Before she tried to be a good woman
she had been a very bad woman so bad that
she could trail her wonderful apparel up and down Main
Street, from the Elm Tree Bakery to the railroad tracks,
without once having a man doff his hat to her or a
woman bow. You passed her on the street with
a surreptitious glance, though she was well worth looking
at in her furs and laces and plumes.
She had the only full-length mink coat in our town,
and Ganz’s shoe store sent to Chicago for her
shoes. Hers were the miraculously small feet
you frequently see in stout women.
Usually she walked alone; but on rare
occasions, especially round Christmastime, she might
have been seen accompanied by some silent, dull-eyed,
stupid-looking girl, who would follow her dumbly in
and out of stores, stopping now and then to admire
a cheap comb or a chain set with flashy imitation
stones or, queerly enough, a doll with yellow
hair and blue eyes and very pink cheeks. But,
alone or in company, her appearance in the stores
of our town was the signal for a sudden jump in the
cost of living. The storekeepers mulcted her;
and she knew it and paid in silence, for she was of
the class that has no redress. She owned the
House with the Closed Shutters, near the freight depot did
Blanche Devine.
In a larger town than ours she would
have passed unnoticed. She did not look like
a bad woman. Of course she used too much make-up,
and as she passed you caught the oversweet breath
of a certain heavy scent. Then, too, her diamond
eardrops would have made any woman’s features
look hard; but her plump face, in spite of its heaviness,
wore an expression of good-humored intelligence, and
her eyeglasses gave her somehow a look of respectability.
We do not associate vice with eyeglasses. So
in a large city she would have passed for a well-dressed,
prosperous, comfortable wife and mother who was in
danger of losing her figure from an overabundance
of good living; but with us she was a town character,
like Old Man Givins, the drunkard, or the weak-minded
Binns girl. When she passed the drug-store corner
there would be a sniggering among the vacant-eyed
loafers idling there, and they would leer at each
other and jest in undertones.
So, knowing Blanche Devine as we did,
there was something resembling a riot in one of our
most respectable neighborhoods when it was learned
that she had given up her interest in the house near
the freight depot and was going to settle down in
the white cottage on the corner and be good.
All the husbands in the block, urged on by righteously
indignant wives, dropped in on Alderman Mooney after
supper to see if the thing could not be stopped.
The fourth of the protesting husbands to arrive was
the Very Young Husband who lived next door to the corner
cottage that Blanche Devine had bought. The
Very Young Husband had a Very Young Wife, and they
were the joint owners of Snooky. Snooky was
three-going-on-four, and looked something like an angel only
healthier and with grimier hands. The whole
neighborhood borrowed her and tried to spoil her;
but Snooky would not spoil.
Alderman Mooney was down in the cellar,
fooling with the furnace.
He was in his furnace overalls; a
short black pipe in his mouth. Three protesting
husbands had just left. As the Very Young Husband,
following Mrs. Mooney’s directions, descended
the cellar stairs, Alderman Mooney looked up from
his tinkering. He peered through a haze of pipe
smoke.
“Hello!” he called, and
waved the haze away with his open palm.
“Come on down! Been tinkering
with this blamed furnace since supper. She don’t
draw like she ought. ’Long toward spring
a furnace always gets balky. How many tons you
used this winter?”
“Oh-five,” said the Very
Young Husband shortly. Alderman Mooney considered
it thoughtfully. The Young Husband leaned up
against the side of the water tank, his hands in his
pockets. “Say, Mooney, is that right about
Blanche Devine’s having bought the house on the
corner?”
“You’re the fourth man
that’s been in to ask me that this evening.
I’m expecting the rest of the block before
bedtime. She bought it all right.”
The Young Husband flushed and kicked
at a piece of coal with the toe of his boot.
“Well, it’s a darned shame!”
he began hotly. “Jen was ready to cry at
supper. This’ll be a fine neighborhood
for Snooky to grow up in! What’s a woman
like that want to come into a respectable street for,
anyway? I own my home and pay my taxes ”
Alderman Mooney looked up.
“So does she,” he interrupted.
“She’s going to improve the place paint
it, and put in a cellar and a furnace, and build a
porch, and lay a cement walk all round.”
The Young Husband took his hands out
of his pockets in order to emphasize his remarks with
gestures.
“What’s that got to do
with it? I don’t care if she puts in diamonds
for windows and sets out Italian gardens and a terrace
with peacocks on it. You’re the alderman
of this ward, aren’t you? Well, it was
up to you to keep her out of this block! You
could have fixed it with an injunction or something.
