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<h2> XXII </h2>
<h3> FORESHADOWINGS </h3>
<p>Now the last rose had blown; the dandelion globes were long since on the
wind; gladioli and golden-glow and salvia were here; the season moved
toward asters and the goldenrod. This haloed summer still idled on its
way, yet all the while sped quickly; like some languid lady in an
elevator.</p>
<p>There came a Sunday—very hot.</p>
<p>Mr. and Mrs. Baxter, having walked a scorched half-mile from church,
drooped thankfully into wicker chairs upon their front porch, though Jane,
who had accompanied them, immediately darted away, swinging her hat by its
ribbon and skipping as lithesomely as if she had just come forth upon a
cool morning.</p>
<p>"I don't know how she does it!" her father moaned, glancing after her and
drying his forehead temporarily upon a handkerchief. "That would merely
kill me dead, after walking in this heat."</p>
<p>Then, for a time, the two were content to sit in silence, nodding to
occasional acquaintances who passed in the desultory after-church
procession. Mr. Baxter fanned himself with sporadic little bursts of
energy which made his straw hat creak, and Mrs. Baxter sighed with the
heat, and gently rocked her chair.</p>
<p>But as a group of five young people passed along the other side of the
street Mr. Baxter abruptly stopped fanning himself, and, following the
direction of his gaze, Mrs. Baxter ceased to rock. In half-completed
attitudes they leaned slightly forward, sharing one of those pauses of
parents who unexpectedly behold their offspring.</p>
<p>"My soul!" said William's father. "Hasn't that girl gone home YET?"</p>
<p>"He looks pale to me," Mrs. Baxter murmured, absently. "I don't think he
seems at all well, lately."</p>
<p>During seventeen years Mr. Baxter had gradually learned not to protest
anxieties of this kind, unless he desired to argue with no prospect of
ever getting a decision. "Hasn't she got any HOME?" he demanded, testily.
"Isn't she ever going to quit visiting the Parchers and let people have a
little peace?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter disregarded this outburst as he had disregarded her remark
about William's pallor. "You mean Miss Pratt?" she inquired, dreamily, her
eyes following the progress of her son. "No, he really doesn't look well
at all."</p>
<p>"Is she going to visit the Parchers all summer?" Mr. Baxter insisted.</p>
<p>"She already has, about," said Mrs. Baxter.</p>
<p>"Look at that boy!" the father grumbled. "Mooning along with those other
moon-calves—can't even let her go to church alone! I wonder how many
weeks of time, counting it out in hours, he's wasted that way this
summer?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know! You see, he never goes there in the evening."</p>
<p>"What of that? He's there all day, isn't he? What do they find to talk
about? That's the mystery to me! Day after day; hours and hours—My
soul! What do they SAY?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Baxter laughed indulgently. "People are always wondering that about
the other ages. Poor Willie! I think that a great deal of the time their
conversation would be probably about as inconsequent as it is now. You see
Willie and Joe Bullitt are walking one on each side of Miss Pratt, and
Johnnie Watson has to walk behind with May Parcher. Joe and Johnnie are
there about as much as Willie is, and, of course, it's often his turn to
be nice to May Parcher. He hasn't many chances to be tete-a-tete with Miss
Pratt."</p>
<p>"Well, she ought to go home. I want that boy to get back into his senses.
