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Our Mr. Wrenn: The Romantic Adventures of a Gentle Man
CHAPTER II HE WALKS WITH MISS THERESA
Sinclair Lewis
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       _ As he left the Souvenir Company building after working late at
       taking inventory and roamed down toward Fourteenth Street, Mr.
       Wrenn felt forlornly aimless. The worst of it all was that he
       could not go to the Nickelorion for moving pictures; not after
       having been cut by the ticket-taker. Then, there before him was
       the glaring sign of the Nickelorion tempting him; a bill with
       "Great Train Robbery Film Tonight" made his heart thump like
       stair-climbing--and he dashed at the ticket-booth with a nickel
       doughtily extended. He felt queer about the scalp as the
       cashier girl slid out a coupon. Why did she seem to be watching
       him so closely? As he dropped the ticket in the chopper he
       tried to glance away from the Brass-button Man. For one-
       nineteenth of a second he kept his head turned. It turned
       back of itself; he stared full at the man, half bowed--and
       received a hearty absent-minded nod and a "Fine evenin'."
       He sang to himself a monotonous song of great joy. When he
       stumbled over the feet of a large German in getting to a seat,
       he apologized as though he were accustomed to laugh easily with
       many friends.
       The train-robbery film was--well, he kept repeating "Gee!" to
       himself pantingly. How the masked men did sneak, simply sneak
       and sneak, behind the bushes! Mr. Wrenn shrank as one of them
       leered out of the picture at him. How gallantly the train
       dashed toward the robbers, to the spirit-stirring roll of the
       snare-drum. The rush from the bushes followed; the battle with
       detectives concealed in the express-car. Mr. Wrenn was
       standing sturdily and shooting coolly with the slender
       hawk-faced Pinkerton man in puttees; with him he leaped to horse
       and followed the robbers through the forest. He stayed through
       the whole program twice to see the train robbery again.
       As he started to go out he found the ticket-taker changing his
       long light-blue robe of state for a highly commonplace sack-coat
       without brass buttons. In his astonishment at seeing how a
       Highness could be transformed into an every-day man, Mr. Wrenn
       stopped, and, having stopped, spoke:
       "Uh--that was quite a--quite a picture--that train robbery.
       Wasn't it."
       "Yuh, I guess--Now where's the devil and his wife flew away
       to with my hat? Them guys is always swiping it. Picture,
       mister? Why, I didn't see it no more 'n--Say you, Pink Eye,
       say you crab-footed usher, did you swipe my hat? Ain't he the
       cut-up, mister! Ain't both them ushers the jingling sheepsheads,
       though! Being cute and hiding my hat in the box-office.
       _Picture?_ I don't get no chance to see any of 'em. Funny,
       ain't it?--me barking for 'em like I was the grandmother of the
       guy that invented 'em, and not knowing whether the train
       robbery--Now who stole my going-home shoes?... Why, I don't
       know whether the train did any robbing or not!"
       He slapped Mr. Wrenn on the back, and the sales clerk's heart
       bounded in comradeship. He was surprised into declaring:
       "Say--uh--I bowed to you the other night and you--well, honestly,
       you acted like you never saw me."
       "Well, well, now, and that's what happens to me for being the
       dad of five kids and a she-girl and a tom-cat. Sure, I couldn't
       've seen you. Me, I was probably that busy with fambly cares--I
       was probably thinking who was it et the lemon pie on me--was it Pete
       or Johnny, or shall I lick 'em both together, or just bite me wife."
       Mr. Wrenn knew that the ticket-taker had never, never really
       considered biting his wife. _He_ knew! His nod and grin and
       "That's the idea!" were urbanely sophisticated. He urged:
       "Oh yes, I'm sure you didn't intend to hand me the icy mitt.
       Say! I'm thirsty. Come on over to Moje's and I'll buy you a drink."
       He was aghast at this abyss of money-spending into which he had
       leaped, and the Brass-button Man was suspiciously wondering what
       this person wanted of him; but they crossed to the adjacent
       saloon, a New York corner saloon, which of course "glittered"
       with a large mirror, heaped glasses, and a long shining
       foot-rail on which, in bravado, Mr. Wrenn placed his
       Cum-Fee-Best shoe.
       "Uh?" said the bartender.
       "Rye, Jimmy," said the Brass-button Man.
       "Uh-h-h-h-h," said Mr. Wrenn, in a frightened diminuendo, now
       that--wealthy citizen though he had become--he was in danger of
       exposure as a mollycoddle who couldn't choose his drink properly.
