At seven o’clock the Seaside
Hotel struggled into full dress ladies
emerged from siestas and curlpapers, dowagers
wormed into straight fronts and spread the spousal
vestments of boiled shirt, U-shaped waistcoat et
al. across the bed. Slim young men in the
swelter of their inside two-fifty-a-day rooms carefully
extracted their braided-at-the-seams trousers from
beneath the mattresses and removed trees from patent-leather
pumps.
At seven-thirty young girls fluttered
in and out from the dining-room like brilliant night
moths, the straight-front dowagers, U-vested spouses,
and slim young men in braided trousers seams crowded
about the desk for the influx of mail, and read their
tailor and modiste duns with the rapt and misleading
expression that suggested a love rune rather than
a “Please remit.” Interested mothers
elbowed for the most desirable veranda rockers; the
blather of voices, the emph-umph-umph of the three-nights-a-week
orchestra and the remote pound of the ocean joined
in united effort.
At eight o’clock Miss Myra Sternberger
yawned in her wicker rocker and raised two round and
bare-to-the-elbow arms high above her head.
“Gee!” she said.
“This place is so slow it gets on my nerves it
does!”
Mrs. Blondheim, who carried toast
away from the breakfast-table concealed beneath a
napkin for her daughter who remained abed until noon,
paused in her Irish crochet, spread a lace wheel upon
her ample knee, and regarded it approvingly.
“What you got to kick about,
Miss Sternberger? Didn’t I see you in the
surf this morning with that shirtwaist drummer from
Cincinnati?”
“Mr. Eckstein oh,
I been meetin’ him down here in July for two
years. He’s a nice fellow an’ makes
a good livin’ but he ain’t my
style.”
“Girls are too particular nowadays.
Take my Bella why, that girl’s had
chances you wouldn’t believe! But she always
says to me, she says, ‘Mamma, I ain’t
goin’ to marry till Mr. Right comes along.’”
“That’s just the same way with me.”
“My Bella’s had chances not
one, but six. You can ask anybody who knows us
in New York the chances that goil has had.”
“I ain’t in a hurry to
take the first man that asks me, neither.”
Mrs. Blondheim wrapped the forefinger
of her left hand with mercerized cotton thread, and
her needle flashed deftly.
“What about the little Baltimore
fellow that went away yesterday? I seen he was
keepin’ you pretty busy.”
“Aw, Mrs. Blondheim, can’t
a girl have a good time with a fellow without gettin’
serious?”
But she giggled in pleased self-consciousness
and pushed her combs into place Miss Sternberger
wore her hair oval about her face like Mona Lisa;
her cheeks were pink-tinted, like the lining of a conch-shell.
“My Bella always says a goil
can’t be too careful at these here summer resorts that’s
why she ain’t out every night like some of these
goils. She won’t go out with a young man
till she knows he comes from nice people.”
Miss Sternberger patted the back of
her hand against her mouth and stifled a yawn.
“One thing I must say for my
Bella no matter where I take that goil,
everybody says what a nice, retirin’ goil she
is!”
“Bella does retire rather early,”
agreed Miss Sternberger in tones drippingly sweet.
“I try to make her rest up in
summer,” pursued Mrs. Blondheim, unpunctured.
“You goils wear yourselves out nothin’
but beaus, beaus all the time. There ain’t
a night in New York that my Bella ain’t out
with some young man. I always say to her, ’Bella,
the theayters ought to give you a commission.’”
Miss Sternberger rocked.
“Where did you say you live in New York, Miss
Sternberger?”
“West One Hundred and Eleventh Street.”
“Oh yes are you related
to the Morris Sternbergers in the boys’-pants
business?”
“I think on my father’s side.”
“Honest, now! Carrie Sternberger
married my brother-in-law; and they’re doin’
grand, too! He’s built up a fine business
there. Ain’t this a small woild after all!”
“It is that,” agreed Miss
Sternberger. “Why, last summer I was eatin’
three meals a day next to my first cousin and didn’t
know it.”
“Look!” said Mrs. Blondheim.
“There’s those made-up Rosenstein goils
comin’ out of the dinin’-room. Look
at the agony they put on, would you! I knew ’em
when they were livin’ over their hair-store on
Twenty-thoid Street. I wonder where my Bella
is!”
“That’s a stylish messaline
the second one’s got on, all right. I think
them beaded tunics are swell.”
“If it hadn’t been for
the false-hair craze old man Rosenstein wouldn’t ”
Mrs. Blondheim leaned forward in her
chair; her little flowered-silk work-bag dropped to
the floor. “There’s Bella now!
Honest, that Mr. Arnheim ’ain’t left her
once to-day, and he only got here this morning, too!
Such a fine young man, the clerk says; he’s been
abroad six months and just landed yesterday and
been with her all day. When I think of the chances
that goil had. Why, Marcus Finberg, who was down
here last week, was crazy about her!”
“Did you say that fellow’s name was Arnheim?”
“Yes. ’Ain’t
you heard of the Arnheim models? He’s a
grand boy, the clerk says, and the swellest importer
of ladies’ wear in New York.”
Miss Sternberger leaned forward in
her chair. “Is that Simon Arnheim?”
