In the Knockerbeck Hotel there are
various parlors; Pompeian rooms lined in marble and
pillared in chaste fluted columns; Louis Quinze corners,
gold-leafed and pink-brocaded, principally furnished
with a spindly-legged Vernis-Martin cabinet
and a large French clock in the form of a celestial
sphere surmounted by a gold cupid.
There are high-ceilinged rendezvous
rooms, with six arm and two straight chairs chased
after the manner of Gouthiere, and a series of small
inlaid writing-desks, generously equipped for an avidious
public to whom the crest-embossed stationery of a
four-dollar-a-day-up hotel suggests long-forgotten
friends back home.
Just off the lobby is the Oriental
room, thick with arabesque hangings and incense and
distinguished by the famous pair of Chinese famille
rose mandarin jars, fifty-three inches high and
enameled with Hoho birds and flowers. In careful
contrast the adjoining room, a Colonial parlor paneled
in black walnut and designed by a notorious architect,
is ten degrees lower in temperature and lighted by
large rectangular windows, through whose leaded panes
a checkered patch of sunshine filters across the floor
for half an hour each forenoon.
Then there is the manicure parlor,
done in white tile, and stationary wash-stands by
the Herman Casky Hygienic Company, Eighth Avenue.
The oracle of this particular Delphi
was Miss Gertrude Sprunt, white-shirtwaisted, smooth-haired,
and cool-fingered. Miss Sprunt could tell, almost
as soon as you stepped out of the elevator opposite
the parlors, the shortest cut to your hand and heart;
she could glance at a pair of cuffs and give the finger-nails
a correspondingly high or domestic finish, and could
cater to the manicurial whims of Fifth Avenue and
Four Corners alike. After one digital treat at
her clever hands you enlisted as one of Miss Sprunt’s
regulars.
This fact was not lost upon her sister
worker, Miss Ethyl Mooney. “Say, Gertie” Miss
Mooney tied a perky little apron about her trim waist
and patted a bow into place “is there
ever a mornin’ that you ain’t booked clear
through the day?”
Miss Sprunt hung her flat sailor hat
and blue jacket behind the door, placed her hands
on her hips, glanced down the length of her svelte
figure, yawned, and patted her mouth with her hand.
“Not so you could notice it,”
she replied, in gapey tones. “I’m
booked from nine to quitting just six days of the
week; and, believe me, it’s not like taking
the rest cure.”
“I guess if I was a jollier
like you, Gert, I’d have a waitin’-list,
too, I wish I could get on to your system.”
“Maybe I give tradin’-stamps,”
observed Miss Sprunt, flippantly.
“You give ’em some sort
of laughing-gas; but me, I’m of a retiring disposition,
and I never could force myself on nobody.”
Miss Gertrude flecked at herself with a whisk-broom.
“Don’t feel bad about it, Ethyl; just
keep on trying.”
Miss Ethyl flushed angrily.
“Smarty!” she said.
“I wasn’t trying to be
nasty, Ethyl you’re welcome to an
appointment every twenty minutes so far as I’m
concerned.”
Miss Ethyl appeared appeased.
“You know yourself, Gert, you
gotta way about you. A dollar tip ain’t
nothin’ for you. But look at me I’ve
forgot there’s anything bigger’n a quarter
in circulation.”
“There’s a great deal
in knowing human nature. Why, I can almost tell
a fellow’s first name by looking at his half-moons.”
“Believe me, Gert, it ain’t
your glossy finish that makes the hit; it’s
a way you’ve got of making a fellow think he’s
the whole show.”
“I do try to make myself
agreeable,” admitted Miss Sprunt.
“Agreeable! You can look
at a guy with that Oh-I-could-just-listen-to-you-talk-for-ever
expression, and by the time you’re through with
him he’ll want to take his tens out of the water
and sign over his insurance to you.”
“Manicuring is a business like
anything else,” said Miss Sprunt, by no means
displeased. “You sure do have to cater to
the trade.”
“Well, believe me ” began Miss
Ethyl.
But Miss Gertrude suddenly straightened,
smiled, and turned toward her table.
Across the hall Mr. James Barker,
the rubbed-down, clean-shaven result of a Russian
bath, a Swedish massage, and a bountiful American
breakfast, stepped out of a French-gold elevator and
entered the parlor.
Miss Sprunt placed the backs of her
hands on her hips and cocked her head at the clock.
“Good morning, Mr. Barker; you’re on time
to the minute.”
Mr. Barker removed his black-and-white
checked cap, deposited three morning editions of evening
papers atop a small glass case devoted to the display
of Madame Dupont’s beautifying cold-creams and
marvelous cocoa-butters, and rubbed his hands swiftly
together as if generating a spark. A large diamond
mounted in a cruelly stretched lion’s mouth
glinted on Mr. Barker’s left hand; a sister stone
glowed like an acetylene lamp from his scarf.