       "Stummick been hurting me. Guess I'd better just take a lemonade."
       "You're the brother-in-law to a wise one," commented the
       Brass-button Man. "Me, I ain't never got the sense to do the
       traffic cop on the booze. The old woman she says to me, `Mory,'
       she says, `if you was in heaven and there was a pail of beer on
       one side and a gold harp on the other,' she says, `and you was
       to have your pick, which would you take?' And what 'd yuh think
       I answers her?"
       "The beer," said the bartender. "She had your number, all right."
       "Not on your tin-type," declared the ticket-taker.
       "`Me?' I says to her. `Me? I'd pinch the harp and pawn it for
       ten growlers of Dutch beer and some man-sized rum!'"
       "Hee, hee hee!" grinned Mr. Wrenn.
       "Ha, ha, ha!" grumbled the bartender.
       "Well-l-l," yawned the ticket-taker, "the old woman'll be
       chasing me best pants around the flat, if she don't have me to
       chase, pretty soon. Guess I'd better beat it. Much obliged for
       the drink, Mr. Uh. So long, Jimmy."
       Mr. Wrenn set off for home in a high state of exhilaration
       which, he noticed, exactly resembled driving an aeroplane, and
       went briskly up the steps of the Zapps' genteel but unexciting
       residence. He was much nearer to heaven than West Sixteenth
       Street appears to be to the outsider. For he was an explorer of
       the Arctic, a trusted man on the job, an associate of witty
       Bohemians. He was an army lieutenant who had, with his friend
       the hawk-faced Pinkerton man, stood off bandits in an attack
       on a train. He opened and closed the door gaily.
       He was an apologetic little Mr. Wrenn. His landlady stood
       on the bottom step of the hall stairs in a bunchy Mother
       Hubbard, groaning:
       "Mist' Wrenn, if you got to come in so late, Ah wish you
       wouldn't just make all the noise you can. Ah don't see why Ah
       should have to be kept awake all night. Ah suppose it's the
       will of the Lord that whenever Ah go out to see Mrs. Muzzy and
       just drink a drop of coffee Ah must get insomina, but Ah don't
       see why anybody that tries to be a gennulman should have to go
       and bang the door and just rack mah nerves."
       He slunk up-stairs behind Mrs. Zapp's lumbering gloom.
       "There's something I wanted to tell you, Mrs. Zapp--something
       that's happened to me. That's why I was out celebrating last
       evening and got in so late." Mr. Wrenn was diffidently sitting
       in the basement.
       "Yes," dryly, "Ah noticed you was out late, Mist' Wrenn."
       "You see, Mrs. Zapp, I--uh--my father left me some land, and
       it's been sold for about one thousand plunks."
       " Ah'm awful' glad, Mist' Wrenn," she said, funereally. "Maybe
       you'd like to take that hall room beside yours now. The two
       rooms'd make a nice apartment." (She really said "nahs
       'pahtmun', "you understand.)
       "Why, I hadn't thought much about that yet." He felt guilty, and
       was profusely cordial to Lee Theresa Zapp, the factory
       forewoman, who had just thumped down-stairs.
       Miss Theresa was a large young lady with a bust, much black
       hair, and a handsome disdainful discontented face. She waited
       till he had finished greeting her, then sniffed, and at her
       mother she snarled:
       "Ma, they went and kept us late again to-night. I'm getting
       just about tired of having a bunch of Jews and Yankees think I'm
       a nigger. Uff! I hate them!"
       "T'resa, Mist' Wrenn's just inherited two thousand dollars, and
       he's going to take that upper hall room." Mrs. Zapp beamed with
       maternal fondness at the timid lodger.
       But the gallant friend of Pinkertons faced her--for the first
       time. "Waste his travel-money?" he was inwardly exclaiming as
       he said:
       "But I thought you had some one in that room. I heard som--"
       "That fellow! Oh, he ain't going to be perm'nent. And he
       promised me--So you can have--"
       "I'm _awful_ sorry, Mrs. Zapp, but I'm afraid I can't take it.
       Fact is, I may go traveling for a while."
       "Co'se you'll keep your room if you do, Mist' Wrenn?"
       "Why, I'm afraid I'll have to give it up, but--Oh, I may not be
       going for a long long while yet; and of course I'll be glad to
       come--I'll want to come back here when I get back to New York.
       I won't be gone for more than, oh, probably not more than a year
       anyway, and--"
       "And Ah thought you said you was going to be perm'nent!" Mrs.