“Sure. He’s the one
that introduced the hobble skoit. My Bella was
one of the foist to wear one. There ain’t
a fad that he don’t go over to Europe and get.
He made a fortune off the hobble skoit alone.”
“Is that so?”
“Believe me, if he wasn’t
all right my Bella wouldn’t let him hang on
that way.”
“I’ve heard of him.”
“I wish you could see that Babette
Dreyfous eying my Bella! She’s just green
because Bella’s got him.”
“Do you use the double stitch
in your crochet, Mrs. Blondheim? That’s
a pretty pattern you’re workin’ on.”
“Yes. I’ve just finished
a set of doilies you’d pay twenty-five dollars
for anywhere.”
Miss Sternberger rose languidly to
her feet. “Well,” she said, “I
guess I’ll take a stroll and go up to bed.”
“Don’t be so fidgety,
Miss Sternberger; sit down by me and talk.”
Miss Sternberger smiled. “I’ll
see you later, Mrs. Blondheim; and don’t forget
that preparation I was tellin’ you about Sloand’s
Mosquito Skit. Just rub the bottle stopper over
your pillow and see if it don’t work.”
She moved away with the dignity of
an emperor moth, slim and supple-hipped in a tight-wrapped
gown.
The Seaside Hotel lobby leaned forward
in its chairs; young men moved their feet from the
veranda rail and gazed after her; pleasantries fell
in her pathway as roses before a queen.
A splay-mouthed youth, his face and
neck sunburnt to a beefy red, tugged at her gold-colored
scarf as she passed.
“Oh, you Myra!” he sang.
“Quit your kiddin’, Izzy!”
she parried back. “Who was that blonde I
seen you with down at the beach this mornin’?”
A voluptuous brunette in a rose-pink
dress and diamonds dragged her down to the arm of
her rocker.
“I got a trade-last for you, Myra.”
“For me?”
“Yes.”
“Give it to me, Clara.”
“No, I said a trade and a dandy,
too!”
“Who from man?”
“Yes.”
“Well, I got one for you, too Leon
Eckstein says he thinks you’re an awfully sweet
girl and will make some man a grand wife.”
Clara giggled and fingered the gold-fringe
edging of Miss Sternberger’s sleeve. She
spoke slowly and stressed each word alike.
“Well, there’s a fellow
just got here from Paris yesterday says
you sure know how to dress and that you got a swell
figure.”
“Who said it?”
“Guess.”
“I should know!”
“That fellow over there with
Bella Blondheim the one with the smooth
face and grayish hair. I hear he’s a swell
New York fellow in the importin’ business.”
“How’d Bella grab him?”
“She’s been holdin’
on to him like a crawfish all day. She won’t
let anybody get near him neither will her
mother.”
“Here comes Izzy over here after
me! If there’s one fellow I can’t
stand it’s him.”
Miss Sternberger moved away with her
chin tilted at a sharp angle. At a turn in the
veranda she came suddenly upon Miss Bella Blondheim
and a sleek, well-dressed young man with grayish hair.
Miss Blondheim’s hand was hooked with a deadlock
clutch to the arm of her companion.
Miss Sternberger threw herself before
them like a melodrama queen flagging a train.
“Hello, Bella!” she said in a voice as
low as a ’cello.
Miss Blondheim, who had once sold
the greatest number of aprons at a charity bazar,
turned cold eyes upon the intruder.
“Hello, Myra!” she said in cool tones
of dismissal.
There was a pause; the color swept
up and surged over Miss Blondheim’s face.
“Are you finished with Love
in a Cottage, Bella? I promised it to Mrs.
Weiss when you’re finished with it.”
“Yes,” said Bella. “I’ll
bring it down to-night.”
There was another pause; the young man with the grayish
hair coughed.
“Mr. Arnheim, let me introduce you to my friend,
Miss Sternberger.”
Miss Sternberger extended a highly
groomed hand. “Pleased to meet you,”
she said.
“Howdy-do, Miss Sternberger?”
His arm squirmed free from the deadlock clutch.
“Won’t you join us?”
“Thanks,” said Myra, smiling
until an amazing quantity of small white teeth showed;
“but I just stopped by to tell Bella that Mrs.
Blondheim was askin’ for her.”
There was a third pause.
“Won’t you come along,
Mr. Arnheim? Mamma’s always so worried about
me; and I’d like for you to meet mamma,”
said Bella, anxiously.
With a heroic jerk Mr. Arnheim managed
to free himself entirely. “Thanks,”
he said; “but I think I’ll stay out and
have a smoke.”
Miss Blondheim’s lips drooped
at the corners. She entered the bright, gabbling
lobby, threading her way to her mother’s stronghold.
The maternal glance that greeted her was cold and
withering.
“I knew if I couldn’t
hold her she’d get him away. That’s
why I didn’t go and play lotto with the ladies.”
“Well, I couldn’t help
it, could I? You’re always nosin’
after me so anybody could say you want
me and not be lyin’.”
“That’s the thanks I get
for tryin’ to do the right thing by my children.
When I was your age I had more gumption in my little
finger than you got in your whole hand! I’d
like to see a little piece like her get ahead of me.
