N, “Pantry Girl"
Perhaps, more strictly speaking, instead
of working with the working woman, it was working
with the working man. Hotel work is decidedly
co-educational! Except, indeed, for chambermaids
and laundry workers, where the traditionally female
fields of bed-making and washing have not been usurped
by the male. Even they, those female chambermaids
and launderers, see more or less of working menfolk
during the day. So it might be thought then that
hotel work offers an ideal field for the growth of
such normal intercourse between the sexes as leads
to happy matrimony. No need to depend on dance
halls or the Subway to pick up a “fella.”
No need for external administrations from wholesome
social workers whose aim is to enable the working
man or woman to see something of the opposite sex.
Yet forever are there flies in ointments.
Flossie was one of the salad girls in the main kitchen.
Flossie was Irish, young, most of her teeth gone.
Her sister had worked at our hotel two years earlier,
then had sent for Flossie to come from Ireland.
The sister was now married.
Innocently, interestedly, I asked,
“To a man she knew here at the hotel?”
Flossie cast a withering eye upon
me. “The good Lord save us! I should
say not! And what decent girl would ever be marryin’
the likes of a man who worked around a hotel?
She couldn’t do much worse! Just steer
clear of hotel men, I’m tellin’ ya.
They’re altogether too wise to be safe for any
girl.”
We were eating supper. The table
of eight all nodded assent.
Too wise or not too wise-at
least there is a-cordiality-a
predisposition toward affection on the part of male
hotel workers which tends to make one’s outside
male associates seem fearfully formal, if not stiffly
antagonistic. If one grows accustomed to being
called “Sweetheart,” “Darling”
on first sight, ending in the evening by the time-clock
man’s greeting of, “Here comes my little
bunch of love!”-is it not plain that
outside in the cruel world such words as a mere “How-do-you-do”
or “Good morning” seem cold indeed?
What happens when a girl works three
years in this affectionate atmosphere and then marries
a plumber who hollers merely “say” at her?
Behind the scenes in a hotel-what
is it all about? To find that out I poked around
till the employment-office entrance of one of New York’s
biggest and newest hotels was discovered. There
had been no “ad.” in the Sunday paper
which would give a hint that any hotel needed additional
help. We took our chances. Some twenty men
waited in a little hallway, two women inside the little
office. One of the women weighed at least two
hundred and fifty, the other not a pound over ninety.
Both could have been grandmothers, both wanted chamber
work. The employment man spied me.
“What do you want?”
“A job.”
“What kind of a job?”
“Anything but bein’ chambermaid.”
“What experience have you had in hotel work?”
“None, but lots in private homes.
I’d like a job around the kitchen some place.”
“Ever try pantry work?”
“Not in a hotel, but lots in
private families. I can do that swell!”
(What pantry work meant I hadn’t the least idea-thought
perhaps washing glasses and silverware.)
He put on his coat and hat and dashed
upstairs. He always put on his coat and
hat to go upstairs. In a few moments he dashed
hurriedly back, followed by another man whose teeth
were all worn down in the front. I learned later
that he was an important steward.
He asked me all over again all the
questions the first man had asked, and many more.
He was in despair and impatient when he found I had
not a single letter of recommendation from a single
private family I had worked for. I could have
written myself an excellent one in a few moments.
Could I bring a letter back later in the day?
“Can you fix salads?”
“Sure!”
“You think you could do the job?”
“Sure!”
“Well, you look as if you could.
Never mind the letter, but get one to have by you-comes
in handy any job you want. Now about pay-I
can’t pay you what you been used to getting,
at least not first month.” (I’d mentioned
nothing as to wages.) “Second month maybe more.
First month all I can pay you is fifty and your meals.
That all right?”
As usual, my joy at landing a job
was such that any old pay was acceptable.
“Be back in two hours.”
Just then the employment man called
out to the hall filled with waiting men, “No
jobs for any men this morning.” I don’t
know what became of the old women.
I was back before my two hours were
up, so anxious to begin. The employment man put
on his hat and coat and dashed upstairs after my steward.
Just incidentally, speaking of hats and coats, it can
be mentioned that all this was in the middle of one
of the hottest summers New York ever knew.
The steward led the way up one flight
of iron stairs and into the main kitchen. Wasn’t
I all eyes to see what was what! If anyone is
looking for a bit of muck-raking about the hinterland
of restaurants, let him not bother to read farther.
Nothing could have been cleaner than the kitchen conditions
in our hotel. And orders up and down the line
were to serve nothing which was not absolutely
as it should be.
In a corner of the main kitchen the
steward turned me over to Bridget, who was to take
me here, there, and the other place. By 11.30
A.M., I was back where I started from, only, thanks
to aged Bridget and her none-too-sure leadings, I
was clad in a white cap and white all-over apron-dress,
and had had my lunch. Thereupon the steward escorted
me to my own special corner of the world, where, indeed,
I was to be lord of all I surveyed-provided
my gaze fell not too far afield.
That particular corner was down one
short flight of stairs from the main kitchen into
a hustling, bustling, small and compact, often crowded,
place where were prepared the breakfasts, lunches,
and dinners of such folk who cared more for haste
and less for style than the patrons of the main dining
rooms. Our cafe fed more persons in a day than
the other dining rooms combined. Outside we could
seat five hundred at a time, sixty-five of those at
marble counters, the rest at small tables. But
our kitchen quarters could have been put in one corner
of the spacious, airy upstairs main kitchen.
Through the bustle of scurrying and
ordering waiters I was led to a small shelved-off
compartment. Here I was to earn my fifty dollars
a month from 1.30 P.M. to 9 P.M. daily except Sunday,
with one-half hour off for supper. I was entitled
to eat my breakfast and lunch at the hotel as well.
This first day, I was instructed to
watch for two hours the girl I was to relieve at 1.30.
Her hours were from 6 in the morning to 1.30, which
meant she got the brunt of the hard work-all
of the breakfast and most of the lunch rush.
To me fell the tail end of the lunch rush-up
to about 2.15, and supper or dinner, which only occasionally
could be spoken of as “rush” at all.
I discovered later that we both got the same pay,
although she had to work very much harder, and also
she had been at our hotel almost two years, though
only nine months at this special pantry job.
Before that she had made toast, and toast only, upstairs
in the main kitchen.
The first question Mary asked me that
Monday morning was, “You Spanish?” No,
I wasn’t. Mary was a Spanish grass widow.
Ten years she had been married, but only five of that
time had she lived with her husband. Where was
he? Back in Spain. “No good.”
She had come on to this country because it was too
hard for a woman to make her way in Spain. She
spoke little English, but with that little she showed
that she was kindly disposed and anxious to help all
she could. She herself had a stolid, untidy efficiency
about her, and all the while, poor thing, suffered
with pains in her stomach.
By the time 1.30 came around I knew
what I had to do and could be left to my own devices.
To the pantry girl of our cafe fell various and sundry
small jobs. But the end and aim of her life had
to be speed.
To the left of my little doorway was
a small, deep sink. Next to the sink was a very
large ice chest. On the side of the ice chest
next the sink hung the four soft-boiled-egg machines-those
fascinating contrivances in which one deposited the
eggs, set the notch at two, three, four minutes, according
to the desires of the hurried guest without, sank
the cup-shaped container in the boiling water, and
never gave the matter another thought. At the
allotted moment the eggs were hoisted as if by magic
from out their boilings. Verily are the wonders
of civilization manifold! The sink and the protruding
ice chest filled the entire left side of my small
inclosure. Along the entire right and front was
a wide work-shelf. On this shelf at the right
stood the electric toasting machine which during busy
hours had to be kept going full blast.
“Toast for club!” a waiter
sang out as he sped by, and zip! the already partially
toasted bread went into the electric oven to be done
so crisply and quickly that you could call out to that
waiter, “Toast for club” before he could
come back and repeat his ominous, “Toast for
club!” at you. People who order club sandwiches
seem always to be in a special hurry.
In the front corner just next the
toaster stood the tray of bread sliced ready to toast,
crusts off for dry or buttered toast, crusts on for
“club,” very thin slices for “toast
Melba.” Directly in front, and next the
bread tray, came the tray filled with little piles
of graham and milk crackers, seven in a pile.
What an amazing number of folk order graham or milk
crackers in a cafe! It seems unbelievable to one
who has always looked upon a place furnishing eatables
outside a home as a chance to order somewhat indigestible
food prepared entirely differently from what any home
could accomplish. Yet I know it to be a fact
that people seat themselves at a table or a counter
in a more or less stylish cafe and order things like
prunes or rhubarb and graham or milk crackers, and
perhaps top off, if they forget themselves so far,
with a shredded-wheat biscuit.