       Zapp began quietly, prefatory to working herself up into
       hysterics. "And here Ah've gone and had your room fixed up
       just for you, and new paper put in, and you've always been
       talking such a lot about how you wanted your furniture arranged,
       and Ah've gone and made all mah plans--"
       Mr. Wrenn had been a shyly paying guest of the Zapps for four
       years. That famous new paper had been put up two years before.
       So he spluttered: "Oh, I'm _awfully_ sorry. I wish--uh--I
       don't--"
       "Ah'd _thank_ you, Mist' Wrenn, if you could _conveniently_ let me
       _know_ before you go running off and leaving me with empty rooms,
       with the landlord after the rent, and me turning away people
       that 'd pay more for the room, because Ah wanted to keep it for
       you. And people always coming to see you and making me answer
       the door and--"
       Even the rooming-house worm was making small worm-like sounds
       that presaged turning. Lee Theresa snapped just in time, "Oh,
       cut it out, Ma, will you!" She had been staring at the worm, for
       he had suddenly become interesting and adorable and,
       incidentally, an heir. "I don't see why Mr. Wrenn ain't giving
       us all the notice we can expect. He said he mightn't be going
       for a long time."
       "Oh!" grunted Mrs. Zapp. "So mah own flesh and blood is going
       to turn against me!"
       She rose. Her appearance of majesty was somewhat lessened by
       the creak of stays, but her instinct for unpleasantness was
       always good. She said nothing as she left them, and she plodded
       up-stairs with a train of sighs.
       Mr. Wrenn looked as though sudden illness had overpowered him.
       But Theresa laughed, and remarked: "You don't want to let Ma
       get on her high horse, Mr. Wrenn. She's a bluff."
       With much billowing of the lower, less stiff part of her
       garments, she sailed to the cloudy mirror over the
       magazine-filled bookcase and inspected her cap of false curls,
       with many prods of her large firm hands which flashed with
       Brazilian diamonds. Though he had heard the word "puffs,"
       he did not know that half her hair was false. He stared
       at it. Though in disgrace, he felt the honor of knowing
       so ample and rustling a woman as Miss Lee Theresa.
       "But, say, I wish I could 've let her know I was going earlier,
       Miss Zapp. I didn't know it myself, but it does seem like a
       mean trick. I s'pose I ought to pay her something extra."
       "Why, child, you won't do anything of the sort. Ma hasn't got
       a bit of kick coming. You've always been awful nice, far as I
       can see." She smiled lavishly. "I went for a walk to-night....
       I wish all those men wouldn't stare at a girl so. I'm sure I
       don't see why they should stare at me."
       Mr. Wrenn nodded, but that didn't seem to be the right comment,
       so he shook his head, then looked frightfully embarrassed.
       "I went by that Armenian restaurant you were telling me about,
       Mr. Wrenn. Some time I believe I'll go dine there." Again she paused.
       He said only, "Yes, it is a nice place."
       Remarking to herself that there was no question about it,
       after all, he _was_ a little fool, Theresa continued the siege.
       "Do you dine there often?"
       "Oh yes. It is a nice place."
       "Could a lady go there?"
       "Why, yes, I--"
       "Yes!"
       "I should think so," he finished.
       "Oh!... I do get so awfully tired of the greasy stuff Ma and
       Goaty dish up. They think a big stew that tastes like
       dish-water is a dinner, and if they do have anything I like they
       keep on having the same thing every day till I throw it in the
       sink. I wish I could go to a restaurant once in a while for a
       change, but of course--I dunno's it would be proper for a
       lady to go alone even there. What do you think? Oh dear!"
       She sat brooding sadly.
       He had an inspiration. Perhaps Miss Theresa could be persuaded
       to go out to dinner with him some time. He begged:
       "Gee, I wish you'd let me take you up there some evening, Miss Zapp."
       "Now, didn't I tell you to call me `Miss Theresa'? Well, I
       suppose you just don't want to be friends with me. Nobody
       does." She brooded again.
       "Oh, I didn't mean to hurt your feelings. Honest I didn't.
       I've always thought you'd think I was fresh if I called you
       `Miss Theresa,' and so I--"
       "Why, I guess I could go up to the Armenian with you, perhaps.
       When would you like to go? You know I've always got lots of
       dates but I--um--let's see, I think I could go to-morrow evening."
       "Let's do it! Shall I call for you, Miss--uh--Theresa?"
