("The nerve of the young imp!") + +He hoped the letter would reach her in time. Knew how this weather +mussed up her schedule. He wanted her honest opinion about something-- +straight, now! One of the frat fellows was giving a Christmas house- +party. Awful swells, by the way. He was lucky even to be asked. He'd +never remembered a real Christmas--in a home, you know, with a tree, +and skating, and regular high jinks, and a dinner that left you +feeling like a stuffed gooseberry. Old Wells says his grandmother +wears lace caps with lavender ribbons. Can you beat it! Of course he +felt like a hog, even thinking of wanting to stay away from her at +Christmas. Still, Christmas in a New York hotel--! But the fellows had +nagged him to write. Said they'd do it if he didn't. Of course he +hated to think of her spending Christmas alone--felt like a bloody +villain-- + +Little by little the smile that had wreathed her lips faded and was +gone. The lips still were parted, but by one of those miracles with +which the face expresses what is within the heart their expression had +changed from pleasure to bitter pain. + +She sat there, at the edge of the bed, staring dully until the black +scrawls danced on the white page. With the letter before her she +raised her hand slowly and wiped away a hot, blinding mist of tears +with her open palm. Then she read it again, dully, as though every +selfish word of it had not already stamped itself on her brain and +heart. + +[Illustration: "She read it again, dully, as though every selfish word +had not already stamped itself on her brain and heart"] + +After the second reading she still sat there, her eyes staring down at +her lap. Once she brushed an imaginary fleck of lint from the lap of +her blue serge skirt--brushed, and brushed and brushed, with a +mechanical, pathetic little gesture that showed how completely absent +her mind was from the room in which she sat. Then her hand fell idle, +and she became very still, a crumpled, tragic, hopeless look rounding +the shoulders that were wont to hold themselves so erect and +confident. + +A tentative knock at the door. The figure on the bed did not stir. +Another knock, louder this time. Emma McChesney sat up with a start. +She shivered as she became conscious of the icy December air pouring +into the little room. She rose, walked to the window, closed it with a +bang, and opened the door in time to intercept the third knock. + +A waiter proffered her a long card. "Dinner, Madame?" + +"Oh!" She shook her head. "Sorry I've changed my mind. I--I shan't +want any dinner." + +She shut the door again and stood with her back against it, eying the +bed. In her mind's eye she had already thrown herself upon it, buried +her face in the nest of pillows, and given vent to the flood of tears +that was beating at her throat. She took a quick step toward the bed, +stopped, turned abruptly, and walked toward the mirror. + +"Emma McChesney," she said aloud to the woman in the glass, "buck up, +old girl! Bad luck comes in bunches of threes. It's like breaking the +first cup in a new Haviland set. You can always count on smashing two +more. This is your third. So pick up the pieces and throw 'em in the +ash-can." + +Then she fastened her collar, buttoned her shoe, pulled down her +shirtwaist all around, smeared her face with cold cream, wiped it with +a towel, smoothed her hair, donned her hat. The next instant the +little room was dark, and Emma McChesney was marching down the long, +red-carpeted hallway to the elevator, her head high, her face set. + +Down-stairs in the lobby--"How about my trunks?" she inquired of a +porter. + +That blue-shirted individual rubbed a hard brown hand over his cheek +worriedly. + +"They ain't come." + +"Ain't come!"--surprise disregarded grammar. + +Nope. No signs of 'em. I'll tell you what: I think prob'ly they was +overlooked in the rush, the train being late from Dayton when you +started. Likely they'll be in on the ten-thirteen. I'll send 'em up +the minute they get in." + +"I wish you would. I've got to get my stuff out early. I can't keep +customers waiting for me. Late, as it is." + +She approached the clerk once more. "Anything at the theaters?" + +"Well, nothing much, Mrs. McChesney. Christmas coming on kind of puts +a crimp in the show business. Nice little bill on at the Majestic, if +you like vaudeville." + +"Crazy about it. Always get so excited watching to see if the next act +is going to be as rotten as the last one. It always is." + +From eight-fifteen until ten-thirty Mrs. McChesney sat absolutely +expressionless while a shrill blonde lady and a nasal dark gentleman +went through what the program ironically called a "comedy sketch," +followed by a chummy person who came out in evening dress to sing a +sentimental ditty, shed the evening dress to reappear in an ankle- +length fluffy pink affair; shucked the fluffy pink affair for a +child's pinafore, sash, and bare knees; discarded the kiddie frock, +disclosing a bathing-suit; left the bathing-suit behind the wings in +favor of satin knee-breeches and tight jacket--and very discreetly +stopped there, probably for no reason except to give way to the next +act, consisting of two miraculously thin young men in lavender dress +suits and white silk hats, who sang and clogged in unison, like two +things hung on a single wire. + +The night air was grateful to her hot forehead as she walked from the +theater to the hotel. + +"Trunks in?" to the porter. + +"No sign of 'em, lady. They didn't come in on the ten. Think they'd +better wire back to Dayton." + +But the next morning Mrs. McChesney was in the depot baggage-room when +Dayton wired back: + +_"Trunks not here. Try Columbus, Nebraska."_ + +"Crash!" said Emma McChesney to the surprised baggage-master. "There +goes my Haviland vegetable-dish." + +"Were you selling china?" he inquired. + +"No, I wasn't," replied Emma McChesney viciously. "And if you don't +let me stand here and give my frank, unbiased opinion of this road, +its president, board of directors, stockholders, baggage-men, Pullman +porters, and other things thereto appertaining, I'll probably have +hysterics." + +"Give it," said the baggage-master." You'll feel better. And we're +used to it." + +She gave it. When she had finished: + +"Did you say you was selling goods on the road? Say, that's a hell of +a job for a woman! Excuse me, lady. I didn't mean--" + +"I think perhaps you're right," said Emma McChesney slowly. "It is +just that." + +"Well, anyway, we'll do our best to trace it. Guess you're in for a +wait." + +Emma McChesney waited. She made the rounds of her customers, and +waited. She wired her firm, and waited. She wrote Jock to run along +and enjoy himself, and waited. She cut and fitted a shirt-waist, took +her hat apart and retrimmed it, made the rounds of her impatient +customers again, threatened to sue the road, visited the baggage-room +daily--and waited. + +Four weary, nerve-racking days passed. It was late afternoon of the +fourth day when Mrs. McChesney entered the elevator to go to her room. +She had come from another fruitless visit to the baggage-room. She +sank into a leather-cushioned seat in a corner of the lift. Two men +entered briskly, followed by a bellboy. Mrs. McChesney did not look +up. + +"Well, I'll be dinged!" boomed a throaty voice. "Mrs. McChesney, by +the Great Horn Spoon! H'are you? Talking about you this minute to my +friend here." + +Emma McChesney, with the knowledge of her lost sample-trunks striking +her afresh, looked up and smiled bravely into the plump pink face of +Fat Ed Meyers, traveling representative for her firm's bitterest +rival, the Strauss Sans-silk Skirt Company. + +"Talking about me, Mr. Meyers? Sufficient grounds for libel, right +there." + +The little sallow, dark man just at Meyers' elbow was gazing at her +unguardedly. She felt that he had appraised her from hat to heels. Ed +Meyers placed a plump hand on the little man's shoulder. + +"Abe, you tell the lady what I was saying. This is Mr. Abel Fromkin, +maker of the Fromkin Form-Fit Skirt. Abe, this is the wonderful Mrs. +McChesney." + +"Sorry I can't wait to hear what you've said of me. This is my floor." +Mrs. McChesney was already leaving the elevator. + +"Here! Wait a minute!" Fat Ed Meyers was out and standing beside her, +his movements unbelievably nimble. "Will you have dinner with us, Mrs. +McChesney?" + +"Thanks. Not to-night." + +Meyers turned to the waiting elevator. "Fromkin, you go on up with the +boy; I'll talk to the lady a minute." + +A little displeased frown appeared on Emma McChesney's face. + +"You'll have to excuse me, Mr. Meyers, I--" + +"Heigh-ho for that haughty stuff, Mrs. McChesney," grinned Ed Meyers. +"Don't turn up your nose at that little Kike friend of mine till +you've heard what I have to say. Now just let me talk a minute. +Fromkin's heard all about you. He's got a proposition to make. And it +isn't one to sniff at." + +He lowered his voice mysteriously in the silence of the dim hotel +corridor. + +"Fromkin started in a little one-room hole-in-the-wall over on the +East Side. Lived on a herring and a hunk of rye bread. Wife used to +help him sew. That was seven years ago. In three years, or less, +she'll have the regulation uniform--full length seal coat, bunch of +paradise, five-drop diamond La Valliere set in platinum, electric +brougham. Abe has got a business head, take it from me. But he's wise +enough to know that business isn't the rough-and-tumble game it used +to be. He realizes that he'll do for the workrooms, but not for the +front shop. He knows that if he wants to keep on growing he's got to +have what they call a steerer. Somebody smooth, and polished, and +politic, and what the highbrows call suave. Do you pronounce that with +a long _a_, or two dots over? Anyway, you get me. You're all those +things and considerable few besides. He's wise to the fact that a +business man's got to have poise these days, and balance. And when it +comes to poise and balance, Mrs. McChesney, you make a Fairbanks scale +look like a raft at sea." + +"While I don't want to seem to hurry you," drawled Mrs. McChesney, +"might I suggest that you shorten the overture and begin on the first +act?" + +"Well, you know how I feel about your business genius." + +"Yes, I know," enigmatically. + +Ed Meyers grinned. "Can't forget those two little business +misunderstandings we had, can you?" + +"Business understandings," corrected Emma McChesney. + +"Call 'em anything your little heart dictates, but listen. Fromkin +knows all about you. Knows you've got a million friends in the trade, +that you know skirts from the belt to the hem. I don't know just what +his proposition is, but I'll bet he'll give you half interest in the +livest, come-upest little skirt factory in the country, just for a few +thousands capital, maybe, and your business head at the executive end. +Now just let that sink