Books: Our Mr. Wrenn
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Sinclair Lewis >> Our Mr. Wrenn
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"It's kind of a plain room," Mrs. Arty said, doubtfully. "The
furniture is kind of plain. But my head-waiter man--it was
furnished for a friend of his--he says he likes it better than
any other room in the house. It _is_ comfortable, and you get
lots of sunlight and--"
"I'll take--How much is it, please, with board?"
She spoke with a take-it-or-leave-it defiance. "Eleven-fifty a week."
It was a terrible extravagance; much like marrying a sick woman
on a salary of ten a week, he reflected; nine-teen minus
eleven-fifty left him only seven-fifty for clothes and savings
and things and--but--" I'll take it," he said, hastily. He
was frightened at himself, but glad, very glad. He was to live
in this heaven; he was going to be away from that Zapp woman;
and Nelly Croubel--Was she engaged to some man? he wondered.
Mrs. Arty was saying: "First, I want to ask you some questions,
though. Please sit down." As she creaked into one of the wicker
chairs she suddenly changed from the cigarette-rolling chaffing
card-player to a woman dignified, reserved, commanding. "Mr.
Wrenn, you see, Miss Proudfoot and Miss Croubel are on this
floor. Miss Proudfoot can take care of herself, all right, but
Nelly is such a trusting little thing--She's like my
daughter. She's the only one I've ever given a reduced rate
to--and I swore I never would to anybody!... Do
you--uh--drink--drink much, I mean?"
Nelly on this floor! Near him! Now! He had to have this room.
He forced himself to speak directly.
"I know how you mean, Mrs. Ferrard. No, I don't drink much of
any--hardly at all; just a glass of beer now and then; sometimes
I don't even touch that a week at a time. And I don't gamble
and--and I do try to keep--er--straight--and all that sort of thing."
"That's good."
"I work for the Souvenir and Art Novelty Company on
Twenty-eighth Street. If you want to call them up I guess the
manager'll give me a pretty good recommend."
"I don't believe I'll need it, Mr. Wrenn. It's my business to
find out what sort of animiles men are by just talking to them."
She rose, smiled, plumped out her hand. "You _will_ be nice to
Nelly, _won't_ you! I'm going to fire that Teddem out--don't tell
him, but I am--because he gets too fresh with her."
"Yes!"
She suddenly broke into laughter, and ejaculated: "_Say_, that
was hard work! Don't you _hate_ to have to be serious? Let's trot
down, and I'll make Tom or Duncan rush us a growler of beer to
welcome you to our midst.... I'll bet your socks aren't darned
properly. I'm going to sneak in and take a look at them, once I
get you caged up here.... But I won't read your love-letters!
Now let's go down by the fire, where it's comfy."
CHAPTER XV
HE STUDIES FIVE HUNDRED, SAVOUIR FAIRE, AND LOTSA-SNAP OFFICE MOTTOES
On a couch of glossy red leather with glossy black buttons and
stiff fringes also of glossy red leather, Mr. William Wrenn sat
upright and was very confiding to Miss Nelly Croubel, who was
curled among the satin pillows with her skirts drawn carefully
about her ankles. He had been at Mrs. Arty's for two weeks now.
He wore a new light-blue tie, and his trousers were pressed like
sheet steel.
"Yes, I suppose you're engaged to some one, Miss Nelly, and
you'll go off and leave us--go off to that blamed Upton's Grove
or some place."
"I am _not_ engaged. I've told you so. Who would want to marry
me? You stop teasing me--you're mean as can be; I'll just have
to get Tom to protect me!"
"Course you're engaged."
"Ain't."
"Are."
"Ain't. Who would want to marry poor little me?"
"Why, anybody, of course."
"You _stop_ teasing me.... Besides, probably you're in love with
twenty girls."
"I am _not_. Why, I've never hardly known but just two girls in
my life. One was just a girl I went to theaters with once or
twice--she was the daughter of the landlady I used to have
before I came here."
"If you don't make love to the landlady's daughter
You won't get a second piece of pie!"
quoted Nelly, out of the treasure-house of literature.
"Sure. That's it. But I bet you--"
"Who was the other girl?"
"Oh! She.... She was a--an artist. I liked her--a lot.
