“Youth on the prow, and Pleasure
at the helm.”
GRAY
Jim scarcely felt the jolting of the
ambulance over the city stones, and his impatience
and eagerness to get across the intervening space made
dust, and heat, and weariness of travel seem but as
feather weights, not to be cared for, nor indeed considered
at all; though, in fact, his arm complained, and his
leg ached distressingly, and he was faint and weak
without confessing it long before the tiresome journey
reached its end.
“No matter,” he said to
himself; “it’ll be all well, or forgotten,
at least, when I see Sallie once more; and so, what
odds?”
The end was gained at last, and he
would have gone to her fast as certain Rosinantes,
yclept hackhorses, could carry him, but, stopping
for a moment to consider, he thought, “No, that
will never do! Go to her looking like such a
guy? Nary time. I’ll get scrubbed,
and put on a clean shirt, and make myself decent,
before she sees me. She always used to look nice
as a new pin, and she liked me to look so too; so I’d
better put my best foot foremost when she hasn’t
laid eyes on me for such an age. I’m fright
enough, anyway, goodness knows, with my thinness,
and my old lame leg; so ” sticking
his head out of the window, and using his lungs with
astonishing vigor “Driver! streak
like lightning, will you, to the ‘Merchants’?
and you shall have extra fare.”
“Hold your blab there,”
growled the driver; “I ain’t such a pig
yet as to take double fare from a wounded soldier.
You’ll pay me well at half-price, when
we get where you want to go,” which
they did soon.
“No!” said Jehu, thrusting
back part of the money, “I ain’t agoin’
to take it, so you needn’t poke it out at me.
I’m all right; or, if I ain’t, I’ll
make it up on the next broadcloth or officer I carry;
never you fear! us fellows knows how to take care
of ourselves, you’d better believe!” which
statement Jim would have known to be truth, without
the necessity of repetition, had he been one of the
aforesaid “broadcloths,” or “officers,”
and thus better acquainted with the genus hack-driver
in the ordinary exercise of its profession.
As it was; he shook hands with the
fellow, pocketed the surplus change, made his way
into the hotel, was in his room, in his bath, under
the barber’s hands, cleaned, shaved, brushed,
polished, shining, as he himself would
have declared, “in a jiffy” Then, deciding
himself to be presentable to the lady of his heart,
took his crutch and sallied forth, as good-looking
a young fellow, spite of the wooden appendage, as any
the sun shone upon in all the big city, and as happy,
as it was bright.
He knew where to go, and, by help
of street-cars and other legs than his own, he was
there speedily. He knew the very room towards
which to turn; and, reaching it, paused to look in
through the half-open door, delighted thus
to watch and listen for a little space unseen.
Sallie was sitting, her handsome head
bent over her sewing, Frankie gambolling
about the floor.
“O sis, don’t you
wish Jim would come home?” queried the youngster.
“I do, I wish he’d come right
straight away.”
“Right straight away? What do you
want to see Jim for?”
“O, ’cause he’s
nice; and ’cause he’ll take me to the Theayter;
and ’cause he’ll treat, apples,
and peanuts, and candy, you know, and and ice-cream,”
wiping the beads from his little red face, the
last desideratum evidently suggested by the fiery summer
heat. “I say, Sallie!” a
pause “won’t you get me some
ice-cream this evening?”
“Yes, Bobbity, if you’ll be a good boy.”
Frankie looked dubious over that proposition.
Jim never made any such stipulations: so, after
another pause, in which he was probably considering
the whole subject with due and becoming gravity, evidently
desiring to hear his own wish propped up by somebody
else’s seconding, he broke out again,
“Now, Sallie, don’t you just wish Jim
would come home?”
“O Frankie, don’t I?”
cried the girl, dropping her work, and stretching
out her empty arms as though she would clasp some shape
in the air.
Frankie, poor child! innocently imagining
the proffered embrace was for him, ran forward, for
he was an affectionate little soul, to give Sallie
a good hug, but found himself literally left out in
the cold; no arms to meet, and no Sallie, indeed,
to touch him. Something big, burly, and blue
loomed up on his sight, something that was
doing its best to crush Sallie bodily, and to devour
what was not crushed; something that could say nothing
by reason of its lips being so much more pleasantly
engaged, and whose face was invisible through its
extraordinary proximity to somebody else’s face
and hair.
