Complete Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald (Illustrated) (314 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald (Illustrated)
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He located Kresge who conducted him to Superintendent Kit Doolan. Mr Doolan, a famous ex-tackle, was in excellent humour. With five coloured giants in this year’s line, none of them quite old enough for pensions, but all men of experience, his team was in a fair way to conquer his section.

‘Glad to be of help to your studio,’ he said. ‘Glad to help Mr Berners--or Louie. What can I do for you? You want to make a picture? . . . Well, we can always use publicity. Mr Hobby, I got a meeting of the Faculty Committee in just five minutes and perhaps you’d like to tell them your notion.’

‘I don’t know,’ said Pat doubtfully. ‘What I thought was maybe I could have a spiel with you. We could go somewhere and hoist one.’

‘Afraid not,’ said Doolan jovially. ‘If those smarties smelt liquor on me--Boy! Come on over to the meeting--somebody’s been getting away with watches and jewellery on the campus and we’re sure it’s a student.’

Mr Kresge, having played his role, got up to leave.

‘Like something good for the fifth tomorrow?’

‘Not me,’ said Mr Doolan.

‘You, Mr Hobby?’

‘Not me,’ said Pat.

 

IV

 

Ending their alliance with the underworld, Pat Hobby and Superintendent Doolan walked down the corridor of the AdministrationBuilding. Outside the Dean’s office Doolan said: ‘As soon as I can, I’ll bring you in and introduce you.’ As an accredited representative neither of Jack Berners’ nor of the studio, Pat waited with a certain
malaise.
He did not look forward to confronting a group of highbrows but he remembered that he bore an humble but warming piece of merchandise in his threadbare overcoat. The Dean’s assistant had left her desk to take notes at the conference so he repleated his calories with a long, gagging draught.

In a moment, there was a responsive glow and he settled down in his chair, his eye fixed on the door marked:

 

SAMUEL K. WISKETH

DEAN OF THE STUDENT BODY

 

It might be a somewhat formidable encounter.

. . . but why? There were stuffed shirts--everybody knew that. They had college degrees but they could be bought. If they’d play ball with the studio they’d get a lot of good publicity for U.W.C. And that meant bigger salaries for them, didn’t it, and more jack?

The door to the conference room opened and closed tentatively. No one came out but Pat sat up and readied himself. Representing the fourth biggest industry in America, or
almost
representing it, he must not let a bunch of highbrows stare him down. He was not without an inside view of higher education--in his early youth he had once been the ‘Buttons’ in the DKE House at the University of Pennsylvania. And with encouraging chauvinism he assured himself that Pennsylvania had it over this pioneer enterprise like a tent.

The door opened--a flustered young man with beads of sweat on his forehead came tearing out, tore through--and disappeared. Mr Doolan stood calmly in the doorway.

‘All right, Mr Hobby,’ he said.

Nothing to be scared of. Memories of old college days continued to flood over Pat as he walked in. And instantaneously, as the juice of confidence flowed through his system, he had his idea . . .

‘. . . it’s more of a realistic idea,’ he was saying five minutes later. ‘Understand?’

Dean Wiskith, a tall, pale man with an earphone, seemed to understand--if not exactly to approve. Pat hammered in his point again.

‘It’s up-to-the-minute,’ he said patiently, ‘what we call “a topical”. You admit that young squirt who went out of here was stealing watches, don’t you?’

The faculty committee, all except Doolan, exchanged glances, but no one interrupted.

‘There you are,’ went on Pat triumphantly. ‘You turn him in to the newspapers. But here’s the twist. In the Picture we make it turns out he steals the watches to support his young
bro
ther--and his young brother is the mainstay of the football team! He’s the climax runner. We probably try to borrow Tyrone Power but we use one of
your
players as a double.’

Pat paused, trying to think of everything.

‘--of course, we’ve got to release it in the southern states, so it’s got to be one of your players that’s white.’

There was an unquiet pause. Mr Doolan came to his rescue.

‘Not a bad idea,’ he suggested.

‘It’s an appalling idea,’ broke out Dean Wiskith. ‘It’s--’

Doolan’s face tightened slowly.

‘Wait a minute,’ he said. ‘Who’s telling
who
around here? You listen to him!’

The Dean’s assistant, who had recently vanished from the room at the call of a buzzer, had reappeared and was whispering in the Dean’s ear. The latter started.

‘Just a minute, Mr Doolan,’ he said. He turned to the other members of the committee.

‘The proctor has a disciplinary case outside and he can’t legally hold the offender. Can we settle it first? And then get back to this--’ He glared at Mr Doolan,’--to this preposterous idea?’

At his nod the assistant opened the door.

This proctor, thought Pat, ranging back to his days on the vineclad, leafy campus, looked like all proctors, an intimidated cop, a scarcely civilized beast of prey.

‘Gentlemen,’ the proctor said, with delicately modulated respect, ‘I’ve got something that can’t be explained away.’ He shook his head, puzzled, and then continued: ‘I know it’s all wrong--but I can’t seem to get to the point of it. I’d like to turn it over to
you--
I’ll just show you the evidence and the offender . . . Come in, you.’

