Odd Numbers - Odd Numbers Part 14
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Odd Numbers Part 14

It wa'n't any jolly, either. There never was any real sharp angles to Cornelia, and now I come to reckon up I couldn't place her as more'n twenty-six or twenty-seven at the outside. So why shouldn't she show up fairly well in a Gibson model?

"It's so good of you to come to our rescue," says she. "Miss Stover will be down presently. Now, where shall we go to dinner?"

Well, I see in a minute I've got to revise my plans; so I begins namin'

over some of the swell grillrooms and cafes.

"Oh, we have been to most of those, all by ourselves," says Cornelia.

"What we would like to see to-night is some real--well, a place where we couldn't go alone, out somewhere--an automobile resort, for instance."

"Whe-e-ew!" says I through my front teeth. "Say, Miss Cornie, but you are gettin' out of the bereft class for fair! I guess it's comin' to you, though. Now jest let me get an idea of how far you want to go."

"Why," says she, shruggin' her shoulders,--"how is it you put such things?--the limit, I suppose?"

"Honest?" says I. "Then how about Clover Blossom Inn?"

Heard about that joint, haven't you? Of course. There's a lot of joy-ride tank stations strung along Jerome-ave. and the Yonkers road; but when it comes to a genuine tabasco flavored chorus girls' rest, the Clover Blossom has most of the others lookin' like playgrounds for little mothers. But Cornie don't do any dodgin'.

"Fine!" says she. "I've read about that inn." Then she hurries on to plan out the details. I must go over to Times Square and hire a nice looking touring car for the evening. And I mustn't let Miss Stover know how much it costs; for Cornelia wants to do that part of it by her lonely.

"The dinner we are to go shares on," says she.

"Couldn't think of it," says I. "Let that stand as my blow."

"No, indeed," says Cornelia. "We have the money all put aside, and I sha'n't like it. Here it is, and I want you to be sure you spend the whole of it," and with that she shoves over a couple of fives.

I couldn't help grinnin' as I takes it. Maybe you've settled a dinner bill for three and a feed for the shofer at the Clover Blossom; but not with a ten-spot, eh?

And while Cornelia is goin' back in the elevator after the schoolma'am, I scoots over to get a machine. After convincin' two or three of them leather capped pirates that I didn't want to buy their blamed outfits, I fin'lly beats one down to twenty-five and goes back after the ladies.

[Illustration: "Cornelia whispered about the peroxide puffed girl"]

Miss Stover don't turn out to be any such star as Cornelia; but she don't look so much like a suffragette as I expected. She's plump, and middle aged, and plain dressed; but there's more or less style to the way she carries herself. Also she has just a suspicion of eye twinkle behind the glasses, which suggests that perhaps some of this programme is due to her.

"All aboard for the Clover Blossom!" says I, handin' 'em into the tonneau; "that is, as soon as I run in here to the telephone booth."

It had come to me only at that minute what a shame it was this stunt of Cornelia's was goin' to be wasted on an audience that couldn't appreciate the fine points, and I'd thought of a scheme that might supply the gap.

So I calls up an old friend of mine and has a little confab.

By the time we'd crossed the Harlem and had got straightened out on the parkway with our gas lamps lighted, and the moon comin' up over the trees, and hundreds of other cars whizzin' along in both directions, Cornelia and her schoolma'am friend was chatterin' away like a couple of boardin' school girls. There's no denyin' that it does get into your blood, that sort of ridin'. Why, even I begun to feel some frisky!

And look at Cornelia! For years she'd been givin' directions about where to put the floral wreaths, and listenin' to wills being read, and all summer long she'd been buried in a little backwoods boardin' house, where the most excitin' event of the day was watchin' the cows come home, or going down for the mail. Can you blame her for workin' up a cheek flush and rattlin' off nonsense?

Clover Blossom Inn does look fine and fancy at night, too, with all the colored lights strung around, and the verandas crowded with tables, and the Gypsy orchestra sawin' away, and new parties landin' from the limousines every few minutes. Course, I knew they'd run against perfect ladies hittin' up cocktails and cigarettes in the cloak room, and hear more or less high spiced remarks; but this was what they'd picked out to view.

So I orders the brand of dinner the waiter hints I ought to have,--little necks, okra soup, broiled lobster, guinea hen, and so on, with a large bottle of fizz decoratin' the silver tub on the side and some sporty lookin' mineral for me. It don't make any diff'rence whether you've got a wealthy water thirst or not, when you go to one of them tootsy palaces you might just as well name your vintage first as last; for any cheap skates of suds consumers is apt to find that the waiter's made a mistake and their table has been reserved for someone else.

