His work upon the page began the following
week. When the first morning of his campaign
opened with a tumultuous blizzard, Jim Bowles and
Julius Steinberger privately sympathized with him as
they dressed in company, but they heard him whistling
in his own hall bedroom as he put on his clothes,
and to none of the three did it occur that time could
be lost because the weather was inhuman. Blinding
snow was being whirled through the air by a wind
which had bellowed across the bay, and torn its way
howling through the streets, maltreating people as
it went, snatching their breath out of them, and leaving
them gaspingly clutching at hats and bending their
bodies before it. Street-cars went by loaded
from front to back platform, and were forced from
want of room to whizz heartlessly by groups waiting
anxiously at street corners.
Tembarom saw two or three of them
pass in this way, leaving the waiting ones desperately
huddled together behind them. He braced himself
and whistled louder as he buttoned his celluloid collar.
“I’m going to get up to
Harlem all the same,” he said. “The
‘L’ will be just as jammed, but there’ll
be a place somewhere, and I’ll get it.”
His clothes were the outwardly decent
ones of a young man who must perforce seek cheap
clothing-stores, and to whom a ten-dollar “hand-me-down”
is a source of exultant rejoicing. With the aid
of great care and a straight, well-formed young body,
he managed to make the best of them; but they were
not to be counted upon for warmth even in ordinarily
cold weather. His overcoat was a specious covering,
and was not infrequently odorous of naphtha.
“You’ve got to know something
about first aid to the wounded if you live on ten
per,” he had said once to Little Ann. “A
suit of clothes gets to be an emergency-case mighty
often if it lasts three years.”
“Going up to Harlem to-day,
T. T.?” his neighbor at table asked him as
he sat down to breakfast.
“Right there,” he answered.
“I’ve ordered the limousine round, with
the foot-warmer and fur rugs.”
“I guess a day wouldn’t
really matter much,” said Mrs. Bowse, good-naturedly.
“Perhaps it might be better to-morrow.”
“And perhaps it mightn’t,”
said Tembarom, eating “break-fast-food”
with a cheerful appetite. “What you can’t
be stone-cold sure of to-morrow you drive a nail
in to-day.”
He ate a tremendous breakfast as a
discreet precautionary measure. The dark dining-room
was warm, and the food was substantial. It was
comfortable in its way.
“You’d better hold the
hall door pretty tight when you go out, and don’t
open it far,” said Mrs. Bowse as he got up to
go. “There’s wind enough to upset
things.”
Tembarom went out in the hall, and
put on his insufficient overcoat. He buttoned
it across his chest, and turned its collar up to his
ears. Then he bent down to turn up the bottoms
of his trousers.
“A pair of arctics would be
all to the merry right here,” he said, and
then he stood upright and saw Little Ann coming down
the staircase holding in her hand a particularly
ugly tar-tan-plaid woolen neck-scarf of the kind
known in England as a “comforter.”
“If you are going out in this
kind of weather,” she said in her serene, decided
little voice, “you’d better wrap this comforter
right round your neck, Mr. Tembarom. It’s
one of Father’s, and he can spare it because
he’s got another, and, besides, he’s not
going out.”
Tembarom took it with a sudden emotional
perception of the fact that he was being taken care
of in an abnormally luxurious manner.
“Now, I appreciate that,”
he said. “The thing about you. Little
Ann, is that you never make a wrong guess about what
a fellow needs, do you?”
“I’m too used to taking
care of Father not to see things,” she answered.
“What you get on to is how to
take care of the whole world —initials
on a fellow’s socks and mufflers round his neck.”
His eyes looked remarkably bright.
“If a person were taking care
of the whole world, he’d have a lot to do,”
was her sedate reception of the remark. “You’d
better put that twice round your neck, Mr. Tembarom.”
She put up her hand to draw the end
of the scarf over his shoulder, and Tembarom stood
still at once, as though he were a little boy being
dressed for school. He looked down at her round
cheek, and watched one of the unexpected dimples
reveal itself in a place where dimples are not usually
anticipated. It was coming out because she was
smiling a small, observing smile. It was an almost
exciting thing to look at, and he stood very still
indeed. A fellow who did not own two pairs of
boots would be a fool not to keep quiet.
“You haven’t told me I
oughtn’t to go out till the blizzard lets up,”
he said presently.
“No, I haven’t, Mr. Tembarom,”
she answered. “You’re one of the kind
that mean to do a thing when they’ve made up
their minds. It’ll be a nice bit of money
if you can keep the page.”
“Galton said he’d give
me a chance to try to make good,” said Tembarom.
“And if it’s the hit he thinks it ought
to be, he’ll raise me ten. Thirty per.
Vanastorbilts won’t be in it. I think I’ll
get married,” he added, showing all his attractive
teeth at once.
“I wouldn’t do that,”
she said. “It wouldn’t be enough to
depend on. New York’s an expensive place.”
She drew back and looked him over.
“That’ll keep you much warmer,”
she decided. “Now you can go. I’ve
been looking in the telephone-book for confectioners,
and I’ve written down these addresses.”
She handed him a slip of paper.
Tembarom caught his breath.
“Hully gee!” he exclaimed,
“there never were two of you made!
One used up all there was of it. How am I going
to thank you, anyhow!”
“I do hope you’ll be able
to keep the page,” she said. “I do
that, Mr. Tembarom.”
If there had been a touch of coquetry
in her earnest, sober, round, little face she would
have been less distractingly alluring, but there
was no shade of anything but a sort of softly motherly
anxiety in the dropped note of her voice, and it
was almost more than flesh and blood at twenty-five
could stand. Tembarom made a hasty, involuntary
move toward her, but it was only a slight one, and
it was scarcely perceptible before he had himself
in hand and hurriedly twisted his muffler tighter,
showing his teeth again cheerily.
“You keep on hoping it all day
without a let-up,” he said. “And tell
Mr. Hutchinson I’m obliged to him, please.
Get out of the way, Little Ann, while I go out.
The wind might blow you and the hat-stand up-stairs.”
He opened the door and dashed down
the high steps into the full blast of the blizzard.
He waited at the street corner while three overcrowded
cars whizzed past him, ignoring his signals because
there was not an inch of space left in them for another
passenger. Then he fought his way across two
or three blocks to the nearest “L” station.
He managed to wedge himself into a train there, and
then at least he was on his way. He was thinking
hard and fast, but through all his planning the warm
hug of the tartan comforter round his neck kept Little
Ann near him. He had been very thankful for the
additional warmth as the whirling snow and wind had
wrought their will with him while he waited for the
cars at the street corner. On the “L”
train he saw her serious eyes and heard the motherly
drop in her voice as she said, “I do hope you’ll
be able to keep the page. I do that, Mr. Tembarom.”
It made him shut his hands hard as they hung in his
overcoat pockets for warmth, and it made him shut
his sound teeth strongly.
“Gee! I’ve got to!”
his thoughts said for him. “If I make it,
perhaps my luck will have started. When a man’s
luck gets started, every darned thing’s to
the good.”
The “L” had dropped most
of its crowd when it reached the up-town station
among the hundredth streets which was his destination.
He tightened his comforter, tucked the ends firmly
into the front of his overcoat, and started out along
the platform past the office, and down the steep,
iron steps, already perilous with freezing snow.
He had to stop to get his breath when he reached
the street, but he did not stop long. He charged
forth again along the pavement, looking closely at
the shop-windows. There were naturally but few
passers-by, and the shops were not important-looking;
but they were open, and he could see that the insides
of them looked comfortable in contrast with the blizzard-ruled
street. He could not see both sides of the street
as he walked up one side of the block without coming
upon a confectioner’s. He crossed at the
corner and turned back on the other side. Presently
he saw that a light van was standing before one place,
backed up against the sidewalk to receive parcels,
its shuddering horse holding its head down and bracing
itself with its forelegs against the wind. At
any rate, something was going on there, and he hurried
forward to find out what it was. The air was so
thick with myriads of madly flying bits of snow,
which seemed whirled in all directions in the air,
that he could not see anything definite even a few
yards away. When he reached the van he found that
he had also reached his confectioner. The sign
over the window read “M. Munsberg, Confectionery.
Cakes. Ice-Cream. Weddings, Balls and Receptions.”
“Made a start, anyhow,” said Tembarom.
He turned into the store, opening
the door carefully, and thereby barely escaping being
blown violently against a stout, excited, middle-aged
little Jew who was bending over a box he was packing.
This was evidently Mr. Munsberg, who was extremely
busy, and even the modified shock upset his temper.
“Vhere you goin’?”
he cried out. “Can’t you look vhere
you’re goin’?”
Tembarom knew this was not a good
beginning, but his natural mental habit of vividly
seeing the other man’s point of view helped him
after its usual custom. His nice grin showed
itself.
“I wasn’t going; I was
coming,” he said. “Beg pardon.
The wind’s blowing a hundred miles an hour.”
A good-looking young woman, who was
probably Mrs. Munsberg, was packing a smaller box
behind the counter. Tembarom lifted his hat,
and she liked it.
“He didn’t do it a bit
fresh,” she said later. “Kind o’
nice.” She spoke to him with professional
politeness.
“Is there anything you want?” she asked.
Tembarom glanced at the boxes and
packages standing about and at Munsberg, who had
bent over his packing again. Here was an occasion
for practical tact.
“I’ve blown in at the
wrong time,” he said. “You’re
busy getting things out on time. I’ll
just wait.. Gee! I’m glad to be inside.
I want to speak to Mr. Munsberg.”
Mr. Munsberg jerked himself upright
irascibly, and broke forth in the accent of the New
York German Jew.
“If you comin’ in here
to try to sell somedings, young man, joost you let
that same vind vat blew you in blow you right out pretty
quick. I’m not buyin’ nodings.
I’m busy.”
“I’m not selling a darned
thing,” answered Tembarom, with undismayed
cheer.
“You vant someding?” jerked out Munsberg.
“Yes, I want something,”
Tembarom answered, ” but it’s nothing any one
has to pay for. I’m only a newspaper man.”
He felt a glow of pride as he said the words.
He was a newspaper man even now. “Don’t
let me stop you a minute. I’m in luck
to get inside anywhere and sit down. Let me
wait.”
Mrs. Munsberg read the Sunday papers
and revered them. She also knew the value of
advertisement. She caught her husband’s
eye and hurriedly winked at him.
“It’s awful outside.
’T won’t do harm if he waits—if
he ain’t no agent,” she put in.
“See,” said Tembarom,
handing over one of the cards which had been Little
Ann’s businesslike inspiration.
“T. Tembarom. New
York Sunday Earth,” read Munsberg, rather grudgingly.
He looked at T. Tembarom, and T. Tembarom looked back
at him. The normal human friendliness in the
sharp boyish face did it.
“Vell,” he said, making
another jerk toward a chair, “if you ain’t
no agent, you can vait.”
“Thank you,” said Tembarom,
and sat down. He had made another start, anyhow.
After this the packing went on fast
and furious. A youth appeared from the back
of the store, and ran here and there as he was ordered.
Munsberg and his wife filled wooden and cardboard
boxes with small cakes and larger ones, with sandwiches
and salads, candies and crystallized fruits.
Into the larger box was placed a huge cake with an
icing temple on the top of it, with silver doves adorning
it outside and in. There was no mistaking the
poetic significance of that cake. Outside the
blizzard whirled clouds of snow-particles through
the air, and the van horse kept his head down and his
forelegs braced. His driver had long since tried
to cover him with a blanket which the wind continually
tore loose from its fastenings, and flapped about
the creature’s sides. Inside the store grew
hot. There was hurried moving about, banging
of doors, excited voices, irascible orders given
and countermanded. Tembarom found out in five
minutes that the refreshments were for a wedding
reception to be held at a place known as “The
Hall,” and the goods must be sent out in time
to be ready for the preparations for the wedding supper
that night.
“If I knew how to handle it,
I could get stuff for a column just sitting here,”
he thought. He kept both eyes and ears open.
He was sharp enough to realize that the mere sense
of familiarity with detail which he was gaining was
material in itself. Once or twice he got up
and lent a hand with a box in his casual way, and once
or twice he saw that he could lift some-thing down
or up for Mrs. Munsberg, who was a little woman.
The natural casualness of his way of jumping up to
do the things prevented any suspicion of officiousness,
and also prevented his waiting figure from beginning
to wear the air of a superfluous object in the way.
He waited a long time, and circumstances so favored
him as to give him a chance or so. More than
once exactly the right moment presented itself when
he could interject an apposite remark. Twice
he made Munsberg laugh, and twice Mrs. Munsberg voluntarily
addressed him.
At last the boxes and parcels ware
all carried out and stored in the van, after strugglings
with the opening and shutting of doors, and battlings
with outside weather.
When this was all over, Munsberg came
back into the store, knocking his hands together
and out of breath.
“Dot’s all right,”
he said. ” It’ll all be there plenty time.
Vouldn’t have fell down on that order for tventy-vive
dollars. Dot temple on the cake was splendid.
Joseph he done it fine.”
“He never done nothin’
no finer,” Mrs. Munsberg said. “It
looked as good as anything on Fift’ Avenoo.”
Both were relieved and pleased with
themselves, their store, and their cake-decorator.
Munsberg spoke to Tembarom in the manner of a man
who, having done a good thing, does not mind talking
about it.
“Dot was a big order,” he remarked.
“I should smile,” answered
Tembarom. “I’d like to know whose
going to get outside all that good stuff. That
wedding-cake took the tart away from anything I’ve
ever seen. Which of the four hundred’s going
to eat it?”
“De man vot ordered dot cake,”
Munsberg swaggered, “he’s not got to
vorry along on vun million nor two. He owns de
biggest brewery in New York, I guess in America.
He’s Schwartz of Schwartz & Kapfer.”
“Well, he ’s got it to burn!” said
Tembarom.
“He’s a mighty good man,”
went on Munsberg. ” He’s mighty fond of his
own people. He made his first money in Harlem,
and he had a big fight to get it; but his own people
vas good to him, an’ he’s never forgot
it. He’s built a fine house here, an’
his girls is fine girls. De vun’s goin’
to be married to-night her name’s Rachel, an’
she’s goin’ to marry a nice feller, Louis
Levy. Levy built the big entertainment-hall
vhere the reception’s goin’ to be.
It’s decorated vith two thousand dollars’
worth of bride roses an’ lilies of de valley
an’ smilax. All de up-town places vas
bought out, an’ den Schwartz vent down Fift’
Avenoo.”
The right moment had plainly arrived.
“Say, Mr. Munsberg,” Tembarom
broke forth, “you’re giving me just what
I wanted to ask you for. I’m the new up-town
society reporter for the Sunday Earth, and I came
in here to see if you wouldn’t help me to get
a show at finding out who was going to have weddings
and society doings. I didn’t know just
how to start.”
Munsberg gave a sort of grunt. He looked less
amiable.
“I s’pose you’re used to nothin’
but Fift’ Avenoo,” he said.
Tembarom grinned exactly at the right
time again. Not only his good teeth grinned,
but his eyes grinned also, if the figure may be used.
“Fifth Avenue!” he laughed.
“There’s been no Fifth Avenue in mine.
