Complete Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald (Illustrated) (468 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald (Illustrated)
10.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

LINDY:
(From the doorway.)
Yes, she has forgiven him.

 

(Enter Lindy.)

 

CECILIA: Lindy, I didn’t know —

 

LINDY: I was standing here. It makes no difference — I am interested in Captain Holworthy because I started his — his change.

 

He’s — he’s rather a protégé of mine.

 

(Enter Jeff.)

 

CECILIA: I must go now. Mother is waiting for me — waiting luncheon.

 

MRS. D.: Will you stay and dine?
(Jeff coughs.)
We have not much to offer, but
(Jeff coughs)
— Jeff, will you be quiet! — but we would be so glad to have you.

 

CECILIA: NO thank you, Mrs. Douglas. I think I’ll be moving along. Good morning.

 

MRS. D. AND LINDY: Good morning, Celia.

 

MRS. D.: Jeff, never do that again. Don’t you know we are always glad to have anyone share whatever we have?

 

JEFF: Yassum, but we ain’t got but one share. You can’t share a share.

 

MRS. D.: That’s true, but —

 

JEFF: Dey’s plenty o’ chairs — You don’t have to chair de shares —

 

I mean chair de chairs — No, I mean share de shares — Mrs.

 

Douglas, luncheon is ready.

 

LINDY: The children?

 

MRS. D.: At the Taylors for luncheon.

 

LINDY: Oh, I almost forgot — Teacher — “that’s me” — was presented with two oranges today. I’ll get them.

 

(Exit Lindy.)

 

JEFF:
(Goes to window.)
Lawd o’ massy! It’s Mistah Charley!

 

(Enter Captain Charles Douglas.)

 

CHARLEY: Jeff!

 

MRS. D.: My boy!

 

CHARLEY: Mother!

 

JEFF: Large as life and twice as natural!

 

CHARLEY: Home at last, Mother. Where’s Lindy?

 

(Enter Lindy with plate of oranges. She sees Charley and drops plate which Jeff catches.)

 

LINDY: Charley!

 

CHARLEY: Lindy! Home again. It seems great.

 

LINDY: And the war?

 

CHARLEY: Is over. Lee surrendered at Appomattox twelve hours ago. We did all we could — We were all gone — It was too much for us.

 

MRS. D.: My poor boy!

 

CHARLEY: I’m lucky to be alive and have a home to come back to, and a place for food.
(Looks at table.)

 

MRS. D-: Sit down. You must be famished.

 

CHARLEY: Ah, milk!
(Drinks and sputters.)

 

MRS. D.: Why, what’s the matter?

 

CHARLEY: Nothing. But I’ve learned something.

 

LINDY: What?

 

CHARLEY: There are some things worse than prison fare.

 

MRS. D.:
(Drinks and sputters.)

 

LINDY:
(Holds up glass.)
Jeff, what’s the matter with this milk?

 

JEFF:
(Examines it carefully.)
Nothin’.

 

CHARLEY: Nothing?

 

MRS. D.: Nothing?

 

LINDY: Taste it!

 

JEFF:
(Tastes it.)
Oh, I recollect — I was enockomizing. Dey’s water — a little bit — in dis milk — Jes’ a bit.

 

CHARLEY: I should say there was. Mother, are we in need of economizing like this?

 

MRS. D.: Lindy teaches school.

 

CHARLEY: By all that is holy! I’ll get some work tonight. Mother, can you let me see exactly how we stand?

 

MRS. D.: Yes, I have the accounts in the parlor.

 

(Exit Mrs. Douglas, Captain Douglas and Jeff.)

 

(Enter Jim.)

 

JIM: Good morning, Miss Lindy.

 

LINDY: Mr. — Captain Holworthy! Good morning.

 

JIM: It’s — it’s four years since I saw you last.

 

LINDY: Four years.

 

JIM: I was different then — I reckon we all were.

 

LINDY: Yes, I reckon we all were.

 

JIM: I’ve always thought that you rather set me right somehow.

 

LINDY: YOU do me great honor, Captain Holworthy.

 

JIM: I haven’t forgotten it, either.

 

LINDY: YOU haven’t?

 

JIM: NO, I’ve — I’ve thought of it a lot more than you know. I realized long ago what I was.

 

LINDY: Well, you’ve come back different.

 

JIM: Yes, I reckon so. Do you remember the day when — when your brother was captured — what I said to you earlier in the day?

