YOU SHOULD WORRY ABOUT A TANGO LESSON
The idea originated with Bunch Jefferson.
You can always count on Bunch having a few freak ideas
in the belfry where he keeps his butterflies.
Bunch and his wife, Alice, live out in Westchester
County, about half a mile from Uncle Peter’s
bungalow, where friend wife and I are spending the
winter.
The fact that Uncle Peter and Aunt
Martha had decided to give us a party was the inspiration
for Bunch’s brilliant idea.
“Listen, John,” he Macchiavellied;
“not one of this push out here knows a thing
about the Tango. Most of them have a foolish idea
that it’s a wicked institution invented by the
devil, who sold his patent rights to the Evil-Doers’
Association. Now, I’ll tell you what we’ll
do, John: we’ll put them wise. We’ll
take about two lessons from a good instructor in town
and on the night of the party we’ll make the
hit of our lives teaching them all to Tango are
you James to the possibilities?”
“It listens like a good spiel,”
I agreed; “but will a couple of lessons be enough
for us?”
“Sure,” he came back;
“we’re not a couple of Patsys with the
pumps! We can learn enough in two lessons to
make good in this Boob community. Why, we’ll
start a Tango craze out here that will put life and
ginger in the whole outfit and presently they’ll
be putting up statues in our honor.”
Well, to make a long story lose its
cunning, we made arrangements next day with Ikey Schwartz,
Dancing Instructor, to explain the mysteries of this
modern home-wrecking proposition known as the Tango,
and paid him in advance the sum of $100.
It seemed to me that a hundred iron
men in advance was a nifty little price for two lessons,
but Bunch assured me the price was reasonable on account
of the prevalence of rich scholars willing to divide
their patrimony with anybody who could teach their
feet to behave in time to the music.
We made an appointment to meet Ikey
at his “studio” for our first lesson the
following afternoon. Then we hiked for home on
the 4.14, well pleased with our investment and its
promise of golden returns.
That night Bunch and Alice were over
to our place for dinner. After dinner Bunch and
I sat down by the log fire in the Dutch room, filled
our faces with Havana panatellas, and proceeded to
enjoy life in silence.
Into the next room came Alice and
Peaches and sat down for their usual cackle.
Bunch and I started from our reveries
when we heard Alice say to Peaches, “You don’t
know what a source of comfort it has been to me to
realize that Bunch doesn’t know a blessed thing
about the Tango or any of those hatefully intimate
new dances!”
“The same with me, Alice,”
friend wife chirped in. “I believe if John
were to suddenly display the ability to dance the Tango
I’d be broken-hearted. Naturally, I’d
know that he must have learned it with a wicked companion
in some lawless cabaret. And if he frequented
cabarets without my knowledge oh, Alice,
what would I do?”
I looked at Bunch, he looked at me,
and then we both looked out the window.
“For my part,” Alice went
on, “I trust Bunch so implicitly that I don’t
even question his motive when he telephones me he has
to take dinner in town with a prospective real estate
customer.”
“And I know enough of human
nature,” Peaches gurgled, “to be sure that
if either one of them could Tango he would be crazy
to show off at home. I think we’re very
lucky, both of us, to have such steady-going husbands,
don’t you, Alice?”
At this point Aunt Martha buzzed into
the other room and the cackle took on another complexion.
In the meantime Bunch and I had passed away.
“It’s cold turkey,” I whispered.
“I’ve been in the refrigerator
for ten minutes and I’m chilled to the bone,”
Bunch whispered back.
“Can we get our coin away from Ikey?”
I asked.
“We can try,” Bunch sneezed.
The next afternoon we had Ikey Schwartz
for luncheon with us at the St. Astorbilt. The
idea being to dazzle him and get a few of the iron
men back.
“Leave everything to me,”
Bunch growled as we shaved our hats and Indian-filed
to a trough.
“A quart of Happysuds,”
Bunch ordered. “How about it, Ikey?”
Ikey flashed a grin and tried to swallow
his palate, so it wouldn’t interfere with the
wet spell suggested by Bunch.
Ikey belonged to the “dis, dose and
dem” push.
Every long sentence he uttered was full of splintered
grammar.
