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One Woman’s Life
Part Four. Realities   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 3. More Of "Bunker's"
Robert Herrick
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       _ PART FOUR. REALITIES
       CHAPTER III. MORE OF "BUNKER'S"
       One of the notable incidents of this period was the visit they made to the Bunker's place on Long Island. It was in the autumn after Bragdon had been on the magazine staff for some months. Milly went out in the train with Hazel Fredericks, who took this occasion to air her views of the Bunkers and the Billmans more fully than she had before. She described the magazine proprietor and his wife in a succinct sentence,--
       "They're second-class New York: everything the others have but the right crowd--you'll see."
       Howard Bunker, she admitted, was likable,--a jolly, unpretentious, shrewd business man, with a hearty American appetite for the bustle of existence. As for the handsome Mrs. Bunker,--"She was from Waterbury, Connecticut, you know," she said, assuming that Milly, who had heard of the Connecticut town solely as a place where a popular cheap watch was manufactured, would understand the depth of social inferiority Mrs. Howard Bunker's origin implied. "She's too lazy to be really ambitious. They have a box at the Opera, but that means nothing these days. She's kind, if you don't put her to any trouble, and they have awfully good food.... It's a bore coming out to their place, but you have to, once in so often, you understand. You sit around and eat and look over the stables and the garden and all that sort of thing."
       She further explained that probably Grace Billman was motoring out with their host. "She always manages that: she regards him as her property, you know." It would be a "shop party," she expected. "That's all the social imagination these people have: they get us together by groups--we're the magazine group. Possibly she'll have Clive Reinhard. He's different, though, because he's made a name for himself, so that all sorts of people run after him."
       Mrs. Bunker met the young women at the station, driving her own ponies. Milly recognized the type at a glance, as much from her Chicago experience as from Mrs. Fredericks' description. Mrs. Bunker was a largish, violent blonde, with a plethora of everything about her,--hair and blood and flesh. She was cordial in her greeting to the editors' wives. She apparently regarded the magazine as one of her husband's fads,--an incident of his wealth,--like a shooting-box or a racing stable or a philanthropy. It gave prestige.
       "I've got Clive Reinhard," she announced, as they started from the station, a note of triumph in her languid voice. "My, but he's popular. I've tried to get him for a month. This time I had him on the telephone, and I said 'I won't let you go--simply won't ring off until you promise. I'll tell Howard to turn down your next book.'"
       She laughed at her own wit. Hazel Fredericks glanced at Milly with a look of intelligence. Milly was much amused by the good lady and listened appreciatively to her petty conversation....
       It was all just as Mrs. Fredericks had predicted. Their host arrived shortly in his car with Mrs. Montgomery Billman, who cast a scornful glance at the "shop party," nodded condescendingly at Milly, kissed Hazel on the tip of her nose, and retired to her room. The men came along later, in time for dinner, all except the popular novelist, who was motored over from another house party the next morning. Dinner was long and dull. The Responsible Editress absorbed the host for the most part. What little general talk there was turned on the magazine, especially on the noise it was making with a series of "exposure" articles on the "Crimes of Big Business." Milly could not understand how Mr. Bunker, who seemed to have prospered under the rule of Big Business, could permit such articles in his magazine. But Reinhard explained to her the next day that Radicalism was the "new note." "You have to be progressive and reform and all that to break into notice," he said.
       After dinner there was a little music, some bridge, more talk; then the women yawningly went to bed, while the men stayed up for another cigar and further shop talk. The next day was also much as Hazel Fredericks had said it would be. It was hot, and after the very late and copious breakfast everybody was languid. Milly was much interested in being shown over the place by her hostess. She admired the gardens, the hothouses, the planting, the stables, and all the other appurtenances of a modern country estate. Later she had a brief tete-a-tete with Bunker, who had been prejudiced against her by Mrs. Billman and was bored by her too evident flattery. She had also a talk with Clive Reinhard, with whom she discussed his last story and his "ideas about women." For the rest it was a torpid and sensual Sunday with much to eat and drink,--very much like the Sunday of some thousands of rich Americans all over the land. Most of the guests returned to the city on an evening train, bored and unconsciously glad to get back into their respective ruts.
