<h2 id="c11">CHAPTER XI <br/><span class="small">A HOLD-ON IN NEW YORK</span></h2>
<p>“My! Isn’t it hard to hang on!” breathed
Tavia, clinging to Dorothy, as the subway train
swung rapidly around the curves. As usual the
morning express was crowded to overflowing, and
the “overflowers” were squeezed tightly together
on the platforms. Ned held Aunt Winnie by the
arm and looked daggers at the complacent New
Yorkers who sat behind the morning papers, unable
to see any persons who might want their seats.</p>
<p>“Such unbearable air! It always makes me
faint,” said Aunt Winnie, weakly.</p>
<p>“Let’s get out as quickly as possible,” said Dorothy,
“the top of a ’bus for mine!”</p>
<p>“So this is a subway train,” exclaimed Tavia, as
she was lurched with much force against an athletic
youth, who simply braced himself on his feet,
and saved Tavia from falling.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_101">[101]</div>
<p>“The agony will be over in a second,” exclaimed
Ned, as the guard yelled in a most bewildering
way, “next stop umphgetoughly!” and another in
the middle of the train, screamed in a perfectly
unintelligent manner, “next stop fothburgedinskt!”</p>
<p>“What did he say?” said Tavia, wonderingly.</p>
<p>“He must have said Forty-second Street,” said
Aunt Winnie, “that I know is the next stop.”</p>
<p>“I would have to ride on indefinitely,” said
Tavia, “I could never understand such eloquence.”</p>
<p>“There,” said Dorothy, readjusting herself, “I
expected to be hurled into someone’s lap sooner
or later, but I didn’t expect it so soon.”</p>
<p>“You surely landed in his lap,” laughed Tavia,
“see how he’s blushing. Why don’t you hang
onto Ned, as we are doing.”</p>
<p>“Poor Ned,” said Dorothy, but she, too,
grasped a portion of his arm, and like grim death
the three women clung to Ned for protection
against the merciless swaying of the subway train.</p>
<p>Reaching Forty-second Street, up the steps they
dashed with the rest of the madly rushing crowd
of people and out into the open street. Tavia
tried to keep her mouth closed, because all the cartoons
she had ever seen of a country person’s first
glimpse of New York pictured them open-mouthed,
and staring. She clung to Dorothy and
Dorothy hung on Aunt Winnie, who had Ned’s
arm in a firm grip.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_102">[102]</div>
<p>Such crowds of human beings! Neither Dorothy
nor Tavia had ever before seen so many people
at one glance! So many people were not in Dalton
in an entire year.</p>
<p>“This isn’t anything,” said Ned, out of his
superior knowledge of a previous trip to New
York. “This is only a handful—the business
crowd.”</p>
<p>“Oh, let’s stay in front of the Grand Central
Terminal,” said Dorothy, “I want to finish
counting the taxicabs, I was only up to thirty.”</p>
<p>“I only had time to count five stories in that big
hotel building,” cried Tavia, “and I want to count
’em right up into the clouds.”</p>
<p>“They’re not tall buildings,” said Ned, just
bursting with information. “Wait until you see
the downtown skyscrapers!”</p>
<p>“Ned throws cold water on all our little enthusiasms,”
pouted Dorothy.</p>
<p>“Never mind,” said Aunt Winnie, “you and
Tavia can come down town to-morrow and spend
the day counting people and things.”</p>
<p>Arriving at the corner of Fifth Avenue, and successfully
dodging many vehicles, they got safely
on the opposite corner just in time to catch a
speeding auto ’bus. Up to the roof they climbed.</p>
<p>“Isn’t it too delightful!” sighed Tavia, blissfully.</p>
<p>“We’ll come down town on a ’bus every day,”
declared Dorothy.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_103">[103]</div>
<p>They passed all the millionaires’ palatial residences
in blissful ignorance of whom the palaces
sheltered. They didn’t care which rich man occupied
one mansion or another, they were happy
enough riding on top of a ’bus.</p>
<p>Tavia simply gushed when they reached the
Drive and a cutting sharp breeze blew across the
Hudson river.</p>
<p>“I never imagined New York City had anything
so lovely as this; I thought it was all tall
buildings and smoky atmosphere and—lights!”
declared Tavia.</p>
<p>Along the river all was quiet and luxurious and
wonderful. The auto ’bus stopped before a small
apartment house—that is, it was small comparatively.
