Free Air - Page 41/176

Hence it was to the traveling men, not to supercilious tourists in

limousines, that Milt turned for suggestions as to how to perform the

miracle of changing from an ambitious boy into what Claire would

recognize as a charming man. He had not met enough traveling men at

Schoenstrom. They scooped up what little business there was, and escaped

from the Leipzig House to spend the night at St. Cloud or Sauk Centre.

In the larger towns in Minnesota and Dakota, after evening movies,

before slipping out to his roadside camp Milt inserted himself into a

circle of traveling men in large leather chairs, and ventured, "Saw a

Gomez-Dep with a New York license down the line today."

"Oh. You driving through?"

"Yes. Going to Seattle."

That distinguished Milt from the ordinary young-men-loafers, and he was

admitted as one of the assembly of men who traveled and saw things and

wondered about the ways of men. It was good talk he heard; too much of

hotels, and too many tight banal little phrases suggesting the solution

of all economic complexities by hanging "agitators," but with this, an

exciting accumulation of impressions of Vancouver and San Diego, Florida

and K. C.

"That's a wonderful work farm they have at Duluth," said one, and the

next, "speaking of that, I was in Chicago last week, and I saw a

play----"

Milt had, in his two years of high school in St. Cloud, and in his

boyhood under the genial but abstracted eye of the Old Doctor, learned

that it was not well thought of to use the knife as a hod and to plaster

mashed potatoes upon it, as was the custom in Mac's Old Home Lunch at

Schoenstrom. But the arts of courteously approaching oysters, salad, and

peas were rather unfamiliar to him. Now he studied forks as he had once

studied carburetors, and he gave spiritual devotion to the nice eating

of a canned-shrimp cocktail--a lost legion of shrimps, now two thousand

miles and two years away from their ocean home.

He peeped with equal earnestness at the socks and the shirts of the

traveling men. Socks had been to him not an article of faith but a

detail of economy. His attitude to socks had lacked in reverence and

technique. He had not perceived that socks may be as sound a symbol of

culture as the 'cello or even demountable rims. He had been able to

think with respect of ties and damp piqué collars secured by gold

safety-pins; and to the belted fawn overcoat that the St. Klopstock

banker's son had brought back from St. Paul, he had given jealous

attention. But now he graduated into differential socks.

By his campfire, sighing to the rather somnolent Vere de Vere, he

scornfully yanked his extra pairs of thick, white-streaked, yellow

cotton socks from the wicker suitcase, and uttered anathema: "Begone, ye unworthy and punk-looking raiment. I know ye! Ye werst a

bargain and two pairs for two bits. But even as Adolph Zolzac and an

agent for flivver accessories are ye become in my eyes, ye generation of

vipers, ye clumsy, bag-footed, wrinkle-sided gunny-sacking ye!"