A DAUGHTER OF TO-DAY by Sara Jeannette Duncan
CHAPTER I.
Miss Kimpsey dropped into an arm-chair in Mrs. Leslie Bell's drawing-room and crossed her small dusty feet before her while she waited for Mrs. Leslie Bell. Sitting there, thinking a little of how tired she was and a great deal of what she had come to say, Miss Kimpsey enjoyed a sense of consideration that came through the ceiling with the muffled sound of rapid footsteps in the chamber above. Mrs. Bell would be "down in a minute," the maid had said. Miss Kimpsey was inclined to forgive a greater delay, with this evidence of hasteful preparation going on overhead. The longer she had to ponder her mission the better, and she sat up nervously straight pondering it, tracing with her parasol a sage-green block in the elderly aestheticated pattern of the carpet.
Miss Kimpsey was thirty-five, with a pale, oblong little face, that looked younger under its softening "bang" of fair curls across the forehead. She was a buff-and-gray-colored creature, with a narrow square chin and narrow square shoulders, and a flatness and straightness about her everywhere that gave her rather the effect of a wedge, to which the big black straw hat she wore tilted a little on one side somehow conduced. Miss Kimpsey might have figured anywhere as a representative of the New England feminine surplus--there was a distinct suggestion of character under her unimportant little features--and her profession was proclaimed in her person, apart from the smudge of chalk on the sleeve of her jacket. She had been born and brought up and left over in Illinois, however, in the town of Sparta, Illinois. She had developed her conscience there, and no doubt, if one knew it well, it would show peculiarities of local expansion directly connected with hot corn-bread for breakfast, as opposed to the accredited diet of legumes upon which consciences arrive at such successful maturity in the East. It was, at all events, a conscience in excellent controlling order. It directed Miss Kimpsey, for example, to teach three times a week in the boys' night-school through the winter, no matter how sharply the wind blew off Lake Michigan, in addition to her daily duties at the High School, where for ten years she had imparted instruction in the "English branches," translating Chaucer into the modern dialect of Sparta, Illinois, for the benefit of Miss Elfrida Bell, among others. It had sent her on this occasion to see Mrs. Leslie Bell, and Miss Kimpsey could remember circumstances under which she had obeyed her conscience with more alacrity.
"It isn't," said Miss Kimpsey, with internal discouragement, "as if I knew her well."
Miss Kimpsey did not know Mrs. Bell at all well. Mrs. Bell was president of the Browning Club, and Miss Kimpsey was a member, they met, too, in the social jumble of fancy fairs in aid of the new church organ; they had a bowing acquaintance--that is, Mrs. Bell, had. Miss Kimpsey's part of it was responsive, and she always gave a thought to her boots and her gloves when she met Mrs. Bell. It was not that the Spartan social circle which Mrs. Bell adorned had any vulgar prejudice against the fact that Miss Kimpsey earned her own living--more than one of its ornaments had done the same thing--and Miss Kimpsey's relations were all "in grain" and obviously respectable. It was simply that none, of the Kimpseys, prosperous or poor, had ever been in society in Sparta, for reasons which Sparta itself would probably be unable to define; and this one was not likely to be thrust among the elect because she taught school and enjoyed life upon a scale of ethics.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Daughter of To-Day by Sara Jeannette Duncan
- 2: But they elevated Miss Kimpsey
- 3: Miss Kimpsey spoke quite meekly
- 4: Miss Kimpsey it seemed to come to her
- 5: Aren't you charmed with Elfrida
- 6: Sparta would be pleased in advance
- 7: Elfrida was always agreeable to her father
- 8: Repeating Rossetti to the wakeful budding garden
- 9: You seem to have done a great many of these etchings
- 10: Elfrida was sitting beside her mother on the sofa
- 11: Mademoiselle Palicsky deliberately sat down
- 12: Nadie had turned her head away
- 13: To comprehend these was to be thrice blessed
- 14: Which Nadie confessed agreeable to her vanity
- 15: Elfrida set her teeth against his silences
- 16: Nadie had been so sensible about it
- 17: Elfrida was thoroughly grieved
- 18: Monsieur began Elfrida a little formally
- 19: You know the editor of Raffini
- 20: De Pommitz isn't in it this time
- 21: For the pleasure of the milords
- 22: Especially so clever a girl as Elfrida Bell
- 23: When Kendal joined her crossing the courtyard of the atelier
- 24: Elfrida raised the arch of her eyebrows
- 25: Cried Mademoiselle Palicsky from the doorway
- 26: 'That is Mademoiselle Nadie Palicsky
- 27: Returned from the Criterion Restaurant
- 28: To which Elfrida had responded
- 29: Elfrida looked at it affectionately
- 30: Ware is the corrispondent all this time
- 31: Found Elfrida finishing her coffee
- 32: Elfrida raised her eyebrows and pursed her lips a little
