THE
MAN WITH TWO LEFT FEET
By
P.G.Wodehouse
Students
of the folk-lore of the United States of America are no doubt familiar with the
quaint old story of Clarence MacFadden. Clarence MacFadden, it seems, was
'wishful to dance, but his feet wasn't gaited that way. So he sought a
professor and asked him his price, and said he was willing to pay. The
professor' (the legend goes on) 'looked down
with
alarm at his feet and marked their enormous expanse; and he tacked on a five to
his regular price for teaching MacFadden to dance.'
I
have often been struck by the close similarity between the case of Clarence and
that of Henry Wallace Mills. One difference alone presents itself. It would
seem to have been ere vanity and ambition that stimulated the former; whereas
the motive force which drove Henry Mills to defy Nature and attempt dancing was
the purer one of love. He did it to please his wife. Had he never gone to Ye
Bonnie Briar-Bush Farm, that popular holiday resort, and there met Minnie Hill,
he would doubtless have continued to spend in peaceful reading the hours not given
over to work at the New York bank at which he was employed as paying-cashier.
For Henry was a voracious reader. His idea of a pleasant evening was to get
back to his little flat, take off his coat, put on his slippers, light a pipe,
and go on from the point where he had left off the night before in his perusal
of the BIS-CAL volume of
the
_Encyclopaedia Britannica_--making notes as he read in a stout notebook. He
read the BIS-CAL volume because, after many days, he had finished the A-AND,
AND-AUS, and the AUS-BIS. There was something admirable--and yet a little
horrible--about Henry's method of study. He went after Learning with the cold
and dispassionate relentlessness of a stoat pursuing a rabbit. The ordinary man
who is paying instalments on the _Encyclopaedia Britannica_ is apt to get
over-excited and to skip impatiently to Volume XXVIII (VET-ZYM) to see how it
all comes out in the end. Not so Henry. His was not a frivolous mind. He intended
to read the _Encyclopaedia_ through, and he was not going to spoil his pleasure
by peeping ahead.
It
would seem to be an inexorable law of Nature that no man shall shine at both
ends. If he has a high forehead and a thirst for wisdom, his fox-trotting (if
any) shall be as the staggerings of the drunken; while, if he is a good dancer,
he is nearly always petrified from the ears upward. No better examples of this
law could have been found than Henry Mills and his fellow-cashier, Sidney
Mercer. In New York banks paying-cashiers, like bears, tigers, lions, and other
fauna, are always shut up in a cage in pairs, and are consequently dependent on
each other for entertainment and social intercourse when business is slack.
Henry
Mills and Sidney simply could not find a subject in common. Sidney knew
absolutely nothing of even such elementary things as Abana, Aberration,
Abraham, or Acrogenae; while Henry, on his side, was scarcely aware that there
had been any developments in the dance since the polka. It was a relief to
Henry when Sidney threw up his job to join the chorus of a musical comedy, and
was succeeded by a man who, though full of limitations, could at least converse
intelligently on Bowls.
Such,
then, was Henry Wallace Mills. He was in the middle thirties, temperate,
studious, a moderate smoker, and--one would have said—a bachelor of the
bachelors, armour-plated against Cupid's well-meant but obsolete artillery.
Sometimes Sidney Mercer's successor in the teller's cage, a sentimental young
man, would broach the topic of Woman and arriage. He would ask Henry if he ever
intended to get married. On such occasions Henry would look at him in a manner
which was a blend of scorn, amusement, and indignation; and would reply with a
single word:
'Me!'
It
was the way he said it that impressed you.
But
Henry had yet to experience the unmanning atmosphere of a lonely summer resort.
He had only just reached the position in the bank where he was permitted to
take his annual vacation in the summer. Hitherto he had always been released
from his cage during the winter months, and had spent his ten days of freedom
at his flat, with a book in his hand and his feet on the radiator. But the
summer after Sidney Mercer's departure they unleashed him in August.
It
was meltingly warm in the city. Something in Henry cried out for the country.