 

LINDY: Yes — yes, I think I do.

 

JIM: Well I — I can’t explain but — it’s you that I owe everything I’ve become — and that’s not much, for the last soldier of a lost cause doesn’t bring back much except an empty scabbard.

 

LINDY: And medals.

 

JIM: Medals.

 

LINDY: That little iron cross — Where did you get that?

 

JIM: Well, General Lee is the only one that can tell. HE — he gives them away instead of cigars; he was out of cigars the day I called.

 

LINDY: I see you’re more modest than you used to be.

 

JIM: It isn’t much of a virtue when you have nothing to be vain about. My vanity wants satisfaction in another way now.

 

LINDY: Yes?

 

JIM: Yes. I could be proud — very proud if — Miss Lindy, you know what I want to say. You’ve been with me always. You made me go south. You have made me what I am. Whenever I received promotion it was because you inspired me. And — and — will you keep inspiring me?

 

LINDY: YOU ask me to be your wife?

 

JIM: Yes.

 

LINDY: Ji — Captain Holworthy, the man I marry must have my whole respect. I have lived in a war time and have had death and bravery brought very near to me. Bravery and moral courage are to me necessary to respect and love. I — I — Do you remember that morning you told me you had a strain somewhere in your nature of cowardice?

 

JIM: I remember.

 

LINDY: Tell me then, if you have completely conquered that?

 

JIM: And if I have.

 

LINDY: If you have, I — I will marry you.

 

JIM: Miss Lindy — Lindy, I am telling you the truth, though God only knows it hurts me to do it — I haven’t conquered it. When it’s something impulsive or where I don’t have to reason, I’ve done many dangerous things, but when I think, I hesitate and give up. I got these trinkets for things like the first. This for a flag I took at Chickamauga, and this for saving Bragg from being shot at Shiloh; but I remember once when Lee asked for volunteers for secret service I didn’t step out with the rest. And when I was in Libby prison before I was exchanged, three fellows who were with me had a chance to escape. They offered me an equal chance — It was an even chance — death or escape, and I didn’t take it. I reckon it’s a yellow streak in me somewhere. I would like to try once more.

 

LINDY: I see. But your chance of trying is over now.

 

JIM: I reckon.

 

LINDY: Well, goodbye Jim.

 

JIM: Goodbye Miss Lindy. You are right — I shouldn’t have hoped for you. It was all a kind of a dream. (
Starts to go.)

 

LINDY: You may have a chance yet to prove it.

 

JIM: NO, I reckon not.

 

(Exit Jim.)

 

(Enter Jeff.)

 

JEFF: On celebration o’ Mistah Charley’s return kin ah get out de best tableclof? He’s got a bit o’ money and he’s goin’ to buy a good dinner.

 

LINDY: Yes Jeff, anything.

 

(Exit Lindy.)

 

JEFF: NOW whah was dat? In — in de oie linen chest what hain’t been used fo’ yeahs. Lemme see.
(Goes to chest and opens it.)
Why I — I feels sumpin!
(Pulls out roll of money.)
Jumpin’ Jerusalem it’s money! Stacks of it! Northern money. Now dat’s one hundred and one hundred is — Gee, I ain’t no mathematician. Now lemme see — How did that money get thar? That chest ain’t been used since Mistah Charley was captured out o’ it three years ago. Why, don’t I recollect he had some army money wit him? But it won’t do to tell him it was dat — He’d send it away to General Lee. I’ll — I’ll — diplomatize — dat is, if I’m as good a liah as ah used to be.
(Steps heard outside. Starts sweeping.)

 

(Enter Mrs. Douglas and Charley.)

 

JEFF: Mrs. Douglas, dere’s a mattah ah wants to broach to you.

 

MRS. D.: What is it, Jeff?

 

JEFF:
(Hesitates and jumbles.)
On de later desease — demise of youh inflected husband he sum-mumoned me to his bedside jes aftah he died, and thrust into mah hands a small sum o’ money which he said to give you after de triffic encountah which was den ragin’ triumphantly and spasmodically — de very words he used — was done. De circumstances is now justified. Behold!

 

(Produces money.)

 

CHARLEY: (
Takes it.)
Why, what’s this?

 

MRS. D.: Why, I didn’t know Arthur had any money when he died.

 

CHARLEY: Mother, it’s twelve thousand dollars good money!

 

MRS. D.: If Jeff is telling the truth —

 

CHARLEY: Jeff?

