Part 20 (2/2)
Brotherton:
”George says Judge Van Dorn is running for Judge again: really, Laura, I hope he'll win. George says he will. George says Henry Fenn is the only trouble Mr. Van Dorn will have, though I don't see as Henry could do much. Though George says he will. George says Henry is cranky and mean about the Judge someway and George says Henry is drinking like a fish this spring and his legs is hollow, he holds so much; though he must have been joking for I have heard of hollow horn in cattle, but I never heard of hollow legs, though they are getting lots of new diseases.”
By the time Mrs. Brotherton found it necessary to stop for breath, Laura Van Dorn had regained the color that had dimmed as she heard the reference to Henry Fenn. And when she met Mrs. Margaret Fenn at a turn of the aisle, Mrs. Margaret Fenn was the spirit of joy and it seemed that Mrs. Van Dorn was her long lost sister; so Mrs. Margaret Fenn began fumbling her over to find the identifying strawberry mark. At least that is what Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., told Mrs. Nesbit as she sold Mrs. Nesbit the large one with the brown plume.
Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., made it a rule never to gossip, as every one who frequented her shop was told, but as between old friends she would say to Mrs. Nesbit that if ever one woman glued herself to another, and couldn't be boiled or frozen, or chopped loose, that woman was Maggie Fenn sticking to Laura Van Dorn. And Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., closed her mouth significantly, and Mrs. Nesbit pretended with a large obvious, rather clumsy pretense, that she read no meaning in Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker's words. The handsome Miss Morton, with her shoe tops tiptoeing to her skirts, who was in the shop and out of school for the rush season, listened hard, but after that they whispered and the handsome Miss Morton turned her attention to the youngest Miss Morton who was munching bonbons and opening the door for all of Harvey and South Harvey and the princ.i.p.alities around about to enter and pa.s.s out. After school came the tired school teachers from the High School, her eldest sister, Emma Morton, among them, with their books and reports pressed against their sides. But Margaret Fenn did not see the school teachers, nor even the fifth Mrs. Sands towed about by her star-eyed stepdaughter Anne, though Margaret Fenn's eyes were busy. But she was watching the women; she was looking for something as though to ward it off, always glancing ahead of her to see where she was going, and who was in her path; always measuring her woman, always listening under the shriek of the clarionettes, always quick with a smile--looking for something--something that she may have felt was upon its way, something that she dreaded to see. But all the shoulders she hobn.o.bbed with that day were warm enough--indifferently warm, and that was all she asked. So she smiled and radiated her fine, animal grace, her feline beauty, her superfemininity, and was as happy as any woman could be who had arrived at an important stage of her journey and could see a little way ahead with some degree of clearness.
Let us look at her as she stands by the door waiting to overhaul Mrs.
Nesbit. A fine figure of a woman, Margaret Fenn makes there--in her late twenties, with large regular features, big even teeth, clear brown eyes--not bold at all, yet why do they seem so? Perhaps because she is so sure and firm and unhesitating. Her skin is soft and fair as a child's, bespeaking health and good red blood. The good red blood shows in her lips--red as a wicked flower, red and full and as shameless as a dream. Taller than Mrs. Nesbit she stands, and her clothes hang to her in spite of the fullness of the fas.h.i.+on, in most suggestive lines. She seems to s.h.i.+ne out of her clothes a l.u.s.trous, s.h.i.+mmering figure, female rather than feminine, and gorgeous rather than lovely. Margaret Fenn is in full bloom; not a drooping petal, not a bending stamen, not a wilted calyx or bruised leaf may be seen about her. She is a perfect flower whose whole being--like that of a flower at its full--seems eager, thrilling, burning with antic.i.p.ation of the perfect fruit.
She puts out her hands--both of her large strong hands, so well-gloved and well-kept, to Mrs. Nesbit. Surely Mrs. Fenn's smile is not a make-believe smile; surely that is real pleasure in her voice; surely that is real joy that lights up her eyes. And why should they not be real? Is not Mrs. Nesbit the one person in all Harvey that Margaret Fenn would delight to honor? Is not Mrs. Nesbit the dowager empress of Harvey, and the social despot of the community? And is not Mrs. Nesbit smiling at the eldest Miss Morton, she of the Longfellow school, who is trying on a traveling hat, and explaining that she always wanted a traveling hat and suit alike so that she could go to the Grand Canyon if she could ever save up enough money, but she could never seem to afford it? Moreover is not Mrs. Nesbit in a beneficent frame of mind?
”Well,” smiles the eyes and murmurs the voice, and glows the face of the young woman, and she puts out her hand. ”Mrs. Nesbit--so glad I'm sure.
