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PAGE 3

Roast Beef, Medium
by [?]

“Be a good fellow,” pleaded the unquenchable one. “Let’s take in all the nickel shows, and then see if we can’t drown our sorrows in–er–“

Emma McChesney slipped a coin under her plate, crumpled her napkin, folded her arms on the table, and regarded the boy across the way with what our best talent calls a long, level look. It was so long and so level that even the airiness of the buoyant youngster at whom it was directed began to lessen perceptibly, long before Emma began to talk.

“Tell me, young ‘un, did any one ever refuse you anything? I thought not. I should think that when you realize what you’ve got to learn it would scare you to look ahead. I don’t expect you to believe me when I tell you I never talk to fresh guys like you, but it’s true. I don’t know why I’m breaking my rule for you, unless it’s because you’re so unbelievably good-looking that I’m anxious to know where the blemish is. The Lord don’t make ’em perfect, you know. I’m going to get out those letters, and then, if it’s just the same to you, we’ll take a walk. These nickel shows are getting on my nerves. It seems to me that if I have to look at one more Western picture about a fool girl with her hair in a braid riding a show horse in the wilds of Clapham Junction and being rescued from a band of almost-Indians by the handsome, but despised Eastern tenderfoot, or if I see one more of those historical pictures, with the women wearing costumes that are a pass between early Egyptian and late State Street, I know I’ll get hysterics and have to be carried shrieking, up the aisle. Let’s walk down Main Street and look in the store windows, and up as far as the park and back.”

“Great!” assented he. “Is there a park?

“I don’t know,” replied Emma McChesney, “but there is. And for your own good I’m going to tell you a few things. There’s more to this traveling game than just knocking down on expenses, talking to every pretty woman you meet, and learning to ask for fresh white-bread heels at the Palmer House in Chicago. I’ll meet you in the lobby at eight.”

Emma McChesney talked steadily, and evenly, and generously, from eight until eight-thirty. She talked from the great storehouse of practical knowledge which she had accumulated in her ten years on the road. She told the handsome young cub many things for which he should have been undyingly thankful. But when they reached the park–the cool, dim, moon-silvered park, its benches dotted with glimpses of white showing close beside a blur of black, Emma McChesney stopped talking. Not only did she stop talking, but she ceased to think of the boy seated beside her on the bench.

In the band-stand, under the arc-light, in the center of the pretty little square, some neighborhood children were playing a noisy game, with many shrill cries, and much shouting and laughter. Suddenly, from one of the houses across the way, a woman’s voice was heard, even above the clamor of the children.

“Fred-dee!” called the voice. “Maybelle! Come, now.”

And a boy’s voice answered, as boys’ voices have since Cain was a child playing in the Garden of Eden, and as boys’ voices will as long as boys are:

“Aw, ma, I ain’t a bit sleepy. We just begun a new game, an’ I’m leader. Can’t we just stay out a couple of minutes more?”

“Well, five minutes,” agreed the voice. “But don’t let me call you again.”

Emma McChesney leaned back on the rustic bench and clasped her strong, white hands behind her head, and stared straight ahead into the soft darkness. And if it had been light you could have seen that the bitter lines showing faintly about her mouth were outweighed by the sweet and gracious light which was glowing in her eyes.

“Fred-dee!” came the voice of command again. “May-belle! This minute, now!”

One by one the flying little figures under the arc-light melted away in the direction of the commanding voice and home and bed. And Emma McChesney forgot all about fresh young kids and featherloom petticoats and discounts and bills of lading and sample-cases and grouchy buyers. After all, it had been her protecting maternal instinct which had been aroused by the boy at supper, although she had not known it then. She did not know it now, for that matter. She was busy remembering just such evenings in her own life–summer evenings, filled with the high, shrill laughter of children at play. She too, had stood in the doorway, making a funnel of her hands, so that her clear call through the twilight might be heard above the cries of the boys and girls. She had known how loath the little feet had been to leave their play, and how they had lagged up the porch stairs, and into the house. Years, whose memory she had tried to keep behind her, now suddenly loomed before her in the dim quiet of the little flower-scented park.