The front was entirely latticed glass and
white marble. A bell boy rushed forward to relieve
them of their bags, another took their wraps
and a third respectfully held open the reception
hall door. Down this hall, lined on two sides
with growing plants, Aunt Winnie’s party marched
in haughty silence. They were afraid to utter
an unseemly word. Tavia’s little chin went up
into the air—the bell boys were very appalling—but
they shouldn’t know of the visitors’ suburban
origin if Tavia could help it. They were assisted
on the elevator by a dignified liveried man, and
up into the air they shot, landing, breathless, in
a perfectly equipped tiny hall. At home, of course,
one would call it a tiny hall, but in a New York
apartment house it was spacious and roomy.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_104">[104]</div>
<p>Still another person, this time a woman, in spotless
white, opened the door and into the door
Aunt Winnie disappeared, and the others followed,
although they were not at all sure it was
the proper thing to do.</p>
<p>Then Tavia gasped. In her loveliest dreams of
a home, she had never dreamed of anything as
perfectly beautiful as this. Little bowers of pink
and white, melted into other little rooms of gold
and green and blue, and then a velvety stretch of
something, which Tavia afterward discovered was
a hall, led them into a kitchenette.</p>
<p>“Do people eat here?” said the dazed Tavia.</p>
<p>“One must eat, be the furnishings ever so
luxurious,” sang Ned.</p>
<p>Dorothy rushed immediately to the tiny cupboard,
and examined the Mother Goose pattern
breakfast dishes, while Tavia gazed critically at
the numerous mysterious doors leading hither and
thither through the apartment.</p>
<p>They gathered together, finally, in the living
room, which faced the river. The heavy draperies
subdued the strong sunlight.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_105">[105]</div>
<p>Mrs. White sighed the happy sigh that betokens
rest, as she sank into a Turkish chair. Dorothy
and Tavia were not ready to sit down yet—there
was too much to explore. From their high place,
there above the crowds, and seemingly in the
clouds, they could see something akin to human
beings moving about everywhere, even, it seemed,
out along the river drive. For a brief time no
one spoke; then Ned “proverbially” broke the
silence.</p>
<p>“Well, Mom,” he emitted, “what is it all
about? Did you just come into upholstered storage
to have new looking glasses? Or is there a
system in this insanity?”</p>
<p>Mrs. White smiled indulgently. Ned was beginning
to take an interest in things. He must
surmise that her trip to New York was not one of
mere pleasure.</p>
<p>The girls, unconsciously discreet, had left the
room.</p>
<p>“My dear son,” said the lady, now in a soft
robe, just rescued from her suit-case, “I am glad
to see that you are trying to help me. You know
the Court Apartments, the one I hold purposely for
you and Nat?” He nodded. “Well, the agent
has been acting queerly. In fact, I have reason
to question his honesty. He is constantly refusing
to make reports. Says that rents have come down,
when everyone else says they have gone up. He
also declares some of the tenants are in arrears.
Now, if we are to have so much trouble with the
investment, we shall have to get rid of it.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_106">[106]</div>
<p>The remark was in the note of query. Nat
brushed his fingers through his heavy hair.</p>
<p>“Well, Mom,” he said impressively, “we must
look it over carefully, but I have always heard that
New York real estate men—of a certain type—observe
the certain and remember the type—are
not always to be trusted. I wouldn’t ask better
sport than going in for detective work on the half-shell.
But say, this is some apartment! I suppose
I may have it some evening for a little round-up
of my New York friends? You know so many
of the fellows seem to blow this way.”</p>
<p>“Of course you may, Ned. I shall be glad to
help you.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you couldn’t possibly do that, mother,”
he objected. “There is only one way to let boys
have a good time and that is to let them have it.
If one interferes it’s ‘good-night’,” and he paused
to let the pardonable slang take effect.</p>
<p>“Just as you like, of course,” said the mother,
without the least hint of offence. “I know I can
depend upon you not to—eat the rugs or chairs.
They are only hired, you know.”</p>
<p>“Never cared for that sort of food. In fact I
don’t even like the feel of some of these,” and he
rubbed his hand over the side of a plush chair.
“Nothing like the home stuffs, Mom.”</p>
<p>“You are not disappointed?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_107">[107]</div>
<p>“Oh, no, not that. Only trying to remember
what home is like. It kind of upsets one’s memory
to take a trip and get here. I wonder what the
girls are up to? You stay here while I inspect.”</p>
<p>Mrs. White was not sorry of the respite. She
looked out over the broad drive. It was some
years since her husband had taken her to a pretty
little apartment in this city. The thought was
absorbing. But it was splendid that she had two
such fine boys. Yes, she must not complain, for
both boys were in many ways like their father,
upright to the point of peril, daring to the point
of personal risk.</p>
<p>The maid, she who had come in advance from
North Birchland, stepped in with the soft tread of
the professional nurse to close the doors. Something
must be going on in the kitchenette. Well,
let the children play, thought Mrs. White.</p>
<p>Suddenly she heard something like a shriek!
Even then she did not move. If there were danger
to any one in the apartment she would soon know
it—the old reliable adage—no news is good news,
when someone shrieks.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_108">[108]</div>
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