For a month before the beginning of his vacation he devoted much of the time
that should have been given to the _Encyclopaedia Britannica_ in reading
summer-resort literature. He decided at length upon Ye Bonnie Briar-Bush Farm
because the advertisements spoke
so
well of it.
Ye
Bonnie Briar-Bush Farm was a rather battered frame building many miles from
anywhere. Its attractions included a Lovers' Leap, a Grotto, golf-links--a
five-hole course where the enthusiast found unusual hazards in the shape of a
number of goats tethered at intervals between the holes--and a silvery lake,
only portions of which were used as a
dumping-ground
for tin cans and wooden boxes. It was all new and strange to Henry and caused
him an odd exhilaration. Something of gaiety and reckless abandon began to
creep into his veins. He had a curious feeling that in these romantic
surroundings some dventure
ought
to happen to him.
At
this juncture Minnie Hill arrived. She was a small, slim girl, thinner and
paler than she should have been, with large eyes that seemed to Henry pathetic
and stirred his chivalry. He began to think a good deal about Minnie Hill.
And
then one evening he met her on the shores of the silvery lake. He was standing
there, slapping at things that looked like mosquitoes, but could not have been,
for the advertisements expressly stated that none were ever found in the
neighbourhood of Ye Bonnie Briar-Bush Farm, when along she came. She walked
slowly, as if she were tired. A strange thrill, half of pity, half of something
else, ran through Henry. He looked at her. She looked at him.
'Good
evening,' he said.
They
were the first words he had spoken to her. She never contributed to the
dialogue of the dining-room, and he had been too shy to seek her out in the
open.
She
said 'Good evening,' too, tying the score. And there was silence for a moment.
Commiseration
overcame Henry's shyness.
'You're
looking tired,' he said.
'I
feel tired.' She paused. 'I overdid it in the city.'
'It?'
'Dancing.'
'Oh,
dancing. Did you dance much?'
'Yes;
a great deal.'
'Ah!'
A
promising, even a dashing start. But how to continue? For the first time Henry
regretted the steady determination of his methods with the _Encyclopaedia_. How
pleasant if he could have been in a position to talk easily of Dancing. Then
memory reminded him that, though he had not yet got up to Dancing, it was only
a few weeks before that he had
been
reading of the Ballet.
'I
don't dance myself,' he said, 'but I am fond of reading about it. Did you know
that the word "ballet" incorporated three distinct modern words,
"ballet", "ball", and "ballad", and that
ballet-dancing was originally accompanied by singing?'
It
hit her. It had her weak. She looked at him with awe in her eyes. One might
almost say that she gaped at Henry.
'I
hardly know anything,' she said.
'The
first descriptive ballet seen in London, England,' said Henry, quietly, 'was
"The Tavern Bilkers", which was played at Drury Lane in--in seventeen--something.'
'Was
it?'
'And
the earliest modern ballet on record was that given by--by someone to celebrate
the marriage of the Duke of Milan in 1489.'
There
was no doubt or hesitation about the date this time. It was grappled to his
memory by hoops of steel owing to the singular coincidence of it being also his
telephone number. He gave it out with a roll, and the girl's eyes widened.
'What
an awful lot you know!'
'Oh,
no,' said Henry, modestly. 'I read a great deal.'
'It
must be splendid to know a lot,' she said, wistfully. 'I've never had time for
reading. I've always wanted to. I think you're wonderful!'
Henry's
soul was expanding like a flower and purring like a well-tickled cat. Never in
his life had he been admired by a woman. The sensation was intoxicating.
Silence
fell upon them. They started to walk back to the farm, warned by the distant
ringing of a bell that supper was about to materialize. It was not a musical
bell, but distance and the magic of this unusual moment lent it charm. The sun
was setting. It threw a crimson carpet across the silvery lake. The air was
very still. The creatures,
unclassified
by science, who might have been mistaken for mosquitoes had their presence been
possible at Ye Bonnie Briar-Bush Farm, were biting harder than ever. But Henry
heeded them not. He did not even slap at them. They drank their fill of his
blood and went away to put their friends on to this good thing; but for Henry
they did not exist. Strange things were happening to him. And, lying awake that
night in bed, he recognized the truth. He was in love.
