VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON MAID KN V O Y A G E Copyright, Kathleen Norris. KATHLEEN NORRIS CHAPTER I HILE she waited, Antoinette W remained standing; she was nervous and excited, and it seemed easier to stand. Except for her­ self, there was nobody In the place. There had been an inky, shabby, cold-looking boy In a suit too small for him Idling at the battered, and Inky desk, spearing vainly at files with an old pen. But he had dis­ appeared through the glass-topped splintered door marked “Editor. Private," to tell Mr. Lawrence Bell­ amy, editor of the San Francisco Journal of Commerce and Business, that Miss Antoinette Taft was wait­ ing to see him. Rain was falling In gray sheets. Traffic crashed and honked on Montgomery Street. The boy returned; Mr. Bellamy would be free In a minute. An­ toinette sat down, her heart beating fast, and perforce looked about the waiting room of the Journal. Antoinette was seeking for a job. “You kin go in now,” the boy said. There was a fat young man In a cafe-au-lalt raincoat In the re­ volving chair opposite that of Mr. Lawrence Bellamy. “I wish you’d let me send yon our figures?" said this Individual engagingly rising as Antoinette came In. “I won't!” said Mr. Bellamy. "May I leave you my card?” asked the visitor. “Sure!” the editor agreed. The young man took out his fountain pen and wrote on the card, and An­ toinette took the vacated chair. She saw the older man, lolling In his seat, glance at her card. “Miss Taft?" he asked. "Funny thing— my mother’s brother was Taft Bald­ win,” he said. “They’re both good New Eng­ land names,” Antoinette said, with a slight effort to seem friendly and at ease. “Your people from Boston?” “My father’s family was. But his father came round the Horn In 'Forty-nine? Antoinette went through the usual little story, smil­ ingly The edltoi was dark, his brown face thin; his aquiline large nose gave a sort of autocratic signifi­ cance to his face. His hands were big and lean, bls mouth large, his dark thick hair was In an untidy tumble and he wore glasses. “Job, eb?” he began. Antoinette only smiled deprecatiugly. “What experience have you had?” "Not much—on newspapers. I did the social column for the Bulletin for two weeks. Then Margaret Rus­ sell—my friend, who had got me Into It—came back from her va­ cation.” “That was the only work you ever did?" “Oh, no." Antoinette smiled rue­ fully. “I’ve done lots of other things,” she confessed. “I was In the Mercantile library for a year, and then in Younger’s bookstore, helping my older sister.” “I know Paul Younger well,” Mr. Bellamy said, with what appeared to be characteristic musing Irrele­ vance. “Nice feller—dreamer, but that’s all right Your sister work there?" "You’d Identify her because she’s tall and dark, and she wears her hair—” Antoinette made a gesture. One always made this gesture in describing Brenda’s crown of braids. “I know: young girl, rather pret­ ty, wears turned-down collars; 'bout twenty-four or -five?” “That’s Brenda. She’s really—a little older than that.” “Just the two of you?" "Two brothers, Cliff and Bruce." “Mother and father?" “No, we lost them years ago. But WNU Service. along the narrow streets of China­ town. Somehow she was still smarting over the recent Interview with the handsome, aristocratic ed ltor of the Journal. While they had been talking, he had told her something of his own history. He had graduated very young from Harvard, and after some experi­ ence on college periodicals had be­ come associated with a financial journal in New York, had married almost immediately, had continued In newspaper work ever since. The present venture in San Francisco was new but already was marked with success. He was only thirty- one or -two, Antoinette judged, probably less than ten years older than herself, he was pleased with life, sure of himself and his job! It was "his idea" to do this, and “his Innovation" to do that; he could smile down, he could depre- catlngly shake away her poor lit­ tle suggestions; he was full of sug­ gestions and Ideas himself. After all she would go home to lunch. She climbed into a car on Market street Presently she en­ tered the doorway of a dilapidated building that contained eight five- room flats on four floor levels. Steep wooden steps, peeling and paintless, led up from the street that ran for blocks between the shabbiest and least interesting of the city's dwellings. Almost all the windows had little signs on them, little confessions of poverty and failure. “Modes,’ “Violin Studio," “Rooms," “Home Board,” said the signs, patient and fly-specked, year after year. There were no signs on the Taft windows; they were top-floor win­ dows, anyway, above the eyes