“On time, eh! Leave it
to your Uncle Fuller to be on time for the big show a
pretty goil can drag me from the hay quicker’n
anything I know of.”
Miss Gertrude quirked the corner of
one eye at Miss Ethyl in a scarcely perceptible wink
and filled a glass bowl with warm water.
“That’s one thing I will
say for my regular customers they never
keep me waiting; that is the beauty of having a high-class
trade.”
She glanced at Mr. Barker with pleasing
insinuation, and they seated themselves vis-a-vis
at the little table.
Miss Sprunt surrounded herself with
the implements of her craft small porcelain
jars of pink and white cold-creams, cakes of powder
in varying degrees of pinkness, vials of opaque liquids,
graduated series of files and scissors, large and
small chamois-covered buffers, and last the round
glass bowl of tepid water cloudy with melting soap.
Mr. Barker extended his large hand
upon the little cushion and sighed in satisfaction.
“Go to it, sis gimme a shine like
a wind-shield.”
She rested his four heavy fingers lightly in her palm.
“You really don’t need
a manicure, Mr. Barker; your hands keep the shine
better than most.”
“Well, I’ll be hanged tryin’
to learn your Uncle Fuller when to have his own hands
polished! Can you beat it?” Mr. Barker’s
steel-blue shaved face widened to a broad grin.
“Say, you’re a goil after my own heart a
regular little sixty-horse-power queen.”
“I wasn’t born yesterday, Mr. Barker.”
“I know you wasn’t, but
you can’t bluff me off, kiddo. You don’t
need to give me no high-power shine if you don’t
want to, but I’ve got one dollar and forty minutes’
worth of your time cornered, just the samey.”
Miss Sprunt dipped his hands into tepid water.
“I knew what I said would not
frighten you off, Mr. Barker. I wouldn’t
have said it if I thought it would.”
Mr. Barker guffawed with gusto.
“Can you beat the wimmin?” he cried.
“Can you beat the wimmin?”
“You want a high pink finish, don’t you,
Mr. Barker?”
“Go as far as you like, sis;
give ’em to me as pink and shiny as a baby’s
heel.”
Miss Sprunt gouged out a finger-tip
of pink cream and applied it lightly to the several
members of his right hand. Her touch was sure
and swift.
He regarded her with frankly admiring eyes.
“You’re some little goil,”
he said; “you can tell me what I want better
than I know myself.”
“That’s easy; there isn’t
a broker in New York who doesn’t want a high
pink finish, and I’ve been doing brokers, actors,
millionaires, bank clerks, and Sixth Avenue swells
in this hotel for three years.”
He laughed delightedly, his eyes almost
disappearing behind a fretwork of fine wrinkles.
“What makes you know I’m
a tape-puller, kiddo? Durned if you ain’t
got my number better than I got it myself.”
“I can tell a broker from a
business man as easy as I can tell a five-carat diamond
from a gilt-edge bond.”
He slid farther down on his chair
and regarded her with genuine approval.
“Say, kiddo, I’ve been
all round the world took a trip through
Egypt in my car last spring that I could write a book
about; but I ain’t seen nothin’ in the
way of skirts that could touch you with a ten-foot
rod.”
She flushed.
“Oh, you fellows are such jolliers!”
“On the level, kiddo, you’re
preferred stock all right, and I’d be willin’
to take a flyer any time.”
“Say, Mr. Barker, you’d
better quit stirring the candy, or it will turn to
sugar.”
“Lemme tell you, Miss Gertie,
I ain’t guyin’, and I’ll prove it
to you. I’m goin’ to take you out
in the swellest little ninety-horse-power speedwagon
you ever seen; if you’ll gimme leave I’ll
set you and me up to-night to the niftiest little
dinner-party on the island, eh?”
She filed rapidly at his thumb, bringing
the nail to a pointed apex.
“I’m very careful about
accepting invitations, Mr. Barker.”
“Don’t you think I can
tell a genteel goil when I see her? That’s
why I ain’t asked you out the first time I seen
you.”
She kept her eyes lowered.
“Of course, since you put it
that way, I’ll be pleased to accept your invitation,
Mr. Barker.”
He struck the table with his free hand.
“You’re a live un, all
right. How about callin’ round fer
you at six this evenin’?”
She nodded assent.
“Good goil! We’ll keep the speedometer
busy, all right!”
She skidded the palms of her hands
over his nails. “There,” she said,
“that’s not a bad shine.”
He straightened his hands out before
him and regarded them in mock scrutiny. “Those
are some classy grabbers,” he said; “and
you’re some classy little woiker.”