Isn't it lovely here? Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker is so effective.”
”Mrs. Fenn,--” this from the dowager, and the eyebrow that Mrs. Fenn gave to Mrs. Hogan, and Mrs. Hogan gave to Mrs. Van Dorn and Mrs. Van Dorn gave to Mrs. Brotherton and Mrs. Brotherton gave to Mrs. Calvin who, George says, is an old cat, and Mrs. Calvin gave to Mrs. Nesbit for remarks as to the biennial presence of Mr. Calvin in the barn (repeated to Mrs. Calvin), the eyebrow having been around the company comes back to Mrs. Fenn.
After which Mrs. Nesbit moves with what dignity her tonnage will permit out of the perfumed air, out of the concord of sweet sounds into the street. Mrs. Fenn, who was looking for it all the afternoon, that thing she dreaded and antic.i.p.ated with fear in her heart's heart, found it. It was exceedingly cold--and also a shoulder of some proportions. And it chilled the flowing sap of the perfect flower so that the flower s.h.i.+vered in the breeze made by the closing door, though the youngest Miss Morton presiding at the door thought it was warm, and Mrs.
Herd.i.c.ker thought it was warm and Mrs. Violet Hogan said to Mrs. Bowman as they went through the same door and met the same air: ”My land, Bowman, did you ever see such an oven?” and then as the door closed she added:
”See old Mag Fenn there? I just heard something about her to-day. I bet it's true.”
Thus the afternoon faded and the women went home to cook their evening meals, and left Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., with a few late comers--ladies of no particular character who had no particular men folk to do for, and who slipped in after the rush to pay four prices for what had been left.
Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., was straightening up the stock and snapping prices to the girls who were waiting upon the belated customers. She spent little of her talent upon the sisterhood of the old, old trade, and contented herself with charging them all she could get, and making them feel she was obliging them by selling to them at all. It was while trade sagged in the twilight that Mrs. Jared Thurston, Lizzie Thurston to be exact, wife of the editor of the South Harvey _Derrick_ came in. Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., knew her of old. She was in to solicit advertising, which meant that she was needing a hat and it was a swap proposition. So Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker told Mrs. Thurston to write up the opening and put in a quarter page advertis.e.m.e.nt beside and send her the bill, and Mrs. Thurston looked at a hat. No time was wasted on her either--nor much talent; but as Mrs. Thurston was in a business way herself, Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., stopped to talk to her a moment as to an equal--a rare distinction. They sat on a sofa in the alcove that had sheltered the orchestra behind palms and ferns and Easter lilies, and chatted of many things--the mines, the new smelter, the new foreman's wife at the smelter, the likelihood that the Company store in South Harvey would put in a line of millinery--which Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., denied with emphasis, declaring she had an agreement with the old devil not to put in millinery so long as she deposited at his bank. Mrs.
Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., had taken the $500 which the Company had offered for the life of poor Casper and had filed no lawsuit, fearing that a suit with the Company would hurt her trade. But as a business proposition both women were interested in the other damage suits pending against the Company for the mine accident. ”What do they say down there about it?”
asked the milliner.
”Well, of course,” returned Mrs. Thurston, who was not sure of her ground and had no desire to talk against the rich and powerful, ”they say that some one ought to pay something. But, of course, Joe Calvin always wins his suits and the Judge, of course, was the Company's attorney before he was the Judge--”
”And so the claim agents are signing 'em up for what the Company will give,” cut in the questioner.
”That's about it, Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker,” responded Mrs. Thurston. ”Times are hard, and they take what they can get now, rather than fight for it. And the most the Company will pay is $400 for a life, and not all are getting that.”
”Tom Van Dorn--he's a smooth one, Lizzie--he's a smooth one.” Mrs.
Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., looked quickly at Mrs. Thurston and got a smile in reply. That was enough. She continued:
”You'd think he'd know better--wouldn't you?”
”Well, I don't know--it's hard to teach an old dog new tricks,” was the non-committal answer of Mrs. Thurston, still cautious about offending the powers.
Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., brushed aside formalities. ”Yes--stenographers and hired girls, and biscuit shooters at the Palace and maybe now and then an excursion across the track; but this is different; this is in his own cla.s.s. They were both here this afternoon, and you should have seen the way she cooed and billed over Laura Van Dorn. Honest, Lizzie, if I'd never heard a word, I'd know something was wrong. And you should have seen old lady Nesbit give her the come-uppins.”
Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker, Prop., dropped her voice to a confidential tone.
”Lizzie?” a pause; ”They say you've seen 'em together.”
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