       "Yes, you may if you'll be a good boy. Good night." She
       departed with an air of intimacy.
       Mr. Wrenn scuttled to the Nickelorion, and admitted to the
       Brass-button Man that he was "feeling pretty good 's evening."
       He had never supposed that a handsome creature like Miss Theresa
       could ever endure such a "slow fellow" as himself. For about
       one minute he considered with a chill the question of whether
       she was agreeable because of his new wealth, but reproved the
       fiend who was making the suggestion; for had he not heard her
       mention with great scorn a second cousin who had married an old
       Yankee for his money? That just settled _that_, he assured
       himself, and scowled at a passing messenger-boy for having thus
       hinted, but hastily grimaced as the youngster showed signs of
       loud displeasure.
       The Armenian restaurant is peculiar, for it has foreign food at
       low prices, and is below Thirtieth Street, yet it has not become
       Bohemian. Consequently it has no bad music and no crowd of
       persons from Missouri whose women risk salvation for an evening
       by smoking cigarettes. Here prosperous Oriental merchants,
       of mild natures and bandit faces, drink semi-liquid Turkish
       coffee and discuss rugs and revolutions.
       In fact, the place seemed so unartificial that Theresa, facing
       Mr. Wrenn, was bored. And the menu was foreign without being
       Society viands. It suggested rats' tails and birds' nests, she
       was quite sure. She would gladly have experimented with _pate
       de foie gras_ or alligator-pears, but what social prestige was
       there to be gained at the factory by remarking that she "always
       did like _pahklava_"? Mr. Wrenn did not see that she was
       glancing about discontentedly, for he was delightedly listening
       to a lanky young man at the next table who was remarking to his
       _vis-a-vis_, a pale slithey lady in black, with the lines of a
       torpedo-boat: "Try some of the stuffed vine-leaves, child of
       the angels, and some wheat _pilaf_ and some _bourma_. Your wheat
       _pilaf_ is a comfortable food and cheering to the stomach of man.
       Simply _won_-derful. As for the _bourma_, he is a merry beast, a
       brown rose of pastry with honey cunningly secreted between his
       petals and--Here! Waiter! Stuffed vine-leaves, wheat _p'laf,
       bourm'_--twice on the order and hustle it."
       "When you get through listening to that man--he talks like a bar
       of soap--tell me what there is on this bill of fare that's safe
       to eat," snorted Theresa.
       "I thought he was real funny," insisted Mr. Wrenn.... "I'm sure
       you'll like _shish kebab_ and s--"
       "_Shish kibub!_ Who ever heard of such a thing! Haven't they
       any--oh, I thought they'd have stuff they call `Turkish Delight'
       and things like that."
       "`Turkish Delights' is cigarettes, I think."
       "Well, I know it isn't, because I read about it in a story in a
       magazine. And they were eating it. On the terrace.... What is
       that _shish kibub_?"
       "_Kebab_.... It's lamb roasted on skewers. I know you'll like it."
       "Well, I'm not going to trust any heathens to cook my meat.
       I'll take some eggs and some of that--what was it the idiot was
       talking about--_berma_?"
       "_Bourma_.... That's awful nice. With honey. And do try some
       of the stuffed peppers and rice."
       "All right," said Theresa, gloomily.
       Somehow Mr. Wrenn wasn't vastly transformed even by the
       possession of the two thousand dollars her mother had reported.
       He was still "funny and sort of scary," not like the
       overpowering Southern gentlemen she supposed she remembered.
       Also, she was hungry. She listened with stolid glumness to Mr.
       Wrenn's observation that that was "an awful big hat the lady
       with the funny guy had on."
       He was chilled into quietness till Papa Gouroff, the owner of
       the restaurant, arrived from above-stairs. Papa Gouroff was
       a Russian Jew who had been a police spy in Poland and a hotel
       proprietor in Mogador, where he called himself Turkish and
       married a renegade Armenian. He had a nose like a sickle and a
       neck like a blue-gum nigger. He hoped that the place would
       degenerate into a Bohemian restaurant where liberal clergymen
       would think they were slumming, and barbers would think they
       were entering society, so he always wore a _fez_ and talked bad
       Arabic. He was local color, atmosphere, Bohemian flavor. Mr.
       Wrenn murmured to Theresa:
       "Say, do you see that man? He's Signor Gouroff, the owner.
       I've talked to him a lot of times. Ain't he great! Golly! look
       at that beak of his. Don't he make you think of _kiosks_ and
       _hyrems_ and stuff? Gee! What does he make you think--"
       "He's got on a dirty collar.... That waiter's awful slow....