No wonder you ain’t got no luck!”
Miss Blondheim sat down wearily beside
her mother. “I wish I knew how she does
it.”
“Nerve! That’s how.
‘Ain’t I been preachin’ nerve to
you since you could talk? You’d be married
to Marcus Finberg now if you’d ‘a’
worked it right and listened to your mother.”
“Aw, maw, lemme alone.
I couldn’t make him pop, could I? I don’t
see other girls’ mothers always buttin’
in.”
Out in the cool of the veranda Miss
Sternberger strolled over to the railing and leaned
her back against a white wooden column. Her eyes,
upslanting and full of languor, looked out over the
toiling, moiling ocean. She was outlined as gently
as a Rembrandt.
“A penny for your thoughts, Miss Sternberger.”
Mr. Arnheim, the glowing end of a
newly lighted cigar in one corner of his mouth, peered
his head over her shoulder.
“Oh, Mr. Arnheim, how you scared
me!” Miss Sternberger placed the well-groomed
left hand, with a seal ring on the third finger, upon
the thread-lace bosom of her gown. “How
you frightened me!”
“It’s a nice night, Miss
Sternberger. Want to walk on the beach?”
“Don’t mind if I do,” she said.
They strolled the length of the veranda,
down the steps to the boardwalk and the beach beyond.
Mrs. Blondheim rolled her crochet
into a tight ball and stuck her needle upright.
“Come on, Bella; let’s go to bed.”
They trailed past the desk like birds with damp feathers.
“Send up some ice-water to three-hundred-and-eighteen,”
said Miss Bella over the counter, her eyes straining
meanwhile past the veranda to the beach below.
Without, a moon low and heavy and
red came out from the horizon; it cast a copper-gold
band across the water.
“Let’s go down to the edge, kiddo.”
Mr. Arnheim helped Miss Sternberger plow daintily
through the sand.
“If I get sand in my shoes I’ll blame
you, Mr. Arnheim.”
“Little slippers like yours can’t hold
much.”
She giggled.
They seated themselves like small
dunes on the white expanse of beach; he drew his knees
up under his chin and nursed them.
In the eery light they might have
been a fay and a faun in evening dress.
“Well,” said Mr. Arnheim, exhaling loudly,
“this is something like it.”
“Ain’t that a grand moon, though, Mr.
Arnheim?”
“The moon ’ain’t got a show when
you’re round, little one.”
“I’ll bet you say that to every girl you
meet.”
“Nix I do; but I know when a girl looks good
to me.”
“I wish I knew if you was jollyin’ me
or not.”
He tossed his cigar into the surf
that curled at their very feet, leaving a rim of foam
and scum. The red end died with a fizz. Then
he turned his dark eyes full upon her with a steady
focus.
“If you knew me better you’d
know that I ain’t that sort of a fellow.
When I say a thing I mean it.”
His hand lay outstretched; she poured
rivulets of white sand between the fingers. They
watched the little mounds of sand which she patted
into shape.
“I’ll bet you’re a New York girl.”
“Why?”
“I can tell them every time style
and all.”
“I’ll bet you’re a New York fellow,
too.”
“Little New York is good enough
for me. I’ve been over in Paris four months,
now, and, believe me, it looked good yesterday to see
the old girlie holdin’ her lamp over the harbor.”
Miss Sternberger ran her hand over
the smooth sheen of her dress; her gown was chaste,
even stern, in its simplicity the expensive
simplicity that is artful rather than artless.
“That’s a neat little model you’re
wearin’.”
“Aw, Mr. Arnheim, what do you know about clothes?”
Mr. Arnheim threw back his head and
laughed long and loud. “What do I know
about clothes? I only been in the biz for eight
years. What I don’t know about ladies’
wear ain’t in the dictionary.”
“Well,” said Miss Sternberger,
“that’s so; I did hear you was in the
business.”
“I’m in the importin’
line, I am. Why, girl, I’ve put through
every fad that’s taken hold in the last five
years brought them over myself, too, I’ve
dressed Broadway and Fifth Avenue in everything from
rainy-day to harem skirts.”
“Honest?”
“Sure! I’ve imported
more good sellers than any dealer in New York.
I got a new model now passin’ customs that’s
to be a bigger hit than the sheath was. Say,
when I brought over the hobble every house on the
Avenue laughed in my face; and when I finally dumped
a consignment on to one of them, the firm was scared
stiff and wanted to countermand; but I had ’em
and they couldn’t jump me.”
“Just think!”
“By Jove! it wasn’t two
weeks before that very model was the talk of New York
and Lillian Russell was wearin’ one in the second
act of her show; and when she wears a model it’s
as good as made.”
“Gee!” she said.
“I could just sit and listen to you talk and
talk.”
He hunched close. “I sold
the first dozen pannier dresses for a sum that would
give you the blind staggers. I was just as scared
as she was, too, but all you got to do with women
is to get a few good-lookin’ bell-sheep to lead
and the others will follow fast.”
She regarded him in the wan moonlight.
“If there’s anything I admire,”
she said, “it’s a smart man.”