After
that, for the remainder of his stay, they were always together. They walked in
the woods, they sat by the silvery lake. He poured out the treasures of his
learning for her, and she looked at him with reverent eyes, uttering from time
to time a soft 'Yes' or a musical 'Gee!'
In
due season Henry went back to New York.
'You're
dead wrong about love, Mills,' said his sentimental fellow-cashier, shortly
after his return. 'You ought to get married.'
'I'm
going to,' replied Henry, briskly. 'Week tomorrow.'
Which
stunned the other so thoroughly that he gave a customer who entered at that
moment fifteen dollars for a ten-dollar cheque, and had to do some excited
telephoning after the bank had closed.
Henry's
first year as a married man was the happiest of his life. He had always heard
this period described as the most perilous of matrimony. He had braced himself
for clashings of tastes, painful adjustments of character, sudden and
unavoidable quarrels. Nothing of
the
kind happened. From the very beginning they settled down in perfect harmony.
She merged with his life as smoothly as one river joins another. He did not
even have to alter his habits. Every morning he had his breakfast at eight, smoked
a cigarette, and walked to the Underground. At five he left the bank, and at
six he arrived home, for it was his practice to walk the first two miles of the
way, breathing deeply and regularly. Then dinner. Then the quiet evening.
Sometimes the moving-pictures, but generally the quiet evening, he reading the _Encyclopaedia_--aloud
now--Minnie darning his socks, but never
ceasing
to listen.
Each
day brought the same sense of grateful amazement that he should be so
wonderfully happy, so extraordinarily peaceful. Everything was as perfect as it
could be. Minnie was looking a different girl. She had lost her drawn look. She
was filling out.
Sometimes
he would suspend his reading for a moment, and look across at her. At first he
would see only her soft hair, as she bent over her sewing. Then, wondering at
the silence, she would look up, and he would meet her big eyes. And then Henry
would gurgle with happiness, and demand of himself, silently:
'Can
you beat it!'
It
was the anniversary of their wedding. They celebrated it in fitting style. They
dined at a crowded and exhilarating Italian restaurant on a street off Seventh
Avenue, where red wine was included in the bill, and excitable people, probably
extremely clever, sat round at small tables and talked all together at the top
of their voices. After dinner they saw a musical comedy. And then--the great
event of the night—they went on to supper at a glittering restaurant near Times
Square.
There
was something about supper at an expensive restaurant which had always appealed
to Henry's imagination. Earnest devourer as he was of the solids of literature,
he had tasted from time to time its lighter face--those novels which begin with
the hero supping in the midst of the glittering throng and having his attention
attracted to a distinguished-looking elderly man with a grey imperial who is
entering with a girl so strikingly beautiful that the revellers turn, as she passes,
to look after her. And then, as he sits and smokes, a waiter comes up to the
hero and, with a soft '_Pardon, m'sieu!_' hands him a note.
The
atmosphere of Geisenheimer's suggested all that sort of thing to Henry. They
had finished supper, and he was smoking a cigar--his second that day. He leaned
back in his chair and surveyed the scene. He felt braced up, adventurous. He
had that feeling, which comes to all quiet men who like to sit at home and
read, that this was the sort of atmosphere in which he really belonged. The
brightness of it all—the dazzling lights, the music, the hubbub, in which the
deep-throated gurgle of the wine-agent surprised while drinking soup blended
with the shriller note of the chorus-girl calling to her mate--these things got
Henry. He was thirty-six next birthday, but he felt a youngish twenty-one.
A
voice spoke at his side. Henry looked up, to perceive Sidney Mercer.