of the crowd. On the right of the narrow entrance hall there was the doorway of a dark bedroom, An­ toinette's and Brenda’s room, where one must always snap on a light. Lighted, however, It was a pleasant room enough, with a great window “And You Think You’d Like a Job that was always open, on an air­ on a Newspaper?” shaft, and an oblique upward view into that line,” Lawrence Bel­ of the sky. Next to this bedroom was the lamy told her. "You don't?” Life was bitter In bathroom, dark and dank. Then her mouth, but she could seem In­ came Aunt Meg’s room; the best bedroom in the house, small but terested, could manage to smile. "No! But we've got to put on bright, for It looked out across the more advertising before we— Let southern city and Twin Peaks, and me explain the whole thing to you,” shared with the sitting room next the editor said. He proceeded to to It the only exposed side of the explain It, Illustrating figures with apartment On the left side of a pencil. Antoinette listened re­ the hall, was a small black hole spectfully, because she had no originally Intended for an occasion­ al servant, and now occupied con­ choice. “Now, I’ll tell you what I’ll do, tentedly enough by seventeen-year- Miss Taft,” Lawrence Bellamy said old Bruce, who had a very treas­ finally. “I’ve put a new man on ure house of broken cameras, nails, here to rustle me up ads—only had tools, radio equipment, guns and him two weeks, and I don’t know cartridges on table, window ledge, how he’s going to turn out , I’ll bureau, mingling In casually with give him another week, and then his shirts and collars. The other why don’t you get In on this? I’ll was a fair-sized kitchen with a let him keep whatever he’s got, skylight upon whose dusty face the and I'll tell him that you’re going rain was hammering and dancing after the department stores and again, as Antoinette came In. the milliners and the tea rooms, The kitchen clock said twenty how’s that? You get forty per cent minutes past two. Antoinette made of what you bring in. herself a luxurious meal of brown “And meanwhile—” they were toast and tea. There was a sau­ standing now—"meanwhile I'll ask cer of stewed tomatoes In the fee­ Mrs. Bellamy what she thinks of box; one sardine. She grilled the any woman’s stuff In the Journal," sardine, scrambled an egg in the the editor said, guiding her toward tomato sauce, and presently carried the door “She gives me pretty an epicurean tray In to the sitting­ room window; found her book. The good steers sometimes 1” Antoinette bowed a smiling fare­ rain, the discouraging editors, the well, went out Into the dark, wood- condition of the family budget were eny, Inky hall, and walked down all forgot: Antoinette was In Lon two flights to the street. The I don streets. In London clubs and whole morning bad been an utter studios, following a shabby cassock through strange and dramatic ad waste of time. Rain was still falling heavily; ventures. After a while the food was gone, there was no use going home; no­ body was there. Aunt Meggy would and the rain had disappeared, too. be at the sewing society meeting, Antoinette put her head down on Bruce was in school. Cliff at the her arms and sat motionless for some fifteen minutes. Then sud­ office, Brenda at the store. Antoinette wandered past the denly she sprang up, her book Hall of Justice and the little park coasting to the floor, and snatch­ whose green leaves were tossing In ing up the tray fled rather than the warm sticky rain, and went idly walked with It to the kitchen. Cup, my aunt. Miss Bruce, lives with us.” "And you think you’d like a job on a newspaper? No social stuff on this paper, you know." “I know. I know it’s a commer­ cial paper. This Is what I was thinking, Mr. Bellamy, why shouldn't the Journal have one page of society news and of things interesting to women, recipes and fashions and a puzzle or two?” Her voice was dying Into a suffo­ cated silence under the effect of his narrowed smiling look and slowly shaking bead She struggled on: “It might mean that men would take It home to their wives—” “I don't think we want to go Bpoons, plate Into the dishpan, hot water, tray tipped up on the dress er again, teapot rinsed and turned upside down— Antoinette worked as If whips were driving her. She went Into the bedroom and came out with two waists and several pairs of stockings, took a basin from the damp, vegetable-scented back porch, rinsed and soaped busily. Meanwhile, with characteristic fatal determination to be thor­ ough, Antoinette was starting sev­ eral other things and planning In her busy brain to do more. She hung the waists daintly on hang ers in the sitting room, put the dish towels on to boil, took out the stove tray