<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span> <SPAN name="vi" id="vi"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<p class="cap">APPARENTLY the Applebys’ customers had liked “The T Room” well
enough—some of them had complimented Mrs. Appleby on the crispness of
her doughnuts, the generousness of her chicken sandwiches. Those who had
quarreled about the thickness of the bread or the vagueness of flavor in
the tea Father had considered insulting, and he had been perky as a
fighting-sparrow in answering them. A good many must have been pleased,
for on their trip back from Provincetown they returned, exclaimed that
they remembered the view from the rose-arbor, and chatted with Father
about the roads and New York and fish. As soon as the first novelty of
Miss Mitchin’s was gone, the Applebys settled down to custom which was
just large enough to keep their hopes staggering onward, and just small
enough to eat away their capital a few cents a day, instead of giving
them a profit.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span>
In the last week of July they were visited by their daughter Lulu—Lulu
the fair, Lulu the spectacled, Lulu the lily wife of Harris Hartwig, the
up-to-date druggist of Saserkopee, New York.</p>
<p>Lulu had informed them two weeks beforehand that they were to be honored
with the presence of herself and her son Harry; and Father and Mother
had been unable to think of any excuse strong enough to keep her away.
Lulu wasn’t unkind to her parents; rather, she was too kind; she gave
them good advice and tried to arrange Mother’s hair in the coiffures
displayed by Mrs. Edward Schuyler Deflaver of Saserkopee, who gave smart
teas at the Woman’s Exchange. Lulu cheerily told Father how well he was
withstanding the hand of Time, which made him feel decrepit and become
profane.</p>
<p>In fact, though they took it for granted that they adored their dear
daughter Lulu, they knew that they would not enjoy a single game of
cribbage, nor a single recital by Signor Sethico Applebi the mouth-organ
virtuoso, as long as she was with them. But she was coming, and Mother
frantically cleaned everything and hid her favorite old shoes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span>
Mrs. Lulu Hartwig arrived with a steamer-trunk, two new gowns, a camera,
and Harry. She seemed disappointed not to find a large summer hotel with
dancing and golf next door to “The T Room,” and she didn’t hesitate to
say that her parents would have done better—which meant that Lulu would
have enjoyed her visit more—if they had “located” at Bar Harbor or
Newport. She rearranged the furniture, but as there was nothing in the
tea-room but chairs, tables, and a fireplace, there wasn’t much she
could do.</p>
<p>She descended on Grimsby Center, and came back enthusiastic about Miss
Mitchin’s. She had met the young man with the Albanian costume, and he
had talked to her about vorticism and this jolly new Polish composer
with his suite for tom-tom and cymbals. She led Father into the arbor
and effervescently demanded, “Why don’t Mother and you have a place like
that dear old mansion of Miss Mitchin’s, and all those clever people
there and all?”</p>
<p>Father fairly snarled, “Now look here, young woman, the less you say
about Miss Mitten the more popular you’ll be around here. And don’t you
dare to speak to your mother about that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></SPAN></span> place. It’s raised the devil
with our trade, and I won’t have your mother bothered with it. And if
you mean the young fellow that needs a decent pair of pantaloons by this
‘Albanian costume’ business, why I sh’d think you’d be ashamed to speak
of him.”</p>
<p>“Now, Father, of course you have particularly studied artists—”</p>
<p>“Look here, young woman, when you used to visit us in New York, it was
all right for you to get our goats by sticking your snub nose in the air
and asking us if we’d read a lot of new-fangled books that we’d never
heard of. I’ll admit that was a good way to show us how superior you
were. But this Miss Mitten place is a pretty serious proposition for us
to buck, and I absolutely forbid you to bother your mother with
mentioning it.”</p>
<p>Father stood straight and glared at her. There was in him nothing of the
weary little man who was in awe of Miss Mitchin’s. Even his daughter was
impressed. She forgot for a moment that she was Mrs. Hartwig, now, and
had the best phonograph in Saserkopee. But she took one more shot:</p>
<p>“All the same, it would be a good thing for you if you had some clever
people—or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></SPAN></span> some society people—coming here often. It would advertise
the place as nothing else would.”</p>
<p>“Well, we’ll see about that,” said Father—which meant, of course, that
he wouldn’t see about it.</p>
<p>Lulu Hartwig was a source of agitation for two weeks. After Father’s
outbreak she stopped commenting, but every day when business was light
they could feel her accusingly counting the number of customers. But she
did not become active again till the Sunday before her going.</p>
<p>The Applebys were sitting up-stairs, that day, holding hands and
avoiding Lulu. Below them they heard a motor-car stop, and Mother
prepared to go down and serve the tourists. The brazen, beloved voice of
Uncle Joe Tubbs of West Skipsit blared out: “Where’s the folks, heh?