He's in an awful state."</p>
<p>"I think she is going soon," said Mrs. Baxter. "The Parchers are to have a
dance for her Friday night, and I understand there's to be a floor laid in
the yard and great things. It's a farewell party."</p>
<p>"That's one mercy, anyhow!"</p>
<p>"And if you wonder what they say," she resumed, "why, probably they're all
talking about the party. And when Willie IS alone with her—well,
what does anybody say?" Mrs. Baxter interrupted herself to laugh. "Jane,
for instance—she's always fascinated by that darky, Genesis, when
he's at work here in the yard, and they have long, long talks; I've seen
them from the window. What on earth do you suppose they talk about? That's
where Jane is now. She knew I told Genesis I'd give him something if he'd
come and freeze the ice-cream for us to-day, and when we got here she
heard the freezer and hopped right around there. If you went out to the
back porch you'd find them talking steadily—but what on earth about
I couldn't guess to save my life!"</p>
<p>And yet nothing could have been simpler: as a matter of fact, Jane and
Genesis (attended by Clematis) were talking about society. That is to say,
their discourse was not sociologic; rather it was of the frivolous and
elegant. Watteau prevailed with them over John Stuart Mill—in a
word, they spoke of the beau monde.</p>
<p>Genesis turned the handle of the freezer with his left hand, allowing his
right the freedom of gesture which was an intermittent necessity when he
talked. In the matter of dress, Genesis had always been among the most
informal of his race, but to-day there was a change almost unnerving to
the Caucasian eye. He wore a balloonish suit of purple, strangely
scalloped at pocket and cuff, and more strangely decorated with lines of
small parasite buttons, in color blue, obviously buttons of leisure. His
bulbous new shoes flashed back yellow fire at the embarrassed sun, and his
collar (for he had gone so far) sent forth other sparkles, playing upon a
polished surface over an inner graining of soot. Beneath it hung a simple,
white, soiled evening tie, draped in a manner unintended by its
manufacturer, and heavily overburdened by a green glass medallion of the
Emperor Tiberius, set in brass.</p>
<p>"Yesm," said Genesis. "Now I'm in 'at Swim—flyin' roun' ev'y night
wif all lem blue-vein people—I say, 'Mus' go buy me some blue-vein
clo'es! Ef I'm go'n' a START, might's well start HIGH!' So firs', I buy me
thishere gol' necktie pin wi' thishere lady's face carved out o' green
di'mon', sittin' in the middle all 'at gol'. 'Nen I buy me pair Royal King
shoes. I got a frien' o' mine, thishere Blooie Bowers; he say Royal King
shoes same kine o' shoes HE wear, an' I walk straight in 'at sto' where
they keep 'em at. 'Don' was'e my time showin' me no ole-time shoes,' I
say. 'Run out some them big, yella, lump-toed Royal Kings befo' my eyes,
an' firs' pair fit me I pay price, an' wear 'em right off on me!' 'Nen I
got me thishere suit o' clo'es—OH, oh! Sign on 'em in window: 'Ef
you wish to be bes'-dress' man in town take me home fer six dolluhs
ninety-sevum cents.' ''At's kine o' suit Genesis need,' I say. 'Ef Genesis
go'n' a start dressin' high, might's well start top!'"</p>
<p>Jane nodded gravely, comprehending the reasonableness of this view. "What
made you decide to start, Genesis?" she asked, earnestly. "I mean, how did
it happen you began to get this way?"</p>
<p>"Well, suh, 'tall come 'bout right like kine o' slidin' into it 'stid o'
hoppin' an' jumpin'. I'z spen' the even' at 'at lady's house, Fanny, what
cook nex' do', las' year. Well, suh, 'at lady Fanny, she quit privut
cookin', she kaytliss—"</p>
<p>"She's what?" Jane asked. "What's that mean, Genesis—kaytliss?"</p>
<p>"She kaytuhs," he explained. "Ef it's a man you call him kaytuh; ef it's a
lady, she's a kaytliss. She does kaytun fer all lem blue-vein fam'lies in
town. She make ref'eshmuns, bring waituhs—'at's kaytun. You' maw
give big dinnuh, she have Fanny kaytuh, an' don't take no trouble 'tall
herself. Fanny take all 'at trouble."</p>
<p>"I see," said Jane. "But I don't see how her bein' a kaytliss started you
to dressin' so high, Genesis."</p>
<p>"Thishere way. Fanny say, 'Look here, Genesis, I got big job t'morra night
an' I'm man short, 'count o' havin' to have a 'nouncer.'"</p>
<p>"A what?"</p>
<p>"Fanny talk jes' that way. Goin' be big dinnuh-potty, an' thishere
blue-vein fam'ly tell Fanny they want whole lot extry sploogin'; tell her
put fine-lookin' cullud man stan' by drawin'-room do'—ask ev'ybody
name an' holler out whatever name they say, jes' as they walk in. Thishere
fam'ly say they goin' show what's what, 'nis town, an' they boun' Fanny go
git 'em a 'nouncer. 'Well, what's mattuh YOU doin' 'at 'nouncin'?' Fanny
say. 'Who—me?' I tell her. 'Yes, you kin, too!' she say, an' she say
she len' me 'at waituh suit yoosta b'long ole Henry Gimlet what die' when
he owin' Fanny sixteen dolluhs—an' Fanny tuck an' keep 'at waituh
suit. She use 'at suit on extry waituhs when she got some on her hands
what 'ain't got no waituh suit. 'You wear 'at suit,' Fanny say, 'an' you
be good 'nouncer, 'cause you' a fine, big man, an' got a big, gran' voice;
'nen you learn befo' long be a waituh, Genesis, an' git dolluh an' half
ev'y even' you waitin ', 'sides all 'at money you make cuttin' grass
daytime.' Well, suh, I'z stan' up doin' 'at 'nouncin' ve'y nex' night.
