Dinner Clothes ⦠Papaâs Friend Believes in Preparedness.
April twenty-fifth
Went out calling on amahâs third cousin who lives on little street near Nanking Road. Perfumes very unusual. Not a bit like mamaâs talcum. Donât remember much of visit, as went to sleep on bed with Chinese baby getting over mumps. Later amah let me drink tea from her cup and gave me piece of fried dumpling. Pleasant morning.
April twenty-sixth
Nobody paying any attention to me today. Everybody getting ready for taipanâs dinner. Amah busy making red paper frills. Mama busy making place cards. Cook busy making menu. Auntie busy making complexion. Houseboy busy making trouble. Hope they donât forget my chow.
April twenty-sixth, later
Papa came home to tiffin and brought fresh lettuce.
âItâs perfectly safe,â he said âOne of the men in the office grew it in his own garden.â
âIâm so glad,â said mama. âIâm as hungry for lettuce as a rabbit. Iâll send it right down to the cook to get ready for tonight.â
Sat in kitchen later while amah tried on Paris garters she had found in papaâs bureau drawer. Had interesting time watching cook blow mouthfuls of water on sanitary lettuce to keep it fresh.
April twenty-sixth
Still sitting in living-room. Family forgot to have me put to bed. Table all ready for taipanâs party. Mama called downstairs to papa and asked him what he was doing.
âReading a love-story in the Municipal Gazette.â said papa. âCanât I sit down for five minutes without giving an account of myself?â
âGo in the dining-room and compare the place-cards with the initials on the knives and forks,â said Mama. âThe houseboy borrowed from all over so as not to have dish-washing between courses and I want to make sure that nobody gets his own silver.â
Mama said later that she had decided uponeverything except the person who was to sit on papaâs left.
âWell, donât go and pick out a century plant,â said papa, taking salted peanut from red paper dish. âThe last one you put me next to remembered the inauguration of Lincoln.â
Squalled at this point and was taken upstairs, but couldnât sleep anyway on account of noise. Heard papa ask mama what had become of his pearl studs.
âI gave them to the baby for cough-drops,â said mama, with unpleasant look in voice.
Papa said all right, that she didnât need to tell him if she didnât want to, but if he didnât find them he would wear my safety pins.
April twenty-sixth, last bulletin
Papa wondering if taipan would wear evening suit or dinner coat.
âIf he wears a dress suit, I donât want to show up in a dinner coat, and if he comes in a dinner coat, I donât want to put something over on him by wearing an evening suit,â said papa.
Mama said he might send the houseboy over to ask taipanâs houseboy what his master was putting on.
âIâm afraid heâd tip it off to the taipan,â said papa.
Mama said she didnât think so, and that anyway the Orientals have a grand reputation fordiplomacy. Houseboy went, but came back pretty soon. Told papa that other master sent compliments and said he would wear evening dress and that his wife was going to wear low-necked purple gown with pearl necklace. Did not catch papaâs remark, but heard shoe falling downstairs after houseboy. Sometime when feeling good, I will get even with family by squalling all night.
April twenty-seventh
Everybody cross today after taipanâs dinner. Papa said party would have been a success if houseboy had not served dinner from behind heavy garlic barrage. Mama said it was papaâs fault for telling story he had heard at club and for spearing olives with fork. Auntie cross because Bertie led her aside to say something special and then asked her for piece of baby-ribbon to tie up his
Brian Herbert, Kevin J. Anderson