Every time Ikey opened his word-chest
the King’s English screamed for help, and literature
got a kick in the slats.
He was short and thin, but it was
a deceptive thinness. His capacity for storing
away free liquids was awe-inspiring and a sin.
I think Ikey must have been hollow
from the neck to the ankles, with emergency bulkheads
in both feet.
His nose was shaped like a quarter
to six o’clock. It began in the middle
and rushed both ways as hard as it could. One
end of it ducked into his forehead and never did come
out.
His interior was sponge-lined, and
when the bartenders began to send them in fast, Ikey
would lower an asbestos curtain to keep the fumes
away from his brain.
Nobody ever saw Ikey at high tide.
There was surely something wrong with
Ikey’s switchboard, because he could wrap his
system around more Indian laughing-juice without getting
lit up than any other man in the world.
But Ikey was the compliments of the
season, all right, all right.
Ikey had spent most of his life being
a Bookmaker, and when the racing game went out of
fashion he sat down and tried to think what else he
could do. Nothing occurred to him until one day
he discovered that he could push his feet around in
time to music, so he became a dancing instructor and
could clean up $1,000 per day if the bartenders didn’t
beckon too hard.
The luncheon had been ordered and
Bunch was just about to switch the conversation around
to the subject of rebates when suddenly his eyes took
on the appearance of saucers, and tapping me on the
arm he gasped, “Look!”
I looked, and beheld Peaches, Alice
and Aunt Martha sailing over in our direction.
With a whispered admonition to Bunch
to keep Ikey still, I went forward to meet friend
wife, her aunt and Alice.
They were as much surprised as I was.
“It was such a delightful day
that Aunt Martha couldn’t resist the temptation
to do a little shopping,” Peaches rattled on;
“and then we decided to come here for a bit
of luncheon hello, Bunch! I’m
so glad to see you! John, hadn’t
we better take another table so that your friendly
conference may not be interrupted?”
I hastened to assure Peaches that
it wasn’t a conference at all. We had met
Mr. Schwartz quite by accident. Then I introduced
Ikey to the ladies.
He got up and did something that was
supposed to be a bow, but you couldn’t tell
whether he was tying his shoe or coming down a stepladder.
When Ikey tried to bend a Society
double he looked like one of the pictures that goes
with a rubber exerciser, price 75 cents.
After they had ordered club sandwiches
and coffee I explained to Peaches and the others that
Mr. Schwartz was a real estate dealer. Ikey began
to swell up at once.
“Bunch and I are going in a
little deal with Mr. Schwartz,” I explained.
“He knows the real estate business backwards.
Mr. Schwartz has a fad for collecting apartment houses.
He owns the largest assortment of People Coops in
the city. All the modern improvements, too.
Hot and cold windows, running gas and noiseless janitors.
Mr. Schwartz is the inventor of the idea of having
two baths in every apartment so that the lessee will
have less excuse for not being water broke.”
Ikey never cracked a smile.
“In Mr. Schwartz’s apartment
houses,” I continued, while Bunch kicked my
shins under the table, “you will find self-freezing
refrigerators and self-leaving servants. All
the rooms are light rooms, when you light the gas.
Two of his houses overlook the Park and all of them
overlook the building laws. The floors are made
of concrete so that if you want to bring a horse in
the parlor you can do so without kicking off the plaster
in the flat below. Every room has folding doors,
and when the water pipes burst the janitor has folding
arms.”
“Quit your joshing, John! you’ll
embarrass Mr. Schwartz,” laughed Bunch somewhat
nervously, but Ikey’s grin never flickered.
“Is Mr. Schwartz deaf and dumb?” Peaches
whispered.
“Intermittently so,” I
whispered back; “sometimes for hours at a time
he cannot speak a word and can hear only the loudest
tones.”
Aunt Martha heard my comment on Ikey’s
infirmity and was about to become intensely sympathetic
and tell him how her brother’s wife was cured
when Bunch interrupted loudly by asking after Uncle
Peter’s health.
“Never better,” answered
Aunt Martha. “He has spent all the morning
arranging the program of dancing for our little party.
