Our Mister Wren

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by Lewis, Sinclair


  England."

  "Oh, that wasn't nothing.... But I was always thinking of you,

  even when I was on the job----"

  "It's gratifying to have some one continue taking me

  seriously.... Really, dear, I do appreciate it. But you

  mustn't--you mustn't----"

  "Oh, gee! I just can't get over it--you here by me --ain't it

  curious!... "Then he persisted with the tale of his longing,

  which she had so carefully interrupted: "The people here are

  _awful_ kind and good, and you can bank on 'em. But--oh----"

  From across the room,Tom's pretended jeers, lighted up with Miss

  Proudfoot's giggles, as paper lanterns illumine Coney Island.

  From Tom:

  "Yes, you're a hot dancer, all right. I suppose you can do the

  Boston and all them swell dances. Wah-h-h-h-h!"

  "----but Istra, oh, gee! you're like poetry--like all them

  things a feller can't get but he tries to when he reads

  Shakespeare and all those poets."

  "Oh, dear boy, you mustn't! We will be good friends. I do

  appreciate having some one care whether I'm alive or not.

  But I thought it was all understood that we weren't to take

  playing together seriously; that it was to be merely

  playing--nothing more."

  "But, anyway, you will let me play with you here in New York as

  much as I can? Oh, come on, _let's_ go for a walk--let's--let's

  go to a show."

  "I'm awf'ly sorry, but I promised--a man's going to call for me,

  and we're going to a stupid studio party on Bryant Park. Bore,

  isn't it, the day of landing? And poor Istra dreadfully landsick."

  "Oh, then," hopefully, "don't go. Let's----"

  "I'm sorry, Mouse dear, but I'm afraid I can't break the

  date.... Fact, I must go up and primp now----"

  "Don't you care a bit?" he said, sulkily.

  "Why, yes, of course. But you wouldn't have Istra disappoint a

  nice Johnny after he's bought him a cunnin' new weskit, would

  you?... Good night, dear." She smiled--the mother smile--and

  was gone with a lively good night to the room in general.

  Nelly went up to bed early. She was tired, she said. He had no

  chance for a word with her. He sat on the steps outside alone

  a long time. Sometimes he yearned for a sight of Istra's ivory

  face. Sometimes, with a fierce compassion that longed to take

  the burden from her, he pictured Nelly working all day in the

  rushing department store on which the fetid city summer would

  soon descend.

  They did have their walk the next night, Istra and Mr. Wrenn,

  but Istra kept the talk to laughing burlesques of their tramp in

  England. Somehow--he couldn't tell exactly why--he couldn't

  seem to get in all the remarks he had inside him about how much

  he had missed her.

  Wednesday--Thursday--Friday; he saw her only at one dinner, or

  on the stairs, departing volubly with clever-looking men in

  evening clothes to taxis waiting before the house.

  Nelly was very pleasant; just that--pleasant. She pleasantly

  sat as his partner at Five Hundred, and pleasantly declined to

  go to the moving pictures with him. She was getting more and

  more tired, staying till seven at the store, preparing what she

  called "special stunts" for the summer white sale. Friday

  evening he saw her soft fresh lips drooping sadly as she toiled

  up the front steps before dinner. She went to bed at eight, at

  which time Istra was going out to dinner with a thin,

  hatchet- faced sarcastic- looking man in a Norfolk jacket and a

  fluffy black tie. Mr. Wrenn resented the Norfolk jacket. Of

  course, the kingly men in evening dress would be expected to

  take Istra away from him, but a Norfolk jacket---- He did not

  call it that. Though he had worn one in the fair village of

  Aengusmere, it was still to him a "coat with a belt."

  He thought of Nelly all evening. He heard her--there on the

  same floor with him--talking to Miss Proudfoot, who stood at

  Nelly's door, three hours after she was supposed to be asleep.