I’m going to get up a petition that’s
what I’m going ”
Alderman Mooney closed the furnace
door with a bang that drowned the rest of the threat.
He turned the draft in a pipe overhead and brushed
his sooty palms briskly together like one who would
put an end to a profitless conversation.
“She’s bought the house,”
he said mildly, “and paid for it. And it’s
hers. She’s got a right to live in this
neighborhood as long as she acts respectable.”
The Very Young Husband laughed.
“She won’t last! They never do.”
Alderman Mooney had taken his pipe
out of his mouth and was rubbing his thumb over the
smooth bowl, looking down at it with unseeing eyes.
On his face was a queer look the look of
one who is embarrassed because he is about to say
something honest.
“Look here! I want to
tell you something: I happened to be up in the
mayor’s office the day Blanche signed for the
place. She had to go through a lot of red tape
before she got it had quite a time of it,
she did! And say, kid, that woman ain’t
so bad.”
The Very Young Husband exclaimed impatiently:
“Oh, don’t give me any
of that, Mooney! Blanche Devine’s a town
character. Even the kids know what she is.
If she’s got religion or something, and wants
to quit and be decent, why doesn’t she go to
another town Chicago or someplace where
nobody knows her?”
That motion of Alderman Mooney’s
thumb against the smooth pipe bowl stopped.
He looked up slowly.
“That’s what I said the
mayor too. But Blanche Devine said she wanted
to try it here. She said this was home to her.
Funny ain’t it? Said she wouldn’t
be fooling anybody here. They know her.
And if she moved away, she said, it’d leak out
some way sooner or later. It does, she said.
Always! Seems she wants to live like well,
like other women. She put it like this:
she says she hasn’t got religion, or any of that.
She says she’s no different than she was when
she was twenty. She says that for the last ten
years the ambition of her life has been to be able
to go into a grocery store and ask the price of, say,
celery; and, if the clerk charged her ten when it
ought to be seven, to be able to sass him with a regular
piece of her mind and then sail out and
trade somewhere else until he saw that she didn’t
have to stand anything from storekeepers, any more
than any other woman that did her own marketing.
She’s a smart woman, Blanche is! God knows
I ain’t taking her part exactly;
but she talked a little, and the mayor and me got a
little of her history.”
A sneer appeared on the face of the
Very Young Husband. He had been known before
he met Jen as a rather industrious sower of wild oats.
He knew a thing or two, did the Very Young Husband,
in spite of his youth! He always fussed when
Jen wore even a V-necked summer gown on the street.
“Oh, she wasn’t playing
for sympathy,” went on Alderman Mooney in answer
to the sneer. “She said she’d always
paid her way and always expected to. Seems her
husband left her without a cent when she was eighteen with
a baby. She worked for four dollars a week in
a cheap eating house. The two of ’em couldn’t
live on that. Then the baby ”
“Good night!” said the
Very Young Husband. “I suppose Mrs. Mooney’s
going to call?”
“Minnie! It was her scolding
all through supper that drove me down to monkey with
the furnace. She’s wild Minnie
is.” He peeled off his overalls and hung
them on a nail. The Young Husband started to
ascend the cellar stairs. Alderman Mooney laid
a detaining finger on his sleeve. “Don’t
say anything in front of Minnie! She’s
boiling! Minnie and the kids are going to visit
her folks out West this summer; so I wouldn’t
so much as dare to say ‘Good morning!’
to the Devine woman. Anyway, a person wouldn’t
talk to her, I suppose. But I kind of thought
I’d tell you about her.
“Thanks!” said the Very Young Husband
dryly.
In the early spring, before Blanche
Devine moved in, there came stone-masons, who began
to build something. It was a great stone fireplace
that rose in massive incongruity at the side of the
little white cottage. Blanche Devine was trying
to make a home for herself.
Blanche Devine used to come and watch
them now and then as the work progressed. She
had a way of walking round and round the house, looking
up at it and poking at plaster and paint with her umbrella
or finger tip. One day she brought with her
a man with a spade. He spaded up a neat square
of ground at the side of the cottage and a long ridge
near the fence that separated her yard from that of
the Very Young Couple next door. The ridge spelled
sweet peas and nasturtiums to our small-town eyes.