But she was--oh, awful highbrow. Gee! if--But--"
A sympathetic silence, which Nelly broke with:
"Yes, they're funny people. Artists.... Do you have your
lesson in Five Hundred tonight? Your very first one?"
"I think so. Say, is it much like this here bridge-whist? Oh
say, Miss Nelly, why do they call it Five Hundred?"
"That's what you have to make to go out. No, I guess it isn't
very much like bridge; though, to tell the truth, I haven't ever
played bridge. . My! it must be a nice game, though."
"Oh, I thought prob'ly you could play it. You can do 'most
everything. Honest, I've never seen nothing like it."
"Now you stop, Mr. Wrenn. I know I'm a--what was it Mr. Teddem
used to call me? A minx. But--"
"Miss _Nelly!_ You _aren't_ a minx!"
"Well--"
"Or a mink, either. You're a--let's see--an antelope."
"I am not! Even if I can wriggle my nose like a rabbit.
Besides, it sounds like a muskmelon. But, anyway, the head
buyer said I was crazy to-day."
"If I heard him say you were crazy--"
"Would you beat him for me?" She cuddled a cushion and smiled
gratefully. Her big eyes seemed to fill with light.
He caught himself wanting to kiss the softness of her shoulder,
but he said only, "Well, I ain't much of a scrapper, but I'd try
to make it interesting for him."
"Tell me, did you ever have a fight? When you were a boy? Were
you _such_ a bad boy?"
"I never did when I was a boy, but--well--I did have a couple of
fights when I was on the cattle-boat and in England. Neither of
them amounted to very much, though, I guess. I was scared stiff!"
"Don't believe it!"
"Sure I was."
"I don't believe you'd be scared. You're too earnest."
"Me, Miss Nelly? Why, I'm a regular cut-up."
"You stop making fun of yourself! I _like_ it when you're
earnest--like when you saw that beautiful snowfall last
night.... Oh dear, isn't it hard to have to miss so many
beautiful things here in the city--there's just the parks, and
even there there aren't any birds, real wild birds, like we used
to have in Pennsylvania."
"Yes, isn't it! Isn't it hard!" Mr. Wrenn drew nearer and looked
sympathy.
"I'm afraid I'm getting gushy. Miss Hartenstein--she's in my
department--she'd laugh at me.... But I do love birds and
squirrels and pussy-willows and all those things. In summer
I love to go on picnics on Staten Island or tramp in Van
Cortlandt Park."
"Would you go on a picnic with me some day next spring?"
Hastily, "I mean with Miss Proudfoot and Mrs. Arty and me?"
"I should be pleased to." She was prim but trusting about it.
"Oh, listen, Mr. Wrenn; did you ever tramp along the Palisades
as far as Englewood? It's lovely there--the woods and the river
and all those funny little tugs puffing along, way _way_ down
below you--why, I could lie on the rocks up there and just dream
and dream for hours. After I've spent Sunday up there"--she
was dreaming now, he saw, and his heart was passionately tender
toward her--"I don't hardly mind a bit having to go back to the
store Monday morning.... You've been up along there, haven't you?"
"Me? Why, I guess I'm the guy that discovered the Palisades!...
Yes, it is _won_-derful up there!"
"Oh, you are, are you? I read about that in American history!...
But honestly, Mr. Wrenn, I do believe you care for tramps and
things--not like that Teddem or Mr. Duncan--they always want
to just stay in town--or even Tom, though he's an old dear."
Mr. Wrenn looked jealous, with a small hot jealousy. She
hastened on with: "Of course, I mean he's just like a big
brother. To all of us."
It was sweet to both of them, to her to declare and to him to
hear, that neither Tom nor any other possessed her heart. Their
shy glances were like an outreach of tenderly touching hands as
she confided, "Mrs. Arty and he get up picnics, and when we're
out on the Palisades he says to me--you know, sometimes he
almost makes me think he _is_ sleepy, though I do believe he just
sneaks off under a tree and talks to Mrs. Arty or reads a
magazine--but I was saying: he always says to me, 'Well, sister,
I suppose you want to mousey round and dream by yourself--you
won't talk to a growly old bear like me. Well, I'm glad of it.