in before you speak." + +"And why," inquired Emma McChesney, "don't you grab this matchless +business opportunity yourself?" + +"Because, fair lady, Fromkin wouldn't let me get in with a crowbar. +He'll never be able to pronounce his t's right, and when he's dressed +up he looks like a 'bus-boy at Mouquin's, but he can see a bluff +farther than I can throw one--and that's somewhere beyond the horizon, +as you'll admit. Talk it over with us after dinner then?" + +Emma McChesney was regarding the plump, pink, eager face before her +with keen, level, searching eyes. + +"Yes," she said slowly, "I will." + +"Cafe? We'll have a bottle--" + +"No." + +"Oh! Er--parlor?" + +Mrs. McChesney smiled. "I won't ask you to make yourself that +miserable. You can't smoke in the parlor. We'll find a quiet corner in +the writing-room, where you men can light up. I don't want to take +advantage of you." + +[Illustration: "'Not that you look your age--not by ten years!'"] + +Down in the writing-room at eight they formed a strange little group. +Ed Meyers, flushed and eager, his pink face glowing like a peony, +talking, arguing, smoking, reasoning, coaxing, with the spur of a fat +commission to urge him on; Abel Fromkin, with his peculiarly pallid +skin made paler in contrast to the purplish-black line where the razor +had passed, showing no hint of excitement except in the restless +little black eyes and in the work-scarred hands that rolled cigarette +after cigarette, each glowing for one brief instant, only to die down +to a blackened ash the next; Emma McChesney, half fascinated, half +distrustful, listening in spite of herself, and trying to still a +small inner voice--a voice that had never advised her ill. + +"You know the ups and downs to this game," Ed Meyers was saying. "When +I met you there in the elevator you looked like you'd lost your last +customer. You get pretty disgusted with it all, at times, like the +rest of us." + +"At that minute," replied Emma McChesney, "I was so disgusted that if +some one had called me up on the 'phone and said, 'Hullo, Mrs. +McChesney! Will you marry me?' I'd have said: 'Yes. Who is this?'" + +"There! That's just it. I don't want to be impolite, or anything like +that, Mrs. McChesney, but you're no kid. Not that you look your age-- +not by ten years! But I happen to know you're teetering somewhere +between thirty-six and the next top. Ain't that right?" + +"Is that a argument to put to a lady?" remonstrated Abel Fromkin. + +Fat Ed Meyers waved the interruption away with a gesture of his +strangely slim hands. "This ain't an argument. It's facts. Another ten +years on the road, and where'll you be? In the discard. A man of +forty-six can keep step with the youngsters, even if it does make him +puff a bit. But a woman of forty-six--the road isn't the place for +her. She's tired. Tired in the morning; tired at night. She wants her +kimono and her afternoon snooze. You've seen some of those old girls +on the road. They've come down step by step until you spot 'em, +bleached hair, crow's-feet around the eyes, mussy shirt-waist, yellow +and red complexion, demonstrating green and lavender gelatine messes +in the grocery of some department store. I don't say that a brainy +corker of a saleswoman like you would come down like that. But you've +got to consider sickness and a lot of other things. Those six weeks +last summer with the fever at Glen Rock put a crimp in you, didn't it? +You've never been yourself since then. Haven't had a decent chance to +rest up." + +"No," said Emma McChesney wearily. + +"Furthermore, now that old T. A.'s cashed in, how do you know what +young Buck's going to do? He don't know shucks about the skirt +business. They've got to take in a third party to keep it a close +corporation. It was all between old Buck, Buck junior, and old lady +Buck. How can you tell whether the new member will want a woman on the +road, or not?" + +A little steely light hardened the blue of Mrs. McChesney's eyes. + +"We'll leave the firm of T. A. Buck out of this discussion, please." + +"Oh, very well!" Ed Meyers was unabashed. "Let's talk about Fromkin. +He don't object, do you, Abe? It's just like this. He needs your smart +head. You need his money. It'll mean a sure thing for you--a share in +a growing and substantial business. When you get your road men trained +it'll mean that you won't need to go out on the road yourself, except +for a little missionary trip now and then, maybe. No more infernal +early trains, no more bum hotel grub, no more stuffy, hot hotel rooms, +no more haughty lady buyers--gosh, I wish I had the chance!" + +Emma McChesney sat very still. Two scarlet spots glowed in her cheeks. +"No one appreciates your gift of oratory more than I do, Mr. Meyers. +Your flow of language, coupled with your peculiar persuasive powers, +make a combination a statue couldn't resist. But I think it would sort +of rest me if Mr. Fromkin were to say a word, seeing that it's really +his funeral." + +Abel Fromkin started nervously, and put his dead cigarette to his +lips. "I ain't much of a talker," he said, almost sheepishly. "Meyers, +he's got it down fine. I tell you what. I'll be in New York the +twenty-first. We can go over the books and papers and the whole +business. And I like you should know my wife. And I got a little girl +--Would you believe it, that child ain't more as a year old, and says +Papa and Mama like a actress!" + +"Sure," put in Ed Meyers, disregarding the more intimate family +details. "You two get together and fix things up in shape; then you +can sign up and have it off your mind so you can enjoy the festive +Christmas season." + +Emma McChesney had been gazing out of the window to where the street- +lamps were reflected in the ice-covered pavements. Now she spoke, +still staring out upon the wintry street. + +Christmas isn't a season. It's a feeling. And I haven't got it." + +"Oh, come now, Mrs. McChesney!" objected Ed Meyers. + +With a sudden, quick movement Emma McChesney turned from the window to +the little dark man who was watching her so intently. She faced him +squarely, as though utterly disregarding Ed Meyers' flattery and +banter and cajolery. The little man before her seemed to recognize the +earnestness of the moment. He leaned forward a bit attentively. + +"If what has been said is true," she began, this ought to be a good +thing for me. If I go into it, I'll go in heart, soul, brain, and +pocket-book. I do know the skirt business from thread to tape and back +again. I've managed to save a few thousand dollars. Only a woman could +understand how I've done it. I've scrimped on little things. I've +denied myself necessities. I've worn silk blouses instead of linen +ones to save laundry-bills and taken a street-car or 'bus to save a +quarter or fifty cents. I've always tried to look well dressed and +immaculate--" + +"You!" exclaimed Ed Meyers. "Why, say, you're what I call a swell +dresser. Nothing flashy, understand, or loud, but the quiet, good +stuff that spells ready money." + +"M-m-m--yes. But it wasn't always so ready. Anyway, I always managed +somehow. The boy's at college. Sometimes I wonder--well, that's +another story. I've saved, and contrived, and planned ahead for a +rainy day. There have been two or three times when I thought it had +come. Sprinkled pretty heavily, once or twice. But I've just turned up +my coat-collar, tucked my hat under my skirt, and scooted for a tree. +And each time it has turned out to be just a summer shower, with the +sun coming out bright and warm." + +Her frank, clear, honest, blue eyes were plumbing the depths of the +black ones. "Those few thousand dollars that you hold so lightly will +mean everything to me. They've been my cyclone-cellar. If--" + +Through the writing-room sounded a high-pitched, monotonous voice with +a note of inquiry in it. + +"Mrs. McChesney! Mr. Fraser! Mr. Ludwig! Please! Mrs. McChesney! Mr. +Fraser! Mr. Lud--" + +"Here, boy!" Mrs. McChesney took the little yellow envelope from the +salver that the boy held out to her. Her quick glance rested on the +written words. She rose, her face colorless. + +"Not bad news?" The two men spoke simultaneously. + +"I don't know," said Emma McChesney. "What would you say?" + +She handed the slip of paper to Fat Ed Meyers. He read it in silence. +Then once more, aloud: + +"'Take first train back to New York. Spalding will finish your trip.'" + +"Why--say--" began Meyers. + +"Well?" + +"Why--say--this--this looks as if you were fired!" + +"Does, doesn't it?" She smiled. + +"Then our little agreement goes?" The two men were on their feet, +eager, alert. "That means you'll take Fromkin's offer?" + +"It means that our little agreement is off. I'm sorry to disappoint +you. I want to thank you both for your trouble. I must have been crazy +to listen to you for a minute. I wouldn't have if I'd been myself." + +"But that telegram--" + +"It's signed, 'T. A. Buck.' I'll take a chance." + +The two men stared after her, disappointment and bewilderment chasing +across each face. + +"Well, I thought I knew women, but--" began Ed Meyers fluently. + +Passing the desk, Mrs. McChesney heard her name. She glanced toward +the clerk. He was just hanging up the telephone-receiver. + +"Baggage-room says the depot just notified 'em your trunks were traced +to Columbia City. They're on their way here now." + +"Columbia City!" repeated Emma McChesney. "Do you know, I believe I've +learned to hate the name of the discoverer of this fair land." + +Up in her room she opened the crumpled telegram again, and regarded it +thoughtfully before she began to pack her bag. + +The thoughtful look was still there when she entered the big bright +office of the T. A. Buck Featherloom Petticoat Company. And with it +was another expression that resembled contrition. + +"Mr. Buck's waiting for you," a stenographer told her. + +Mrs. McChesney opened the door of the office marked "Private." + +Two men rose. One she recognized as the firm's lawyer. The other, who +came swiftly toward her, was T. A. Buck--no longer junior. There was a +new look about him--a look of responsibility, of efficiency, of clear- +headed knowledge. + +The two clasped hands--a firm, sincere, understanding grip. + +Buck spoke first. "It's good to see you. We were talking of you as you +came in. You know Mr. Beggs, of course. He has some things to tell +you--and so have I. His will be business things, mine will be +personal. I got there before father passed away--thank God! But he +couldn't speak. He'd anticipated that with his clear-headedness, and +he'd written what he wanted to say. A great deal of it was about you. +I want you to read that letter later." + +"I shall consider it a privilege," said Emma McChesney. + +Mr. Beggs waved her toward a chair. She took it in silence. She heard +him in silence, his sonorous voice beating upon her brain. + +"There are a great many papers and much business