As I walked to Geisenheimer’s
that night I was feeling blue and restless, tired
of New York, tired of dancing, tired of everything.
Broadway was full of people hurrying to the theatres.
Cars rattled by. All the electric lights in the
world were blazing down on the Great White Way.
And it all seemed stale and dreary to me.
Geisenheimer’s was full as usual.
All the tables were occupied, and there were several
couples already on the dancing-floor in the centre.
The band was playing ‘Michigan’:
I want to go back, I want to go
back To the place where I was born. Far
away from harm With a milk-pail on my arm.
I suppose the fellow who wrote that
would have called for the police if anyone had ever
really tried to get him on to a farm, but he has certainly
put something into the tune which makes you think he
meant what he said. It’s a homesick tune,
that.
I was just looking round for an empty
table, when a man jumped up and came towards me, registering
joy as if I had been his long-lost sister.
He was from the country. I could
see that. It was written all over him, from his
face to his shoes.
He came up with his hand out, beaming.
‘Why, Miss Roxborough!’
‘Why not?’ I said.
‘Don’t you remember me?’
I didn’t.
‘My name is Ferris.’
‘It’s a nice name, but it means nothing
in my young life.’
‘I was introduced to you last time I came here.
We danced together.’
This seemed to bear the stamp of truth.
If he was introduced to me, he probably danced with
me. It’s what I’m at Geisenheimer’s
for.
‘When was it?’
‘A year ago last April.’
You can’t beat these rural charmers.
They think New York is folded up and put away in camphor
when they leave, and only taken out again when they
pay their next visit. The notion that anything
could possibly have happened since he was last in
our midst to blur the memory of that happy evening
had not occurred to Mr Ferris. I suppose he was
so accustomed to dating things from ‘when I
was in New York’ that he thought everybody else
must do the same.
‘Why, sure, I remember you,’ I said.
‘Algernon Clarence, isn’t it?’
‘Not Algernon Clarence. My name’s
Charlie.’
’My mistake. And what’s
the great scheme, Mr Ferris? Do you want to dance
with me again?’
He did. So we started. Mine
not to reason why, mine but to do and die, as the
poem says. If an elephant had come into Geisenheimer’s
and asked me to dance I’d have had to do it.
And I’m not saying that Mr Ferris wasn’t
the next thing to it. He was one of those earnest,
persevering dancers the kind that have
taken twelve correspondence lessons.
I guess I was about due that night
to meet someone from the country. There still
come days in the spring when the country seems to get
a stranglehold on me and start in pulling. This
particular day had been one of them. I got up
in the morning and looked out of the window, and the
breeze just wrapped me round and began whispering about
pigs and chickens. And when I went out on Fifth
Avenue there seemed to be flowers everywhere.
I headed for the Park, and there was the grass all
green, and the trees coming out, and a sort of something
in the air why, say, if there hadn’t
have been a big policeman keeping an eye on me, I’d
have flung myself down and bitten chunks out of the
turf.
And as soon as I got to Geisenheimer’s
they played that ‘Michigan’ thing.
Why, Charlie from Squeedunk’s
‘entrance’ couldn’t have been better
worked up if he’d been a star in a Broadway show.
The stage was just waiting for him.
But somebody’s always taking
the joy out of life. I ought to have remembered
that the most metropolitan thing in the metropolis
is a rustic who’s putting in a week there.
We weren’t thinking on the same plane, Charlie
and me. The way I had been feeling all day, what
I wanted to talk about was last season’s crops.
The subject he fancied was this season’s chorus-girls.
Our souls didn’t touch by a mile and a half.
‘This is the life!’ he said.
There’s always a point when that sort of man
says that.
‘I suppose you come here quite a lot?’
he said.
‘Pretty often.’
I didn’t tell him that I came
there every night, and that I came because I was paid
for it. If you’re a professional dancer
at Geisenheimer’s, you aren’t supposed
to advertise the fact. The management thinks
that if you did it might send the public away thinking
too hard when they saw you win the Great Contest for
the Love-r-ly Silver Cup which they offer later in
the evening. Say, that Love-r-ly Cup’s
a joke. I win it on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays,
and Mabel Francis wins it on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and
Saturdays. It’s all perfectly fair and
square, of course. It’s purely a matter
of merit who wins the Love-r-ly Cup. Anybody
could win it. Only somehow they don’t.