Tell ’em the Tubbses are here.”</p>
<p>And Lulu’s congealed voice, in answer: “I don’t know whether they are at
home. If they are, who shall I tell them is calling, please?”</p>
<p>“Huh? Oh, well, just say the Tubbses.”</p>
<p>“Mr. and Mrs. Tubbs?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></SPAN></span>
“Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes!”</p>
<p>By this time Father and Mother were galloping down-stairs. They welcomed
the Tubbses with yelps of pleasure; the four of them sat in rockers on
the grass and talked about the Tubbses’ boarders, and the Applebys
admired to hear that Uncle Joe now ran the car himself. But all of them
were conscious that Lulu, in a chiffon scarf and eye-glasses, was
watching them amusedly, and the Tubbses uneasily took leave in an hour,
pleading the distance back to West Skipsit.</p>
<p>Not till evening, when he got the chance to walk by himself on the beach
below the gravel cliffs, did Father quite realize what his daughter had
done—that, with her superior manner, she had frightened the Tubbses
away. Yet there was nothing to do about it.</p>
<p>Even at her departure there was a certain difficulty, for Lulu developed
a resolution to have her parents visit her at Saserkopee. Perhaps she
wished to show them in what state she now lived; or it may conceivably
be that, in her refined and determined manner, she was fond of her
parents. She kissed them repeatedly and was gone with much waving of a
handkerchief and yelps of “Now don’t forget—you’re<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN></span> you’re to visit
me—be sure and write—Harry, don’t stick your head out of the window,
d’yuhhearme?”</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>Lulu’s visit had two effects upon the lives of Father and Mother. They
found that their quiet love had grown many-fold stronger, sweeter, in
the two weeks it had been denied the silly fondnesses of utterance. They
could laugh, now that there was no critic of their shy brand of humor.
Father stopped on the step and winked an immense shameless wink at
Mother, and she sighed and said, with unexpected understanding, “Yes,
I’m afraid Lulu is a little—just a leet-le bit—”</p>
<p>“And I reckon we won’t be in such a gosh-awful hustle to visit her.”</p>
<p>Mother was so vulgar as to grunt, “Well, I guess not!”</p>
<p>That evening they sat in the rose-arbor again. And had tone poems on the
mouth-organ. And dreamed that something would happen to make their
investment pay.</p>
<p>Another result there was of Lulu’s visit. Father couldn’t help
remembering her suggestion that they ought to bag a social or artistic
lion as an attraction for “The T Room.” He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN></span> was delighted to find that,
after weeks of vacuous worry, he had another idea.</p>
<p>Now that August, the height of the season, had come, he would capture
Mrs. Vance Carter herself.</p>
<p>Mrs. Vance Carter was the widow of the Boothbay Textile Mills millions.
She was a Winslow on her father’s side, a Cabot on her mother’s, and
Beacon Street was officially swept from end to end and tidied with
little pink feather dusters whenever she returned to Boston. She was so
solid that society reporters didn’t dare write little items about her,
and when she was in Charleston she was invited to the Saint Cecilia
Ball. Also she was rather ignorant, rather unhappy, and completely
aimless. She and her daughter spent their summers three miles from
Grimsby Head, in an estate with a gate-house and a conservatory and a
golf course and a house with three towers and other architecture. When
America becomes a military autocracy she will be Lady Carter or the
Countess of Grimsby.</p>
<p>The Applebys saw her go by every day, in a landaulet with liveried
chauffeur and footman.</p>
<p>With breathless secrecy Father planned to entice Mrs. Vance Carter to
“The T Room.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></SPAN></span>” Once they had her there, she would certainly appreciate
the wholesome goodness of Mother’s cooking. He imagined long intimate
conversations in which Mrs. Carter would say to him, “Mr. Appleby, I
can’t tell you how much I like to get away from my French cook and enjoy
your nice old house and Mrs. Appleby’s delicious homey doughnuts.” It
was easy to win Mrs. Carter, in imagination. Sitting by himself in the
rose-arbor while Mother served their infrequent customers or stood at
the door unhappily watching for them, Father visualized Mrs. Carter
exclaiming over the view from the arbor, the sunset across the moors as
seen from their door—which was, Father believed, absolutely the largest
and finest sunset in the world. He even went so far as to discover in
Mrs. Vance Carter, Mrs. Cabot-Winslow-Carter, a sneaking fondness for
cribbage, which, in her exalted social position, she had had to conceal.
