When Mr. Chadwick Champneys had visualized
to himself Milly’s niece, it had always been
in Milly’s image and likeness sweet,
fair, brave, merry, gentle, and strong. Milly’s
niece, of course, would be companionable. He
would only have to put upon her the finishing touches,
so to speak, embellish her natural graces with a finer
social polish. At the very worst, he hadn’t
dreamed that anybody belonging to Milly could be like
this red-headed Nancy. Perhaps, though, she would
be less objectionable when she was properly clad.
“Drive to the best department
store in town,” he told the driver, briefly.
Once in the store he summoned the
manager and briefly stated his needs. The young
lady must be furnished with everything she needed,
and as quickly as possible. She needed, it appeared,
about everything. The shrewd young Jew looked
her over with his trained eyes.
“Should you prefer our Miss
Smith to proffer aid and advice? Miss Smith is
an expert.”
Mr. Champneys reacted almost with
terror against Nancy Simms’s probable choice.
“See that the young lady gets
the best you have; and make Miss Smith the final authority,”
he said, briefly.
At the end of two hours Nancy returned,
the two clerks and the manager accompanying her.
The store people were slightly flushed, Nancy herself
sullenly acquiescent. For the first time in her
life she had had the opportunity to buy enough clothes
of her own, and yet she hadn’t been allowed
to choose what she really wanted. Gently but
inexorably they had rejected the garments Nancy selected,
smoothly insisting that these weren’t “just
the thing” for her. They slid her into
quiet-colored, plainly cut things that she wouldn’t
have looked at if left to her own devices. It
took their united tact, firmness, and diplomacy to
steer Nancy over the reefs of what the manager called
hired-girl taste.
Nancy was silent when she appeared
before Mr. Champneys in her new clothes. She
thought that if she had been allowed to pick them out
for herself, instead of having been hypnotized “bulldozed”
is what she called it into plain old dowdy
duds by two shopwomen and a Jew manager, she’d
have given him more for his money.
Mr. Champneys, looking her over critically,
admitted that the girl was at least presentable.
From hat to shoes she gave the impression of being
well and carefully dressed. But her aspect breathed
dissatisfaction, her bearing was ungraciousness itself;
nor did the two women clerks, trained to patience,
tact, and politeness as they were, altogether manage
to conceal their unfavorable opinion of her; even
the clever, smiling young Jew, used to managing women
shoppers, failed to hide the fact that he was more
than glad to get this one off his hands.
Nancy hadn’t taken time to eat
her dinner before leaving the Baxter house, nor had
Mr. Champneys had his lunch. They drove to his
hotel, both hungry, and had their first meal together.
Nancy hadn’t been trained to linger over meals:
one ate as much as one could get, in as short a space
of time as possible. Mr. Champneys was grateful
to a merciful Providence that he had ordered that
repast served in his private sitting-room.
Her hunger quite satisfied, she shoved
her plate aside, sighed, stretched luxuriously, and
yawned widely, like the healthy animal she was.
“What we got to do now?
Them women at the store said they’d get the
rest of my things here, along with the travelin’-bags,
in a coupla hours. I got a swell suit-case, didn’t
I? And oh, them toilet things! But between
now and then, what you want I should do?”
It was then half-after four, and the
train they were to take didn’t leave until half-after
seven.
“What would you like to do?” he asked.
“Can I go to the movies?”
He thought it an excellent idea.
It would give him some idea of the girl’s mental
processes; the psychology of the proletariat, he thought,
could be studied to advantage in their reaction to
the movies.
He sat beside her for an unhappy hour
while a famous screen comedian did the things with
his feet and his backbone for which his managers paid
him more in one year than the United States pays its
Presidents in ten. At each impossible climax Nancy
shrieked with laughter, the loud, delighted laughter
of a pleased child. Her enthusiasm for the slapstick
artist provoked him, but at the same time that gay
laughter tickled his ears pleasantly. There’s
plenty of good in a girl who can laugh like that!