detail, but that will +be attended to later," began Beggs ponderously. "You are to be +congratulated on the position of esteem and trust which you held in +the mind of your late employer. By the terms of his will--I'll put it +briefly, for the moment--you are offered the secretaryship of the firm +of T. A. Buck, Incorporated. Also you are bequeathed thirty shares in +the firm. Of course, the company will have to be reorganized. The late +Mr. Buck had great trust in your capabilities." + +Emma McChesney rose to her feet, her breath coming quickly. She turned +to T. A. Buck. "I want you to know--I want you to know--that just +before your telegram came I was half tempted to leave the firm. To--" + +"Can't blame you," smiled T. A. Buck. "You've had a rotten six months +of it, beginning with that illness and ending with those infernal +trunks. The road's no place for a woman." + +[Illustration: "'Christmas isn't a season...it's a feeling, and, thank +God, I've got it!'"] + +"Nonsense!" flashed Emma McChesney. "I've loved it. I've gloried in +it. And I've earned my living by it. Giving it up--don't now think me +ungrateful--won't be so easy, I can tell you." + +T. A. Buck nodded understandingly. "I know. Father knew too. And I +don't want you to let his going from us make any difference in this +holiday season. I want you to enjoy it and be happy." + +A shade crossed Emma McChesney's face. It was there when the door +opened and a boy entered with a telegram. He handed it to Mrs. +McChesney. It held ten crisp words: + +_Changed my darn fool mind. Me for home and mother._ + +Emma McChesney looked up, her face radiant. + +"Christmas isn't a season, Mr. Buck. It's a feeling; and, thank God, +I've got it!" + + + + +IX + +KNEE-DEEP IN KNICKERS + + +When the column of figures under the heading known as "Profits," and +the column of figures under the heading known as "Loss" are so +unevenly balanced that the wrong side of the ledger sags, then to the +listening stockholders there comes the painful thought that at the +next regular meeting it is perilously possible that the reading may +come under the heads of Assets and Liabilities. + +There had been a meeting in the offices of the T. A. Buck Featherloom +Petticoat Company, New York. The quarterly report had had a +startlingly lop-sided sound. After it was over Mrs. Emma McChesney, +secretary of the company, followed T. A. Buck, its president, into the +big, bright show-room. T. A. Buck's hands were thrust deep into his +pockets. His teeth worried a cigar, savagely. Care, that clawing, +mouthing hag, perched on his brow, tore at his heart. + +He turned to face Emma McChesney. + +"Well," he said, bitterly, "it hasn't taken us long, has it? Father's +been dead a little over a year. In that time we've just about run this +great concern, the pride of his life, into the ground." + +Mrs. Emma McChesney, calm, cool, unruffled, scrutinized the harassed +man before her for a long minute. + +"What rotten football material you would have made, wouldn't you?" she +observed. + +"Oh, I don't know," answered T. A. Buck, through his teeth. "I can +stand as stiff a scrimmage as the next one. But this isn't a game. You +take things too lightly. You're a woman. I don't think you know what +this means." + +Emma McChesney's lips opened as do those of one whose tongue's end +holds a quick and stinging retort. Then they closed again. She walked +over to the big window that faced the street. When she had stood there +a moment, silent, she swung around and came back to where T. A. Buck +stood, still wrapped in gloom. + +"Maybe I don't take myself seriously. I'd have been dead ten years ago +if I had. But I do take my job seriously. Don't forget that for a +minute. You talk the way a man always talks when his pride is hurt." + +"Pride! It isn't that." + +"Oh, yes, it is. I didn't sell T. A. Buck's Featherloom Petticoats on +the road for almost ten years without learning a little something +about men and business. When your father died, and I learned that he +had shown his appreciation of my work and loyalty by making me +secretary of this great company, I didn't think of it as a legacy--a +stroke of good fortune." + +"No?" + +"No. To me it was a sacred trust--something to be guarded, nursed, +cherished. And now you say we've run this concern into the ground. Do +you honestly think that?" + +T. A. shrugged impotent shoulders. "Figures don't lie." He plunged +into another fathom of gloom. "Another year like this and we're done +for." + +Emma McChesney came over and put one firm hand on T. A. Buck's +drooping shoulder. It was a strange little act for a woman--the sort +of thing a man does when he would hearten another man. + +"Wake up!" she said, lightly. "Wake up, and listen to the birdies +sing. There isn't going to be another year like this. Not if the +planning, and scheming, and brain-racking that I've been doing for the +last two or three months mean anything." + +T. A. Buck seated himself as one who is weary, body and mind. + +"Got another new one?" + +Emma McChesney regarded him a moment thoughtfully. Then she stepped to +the tall show-case, pushed back the sliding glass door, and pointed to +the rows of brilliant-hued petticoats that hung close-packed within. + +"Look at 'em!" she commanded, disgust in her voice. "Look at 'em!" + +T. A. Buck raised heavy, lack-luster eyes and looked. What he saw did +not seem to interest him. Emma McChesney drew from the rack a skirt of +king's blue satin messaline and held it at arm's length. + +"And they call that thing a petticoat! Why, fifteen years ago the +material in this skirt wouldn't have made even a fair-sized sleeve." + +T. A. Buck regarded the petticoat moodily. "I don't see how they get +around in the darned things. I honestly don't see how they wear 'em." + +"That's just it. They don't wear 'em. There you have the root of the +whole trouble." + +"Oh, nonsense!" disputed T. A. "They certainly wear something--some +sort of an--" + +"I tell you they don't. Here. Listen. Three years ago our taffeta +skirts ran from thirty-six to thirty-eight yards to the dozen. We paid +from ninety cents to one dollar five a yard. Now our skirts run from +twenty-five to twenty-eight yards to the dozen. The silk costs us from +fifty to sixty cents a yard. Silk skirts used to be a luxury. Now +they're not even a necessity." + +"Well, what's the answer? I've been pondering some petticoat problems +myself. I know we've got to sell three skirts to-day to make the +profit that we used to make on one three years ago." + +Emma McChesney had the brave-heartedness to laugh. "This skirt +business reminds me of a game we used to play when I was a kid. We +called it Going to Jerusalem, I think. Anyway, I know each child sat +in a chair except the one who was It. At a signal everybody had to get +up and change chairs. There was a wild scramble, in which the one who +was It took part. When the burly-burly was over some child was always +chairless, of course. He had to be It. That's the skirt business to- +day. There aren't enough chairs to go round, and in the scramble +somebody's got to be left out. And let me tell you, here and now, that +the firm of T. A. Buck, Featherloom Petticoats, is not going to be +It." + +T. A. rose as wearily as he had sat down. Even the most optimistic of +watchers could have discerned no gleam of enthusiasm on his face. + +"I thought," he said listlessly, "that you and I had tried every +possible scheme to stimulate the skirt trade." + +"Every possible one, yes," agreed Mrs. McChesney, sweetly. "And now +it's time to try the impossible. The possibilities haven't worked. My +land! I could write a book on the Decline and Fall of the Petticoat, +beginning with the billowy white muslin variety, and working up to the +present slinky messaline affair. When I think of those dear dead days +of the glorious--er--past, when the hired girl used to complain and +threaten to leave because every woman in the family had at least three +ruffled, embroidery-flounced white muslin petticoats on the line on +Mondays--" + +The lines about T. A. Buck's mouth relaxed into a grim smile. + +"Remember that feature you got them to run in the _Sunday Sphere?_ The +one headed 'Are Skirts Growing Fuller, and Where?'" + +"Do I remember it!" wailed Emma McChesney. "And can I ever forget the +money we put into that fringed model we called the Carmencita! We made +it up so it could retail for a dollar ninety-five, and I could have +sworn that the women would maim each other to get to it. But it didn't +go. They won't even wear fringe around their ankles." + +T. A.'s grim smile stretched into a reminiscent grin. "But nothing in +our whole hopeless campaign could touch your Municipal Purity League +agitation for the abolition of the form-hugging skirt. You talked +public morals until you had A. Comstock and Lucy Page Gaston looking +like Parisian Apaches." + +A little laugh rippled up to Emma McChesney's lips, only to die away +to a sigh. She shook her head in sorrowful remembrance. + +"Yes. But what good did it do? The newspapers and magazines did take +it up, but what happened? The dressmakers and tailors, who are +charging more than ever for their work, and putting in half as much +material, got together and knocked my plans into a cocked hat. In +answer to those snap-shots showing what took place every time a woman +climbed a car step, they came back with pictures of the styles of '61, +proving that the street-car effect is nothing to what happened to a +belle of '61 if she chanced to sit down or get up too suddenly in the +hoop-skirt days." + +They were both laughing now, like a couple of children. "And, oh, +say!" gasped Emma, "remember Moe Selig, of the Fine-Form Skirt +Company, trying to get the doctors to state that hobble skirts were +making women knock-kneed! Oh, mercy!" + +But their laugh ended in a little rueful silence. It was no laughing +matter, this situation. T. A. Buck shrugged his shoulders, and began a +restless pacing up and down. "Yep. There you are. Meanwhile--" + +"Meanwhile, women are still wearing 'em tight, and going +petticoatless." + +Suddenly T. A. stopped short in his pacing and fastened his surprised +and interested gaze on the skirt of the trim and correct little +business frock that sat so well upon Emma McChesney's pretty figure. + +"Why, look at that!" he exclaimed, and pointed with one eager finger. + +"Mercy!" screamed Emma McChesney. "What is it? Quick! A mouse?" + +T. A. Buck shook his head, impatiently. "Mouse! Lord, no! Plaits!" + +"Plaits!" + +She looked down, bewildered. + +"Yes. In. your skirt. Three plaits at the front-left, and three in the +back. That's new, isn't it? If outer skirts are being made fuller, +then it follows--" + +"It ought to follow," interrupted Emma McChesney, "but it doesn't. It +lags way behind. These plaits are stitched down. See? That's the +fiendishness of it. And the petticoat