Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town
EIGHT
The Fore-ordained Attachment
of Zena Pepperleigh and Peter Pupkin
Zena Pepperleigh used to sit reading novels on the piazza of the judge's
house, half hidden by the Virginia creepers. At times the book would fall upon
her lap and there was such a look of unstilled yearning in her violet eyes that
it did not entirely disappear even when she picked up the apple that lay beside
her and took another bite out of it.
With hands clasped she would sit there dreaming all the beautiful day-dreams
of girlhood. When you saw that faraway look in her eyes, it meant that she was
dreaming that a plumed and armoured knight was rescuing her from the embattled
keep of a castle beside the Danube. At other times she was being borne away by
an Algerian corsair over the blue waters of the Mediterranean and was reaching
out her arms towards France to say farewell to it.
Sometimes when you noticed a sweet look of resignation that seemed to rest
upon her features, it meant that Lord Ronald de Chevereux was kneeling at her
feet, and that she was telling him to rise, that her humbler birth must ever be
a bar to their happiness, and Lord Ronald was getting into an awful state about
it, as English peers do at the least suggestion of anything of the sort.
Or, if it wasn't that, then her lover had just returned to her side, tall and
soldierly and sunburned, after fighting for ten years in the Soudan for her
sake, and had come back to ask her for her answer and to tell her that for ten
years her face had been with him even in the watches of the night. He was asking
her for a sign, any kind of sign,—ten years in the Soudan entitles them to a
sign,—and Zena was plucking a white rose, just one, from her hair, when she
would hear her father's step on the piazza and make a grab for the Pioneers of
Tecumseh Township, and start reading it like mad.
She was always, as I say, being rescued and being borne away, and being
parted, and reaching out her arms to France and to Spain, and saying good-bye
forever to Valladolid or the old grey towers of Hohenbranntwein.
And I don't mean that she was in the least exceptional or romantic, because
all the girls in Mariposa were just like that. An Algerian corsair could have
come into the town and had a dozen of them for the asking, and as for a wounded
English officer,—well, perhaps it's better not to talk about it outside or the
little town would become a regular military hospital.
Because, mind you, the Mariposa girls are all right. You've only to look at
them to realize that. You see, you can get in Mariposa a print dress of pale
blue or pale pink for a dollar twenty that looks infinitely better than anything
you ever see in the city,—especially if you can wear with it a broad straw hat
and a background of maple trees and the green grass of a tennis court. And if
you remember, too, that these are cultivated girls who have all been to the
Mariposa high school and can do decimal fractions, you will understand that an
Algerian corsair would sharpen his scimitar at the very sight of them.
Don't think either that they are all dying to get married; because they are
not. I don't say they wouldn't take an errant knight, or a buccaneer or a
Hungarian refugee, but for the ordinary marriages of ordinary people they feel
nothing but a pitying disdain. So it is that each one of them in due time
marries an enchanted prince and goes to live in one of the little enchanted
houses in the lower part of the town.
I don't know whether you know it, but you can rent an enchanted house in
Mariposa for eight dollars a month, and some of the most completely enchanted
are the cheapest. As for the enchanted princes, they find them in the strangest
places, where you never expected to see them, working—under a spell, you
understand,—in drug-stores and printing offices, and even selling things in
shops. But to be able to find them you have first to read ever so many novels
about Sir Galahad and the Errant Quest and that sort of thing.
Naturally then Zena Pepperleigh, as she sat on the piazza, dreamed of bandits
and of wounded officers and of Lord Ronalds riding on foam-flecked chargers. But
that she ever dreamed of a junior bank teller in a daffodil blazer riding past
on a bicycle, is pretty hard to imagine. So, when Mr. Pupkin came tearing past
up the slope of Oneida Street at a speed that proved that he wasn't riding there
merely to pass the house, I don't suppose that Zena Pepperleigh was aware of his
existence.
That may be a slight exaggeration. She knew, perhaps, that he was the new
junior teller in the Exchange Bank and that he came from the Maritime Provinces,
and that nobody knew who his people were, and that he had never been in a canoe
in his life till he came to Mariposa, and that he sat four pews back in Dean
Drone's church, and that his salary was eight hundred dollars. Beyond that, she
didn't know a thing about him. She presumed, however, that the reason why he
went past so fast was because he didn't dare to go slow.