As Evylyn Lascalles entered, followed shortly by a big clinking pillow cover which the proctor deposited beside her, Pat thought once more of the elm-covered campus of the University of Pennsylvania. He wished passionately that he were there. He wished it more than anything in the world. Next to that he wished that Doolan’s back, behind which he tried to hide by a shifting of his chair, were broader still.

‘There you are!’ she cried gratefully. ‘Oh, Mr Hobby--Thank God! I couldn’t get rid of them--and I couldn’t take them home--my mother would kill me. So I came here to find you--and this man packed into the back seat of my car.’

‘What’s in that sack?’ demanded Dean Wiskith. ‘Bombs? What?’

Seconds before the proctor had picked up the sack and bounced it on the floor, so that it gave out a clear unmistakable sound, Pat could have told them. There were dead soldiers--pints, half-pints, quarts--the evidence of four strained weeks at two-fifty--empty bottles collected from his office drawers. Since his contract was up tomorrow he had thought it best not to leave such witnesses behind.

Seeking for escape his mind reached back for the last time to those careless days of fetch and carry at the University of Pennsylvania.

‘I’ll take it,’ he said rising.

Slinging the sack over his shoulder, he faced the faculty committee and said surprisingly:

‘Think it over.’

 

V

 

‘We did,’ Mr Doolan told his wife that night. ‘But we never made head nor tail of it.’

‘It’s kind of spooky,’ said Mrs Doolan. ‘I hope I don’t dream tonight. The poor man with that sack! I keep thinking he’ll be down in purgatory--and they’ll make him carve a ship in
every one
of those bottles--before he can go to heaven.’

‘Don’t!’ said Doolan quickly. ‘You’ll have
me
dreaming. There were plenty bottles.

 

MISCELLANEOUS STORIES

 

 

These 78 short stories were printed in various periodicals and magazines, yet were never published in a story collection during the writer’s lifetime.

 

 

One of the many magazines Fitzgerald wrote stories for

 

CONTENTS

A FREEZE-OUT

A NEW LEAF

A NIGHT AT THE FAIR

AFTERNOON OF AN AUTHOR

AN ALCOHOLIC CASE

AT YOUR AGE

BASIL AND CLEOPATRA

THE BRIDAL PARTY

THE BOWL

DESIGN IN PLASTER

DICE, BRASSKNUCKLES & GUITAR

EMOTIONAL BANKRUPTCY

FINANCING FINNEGAN

FORGING AHEAD

THE HOTEL CHILD

“I DIDN’T GET OVER”

JACOB’S LADDER

THE LOST DECADE

LOVE IN THE NIGHT

MAGNETISM

MORE THAN JUST A HOUSE

NEWS OF PARIS--FIFTEEN YEARS AGO

ONE TRIP ABROAD

OUTSIDE THE CABINET-MAKER’S

THE ROUGH CROSSING

SIX OF ONE--

THE SWIMMERS

THREE HOURS BETWEEN PLANES

WHAT A HANDSOME PAIR!

THE ORDEAL

MYRA MEETS HIS FAMILY

THE I.O.U.

THE POPULAR GIRL

TWO FOR A CENT

THE PUSHER-IN-THE-FACE

ONE OF MY OLDEST FRIENDS

THE UNSPEAKABLE EGG

PRESUMPTION

YOUR WAY AND MINE

LIPSTICK: A COLLEGE COMEDY

THE LOVE BOAT

ON YOUR OWN

BETWEEN THREE AND FOUR

FLIGHT AND PURSUIT

A WOMAN WITH A PAST

TOO CUTE FOR WORDS,

STRANGE SANCTUARY

INSIDE THE HOUSE

LO, THE POOR PEACOCK!

ON SCHEDULE,

THE PASSIONATE ESKIMO

IMAGE ON THE HEART

A FULL LIFE

SHAGGY’S MORNING

THREE ACTS OF MUSIC

THE ANTS AT PRINCETON

IN THE HOLIDAYS

THE GUEST IN ROOM NINETEEN

THE LONG WAY OUT

THE WOMAN FROM “21”

ON AN OCEAN WAVE

DEARLY BELOVED

PAT AT THE FAIR REUNION AT THE FAIR

THE MYSTERY OF THE RAYMOND MORTGAGE

READE, SUBSTITUTE RIGHT HALF

A DEBT OF HONOR

THE ROOM WITH THE GREEN BLINDS

A LUCKLESS SANTA CLAUS

PAIN AND THE SCIENTIST

THE TRAIL OF THE DUKE

LITTLE MINNIE MCCLOSKEY

THE OLD FRONTIERSMAN

THE SPIRE AND THE GARGOYLE

THE DIARY OF A SOPHOMORE

THE PRINCE OF PESTS

SENTIMENT — AND THE USE OF ROUGE

THE PIERIAN SPRINGS AND THE LAST STRAW

CEDRIC THE STOKER

 

 

 

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