Toward the city Mother Earth turns
a plate-glass eye and an asphalt bosom. The rhythm
of her heart-beats does not penetrate through paved
streets. That cadence is for those few of her
billion children who have stayed by to sleep with
an ear to the mossy floor of her woodlands. The
prodigals, the future Tammany leaders, merchant princes,
cotton kings, and society queens march on, each to
an urban destiny.
Nor is the return of the prodigal
to Mother Earth along a piked highway. The road
back to Nature is full of her own secrets, and few
who have trod the streets of the city remember the
brambled return, or care.
Men who know to the centime each fluctuation
of the wheat-market have no eye for the tawny beauty
of a whole field of the precious product fluctuating
to a breeze. Women stayed by steel and convention
into the mold of form love the soft faces of flowers
looking up at them from expensive corsages, but care
not for their nativity. Greeks, first of men,
perched their gods up on Olympus and wandered down
to build cities.
Because the city is as insidious as
the sleeping-draught of an Indian soothsayer, under
its spell men go mad for gain and forget that to stand
on the brow of a mountain at night, arms outstretched
in kinship to Vega and Capella, is a golden moment
of purer alloy than certified bonds. What magnate
remembers where the best tackle squirms, or the taste
of grass sucked in from the tender end of the blade?
All progress is like that. How immediately are
the yesterdays metamorphosed into memories; and memories,
even the stanchest of them, mold and disintegrate.
There were times when Mrs. Simon Meyerburg,
who was threescore and ten years removed from the
days when her bare feet had run fleet across a plushy
meadow, would pause, hand on brow, when a memory, perhaps
moving as it crumpled, would pass before her in faded
daguerreotype. A gallery of events so
many pictures faded from her mental walls that the
gaps seemed, as it were, to separate her from herself,
making of her and that swift-footed girl back there
vague strangers. And yet the vivid canvases!
A peasant child at a churn, switching her black braids
this way and that when they dangled too far over her
shoulders; a linnet dead in its cage outside a thatched
doorway, and the taste of her first heart tears; a
hand-made crib in a dark corner and hardly ever empty
of a little new-comer.
Then gaps, except here and there a
faded bit. Then again large memories close and
full of color: Simon Meyerburg, with the years
folded back and youth on him, wooing her beside a
stile that led off a South German country road, his
peasant cap fallen back off his strong black curls,
and even then a seer’s light in his strong black
eyes. Her own black eyes more diffident now and
the black braids looped up and bound in a tight coronet
round her head. The voice of the mother calling
her homeward through cupped hands and in the Low Dutch
of the Lowlands. A moonrise and the sweet, vivid
smell of evening, and once more the youth Simon Meyerburg
wooing her there beside the roadside stile.
The crowded steerage of a wooden ship,
her first son suckling at her breast. At the
prow Simon Meyerburg again, his peasant cap pushed
backward and his black eyes, with the seer’s
light in them, gleaming ahead for the first glimpse
of the land of fulfilment. An unbelievable city
sucking them immediately into its slums. Filth.
A quick descent into squalor. A second son.
A third. A fourth. A fifth. A girl child.
Mouths too eager for black bread. Always the struggle
and the sour smell of slums. Finally light.
White light. The seer sees!
Then, ever green in her mind, a sun-mottled
kitchen with a black iron range, and along the walls
festoons of looped-up green peppers. White bread
now in abundance for small mouths not so hungry.
At evening, Simon Meyerburg, with rims of dirt under
his nails, entering that kitchen door, the girl child
turning from her breast to leap forward....
Sometimes in her stately halls, caught,
as it were, in passing from room to room, Mrs. Simon
Meyerburg would pause, assaulted by these memories
of days so remote that her mind could not always run
back to meet them. Then again the glittering
present studded with the jewels of fulfilment lay
on her brow like the thin line of a headache, pressing
out the past.
In Mrs. Meyerburg’s bedroom
a great arched ceiling, after the narrative manner
of Paolo Veronese, lent such vastness to the apartment
that moving across it, or sitting in her great overstuffed
armchair beside a window, she hardly struck a note.
Great wealth lay in canopied silence over that room.
A rug out of Persia, so large that countless extra
years and countless pairs of tired eyes and tired
fingers had gone to make it, let noises sink noiseless
into its nap. Brocade and tufting ate up sound.
At every window more brocade shut out the incessant
song of the Avenue.
In the overstuffed chair beside one
of these windows sat Mrs. Meyerburg with her hands
idle and laid out along the chair sides. They
were ringless hands and full of years, with a great
network of veins across their backs and the aging
fingers large at the knuckles. But where the
hands betrayed the eyes belied. Deep in Mrs. Meyerburg’s
soft and scarcely flabby face her gaze was straight
and very black.
An hour by an inlaid ormolu clock
she sat there, her feet in soft, elastic-sided shoes,
just lifted from the floor. Incongruous enough,
on a plain deal table beside her, a sheaf of blue-prints
lay unrolled. She fingered them occasionally
and with a tenderness, as if they might be sensitive
to touch; even smiled and held the sheets one by one
up against the shrouded window so that the light pressing
through them might emphasize the labyrinth of lines.
Dozed, with a smile printed on her lips, and awoke
when her head lopped too heavily sidewise.
After an interval she slid out of
her chair and crossed to the door; even in action
her broad, squat figure infinitesimal to the room’s
proportions. When she opened the door the dignity
of great halls lay in waiting. She crossed the
wide vista to a closed door, a replica of her own,
and knocked, waited, turned the crystal knob, knocked,
waited. Rapped again, this time in three staccatos.
Silence. Then softly and with her cheek laid
against the imperturbable panel of the closed door:
“Becky! Becky! Open! Open!”
A muffled sound from within as if a sob had been let
slip.
Then again, rattling the knob this
time: “Becky, it’s mamma. Becky,
you should get up now; it’s time for our drive.
Let me in, Becky. Open!” shaking the handle.
When the door opened finally, Mrs.
Meyerburg stepped quickly through the slit, as if
to ward off its too heavy closing. A French maid,
in the immemorial paraphernalia of French maids, stood
by like a slim sentinel on stilts, her tall, small
heels clicked together. Perfume lay on the artificial
dusk of that room.
“Therese, you can go down awhile.
When Miss Becky wants she can ring.”
“Oui, madame.”
“I wish, Therese, when you go
down you would tell Anna I don’t want she should
put the real lace table-cloth from Miss Becky’s
party last night in the linen-room. Twice I’ve
told her after its use she should always bring it
right back to me.”
“Oui, madame.” And Therese
flashed out on the slim heels.
In the crowded apartment, furnished
after the most exuberant of the various exuberant
French periods, Miss Rebecca Meyerburg lay on a Louis
Seize bed, certified to have been lifted, down to the
casters, from the Grand Trianon of Marie Antoinette.