 

JEFF: Mrs. Douglas, ma mouf is as clean from lyin’ as is de grass from de snow — in de wintah time.

 

CHARLEY: It sounds true. Mother, we’re rich! It’s yours!

 

MRS. D.: It’s too good to be true.

 

CHARLEY: And I’m off.

 

MRS. D.: Where?

 

CHARLEY: TO see Cecilia.

 

(Exit Charley.’)

 

JEFF:
(Aside.)
No sah, dere ain’t nothin’ like a little judicious lyin’!

 

(Enter Lieutenant Percy Altwater.)

 

PERCY: Mrs. Douglas, good morning. I fancy you are surprised to see me.

 

MRS. D.: I remember you perfectly, Mr. Hotwater.

 

PERCY: Altwater, my dear lady — Altwater.

 

MRS. D.: Excuse me.

 

PERCY: Certainly. Do you know, I hesitate to tell you why I returned. Do you know, I fancy Cupid has been at work and brought me back, fair as a — a — What am I fair as?

 

MRS. D.: A dancing elephant.

 

PERCY: Yes, a dancing elephant — er — oh, that doesn’t sound just right, does it?

 

MRS. D.: Doesn’t it, Mr. Warmwater?

 

PERCY: Altwater — Altwater.

 

MRS. D.: Excuse me.

 

PERCY: And as I was saying, I made the acquaintance of a most fascinating young lady at your house, Miss Virginia the tailor — I suppose they meant dressmaker. But even if the poor girl is a dressmaker, I would wave aside caste and er — marry her.

 

MRS. D.: Very condescending of you, Mr. Breakwater.

 

PERCY: Altwater — Altwater. I think so myself.

 

MRS. D.: But she isn’t a dressmaker. That’s just her name.

 

PERCY: Miss Virginia Dressmaker — That’s a very odd name.

 

MRS. D.: NO no! — Miss Virginia Taylor.

 

PERCY: Oh!

 

(Enter Virginia.)

 

VIRGINIA: Good morning, Mrs. Douglas.

 

MRS D.: Here is a friend of yours, Virginia.

 

VIRGINIA: Mr. Sweetwater!

 

PERCY: Miss Dressmaker!

 

(Exit Mrs. Douglas.)

 

VIRGINIA: I am delighted to see you again.

 

PERCY: Did you get my letter?

 

VIRGINIA: Yes, and the coat-of-arms.

 

PERCY: Rather a pretty crest, isn’t it? I picked it up at a stationer’s in Richmond.

 

VIRGINIA: Horrors!

 

PERCY: I’m sorry. You’ll forgive me?

 

VIRGINIA: Yes. Who would not forgive the lost soldier of a last cause.

 

PERCY: Yes, but I’m not lost.

 

VIRGINIA: A slip of the tongue — I mean, the last soldier of a lost cause.

 

PERCY: Just so. It’s rather sad.

 

VIRGINIA: Sad? It’s all pathetic.

 

PERCY: Allopathic?

 

VIRGINIA: All pathetic.

 

PERCY: Miss Virginia, I’ve something to say to you.

 

VIRGINIA: It’s coming! — Isn’t it perfectly thirteenth century!

 

PERCY: Will you — will you —

 

VIRGINIA: Oh, I feel faint! Catch me! (
Fakes a faint.) (Percy springs forward.)
No, on the other side — It looks better.
(He helps her sink into chair.)
All right. Now go on.

 

PERCY: Will you marry me?

 

VIRGINIA:
(Dreaming.)
She looked tenderly into his dark brown eyes —

 

PERCY: But my eyes are not dark brown.

 

VIRGINIA: Sh! — And lisped — whispered tenderly —

 

PERCY: But this isn’t a novel, you know.

 

VIRGINIA: Now you’ve spoiled the whole thing. I want to look back upon my proposal as something romantic.

 

PERCY: But this is my proposal. Will you —

 

VIRGINIA:
(Jumps up.)
Wait! It must be on bended knees in the flower garden, with the roses —

 

PERCY: And the bugs —

 

VIRGINIA: With the green grass —

Other books

Parrots Prove Deadly by Clea Simon
Ammunition by Bruen, Ken
Collingsworth by Andy Eisenberg
Qissat by Jo Glanville
Arabella by Georgette Heyer
Portrait of My Heart by Patricia Cabot
T Wave by Steven F. Freeman