It is bad enough if a man feels called
upon to act that way before 2 P.M. When he puts
in an order for such after 6 in the evening-then
indeed it is a case for tears. I would get the
blues wondering whatever could ail adult humanity
that it ordered shredded-wheat biscuits after dark.
Just above the counter holding the
bread and crackers was the counter on which were placed
the filled orders for the waiters to whisk away.
It was but a step from there to my ice box. The
orders it was my business to fill were for blackberries,
blueberries, prunes, sliced oranges, rhubarb, grapefruit,
whole oranges, apples, sliced peaches and bananas,
muskmelons, and four kinds of cheese. These pretty
well filled the upper half of the ice chest, together
with the finished salads I kept ahead, say three of
each, lettuce and tomato, hearts of lettuce, plain
lettuce, and sliced tomatoes.
In the lower half stood the pitchers
of orange and grape juice, jams and jellies for omelettes
to be made down the line, olives, celery, lettuce,
cucumbers, a small tub of oranges and a large bowl
of sliced lemons. The lemons, lemons, lemons
I had daily to slice to complete the ice-tea orders!
The next pantry-girl job I fill will be in winter
when there is no demand for ice tea. I had also
to keep on hand a bowl of American cheese cut the
proper size to accompany pie, and together with toast
and soft-boiled eggs and crackers and a crock of French
dressing set in ice. Such was my kingdom, and
I ruled it alone.
During slack hours it was easy, too
easy. In rush hours you had to keep your head.
Six waiters might breeze by in a line not one second
apart, each calling an order, “Half a cantaloupe!”
“Two orders of buttered toast!” “Combination
salad!” (that meant romaine and lettuce leaves,
shredded celery, sliced cucumbers, quartered tomatoes,
green pepper, watercress, which always had to be made
up fresh); “Sliced peaches!” (they could
never be sliced in advance); “One order orange
juice!” “Toast for club!” then how
one’s fingers sped!
The wonder of it was no one ever seemed
to lose his patience or his temper. That is,
nobody out our way. Maybe in the cafe there was
some millionaire hastily en route to a game of golf
who cursed the universe in general and the clumsy
fingers of some immigrant pantry girl in particular.
(Not so fearfully clumsy either.)
Between 2 and 2.30 the rush subsided,
and that first day I caught my breath and took time
to note the lay of the land.
My compartment came first, directly
next the dishes. Next me was a beautiful chef
with his white cap set on at just the chef angle.
He was an artist, with a youngster about fifteen as
his assistant. Some day that youngster will be
a more beautiful chef than his master and more of
an artist. His master, I found out in my slack
hours that first afternoon, was French, with little
English at his command, though six years in this country.
I know less French than he does English, but we got
to be good friends over the low partition which separated
us. There was nothing at all fresh or affectionate
about that French chef. I showed my gratitude
for that by coming over in the afternoon and helping
him slice hot potatoes for potato salad while my floor
got washed. Every day I made him a bow and said,
“Bon jour, Monsieur lé Bon Chef,”
which may be no French at all. And every day
he made me a bow back and said, “Bon jour”
something or other, which I could tell was nice and
respectful, but-I can’t write it down.
Monsieur Le Bon Chef made splendid cold works of art
in jellies, and salads which belonged to another realm
than my poor tomatoes and lettuce. Also, he and
his assistant-the assistant was Spanish-made
wonder sandwiches. They served jellied soups from
their counter. Poor humble me would fill “One
order graham crackers, little one!” But to Monsieur
Le Bon Chef it would be “Two Cream of Cantaloupes!”
“One chicken salad!” “One (our hotel)
Plate!” (What a creation of a little of everything
that was!) Monsieur Le Bon Chef taught me some tricks
of the trade, but this is no treatise on domestic
science.
I will tell you about Monsieur Le
Bon Chef, though by no means did I learn this all
my first afternoon. I only picked up a little
here and there, now and then. He came to this
country a French immigrant from near Toulouse six
or so years ago, his heart full of dreams as to the
opportunities in America. Likely as not we might
now have to add that, after many searchings, he landed
a job peeling potatoes at fifteen dollars a month.
Monsieur Le Bon Chef was no Bon Chef at all when he
landed-knew none of the tricks of “chefness”
to speak of. His first day in America he sought
out an employment office. Not a word of English
could he speak. While the employment agent was
just about to shake his head and say, “Nothing
to-day,” a friend, or at least a countryman,
dashed up. “I have a job for you,”
said the countryman, and he led my Bon Chef to New
York’s most aristocratic hotel. Monsieur
Le Bon Chef could not know there was a cooks’
strike on. Down to the kitchen they led him,
and for some weeks he drew ten dollars a day wages
and his room and board right there at the hotel.
To fall from Toulouse into a ten-dollar-a-day job!
And when one knew scarce more than how to boil potatoes!
Of course, when the strike was over,
there were no such wages paid as ten dollars a day.
Nothing like that was he earning these six years later
when he could make the beauteous works of art in jelly.
I asked him if he liked his work. He shrugged
his shoulders and brushed one side of his rather bristly
blond mustache. “Na-no like so
much-nothing in it but the moaney-make
good moaney.” He shrugged his shoulders
again and brushed up the other side of his mustache.
“No good work just for tha moaney.”
You see he really is an artist. He was my quiet,
nice friend, Monsieur Le Bon Chef. Indeed, one
night he gave me a wondrously made empty cigar box
with a little lock to it. “Ooh La-la!”
I cried, and made a very deep bow, and said in what
I’m sure was correct French-because
Monsieur Le Bon Chef said it was-“Thank
you very much!”
So then, all there was on our side
of the kitchen was my little compartment and the not
quite so little compartment of Monsieur Le Bon Chef,
whose confines reached around the corner a bit.
Around that corner and back a little way were two
fat Porto-Rican women who washed glasses and spoke
no English. Beyond them, at the right of the stairs
going up to the main kitchen, were clean dishes.
They came on dumb-waiters from some place either above
or below.
At the left of the stairs were some
five chefs of as many nationalities-Italian,
Spanish, South American, French, Austrian, who filled
hot orders, frying and broiling and roasting.
Around the corner and opposite the Bon Chef and me
were first the two cashiers, then my special friends,
the Spanish dessert man and the Greek coffee and tea
man. That is, they were the main occupants of
their long compartment, but at the time of lunch rush
at least six men worked there. Counting the chore
persons of various sorts and not counting waiters,
we had some thirty-eight working in or for our cafe-all
men but the two fat Porto-Rican glass washers and
me.
Bridget, the dear old soul, came down
that first afternoon to see how I was getting along.
I had cleaned up spick and span after the Spanish
woman-and a mess she always managed to leave.
The water was out of the egg-boiling machine and that
all polished; the heat turned off in the toasting
machine and that wiped off; lemons sliced; celery
“Julietted”; and I was peeling a tubful
of oranges-in the way the steward had showed
me-to be sliced by Spanish Mary for breakfast
next morning.
“I’m sure gettin’ along swell,”
I told Bridget.
“God bless ye,” said my
dear old guide, and picked her way upstairs again.
It was plain to see that down our
way everybody’s work eased up between 3.30 and
5. Then everyone visited about, exchanged newspapers,
gossiped over counters. We changed stewards at
three. Kelly, the easy-going, jovial (except
at times) Irishman, took himself off, and a narrow-shouldered,
small, pernickety German Jew came on for the rest
of my time. When we closed up at nine he went
to some other part of the hotel and stewarded.
My first afternoon Schmitz sauntered
about to see what he could find out. Where did
I live, what did I do evenings, what time did I get
up mornings, what did I do Sundays? One question
mark was Schmitz. One thing only he did not ask
me, because he knew that. He always could tell
what nationality a person was just by looking at him.
So? Yes, and he knew first thing what nationality
I was. So? Yes, I was a Turk. But the
truth of it was that at the hotel I was part Irish
and part French and part Portuguese, but all I could
talk was the Irish because my parents had both died
while I was very young. Another day, my Greek
friend, the coffee man, said he was sure there was
a little Greek in me; and an Austrian waiter guessed
right away I was a bit Austrian; and every Spaniard
in the kitchen-and the hotel was full of
them-started by talking a mile-a-minute
Spanish at me. So a cosmopolitan, nondescript,
melting-pot face is an asset in the labor world in
our fair land-all nationalities feel friendly
because they think you are a countryman. But
a Turk-that stretched boundaries a bit.