After the grimacing genius there followed a short
drama of stage mother-love, in which the angel-child
dies strenuously in his little white bed. Nancy
dabbled her eyes, and blew her nose with what her captious
companion thought unnecessary vigor.
“Ain’t it movin’?”
“Yes. Moving pictures,”
was the cold response. And to himself he was
saying, defiantly: “Well, what else could
I expect? She’s not a whit worse than the
vast majority! She’s got the herd-taste.
That’s perfectly natural, under the circumstances.
When I get her well in hand, she will be different.”
“You don’t like funny
things, an’ you got no feelin’ for sad
things,” she ruminated, as they left the theater.
In silence they walked back to their hotel.
The bulk of her purchases had been
sent from the store, and a huge parcel awaited her
in her room. It enchanted her to go over these
new possessions, to gloat over her new toilet articles,
to sniff at the leather of her traveling-kit.
The smell of new leather was always to linger subconsciously
in Nancy’s memory; it was the smell of adventure
and of change.
They dined together in Mr. Champney’s
sitting-room, although she would have preferred the
public dining-room. Mr. Champneys was an abstemious
man, but the girl was frankly greedy with the naïve
greed of one who had been heretofore stinted.
She had seldom had what she really craved, and at
best she had never had enough of it. To be allowed
to order what and as much as she pleased, to be served
first, to have her wishes consulted at all, was a new,
amazing, and altogether delightful experience.
Everything was brand-new to her.
She had never before traveled in a
sleeping-car. It delighted her to watch the deft
porter make up the berths; she decided that the peculiar
etiquette of sleeping-cars required that all travelers,
male and female, should be driven to bed by lordly
colored men in white jackets, and there left in cramped
misery with nothing but an uncertain, rustling curtain
between them and the world; this, too, at an hour
when nobody is sleepy. Nancy wondered to see free
white citizens meekly obey their dusky tyrant.
She got into her own lower berth, grateful that she
hadn’t to climb like a cat into an upper.
She lay there staring, while the train
whizzed through the night. This had been the
most momentous day of her life. That morning she
had been the hopeless slavey in the Baxter kitchen,
an unpaid drudge with her hand against every man and
every man’s hand against her. She had been
bullied and beaten, she had eaten leavings, and worn
cast-offs. Since her mother’s death she
had known the life of an uncared-for child, the minimum
of care measured against the maximum of labor squeezed
out of it. Until to-day her fate had been the
fate of those who approach the table of Life with
unshod feet and unwashen hands.
And to-night all that was changed.
She was here, flying farther and farther away from
all she had known. She wondered if she were not
dreaming it. Panicky at that, she sat up in her
berth, pressed the button that turned on the electric
light, slipped her new kimono about her, and looked
long and earnestly at the new clothes within reach
of her hand. There they were, real to her touch;
there was her fine new hand-bag; and most real of
all was the feel of the money in it. Nancy fingered
the money, thoughtfully smoothing out the bills.
“As soon as we are settled, you will have your
allowance, and I shall of course provide you with
a check-book,” Mr. Champneys had told her.
“In the meanwhile you will naturally want money
for such little things as you may need.”
And he had given her twenty five-dollar bills.
She had received the money dumbly. This had been
the crowning miracle for she had never in
the whole course of her life had so much as one five-dollar
bill to do as she pleased with. She sat looking
at the money, concrete proof of the reality of the
change that had befallen her, and wondered, and wondered.
With a sigh of content she thrust the hand-bag under
her pillow, folded her kimono at the foot of her berth,
switched out the light, and presently fell asleep.
In his berth opposite hers, Mr. Chadwick
Champneys, more sleepless even than Nancy, was tabulating
his estimate of the young woman he had acquired.
It ran something like this:
Looks: bad; may improve.
Manners: worse; must improve. Particularly
in speech.
Appetite: that of the seventeen-year
locust. Must be restrained, to prevent an early
death.
Character in general: suspend judgment until
further study.