The
passage of a year, which had turned Henry into a married man, had turned Sidney
Mercer into something so magnificent that the spectacle for a moment deprived
Henry of speech. Faultless evening dress clung with loving closeness to
Sidney's lissom form. Gleaming shoes of perfect patent leather covered his
feet. His light hair was brushed
back
into a smooth sleekness on which the electric lights shone like stars on some
beautiful pool. His practically chinless face beamed amiably over a spotless
collar.
Henry
wore blue serge.
'What
are you doing here, Henry, old top?' said the vision. 'I didn't know you ever
came among the bright lights.'
His
eyes wandered off to Minnie. There was admiration in them, for Minnie was
looking her prettiest.
'Wife,'
said Henry, recovering speech. And to Minnie: 'Mr Mercer. Old friend.'
'So
you're married? Wish you luck. How's the bank?'
Henry
said the bank was doing as well as could be expected.
'You
still on the stage?'
Mr
Mercer shook his head importantly.
'Got
better job. Professional dancer at this show. Rolling in money. Why aren't you
dancing?'
The
words struck a jarring note. The lights and the music until that moment had had
a subtle psychological effect on Henry, enabling him to hypnotize himself into
a feeling that it was not inability to dance that kept him in his seat, but
that he had had so much of that sort of thing that he really preferred to sit
quietly and look on for a change. Sidney's question changed all that. It made
him face the truth.
'I
don't dance.'
'For
the love of Mike! I bet Mrs Mills does. Would you care for a turn, Mrs Mills?'
'No,
thank you, really.'
But
remorse was now at work on Henry. He perceived that he had been standing in the
way of Minnie's pleasure. Of course she wanted to dance. All women did. She was
only refusing for his sake.
'Nonsense,
Min. Go to it.'
Minnie
looked doubtful.
'Of
course you must dance, Min. I shall be all right. I'll sit here and smoke.'
The
next moment Minnie and Sidney were treading the complicated measure; and
simultaneously Henry ceased to be a youngish twenty-one and was even conscious
of a fleeting doubt as to whether he was really only thirty-five.
Boil
the whole question of old age down, and what it amounts to is that a man is
young as long as he can dance without getting lumbago, and, if he cannot dance,
he is never young at all. This was the truth that forced itself upon Henry
Wallace Mills, as he sat watching his wife moving over the floor in the arms of
Sidney Mercer. Even he could see that Minnie danced well. He thrilled at the
sight of her gracefulness; and for the first time since his marriage he became
introspective. It had never struck him before how much younger Minnie was than
himself. When she had signed the paper at the City Hall on the occasion of the purchase
of the marriage licence, she had given her age, he remembered now, as
twenty-six. It had made no impression on him at the time. Now, however, he
perceived clearly that between twenty-six and thirty-five there was a gap of
nine years; and a chill sensation came upon him of being old and stodgy. How
dull it must be for poor little Minnie to be cooped up night after night with
such an old fogy? Other men took their
wives
out and gave them a good time, dancing half the night with them. All he could
do was to sit at home and read Minnie dull stuff from the _Encyclopaedia_. What
a life for the poor child! Suddenly, he felt acutely jealous of the
rubber-jointed Sidney Mercer, a man whom hitherto he had always heartily
despised.
The
music stopped. They came back to the table, Minnie with a pink glow on her face
that made her younger than ever; Sidney, the insufferable ass, grinning and
smirking and pretending to be eighteen. They looked like a couple of
children--Henry, catching sight of himself in a mirror, was surprised to find
that his hair was not white.
Half
an hour later, in the cab going home, Minnie, half asleep, was aroused by a
sudden stiffening of the arm that encircled her waist and a sudden snort close
to her ear.
It
was Henry Wallace Mills resolving that he would learn to dance.
Being
of a literary turn of mind and also economical, Henry's first step towards his
new ambition was to buy a fifty-cent book entitled _The ABC of Modern Dancing_,
by 'Tango'. It would, he felt—not without reason--be simpler and less expensive
if he should learn the
steps
by the aid of this treatise than by the more customary method of taking
lessons. But quite early in the proceedings he was faced by complications. In
the first place, it was his intention to keep what he was doing a secret from
Minnie, in order to be able to give her a pleasant surprise on her birthday,
which would be coming round in a few weeks. In the second place, _The ABC of
Modern Dancing_ proved on investigation far more complex than its title
suggested.