On the day that Blanche Devine moved
in there was wild agitation among the white-ruffed
bedroom curtains of the neighborhood. Later on
certain odors, as of burning dinners, pervaded the
atmosphere. Blanche Devine, flushed and excited,
her hair slightly askew, her diamond eardrops flashing,
directed the moving, wrapped in her great fur coat;
but on the third morning we gasped when she appeared
out-of-doors, carrying a little household ladder,
a pail of steaming water, and sundry voluminous white
cloths. She reared the little ladder against
the side of the house, mounted it cautiously, and
began to wash windows with housewifely thoroughness.
Her stout figure was swathed in a gray sweater and
on her head was a battered felt hat the
sort of window washing costume that has
been worn by women from time immemorial. We
noticed that she used plenty of hot water and clean
rags, and that she rubbed the glass until it sparkled,
leaning perilously sideways on the ladder to detect
elusive streaks. Our keenest housekeeping eye
could find no fault with the way Blanche Devine washed
windows.
By May, Blanche Devine had left off
her diamond eardrops perhaps it was their
absence that gave her face a new expression.
When she went downtown we noticed that her hats were
more like the hats the other women in our town wore;
but she still affected extravagant footgear, as is
right and proper for a stout woman who has cause to
be vain of her feet. We noticed that her trips
downtown were rare that spring and summer. She
used to come home laden with little bundles; and before
supper she would change her street clothes for a neat,
washable housedress, as is our thrifty custom.
Through her bright windows we could see her moving
briskly about from kitchen to sitting room; and from
the smells that floated out from her kitchen door,
she seemed to be preparing for her solitary supper
the same homely viands that were frying or stewing
or baking in our kitchens. Sometimes you could
detect the delectable scent of browning, hot tea biscuit.
It takes a determined woman to make tea biscuit for
no one but herself.
Blanche Devine joined the church.
On the first Sunday morning she came to the service
there was a little flurry among the ushers at the
vestibule door. They seated her well in the rear.
The second Sunday morning a dreadful thing happened.
The woman next to whom they seated her turned, regarded
her stonily for a moment, then rose agitatedly and
moved to a pew across the aisle.
Blanche Devine’s face went a
dull red beneath her white powder. She never
came again though we saw the minister visit
her once or twice. She always accompanied him
to the door pleasantly, holding it well open until
he was down the little flight of steps and on the sidewalk.
The minister’s wife did not call.
She rose early, like the rest of us;
and as summer came on we used to see her moving about
in her little garden patch in the dewy, golden morning.
She wore absurd pale-blue negligees that made her stout
figure loom immense against the greenery of garden
and apple tree. The neighborhood women viewed
these negligees with Puritan disapproval as they smoothed
down their own prim, starched gingham skirts.
They said it was disgusting and perhaps
it was; but the habit of years is not easily overcome.
Blanche Devine snipping her sweet peas,
peering anxiously at the Virginia creeper that clung
with such fragile fingers to the trellis, watering
the flower baskets that hung from her porch was
blissfully unconscious of the disapproving eyes.
I wish one of us had just stopped to call good morning
to her over the fence, and to say in our neighborly,
small-town way: “My, ain’t this a
scorcher! So early too! It’ll be
fierce by noon!”
But we did not.
I think perhaps the evenings must
have been the loneliest for her. The summer
evenings in our little town are filled with intimate,
human, neighborly sounds. After the heat of
the day it is pleasant to relax in the cool comfort
of the front porch, with the life of the town eddying
about us. We sew and read out there until it
grows dusk. We call across lots to our next-door
neighbor. The men water the lawns and the flower
boxes and get together in little, quiet groups to
discuss the new street paving. I have even known
Mrs. Hines to bring her cherries out there when she
had canning to do, and pit them there on the front
porch partially shielded by her porch vine, but not
so effectually that she was deprived of the sights
and sounds about her. The kettle in her lap and
the dishpan full of great ripe cherries on the porch
floor by her chair, she would pit and chat and peer
out through the vines, the red juice staining her
plump bare arms.
I have wondered since what Blanche
Devine thought of us those lonesome evenings those
evenings filled with friendly sights and sounds.
It must have been difficult for her, who had dwelt
behind closed shutters so long, to seat herself on
the new front porch for all the world to stare at;
but she did sit there resolutely watching
us in silence.
She seized hungrily upon the stray
crumbs of conversation that fell to her. The
milkman and the iceman and the butcher boy used to
hold daily conversation with her. They sociable
gentlemen would stand on her door-step,
one grimy hand resting against the white of her doorpost,
exchanging the time of day with Blanche in the doorway a
tea towel in one hand, perhaps, and a plate in the
other. Her little house was a miracle of cleanliness.