This, of course, was perfectly correct. Ever since the day when Mr. Pupkin
met Zena in the Main Street he used to come past the house on his bicycle just
after bank hours. He would have gone past twenty times a day but he was afraid
to. As he came up Oneida Street, he used to pedal faster and faster,—he never
meant to, but he couldn't help it,—till he went past the piazza where Zena was
sitting at an awful speed with his little yellow blazer flying in the wind. In a
second he had disappeared in a buzz and a cloud of dust, and the momentum of it
carried him clear out into the country for miles and miles before he ever dared
to pause or look back.
Then Mr. Pupkin would ride in a huge circuit about the country, trying to
think he was looking at the crops, and sooner or later his bicycle would be
turned towards the town again and headed for Oneida Street, and would get going
quicker and quicker and quicker, till the pedals whirled round with a buzz and
he came past the judge's house again, like a bullet out of a gun. He rode
fifteen miles to pass the house twice, and even then it took all the nerve that
he had.
The people on Oneida Street thought that Mr. Pupkin was crazy, but Zena
Pepperleigh knew that he was not. Already, you see, there was a sort of dim
parallel between the passing of the bicycle and the last ride of Tancred the
Inconsolable along the banks of the Danube.
I have already mentioned, I think, how Mr. Pupkin and Zena Pepperleigh first
came to know one another. Like everything else about them, it was a sheer matter
of coincidence, quite inexplicable unless you understand that these things are
fore-ordained.
That, of course, is the way with fore-ordained affairs and that's where they
differ from ordinary love.
I won't even try to describe how Mr. Pupkin felt when he first spoke with
Zena and sat beside her as they copied out the "endless chain" letter asking for
ten cents. They wrote out, as I said, no less than eight of the letters between
them, and they found out that their handwritings were so alike that you could
hardly tell them apart, except that Pupkin's letters were round and Zena's
letters were pointed and Pupkin wrote straight up and down and Zena wrote on a
slant. Beyond that the writing was so alike that it was the strangest
coincidence in the world. Of course when they made figures it was different and
Pupkin explained to Zena that in the bank you have to be able to make a seven so
that it doesn't look like a nine.
So, as I say, they wrote the letters all afternoon and when it was over they
walked up Oneida Street together, ever so slowly. When they got near the house,
Zena asked Pupkin to come in to tea, with such an easy off-hand way that you
couldn't have told that she was half an hour late and was taking awful chances
on the judge. Pupkin hadn't had time to say yes before the judge appeared at the
door, just as they were stepping up on to the piazza, and he had a table napkin
in his hand and the dynamite sparks were flying from his spectacles as he called
out:
"Great heaven! Zena, why in everlasting blazes can't you get in to tea at a
Christian hour?"
Zena gave one look of appeal to Pupkin, and Pupkin looked one glance of
comprehension, and turned and fled down Oneida Street. And if the scene wasn't
quite as dramatic as the renunciation of Tancred the Troubadour, it at least had
something of the same elements in it.
Pupkin walked home to his supper at the Mariposa House on air, and that
evening there was a gentle distance in his manner towards Sadie, the dining-room
girl, that I suppose no bank clerk in Mariposa ever showed before. It was like
Sir Galahad talking with the tire-women of Queen Guinevere and receiving
huckleberry pie at their hands.
After that Mr. Pupkin and Zena Pepperleigh constantly met together. They
played tennis as partners on the grass court behind Dr. Gallagher's house,—the
Mariposa Tennis Club rent it, you remember, for fifty cents a month,—and Pupkin
used to perform perfect prodigies of valour, leaping in the air to serve with
his little body hooked like a letter S. Sometimes, too, they went out on Lake
Wissanotti in the evening in Pupkin's canoe, with Zena sitting in the bow and
Pupkin paddling in the stern and they went out ever so far and it was after dark
and the stars were shining before they came home. Zena would look at the stars
and say how infinitely far away they seemed, and Pupkin would realize that a
girl with a mind like that couldn't have any use for a fool such as him. Zena
used to ask him to point out the Pleiades and Jupiter and Ursa minor, and Pupkin
showed her exactly where they were. That impressed them both tremendously,
because Pupkin didn't know that Zena remembered the names out of the astronomy
book at her boarding-school, and Zena didn't know that Pupkin simply took a
chance on where the stars were.