“Oh, I don’t know,”
he said. “I’ve just got a little better
judgment than the next fellow. Those things come
natural, that’s all. In my line a fellow’s
got to know human nature. If I’d sprung
the hobble on the Avenue five years ago I’d
gone broke on the gamble; but I sprung the idea on
’em at just the right time.”
Her hand, long and slim, lay like
a bit of carved ivory on the sand; he leaned forward
and covered it with his.
“I want to see a great deal of you while I’m
down here.”
She did not reply, but drew her hand away with a shy
diffidence.
“I’ll bet I could show
you some things that would warm you up all right.
I’m goin’ into New York with the swellest
bunch of French novelties you ever seen. I’ve
got a peach-colored Piquette model I’ve brought
over that’s goin’ to be the talk of the
town.”
“A Piquette?”
He laughed delightedly. “Sure!
You never heard of the firm? Wait till you see
’em on show at the openin’. It’s
got the new butterfly back; and, believe me, it wasn’t
no cinch to grab that pattern, neither. I laid
low in Paris two months before I even got a smell at
it.”
“You talk just like a story-book,” she
said.
He stretched himself full length on
the sand and looked up into her face. “I’ll
show you a thing or two when we get back to New York,
little one.”
“You ain’t like most of
the boys I know, Mr. Arnheim. You got something
different about you.”
“And you got a face like the
kind you see painted on fans on the order
of a Japanese dame. I got some swell Japanese
imports, too.”
“Everybody says that about me. I take after
paw.”
“Say, little one, I want your
telephone number when I get back to New York.”
“I’ll be pleased to have you call me up,
Mr. Arnheim.”
“Will I call you up? Well, rather!”
“I know some nice girls I’ll introduce
you to.”
He looked at her insinuatingly.
“I know one nice girl, and that’s enough,”
he said.
“Aw, Mr. Arnheim, of all the
jolliers I ever knew you got ’em beat.”
She rose to her feet like a gold-colored phoenix from
a mound of white sand. “When I meet a fellow
I like I don’t want him to tell me nothin’
but the truth.”
“That’s just the way with
me when I meet a girl that looks good I
want to treat her white, and I want her to do the
same by me.”
They strolled along the edge of the
beach. Once the foaming surf threatened to lap
over her slippers; he caught her deftly and raised
her high above the swirl.
“Oh,” she cried, a little
breathlessly, “ain’t you strong!”
Then she laughed in a high-pitched voice.
They dallied until the moon hardened
from a soft, low ball to a high, yellow disk and the
night damp seeped into their clothes. Miss Sternberger’s
yellow scarf lay like a limp rag on her shoulders.
“You’re a perfect thirty-six, ain’t
you, little one?”
“That’s what they say
when I try on ready-mades,” she replied, with
sweet reticence.
“Gee!” he said. “Wouldn’t
I like you in some of my models! Maybe if you
ain’t no snitch I’ll show you the colored
plates some day.”
“I ain’t no snitch,”
she said. Her voice was like a far-away echo.
They climbed the wooden steps to their
hotel like glorified children who had been caught
in a silver weft of enchantment.
The lobby was semi-dark; they asked
for their keys in whispers and exchanged good-nights
in long-drawn undertones.
“Until to-morrow, little one.”
“Until to-morrow.”
She entered the elevator with a smile
on her lips and in her eyes. They regarded each
other through the iron framework until she shot from
sight.
At breakfast next morning Mrs. Blondheim
drew up before her “small steak, French-fried
potatoes, jelly omelet, buttered toast, buckwheat
cakes, and coffee.”
“Well, of all the nerve!”
she exclaimed to her vis-a-vis, Mrs. Epstein.
“If there ain’t Myra Sternberger eatin’
breakfast with that Mr. Arnheim!”
Mrs. Epstein opened a steaming muffin,
inserted a lump of butter, and pressed the halves
together. “I said to my husband last night,”
she remarked, ’I’m glad we ‘ain’t
got no daughters’; till they’re married
off and all, it ain’t no fun. With my Louie,
now, it’s different. When he came out of
the business school my husband put him in business,
and now I ’ain’t got no worry.”
“My Bella ’ain’t
never given me a day’s worry, neither. I
ain’t in no hurry to marry her off. She
always says to me, ‘Mamma,’ she says, ’I
ain’t in no hurry to marry till Mr. Right comes
along.’”
“My Louie is comin’ down
to-day or to-morrow on his vacation if he can get
away from business. Louie’s a good boy if
I do say so myself.”
“I don’t want to talk but
I often say what my Bella gets when she marries is
enough to give any young man a fine start in a good
business.”
“I must have my Louie meet Miss
Bella. The notes and letters Louie gets from
girls you wouldn’t believe; he don’t pay
no attention to ’em. He’s an awful
mamma-boy, Mrs. Blondheim.”
“It will be grand for them to
meet,” said Mrs. Blondheim. “If I
do say it, my Bella’s had proposals you wouldn’t
believe! Look at Simon Arnheim over there he
only met her yesterday, and do you think he would leave
her side all day? No, siree. Honest, it makes
me mad sometimes. A grand young man comes along
and Bella introduces him to every one, but she won’t
have nothin’ to do with him.”
“Try some of this liver and
onions, Mrs. Blondheim; it’s delicious.”
