Odd Numbers - Odd Numbers Part 13
Library

Odd Numbers Part 13

CHAPTER VII

CORNELIA SHOWS SOME CLASS

"Oh, by the way, Shorty," says Sadie to me the other mornin', just as I'm makin' an early get-away for town.

"Another postscript, eh?" says I. "Well, let it come over speedy."

"It's something for Mrs. Purdy-Pell," says she. "I'd almost forgotten."

"Is it orderin' some fancy groceries, or sendin' out a new laundry artist?" says I. "If it is, why I guess I can----"

"No, no," says Sadie, givin' my tie an extra pat and brushin' some imaginary dust off my coat collar; "it's about Cousin Cornelia. She's in town, you know, and neither of the Purdy-Pells can get in to see her before next week on account of their garden party, and Cornelia is staying at a hotel alone, and they're a little anxious about her. So look her up, won't you? I told them you would. You don't mind, do you?"

"Me?" says I. "Why, I've been waitin' for this. Makin' afternoon calls on weepy old maids is my specialty."

"There, there!" says Sadie, followin' me out on the veranda. "Don't play the martyr! Perhaps Cornelia isn't the most entertaining person in the world, for she certainly has had her share of trouble; but it isn't going to hurt you merely to find out how she is situated and ask if you can be of any help to her. You know, if there was anything she could do for us, she would----"

"Oh, sure!" says I. "If I'm ever brought home on a shutter, I shall look for Cornelia to be waitin' on the mat with a needle and thread, ready to sew mournin' bands on the help."

That seems to be Cousin Cornelia's steady job in life, tendin' out on the sick and being in at the obsequies. Anyway, she's been at it ever since we knew her. She's a cousin of Mr. Purdy-Pell's, and his branch of the fam'ly, being composed mainly of antiques and chronic invalids, has been shufflin' off in one way or another for the last three or four years at the rate of about one every six months.

Course, it was kind of sad to see a fam'ly peter out that way; but, as a matter of fact, most of 'em was better off. At first the Purdy-Pells started in to chop all their social dates for three months after each sorrowful event; but when they saw they was being let in for a continuous performance, they sort of detailed Cousin Cornelia to do their heavy mournin' and had a black edge put on their stationery.

Maybe Cornelia didn't exactly yearn for the portfolio; but she didn't have much choice about taking it. She was kind of a hanger-on, Cornelia was, you see, and she was used to going where she was sent. So when word would come that Aunt Mehitabel's rheumatism was worse and was threatenin'

her heart, that meant a hurry call for Cousin Cornelia. She'd pack a couple of suit cases full of black skirts and white shirtwaists, and off she'd go, not showin' up again at the Purdy-Pells' town house until Aunty had been safely planted and the headstone ordered.

You couldn't say but what she did it thorough, too; for she'd come back wearin' a long crape veil and lookin' pasty faced and wore out. Don't know as I ever saw her when she wa'n't either just comin' from where there'd been a funeral, or just startin' for where there was likely to be one.

So she didn't cut much of a figure in all the gay doin's the Purdy-Pells was always mixed up in. And yet she wasn't such a kiln dried prune as you might expect, after all. Rather a well built party, Cornelia was, with a face that would pass in a crowd, and a sort of longin' twist to her mouth corners as if she wanted to crack a smile now and then, providin' the chance would only come her way.

And it wa'n't hardly a square deal to list her with the U.B.'s as soon as we did; for all this time she was doing the chief mourner act she was engaged to young Durgin. First off it was understood that she was waitin'

for him to settle on whether he was goin' to be a minister or a doctor, him fiddlin' round at college, now takin' one course and then another; but at last he makes up his mind to chuck both propositions and take a hack at the law.

Durgin got there, too, which was more or less of a surprise to all hands, and actually broke in as partner in a good firm. Then it was a case of Durgin waitin' for Cornelia; for about that time the relations got to droppin' off in one-two-three order, and she seemed to think that so long as she'd started in on the job of ridin' in the first carriage, she ought to see it through.

Whether it was foolish of her or not, ain't worth while debatin' now.

Anyhow, she stuck to it until the last one had cashed in, puttin' Durgin off from month to month and year to year. Then it turns out that the last of the bunch, Uncle Theodore, had left her a good-sized wad that Purdy-Pell had always supposed was comin' to him, but which he didn't grudge to Cornelia a bit.

So there she was, all the lingerin' ones off her hands, and her sportin'

a bank account of her own. She's some tired out, though; so, after sendin' Durgin word that they might as well wait until fall now, she hikes off to some little place in New Hampshire and spends the summer restin' up. Next she comes down unexpected and hits New York.

In the meantime, though, Durgin has suddenly decided to scratch his entry for that partic'lar Matrimonial Handicap. Not that he's seriously int'rested in somebody else, but he's kind of got weary hangin' around, and he's seen a few livelier ones than Cornelia, and he feels that somehow him and her have made a great mistake. You know how they're apt to talk when they get chilly below the ankles? He don't hand this straight out to Cornelia, mind you, but goes to Mrs. Purdy-Pell and Sadie with the tale, wantin' to know what he'd better do.

