By F. Hopkinson Smith
1909
I
Once in a while there come to me out
of the long ago the fragments of a story I have not
thought of for years one that has been hidden
in the dim lumber-room of my brain where I store my
by-gone memories.
These fragments thrust themselves
out of the past as do the cuffs of an old-fashioned
coat, the flutings of a flounce, or the lacings of
a bodice from out a quickly opened bureau drawer.
Only when you follow the cuff along the sleeve to
the broad shoulder; smooth out the crushed frill that
swayed about her form, and trace the silken thread
to the waist it tightened, can you determine the fashion
of the day in which they were worn.
And with the rummaging of this lumber-room
come the odors: dry smells from musty old trunks
packed with bundles of faded letters and worthless
deeds tied with red tape; musty smells from dust-covered
chests, iron bound, holding mouldy books, their backs
loose; pungent smells from cracked wardrobes stuffed
with moth-eaten hunting-coats, riding-trousers, and
high boots with rusty spurs cross-country
riders these roisterers and gamesters a
sorry lot, no doubt.
Or perhaps it is an old bow-legged
high-boy its club-feet slippered on easy
rollers the kind with deep drawers kept
awake by rattling brass handles, its outside veneer
so highly polished that you are quite sure it must
have been brought up in some distinguished family.
The scent of old lavender and spiced rose leaves,
and a stick or two of white orris root, haunt this
relic: my lady’s laces must be kept fresh,
and so must my lady’s long white mitts they
reach from her dainty knuckles quite to her elbow.
And so must her cobwebbed silk stockings and the filmy
kerchief she folds across her bosom:
It is this kind of a drawer that I
am opening now one belonging to the Little
Gray Lady.
As I look through its contents my
eyes resting on the finger of a glove, the end of
a lace scarf, and the handle of an old fan, my mind
goes back to the last time she wore them. Then
I begin turning everything upside down, lifting the
corner of this incident, prying under that no bit of
talk, recalling what he said and who told of it (I
shall have the whole drawer empty before I get through),
and whose fault it was that the match was broken off,
and why she, of all women in the world, should have
remained single all those years. Why, too, she
should have lost her identity, so to speak, and become
the Little Gray Lady.
And yet no sobriquet could better
express her personality: She was little a
dainty, elf-like littleness, with tiny feet and wee
hands; she was gray a soft, silver gray too
gray for her forty years (and this fragment begins
when she was forty); and she was a lady in every beat
of her warm heart; in every pressure of her white hand;
in her voice, speech in all her thoughts
and movements.
She lived in the quaintest of old
houses fronted by a brick path bordered with fragrant
box, which led up to an old-fashioned porch, its door
brightened by a brass knocker. This, together
with the knobs, steps, and slits of windows on each
side of the door, was kept scrupulously clean by old
Margaret, who had lived with her for years.
But it is her personality and not
her surroundings that lingers in my memory. No
one ever heard anything sweeter than her voice; in
and nobody ever looked into a lovelier face, even
if there were little hollows in the cheeks and shy,
fanlike wrinkles lurking about the corners of her
lambent brown eyes. Nor did her gray hair mar
her beauty. It was not old, dry, and withered a
wispy gray. (That is not the way it happened.) It
was a new, all-of-a-sudden gray, and in less than a
week so Margaret once told me bleaching
its brown gold to silver. But the gloss remained,
and so did the richness of the folds, and the wealth
and weight of it.
