There is a story Kipling
I think that tells of a spirited horse
galloping in the dark suddenly drawing up tense hoofs
bunched slim flanks quivering nostrils dilated
ears pricked. Urging being of no avail the rider
dismounts strikes a match advances a cautious step
or so and finds himself at the precipitous brink
of a newly formed crevasse.
So it is with your trained editor.
A miraculous sixth sense guides him. A mysterious
something warns him of danger lurking within the seemingly
innocent oblong white envelope. Without slitting
the flap, without pausing to adjust his tortoise-rimmed
glasses, without clearing his throat, without lighting
his cigarette he knows.
The deadly newspaper story he scents
in the dark. Cub reporter. Crusty city editor.
Cub fired. Stumbles on to a big story. Staggers
into newspaper office wild-eyed. Last edition.
“Hold the presses!” Crusty C.E. stands
over cub’s typewriter grabbing story line by
line. Even foreman of pressroom moved to tears
by tale. “Boys, this ain’t just a
story this kid’s writin’. This is
history!” Story finished. Cub faints.
C.E. makes him star reporter.
The athletic story: “I
could never marry a mollycoddle like you, Harold Hammond!”
Big game of the year. Team crippled. Second
half. Halfback hurt. Harold Hammond, scrub,
into the game. Touchdown! Broken leg.
Five to nothing. “Harold, can you ever,
ever forgive me?”
The pseudo-psychological story:
She had been sitting before the fire for a long, long
time. The flame had flickered and died down to
a smouldering ash. The sound of his departing
footsteps echoed and re-echoed through her brain.
But the little room was very, very still.
The shop-girl story: Torn boots
and temptation, tears and snears, pathos and bathos,
all the way from Zola to the vice inquiry.
Having thus attempted to hide the
deadly commonplaceness of this story with a thin layer
of cynicism, perhaps even the wily editor may be tricked
into taking the leap.
Four weeks before the completion of
the new twelve-story addition the store advertised
for two hundred experienced saleswomen. Rachel
Wiletzky, entering the superintendent’s office
after a wait of three hours, was Applicant N.
The superintendent did not look up as Rachel came
in. He scribbled busily on a pad of paper at his
desk, thus observing rules one and two in the proper
conduct of superintendents when interviewing applicants.
Rachel Wiletzky, standing by his desk, did not cough
or wriggle or rustle her skirts or sag on one hip.
A sense of her quiet penetrated the superintendent’s
subconsciousness. He glanced up hurriedly over
his left shoulder. Then he laid down his pencil
and sat up slowly. His mind was working quickly
enough though. In the twelve seconds that intervened
between the laying down of the pencil and the sitting
up in his chair he had hastily readjusted all his
well-founded preconceived ideas on the appearance of
shop-girl applicants.
Rachel Wiletzky had the colouring
and physique of a dairymaid. It was the sort
of colouring that you associate in your mind with lush
green fields, and Jersey cows, and village maids,
in Watteau frocks, balancing brimming pails aloft
in the protecting curve of one rounded upraised arm,
with perhaps a Maypole dance or so in the background.
Altogether, had the superintendent been given to figures
of speech, he might have said that Rachel was as much
out of place among the preceding one hundred and seventy-eight
bloodless, hollow-chested, stoop-shouldered applicants
as a sunflower would be in a patch of dank white fungi.
He himself was one of those bleached
men that you find on the office floor of department
stores. Grey skin, grey eyes, greying hair, careful
grey clothes seemingly as void of pigment
as one of those sunless things you disclose when you
turn over a board that has long lain on the mouldy
floor of a damp cellar. It was only when you looked
closely that you noticed a fleck of golden brown in
the cold grey of each eye, and a streak of warm brown
forming an unquenchable forelock that the conquering
grey had not been able to vanquish. It may have
been a something within him corresponding to those
outward bits of human colouring that tempted him to
yield to a queer impulse. He whipped from his
breast-pocket the grey-bordered handkerchief, reached
up swiftly and passed one white corner of it down
the length of Rachel Wiletzky’s Killarney-rose
left cheek. The rude path down which the handkerchief
had travelled deepened to red for a moment before
both rose-pink cheeks bloomed into scarlet. The
superintendent gazed rather ruefully from unblemished
handkerchief to cheek and back again.
