Hattie Ever After (18 page)

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Authors: Kirby Larson

BOOK: Hattie Ever After
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My first stop was the Fairmont. Florence, one of the hotel maids, had helped me search Miss Clare’s room one time when a favorite kid leather glove had gone missing. It was Florence who’d thought to pull out the dresser drawers, and there it was, stuck inside the frame. When I found her and gave her the copy of the article, you would have thought I was giving her the key to the city. She read it right then and there. “You make me sound like somebody,” she said, teary-eyed.

“Well, you are somebody,” I told her.

She shook her head. “Not to most folks.”

“You know this might never get published,” I said.

“That’s no nevermind.” She pressed the paper to her chest. “Just seeing these words here makes me hold my head higher.” I couldn’t think of anything that had ever made me feel so proud.

I passed Praeger’s on the way to my next delivery and paused for a little window-shopping. Admiring the latest gabardine outfits on display, I couldn’t help but think of Ruby. The good thing about window-shopping is that it is easy on the pocketbook. I decided Ruby would look stunning in the emerald-green ensemble with the shawl collar and made a mental gift of it to her. And the dove-gray number might suit me. It would be the perfect thing to wear to Maude’s going-away dinner. Perfect, except for the price tag. My faithful yellow dress and jacket would have to do. I turned away from the shop window with a sigh, not so much about not being able to afford a new gown, but suddenly feeling a bit out of sorts and alone, in spite of Florence’s kind words. With Ruby gone and Maude busy wrapping things up in preparation for her road trip, I hadn’t had much female companionship recently. Not that I didn’t enjoy Bernice and Spot, but they were work colleagues. They’d helped me with Pearl’s quilt, but I couldn’t call them social friends. It’d been a long while since I’d enjoyed girl talk over a soda at the drugstore. Or seen the latest romantic comedy at a Sunday matinee. Or curled up with a cup of tea and a sewing project, both made sweeter because of the company.

The final stop on my itinerary was at the hospital where
Spot’s sister, Tinny, worked. A sharply starched matron frowned when I asked where I might find her, but grudgingly directed me to the proper floor. I waited while Tinny finished ministering to a patient and then gave her the article. I’d saved her for last because I felt the piece I’d written about her was my very best. Perhaps it was a bit flowery, but I’d compared her to Joan of Arc. There was something so pure and purposeful about her. Ten minutes in her company, you wanted to give your own life over to helping others. Not that she was a saint, like Joan. Tinny’s language could be a bit colorful, and I had it on reliable authority from Spot that Tinny used her knowledge of chemistry to manufacture gin in their basement laundry tub. These latter details did not appear in my piece, for obvious reasons. One of the best quotes from all the girls came from Tinny: “If we weren’t meant to reach out to others, we’d not been given a pair of hands.”

When she came out of the patient’s room, her face lit up with a warm smile. “Well, if it isn’t our own Nellie Bly,” she said. “What are you doing here?”

I handed her the article and she read it there in the hospital hallway. She didn’t say anything for a moment when she finished, just folded it up and put it in her pocket. Then she looked me straight in the eye. “The next thing you bring me will be a newspaper clipping,” she said. “With your name front and center.”

“What a dreamer you are,” I said, shaking my head. Tinny had no idea about my painful discoveries—about Uncle Chester and about myself. At least she believed I could still be a reporter. “But it’s not up to me.”

She pointed her finger at me. “Of course it is! Who else is going to make it happen?”

“Well, I am doing my best.”

Another nurse had come up to us and was obviously trying to get Tinny’s attention. “You better get back to work,” I said.

“I’ll be right there,” Tinny said to the other nurse. She took a step down the hall, then turned back to me, patting her pocket. “Your best doesn’t belong in here. It belongs on the page. ‘Fortune befriends the bold.’ ” She winked. “Emily Dickinson.” With that, she was gone, and I was left to ponder her admonition as I made my way out of the hospital. I wasn’t sure how I could work harder. Tinny simply didn’t understand. My fate was in Mr. Monson’s hands. Not my own.

A church bell somewhere chimed the hour. There was time enough for a hot bath before the evening’s outing. I splurged on a cable-car ride back from the hospital and was soon at the hotel. Maybe I’d even use some of those lilac bath salts Maude had given me. With my mind on such weighty matters, I wasn’t immediately aware of my name being called. “Miss Hattie!” From her tone, Sadie the day clerk had evidently been attempting to get my attention for some time.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “My mind was somewhere else.”