I want to sleep. I don't want to be bothered by you and your
everlasting chatter. Get out!' I b'lieve he just says that
'cause he knows I wouldn't want to run off by myself if they
didn't think it was proper."
As he heard her lively effort to imitate Tom's bass Mr. Wrenn
laughed and pounded his knee and agreed: "Yes, Tom's an awfully
fine fellow, isn't he!... I love to get out some place by
myself, too. I like to wander round places and make up the
doggondest fool little stories to myself about them; just as bad
as a kiddy, that way."
"And you read such an awful lot, Mr. Wrenn! My! Oh, tell me,
have you ever read anything by Harold Bell Wright or Myrtle
Reed, Mr. Wrenn? They write such sweet stories."
He had not, but he expressed an unconquerable resolve so to do,
and with immediateness. She went on:
"Mrs. Arty told me you had a real big library--nearly a
hundred books and--Do you mind? I went in your room and peeked
at them."
"No, course I don't mind! If there's any of them you'd like to
borrow any time, Miss Nelly, I would be awful glad to lend them
to you.... But, rats! Why, I haven't got hardly any books."
"That's why you haven't wasted any time learning Five Hundred and
things, isn't it? Because you've been so busy reading and so on?"
"Yes, kind of." Mr. Wrenn looked modest.
"Haven't you always been lots of--oh, haven't you always
'magined lots?"
She really seemed to care.
Mr. Wrenn felt excitedly sure of that, and imparted: "Yes, I
guess I have.... And I've always wanted to travel a lot."
"So have I! Isn't it wonderful to go around and see new places!"
"Yes, _isn't_ it!" he breathed. "It was great to be in
England--though the people there are kind of chilly some ways.
Even when I'm on a wharf here in New York I feel just like I was
off in China or somewheres. I'd like to see China. And
India.... Gee! when I hear the waves down at Coney Island or
some place--you know how the waves sound when they come in.
Well, sometimes I almost feel like they was talking to a
guy--you know--telling about ships. And, oh say, you know the
whitecaps--aren't they just like the waves was motioning at
you--they want you to come and beat it with you--over to China
and places."
"Why, Mr. Wrenn, you're a regular poet!"
He looked doubtful.
"Honest; I'm not teasing you; you are a poet. And I think it's
fine that Mr. Teddem was saying that nobody could be a poet or
like that unless they drank an awful lot and--uh--oh, not be
honest and be on a job. But you aren't like that. _Are_ you?"
He looked self-conscious and mumbled, earnestly, "Well, I try
not to be."
"But I am going to make you go to church. You'll be a socialist
or something like that if you get to be too much of a poet and
don't--"
"Miss Nelly, please _may_ I go to church with you?"
"Why--"
"Next Sunday?"
"Why, yes, I should be pleased. Are you a Presbyterian, though?"
"Why--uh--I guess I'm kind of a Congregationalist; but still,
they're all so much alike."
"Yes, they really are. And besides, what does it matter if we
all believe the same and try to do right; and sometimes that's hard,
when you're poor, and it seems like--like--"
"Seems like what?" Mr. Wrenn insisted.
"Oh--nothing.... My, you'll have to get up awful early Sunday
morning if you'd like to go with me. My church starts at
ten-thirty."
"Oh, I'd get up at five to go with you."
"Stupid! Now you're just trying to jolly me; you _are_;
because you men aren't as fond of church as all that, I know you
aren't. You're real lazy Sunday mornings, and just want to sit
around and read the papers and leave the poor women--But
please tell me some more about your reading and all that."
"Well, I'll be all ready to go at nine-thirty.... I don't know;
why, I haven't done much reading. But I would like to travel
and--Say, wouldn't it be great to--I suppose I'm sort of a
kid about it; of course, a guy has to tend right to business,
but it would be great--Say a man was in Europe with--with--a
friend, and they both knew a lot of history--say, they both knew
a lot about Guy Fawkes (he was the guy that tried to blow up
the English Parliament), and then when they were there in London
they could almost think they saw him, and they could go round
together and look at Shelley's window--he was a poet at
Oxford--Oh, it would be great with a--with a friend."
