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Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Edna Ferber > Text of Simply Skirts

A short story by Edna Ferber

Simply Skirts

Simply Skirts

They may differ on the subjects of cigars, samples, hotels, ball teams
and pinochle hands, but two things there are upon which they stand
united. Every member of that fraternity which is condemned to a hotel
bedroom, or a sleeper berth by night, and chained to a sample case by
day agrees in this, first: That it isn't what it used to be. Second:
If only they could find an opening for a nice, paying gents'
furnishing business in a live little town that wasn't swamped with
that kind of thing already they'd buy it and settle down like a white
man, by George! and quit this peddling. The missus hates it anyhow;
and the kids know the iceman better than they do their own dad.

On the morning that Mrs. Emma McChesney (representing T. A. Buck,
Featherloom Petticoats) finished her talk with Miss Hattie Stitch,
head of Kiser & Bloch's skirt and suit department, she found herself
in a rare mood. She hated her job; she loathed her yellow sample
cases; she longed to call Miss Stitch a green-eyed cat; and she wished
that she had chosen some easy and pleasant way of earning a living,
like doing plain and fancy washing and ironing. Emma McChesney had
been selling Featherloom Petticoats on the road for almost ten years,
and she was famed throughout her territory for her sane sunniness, and
her love of her work. Which speaks badly for Miss Hattie Stitch.

Miss Hattie Stitch hated Emma McChesney with all the hate that a flat-
chested, thin-haired woman has for one who can wear a large thirty-six
without one inch of alteration, and a hat that turns sharply away from
the face. For forty-six weeks in the year Miss Stitch existed in Kiser
& Bloch's store at River Falls. For six weeks, two in spring, two in
fall, and two in mid-winter, Hattie lived in New York, with a capital
L. She went there to select the season's newest models (slightly
modified for River Falls), but incidentally she took a regular
trousseau with her.

All day long Hattie picked skirt and suit models with unerring good
taste and business judgment. At night she was a creature transformed.
Every house of which Hattie bought did its duty like a soldier and a
gentleman. Nightly Hattie powdered her neck and arms, performed sacred
rites over her hair and nails, donned a gown so complicated that a
hotel maid had to hook her up the back, and was ready for her
evening's escort at eight. There wasn't a hat in a grill room from one
end of the Crooked Cow-path to the other that was more wildly barbaric
than Hattie's, even in these sane and simple days when the bird of
paradise has become the national bird. The buyer of suits for a
thriving department store in a hustling little Middle-Western town
isn't to be neglected. Whenever a show came to River Falls Hattie
would look bored, pass a weary hand over her glossy coiffure and say:
"Oh, yes. Clever little show. Saw it two winters ago in New York. This
won't be the original company, of course." The year that Hattie came
back wearing a set of skunk everyone thought it was lynx until Hattie
drew attention to what she called the "brown tone" in it. After that
Old Lady Heinz got her old skunk furs out of the moth balls and
tobacco and newspapers that had preserved them, and her daughter cut
them up into bands for the bottom of her skirt, and the cuffs of her
coat. When Kiser & Bloch had their fall and spring openings the town
came ostensibly to see the new styles, but really to gaze at Hattie in
a new confection, undulating up and down the department, talking with
a heavy Eastern accent about this or that being "smart" or "good this
year," or having "a world of style," and sort of trailing her toes
after her to give a clinging, Grecian line, like pictures of Ethel
Barrymore when she was thin. The year that Hattie confided to some one
that she was wearing only scant bloomers beneath her slinky silk the
floor was mobbed, and they had to call in reserves from the basement
ladies-and-misses-ready-to-wear.

Miss Stitch came to New York in March. On the evening of her arrival
she dined with Fat Ed Meyers, of the Strauss Sans-silk Skirt Company.
He informed her that she looked like a kid, and that that was some
classy little gown, and it wasn't every woman who could wear that kind
of thing and get away with it. It took a certain style. Hattie smiled,
and hummed off-key to the tune the orchestra was playing, and Ed told
her it was a shame she didn't do something with that voice.

"I have something to tell you," said Hattie. "Just before I left I had
a talk with old Kiser. Or rather, he had a talk with me. You know I
have pretty much my own way in my department. Pity if I couldn't have.
I made it. Well, Kiser wanted to know why I didn't buy Featherlooms. I
said we had no call for 'em, and he came back with figures to prove
we're losing a good many hundreds a year by not carrying them. He said
the Strauss Sans-silk skirt isn't what it used to be. And he's right."