Mrs. Blondheim partook and nibbled
between her front teeth. “I got a grand
recipe for suss und sauer liver.
When we’re at home my Bella always says, ’Mamma,
let’s have some liver and gedaemftes fleisch
for lunch.’”
“Do you soak your liver first?”
inquired Mrs. Epstein. “My Louie won’t
eat nothin’ suss und sauer.
It makes me so mad. I got to cook different for
every one in my family. Louie won’t eat
this and his father won’t eat that!”
“I’ll give you the recipe
when I give you the one for the noodles. Bella
says it’s the best she ever ate. My husband
gets so mad when I go down in the kitchen me
with two grand girls and washerwoman two days a week!
But the girls can’t cook to suit me.”
“Excuse me, too, from American cookin’.”
Mrs. Blondheim’s interest and
gaze wandered down the dining-hall. “I
wish you’d look at that Sternberger girl actin’
up! Ain’t it disgusting?”
“Please pass the salt, Mrs.
Blondheim. That’s the trouble with hotel
cooking they don’t season. At
home we like plenty of it, too. I season and
season, and then at the table my husband has to have
more.”
“She wouldn’t have met
him at all if it hadn’t been for Bella,”
pursued Mrs. Blondheim.
The object of Mrs. Blondheim’s
solicitude, fresh as spring in crisp white linen,
turned her long eyes upon Mr. Arnheim.
“You ought to feel flattered,
Mr. Arnheim, that I let you come over to my table.”
Mr. Arnheim regarded her through a
mist of fragrant coffee steam. “You betcher
life I feel flattered. I’d get up earlier
than this to have breakfast with a little queen.”
“Ain’t you ever goin’ to quit jollyin’?”
He leaned across the table. “That
ain’t a bad linen model you’re wearin’ it’s
domestic goods, too. Where’d you get it?”
“At Lipman’s.”
“I sold them a consignment last
year; but, say, if you want to see real classy white
goods you ought to see some ratine cutaways I’m
bringing over. I’ve brought a model I’m
goin’ to call the Phoebe Snow. It’s
the niftiest thing for early fall you ever saw.”
“Ratine?”
“You never heard of it?
That’s where I get my work in it’s
the new lines, the novelty stuff, that gets the money.”
“Are you goin’ in the surf this morning,
Mr. Arnheim?”
“I’m goin’ where
you go, little one.” He dropped two lumps
of sugar into her coffee-cup. “Sweets to
the sweet,” he said.
“Silly!” But she giggled under her breath.
They pushed back their chairs and
strolled down the aisle between the tables. She
smiled brightly to her right and left.
“Good morning, Mrs. Blondheim.
Is it warm enough for you?”
“Good morning,” replied
Mrs. Blondheim, stabbing a bit of omelet with vindictive
fork.
Mrs. Epstein looked after the pair
with warming eyes. “She is a stylish dresser,
ain’t she?”
“I wish you’d see the
white linen my Bella’s got. It’s got
sixteen yards of Cluny lace in the waist alone and
such Cluny, too! I paid a dollar and a half a
yard wholesale.”
“Just look at this waist I’m
wearin’, Mrs. Blondheim. You wouldn’t
think I paid three and a half for the lace, would
you?”
“Oh yes; I can always tell good
stuff when I see it, and I always say it pays best
in the end,” said Mrs. Blondheim, feeling the
heavy lace edge of Mrs. Epstein’s sleeve between
discriminating thumb and forefinger.
Suddenly Mrs. Epstein’s eyes
widened; she rose to her feet, drawing a corner of
the table-cloth awry. “If it ain’t
my Louie!”
Mr. Louis Epstein, a faithful replica
of his mother, with close black hair that curled on
his head like the nap of a Persian lamb, imprinted
a large, moist kiss upon the maternal lips.
“Hello, maw! Didn’t you expect me?”
“Not till the ten-o’clock train, Louie.
How’s papa?”
“He’th fine. I left him billing thom
goods to Thpokane.”
“How’s business, Louie?”
“Not tho bad, but pa can’t
get away yet for a week. The fall goods ain’t
all out yet.”
“Ain’t it awful, the way
that man is all for business, Mrs. Blondheim?
This is my son Louie.”
“Well, well, Mr. Epstein.
I’ve heard a lot about you. I want you to
meet my daughter Bella. You ought to make friends.”
“Yeth’m,” said Mr. Epstein.
Out on the clean-washed beach the
sun glinted on the water and sent points of light
dancing on the wavelets like bits of glass. Children
in blue rompers burrowed and jangled their painted
spades and pails; nursemaids planted umbrellas in
the sand and watched their charges romp; parasols
flashed past like gay-colored meteors.
In the white-capped surf bathers bobbed
and shouted, and all along the shore-line the tide
ran gently up the beach and down again, leaving a
smooth, damp stretch of sand which soughed and sucked
beneath the steps of the bathers.
Far out, where the waters were highest
and the whitecaps maddest, Mr. Arnheim held Miss Sternberger
about her slim waist and raised her high over each
rushing breaker. They caught the swells and lay
back against the heavy tow, letting the wavelets lap
up to their chins.