And the coincidence of the fact that Mabel and I always
do has kind of got on the management’s nerves,
and they don’t like us to tell people we’re
employed there. They prefer us to blush unseen.
‘It’s a great place,’
said Mr Ferris, ’and New York’s a great
place. I’d like to live in New York.’
‘The loss is ours. Why don’t you?’
‘Some city! But dad’s dead now, and
I’ve got the drugstore, you know.’
He spoke as if I ought to remember reading about it
in the papers.
’And I’m making good with
it, what’s more. I’ve got push and
ideas. Say, I got married since I saw you last.’
‘You did, did you?’ I
said. ’Then what are you doing, may I ask,
dancing on Broadway like a gay bachelor? I suppose
you have left your wife at Hicks’ Corners, singing
“Where is my wandering boy tonight"?’
‘Not Hicks’ Corners.
Ashley, Maine. That’s where I live.
My wife comes from Rodney.... Pardon me, I’m
afraid I stepped on your foot.’
‘My fault,’ I said; ’I
lost step. Well, I wonder you aren’t ashamed
even to think of your wife, when you’ve left
her all alone out there while you come whooping it
up in New York. Haven’t you got any conscience?’
‘But I haven’t left her. She’s
here.’
‘In New York?’
‘In this restaurant. That’s her up
there.’
I looked up at the balcony. There
was a face hanging over the red plush rail. It
looked to me as if it had some hidden sorrow.
I’d noticed it before, when we were dancing
around, and I had wondered what the trouble was.
Now I began to see.
‘Why aren’t you dancing
with her and giving her a good time, then?’ I
said.
‘Oh, she’s having a good time.’
’She doesn’t look it.
She looks as if she would like to be down here, treading
the measure.’
‘She doesn’t dance much.’
‘Don’t you have dances at Ashley?’
’It’s different at home.
She dances well enough for Ashley, but well,
this isn’t Ashley.’
‘I see. But you’re not like that?’
He gave a kind of smirk.
‘Oh, I’ve been in New York before.’
I could have bitten him, the sawn-off
little rube! It made me mad. He was ashamed
to dance in public with his wife didn’t
think her good enough for him. So he had dumped
her in a chair, given her a lemonade, and told her
to be good, and then gone off to have a good time.
They could have had me arrested for what I was thinking
just then.
The band began to play something else.
‘This is the life!’ said Mr Ferris.
‘Let’s do it again.’
‘Let somebody else do it,’
I said. ’I’m tired. I’ll
introduce you to some friends of mine.’
So I took him off, and whisked him
on to some girls I knew at one of the tables.
‘Shake hands with my friend
Mr Ferris,’ I said. ’He wants to show
you the latest steps. He does most of them on
your feet.’
I could have betted on Charlie, the
Debonair Pride of Ashley. Guess what he said?
He said, ‘This is the life!’
And I left him, and went up to the balcony.
She was leaning with her elbows on
the red plush, looking down on the dancing-floor.
They had just started another tune, and hubby was moving
around with one of the girls I’d introduced him
to. She didn’t have to prove to me that
she came from the country. I knew it. She
was a little bit of a thing, old-fashioned looking.
She was dressed in grey, with white muslin collar
and cuffs, and her hair done simple. She had a
black hat.
I kind of hovered for awhile.
It isn’t the best thing I do, being shy; as
a general thing I’m more or less there with the
nerve; but somehow I sort of hesitated to charge in.
Then I braced up, and made for the vacant chair.
‘I’ll sit here, if you don’t mind,’
I said.
She turned in a startled way.
I could see she was wondering who I was, and what
right I had there, but wasn’t certain whether
it might not be city etiquette for strangers to come
and dump themselves down and start chatting.
‘I’ve just been dancing with your husband,’
I said, to ease things along.
‘I saw you.’
She fixed me with a pair of big brown
eyes. I took one look at them, and then I had
to tell myself that it might be pleasant, and a relief
to my feelings, to take something solid and heavy and
drop it over the rail on to hubby, but the management
wouldn’t like it. That was how I felt about
him just then. The poor kid was doing everything
with those eyes except crying. She looked like
a dog that’s been kicked.