underneath--if there is one-- +must be just as smooth, and unwrinkled, and scant as ever. Don't let +'em fool you." + +Buck spread his palms with a little gesture of utter futility. + +"I'm through. Out with your scheme. We're ready for it. It's our last +card, whatever it is." + +There was visible on Emma McChesney's face that little tightening of +the muscles, that narrowing of the eyelids which betokens intense +earnestness; the gathering of all the forces before taking a momentous +step. Then, as quickly, her face cleared. She shook her head with a +little air of sudden decision. + +"Not now. Just because it's our last card I want to be sure that I'm +playing it well. I'll be ready for you to-morrow morning in my office. +Come prepared for the jolt of your young life." + +For the first time since the beginning of the conversation a glow of +new courage and hope lighted up T. A. Buck's good-looking features. +His fine eyes rested admiringly upon Emma McChesney standing there by +the great show-case. She seemed to radiate energy. alertness, +confidence. + +"When you begin to talk like that," he said, "I always feel as though +I could take hold in a way to make those famous jobs that Hercules +tackled look like little Willie's chores after school." + +"Fine!" beamed Emma McChesney. "Just store that up, will you? And +don't let it filter out at your finger-tips when I begin to talk to- +morrow." + +"We'll have lunch together, eh? And talk it over then sociably." + +Mrs. McChesney closed the glass door of the case with a bang. + +"No, thanks. My office at 9:30." + +T. A. Buck followed her to the door. "But why not lunch? You never +will take lunch with me. Ever so much more comfortable to talk things +over that way--" + +"When I talk business," said Emma McChesney, pausing at the threshold, +"I want to be surrounded by a business atmosphere. I want the scene +all set--one practical desk, two practical chairs, one telephone, one +letter-basket, one self-filling fountain-pen, et cetera. And when I +lunch I want to lunch, with nothing weightier on my mind than the +question as to whether I'll have chicken livers saute or creamed +sweetbreads with mushrooms." + +"That's no reason," grumbled T. A. "That's an excuse." + +"It will have to do, though," replied Mrs. McChesney abruptly, and +passed out as he held the door open for her. He was still standing in +the doorway after her trim, erect figure had disappeared into the +little office across the hail. + +The little scarlet leather clock on Emma McChesney's desk pointed to +9:29 A.M. when there entered her office an immaculately garbed, +miraculously shaven, healthily rosy youngish-middle-aged man who +looked ten years younger than the harassed, frowning T. A. Buck with +whom she had almost quarreled the evening before. Mrs. McChesney was +busily dictating to a sleek little stenographer. The sleek little +stenographer glanced up at T. A. Buck's entrance. The glance, being a +feminine one, embraced all of T. A.'s good points and approved them +from the tips of his modish boots to the crown of his slightly bald +head, and including the creamy-white flower that reposed in his +buttonhole. + +"'Morning!" said Emma McChesney, looking up briefly. "Be with you in a +minute. ...and in reply would say we regret that you have had trouble +with No. 339. It is impossible to avoid pulling at the seams in the +lower-grade silk skirts when they are made up in the present scant +style. Our Mr. Spalding warned you of this at the time of your +purchase. We will not under any circumstances consent to receive the +goods if they are sent back on our hands. Yours sincerely. That'll be +all, Miss Casey." + +She swung around to face her visitor as the door closed. If T. A. Buck +looked ten years younger than he had the afternoon before, Emma +McChesney undoubtedly looked five years older. There were little, +worried, sagging lines about her eyes and mouth. + +T. A. Buck's eyes had followed the sheaf of signed correspondence, and +the well-filled pad of more recent dictation which the sleek little +stenographer had carried away with her. + +"Good Lord! It looks as though you had stayed down here all night." + +Emma McChesney smiled a little wearily. "Not quite that. But I was +here this morning in time to greet the night watchman. Wanted to get +my mail out of the way." Her eyes searched T. A. Buck's serene face. +Then she leaned forward, earnestly. + +"Haven't you seen the morning paper?" + +"Just a mere glance at 'em. Picked up Burrows on the way down, and we +got to talking. Why?" + +"The Rasmussen-Welsh Skirt Company has failed. Liabilities three +hundred thousand. Assets one hundred thousand." + +"Failed! Good God!" All the rosy color, all the brisk morning +freshness had vanished from his face. "Failed! Why, girl, I thought +that concern was as solid as Gibraltar." He passed a worried hand over +his head. "That knocks the wind out of my sails." + +"Don't let it. Just say that it fills them with a new breeze. I'm all +the more sure that the time is ripe for my plan." + +T. A. Buck took from a vest pocket a scrap of paper and a fountain +pen, slid down in his chair, crossed his legs, and began to scrawl +meaningless twists and curlycues, as was his wont when worried or +deeply interested. + +"Are you as sure of this scheme of yours as you were yesterday?" + +"Sure," replied Emma McChesney, briskly. Sartin-sure." + +"Then fire away." + +Mrs. McChesney leaned forward, breathing a trifle fast. Her eyes were +fastened on her listener. + +"Here's the plan. We'll make Featherloom Petticoats because there +still are some women who have kept their senses. But we'll make them +as a side line. The thing that has got to keep us afloat until full +skirts come in again will be a full and complete line of women's satin +messaline knickerbockers made up to match any suit or gown, and a full +line of pajamas for women and girls. Get the idea? Scant, smart, trim +little taupe-gray messaline knickers for a taupe gray suit, blue +messaline for blue suits, brown messaline for brown--" + +T. A. Buck stared, open-mouthed, the paper on which he had been +scrawling fluttering unnoticed to the floor. + +"Look here!" he interrupted. "Is this supposed to be humorous?" + +"And," went on Emma McChesney, calmly, "in our full and complete, not +to say nifty line of women's pajamas--pink pajamas, blue pajamas, +violet pajamas, yellow pajamas, white silk--" + +T. A. Buck stood up. "I want to say," he began, "that if you are +jesting, I think this is a mighty poor time to joke. And if you are +serious I can only deduce from it that this year of business worry and +responsibility has been too much for you. I'm sure that if you were--" + +"That's all right," interrupted Emma McChesney. "Don't apologize. I +purposely broke it to you this way, when I might have approached it +gently. You've done just what I knew you'd do, so it's all right. +After you've thought it over, and sort of got chummy with the idea, +you'll be just as keen on it as I am." + +"Never!" + +"Oh, yes, you will. It's the knickerbocker end of it that scares you. +Nothing new or startling about pajamas, except that more and more +women are wearing 'em, and that no girl would dream of going away to +school without her six sets of pajamas. Why, a girl in a regulation +nightie at one of their midnight spreads would be ostracized. Of +course I've thought up a couple of new kinks in 'em--new ways of +cutting and all that, and there's one model--a washable crepe, for +traveling, that doesn't need to be pressed--but I'll talk about that +later." + +T. A. Buck was trying to put in a word of objection, but she would +have none of it. But at Emma McChesney's next words his indignation +would brook no barriers. + +"Now," she went on, "the feature of the knickerbockers will be this: +They've got to be ready for the boys' spring trip, and in all the +larger cities, especially in the hustling Middle-Western towns, and +along the coast, too, I'm planning to have the knickerbockers +introduced at private and exclusive exhibitions, and worn by--get +this, please--worn by living models. One big store in each town, see? +Half a dozen good-looking girls--" + +"Never!" shouted T. A. Buck, white and shaking. "Never! This firm has +always had a name for dignity, solidness, conservatism--" + +"Then it's just about time it lost that reputation. It's all very well +to hang on to your dignity when you're on solid ground, but when you +feel things slipping from under you the thing to do is to grab on to +anything that'll keep you on your feet for a while at least. I tell +you the women will go wild over this knickerbocker idea. They've been +waiting for it." + +"It's a wild-cat scheme," disputed Buck hotly. "It's a drowning man's +straw, and just about as helpful. I'm a reasonable man--" + +"All unreasonable men say that," smiled Emma McChesney. + +"--I'm a reasonable man, I say. And heaven knows I have the interest +of this firm at heart. But this is going too far. If we're going to +smash we'll go decently, and with our name untarnished. Pajamas are +bad enough. But when it comes to the firm of T. A. Buck being +represented by--by--living model hussies stalking about in satin +tights like chorus girls, why--" + +In Emma McChesney's alert, electric mind there leapt about a dozen +plans for winning this man over. For win him she would, in the end. It +was merely a question of method. She chose the simplest. There was a +set look about her jaw. Her eyes flashed. Two spots of carmine glowed +in her cheeks. + +"I expected just this," she said. "And I prepared for it." She crossed +swiftly to her desk, opened a drawer, and took out a flat package. "I +expected opposition. That's why I had these samples made up to show +you. I designed them myself, and tore up fifty patterns before I +struck one that suited me. Here are the pajamas." + +She lifted out a dainty, shell-pink garment, and shook it out before +the half-interested, half-unwilling eyes of T. A. Buck. + +"This is the jacket. Buttons on the left; see? Instead of the right, +as it would in a man's garment. Semi-sailor collar, with knotted soft +silk scarf. Oh, it's just a little kink, but they'll love it. They're +actually becoming. I've tried 'em. Notice the frogs and cord. Pretty +neat, yes? Slight flare at the hips. Makes 'em set and hang right. +Perfectly straight, like a man's coat." + +T. A. Buck eyed the garments with a grudging admiration. + +"Oh, that part of it don't sound so unreasonable, although I don't +believe there is much of a demand for that kind of thing. But the +other---the--the knickerbocker things--that's not even practical. It +will make an ugly garment, and the women who would fall for a fad like +that wouldn't be of the sort to wear an ugly piece of lingerie. It +isn't to be thought of seriously--" + +Emma McChesney stepped to the door of the tiny wash-room off her +office and threw it open. + +"Miss La Noyes! We're ready for you." + +And there emerged from the inner room a trim, lithe, almost boyishly +slim figure attired in a bewitchingly skittish-looking garment +consisting of knickerbockers and snug brassiere of king's blue satin +messaline. Dainty black silk stockings and tiny buckled slippers set +off the whole effect. + +"Miss La Noyes," said Emma McChesney, almost solemnly, "this is Mr. T. +A. Buck, president of the firm. Miss La Noyes, of the 'Gay Social +Whirl' company." + +Miss La Noyes bowed slightly and rested one white hand at her side in +an attitude of nonchalant ease. + +"Pleased, I'm shaw!" she said, in a clear, high voice. + +And, "Charmed," replied T. A. Buck, his years and breeding standing +him in good stead now. + +Emma McChesney laid a kindly hand on the girl's shoulder. "Turn +slowly, please. Observe the absence of unnecessary fulness about the +hips, or at the knees. No wrinkles to show there. No man will ever +appreciate the fine points of this little garment, but the women!--To +the left, Miss La Noyes. You'll see it fastens snug and trim with a +tiny clasp just below the knees. This garment has the added attraction +of being fastened to the upper garment, a tight satin brassiere. The +single, unattached garment is just as satisfactory, however. Women are +wearing plush this year. Not only for the street, but for evening +dresses. I rather think they'll fancy a snappy little pair of yellow +satin knickers under a gown of the new orange plush. Or a taupe pair, +under a gray street suit. Or a natty little pair of black satin, +finished and piped in white satin, to be worn with a black and white +shopping costume. Why, I haven't worn a petticoat since I--" + +"Do you mean to tell me," burst from the long-pent T. A. Buck, "that +you wear 'em too?" + +"Crazy about 'em. Miss La Noyes, will you just slip on your street +skirt, please?" + +She waited in silence until the demure Miss La Noyes reappeared. A +narrow, straight-hanging, wrinkleless cloth skirt covered the much +discussed under-garment. "Turn slowly, please. Thanks. You see, Mr. +Buck? Not a wrinkle. No bunchiness. No lumps. No crawling up about the +knees. Nothing but ease, and comfort, and trim good looks." + +T. A. Buck passed his hand over his head in a dazed, helpless gesture. +There was something pathetic in his utter bewilderment and +helplessness in contrast with Emma McChesney's breezy self-confidence, +and the show-girl's cool poise and unconcern. + +"Wait a minute," he murmured, almost pleadingly. "Let me ask a couple +of questions, will you?" + +"Questions? A hundred. That proves you're interested." + +"Well, then, let me ask this young lady the first one. Miss--er--La +Noyes, do you honestly and truly like this garment? Would you buy one +if you saw it in a shop window?" + +Miss La Noyes' answer came trippingly and without hesitation. She did +not even have to feel of her back hair first. + +"Say, I'd go without my lunch for a week to get it. Mrs. McChesney +says I can have this pair. I can't wait till our prima donna sees 'em. +She'll hate me till she's got a dozen like 'em." + +"Next!" urged Mrs. McChesney, pleasantly. + +But T. A. Buck shook his head. "That's all. Only--" + +Emma McChesney patted Miss La Noyes lightly on the shoulder, and +smiled dazzlingly upon her. "Run along, little girl. You've done +beautifully. And many thanks." + +Miss La Noyes, appearing in another moment dressed for the street, +stopped at the door to bestow a frankly admiring smile upon the +abstracted president of the company, and a grateful one upon its pink- +cheeked secretary. + +"Hope you'll come and see our show some evening. You won't know me at +first, because I wear a blond wig in the first scene. Third from the +left, front row." And to Mrs. McChesney: "I cer'nly did hate to get up +so early this morning, but after you're up it ain't so fierce. And it +cer'nly was easy money. Thanks." + +[Illustration: "'No man will ever appreciate the fine points of this +little garment, but the women--!'"] + +Emma McChesney glanced quickly at T. A., saw that he was pliant enough +for the molding process, and deftly began to shape, and bend, and +smooth and pat. + +"Let's sit down, and unravel the kinks in our nerves. Now, if you do +favor this new plan--oh, I mean after you've given it consideration, +and all that! Yes, indeed. But if you do, I think it would be good +policy to start the game in--say--Cleveland. The Kaufman-Oster Company +of Cleveland have a big, snappy, up-to-the-minute store. We'll get +them to send out announcement cards. Something neat and flattering- +looking. See? Little stage all framed up. Scene set to show a bedroom +or boudoir. Then, thin girls, plump girls, short girls, high girls. +They'll go through all the paces. We won't only show the +knickerbockers: we demonstrate how the ordinary petticoat bunches and +crawls up under the heavy plush and velvet top skirt. We'll show 'em +in street clothes, evening clothes, afternoon frocks. Each one in a +different shade of satin knicker. And silk stockings and cunning +little slippers to match. The store will stand for that. It's a big ad +for them, too." + +Emma McChesney's hair was slightly tousled. Her cheeks were carmine. +Her eyes glowed. + +"Don't you see! Don't you get it! Can't you feel how the thing's going +to take hold?" + +"By Gad!" burst from T. A. Buck, "I'm darned if I don't believe you're +right--almost--But are you sure that you believe--" + +Emma McChesney brought one little white fist down into the palm of the +other hand. "Sure? Why, I'm so sure that when I shut my eyes I can see +T. A. Senior sitting over there in that chair, tapping the side of his +nose with the edge of his tortoise-shell-rimmed glasses, and nodding +his head, with his features all screwed up like a blessed old +gargoyle, the way he always did when something tickled him. That's how +sure I am." + +T. A. Buck stood up abruptly. He shrugged his shoulders. His face +looked strangely white and drawn. "I'll leave it to you. I'll do my +share of the work. But I'm not more than half convinced, remember." + +"That's enough for the present," answered Emma McChesney, briskly. +"Well, now, suppose we talk machinery and girls, and cutters for a +while." + +Two months later found T. A. Buck and his sales-manager, both shirt- +sleeved, both smoking nervously, as they marked, ticketed, folded, +arranged. They were getting out the travelers' spring lines. Entered +Mrs. McChesney, and stood eying them, worriedly. It was her dozenth +visit to the stock-room that morning. A strange restlessness seemed to +trouble her. She wandered from office to show-room, from show-room to +factory. + +"What's the trouble?" inquired T. A. Buck, squinting up at her through +a cloud of cigar smoke. + +"Oh, nothing," answered Mrs. McChesney, and stood fingering the piles +of glistening satin garments, a queer, faraway look in her eyes. Then +she turned and walked listlessly toward the door. There she +encountered Spalding--Billy Spalding, of the coveted Middle-Western +territory, Billy Spalding, the long-headed, quick-thinking; Spalding, +the persuasive, Spalding the mixer, Spalding on whom depended the fate +of the T. A. Buck Featherloom Knickerbocker and Pajama. + +"'Morning! When do you start out?" she asked him. + +"In the morning. Gad, that's some line, what? I'm itching to spread +it. You're certainly a wonder-child, Mrs. McChesney. Why, the boys--" + +Emma McChesney sighed, somberly. "That line does sort of--well, tug at +your heart-strings, doesn't it?" She smiled, almost wistfully. "Say, +Billy, when you reach the Eagle House at Waterloo, tell Annie, the +head-waitress to rustle you a couple of Mrs. Traudt's dill pickles. +Tell her Mrs. McChesney asked you to. Mrs. Traudt, the proprietor's +wife, doles 'em out to her favorites. They're crisp, you know, and +firm, and juicy, and cold, and briny." + +Spalding drew a sibilant breath. "I'll be there!" he grinned. "I'll be +there!" + +But he wasn't. At eight the next morning there burst upon Mrs. +McChesney a distraught T. A. Buck. + +"Hear about Spalding?" he demanded. + +"Spalding? No." + +"His wife 'phoned from St. Luke's. Taken with an appendicitis attack +at midnight. They operated at five this morning. One of those had-it- +been-twenty-four-hours-later-etc. operations. That settles us." + +"Poor kid," replied Emma McChesney. "Rough on him and his brand-new +wife." + +"Poor kid! Yes. But how about his territory? How about our new line? +How about--" + +"Oh, that's all right," said Emma McChesney, cheerfully. + +"I'd like to know how! We haven't a man equal to the territory. He's +our one best bet." + +"Oh, that's all right," said Mrs. McChesney again, smoothly. + +A little impatient exclamation broke from T. A. Buck. At that Emma +McChesney smiled. Her new listlessness and abstraction seemed to drop +from her. She braced her shoulders, and smiled her old sunny, +heartening smile. + +"I'm going out with that line. I'm going to leave a trail of pajamas +and knickerbockers from Duluth to Canton." + +"You! No, you won't!" A dull, painful red had swept into T. A. Buck's +face. It was answered by a flood of scarlet in Mrs. McChesney's +countenance. + +"I don't get you," she said. "I'm afraid you don't realize what this +trip means. It's going to be a fight. They'll have to be coaxed and +bullied and cajoled, and reasoned with. It's going to be a 'show-me' +trip." + +T. A. Buck took a quick step forward. "That's just why. I won't have +you fighting with buyers, taking their insults, kowtowing to them, +salving them. It--it isn't woman's work." + +Emma McChesney was sorting the contents of her desk with quick, +nervous fingers. "I'll. get the Twentieth Century," she said, over her +shoulder. "Don't argue, please. If it's no work for a woman then I +suppose it follows that I'm unwomanly. For ten years I traveled this +country selling T. A. Buck's Featherloom Petticoats. My first trip on +the road I was in the twenties--and pretty, too. I'm a woman of +thirty-seven now. I'll never forget that first trip--the heartbreaks, +the insults I endured, the disappointments, the humiliation, until +they understood that I meant business--strictly business. I'm tired of +hearing you men say that this and that and the other isn't woman's +work. Any work is woman's work that a woman can do well. I've given +the ten best years of my life to this firm. Next to my boy at school +it's the biggest thing in my life. Sometimes it swamps even him. Don't +come to me with that sort of talk." She was locking drawers, searching +pigeon-holes, skimming files. "This is my busy day." She arose, and +shut her desk with a bang, locked it, and turned a flushed and beaming +face toward T. A. Buck, as he stood frowning before her. + +[Illustration: "Emma McChesney... I believe in you now! Dad and I both +believe in you'"] + +"Your father believed