General summary of personal appearance:
Nice teeth on which a little dentistry will work wonders.
Not a bad figure, but doesn’t know how to carry
herself; has a villainous fashion of slouching, with
her hands on her hips. Plenty of hair, but of
terrifying redness; sullen expression of the eyes;
fiendish profusion of freckles: may have to be
skinned. Excellent nose. Speaks with appalling
frankness at times but is not talkative.
What must be done for her? Everything.
He groaned, turned over, and after
a while managed to sleep. Sufficient to the day
was the red hair thereof; he couldn’t afford
to lie awake worrying about to-morrow.
He had long since decided upon New
York as a residence until all his plans had matured.
One had greater freedom to act, and far more privacy,
in so large a city. They would stay at some quiet
hotel until after the marriage; then he and Nancy
would occupy the house he had recently purchased,
in the West Seventies. It was a fine old house
with a glimpse of near-by Central Park for an outlook,
and what he had paid for it would have purchased half
Riverton. He wanted its large, high-ceilinged
rooms to be furnished as the old house in Carolina
had been furnished, this being his standard of all
that was desirable. He wished for Peter’s
wife such a background as Peter’s forebears
had known; and Peter’s wife must be trained to
appreciate and to fit into it, that’s all!
The New York hotel, with its deft
and deferential servants who seemed to anticipate
her wishes, its luxury, its music, its shifting, splendidly
dressed patrons, its light and glitter, filled Nancy
with the same wonder that had fallen upon Aladdin when
he found himself in the magic cave with all its treasures
gleaming before his astounded, ignorant young eyes.
She hadn’t thought the whole
world contained so many people as she saw in New York
in one day. Fifth Avenue amazed and absorbed more
than it delighted her. The expressionless expressions
of the women, their hand-made faces, their smart shoes,
the way they wore their hair, the way they wore their
clothes; the men’s air of being well dressed,
of having money to spend, of appearing importantly
busy at any cost; a certain pretentiousness, as if
everything were shown at once and there were no reserve
of power, nothing held in disciplined abeyance, interested
her profoundly. She had a native shrewdness.
“They’re just like the
same kind of folks back home, but there’s more
of ’em here,” she decided.
The huge policemen she saw at every
turn, lordly and massive monoliths rising superbly
above lesser humanity, filled her with the deepest
respect and admiration. The mere policemen in
her home town were to these magnificent beings as
daubs to Titians, as pigmies to Titans. If in
those first days the girl had been called upon to do
the seven bendings and the nine knockings before the
one New York institution which impressed her most
profoundly, she undoubtedly would have singled out
one of those mastodons a-bossing everything and everybody,
with a prize-ham paw.
She was cold to the Woolworth Building,
as indifferent to the Sherman monument as Mr. Chadwick
Champneys was acridly averse to it, and not at all
interested in the Public Library. The Museum of
Natural History failed to win any applause from her;
the Metropolitan Museum bored her interminably, there
was so much of it. Most of the antiquities she
thought so much junk, and the Egyptian and Assyrian
remains were so obviously the plunder of old graveyards
that she couldn’t for the life of her understand
why anybody should wish to keep them above ground.
Mr. Champneys explained, patiently.
He wished, by way of aiding and abetting the education
he had in view for her, to arouse her interest in
these remains of a lost and vanished world.
She stood by the glass case that contains
the old brown mummied priest with his shaven skull,
his long, narrow feet, his flattened nose and fleshless
hands, and the mark of the embalmer’s stone knife
still visible upon his poor old empty stomach.
And she didn’t like him at all. There was
something grisly and repellent to her in the idea
that living people should make of this poor old dead
man a spectacle for idle curiosity.
“There was a feller in our town
used to keep stuffed snakes an’ monkeys an’
birds, an’ dried grasshoppers an’ bugs
an’ things like that in glass cases; but I never
dreamed in all my born life that anybody’d want
to keep dried people,” she commented disgustedly.
