The F. Scott Fitzgerald MEGAPACK ®. F. Scott Fitzgerald

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The F. Scott Fitzgerald MEGAPACK ® - F. Scott Fitzgerald

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led him downtown. He sat slouched down very low in his seat, much too dispirited to care where he went.

      In front of the Clarendon Hotel he was hailed from the sidewalk by a bad man named Baily, who had big teeth and lived at the hotel and had never been in love.

      “Perry,” said the bad man softly when the roadster drew up beside him at the curb, “I’ve got six quarts of the doggonedest still champagne you ever tasted. A third of it’s yours, Perry, if you’ll come upstairs and help Martin Macy and me drink it.”

      “Baily,” said Perry tensely, “I’ll drink your champagne. I’ll drink every drop of it, I don’t care if it kills me.”

      “Shut up, you nut!” said the bad man gently. “They don’t put wood alcohol in champagne. This is the stuff that proves the world is more than six thousand years old. It’s so ancient that the cork is petrified. You have to pull it with a stone drill.”

      “Take me upstairs,” said Perry moodily. “If that cork sees my heart it’ll fall out from pure mortification.”

      The room upstairs was full of those innocent hotel pictures of little girls eating apples and sitting in swings and talking to dogs. The other decorations were neckties and a pink man reading a pink paper devoted to ladies in pink tights.

      “When you have to go into the highways and byways—” said the pink man, looking reproachfully at Baily and Perry.

      “Hello, Martin Macy,” said Perry shortly, “where’s this stone-age champagne?”

      “What’s the rush? This isn’t an operation, understand. This is a party.”

      Perry sat down dully and looked disapprovingly at all the neckties.

      Baily leisurely opened the door of a wardrobe and brought out six handsome bottles.

      “Take off that darn fur coat!” said Martin Macy to Perry. “Or maybe you’d like to have us open all the windows.”

      “Give me champagne,” said Perry.

      “Going to the Townsends’ circus ball tonight?”

      “Am not!”

      “’Vited?”

      “Uh-huh.”

      “Why not go?”

      “Oh, I’m sick of parties,” exclaimed Perry. “I’m sick of ’em. I’ve been to so many that I’m sick of ’em.”

      “Maybe you’re going to the Howard Tates’ party?”

      “No, I tell you; I’m sick of ’em.”

      “Well,” said Macy consolingly, “the Tates’ is just for college kids anyways.”

      “I tell you—”

      “I thought you’d be going to one of ’em anyways. I see by the papers you haven’t missed a one this Christmas.”

      “Hm,” grunted Perry morosely.

      He would never go to any more parties. Classical phrases played in his mind—that side of his life was closed, closed. Now when a man says “closed, closed” like that, you can be pretty sure that some woman has double-closed him, so to speak. Perry was also thinking that other classical thought, about how cowardly suicide is. A noble thought that one—warm and inspiring. Think of all the fine men we should lose if suicide were not so cowardly!

      An hour later was six o’clock, and Perry had lost all resemblance to the young man in the liniment advertisement. He looked like a rough draft for a riotous cartoon. They were singing—an impromptu song of Baily’s improvisation:

      “One Lump Perry, the parlor snake,

      Famous through the city for the way he drinks his tea;

      Plays with it, toys with it

      Makes no noise with it,

      Balanced on a napkin on his well-trained knee—”

      “Trouble is,” said Perry, who had just banged his hair with Baily’s comb and was tying an orange tie round it to get the effect of Julius Caesar, “that you fellas can’t sing worth a damn. Soon’s I leave the air and start singing tenor you start singin’ tenor too.”

      “’M a natural tenor,” said Macy gravely. “Voice lacks cultivation, tha’s all. Gotta natural voice, m’aunt used say. Naturally good singer.”

      “Singers, singers, all good singers,” remarked Baily, who was at the telephone. “No, not the cabaret; I want night egg. I mean some dog-gone clerk ’at’s got food—food! I want—”

      “Julius Caesar,” announced Perry, turning round from the mirror. “Man of iron will and stern ’termination.”

      “Shut up!” yelled Baily. “Say, iss Mr. Baily Sen’ up enormous supper. Use y’own judgment. Right away.”

      He connected the receiver and the hook with some difficulty, and then with his lips closed and an expression of solemn intensity in his eyes went to the lower drawer of his dresser and pulled it open.

      “Lookit!” he commanded. In his hands he held a truncated garment of pink gingham.

      “Pants,” he exclaimed gravely. “Lookit!”

      This was a pink blouse, a red tie, and a Buster Brown collar.

      “Lookit!” he repeated. “Costume for the Townsends’ circus ball. I’m li’l’ boy carries water for the elephants.”

      Perry was impressed in spite of himself.

      “I’m going to be Julius Caesar,” he announced after a moment of concentration.

      “Thought you weren’t going!” said Macy.

      “Me? Sure I’m goin’, Never miss a party. Good for the nerves—like celery.”

      “Caesar!” scoffed Baily. “Can’t be Caesar! He is not about a circus. Caesar’s Shakespeare. Go as a clown.”

      Perry shook his head.

      “Nope; Caesar,”

      “Caesar?”

      “Sure. Chariot.”

      Light dawned on Baily.

      “That’s right. Good idea.”

      Perry looked round the room searchingly.

      “You lend me a bathrobe and this tie,” he said finally. Baily considered.

      “No good.”

      “Sure, tha’s all I need. Caesar was a savage. They can’t kick if I come as Caesar, if he was a savage.”

      “No,”

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