       Would you please be so kind and pour me another glass of water?"
       But when she reached the honied _bourma_ she grew tolerant toward
       Mr. Wrenn. She had two cups of cocoa and felt fat about the
       eyes and affectionate. She had mentioned that there were good
       shows in town. Now she resumed:
       "Have you been to `The Gold Brick' yet?"
       "No, I--uh--I don't go to the theater much."
       "Gwendolyn Muzzy was telling me that this was the funniest show
       she'd ever seen. Tells how two confidence men fooled one of
       those terrible little jay towns. Shows all the funny people,
       you know, like they have in jay towns.... I wish I could go to
       it, but of course I have to help out the folks at home, so--
       Well.... Oh dear."
       "Say! I'd like to take you, if I could. Let's go--this
       evening!" He quivered with the adventure of it.
       "Why, I don't know; I didn't tell Ma I was going to be out.
       But--oh, I guess it would be all right if I was with you."
       "Let's go right up and get some tickets."
       "All right." Her assent was too eager, but she immediately
       corrected that error by yawning, "I don't suppose I'd ought to
       go, but if you want to--"
       They were a very lively couple as they walked up. He trickled
       sympathy when she told of the selfishness of the factory girls
       under her and the meanness of the superintendent over her, and
       he laughed several times as she remarked that the superintendent
       "ought to be boiled alive--that's what _all_ lobsters ought to
       be," so she repeated the epigram with such increased jollity
       that they swung up to the theater in a gale; and, once facing
       the ennuied ticket-seller, he demanded dollar seats just as
       though he had not been doing sums all the way up to prove that
       seventy-five-cent seats were the best he could afford.
       The play was a glorification of Yankee smartness. Mr. Wrenn was
       disturbed by the fact that the swindler heroes robbed quite all
       the others, but he was stirred by the brisk romance of
       money-making. The swindlers were supermen--blonde beasts with
       card indices and options instead of clubs. Not that Mr. Wrenn
       made any observations regarding supermen. But when, by way of
       commercial genius, the swindler robbed a young night clerk Mr.
       Wrenn whispered to Theresa, "Gee! he certainly does know how to
       jolly them, heh?"
       "Sh-h-h-h-h-h!" said Theresa.
       Every one made millions, victims and all, in the last act, as a
       proof of the social value of being a live American business man.
       As they oozed along with the departing audience Mr. Wrenn gurgled:
       "That makes me feel just like I'd been making a million
       dollars." Masterfully, he proposed, "Say, let's go some place
       and have something to eat."
       "All right."
       "Let's--I almost feel as if I could afford Rector's, after
       that play; but, anyway, let's go to Allaire's."
       Though he was ashamed of himself for it afterward, he was almost
       haughty toward his waiter, and ordered Welsh rabbits and beer
       quite as though he usually breakfasted on them. He may even
       have strutted a little as he hailed a car with an imaginary
       walking-stick. His parting with Miss Theresa was intimate; he
       shook her hand warmly.
       As he undressed he hoped that he had not been too abrupt with
       the waiter, "poor cuss." But he lay awake to think of Theresa's
       hair and hand-clasp; of polished desks and florid gentlemen who
       curtly summoned bank-presidents and who had--he tossed the
       bedclothes about in his struggle to get the word--who had a
       _punch!_
       He would do that Great Traveling of his in the land of Big
       Business!
       The five thousand princes of New York to protect themselves
       against the four million ungrateful slaves had devised the
       sacred symbols of dress-coats, large houses, and automobiles as
       the outward and visible signs of the virtue of making money, to
       lure rebels into respectability and teach them the social value
       of getting a dollar away from that inhuman, socially injurious
       fiend, Some One Else. That Our Mr. Wrenn should dream for
       dreaming's sake was catastrophic; he might do things because
       he wanted to, not because they were fashionable; whereupon,
       police forces and the clergy would disband, Wall Street and
       Fifth Avenue would go thundering down. Hence, for him were
       provided those Y. M. C. A. night bookkeeping classes
       administered by solemn earnest men of thirty for solemn credulous
       youths of twenty-nine; those sermons on content; articles on
       "building up the rundown store by live advertising"; Kiplingesque
       stories about playing the game; and correspondence-school
       advertisements that shrieked, "Mount the ladder to thorough
       knowledge--the path to power and to the fuller pay-envelope."