It was no uncommon sight to see her down on her knees
on the kitchen floor, wielding her brush and rag like
the rest of us. In canning and preserving time
there floated out from her kitchen the pungent scent
of pickled crab apples; the mouth-watering smell that
meant sweet pickles; or the cloying, divinely sticky
odor that meant raspberry jam. Snooky, from
her side of the fence, often used to peer through
the pickets, gazing in the direction of the enticing
smells next door.
Early one September morning there
floated out from Blanche Devine’s kitchen that
fragrant, sweet scent of fresh-baked cookies cookies
with butter in them, and spice, and with nuts on top.
Just by the smell of them your mind’s eye pictured
them coming from the oven-crisp brown circlets, crumbly,
delectable. Snooky, in her scarlet sweater and
cap, sniffed them from afar and straightway deserted
her sand pile to take her stand at the fence.
She peered through the restraining bars, standing
on tiptoe. Blanche Devine, glancing up from her
board and rolling pin, saw the eager golden head.
And Snooky, with guile in her heart, raised one fat,
dimpled hand above the fence and waved it friendlily.
Blanche Devine waved back. Thus encouraged,
Snooky’s two hands wigwagged frantically above
the pickets. Blanche Devine hesitated a moment,
her floury hand on her hip. Then she went to the
pantry shelf and took out a clean white saucer.
She selected from the brown jar on the table three
of the brownest, crumbliest, most perfect cookies,
with a walnut meat perched atop of each, placed them
temptingly on the saucer and, descending the steps,
came swiftly across the grass to the triumphant Snooky.
Blanche Devine held out the saucer, her lips smiling,
her eyes tender. Snooky reached up with one plump
white arm.
“Snooky!” shrilled a high
voice. “Snooky!” A voice of horror
and of wrath. “Come here to me this minute!
And don’t you dare to touch those!” Snooky
hesitated rebelliously, one pink finger in her pouting
mouth.
“Snooky! Do you hear me?”
And the Very Young Wife began to descend
the steps of her back porch. Snooky, regretful
eyes on the toothsome dainties, turned away aggrieved.
The Very Young Wife, her lips set, her eyes flashing,
advanced and seized the shrieking Snooky by one arm
and dragged her away toward home and safety.
Blanche Devine stood there at the
fence, holding the saucer in her hand. The saucer
tipped slowly, and the three cookies slipped off and
fell to the grass. Blanche Devine stood staring
at them a moment. Then she turned quickly, went
into the house, and shut the door.
It was about this time we noticed
that Blanche Devine was away much of the time.
The little white cottage would be empty for weeks.
We knew she was out of town because the expressman
would come for her trunk. We used to lift our
eyebrows significantly. The newspapers and handbills
would accumulate in a dusty little heap on the porch;
but when she returned there was always a grand cleaning,
with the windows open, and Blanche her
head bound turbanwise in a towel appearing
at a window every few minutes to shake out a dustcloth.
She seemed to put an enormous amount of energy into
those cleanings as if they were a sort
of safety valve.
As winter came on she used to sit
up before her grate fire long, long after we were
asleep in our beds. When she neglected to pull
down the shades we could see the flames of her cosy
fire dancing gnomelike on the wall. There came
a night of sleet and snow, and wind and rattling hail one
of those blustering, wild nights that are followed
by morning-paper reports of trains stalled in drifts,
mail delayed, telephone and telegraph wires down.
It must have been midnight or past when there came
a hammering at Blanche Devine’s door a
persistent, clamorous rapping. Blanche Devine,
sitting before her dying fire half asleep, started
and cringed when she heard it, then jumped to her feet,
her hand at her breast her eyes darting
this way and that, as though seeking escape.
She had heard a rapping like that
before. It had meant bluecoats swarming up the
stairway, and frightened cries and pleadings, and wild
confusion. So she started forward now, quivering.
And then she remembered, being wholly awake now she
remembered, and threw up her head and smiled a little
bitterly and walked toward the door. The hammering
continued, louder than ever. Blanche Devine flicked
on the porch light and opened the door. The
half-clad figure of the Very Young Wife next door
staggered into the room. She seized Blanche Devine’s
arm with both her frenzied hands and shook her, the
wind and snow beating in upon both of them.
“The baby!” she screamed
in a high, hysterical voice. “The baby!
The baby !”
Blanche Devine shut the door and shook
the Young Wife smartly by the shoulders.
“Stop screaming,” she said quietly.
“Is she sick?”