Mr. Arnheim, with little rivulets
running down his cheeks, shook the water out of his
grayish hair and looked at her with salt-bitten, red-rimmed
eyes.
“Gee!” he wheezed.
“You’re a spunky little devil! Excuse
me from the beach-walkers; I like ’em when they’re
game like you.”
She danced about like an Amphitrite.
“Who would be afraid of the water with a dandy
swimmer like you?”
“This ain’t nothin’,”
said Mr. Arnheim. “You ought to see me in
still water. At Arverne last summer I was the
talk of the place.”
They emerged from the water, dripping
and heavy-footed. She wrung out her brief little
skirts and stamped her feet on the sand. Mr. Arnheim
hopped on one foot and then on the other, holding his
head aslant. Then they stretched out on the white,
sunbaked beach. Miss Sternberger loosened her
hair and it showered about her.
“Gee! ’Ain’t you got a swell
bunch of hair!”
She shook and fluffed it. “You
ought to seen it before I had typhoid. I could
sit on it then.”
“That Phoebe Snow model that
I got in mind for Lillian Russell would make you look
like a queen, with that hair of yourn!”
She buried his arm in the sand and
patted the mound. “Now,” she said,
“I got you, and you can’t do anything
without askin’ me.”
“You got me, anyway,” he said, with an
expressive glance.
“Yes,” she purred, “that’s
what you say now; but when you get back to New York
you’ll forget all about the little girl you met
down at the shore.”
“That’s all you know about
me. I don’t take up with every girl.”
“I’m glad you don’t,” she
said.
“But I’ll bet you got
a different fellow for every day when you’re
in New York.”
“Nothin’ like that,”
she said; “but, anyway, there’s always
room for one more.”
Two young men without hats passed.
Miss Sternberger called out her greeting.
“Hello, Manny! Wasn’t
the water grand? What? Well, you tell Leo
he don’t know nothin’. No, we don’t
want to have our pictures taken! Mr. Arnheim,
I want to introduce you to Mr. Landauer, a neckwear
man out of Baltimore, and Mr. Manny Sinai, also neckwear,
out of New York.”
They posed, with the white sunlight in their eyes.
“I hope we won’t break the camera,”
said Arnheim.
The remark was greeted with laughter.
The little machine clicked, the new-comers departed,
and then Miss Sternberger and Mr. Arnheim turned to
each other again.
“You ain’t tired, are you Myra?”
“No Simon” she
danced to her feet and tossed the hair back from her
face “I ain’t tired.”
They walked down the beach toward
the bathhouse, humming softly to themselves.
“I’ll be out in ten minutes,”
she said, pausing at the door of her locker.
“Me too,” he said.
When they met again they were regroomed
and full of verve. She was as cool as a rose.
They laughed at their crinkly finger-tips wrinkled
by the water like parchment; and his neck, where it
rose above the soft high collar, was branded by the
sun a flaming red.
“Gee!” she cried. “Ain’t
you sunburnt!”
“I always tan red,” he said.
“And me, I always tan tan.”
They exchanged these pithy and inspired
bits of autobiography in warm, intimate tones.
At their hotel steps she sighed with a delicious weariness.
“I wish I could do everything for you, little
one even walk up-stairs.”
“I ain’t tired, Simon; only only Oh,
I don’t know.”
“Little one,” he said, softly.
In the lobby Miss Bella Blondheim
leaned an elbow on the clerk’s desk and talked
to a stout young man with a gold-mounted elk’s
tooth on his watch-fob, and black hair that curled
close to his head.
They made a group of four for a moment,
Miss Blondheim regarding the arrivals with bright,
triumphant eyes.
“My friend, Mr. Louis Epstein,” she said.
The men shook hands.
“Related to the Epstein & Son Millinery Company,
Broadway and Spring?”
“Thertainly am. I happen to be the thon
mythelf.”
“Was you in the surf this mornin’, Bella?
It was grand!”
“No, Myra,” replied her
friend. “Mr. Epstein and me took a trip
to Ocean View.”
“You missed the water this mornin’.
It was fine and dandy!” volunteered Mr. Arnheim.
“Me and Mr. Epstein are goin’ this afternoon ain’t
we?”
“We thertainly are,” agreed
Mr. Epstein, regarding Miss Blondheim with small,
admiring eyes.
Miss Sternberger edged away. “Pleased to
have met you, Mr. Epstein.”
Mr. Arnheim edged with her and they
moved on their way toward the dining-room.
Mrs. Blondheim from her point of vantage the
wicker rocker leaned toward her sister-in-law.
“Look, Hanna! that’s Louie
Epstein, of the Epstein & Son Millinery Company, with
Bella. He’s a grand boy. I meet his
mother at Doctor Bergenthal’s lecture every
Saturday morning. Epstein & Son have got a grand
business, and Bella could do a whole lot worse.”
“Well, I wish her luck,”
said Mrs. Blondheim’s sister-in-law.
“I smell fried smelts. Let’s go in
to lunch.”
Mrs. Blondheim stabbed her crochet
needle into her spool. “I usually dip my
smelts in bread crumbs. Have you ever tried them
that way, Hanna?”
