Dear Kate:
It is raining and I am staying in
the room cause I bit my tongue last night and I can’t
talk. I am sore. Sometimes I think I will
never do a good trick for a person as long as I live,
and then, when the time comes I am always Mr. Easymark.
Last night I was coming along home after work about
two o’clock, and it was cold and rainy and a
miserably bum night. At the corner of Sixth Avenue
I saw a fellow all sort of hunched up, walking along
as if he had a jag. As I went by him I saw it
was Fred Dennis, and he sure looked all in. He
was shaking as if he had chills and fever, and I stopped
and asked him what was the matter. He said he
just come out of the hospital where he had typhoid.
Between you and me, I think he had been in the jag
ward at Bellevue, but that was none of my business,
and he sure needed help. He said he was stone
broke, that he didn’t have the price for a ten-cent
lodging house, and he give me a touch. First
I thought I would cough, then I looked in his shifty
eyes, and I knew he would go straight to Kelly’s
and get a drink and take a chance of sleeping on the
floor, so I said to him, “You come up to my
room, and I will make you some hot cocoa, and you go
to bed in a bed. That is what you need,
or you will be costing the City a funeral.”
I sneaked him up to the room and had him put on that
old Japanese wadded wrapper of mine and get in bed,
and I made him some hot cocoa. His teeth chattered
like they was playing a tune, but I piled all my bed
clothes on him and my winter coat and most of my clothes
and when he got warm, I went in and slept with Myrtle
Seaman. She has only a single bed, and I went
to turn over in the night and fell out and bit my tongue.
Say, but it is sore. It seems to fill my whole
mouth, and I spend most of my time setting in front
of the looking glass to see if the swelling is stopped.
But my tongue ain’t half as
sore as I was, when I went into my room this morning
thinking I would make Fred some coffee and give him
a half a dollar, so as he could get a square meal.
Now what do you think that piker had done? He
had copped everything in my room that he could hock.
He took my black bag, my winter coat, my new green
silk petticoat that I got to wear with my slit skirt,
the buckles off my dancing slippers, and the little
silver frame that had Billy’s picture in it.
My can of cocoa was gone and he even sneaked the bottle
of milk in front of the door. Can you beat that
for nerve! Now, the next time I see a bum standing
on a corner, shaking his teeth out with the cold,
he can stand there and scatter his pearls from 14th
Street to 42nd for all me.
I am just sore to-day. I have
been a setting here and a thinking that this game
ain’t worth it. There must be something
better somewhere than living from hand to mouth with
people that would steal the pennies off your eyes.
You can’t tell where you stand with any of them.
They will be good to you one minute, and the next
minute do you a dirty trick. Just like Ethel
Rooney who sat up three nights running with Mamie Callahan
when she was sick, then pinched her only pair of slippers.
I believe crooks have something wrong down deep inside
of them. They never do nothing like other people.
Their hearts are good, they will go to the pen for
a friend rather than peach on him, and yet that friend
wouldn’t trust him alone in his room with a
five dollar bill, and the women if they
don’t steal each other’s money, they steal
each other’s fellows if they’re left around
careless-like.
I sent your letter to Jim, and I told
you before, I paid the storage man. Don’t
get so blue, it won’t be long, and I am doing
everything I can for you. You are always a kicking
at me, Kate, and I am a doing the best I know how.
I am working like a dog, and I don’t spend a
cent for myself more than I have to. I am a thinking
of you, Kate, and I love you even if you do seem to
always have a grouch against me.
Yours,
Nan.