Now I ain't got any grouch against Durgin. He's all right, I expect, in his way, more or less of a stiff necked, mealy mouthed chump, I always thought; but they say he's nice to his old mother, and he's makin' good in the law business, and he ain't bad to look at. The women folks takes his side right off. They say they don't blame him a bit, and, without stoppin' to think how Cousin Cornelia is going to feel left alone there on the siding, they get busy pickin' out new candidates for Durgin to choose from.

Well, that's the situation when I'm handed this assignment to go and inspect the head of the Purdy-Pells' obituary department and see if she's all comfy. Couldn't have weighed very heavy on my mind; for I don't think of it until late afternoon, just as I'm startin' to pull out for home.

Then I says to myself that maybe it'll do just as well if I ring her up on the 'phone at her hotel. She's in, all right, and I explains over the wire how anxious I am to know if she's all right, and hopes nobody has tried to kidnap her yet, and asks if there's anything I can do.

"Why, how kind of you, Mr. McCabe!" says Cornelia. "Yes, I am perfectly well and quite safe here."

"Good!" says I. And then, seein' how easy I was gettin' out of it, I has to pile on the agony a little by addin', "Ain't there some way I can be useful, though? No errands you want done, or any place you'd like to be towed around to, eh?"

"Why--why----" says she, hesitatin'. "Oh, but I couldn't think of troubling you, you know."

"Why not?" says I, gettin' reckless. "Just remember that I'd be tickled to death, any time you push the button."

"We-e-ell," says she, "we were just wishing, Miss Stover and I, that we did have some gentleman friend who would----"

"Count me in," says I. "What's the game? Trip to Woodlawn Cemetery some day, or do you want to be piloted up to Grant's Tomb?"

No, it wa'n't either of them festive splurges she had in mind. They wanted a dinner escort for that evenin', she and Miss Stover. The other lady, she goes on to say, is a school teacher from up Boston way, that she'd made friends with durin' the summer. Miss Stover was takin' a year off, for the benefit of her nerves, and before she sailed on her Cook's trip abroad she thought she'd like to see a little of New York. They'd been tryin' to knock around some alone, and had got along all right daytimes, but hadn't dared venture out much at night. So if I wanted to be real generous, and it wouldn't be too much of a bore, they'd be very thankful if I would----

"In a minute," says I and, seein' I was up against it anyhow, I thought I might as well do it cheerful. "I'll be up about six, eh?"

"Chee!" says Swifty Joe, who always has his ear stretched out on such occasions, "you make a noise like you was fixin' up a date."

"What good hearin' you have, Swifty!" says I. "Some day, though, you'll strain one of them side flaps of yours. Yes, this is a date, and it's with two of the sportiest female parties that ever dodged an old ladies'

home."

Excitin' proposition, wa'n't it? I spends the next half-hour battin' my head to think of some first class food parlor where I could cart a couple like this Boston schoolma'am and Cousin Cornelia without shockin' 'em.

There was the Martha Washington; but I knew I'd be barred there. Also there was some quiet fam'ly hotels I'd heard of up town; but I couldn't remember exactly what street any of 'em was on.

"Maybe Cornelia will have some plans of her own," thinks I, as I gets into my silk faced dinner jacket and V-cut vest. "And I hope she ain't wearin' more'n two thicknesses of crape veil now."

Well, soon after six I slides out, hops on one of these shed-as-you-enter surface cars, and rides up to the hotel. I'd been holdin' down one of the velvet chairs in the ladies' parlor for near half an hour, and was wonderin' if Cornelia had run out of black headed pins, or what, when I pipes off a giddy specimen in wistaria costume that drifts in and begins squintin' around like she was huntin' for some one. Next thing I knew she'd spotted me and was sailin' right over.

"Oh, there you are!" she gurgles, holdin' out her hand.

"Excuse me, lady," says I, sidesteppin' behind the chair, "but ain't you tryin' to tag the wrong party?"

"Why," says she, lettin' out a chuckle, "don't you know me, Mr. McCabe?"

"Not yet," says I; "but it looks like I would if----Great snakes!"

And honest, you could hardly have covered my face cavity with a waffle iron when I drops to the fact that it's Cousin Cornelia. In place of the dismal female I'd been expectin', here's a chirky party in vivid regalia that shows class in every line. Oh, it's a happy days uniform, all right, from the wide brimmed gauze lid with the long heliotrope feather trailin'

over one side, to the lavender kid pumps.

"Gee!" I gasps. "The round is on me, Miss Cornelia. But I wa'n't lookin'

for you in--in----"

"I know," says she. "This is the first time I've worn colors for years, and I feel so odd. I hope I don't look too----"

"You look all to the skookum," says I.