“Why it it’s real!”
he stammered.
Rachel Wiletzky smiled a good-natured
little smile that had in it a dash of superiority.
“If I was putting it on,”
she said, “I hope I’d have sense enough
to leave something to the imagination. This colour
out of a box would take a spiderweb veil to tone it
down.”
Not much more than a score of words.
And yet before the half were spoken you were certain
that Rachel Wiletzky’s knowledge of lush green
fields and bucolic scenes was that gleaned from the
condensed-milk ads that glare down at one from billboards
and street-car chromos. Hers was the
ghetto voice harsh, metallic, yet fraught
with the resonant music of tragedy.
“H’m name?”
asked the grey superintendent. He knew that vocal
quality.
A queer look stole into Rachel Wiletzky’s
face, a look of cunning and determination and shrewdness.
“Ray Willets,” she replied composedly.
“Double l.”
“Clerked before, of course. Our advertisement
stated ”
“Oh yes,” interrupted
Ray Willets hastily, eagerly. “I can sell
goods. My customers like me. And I don’t
get tired. I don’t know why, but I don’t.”
The superintendent glanced up again
at the red that glowed higher with the girl’s
suppressed excitement. He took a printed slip
from the little pile of paper that lay on his desk.
“Well, anyway, you’re
the first clerk I ever saw who had so much red blood
that she could afford to use it for decorative purposes.
Step into the next room, answer the questions on this
card and turn it in. You’ll be notified.”
Ray Willets took the searching, telltale
blank that put its questions so pertinently.
“Where last employed?” it demanded.
“Why did you leave? Do you live at home?”
Ray Willets moved slowly away toward
the door opposite. The superintendent reached
forward to press the button that would summon Applicant
N. But before his finger touched it Ray
Willets turned and came back swiftly. She held
the card out before his surprised eyes.
“I can’t fill this out.
If I do I won’t get the job. I work over
at the Halsted Street Bazaar. You know the
Cheap Store. I lied and sent word I was sick
so I could come over here this morning. And they
dock you for time off whether you’re sick or
not.”
The superintendent drummed impatiently
with his fingers. “I can’t listen
to all this. Haven’t time. Fill out
your blank, and if ”
All that latent dramatic force which
is a heritage of her race came to the girl’s
aid now.
“The blank! How can I say
on a blank that I’m leaving because I want to
be where real people are? What chance has a girl
got over there on the West Side? I’m different.
I don’t know why, but I am. Look at my face!
Where should I get red cheeks from? From not having
enough to eat half the time and sleeping three in
a bed?”
She snatched off her shabby glove
and held one hand out before the man’s face.
“From where do I get such hands?
Not from selling hardware over at Twelfth and Halsted.
Look at it! Say, couldn’t that hand sell
silk and lace?”
Some one has said that to make fingers
and wrists like those which Ray Willets held out for
inspection it is necessary to have had at least five
generations of ancestors who have sat with their hands
folded in their laps. Slender, tapering, sensitive
hands they were, pink-tipped, temperamental.
Wistful hands they were, speaking hands, an inheritance,
perhaps, from some dreamer ancestor within the old-world
ghetto, some long-haired, velvet-eyed student of the
Talmud dwelling within the pale with its squalor and
noise, and dreaming of unseen things beyond the confining
gates things rare and exquisite and fine.
“Ashamed of your folks?” snapped the superintendent.
“N-no No! But
I want to be different. I am different! Give
me a chance, will you? I’m straight.
And I’ll work. And I can sell goods.
Try me.”
That all-pervading greyness seemed
to have lifted from the man at the desk. The
brown flecks in the eyes seemed to spread and engulf
the surrounding colourlessness. His face, too,
took on a glow that seemed to come from within.
It was like the lifting of a thick grey mist on a
foggy morning, so that the sun shines bright and clear
for a brief moment before the damp curtain rolls down
again and effaces it.
He leaned forward in his chair, a
queer half-smile on his face.
“I’ll give you your chance,”
he said, “for one month. At the end of that
time I’ll send for you. I’m not going
to watch you. I’m not going to have you
watched. Of course your sale slips will show the
office whether you’re selling goods or not.
If you’re not they’ll discharge you.