"Oh, say--" objected Ed Meyers.

"It's true," insisted Hattie. "But I couldn't tell him that I didn't
buy Featherlooms because McChesney made me tired. Besides, she never
entertains me when I'm in New York. Not that I'd go to the theater in
the evening with a woman, because I wouldn't, but--Say, listen. Why
don't you make a play for her job? As long as I've got to put in a
heavy line of Featherlooms you may as well get the benefit of it. You
could double your commissions. I'll bet that woman makes her I-don't
know-how-many thousands a year."

Ed Meyers' naturally ruddy complexion took on a richer tone, and he
dropped his fork hastily. As he gazed at Miss Stitch his glance was
not more than half flattering. "How you women do love each other,
don't you! You don't. I don't mind telling you my firm's cutting down
its road force, and none of us knows who's going to be beheaded next.
But--well--a guy wouldn't want to take a job away from a woman--
especially a square little trick like McChesney. Of course she's
played me a couple of low-down deals and I promised to get back at
her, but that's business. But--"

"So's this," interrupted Miss Hattie Stitch. "And I don't know that
she is so square. Let me tell you that I heard she's no better than
she might be. I have it on good authority that three weeks ago, at the
River House, in our town--"

Their heads came close together over the little, rose-shaded
restaurant table.

At eleven o'clock next morning Fat Ed Meyers walked into the office of
the T. A. Buck Featherloom Petticoat Company and asked to see old T.
A.

"He's in Europe," a stenographer informed him, "spaing, and
sprudeling, and badening. Want to see T. A. Junior?"

"T. A. Junior!" almost shouted Ed Meyers. "You don't mean to tell me
_that_ fellow's taken hold--"

"Believe _me_. That's why Featherlooms are soaring and Sans-silks are
sinking. Nobody would have believed it. T. A. Junior's got a live wire
looking like a stick of licorice. When they thought old T. A. was
going to die, young T. A. seemed to straighten out all of a sudden and
take hold. It's about time. He must be almost forty, but he don't show
it. I don't know, he ain't so good-looking, but he's got swell eyes."

Ed Meyers turned the knob of the door marked "Private," and entered,
smiling. Ed Meyers had a smile so cherubic that involuntarily you
armed yourself against it.

"Hel-lo Buck!" he called jovially. "I hear that at last you're taking
an interest in skirts--other than on the hoof." And he offered young
T. A. a large, dark cigar with a fussy-looking band encircling its
middle. Young T. A. looked at it disinterestedly, and spake, saying:

"What are you after?"

"Why, I just dropped in--" began Ed Meyers lamely.

"The dropping," observed T. A. Junior, "is bad around here this
morning. I have one little formula for all visitors to-day, regardless
of whether they're book agents or skirt salesmen. That is, what can I
do for you?"

Ed Meyers tucked his cigar neatly into the extreme right corner of his
mouth, pushed his brown derby far back on his head, rested his
strangely lean hands on his plump knees, and fixed T. A. Junior with a
shrewd blue eye. "That suits me fine," he agreed. "I never was one to
beat around the bush. Look here. I know skirts from the draw-string to
the ruffle. It's a woman's garment, but a man's line. There's fifty
reasons why a woman can't handle it like a man. For one thing the
packing cases weigh twenty-five pounds each, and she's as dependent on
a packer and a porter as a baby is on its mother. Another is that if a
man has to get up to make a train at 4 A.M. he don't require twenty-
five minutes to fasten down three sets of garters, and braid his hair,
and hook his waist up the back, and miss his train. And he don't have
neuralgic headaches. Then, the head of a skirt department in a store
is a woman, ten times out of ten. And lemme tell you," he leaned
forward earnestly, "a woman don't like to buy of a woman. Don't ask me
why. I'm too modest. But it's the truth."

"Well?" said young T. A., with the rising inflection.

"Well," finished Ed Meyers, "I like your stuff. I think it's great.
It's a seller, with the right man to push it. I'd like to handle it.
And I'll guarantee I could double the returns from your Middle-Western
territory." T. A. Junior had strangely translucent eyes. Their
luminous quality had an odd effect upon any one on whom he happened to
turn them. He had been scrawling meaningless curlycues on a piece of
paper as Ed Meyers talked. Now he put down the pencil, turned, and
looked Ed Meyers fairly in the eye.

"You mean you want Mrs. McChesney's territory?" he asked quietly.

"Well, yes, I do," confessed Ed Meyers, without a blush.