And ever so many times they talked so intimately that Pupkin came mighty near
telling her about his home in the Maritime Provinces and about his father and
mother, and then kicked himself that he hadn't the manliness to speak straight
out about it and take the consequences.
Please don't imagine from any of this that the course of Mr. Pupkin's love
ran smooth. On the contrary, Pupkin himself felt that it was absolutely hopeless
from the start.
There were, it might be admitted, certain things that seemed to indicate
progress.
In the course of the months of June and July and August, he had taken Zena
out in his canoe thirty-one times. Allowing an average of two miles for each
evening, Pupkin had paddled Zena sixty-two miles, or more than a hundred
thousand yards. That surely was something.
He had played tennis with her on sixteen afternoons. Three times he had left
his tennis racket up at the judge's house in Zena's charge, and once he had,
with her full consent, left his bicycle there all night. This must count for
something. No girl could trifle with a man to the extent of having his bicycle
leaning against the verandah post all night and mean nothing by it.
More than that—he had been to tea at the judge's house fourteen times, and
seven times he had been asked by Lilian Drone to the rectory when Zena was
coming, and five times by Nora Gallagher to tea at the doctor's house because
Zena was there.
Altogether he had eaten so many meals where Zena was that his meal ticket at
the Mariposa lasted nearly double its proper time, and the face of Sadie, the
dining-room girl, had grown to wear a look of melancholy resignation; sadder
than romance.
Still more than that, Pupkin had bought for Zena, reckoning it altogether,
about two buckets of ice cream and perhaps half a bushel of chocolate. Not that
Pupkin grudged the expense of it. On the contrary, over and above the ice cream
and the chocolate he had bought her a white waistcoat and a walking stick with a
gold top, a lot of new neckties and a pair of patent leather boots—that is, they
were all bought on account of her, which is the same thing.
Add to all this that Pupkin and Zena had been to the Church of England Church
nearly every Sunday evening for two months, and one evening they had even gone
to the Presbyterian Church "for fun," which, if you know Mariposa, you will
realize to be a wild sort of escapade that ought to speak volumes.
Yet in spite of this, Pupkin felt that the thing was hopeless: which only
illustrates the dreadful ups and downs, the wild alternations of hope and
despair that characterise an exceptional affair of this sort.
Yes, it was hopeless.
Every time that Pupkin watched Zena praying in church, he knew that she was
too good for him. Every time that he came to call for her and found her reading
Browning and Omar Khayyam he knew that she was too clever for him. And every
time that he saw her at all he realized that she was too beautiful for him.
You see, Pupkin knew that he wasn't a hero. When Zena would clasp her hands
and talk rapturously about crusaders and soldiers and firemen and heroes
generally, Pupkin knew just where he came in. Not in it, that was all. If a war
could have broken out in Mariposa, or the judge's house been invaded by the
Germans, he might have had a chance, but as it was—hopeless.
Then there was Zena's father. Heaven knows Pupkin tried hard to please the
judge. He agreed with every theory that Judge Pepperleigh advanced, and that
took a pretty pliable intellect in itself. They denounced female suffrage one
day and they favoured it the next. One day the judge would claim that the labour
movement was eating out the heart of the country, and the next day he would hold
that the hope of the world lay in the organization of the toiling masses. Pupkin
shifted his opinions like the glass in a kaleidoscope. Indeed, the only things
on which he was allowed to maintain a steadfast conviction were the purity of
the Conservative party of Canada and the awful wickedness of the recall of
judges.
But with all that the judge was hardly civil to Pupkin. He hadn't asked him
to the house till Zena brought him there, though, as a rule, all the bank clerks
in Mariposa treated Judge Pepperleigh's premises as their own. He used to sit
and sneer at Pupkin after he had gone till Zena would throw down the Pioneers of
Tecumseh Township in a temper and flounce off the piazza to her room. After
which the judge's manner would change instantly and he would relight his corn
cob pipe and sit and positively beam with contentment. In all of which there was
something so mysterious as to prove that Mr. Pupkin's chances were hopeless.
Nor was that all of it. Pupkin's salary was eight hundred dollars a year and
the Exchange Bank limit for marriage was a thousand.
I suppose you are aware of the grinding capitalistic tyranny of the banks in
Mariposa whereby marriage is put beyond the reach of ever so many mature and
experienced men of nineteen and twenty and twenty-one, who are compelled to go
on eating on a meal ticket at the Mariposa House and living over the bank to
suit the whim of a group of capitalists.