In a great confusion of laces and linens, disarrayed
as if tossed by a fever patient, she lay there, her
round young arm flung up over her head and her face
turned downward to the curve of one elbow.
“Ach, now, Becky, ain’t
it a shame you should take on so? Ain’t
it a shame before the servants? Come, baby, in
a half-hour it’s time for our drive. Come,
baby!”
Beneath the fine linen Miss Meyerburg
dug with her toes into the mattress, her head burrowing
deeper and the black mane of her hair rippling backward
in maenadic waves. “If you don’t let
me alone, ma, if you don’t just let me lay here
in peace, I’ll scream. I’ll faint.
Faint, I tell you,” and smothered her words
in the curve of her elbow.
Mrs. Meyerburg breathed outward in
a sigh and sat down hesitant on the bed edge, her
hand reaching out to the bare white shoulder and smoothing
its high luster.
“Come, Becky, and get up like
a good girl. Don’t you want, baby, to come
over by mamma’s room and see the plans for the
Memorial?”
“No! No! No!”
“They got to be sent back to-day,
Becky, before Goldfinger leaves for Boston with them.
I got to get right away busy if I want the boys should
have their surprise this time next year. To no
one but my baby girl have I said yet one word.
Don’t you want, Becky, to see them before they
go down by Goldfinger’s office, so he can right
away go ahead?”
“No! No!”
“Becky, ain’t you ashamed, your own papa’s
Memorial?”
“Please, mamma, please. If you only won’t
Becky me.”
“Betty.”
“If you only will go and and leave
me alone.”
“I ask you, Betty, should a
girl what’s got everything that should make
her happy just like an angel, a girl what has got for
herself heaven on earth, make herself right away sick
the first time what things don’t go smooth with
her?”
“If I could only die! If I could die!
Why don’t I die to-day?”
The throb of a sob lay on her voice,
and she sat up suddenly, pushing backward with both
hands the thick rush of hair to her face. Grief
had blotched her cheeks, but she was as warm and as
curving as Flora. It was as if her deep-white
flesh was deep-white plush and would sink to the touch.
The line and the sheen of her radiated through her
fine garment.
“Why don’t I die?”
repeating her vain question, and her eyes, darker
because she was so white, looking out and past her
parent and streaming their bitter tears.
“You’m a bad girl, Becky,
and it’s a sin you should talk so. Gott sei
dank your poor papa ain’t alive to hear such
bad words from his own daughter’s lips.”
“If pa was living things would
be different let me tell you that.”
In a flare of immediate anger Mrs.
Meyerburg’s head shot forward. “Du ”
she cried; “du you you
bad girl du ”
“If he had lived they would!”
Suddenly Mrs. Meyerburg’s face,
with the lines in it held tight, relaxed to tears
and she fell to rocking herself softly to and fro,
her stiff silk shushing as she swayed.
“Ach, that I should live
to hear from my own child that I ’ain’t
done by her like her father would want that I should
do. Every hour since I been left alone, to do
by my six children like he would want has been always
my only thought, and now ”
“I mean it! I mean it!
If he had lived he would have settled it on me easy
enough when he saw what I was doing for the family.
Two million if need be! He was the one in this
family that made it big, because he wasn’t afraid
of big things.”
Further rage trembled along Mrs. Meyerburg’s
voice, and the fingers she waggled trembled, too,
of that same wrath. “You’m a bad girl,
Becky! You’m a bad girl with thought only
for yourself. Always your papa said by each child
we should do the same. Five hundred thousand dollars
to each son when he marries a fine, good girl.
More as one night I can tell you I laid awake when
Felix picked out for himself Trixie, just wondering
what papa would want I should do it or not.”
“Can’t you keep from picking
on that girl, mamma? It’s through her, if
you want to know it, that I first got in with with
the marquis and that crowd.”
“Always by each child we should
do the same, he said. Five hundred thousand dollars
to our girl when she marries a fine, good man.
Even back in days when he had not a cent to leave
after him, always he said alike you should all be
treated. Always, you hear? Always.”
Fire had dried the tears in Mrs. Meyerburg’s
eyes and her face had resumed its fixity of lines.
Only her finger continued to tremble and two near-the-surface
nerves in her left temple.
“But, mamma, you know yourself
he never dreamt we could climb up to this. That
for a miserable five hundred thousand more we ”
“A miserable five hundred thousand
she calls it like it was five hundred thousand cents!”
“That for a miserable five hundred
thousand dollars we could raise our family up to the
nobility. The Marquis Rosencrantz, ma, who ”
“Becky, it ain’t that
I got a word to say against this young man Rosencrantz but ”
“Marquis Rosencrantz, mamma.”
“All right then, Marquis Rosencrantz;
but it’s like your brother Ben says a
marquis in a country where there ain’t no more
any of them made could just as well be called a mister.
Not a word I got to say against this young Rosencrantz,
but ”
“Marquis, ma, please remember!
M-a-r-q-u-i-s. Whether there are any more of
them or not in France, he still goes by the title over
here, and that’s what he is, ma. Please
remember!”
“Marquis Rosencrantz. But
when a young man, Becky, don’t talk my own language,
it ain’t so easy for me to know if I like him ”
“Like him. Huh!”
Sitting there upright in bed, her large, white arms
wrapped about her knees, Miss Meyerburg regarded her
mother with dry eyes, but through a blur of scorn.
“She don’t know if she likes him!
Let me tell you, ma, we can worry if he likes us,
not if we like him.”
“I always say, Becky, about
these fine people what you meet traveling in Europe
with your brother Felix and his wife with her gay ways,
you ”
“A marquis comes her way and
she don’t know whether she likes him or not.
That’s rich!”
“For the price what you say
he hinted to you last night he’s got to have
before he can get married, I guess oser I can
say if I like him or not.”
“I should think, ma, if you
had any pride for the family after the way we’ve
been spit on by a certain bunch in this town, you’d
be glad to grab a marquis to wave in their stuck-up
faces.”
“For such things what make in
life men like wild beasts fighting each other I got
no time. I ain’t all for style. All
what I want is to see my little girl married to a
fine, good ”
“Yes, yes, ma. I know all that fine, good
man stuff.”
“Ja, I say it again. To
a fine, good man just like nearly all your brothers
married fine, good women.”
“The marquis, just let me tell
you, ma, is a man of force he is. Maybe
those foreigners don’t always show up, but I’ve
seen him on his own ground. I’ve seen him
in Paris and Monte Carlo and I ”
“I ’ain’t got a
word to say against this young man what followed you
all the way home from Paris. What I don’t
know I can’t talk about. Only I ask you,
Becky, ain’t it always in the papers how from
Europe they run here thick after the girls what have
got money?”