  "No," Nelly was saying with evidently fictitious cheerfulness,

  "no, it was just a little headache.... It's much better. I

  think I can sleep now. Thank you very much for coming."

  Nelly hadn't told Mr. Wrenn that she had a severe headache--she

  who had once, a few weeks before, run to him with a cut in her

  soft small finger, demanding that he bind it up.... He went

  slowly to bed.

  He had lain awake half an hour before his agony so overpowered

  him that he flung out of bed. He crouched low by the bed, like

  a child, his legs curled under him, the wooden sideboard pressing

  into his chest in one long line of hot pain, while he prayed:

  "O God, O God, forgive me, forgive me, oh, forgive me! Here I

  been forgetting Nelly (and I _love_ her) and comparing her with

  Istra and not appreciating her, and Nelly always so sweet to me

  and trusting me so---- O God, keep me away from wickedness!"

  He huddled there many minutes, praying, the scorching pressure

  of the bedside growing more painful. All the while the

  camp-fire he had shared with Istra was burning within his closed

  eyes, and Istra was visibly lording it in a London flat filled

  with clever people, and he was passionately aware that the line

  of her slim breast was like the lip of a shell; the line of her

  pallid cheek, defined by her flame-colored hair, something

  utterly fine, something he could not express.

  "Oh," he groaned, "she is like tha t poetry stuff in Shakespeare

  that's so hard to get.... I'll be extra nice to Nelly at the

  picnic Sunday.... Her trusting me so, and then me---- O God,

  keep me away from wickedness!"

  As he was going out Saturday morning he found a note from Istra

  waiting in the hall on the hat-rack:

  Do you want to play with poor Istra tomorrow Sat. afternoon and

  perhaps evening, Mouse? You have Saturday afternoon off, don't

  you? Leave me a note if you can call for me at 1.30.

  I. N.

  He didn't have Saturday afternoon off, but he said he did in his

  note, and at one-thirty he appeared at her door in a new spring

  suit (purchased on Tuesday), a new spring hat, very fuzzy and

  gay (purchased Saturday noon), and the walking-stick he had

  bought on Tottenham Court Road, but decently concealed from the

  boarding-house.

  Istra took him to what she called a "futurist play." She

  explained it all to him several times, and she stood him tea and

  muffins, and recalled Mrs. Cattermole's establishment with full

  attention to Mrs. Cattermole's bulbous but earnest nose. They

  dined at the Brevoort, and were back at nine-thirty; for, said

  Istra, she was "just a bit tired, Mouse."

  They stood at the door of Istra's room. Istra said, "You may

  come in--just for a minute."

  It was the first time he had even peeped into her room in New

  York. The old shyness was on him, and he glanced back.

  Nelly was just coming up-stairs, staring at him where he stood

  inside the door, her lips apart with amazement.

  Ladies distinctly did not entertain in their rooms at Mr
s. Arty's.

  He wanted to rush out, to explain, to invite her in, to--to----

  He stuttered in his thought, and by now Nelly had hastened past,

  her face turned from them.

  Uneasily he tilted on the front of a cane-seated rocking-chair,

  glaring at a pile of books before one of Istra's trunks. Istra

  sat on the bedside nursing her knee. She burst out:

  "O Mouse dear, I'm so bored by everybody--every sort of

  everybody.... Of course I don't mean you; you're a good pal....

  Oh--Paris is _too_ complex--especially when you can't quite get

  the nasal vowels--and New York is too youthful and earnest; and

  Dos Puentes, California, will be plain hell.... And all my

  little parties--I start out on them happily, always, as naive as

  a kiddy going to a birthday party, and then I get there and find

  I can't even dance square dances, as the kiddy does, and go

  home---- Oh damn it, damn it, damn it! Am I shocking you? Well,

  what do I care if I shock everybody!"

  Her slim pliant length was flung out along the bed, and she was

  crying. Her beautiful hands clutched the corners of a pillow

  bitterly.