These
two facts were the ruin of the literary method, for, while it was possible to
study the text and the plates at the bank, the home was the only place in which
he could attempt to put the instructions into practice. You cannot move the
right foot along dotted line A B and bring the left foot round curve C D in a
paying-cashier's cage in a bank, nor, if you are at all sensitive to public
opinion, on the pavement going home. And while he was trying to do it in the
parlour of the flat one night when he imagined that Minnie was in the kitchen cooking
supper, she came in unexpectedly to ask how he wanted the steak
cooked.
He explained that he had had a sudden touch of cramp, but the incident shook
his nerve.
After
this he decided that he must have lessons.
Complications
did not cease with this resolve. Indeed, they became more acute. It was not
that there was any difficulty about finding an instructor. The papers were full
of their advertisements. He selected a Mme Gavarni because she lived in a
convenient spot. Her house was in a side street, with a station within easy
reach. The real problem was when to find time for the lessons. His life was run
on such a regular schedule that he could hardly alter so important a moment in
it as the hour of his arrival home without exciting comment. Only deceit could provide
a solution.
'Min,
dear,' he said at breakfast.
'Yes,
Henry?'
Henry
turned mauve. He had never lied to her before.
'I'm
not getting enough exercise.'
'Why
you look so well.'
'I
get a kind of heavy feeling sometimes. I think I'll put on another mile or so
to my walk on my way home. So--so I'll be back a little later in future.'
'Very
well, dear.'
It
made him feel like a particularly low type of criminal, but, by abandoning his
walk, he was now in a position to devote an hour a day to the lessons; and Mme
Gavarni had said that that would be ample.
'Sure,
Bill,' she had said. She was a breezy old lady with a military moustache and an
unconventional manner with her clientele. 'You come to me an hour a day, and,
if you haven't two left feet, we'll make you the pet of society in a month.'
'Is
that so?'
'It
sure is. I never had a failure yet with a pupe, except one. And that wasn't my
fault.'
'Had
he two left feet?'
'Hadn't
any feet at all. Fell off of a roof after the second lesson, and had to have
'em cut off him. At that, I could have learned him to tango with wooden legs,
only he got kind of discouraged. Well, see you Monday, Bill. Be good.'
And
the kindly old soul, retrieving her chewing gum from the panel of the door
where she had placed it to facilitate conversation, dismissed him.
And
now began what, in later years, Henry unhesitatingly considered the most
miserable period of his existence. There may be times when a man who is past
his first youth feels more unhappy and ridiculous than when he is taking a
course of lessons in the modern dance, but it is not easy to think of them.
Physically, his new experience caused Henry
acute
pain. Muscles whose existence he had never suspected came into being
for--apparently--the sole purpose of aching. Mentally he suffered even more.
This
was partly due to the peculiar method of instruction in vogue at Mme Gavarni's,
and partly to the fact that, when it came to the actual lessons, a sudden niece
was produced from a back room to give them. She was a blonde young lady with
laughing blue eyes, and Henry never clasped her trim waist without feeling a
black-hearted traitor to his absent Minnie. Conscience racked him. Add to this
the sensation of being a strange, jointless creature with abnormally large
hands and feet, and the fact that it was Mme Gavarni's custom to stand in a corner
of the room during the hour of tuition, chewing gum and making comments, and it
is not surprising that Henry became wan and thin.
Mme
Gavarni had the trying habit of endeavouring to stimulate Henry by frequently
comparing his performance and progress with that of a cripple whom she claimed
to have taught at some previous time.
She
and the niece would have spirited arguments in his presence as to whether or
not the cripple had one-stepped better after his third lesson than Henry after
his fifth. The niece said no. As well, perhaps, but not better. Mme Gavarni
said that the niece was forgetting the way the cripple had slid his feet. The
niece said yes, that was so, maybe she was. Henry said nothing. He merely
perspired.