But that’s routine. What do you want to
sell?”
“What do I want to Do
you mean Why, I want to sell the lacy things.”
“The lacy ”
Ray, very red-cheeked, made the plunge.
“The the lawnjeree, you know.
The things with ribbon and handwork and yards and yards
of real lace. I’ve seen ’em in the
glass case in the French Room. Seventy-nine dollars
marked down from one hundred.”
The superintendent scribbled on a
card. “Show this Monday morning. Miss
Jevne is the head of your department. You’ll
spend two hours a day in the store school of instruction
for clerks. Here, you’re forgetting your
glove.”
The grey look had settled down on
him again as he reached out to press the desk button.
Ray Willets passed out at the door opposite the one
through which Rachel Wiletzky had entered.
Some one in the department nick-named
her Chubbs before she had spent half a day in the
underwear and imported lingerie. At the store
school she listened and learned. She learned
how important were things of which Halsted Street
took no cognisance. She learned to make out a
sale slip as complicated as an engineering blueprint.
She learned that a clerk must develop suavity and
patience in the same degree as a customer waxes waspish
and insulting, and that the spectrum’s colours
do not exist in the costume of the girl-behind-the-counter.
For her there are only black and white. These
things she learned and many more, and remembered them,
for behind the rosy cheeks and the terrier-bright eyes
burned the indomitable desire to get on. And
the finished embodiment of all of Ray Willets’
desires and ambitions was daily before her eyes in
the presence of Miss Jevne, head of the lingerie and
negligees.
Of Miss Jevne it might be said that
she was real where Ray was artificial, and artificial
where Ray was real. Everything that Miss Jevne
wore was real. She was as modish as Ray was shabby,
as slim as Ray was stocky, as artificially tinted
and tinctured as Ray was naturally rosy-cheeked and
buxom. It takes real money to buy clothes as real
as those worn by Miss Jevne. The soft charmeuse
in her graceful gown was real and miraculously draped.
The cobweb-lace collar that so delicately traced its
pattern against the black background of her gown was
real. So was the ripple of lace that cascaded
down the front of her blouse. The straight, correct,
hideously modern lines of her figure bespoke a real
eighteen-dollar corset. Realest of all, there
reposed on Miss Jevne’s bosom a bar pin of platinum
and diamonds very real diamonds set in a
severely plain but very real bar of precious platinum.
So if you except Miss Jevne’s changeless colour,
her artificial smile, her glittering hair and her
undulating head-of-the-department walk, you can see
that everything about Miss Jevne was as real as money
can make one.
Miss Jevne, when she deigned to notice
Ray Willets at all, called her “girl,”
thus: “Girl, get down one of those Number
Seventeens for me with the pink ribbons.”
Ray did not resent the tone. She thought about
Miss Jevne as she worked. She thought about her
at night when she was washing and ironing her other
shirtwaist for next day’s wear. In the
Halsted Street Bazaar the girls had been on terms of
dreadful intimacy with those affairs in each other’s
lives which popularly are supposed to be private knowledge.
They knew the sum which each earned per week; how
much they turned in to help swell the family coffers
and how much they were allowed to keep for their own
use. They knew each time a girl spent a quarter
for a cheap sailor collar or a pair of near-silk stockings.
Ray Willets, who wanted passionately to be different,
whose hands so loved the touch of the lacy, silky
garments that made up the lingerie and negligee departments,
recognised the perfection of Miss Jevne’s faultless
realness recognised it, appreciated it,
envied it. It worried her too. How did she
do it? How did one go about attaining the same
degree of realness?
Meanwhile she worked. She learned
quickly. She took care always to be cheerful,
interested, polite. After a short week’s
handling of lacy silken garments she ceased to feel
a shock when she saw Miss Jevne displaying a robe-de-nuit
made up of white cloud and sea-foam and languidly
assuring the customer that of course it wasn’t
to be expected that you could get a fine handmade
lace at that price only twenty-seven-fifty.
Now if she cared to look at something really fine made
entirely by hand why
The end of the first ten days found
so much knowledge crammed into Ray Willets’
clever, ambitious little head that the pink of her
cheeks had deepened to carmine, as a child grows flushed
and too bright-eyed when overstimulated and overtired.