He watched her replace the crystal
stoppers in their several bottles and fit her various
commodities into place. She ranged the scissors
and files in neat graduated rows and blew powder particles
off the cover with prettily pursed lips.
“That’ll be about all, Mr. Barker.”
He ambled reluctantly out from his chair.
“You’ll be here at six, then?”
“Will I be here at six, sis? Say, will
a fish swim?”
He fitted his cap carefully upon his
head and pulled the vizor low over his eyes.
“So long, kiddo!” He crossed
the marble corridor, stepped into the gold elevator,
the filigree door snapped shut, and he shot upward.
Miss Ethyl waited a moment and then
pitched her voice to a careful note of indifference.
“I’ll bet the million-dollar
kid asked you to elope with him.”
Miss Gertrude tilted her coiffure
forward and ran her amber back-comb through her front
hair.
“No,” she said, with the
same indifference, “he didn’t ask me to
elope with him; he just wanted to know if I’d
tour Hester Street with him in his canoe.”
“I don’t see no medals
on you fer bein’ the end man of the minstrel
show. Don’t let a boat trip to Coney go
to your head; you might get brain-fever.”
Gertrude Sprunt cast her eyes ceilingward.
“Well, one good thing, your
brain will never cause you any trouble, Ethyl.”
“Lord, Gert, cut out the airs!
You ain’t livin’ in the rose suite on the
tenth floor; you’re only applyin’ nail-polishes
and cuticle-lotions down here in the basement.”
“There’s something else
I’m doing, too,” retorted Miss Gertrude,
with unruffled amiability. “I’m minding
my own affairs.”
They fell to work again after these
happy sallies, and it was late afternoon before there
came a welcome lull.
“Who’s your last, Gert?”
“Mr. Chase.” There
were two red spots of excitement burning on Miss Sprunt’s
cheeks, and her eyes showed more black than blue.
“Not that little guy with the
Now-I-lay-me-down-to-sleep face? Take it from
me, he’s a bank clerk or a library guy.
Thank Heaven, I ain’t got no cheap skates on
my staff!”
Miss Gertrude flushed up to her eyes.
“He may be a clerk, but ”
Mr. Chase entered quietly. There
was a gentle, even shrinking smile upon his features,
and he carried a small offering covered with purple
tissue-paper, which he placed nervously upon the edge
of the table.
“Good afternoon, Miss Sprunt.”
He pushed the greeting toward her. “May
I hope that you will accept these?”
“Oh, Mr. Chase, aren’t
you good?” The very quality of her voice was
suddenly different, like the softening of a violin
note when you mute the strings.
He drew his chair up to the table
with the quiet satisfaction of a man ready for a well-merited
meal.
“You and violets are inseparable
in my mind, Miss Sprunt, because you both suggest
the spring.”
She laughed in low, rich tones, and
her shirtwaist rose and fell rapidly from short breathing.
“Why,” she said, “that’s
the very nicest thing any one ever said to me!”
His hand, long-fingered and virile,
drooped over the edge of the bowl into the warm water;
he leaned forward with his chest against the line
of the table.
“What do you mean, Miss Sprunt?”
She took his dripping hand from the
water and dried each finger separately.
“If you had been doing high
pink finishes for three years you’d know the
difference when a dull white came along I I
mean, I ”
He smoothed away her embarrassment
with a raillery: “By your polish shall
ye be known.”
“Yes,” she replied, with
more seriousness than banter; “that’s exactly
what I mean. I’m not used to men whose polish
extends beyond their finger-nails.”
She worked with her head bent low,
and he regarded the shining coils of her hair.
“How droll you are!” he said.
She pushed back the half-moons of
his fingers with an orange stick dipped in cold-cream.
“You ought to watch your cuticle,
Mr. Chase, and be more regular about the manicures.
Your hands are more delicate than most.”
He started.
“Of course I should pay more
attention to them, but I’m pretty busy and and ”
“Of course I understand manicures
are expensive luxuries these days.”
“Yes.”
“I have become so accustomed
to hotel trade that I forgot that some hands may be
earning salaries instead of drawing incomes.”
Her manner was unobtrusive, and he laughed quietly.
“You are quite a student of types, Miss Sprunt.”
“Wouldn’t I have to be,
Mr. Chase, me doing as many as a hundred fingers a
day, and something different coming with each ten of
them?”
“You are delightful,”
he said, letting his amused eyes rest upon her; “but
I fear you’ve mysterious methods of divination.”
“Oh, I don’t know,”
she said, airily. “Just take you, for example.
I don’t need an X-ray to see that there isn’t
a Fifth Avenue tailor sign stitched inside your coat.