       To all these Mr. Wrenn had been indifferent, for they showed no
       imagination. But when he saw Big Business glorified by a
       humorous melodrama, then The Job appeared to him as picaresque
       adventure, and he was in peril of his imagination.
       The eight-o'clock sun, which usually found a wildly shaving Mr.
       Wrenn, discovered him dreaming that he was the manager of the
       Souvenir Company. But that was a complete misunderstanding of
       the case. The manager of the Souvenir Company was Mr. Mortimer
       R. Guilfogle, and he called Mr. Wrenn in to acquaint him with
       that fact when the new magnate started his career in Big
       Business by arriving at the office one hour late.
       What made it worse, considered Mr. Guilfogle, was that this
       Wrenn had a higher average of punctuality than any one else in
       the office, which proved that he knew better. Worst of all, the
       Guilfogle family eggs had not been scrambled right at breakfast;
       they had been anemic. Mr. Guilfogle punched the buzzer and set
       his face toward the door, with a scowl prepared.
       Mr. Wrenn seemed weary, and not so intimidated as usual.
       "Look here, Wrenn; you were just about two hours late this
       morning. What do you think this office is? A club or a
       reading-room for hoboes? Ever occur to you we'd like to have
       you favor us with a call now and then so's we can learn how
       you're getting along at golf or whatever you're doing these days?"
       There was a sample baby-shoe office pin-cushion on the manager's
       desk. Mr. Wrenn eyed this, and said nothing. The manager:
       "Hear what I said? D'yuh think I'm talking to give my throat exercise?"
       Mr. Wrenn was stubborn. "I couldn't help it."
       "Couldn't help--! And you call that an explanation! I know
       just exactly what you're thinking, Wrenn; you're thinking that
       because I've let you have a lot of chances to really work into
       the business lately you're necessary to us, and not simply an
       expense--"
       "Oh no, Mr. Guilfogle; honest, I didn't think--"
       "Well, hang it, man, you _want_ to think. What do you suppose we
       pay you a salary for? And just let me tell you, Wrenn, right
       here and now, that if you can't condescend to spare us some of
       your valuable time, now and then, we can good and plenty get
       along without you."
       An old tale, oft told and never believed; but it interested Mr.
       Wrenn just now.
       "I'm real glad you can get along without me. I've just
       inherited a big wad of money! I think I'll resign! Right now!"
       Whether he or Mr. Mortimer R. Guilfogle was the more aghast at
       hearing him bawl this no one knows. The manager was so worried
       at the thought of breaking in a new man that his eye-glasses
       slipped off his poor perspiring nose. He begged, in sudden
       tones of old friendship:
       "Why, you can't be thinking of leaving us! Why, we expect to
       make a big man of you, Wrenn. I was joking about firing you.
       You ought to know that, after the talk we had at Mouquin's the
       other night. You can't be thinking of leaving us! There's no
       end of possibilities here."
       "Sorry," said the dogged soldier of dreams.
       "Why--" wailed that hurt and astonished victim of ingratitude,
       Mr. Guilfogle.
       "I'll leave the middle of June. That's plenty of notice,"
       chirruped Mr. Wrenn.
       At five that evening Mr. Wrenn dashed up to the Brass-button Man
       at his station before the Nickelorion, crying:
       "Say! You come from Ireland, don't you?"
       "Now what would you think? Me--oh no; I'm a Chinaman from Oshkosh!"
       "No, honest, straight, tell me. I've got a chance to travel.
       What d'yuh think of that? Ain't it great! And I'm going right
       away. What I wanted to ask you was, what's the best place in
       Ireland to see?"
       "Donegal, o' course. I was born there."
       Hauling from his pocket a pencil and a worn envelope, Mr. Wrenn
       joyously added the new point of interest to a list ranging from
       Delagoa Bay to Denver.
       He skipped up-town, looking at the stars. He shouted as he saw
       the stacks of a big Cunarder bulking up at the end of Fourteenth
       Street. He stopped to chuckle over a lithograph of the
       Parthenon at the window of a Greek bootblack's stand.
       Stars--steamer--temples, all these were his. He owned them now.
       He was free.
       Lee Theresa sat waiting for him in the basement livingroom till
       ten-thirty while he was flirting with trainboards at the Grand
       Central. Then she went to bed, and, though he knew it not, that
       prince of wealthy suitors, Mr. Wrenn, had entirely lost the
       heart and hand of Miss Zapp of the F. F. V.
       He stood before the manager's god-like desk on June 14, 1910. Sadly:
       "Good-by, Mr. Guilfogle. Leaving to-day. I wish--Gee!