“I don’t see no good in it: it’s
sickenin’.” She turned her back upon
mummied Egypt with a gesture of aversion. “For
Gawdsake let’s go see somethin’ alive!”
He looked at her a bit helplessly.
Plainly, this young person’s education wasn’t
to be tackled off-hand! Agreeably to her wishes
he took her to a certain famous shop filled at that
hour with fashionable women wonderfully groomed and
gowned. Here, seated at a small table, lingering
over her ice-cream, Nancy was all observant eyes and
ears. Not being a woman, however, Mr. Champneys
was not aware that her proper education was distinctly
under way.
A day or two later he took her to
the Bronx Zoo. Here he caught a glimpse of Nancy
Simms that made him prick up his ears and pull his
mustache, thoughtfully. He had discovered how
appallingly ignorant she was, how untrained, how undisciplined.
To-day he saw how really young she was. She ran
from cage to cage. Her laughter made the corners
of his mouth turn up sympathetically.
There was something pathetic in her
eager enjoyment, something so fresh and unspoiled
in that laughter of hers that one felt drawn to her.
When she forgot to narrow her eyes, or to furrow her
forehead, or to screw up her mouth, she was almost
attractive, despite her freckles! Her eyes, of
an agaty gray-green, were transparently honest.
She had brushed the untidy mop of red hair, parted
it in the middle, and wore it in a thick bright plait,
tied with a black ribbon. She wore a simple middy
blouse and a well-made blue skirt. Altogether,
she looked more like a normal young girl than he had
yet seen her.
The Zoo enchanted her. She hurried
from house to house. Once, she told him, when
she was a little kid, a traveling-man had taken her
to a circus, because he was sorry for her. That
was the happiest day she had ever spent; it stood
out bright and golden in her memory. There had
been a steam-piano hoo-hooing “Wait till the
clouds roll by, Jenny.” Wasn’t a
steam-piano perfectly grand? She liked it better
than anything she’d ever heard. She’d
long ago made up her mind that if she was ever really
rich and had a place of her own, she’d have
a big circus steam-piano out in the barn, and she’d
play it on Sundays and holidays hoo-hoo,
hoo-hoo, hoo, hoo-hoo like that, you
know.
And to-day reminded her of that long-ago
circus day, with even more animals to look at!
She had never seen as many different animals as she
wanted to see, until now. She admitted that she
sort of loved wild things she even liked
the wild smell of ’em. There was something
in here she touched her breast lightly that
felt kin to them.
There was not the usual horde of visitors,
that day being a pay-day. A bearded man with
a crutch was showing one or two visitors around, and
at a word from him a keeper unlocked a cage door, to
allow a young chimpanzee to leap into his arms.
It hugged him, exhibiting extravagant affection; it
thrust out its absurd muzzle to kiss his cheek, and
patted him with its small, leathery, unpleasantly human
hands.
“It’s just like any other
baby,” said the keeper, petting it.
“I sure hope it ain’t
like any I’ll ever have,” said Nancy,
so naively that the man with the crutch laughed.
He looked at her keenly.
“Go over and see the baby lion,”
he suggested; and he added, smiling, “It’s
got red hair.”
“It can afford to have red hair,
so long as it’s a lion,” said Nancy, sturdily;
and she added, reflectively: “I’d
any day rather have me a lion-child with red hair,
than a monkey-child with any kind of hair.”
Somehow that blunt comment pleased
Mr. Champneys. When he took his charge back to
their hotel that evening, it was with something like
a glimmering of real hope in his heart.
The next day, as he joined her at
lunch, he said casually:
“I had a message from my nephew
this morning. He will be here in a few days.”
She turned pale; the hand that held
her fork began to tremble.
“Is it soon?” she asked, almost
unaudibly.
“The sooner the better.
I think we’d better have it here, in our sitting-room,
say at noon on Wednesday. Don’t be seared,”
he added, kindly. “All you have to do is
just to stand still and say, ’I will,’
at the right moment.”