“Julius don’t eat smelts.”
They moved toward the dining-room.
Late that afternoon Miss Sternberger
and Mr. Arnheim returned from a sail. Their faces
were flushed and full of shy, sweet mystery.
“I can’t show you the
models the way I’d like to, dearie, but I got
’em in colors just like the real thing.”
“Oh, Simon, you’re doin’
a thing like this for me without me even askin’
you!”
His hold of her arm tightened.
“I wouldn’t show these here to my own
sister before the twenty-fifth of the month. Now
you know how you stand with me, little one.”
“Oh,” she cried, “I’m
so excited! It’s just like lookin’
behind the scenes in a theayter.”
He left her and returned a few moments
later with a flat, red-covered portfolio. They
sought out an unmolested spot and snuggled in a corner
of a plush divan in one of the deserted parlors.
He drew back the cover and their heads bent low.
At each turn of the pages she breathed
her ecstasy and gave out shrills and calls of admiration.
“Oh, Simon, ain’t that
pink one a beauty! Ain’t that skirt the
swellest thing you ever seen!”
“That’s the Piquette model,
girlie. You and all New York will be buyin’
it in another month. Ain’t it the selectest
little thing ever?”
Her face was rapt. “It’s
the swellest thing I’ve ever seen!” she
declared.
He turned to another plate.
“Oh-h-h-h-h!” she cried.
“Ain’t that a beauty!
That there is going to be the biggest hit I’ve
had yet. Watch out for the Phoebe Snow!
I’ve got the original model in my trunks.
That cutaway effect can’t be beat.”
“Oh-h-h-h-h!” she repeated.
They passed slowly over the gay-colored plates.
“There’s that flame-colored one I’d
like to see you in.”
“Gee!” she said. “There’s
some class to that.”
After a while the book was laid aside
and they talked in low, serious tones; occasionally
his hand stroked hers.
The afternoon waned; the lobby thinned;
the dowagers and their daughters asked for room keys
and disappeared for siestas and more mysterious
processes; children trailed off to rest; the hot land-breezes,
dry and listless, stirred the lace curtains of the
parlor but they remained on the plush divan,
rapt as might have been Paolo and Francesca in
their romance-imbued arbor.
“How long will you be down here?” she
asked.
“As long as you,” he replied, not taking
his eyes from her face.
“Honest?”
“Sure. I don’t have
to go in to New York for a week or ten days yet.
My season ain’t on yet.”
She leaned her head against the back
of the divan. “All nice things must end,”
she said, with the ’cello note in her voice.
“Oh, I don’t know!”
he replied, with what might have been triple significance.
They finally walked toward the elevator,
loath to part for the interim of dressing.
That evening they strolled together
on the beach until the last lights of the hotel were
blinking out. Then they stole into the semi-dark
lobby like thieves but soft-voiced, joyous
thieves. A few straggling couples like themselves
came in with the same sheepish but bright-eyed hesitancy.
At the elevator Miss Blondheim and Mr. Epstein were
lingering over good-nights.
The quartette rode up to their respective
floors together the girls regarding each
other with shy, happy eyes; the men covering up their
self-consciousness with sallies.
“Ain’t you ashamed to
keep such late hours, Miss Blondheim?” said Mr.
Arnheim.
“I don’t see no early-to-bed-early-to-rise
medals on none of us,” she said, diffidently.
“These thummer rethorts sure
ain’t no plathe for a minither’s thon,”
said Mr. Epstein.
Laughter.
“Remember, Mr. Arnheim, whoever’s
up first wait in the leather chair opposite the elevator.”
“Sure thing, Miss Sternberger.”
Her last glance, full of significance,
was for Mr. Arnheim. The floor above he also
left the elevator, the smile still on his lips.
Left alone, Mr. Epstein turned to Miss Blondheim.
“Good night, dearie,” he whispered.
“Thweet dreamth.”
“Good night, Louie,” she replied.
“Same to you.”
Mr. Arnheim awoke to a scudding rain;
his ocean-ward window-sill dripping and a great patch
of carpet beneath the window dark and soggy.
Downstairs the lobby buzzed with restrained energies;
a few venturesome ones in oils and turned-up collars
paced the veranda without.
Mr. Arnheim, in his invariable soft
collar and shadow-checked suit, skirted the edge of
the crowd in matinal ill humor and deposited his room
key at the desk. The clerk gave him in return
a folded newspaper and his morning mail.
Mr. Arnheim’s morning aspect
was undeniable. He suggested too generous use
of soap and bay rum, and his eyes had not lost the
swollen heaviness that comes with too much or too
little sleep. He yawned and seated himself in
the heavy leather chair opposite the elevator.
His first letter was unstamped and
addressed to him on hotel stationery; the handwriting
was an unfamiliar backhand and the inclosure brief:
DEAR MR. ARNHEIM: I am
very sorry we could not keep our date, but I
got a message and I got to
go in on the 7:10 train. Hope to see you
when I come back.
Sincerely, MYRA STERNBERGER.
Mr. Arnheim replaced the letter slowly
in the envelope. There were two remaining a
communication from a cloak-manufacturing firm and a
check from a banking-house. He read them and
placed them in his inside coat pocket. Then he
settled the back of his neck against the rim of the
chair, crossed one leg over the other, rattled his
newspaper open, and turned to the stock-market reports.
