"Lucky?"
"Yes _ma"am_! You can do all the dumka stuff in private, the way Anna Czarnik does, but it"s up to you to make them laugh twice a day for twenty minutes."
"It"s all very well for you to talk that cheer-o stuff. It hasn"t come home to you, I can see that."
Martha Foote smiled. "If you don"t mind my saying it, Miss McCoy, you"re too worn out from lack of sleep to see anything clearly. You don"t know me, but I do know you, you see. I know that a year ago Anna Czarnik would have been the most interesting thing in this town, for you. You"d have copied her clothes, and got a translation of her sob song, and made her as real to a thousand audiences as she was to us this morning; tragic history, patient animal face, comic shoes and all. And that"s the trouble with you, my dear. When we begin to brood about our own troubles we lose what they call the human touch. And that"s your business a.s.set."
Geisha McCoy was looking up at her with a whimsical half-smile. "Look here. You know too much. You"re not really the hotel housekeeper, are you?"
"I am."
"Well, then, you weren"t always--"
"Yes I was. So far as I know I"m the only hotel housekeeper in history who can"t look back to the time when she had three servants of her own, and her private carriage. I"m no decayed black-silk gentlewoman. Not me.
My father drove a hack in Sorgham, Minnesota, and my mother took in boarders and I helped wait on table. I married when I was twenty, my man died two years later, and I"ve been earning my living ever since."
"Happy?"
"I must be, because I don"t stop to think about it. It"s part of my job to know everything that concerns the comfort of the guests in this hotel."
"Including hysterics in six-eighteen?"
"Including. And that reminds me. Up on the twelfth floor of this hotel there"s a big, old-fashioned bedroom. In half an hour I can have that room made up with the softest linen sheets, and the curtains pulled down, and not a sound. That room"s so restful it would put old Insomnia himself to sleep. Will you let me tuck you away in it?"
Geisha McCoy slid down among her rumpled covers, and nestled her head in the lumpy, tortured pillows. "Me! I"m going to stay right here."
"But this room"s--why, it"s as stale as a Pullman sleeper. Let me have the chambermaid in to freshen it up while you"re gone."
"I"m used to it. I"ve got to have a room mussed up, to feel at home in it. Thanks just the same."
Martha Foote rose, "I"m sorry. I just thought if I could help--"
Geisha McCoy leaned forward with one of her quick movements and caught Martha Foote"s hand in both her own, "You have! And I don"t mean to be rude when I tell you I haven"t felt so much like sleeping in weeks.
Just turn out those lights, will you? And sort of tiptoe out, to give the effect." Then, as Martha Foote reached the door, "And oh, say! D"you think she"d sell me those shoes?"
Martha Foote didn"t get her dinner that night until almost eight, what with one thing and another. Still as days go, it wasn"t so bad as Monday; she and Irish Nellie, who had come in to turn down her bed, agreed on that. The Senate Hotel housekeeper was having her dinner in her room. Tony, the waiter, had just brought it on and had set it out for her, a gleaming island of white linen, and dome-shaped metal tops.
Irish Nellie, a privileged person always, waxed conversational as she folded back the bed covers in a neat triangular wedge.
"Six-eighteen kinda ca"med down, didn"t she? High toime, the divil. She had us jumpin" yist"iddy. I loike t" went off me head wid her, and th"
day girl th" same. Some folks ain"t got no feelin", I dunno."
Martha Foote unfolded her napkin with a little tired gesture. "You can"t always judge, Nellie. That woman"s got a son who has gone to war, and she couldn"t see her way clear to living without him. She"s better now.
I talked to her this evening at six. She said she had a fine afternoon."
"Shure, she ain"t the only wan. An" what do you be hearin" from your boy, Mis" Phut, that"s in France?"
"He"s well, and happy. His arm"s all healed, and he says he"ll be in it again by the time I get his letter."
"Humph," said Irish Nellie. And prepared to leave. She cast an inquisitive eye over the little table as she made for the door--inquisitive, but kindly. Her wide Irish nostrils sniffed a familiar smell. "Well, fur th" land, Mis" Phut! If I was housekeeper here, an" cud have hothouse strawberries, an" swatebreads undher gla.s.s, an" sparrowgra.s.s, an" chicken, _an"_ ice crame, the way you can, whiniver yuh loike, I wouldn"t be a-eatin" cornbeef an" cabbage.
Not me."
"Oh, yes you would, Nellie," replied Martha Foote, quietly, and spooned up the thin amber gravy. "Oh, yes you would."
XII
Sh.o.r.e LEAVE
Tyler Kamps was a tired boy. He was tired from his left great toe to that topmost spot at the crown of his head where six unruly hairs always persisted in sticking straight out in defiance of patient brushing, wetting, and greasing. Tyler Kamps was as tired as only a boy can be at 9.30 P.M. who has risen at 5.30 A.M. Yet he lay wide awake in his hammock eight feet above the ground, like a giant silk-worm in an incredible coc.o.o.n and listened to the sleep-sounds that came from the depths of two hundred similar coc.o.o.ns suspended at regular intervals down the long dark room. A chorus of deep regular breathing, with an occasional grunt or sigh, denoting complete relaxation. Tyler Kamps should have been part of this chorus, himself. Instead he lay staring into the darkness, thinking mad thoughts of which this is a sample:
"Gosh! Wouldn"t I like to sit up in my hammock and give one yell! The kind of a yell a movie cowboy gives on a Sat.u.r.day night. Wake "em up and stop that--darned old breathing."