For every question Schmitz asked me
I asked him one back. His wife and daughter,
sixteen, were in France for three months, visiting
the wife’s parents. As Schmitz’s
pernicketyness became during the next days more and
more impossible to ignore, I solaced my harassed feelings
with the thought of how much it must mean to Mrs. Schmitz
to be away from Mr. Schmitz and his temperament and
disposition for three blessed months. Perhaps
the daughter, sixteen, had spoken of that phase of
the trip to Mrs. Schmitz. Mrs. Schmitz, being
a dutiful wife who has stood Mr. Schmitz at least,
we surmise, some seventeen years, replied to such
comments of her sixteen-year-old daughter, “Hush,
Freda!”
At five minutes to five Schmitz graciously
told me I might go up to my supper, though the law
in the statute books stood five. Everybody upstairs
in the main kitchen, as I made my way to the service
elevator, spoke kindly and asked in the accents of
at least ten different nationalities how I liked my
job. Hotel folk, male and female, are indeed
a friendly lot.
The dining room for the help is on
the ballroom floor, which is a short flight of steps
above the third. It is the third floor which is
called the service floor, where our lockers are, and
the chambermaids’ sleeping quarters, and the
recreation room.
There are, it seems, class distinctions
among hotel help. The chefs eat in a dining room
of their own. Then, apparently next in line, came
our dining room. I, as pantry girl, ranked a “second
officer.” We had round tables seating from
eight to ten at a table, table cloths and cafeteria
style of getting one’s food. The chefs were
waited upon. In our dining room ate the bell
boys, parlor maids, laundry workers, seamstresses,
housekeepers, hotel guards and police, the employment
man, pantry girls-a bit of everything.
To reach our dining room we had to pass through the
large room where the chambermaids ate. They had
long bare tables, no cloths, and sat at benches without
backs.
As to food, our dining room but reflected
the state of mind any and every hotel dining room
reflects, from the most begilded and bemirrored down.
Some thought the food good, some thought it awful,
some thought nothing about it at all, but just sat
and ate. One thing at least was certain-there
was enough. For dinner there was always soup,
two kinds of meat, potatoes, vegetables, dessert, ice
tea, milk, or coffee. For supper there was soup
again, meat or fish, potatoes, a salad, and dessert,
and the same variety of drinkables to choose from.
Once I was late at lunch and ate with the help’s
help. The woman who dished up the vegetables
was in a fearful humor that day. People had been
complaining about the food. “They make me
sick!” she grunted. “They jus’
oughta try the - Hotel. I worked
in their help’s dinin’ room for four years
and we hardly ever seen a piece of meat, and as for
eggs-I’m tellin’ ya a girl
was lucky if she seen a egg them four years.”
The people in our dining room were
like the people in every dining room: some were
sociable and talked to their neighbors, some were not
sociable at all. There was no regular way of seating.
Some meals you found yourself at a table where all
was laughter and conversation. The next meal,
among the same number of people, not one word would
be spoken. “Pass the salt” would
grow to sound warm and chummy.
Half an hour was the time allowed
everyone for meals. With a friendly crowd at
the table that half hour flew. Otherwise, there
was no way of using up half an hour just eating.
And then what?
After a couple of days, some one mentioned
the recreation room. Indeed, what’s in
a name? Chairs were there, two or three settees,
a piano, a victrola, a Christy picture, a map of South
America, the dying soldier’s prayer, and three
different sad and colored pictures of Christ.
Under one of these was pinned a slip of paper, and
in homemade printing the worthy admonition:
“No cursing no stealing when
tempted look on his kindly face.”
There were all these things, but no
girls. Once in a while a forlorn bunch of age
would sit humped in a chair, now and then a victrola
record sang forth its worn contents, twice the piano
was heard. After some ten days my large fat friend
from the help’s pantry informed me that she
and I weren’t supposed to be there-the
recreation room was only for chambermaids and like
as not any day we’d find the door locked.
Sure enough, my last day at the hotel I sneaked around
in the middle of the afternoon, as usual, to see what
gossip I could pick up, and the door was locked.
But I made the recreation room pay for itself as far
as I was concerned. Every day I managed to pick
up choice morsels of gossip there that was grist to
my mill.
After my first supper I could find
nothing to do or no one to talk to, so back I went
to work-feeling a good deal like teacher’s
pet. About four o’clock it was my business
to tell Schmitz what supplies we were out of and what
and how much we’d need for supper. When
I got back from supper there were always trays of
food to be put in the ice chest, salads to be fixed,
blackberries to dish out, celery to wash, and the
like. By the time that was done supper was on
in our cafe. That is, for some it was supper;
for others, judging by the looks of the trays which
passed hurriedly by my compartment, stopping only
long enough for sliced lemon for the ice tea, it was
surely dinner. Dinner de luxe now and
then! Such delectable dishes! How did anybody
ever know their names enough to order them?
From 6 to 7.30 was the height of the
supper rush. What a variable thing our patrons
made of it! Some evenings there would be a regular
run on celery salads, then for four nights not a single
order. Camembert cheese would reign supreme three
nights in succession-not another order
for the rest of the week. Sometimes it seemed
as if the whole of creation sat without, panting for
sliced tomatoes. The next night stocked up in
advance so as to keep no one waiting-not
a human being looked at a tomato.
At eight o’clock only stragglers
remained to be fed, and my job was to clear out the
ice chest of all but two of each dish, send it upstairs
to the main kitchen, and then start scrubbing house.
Schmitz let it be known that one of the failings of
her whose place I was now filling, the one who was
asked to leave the Friday night before the Monday
morning I appeared, was that she was not clean enough.
At first, a year and a half ago, she was cleanly and
upright-that is, he spoke of such uprightness
as invariably follows cleanliness. But as time
wore on her habits of cleanliness wore off, and there
were undoubtedly corners in the ice box where her
waning-in-enthusiasm fingers failed to reach.
But on a night when the New York thermometer ranges
up toward the nineties it is a pure and unadulterated
joy to labor inside an ice box. I scrubbed and
rinsed and wiped until Schmitz almost looked approving.
Only it was congenital with Schmitz that he never
really showed approval of anything or anybody.
Schmitz was the kind (poor Mrs. Schmitz with her three
months only of freedom) who always had to change everything
just a little. There would echo down the line
an order, “One Swiss cheese, little one”
(that referred to me, not the cheese). Schmitz
would stroll over from where he was trying to keep
busy watching everyone at once, enter the very confines
of my compartment, and stand over me while I sliced
that Swiss cheese. It was always either too big,
in which case he took the knife from my hands and
sliced off one-sixteenth of an inch on one end; or
too small, in which case Schmitz would endeavor to
slice a new piece altogether. The chances were
it would end in being even smaller than the slice
I cut. In that case, Schmitz would say, “Led
it go, anyway.” And then, because he would
always be very fair, he stood and explained at length
why the piece was too big, if it were too big, or too
small, if too small. “You know, it’s
dis vay-” My Gawd! not once,
but every night. There was always one slice too
many or too few on the sliced-tomato order. Schmitz
would say, “There must be five slices.”
The next time I put on five slices Schmitz stuck that
nose of his around the waiter’s shoulder.
“Hey, vhat’s dat?
Only five slices? De guests won’t stand
for dat, you know. Dey pay good money here.
Put anoder slice on.”
I was wont to get fearfully exasperated at times.
“But,” I remonstrated,
“last time I had on six and you told me to put
on five!”
“Yes, yes, but I expect you to use your common
sense!”
That was his invariable comeback. And always
followed by his patient:
“You see, it’s dis
vay-If you put on too much the hotel, vhy,
dey lose money, and of course you see it’s dis
vay: naturally” (that was a pet word of
Schmitz’s), “naturally the hotel don’t
vant to lose money-you can see dat for
yourself. Now on the odder hand if you don’t
put on enough, vhy of course you see it’s dis
vay, naturally a guest vants to get his money’s
vorth, you can see dat for yourself-you’ve
just got to use your common sense, you can see dat
for yourself.” Not once, but day after day,
night after night. Poor, poor Mrs. Schmitz!
Verily there are worse things than first-degree murder
and intoxication.
But for all that Schmitz deigned not
to allow it to be known that my scrubbings found favor
in his sight, my own soul approved of me. The
shelves and the sink I scrubbed. Then every perishable
article in my ice chest or elsewhere got placed upon
trays to go upstairs. By this time it was two
minutes to nine. Schmitz, always with his hands
clasped behind him, except when he was doing over everything
I did, said, “You can go now.”
