<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></SPAN></span> <SPAN name="ix" id="ix"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX</h2>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/quote.png" width-obs="8" height-obs="7" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p class="cap">DOGGONIT, I liked that cap. It was a good one,” said Father, in a tone
of settled melancholy.</p>
<p>“Well, it wa’n’t much of a cap,” said Mother, “but I do know how you
feel.”</p>
<p>They sat in their tremendously varnished and steam-heated room on the
second floor of daughter Lulu’s house, and found some occupation in
being gloomy. For ten days now they had been her guests. Lulu had
received them with bright excitement and announced that they needn’t
ever do any more work, and were ever so welcome—and then she had
started to reform them. It may seem a mystery as to why a woman whose
soul was composed of vinegar and chicken feathers, as was Lulu Appleby
Hartwig’s, should have wanted her parents to stay with her. Perhaps she
liked them. One does find such anomalies. Anyway, she condescendingly
bought them new hats. And her husband, a large, heavy-blooded<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></SPAN></span> man, made
lumbering jokes at their expense, and expected them to laugh.</p>
<p>“The old boy still likes to play the mouth-organ—nothing like these old
codgers for thinking they’re still kids,” Mr. Hartwig puffed at dinner,
then banged his fist and laughed rollingly. He seemed surprised when
Father merely flushed and tightened his tie. For all his gross body, Mr.
Hartwig was sensitive—so sensitive that he was hurt when people didn’t
see the humor of his little sallies.</p>
<p>The Hartwigs’ modest residence was the last word in cement and small
useless side-tables and all modern inconveniences. The furnace heat made
you sneeze, and the chairs, which were large and tufted, creaked. In the
dining-room was an electrolier made of seven kinds of inimical colored
glass, and a plate-rack from which were hung department-store steins. On
the parlor table was a kodak album with views of Harry in every stage of
absurdity. There was a small car which Mr. Hartwig drove himself. And
there was a bright, easy, incredibly dull social life; neighbors who
went out to the country club to watch the tennis in summer, and played
“five hundred” every Saturday evening in the winter.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></SPAN></span>
Like a vast proportion of the inhabitants of that lonely city, New York,
the Applebys were unused to society. It is hard to tell which afflicted
them more—sitting all day in their immaculate plastered and varnished
room with nothing useful to do or being dragged into the midst of
chattering neighbors who treated them respectfully, as though they were
old.</p>
<p>Mother begged daughter to be permitted to dust or make beds; Father
suggested that he might rake the lawn. But Lulu waggled her stringy
forefinger at them and bubbled, “No, no! What would the neighbors think?
Don’t you suppose that we can afford to have you dear old people take a
rest? Why, Harris would be awfully angry if he saw you out puttering
around, Father. No, you just sit and have a good rest.”</p>
<p>And then, when they had composed to a spurious sort of rest the hands
that were aching for activity, the Applebys would be dragged out, taken
to teas, shown off, with their well-set-up backs and handsome heads, as
Lulu’s aristocratic parents.</p>
<p>“My father has been a prominent business man in New York for many years,
you know,” she would confide to neighbors.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></SPAN></span>
While the prominent business man longed to be sitting on a foolish stool
trying shoes on a fussy old lady.</p>
<p>But what could he do? In actual cash Mother and he had less than seven
dollars in the world.</p>
<p>By the end of two weeks Father and Mother were slowly going mad with the
quiet of their room, and Lulu was getting a little tired of her
experiment in having a visible parental background. She began to let
Mother do the sock-darning—huge uninteresting piles of Harris Hartwig’s
faded mustard-colored cotton socks, and she snapped at Father when he
was restlessly prowling about the house, “My head aches so, I’m sure
it’s going to be a sick headache, and I do think you might let me have a
nap instead of tramping and tramping till my nerves get so frazzled that
I could just shriek.”</p>
<p>With this slight damming of her flowing fount of filial love, Lulu
combined a desire to have them appear as features at a musicale she was
to give, come Saturday evening. Mother was to be in a “dear ducky lace
cap” and Father in a frilled shirt and a long-tailed coat which Harris
Hartwig had once worn in theatricals, the two of them presiding at the
