Torchy As A Pa - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Naughty, naughty!" says she. "But go on. Tell me a funny story while the fish is being served."
"I'd do better servin' the fish," says I.
"Pooh!" says she. "I don't believe it. Come!"
"How do you know I'm primed?" says I.
"I can tell by your eyes," says she. "There's a twinkle in them."
"S-s-s-s.h.!.+" says I. "Belladonna. Besides, I always forget the good ones I read in the comic section."
"Please!" insists Betty. "Every one else is being so stupid. And you're supposed to entertain me, you know."
"Well," says I, "I did hear kind of a rich one while I was waitin' at the club for Mr. Robert today only I don't know as----"
"Listen, everybody," announces Betty vivacious. "Torchy is going to tell a story."
Course, that gets me pinked up like the candle shades and I shakes my head vigorous.
"Hear, hear!" says Mr. Robert.
"Oh, do!" adds Mrs. Ellins.
As for Vee, she looks across at me doubtful. "I hope it isn't that one about a Mr. Cohen who played poker all night," says she.
"Wrong guess," says I. "It's one I overheard at Mr. Robert's club while a bunch of young sports was comparin' notes on settin' hens."
"How do you mean, setting hens?" asks Mr. Robert.
"It's the favorite indoor sport up in New England now, I understand,"
says I. "It's the pie-belt way of taking the sting out of the prohibition amendment. You know, building something with a kick to it. I didn't get the details, but they use corn-meal, sugar, water, raisins and the good old yeast cake, and let it set in a cask! for twenty-one days. Nearly everybody up there has a hen on, I judge, or one just coming off."
"Oh, I see!" says Mr. Robert. "And had any of the young men succeeded; that is, in producing something with--er--a kick to it?"
"Accordin' to their tale, they had," says I. "Seems they tried it out in Boston after the Harvard-Yale game. A bunch got together in some hotel room and opened a jug one of 'em had brought along in case Harvard should win, and after that 10-3 score--well, I expect they'd have celebrated on something, even if it was no more than lemon extract or Jamaica ginger."
"How about that, Nicky?" asks Mr. Robert, who's a Yale man.
"Quite possible," says Nicky, who for the first time seems to have his ears p.r.i.c.ked up. "What then?"
"Well," says I, "there was one Harvard guy who wasn't much used to hitting anything of the sort, but he was so much cheered up over seeing his team win that he let 'em lead him to it. They say he shut his eyes and let four fingers in a water gla.s.s trickle down without stopping to taste it. From then on he was a different man. He forgot all about being a Delta Kappa, whatever that is; forgot that he had an aunt who still lived on Beacon Street; forgot most everything except that the birds were singin' 'Johnny Harvard' and that Casey was a great man. He climbed on a table and insisted on makin' a speech about it. You know how that home brew stuff works sometimes?"
"I've been told that it has a certain potency," says Mr. Robert, winkin'
at Nicky.
"Anyway," I goes on, seein' that Nicky was still interested, "it seems to tie his tongue loose. He gets eloquent about the poor old Elis who had to stand around and watch the snake dance without lettin' out a yip.
Then he has a bright idea, which he proceeds to state. Maybe they don't know anything about the glorious product of the settin' hen down in New Haven. And who needs it more at such a time as this? Ought to have some of 'em up there and lighten their load of gloom. Act of charity. Gotta be done. If n.o.body else'll do it, he will. Go out into highways and byways.
"And he does. Half an hour later he shows up at the home brew headquarters with an Eli that he's captured on the way to the South station. He's a solemn-faced, dignified party who don't seem to catch what it's all about and rather balks when he sees the bunch. But he's dragged in and introduced as Chester Beal, the Hitt.i.te."
"I beg pardon?" asks Nicky.
"I'm only giving you what I heard," says I. "Chester Beal might have been his right name, or it might not, and the Hitt.i.te part was some of his josh, I take it. Anyway, Chester was dealt a generous shot from the jug, followin' which he was one of 'em. Him and the Harvard guy got real chummy, and the oftener they sampled the home brew the more they thought of each other. They discovered they'd both served in the same division on the other side and had spent last Thanksgiving only a few miles from each other. It was real touchin'. When last seen they was driftin' up Tremont Street arm in arm singin' 'Madelon,' 'Boola-Boola,'
'Harvardiana' and other appropriate melodies."
"Just like the good old days, eh, Nicky?" suggests Mr. Robert.
But Nicky only shakes his head. "You say they were not seen again?" he demands.
"Not until about 1:30 a. m.," says I, "when they shows up in front of the Harvard Club on Commonwealth Avenue. One of the original bunch spots the pair and listens in. The Harvard man is as eloquent as ever. He's still going strong. But Chester, the Hitt.i.te, looks bored and weary.
'Oh, shut up!' says he. But the other one can't be choked off that way.
He just starts in again. So Chester leads him out to the curb and hails a taxi driver. 'Take him away,' says Chester. 'He's been talking to me for hours and hours. Take him away.' 'Yes, sir,'says the driver. 'Where to, sir,' 'Oh, anywhere,' says Chester. 'Take him to--to Worcester.'
'Right,' says the driver, loadin' in his fare."
"But--but of course he didn't really take him all that distance?" puts in Betty.
"Uh-huh!" says I. "That's what I thought was so rich. And about 10:30 next mornin' a certain party wakes up in a strange room in a strange town. He's got a head on him like an observation balloon and a tongue that feels like a p.u.s.s.ycat's back. And when he finally gets down to the desk he asks the clerk where he is. 'Bancroft House, Worcester, sir,'
says the clerk. 'How odd!' says he. 'But--er--? what is this charge of $16.85 on my bill?' 'Taxi fare from Boston,' says the clerk. And they say he paid up like a good sport."
"In such a case," says Mr. Robert "one does."
"Worcester!" says Betty. "That's queer."
"The rough part of it was," I goes on, "that he was due to attend a big affair in Boston the night before, sort of a reunion of officers who'd been in the army of occupation--banquet and dance afterward--I think they call it the Society of the Rhine."
"What!" exclaims Betty.
"Oh, I say!" gasps Nicky. Then they look at each other queer.
I could see that I'd made some kind of a break but I couldn't figure out just what it was. "Anyway," says I, "he didn't get there. He got to Worcester instead. Course, though, you don't have to believe all you hear at a club."
"If only one could," says Betty.
And it wasn't until after dinner that I got a slant on this remark of hers.
"Torchy," says she, "where is Mr. Wells?"
"Why," says I, "I saw him drift out on the terrace a minute ago."
"Alone?" says she.
I nods.
"Then take me out to him, will you?" she asks.
"Sure thing," says I.
And she puts it up to him straight when we get him cornered. "Was that the real reason why you were in Worcester?" she demands.