Miss Myrtle, the store beauty, strolled
up to Ray, who was straightening a pile of corset
covers and brassières. Miss Myrtle was
the store’s star cloak-and-suit model.
Tall, svelte, graceful, lovely in line and contour,
she was remarkably like one of those exquisite imbéciles
that Rossetti used to love to paint. Hers were
the great cowlike eyes, the wonderful oval face, the
marvellous little nose, the perfect lips and chin.
Miss Myrtle could don a forty-dollar gown, parade it
before a possible purchaser, and make it look like
an imported model at one hundred and twenty-five.
When Miss Myrtle opened those exquisite lips and spoke
you got a shock that hurt. She laid one cool slim
finger on Ray’s ruddy cheek.
“Sure enough!” she drawled
nasally. “Whereja get it anyway, kid?
You must of been brought up on peaches ‘n’
cream and slept in a pink cloud somewheres.”
“Me!” laughed Ray, her
deft fingers busy straightening a bow here, a ruffle
of lace there. “Me! The L-train runs
so near my bed that if it was ever to get a notion
to take a short cut it would slice off my legs to
the knees.”
“Live at home?” Miss Myrtle’s
grasshopper mind never dwelt long on one subject.
“Well, sure,” replied
Ray. “Did you think I had a flat up on the
Drive?”
“I live at home too,”
Miss Myrtle announced impressively. She was leaning
indolently against the table. Her eyes followed
the deft, quick movements of Ray’s slender,
capable hands. Miss Myrtle always leaned when
there was anything to lean on. Involuntarily she
fell into melting poses. One shoulder always
drooped slightly, one toe always trailed a bit like
the picture on the cover of the fashion magazines,
one hand and arm always followed the line of her draperies
while the other was raised to hip or breast or head.
Ray’s busy hands paused a moment.
She looked up at the picturesque Myrtle. “All
the girls do, don’t they?”
“Huh?” said Myrtle blankly.
“Live at home, I mean? The application
blank says ”
“Say, you’ve got clever
hands, ain’t you?” put in Miss Myrtle
irrelevantly. She looked ruefully at her own short,
stubby, unintelligent hands, that so perfectly reflected
her character in that marvellous way hands have.
“Mine are stupid-looking. I’ll bet
you’ll get on.” She sagged to the
other hip with a weary gracefulness. “I
ain’t got no brains,” she complained.
“Where do they live then?” persisted Ray.
“Who? Oh, I live at home” again
virtuously “but I’ve got some
heart if I am dumb. My folks couldn’t get
along without what I bring home every week. A
lot of the girls have flats. But that don’t
last. Now Jevne ”
“Yes?” said Ray eagerly.
Her plump face with its intelligent eyes was all aglow.
Miss Myrtle lowered her voice discreetly.
“Her own folks don’t know where she lives.
They says she sends ’em money every month, but
with the understanding that they don’t try to
come to see her. They live way over on the West
Side somewhere. She makes her buying trip to Europe
every year. Speaks French and everything.
They say when she started to earn real money she just
cut loose from her folks. They was a drag on her
and she wanted to get to the top.”
“Say, that pin’s real, ain’t it?”
“Real? Well, I should say
it is! Catch Jevne wearing anything that’s
phony. I saw her at the theatre one night.
Dressed! Well, you’d have thought that
birds of paradise were national pests, like English
sparrows. Not that she looked loud. But that
quiet, rich elegance, you know, that just smells of
money. Say, but I’ll bet she has her lonesome
evenings!”
Ray Willets’ eyes darted across
the long room and rested upon the shining black-clad
figure of Miss Jevne moving about against the luxurious
ivory-and-rose background of the French Room.
“She she left her folks, h’m?”
she mused aloud.
Miss Myrtle, the brainless, regarded the tips of her
shabby boots.
“What did it get her?”
she asked as though to herself. “I know
what it does to a girl, seeing and handling stuff
that’s made for millionaires, you get a taste
for it yourself. Take it from me, it ain’t
the six-dollar girl that needs looking after.
She’s taking her little pay envelope home to
her mother that’s a widow and it goes to buy
milk for the kids. Sometimes I think the more
you get the more you want. Somebody ought to
turn that vice inquiry on to the tracks of that thirty-dollar-a-week
girl in the Irish crochet waist and the diamond bar
pin. She’d make swell readin’.”