“An’ an’ then?”
“My nephew’s boat sails
at about two. He drives to the pier. You
and I go to our apartment, until our own house is
ready for us. You see how nicely it’s all
arranged.”
“I ain’t I
mean, I don’t have to see him nor talk to him
before, do I?” She looked panic-stricken.
“Because I won’t! I can’t!
There’s some things I just can’t stummick,
an’ meetin’ that feller before the very
last minute I got to do it, is one of ’em.”
“Of course, of course!
You sha’n’t meet him until the very last
minute. Though he’s a mighty nice chap,
my nephew Peter is a mighty nice chap.”
“He must be! We’re
both of us a mighty nice pair, ain’t we?
Him goin’ one way an’ me goin’,
another way, all by our lonesomes!”
“The arrangement does not suit
you?” he inquired politely.
“Oh, it suits me all right,”
she said, after a moment. “I said I’d
do what I was told, an’ I’ll do it I
ain’t the sort backs down. But I ain’t
none too anxious to get any better acquainted with
this feller than what I am right now. I ain’t
stuck on men, noways.”
“You are only sixteen, my dear,” he reminded
her.
“Women know as much about men
when they’re sixteen as they do when they’re
sixty,” said she, coldly. “There ain’t
but one thing to believe about ’em an’
that is, you best not believe any of ’em.”
“I hope,” said he, stiffly,
“that you have no just cause to disbelieve me,
Nancy? Have I been unkind to you?”
“It ain’t me you’re
either kind or yet unkind to,” she told him.
“It’s Aunt Milly’s niece: you’re
a little crazy on that head, I guess. It’s
Aunt Milly’s niece you aim to marry to that nephew
of yours. If I was just me myself without bein’
any kin to her, you wouldn’t wipe your old shoes
on me.” She gave him a clear, level look.
“Let’s don’t have any lies about
this thing,” she begged. “I’m
a poor hand for lies. I know, and I want you should
know I know, and deal with me honest.”
She surprised him. Her next question
surprised him even more.
“What about my weddin’-dress?”
she demanded. “I got nothin’ fittin’
to be married in.”
“I should think a plain, tailored suit ”
he began.
“Then you got another think
comin’ to you,” she said, in a hard voice.
“I got nothin’ to do with pickin’
out the groom: you fixed that to suit yourself.
But I don’t let no man alive pick out my dress.
I want a weddin’-dress. I want one I want
myself. I want it should be white satin’
an’ real bride-like. I’ve saw pictures
of brides, an’ I know what’s due ’em.
I ain’t goin’ to resemble just me myself,
standin’ up to be married in a coat-suit you
get some floor-walker to pick out for me. White
satin or nothin’. An’ a veil and
white satin slippers.”
He looked at her helplessly.
“White satin, my dear? And a veil?”
“Yes, sir. An’ a
shower bokay,” said she, firmly. “I
got to insist on the shower bokay. If I got to
be a bride I’ll be my kind of bride and not
yours.”
“My dear child, of course, of
course. You shall choose your own frock,”
said he, hastily. “Only under
the circumstances, I can’t help thinking that
something plain, something quite plain and simple,
would be more in keeping.”
“With me? ‘T wouldn’t,
neither. It’d be something fierce, an’
I won’t stand for it. I don’t mind
bein’ buried in somethin’ plain, but I
won’t get married in it. Ain’t it
hard enough as it is, without me havin’ to feel
more horrid than what I do already? I want something
to make me feel better about it, and there ain’t
anything can do that except it’s a dress I want
myself.”
Mr. Champneys capitulated, horse and foot.
“We will go to some good shop
immediately after lunch, and you shall choose your
own wedding-dress,” he promised, resignedly,
marveling at the psychology of women.
It was a very fine forenoon, with
a hint of coming autumn in the air. Even an imminent
bridegroom couldn’t altogether dampen the delight
of whizzing through those marvelous streets in a taxi.