White lady an' ge'lmun walk todes my do', I step up to 'em—I step up
to 'em thisaway."</p>
<p>Here Genesis found it pleasant to present the scene with some elaboration.
He dropped the handle of the freezer, rose, assumed a stately, but
ingratiating, expression, and "stepped up" to the imagined couple, using a
pacing and rhythmic gait—a conservative prance, which plainly
indicated the simultaneous operation of an orchestra. Then bending
graciously, as though the persons addressed were of dwarfish stature,
"'Scuse me," he said, "but kin I please be so p'lite as to 'quiah you'
name?" For a moment he listened attentively, then nodded, and, returning
with the same aristocratic undulations to an imaginary doorway near the
freezer, "Misto an' Missuz Orlosko Rinktum!" he proclaimed, sonorously.</p>
<p>"WHO?" cried Jane, fascinated. "Genesis, 'nounce that again, right away!"</p>
<p>Genesis heartily complied.</p>
<p>"Misto an' Missuz Orlosko Rinktum!" he bawled.</p>
<p>"Was that really their names?" she asked, eagerly.</p>
<p>"Well, I kine o' fergit," Genesis admitted, resuming his work with the
freezer. "Seem like I rickalect SOMEBODY got name good deal like what I
say, 'cause some mighty blue-vein names at 'at dinnuh-potty, yessuh! But I
on'y git to be 'nouncer one time, 'cause Fanny tellin' me nex' fam'ly have
dinnuh-potty make heap o' fun. Say I done my 'nouncin' GOOD, but say
what's use holler'n' names jes' fer some the neighbors or they own aunts
an' uncles to walk in, when ev'ybody awready knows 'em? So Fanny pummote
me to waituh, an' I roun' right in amongs' big doin's mos' ev'y night.
Pass ice-cream, lemonade, lemon-ice, cake, samwitches. 'Lemme han' you
li'l' mo' chicken salad, ma'am'—' 'Low me be so kine as to git you
f'esh cup coffee, suh'—'S way ole Genesis talkin' ev'y even' 'ese
days!"</p>
<p>Jane looked at him thoughtfully. "Do you like it better than cuttin'
grass, Genesis?" she asked.</p>
<p>He paused to consider. "Yes'm—when ban' play all lem TUNES! My
goo'ness, do soun' gran'!"</p>
<p>"You can't do it to-night, though, Genesis," said Jane. "You haf to be
quiet on Sunday nights, don't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes'm. 'Ain' got no mo' kaytun till nex' Friday even'."</p>
<p>"Oh, I bet that's the party for Miss Pratt at Mr. Parcher's!" Jane cried.
"Didn't I guess right?"</p>
<p>"Yes'm. I reckon I'm a-go'n' a see one you' fam'ly 'at night; see him
dancin'—wait on him at ref'eshmuns."</p>
<p>Jane's expression became even more serious than usual. "Willie? I don't
know whether he's goin', Genesis."</p>
<p>"Lan' name!" Genesis exclaimed. "He die ef he don' git INvite to 'at
ball!"</p>
<p>"Oh, he's invited," said Jane. "Only I think maybe he won't go."</p>
<p>"My goo'ness! Why ain' he goin'?"</p>
<p>Jane looked at her friend studiously before replying. "Well, it's a
secret," she said, finally, "but it's a very inter'sting one, an' I'll
tell you if you never tell."</p>
<p>"Yes'm, I ain' tellin' nobody."</p>
<p>Jane glanced round, then stepped a little closer and told the secret with
the solemnity it deserved. "Well, when Miss Pratt first came to visit Miss
May Parcher, Willie used to keep papa's evening clo'es in his window-seat,
an' mamma wondered what HAD become of 'em. Then, after dinner, he'd slip
up there an' put 'em on him, an' go out through the kitchen an' call on
Miss Pratt. Then mamma found 'em, an' she thought he oughtn't to do that,
so she didn't tell him or anything, an' she didn't even tell papa, but she
had the tailor make 'em ever an' ever so much bigger, 'cause they were
gettin' too tight for papa. An' well, so after that, even if Willie could
get 'em out o' mamma's clo'es-closet where she keeps 'em now, he'd look so
funny in 'em he couldn't wear 'em. Well, an' then he couldn't go to pay
calls on Miss Pratt in the evening since then, because mamma says after he
started to go there in that suit he couldn't go without it, or maybe Miss
Pratt or the other ones that's in love of her would think it was pretty
queer, an' maybe kind of expeck it was papa's all the time. Mamma says she
thinks Willie must have worried a good deal over reasons to say why he'd
always go in the daytime after that, an' never came in the evening, an'
now they're goin' to have this party, an' she says he's been gettin' paler
and paler every day since he heard about it. Mamma says he's pale SOME
because Miss Pratt's goin' away, but she thinks it's a good deal more
because, well, if he would wear those evening clo'es just to go CALLIN',
how would it be to go to that PARTY an' not have any! That's what mamma
thinks—an', Genesis, you promised you'd never tell as long as you
live!"</p>
<p>"Yes'm. <i>I</i> ain' tellin'," Genesis chuckled. "I'm a-go'n' agit me one
nem waituh suits befo' long, myse'f, so's I kin quit wearin' 'at ole Henry
Gimlet suit what b'long to Fanny, an' have me a privut suit o' my own.