Inside the green-painted door, with
its white trim and brass knocker and knobs, there
was a narrow hall hung with old portraits, opening
into a room literally all fireplace. Here there
were gouty sofas, and five or six big easy-chairs
ranged in a half-circle, with arms held out as if
begging somebody to sit in them; and here, too, was
an embroidered worsted fire screen that slid up and
down a standard, to shield one’s face from the
blazing logs; and there were queer tables and old-gold
curtains looped back with brass rosettes ears
really behind which the tresses of the
parted curtains were tucked; and there were more old
portraits in dingy frames, and samplers under glass,
and a rug which some aunt had made with her own hands
from odds and ends; and a huge work-basket spilling
worsteds, and last, and by no manner of means least,
a big chintz-covered rocking-chair, the little lady’s
very own its thin ankles and splay feet
hidden by a modest frill. There were all these
things and a lot more and yet I still maintain
that the room was just one big fireplace. Not
alone because of its size (and it certainly was big:
many a doubting curly head, losing its faith in Santa
Claus, has crawled behind the old fire-dogs, the child’s
fingers tight about the Little Gray Lady’s,
and been told to look up into the blue a
lesson never forgotten all their lives), but because
of the wonderful and never-to-be-told-of things which
constantly took place before its blazing embers.
For this fireplace was the Little
Gray Lady’s altar. Here she dispensed wisdom
and cheer and love. Everybody in Pomford village
had sat in one or the other of the chairs grouped
about it and had poured out their hearts to her.
All sorts of pourings: love affairs, for instance,
that were hopeless until she would take the girl’s
hand in her own and smooth out the tangle; to-say
nothing of bickerings behind closed doors, with two
lives pulling apart until her dear arms brought them
together.
But all this is only the outside of
the old mahogany high-boy with its meerschaum-pipe
polish, spraddling legs, and rattling handles.
Now for the Little Gray Lady’s own particular
drawer.
II
It was Christmas Eve, and Kate Dayton,
one of Pomford’s pretty girls, had found the
Little Gray Lady sitting alone before the fire gazing
into the ashes, her small frame almost hidden in the
roomy chair. The winter twilight had long since
settled and only the flickering blaze of the logs
and the dim glow from one lone candle illumined the
room. This, strange to say, was placed on a table
in a corner where its rays shed but little light in
the room.
“Oh! Cousin Annie,”
moaned Kate (everybody in Pomford who got close enough
to touch the Little Gray Lady’s hand called her
“Cousin Annie” it was only
the outside world who knew her by her other sobriquet),
“I didn’t mean anything. Mark came
in just at the wrong minute, and and ”
The poor girl’s tears smothered the rest.
“Don’t let him go, dearie,”
came the answer, when she had heard the whole story,
the girl on her knees, her head in her lap, the wee
hand stroking the fluff of golden hair dishevelled
in her grief.
“Oh, but he won’t stay!”
moaned Kate. “He says he is going to Rio way
out to South America to join his Uncle Harry.”
“He won’t go, dearie not
if you tell him the truth and make him tell you the
truth. Don’t let your pride come in; don’t
beat around the bush or make believe you are hurt
or misunderstood, or that you don’t care.
You do care. Better be a little humble now than
humble all your life. It only takes a word.
Hold out your hand and say: ’I’m sorry,
Mark please forgive me.’ If
he loves you and he does ”
The girl raised her head: “Oh!
Cousin Annie! How do you know?”
She laughed gently. “Because
he was here, dearie, half an hour ago and told me
so. He thought you owed him the dance, and he
was a little jealous of Tom.”
“But Tom had asked me ”
“Yes and so had Mark ”
“Yes but he had no
right ” She was up in arms again:
she wouldn’t she couldn’t and
again an outburst of tears choked her words.
The Little Gray Lady had known Kate’s
mother, now dead, and what might have happened but
for a timely word and she knew to her own
sorrow what had happened for want of one. Kate
and Mark should not repeat that experience if she
could help it. She had saved the mother in the
old days by just such a word. She would save
the daughter in the same way. And the two were
much alike same slight, girlish figure;
same blond hair and blue eyes; same expression, and
the same impetuous, high-strung temperament.
“If that child’s own mother walked in this
minute I couldn’t tell ’em apart, they
do favor one another so,” old Margaret had told
her mistress when she opened the door for the girl,
and she was right. Pomford village was full of
these hereditary likenesses. Mark Dab-ney, whom
all the present trouble was about, was so like his
father at his age that his Uncle Harry had picked
Mark out on a crowded dock when the lad had visited
him in Rio the year before, although he had not seen
the boy’s father for twenty years so
strong was the family likeness.