He
made progress slowly. This could not be blamed upon his instructress, however.
She did all that one woman could to speed him up. Sometimes she would even
pursue him into the street in order to show him on the side-walk a means of
doing away with some of his numerous errors of _technique_, the elimination of
which would help to make him definitely the cripple's superior. The misery of embracing
her indoors was as nothing to the misery of embracing her on the sidewalk.
Nevertheless,
having paid for his course of lessons in advance, and being a determined man,
he did make progress. One day, to his surprise, he found his feet going through
the motions without any definite exercise of will-power on his part--almost as
if they were endowed with an intelligence of their own. It was the
turning-point. It filled him
with
a singular pride such as he had not felt since his first rise of salary at the
bank.
Mme
Gavarni was moved to dignified praise.
'Some
speed, kid!' she observed. 'Some speed!'
Henry
blushed modestly. It was the accolade.
Every
day, as his skill at the dance became more manifest, Henry found occasion to
bless the moment when he had decided to take lessons. He shuddered sometimes at
the narrowness of his escape from disaster. Every day now it became more
apparent to him, as he watched Minnie,
that
she was chafing at the monotony of her life. That fatal supper had wrecked the
peace of their little home. Or perhaps it had merely precipitated the wreck.
Sooner or later, he told himself, she was bound to have wearied of the dullness
of her lot. At any rate, dating from shortly after that disturbing night, a
lack of ease and spontaneity seemed to creep into their relations. A blight
settled on the home.
Little
by little Minnie and he were growing almost formal towards each other. She had
lost her taste for being read to in the evenings and had developed a habit of
pleading a headache and going early to bed. Sometimes, catching her eye when
she was not expecting it, he surprised an enigmatic look in it. It was a look,
however, which he was able to read. It meant that she was bored.
It
might have been expected that this state of affairs would have distressed
Henry. It gave him, on the contrary, a pleasurable thrill. It made him feel
that it had been worth it, going through the torments of learning to dance. The
more bored she was now the greater her
delight
when he revealed himself dramatically. If she had been contented with the life
which he could offer her as a non-dancer, what was the sense of losing weight
and money in order to learn the steps? He enjoyed the silent, uneasy evenings
which had supplanted those cheery ones of the first year of their marriage. The
more uncomfortable they were now, the more they would appreciate their
happiness later on. Henry belonged to the large circle of human beings who
consider that there is acuter pleasure in being suddenly cured of toothache
than in never having toothache at all.
He
merely chuckled inwardly, therefore, when, on the morning of her birthday,
having presented her with a purse which he knew she had long coveted, he found
himself thanked in a perfunctory and mechanical way.
'I'm
glad you like it,' he said.
Minnie
looked at the purse without enthusiasm.
'It's
just what I wanted,' she said, listlessly.
'Well,
I must be going. I'll get the tickets for the theatre while I'm
in
town.'
Minnie
hesitated for a moment.
'I
don't believe I want to go to the theatre much tonight, Henry.'
'Nonsense.
We must have a party on your birthday. We'll go to the theatre and then we'll
have supper at Geisenheimer's again. I may be working after hours at the bank
today, so I guess I won't come home. I'll meet you at that Italian place at
six.'
'Very
well. You'll miss your walk, then?'
'Yes.
It doesn't matter for once.'
'No.
You're still going on with your walks, then?'
'Oh,
yes, yes.'
'Three
miles every day?'
'Never
miss it. It keeps me well.'
'Yes.'
'Good-bye,
darling.'
'Good-bye.'
Yes,
there was a distinct chill in the atmosphere. Thank goodness, thought Henry, as
he walked to the station, it would be different tomorrow morning. He had rather
the feeling of a young knight who has done perilous deeds in secret for his
lady, and is about at last to
receive
credit for them.