She looked away, and fiddled with
the string of the electric light. There was a
hatpin lying on the table. She picked it up, and
began to dig at the red plush.
‘Ah, come on sis,’ I said; ‘tell
me all about it.’
‘I don’t know what you mean.’
‘You can’t fool me. Tell me your
troubles.’
‘I don’t know you.’
’You don’t have to know
a person to tell her your troubles. I sometimes
tell mine to the cat that camps out on the wall opposite
my room. What did you want to leave the country
for, with summer coming on?’
She didn’t answer, but I could
see it coming, so I sat still and waited. And
presently she seemed to make up her mind that, even
if it was no business of mine, it would be a relief
to talk about it.
’We’re on our honeymoon.
Charlie wanted to come to New York. I didn’t
want to, but he was set on it. He’s been
here before.’
‘So he told me.’
‘He’s wild about New York.’
‘But you’re not.’
‘I hate it.’
‘Why?’
She dug away at the red plush with
the hatpin, picking out little bits and dropping them
over the edge. I could see she was bracing herself
to put me wise to the whole trouble. There’s
a time comes when things aren’t going right,
and you’ve had all you can stand, when you have
got to tell somebody about it, no matter who it is.
‘I hate New York,’ she
said getting it out at last with a rush. ’I’m
scared of it. It it isn’t fair
Charlie bringing me here. I didn’t want
to come. I knew what would happen. I felt
it all along.’
‘What do you think will happen, then?’
She must have picked away at least
an inch of the red plush before she answered.
It’s lucky Jimmy, the balcony waiter, didn’t
see her; it would have broken his heart; he’s
as proud of that red plush as if he had paid for it
himself.
‘When I first went to live at
Rodney,’ she said, ’two years ago we
moved there from Illinois there was a man
there named Tyson Jack Tyson. He lived
all alone and didn’t seem to want to know anyone.
I couldn’t understand it till somebody told
me all about him. I can understand it now.
Jack Tyson married a Rodney girl, and they came to
New York for their honeymoon, just like us. And
when they got there I guess she got to comparing him
with the fellows she saw, and comparing the city with
Rodney, and when she got home she just couldn’t
settle down.’
‘Well?’
’After they had been back in
Rodney for a little while she ran away. Back
to the city, I guess.’
‘I suppose he got a divorce?’
‘No, he didn’t. He still thinks she
may come back to him.’
‘He still thinks she will come
back?’ I said. ’After she has been
away three years!’
’Yes. He keeps her things
just the same as she left them when she went away,
everything just the same.’
’But isn’t he angry with
her for what she did? If I was a man and a girl
treated me that way, I’d be apt to murder her
if she tried to show up again.’
’He wouldn’t. Nor
would I, if if anything like that happened
to me; I’d wait and wait, and go on hoping all
the time. And I’d go down to the station
to meet the train every afternoon, just like Jack Tyson.’
Something splashed on the tablecloth. It made
me jump.
‘For goodness’ sake,’
I said, ’what’s your trouble? Brace
up. I know it’s a sad story, but it’s
not your funeral.’
‘It is. It is. The same thing’s
going to happen to me.’
‘Take a hold on yourself. Don’t cry
like that.’
’I can’t help it.
Oh! I knew it would happen. It’s happening
right now. Look look at him.’
I glanced over the rail, and I saw
what she meant. There was her Charlie, dancing
about all over the floor as if he had just discovered
that he hadn’t lived till then. I saw him
say something to the girl he was dancing with.
I wasn’t near enough to hear it, but I bet it
was ‘This is the life!’ If I had been
his wife, in the same position as this kid, I guess
I’d have felt as bad as she did, for if ever
a man exhibited all the symptoms of incurable Newyorkitis,
it was this Charlie Ferris.
‘I’m not like these New
York girls,’ she choked. ’I can’t
be smart. I don’t want to be. I just
want to live at home and be happy. I knew it
would happen if we came to the city. He doesn’t
think me good enough for him. He looks down on
me.’
‘Pull yourself together.’
‘And I do love him so!’
Goodness knows what I should have
said if I could have thought of anything to say.
But just then the music stopped, and somebody on the
floor below began to speak.