They's a secon'-han' sto' ovuh on the avynoo, where they got swallertail
suits all way f'um sevum dolluhs to nineteem dolluhs an' ninety-eight
cents. I'm a—"</p>
<p>Jane started, interrupting him. "'SH!" she whispered, laying a finger
warningly upon her lips.</p>
<p>William had entered the yard at the back gate, and, approaching over the
lawn, had arrived at the steps of the porch before Jane perceived him. She
gave him an apprehensive look, but he passed into the house
absent-mindedly, not even flinching at sight of Clematis—and Mrs.
Baxter was right, William did look pale.</p>
<p>"I guess he didn't hear us," said Jane, when he had disappeared into the
interior. "He acks awful funny!" she added, thoughtfully. "First when he
was in love of Miss Pratt, he'd be mad about somep'm almost every minute
he was home. Couldn't anybody say ANYthing to him but he'd just behave as
if it was frightful, an' then if you'd see him out walkin' with Miss
Pratt, well, he'd look like—like—" Jane paused; her eye fell
upon Clematis and by a happy inspiration she was able to complete her
simile with remarkable accuracy. "He'd look like the way Clematis looks at
people! That's just EXACTLY the way he'd look, Genesis, when he was
walkin' with Miss Pratt; an' then when he was home he got so quiet he
couldn't answer questions an' wouldn't hear what anybody said to him at
table or anywhere, an' papa 'd nearly almost bust. Mamma 'n' papa 'd talk
an' talk about it, an'"—she lowered her voice—"an' I knew what
they were talkin' about. Well, an' then he'd hardly ever get mad any more;
he'd just sit in his room, an' sometimes he'd sit in there without any
light, or he'd sit out in the yard all by himself all evening, maybe; an'
th'other evening after I was in bed I heard 'em, an' papa said—well,
this is what papa told mamma." And again lowering her voice, she proffered
the quotation from her father in atone somewhat awe-struck: "Papa said, by
Gosh! if he ever 'a' thought a son of his could make such a Word idiot of
himself he almost wished we'd both been girls!"</p>
<p>Having completed this report in a violent whisper, Jane nodded repeatedly,
for emphasis, and Genesis shook his head to show that he was as deeply
impressed as she wished him to be. "I guess," she added, after a pause "I
guess Willie didn't hear anything you an' I talked about him, or clo'es,
or anything."</p>
<p>She was mistaken in part. William had caught no reference to himself, but
he had overheard something and he was now alone in his room, thinking
about it almost feverishly. "A secon'-han' sto' ovuh on the avynoo, where
they got swaller-tail suits all way f'um sevum dolluhs to nineteem dolluhs
an' ninety-eight cents."</p>
<p>... Civilization is responsible for certain longings in the breast of man—artificial
longings, but sometimes as poignant as hunger and thirst. Of these the
strongest are those of the maid for the bridal veil, of the lad for long
trousers, and of the youth for a tailed coat of state. To the
gratification of this last, only a few of the early joys in life are
comparable. Indulged youths, too rich, can know, to the unctuous full,
neither the longing nor the gratification; but one such as William, in
"moderate circumstances," is privileged to pant for his first evening
clothes as the hart panteth after the water-brook—and sometimes, to
pant in vain. Also, this was a crisis in William's life: in addition to
his yearning for such apparel, he was racked by a passionate urgency.</p>
<p>As Jane had so precociously understood, unless he should somehow manage to
obtain the proper draperies he could not go to the farewell dance for Miss
Pratt. Other unequipped boys could go in their ordinary "best clothes,"
but William could not; for, alack! he had dressed too well too soon!</p>
<p>He was in desperate case.</p>
<p>The sorrow of the approaching great departure was but the heavier because
it had been so long deferred. To William it had seemed that this
flower-strewn summer could actually end no more than he could actually
die, but Time had begun its awful lecture, and even Seventeen was
listening.</p>
<p>Miss Pratt, that magic girl, was going home.</p>
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