“What are you always running
down Europe for, ma? Where did you come from,
yourself, I’d like to know!”
“I don’t run it down,
baby. I don’t. You know how your papa
loved the old country and sent always money back home.
But he always said, baby, it’s in America we
had all our good luck and to America what gave us so
much we should give back too. Just because your
brother Felix and his wife what was on the stage like
such doings over there is no reason ”
“It’s just those notions
of yours, ma, that are keeping this family down, let
me tell you that you and Ben and Roody and
Izzy and all the rest of them with their old-fogyness.”
“Your brothers, let me tell
you, you bad girl, you, are as fine, steady men as
your papa before them.”
“We could have one of the biggest
names in this town and get in on the right kind of
charities, if you and they didn’t ”
“Your papa, Becky, had his own
ideas how to do charity and how we should not give
just where our name shows big in the papers. Your
brothers are like him, fine, good men, and that’s
why I want the Memorial should come like a surprise,
so they can have before them always that their father
was the finest ”
Suddenly Miss Meyerburg flung herself
back on her pillows, tears gushing hot and full of
salt. “Oh, what’s the use? What’s
the use? She won’t understand.”
“Becky, baby, ’ain’t
you got everything what money can buy? A house
on Fifth Avenue what even the sight-seeing automobile
hollers out about. Automobiles of your own more
as you can use. Brothers nearly all with grand
wives and families, and such a beautiful girl like
you with a grand fortune to ”
“Mamma, mamma, can’t you
understand there’s things that money can’t
buy?”
“Ja, I should say so; but them
is the things, Becky, that money makes you forget
all about.”
“Try to understand, can’t
you, ma, that the Rosencrantzes are a great old French
family. You know for yourself how few of of
our people got titles to their names. Jacob Rosencrantz,
ma, the marquis’s great-grandfather back in
the days when the family had big money, got his title
from the king, ma, for lending money when the ”
“If all of his sons got, like
this great-grandson of his asks, one million dollars
with their wives, I should say he could afford to lend
to the king. To two kings!”
“Please, mamma, can’t
you understand? It don’t hurt how things
are now it’s the way they used to
be with those kinds of families that count, ma.
I was on their estate in France, ma, with Trixie and
Felix. She used to know him in Paris when she
was singing there. You ought to see, ma, an old,
old place that you can ride on for a day and not come
to the end, and the house so moldy and ramshackly that
any American girl would be proud to marry into it.
Those are the things, ma, that our family needs and
money can’t buy.”
“You mean, Becky, that five
hundred thousand dollars can’t buy it! It
has got to be a million dollars yet! A million
dollars my child asks for just like it was five dollars!”
“I’m not asking that,
ma, I’m not. Five hundred thousand of it
is mine by rights. I’m only asking for
half a million.”
“Gott in Himmel, child, much
more as a million dollars I ’ain’t got
left altogether. With my five sons married and
their shares drawn, I tell you, Becky, a million dollars
to you now would leave me so low that ”
“There you go. That’s
what you said that time Felix had to have the hundred
thousand in a hurry, but I notice you got it overnight
without even turning a finger. For him you can
do, but ”
“For a black sheep I got to ”
“It’s not all tease with
the boys, let me tell you, ma, when they sing that
song at you about a whole stocking full you’ve
got that none of us know anything about.”
“Ja, you and your brothers can
talk, but I know what’s what. Don’t
think, Becky, your brother Felix and his wife with
their Monte Carlo all the time and a yacht they got
to have yet, and their debts, ’ain’t eat
a piece out of the fortune your papa built up for
you children out of his own sweat.”
“Don’t go back to ancient history, ma.”
“Those cut-uppings is for billionaires,
Becky; not for one old lady as ’ain’t
got much more as a million left after her six dowries
is paid.”
“Yes, I wish I had what you’ve got over
and above that.”
“That young Rosencrantz is playing
you high, Becky, because he sees how high your brother
and his wife can fly. Always when people get big
like us, right away the world takes us for even bigger
as we are. He ’ain’t got no right
to make such demands. Five hundred thousand dollars
is more as he ever saw in his life. I tell you,
Becky, if I could speak to that young man like you
can in his own language, I would tell him what ”
“He don’t make demands
in so many words, ma. There there’s
a way those things are done without just coming right
out. I guess you think, when Selma Bernheimer
married her baron, he came right out in words and said
it had to be two millions. Like fun he did!
But just the same, you don’t think she could
have said yes to him, when he asked her, unless she
knew that she she could fork over, do you?”
“I tell you in such marriages
the last thing what you hear talked about is being
in love.”
“Oh, that had nothing to do
with this, ma. The love part is there all right.
You you don’t understand, ma!”
“Gott sei dank that I don’t understand
such!”
Then Miss Meyerburg leaned forward,
her large, white hand on her parent’s knee,
her face close and full of fervor. “Ma dear,
you got it in your power sitting there to make me
the happiest girl in the world. I’ll do
more for the family in this marriage, ma dear, than
all five of the boys put together. I tell you,
ma, it’s the biggest minute in the life of this
family if you give if you do this for me,
ma. It is, dear.”
“Ja, let me just tell you that
your brothers and their wives will be the first to
put their foot down on that the youngest should get
twice as much as they.”
“What do you care? And,
anyways, ma, they don’t need to know. What
they don’t know don’t hurt them.
Don’t tell them, ma; just don’t tell them.
Ain’t I the only girl, and the baby too?
Haven’t I got the chance to, raise them all
up in society? Oh, ma dear, you’ve got so
much! So much more than you can ever use, and and
you you’re old now, ma, and I I’m
so young, dear, so young!”
“Ja, like you say, maybe I’m
old, but I tell you, Becky, I ’ain’t got
the money to throw away like ”
“Let me let the marquis ask
me when he comes to-night, ma. He’s ready
to pop if if I just dare to let him, ma.”
“Gott in Himmel, I tell
you how things is done now’days between young
people. I should let him ask her yet, she says,
like I had put on his mouth a muzzle.”
“It’s no use letting him
ask me, ma dear, if I can’t come across like
I know the girl he can marry has got to. Let
me let him ask me to-night, ma. And to-morrow
at New-Year’s dinner with all the family here,
we’ll break it to ’em, ma. Mamma
dearie! Let me ask the marquis here to New-Year’s
dinner to-morrow to meet his new brothers. Ma
dearie!”
She was frankly pleading, her eyes
twilit, with stars shining through, her mouth so like
red fruit and her beautiful brows raised.
“So help me, Becky, if I give
you the million like you ask and with the Memorial
yet to build, I am wiped out, Becky. Wiped out!”
“Wiped out! With five sons
with their finger in every good pie in town and a
daughter married into nobility?”