If there was to be a quarrel it must
not be between the Dabneys and the Daytons, of all
families. There had been suffering enough in the
old days.
“Listen, dearie,” she
said in her gentle, crooning tone, patting the girl’s
cheek as she talked. “A quarrel where there
is no love is soon forgotten, but a difference when
both love may, if not quickly healed, leave a scar
that will last through life.”
“There are as good fish in the
sea as were ever caught,” cried the girl in
sheer bravado, brushing away her tears.
“Don’t believe it, dearie and
don’t ever say it. That has wrecked more
lives than you know. That is what I once knew
a girl to say a girl just about your age ”
“But she found somebody else,
and that’s just what I’m going to do.
I’m not going to have Mark read me a lecture
every time I want to do something he doesn’t
like. Didn’t your girl find somebody else?”
“No never. She is still unmarried.”
“Yes but it wasn’t her fault,
was it?”
“Yes although she
did not know it at the time. She opened a door
suddenly and found her lover alone with another girl.
The two had stolen off together where they would not
be interrupted. He was pleading for his college
friend straightening out just some such
foolish quarrel as you have had with Mark but
the girl would not understand; nor did she know the
truth until a year afterward. Then it was too
late.”
The Little Gray Lady stopped, lifted
her hand from the girl’s head, and turned her
face toward the now dying fire.
“And what became of him?”
asked the girl in a hushed voice, as if she dared
not awaken the memory.
“He went away and she has never seen him since.”
For some minutes there was silence, then Kate said
in a braver tone:
“And he married somebody else?”
“No.”
“Well, then, she died?”
“No.”
The Littie Lady had not moved, nor
had she taken her eyes from the blaze. She seemed
to be addressing some invisible body who could hear
and understand. The girl felt its influence and
a tremor ran through her. The fitful blaze casting
weird shadows helped this feeling. At last, with
an effort, she asked:
“You say you know them both, Cousin Annie?”
“Yes he was my dear
friend. I was just thinking of him when you came
in.”
The charred logs broke into a heap
of coals; the blaze flickered and died. But for
the lone candle in the corner the room would have been
in total darkness.
“Shall I light another candle,
Cousin Annie?” shivered the girl, “or
bring that one nearer?”
“No, it’s Christmas Eve,
and I only light one candle on Christmas Eve.”
“But what’s one candle!
Why, father has the whole house as bright as day and
every fire blazing.” The girl sprang to
her feet and stepped nearer the hearth. She would
be less nervous, she thought, if she moved about,
and then the warmth of the fire was somehow reassuring.
“Please let me light them all, Cousin Annie,”
she pleaded, reaching out her hand toward a cluster
in an old-fashioned candelabra “and
if there aren’t enough I’ll get more from
Margaret.”
“No, no one will
do. It is an old custom of mine; I’ve done
it for twenty years.”
“But don’t you love Christmas?”
Kate argued, her nervousness increasing. The
ghostly light and the note of pain in her companion’s
voice were strangely affecting.
The Little Gray Lady leaned forward
in her chair and looked long and steadily at the heap
of smouldering ashes; then she answered slowly, each
word vibrating with the memory of some hidden sorrow:
“I’ve had mine, dearie.”
“But you can have some more,” urged Kate.
“Not like those that have gone before, dearie no,
not like those.”
Something in the tones of her voice
and quick droop of the dear head stirred the girl
to her depths. Sinking to her knees she hid her
face in the Little Lady’s lap.
“And you sit here in the dark with only one
candle?” she whispered.
“Yes, always,” she answered,
her fingers stroking the fair hair. “I can
see those I have loved better in the dark. Sometimes
the room is full of people; I have often to strain
my eyes to assure myself that the door is really shut.
All sorts of people come the girls and boys
I knew when I was young. Some are dead; some
are far away; some so near that should I open the
window and shout their names many of them could hear.
There are fewer above ground every year but
I welcome all who come. It’s the old maid’s
hour, you know this twilight hour.