Upstairs among the lockers on the
third floor the temperature was like that of a live
volcano, only nothing showed any signs of exploding.
Fat women who could speak little or no English were
here and there puffily dismantling, exchanging the
hotel work-uniform for street garments. Everyone
was kindly and affectionate. One old Irishwoman
came up while I was changing my clothes.
“Well, dearie, and how did it go?”
“Sure it went swell.”
“That’s good. The
Lord bless ye. But there’s one bit of advice
I must be giving ye. There’s one thing
you must take care of now. I’m tellin’
ye, dearie, you must guard your personality! I’m
tellin’ ye, there ’re the men y’
know, but guard y’ personality!”
I thanked her from the bottom of my
heart and said I’d guard it, surest thing she
knew.
“Oh, the good Lord and the Virgin
Mary bless ye, child!” And she patted me affectionately
on the back.
Indeed, I had been getting affectionate
pats most of the time, though the majority of them
were from the male help. The composite impression
of that first day as I took my way home on the sticky
Subway was that the world was a very affectionate
place, nor was I quite sure just what to do about
it.
The second morning I was given a glimpse
of what can be done about it. As I was waiting
for the elevator on the service floor to be taken
down to work, a very attractive girl came along and
immediately we became chummy. She had been at
the hotel three weeks; her job was to cut fruit.
Had she done this sort of work long? Not in this
country, but in Europe. Just one year had she
been in America. At that moment two youths passed.
I saw nothing, but quick as a flash my new friend
flared up, “You fresh guy-keep your
hands to yourself!” So evidently that’s
the way it’s done. I practiced it mentally.
“Lots o’ fresh guys round here,”
I sniffed. “You said it,” muttered
the still ruffled fruit cutter.
Downstairs, Kelly was waiting with
a welcoming nod-Kelly, the unpernickety
steward. Everyone was as friendly as if we had
been feeding humanity side by side these many years.
During the rush the waiters called out as they sped
by: “Hi there, little one!” “There’s
the girlie!” “Ah there, sweetheart!”
Verily the world is an affectionate place. If
a waiter had an order to give he passed the time of
day as he gave it and as he collected his order.
“And how’s the little girl to-day?”
“Tiptop-and yourself?”
“A little low in spirits I was
to-day until I seen you’d come-an’
then. You love me as much as you did yesterday?”
“Move on there. W’at
y’ a-doin’ talkin’ to my girl!
Now, honey, I’m tellin’ you this here
guy is too fresh for any lady. I’d like
one order of romaine lettuce, bless your sweet heart,
if it won’t be tirin’ your fingers too
much. That’s the dearie-I’m
back in a moment.”
Across the way, arms resting on the
counter, head ducked under the upper shelf, leaned
a burly redheaded helper to the Greek.
Every time the pantry girl looked
his way he beamed and nodded and nodded and beamed.
“How you lak?” “Fine!” More
beams and nods. Soon a waiter slipped a glass
of ice coffee, rich in cream and sugar, under my counter.
Beams and nods fit to burst from the assistant coffee
man across the way. Beams and nods from the pantry
girl. Thus every day. Our sole conversation
was, “How you lak?” “Fine!”
He said the rest with coffee.
With the lunch rush over, Kelly sneaked
around my entrance and jerked his head sidewise.
That meant, naturally, that I was to approach and
harken unto what he had to say. When Kelly imparted
secrets-and much of what Kelly had to impart
was that sort of information where he felt called
upon to gaze about furtively to make sure no one was
over-hearing-when he had matters of weight
then to impart he talked down in his boots and a bit
out of the corner of his mouth.
“Say, kid”-Kelly
jerked his head-“want to tell you
about this eatin’ business. Y’know,
ain’t no one supposed to eat nothin’ on
this floor. If the boss catches ya, it’s
good-by dolly. Sign up over the door sayin’
you’ll be dismissed at once if you eat
anything-see? But I’m givin’
ya a little tip-see? I don’t
care how much ya eat-it’s nothin’
to me. I say eat all ya got a mind to.
Only for Gawd’s sake don’t let the Big
Boss catch ya.” (The Big Boss was the little
chief steward, who drew down a fabulous salary and
had the whole place scared to death.) “See-pull
a cracker box out so and put what ya got to eat
behind it this way, then ya can sit down and sorta
take your time at it. If the boss does come by-it’s
behind the cracker box and you should worry!
Have a cup of coffee?”
I was full up of coffee from my gentleman
friend across the way, so declined Kelly’s assistance
in obtaining more. Every day, about 2.30, Kelly
got in a certain more or less secluded corner of my
compartment and ate a bit himself. “Been
almost fired a couple of times for doin’ this-this
place is full o’ squealers-gotta watch
out all the time. Hell of a life I say when a
fella has to sneak around to eat a bit of food.”
That second afternoon, Kelly stopped
in the middle of a gulp of coffee.
“Say, w’at t’ hell’s
a girl like you workin’ for, anyhow? Say,
don’t you know you could get married easy as-my
Gawd! too easy. Say, you could pick up with one
of these waiters just like that! They’re
good steady fellas, make decent pay. You could
do much worse than marry a waiter. I’m
tellin’ ya there’s no sense to a girl
like you workin’.”
That was an obsession with Kelly.
He drilled it into me daily. Kelly himself was
a settled married man. Of his state we talked
often. I asked Kelly the very first day if he
ever went to Coney Island.
“Ustta-’ain’t been for
ten years.”
“Why not for ten years?”
Kelly looked at me out of the corner
of his eyes. “Got married ten years ago.”
“Well, and w’at of it? Don’t
you have no more fun?”
“You said it! I’m
tellin’ ya there’s no more fun.
Gee! I sure don’t know myself these ten
years. I was the kind of a fella”-here
Kelly was moved in sheer admiration to do a bit of
heavy cursing-“I was the kind of
fella that did everything-I’m tellin’
ya, everything. Bet there ain’t
a thing in this world I ’ain’t done at
least once, and most of ’em a whole lot more
‘n that. An’ now-look at
me now! Get up at four every mornin’, but
Sundays, get down here at six” (Kelly was a
suburbanite), “work till three, git home, monkey
with my tools a bit or play with the kids, eat dinner,
sit around a spell, go to bed.”
A long pause. “Ain’t that a hell
of a life, I’m askin’ ya?”
Another pause in which Kelly mentally
reviewed his glowing past. He shook his head
and smiled a sad smile. “If you could ‘a’
seen me ten years ago!”
Kelly told me the story of his life
more or less in detail some days later. I say
advisedly “more or less.” Considering
the reputation he had given himself, I am relieved
to be able to note that he must have left some bits
out, though goodness knows he put enough in. But
Kelly’s matrimonial romance must be told.
Kelly went with a peach of a girl
in the years gone by-swellest little kid-gee!
he respected that girl-never laid hands
on her. She wanted to go back to the old country
for a visit, so he paid her way there and back-one
hundred and sixty-five dollars it had cost him.
Coming home from a ball where Kelly had been manager-this
at 4 A.M.-a remark of the girl’s
led Kelly to suspect she was not the stainless bit
of perfection his love had pictured. So after
three years of constant devotion Kelly felt that he
had been sold out. He turned around and said
then and there to his fair one, “You go to hell!”
He never laid eyes on her again.
A few years later Kelly met an American
girl. He went with her three years, was making
seventy-five dollars a month, had saved eight hundred
and seventy-six dollars, and in addition possessed
one hundred and ten dollars in life insurance.
So he asked the lady to marry him. Y’ know
w’at she said to Kelly? Kelly leaned his
shaggy mop of hair my way. She said, “I
won’t marry nobody on seventy-five dollars a
month!” Again Kelly’s manhood asserted
itself. Do you know w’at Kelly said to
her? He says, says he, once more, “You go
to hell!” He quit.
Whereupon Kelly drew out every cent
he possessed and sailed for Europe. When he landed
again in New York City, d’ y’know how much
money Kelly had in his pocket? Thirty-five cents.
Then he went West for seven or eight years, and tore
up the country considerable, Kelly did. He came
back to New York again, again minus cash. A few
days after his return the girl of eight years before
met him by appointment at the Grand Central Station.
What d’ y’know? She asked Kelly to
marry her-just like that. Heck! by
that time Kelly didn’t give a darn one way or
the other. She bought the ring, she hired the
minister, she did the whole business. Kelly married
her-that’s the wife he’s got
right now.