But if you don't mind payin' four prices, and can stand the comp'ny at the adjoinin' tables, just being part of the picture and seeing it from the inside is almost worth the admission. If there's any livelier purple spots on the map than these gasolene road houses from eight-thirty P. M.

to two-thirty in the mornin', I'll let you name 'em.

Cornelia rather shies at the sight of the fat bottle peekin' out of the cracked ice; but she gets over that feelin' after Miss Stover has expressed her sentiments.

"Champagne!" says the schoolma'am. "Oh, how perfectly delightful! Do you know, I always have wanted to know how it tasted."

Say, she knows all about it now. Not that she put away any more'n a lady should,--at the Clover Blossom,--but she had tackled a dry Martini first, and then she kept on tastin' and tastin' her glass of fizz, and the waiter keeps fillin' it up, and that twinkle in her eye develops more and more, and her conversation gets livelier and livelier. So does Cornelia's. They gets off some real bright things, too. You'd never guess there was so much fun in Cornie, or that she could look so much like a stunner.

She was just leanin' over to whisper something to me about the peroxide puffed girl at the next table, and I was tryin' to stand bein' tickled in the neck by that long feather of hers while I listens, and Miss Stover was snuggled up real chummy on the other side, when I looks up the aisle and sees a little group watchin' us with their mouths open and their eyebrows up.

Leadin' the way is Pinckney. Oh, he'd done his part, all right, just as I'd told him over the wire; for right behind him is Durgin, starin' at Cornelia until he was pop eyed.

But that wa'n't all. Trust Pinckney to add something. Beyond Durgin is Mrs. Purdy-Pell--and Sadie. Now, I've seen Mrs. McCabe when she's been some jarred; but I don't know as I ever watched the effect of such a jolt as this. You see, Cornelia's back was to her, and all Sadie can see is that wistaria lid with the feather danglin' down my neck.

Sadie don't indulge in any preliminaries. She marches right along, with her chin in the air, and glues them Irish blue eyes of hers on me in a way I can feel yet. "Well, I must say!" says she.

"Eh?" says I, tryin' hard to put on a pleased grin. "So Pinckney brought you along too, did he? Lovely evenin', ain't it?"

"Why, Sadie?" says Cornelia, jumpin' up and givin' 'em a full face view.

And you should have seen how that knocks the wind out of Sadie.

"Wha-a-at!" says she. "You?"

"Of course," says Cornie. "And we're just having the grandest lark, and----Oh! Why, Durgin! Where in the world did you come from? How jolly!"

"Ain't it?" says I. "You see, Sadie, I'm carryin' out instructions."

Well, the minute she gets wise that it's all a job that Pinckney and I have put up between us, and discovers that my giddy lookin' friend is only Cousin Cornelia doin' the butterfly act, the thunder storm is all over. The waiter shoves up another table, and they plants Durgin next to Cornie, and the festivities takes a new start.

Did Durgin boy forget all about them chilly feet of his? Why, you could almost see the frost startin' out before he'd said a dozen words, and by the time he'd let the whole effect sink in, he was no nearer contractin'

chilblains than a Zulu with his heels in the campfire.

What pleases me most, though, was the scientific duck I made in the last round. We'd gone clear through the menu, and they was finishin' up their cordials, when I spots the waiter comin' with a slip of paper on his tray as long as a pianola roll.

"Hey, Pinckney," says I, "see what's comin' now!"

And when Pinckney reached around and discovers what it is, he digs down for his roll like a true sport, never battin' an eyelash.

"You would ring in the fam'ly on me, would you," says I, "when I'm showin' lady friends the sights?"

CHAPTER VIII

DOPING OUT AN ODD ONE

Say, notice any deep sea roll about my walk? No? Well, maybe you can get the tarry perfume as I pass by? Funny you don't; for I've been a Vice Commodore for most three weeks now. Yes, that's on the level--belay my spinnaker taffrail if it ain't!

That's what I get for bein' one of the charter members of the Rockhurst Yacht Club. You didn't, eh? Well, say, I'm one of the yachtiest yachters that ever jibbed a gangway. Not that I do any sailin' exactly; but I guess Sadie and me each paid good money for our shares of club stock, and if that ain't as foolish an act as you can find in the nautical calendar, then I'll eat the binnacle boom.