"Yes, wouldn't it?... I wanted to work in the book department
one time. It's so nice your being--"
"Ready for Five Hundred?" bellowed Tom Poppins in the hall
below. "Ready partner--you, Wrenn?"
Tom was to initiate Mr. Wrenn into the game, playing with him
against Mrs. Arty and Miss Mary Proudfoot.
Mrs. Arty sounded the occasion's pitch of high merriment by
delivering from the doorway the sacred old saying, "Well, the
ladies against the men, eh?"
A general grunt that might be spelled "Hmmmmhm" assented.
"I'm a good suffragette," she added. "Watch us squat the men, Mary."
"Like to smash windows? Let's see--it's red fours, black fives
up?" remarked Tom, as he prepared the pack of cards for playing.
"Yes, I would! It makes me so tired," asseverated Mrs. Arty, "to
think of the old goats that men put up for candidates when they
_know_ they're solemn old fools! I'd just like to get out and
vote my head off."
"Well, I think the woman's place is in the home," sniffed Miss
Proudfoot, decisively, tucking away a doily she was finishing
for the Women's Exchange and jabbing at her bangs.
They settled themselves about the glowing, glancing, glittering,
golden-oak center-table. Miss Proudfoot shuffled sternly. Mr.
Wrenn sat still and frightened, like a shipwrecked professor on
a raft with two gamblers and a press-agent, though Nelly was
smiling encouragingly at him from the couch where she had
started her embroidery--a large Christmas lamp mat for the wife
of the Presbyterian pastor at Upton's Grove.
"Don't you wish your little friend Horatio Hood Teddem was here
to play with you?" remarked Tom.
"I _do_ not," declared Mrs. Arty. "Still, there was one thing
about Horatio. I never had to look up his account to find out
how much he owed me. He stopped calling me, Little Buttercup,
when he owed me ten dollars, and he even stopped slamming the
front door when he got up to twenty. O Mr. Wrenn, did I ever
tell you about the time I asked him if he wanted to have Annie
sweep--"
"Gerty!" protested Miss Proudfoot, while Nelly, on the couch,
ejaculated mechanically, "That story!" but Mrs. Arty chuckled
fatly, and continued:
"I asked him if he wanted me to have Annie sweep his nightshirt
when she swept his room. He changed it next day."
"Your bid, Mr. Poppins, "said Miss Proudfoot, severely.
"First, I want to tell Wrenn how to play. You see, Wrenn,
here's the schedule. We play Avondale Schedule, you know."
"Oh yes," said Mr. Wrenn, timorously.... He had once heard of
Carbondale--in New Jersey or Pennsylvania or somewhere--but that
didn't seem to help much.
"Well, you see, you either make or go back," continued Tom.
"Plus and minus, you know. Joker is high, then right bower,
left, and ace. Then--uh--let's see; high bid takes the
cat--widdie, you know--and discards. Ten tricks. Follow suit
like whist, of course. I guess that's all--that ought to give
you the hang of it, anyway. I bid six on no trump."
As Tom Poppins finished these instructions, given in the
card-player's rapid don't-ask-me-any-more-fool-questions manner,
Mr. Wrenn felt that he was choking. He craned up his neck,
trying to ease his stiff collar. So, then, he was a failure, a
social outcast already.
So, then, he couldn't learn Five Hundred! And he had been very
proud of knowing one card from another perfectly, having played
a number of games of two-handed poker with Tim on the cattle-boat.
But what the dickens did "left--cat--follow suit" mean?
And to fail with Nelly watching him! He pulled at his collar again.
Thus he reflected while Mrs. Arty and Tom were carrying on the
following brilliant but cryptic society-dialogue:
_Mrs. Arty:_ Well, I don't know.
_Tom:_ Not failure, but low bid is crime, little one.
_Mrs. Arty:_ Mary, shall I make--
_Tom:_ Hey! No talking 'cross table!
_Mrs. Arty:_ Um--let--me--see.
_Tom:_ Bid up, bid up! Bid a little seven on hearts?
_Mrs. Arty:_ Just for that I _will_ bid seven on hearts, smarty!
_Tom:_ Oh, how we will squat you!... What you bidding, Wrenn?
Behind Mr. Wrenn, Nelly Croubel whispered to him: "Bid seven on
no suit. You've got the joker." Her delicate forefinger, its
nail shining, was pointing at a curious card in his hand.