Young T. A. swung back to his desk, tore from the pad before him the
piece of paper on which he had been scrawling, crushed it, and tossed
it into the wastebasket with an air of finality.

"Take the second elevator down," he said. "The nearest one's out of
order."

For a moment Ed Meyers stared, his fat face purpling. "Oh, very well,"
he said, rising. "I just made you a business proposition, that's all.
I thought I was talking to a business man. Now, old T. A.--"

"That'll be about all," observed T. A. Junior, from his desk.

Ed Meyers started toward the door. Then he paused, turned, and came
back to his chair. His heavy jaw jutted out threateningly.

"No, it ain't all, either. I didn't want to mention it, and if you'd
treated me like a gentleman, I wouldn't have. But I want to say to you
that McChesney's giving this firm a black eye. Morals don't figure
with a man on the road, but when a woman breaks into this game, she's
got to be on the level."

T. A. Junior rose. The blonde stenographer who had made the admiring
remark anent his eyes would have appreciated those features now. They
glowed luminously into Ed Meyers' pale blue ones until that gentleman
dropped his eyelids in confusion. He seemed at a disadvantage in every
way, as T. A. Junior's lean, graceful height towered over the fat
man's bulk. "I don't know Mrs. McChesney," said T. A. Junior. "I
haven't even seen her in six years. My interest in the business is
very recent. I do know that my father swears she's the best salesman
he has on the road. Before you go any further I want to tell you that
you'll have to prove what you just implied, so definitely, and
conclusively, and convincingly that when you finish you'll have an
ordinary engineering blue-print looking like a Turner landscape.
Begin."

Ed Meyers, still standing, clutched his derby tightly and began.

"She's a looker, Emma is. And smooth! As the top of your desk. But
she's getting careless. Now a decent, hard-working, straight girl like
Miss Hattie Stitch, of Kiser & Bloch's, River Falls, won't buy of her.
You'll find you don't sell that firm. And they buy big, too. Why, last
summer I had it from the clerk of the hotel in that town that she ran
around all day with a woman named LeHaye--Blanche LeHaye, of an
aggregation of bum burlesquers called the Sam Levin Crackerjack
Belles. And say, for a whole month there, she had a tough young kid
traveling with her that she called her son. Oh, she's queering your
line, all right. The days are past when it used to be a signal for a
loud, merry laugh if you mentioned you were selling goods on the road.
It's a fine art, and a science these days, and the name of T. A. Buck
has always stood for--"

Downstairs a trim, well-dressed, attractive woman stepped into the
elevator and smiled radiantly upon the elevator man, who had smiled
first.

"Hello, Jake," she said. "What's old in New York? I haven't been here
in three months. It's good to be back."

"Seems grand t' see you, Mis' McChesney," returned Jake." Well,
nothin' much stirrin'. Whatcha think of the Grand Central? I
understand they're going to have a contrivance so you can stand on a
mat in the waiting-room and wish yourself down to the track an' train
that you're leavin' on. The G'ints have picked a bunch of shines this
season. T. A. Junior's got a new sixty-power auto. Genevieve--that
yella-headed steno--was married last month to Henry, the shipping
clerk. My wife presented me with twin girls Monday. Well, thank _you_,
Mrs. McChesney. I guess that'll help some."

Emma McChesney swung down the hall and into the big, bright office.
She paused at the head bookkeeper's desk. The head bookkeeper was a
woman. Old Man Buck had learned something about the faithfulness of
women employees. The head bookkeeper looked up and said some
convincing things.

"Thanks," said Emma, in return. "It's mighty good to be here. Is it
true that skirts are going to be full in the back? How's business? T.
A. in?"

"Young T. A. is. But I think he's busy just now. You know T. A. Senior
isn't back yet. He had a tight squeeze, I guess. Everybody's talking
about the way young T. A. took hold. You know he spent years running
around Europe, and he made a specialty of first nights, and first
editions, and French cars when he did show up here. But now! He's
changed the advertising, and designing, and cutting departments around
here until there's as much difference between this place now and the
place it was three months ago as there is between a hoop-skirt and a
hobble. He designed one skirt--Here, Miss Kelly! Just go in and get
one of those embroidery flounce models for Mrs. McChesney. How's that?
Honestly, I'd wear it myself."

Emma McChesney held the garment in her two hands and looked it over
critically. Her eyes narrowed thoughtfully. She looked up to reply
when the door of T. A. Buck's private office opened, and Ed Meyers
walked briskly out. Emma McChesney put down the skirt and crossed the
office so that she and he met just in front of the little gate that
formed an entrance along the railing.