       I wish I could tell you, you know--about how much I appreciate--"
       The manager moved a wire basket of carbon copies of letters from
       the left side of his desk to the right, staring at them
       thoughtfully; rearranged his pencils in a pile before his
       ink-well; glanced at the point of an indelible pencil with a
       manner of startled examination; tapped his desk-blotter with his
       knuckles; then raised his eyes. He studied Mr. Wrenn, smiled,
       put on the look he used when inviting him out for a drink. Mr.
       Guilfogle was essentially an honest fellow, harshened by The
       Job; a well-satisfied victim, with the imagination clean gone out
       of him, so that he took follow-up letters and the celerity of
       office-boys as the only serious things in the world. He was
       strong, alive, not at all a bad chap, merely efficient.
       "Well, Wrenn, I suppose there's no use of rubbing it in. Course
       you know what I think about the whole thing. It strikes me
       you're a fool to leave a good job. But, after all, that's your
       business, not ours. We like you, and when you get tired of
       being just a bum, why, come back; we'll always try to have a job
       open for you. Meanwhile I hope you'll have a mighty good time,
       old man. Where you going? When d'yuh start out?"
       "Why, first I'm going to just kind of wander round generally.
       Lots of things I'd like to do. I think I'll get away real soon
       now.... Thank you awfully, Mr. Guilfogle, for keeping a place
       open for me. Course I prob'ly won't need it, but gee! I sure do
       appreciate it."
       "Say, I don't believe you're so plumb crazy about leaving us,
       after all, now that the cards are all dole out. Straight now,
       are you?"
       "Yes, sir, it does make me feel a little blue--been here so
       long. But it'll be awful good to get out at sea."
       "Yuh, I know, Wrenn. I'd like to go traveling myself--I
       suppose you fellows think I wouldn't care to go bumming around
       like you do and never have to worry about how the firm's going
       to break even. But--Well, good-by, old man, and don't
       forget us. Drop me a line now and then and let me know how
       you're getting along. Oh say, if you happen to see any novelties
       that look good let us hear about them. But drop me a line, anyway.
       We'll always be glad to hear from you. Well, good-by and good luck.
       Sure and drop me a line."
       In the corner which had been his home for eight years Mr. Wrenn
       could not devise any new and yet more improved arrangement of
       the wire baskets and clips and desk reminders, so he cleaned a
       pen, blew some gray eraser-dust from under his iron ink-well
       standard, and decided that his desk was in order; reflecting:
       He'd been there a long time. Now he could never come back to
       it, no matter how much he wanted to.... How good the manager
       had been to him. Gee! he hadn't appreciated how considerut
       Guilfogle was!
       He started down the corridor on a round of farewells to the boys.
       "Too bad he hadn't never got better acquainted with them,
       but it was too late now. Anyway, they were such fine jolly
       sports; they'd never miss a stupid guy like him."
       Just then he met them in the corridor, all of them except
       Guilfogle, headed by Rabin, the traveling salesman, and Charley
       Carpenter, who was bearing a box of handkerchiefs with a large
       green-and-crimson-paper label.
       "Gov'nor Wrenn," orated Charley, "upon this suspicious occasion
       we have the pleasure of showing by this small token of our
       esteem our 'preciation of your untiring efforts in the
       investigation of Mortimer R. Gugglegiggle of the Graft Trust
       and--
       "Say, old man, joking aside, we're mighty sorry you're going
       and--uh--well, we'd like to give you something to show
       we're--uh--mighty sorry you're going. We thought of a box of
       cigars, but you don't smoke much; anyway, these han'k'chiefs'll
       help to show--Three cheers for Wrenn, fellows!"
       Afterward, by his desk, alone, holding the box of handkerchiefs
       with the resplendent red-and-green label, Mr. Wrenn began to cry.
       He was lying abed at eight-thirty on a morning of late June, two
       weeks after leaving the Souvenir Company, deliberately hunting
       over his pillow for cool spots, very hot and restless in the
       legs and enormously depressed in the soul. He would have got up
       had there been anything to get up for. There was nothing, yet
       he felt uneasily guilty. For two weeks he had been afraid of
       losing, by neglect, the job he had already voluntarily given up.
       So there are men whom the fear of death has driven to suicide.