The Young Wife told her, her teeth chattering:
“Come quick! She’s
dying! Will’s out of town. I tried
to get the doctor. The telephone wouldn’t
I saw your light! For God’s sake ”
Blanche Devine grasped the Young Wife’s
arm, opened the door, and together they sped across
the little space that separated the two houses.
Blanche Devine was a big woman, but she took the stairs
like a girl and found the right bedroom by some miraculous
woman instinct. A dreadful choking, rattling
sound was coming from Snooky’s bed.
“Croup,” said Blanche Devine, and began
her fight.
It was a good fight. She marshaled
her inadequate forces, made up of the half-fainting
Young Wife and the terrified and awkward hired girl.
“Get the hot water on lots
of it!” Blanche Devine pinned up her sleeves.
“Hot cloths! Tear up a sheet or
anything! Got an oilstove? I want a tea-kettle
boiling in the room. She’s got to have
the steam. If that don’t do it we’ll
raise an umbrella over her and throw a sheet over,
and hold the kettle under till the steam gets to her
that way. Got any ipecac?”
The Young Wife obeyed orders, white-faced
and shaking. Once Blanche Devine glanced up
at her sharply.
“Don’t you dare faint!” she commanded.
And the fight went on. Gradually
the breathing that had been so frightful became softer,
easier. Blanche Devine did not relax. It
was not until the little figure breathed gently in
sleep that Blanche Devine sat back, satisfied.
Then she tucked a cover at the side of the bed, took
a last satisfied look at the face on the pillow, and
turned to look at the wan, disheveled Young Wife.
“She’s all right now.
We can get the doctor when morning comes though
I don’t know’s you’ll need him.”
The Young Wife came round to Blanche
Devine’s side of the bed and stood looking up
at her.
“My baby died,” said Blanche
Devine simply. The Young Wife gave a little
inarticulate cry, put her two hands on Blanche Devine’s
broad shoulders, and laid her tired head on her breast.
“I guess I’d better be going,” said
Blanche Devine.
The Young Wife raised her head. Her eyes were
round with fright.
“Going! Oh, please stay!
I’m so afraid. Suppose she should take
sick again! That awful breathing ”
“I’ll stay if you want me to.”
“Oh, please! I’ll make up your bed
and you can rest ”
“I’m not sleepy.
I’m not much of a hand to sleep anyway.
I’ll sit up here in the hall, where there’s
a light. You get to bed. I’ll watch
and see that everything’s all right. Have
you got something I can read out here something
kind of lively with a love story in it?”
So the night went by. Snooky
slept in her white bed. The Very Young Wife
half dozed in her bed, so near the little one.
In the hall, her stout figure looming grotesque in
wall shadows, sat Blanche Devine, pretending to read.
Now and then she rose and tiptoed into the bedroom
with miraculous quiet, and stooped over the little
bed and listened and looked and tiptoed
away again, satisfied.
The Young Husband came home from his
business trip next day with tales of snowdrifts and
stalled engines. Blanche Devine breathed a sigh
of relief when she saw him from her kitchen window.
She watched the house now with a sort of proprietary
eye. She wondered about Snooky; but she knew
better than to ask. So she waited. The
Young Wife next door had told her husband all about
that awful night had told him with tears
and sobs. The Very Young Husband had been very,
very angry with her angry, he said, and
astonished! Snooky could not have been so sick!
Look at her now! As well as ever. And
to have called such a woman! Well, he did not
want to be harsh; but she must understand that she
must never speak to the woman again. Never!
So the next day the Very Young Wife
happened to go by with the Young Husband. Blanche
Devine spied them from her sitting-room window, and
she made the excuse of looking in her mailbox in order
to go to the door. She stood in the doorway
and the Very Young Wife went by on the arm of her
husband. She went by rather white-faced without
a look or a word or a sign!
And then this happened! There
came into Blanche Devine’s face a look that
made slits of her eyes, and drew her mouth down into
an ugly, narrow line, and that made the muscles of
her jaw tense and hard. It was the ugliest look
you can imagine. Then she smiled if
having one’s lips curl away from one’s
teeth can be called smiling.
Two days later there was great news
of the white cottage on the corner. The curtains
were down; the furniture was packed; the rugs were
rolled. The wagons came and backed up to the
house and took those things that had made a home for
Blanche Devine. And when we heard that she had
bought back her interest in the House with the Closed
Shutters, near the freight depot, we sniffed.
“I knew she wouldn’t last!” we said.
“They never do!” said we.