refreshments table.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></SPAN></span>
“Like a prize Persian cat and a pet monkey,” Father said.</p>
<p>Against this indignity they frettingly rebelled. Father snarled, “Good
Lord! I’m not much older than your precious dumpling of a Harris.” It
was the snarl of a caged animal. Lulu had them; she merely felt
misunderstood when they protested.</p>
<p>Friday morning. The musicale was coming next day, and Lulu had already
rehearsed them in their position as refreshment ornaments. Father had
boldly refused to wear the nice, good frilled shirt and “movie-actor
coat” during the rehearsal.</p>
<p>“Very well,” said Lulu, “but you will to-morrow evening.”</p>
<p>Father wasn’t sure whether Lulu would use an ax or chloroform or tears
on him, but he was gloomily certain that she would have him in the
shameless garments on Saturday evening.</p>
<p>There was a letter for him on the ten o’clock morning mail. He didn’t
receive many letters—one a month from Joe Tubbs relating diverting
scandal about perfectly respectable neighbors, or an occasional note
from Cousin George Henry of Stamford. Lulu was acutely curious regarding
it; she almost smelled it, with that quivering<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></SPAN></span> sharp-pointed nose of
hers that could tell for hours afterward whether Father had been smoking
“those nasty, undignified little cigarettes—why don’t you smoke the
handsome brier pipe that Harris gave you?” She brightly commented that
the letter was from Boston. But Father didn’t follow her lead. He
defensively tucked the letter in his inside coat pocket and trotted
up-stairs to read it to Mother.</p>
<p>It was from the Boston agency in whose hands he had left the disposal of
the tea-room lease and of their furniture. The agency had, they wrote,
managed to break the lease, and they had disposed of the tables and
chairs and some of the china. They inclosed a check for twenty-eight
dollars.</p>
<p>With the six dollars and eighty-three cents left from their capital the
Applebys were the possessors of almost thirty-five dollars!</p>
<p>“Gee! if we only had two or three times that amount we could run away
and start again in New York, and not let Lulu make us over into a darned
old elderly couple!” Father exulted.</p>
<p>“Yes,” sighed Mother. “You know and I know what a fine, sweet, womanly
woman Lulu<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></SPAN></span> has become, but I do wish she hadn’t gone and set her heart
on my wearing that lace cap. My lands! makes me feel so old I just don’t
know myself.”</p>
<p>“And me with a granddaddy outfit! Why, I never will dast to go out on
the streets again,” complained Father. “I never did hear of such a thing
before; they making us old, and we begging for a chance to be young, and
sitting here and sitting here, and—”</p>
<p>He looked about their room, from the broad window with its resolutely
stiff starched net curtains to the very new bureau and the brass bed
that looked as though no one had ever dared to sleep in it. He kicked at
one of the dollar-ninety-eight-cent rugs and glared at the expanse of
smirkingly clean plaster, decorated with an English sporting print
composed by an artist who was neither English nor sporting.</p>
<p>“Say,” continued Father, “I don’t like this room. It’s too—clean. I
don’t dast to wear slippers in it.”</p>
<p>“Why, Father, it’s a nice room!” marveled Mother. Then, with an outburst
of frankness: “Neither do I! It feels like I never could loosen my stays
and read the funnies in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></SPAN></span> last night’s paper. Oh, you needn’t to look
at me so! Many’s the time I did that when you were away at the store and
I didn’t have to sit up and look respectable.”</p>
<p>They laughed, both of them, with tender tears. He came to sit on the arm
of her rocker and pat her hand.</p>
<p>He said, quietly, very quietly indeed: “Mother, we’re getting to be real
adventurous. Nothing very old about us, I guess! We’re going to sneak
right smack out of this house, this very day, and run away to New York,
and I’ll get a job and we’ll stick right there in little old New York
for the rest of our lives, so help me Bob!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she said, “yes. I’d like to. But what—uh—what lie could we tell
Lulu?”</p>
<p>“Why, Mother, how you talk! Do you know what St. Peter would say to you
if he heard you talk about lying? He’d up and jam his halo down over his
ears and he’d say, ‘You can’t come in here, Sarah Jane Appleby. You’re a
liar. And you know what you can do, don’t you? You can go—’”</p>
<p>“Now you see here, Seth Appleby, I just won’t have you cursing and
swearing and being sacrilegious. I sh’d think you’d be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></SPAN></span> ashamed, man of