One of Kelly’s steady, dependable
waiters approached about 5 P.M. “Say, girl,
I like you!” Of course, the comeback for that
now, as always, was, “Aw go-an!”
“Sure, I like you. Say,
how about goin’ out this evening with me?
We’ll sure do the old town!”
“I say, you sound like as if
you got all of twenty-five cents in your pocket!”
He leaned way over my counter.
“I got twenty-five dollars, and it’s yours
any time you say the word!”
It’s words like that which sometimes don’t
get said.
For supper that night I sat at a table
with a housekeeper, a parlor maid, and a seamstress,
and listened to much talk. Mainly, it was a discussion
of where the most desirable jobs were to be had in
their respective lines. There was complete unanimity
of opinion. Clubs headed the list, and the cream
of cream were men’s clubs. The housekeeper
and parlor maid together painted a picture which would
lead one to conclude that the happiest women in all
New York City were the housekeepers in men’s
clubs. The work was light, they were well treated-it
was a job for anyone to strive for. The type of
men or women in clubs, they remarked, was ahead of
what you’d draw in any hotel.
The parlor maid, an attractive, gray-haired
woman-indeed, all three were gray-haired-was
very pleased with her job at our hotel. She slept
there and loved it. The rooms were so clean-your
towels were changed daily just as for the guests.
Sure she was very contented. If her mother were
only alive-she died two years ago-she’d
be the happiest woman in the world, she just knew
it. But every single morning she woke up with
an empty feeling in her heart for the longings after
her mother.
My diary of Thursday of that first
week starts: “The best day since I’ve
been trying jobs-Glory be, it was rich!”
And pages follow as to the wonders of that one day-wonders
to me, who was after what the workers themselves think
about the universe in general.
When I found how hard the Spanish
woman I relieved at 1.30 had to work, how much more
rushed she was from 6 to 1.30 than ever I was from
1.30 to 9, and when I learned, in addition, that she
received no more pay for all her extra labors, I told
her I would come early every day and help her during
the rush. This is all good psychology and I give
it for what it is worth. The first few days, this
Thursday being one of them, she was very grateful-spoke
often of how much it helped to have me there early.
My last morning during my two weeks of the hotel job
I was so rushed with final errands to do before leaving
New York that it was impossible for me to arrive at
work before 1.30, my regular and appointed time.
The Spanish woman knew it was my last day. But
she was so put out to think I had not arrived early
that she whisked out of that compartment the second
I arrived, only taking time to give me one fearful
and unmistakable glare. Kelly caught the remnants
of it as she swung by him. He sauntered over to
my counter. “Say, the nerve of some people!”
That Thursday noon, I ate with the
workers in the help’s kitchen. So much
talk! First there was a row on fit to rend the
rafters. One of the Irish girls plumped herself
down to eat and raved on about Lizzie, an Armenian
girl, and something or other Lizzie had done or hadn’t
done with the silverware. Everyone was frank as
to what each thought about Lizzie. Armenian stock
was very low that day. Just then Lizzie appeared,
a very attractive, neat girl who had been friendly
and kind to me. I had no idea it was she about
whose character such blusterous words were being spoken.
With Lizzie and the Irish girl face to face-Heaven
help us! I expected to see them at each other’s
throats. Such talk! Finally another Irish
girl turned to the Armenian. “Why t’hell
do you get so mad over it all, now?” Lizzie stopped,
gave the second Irish girl a quizzical look.
Slowly a smile spread over her face. She gave
a little chuckle. “Ho! Why t’hell?”
We all laughed and laughed, and the fight was off.
It seems Lizzie was known far and
wide for her temper. She had been fired from
waiting on the chefs because she let it loose in their
dining room one night. Now they were trying her
out up at our end of the service floor. Minnie,
the oldest Irish woman at our table and in a decidedly
ruffled mood that day, claimed it was the Armenian
in her. “They’re all like that.
Shure, I got a Armenian helper-that kid
over there. Wait till he says one word more to
me. I’ll bust a plate on his head and kick
his prostrate form into the gutter. It’ll
be a happy day in my life!”
They all asked me about my work and
how I liked it. Evidently mine was a job high
in favor. “Shure you’re left alone
and no one to be under your feet or botherin’
with y’ every minute of the day. You’re
yo’r own boss.”
The talk got around to the strike
at the Hotel McAlpin of a few years ago. It was
for more pay. The strike was lost. I asked
why. “Shure, they deserved to lose it.
Nobody hung together.”
We discussed domestic service.
Every day at that hotel I wondered why any girl took
work in a private home if she could possibly get a
hotel job. Here was what could be considered
by comparison with other jobs, good pay, plus three
nourishing meals a day, decent hours, and before and
after those hours freedom. In many cases, also,
it meant a place to sleep. There was a chance
for talk and companionship with one’s kind during
the day. Every chance I got I asked a girl if
she liked working in a private home, or would change
her hotel job if she got a chance. The only person
who was not loud in decrying private service was Minnie
during this special Thursday lunch. But Minnie
was so sore on the world that day. I do believe
she would have objected to the Virgin Mary, had the
subject come up. Minnie had worked years in private
families and only six years in hotels. She wished
she’d never seen the inside of a hotel.
That same night at the supper table
the subject came up again before an entirely different
crowd. Three at the table had tried domestic
service. Never again! Why? Always the
answer was the same. “Aw, it’s the
feeling of freedom ya never get there, and ya
do get it in a hotel.” One sweet gray-haired
woman told of how she had worked some years as cook
in a swell family where they kept lots of servants.
She got grand wages, and naively she added, you get
a chance to make lots on the side, o’ course.
I asked her if she meant tips from guests. Oh
no! She meant what you made off tradespeople.
Don’t you see, if you got the butcher bill up
so high, you got so much off the butcher, and the
same with the grocer and the rest. She had a sister
not cooking long who made over one hundred dollars
a month, counting what she got off tradespeople.
It is a perfectly accepted way of doing, mentioned
with no concern.
But on the whole, that supper table
agreed that domestic service was a good deal like
matrimony. If you got a good family, all right;
but how many good families were there in the world?
One woman spoke of working where they’d made
a door mat of her. Barely did she have food enough
to eat. There were four in the family. When
they had chops the lady of the house ordered just
four, which meant she who cooked the chops got none.
After lunch this full Thursday I rushed
to assist Mary. I loved going down the stairs
into our hot scurry of excitement. Indeed, it
was seeing behind the scenes. And always the
friendly nods from everyone, even though the waiters
especially looked ready to expire in pools of perspiration.
At Monsieur Le Bon Chef’s counter some sticky
waiter had ordered a roast-beef sandwich. The
heat had made him skeptical. “Call that
beef?” The waiter next him glared at him with
a chuckle. “An’ must we then always
lead in the cow for you to see?” A large Irishman
breezed up to my Bon Chef. “Two beef a la
modes. Make it snappy, chief. Party’s
in a hurry. Has to catch the five-thirty train”-this
at one o’clock. Everyone good-natured, and
the perspiration literally rolling off them.
Most of the waiters were Irish.
One of them was a regular dude-such immaculateness
never was. He was the funny man of the place,
and showed off for my special benefit, for I made
no bones of the fact that he amused me highly.
He was a very chippy-looking waiter-pug
nose, long upper lip. When he ordered ice coffee
he sneaked up on the Greek a la Bill Hart, ready to
pull a gun on him. He had two names at his disposal
and used one or the other with every order, no matter
who the chef was. In a very deep tone of voice,
it was either, “James, custard pie!” or,
“Dinsmore, one veal cutlet.” But to
me it was always: “Ah there, little one!
Toast, I say toast. Dry, little one.
Ah yes! There be them who out of force of habit
inflicted upon them take even their toast dry.
You get me, little one?”
He was especially immaculate this
Thursday. I guessed he must be taking at least
three ladies out that evening. He looked at me
out of the corner of his eyes. “Three,
little one, this hot night? Winter time, yes,
a man can stand a crowd about him, but not to-night.
No. To-night, little one, I take but one lady.
It allows for more circulation of air. And you
will be that One?”
The Greek this hot Thursday became
especially friendly. He twirled his heavy black
mustache and carried on an animated broken-English
conversation most of the afternoon. Incidentally,
he sent over one ice coffee with thick cream and two
frosted chocolates.
The little Spaniard next to him, he
who served pies and ice cream and more amazing desserts-he,
too, became very friendly. There was nothing
the least fresh about the little Spaniard. He
mostly leaned on his counter, in moments of lull in
trade, and when I so much as looked his way, he sighed
heavily. Finally he made bold to converse.