Geisenheimer's
was as brilliant and noisy as it had been before when Henry reached it that
night, escorting a reluctant Minnie. After a silent dinner and a theatrical
performance during which neither had exchanged more than a word between the
acts, she had wished to abandon the idea of supper and go home. But a squad of
police could not have kept Henry from Geisenheimer's. His hour had come. He had
thought of this moment for weeks, and he visualized every detail of his big
scene. At first they would sit at their table in silent discomfort. Then Sidney
Mercer would come up, as before, to ask Minnie to dance. And then--then--Henry
would rise and, abandoning all concealment, exclaim
grandly:
'No! I am going to dance with my wife!' Stunned amazement of Minnie, followed
by wild joy. Utter rout and discomfiture of that pin-head, Mercer. And then,
when they returned to their table, he breathing easily and regularly as a
trained dancer in perfect condition should, she tottering a little with the
sudden rapture of it all, they would sit with their heads close together and
start a new life. That was the scenario which Henry had drafted.
It
worked out--up to a certain point--as smoothly as ever it had done in his
dreams. The only hitch which he had feared--to wit, the non-appearance of
Sidney Mercer, did not occur. It would spoil the scene a little, he had felt,
if Sidney Mercer did not present himself
to
play the role of foil; but he need have had no fears on this point. Sidney had
the gift, not uncommon in the chinless, smooth-baked type of man, of being able
to see a pretty girl come into the restaurant even when his back was towards
the door. They had hardly seated themselves when he was beside their table
bleating greetings.
'Why,
Henry! Always here!'
'Wife's
birthday.'
'Many
happy returns of the day, Mrs Mills. We've just time for one turn before the
waiter comes with your order. Come along.'
The
band was staggering into a fresh tune, a tune that Henry knew well. Many a time
had Mme Gavarni hammered it out of an aged and unwilling piano in order that he
might dance with her blue-eyed niece. He rose.
'No!'
he exclaimed grandly. 'I am going to dance with my wife!'
He
had not under-estimated the sensation which he had looked forward to causing.
Minnie looked at him with round eyes. Sidney Mercer was obviously startled.
'I
thought you couldn't dance.'
'You
never can tell,' said Henry, lightly. 'It looks easy enough.
Anyway,
I'll try.'
'Henry!'
cried Minnie, as he clasped her.
He
had supposed that she would say something like that, but hardly in that kind of
voice. There is a way of saying 'Henry!' which conveys surprised admiration and
remorseful devotion; but she had not said it in that way. There had been a note
of horror in her voice. Henry's was a simple mind, and the obvious solution,
that Minnie thought that he
had
drunk too much red wine at the Italian restaurant, did not occur to him.
He
was, indeed, at the moment too busy to analyse vocal inflections. They were on
the floor now, and it was beginning to creep upon him like a chill wind that
the scenario which he had mapped out was subject to unforeseen alterations.
At
first all had been well. They had been almost alone on the floor, and he had
begun moving his feet along dotted line A B with the smooth vim which had
characterized the last few of his course of lessons. And then, as if by magic,
he was in the midst of a crowd--a mad, jigging crowd that seemed to have no
sense of direction, no ability whatever to
keep
out of his way. For a moment the tuition of weeks stood by him. Then, a shock,
a stifled cry from Minnie, and the first collision had occurred. And with that
all the knowledge which he had so painfully acquired passed from Henry's mind,
leaving it an agitated blank. This was a situation for which his slidings round
an empty room had not
prepared
him. Stage-fright at its worst came upon him. Somebody charged him in the back
and asked querulously where he thought he was going. As he turned with a
half-formed notion of apologizing, somebody else rammed him from the other
side. He had a momentary feeling as if he were going down the Niagara Rapids in
a barrel, and then he was lying on the floor with Minnie on top of him.
Somebody tripped over his head.
He
sat up. Somebody helped him to his feet. He was aware of Sidney Mercer at his
side.
'Do
it again,' said Sidney, all grin and sleek immaculateness. 'It went down big,
but lots of them didn't see it.'
The
place was full of demon laughter.
*
* * *
*
'Min!'
said Henry.