Ed Meyers' mouth twisted itself into a smile. He put out a welcoming
hand.

"Why, hello, stranger! When did you drive in? How's every little
thing? I'm darned if you don't grow prettier and younger every day of
your sweet life."

"Quit Sans-silks?" inquired Mrs. McChesney briefly.

[Illustration: "'Honestly. I'd wear it myself!'"]

"Why--no. But I was just telling young T. A. in there that if I could
only find a nice, paying little gents' furnishing business in a live
little town that wasn't swamped with that kind of thing already I'd
buy it, by George! I'm tired of this peddling."

"Sing that," said Emma McChesney. "It might sound better," and marched
into the office marked "Private."

T. A. Junior's good-looking back and semi-bald head were toward her as
she entered. She noted, approvingly, woman-fashion, that his neck
would never lap over the edge of his collar in the back. Then Young T.
A. turned about. He gazed at Emma McChesney, his eyebrows raised
inquiringly. Emma McChesney's honest blue eyes, with no translucent
nonsense about them, gazed straight back at T. A. Junior.

"I'm Mrs. McChesney. I got in half an hour ago. It's been a good
little trip, considering business, and politics, and all that. I'm
sorry to hear your father's still ill. He and I always talked over
things after my long trip."

Young T. A.'s expert eye did not miss a single point, from the tip of
Mrs. McChesney's smart spring hat to the toes of her well-shod feet,
with full stops for the fit of her tailored suit, the freshness of her
gloves, the clearness of her healthy pink skin, the wave of her soft,
bright hair.

"How do you do, Mrs. McChesney," said Young T. A. emphatically.
"Please sit down. It's a good idea--this talking over your trip. There
are several little things--now Kiser & Bloch, of River Falls, for
instance. We ought to be selling them. The head of their skirt and
suit department is named Stitch, isn't she? Now, what would you say of
Miss Stitch?"

"Say?" repeated Emma McChesney quickly. "As a woman, or a buyer?"

T. A. Junior thought a minute. "As a woman."

Mrs. McChesney thoughtfully regarded the tips of her neatly gloved
hands. Then she looked up. "The kindest and gentlest thing I can say
about her is that if she'd let her hair grow out gray maybe her face
wouldn't look so hard."

T. A. Junior flung himself back in his chair and threw back his head
and laughed at the ceiling.

Then, "How old is your son?" with disconcerting suddenness.

"Jock's scandalously near eighteen." In her quick mind Emma McChesney
was piecing odds and ends together, and shaping the whole to fit Fat
Ed Meyers. A little righteous anger was rising within her.

T. A. Junior searched her face with his glowing eyes.

"Does my father know that you have a young man son? Queer you never
mentioned it.

"Queer? Maybe. Also, I don't remember ever having mentioned what
church my folks belonged to, or where I was born, or whether I like my
steak rare or medium, or what my maiden name was, or the size of my
shoes, or whether I take my coffee with or without. That's because I
don't believe in dragging private and family affairs into the business
relation. I think I ought to tell you that on the way in I met Ed
Meyers, of the Strauss Sans-silk Skirt Company, coming out. So
anything you say won't surprise me."

"You wouldn't be surprised," asked T. A. Junior smoothly, "if I were
to say that I'm considering giving a man your territory?" Emma
McChesney's eyes--those eyes that had seen so much of the world and
its ways, and that still could return your gaze so clearly and
honestly--widened until they looked so much like those of a hurt
child, or a dumb animal that has received a death wound, that young T.
A. dropped his gaze in confusion.

Emma McChesney stood up. Her breath came a little quickly. But when
she spoke, her voice was low and almost steady.

"If you expect me to beg you for my job, you're mistaken. T. A. Buck's
Featherloom Petticoats have been my existence for almost ten years.
I've sold Featherlooms six days in the week, and seven when I had a
Sunday customer. They've not only been my business and my means of
earning a livelihood, they've been my religion, my diversion, my life,
my pet pastime. I've lived petticoats, I've talked petticoats, I've
sold petticoats, I've dreamed petticoats--why, I've even worn the
darned things! And that's more than any man will ever do for you."

[Illustration: "'I've lived petticoats, I've talked petticoats, I've
dreamed petticoats--why, I've even worn the darn things!'"]