It doesn’t take any mind-reader to know that
you come in from the Sixth Avenue entrance and not
from the elevator. Besides, when you come to
live in a lobster palace you usually have your claws
done to match your shell. I’d have given
you a dull white finish without your even asking
for it.”
“I see where I stand with you, Miss Sprunt.”
“Oh, it isn’t that, Mr.
Chase. I guess, if the truth was known, the crawfish
stand better with me than the lobsters.”
Mr. Chase’s fingers closed lightly over hers.
“I believe you mean what you say,” he
said.
“You bet your life I do!”
she said, emphasizing each word with a buff.
She looked up, met his insistent eyes, and laughed
in a high, unnatural pitch. “Other hand,
please,” she whispered.
When he finally rose to depart she
rose with him, holding her nosegay at arm’s-length
and tilting her head.
“It’s almost time for
wood violets, Miss Sprunt. I’ll try to get
you some.”
“Oh, don’t trouble, Mr.
Chase; these hothouse ones are beauties.”
“I I’ll be
dropping in soon again, Miss Sprunt. I think I’ll
take your advice and be more regular about my manicures.”
“Oh,” she said, in some
confusion, “I I didn’t mean
that. You can care for them in between times
yourself.”
At the Sixth Avenue exit he paused.
“Good night,” he said, slowly.
“Good night,” she responded, her lips
warm and parted like a child’s.
When the click of his footsteps had
echoed down the marble corridor Miss Ethyl crossed
the room and indulged in several jerky sniffs at the
little floral offering. “Well, whatta you
know about that little tin Willie, bringin’
a goil violets in May? You better stick to the
million-dollar kid, Gert; he’s the strawberries-in-December
brand.”
For once Miss Gertrude did not retort;
her eyes, full of dreams, were gazing past the doorway
which had so recently framed the modest figure of
Mr. Chase.
Promptly at six Mr. Barker appeared
for his appointment. He bespoke the last word
and epilogue in sartorial perfection his
suit was a trifle too brown and a trifle too creased
and his carnation a bit too large, but he radiated
good cheer and perfume.
Miss Ethyl nudged Miss Gertrude excitedly.
“Pipe the rig, Gert; he makes you look like
a hole in a doughnut.”
He entered, suave as oil.
“Well, sis, ready?”
“Oh, Mr. Barker, you’re all dressed up and
look at me. I ”
“Ah-h-h, how do you like it?
Some class, eh? Guess your Uncle Fuller ain’t
some hit brand-new gear from tonneau to
rear wheels.”
Mr. Barker circumvolved on one heel, holding his coat-tails
apart.
“I blew me right fer this outfit; but it’s
woith the money, sis.”
“If I had known I’d have gone home and
dressed up, too.”
“Well, whatta you know about
that?” exclaimed Mr. Barker, observing her up
and down. “That there shroud you’re
wearing is as classy as anything I’ve seen up
in the lobby or any place else, and I’ve been
all round the woild some, too. I know the real
thing from the seconds every time.”
Miss Gertrude worked into her gloves.
“I guess it is more becoming for a girl like
me to go plainly.”
“Believe me, kiddo” Mr.
Barker placed his hand blinker-fashion against the
side of his mouth, and his lips took on an oblique
slant “take it from me, kiddo, when
it comes to real feet-on-the-fender comfort, a nineteen-fifty
suit with a extry pair of pants thrown in can make
this rig feel like a busted tire.”
“Well, Mr. Barker, I’m ready if you are.”
He swung one arm akimbo with an outward
circular movement, clicked his heels together, and
straightened his shoulders until his speckled white
vest swelled.
“Hitch on, sis, and let’s show Broadway
we’re in town!”
Gertrude took a pinch of sleeve between
her gloved fingers; they fell into step. At the
door she turned and nodded over one shoulder.
“Good night, Ethyl dear,” she said, a
trifle too sweetly.
A huge mahogany-colored touring-car
caparisoned in nickel and upholstered in darker red
panted and chugged at the Broadway curb. Mr.
Barker helped her into the front seat, swung himself
behind the steering-wheel, covered them over with
a striped rug, and turned his shining monster into
the flux of Broadway.
Miss Gertrude leaned her head back
against the upholstery and breathed a deep-seated,
satisfied sigh.
“This,” she said, “is what I call
living.”
Mr. Barker grinned and let out five miles more to
the hour.
“I guess this ain’t got the Sixth Avenue
‘L’ skinned a mile!”
“Two miles,” she said.
“Honest, sis, I could be arrested for what I
think of the ‘L.’”
“I know the furnishing of every
third-floor front on the line,” she replied,
with a dreary attempt at jocoseness.
“Never mind, kiddo, I’ve
got my eye on you,” he sang, quoting from a
street song of the hour.
They sped on silently, the wind singing in their ears.
“Want the shield up?”