Then came the even more marvelous world of the department
store, which, “by reason of the multitude of
all kind of riches, in all sorts of things, in blue
clothes, and broidered work, and in chests of rich
apparel,” put one in mind of the great fairs
of Tyre when Tyre was a prince of the sea, as set
forth in the Twenty-seventh Chapter of Ezekiel.
Nancy would have been tempted to marry
Bluebeard himself for the sake of some of the “rich
apparel” that obliging saleswomen were setting
forth for her inspection. Getting married began
to assume a rosier aspect, due probably to the reflection
of the filmy and lacy miracles that she might have
for the mere choosing. She would almost have
been willing to be hanged, let alone married, in a
pink-silk combination.
The saleswomen scented mystery and
romance here. The girl was no beauty, but then,
she was astonishingly young; and the old gentleman
was very distinguished-looking quite a personage.
They thought at first that he was the prospective
bridegroom; learning that he wasn’t deepened
the mystery but didn’t destroy the romance.
Americans are all but hysterically sentimental.
Sentimentality is a national disease, which rages
nowhere more virulently than among women clerks.
Would they rush through the necessary alterations,
set an entire force to work overtime, if necessary,
in order to have that girl’s wedding-dress at
her hotel on time? Wouldn’t they, though!
And they did. Gown, gloves, veil, shoes, fan,
everything; all done up with the most exquisite care
in reams of soft tissue paper.
She was to be married on the noon
of Wednesday. On Tuesday night Nancy locked her
door, opened her boxes, and spread her wedding finery
on her bed. The dress was a magnificent one, as
magnificent a dress as a great store can turn out;
its lines had been designed by a justly famous designer.
There was a slip, with as much lace as could be put
upon one garment; such white satin slippers as she
had never hoped to wear; and the texture of the silk
stockings almost made her shout for joy. Achilles
was vulnerable in the heel: fly, O man, from
the woman who is indifferent to the lure of a silk
stocking!
Nancy got into her kimono and turned
on the hot water in her bath. At Baxters’
there had never been enough hot water with which to
wash the dishes, not to mention Nancy herself.
Here there was enough to scald all the dishes and
the people on earth, it seemed to her.
She could hardly get used to the delight and the luxury
of all the hot water and scented soap and clean towels
she wanted, in a bath-room all to herself. Think
of not having to wait one’s turn, a very limited
turn at that, in a spotted tin tub set in a five-by-seven
hole in the wall, with an unshaded gas-jet sizzling
about a foot above one’s head! The shower-bath
was to her an adventure like running out
in the rain, when one was a child. She couldn’t
get into the tub, and slide down into the warm, scented
water, without a squeal of pleasure.
She skipped back to her bedroom, red
as a boiled lobster, a rope of damp red hair hanging
down her back, sat down on the floor, and drew on
those silk stockings, and loved them from a full heart.
She wiggled her toes ecstatically.
“O Lord!” sighed Nancy,
fervently, “I wish You’d fix it so’s
folks could walk on their hands for a change!
My feet are so much prettier than my face!”
Slipping on the satin slippers, she
teetered over and reverently touched the satin frock.
All these glories for her, Nancy Simms, who had worn
Mrs. Baxter’s wretched old clothes cut down for
her!
She was afraid to refold the dress,
almost afraid to touch it, lest she rumple it.
It looked so shining, so lustrous, so fairy-like and
glorious and almost impossible, glistening there on
her bed! Carefully she smoothed a fold, slightly
awry. Reverently she placed the thin tulle veil
beside it, as well as the rest of her Cinderella finery,
including the satin slippers and the fine silk stockings
which her soul loved.
She took the two pillows off her bed,
secured two huge bath-towels from her bath-room by
way of a mattress and a coverlet; and with a last
passionate glance at the splendors of her wedding-frock,
and never a thought for the unknown groom because
of whom she was to don it, the bride switched off
her light, curled herself up like a cat, and in five
minutes was sound asleep on the floor.