Frankie, finding he could gain neither
sight nor sound of notice, began to howl. But
as neither of the hard-hearted creatures seemed to
care for the poor little chap’s howling, he
fell upon the coat-tails of the big blue obstruction,
and pulled at them lustily, not to say
viciously, till their owner turned, and
beheld him panting and fiery.
“Helloa, youngster! what’s to pay now?”
“Wow! if ’tain’t
Jim. Hooray!” screeched the youngster, first
embracing the blue legs, and then proceeding to execute
a dance upon his head. “Te, te,
di di, idde i-dum,” he sang, coming
feet down, finally.
Evidently the bad boy’s language
had been corrupted by his street confreres;
it was a missionary ground upon which Sallie entered,
more or less faithfully, every day to hoe and weed;
but of this last specimen-plant she took no notice,
save to laugh as Jim, catching him up, first kissed
him, then gave him a shake and a small spank, and,
thrusting a piece of currency into his hand, whisked
him outside the door with a “Come, shaver, decamp,
and treat yourself to-day,” and had it shut
and fastened in a twinkling.
“O Jim!” she cried then, her soul in her
handsome eyes.
“O Sallie!” and he had her
fast and tight once more.
An ineffable blank, punctuated liberally
with sounding exclamation points, and strongly marked
periods, though how or why a blank should
be punctuated at all, only blissful lovers could possibly
define.
“Jim, dear Jim!” whispering
it, and snuggling her blushing face closer to the
faded blue, “can you love me after all that has
happened?”
“Come now! can I love
you, my beauty? Slightly, I should think.
O, te, te, di di, idde i-dum,” singing
Frank’s little song with his big, gay voice, “I’m
happy as a king.”
Happy as a king, that was plain enough.
And what shall be said of her, as he sat down, and,
resting the wounded leg stiff and sore yet, held
Sallie on his other knee, then fell to admiring
her while she stroked his mustache and his crisp,
curling hair, looking at both and at him altogether
with an expression of contented adoration in her eyes.
Frank, tired of prowling round the
door, candy in hand, here thrust his head in at the
window, and, unfortunately for his plans, sneezed.
“Mutual-admiration society!” he cried at
that, seeing that he was detected in any case, and
running away, his run spoiled as soon as
it began.
“We are a handsome couple,”
laughed Jim, holding back her face between both hands, “ain’t
we, now?”
Yes, they were, no mistake
about that, handsome as pictures.
And merry as birds, through all of
his short stay. They would see no danger in the
future: Jim had been scathed in time past so often,
yet come out safe and sound, that they would have
no fear for what was to befall him in time to come.
If they had, neither showed it to the other.
Jim thought, “Sallie would break her heart, if
she knew just what is down there, so it
would be a pity to talk about it”; and Sallie
thought, “It’s right for Jim to go, and
I won’t say a word to keep him back, no matter
how I feel.”
The furlough was soon ah!
how soon out, the days of happiness over;
and Jim, holding her in a last close embrace, said
his farewell: “Come, Sallie, you’re
not to cry now, and make me a coward. It’ll
only be for a little while; the Rebs can’t
stand it much longer, and then
“Ah, Jim! but if you should
“Yes, but I sha’n’t,
you see; not a bit of it; don’t you go to think
it. ‘I bear’ what is it?
O ’a charmed life,’ as Mr. Macbeth
says, and you’ll see me back right and tight,
and up to time. One kiss more, dear. God
bless you! good by!” and he was gone.
She leaned out of the window, she
smiled after him, kissed her hand, waved her handkerchief,
so long as he could see them, till he had
turned a corner way down the street, and
smile, and hand, and handkerchief were lost to his
sight; then flung herself on the floor, and cried
as though her very heart would break. “God
send him home, send him safe and soon home!”
she implored; entreaty made for how many loved ones,
by how many aching hearts, that speedily lost the need
of saying amen to any such petition, the
prayer for the living lost in mourning for the dead.
Heaven grant that no soul that reads this ever may
have the like cause to offer such prayer again!