One week later Mr. Simon Arnheim,
a red portfolio under one arm, walked into the mahogany,
green-carpeted, soft-lighted establishment of an importing
house on Fifth Avenue.
Mrs. S.S. Schlimberg, senior
member, greeted him in her third-floor office behind
the fitting-rooms.
“Well, well! Wie geht’s,
Arnheim? I thought it was gettin’ time for
you.”
Mr. Arnheim shook hands and settled
himself in a chair beside the desk. “You
know you can always depend upon me, madame, to
look you up the minnit I get back. Don’t
I always give you first choice?”
Mrs. Schlimberg weighed a crystal
paper-weight up and down in her pudgy, ringed hands.
“None of your fancy prices for me this season,
Arnheim. There’s too many good things lyin’
loose. That’s why I got my openin’
a month sooner. I got a designer came in special
off her vacation with some good things.”
Mr. Arnheim winked. “Schlim,
I got some models here to show you that you can’t
beat. When you see ’em you’ll pay
any price.”
“I can’t pay your fancy
prices no more. I paid you too much for that
plush fad last winter, and it never was a go.”
Mr. Arnheim chuckled. “When
you see a couple of the designs I brought over this
trip you’ll be willin’ to pay me twice
as much as for the hobble. Come on own
up, Schlim; you can’t beat my styles. Why,
you can copy them for your import-room and make ninety
per cent, on any one of ’em!”
“They won’t pay the prices,
I tell you. Some of my best customers have gone
over to other houses for the cheaper goods.”
“You can’t put over domestic
stuff on your trade, Schlim. You might as well
admit it. You gotta sting your class of trade
in order to have ’em appreciate you.”
“Now, just to show you that
I know what I’m talking about, Arnheim, I got
the best lines of new models for this season I’ve
had since I’m in business every one
of them domestics too. I’m puttin’
some made-in-America models in the import-room to-day
that will open your eyes.”
Mr. Arnheim laughed and opened his
portfolio. “I’ll show you these till
my trunks come up,” he said.
“Just a minute, Arnheim.
I want to show you some stuff Miss Sternberger!”
Mrs. Schlimberg raised her voice slightly, “Miss
Sternberger!”
Almost immediately a svelte, black-gowned
figure appeared in the doorway; she wore her hair
oval about her face, like a Mona Lisa, and her hands
were long and the dusky white of ivory.
“Mr. Arnheim, I want to introduce
you to a designer we’ve got since you went away.
Mr. Arnheim Miss Sternberger.”
The whir of sewing-machines from the
workrooms cut the silence.
“How do you do?” said Miss Sternberger.
“How do you do?” said Mr. Arnheim.
“Miss Sternberger is like you,
Mr. Arnheim she’s always out after
novelties; and I will say for her she don’t miss
out! She put out a line of uncut velvets last
winter that was the best sellers we had.”
Mr. Arnheim bowed. Mrs. Schlimberg turned to
Miss Sternberger.
“Miss Sternberger, will you
bring in some of those new models that are going like
hot cakes? Just on the forms will do.”
“Certainly.” She disappeared from
the doorway.
Mrs. Schlimberg tapped her forefinger
on the desk. “There’s the finest
little designer we’ve ever had! I got her
off a Philadelphia house, and I ‘ain’t
never regretted the money I’m payin’ her.
She’s done more for the house in eight months
than Miss Isaacs did in ten years!”
Miss Sternberger returned; a stock-boy
wheeled in the new models on wooden figures while
Mrs. Schlimberg and her new designer arranged them
for display. Mrs. Schlimberg turned to Mr. Arnheim.
“How’s the wife and boys,
Arnheim? I ’ain’t seen ’em since
you brought ’em all in to see the Labor Day
parade from the store windows last fall. Them’s
fine boys you got there, Arnheim!”
“Thanks,” said Arnheim.
“Now, Arnheim, I’m here
to ask you if you can beat these. Look at that
there peach-bloom Piquette look! Can
you beat it? That there’s the new butterfly
skirt just one year ahead of anything that’s
being shown this season.” Mrs. Schlimberg
turned to a second model. “Look at this
here ratine cutaway. If the Phoebe Snow
ain’t the talk of New York before next week,
then I don’t know my own name. Ain’t
it so, Miss Sternberger?”
Miss Sternberger ran her smooth hand
over the lace shoulder of the gown. “This
is a great seller,” she replied, smiling at Mr.
Arnheim. “Lillian Russell is going to wear
it in the second act of her new play when she opens
to-morrow night.”
“I guess we’re slow in
here,” chuckled Mrs. Schlimberg, nudging Mr.
Arnheim with the point of her elbow.
Miss Sternberger spread the square
train of a flame-colored robe full length on the green
carpet and drew back a corner of the hem to display
the lacy avalanche beneath. Then she bowed slightly
and turned toward the door.
Mrs. Schlimberg laid a detaining hand
on her sleeve. “Just a minute, Miss Sternberger.
Mr. Arnheim’s brought in some models he wants
us to look at.”