"Seven nosut," he mumbled.
"Eight hearts," snapped Miss Proudfoot.
Nelly drew up a chair behind Mr. Wrenn's. He listened to her
soft explanations with the desperate respect and affection which
a green subaltern would give to a general in battle.
Tom and he won the hand. He glanced back at Nelly with awe,
then clutched his new hand, fearfully, dizzily, staring at it as
though it might conceal one of those malevolent deceivers of
which Nelly had just warned him--a left bower.
"Good! Spades--see," said Nelly.
Fifteen minutes later Mr. Wrenn felt that Tom was hoping he
would lead a club. He played one, and the whole table said:
"That's right. Fine!"
On his shoulder he felt a light tap, and he blushed like a
sunset as he peeped back at Nelly.
Mr. Wrenn, the society light, was Our Mr. Wrenn of the Souvenir
Company all this time. Indeed, at present he intended to keep
on taking The Job seriously until that most mistily distant time,
which we all await, "when something turns up." His fondling of
the Southern merchants was showing such results that he had grown
from an interest in whatever papers were on his desk to a belief
in the divine necessity of The Job as a whole. Not now, as of old,
did he keep the personal letters in his desk tied up, ready for a
sudden departure for Vienna or Kamchatka. Also, he wished to earn
much more money for his new career of luxury. Mr. Guilfogle had
assured him that there might be chances ahead--business had been
prospering, two new road salesmen and a city-trade man had been
added to the staff, and whereas the firm had formerly been jobbers
only, buying their novelties from manufacturers, now they were
having printed for them their own Lotsa-Snap Cardboard Office
Mottoes, which were making a big hit with the trade.
Through his friend Rabin, the salesman, Mr. Wrenn got better
acquainted with two great men--Mr. L. J. Glover, the
purchasing agent of the Souvenir Company, and John Hensen, the
newly engaged head of motto manufacturing. He "wanted to get
onto all the different lines of the business so's he could step
right in anywhere"; and from these men he learned the valuable
secrets of business wherewith the marts of trade build up
prosperity for all of us: how to seat a selling agent facing the
light, so you can see his face better than he can see yours.
How much ahead of time to telephone the motto-printer that
"we've simply got to have proof this afternoon; what's the matter
with you, down there? Don't you want our business any more?" He
also learned something of the various kinds of cardboard and
ink-well glass, though these, of course, were merely matters of
knowledge, not of brilliant business tactics, and far less
important than what Tom Poppins and Rabin called "handing out a
snappy line of talk."
"Say, you're getting quite chummy lately--reg'lar society
leader," Rabin informed him.
Mr. Wrenn's answer was in itself a proof of the soundness of
Rabin's observation:
"Sure--I'm going to borrow some money from you fellows. Got to
make an impression, see?"
A few hours after this commendation came Istra's second letter:
Mouse dear, I'm so glad to hear about the simpatico boarding-
house. Yes indeed I would like to hear about the people in it.
And you are reading history? That's good. I'm getting sick of
Paris and some day I'm going to stop an absinthe on the
boulevard and slap its face to show I'm a sturdy moving-picture
Western Amurrican and then leap to saddle and pursue the bandit.
I'm working like the devil but what's the use. That is I mean
unless one is doing the job well, as I'm glad you are. My Dear,
keep it up. You know I want you to be _real_ whatever you are.
I didn't mean to preach but you know I hate people who aren't
real--that's why I haven't much of a flair for myself.
_Au recrire_,
I. N.
After he had read her letter for the third time he was horribly
shocked and regarded himself as a traitor, because he found that
he was only pretending to be enjoyably excited over it.... It
seemed so detached from himself. "Flair"--"_au recrire_."
Now, what did those mean? And Istra was always so discontented.
"What 'd she do if she had to be on the job like Nelly?... Oh,
Istra _is_ wonderful. But--gee!--I dunno--"
And when he who has valorously loved says "But--gee!--I
dunno--" love flees in panic.
He walked home thoughtfully.
After dinner he said abruptly to Nelly, "I had a letter from
Paris to-day."
"Honestly? Who is she?"
"G-g-g-g--"
"Oh, it's always a she."