in me--from the ground up. We understood each +other, he and I. You've learned a lot in the last year and a half, T. +A. Junior-that-was, but there's one thing you haven't mastered. When +will you learn to believe in Emma McChesney?" + +She was out of the office before he had time to answer, leaving him +standing there. + +In the dusk of a late winter evening just three weeks later, a man +paused at the door of the unlighted office marked "Mrs. McChesney." He +looked about a moment, as though dreading detection. Then he opened +the door, stepped into the dim quiet of the little room, and closed +the door gently after him. Everything in the tiny room was quiet, +neat, orderly. It seemed to possess something of the character of its +absent owner. The intruder stood there a moment, uncertainly, looking +about him. + +Then he took a step forward and laid one hand on the back of the empty +chair before the closed desk. He shut his eyes and it seemed that he +felt her firm, cool, reassuring grip on his fingers as they clutched +the wooden chair. The impression was so strong that he kept his eyes +shut, and they were still closed when his voice broke the silence of +the dim, quiet little room. + +"Emma McChesney," he was saying aloud, "Emma McChesney, you great big, +fine, brave, wonderful woman, you! I believe in you now! Dad and I +both believe in you." + + + + +X + +IN THE ABSENCE OF THE AGENT + + +This is a love-story. But it is a love-story with a logical ending. +Which means that in the last paragraph no one has any one else in his +arms. Since logic and love have long been at loggerheads, the story +may end badly. Still, what love passages there are shall be left +intact. There shall be no trickery. There shall be no running +breathless, flushed, eager-eyed, to the very gateway of Love's garden, +only to bump one's nose against that baffling, impregnable, stone-wall +phrase of "let us draw a veil, dear reader." This is the story of the +love of a man for a woman, a mother for her son, and a boy for a girl. +And there shall be no veil. + +Since 8 A.M., when she had unlocked her office door, Mrs. Emma +McChesney had been working in bunches of six. Thus, from twelve to one +she had dictated six letters, looked up memoranda, passed on samples +of petticoat silk, fired the office-boy, wired Spalding out in +Nebraska, and eaten her lunch. Emma McChesney was engaged in that +nerve-racking process known as getting things out of the way. When +Emma McChesney aimed to get things out of the way she did not use a +shovel; she used a road-drag. + +Now, at three-thirty, she shut the last desk-drawer with a bang, +locked it, pushed back the desk-phone, discovered under it the +inevitable mislaid memorandum, scanned it hastily, tossed the scrap of +paper into the brimming waste-basket, and, yawning, raised her arms +high above her head. The yawn ended, her arms relaxed, came down +heavily, and landed her hands in her lap with a thud. It had been a +whirlwind day. At that moment most of the lines in Emma McChesney's +face slanted downward. + +But only for that moment. The next found her smiling. Up went the +corners of her mouth! Out popped her dimples! The laugh-lines appeared +at the corners of her eyes. She was still dimpling like an +anticipatory child when she had got her wraps from the tiny closet, +and was standing before the mirror, adjusting her hat. + +[Illustration: "It had been a whirlwind day"] + +The hat was one of those tiny, pert, head-hugging trifles that only a +very pretty woman can wear. A merciless little hat, that gives no +quarter to a blotched skin, a too large nose, colorless eyes. Emma +McChesney stood before the mirror, the cruel little hat perched atop +her hair, ready to give it the final and critical bash which should +bring it down about her ears where it belonged. But even now, perched +grotesquely atop her head as it was, you could see that she was going +to get away with it. + +It was at this critical moment that the office door opened, and there +entered T. A. Buck, president of the T. A. Buck Featherloom Petticoat +and Lingerie Company. He entered smiling, leisurely, serene-eyed, as +one who anticipates something pleasurable. At sight of Emma McChesney +standing, hatted before the mirror, the pleasurable look became less +confident. + +"Hello!" said T. A. Buck. "Whither?" and laid a sheaf of businesslike- +looking papers on the top of Mrs. McChesney's well cleared desk. + +Mrs. McChesney, without turning, performed the cramming process +successfully, so that her hat left only a sub-halo of fluffy bright +hair peeping out from the brim. + +Then, "Playing hooky," she said. "Go 'way." + +T. A. Buck picked up the sheaf of papers and stowed them into an +inside coat-pocket. "As president of this large and growing concern," +he said, "I want to announce that I'm going along." + +Emma McChesney adjusted her furs. "As secretary of said firm I rise to +state that you're not invited." + +T. A. Buck, hands in pockets, stood surveying the bright-eyed woman +before him. The pleasurable expression had returned to his face. + +"If the secretary of the above-mentioned company has the cheek to play +hooky at 3:30 P.M. in the middle of November, I fancy the president +can demand to know where she's going, and then go too." + +Mrs. McChesney unconcernedly fastened the clasp of her smart English +glove. + +"Didn't you take two hours for lunch? Had mine off the top of my desk. +Ham sandwich and a glass of milk. Dictated six letters between bites +and swallows." + +A frown of annoyance appeared between T. A. Buck's remarkably fine +eyes. He came over to Mrs. McChesney and looked down at her. + +"Look here, you'll kill yourself. It's all very well to be interested +in one's business, but I draw the line at ruining my digestion for it. +Why in Sam Hill don't you take a decent hour at least?" + +"Only bricklayers can take an hour for lunch," retorted Emma +McChesney. "When you get to be a lady captain of finance you can't +afford it." + +She crossed to her desk and placed her fingers on the electric switch. +The desk-light cast a warm golden glow on the smart little figure in +the trim tailored suit, the pert hat, the shining furs. She was rosy- +cheeked and bright-eyed as a schoolgirl. There was about her that +vigor, and glow, and alert assurance which bespeaks congenial work, +sound sleep, healthy digestion, and a sane mind. She was as tingling, +and bracing, and alive, and antiseptic as the crisp, snappy November +air outdoors. + +T. A. Buck drew a long breath as he looked at her. + +"Those are devastating clothes," he remarked. "D'you know, until now I +always had an idea that furs weren't becoming to women. Make most of +'em look stuffy. But you--" + +Emma McChesney glanced down at the shining skins of muff and scarf. +She stroked them gently and lovingly with her gloved hand. + +"M-m-m-m! These semi-precious furs _are_ rather satisfactory--until +you see a woman in sealskin and sables. Then you want to use 'em for a +hall rug." + +T. A. Buck stepped within the radius of the yellow light, so that its +glow lighted up his already luminous eyes--eyes that had a trick of +translucence under excitement. + +"Sables and sealskin," repeated T. A. Buck, his voice vibrant. "If +it's those you want, you can--" + +Snap! went the electric switch under Emma McChesney's fingers. It was +as decisive as a blow in the face. She walked to the door. The little +room was dim. + +"I'm sending my boy through college with my sealskin-and-sable fund," +she said crisply; "and I'm to meet him at 4:30." + +"Oh, that's your appointment!" Relief was evident in T. A. Buck's +tone. + +Emma McChesney shook a despairing head. "For impudent and unquenchable +inquisitiveness commend me to a man! Here! If you must know, though I +intended it as a surprise when it was finished and furnished--I'm +going to rent a flat, a regular six-room, plenty-of-closets flat, +after ten years of miserable hotel existence. Jock's running over for +two days to approve it. I ought to have waited until the holidays, so +he wouldn't miss classes; but I couldn't bear to. I've spent ten +Thanksgivings, and ten Christmases, and ten New Years in hotels. Hell +has no terrors for me." + +They were walking down the corridor together. + +"Take me along--please!" pleaded T. A. Buck, like a boy. "I know all +about flats, and gas-stoves, and meters, and plumbing, and +everything!" + +"You!" scoffed Emma McChesney, "with your five-story house and your +summer home in the mountains!" + +"Mother won't hear of giving up the house. I hate it myself. Bathrooms +in those darned old barracks are so cold that a hot tub is an icy +plunge before you get to it." They had reached the elevator. A +stubborn look appeared about T. A. Buck's jaw. "I'm going!" he +announced, and scudded down the hail to his office door. Emma +McChesney pressed the elevator-button. Before the ascending car showed +a glow of light in the shaft T. A. Buck appeared with hat, gloves, +stick. + +"I think the car's downstairs. We'll run up in it. What's the address? +Seventies, I suppose?" + +Emma McChesney stepped out of the elevator and turned. "Car! Not I! If +you're bound to come with me you'll take the subway. They're asking +enough for that apartment as it is. I don't intend to drive up in a +five-thousand-dollar motor and have the agent tack on an extra twenty +dollars a month." + +T. . Buck smiled with engaging agreeableness. "Subway it is," he said. +"Your presence would turn even a Bronx train into a rose-garden." + +Twelve minutes later the new apartment building, with its cream-tile +and red-brick Louis Somethingth facade, and its tan brick and plaster +Michael-Dougherty-contractor back, loomed before them, soaring even +above its lofty neighbors. On the door-step stood a maple-colored +giant in a splendor of scarlet, and gold braid, and glittering +buttons. The great entrance door was opened for them by a half-portion +duplicate of the giant outside. In the foyer was splendor to grace a +palace hall. There were great carved chairs. There was a massive oaken +table. There were rugs, there were hangings, there were dim-shaded +lamps casting a soft glow upon tapestry and velours. + +Awaiting the pleasure of the agent, T. A. Buck, leaning upon his +stick, looked about him appreciatively. "Makes the Knickerbocker lobby +look like the waiting-room in an orphan asylum." + +"Don't let 'em fool you," answered Emma McChesney, _sotto voce,_ just +before the agent popped out of his office. "It's all included in the +rent. Dinky enough up-stairs. If ever I have guests that I want to +impress I'll entertain 'em in the hall." + +There approached them the agent, smiling, urbane, pleasing as to +manner--but not too pleasing; urbanity mixed, so to speak, with the +leaven of caution. + +"Ah, yes! Mrs.