“I ’ain’t got one
word to say against my children, Becky; luckier I been
as most mothers; but the day what I am dependent on
one of them for my living, that day I want I should
be done with living.”
“You could live with us, ma
dearie. Paris in season and the estate in winter.
You you could run the big estate for us,
ma, order and ”
“You heard what I said, Becky.”
“Well, then, ma, why why
don’t you get the Memorial out of your head,
dear? Pa built his own Memorial, ma. His
memory lasts with everybody, anyway.”
Aspen trembling laid hold of Mrs.
Meyerburg, muddling her words. “You ach from
her dead father yet she would take away the marble
to his memory.”
“Ma!”
“Ja, the marble to his memory!
Bad girl, you! A man what lifted up with his
hands those that came after so that hardly on the ground
they got to put a foot. And now du du
what gives him no thanks! A Memorial to her papa,
a Home for the Old and Poor what he always dreamed
of building, she begrudges, she begrudges!”
“No, no, mamma, you don’t understand!”
“A man what loved so the poor
while he lived, shouldn’t be able to do for
the poor after he is dead too. You go, you bad
girl you, to your grand nobleman what won’t
take you if you ain’t worth every inch your
weight in gold, you ”
“Mamma mamma, if
you don’t stop your terrible talk I I’ll
faint, I tell you!”
“You go and your brother Felix
and his fine wife with you, for the things what money
can buy. You got such madness for money, sometimes
like wolfs you all feel to me breathing on my back,
you go and ”
“I tell you if if
you don’t stop that terrible talk I I’ll
faint, I will! Oh, why don’t I die why why why?”
“Since the day what he died
every hour I’ve lived for the time when, with
my children provided for, I could spend the rest of
my days building to a man what deserved it such a
monument as he should have. A Home for the Old
and Poor with a park all around, where they can sit
all day in the sun. All ready I got the plans
in my room to send them down by Goldfinger this afternoon
he should go right ahead and ”
“Mamma, mamma, please listen ”
But the voice of Mrs. Meyerburg rose
like a gale and her face was slashed with tears.
“If my last cent it takes and on the streets
I go to beg, up such a Memorial goes. All you
children with your feet up on his shoulders can turn
away from his memory now he’s gone, but up it
goes if on the day what I die I got to dig dirt with
my finger-nails to pay yet for my coffin.”
“Listen, ma; just be calm a
minute just a minute. I don’t
mean that. Didn’t I just say he was the
grandest father in the world and ”
“You said ”
“’Sh-h-h, mamma!
Quiet, quiet! There isn’t one of the boys
wouldn’t agree with me if they knew. We
aren’t big enough, I tell you, to sink a million
in an out-of-town charity like that. In any charity,
for that matter, no matter how big it shows up.
You say yourself a million and a half will cripple
you. Well, your first duty is to us living and
not to him dead To us living! It means
my whole life, my whole life!” And she beat
the pillow with hard fists.
“Ja, but ”
“With that money you can buy
my happiness living, and he don’t want it or
need it dead.”
Within the quick vise of her two hands
Mrs. Meyerburg clasped her face, all quivering and
racked with sobs. “I can’t hear it.
It’s like she was sticking knifes into me.”
“The marquis has the kind of
blood we need to give this family a boost. We
can be big, ma. Big, I tell you. I can have
a crest embroidered in two colors in my linens.
That inside clique that looks down on us now can do
some looking up then. The boys don’t need
to know about that million, ma. Just let me have
the marquis here to-morrow to meet his new brothers,
ma, like there was nothing unusual. I’ll
pay it back to you in a million ways. The Memorial
will come in time. Everything will come in time.
Make me the happiest girl in the world, ma. He’ll
ask me to-night if I let him. Get the Memorial
plans out of your head for a while, anyway! Just
for a while!”
“Not so long as I got in me
the strength to send down them plans to Goldfinger’s
office this afternoon with my message to go ahead.
I don’t invite no marquis here to-morrow for
family dinner if I got to get him here with a million
dollars’ worth of bait. I ”
“Mamma!”
“Go and tell him your stingy
old mamma would rather build a Home for the Old and
Poor in memory of the grandest man what ever lived
than give a snip like him, what never did a lick of
work in his life, a fortune so he should have with
it a good time at Monte Carlo. Just go tell him!
Tell him!”
She was trembling now so that she
could scarcely withdraw from the bedside, but her
voice had lost none of its gale-like quality.
“Go tell him! Maybe it
does him good he should hear.” And in spite
of her ague she crossed the vast room, slamming the
door so that a great shudder ran over the room.
On the bed that had been lifted bodily
from the Grand Trianon of Marie Antoinette, its laces
upheaved about her like billows in anger, Rebecca
Meyerburg lay with her face to the ceiling, raw sobs
distorting it.
Steadying herself without that door,
her hand laid between her breasts and slightly to
the left, as if there a sharp pain had cut her, Mrs.
Meyerburg leaned to the wall a moment, and, gaining
quick composure, proceeded steadily enough across
the wide aisle of hall, her hand following a balustrade.
A servant intercepted her half-way. “Madam ”
“Kemp, from here when I look
down in the lower hall, all them ferns look yellow
on top. I want you should please cut them!”
“Yes, madam. Mrs. Fischlowitz,
madam, has been waiting down in the side hall for
you.”
“Mrs. Fischlowitz! For
why you keep her waiting in the side hall?”
“Therese said madam was occupied.”
“Bring her right up, Kemp, in
the elevator. Her foot ain’t so good.
Right away, Kemp.”
“Yes, madam.”
Into Mrs. Meyerburg’s room of
many periods, its vastness so emphasized by the ceiling
after Paolo Veronese, its fluted yellow-silk bed
canopy reaching up to that ceiling stately and theatric
enough to shade the sleep of a shah, limped Mrs. Fischlowitz
timidly and with the uncertainty with which the callous
feet of the unsocialistic poor tread velvet.
“How-do, Mrs. Fischlowitz?”
“Mrs. Meyerburg, I didn’t
want you to be disturbed except I want to explain
to you why I’m late again this month.”
“Sit down! I don’t
want you should even explain, Mrs. Fischlowitz that’s
how little I thought about it.”
Mrs. Meyerburg was full of small,
pleased ways, drawing off her guest’s decent
black cape, pulling at her five-fingered mittens, lifting
the nest-like bonnet.
“So! And how’s the foot?”
“Not so good and not so bad.
And how is the sciatica with you, Mrs. Meyerburg?”
“Like with you, Mrs. Fischlowitz.
It could be better and it could be worse. Sometimes
I got a little touch yet up between my ribs.”
“If it ain’t one thing,
Mrs. Meyerburg, it’s another. What you think
why I’m late again with the rent, Mrs. Meyerburg?
If last week my Sollie didn’t fall off the delivery-wagon
and sprain his back!”