Young T. A. rose. He laughed a little laugh of sheer admiration.
Admiration shone, too, in those eyes of his which so many women found
irresistible. He took a step forward and laid one well-shaped hand on
Emma McChesney's arm. She did not shrink, so he let his hand slip down
the neat blue serge sleeve until it reached her snugly gloved hand.

"You're all right!" he said. His voice was very low, and there was a
new note in it. "Listen, girlie. I've just bought a new sixty-power
machine. Have dinner with me to-night, will you? And we'll take a run
out in the country somewhere. It's warm, even for March. I'll bring
along a fur coat for you. H'm?"

Mrs. McChesney stood thoughtfully regarding the hand that covered her
own. The blue of her eyes and the pink of her cheeks were a marvel to
behold.

"It's a shame," she began slowly, "that you're not twenty-five years
younger, so that your father could give you the licking you deserve
when he comes home. I shouldn't be surprised if he'd do it anyway. The
Lord preserve me from these quiet, deep devils with temperamental
hands and luminous eyes. Give me one of the bull-necked, red-faced,
hoarse-voiced, fresh kind every time. You know what they're going to
say, at least, and you're prepared for them. If I were to tell you how
the hand you're holding is tingling to box your ears you'd marvel that
any human being could have that much repression and live. I've heard
of this kind of thing, but I didn't know it happened often off the
stage and outside of novels. Let's get down to cases. If I let you
make love to me, I keep my job. Is that it?"

"Why--no--I--to tell the truth I was only--"

"Don't embarrass yourself. I just want to tell you that before I'd
accept your auto ride I'd open a little fancy art goods and needlework
store in Menominee, Michigan, and get out the newest things in
Hardanger work and Egyptian embroidery. And that's my notion of zero
in occupation. Besides, no plain, everyday workingwoman could enjoy
herself in your car because her conscience wouldn't let her. She'd be
thinking all the time how she was depriving some poor, hard-working
chorus girl of her legitimate pastime, and that would spoil
everything. The elevator man told me that you had a new motor car, but
the news didn't interest me half as much as that of his having new
twin girls. Anything with five thousand dollars can have a sixty-power
machine, but only an elevator man on eight dollars a week can afford
the luxury of twins."

"My dear Mrs. McChesney--"

"Don't," said Emma McChesney sharply. "I couldn't stand much more. I
joke, you know, when other women cry. It isn't so wearing."

She turned abruptly and walked toward the door. T. A. Junior overtook
her in three long strides, and placed himself directly before her.

"My cue," said Emma McChesney, with a weary brightness, "to say, 'Let
me pass, sir!'"

"Please don't," pleaded T. A. Junior. "I'll remember this the rest of
my life. I thought I was a statue of modern business methods, but
after to-day I'm going to ask the office boy to help me run this
thing. If I could only think of some special way to apologize to you--
"

"Oh, it's all right," said Emma McChesney indifferently.

"But it isn't! It isn't! You don't understand. That human jellyfish of
a Meyers said some things, and I thought I'd be clever and prove them.
I can't ask your pardon. There aren't words enough in the language.
Why, you're the finest little woman--you're--you'd restore the faith
of a cynic who had chronic indigestion. I wish I--Say, let me relieve
you of a couple of those small towns that you hate to make, and give
you Cleveland and Cincinnati. And let me--Why say, Mrs. McChesney!
Please! Don't! This isn't the time to--"

"I can't help it," sobbed Emma McChesney, her two hands before her
face. "I'll stop in a minute. There; I'm stopping now. For Heaven's
sake, stop patting me on the head!"

"Please don't be so decent to me," entreated T. A. Junior, his fine
eyes more luminous than ever." If only you'd try to get back at me I
wouldn't feel so cut up about it." Emma McChesney looked up at him, a
smile shining radiantly through the tears. "Very well. I'll do it.
Just before I came in they showed me that new embroidery flounced
model you just designed. Maybe you don't know it, but women wear only
one limp petticoat nowadays. And buttoned shoes. The eyelets in that
embroidery are just big enough to catch on the top button of a woman's
shoe, and tear, and trip her. I ought to have let you make up a couple
of million of them, and then watch them come back on your hands. I was
going to tell you, anyway, for T. A. Senior's sake. Now I'm doing it
for your own."

[Illustration: "And found himself addressing the backs of the letters
on the door marked 'Private'"]

"For--" began T. A. Junior excitedly. And found himself addressing the
backs of the letters on the door marked "Private," as it slammed after
the trim, erect figure in blue.


-THE END-
Edna Ferber's short story: Simply Skirts




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