The wives are making ready the supper; the children
are romping; lovers are together in the corner where
they can whisper and not be overheard. But none
of this disturbs me no big man bursts in,
letting in the cold. I have my chair, my candle,
my thoughts, and my fire. When you get to be my
age, Kate, and live alone and you might,
dearie, if Mark should leave you you will
love these twilight hours, too.”
The girl reached up her hands and
touched the Little Gray Lady’s cheek, whispering:
“But aren’t you very, very lonely.
Cousin Annie?”
“Yes, sometimes.”
For a moment Kate remained silent,
then she asked in a faltering voice through which
ran a note almost of terror:
“Do you think I shall ever be
like like that is I
shall ever be all alone?”
“I don’t know, dearie.
No one can ever tell what will happen. I never
thought twenty years ago I should be all alone but
I am.”
The girl raised her head, and with
a cry of pain threw her arms around the Little Gray
Lady’s neck:
“Oh, no! no!
I can’t bear it!” she sobbed! “I’ll
tell Mark! I’ll send for him to-night-before
I go to bed!”
III
It was not until Kate Dayton reached
her father’s gate that the spell wrought by
the flickering firelight and the dim glow of the ghostly
candle wore off. The crisp air of the winter night for
it was now quite dark had helped, but the
sight of Mark’s waiting figure striding along
the snow-covered path to her home and his manly outspoken
apology, “Please forgive me, Kate, I made an
awful fool of myself,” followed by her joyous
refrain, “Oh, Mark! I’ve been so wretched!”
had done more. It had all come just as Cousin
Annie had said; there had been neither pride nor anger.
Only the Little Gray Lady’s timely word.
But if the spell was broken the pathetic
figure of the dear woman, her eyes fixed on the dying
embers, still lingered in Kate’s mind.
“Oh, Mark, it is so pitiful
to see her! and I got so frightened; the
whole room seemed filled with ghosts. Christmas
seems her loneliest time. She won’t have
but one candle lighted, and she sits and mopes in
the dark. Oh, it’s dreadful! I tried
to cheer her up, but she says she likes to sit in
the dark, because then all the dead people she loves
can come to her. Can’t we do something
to make her happy? She is so lovely, and she
is so little, and she is so dear!”
They had entered the house, now a
blaze of light. Kate’s father was standing
on the hearth rug, his back to a great fireplace filled
with roaring logs.
“Where have you two gadabouts
been?” he laughed merrily. “What do
you mean by staying out this late? Don’t
you know it’s Christmas Eve?”
“We’ve been to see Cousin
Annie, daddy; and it would make your heart ache to
look at her! She’s there all alone.
Can’t you go down and bring her up here?”
“Yes, I could, but she wouldn’t
come, not on Christmas Eve. Did she have her
candle burning?”
“Yes, just one poor little miserable
candle that hardly gave any light at all.”
“And it was in the corner on a little table?”
“Yes, all by itself.”
“Poor dear, she always lights
it. She’s lighted it for almost twenty
years.”
“Is it for somebody she loved who died?”
“No it’s for
somebody she loved who is alive, but who never came
back and won’t.”
He studied them both for a moment,
as if in doubt, then he added in a determined voice,
motioning them to a seat beside him:
“It is about time you two children
heard the story straight, for it concerns you both,
so I’ll tell you. Your Uncle Harry, Mark,
is the man who never came back and won’t.
He was just your age at the time. He and Annie
were to be married in a few months, then everything
went to smash. And it was your mother, Kate,
who was the innocent cause of his exile. Harry,
who was the best friend I had in the world, tried to
put in a good word for me this was before
I and your mother were engaged and Annie,
coming in and finding them, got it all crooked.
Instead of waiting until Harry could explain, she
flared up, and off he went. Her hair turned white
in a week when she found out how she had misjudged
him, but it was too late then Harry wouldn’t
come back, and he never will. When he told you,
Mark, last year in Rio that he was coming home Christmas
I knew he’d change his mind just as soon as you
left him, and he did. Queer boy, Harry.
Once he gets an idea in his head it sticks there.