’Ladeez ‘n’ gemmen,’
he said, ’there will now take place our great
Numbah Contest. This gen-u-ine sporting contest ’
It was Izzy Baermann making his nightly
speech, introducing the Love-r-ly Cup; and it meant
that, for me, duty called. From where I sat I
could see Izzy looking about the room, and I knew he
was looking for me. It’s the management’s
nightmare that one of these evenings Mabel or I won’t
show up, and somebody else will get away with the Love-r-ly
Cup.
‘Sorry I’ve got to go,’ I said.
‘I have to be in this.’
And then suddenly I had the great
idea. It came to me like a flash, I looked at
her, crying there, and I looked over the rail at Charlie
the Boy Wonder, and I knew that this was where I got
a stranglehold on my place in the Hall of Fame, along
with the great thinkers of the age.
‘Come on,’ I said.
’Come along. Stop crying and powder your
nose and get a move on. You’re going to
dance this.’
‘But Charlie doesn’t want to dance with
me.’
‘It may have escaped your notice,’
I said, ’but your Charlie is not the only man
in New York, or even in this restaurant. I’m
going to dance with Charlie myself, and I’ll
introduce you to someone who can go through the movements.
Listen!’
’The lady of each couple’ this
was Izzy, getting it off his diaphragm ’will
receive a ticket containing a num-bah. The
dance will then proceed, and the num-bahs will
be eliminated one by one, those called out by the
judge kindly returning to their seats as their num-bah
is called. The num-bah finally remaining
is the winning num-bah. The contest is a
genuine sporting contest, decided purely by the skill
of the holders of the various num-bahs.’
(Izzy stopped blushing at the age of six.) ’Will
ladies now kindly step forward and receive their num-bahs.
The winner, the holder of the num-bah left on
the floor when the other num-bahs have been eliminated’
(I could see Izzy getting more and more uneasy, wondering
where on earth I’d got to), ’will receive
this Love-r-ly Silver Cup, presented by the management.
Ladies will now kindly step forward and receive their
num-bahs.’
I turned to Mrs Charlie. ‘There,’
I said, ’don’t you want to win a Love-r-ly
Silver Cup?’
‘But I couldn’t.’
‘You never know your luck.’
’But it isn’t luck.
Didn’t you hear him say it’s a contest
decided purely by skill?’
‘Well, try your skill, then.’
I felt as if I could have shaken her. ‘For
goodness’ sake,’ I said, ’show a
little grit. Aren’t you going to stir a
finger to keep your Charlie? Suppose you win,
think what it will mean. He will look up to you
for the rest of your life. When he starts talking
about New York, all you will have to say is, “New
York? Ah, yes, that was the town I won that Love-r-ly
Silver Cup in, was it not?” and he’ll
drop as if you had hit him behind the ear with a sandbag.
Pull yourself together and try.’
I saw those brown eyes of hers flash,
and she said, ‘I’ll try.’
‘Good for you,’ I said.
’Now you get those tears dried, and fix yourself
up, and I’ll go down and get the tickets.’
Izzy was mighty relieved when I bore down on him.
‘Gee!’ he said, ’I
thought you had run away, or was sick or something.
Here’s your ticket.’
’I want two, Izzy. One’s
for a friend of mine. And I say, Izzy, I’d
take it as a personal favour if you would let her stop
on the floor as one of the last two couples.
There’s a reason. She’s a kid from
the country, and she wants to make a hit.’
’Sure, that’ll be all
right. Here are the tickets. Yours is thirty-six,
hers is ten.’ He lowered his voice.
‘Don’t go mixing them.’
I went back to the balcony. On
the way I got hold of Charlie.
‘We’re dancing this together,’ I
said.
He grinned all across his face.
I found Mrs Charlie looking as if
she had never shed a tear in her life. She certainly
had pluck, that kid.
‘Come on,’ I said. ‘Stick to
your ticket like wax and watch your step.’
I guess you’ve seen these sporting
contests at Geisenheimer’s. Or, if you
haven’t seen them at Geisenheimer’s, you’ve
seen them somewhere else. They’re all the
same.
When we began, the floor was so crowded
that there was hardly elbow-room. Don’t
tell me there aren’t any optimists nowadays.
Everyone was looking as if they were wondering whether
to have the Love-r-ly Cup in the sitting-room or the
bedroom. You never saw such a hopeful gang in
your life.
Presently Izzy gave tongue. The
management expects him to be humorous on these occasions,
so he did his best.