"Why--uh--it _is_ from a girl. I started to tell you about
her one day. She's an artist, and once we took a long tramp in
the country. I met her--she was staying at the same place as I
was in London. But--oh, gee! I dunno; she's so blame literary.
She _is_ a _fine_ person--Do you think you'd like a girl like that?"
"Maybe I would."
"If she was a man?"
"Oh, yes-s! Artists are so romantic."
"But they ain't on the job more 'n half the time," he said, jealously.
"Yes, that's _so_."
His hand stole secretly, craftily skirting a cushion, to touch
hers--which she withdrew, laughing:
"Hump-a! You go hold your artist's hand!"
"Oh, Miss Nelly! When I _told_ you about her _myself!_"
"Oh yes, of course."
She was contrite, and they played Five Hundred animatedly all evening.
CHAPTER XVI
HE BECOMES MILDLY RELIGIOUS AND HIGHLY LITERARY
The hero of the one-act play at Hammerstein's Victoria
vaudeville theater on that December evening was, it appeared, a
wealthy young mine-owner in disguise. He was working for the
"fake mine promoter" because he loved the promoter's daughter
with a love that passed all understanding except that of the
girls in the gallery. When the postal authorities were about to
arrest the promoter our young hero saved him by giving him a
real mine, and the ensuing kiss of the daughter ended the
suspense in which Mr. Wrenn and Nelly, Mrs. Arty and Tom had
watched the play from the sixth row of the balcony.
Sighing happily, Nelly cried to the group: "Wasn't that grand?
I got so excited! Wasn't that young miner a dear?"
"Awfully nice," said Mr. Wrenn. "And, gee! wasn't that great,
that office scene--with that safe and the rest of the
stuff--just like you was in a real office. But, say, they
wouldn't have a copying-press in an office like that; those fake
mine promoters send out such swell letters; they'd use carbon
copies and not muss the letters all up."
"By gosh, that's right!" and Tom nodded his chin toward his
right shoulder in approval. Nelly cried, "That's so; they
would"; while Mrs. Arty, not knowing what a copying-press was,
appeared highly commendatory, and said nothing at all.
During the moving pictures that followed, Mr. Wrenn felt
proudly that he was taken seriously, though he had known
them but little over a month. He followed up his conversational
advantage by leading the chorus in wondering, "which one of them
two actors the heroine was married to?" and "how much a week
they get for acting in that thing?" It was Tom who invited them
to Miggleton's for coffee and fried oysters. Mr. Wrenn was
silent for a while. But as they were stamping through the
rivulets of wheel-tracks that crisscrossed on a slushy
street-crossing Mr. Wrenn regained his advantage by crying,
"Say, don't you think that play 'd have been better if the
promoter 'd had an awful grouch on the young miner and 'd had to
crawfish when the miner saved him?"
"Why, yes; it would!" Nelly glowed at him.
"Wouldn't wonder if it would," agreed Tom, kicking the December
slush off his feet and patting Mr. Wrenn's back.
"Well, look here," said Mr. Wrenn, as they left Broadway, with
its crowds betokening the approach of Christmas, and stamped to
the quieter side of Forty-second, "why wouldn't this make a
slick play: say there's an awfully rich old guy; say he's a
railway president or something, d' you see? Well, he's got a
secretary there in the office--on the stage, see? The scene is
his office. Well, this guy's--the rich old guy's--daughter
comes in and says she's married to a poor man and she won't tell
his name, but she wants some money from her dad. You see, her
dad's been planning for her to marry a marquise or some kind of
a lord, and he's sore as can be, and he won't listen to her, and
he just cusses her out something fierce, see? Course he doesn't
really cuss, but he's awful sore; and she tells him didn't he
marry her mother when he was a poor young man; but he won't
listen. Then the secretary butts in--my idea is he's been kind
of keeping in the background, see--and _he's_ the daughter's
husband all the while, see? and he tells the old codger how
he's got some of his--some of the old fellow's--papers that give
it away how he done something that was crooked--some kind of
deal--rebates and stuff, see how I mean?--and the secretary's
going to spring this stuff on the newspapers if the old man
don't come through and forgive them; so of course the president
has to forgive them, see?"
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