“You don’t say so!”
“That same job as you got him
two years ago so good he’s kept, and now such
a thing has to happen. Gott sei dank, he’s
up and out again, but I tell you it was a scare!”
“I should say so. And how is Tillie?”
“Mrs. Meyerburg, you should
just see for yourself how that girl has got new color
since that certified milk you send her every day.
Like a new girl so pretty all of a sudden she has
grown. For to-morrow, Mrs. Meyerburg, a girl
what never before had a beau in her life, if Morris
Rinabauer, the young foreman where she works, ’ain’t
invited her out for New-Year’s Day.”
“You got great times down by
Rivington Street this time of year. Not?
I remember how my children used to like it with their
horns oser like it was their own holiday.”
“Ja, it’s a great gedinks
like always. Sometimes I say it gets so tough
down there I hate my Tillie should come home from the
factory after dark, but now with Morris Rinabauer ”
“Mrs. Fischlowitz, I guess you
think it’s a sin I should say so, but I tell
you, when I think of that dirty little street down
there and your flat what I lived in the seventeen
happiest years of my life with my husband and babies when
I think back on my years in that little flat I I
can just feel myself tremble like all over. That’s
how happy we were down there, Mrs. Fischlowitz.”
“I can tell you, Mrs. Meyerburg,
when I got a place like this, at Rivington Street
I wouldn’t want I should ever have to look again.”
“It’s a feeling, Mrs.
Fischlowitz, what you you can’t understand
until until you live through so much like
me. I I just want some day you should
let me come down, Mrs. Fischlowitz, and visit by you
in the old place, eh?”
“Ach, Mrs. Meyerburg, I
can tell you the day what you visit on me down there
I am a proud woman. How little we got to offer
you know, but if I could fix for you Kaffeeklatsch
some day and Kuchen and ”
“In the kitchen you still got
the noodle-board yet, Mrs. Fischlowitz, where you
can mix Kuchen too?”
“I should say so. Always on it I mix my
doughs.”
“He built it in for me himself,
Mrs. Fischlowitz. On hinges so when I was done,
up against the wall out of the way I could fold it.”
“‘Just think,’ I
say to my children, ’we eat noodles off a board
what Simon Meyerburg built with his own hands.’
On the whole East Side it’s a curiosity.”
“Sometimes when I come down
by your flat, Mrs. Fischlowitz, I show you how I used
to make them for him. Wide ones he liked.”
“Ach, Mrs. Meyerburg, like
you could put your hands in dough now!”
“‘Mamma,’ he used
to say standing in the kitchen door when
he came home nights and looking at me maybe rocking
Becky there by the stove and waiting supper for him ’Mamma,’
he’d say, clapping his hands at me, ’open
your eyes wide so I can see what’s in ’em.’”
“That such a big man should play like that!”
“‘Come in, darling,’ I’d say;
‘you can’t guess from there what we got.’”
“Just think, like just married you were together.”
“‘Noodles!’ he’d
holler, and all the time right in back of me, spread
out on the board, he could see ’em. I can
see him yet, Mrs. Fischlowitz, standing there in the
kitchen doorway, under the horseshoe what he found
when we first landed.”
“I can tell you, Mrs. Meyerburg,
in that flat we ’ain’t had nothing but
luck, neither, with you so good to us.”
“Ach, now, Mrs. Fischlowitz,
for an old friend like you, what I lived next door
to so many years and more as once gave my babies to
keep for me when I must go out awhile, I shouldn’t
do a little yet.”
“‘Little,’ she calls
it. With such low rent you give us I’m ashamed
to bring the money. Five weeks in the country
and milk for my Tillie, until it’s back from
the grave you snatched her. Even on my back now
every stitch what I got on I got to thank you for.
Such comfort I got from that black cape!”
“I was just thinking, Mrs. Fischlowitz,
with your rheumatism and on such a cold day a cape
ain’t so good for you, neither. Right up
under it the wind can get.”
“Warm like toast it is, Mrs. Meyerburg.”
“I got a idea, Mrs. Fischlowitz!
In that chest over there by the wall I got yet a jacket
from Rivington Street. Right away it got too tight
for me. Like new it is, with a warm beaver collar.
At auction one day he got it for me. Like a top
it will fit you, Mrs. Fischlowitz.”
“No, no, please, Mrs. Meyerburg.
It just looks like every time what I come you got
to give me something. Ashamed it makes me.
Please you shouldn’t.”
But in the pleasant frenzy of sudden
decision Mrs. Meyerburg was on her knees beside a
carved chest, burrowing her arm beneath folded garments,
the high smell of camphor exuding.
“Only yesterday in my hand I
had it. There! See! Just your size!”
She held the creased garment out from her by each
shoulder, blowing the nap of the beaver collar.
“Please, no, Mrs. Meyerburg.
Such a fine coat maybe you can wear it yourself.
No, I don’t mean that, when you got such grander
ones; but for me, Mrs. Meyerburg, it’s too fine
to take. Please!”
Standing there holding it thrust enthusiastically
forward, a glaze suddenly formed over Mrs. Meyerburg’s
eyes and she laid her cheek to the brown fur collar,
a tear dropping to it.
“You’m right, Mrs. Fischlowitz,
I I can’t give this up. I he a
coat he bought once for me at auction when he
oser could afford it. I you
must excuse me, Mrs. Fischlowitz.”
“That’s right, Mrs. Meyerburg,
for a remembrance you should keep it.”
Then brightening: “But
I got in the next room, Mrs. Fischlowitz, a coat better
as this for you. Lined all in squirrel-skin they
call it. One day by myself I bought it, and how
my Becky laughs and won’t even let me wear it
in automobile. I ain’t stylish enough, she
says.”
With an inarticulate medley of sounds
Mrs. Fischlowitz held up a hand of remonstrance.
“But ”
“Na, na, just a minute.”
And on the very wings of her words Mrs. Meyerburg
was across the room, through the ornate door of an
ornate boudoir, and out presently with the garment
flung across her arm. “Na, here put it
on.”
“Ach, such a beau-tiful coat!”
“So! Let me help!”
They leaned together, their faces,
which the years had passed over none too lightly,
close and eager. Against the beaver collar Mrs.
Fischlowitz’s hand lay fluttering.
“Put your hands in the pockets, Mrs. Fischlowitz.
Deep, eh?”
“Finer you can believe me as
I ever had in my life before. I can tell you,
Mrs. Meyerburg, a woman like you should get first place
in heaven and you should know how many on the East
Side there is says the same. I I brought
you your rent, Mrs. Meyerburg. You must excuse
how late, but my Sollie ”
“Ja, ja.”
Eleven! Twelve! Twelve-fifty!