Whenever Pupkin thought of this two hundred dollars he understood all that it
meant by social unrest. In fact, he interpreted all forms of social discontent
in terms of it. Russian Anarchism, German Socialism, the Labour Movement, Henry
George, Lloyd George,—he understood the whole lot of them by thinking of his two
hundred dollars.
When I tell you that at this period Mr. Pupkin read Memoirs of the Great
Revolutionists and even thought of blowing up Henry Mullins with dynamite, you
can appreciate his state of mind.
But not even by all these hindrances and obstacles to his love for Zena
Pepperleigh would Peter Pupkin have been driven to commit suicide (oh, yes; he
committed it three times, as I'm going to tell you), had it not been for another
thing that he knew stood once and for all and in cold reality between him and
Zena.
He felt it in a sort of way, as soon as he knew her. Each time that he tried
to talk to her about his home and his father and mother and found that something
held him back, he realized more and more the kind of thing that stood between
them. Most of all did he realize it, with a sudden sickness of heart, when he
got word that his father and mother wanted to come to Mariposa to see him and he
had all he could do to head them off from it.
Why? Why stop them? The reason was, simple enough, that Pupkin was ashamed of
them, bitterly ashamed. The picture of his mother and father turning up in
Mariposa and being seen by his friends there and going up to the Pepperleigh's
house made him feel faint with shame.
No, I don't say it wasn't wrong. It only shows what difference of fortune,
the difference of being rich and being poor, means in this world. You perhaps
have been so lucky that you cannot appreciate what it means to feel shame at the
station of your own father and mother. You think it doesn't matter, that honesty
and kindliness of heart are all that counts. That only shows that you have never
known some of the bitterest feelings of people less fortunate than yourself.
So it was with Mr. Pupkin. When he thought of his father and mother turning
up in Mariposa, his face reddened with unworthy shame.
He could just picture the scene! He could see them getting out of their
Limousine touring car, with the chauffeur holding open the door for them, and
his father asking for a suite of rooms,—just think of it, a suite of rooms!—at
the Mariposa House.
The very thought of it turned him ill.
What! You have mistaken my meaning? Ashamed of them because they were poor?
Good heavens, no, but because they were rich! And not rich in the sense in which
they use the term in Mariposa, where a rich person merely means a man who has
money enough to build a house with a piazza and to have everything he wants; but
rich in the other sense,—motor cars, Ritz hotels, steam yachts, summer islands
and all that sort of thing.
Why, Pupkin's father,—what's the use of trying to conceal it any longer?—was
the senior partner in the law firm of Pupkin, Pupkin and Pupkin. If you know the
Maritime Provinces at all, you've heard of the Pupkins. The name is a household
word from Chedabucto to Chidabecto. And, for the matter of that, the law firm
and the fact that Pupkin senior had been an Attorney General was the least part
of it. Attorney General! Why, there's no money in that! It's no better than the
Senate. No, no, Pupkin senior, like so many lawyers, was practically a promoter,
and he blew companies like bubbles, and when he wasn't in the Maritime Provinces
he was in Boston and New York raising money and floating loans, and when they
had no money left in New York he floated it in London: and when he had it, he
floated on top of it big rafts of lumber on the Miramichi and codfish on the
Grand Banks and lesser fish in the Fundy Bay. You've heard perhaps of the Tidal
Transportation Company, and Fundy Fisheries Corporation, and the Paspebiac Pulp
and Paper Unlimited? Well, all of those were Pupkin senior under other names. So
just imagine him in Mariposa! Wouldn't he be utterly foolish there? Just imagine
him meeting Jim Eliot and treating him like a druggist merely because he ran a
drug store! or speaking to Jefferson Thorpe as if he were a barber simply
because he shaved for money! Why, a man like that could ruin young Pupkin in
Mariposa in half a day, and Pupkin knew it.
That wouldn't matter so much, but think of the Pepperleighs and Zena!
Everything would be over with them at once. Pupkin knew just what the judge
thought of riches and luxuries. How often had he heard the judge pass sentences
of life imprisonment on Pierpont Morgan and Mr. Rockefeller. How often had
Pupkin heard him say that any man who received more than three thousand dollars
a year (that was the judicial salary in the Missinaba district) was a mere
robber, unfit to shake the hand of an honest man. Bitter! I should think he was!