There fell a little silence between
the two a silence of which neither was
conscious. Both were thinking, Myrtle disjointedly,
purposelessly, all unconscious that her slow, untrained
mind had groped for a great and vital truth and found
it; Ray quickly, eagerly, connectedly, a new and daring
resolve growing with lightning rapidity.
“There’s another new baby
at our house,” she said aloud suddenly.
“It cries all night pretty near.”
“Ain’t they fierce?” laughed Myrtle.
“And yet I dunno ”
She fell silent again. Then with
the half-sign with which we waken from day dreams
she moved away in response to the beckoning finger
of a saleswoman in the evening-coat section.
Ten minutes later her exquisite face rose above the
soft folds of a black charmeuse coat that
rippled away from her slender, supple body in lines
that a sculptor dreams of and never achieves.
Ray Willets finished straightening
her counter. Trade was slow. She moved idly
in the direction of the black-garbed figure that flitted
about in the costly atmosphere of the French section.
It must be a very special customer to claim Miss Jevne’s
expert services. Ray glanced in through the half-opened
glass and ivory-enamel doors.
“Here, girl,” called Miss
Jevne. Ray paused and entered. Miss Jevne
was frowning. “Miss Myrtle’s busy.
Just slip this on. Careful now. Keep your
arms close to your head.”
She slipped a marvellously wrought
garment over Ray’s sleek head. Fluffy drifts
of equally exquisite lingerie lay scattered about on
chairs, over mirrors, across showtables. On one
of the fragile little ivory-and-rose chairs, in the
centre of the costly little room, sat a large, blonde,
perfumed woman who clanked and rustled and swished
as she moved. Her eyes were white-lidded and
heavy, but strangely bright. One ungloved hand
was very white too, but pudgy and covered so thickly
with gems that your eye could get no clear picture
of any single stone or setting.
Ray, clad in the diaphanous folds
of the robe-de-nuit that was so beautifully
adorned with delicate embroideries wrought by the patient,
needle-scarred fingers of some silent, white-faced
nun in a far-away convent, paced slowly up and down
the short length of the room that the critical eye
of this coarse, unlettered creature might behold the
wonders woven by this weary French nun, and, beholding,
approve.
“It ain’t bad,”
spake the blonde woman grudgingly. “How
much did you say?”
“Ninety-five,” Miss Jevne
made answer smoothly. “I selected it myself
when I was in France my last trip. A bargain.”
She slid the robe carefully over Ray’s
head. The frown came once more to her brow.
She bent close to Ray’s ear. “Your
waist’s ripped under the left arm. Disgraceful!”
The blonde woman moved and jangled
a bit in her chair. “Well, I’ll take
it,” she sighed. “Look at the colour
on that girl! And it’s real too.”
She rose heavily and came over to Ray, reached up and
pinched her cheek appraisingly with perfumed white
thumb and forefinger.
“That’ll do, girl,”
said Miss Jevne sweetly. “Take this along
and change these ribbons from blue to pink.”
Ray Willets bore the fairy garment
away with her. She bore it tenderly, almost reverently.
It was more than a garment. It represented in
her mind a new standard of all that was beautiful
and exquisite and desirable.
Ten days before the formal opening
of the new twelve-story addition there was issued
from the superintendent’s office an order that
made a little flurry among the clerks in the sections
devoted to women’s dress. The new store
when thrown open would mark an epoch in the retail
drygoods business of the city, the order began.
Thousands were to be spent on perishable decorations
alone. The highest type of patronage was to be
catered to. Therefore the women in the lingerie,
negligee, millinery, dress, suit and corset sections
were requested to wear during opening week a modest
but modish black one-piece gown that would blend with
the air of elegance which those departments were to
maintain.
Ray Willets of the lingerie and negligee
sections read her order slip slowly. Then she
reread it. Then she did a mental sum in simple
arithmetic. A childish sum it was. And yet
before she got her answer the solving of it had stamped
on her face a certain hard, set, resolute look.
The store management had chosen Wednesday
to be the opening day. By eight-thirty o’clock
Wednesday morning the French lingerie, millinery and
dress sections, with their women clerks garbed in modest
but modish black one-piece gowns, looked like a levee
at Buckingham when the court is in mourning.