“The what?”
“The glass front.”
“No, thank you, Mr. Barker; this air is good.”
“This old wagon can eat up the
miles, all right, eh? She toured Egypt fer
two months and never turned an ankle.”
“To think of having traveled as you have.”
“Me, I’m the best little
traveler you ever seen. More than once I drove
this car up a mountainside. Hold your hat here
goes, kiddo.”
“I guess you’ll think
I’m slow, but this is the first time I’ve
been in an automobile, except once when I was sent
for in a taxi-cab for a private manicure.”
“You think you could get used
to mine, kiddo?” He nudged her elbow with his
free arm; she drew herself back against the cushions.
“The way I feel now,”
she said, closing her eyes, “I could ride this
way until the crack of doom.”
They drew up before a flaring, electric-lighted
cafe with an awning extending from the entrance out
to the curb. A footman swung open the door, a
doorman relieved Mr. Barker of his hat and light overcoat,
a head waiter steered them through an Arcadia of palms,
flower-banked tables, and small fountains to a mirrored
corner, a lackey drew out their chairs, a pantry boy
placed crisp rolls and small pats of sweet butter
beside their plates and filled their tumblers with
water from a crystal bottle, a waiter bent almost
double wrote their order on a silver-mounted pad,
and music faint as the symphony of the spheres came
to them from a small gold balcony.
Miss Gertrude removed her gloves thoughtfully.
“That is what I call living,”
she repeated. She leaned forward, her elbows
on the table, and the little bunch of violets at her
belt worked out and fell to the floor. An attendant
sprang to recover them.
“Let ’em go,” said
Barker. He drew a heavy-headed rose from the
embankment between them and wiped its wet stem.
“Here’s a posy that’s got them beat
right.”
She took it and pinned it at her throat.
“Thanks,” she said, glancing about her
with glowing, interested eyes.
“This place makes Runey’s
lunch-room look like a two-weeks-old manicure.”
“I told you I was goin’
to show you the time of your life, didn’t I?
Any goil that goes out with me ain’t with a
piker.”
“Gee!” said Gertrude; “if Ethyl
could only see me now!”
She sipped her water, and the ice
tinkled against the frail sides of the tumbler.
A waiter swung a silver dome off a platter and served
them a steaming and unpronounceable delicacy; a woman
sang from the small gold balcony life,
wine, and jewels sparkled alike.
A page with converging lines of gilt
balls down the front of his uniform passed picture
post-cards, showing the cafe, from table to table.
Gertrude asked for a lead-pencil and wrote one to a
cousin in Montana, and Mr. Barker signed his name
beneath hers.
They dallied with pink ices and French
pastries, and he loudly requested the best cigar in
the place.
“It’s all in knowin’
how to live,” he explained. “I’ve
been all over the woild, and there ain’t much
I don’t know or ain’t seen; but you gotta
know the right way to go about things.”
“Anybody could tell by looking
at you that you are a man of the world,” said
Miss Gertrude.
It was eleven o’clock when they
entered the car for the homeward spin. The cool
air blew color and verve into her face; and her hair,
responding to the night damp, curled in little grape-vine
tendrils round her face.
“You’re some swell little
goil,” remarked Mr. Barker, a cigar hung idle
from one corner of his mouth.
“And you are some driver!”
she retorted. “You run a car like a real
chauffeur.”
“I wouldn’t own a car
if I couldn’t run it myself,” he said.
“I ran this car all through France last fall.
There ain’t no fun bein’ steered like
a mollycoddle.”
“No one could ever accuse you
of being a mollycoddle, Mr. Barker.”
He turned and loosened the back of
her seat until it reclined like a Morris chair.
“My own invention,” he said; “to
lie back and watch the stars on a clear night sort
of of gives you a hunch what’s goin’
on up there.”
She looked at him in some surprise.
“You’re clever, all right,” she
said, rather seriously.
“Wait till you know me better,
kiddo. I’ll learn you a whole lot about
me that’ll surprise you.”
His hand groped for hers; she drew
it away gently, but her voice was also gentle:
“Here we are home, Mr. Barker.”
In front of her lower West Side rooming-house
he helped her carefully to alight, regarding her sententiously
in the flare of the street lamp.
“You’re my style, all
right, kiddo. My speedometer registers you pretty
high.”
She giggled.
“I’m here to tell you
that you look good to me, and and I anything
on fer to-morrow night?”
“No,” she said, softly.
“Are you on?”
She nodded.
“I’ll drop in and see you to-morrow,”
he said.
“Good,” she replied.
“If nothin’ unexpected
comes up to-morrow night we’ll take one swell
spin out along the Hudson Drive and have dinner at
the Vista. There’s some swell scenery out
along the Palisade drive when the moon comes up and
shines over the water.”