and slid It Into the sink to give it a thorough cleaning, brought her sewing materials Into the kitchen to catch up a run In one stocking and the split heel of another, and poured a bag of peas into a pan. "I really ought to find an old sheet and re-cover that Ironing board—we'll only burn the blan­ ket right through at this rate—1 wonder if there’s an old sheet In Aunt Meggy’s room?” She went into her aunt's room and gave a dramatic shriek. The window had been left open, and Jingle had performed his fa­ vorite trick of coming along the hack porch and over the roof and down the fire escape, and so mak­ ing a leap into his favorite spot, In the center of Aunt Meggy’s bed. His paws had, of course, been thick with soot and mud. “Yes, and you know you're a bad cat!” Antoinette said grimly, as he leaped gayly past her to the kitchen. She repaired the dam age gingerly: her own hands were far from clean. Presently she went into the bathroom to wash them and was In there when Brenda came home a moment later. “Hell-oo I” "Brenda, my darling, you’re early!” Antoinette kissed her sis­ ter affectionately. “Darling, what time Is It?” she asked, going on with the wiping of her hands. “It Isn’t five yet. But It was so dark, and going to rain again, and appraisers or accountants were there, or something. Anyway, Paul,” said Brenda, who usually spoke of her employer thus familiarly, "told us we all could go home 1” She was as tall as Antoinette, but more slender, with a certain fastidious delicacy of build and ex­ pression. “Oh, It’s good to get home!” she exclaimed. Presently she followed Antoinette to the kitchen, to find her In a whirl of activities. "What on earth are you up to?" “I did the stockings — oh, and both waists, too—and then I got Into the vegetable box.” “And you’re cleaning the stove too.” “Sit down. Bendy, and rest. Here, do the peas. I’ll get out of all this!” Antoinette brought to the confusion her own swift en­ ergy and concentration, and was wringing out the hot clean dish towels when her aunt came in. Little Miss Bruce was cramped with the cold; her gloves and boots and shoulders were damp; she fair­ ly shuddered with pleasure as she came Into the comfortable warm kitchen. “You got caught In It, Aunt Meg­ gy!”' "Caught in It, I should say I did!” scolded Miss Bruce, with a pretty little petulant manner that had remained with her since long ago days of popularity and youth and prettiness. “I do believe we could have a fire in the sitting room tonight Oh, later, later. There’s Jingle — Jingle, you bad cat where were you all morning?” “Bad cat Is right!" said Antoi­ nette. “He was out on the roof again, and he leaped in your win­ dow. And I wish you could see your quilt I” Miss Bruce, small, gray, fuzzy- headed In her mackintosh and tied small hat stood rooted with hor ror to the spot “He didn’t! I left—alackaday! I left that window open at the bot­ tom; I’m always forgetting that!" lamented the older woman. “Yes, rub yourself against my legs now,” she reproached the cat “Cliffy home tonight, darling?" “Nope. Gone to Sacramento.” “That looks as if Barney Kerr was half as Important as Cliff 1" Miss Bruce said triumphantly, scornfully. “Maybe they need Barney here,” Antoinette, who for reasons of her own did not quite like to have Bar­ ney depreciated, even for the ag­ grandizement of Cliff, offered mildly. “Boo-boo home?" “He went to the water polo." “I don't think, after his pneu­ monia, that he ought to play water­ polo." “I don't believe he’s playing, but or course he had to go yell tor his team." Brenda sat at the kitchen table In a contented dream of pea shell­ ing; Antoinette finished up the oth­ er odds and ends of work with the familiarity of long practice. Miss Bruce, returning in a practical al­ paca gown of many seasons’ wear and a large checked apron, inspect­ ed the kitchen alertly. Present­ ly Antoinette spoke musingly: "I wonder If queens—or let's say movie queens, there are so few of the other sort left—I wonder If movie queens ever do anything as pleasant at the end of a bleak wet afternoon as to come out to a nice warm kitchen and have the sort of dinner they like to cook!” This affected Miss Bruce emo­ tionally. Her back was to the kitchen, as she filled the kettle at the sink, but her voice was thick with sudden tears. (TO BE CONTINUED) TONY TAFT was a swell reporter, an expert at gathering social news for a big San Francisco newspaper, but she couldn’t manage her love ... And thereby hangs the tale that is told so delightfully by the most famous of American women authors Kathleen Norris ▼ Read this opening installment of “ Maiden Voyage” and you will not want to miss a single sentence of this ab­ sorbing story of love behind the news.