your age that ought to know better, acting up like a young smarty and
cursing and swearing and—”</p>
<p>“And cursing and swearing. Don’t forget to put that in, Mother.”</p>
<p>He was delighted. It was the first time since September that Mother had
scolded him. She was coming back to life again. He tickled her under the
chin till she slapped viciously at his finger, then he crowed like a
rooster till a shame-faced smile chased away her lively old-dame wrath
and, shaking her head with a pretense of disgust, she said, comfortably,
“I declare I never did see such a man, not in all my born days.” She let
him take her hand again, and their expression, half smiles, half musing,
was like the sunshine of a calm late afternoon. They were happy. For
they knew that, as soon as they should have debated and worried and
planned and fussed in a manner appropriate to the great event, they
would run away from the overheated respectability of “Lulu’s pretty
little home.”</p>
<p>With enough agony of literary effort to have composed a war article and
a column of Household Hints, they sinfully devised a letter for Lulu in
which they stated that “a dear old<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></SPAN></span> friend, you would not remember him
as we have met him since you were married, writes us from Boston that he
is sick, and we are going to him, we are stealing out this way because
we don’t want you to trouble about it, with party coming on to-morrow
even’g, know you are so kind you would take all sort of trouble if knew
we were going, so just slip away & hope party is great success, Your
loving Father & Mother. P.S., May not be back for some time as friend
may need us.”</p>
<p>In the wreck of their fortunes the Applebys had lost their own
furniture, down to the last beloved picture. They had only a suit-case
and a steamer-trunk, the highly modern steamer-trunk which Father had
once bought for a vacation trip to West Skipsit and the Tubbses. But it
required man[oe]uvering to get even this light baggage to the station.</p>
<p>Mother went nosing about till she discovered that Lulu was going calling
that afternoon. Father hired an expressman, who was to be ready to come
the instant he telephoned.</p>
<p>Lulu went out at three, and Father stole down-stairs to telephone. But
the maid had taken a fancy to dusting the living-room, where the
telephone lived. In all her domestic history<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></SPAN></span> the maid had never done
that before—attest many sarcastic remarks of Lulu.</p>
<p>They had planned to catch the four-o’clock train for New York. Half-past
three now. The maid was polishing the silver in the dining-room, which
was separated from the living-room only by an open arch. Father dared
not telephone, lest she instantly send for Lulu.</p>
<p>Mother tiptoed down and the runaways plotted in whispers. Upon which
conspiracy Lulu brightly entered through the front door.</p>
<p>For a second Father had a wild, courageous desire to do the natural
thing, to tell Lulu that they were going. But he quailed as Lulu
demanded: “Have you tried on the coat and frilled shirt for to-morrow
evening yet, papa? You know there may have to be some alterations in
them. I’m sure mama won’t mind making them, will you, mama! Oh, you two
will be so cute and dear, I know everybody will love you, and it will
give such a homey, old-fashioned touch that—”</p>
<p>“No, I haven’t tried it on yet, and I ain’t sure I’m a-going—” Father
gallantly attempted.</p>
<p>Lulu glared at him and said, in a voice of honey and aloes, “I’m sure,
papa dear, I don’t ask very much of you, and when I do ask just<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104"></SPAN></span> this
one little thing that I’m sure anybody else would be glad to help me
with and me doing my very best to make you happy—”</p>
<p>No! No, no! Father didn’t tell her they were going to New York. He was
glad enough to escape up-stairs without having the monkey coat tried on
him by force.</p>
<p>Their suit case and steamer-trunk stood betrayingly in the middle of the
room. With panting anxiety, heaving and puffing, the two domestic
anarchists lifted the steamer-trunk, slipped it under the bed and kicked
the suit-case into the closet, and sat down to wait for the next train
to New York, which left at eleven <span class="smcap">P. M.</span></p>
<p>At dinner—such a jolly family dinner, with Mr. Hartwig carving and
emitting little jokes, with Harry whining about his homework and Lulu
telling the maid what an asphyxiated fool she was to have roasted the
lamb too long— Father was highly elaborate in his descriptions of how
he had tried on the tail-coat and found it to be a superb fit. As the
coat was the personal theatricals-equipment of Mr. Harris Hartwig, who
was shaped like the dome of the county court-house, Lulu looked
