At five minutes of six Bertram and
Calderwell came. Bertram gave his peculiar ring
and let himself in with his latchkey; but Billy did
not meet him in the hall, nor in the drawing-room.
Excusing himself, Bertram hurried up-stairs.
Billy was not in her room, nor anywhere on that floor.
She was not in William’s room. Coming down-stairs
to the hall again, Bertram confronted William, who
had just come in.
“Where’s Billy?”
demanded the young husband, with just a touch of irritation,
as if he suspected William of having Billy in his pocket.
William stared slightly.
“Why, I don’t know. Isn’t she
here?”
“I’ll ask Pete,” frowned Bertram.
In the dining-room Bertram found no
one, though the table was prettily set, and showed
half a grapefruit at each place. In the kitchen in
the kitchen Bertram found a din of rattling tin, an
odor of burned food , a confusion of scattered
pots and pans, a frightened cat who peered at him
from under a littered stove, and a flushed, disheveled
young woman in a blue dust-cap and ruffled apron,
whom he finally recognized as his wife.
“Why, Billy!” he gasped.
Billy, who was struggling with something at the sink,
turned sharply.
“Bertram Henshaw,” she
panted, “I used to think you were wonderful
because you could paint a picture. I even used
to think I was a little wonderful because I could
write a song. Well, I don’t any more!
But I’ll tell you who is wonderful.
It’s Eliza and Rosa, and all the rest of those
women who can get a meal on to the table all at once,
so it’s fit to eat!”
“Why, Billy!” gasped Bertram
again, falling back to the door he had closed behind
him. “What in the world does this mean?”
“Mean? It means I’m
getting dinner,” choked Billy. “Can’t
you see?”
“But Pete! Eliza!”
“They’re sick I
mean he’s sick; and I said I’d do it.
I’d be an oak. But how did I know there
wasn’t anything in the house except stuff that
took hours to cook only potatoes? And
how did I know that they cooked in no time,
and then got all smushy and wet staying in the water?
And how did I know that everything else would stick
on and burn on till you’d used every dish there
was in the house to cook ’em in?”
“Why, Billy!” gasped Bertram,
for the third time. And then, because he had
been married only six months instead of six years,
he made the mistake of trying to argue with a woman
whose nerves were already at the snapping point.
“But, dear, it was so foolish of you to do all
this! Why didn’t you telephone? Why
didn’t you get somebody?”
Like an irate little tigress, Billy turned at bay.
“Bertram Henshaw,” she
flamed angrily, “if you don’t go up-stairs
and tend to that man up there, I shall scream.
Now go! I’ll be up when I can.”
And Bertram went.
It was not so very long, after all,
before Billy came in to greet her guest. She
was not stately and imposing in royally sumptuous blue
velvet and ermine; nor yet was she cozy and homy in
bronze-gold crepe de Chine and swan’s-down.
She was just herself in a pretty little morning house
gown of blue gingham. She was minus the dust-cap
and the ruffled apron, but she had a dab of flour
on the left cheek, and a smutch of crock on her forehead.
She had, too, a cut finger on her right hand, and
a burned thumb on her left. But she was Billy and
being Billy, she advanced with a bright smile and
held out a cordial hand not even wincing
when the cut finger came under Calderwell’s hearty
clasp.
“I’m glad to see you,”
she welcomed him. “You’ll excuse my
not appearing sooner, I’m sure, for didn’t
Bertram tell you? I’m playing Bridget
to-night. But dinner is ready now, and we’ll
go down, please,” she smiled, as she laid a
light hand on her guest’s arm.
Behind her, Bertram, remembering the
scene in the kitchen, stared in sheer amazement.
Bertram, it might be mentioned again, had been married
six months, not six years.
What Billy had intended to serve for
a “simple dinner” that night was:
grapefruit with cherries, oyster stew, boiled halibut
with egg sauce, chicken pie, squash, onions, and potatoes,
peach fritters, a “lettuce and stuff”
salad, and some new pie or pudding. What she did
serve was: grapefruit (without the cherries),
cold roast lamb, potatoes (a mush of sogginess), tomatoes
(canned, and slightly burned), corn (canned, and very
much burned), lettuce (plain); and for dessert, preserved
peaches and cake (the latter rather dry and stale).
Such was Billy’s dinner.
The grapefruit everybody ate.
The cold lamb too, met with a hearty reception, especially
after the potatoes, corn, and tomatoes were served and
tasted. Outwardly, through it all, Billy was gayety
itself. Inwardly she was burning up with anger
and mortification. And because she was all this,
there was, apparently, no limit to her laughter and
sparkling repartee as she talked with Calderwell, her
guest the guest who, according to her original
plans, was to be shown how happy she and Bertram were,
what a good wife she made, and how devoted and satisfied
Bertram was in his home.
William, picking at his dinner as
only a hungry man can pick at a dinner that is uneatable watched
Billy with a puzzled, uneasy frown. Bertram,
choking over the few mouthfuls he ate, marked his wife’s
animated face and Calderwell’s absorbed attention,
and settled into gloomy silence.
But it could not continue forever.
The preserved peaches were eaten at last, and the
stale cake left. (Billy had forgotten the coffee which
was just as well, perhaps.) Then the four trailed up-stairs
to the drawing-room.
At nine o’clock an anxious Eliza
and a remorseful, apologetic Pete came home and descended
to the horror the once orderly kitchen and dining-room
had become. At ten, Calderwell, with very evident
reluctance, tore himself away from Billy’s gay
badinage, and said good night. At two minutes
past ten, an exhausted, nerve-racked Billy was trying
to cry on the shoulders of both Uncle William and Bertram
at once.
“There, there, child, don’t!
It went off all right,” patted Uncle William.
“Billy, darling,” pleaded
Bertram, “please don’t cry so! As
if I’d ever let you step foot in that kitchen
again!”
At this Billy raised a tear-wet face,
aflame with indignant determination.
“As if I’d ever let you
keep me from it, Bertram Henshaw, after this!”
she contested. “I’m not going to do
another thing in all my life but cook! When
I think of the stuff we had to eat, after all the time
I took to get it, I’m simply crazy! Do
you think I’d run the risk of such a thing as
this ever happening again?”