He was that way when he was a boy. He’ll
never come back as long as Annie lives, and that means
never.”
He stopped a moment, spread his fingers
to the blazing logs, and then, with a smile on his
face, said: “If ever I catch you two young
turtledoves making such fools of yourselves, I’ll
turn you both outdoors,” and again his hearty
laugh rang through the cheery room.
The girl instinctively leaned closer
to her lover. She had heard some part of the
story before in fact, both of them had,
but never in its entirety. Her heart went out
to the Little Gray Lady all the more.
Mark now spoke up. He, too, had
had an hour of his own with the Little Gray Lady,
and the obligation still remained unsettled.
“Well, if she won’t come
up here and have Christmas with us,” he cried,
“why can’t we go down there and have Christmas
with her? Let’s surprise her, Kate; let’s
clean out all those dead people. I know she sits
in the dark and imagines they all come back, for I’ve
seen her that way many a time when I drop in on her
in the late afternoon. Let’s show her they’re
alive.”
Kate started up and caught Mark’s
arm. “Oh, Mark! I have it!” she
whispered, “and we will yes that
will be the very thing,” and so with more mumblings
and mutterings, not one word of which could her father
hear, the two raced up-stairs to the top of the house
and the garret.
IV
Two hours later a group of young people
led by Mark Dabney trooped out of Kate’s gate
and turned down the Little Gray Lady’s street.
Most of them wore long cloaks and were muffled in
thick veils.
They were talking in low tones, glancing
from side to side, as if fearing to be seen.
The moon had gone under a cloud, but the light of
the stars, aided by an isolated street lamp, showed
them the way. So careful were they to conceal
their identity that the whole party there
were six in all would dart into an open
gate, crouching behind the snow-laden hedge to avoid
even a single passer-by. Only once were they
in any danger, and that was when a sleigh gliding by
stopped in front of them, the driver calling out in
a voice which sounded twice as loud in the white stillness:
“Where’s Mr. Dabney’s new house?”
(evidently a stranger, for the town pump was not better
known). No one else stopped them until they reached
the Little Gray Lady’s porch.
Kate crept up first, followed by Mark,
and peered in. So far as she could see everything
was just as she had left it.
“The candle is still burning,
Mark, and she’s put more wood on the fire.
But I can’t find her. Oh, yes there
she is in her big chair you
can just see the top of her head and her hand.
Hush! don’t one of you breathe. Now, listen,
girls! Mark and I will tiptoe in first the
front door is never fastened and if she
is asleep and I think she is we
will all crouch down behind her until she wakes up.”
“And another thing,” whispered
Mark from behind his hand “everybody
must drop their coats and things in the hall, so we
can surprise her all at once.”
The strange procession tiptoed in
and arranged itself behind the Little Gray Lady’s
chair. Kate was dressed in her mother’s
wedding-gown, flaring poke bonnet, and long, faded
gloves clear to her shoulder; Mark had on a blue coat
with brass buttons, a buff waistcoat, and black stock,
the two points of the high collar pinching his ruddy
cheeks the same dress his father and Uncle
Harry had worn, and all the young bloods of their
day, for that matter. The others were in their
grandmother’s or grandfather’s short and
long clothes, Tom Fields sporting a tight-sleeved,
high-collared coat, silk-embroidered waistcoat, and
pumps.
Kate crept up behind her chair, but
Mark moved to the fireplace and rested his elbow on
the mantel, so that he would be in full view when
the Little Gray Lady awoke.
At last her eyes opened, but she made
no outcry, nor did she move, except to lift her head
as does a fawn startled by some sudden light, her
wondering eyes drinking in the apparition. Mark,
hardly breathing, stood like a statue, but Kate, bending
closer, heard her catch her breath with a long, indrawn
sigh, and next the half-audible words: “No it
isn’t so How foolish I am ”
Then there came softly: “Harry” and
again in almost a whisper as if hope had
died in her heart “Harry ”
Kate, half frightened, sprang forward
and flung her arms around the Little Gray Lady.