But the ladies-in-waiting, grouped about here and
there, fell back in respectful silence when there paced
down the aisle the queen royal in the person of Miss
Jevne. There is a certain sort of black gown
that is more startling and daring than scarlet.
Miss Jevne’s was that style. Fast black
you might term it. Miss Jevne was aware of the
flurry and flutter that followed her majestic progress
down the aisle to her own section. She knew that
each eye was caught in the tip of the little dog-eared
train that slipped and slunk and wriggled along the
ground, thence up to the soft drapery caught so cunningly
just below the knee, up higher to the marvelously
simple sash that swayed with each step, to the soft
folds of black against which rested the very real
diamond and platinum bar pin, up to the lace at her
throat, and then stopping, blinking and staring again
gazed fixedly at the string of pearls that lay about
her throat, pearls rosily pink, mistily grey.
An aura of self-satisfaction enveloping her, Miss
Jevne disappeared behind the rose-garlanded portals
of the new cream-and-mauve French section. And
there the aura vanished, quivering. For standing
before one of the plate-glass cases and patting into
place with deft fingers the satin bow of a hand-wrought
chemise was Ray Willets, in her shiny little black
serge skirt and the braver of her two white shirtwaists.
Miss Jevne quickened her pace.
Ray turned. Her bright brown eyes grew brighter
at sight of Miss Jevne’s wondrous black.
Miss Jevne, her train wound round her feet like an
actress’ photograph, lifted her eyebrows to
an unbelievable height.
“Explain that costume!” she said.
“Costume?” repeated Ray, fencing.
Miss Jevne’s thin lips grew
thinner. “You understood that women in this
department were to wear black one-piece gowns this
week!”
Ray smiled a little twisted smile. “Yes,
I understood.”
“Then what ”
Ray’s little smile grew a trifle
more uncertain. “ I had the money last
week I was going to The baby
took sick the heat I guess, coming so sudden.
We had the doctor and medicine I Say,
your own folks come before black one-piece dresses!”
Miss Jevne’s cold eyes saw the
careful patch under Ray’s left arm where a few
days before the torn place had won her a reproof.
It was the last straw.
“You can’t stay in this department in
that rig!”
“Who says so?” snapped
Ray with a flash of Halsted Street bravado. “If
my customers want a peek at Paquin I’ll send
’em to you.”
“I’ll show you who says
so!” retorted Miss Jevne, quite losing sight
of the queen business. The stately form of the
floor manager was visible among the glass showcases
beyond. Miss Jevne sought him agitatedly.
All the little sagging lines about her mouth showed
up sharply, defying years of careful massage.
The floor manager bent his stately
head and listened. Then, led by Miss Jevne, he
approached Ray Willets, whose deft fingers, trembling
a very little now, were still pretending to adjust
the perfect pink-satin bow.
The manager touched her on the arm
not unkindly. “Report for work in the kitchen
utensils, fifth floor,” he said. Then at
sight of the girl’s face: “We can’t
have one disobeying orders, you know. The rest
of the clerks would raise a row in no time.”
Down in the kitchen utensils and household
goods there was no rule demanding modest but modish
one-piece gowns. In the kitchenware one could
don black sateen sleevelets to protect one’s
clean white waist without breaking the department’s
tenets of fashion. You could even pin a handkerchief
across the front of your waist, if your job was that
of dusting the granite ware.
At first Ray’s delicate fingers,
accustomed to the touch of soft, sheer white stuff
and ribbon and lace and silk, shrank from contact with
meat grinders, and aluminum stewpans, and egg beaters,
and waffle irons, and pie tins. She handled them
contemptuously. She sold them listlessly.
After weeks of expatiating to customers on the beauties
and excellencies of gossamer lingerie she found it
difficult to work up enthusiasm over the virtues of
dishpans and spice boxes. By noon she was less
resentful. By two o’clock she was saying
to a fellow clerk:
“Well, anyway, in this section
you don’t have to tell a woman how graceful
and charming she’s going to look while she’s
working the washing machine.”
She was a born saleswoman. In
spite of herself she became interested in the buying
problems of the practical and plain-visaged housewives
who patronised this section. By three o’clock
she was looking thoughtful thoughtful and
contented.