’Num-bahs, seven, eleven,
and twenty-one will kindly rejoin their sorrowing
friends.’
This gave us a little more elbow-room,
and the band started again.
A few minutes later, Izzy once more:
’Num-bahs thirteen, sixteen, and seventeen good-bye.’
Off we went again.
‘Num-bah twelve, we hate to part with you,
but back to your table!’
A plump girl in a red hat, who had
been dancing with a kind smile, as if she were doing
it to amuse the children, left the floor.
‘Num-bahs six, fifteen, and twenty, thumbs
down!’
And pretty soon the only couples left
were Charlie and me, Mrs Charlie and the fellow I’d
introduced her to, and a bald-headed man and a girl
in a white hat. He was one of your stick-at-it
performers. He had been dancing all the evening.
I had noticed him from the balcony. He looked
like a hard-boiled egg from up there.
He was a trier all right, that fellow,
and had things been otherwise, so to speak, I’d
have been glad to see him win. But it was not
to be. Ah, no!
‘Num-bah nineteen, you’re
getting all flushed. Take a rest.’
So there it was, a straight contest
between me and Charlie and Mrs Charlie and her man.
Every nerve in my system was tingling with suspense
and excitement, was it not? It was not.
Charlie, as I’ve already hinted,
was not a dancer who took much of his attention off
his feet while in action. He was there to do his
durnedest, not to inspect objects of interest by the
wayside. The correspondence college he’d
attended doesn’t guarantee to teach you to do
two things at once. It won’t bind itself
to teach you to look round the room while you’re
dancing. So Charlie hadn’t the least suspicion
of the state of the drama. He was breathing heavily
down my neck in a determined sort of way, with his
eyes glued to the floor. All he knew was that
the competition had thinned out a bit, and the honour
of Ashley, Maine, was in his hands.
You know how the public begins to
sit up and take notice when these dance-contests have
been narrowed down to two couples. There are
evenings when I quite forget myself, when I’m
one of the last two left in, and get all excited.
There’s a sort of hum in the air, and, as you
go round the room, people at the tables start applauding.
Why, if you didn’t know about the inner workings
of the thing, you’d be all of a twitter.
It didn’t take my practised
ear long to discover that it wasn’t me and Charlie
that the great public was cheering for. We would
go round the floor without getting a hand, and every
time Mrs Charlie and her guy got to a corner there
was a noise like election night. She sure had
made a hit.
I took a look at her across the floor,
and I didn’t wonder. She was a different
kid from what she’d been upstairs. I never
saw anybody look so happy and pleased with herself.
Her eyes were like lamps, and her cheeks all pink,
and she was going at it like a champion. I knew
what had made a hit with the people. It was the
look of her. She made you think of fresh milk
and new-laid eggs and birds singing. To see her
was like getting away to the country in August.
It’s funny about people who live in the city.
They chuck out their chests, and talk about little
old New York being good enough for them, and there’s
a street in heaven they call Broadway, and all the
rest of it; but it seems to me that what they really
live for is that three weeks in the summer when they
get away into the country. I knew exactly why
they were cheering so hard for Mrs Charlie. She
made them think of their holidays which were coming
along, when they would go and board at the farm and
drink out of the old oaken bucket, and call the cows
by their first names.
Gee! I felt just like that myself.
All day the country had been tugging at me, and now
it tugged worse than ever.
I could have smelled the new-mown
hay if it wasn’t that when you’re in Geisenheimer’s
you have to smell Geisenheimer’s, because it
leaves no chance for competition.
‘Keep working,’ I said
to Charlie. ’It looks to me as if we are
going back in the betting.’
‘Uh, huh!’ he says, too busy to blink.
‘Do some of those fancy steps of yours.
We need them in our business.’
And the way that boy worked it was astonishing!
Out of the corner of my eye I could
see Izzy Baermann, and he wasn’t looking happy.
He was nerving himself for one of those quick referee’s
decisions the sort you make and then duck
under the ropes, and run five miles, to avoid the
incensed populace. It was this kind of thing
happening every now and then that prevented his job
being perfect. Mabel Francis told me that one
night when Izzy declared her the winner of the great
sporting contest, it was such raw work that she thought
there’d have been a riot. It looked pretty
much as if he was afraid the same thing was going
to happen now. There wasn’t a doubt which
of us two couples was the one that the customers wanted
to see win that Love-r-ly Silver Cup. It was
a walk-over for Mrs Charlie, and Charlie and I were
simply among those present.