  He crept over to the bed, patting her shoulder, slowly and

  regularly, too frightened of her mood even to want to kiss her.

  She looked up, laughing tearfully. "Please say, `There, there,

  there; don't cry.' It always goes with pats for weepy girls, you

  know.... O Mouse, you will be good to some woman some day."

  Her long strong arms reached up and drew him down. It was his

  head that rested on her shoulder. It seemed to both of them

  that it was he who was to be petted, not she. He pressed his

  cheek against the comforting hollow of her curving shoulder and

  rested there, abandoned to a forlorn and growing happiness, the

  happiness of getting so far outside of his tight world of

  Wrennishness that he could give comfort and take comfort with no

  prim worried thoughts of Wrenn.

  Istra murmured: "Perhaps that's what I need--some one to need

  me. Only----" She stroked his hair. "Now you must go, dear."

  "You---- It's better now? I'm afraid I ain't helped you much.

  It's kinda t' other way round."

  "Oh yes, indeed, it's all right now! Just nerves. Nothing more.

  Now, good night."

  "Please, won't you come to the picnic to-morrow? It's----"

  "No. Sorry, but can't possibly."

  "Please think it over."

  "No, no, no, no, dear! You go and forget me and enjoy yourself

  and be good to your pink-face--Nelly, isn't it? She seems to be

  terribly nice, and I know you two will have a good party. You

  must forget me. I'm just a teacher of playing games who hasn't

  been successful at any game whatever. Not that it matters.

  I don't care. I don't, really. Now, good night."

  CHAPTER XVIII

  AND FOLLOWS A WANDERING FLAME THROUGH PERILOUS SEAS

  They had picnic dinner early up there on the Palisades:

  Nelly and Mr. Wrenn, Mrs. Arty and Tom, Miss Proudfoot and Mrs.

  Samuel Ebbitt, the last of whom kept ejaculating: "Well! I

  ain't run off like this in ten years!" They squatted about a

  red-cotton table-cloth spread on a rock, broadly discussing the

  sandwiches and cold chicken and lemonade and stuffed olives, and

  laughing almost to a point of distress over Tom's accusation

  that Miss Proudfoot had secreted about her person a bottle of

  rye whisky.

  Nelly was very pleasant to Mr. Wrenn, but she called him neither

  Billy nor anything else, and mostly she talked to Miss Proudfoot,

  smiling at him, but saying nothing when he managed to get out a

  jest about Mrs. Arty's chewing-gum. When he moved to her side

  with a wooden plate of cream-cheese sandwiches (which Tom

  humorously termed "cold-cream wafers") Mr. Wrenn started to

  explain how he had come to enter Istra's room.

  "Why shouldn't you?" Nelly asked, curtly, and turned to Miss

  Proudfoot.

  "She doesn't seem to care much," he reflected, relieved and

  stabbed in his humble vanity and reattracted to Nelly, all at

  once. He was anxious about her opinion of Istra and her opinion

  of himself, and slightly defiant, as she continued to regard him

  as a respectable person whose name she couldn't exactly

  remember.

  Hadn't he the right to love Istra if he wanted to? he desired

  to know of himself. Besides, what had he _done?_ Just gone out

  walking with his English hotel acquaintance Istra! He hadn't

  been in her room but just a few minutes. Fine reason that was

  for Nelly to act like a blooming iceberg! Besides, it wasn't

  as if he were engaged to Nelly, or anything like that.

  Besides, of course Istra would never care for him. There were

  several other besideses with which he harrowed himself while

  trying to appear picnically agreeable. He was getting very much

  confused, and was slightly abrupt as he said to Nelly, "Let's

  walk over to that high rock on the edge."

  A dusky afterglow filled the sky before them as they silently

  trudged to the rock and from the top of the sheer cliff

  contemplated the smooth and steely-gray Hudson below. Nelly

  squeaked her fear at the drop and clutched his arm, but suddenly

  let go and drew back without his aid.