“You got a telephone call.” She handed me a slip of paper with a number written on it. “A Mr. Monson. Says to ring him back. Right away.”

“Mr. Monson?” My light spirits turned to lead. How had he gotten my number? Oh, who cared about that! Why was he calling? On a Saturday? It couldn’t be good news. No. It
was bad news. Had to be. My newsroom stint must be over. At least I still had the cleaning job.

“Shall I get the operator for you?” Sadie asked.

“Operator?” He had said to phone right away. “Oh. Yes.”

Sadie peered over the desk at me. “Maybe you’d like to use the phone in the back office.”

“I would. Thank you.” That would be so much better than learning I was being fired out here in the open, in the lobby. “That’s kind of you.”

I followed her to the office and sat in the wooden chair by the telephone.

“Don’t touch anything,” she cautioned. “And make it quick.”

I nodded, then shakily gave the operator Mr. Monson’s number. After three rings on the other end, I heard his gruff “Hello?”

“Mr. Monson?” I squeaked out. “This is Hattie Brooks. You phoned?”

“Brooks.” He mumbled the name as if he were trying to place me. “Brooks. Fine name for a byline,” he said.

This was a funny way to get fired. What was I supposed to say? Thank you?

“So how did it come to you?” he asked. “A bit unorthodox.”

I had no idea what he was talking about. And I wasn’t clever enough to play along as if I did. Taking a deep breath, I confessed my confusion. “I’m sorry, sir, I don’t think I understand.”

Even over the telephone line, I could hear him chewing on
his ever-present cigar. I wondered if he ever lit them. “Female 49ers,” he said impatiently. “Though why you gave it to Marjorie rather than me, I can’t imagine.”

I sat hard against the back of the chair. “Miss D’Lacorte had my article?” I’d given away all the copies I’d typed, except for the one in my desk in my room at the hotel.

“Neither here nor there. Can’t say I was sold on the idea at first, but seems like the sort of thing to draw in female readers.” He coughed. “New female readers. Here’s what I’d like to do: run each of the eight pieces over eight Sundays. What do you say?”

He liked my article. He was going to publish it! Wait till I told Bernice and Spot. And Tinny! Tinny. Her words rushed back at me.
Fortune befriends the bold
. I swallowed. Hard. Maybe I had lassoed that dream. “I’d say that sounds like you’re offering me a job. A reporter’s job.” I squinched my eyes and waited for the explosion from the other end of the line.

It didn’t come. “I’d say you’re right.” He chuckled. “Though Lord help us with you and Marjorie in the same office. We men will be outnumbered.”

A tear wriggled its way out of my left eye and dripped on the handset. “I accept,” I said, trying not to sniffle into the telephone.

“Then plan on starting Monday. I’ll let the employment office know that they have a spot to fill on the cleaning crew. And that we have a new cub reporter.”

Reporter! For the
San Francisco Chronicle
. Wouldn’t Perilee just pop! Ruby, too! This was news I would even share with Charlie, whether he wrote back or not. I had to let him
know that it had been worth it after all. I thanked Mr. Monson, and we said good-bye. I replaced the receiver, but sat with my hand resting on it for several minutes, trying to take it all in. I’d written a story with a San Francisco hook. One good enough to catch an editor’s attention. Would I dare ever ask Miss D’Lacorte how she’d gotten hold of it? Maybe. But not right away.

I practically floated to the restaurant for the farewell party. Maude looked stunning in her newly bobbed hair and flapper-style sheath. The pearls around her neck hung nearly to her knees. When I made my way over to her, Orson was tugging on the strand. “This makes a handy leash,” he said. “Maybe I’ll hang on so tight you won’t be able to leave.”

“But, darling, I must,” she said. “That way you can miss me all the more.” They both laughed, and Maude dragged Orson to the dance floor.

“There you are!” Ned was at my side. “Thought you’d never get here.”

“I’m not even late,” I said. “Don’t be silly.”

“Come on. We’re over this way.” At the table, he held out my chair for me and then sat to my right. “You are positively glowing tonight.”

I was bursting to tell my news, but this was Maude’s evening. The spotlight should be fully on her. Besides, it might be more fun to surprise Ned on Monday morning. And would he be surprised!

“A penny for your thoughts,” he said.

“Oh, I’m just thinking about Monday.” I smiled, pressing back a giggle.