I learned that he had been two years in this country,
eight months at his present job. When I asked
him how he spent his off time, he replied in his very
broken English that he knew nobody and went nowhere.
“It is no pleasure to go alone.” He
rooms with an American family on the East Side.
They are very nice. For some years he had been
in the printing trade in South America; there was something
to a job like that. But in New York he did not
know enough English to be a printer, and so, somehow,
he found himself dishing pies and ice cream at our
hotel.
Later on that day he asked me, “Why are you
so happy?”
Indeed I was very cheerful and made
no secret of it. I had sung every song I knew
and then whistled them all as I worked. But Schmitz,
who surely had never smiled in all his life, could
stand it no longer. “You better not make
so much noise,” he said. “You see,
it’s dis vay-” Poor Schmitz,
he had a miserable time of it that afternoon.
For my expressions of contentment with the world had
spread. Unconsciously a chef would whistle a
bit here as he mixed his gravy ingredients, another
there as he minced chicken, yet another in still another
direction as he arranged a bowl of vegetables.
Schmitz’s head swirled first in one direction,
then in another. Aching he was to reduce the
universe to his perpetual state of gloom. But
chefs he stood in awe of. He dared silence only
me, and every so often I forgot.
So the Spaniard asked me why I was
so happy. I had no reason. Only a great
multitude of reasons why there was no excuse to be
anything else, but I did not go into that. He
would know, though.
“What did you do last night?”
“Ho!” I laughed at him, “rode home
on the top of a bus!”
A bit later a piece of folded paper
landed almost in my French dressing. It was a
note from the Spaniard: “Will you go riding
with me to-night?” I wrote on the bottom of
the paper: “Not to-night. Perhaps
next week, yes?” A few moments later a folded
menu landed on the floor. On the back was written:
“I will be very pleased whenever you can or
wish. Could it be Sunday? I hope you wouldn’t
take it amiss my asking you this. Frank.”
I really wanted to take that bus ride
with Frank. It still worries me that I did not.
He was such a lonesome person.
Then there was the tall, lean, dark
Irish waiter I called Mr. O’Sullivan. He
was a continual joy to my heart and gave me cause for
many a chuckle. A rebel, was Mr. O’Sullivan.
I heard Kelly call him down twice for growling at
what he considered inexcusable desires in the matter
of food or service on the part of patrons by telling
Mr. O’Sullivan it was none of his -
business. But I loved to listen to Mr. O’Sullivan’s
growlings, and once he realized that, he used to stop
at my counter, take extra long to collect three slices
of lemon, and tell me his latest grievance. To-night,
this Thursday, he was sputtering.
“Shure and de y’know what
now? I’ve two parties out there want finger
bowls. Finger bowls!” sputtered Mr. O’Sullivan.
“Shure an’ it’s
a long ways from the sight of finger bowls them two
was born. It had better be a pail apiece they’d
be askin’ for. Finger bowls indeed!”
Mr. O’Sullivan had gotten down to a mumble.
“Shure an’ they make me sick!”
Mr. O’Sullivan knew that I gave
ear to his sentiments upon such matters as old parties,
male or female, who must needs order special kinds
of extra digestible bread, and usually that bread must
in addition be toasted. While it was toasting,
Mr. O’Sullivan voiced his views on Old Maids
with Indigestion. Much of it does not bear repeating.
When the toast was done, Mr. O’Sullivan would
hold out his plate with the napkin folded ready for
the toast. “Shure an yo’r the sweetest
child my eyes ever looked upon” (Mr. O’Sullivan
would say just the same thing in the same way to a
toothless old hag of ninety). “Mind you
spare yo’rself now from both bein’ an old
maid and sufferin’ to the point where y’
can’t eat plain white bread!”
This particular Thursday I had even
found some one to talk to in the recreation room when
I sneaked up at three o’clock. There came
a time when Schmitz’s patience was strained
over my regular disappearance from about 3 to 3.30.
There was absolutely nothing for me to do just then
in my own line, so I embraced that opportunity daily
to take my way to the recreation room and see what
pickings I could gather up. But one afternoon
Schmitz’s face bore an extra-heavy frown.
“Say, what you do every day that keeps you from
your work all this time? Don’t you know
that ain’t no way to do? Don’t you
understand hotel work is just like a factory?
Everybody must be in his place all day and not go
wandering off!”
“Ever work in a factory?” I asked Schmitz.
He deigned no answer.
“Well, then, I’m telling
you I have, and hotel work ain’t like
a factory at all.”
“Vell, you see it’s dis vay-naturally-”
This Thursday up in the recreation
room I found an ancient scrubwoman, patched and darned
to pieces, with stringy thin hair, and the fat, jovial
Irishwoman from the help’s pantry. The three
of us had as giddy a half hour as anyone in all New
York. We laughed at one another’s jokes
till we almost wept, and forgot all about the thermometer.
The fat Irishwoman had worked at the hotel two years,
the scrubwoman almost that long. Both “lived
out.” They, too, informed me I had one
of the best jobs in the hotel-nobody messin’
in with what you’re doin’-they
leave y’alone. The fat one had worked some
time in the linen room, but preferred pantry work.
The linen room was too much responsibility-had
to count out aprons and towels and things in piles
of ten and tie them, and things like that-made
a body’s head swim.
Realizing Schmitz’s growing
discomfort, I finally had to tear myself away.
The fat Irishwoman called after me, “Good-by,
dear, and God bless y’.”
Upstairs at supper that night I had
the luck to land again at a talkative table.
We discussed many things-Ireland, for one.
One girl was she who had come two years ago from Ireland
and did salads in the main kitchen. Such a brogue!
An Irish parlor maid had been long years in this country.
The two asked many questions of each other about their
life in the Old Country. “Shure,”
sighed one, “I love every stick and every stone
and tree and blade of grass in Ireland!” “Shure,”
sighed the other, “an’ that’s just
the way I feel about it, too!”
Everyone at the table liked working
at our hotel. According to them, the hotel was
nice, the girls nice, hours nice.
The subject of matrimony, as ever,
came up. Not a soul at the table but what was
ag’in’ it. Why should a woman get
married when she can support herself? All she’d
get out of it would be a pack of kids to clean up
after, and work that never ended. Of course, the
concession was eventually made, if you were sure you
were gettin’ a good man- But how
many good men were there in the world? And look
at the divorces nowadays! Why try it at all?
One girl reported as statistically accurate that there
was one divorce in the United States to every four
marriages. “You don’t say!”
was the chorus.
The subject changed to summer hotels.
One woman had worked last summer as a waitress at
one of the beaches. That was the swellest job
ever-just like a vacation! All summer
she had two tables only to wait on, two persons at
a table. Each table had tipped her five dollars
a week. Next summer we all must try it.
The minutes flew by too fast that
supper. Before I knew it, 5.30 had come around,
and by the time I was downstairs again it was five
minutes past my appointed half hour. Poor, poor
Schmitz! And yet lucky Schmitz. It must
have caused his soul much inner satisfaction to have
a real honest-to-goodness grievance to complain about.
(You see, he could not go up for his supper until
I came down from mine.) Schmitz upbraided me, patiently,
with explanations. Every single night from then
on, when at five he would tell me I could go upstairs,
he always added, “And be sure you’re back
at half past five!” In natural depravity of
spirit, it was my delight one night to be able to sneak
down at about 5.25 without being seen by Schmitz.
Then I shrank into a corner of my compartment, out
of his line of vision, and worked busily on my evening
chores. At 5.30, Schmitz began his anxious scanning
of our large clock. By 5.40 he was a wreck and
the clock had nearly been glared off its hinges.
Then it was a waiter called out to me the first evening
order. With the crucified steps of a martyr, a
ten-minute-hungry martyr at that, Schmitz made his
way over to fill that order. And there I was,
busily filling it myself! Of course, I hope I
have made it clear that Schmitz was the kind who would
say, “I knew she was there all along.”
The rush of this particular Thursday
night! More lettuce had to be sent for in the
middle of the evening, more tomatoes, more blackberries,
more cantaloupes, more bread for toast. There
was no stopping for breath. In the midst of the
final scrubbings and cleanings came an order of “One
combination salad, Sweetheart!” That done and
removed and there sounded down the way, “One
cantaloupe, Honey!” Back the waiter came in
a moment. “The old party says it’s
too ripe.” There were only two left to
choose from. “Knock his slats in if he
don’t like that, the old fossil.”
In another moment the waiter was back again with the
second half. “He says he don’t want
no cantaloupe, anyhow. Says he meant an order
of Philadelphia cream cheese.”