       Nearly every morning he had driven himself from bed and had
       finished shaving before he was quite satisfied that he didn't
       have to get to the office on time. As he wandered about during
       the day he remarked with frequency, "I'm scared as teacher's pet
       playing hookey for the first time, like what we used to do
       in Parthenon." All proper persons were at work of a week-day
       afternoon. What, then, was he doing walking along the street
       when all morality demanded his sitting at a desk at the Souvenir
       Company, being a little more careful, to win the divine favor of
       Mortimer R. Guilfogle?
       He was sure that if he were already out on the Great Traveling
       he would be able to "push the buzzer on himself and get up his
       nerve." But he did not know where to go. He had planned so many
       trips these years that now he couldn't keep any one of them
       finally decided on for more than an hour. It rather stretched
       his short arms to embrace at once a gay old dream of seeing
       Venice and the stern civic duty of hunting abominably dangerous
       beasts in the Guatemala bush.
       The expense bothered him, too. He had through many years so
       persistently saved money for the Great Traveling that he
       begrudged money for that Traveling itself. Indeed, he planned
       to spend not more than $300 of the $1,235.80 he had now
       accumulated, on his first venture, during which he hoped to
       learn the trade of wandering.
       He was always influenced by a sentence he had read somewhere
       about "one of those globe-trotters you meet carrying a
       monkey-wrench in Calcutta, then in raiment and a monocle at the
       Athenaeum." He would learn some Kiplingy trade that would teach
       him the use of astonishingly technical tools, also daring and
       the location of smugglers' haunts, copra islands, and
       whaling-stations with curious names.
       He pictured himself shipping as third engineer at the Manihiki
       Islands or engaged for taking moving pictures of an aeroplane
       flight in Algiers. He _had_ to get away from Zappism. He had to
       be out on the iron seas, where the battle-ships and liners went
       by like a marching military band. But he couldn't get started.
       Once beyond Sandy Hook, he would immediately know all about
       engines and fighting. It would help, he was certain, to be
       shanghaied. But no matter how wistfully, no matter how late at
       night he timorously forced himself to loiter among unwashed
       English stokers on West Street, he couldn't get himself molested
       except by glib persons wishing ten cents "for a place to sleep."
       When he had dallied through breakfast that particular morning he
       sat about. Once he had pictured sitting about reading
       travel-books as a perfect occupation. But it concealed no
       exciting little surprises when he could be a Sunday loafer on any
       plain Monday. Furthermore, Goaty never made his bed till noon,
       and the gray-and-brown-patched coverlet seemed to trail all
       about the disordered room.
       Midway in a paragraph he rose, threw _One Hundred Ways to See
       California_ on the tumbled bed, and ran away from Our Mr. Wrenn.
       But Our Mr. Wrenn pursued him along the wharves, where the sun
       glared on oily water. He had seen the wharves twelve times that
       fortnight. In fact, he even cried viciously that "he had seen
       too blame much of the blame wharves."
       Early in the afternoon he went to a moving-picture show, but the
       first sight of the white giant figures bulking against the gray
       background was wearily unreal; and when the inevitable
       large-eyed black-braided Indian maiden met the canonical
       cow-puncher he threshed about in his seat, was irritated by the
       nervous click of the machine and the hot stuffiness of the room,
       and ran away just at the exciting moment when the Indian chief
       dashed into camp and summoned his braves to the war-path.
       Perhaps he could hide from thought at home.
       As he came into his room he stood at gaze like a kitten of good
       family beholding a mangy mongrel asleep in its pink basket.
       For on his bed was Mrs. Zapp, her rotund curves stretching behind
       her large flat feet, whose soles were toward him. She was
       noisily somnolent; her stays creaked regularly as she breathed,
       except when she moved slightly and groaned.
       Guiltily he tiptoed down-stairs and went snuffling along the
       dusty unvaried brick side streets, wondering where in all New
       York he could go. He read minutely a placard advertising an
       excursion to the Catskills, to start that evening. For an
       exhilarated moment he resolved to go, but--" oh, there was a lot
       of them rich society folks up there." He bought a morning
       _American_ and, sitting in Union Square, gravely studied the
       humorous drawings.
       He casually noticed the "Help Wanted" advertisements.
       They suggested an uninteresting idea that somehow he might find
       it economical to go venturing as a waiter or farm-hand.
       And so he came to the gate of paradise:
       MEN WANTED. Free passage on cattle-boats to Liverpool feeding
       cattle. Low fee. Easy work. Fast boats. Apply International
       and Atlantic Employment Bureau,--Greenwich Street.
       "Gee!" he cried, "I guess Providence has picked out my first
       hike for me." _