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PAGE 2

Un Morso doo Pang
by [?]

“Time enough to be sittin’ home when I’m old like you.”

And yet between these two there was love, and even understanding.

But in families such as Tessie’s, demonstration is a thing to be ashamed of; affection a thing to conceal. Tessie’s father was janitor of the Chippewa High School. A powerful man, slightly crippled by rheumatism, loquacious, lively, fond of his family, proud of his neat gray frame house and his new cement sidewalk and his carefully tended yard and garden patch. In all her life Tessie had never seen a caress exchanged between her parents.

Nowadays Ma Golden had little occasion for finding fault with Tessie’s evening diversion. She no longer had cause to say, “Always gaddin’ downtown, or over to Cora’s or somewhere, like you didn’t have a home to stay in. You ain’t been in a evening this week, only when you washed your hair.”

Tessie had developed a fondness for sunsets viewed from the back porch –she who had thought nothing of dancing until three and rising at half- past six to go to work.

Stepping about in the kitchen after supper, her mother would eye the limp, relaxed figure on the back porch with a little pang at her heart. She would come to the screen door, or even out to the porch on some errand or other–to empty the coffee grounds, to turn the row of half-ripe tomatoes reddening on the porch railing, to flap and hang up a damp tea towel.

“Ain’t you goin’ out, Tess?”

“No.”

“What you want to lop around here for? Such a grant evening. Why don’t you put on your things and run downtown, or over to Cora’s or somewhere, hm?”

“What for?”–listlessly.

“What for! What does anybody go out for!”

“I don’t know.”

If they could have talked it over together, these two, the girl might have found relief. But the family shyness of their class was too strong upon them. Once Mrs. Golden had said, in an effort at sympathy, “Person’d think Chuck Mory was the only one who’d gone to war an’ the last fella left in the world.”

A grim flash of the old humor lifted the corners of the wide mouth. “He is. Who’s there left? Stumpy Gans, up at the railroad crossing? Or maybe Fatty Weiman, driving the garbage. Guess I’ll doll up this evening and see if I can’t make a hit with one of them.”

She relapsed into bitter silence. The bottom had dropped out of Tessie Golden’s world.

In order to understand the Tessie of today one would have to know the Tessie of six months ago–Tessie the impudent, the life-loving. Tessie Golden could say things to the escapement-room foreman that anyone else would have been fired for. Her wide mouth was capable of glorious insolences. Whenever you heard shrieks of laughter from the girls’ washroom at noon you knew that Tessie was holding forth to an admiring group. She was a born mimic; audacious, agile, and with the gift of burlesque. The autumn that Angie Hatton came home from Europe wearing the first tight skirt that Chippewa had ever seen, Tessie gave an imitation of that advanced young woman’s progress down Grand Avenue in this restricting garment. The thing was cruel in its fidelity, though containing just enough exaggeration to make it artistic. She followed it up by imitating the stricken look on the face of Mattie Haynes, cloak-and-suit buyer at Megan’s, who, having just returned from the East with what she considered the most fashionable of the new fall styles, now beheld Angie Hatton in the garb that was the last echo of the last cry in Paris modes–and no model in Mattie’s newly selected stock bore even the remotest resemblance to it.

You would know from this that Tessie was not a particularly deft worker. Her big-knuckled fingers were cleverer at turning out a blouse or retrimming a hat. Hers were what are known as handy hands, but not sensitive. It takes a light and facile set of fingers to fit pallet and arbor and fork together: close work and tedious. Seated on low benches along the tables, their chins almost level with the table top, the girls worked with pincers and flame, screwin
g together the three tiny parts of the watch’s anatomy that were their particular specialty. Each wore a jeweler’s glass in one eye. Tessie had worked at the watch factory for three years, and the pressure of the glass on the eye socket had given her the slightly hollow- eyed appearance peculiar to experienced watchmakers. It was not unbecoming, though, and lent her, somehow, a spiritual look which made her impudence all the more piquant.