The LOA Edition
Dawn Powell The Library of America Her Life Her Work Commentary
Bibliography Revival Excerpts
Angels on Toast
Dance Night
The Golden Spur
My Home is Far Away
The Locusts Have No King
A Time to be Born
The Magic Wheel
The Wicked Pavilion

The Spinning Top was not one of Chicago's better spots; its chief charm for its customers was that it was not popular and was no place to take a wife. It was a jolly combination of seedy Hollywood glitter and old-time honkytonk. It was near enough to the station so that a busy man could nip over for a drink and the show between trains, say hello to the girls, maybe, and then, after he missed his train, could even be put up in the little adjoining hotel. The girls were good-natured, not bad-looking graduates of various exclusive burlesque wheels, and they sat around at the bar in little fig-leaf costumes, fluttering their blue-greased eyelids at strangers, and on dull nights at least keeping up a semblance of gayety by their perpetual squeals and chatter. It was said, with authority, that a favored customer could toss his coat to Marie, the hat-check girl, for repairs while he drank, and he could even send her out to do his wife's shopping, if necessary, while he downed a few at the bar. Homey, that was the way a traveller described the Spinning Top, and it was fine dropping in a place where they didn't snub you, a place where the waiters all called you by your first name, and the girls kidded and scolded you and took care of you, and took every nickel you had. All right, it was a clip-joint, but if you passed out the manager himself took all your valuables out of your pocket to look after till you came to, so that at least nobody else would steal them. It was your own fault if you forgot next day where you'd been.

It was a dull evening tonight and the girls had listlessly walked through the dinner-show with little more than the orchestra and waiters for audience. Since their gifts were little more than walking under any circumstances the performance was not too much worse than usual. As soon as the Olivers and Donovans arrived, however, the place sprang into action. Two girls who had been slumping at the bar wrangling with the bartender now rushed to attach a cigarette tray and flower tray respectively to their persons; Tessie, the accordionist, struck up "Give My Regards to Broadway," a roguish reminder that on Mr. Oliver's last appearance at "The Top" he had obliged with a simple timestep to that tune. The headwaiter, a punch-drunk ex-fighter, who was making himself feel like a crowd with a series of short brandies, snapped to his heels, with an almost reverential bow.

"Good evening, Mr. Donovan," he said. "And Mr. Oliver. Well, well!"

He had fortunately learned to take no chances on calling the ladies by name, but men customers sometimes wondered whether the flattery to their ego of the bow and their names remembered was really worth while, since the lady was often not impressed so much with the regard in which her husband or boy-friend was held as by the deduction that he must spend a lot of money here.

 

Covers: The Tenth Moon, A Man's Affair, Dance Night

 

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