“Why, don’t you know him?
It’s Mark, Cousin Annie, and here’s Tom
and Nanny Fields, and everybody, and we’re going
to light all the candles every one of them,
and make an awful big fire and have a real,
real Christmas.”
The Little Gray Lady was awake now.
“Oh! you scared me so!”
she cried, rising to her feet, rubbing her eyes.
“You foolish Children! I must have been
asleep yes, I know I was!” She greeted
them all, talking and entering into their fun, the
spirit of hospitality now hers, saying over and over
again how glad she was they came, kissing one and
another; telling them how happy they made her; how
since they had been kind enough to come, she would
let them have a real Christmas “Only,”
she added quickly, “it will have to be by the
light of one candle; but that won’t make any
difference, because you can pile on just as much wood
as you choose. Yes,” she continued, her
voice rising in her effort to meet them on their own
joyous plane “pile on all the kindling,
too, Mark; and Kate, dear, please run and tell Margaret
to bring in every bit of cake she has in the pantry.
Oh, how like your mother you are, Kate! I remember
that very dress. And you, Mark! Why, you’ve
got on the same coat I saw your father wear at the
Governor’s ball. And you, too, Tom.
Oh, what a good time we will all have!”
Soon the lid of the old piano was
raised, a spinet, really, and one of the girls began
running her fingers over the keys; and later on it
was agreed that the first dance was to be the Virginia
reel, with all the hospitable chairs and the fire
screen and the gouty old sofa rolled back against
the wall.
This all arranged, Mark took his place
with the Little Gray Lady for a partner. The
music struck up a lively tune and as quickly ceased
as the sound of bells rang through the night air.
In the hush that followed a sleigh was heard at the
gate.
Kate sprang up and clapped her hands.
“Oh, they are just in time!
There come the rest of them, Cousin Annie. Now
we are going to have a great party! Let’s
be dancing when they come in; keep on playing!”
At this instant the door opened and
Margaret put in her head. “Somebody,”
she said, with a low bow, “wants to see Mr. Mark
on business.”
Mark, looking like a gallant of the
old school, excused himself with a great flourish
to the Little Gray Lady and strode out. In the
hall, with his back to the light, stood a broad-shouldered
man muffled to the chin in a fur overcoat. The
boy was about to apologize for his costume and then
ask the man’s errand, when the stranger turned
quickly and gripped his wrist.
“Hush not a word! Where is she?”
he cried.
With a low whistle of surprise Mark
pushed open the door. The stranger stepped in.
The Little Gray Lady raised her head.
“And who can this new guest
be?” she asked “and in what
a queer costume, too!”
The man drew himself up to his full
height and threw wide his coat: “And you
don’t know me, Annie?”
She did not take her eyes from his
face, nor did she move except to turn her head appealingly
to the room as if she feared they were playing her
another trick.
He had reached her side and stood
looking down at her. Again came the voice a
strong, clear voice, with a note of infinite tenderness
through it:
“How white your hair is, Annie;
and your hand is so thin! Have I changed like
this?”
She leaned forward, scanning him eagerly.
There was a little cry, then all her soul went out
in the one word:
“Harry!”
She was inside the big coat now, his
strong arms around her, her head hidden on his breast,
only the tips of her toes on the floor.
When he had kissed her again and again and
he did and before everybody he crossed
the room, picked up the ghostly candle, and smothered
its flame.
“I saw it from the road,”
he laughed softly, “that’s why I couldn’t
wait. But you’ll never have to light it
again, my darling!”
I saw them both a few years later.
Everything in the way of fading and wrinkling had
stopped so far as the Little Gray Lady was concerned.
If there were any lines left in her forehead and around
the corners of her eyes, I could not find them.
Joy had planted a crop of dimples instead, and they
had spread out, smoothing the care lines. Margaret
even claimed that her hair was turning brown gold
once more, but then Margaret was always her loyal
slave, and believed everything her mistress wished.
And now, if you don’t mind,
dear reader, we will put everything back and shut
the Little Gray Lady’s bureau drawer.