“Oh, Mr. Barker, that will be heavenly!”
“I’m some on the soft-soap stuff myself,”
he said.
“You’re full of surprises,” she
agreed.
“I’ll drop in and see you to-morrow, kiddo.”
“Good night,” she whispered.
“Good night, little sis,” he replied.
They parted with a final hand-shake;
as she climbed up to her room she heard the machine
chug away.
The perfume of her rose floated about
her like a delicate mist. She undressed and went
to bed into a dream-world of shimmering women and
hidden music, a world chiefly peopled by deferential
waiters and scraping lackeys. All the night through
she sped in a silent mahogany-colored touring-car,
with the wind singing in her ears and lights flashing
past like meteors.
When Miss Gertrude arrived at the
Knockerbeck parlors next morning a little violet offering
wrapped in white tissue-paper lay on her desk.
They were fresh wood violets, cool and damp with dew.
She flushed and placed them in a small glass vase
behind the cold-cream case.
Her eyes were blue like the sky when
you look straight up, and a smile trembled on her
lips. Ten minutes later Mr. Barker, dust-begrimed
and enveloped in a long linen duster, swaggered in.
He peeled off his stout gloves; his fingers were black-rimmed
and grease-splotched.
“Mornin’, sis; here’s
a fine job for you. Took an unexpected business
trip ten miles out, and the bloomin’ spark-plug
got to cuttin’ up like a balky horse.”
He crammed his gloves and goggles
into spacious pockets and looked at Miss Gertrude
with warming eyes.
“Durned if you ain’t lookin’
pert as a mornin’-glory to-day!”
She took his fingers on her hand and
regarded them reprovingly.
“Shame on you, Mr. Barker, for
getting yourself so mussed up!” cried Miss Sprunt.
“Looks like I need somebody
to take care of me, doan it, sis?”
“Yes,” she agreed, unblushingly.
Once in warm water, his hands exuded
the odor of gasolene. She sniffed like a horse
scenting the turf.
“I’d rather have a whiff
of an automobile,” she remarked, “than
of the best attar of roses on the market.”
“You ain’t forgot about to-night, sis?”
She lowered her eyes.
“No, I haven’t forgotten.”
“There ain’t nothin’
but a business engagement can keep me off. I gotta
big deal on, and I may be too busy to-night, but we’ll
go to-morrow sure.”
“That’ll be all right, Mr. Barker; business
before pleasure.”
“I’m pretty sure it’ll
be to-night, though. I I don’t
like to have to wait too long.”
He reached across the table suddenly
and gripped hold of her working arm.
“Say, kiddo, I like you.”
“Silly!” she said, softly.
“I ain’t foolin’.”
“I’ll be ready at six,”
she said, lightly. “If you can’t come
let me know.”
“I ain’t the sort to do
things snide,” he said. “If I can’t
come I’ll put you wise, all right.”
“You certainly know how to treat a girl,”
she said.
“Let me get to likin’
a goil, and there ain’t nothin’ I won’t
do for her.”
“You sure can run a machine, Mr. Barker.”
“You wait till I let loose some
speed along the Hudson road, and then you’ll
see some real drivin’; last night wasn’t
nothin’.”
“Oh, Mr. Barker!”
“Call me Jim,” he said.
“Jim,” she repeated, softly, after him.
The day was crowded with appointments.
She worked unceasingly until the nerves at the back
of her head were strained and aching, and tired shadows
appeared under her eyes. The languor of spring
oppressed her.
To her surprise, Mr. Chase appeared
at four o’clock. At the sight of him the
point of her little scissors slipped into the unoffending
cuticle of the hand she was grooming. She motioned
him to a chair along the wall.
“In just a few minutes, Mr. Chase.”
“Thank you,” he replied,
seating himself and watching her with interested,
near-sighted eyes.
A nervousness sent the blood rushing
to her head. The low drone of Ethyl’s voice
talking to a customer, the tick of the clock, the click
and sough of the elevator were thrice magnified.
She could feel the gush of color to her face.
The fat old gentleman whose fingers
she had been administering placed a generous bonus
on the table and ambled out. She turned her burning
eyes upon Mr. Chase and spoke slowly to steady her
voice. She was ashamed of her unaccountable nervousness
and of the suffocating dryness in her throat.
“Ready for you, Mr. Chase.”
He came toward her with a peculiar
slowness of movement, a characteristic slowness which
was one of the trivial things which burned his attractiveness
into her consciousness. In the stuffiness of her
own little room she had more than once closed her
eyes and deliberately pictured him as he came toward
her table, gentle yet eager, with a deference which
was new as it was delightful to her.
As he approached her she snapped a
flexible file between her thumb and forefinger, and
watched it vibrate and come to a jerky stop; then she
looked up.