Mrs. Fischlowitz counted it out carefully from a small
purse tucked in her palm, snapping it carefully shut
over the remaining coins.
“Thank you, Mrs. Fischlowitz.
You should never feel hurried. Mr. Oppenheimer
will mail you a receipt.”
“I guess now I must be going,
Mrs. Meyerburg to-night I promised my Sollie
we have cheese-Kuchen for supper.”
“Always I used to make it with
a short crust for my Isadore. How he loved it!”
“Just again, Mrs. Meyerburg,
I want you should let me say how how this
is the finest present what I ever had in my life.
I can tell you from just how soft it is on me, I can
tell how it must feel to ride in automobile.”
A light flashed in brilliance up into
Mrs. Meyerburg’s face. “Mrs. Fischlowitz!”
“Ja, Mrs. Meyerburg?”
“I tell you what! I this
afternoon my Becky, Mrs. Fischlowitz, she she
ain’t so well and like always can’t take
with me a ride in the Park. Such such
a cold that girl has got. How I should like it,
Mrs. Fischlowitz, if you would be so kind to to
take with me my drive in in your new coat.”
“I ”
“Ja, ja, I know, Mrs.
Fischlowitz, cheese Kuchen should first get cold before
supper, but if you could just an hour ride by me a
little? If you would be so kind, Mrs. Fischlowitz!”
Diffidence ran trembling along Mrs.
Meyerburg’s voice, as if she dared not venture
too far upon a day blessed with tasks. “I
got always so so much time to myself now’days,
Mrs. Fischlowitz, sometimes I I get maybe
a a little lonesome.”
“Ach, Mrs. Meyerburg, you
don’t want to be bothered with such such
a person like me when you ride so grand through the
Park.”
“Fit like a fiddle it will make
you feel, Mrs. Fischlowitz. Button up tight that
collar and right away we start. Please, right
next to you, will you press that third button?
That means we go right down and find outside the car
waiting for us.”
“But, Mrs. Meyerburg ”
“See, just like you, I put on
a coat on the inside fur. This way, Mrs. Fischlowitz.
Careful, your foot!”
In the great lower hall full of Tudor
gloom the carved stone arches dropping in rococo stalactites
from the ceiling, and a marble staircase blue-veined
as a delicate woman’s hand winding up to an oriole
window, a man-servant swung back two sets of trellised
doors; bowed them noiselessly shut again.
The quick cold of December bit them
at the threshold. Opposite lay the Park, its
trees, in their smooth bark whipped bare, and gray
as nuns, the sunlight hard against their boles.
More sunlight lay cold and glittering down the length
of the most facaded avenue in the world and on the
great up-and-down stream of motor-cars and their nickel-plated
snouts and plate-glass sides.
Women, with heads too haughty to turn
them right or left, moved past in closed cars that
were perfumed and upholstered like jewel-boxes; the
joggly smartness of hansom cabs, their fair fares seeing
and being seen behind the wooden aprons and their
frozen laughter coming from their lips in vapor!
On the broad sidewalks women in low shoes that defied
the wind, and men in high hats that the wind defied;
nursemaids trim as deaconesses, and their charges
the beautiful exotic children of pure milk and pure
sunshine!
One of these deaconess-like nursemaids,
walking out with a child whose black curls lay in
wide sprays on each shoulder, detached herself from
the up-town flow and crossed to the trellised threshold.
“Good afternoon, Madam Meyerburg.
Mademoiselle, dites bonjour a madame vôtre grand’maman.”
“Bonjour, grand’maman.”
In the act of descending her steps,
Mrs. Meyerburg’s hands flew outward. “Ach,
du little Aileen. Come, Aileen, to grandma.
Mrs. Fischlowitz, this is Felix’s little girl.
You remember Felix such a beautiful bad
little boy he was what always used to fight your Sollie
underneath the sink.”
“Gott in Himmel, so this is Felix’s
little girl!”
“Ja, this is already his second.
Come, Aileen, to grandma and say good afternoon to
the lady.”
The maid guided the small figure forward
by one shoulder. “Dites bonjour a madame,
Mademoiselle Aileen.”
“Bonjour, madame.”
“Not a word of English she can
speak yet, Mrs. Fischlowitz. I tell you already
my grandchildren are so smart not even their language
I can understand. Aber for why such a child
should only talk so in her own country she can’t
be understood, I don’t know.”
“I guess, Mrs. Meyerburg, it’s
style now’days that you shouldn’t know
your own language.”
“Come by grandma to-morrow,
Aileen, and upstairs I got in the little box sweet
cakes like grandma always keeps for you. Eh, baby?”
“Say thank you, grandmother.”
“Merci bien, grand’maman.”
And they were off into the stream
again, the small white leggings at a smart trot.
At the curb a low-bodied, high-power
car, with the top flung back and the wind-shield up,
lay sidled against the coping.
“Get right in, Mrs. Fischlowitz.
Burk, put under Mrs. Fischlowitz’s both feet
a heater.”
A second man, in too-accentuated livery
of mauve and astrakhan, flung open the wide door.
A glassed-in chauffeur, in more mauve and astrakhan,
threw in his clutch. The door slammed. Mrs.
Fischlowitz breathed deep and grasped the nickel-plated
door handle. Mrs. Meyerburg leaned out, her small
plumes wagging.
“Burk, since Miss Becky ain’t
along to-day, I don’t want in front no second
man.”
“Yes, madam.”
“I want instead you should take
the roadster and call after Mrs. Weinstein. You
know, down by Twenty-third Street, the fourth floor
back.”
“Yes, madam.”
“I want you should say, Burk,
that Mrs. Meyerburg says her and her daughter should
take off from their work an hour for a drive wherever
they say you should take them. And tell her, Burk,
she should make for me five dozens more them paper
carnations. Right away I want you should go.”
“Yes, madam.”
They nosed slowly into the stream of the Avenue.
“Always Becky likes there should
be two men stuck up in front there. I always
say to look only at the backs of my servants I don’t
go out riding for.”
Erect and as if to the fantastic requirements
of the situation sat Mrs. Fischlowitz, her face of
a thousand lines screwed to maintain the transiency
of a great moment.
“That I should live, Mrs. Meyerburg,
to see such a sight like this! In the thirty
years I been in this country not but once have I walked
up Fifth Avenue that time when my Tillie
paraded in the shirtwaist strike. I I
can tell you I’m proud to live to see it this
way from automobile.”
“Lean back, Mrs. Fischlowitz,
so you be more comfortable. That’s all
right; you can’t hurt them bottles. My Becky
likes to have fancy touches all over everything.
Gold-tops bottles she has to have yet by her.
I can tell you, though, Mrs. Fischlowitz, if I do
say it myself, when that girl sits up in here like
a picture she looks. How they stare you should
see.”
“Such a beau-ti-ful girl!