But Izzy had his duty to do, and drew
a salary for doing it, so he moistened his lips, looked
round to see that his strategic railways weren’t
blocked, swallowed twice, and said in a husky voice:
‘Num-bah ten, please re-tiah!’
I stopped at once.
‘Come along,’ said I to Charlie.
‘That’s our exit cue.’
And we walked off the floor amidst applause.
‘Well,’ says Charlie,
taking out his handkerchief and attending to his brow,
which was like the village blacksmith’s, ’we
didn’t do so bad, did we? We didn’t
do so bad, I guess! We ’
And he looked up at the balcony, expecting
to see the dear little wife, draped over the rail,
worshipping him; when, just as his eye is moving up,
it gets caught by the sight of her a whole heap lower
down than he had expected on the floor,
in fact.
She wasn’t doing much in the
worshipping line just at that moment. She was
too busy.
It was a regular triumphal progress
for the kid. She and her partner were doing one
or two rounds now for exhibition purposes, like the
winning couple always do at Geisenheimer’s, and
the room was fairly rising at them. You’d
have thought from the way they were clapping that
they had been betting all their spare cash on her.
Charlie gets her well focused, then
he lets his jaw drop, till he pretty near bumped it
against the floor.
‘But but but ’
he begins.
‘I know,’ I said.
’It begins to look as if she could dance well
enough for the city after all. It begins to look
as if she had sort of put one over on somebody, don’t
it? It begins to look as if it were a pity you
didn’t think of dancing with her yourself.’
‘I I I ’
‘You come along and have a nice
cold drink,’ I said, ’and you’ll
soon pick up.’
He tottered after me to a table, looking
as if he had been hit by a street-car. He had
got his.
I was so busy looking after Charlie,
flapping the towel and working on him with the oxygen,
that, if you’ll believe me, it wasn’t for
quite a time that I thought of glancing around to
see how the thing had struck Izzy Baermann.
If you can imagine a fond father whose
only son has hit him with a brick, jumped on his stomach,
and then gone off with all his money, you have a pretty
good notion of how poor old Izzy looked. He was
staring at me across the room, and talking to himself
and jerking his hands about. Whether he thought
he was talking to me, or whether he was rehearsing
the scene where he broke it to the boss that a mere
stranger had got away with his Love-r-ly Silver Cup,
I don’t know. Whichever it was, he was
being mighty eloquent.
I gave him a nod, as much as to say
that it would all come right in the future, and then
I turned to Charlie again. He was beginning to
pick up.
‘She won the cup!’ he
said in a dazed voice, looking at me as if I could
do something about it.
‘You bet she did!’
‘But well, what do you know about
that?’
I saw that the moment had come to
put it straight to him. ’I’ll tell
you what I know about it,’ I said. ’If
you take my advice, you’ll hustle that kid straight
back to Ashley or wherever it is that you
said you poison the natives by making up the wrong
prescriptions before she gets New York
into her system. When I was talking to her upstairs,
she was telling me about a fellow in her village who
got it in the neck just the same as you’re apt
to do.’
He started. ‘She was telling you about
Jack Tyson?’
’That was his name Jack
Tyson. He lost his wife through letting her have
too much New York. Don’t you think it’s
funny she should have mentioned him if she hadn’t
had some idea that she might act just the same as
his wife did?’
He turned quite green.
‘You don’t think she would do that?’
’Well, if you’d heard
her She couldn’t talk of anything
except this Tyson, and what his wife did to him.
She talked of it sort of sad, kind of regretful, as
if she was sorry, but felt that it had to be.
I could see she had been thinking about it a whole
lot.’
Charlie stiffened in his seat, and
then began to melt with pure fright. He took
up his empty glass with a shaking hand and drank a
long drink out of it. It didn’t take much
observation to see that he had had the jolt he wanted,
and was going to be a whole heap less jaunty and metropolitan
from now on. In fact, the way he looked, I should
say he had finished with metropolitan jauntiness for
the rest of his life.
‘I’ll take her home tomorrow,’
he said. ‘But will she come?’