He was not so bitter, perhaps, as Mr. Muddleson, the principal of the Mariposa
high school, who said that any man who received more than fifteen hundred
dollars was a public enemy. He was certainly not so bitter as Trelawney, the
post-master, who said that any man who got from society more than thirteen
hundred dollars (apart from a legitimate increase in recognition of a successful
election) was a danger to society. Still, he was bitter. They all were in
Mariposa. Pupkin could just imagine how they would despise his father!
And Zena! That was the worst of all. How often had, Pupkin heard her say that
she simply hated diamonds wouldn't wear them, despised them, wouldn't give a
thank you for a whole tiara of them! As for motor cars and steam yachts,—well,
it was pretty plain that that sort of thing had no chance with Zena Pepperleigh.
Why, she had told Pupkin one night in the canoe that she would only marry a man
who was poor and had his way to make and would hew down difficulties for her
sake. And when Pupkin couldn't answer the argument she was quite cross and
silent all the way home.
What was Peter Pupkin doing, then, at eight hundred dollars in a bank in
Mariposa? If you ask that, it means that you know nothing of the life of the
Maritime Provinces and the sturdy temper of the people. I suppose there are no
people in the world who hate luxury and extravagance and that sort of thing
quite as much as the Maritime Province people, and, of them, no one hated luxury
more than Pupkin senior.
Don't mistake the man. He wore a long sealskin coat in winter, yes; but mark
you, not as a matter of luxury, but merely as a question of his lungs. He
smoked, I admit it, a thirty-five cent cigar, not because he preferred it, but
merely through a delicacy of the thorax that made it imperative. He drank
champagne at lunch, I concede the point, not in the least from the enjoyment of
it, but simply on account of a peculiar affection of the tongue and lips that
positively dictated it. His own longing—and his wife shared it—was for the
simple, simple life—an island somewhere, with birds and trees. They had bought
three or four islands—one in the St. Lawrence, and two in the Gulf, and one off
the coast of Maine—looking for this sort of thing. Pupkin senior often said that
he wanted to have some place that would remind him of the little old farm up the
Aroostook where he was brought up. He often bought little old farms, just to try
them, but they always turned out to be so near a city that he cut them into real
estate lots, without even having had time to look at them.
But—and this is where the emphasis lay—in the matter of luxury for his only
son, Peter, Pupkin senior was a Maritime Province man right to the core, with
all the hardihood of the United Empire Loyalists ingrained in him. No luxury for
that boy! No, sir! From his childhood, Pupkin senior had undertaken, at the
least sign of luxury, to "tan it out of him," after the fashion still in vogue
in the provinces. Then he sent him to an old-fashioned school to get it "thumped
out of him," and after that he had put him for a year on a Nova Scotia schooner
to get it "knocked out of him." If, after all that, young Pupkin, even when he
came to Mariposa, wore cameo pins and daffodil blazers, and broke out into
ribbed silk saffron ties on pay day, it only shows that the old Adam still needs
further tanning even in the Maritime Provinces.
Young Pupkin, of course, was to have gone into law. That was his father's
cherished dream and would have made the firm Pupkin, Pupkin, Pupkin, and Pupkin,
as it ought to have been. But young Peter was kept out of the law by the fool
system of examinations devised since his father's time. Hence there was nothing
for it but to sling him into a bank; "sling him" was, I think, the expression.
So his father decided that if Pupkin was to be slung, he should be slung good
and far—clean into Canada (you know the way they use that word in the Maritime
Provinces). And to sling Pupkin he called in the services of an old friend, a
man after his own heart, just as violent as himself, who used to be at the law
school in the city with Pupkin senior thirty years ago. So this friend, who
happened to live in Mariposa, and who was a violent man, said at once: "Edward,
by Jehoshaphat! send the boy up here."
So that is how Pupkin came to Mariposa. And if, when he got there, his
father's friend gave no sign, and treated the boy with roughness and incivility,
that may have been, for all I know, a continuation of the "tanning" process of
the Maritime people.
Did I mention that the Pepperleigh family, generations ago, had taken up land
near the Aroostook, and that it was from there the judge's father came to
Tecumseh township? Perhaps not, but it doesn't matter.
But surely after such reminiscences as these the awful things that are
impending over Mr. Pupkin must be kept for another chapter.