“Monday? No, no, no.” He pretended to knock on my
head. “Absolutely not. This is Saturday night, a time for fun and frivolity. Not work.”

I smiled again. “I will force myself to have fun and be frivolous.”

“That’s the spirit.” The waiter came by and Ned ordered two ginger ales. Maude and Orson joined us, Maude’s cheeks flushed pink from dancing.

“What are you two sticks in the mud doing here?” she demanded. “Out on the dance floor.”

“By orders of Her Majesty,” Orson piped in. Maude stuck her tongue out at him.

“Oh, I’m a terrible dancer,” I said. “Two left feet and all that.”

Ned stood and extended his hand to me. “Then we will make the perfect partners.” He lifted me to my feet and out on the dance floor for a waltz.

“Shame on you for being such a liar,” I told him. “You’re a wonderful dancer.”

“Only because I have a wonderful partner.” He drew me closer. My stomach did a little flip. But I didn’t push away. In fact, I leaned my cheek on his lapel. The wool was warm and soft against my skin. “This is nice,” I murmured.

He tilted my head up. “Very nice.” The band finished the waltz number but we stayed on the dance floor. I thought we were doing the fox-trot but I really wasn’t sure. I simply followed Ned’s lead.

“I could get used to having you for a partner,” Ned said.

“We do manage fairly well together,” I said as we negotiated a turn.

“I was thinking beyond the dance floor. And the newsroom.”

I nodded. I knew what he’d been thinking. “Ned, I’m not ready to make any decisions.”

“Then I’ll make them for us.” He smiled. “Deal?”

I laughed. “No deal.”

He stuck out his lower lip in a pout as we twirled to a stop when the song ended. “Can we at least start seeing each other more often?”

“Oh, don’t you worry.” I took his arm as we walked back to our table. “I have a feeling you’ll be seeing a lot more of me. A lot more.”

He patted my hand. “Speaking as a reporter, may I say that that is the best news I’ve heard in a long time.”

“And what are you two whispering about?” Maude teased as we sat down.

“Good news,” I said. I winked at Ned, thinking how much fun Monday morning was going to be. “Very good news.”

Stuck In Between

September 16, 1919

Dear Charlie
,

Thank you so very much for the card of congratulations. I am keeping it on my desk. My first days as cub reporter have flown by, absorbed as I am by high-level preparations for President Wilson’s upcoming visit to promote the League of Nations. Just for instance: I was assigned to pester City Hall for a copy of the mayor’s welcome speech, and to study railroad maps to calculate the mileage our country’s leader has traveled in his campaign, and let’s not forget the two days spent attempting to find out whether Mrs. Wilson prefers gardenias or violets. The jury’s still out
on the latter topic, so our publisher, Mr. DeYoung, is sending bouquets of each to the Presidential Suite at the Fairmont. It is not all froth and foolishness. Mr. Monson, the managing editor, has paired me up with a more experienced reporter to cover some of the events while the president is in town. That should be quite thrilling
.

How fascinating that Eddie Hubbard plans to expand air service into Alaska. I am certain that the far north is ripe for such an expansion. Do remember, please, that there are polar bears and other unfriendly creatures in such environs that might find a corn-fed Iowa farm boy awfully tasty
.

Yours truly
,
Hattie
       

I had decided not to tell Charlie that my newsroom partner was Ned. Not when Charlie and I were back on “speaking” terms, however fragile. I’d been an official employee of the newsroom for seven days, and six of those had been spent in Ned’s company. After the first day or so, we found our way to a good working routine, which mostly involved Ned telling me what to do and my doing it. Everyone in the newsroom was keyed up over the president’s visit, working to find some angle the
Call
or
Examiner
hadn’t. When I had wondered aloud about doing a piece on the female perspective on the League of Nations, Ned had pooh-poohed it. “You’ve got that working women’s series already. You don’t want to turn into a one-issue reporter.” I was generally grateful for Ned’s
advice, but this hit me funny. We were too busy, though, to dwell on it much. We were all working long hours under tense conditions. It was not unlike trying to plant seed in a windstorm. At one point, I’d even seen Mr. Monson stick a cigar in his mouth—oblivious to the fact that he was already gnawing on one. I’d been dying to ask him about exactly when he planned to run my 49ers story, but the moment had not presented itself. Now we were all frenzied, what with the big day tomorrow. I glanced at the newsroom clock. Tomorrow would be arriving in just an hour.

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