       All but Milly! She had enjoyed herself quite genuinely, and with her quick social perceptions had gathered a great deal from the visit, much of which she imparted to her drowsing husband on the train. She mapped out for his duller masculine apprehension the social hierarchy of _Bunker's_. Mrs. Bunker patronized Mrs. Billman, invited her to her best dinners and to her opera box, because she was striking in looks and had made a place for herself in "interesting circles" in the great city and was more or less talked about. "Hazel is jealous of her," Milly averred. Nevertheless the junior editor's wife accepted Mrs. Billman's patronage and invitations to Mrs. Bunker's opera box when it was given on off nights or matinees to the chief editor's wife, and in turn she was inclined to patronize Mrs. Bragdon by sending her tickets to improving lectures and concerts.
       Hazel Fredericks, in her quiet and self-effacing manner, had aspirations, Milly suspected. She could not compete either with Mrs. Howard Bunker or Mrs. Montgomery Billman, of course, but she aspired to the Serious and the Distinguished, instead of the Rich or the merely Artistic. She went in for "movements" of all sorts and was a member of various leagues, and associations, and committees. Occasionally her name got into public print. Just at present she was in the "woman movement," about which she talked to Milly a good deal. That promised to be the most important of all her "movements."
       Indeed, as Milly saw, all these women "went in" for something. They tried to conduct their lives and their husbands' lives on lines of definite accomplishment, and she was decidedly "old-fashioned" in living hers from day to day for what it offered of amusement or ennui. She was rather proud of the fact that she had never deliberately "gone in" for anything in her life except Love.
       Nevertheless, she found the flutter of women's ambitions exciting and liked to observe the indirect working of their wills even in the man's game....
       "Mrs. Billman is too obvious, don't you think Jack?" she said to her husband. But Jack had gone sound asleep. _
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本书目录

Part One. The West Side
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 1. The New Home
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 2. Victory For Milly
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 3. Illy Goes To Church
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 4. Milly Completes Her Education
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 5. Milly Experiments
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 6. Milly Learns
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 7. Milly Sees More Of The World
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 8. Milly's Campaign
   Part One. The West Side - Chapter 9. Achievements
Part Two. Getting Married
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 1. The Great Outside
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 2. Milly Entertains
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 3. Milly Becomes Engaged
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 4. Congratulations
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 5. The Crash
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 6. The Depths
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 7. Milly Tries To Pay
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 8. Illy Renews Her Prospects
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 9. Milly In Love
   Part Two. Getting Married - Chapter 10. Milly Marries
Part Three. Aspirations
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 1. The New Home
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 2. A Funeral And A Surprise
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 3. On Board Ship
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 4. Being An Artist's Wife
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 5. Women's Talk
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 6. The Child
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 7. Beside The Resounding Sea
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 8. The Picture
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 9. The Pardon
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 10. The Painted Face
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 11. Crisis
   Part Three. Aspirations - Chapter 12. "Come Home"
Part Four. Realities
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 1. Home Once More
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 2. "Bunker's"
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 3. More Of "Bunker's"
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 4. The Head Of The House
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 5. A Shock
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 6. The Secret
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 7. Being A Widow
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 8. The Woman's World
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 9. The New Woman
   Part Four. Realities - Chapter 10. Milly's New Marriage
Part Five. The Cake Shop
   Part Five. The Cake Shop - Chapter 1. "Number 236"
   Part Five. The Cake Shop - Chapter 2. At Last, The Real Right Scheme
   Part Five. The Cake Shop - Chapter 3. Chicago Again
   Part Five. The Cake Shop - Chapter 4. Going Into Business
   Part Five. The Cake Shop - Chapter 5. Milly's Second Triumph
   Part Five. The Cake Shop - Chapter 6. Coming Down
   Part Five. The Cake Shop - Chapter 7. Capitulations
   Part Five. The Cake Shop - Chapter 8. The Sunshine Special