I can tell you for her a prince ain’t good enough.
Ach, what a pleasure it must be, Mrs. Meyerburg,
for a mother to know if her child wants heaven she
can nearly get it for her. I can tell you that
must be the greatest pleasure of all for you, Mrs.
Meyerburg, to give to your daughter everything just
like she wants it.”
“Ja, ja,” said with little to
indicate mental ferment.
They were in the Park, with the wind
scampering through the skeins of bare tree branches.
The lake lay locked in ice, skaters in the ecstasy
of motion lunging across it. Beneath the mink
lap-robe Mrs. Fischlowitz snuggled deeper and more
lax.
“Gott in Himmel, I tell
you this is better as standing over my cheese Kuchen.”
“Always I used to let my cheese
drip first the night before. Right through a
cheese-cloth sack hung from a nail what my husband
drove in for me under the window-sill.”
“Right that same nail is there
yet, Mrs. Meyerburg. Oser we should touch one
thing!”
“I can tell you it’s a
great comfort, Mrs. Fischlowitz, I got such a tenant
as you in there.”
“When you come to visit me,
Mrs. Meyerburg, right to the last nail like you left
it you find it. Not even from the kitchen would
I let my Sollie take down the old clothes-line what
you had stretched across one end.”
“Ach, how many times in
rainy days I used that line. It’s a good
little line I bet yet. Not?”
“Ja.” But with no
corresponding kit of emotions in Mrs. Fischlowitz’s
voice. She was still breathing deep the buoyant
ether of the moment, and beneath the ingratiating
warmth of fur utterly soothed. “Gott,”
she said, “I wish my sister-in-law, Hanna, with
all her fine airs up where she lives on One Hundred
and Twenty-ninth Street, could see me now. Oser
she could stare and stare, and bow and bow, and past
her I would roll like like a rolling-pin.”
From the gold-topped bottle nearest
her came a long insidious whiff of frangipani.
She dared to lean toward it, sniffing.
“Such a beautiful smell.” And let
her eyes half close.
“You market your meat yet on
Fridays down by old Lavinsky’s, Mrs. Fischlowitz?”
“Ja, just like always, only
his liver ain’t so good like it used to be.
I can tell you that’s a beau-ti-ful smell.”
An hour they rode purringly over smooth
highways and for a moment alongside the river, but
there the wind was edged with ice and they were very
presently back into the leisurely flow of the Avenue.
From her curves Mrs. Fischlowitz unbent herself slowly.
“No, no, Mrs. Fischlowitz you stay
in.”
“Ach, I get out here at your house, too,
and take the street-cars. I ”
“No, no. James takes you
all the way home, Mrs. Fischlowitz. I get out
because my Becky likes I should get home early and
get dressed up for dinner.”
“But Mrs. Meyerburg ”
“No, no. Right in you stay.
’Sh-h-h, just don’t mention it. Enough
pleasure you give me to ride by me. Take good
care your foot. Good-by, Mrs. Fischlowitz.
All the way home you should take her, James.”
Once more within the gloom of her
Tudor hall, Mrs. Meyerburg hurried rearward and toward
the elevator. But down the curving stairway the
small maid on stilts came, intercepting her.
“Madame!”
“Ja.”
“Madame will please come.
Mademoiselle Betty this afternoon ees not so well.
Three spells of fainting, madame.”
“Therese!”
“Oui, not serious, madame,
but what I would call hysteeria and mademoiselle will
not have doctor. Eef madame will come ”
With a great mustering of her strength
Mrs. Meyerburg ran up the first three of the marble
steps, then quite as suddenly stopped, reaching out
for the balustrade. The seconds stalked past as
she stood there, a fine frown sketched on her brow,
and the small maid anxious and attendant.
“Madame?”
When Mrs. Meyerburg spoke finally
it was as if those seconds had been years, sapping
more than their share of life from her. “I now
I don’t go up, Therese. After a while I
come, but but not now. I want, though,
you should go right away up to Miss Becky with a message.”
“Oui, madame.”
“I want you should tell her
for me, Therese, that that to-morrow New-Year’s
dinner with the family all here, I I want
she should invite the Marquis Rosencrantz. That
everything is all right. Right away I want you
should go and tell her, Therese!”
“Oui, madame.”
Up in her bedroom and without pause
Mrs. Meyerburg walked directly to the small deal table
there beside her bed and still littered with half-curled
blue-prints. These she gathered into a tight roll,
snapping a rubber band about it. She rang incisively
the fourth of the row of bells. A man-servant
responded almost immediately with a light rap-a-tap
at the door. She was there and waiting.
“Kemp, I want you should away
take down this roll to Goldfinger’s office in
the Syndicate Building. Just say Mrs. Meyerburg
says everything is all right to go ahead.”
“Yes, madam.” And
he closed the door after him, holding the knob a moment
to save the click.
In a Tudor dining-hall, long as the
banquet-room of a thane, faced in thrice-weathered
oak and designed by an architect too eminent to endure
interference except when Miss Meyerburg
had later and at her own stealthy volition installed
a Pompeian colored window above the high Victorian
fireplace the wide light of a brilliant
New-Year’s day lay against leaded window-panes,
but shut out by thick hangings.
Instead, the yellow light from a ceiling
sown with starlike bulbs lay over that room.
At each end of the table, so that the gracious glow
fell full upon the small figure of Mrs. Meyerburg
at one end and upon the grizzled head of Mr. Ben Meyerburg
at the other, two braces of candles burned softly,
crocheting a flickering design upon the damask.
From the foot of that great table,
his place by precedence of years, Mr. Ben Meyerburg
rose from his Voltairian chair, holding aloft a wineglass
like a torch.
“Masseltov, ma,”
he said, “and just like we drank to the happy
couple who have told us the good news to-day, so now
I drink to the grandest little mother in the world.
Masseltov, ma.” And he drained his
glass, holding it with fine disregard back over one
shoulder for refilling.
Round that table Mrs. Meyerburg’s
four remaining sons, towering almost twice her height,
rose in a solemn chorus that was heavier than their
libations of wine.
“Masseltov, ma.”
“Ach, boys, my sons, ich ich danke.”
She was quivering now in the edge of tears and grasped
tightly at the arms of her chair.
“Masseltov, ma,”
said Rebecca Meyerburg, raising her glass and her
moist eyes shining above it. The five daughters-in-law
followed immediate suit. At Miss Meyerburg’s
left the Marquis Rosencrantz, with pointed features
and a silhouette sharp as a knife edge, raised his
glass and his waxed mustache and drank, but silently
and over a deep bow.
“Mamma mother dear, the marquis drinks
to you.”
Mrs. Meyerburg turned upon him with
a great mustering of amiability and safely withdrawn
now from her brink of tears. “I got now
six sons what can drink to my health not,
Marquis?”