They
were in the parlour of their little flat. Her back was towards him, and he
could not see her face. She did not answer. She preserved the silence which she
had maintained since they had left the restaurant. Not once during the journey
home had she spoken.
The
clock on the mantelpiece ticked on. Outside an Elevated train rumbled by.
Voices came from the street.
'Min,
I'm sorry.'
Silence.
'I
thought I could do it. Oh, Lord!' Misery was in every note of Henry's voice.
'I've been taking lessons every day since that night we went to that place
first. It's no good--I guess it's like the old woman said. I've got two left
feet, and it's no use my ever trying to do it.
I
kept it secret from you, what I was doing. I wanted it to be a wonderful
surprise for you on your birthday. I knew how sick and tired you were getting
of being married to a man who never took you out, because he couldn't dance. I
thought it was up to me to learn, and give you a good time, like other men's
wives. I--'
'Henry!'
She
had turned, and with a dull amazement he saw that her whole face had altered.
Her eyes were shining with a radiant happiness.
'Henry!
Was _that_ why you went to that house--to take dancing lessons?'
He
stared at her without speaking. She came to him, laughing.
'So
that was why you pretended you were still doing your walks?'
'You
knew!'
'I
saw you come out of that house. I was just going to the station at the end of
the street, and I saw you. There was a girl with you, a girl with yellow hair.
You hugged her!'
Henry
licked his dry lips.
'Min,'
he said huskily. 'You won't believe it, but she was trying to teach me the
Jelly Roll.'
She
held him by the lapels of his coat.
'Of
course I believe it. I understand it all now. I thought at the time that you
were just saying good-bye to her! Oh, Henry, why ever didn't you tell me what
you were doing? Oh, yes, I know you wanted it to be a surprise for me on my
birthday, but you must have seen there was something wrong. You must have seen
that I thought something. Surely
you
noticed how I've been these last weeks?'
'I
thought it was just that you were finding it dull.'
'Dull!
Here, with you!'
'It
was after you danced that night with Sidney Mercer. I thought the whole thing
out. You're so much younger than I, Min. It didn't seem right for you to have
to spend your life being read to by a fellow like me.'
'But
I loved it!'
'You
had to dance. Every girl has to. Women can't do without it.'
'This
one can. Henry, listen! You remember how ill and worn out I was when you met me
first at that farm? Do you know why it was? It was because I had been slaving
away for years at one of those places where you go in and pay five cents to
dance with the lady instructresses. I was a lady instructress. Henry! Just
think what I went through! Every
day
having to drag a million heavy men with large feet round a big room. I tell
you, you are a professional compared with some of them! They trod on my feet
and leaned their two hundred pounds on me and nearly killed me. Now perhaps you
can understand why I'm not crazy about dancing! Believe me, Henry, the kindest
thing you can do to me is
to
tell me I must never dance again.'
'You--you--'
he gulped. 'Do you really mean that you can--can stand the sort of life we're
living here? You really don't find it dull?'
'Dull!'
She
ran to the bookshelf, and came back with a large volume.
'Read
to me, Henry, dear. Read me something now. It seems ages and ages since you
used to. Read me something out of the _Encyclopaedia_!'
Henry
was looking at the book in his hand. In the midst of a joy that almost
overwhelmed him, his orderly mind was conscious of something wrong.
'But
this is the MED-MUM volume, darling.'
'Is
it? Well, that'll be all right. Read me all about "Mum".'
'But
we're only in the CAL-CHA--' He wavered. 'Oh, well--I' he went on,
recklessly.
'I don't care. Do you?'
'No.
Sit down here, dear, and I'll sit on the floor.'
Henry
cleared his throat.
'"Milicz,
or Militsch (d. 1374), Bohemian divine, was the most influential among those
preachers and writers in Moravia and Bohemia who, during the fourteenth
century, in a certain sense paved the way for the reforming activity of
Huss."'
He
looked down. Minnie's soft hair was resting against his knee. He put out a hand
and stroked it. She turned and looked up, and he met her big eyes.
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