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Old Man Minick
by
A handsome girl, Nettie, and a good girl. He thought of her as a girl, though she was well past thirty. George and Nettie had married late. This was only the third year of their marriage. Alma, the daughter, had married young, but George had stayed on, unwed, in the old house on Ellis until he was thirty-six and all Ma Minick’s friends’ daughters had had a try at him in vain. The old people had urged him to marry, but it had been wonderful to have him around the house, just the same. Somebody young around the house. Not that George had stayed around very much. But when he was there you knew he was there. He whistled while dressing. He sang in the bath. He roared down the stairway, “Ma, where’s my clean shirts?” The telephone rang for him. Ma Minick prepared special dishes for him. The servant girl said, “Oh, now, Mr. George, look what you’ve done! Gone and spilled the grease all over my clean kitchen floor!” and wiped it up adoringly while George laughed and gobbled his bit of food filched from pot or frying pan.
They had been a little surprised about Nettie. George was in the bond business and she worked for the same firm. A plump, handsome, eye-glassed woman with fine fresh colouring, a clear skin that old man Minick called appetizing, and a great coil of smooth dark hair. She wore plain tailored things and understood the bond business in a way that might have led you to think hers a masculine mind if she hadn’t been so feminine, too, in her manner. Old man Minick had liked her better than Ma Minick had.
Nettie had called him Pop and joked with him and almost flirted with him in a daughterly sort of way. He liked to squeeze her plump arm and pinch her soft cheek between thumb and forefinger. She would laugh up at him and pat his shoulder and that shoulder would straighten spryly and he would waggle his head doggishly.
“Look out there, George!” the others in the room would say. “Your dad’ll cut you out. First thing you know you’ll lose your girl, that’s all.”
Nettie would smile. Her teeth were white and strong and even. Old man Minick would laugh and wink, immensely pleased and flattered. “We understand each other, don’t we, Pop?” Nettie would say.
During the first years of their married life Nettie stayed home. She fussed happily about her little flat, gave parties, went to parties, played bridge. She seemed to love the ease, the relaxation, the small luxuries. She and George were very much in love. Before her marriage she had lived in a boarding house on Michigan Avenue. At mention of it now she puckered up her face. She did not attempt to conceal her fondness for these five rooms of hers, so neat, so quiet, so bright, so cosy. Over-stuffed velvet in the living room, with silk lampshades, and small tables holding books and magazines and little boxes containing cigarettes or hard candies. Very modern. A gate-legged table in the dining room. Caramel-coloured walnut in the bedroom, rich and dark and smooth. She loved it. An orderly woman. Everything in its place. Before eleven o’clock the little apartment was shining, spotless; cushions plumped, crumbs brushed, vegetables in cold water. The telephone. “Hello!… Oh, hello, Bess! Oh, hours ago … Not a thing … Well, if George is willing … I’ll call him up and ask him. We haven’t seen a show in two weeks. I’ll call you back within the next half hour … No, I haven’t done my marketing yet…. Yes, and have dinner downtown. Meet at seven.”
Into this orderly smooth-running mechanism was catapulted a bewildered old man. She no longer called him Pop. He never dreamed of squeezing the plump arm or pinching the smooth cheek. She called him Father. Sometimes George’s Father. Sometimes, when she was telephoning, there came to him–“George’s father’s living with us now, you know. I can’t.”