’That’s up to you.
If you can persuade her Here she is now.
I should start at once.’
Mrs Charlie, carrying the cup, came
to the table. I was wondering what would be the
first thing she would say. If it had been Charlie,
of course he’d have said, ‘This is the
life!’ but I looked for something snappier from
her. If I had been in her place there were at
least ten things I could have thought of to say, each
nastier than the other.
She sat down and put the cup on the
table. Then she gave the cup a long look.
Then she drew a deep breath. Then she looked at
Charlie.
‘Oh, Charlie, dear,’ she
said, ‘I do wish I’d been dancing with
you!’
Well, I’m not sure that that
wasn’t just as good as anything I would have
said. Charlie got right off the mark. After
what I had told him, he wasn’t wasting any time.
‘Darling,’ he said, humbly,
’you’re a wonder! What will they say
about this at home?’ He did pause here for a
moment, for it took nerve to say it; but then he went
right on. ’Mary, how would it be if we went
home right away first train tomorrow, and
showed it to them?’
‘Oh, Charlie!’ she said.
His face lit up as if somebody had pulled a switch.
‘You will? You don’t want to stop
on? You aren’t wild about New York?’
‘If there was a train,’
she said, ’I’d start tonight. But
I thought you loved the city so, Charlie?’
He gave a kind of shiver. ‘I
never want to see it again in my life!’ he said.
‘You’ll excuse me,’
I said, getting up, ’I think there’s a
friend of mine wants to speak to me.’
And I crossed over to where Izzy had
been standing for the last five minutes, making signals
to me with his eyebrows.
You couldn’t have called Izzy
coherent at first. He certainly had trouble with
his vocal chords, poor fellow. There was one of
those African explorer men used to come to Geisenheimer’s
a lot when he was home from roaming the trackless
desert, and he used to tell me about tribes he had
met who didn’t use real words at all, but talked
to one another in clicks and gurgles. He imitated
some of their chatter one night to amuse me, and,
believe me, Izzy Baermann started talking the same
language now. Only he didn’t do it to amuse
me.
He was like one of those gramophone
records when it’s getting into its stride.
‘Be calm, Isadore,’ I
said. ’Something is troubling you.
Tell me all about it.’
He clicked some more, and then he got it out.
’Say, are you crazy? What
did you do it for? Didn’t I tell you as
plain as I could; didn’t I say it twenty times,
when you came for the tickets, that yours was thirty-six?’
‘Didn’t you say my friend’s was
thirty-six?’
‘Are you deaf? I said hers was ten.’
‘Then,’ I said handsomely,
’say no more. The mistake was mine.
It begins to look as if I must have got them mixed.’
He did a few Swedish exercises.
’Say no more? That’s
good! That’s great! You’ve got
nerve. I’ll say that.’
’It was a lucky mistake, Izzy.
It saved your life. The people would have lynched
you if you had given me the cup. They were solid
for her.’
‘What’s the boss going to say when I tell
him?’
’Never mind what the boss will
say. Haven’t you any romance in your system,
Izzy? Look at those two sitting there with their
heads together. Isn’t it worth a silver
cup to have made them happy for life? They are
on their honeymoon, Isadore. Tell the boss exactly
how it happened, and say that I thought it was up
to Geisenheimer’s to give them a wedding-present.’
He clicked for a spell.
‘Ah!’ he said. ’Ah!
now you’ve done it! Now you’ve given
yourself away! You did it on purpose. You
mixed those tickets on purpose. I thought as
much. Say, who do you think you are, doing this
sort of thing? Don’t you know that professional
dancers are three for ten cents? I could go out
right now and whistle, and get a dozen girls for your
job. The boss’ll sack you just one minute
after I tell him.’
‘No, he won’t, Izzy, because I’m
going to resign.’
‘You’d better!’
’That’s what I think.
I’m sick of this place, Izzy. I’m
sick of dancing. I’m sick of New York.
I’m sick of everything. I’m going
back to the country. I thought I had got the
pigs and chickens clear out of my system, but I hadn’t.
I’ve suspected it for a long, long time, and
tonight I know it. Tell the boss, with my love,
that I’m sorry, but it had to be done.
And if he wants to talk back, he must do it by letter:
Mrs John Tyson, Rodney, Maine, is the address.’