suspicious, but Harry was discovered making bread pills, and she was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></SPAN></span> so
engaged in telling him what she thought—Lord, what a thinker the little
woman was!—that she forgot to follow the subject.</p>
<p>Out of this life of roast lamb and lies, domesticity and evasions, the
Applebys plunged into a tremor of rebellious plotting. They sat in their
room, waiting for the Hartwigs to go to bed. Every five minutes Father
tiptoed to the door and listened.</p>
<p>At five minutes past ten he shook his fingers with joy. He heard the
Hartwig family discursively lumbering up to bed. He stood at the door,
unmoving, till the house was quiet, while Mother nervously hung their
farewell note on the electric light, and slipped into her overcoat and
the small black hat that was no longer new and would scarce be
impressive to Matilda Tubbs now.</p>
<p>They had decided to abandon the steamer-trunk, though Mother made a
bundle of the more necessary things. The second the house was quiet
Father was ready. He didn’t even have to put on an overcoat—he hadn’t
any worth putting on. His old overcoat had finally gone to seed and was
the chief thing abandoned with the steamer-trunk. He turned up his
coat-collar and slung his muffler about his neck,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></SPAN></span> put his brown
slouch-hat impudently on one side of his white head, and stood
rejuvenated, an adventurer.</p>
<p>Just below their window was the roof of the low garage, which was built
as part of the house. Father opened the window, eased out the suit-case,
followed it, and gave his hand to Mother, who creakingly crawled out
with her bundle. It was an early November evening, chilly, a mist in the
air. After their day in the enervating furnace heat the breeze seemed
biting, and the garage roof was perilously slippery. Mother slid and
balanced and slid on the roof, irritably observing, “I declare to
goodness I never thought that at my time of life I’d have to sneak out
of a window on to a nasty slippery shed-roof, like a thief in the night,
when I wanted to go a-visiting.”</p>
<p>“H’sh!” demanded Father. “They’ll hear us and lug us back.”</p>
<p>“Back nothing!” snapped Mother. “Now that I’ve been and gone and
actually snook out of a window and made a common gallivanting old hex
out of myself this way, I wouldn’t come back not if Lulu and Harry and
that lump of a Harris Hartwig was all a-hanging on to my pettiskirts and
trying to haul me back.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></SPAN></span>
“Oof-flumpf.”</p>
<p>This last sound was made by the soft mud beside the garage as Mother
landed in it. She had jumped from the roof without once hesitating, and
she picked up her bundle and waited quite calmly till Father came flying
frog-like through the mist.</p>
<p>They hadn’t many minutes to wait for the New York train, but they were
anxious minutes. Lest Lulu or the lordly Harris Hartwig descend on them,
they nervously lurked in the dark doorway of the baggage-room. With no
overcoat, Father shivered—and hid the shiver.</p>
<p>The engine came, glaring in through the mist; the train seemed
impatient, enormous, dwarfing the small station. The prodigal parents
hastily tugged suit-case and bundle aboard. They found a seat together.
They fussily tucked away their luggage. He held her hand firmly,
concealing the two hands with a fold of her overcoat.... You have seen
old folk, quite simple and rustic old folk who are apparently unused to
travel, sit motionless for hour after hour of train-travel, and you have
fancied that they were unconscious of life, of speed, of wonder? So sat
Father and Mother, but they were gloriously conscious of each other,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></SPAN></span>
and now and then, when he was sure that no one was looking, he
whispered: “Old honey, there’s nothing holding us apart now no more.
We’re partners again, and Lord! how we’ll fight! I’ll go in and I’ll
take Pilkings’s business clean away from him, I will! Old honey, we’re
free again! And we’re going to see—New York! Lord! I just can’t believe
it!”</p>
<p>“Yes—why—why, it’s our real honeymoon!”</p>
<p>Not till they had ridden for an hour did she demand, “Seth, what <em>are</em>
we going to do in New York?”</p>
<p>“Why, fiddle! I swear I don’t know! But—we’ll find something. I guess
if we can bamboozle a modern fash’nable daughter we won’t be afraid of
just New York.”</p>
<p>“No!”</p>
<p>Till four in the morning the Applebys sat unmoving, awake and happy.
When the train passed the row on row of apartment-houses that mean New
York no youngster first seeing the infinitely possible city, and the
future glory it must hold for him, was ever more excited than the
invading Innocents.</p>
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