Free Air - Page 135/176

That afternoon, after having agreed that Mr. Johnny Martin was a bore,

Mr. and Mrs. Gilson decided to run out to the house of Mr. Johnny

Martin. They bore along the lifeless Claire.

Mr. Martin was an unentertaining bachelor who entertained. There were a

dozen supercilious young married people at his bayside cottage when the

Gilsons arrived. Among them were two eyebrow-arching young matrons whom

Claire had not met--Mrs. Corey and Mrs. Betz.

"We've all heard of you, Miss Boltwood," said Mrs. Betz. "You come from

the East, don't you?"

"Yes," fluttered Claire, trying to be cordial.

Mrs. Corey and Mrs. Betz looked at each other in a motionless wink, and

Mrs. Corey prodded: "From New York?"

"No. Brooklyn." Claire tried not to make it too short.

"Oh." The tacit wink was repeated. Mrs. Corey said brightly--much too

brightly--"I was born in New York. I wonder if you know the Dudenants?"

Now Claire knew the Dudenants. She had danced with that young ass Don

Dudenant a dozen times. But the devil did enter into her and possess

her, and, to Eva Gilson's horror, Claire said stupidly, "No-o, but I

think I've heard of them."

The condemning wink was repeated.

"I hear you've been doing such interesting things--motoring and

adventuring--you must have met some terrible people along the way,"

fished Mrs. Betz.

"Yes, everybody does seem to feel that way. But I'm afraid I found them

terribly nice," flared Claire.

"I always say that common people can be most agreeable," Mrs. Corey

patronized. Before Claire could kill her--there wasn't any homicidal

weapon in sight except a silver tea-strainer--Mrs. Corey had pirouetted

on, "Though I do think that we're much too kind to workmen and all--the

labor situation is getting to be abominable here in the West, and upon

my word, to keep a maid nowadays, you have to treat her as though she

were a countess."

"Why shouldn't maids be like countesses? They're much more important,"

said Claire sweetly.

It cannot be stated that Claire had spent any large part of her time in

reading Karl Marx, leading syndicalist demonstrations, or hemming red

internationalist flags, but at this instant she was a complete

revolutionist. She could have executed Mrs. Corey and pretty Mrs. Betz

with zeal; she disliked the entire bourgeoisie; she looked around for a

Jap boy to call "comrade" and she again thought about the possibilities

of the tea-strainer for use in assassination. She stolidly wore through

the combined and exclamatory explanations of Mrs. Corey, Mrs. Betz, Mrs.

Gilson, and Mr. Johnny Martin about the inherent viciousness of all

maids, and when the storm was over, she said in a manner of honey and

syrup: "You were speaking of the Dudenants, weren't you, Mrs. Corey? I do

remember them now. Poor Don Dudenant, isn't it a pity he's such a fool?

His father is really a very decent old bore."