“Good afternoon, Mr. Chase.”
“Good afternoon, Miss Sprunt.
You see, I am following your advice.” He
took the chair opposite her.
“I I want to thank
you for the violets. They are the first real hint
of May I’ve had.”
“You knew they came from me?”
“Yes.”
“How?”
“Why I why, I just knew.”
She covered her confusion by removing
and replacing crystal bottle-stoppers.
“I’m glad that you knew they came from
me, Miss Sprunt.”
“Yes, I knew that they could
come from no one but you they were so simple
and natural and sweet.”
She laughed a pitch too high and plunged
his fingers into water some degrees too hot.
He did not wince, but she did.
“Oh, Mr. Chase, forgive me.
I I’ve scalded your fingers.”
“Why,” he replied, not
taking his eyes from her face, “so you have!”
They both laughed.
Across the room Miss Ethyl coughed
twice. “I always say,” she observed
to her customer, “a workin’-girl can’t
be too careful of her actions. That’s why
I am of a retiring disposition and don’t try
to force myself on nobody.”
Mr. Chase regarded the shadows beneath
Miss Sprunt’s eyes with a pucker between his
own.
“You don’t get much of
the springtime in here, do you, Miss Sprunt?”
“No,” she replied, smiling
faintly. “The only way we can tell the
seasons down here is by the midwinter Elks convention
and the cloak drummers who come to buy fur coats in
July.”
“You poor little girl,”
he said, slowly. “What you need is air good,
wholesome air, and plenty of it.”
“Oh, I get along all right,”
she said, biting at her nether lip.
“You’re confined too closely, Miss Sprunt.”
“Life isn’t all choice,” she replied,
briefly.
“Forgive me,” he said.
“I walk home sometimes,” she said.
“You’re fond of walking?”
“Yes, when I’m not too tired.”
“Miss Sprunt, would would
you walk with me this evening? I know a quiet
little place where we could dine together.”
“Oh,” she said, “I I
already have an engagement. I ”
She colored with surprise.
“You have an engagement?” His tones were
suddenly flat.
“No,” she replied, in
tones of sudden decision, “I’d be pleased
to go with you. I can do what I planned to-night
any other time.”
“Thank you, Miss Sprunt.”
Her fingers trembled as she worked, and his suddenly
closed over them.
“You poor, tired little girl,” he repeated.
She gulped down her emotions.
“Miss Sprunt, this is neither
the time nor the place for me to express myself, yet
somehow our great moments come when we least expect
them.”
She let her limp fingers rest in his; she was strangely
calm.
“I know it is always a great pleasure to have
you come in, Mr. Chase.”
“The first time I dropped in
was chance, Miss Sprunt. You can see for yourself
that I am not the sort of fellow who goes in for the
little niceties like manicures. I’m what
you might call the seedy kind. But the second
time I dropped in for a manicure was not accident,
nor the third time, nor the tenth it was
you.”
“You’ve been extravagant all on account
of me?” she parried.
“I’ve been more than that
on account of you, dear girl. I’ve been
consumed night and day by the sweet thought of you.”
“Oh-h-h!” She placed one hand at her throat.
“Miss Sprunt, I am not asking
anything of you; I simply want you to know me better.
I want to begin to-night to try to teach you to reciprocate
the immense regard the love I feel for you.”
She closed her eyes for a moment; his firm clasp of
her hand tightened.
“You’ll think I’m a bold girl, Mr.
Chase; you’ll you’ll ”
“Yes?”
“You’ll think I’m
everything I ought not to be, but you you
can’t teach me what I already know.”
“Gertrude!”
She nodded, swallowing back unaccountable tears.
“I never let myself hope, because
I didn’t think there was a chance, Mr. Chase.”
“Dear, is it possible without knowing me who,
what I am you ”
“I only know you,” she said, softly.
“That is all that matters.”
“My little girl,” he whispered,
regarding her with unshed tears shining in his eyes.
She placed her two hands over her face for a moment.
“What is it, dear?”
She burrowed deeper into her hands.
“I’m so happy,” she said, between
her fingers.
They regarded each other with almost
incredulous eyes, seeking to probe the web of enchantment
their love had woven.
“I do not deserve this happiness,
dearest.” But his voice was a pæan of
triumph.
“It is I who do not deserve,”
she said, in turn. “You are too too
everything for me.”
They talked in whispers until there
were two appointees ranged along the wall. He
was loath to go; she urged him gently.
“I can’t work while you
are here, dear; return for me at six no,”
she corrected, struck by a sudden thought, “at
six-thirty.”
“Let me wait for you, dearest,” he pleaded.
She waggled a playful finger at him.
“Good-by until later.”