  He groaned within, "I haven't the right to help her." He took her

  arm as she hesitatingly climbed from the rock down to the ground.

  She jerked it free, curtly saying, "No, thank you."

  She was repentant in a moment, and, cheerfully:

  "Miss Nash took me in her room yesterday and showed me her

  things. My, she's got such be-_yoo_-ti- ful jewels! La V'lieres

  and pearls and a swell amethyst brooch. My! She told me all

  about how the girls used to study in Paris, and how sorry she

  would be to go back to California and keep house."

  "Keep house?"

  Nelly let him suffer for a moment before she relieved him with,

  "For her father."

  "Oh.... Did she say she was going back to California soon?"

  "Not till the end of the summer, maybe."

  "Oh.... Oh, Nelly----"

  For the first time that day he was perfectly sincere. He was

  trying to confide in her. But the shame of having emotions was

  on him. He got no farther.

  To his amazement, Nelly mused, "She is very nice."

  He tried hard to be gallant. "Yes, she is interesting, but of

  course she ain't anywheres near as nice as you are, Nelly, be----"

  "Oh, don't, Billy!"

  The quick agony in her voice almost set them both weeping. The

  shared sorrow of separation drew them together for a moment.

  Then she started off, with short swift steps, and he tagged

  after. He found little to say. He tried to comment on the

  river. He remarked that the apartment-houses across in New York

  were bright in the sunset; that, in fact, the upper windows

  looked "like there was a fire in there." Her sole comment was "Yes."

  When they rejoined the crowd he was surprised to hear her

  talking volubly to Miss Proudfoot. He rejoiced that she was

  "game," but he did not rejoice long. For a frightened feeling

  that he had to hurr
y home and see Istra at once was turning him

  weak and cold. He didn't want to see her; she was intruding;

  but he had to go--go at once; and the agony held him all the way

  home, while he was mechanically playing the part of stern

  reformer and agreeing with Tom Poppins that the horrors of the

  recent Triangle shirt-waist- factory fire showed that "something

  oughta be done--something sure oughta be."

  He trembled on the ferry till Nelly, with a burst of motherly

  tenderness in her young voice, suddenly asked: "Why, you're

  shivering dreadfully! Did you get a chill?"

  Naturally, he wanted the credit of being known as an invalid,

  and pitied and nursed, but he reluctantly smiled and said, "Oh

  no, it ain't anything at all."

  Then Istra called him again, and he fumed over the slowness of

  their landing.

  And, at home, Istra was out.

  He went resolutely down and found Nelly alone, sitting on a

  round pale-yellow straw mat on the steps.

  He sat by her. He was very quiet; not at all the jovial young

  man of the picnic properly following the boarding-house-district

  rule that males should be jocular and show their appreciation of

  the ladies by "kidding them." And he spoke with a quiet

  graciousness that was almost courtly, with a note of weariness

  and spiritual experience such as seldom comes into the

  boarding-houses, to slay joy and bring wisdom and give words shyness.

  He had, as he sat down, intended to ask her to go with him to a

  moving-picture show. But inspiration was on him. He merely sat

  and talked.

  When Mr. Wrenn returned from the office, two evenings later, he

  found this note awaiting him:

  DEAR MOUSE,--Friend has asked me to join her in studio & have

  beat it. Sorry not see you & say good-by. Come see me

  sometime--phone before and see if I'm in--Spring xxx--address xx

  South Washington Sq. In haste, ISTRA.

  He spent the evening in not going to the studio. Several times

  he broke away from a pinochle game to rush upstairs and see if

  the note was as chilly as he remembered. It always was.

  Then for a week he awaited a more definite invitation from her,

  which did not come. He was uneasily polite to Nelly these days,

  and tremulously appreciative of her gentleness. He wanted to

  brood, but he did not take to his old habit of long solitary

  walks. Every afternoon he planned one for the evening; every

 

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