Nerves. He breathed deeply himself, once or twice, because it seemed, somehow to relieve his feeling of irritation. And in that unguarded moment of unconscious relaxation Sleep, that had been lying in wait for him just around the corner, pounced on him and claimed him for its own.
From his hammock came the deep, regular inhalation, exhalation, with an occasional grunt or sigh. The normal sleep-sounds of a very tired boy.
The trouble with Tyler Kamps was that he missed two things he hadn"t expected to miss at all. And he missed not at all the things he had been prepared to miss most hideously.
First of all, he had expected to miss his mother. If you had known Stella Kamps you could readily have understood that. Stella Kamps was the kind of mother they sing about in the sentimental ballads; mother, pal, and sweetheart. Which was where she had made her big mistake. When one mother tries to be all those things to one son that son has a very fair chance of turning out a mollycoddle. The war was probably all that saved Tyler Kamps from such a fate.
In the way she handled this son of hers Stella Kamps had been as crafty and skilful and velvet-gloved as a girl with her beau. The proof of it is that Tyler had never known he was being handled. Some folks in Marvin, Texas, said she actually flirted with him, and they were almost justified. Certainly the way she glanced up at him from beneath her lashes was excused only by the way she scolded him if he tracked up the kitchen floor. But then, Stella Kamps and her boy were different, anyway. Marvin folks all agreed about that. Flowers on the table at meals. Sitting over the supper things talking and laughing for an hour after they"d finished eating, as if they hadn"t seen each other in years. Reading out loud to each other, out of books and then going on like mad about what they"d just read, and getting all het up about it.
And sometimes chasing each other around the yard, spring evenings, like a couple of fool kids. Honestly, if a body didn"t know Stella Kamps so well, and what a fight she had put up to earn a living for herself and the boy after that good-for-nothing Kamps up and left her, and what a housekeeper she was, and all, a person"d think--well--
So, then, Tyler had expected to miss her first of all. The way she talked. The way she fussed around him without in the least seeming to fuss. Her special way of cooking things. Her laugh which drew laughter in its wake. The funny way she had of saying things, vitalising commonplaces with the spark of her own electricity.
And now he missed her only as the average boy of twenty-one misses the mother he has been used to all his life. No more and no less. Which would indicate that Stella Kamps, in her protean endeavours, had overplayed the parts just a trifle.
He had expected to miss the boys at the bank. He had expected to miss the Mandolin Club. The Mandolin Club met, officially, every Thursday and spangled the Texas night with their tinkling. Five rather dreamy-eyed adolescents slumped in stoop-shouldered comfort over the instruments cradled in their arms, each right leg crossed limply over the left, each great foot that dangled from the bony ankle, keeping rhythmic time to the plunketty-plink-tinketty-plunk.
He had expected to miss the familiar faces on Main Street. He had even expected to miss the neighbours with whom he and his mother had so rarely mingled. All the hundred little, intimate, trivial, everyday things that had gone to make up his life back home in Marvin, Texas--these he had expected to miss.
And he didn"t.
After ten weeks at the Great Central Naval Training Station so near Chicago, Illinois, and so far from Marvin, Texas, there were two things he missed.
He wanted the decent privacy of his small quiet bedroom back home.
He wanted to talk to a girl.
He knew he wanted the first, definitely. He didn"t know he wanted the second. The fact that he didn"t know it was Stella Kamps" fault. She had kept his boyhood girlless, year and year, by sheer force of her own love for him, and need of him, and by the charm and magnetism that were hers.
She had been deprived of a more legitimate outlet for these emotions.
Concentrated on the boy, they had sufficed for him. The Marvin girls had long ago given him up as hopeless. They fell back, baffled, their keenest weapons dulled by the impenetrable armour of his impersonal gaze.
The room? It hadn"t been much of a room, as rooms go. Bare, clean, asceptic, with a narrow, hard white bed and a maple dresser whose second drawer always stuck and came out zig-zag when you pulled it; and a swimmy mirror that made one side of your face look sort of lumpy, and higher than the other side. In one corner a bookshelf. He had made it himself at manual training. When he had finished it--the planing, the staining, the polishing--Chippendale himself, after he had designed and executed his first gracious, wide-seated, back-fitting chair, could have felt no finer creative glow. As for the books it held, just to run your eye over them was like watching Tyler Kamps grow up. Stella Kamps had been a Kansas school teacher in the days before she met and married Clint Kamps. And she had never quite got over it. So the book case contained certain things that a fond mother (with a teaching past) would think her small son ought to enjoy. Things like "Tom Brown At Rugby" and "Hans Brinker, Or the Silver Skates." He had read them, dutifully, but they were as good as new. No thumbed pages, no ragged edges, no creases and tatters where eager boy hands had turned a page over--hastily. No, the thumb-marked, dog"s-eared, grimy ones were, as always, "Tom Sawyer"
and "Huckleberry Finn" and "Marching Against the Iroquois."
A hot enough little room in the Texas summers. A cold enough little room in the Texas winters. But his own. And quiet. He used to lie there at night, relaxed, just before sleep claimed him, and he could almost feel the soft Texas night enfold him like a great, velvety, invisible blanket, soothing him, lulling him. In the morning it had been pleasant to wake up to its bare, clean whiteness, and to the tantalising breakfast smells coming up from the kitchen below. His mother calling from the foot of the narrow wooden stairway: