PAGE 7
Not A Day Over Twenty-One
by
The leading man generally made love to her in an expert, unaggressive way. A good many men had tried to make love to her at one time or another. They didn’t get on very well. Harrietta never went to late suppers. Some of them complained: “When you try to make love to her she laughs at you!” She wasn’t really laughing at them. She was laughing at what she knew about life. Occasionally men now married, and living dully content in the prim suburban smugness of Pelham or New Rochelle, boasted of past friendship with her, wagging their heads doggishly. “Little Fuller! I used to know her well.”
They lied.
Not that she didn’t count among her friends many men. She dined with them and they with her. They were writers and critics, lawyers and doctors, engineers and painters. Actors almost never. They sent her books and flowers; valued her opinion, delighted in her conversation, wished she wouldn’t sometimes look at them so quizzically. And if they didn’t always comprehend her wit, they never failed to appreciate the contour of her face, where the thoughtful brow was contradicted by the lovely little nose, and both were drowned in the twin wells of the wide-apart, misleadingly limpid eyes that lay ensnaringly between.
“Your eyes!” these gentlemen sometimes stammered, “the lashes are reflected in them like ferns edging a pool.”
“Yes. The mascara’s good for them. You’d think all that black sticky stuff I have put on, would hurt them, but it really makes them grow, I believe. Sometimes I even use a burnt match, and yet it—-“
“Damn your burnt matches! I’m talking about your lashes.”
“So am I.” She would open her eyes wide in surprise, and the lashes could almost be said to wave at him tantalizingly, like fairy fans. (He probably wished he could have thought of that.)
Ken never talked to her about her lashes. Ken thought she was the most beauteous, witty, intelligent woman in the world, but he had never told her so, and she found herself wishing he would. Ken was forty-one and Knew About Etchings. He knew about a lot of other things, too. Difficult, complex things like Harrietta Fuller, for example. He had to do with some intricate machine or other that was vital to printing, and he was perfecting something connected with it or connecting something needed for its perfection that would revolutionize the thing the machine now did (whatever it was). Harrietta refused to call him an inventor. She said it sounded so impecunious. They had known each other for six years. When she didn’t feel like talking he didn’t say: “What’s the matter?” He never told her that women had no business monkeying with stocks or asked her what they called that stuff her dress was made of, or telephoned before noon. Twice a year he asked her to marry him, presenting excellent reasons. His name was Carrigan. You’d like him.
“When I marry,” Harrietta would announce, “which will be never, it will be the only son of a rich iron king from Duluth, Minnesota. And I’ll go there to live in an eighteen-room mansion and pluck roses for the breakfast room.”
“There are few roses in Duluth,” said Ken, “to speak of. And no breakfast rooms. You breakfast in the dining room, and in the winter you wear flannel underwear and galoshes.”
“California, then. And he can be the son of a fruit king. I’m not narrow.”
Harrietta was thirty-seven and a half when there came upon her a great fear. It had been a wretchedly bad season. Two failures. The rent on her two-room apartment in Fifty-sixth Street jumped from one hundred and twenty-five, which she could afford, to two hundred a month, which she couldn’t. Mary–Irish Mary–her personal maid, left her in January. Personal maids are one of the superstitions of the theatrical profession, and an actress of standing is supposed to go hungry rather than maidless.