PAGE 2
Wait–For Prince Charming
by
“When did he tell you that?”
“Last night, while you were taking testimony in the library.”
The office library was lined with law books. There were a handsome long mahogany table, green covered, and six handsome mahogany chairs. Mary, shut in with three of Knox’s clients and a consulting partner, had had a sense of uneasiness. It was after hours. Nannie was waiting for her in the outer office. Everybody else had gone home except Knox, who was waiting for his clients.
Mary remembered how, when she was Nannie’s age, she had often sat in that outer office after hours, and Knox had talked to her. He had been thirty-five and she, twenty. He had a wife and a handsome home; she had nothing but a hall room. And he had made her feel that she was very necessary to him. “I don’t know how we should ever get along without you,” he had said.
He had said other things.
It was because he had spoken of her lovely hair that she had kept it brushed and shining. It was because his eyes had followed her pencil that she had rubbed cold cream on her hands at night and had looked well after her nails. It was because she had learned his taste that she wore simple but expensive frocks. It was because of her knowledge that nothing escaped him that she shod her pretty feet in expensive shoes.
He had set standards for her, and she had followed them. And now he would set standards for Nannie!
She spoke abruptly. “Is Dick McDonald coming to-night?”
“Yes. He has had a raise, Mary. He telephoned–“
The two girls were in Mary’s room. Dinner was over and Mary had slipped on a Chinese coat of dull blue and had settled down for an evening with her books. Mary’s room was charming. In fifteen years she had had gifts of various kinds from Knox. They had always been well chosen and appropriate. Nothing could have been in better taste as an offering from an employer to an employee than the embossed leather book ends and desk set, the mahogany reading lamp with its painted parchment shade, the bronze Buddha, the antique candlesticks, the Chelsea teacups, the Sheffield tea caddy. Mary’s comfortable salary had permitted her to buy the book shelves and the tea table and the mahogany day bed. There was a lovely rug which Mrs. Knox had sent her on the tenth anniversary of her association with the office. Mrs. Knox looked upon Mary as a valuable business asset. She invited her once a year to dinner.
Nannie wore her blue serge one-piece frock and a new winter hat. The hat was a black velvet tam.
“You need something to brighten you up,” Mary said; “take my beads.”
The beads were jade ones which Mr. Knox had brought to Mary when he came back from a six months’ sojourn in the Orient. Mary had looked after the office while he was away. He had clasped the beads about her neck. “Bend your head while I put them on, Mary,” he had commanded. He had been at his desk in his private office while she sat beside him with her note-book. And when he had clasped the beads and she had lifted her head, he had said with a quick intake of his breath: “I’ve been a long time away from you, Mary.”
Nannie with the jade beads and her red hair and her velvet tam was rather rare and wonderful. “Dick is going to take me to the show to celebrate. He’s got tickets to Jack Barrymore.”
“Dick is such a nice boy,” said Mary. “I’m glad you are going to marry him, Nannie.”
“Who said I was going to marry him?”
“That’s what he wants, Nannie, and you know it.”
“Mr. Knox says it is a pity for a girl like me to get married.”
Mary’s heart seemed to stop beating. She knew just how Knox had said it.