But nine o’clock came round
and somehow the chores were all done and Schmitz nodded
his regal head ever so little-his sign for,
“Madam, you may take your departure,”
and up I flew through the almost deserted main kitchen,
up the three flights to the service floor, down four
flights to the time-clock floor (elevators weren’t
always handy), to be greeted by my friend the time-clock
man with his broad grin and his, “Well, if here
ain’t my little bunch o’ love!”
If he and Schmitz could only have
gotten mixed a bit in the original kneading....
By Saturday of that week I began my
diary: “Goodness! I couldn’t
stand this pace long-waiters are too affectionate.”
I mention such a matter and go into some detail over
their affection here and there, because it was in
no sense personal. I mean that any girl working
at my job, provided she was not too ancient and too
toothless and too ignorant of the English language,
would have been treated with equal enthusiasm.
True, a good-looking Irishman did say to me one evening,
“I keep thinkin’ to myself durin’
the day, what is there about you that’s different.
I shure like it a lot what it is, but I just can’t
put my finger on it.” I used as bad grammar
as the next; I appeared, I hoped, as ignorant as the
next. Yet another Irishman remarked, “I
don’t know who you are or where you came from
or where you got your education, but you shure have
got us all on the run!” But any girl with the
least wits about her would have had them on the run.
She was the only girl these men got a chance to talk
to the greater part of the day.
But what if a girl had a couple of
years of that sort of thing? Or does she get
this attention only the first couple of weeks of the
couple of years, anyhow? Does a waiter grow tired
of expressing his affection before or after the girl
grows tired of hearing it? I could not help but
feel that most of it was due to the fact that perhaps
among those waiters and such girls as they knew a purely
friendly relationship was practically unknown.
Sex seemed to enter in the first ten minutes.
Girls are not for friends-they’re
to flirt with. It was for the girl to set the
limits; the man had none.
But eight and one-half hours a day
of parrying the advances of affectionate waiters-a
law should be passed limiting the cause for such exertion
to two hours a day, no overtime. Nor have I taken
the gentle reader into my confidence regarding the
Spanish chef in the main kitchen. He did the
roasting. I had to pass his stove on my way to
the elevators. At which he dropped everything,
wiped his hands on his apron, and beamed from ear
to ear until I got by. One day he dashed along
beside me and directed an outburst of Spanish into
my ear. When I shook my head and shrugged my
shoulders and got it into his head that I was not
a countrywoman, his dismay was purely temporary.
He spoke rather flowery English. Would I walk
up the stairs with him? No, I preferred the elevator.
He, did too. I made the most of it by asking
him questions too fast for him to ask me any.
He was a tailor by trade, but business had been dull
for months. In despair he had taken to roasting.
Some six months he had been at our hotel. He
much preferred tailoring, and in two months he would
be back at his trade in a little shop of his own,
making about fifty to seventy-five dollars a week.
And then he got in his first question.
“Are you married?”
“No.”
“Could I then ask you to go
out with me some evening?”-all this
with many beams and wipings of hands on his apron.
Well, I was very busy.
But one evening. Oh, just one evening-surely
one evening.
Well, perhaps-
To-night, then?
No, not to-night.
To-morrow night?
No, no night this week or next week, but perhaps week
after next.
Ah, that is so long, so long!
There was no earthly way to get to
the stairs or elevators except by his stove.
I came to dread it. Always the Spanish ex-tailor
dropped everything with a clatter and chased after
me. I managed to pass his confines at greater
and greater speed. Invariably I heard his panting,
“Listen! Listen!” after me, but I
tore on, hoping to get an elevator that started up
before he could make it.
One day the Spaniard, this tall thin
roaster with the black mustache, was waiting as I
came out of the locker room.
“Listen! Listen!”
he panted, from force of habit. “Next week
is still so very long off.”
It so happened it was my last day
at the hotel. I told him I was leaving that night.
“Oh, miss!” He looked
really upset. “Then you will go out to-night
with me. Surely to-night.”
No, I had a date.
To-morrow night.
No, I had another date.
Sunday-oh, Sunday, just one Sunday.
Sunday I had two dates.
I should be able to flatter my female
soul that at least he forgot the seasoning that night
in his roasts.
Downstairs that first Saturday the
little quiet Spaniard of the pies and ice cream screwed
up his courage, crossed over to my precinct, leaned
his arms on my front counter, and said, “If I
had a wife like you I would be happy all the rest
of my life!”
Having delivered himself of those
sentiments, he hastily returned to his pies and ice
cream.
The Greek coffee man would take me to a show that
night.
Saturday, to my surprise, was a slack
day in the cafe business. Trade is always light.
Sunday our kitchen closed shop. Another reason
why my job held allurements. I was the only girl
to get Sunday off. Also, because we were the
only department in the hotel to close down altogether,
it seems we were wont to have an annual picnic.
Alas that I had to miss it!
Plans were just taking shape, too,
for this year’s event. Last year they motored
over to Long Island. Much food, many drinks.
It was a rosy memory. This year Kelly wanted
a hay ride. Kelly, he of the highly colored past,
even so contended there was nothing in the world like
the smell of hay.
There was no fun to the supper that
Saturday night. I sat at a table with a deaf
girl, two dirty men, and a fat, flabby female with
pop eyes, and not a one of them acted as if he possessed
the ability to speak. Except the deaf girl, who
did tell me she couldn’t hear.
So I ate hastily and made for the
recreation room. For the first time the piano
was in use. A chambermaid, surrounded by four
admiring fellow-workers, was playing “Oh, they’re
killin’ men and women for a wearin’ of
the green.” That is, I made out she meant
it for that tune. With the right hand she picked
out what every now and then approached that melody.
With the left she did a tum-te-dum which
she left entirely to chance, the right hand and its
perplexities needing her entire attention. During
all of this, without intermission, her foot conscientiously
pressed the loud pedal.
Altogether there were seven in the
chambermaid’s audience. I sat down next
to a little wrinkled auburn-haired Irish chambermaid
whose face looked positively inspired. She beat
time with one foot and both hands. “Ain’t
it jus’ grand!” she whispered to me.
“If I c’u’d jus’ play like
that!” Her eyes sought the ceiling. When
the player had finished her rendition there was much
applause. One girl left the clouds long enough
to ask, “Oh, Jennie, is it really true you never
took a lesson?” Jennie admitted it was true.
“Think of that, now!” the little woman
by me gasped.
The chambermaid next gave an original
interpretation of “Believe me if all those endearing
young charms.” At least it was nearer that
than anything else. I had to tear myself away
in the middle of what five out of seven people finally
would have guessed was “Way down upon the Suwanee
River.” The faces of the audience were still
wreathed in that expression you may catch on a few
faces at Carnegie Hall.
Monday there was a chambermaids’
meeting. Much excitement. They had been
getting seven dollars a week. The management wished
to change and pay them by the month, instead-thirty
dollars a month. There was something underhanded
about it, the girls were sure of that. In addition
there was a general feeling that everyone was in for
more or less of a cut in wages about September.
A general undertone of suspicion that day was over
everything and everybody. Several chambermaids
were waiting around the recreation room the few moments
before the meeting. They were upset over that
sign under the picture of Christ, “No cursing
no stealing when tempted look on his kindly face.”
As long as they’d been in that hotel they’d
never heard no cursin’ among the girls, and
as for stealin’-well, they guessed
the guests stole more than ever the girls did.
There were too many squealers around that hotel, that
was the trouble. One girl spoke up and said it
wasn’t the hotel. New York was all squealers-worst
“race” she ever knew for meanness to one
another-nothin’ you’d ever see
in the Irish!
I thought back over the dinner conversation
that noon. An Irish girl asked me what my hurry
was, when my work didn’t begin till 1.30.
I told her I helped out the Spanish woman and remarked
that I thought it wrong that she didn’t get
more pay than I. “Say,” said the Irish
girl, “you jus’ look out for your own
self in this world and don’t you go round worryin’
over no one else. You got number one to look out
for and that’s all.”
The excitement of the day was that
the Big Boss for the first time took note of the fact
I was alive. He said good evening and thought
he’d look in my ice chest. My heart did
flutter, but I knew I was safe. I had scrubbed
and polished that ice chest till it creaked and groaned
the Saturday night before. The brass parts were
blinding. But there was too much food in it for
that hour of the night. He called Schmitz-Schmitz
was abject reverence and acquiescence. It was,
of course, Kelly’s fault for leaving so much
stuff there when he went at 3. And Kelly was
gruff as a bear next day. Evidently the Big Boss
spoke to him about sending stuff upstairs after the
lunch rush was over. He almost broke the plates
hurling things out of the ice box at 2.30. And
the names he called Schmitz I dare not repeat.
