登陆注册
34552800000032

第32章

"That just goes to show," remarked Pearlie, "that you must never judge a woman in a kimono or a bathing suit. You look nineteen. Say, I forgot something down-stairs. Just get your handkerchief and chamois together and meet in my cubbyhole next to the lobby, will you? I'll be ready for you."Down-stairs she summoned the lank bell-boy. "You go outside and tell Sid Strang I want to see him, will you? He's on the bench with the baseball bunch."Pearlie had not seen Sid Strang outside. She did not need to. She knew he was there. In our town all the young men dress up in their pale gray suits and lavender-striped shirts after supper on summer evenings. Then they stroll down to the Burke House, buy a cigar and sit down on the benches in front of the hotel to talk baseball and watch the girls go by. It is astonishing to note the number of our girls who have letters to mail after supper. One would think that they must drive their pens fiercely all the afternoon in order to get out such a mass of correspondence.

The obedient Sid reached the door of Pearlie's little office just off the lobby as the leading lady came down the stairs with a spangled scarf trailing over her arm. It was an effective entrance.

"Why, hello!" said Pearlie, looking up from her typewriter as though Sid Strang were the last person in the world she expected to see. "What do you want here? Ethel, this is my friend, Mr. Sid Strang, one of our rising young lawyers. His neckties always match his socks. Sid, this is my friend,Miss Ethel Evans, of New York. We're going over to the strawberry social at the M. E. parsonage. I don't suppose you'd care about going?"Mr. Sid Strang gazed at the leading lady in the white lingerie dress with the pink slip, and the V-shaped neck, and the spangled scarf, and turned to Pearlie.

"Why, Pearlie Schultz!" he said reproachfully. "How can you ask? You know what a strawberry social means to me! I haven't missed one in years!""I know it," replied Pearlie, with a grin. "You feel the same way about Thursday evening prayer-meeting too, don't you? You can walk over with us if you want to. We're going now. Miss Evans and I have got a booth."Sid walked. Pearlie led them determinedly past the rows of gray suits and lavender and pink shirts on the benches in front of the hotel. And as the leading lady came into view the gray suits stopped talking baseball and sat up and took notice. Pearlie had known all those young men inside of the swagger suits in the days when their summer costume consisted of a pair of dad's pants cut down to a doubtful fit, and a nondescript shirt damp from the swimming-hole. So she called out, cheerily:

"We're going over to the strawberry festival. I expect to see all you boys there to contribute your mite to the church carpet."The leading lady turned to look at them, and smiled. They were such a dapper, pink-cheeked, clean-looking lot of boys, she thought. At that the benches rose to a man and announced that they might as well stroll over right now. Whenever a new girl comes to visit in our town our boys make a concerted rush at her, and develop a "case" immediately, and the girl goes home when her visit is over with her head swimming, and forever after bores the girls of her home town with tales of her conquests.

The ladies of the First M. E. Church still talk of the money they garnered at the strawberry festival. Pearlie's out-of-town friend was garnerer-in-chief. You take a cross-eyed, pock-marked girl and put her in a white dress, with a pink slip, on a green lawn under a string of rose- colored Japanese lanterns, and she'll develop an almost Oriental beauty. It is an ideal setting. The leading lady was not cross-eyed or pock-marked. She stood at the lantern-illumined booth, with Pearlie in the background,and dis- pensed an unbelievable amount of strawberries. Sid Strang and the hotel bench brigade assisted. They made engagements to take Pearlie and her friend down river next day, and to the ball game, and planned innumerable picnics, gazing meanwhile into the leading lady's eyes. There grew in the cheeks of the leading lady a flush that was not brought about by the pink slip, or the Japanese lanterns, or the skillful application of rouge.

By nine o'clock the strawberry supply was exhausted, and the president of the Foreign Missionary Society was sending wildly down- town for more ice-cream.

"I call it an outrage," puffed Pearlie happily, ladling ice-cream like mad. "Making a poor working girl like me slave all evening! How many was that last order? Four? My land! that's the third dish of ice-cream Ed White's had! You'll have something to tell the villagers about when you get back to New York."The leading lady turned a flushed face toward Pearlie. "This is more fun than the Actors' Fair. I had the photograph booth last year, and I took in nearly as much as Lil Russell; and goodness knows, all she needs to do at a fair is to wear her diamond-and-pearl stomacher and her set-piece smile, and the men just swarm around her like the pictures of a crowd in a McCutcheon cartoon."When the last Japanese lantern had guttered out, Pearlie Schultz and the leading lady prepared to go home. Before they left, the M. E. ladies came over to Pearlie's booth and personally congratulated the leading lady, and thanked her for the interest she had taken in the cause, and the secretary of the Epworth League asked her to come to the tea that was to be held at her home the following Tuesday. The leading lady thanked her and said she'd come if she could.