- 33: Golightly Ticke tripped downstairs
- 34: Elfrida lifted her hand to knock
- 35: Asked the editor of the Consul
- 36: And started wearily for the Haymarket
- 37: Rattray hastened to deprecate her thanks for his escort
- 38: Nadie stared into it for a moment with cynical eyes
- 39: Kendal found the Cardiffs there were only two
- 40: And of Framley's forthcoming novel Framley
- 41: Cardiff looked at her with amused reproach
- 42: Then the Decade made its weekly slovenly appearance
- 43: Wolff might have done it if it had been in French
- 44: He took up the card that announced her
- 45: Miss Cardiff asked you who wrote it
- 46: Elfrida was looking up with calm inquiry
- 47: Miss Halifax was looking absorbedly at Elfrida
- 48: Rattray did not tell her precisely that
- 49: And asked Golightly Ticke to tea
- 50: But Golightly could not inform her as to Mr
- 51: Golightly said hurriedly to Elfrida
- 52: Elfrida wondered what they occupied themselves with before
- 53: Elfrida went on in the personal key
- 54: I'm dying to see the phenomenal squash
- 55: And give us some real romans psychologiques
- 56: Janet Cardiff watched it with delight
- 57: But we can easily find out from John Kendal
- 58: Kendal had for women the readiest consideration
- 59: Kendal would have answered affirmatively in all honesty
- 60: I think I must be selfish here
- 61: Purblind race of miserable men ' Kendal began lightly
- 62: Elfrida had been accepted at the Cardiffs
- 63: And Janet doubtless found Elfrida
- 64: Elfrida was so much more original a person
- 65: In connection with the Cardiffs
- 66: Golightly Ticke's door was open
- 67: Elfrida finished for him gaily
- 68: Janet joined Elfrida just as the twitter made itself heard
- 69: Miss Kimpsey went on with gratification
- 70: And Elfrida burst into a peal of laughter
- 71: Miss Kimpsey interposed plaintively
- 72: When Miss Kimpsey went away that afternoon
- 73: When Miss Kimpsey arrived at Euston Station next day
- 74: And he had not seen Elfrida in the meantime
- 75: Less on behalf of her sex than on behalf of Elfrida herself
- 76: To have crushed it for Elfrida
- 77: Elfrida leaned forward consciously with shining eyes
- 78: Heard Elfrida's footsteps pause and turn
- 79: Rattray would have extended her scope on the paper
- 80: That Elfrida were a little more human
- 81: She looked at Elfrida with inquiry
- 82: Was it a granduncle you were fond of
- 83: Elfrida drew a long sigh of relief
- 84: An hour later Kendal had not ceased to belabor himself
- 85: And Lawrence Cardiff was smoking
- 86: Cardiff laid down his journal again at the appealing note
- 87: Knowing Elfrida as she thought she knew her
- 88: Cardiff resented the look more than the rejection
- 89: Elfrida held out her hand for the manuscript
- 90: Rattray described as screaming
- 91: Rattray looked seriously uncomprehending
- 92: Golightly and Elfrida looked at each other sympathetically
- 93: Elfrida retracted none of her admiration
- 94: Why shouldn't Frida go to Kamschatka
- 95: As Professor Cardiff was doubtless aware
- 96: At the end of the corridor the girl met Elfrida herself
- 97: Elfrida lifted her eyebrows a little
- 98: Leaving Cardiff to wonder vaguely what she meant
- 99: Cardiff might have seen Kendal
- 100: His future projection of Elfrida
- 101: A chorus of which the refrain was Oh
- 102: He might have known Elfrida better
- 103: The arrangement had been for a few weeks only
- 104: Then unlocked the little bag again and put it carefully in
- 105: The effect upon Elfrida was hysterical
- 106: Elfrida might do what she pleased
- 107: In her review Elfrida had done all she could
- 108: Elfrida desired a change she should have it
- 109: Then looked up gravely at Elfrida
- 110: But at the door Elfrida turned and came back
- 111: It was contemptible but contemptible
- 112: Elfrida only give it the chance
- 113: Is Golightly Ticke your friend completely
- 114: Elfrida snatched it away with a little shiver at the contact
- 115: Elfrida was not available in the morning
- 116: Cardiff returned from behind his newspaper
- 117: How little she knew Elfrida his just
- 118: For they had not mentioned Elfrida again
- 119: As it expresses itself in the nudity of things
- 120: Elfrida was suddenly shaken by deep
- 121: Elfrida forced a smile into what she said
- 122: Presently Kendal lowered his brush impatiently
- 123: Kendal was incapable of denying a word of what she said
- 124: Her eyes wandered uncertainly around the room
- 125: Their mutual understanding of most things
- 126: The actress in Elfrida was nevertheless constantly supreme
- 127: Stepping back to look with Elfrida
- 128: She heard Kendal say reproachfully
- 129: Lady Halifax is buying tickets
- 130: Kendal is full of your portrait
- 131: And in any future intercourse with you
- 132: I dare say she fancied it was that
- 133: Your Elfrida and I had a sort of friendship too it began
- 134: And Kendal gave an impatient groan
- 135: An hour before he expected the Cardiffs
- 136: Pitt knew Rattray for a sagacious man
- 137: Arthur Rattray undertook its disposal