--er--McChesney, wasn't it? I can't tell you how many +parties have been teasing me for that apartment since you looked at +it. I've had to--well--make myself positively unpleasant in order to +hold it for you. You said you wished your son to--" + +The glittering little jewel-box of an elevator was taking them higher +and higher. The agent stared hard at T. A. Buck. + +Mrs. McChesney followed his gaze. "My business associate, Mr. T. A. +Buck," she said grimly. + +The agent discarded caution; he was all urbanity. Their floor +attained, he unlocked the apartment door and threw it open with a +gesture which was a miraculous mixture of royalty and generosity. + +"He knows you!" hissed Emma McChesney, entering with T. A. "Another +ten on the rent. "The agent pulled up a shade, switched on a light, +straightened an electric globe. T. A. Buck looked about at the bare +white walls, at the bare polished floor, at the severe fireplace. + +"I knew it couldn't last," he said. + +"If it did," replied Emma McChesney good-naturedly, "I couldn't afford +to live here," and disappeared into the kitchen followed by the agent, +who babbled ever and anon of views, of Hudsons, of express-trains, of +parks, as is the way of agents from Fiftieth Street to One Hundred and +'Umpty-ninth. + +T. A. Buck, feet spread wide, hands behind him, was left standing in +the center of the empty living-room. He was leaning on his stick and +gazing fixedly upward at the ornate chandelier. It was a handsome +fixture, and boasted some of the most advanced ideas in modern +lighting equipment. Yet it scarcely seemed to warrant the passionate +scrutiny which T. A. Buck was bestowing upon it. So rapt was his gaze +that when the telephone-bell shrilled unexpectedly in the hallway he +started so that his stick slipped on the polished floor, and as Emma +McChesney and the still voluble agent emerged from the kitchen the +dignified head of the firm of T. A. Buck and Company presented an +animated picture, one leg in the air, arms waving wildly, expression +at once amazed and hurt. + +Emma McChesney surveyed him wide-eyed. The agent, unruffled, continued +to talk on his way to the telephone. + +"It only looks small to you," he was saying. "Fact is, most people +think it's too large. They object to a big kitchen. Too much work." He +gave his attention to the telephone. + +Emma McChesney looked troubled. She stood in the doorway, head on one +side, as one who conjures up a mental picture. + +"Come here," she commanded suddenly, addressing the startled T. A. +"You nagged until I had to take you along. Here's a chance to justify +your coming. I want your opinion on the kitchen." + +"Kitchens," announced T. A. Buck of the English clothes and the +gardenia, "are my specialty," and entered the domain of the gas-range +and the sink. + +Emma McChesney swept the infinitesimal room with a large gesture. + +"Considering it as a kitchen, not as a locker, does it strike you as +being adequate?" + +T. A. Buck, standing in the center of the room, touched all four walls +with his stick. + +"I've heard," he ventured, "that they're--ah--using 'em small this +year." + +Emma McChesney's eyes took on a certain wistful expression. "Maybe. +But whenever I've dreamed of a home, which was whenever I got lonesome +on the road, which was every evening for ten years, I'd start to plan +a kitchen. A kitchen where you could put up preserves, and a keg of +dill pickles, and get a full-sized dinner without getting things more +than just comfortably cluttered." + +T. A. Buck reflected. He flapped his arms as one who feels pressed for +room. "With two people occupying the room, as at present, the presence +of one dill pickle would sort of crowd things, not to speak of a keg +of 'em, and the full-sized dinner, and the--er--preserves. Still--" + +"As for a turkey," wailed Emma McChesney, "one would have to go out on +the fire-escape to baste it." + +The swinging door opened to admit the agent. "Would you excuse me? A +party down-stairs--lease--be back in no time. Just look about--any +questions--glad to answer later--" + +"Quite all right," Mrs. McChesney assured him. Her expression was one +of relief as the hall door closed behind him. "Good! There's a spot in +the mirror over the mantel. I've been dying to find out if it was a +flaw in the glass or only a smudge." + +She made for the living-room. T. A. Buck followed thoughtfully. +Thoughtfully and interestedly he watched her as she stood on tiptoe, +breathed stormily upon the mirror's surface, and rubbed the moist +place with her handkerchief. She stood back a pace, eyes narrowed +critically. + +"It's gone, isn't it?" she asked. + +T. A. Buck advanced to where she stood and cocked his head too, +judicially, and in the opposite direction to which Emma McChesney's +head was cocked. So that the two heads were very close together. + +"It's a poor piece of glass," he announced at last. + +A simple enough remark. Perhaps it was made with an object in view, +but certainly it was not meant to bring forth the storm of protest +that came from Emma McChesney's lips. She turned on him, lips +quivering, eyes wrathful. + +"You shouldn't have come!" she cried. "You're as much out of place in +a six-room flat as a truffle would be in a boiled New England dinner. +Do you think I don't see its shortcomings? Every normal woman, no +matter what sort of bungalow, palace, ranch-house, cave, cottage, or +tenement she may be living in, has in her mind's eye a picture of the +sort of apartment she'd live in if she could afford it. I've had mine +mapped out from the wall-paper in the front hall to the laundry-tubs +in the basement, and it doesn't even bear a family resemblance to +this." + +"I'm sorry," stammered T. A. Buck. "You asked my opinion and I--" + +"Opinion! If every one had so little tact as to give their true +opinion when it was asked this would be a miserable world. I asked you +because I wanted you to lie. I expected it of you. I needed bolstering +up. I realize that the rent I'm paying and the flat I'm getting form a +geometrical problem where X equals the unknown quantity and only the +agent knows the answer. But it's going to be a home for Jock and me. +It's going to be a place where he can bring his friends; where he can +have his books, and his 'baccy, and his college junk. It will be the +first real home that youngster has known in all his miserable +boarding-house, hotel, boys' school, and college existence. Sometimes +when I think of what he's missed, of the loneliness and the neglect +when I was on the road, of the barrenness of his boyhood, I--" + +T. A. Buck started forward as one who had made up his mind about +something long considered. Then he gulped, retreated, paced excitedly +to the door and back again. On the return trip he found smiling and +repentant Emma McChesney regarding him. + +"Now aren't you sorry you insisted on coming along? Letting yourself +in for a ragging like that? I think I'm a wee bit taut in the nerves +at the prospect of seeing Jock--and planning things with him--I--" + +T. A. Buck paused in his pacing. "Don't!" he said. "I had it coming to +me. I did it deliberately. I wanted to know how you really felt about +it." + +Emma McChesney stared at him curiously. "Well, now you know. But I +haven't told you half. In all those years while I was selling T. A. +Buck's Featherloom Petticoats on the road, and eating hotel food that +tasted the same, whether it was roast beef or ice-cream, I was +planning this little place. I've even made up my mind to the +scandalous price I'm willing to pay a maid who'll cook real dinners +for us and serve them as I've always vowed Jock's dinners should be +served when I could afford something more than a shifting hotel home." + +T. A. Buck was regarding the head of his if walking-stick with a gaze +as intent as that which he previously had bestowed upon the +chandelier. For that matter it was a handsome enough stick--a choice +thing in malacca. But it was scarcely more deserving than the +chandelier had been. + +Mrs. McChesney had wandered into the dining-room. She peered out of +windows. She poked into butler's pantry. She inspected wall-lights. +And still T. A. Buck stared at his stick. + +"It's really robbery," came Emma McChesney's voice from the next room. +"Only a New York agent could have the nerve to do it. I've a friend +who lives in Chicago--Mary Cutting. You've heard me speak of her. Has +a flat on the north side there, just next door to the lake. The rent +is ridiculous; and--would you believe it?--the flat is equipped with +bookcases, and gorgeous mantel shelves, and buffet, and bathroom +fixtures, and china-closets, and hall-tree--" + +Her voice trailed into nothingness as she disappeared into the +kitchen. When she emerged again she was still enumerating the charms +of the absurdly low-priced Chicago flat, thus: + +"--and full-length mirrors, and wonderful folding table-shelf +gimcracks in the kitchen, and--" + +T. A. Buck did not look up. But, "Oh, Chicago!" he might have been +heard to murmur, as only a New-Yorker can breathe those two words. + +"Don't 'Oh, Chicago!' like that," mimicked Emma McChesney. "I've lain +awake nights dreaming of a home I once saw there, with the lake in the +back yard, and a couple of miles of veranda, and a darling vegetable- +garden, and the whole place simply honeycombed with bathrooms, and +sleeping-porches, and sun-parlors, and linen-closets, and--gracious, I +wonder what's keeping Jock!" + +T. A. Buck wrenched his eyes from his stick. All previous remarks +descriptive of his eyes under excitement paled at the glow which +lighted them now. They glowed straight into Emma McChesney's eyes and +held them, startled. + +"Emma," said T. A. Buck quite calmly, "will you marry me? I want to +give you all those things, beginning with the lake in the back yard +and ending with the linen-closets and the sun-parlor." + +And Emma McChesney, standing there in the middle of the dining-room +floor, stared long at T. A. Buck, standing there in the center of the +living-room floor. And if any human face, in the space of seventeen +seconds, could be capable of expressing relief, and regret, and alarm, +and dismay, and tenderness, and wonder, and a great womanly sympathy, +Emma McChesney's countenance might be said to have expressed all those +emotions--and more. The last two were uppermost as she slowly came +toward him. + +"T. A.," she said, and her voice had in it a marvelous quality, "I'm +thirty-nine years old. You know I was married when I was eighteen and +got my divorce after eight years. Those eight years would have left +any woman who had endured them with one of two determinations: to take +up life again and bring it out into the sunshine until it was sound, +and sweet, and clean, and whole once more, or to hide the hurt and +brood over it, and cover it with bitterness, and hate until it +destroyed by its very foulness. I had Jock, and I chose the sun, thank +God! I said then that marriage was a thing tried and