He saw her send the chauffeur away, and cache her lorgnette, and roll up
her sleeves, and simply wade into an orgy of cribbage, with pleasing
light refreshments of cider and cakes waiting by the fireplace. Then he
saw Mrs. Carter sending all her acquaintances to “The T Room,” and the
establishment so prosperous that Miss<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN></span> Mitchin would come around and beg
the Applebys to enter into partnership.</p>
<p>Father was not such a fool as to believe all his fancies. But hadn’t he
heard the most surprising tales of how friendly these great folk could
be? Why here just the other day he had been reading in the boiler-plate
innards of the <em>Grimsby Recorder</em> how Jim Hill, the railroad king, had
dropped off at a little station in North Dakota one night, incog., and
talked for hours to the young station-master.</p>
<p>He was burning to do something besides helping Mother in the
kitchen—something which would save them and pull the tea-room out of
the hole. Without a word to Mother he started for Grimsby Hill, the
estate of Mrs. Vance Carter. He didn’t know what he was going to do, but
he was certain that he was going to do something.</p>
<p>As he arrived at the long line of iron picket fence surrounding Grimsby
Hill, he saw Mrs. Carter’s motor enter the gate. It seemed to be a good
omen. He hurried to the gate, peered in, then passed on. He couldn’t go
and swagger past that exclusive-looking gate-house and intrude on that
sweep of rhododendron-lined private driveway. He walked shyly along the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></SPAN></span>
iron fence for a quarter of a mile before he got up courage to go back,
rush through the towering iron gateway and past the gate-house, into the
sacred estate. He expected to hear a voice—it would be a cockney
servant’s voice—demanding, “’Ere you, wot do you want?” But no one
stopped him; no one spoke to him; he was safe among the rhododendrons.
He clumped along as though he had important business, secretly patting
his tie into shape and smoothing his hair. Just let anybody try to stop
him! He knew what he was about! But he really didn’t know what he was
about; he hadn’t the slightest notion as to whether he would go up and
invite their dear cribbage-companion Mrs. Carter to come and see them or
tack up a “T Room” advertisement on the porch.</p>
<p>He came to a stretch of lawn, with the house and all its three towers
scowling down at him. Behind it were the edges of a group of
out-buildings. He veered around toward these. Outside the garage he saw
the chauffeur, with his livery coat off, polishing a fender. Great!
Perhaps he could persuade the chauffeur to help him. He put on what he
felt to be a New York briskness, furtively touched his tie again, and
skipped up to the chauffeur.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></SPAN></span>
“Fine day!” he said, breezily, starting with the one neutral topic of
conversation in the world.</p>
<p>“What of it?” said the chauffeur, and went on polishing.</p>
<p>“Well, uh, say, I wanted to have a talk with you.”</p>
<p>“I guess there’s nothing stopping you. G’wan and have your talk. I can’t
get away. The old dragon wanted to have a talk with me, too, this
morning. So did the housekeeper. Everybody does.” And he polished harder
than ever.</p>
<p>“Ha, ha!” Which indicates Father’s laughter, though actually it sounded
more like “Hick, hick!” As carelessly as he could Father observed:
“That’s how it goes, all right. I know. When I was in the shoe
business—”</p>
<p>“Waal, waal, you don’t say so, Si! Haow’s the shoe business in Hyannis,
papa?”</p>
<p>“Hyannis, hell! I’ve been in business in New York City, New York, for
more than forty years!”</p>
<p>“Oh!”</p>
<p>Father felt that he had made an impression. He stuck his thumbs in his
waistcoat pockets—as he had not done these six gloomy weeks—threw<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></SPAN></span> out
his chest, and tried to look like Thirty-fourth and Broadway, with a
dash of Wall Street and a flavor of Fifth Avenue.</p>
<p>The chauffeur sighed, “Well, all I can say is that any guy that’s lived
in New York that long and then comes to this God-forsaken neck of land
is a nut.”</p>
<p>With an almost cosmic sorrow in his manner and an irritated twist in his
suspenders, the chauffeur disappeared into the garage. Father forlornly
felt that he wasn’t visibly getting nearer to the heart and patronage of
Mrs. Vance Carter.</p>
<p>He stood alone on the cement terrace before the garage. The square grim
back of the big house didn’t so much “look down on him” as beautifully
ignore him. A maid in a cap peeped wonderingly at him from a window. A
man in dun livery wheeled a vacuum cleaner out of an unexpected basement
door. An under-gardener, appearing at the corner, dragging a cultivator,
stared at him. Far off, somewhere, he heard a voice crying, “Fif’ love!”