I’m not used to anything, but you may bet your
life I’m going to get used to Harlem, if you
people’ll let me. I’ve just got this
job, and I’m dead stuck on it. I want
to make it go.”
“He’s mighty different
from Biker,” said Mrs. Munsberg in an undertone.
“Vhere’s dod oder feller?”
inquired Munsberg. “He vas a dam fool, dot
oder feller, half corned most de time, an’
puttin’ on Clarence airs. No one was goin’
to give him nothin’. He made folks mad at
de start.”
“I’ve got his job,”
said Tembarom, “and if I can’t make it
go, the page will be given up. It’ll be
my fault if that happens, not Harlem’s.
There’s society enough up-town to make a first-class
page, and I shall be sick if I can’t get on
to it.”
He had begun to know his people.
Munsberg was a good- natured, swaggering little Hebrew.
That the young fellow should make
a clean breast of it and claim no down-town superiority,
and that he should also have the business insight
to realize that he might obtain valuable society items
from such a representative confectioner as M. Munsberg,
was a situation to incite amiable sentiments.
“Vell, you didn’t come
to de wrong place,” he said. “All
de biggest things comes to me, an’ I don’t
mind tellin’ you about ’em. ’T
ain’t goin’ to do no harm. Weddings
an’ things dey ought to be wrote up, anyhow,
if dey’re done right. It’s good for
business. Vy don’t dey have no pictures
of de supper- tables? Dot’d be good.”
“There’s lots of receptions
and weddings this month,” said Mrs. Munsberg,
becoming agreeably excited. “And there’s
plenty handsome young girls that’d like their
pictures published.
“None of them have been in Sunday
papers before, and they’d like it. The
four Schwartz girls would make grand pictures.
They dress splendid, and their bridesmaids dresses
came from the biggest place in Fift’ Avenoo.”
“Say,” exclaimed Tembarom,
rising from his chair, “I’m in luck.
Luck struck me the minute I turned in here.
If you’ll tell me where Schwartz lives, and
where the hall is, and the church, and just anything
else I can use, I’ll go out and whoop up a page
to beat the band.” He was glowing with
exultation. “I know I can do it. You’ve
started me off.”
Munsberg and his wife began to warm.
It was almost as though they had charge of the society
page themselves. There was something stimulating
in the idea. There was a suggestion of social
importance in it. They knew a number of people
who would be pleased with the prospect of being in
the Sunday Earth. They were of a race which
holds together, and they gave not only the names and
addresses of prospective entertainers, but those
of florists and owners of halls where parties were
given.
Mrs. Munsberg gave the name of a dressmaker
of whom she shrewdly guessed that she would be amiably
ready to talk to a society-page reporter.
“That Biker feller,” she
said, “got things down all wrong. He called
fine white satin ‘white nun’s-veiling,’
and he left out things. Never said nothing about
Miss Lewishon’s diamond ring what her grandpa
gave her for a wedding-present. An’ it
cost two hundred and fifty.”
“Well, I’m a pretty big
fool myself,” said Tembarom, “but I should
have known better than that.”
When he opened the door to go, Mrs.
Munsberg called after him:
“When you get through, you come
back here and tell us what you done. I’ll
give you a cup of hot coffee.”
He returned to Mrs. Bowse’s
boarding-house so late that night that even Steinberger
and Bowles had ended their day. The gas in the
hall was turned down to a glimmering point, and the
house was silent for the night. Even a cat who
stole to him and rubbed herself against his leg miauwed
in a sort of abortive whisper, opening her mouth wide,
but emitting no sound. When he went cautiously
up the staircase he carried his damp overcoat with
him, and hung it in company with the tartan muffler
close to the heater in the upper hall. Then he
laid on his bedside table a package of papers and
photographs.
After he had undressed, he dropped
heavily into bed, exhausted, but elate.
“I’m dog-tired,”
he said, “but I guess I’ve got it going.”
And almost before the last word had uttered itself
he fell into the deep sleep of worn-out youth.