He insists upon having the Virginia Reel, the old-fashioned
waltz, the Polka and the Lancers. Uncle Peter
has a perfect horror of these modern dances and Peaches
and Alice and I share it with him.” Then
she turned to Ikey: “Don’t you think
these modern dances are perfectly disgusting?”
Poor Ikey looked reproachfully at
the old lady a second, then with gathering astonishment
he slid silently off the chair and struck the floor
with a bump.
Aunt Martha was so rattled over this
unexpected effort on Mr. Schwartz’s part that
she upset her coffee and Ikey got most of it in the
back of the neck.
When peace was finally restored the
old lady came to the surface with an envelope which
had been lying on the table near her plate.
“Is this your letter, John?”
she asked, and then, arranging her glasses, read with
great deliberation, “Mr. I. Schwartz, Tango Teacher,
care of Kumearly and Staylates’ Cabaret, New
York.”
Peaches and Alice went into the ice
business right away quick.
Aunt Martha, in pained surprise, looked
at me and then at Bunch, and finally focused a steady
beam of interrogation upon the countenance of Mr.
Schwartz.
Ikey never whimpered.
Then Bunch took the letter from the
open-eyed Aunt Martha and leaped to the rescue while
I came out of the trance slowly.
“It’s too bad Mr. Schwartz
forgot his ear trumpet,” Bunch said quickly,
and Ikey was wise to the tip in a minute.
Peaches sniffed suspiciously, and
I knew she had the gloves on.
“Mr. Schwartz’s affliction
is terrible,” she said with a chill in every
word. “How did you converse with him before
our arrival?”
“Oh! he understands the lip
language and can talk back on his fingers,”
I hastened to explain, looking hard at Ikey, whose
masklike face gave no token that he understood what
was going on.
“I thought I understood you
to say Mr. Schwartz is a real estate dealer!”
Peaches continued, while the thermometer went lower
and lower.
“So he is,” I replied.
“Then why does his correspondent
address him as a Tango Teacher?” friend wife
said slowly, and I could hear the icebergs grinding
each other all around me.
“I think I can explain that,”
Bunch put in quietly. Then with the utmost deliberation
he looked Ikey in the eye and said, “Mr. Schwartz,
it’s really none of my business, but would you
mind telling me why you, a real estate dealer, should
have a letter in your possession which is addressed
to you as a Tango Teacher? Answer me on your fingers.”
Ikey delivered the goods.
In a minute he had both paws working
overtime and such a knuckle twisting no mortal man
ever indulged in before.
“He says,” Bunch began
to interpret, “that the letter is not his.
It is intended for Isadore Schwartz, a wicked cousin
of his who is a victim of the cabaret habit.
Mr. Schwartz is now complaining bitterly with his
fingers because his letters and those intended for
his renegade cousin become mixed almost every day.
These mistakes are made because the initials are identical.
He also says that he hopes the presence
of this particular letter in his possession does not offend
the ladies because while it is addressed to a tango-teacher
the contents are quite harmless being but a small bill from
the dentist.”
Ikey’s fingers kept on working
nervously, as though he felt it his duty to wear them
out, and the perspiration rolled off poor Bunch’s
forehead.
“Tell him to cease firing,”
I said to Bunch; “he’ll sprain his fingers
and lose his voice.”
Ikey doubled up all his eight fingers
and two thumbs in one final shout and subsided.
“I’m afraid we’ll
miss the 5.18 train if we don’t hurry,”
said Peaches, and I could see that the storm was over,
although she still glanced suspiciously at poor Ikey.
“And, Bunch, you and John can
come home with us now, can’t you?” Alice
asked as they started to float for the door.
Then Ikey cut in as we started to
follow the family parade, “I’m hep to
the situation. It’s a cutey, take it from
little Ikey. I’ll have to charge you $8
for the sudden attack of deafness; then there’s
$19 for hardships sustained by my finger joints while
conversing. The rest of the 100 iron men I’m
going to keep as a souvenir of two good-natured ginks
who wouldn’t know what to do with a Tango if
they had one.”
As we pulled out of the Mayonnaise
Mansion I looked back at Ikey to thank him with a
farewell nod.
He was halfway under the table, holding
both hands to his sides and making funny faces at
the carpet.