abandoned +forever, for me. And now--" + +There was something almost fine in the lines of T. A. Buck's too +feminine mouth and chin; but not fine enough. + +"Now, Emma," he repeated, "will you marry me?" + +Emma McChesney's eyes were a wonderful thing to see, so full of pain +were they, so wide with unshed tears. + +"As long as--he--lived," she went on, "the thought of marriage was +repulsive to me. Then, that day seven months ago out in Iowa, when I +picked up that paper and saw it staring out at me in print that seemed +to waver and dance"--she covered her eyes with her hand for a moment-- +"'McChesney--Stuart McChesney, March 7, aged forty-seven years. +Funeral to-day from Howland Brothers' chapel. Aberdeen and Edinburgh +papers please copy!'" + +[Illustration: "'Emma.' he said, 'will you marry me?'"] + +T. A. Buck took the hand that covered her eyes and brought it gently +down. + +"Emma," he said, "will you marry me?" + +"T. A., I don't love you. Wait! Don't say it! I'm thirty-nine, but I'm +brave and foolish enough to say that all these years of work, and +disappointment, and struggle, and bitter experience haven't convinced +me that love does not exist. People have said about me, seeing me in +business, that I'm not a marrying woman. There is no such thing as +that. Every woman is a marrying woman, and sometimes the light- +heartedest, and the scoffingest, and the most self-sufficient of us +are, beneath it all, the marryingest. Perhaps I'm making a mistake. +Perhaps ten years from now I'll be ready to call myself a fool for +having let slip what the wise ones would call a 'chance.' But I don't +think so, T. A." + +"You know me too well," argued T. A. Buck rather miserably. "But at +least you know the worst of me as well as the best. You'd be taking no +risks." + +Emma McChesney walked to the window. There was a little silence. Then +she finished it with one clean stroke. "We've been good business +chums, you and I. I hope we always shall be. I can imagine nothing +more beautiful on this earth for a woman than being married to a man +she cares for and who cares for her. But, T. A., you're not the man." + +And then there were quick steps in the corridor, a hand at the door- +knob, a slim, tall figure in the doorway. Emma McChesney seemed to +waft across the rooms and into the embrace of the slim, tall figure. + +"Welcome--home!" she cried. "Sketch in the furniture to suit +yourself." + +"This is going to be great--great!" announced Jock. "What do you know +about the Oriental potentate down-stairs! I guess Otis Skinner has +nothing on him when it comes--Why, hello, Mr. Buck!" He was peering +into the next room. "Why don't you folks light up? I thought you were +another agent person. Met that one down in the hail. Said he'd be +right up. What's the matter with him anyway? He smiles like a +waxworks. When the elevator took me up he was still smiling from the +foyer, and I could see his grin after the rest of him was lost to +sight. Regular Cheshire. What's this? Droring-room?" + +[Illustration: "'Welcome home!' she cried. 'Sketch in the furniture to +suit yourself'"] + +He rattled on like a pleased boy. He strode over to shake hands with +Buck. Emma McChesney, cheeks glowing, eyed him adoringly. Then she +gave a little suppressed cry. + +"Jock, what's happened?" + +Jock whirled around like a cat. "Where? When? What?" + +Emma McChesney pointed at him with one shaking finger. "You! You're +thin! You're--you're emaciated. Your shoulders, where are they? Your-- +your legs--" + +Jock looked down at himself. His glance was pride. "Clothes," he said. + +"Clothes?" faltered his mother. + +"You're losing your punch, Mother? You used to be up on men's rigging. +All the boys look like their own shadows these days. English cut. No +padding. No heels. Incurve at the waist. Watch me walk." He flapped +across the room, chest concave, shoulders rounded, arms hanging limp, +feet wide apart, chin thrust forward. + +"Do you mean to tell me that's your present form of locomotion?" +demanded his mother. + +"I hope so. Been practising it for weeks. They call it the juvenile +jump, and all our best leading men have it. I trailed Douglas +Fairbanks for days before I really got it." + +And the tension between T. A. Buck and Emma McChesney snapped with a +jerk, and they both laughed, and laughed again, at Jock's air of +offended dignity. They laughed until the rancor in the heart of the +man and the hurt and pity in the heart of the woman melted into a bond +of lasting understanding. + +"Go on--laugh!" said Jock. "Say, Mother, is there a shower in the +bathroom, h'm?" And was off to investigate. + +The laughter trailed away into nothingness. "Jock," called his mother, +"do you want your bedroom done in plain or stripes?" + +"Plain," came from the regions beyond. "Got a lot of pennants and +everything." + +T. A. Buck picked up his stick from the corner in which it stood. + +"I'll run along," he said. "You two will want to talk things over +together." He raised his voice to reach the boy in the other room. +"I'm off, Jock." + +Jock's protest sounded down the hall. "Don't leave me alone with her. +She'll blarney me into consenting to blue-and-pink rosebud paper in my +bedroom." + +T. A. Buck had the courage to smile even at that. Emma McChesney was +watching him, her clear eyes troubled, anxious. + +At the door Buck turned, came back a step or two. "I--I think, if you +don't mind, I'll play hooky this time and run over to Atlantic City +for a couple of days. You'll find things slowing up, now that the +holidays are so near." + +"Fine idea--fine!" agreed Emma McChesney; but her eyes still wore the +troubled look. + +"Good-by," said T. A. Buck abruptly. + +"Good--" and then she stopped. "I've a brand-new idea. Give you +something to worry about on your vacation." + +"I'm supplied," answered T. A. Buck grimly. + +"Nonsense! A real worry. A business worry. A surprise." + +Jock had joined them, and was towering over his mother, her hand in +his. + +T. A. Buck regarded them moodily. "After your pajama and knickerbocker +stunt I'm braced for anything." + +"Nothing theatrical this time," she assured him. "Don't expect a show +such as you got when I touched off the last fuse." + +An eager, expectant look was replacing the gloom that bad clouded his +face. "Spring it." + +Emma McChesney waited a moment; then, "I think the time has come to +put in another line--a staple. It's--flannel nightgowns." + +"Flannel nightgowns!" Disgust shivered through Buck's voice. "_Flannel +nightgowns!_ They quit wearing those when Broadway was a cow-path." + +"Did, eh?" retorted Emma McChesney. "That's the New-Yorker speaking. +Just because the French near-actresses at the Winter Garden wear silk +lace and sea-foam nighties in their imported boudoir skits, and just +because they display only those frilly, beribboned handmade affairs in +the Fifth Avenue shop-windows, don't you ever think that they're a +national vice. Let me tell you," she went on as T. A. Buck's demeanor +grew more bristlingly antagonistic, "there are thousands and thousands +of women up in Minnesota, and Wisconsin, and Michigan, and Oregon, and +Alaska, and Nebraska, and Dakota who are thankful to retire every +night protected by one long, thick, serviceable flannel nightie, and +one practical hot-water bag. Up in those countries retiring isn't a +social rite: it's a feat of hardihood. I'm keen for a line of plain, +full, roomy old-fashioned flannel nightgowns of the improved T. A. +Buck Featherloom products variety. They'll be wearing 'em long after +knickerbockers have been cut up for patchwork." + +The moody look was quite absent from T. A. Buck's face now, and the +troubled look from Emma McChesney's eyes. + +"Well," Buck said grudgingly, "if you were to advise making up a line +of the latest models in deep-sea divers' uniforms, I suppose I'd give +in. But flannel nightgowns! In the twentieth century--flannel night--" + +"Think it over," laughed Emma McChesney as he opened the door. "We'll +have it out, tooth and nail, when you get back." + +The door closed upon him. Emma McChesney and her son were left alone +in their new home to be. + +"Turn out the light, son," said Emma McChesney, "and come to the +window. There's a view! Worth the money, alone." + +Jock switched off the light. "D' you know, Blonde, I shouldn't wonder +if old T. A.'s sweetish on you," he said as he came over to the +window. + +"Old!" + +"He's forty or over, isn't he?" + +"Son, do you realize your charming mother's thirty-nine?" + +"Oh, you! That's different. You look a kid. You're young in all the +spots where other women of thirty-nine look old. Around the eyes, and +under the chin, and your hands, and the corners of your mouth." + +In the twilight Emma McChesney turned to stare at her son. "Just where +did you learn all that, young 'un? At college?" + +And, "Some view, isn't it, Mother?" parried Jock. The two stood there, +side by side, looking out across the great city that glittered and +swam in the soft haze of the late November afternoon. There are +lovelier sights than New York seen at night, from a window eyrie with +a mauve haze softening all, as a beautiful but experienced woman is +softened by an artfully draped scarf of chiffon. There are cities of +roses, cities of mountains, cities of palm-trees and sparkling lakes; +but no sight, be it of mountains, or roses, or lakes, or waving palm- +trees, is more likely to cause that vague something which catches you +in the throat. + +It caught those two home-hungry people. And it opened the lips of one +of them almost against his will. + +"Mother," said Jock haltingly, painfully, "I came mighty near coming +home--for good--this time." + +His mother turned and searched his face in the dim light. + +"What was it, Jock?" she asked, quite without fuss. + +The slim young figure in the jumping juvenile clothes stirred and +tried to speak, tried again, formed the two words: "A--girl." + +Emma McChesney waited a second, until the icy, cruel, relentless hand +that clutched her very heart should have relaxed ever so little. Then, +"Tell me, sonny boy," she said. + +"Why, Mother--that girl--" There was an agony of bitterness and of +disillusioned youth in his voice. + +Emma McChesney came very close, so that her head, in the pert little +close-fitting hat, rested on the boy's shoulder. She linked her arm +through his, snug and warm. + +"That girl--" she echoed encouragingly. + +And, "That girl," went on Jock, taking up the thread of his grief, +"why, Mother, that--girl--" + +THE END + + + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, ROAST BEEF, MEDIUM *** + +This file should be named rbeem10.txt or rbeem10.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, rbeem11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, rbeem10a.txt + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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