He could see a corner of a sunken garden with stiff borders of box. He
had an uneasy feeling that a whole army of unexpected servants stood
between him and Mrs. Vance Carter; that, at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></SPAN></span> any moment, a fat,
side-whiskered, expensive butler, like the butlers you see in the
movies, would pop up and order him off the grounds.</p>
<p>The unsatisfactory chauffeur reappeared. In a panic Father urged, “Say,
my name’s Appleby and I run the tea-room at Grimsby Head—you know,
couple of miles this side of the Center. It would be pretty nice for our
class of business if the Madam was to stop there some time, and I was
just wondering, just kinda wondering, if some time when she felt thirsty
you c—”</p>
<p>“She don’t never tell me when she’s thirsty. She just tells me when
she’s mad.”</p>
<p>“Well, you know, some time you might be stopping to show her the view or
something—you fix it up, and— Here, you get yourself some cigars.” He
timidly held out a two-dollar bill. It seemed to bore the chauffeur a
good deal, but he condescended to take it. Father tried to look knowing
and friendly and sophisticated all at once. He added, “Any time you feel
like a good cup o’ tea and the finest home-made doughnuts you ever ate,
why, you just drop in yourself, and ’twon’t cost you a cent.”</p>
<p>“All right, ’bo, I’ll see what I can do,” said the chauffeur, and
vanished again.</p>
<p>Father airily stamped along the driveway.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></SPAN></span> His head was high and
hopeful. He inspected the tennis-courts as though he were Maurice
McLoughlin. He admitted that the rhododendrons were quite extensive. In
fact, he liked Grimsby Hill.</p>
<p>He had saved their fortunes—not for himself, but for Mother. He
whistled “The Harum-Scarum Rag” all the way home, interrupting himself
only to murmur: “I wonder where the back door of that house is. Not at
the back, anyway. Never saw even a garbage-pail.”</p>
<p>And then for two weeks he sat with Mother in the sun and watched the
motors go by.</p>
<p>They were almost ready to admit, now, that their venture was a complete
failure; that they were ruined; that they didn’t know what they would
do, with no savings and a rainy day coming.</p>
<p>They let their maid go. They gave the grocer smaller and smaller orders
for bread and butter and cheese—and even these orders were invariably
too large for the little custom that came their way.</p>
<p>For a week Father concealed the fact that Mrs. Vance Carter would be
coming—not now, but very soon. Then he had to tell Mother the secret to
save her from prostrating worry. They<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></SPAN></span> talked always of that coming
miracle as they sat with hand desperately clutching hand in the evening;
they nearly convinced themselves that Mrs. Carter would send her
friends. September was almost here, and it was too late for Mrs.
Carter’s influence to help them this year, but they trusted that
somehow, by the magic of her wealth and position, she would enable them
to get through the winter and find success during the next year.</p>
<p>They developed a remarkable skill in seeing her car coming far down the
road. When either of them saw it the other was summoned, and they waited
tremblingly. But the landaulet always passed, with Mrs. Carter staring
straight ahead, gray-haired and hook-nosed; sometimes with Miss Margaret
Carter, whose softly piquant little nose would in time be hooked like
her mother’s. Father’s treacherous ally the chauffeur never even looked
at “The T Room.” Sometimes Father wondered if the chauffeur knew just
where the house was; perhaps he had never noticed it. He planned to wave
and attract the chauffeur’s attention, but in face of the prodigious
Mrs. Carter he never dared to carry out the plan.</p>
<p>September 1st. The Applebys had given up<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></SPAN></span> hope of miracles. They were
making up their minds to notify Mr. Pilkings, of Pilkings & Son’s Sixth
Avenue Standard Shoe Parlor, that Father again wanted the job he had
held for so many years.</p>
<p>They must leave the rose-arbor for the noise of that most alien of
places, their native New York.</p>
<p>Mother was in the kitchen; Father at the front door, aimlessly
whittling. He looked up, saw the Vance Carter motor approach. He
shrugged his shoulders, growled, “Let her go to the dickens.”</p>
<p>Then the car had stopped, and Mrs. Vance Carter and Miss Margaret Carter
had incredibly stepped out, had started up the path to the tea-room.</p>
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