“Until six-thirty, cruel one.”
“Yes.”
“There is so much to be said, Gertrude dear.”
“To-night.”
He left her lingeringly. They
tried to cover up their fervent, low-voiced farewells
with passive faces, but after he had departed her
every feature was lyric.
Juliet might have looked like that when her love was
young.
Mr. Barker arrived, but she met him
diffidently, even shamefacedly. Before she could
explain he launched forth:
“I’m sorry, kiddo, but
we’ll have to make it to-morrow night for that
ride of ourn. That party I was tellin’ you
about is goin’ to get busy on that big deal,
and I gotta do a lot of signin’ up to-night.”
Fate had carved a way for her with gentle hand.
“That’s all right, Mr.
Barker; just don’t you feel badly about it.”
She felt a gush of sympathy for him; for all humanity.
“You understand, kiddo, don’t
you? A feller’s got to stick to business
as much as pleasure, and we’ll hit the high places
to-morrow night, all right, all right. You’re
the classiest doll I’ve met yet.”
She swallowed her distaste.
“That’s the right idea,
Mr. Barker; business appointments are always important.”
“I’ll see you to-morrow
mornin’, and we’ll fix up some swell party.”
“Good night, Mr. Barker.”
“So long, honey.”
Directly after he departed Miss Ethyl
bade her good night in cold, cracky tones.
“The goin’s-on in this
parlor don’t make it no place for a minister’s
daughter, Miss Gertie Sprunt.”
“Then you ought to be glad your
father’s a policeman,” retorted her friend,
graciously. “Good night, dearie.”
She hummed as she put her table in
order. At each footstep down the marble corridor
her pulse quickened; she placed her cheeks in her hands,
vise-fashion, to feel of their unnatural heat.
When Mr. Chase finally came they met shyly and with
certain restraint. Whispering together like diffident
children, they went out, their hands lightly touching.
Broadway was already alight; the cool spring air met
them like tonic.
Like an exuberant lad, Mr. Chase led
her to the curb. A huge, mahogany-colored touring-car,
caparisoned in nickel and upholstered in a darker
red, vibrated and snorted alongside. A chauffeur,
with a striped rug across his knees, reached back
respectfully and flung open the door. Like an
automaton Gertrude placed her small foot upon the step
and paused, her dumfounded gaze confronting the equally
stunned eyes of the chauffeur. Mr. Chase aided
and encouraged at her elbow.
“It’s all right, dearest,
it’s all right; this is your surprise.”
“Why,” she gasped, her
eyes never leaving the steel-blue shaved face of the
chauffeur “why I ”
Mr. Chase regarded her in some anxiety.
“What a surprised little girl you are!
I shouldn’t have taken you so unawares.”
He almost lifted her in.
“This machine is yours, Mr. Chase?”
“Yes, dear, this machine is ours.”
“You never told me anything.”
“There is little to tell, Gertrude.
I have not used my cars to amount to anything since
I’m back from Egypt. I’ve been pretty
busy with affairs.”
“Back from Egypt!”
“Do not look so helpless, dear.
I’m only back three months from a trip round
the world, and I’ve been putting up with hotel
life meanwhile. Then I happened to meet you,
and as long as you had me all sized up I just let
it go that’s all, dear.”
“You’re not the Mr. Adam
Chase who’s had the rose suite on the tenth
floor all winter?”
“That’s me,” he laughed.
Her slowly comprehending eyes did not leave his face.
“Why, I thought I you ”
“It was my use of the private
elevator on the east side of the building that gave
you the Sixth Avenue idea, and it was too good a joke
on me to spoil, dearie.”
She regarded him through blurry eyes.
“What must you think of me?”
He felt for her hand underneath the lap-robe.
“Among other things,”
he said, “I think that your eyes exactly match
the violets I motored out to get for you this morning
at my place ten miles up the Hudson.”
“When did you go, dear?”
“Before you were up. We
were back before ten, in spite of a spark-plug that
gave us some trouble.”
“Oh,” she said.
The figure at the wheel squirmed to
be off. She lay back faint against the upholstery.
“To think,” she said, “that you
should care for me!”
“My own dear girl!”
He touched a spring and the back of
her seat reclined like a Morris chair.
“Lie back, dear. I invented
that scheme so I can recline at night and watch the
stars parade past. I toured that way all through
Egypt.”
The figure in the front seat gripped his wheel.
“Where are we going, Adam dear?” she whispered.
“This is your night, Gertrude; give James your
orders.”
She snuggled deeper into the dark-red
upholstery, and their hands clasped closer beneath
the robe.
“James,” she said, in
a voice like a bell, “take us to the Vista for
dinner; afterward motor out along the Palisade drive,
far out so that we can see the Hudson by moonlight.”