Then came the summons. The lingerie
section was swamped! Report to Miss Jevne at
once! Almost regretfully Ray gave her customer
over to an idle clerk and sought out Miss Jevne.
Some of that lady’s statuesqueness was gone.
The bar pin on her bosom rose and fell rapidly.
She espied Ray and met her halfway. In her hand
she carried a soft black something which she thrust
at Ray.
“Here, put that on in one of
the fitting rooms. Be quick about it. It’s
your size. The department’s swamped.
Hurry now!”
Ray took from Miss Jevne the black
silk gown, modest but modish. There was no joy
in Ray’s face. Ten minutes later she emerged
in the limp and clinging little frock that toned down
her colour and made her plumpness seem but rounded
charm.
The big store will talk for many a
day of that afternoon and the three afternoons that
followed, until Sunday brought pause to the thousands
of feet beating a ceaseless tattoo up and down the
thronged aisles. On the Monday following thousands
swarmed down upon the store again, but not in such
overwhelming numbers. There were breathing spaces.
It was during one of these that Miss Myrtle, the beauty,
found time for a brief moment’s chat with Ray
Willets.
Ray was straightening her counter
again. She had a passion for order. Myrtle
eyed her wearily. Her slender shoulders had carried
an endless number and variety of garments during those
four days and her feet had paced weary miles that
those garments might the better be displayed.
“Black’s grand on you,”
observed Myrtle. “Tones you down.”
She glanced sharply at the gown. “Looks
just like one of our eighteen-dollar models.
Copy it?”
“No,” said Ray, still
straightening petticoats and corset covers. Myrtle
reached out a weary, graceful arm and touched one of
the lacy piles adorned with cunning bows of pink and
blue to catch the shopping eye.
“Ain’t that sweet!”
she exclaimed. “I’m crazy about that
shadow lace. It’s swell under voiles.
I wonder if I could take one of them home to copy
it.”
Ray glanced up. “Oh, that!”
she said contemptuously. “That’s just
a cheap skirt. Only twelve-fifty. Machine-made
lace. Imitation embroidery ”
She stopped. She stared a moment
at Myrtle with the fixed and wide-eyed gaze of one
who does not see.
“What’d I just say to you?”
“Huh?” ejaculated Myrtle, mystified.
“What’d I just say?” repeated Ray.
Myrtle laughed, half understanding.
“You said that was a cheap junk skirt at only
twelve-fifty, with machine lace and imitation ”
But Ray Willets did not wait to hear
the rest. She was off down the aisle toward the
elevator marked “Employees.” The superintendent’s
office was on the ninth floor. She stopped there.
The grey superintendent was writing at his desk.
He did not look up as Ray entered, thus observing
rules one and two in the proper conduct of superintendents
when interviewing employees. Ray Willets, standing
by his desk, did not cough or wriggle or rustle her
skirts or sag on one hip. A consciousness of
her quiet penetrated the superintendent’s mind.
He glanced up hurriedly over his left shoulder.
Then he laid down his pencil and sat up slowly.
“Oh, it’s you!” he said.
“Yes, it’s me,”
replied Ray Willets simply. “I’ve
been here a month to-day.”
“Oh, yes.” He ran
his fingers through his hair so that the brown forelock
stood away from the grey. “You’ve
lost some of your roses,” he said, and tapped
his cheek. “What’s the trouble?”
“I guess it’s the dress,”
explained Ray, and glanced down at the folds of her
gown. She hesitated a moment awkwardly. “You
said you’d send for me at the end of the month.
You didn’t.”
“That’s all right,”
said the grey superintendent. “I was pretty
sure I hadn’t made a mistake. I can gauge
applicants pretty fairly. Let’s see you’re
in the lingerie, aren’t you?”
“Yes.”
Then with a rush: “That’s
what I want to talk to you about. I’ve changed
my mind. I don’t want to stay in the lingeries.
I’d like to be transferred to the kitchen utensils
and household goods.”
“Transferred! Well, I’ll
see what I can do. What was the name now?
I forget.”
A queer look stole into Ray Willets’
face, a look of determination and shrewdness.
“Name?” she said. “My name
is Rachel Wiletzky.”