Escorted by a bodyguard of gray suits and lavender-striped shirts Pearlie and her friend, Miss Evans, walked toward the hotel. The attentive bodyguard confessed itself puzzled.

"Aren't you staying at Pearlie's house?" asked Sid tenderly, when they reached the Burke House. The leading lady glanced up at the windows of the stifling little room that faced west.

"No," answered she, and paused at the foot of the steps to the ladies' entrance. The light from the electric globe over the doorway shone on her hair and sparkled in the folds of her spangled scarf.

"I'm not staying at Pearlie's because my name isn't Ethel Evans. It's Aimee Fox, with a little French accent mark over the double E. I'm leading lady of the `Second Wife' company and old enough to be--well, your aunty, anyway. We go out at one-thirty to-morrow morning."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 圣斗士李辉

    圣斗士李辉

    圣斗士肩负重大责任,保护雅典娜的圣斗士一代接着一代,最有名的一代,是青铜五小强,即便如此开外挂,星矢还是最先在冥界战死,接着一辉死于太阳神阿波罗的手上,阿顺,冰河,紫龙被宙斯用神剑劈下,斩于天界,天界战争失败,宙斯命雅典娜思过,宇宙浩瀚如海,无数年的轮回让圣域重新燃起希望,可是如果你空有热情,却无法燃烧强大的小宇宙,你又如何面对强大的敌人????数年后,十四岁的少年李辉,为凤凰座青铜圣衣而来到圣域,从而开启了一个逆天圣斗士的崛起征程。
  • 迷途人与他的萤火虫们

    迷途人与他的萤火虫们

    J,为了实现他心中那个遥远的目的而开始从事杀手工作。手刃了无数条生命的他已经开始麻木了,直到有一天,一个曾经被他杀死过的女孩出现在他的面前,于是J的生活开始发生巨变。
  • 星皇

    星皇

    他狂妄自大,他杀人无数,他天生魔君,他几乎无所不能。穿越之前他是华夏族王子,是血龙裔神的唯一继承人。魂穿之后,他来到了星界之地,带着王子的记忆和性格,手握龙族至宝——血龙珠。这片天让他踩踏,这片地任他驰骋。这里没有法律,只有暴乱;没有怜悯,只有杀戮;没有友情,只有金钱。要么变成强者,要么被杀死。
  • 红雨墨竹

    红雨墨竹

    世上有两把奇刀,一为红雨,杀人无数,嗜血!二为墨竹,湮没人心,蛊惑!历来是天下君王,江湖高手必争之物!
  • 重生之韭菜时代

    重生之韭菜时代

    一个刚刚从看守所蹲完号子的小诈骗犯,正要准备洗心革面,重新做人,回报社会时,不幸就发生了,还没有回来家,路上就发生了车祸,他发现可能老天爷真的想让他重新做人,于是他重生了!!!这是一个全民韭菜的时代,割还是不割?
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 青宗轶事录

    青宗轶事录

    每一棵树都在生长,在躯干里镌刻独有的年轮。这片森林生长着无数棵林木,途径此树时,不若停留片刻?
  • 六宫梦西

    六宫梦西

    回首亘年漫月里的所有怦然心动,你仍拔得头筹
  • 我本小二

    我本小二

    我是一个小二。嗯,一个普普通通的小二。我只是救过一个落魄诸侯,后来听说他做了天下皇帝。我只是救过一个穷困书生,后来听说他做了一朝宰相。我只是救过一个江湖菜鸟,后来听说他做了武林至尊。我还救过……我只是救了他们,我真的什么都没做,真的。但是为什么没有人相信我!我只是个小二!!!
  • 谨此献给路易斯小时候

    谨此献给路易斯小时候

    故事讲述了路易斯快乐成长的童年,我们农村80后的成长历程,和一系列的开心游戏,经历了太多的匆匆变化以后,来到城市打拼的艰辛,当残酷的生活现实突然扑面而来的时候,我们的无奈于心酸。在不知不觉中想起了快乐的童已年,已经渐渐消失在陪伴我们成长的美丽星空下。