He swore and he swore and he swore! And
he stripped the ice box all but bare.
How down on prohibition were Kelly
and many of those waiters! Perhaps all the waiters,
but I did not hear all express opinions. A waiter
was talking to Kelly about it in front of my counter
one day. “How can we keep this up?”
the waiter moaned. “There was a time when
if you got desperate you could take a nip and it carried
you over. But I ask you, how can a man live when
he works like this and works and then goes home and
sits around and goes to bed, and then gets up and goes
back and works and works, and then goes home and sits
around? You put a dollar down on the table and
look at it, and then pick it up and put it in your
pocket again. Hell of a life, I say, and I don’t
see how we can keep it up with never a drink to make
a man forget his troubles!”
Kelly put forth that favorite claim
that there was far more evil-doing of every sort and
description since prohibition than before-and
then added that everyone had his home-brew anyhow.
He told of how the chefs and he got to the hotel early
one morning and started to make up six gallons of
home-brew down in our kitchen. Only, o’
course, “some dirty guy had to go an’
squeal” on ’em and Kelly ’most lost
his job, did Kelly.
I had a very nice Italian friend-second
cook, he called himself-who used to come
over to the compartment of Monsieur Le Bon Chef and
talk over the partition to me every afternoon from
four to half past. He also was not in the least
fresh, but just talked and talked about many things.
His first name in Italian was “Eusebio,”
but he found it more convenient in our land to go
under the name of “Vwictor.” He came
from a village of fifty inhabitants not far from Turin,
almost on the Swiss border, where they had snow nine
months in the year. Why had he journeyed to America?
“Oh, I donno. Italians in my home town have
too little money and too many children.”
Victor was an intelligent talker.
I asked him many questions about the labor problem
generally. When he first came to this country
seven years ago he started work in the kitchen of
the Waldorf-Astoria. In those days pay for the
sort of general unskilled work he did was fifteen
to eighteen dollars a month. Every other day hours
were from 6 A.M. to 8.30 P.M.; in between days they
got off from 2 to 5 in the afternoon. Now, in
the very same job, a man works eight hours a day and
gets eighteen dollars a week. Victor at present
drew twenty-two dollars a week, plus every chef’s
allotment of two dollars and forty cents a week “beer
money.” (It used to be four bottles of beer a
day at ten cents a bottle. Now that beer was
a doubtful bestowal, the hotels issued weekly “beer
money.” You could still buy beer at ten
cents a bottle, only practically everyone preferred
the cash.)
But Victor thought he was as well
off seven years ago on eighteen dollars a month as
he would be to-day on eighteen dollars a week.
Then, it seems, he had a nice room with one other man
for four dollars a month, including laundry.
Now he rooms alone, it is true, but he pays five dollars
a week for a room he claims is little, if any, better
than the old one, and a dollar a week extra for laundry.
Then he paid two to three dollars for a pair of shoes,
now ten or twelve, and they wear out as fast as the
two-dollar shoes of seven years before. Now fifty
dollars for a suit no better than the one he used to
get for fifteen dollars. Thus spoke Victor.
Besides, Victor could save nothing
now, for he had a girl, and you know how it is with
women. It’s got to be a present all the
time. You can’t get ’em by a store
window without you go in and buy a waist or a hat
or goodness knows what all a girl doesn’t manage
to want. He went into detail over his recent
gifts. Why was he so generous as all that to
his fair one? Because if he didn’t get the
things for her he was afraid some other man would.
Nor could Victor understand how people
lived in this country without playing more. Every
night, every single night, he must find some countryman
and play around a little bit before going to bed.
“These fellas who work and work all day, and
then eat some dinner, and then go home and sit around
and go to bed.” No, Victor preferred death
to such stagnation. If it was only a game of
cards and a glass of wine (prohibition did not seem
to exist for Victor and his countrymen) or just walking
around the streets, talking. Anything, so long
as it was something.
Victor was a union man. Oh, sure.
He was glowing with pride and admiration in the union
movement in Italy-there indeed they accomplished
things! But in this country, no, the union movement
would never amount to much here. For two reasons.
One was that working people on the whole were treated
too well here to make good unionists. Pay a man
good wages and give him the eight-hour day-what
kind of a union man will he make? The chances
are he won’t join at all.
But the main reason why unions would
never amount to much here was centered in the race
question. Victor told of several cooks’
strikes he had been in. What happens? A
man stands up and says something, then everybody else
says, “Don’t listen to him; he’s
only an Irishman.” Some one else says something,
and everyone says, “Don’t pay any attention
to him; he’s only an Italian.” The
next man-he’s only a Russian, and
so on.
Then pretty soon what happens next?
Pretty soon a Greek decides he’ll go back to
work, and then all the Greeks go back; next an Austrian
goes back-all his countrymen follow.
And, anyhow, says my Italian friend Eusebio, you can’t
understand nothin’ all them foreigners say,
anyhow.
I asked him if Monsieur Le Bon Chef
after his start as a strike breaker had finally joined
a union. “Oh, I guess he’s civilized
now,” grinned Victor.
Numerous times one person or another
about our hotel spoke of the suddenness with which
the workers there would be fired. “Bing,
you go!” just like that. Kelly, who had
been working there over two years, told me that the
only way to think of a job was to expect to be fired
every day. He claimed he spent his hour’s
ride in to work every morning preparing himself not
to see his time card in the rack, which would mean
no more job for him.
I asked Victor one day about the girl
who had held my job a year and a half and why she
was fired. There was a story for you! Kelly
a few days before had told me that he was usually
able to “get” anybody. “Take
that girl now what had your job. I got her.
She was snippy to me two or three times and I won’t
stand that. It’s all right if anybody wants
to get good and mad, but I detest snippy folks.
So I said to myself, ‘I’ll get you, young
lady,’ and within three days I had her!”
Kelly was called away and never finished
the story, but Victor did. The girl, it seems,
got several slices of ham one day from one of the
chefs. She wrapped them carefully in a newspaper
and later started up the stairs with the paper folded
under her arm, evidently bound for the locker room.
Kelly was standing at the foot of the stairs-“Somebody
had tipped him off, see?”
“What’s the news to-day?” asked
Kelly.
“’Ain’t had time to read the paper
yet,” the girl replied.
“Suppose we read it now together,”
said Kelly, whereupon he slipped the paper out from
under her arm and exposed the ham to view.
“You’re fired!” said Kelly.
He sent her up to the Big Boss, and
he did everything he could think of to get the girl
to tell which chef had given her the ham. The
girl refused absolutely to divulge that.
The Big Boss came down to our kitchen.
He asked each chef in turn if he had given the girl
the ham, and each chef in turn said No.
The Big Boss came back again in a
few minutes. “We can put the detective
force of the hotel on this job and find out within
a few days who did give that ham away and the
man will be fired. But I don’t want to
do it that way. If the man who did it will confess
right now that he did I promise absolutely he will
not be fired.”
A chef spoke up, “I did it.”
Within fifteen minutes he was fired.
As ever, the day for leaving arrived.
This time I gave notice to Kelly three days in advance,
so that a girl could be found to take my place.
“The Big Chief and I both said when we seen you,
she won’t stay long at this job.”
“Why not?” I indignantly asked Kelly.
“Ah, shucks!” sighed Kelly.
Later: “Well, you’re a good kid.
You were making good at your job, too. Only I’ll
tell y’ this. You’re too conscientious.
Don’t pay.”
And still later, “Aw, forget
this working business and get married.”
There was much red tape to leaving
that hotel-people to see, cards to sign
and get signed. Everyone was nice. I told
Kelly-and the news spread-the
truth, that I was unexpectedly going to Europe, being
taken by the same lady who brought me out from California,
her whose kids I looked after. If after six months
I didn’t like it in Europe-and everyone
was rather doubtful that I would, because they don’t
treat workin’ girls so very well in Europe-the
lady would pay my way back to America second-class.
(The Lord save my soul.)
I told Schmitz I was going on the
afternoon of the evening I was to leave. Of course
he knew it from Kelly and the others. “Be
sure you don’t forget to leave your paring knife,”
was Schmitz’s one comment.
Farewells were said-I did
surely feel like the belle of the ball that last half
hour. On the way out I decided to let bygones
be bygones and sought out Schmitz to say good-by.
“You sure you left that paring knife?”
said Schmitz.