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

BOOK: Complete Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald (Illustrated)
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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 —

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