“She says, Marquis,” translated
Miss Meyerburg, ardently, to the sharp profile, “that
now she has six sons to drink to her health.”
"Madame me fait trop d’honneur."
“He says, mamma, that it is too great an honor
to be your son.”
From her yesterday’s couch of
mental travail Miss Meyerburg had risen with a great
radiance turping out its ravages. She was Sheban
in elegance, the velvet of her gown taken from the
color of the ruby on her brow, and the deep-white
flesh of her the quality of that same velvet with
the nap raised.
“He wants to kiss your hand,
ma. Give it to him. No, the right one, dearie.”
“I I’m much
obliged, Marquis. I well, for one little
old woman like me, I got now six sons and six daughters,
each one big enough to carry me off under his arm.
Not?”
She was met with immediate acclaim
from a large blond daughter-in-law, her soft, expansive
bosom swathed in old lace caught up with a great jeweled
lizard.
“Little old nothing, ma.
I always say to Isadore you’ve got more energy
yet than the rest of the family put together.”
“Ach, Dora, always
you children like to make me think I been young yet.”
But she was smilingly tremulous and
pushed herself backward in her heavy throne-like chair.
A butler sprang, lifting it gently from her.
Immediately the great, disheveled
table, brilliantly littered with crystal, frumpled
napkins, and a great centerpiece of fruits and flowers,
was in the confusion of disorganization.
Daughters-in-law and husbands moved
up toward a pair of doors swung heavily backward by
two servants.
Mrs. Isadore Meyerburg pushed her
real-lace bodice into place and adjusted the glittering
lizard. “Believe me,” she said, exuding
a sigh and patting her bosom on the swell of that
deep breath, “I ate too much, but if I can’t
break my diet for the last engagement in the family,
and to nobility at that, when will I do it?”
“I should say so,” replied
Mrs. Rudolph Meyerburg, herself squirming to rights
in an elaborate bodice and wielding an unostentatious
toothpick behind the cup of her hand; “like
I told Roody just now, if I take on a pound to-day
he can blame his sister.”
“Say, I wish you’d look
at the marquis kissing ma’s hand again, will
you?”
“Look at ma get away with it
too. You’ve got to hand it to them French,
they’ve got the manners all right. No wonder
our swell Trixie tags after them.”
“Say, Becky shouldn’t
get manners yet with her looks and five hundred thousand
thrown in. I bet, if the truth is known, and since
ma is going to live over there with them, that there’s
a few extra thousand tacked on too.”
“Not if the court knows it!
Like I told Roody this morning, she’s bringing
a title into the family, but she’s taking a big
wad of the Meyerburg money out of the country too.”
“It is so, ain’t it?”
Around her crowded Mrs. Meyerburg’s five sons.
“Come with us, ma. We got
a children’s party up in the ballroom for Aileen
this afternoon, and then Trixie and I are going to
motor down to Sheepshead for the indoor polo-match.
Come, ma.”
“No, no, Felix. I want
for myself rest this afternoon. All you children
go and have your good times. I got home more as
I can do, and maybe company, too.”
“Tell you what, ma, come with
Dora and me and the kids. She wants to go out
to Hastings this afternoon to see her mother.
Come with us, ma. The drive will do you good.”
“No, no, Izzy. When I ride
too much in the cold right away up in my ribs comes
the sciatica again.”
Miss Meyerburg bent radiant over her
parent. “Mother,” she whispered,
her throat lined with the fur of tenderness, “it’s
reception-day out at that club, and all the cliques
will be there, and I want ”
“Sure, Becky, you and the marquis
should drive out. Take the big car, but tell
James he shouldn’t be so careless driving by
them curves out there by the golf-links.”
“But, ma dear, you come, too, and ”
“No, no, Becky; to-day I got not time.”
“But, ma ma, you
ain’t mad at me, dear? You can see now for
yourself, can’t you, dear, what a big thing
it is for the family and how you ”
“Yes, yes, Becky. Look,
go over by your young man. See how he stands
there and not one word what Ben is hollering so at
him can he understand.”
Across the room, alongside a buffet
wrought out of the powerful Jacobean period, Mr. Ben
Meyerburg threw a violent contortion.
“Want to go up in the Turkish
room and smoke?” he shouted, the apoplectic
purple of exertion rushing into his face and round
to the roll of flesh overhanging the rear of his collar.
"Pardon?"
“Smoke? Do you smoke?
Smokez-vous? Cigarez-vous? See,
like this. Fume. Blow. Do you smoke?
Smokez-vous?”
"Pardon?" said the marquis, bowing low.
In the heavy solitude of Mrs. Meyerburg’s
bedchamber, the buzz of departures over, silence lay
resumed, but with a singing quality to it as if an
echo or so still lingered.
Before the plain deal table, and at
her side two files bulging their contents, Mrs. Meyerburg
sat with her spatulate finger conning in among a page
of figures. After a while the finger ceased to
move across the page, but lay passive midway down
a column. After another while she slapped shut
the book and took to roaming up and down the large
room as if she there found respite from the spirit
of her which nagged and carped. Peering out between
the heavy curtains, she could see the tide of the
Avenue mincing, prancing, chugging past. Resuming
her beat up and down the vistas of the room, she could
still hear its voice muffled and not unlike the tune
of quinine singing in the head.
The ormolu clock struck, and from
various parts of the house musical repetitions.
A French tinkle from her daughter’s suite across
the hall; from somewhere more remote the deep, leisurely
tones of a Nuremberg floor clock. Finally Mrs.
Meyerburg dropped into the overstuffed chair beside
her window, relaxing into the attitude her late years
had brought her, head back, hands stretched out along
the chair sides, and full of rest. An hour she
sat half dozing, and half emerging every so often with
a start, then lay quietly looking into space, her eyes
quiet and the erstwhile brilliancy in them gone out
like a light.
Presently she sat forward suddenly,
and with the quick light of perception flooding up
into her face; slid from her chair and padded across
the carpet. From the carved chest alongside the
wall she withdrew the short jacket with the beaver
collar, worked her shoulders into it. From the
adjoining boudoir she emerged after a time in a small
bonnet grayish with age and the bow not perky.
Her movements were brief and full of decision.
When she opened her door it was slyly and with a quick,
vulpine glance up and down the grave quiet of the halls.
After a cocked attitude of listening and with an incredible
springiness almost of youth, Mrs. Meyerburg was down
a rear staircase, through a rear hallway, and, unseen
and unheard, out into the sudden splendor of a winter’s
day, the side street quiet before her.
“Gott!” said Mrs. Meyerburg,
audibly, breathing deep and swinging into a smart
lope eastward. Two blocks along, with her head
lifted and no effort at concealment, she passed her
pantry-boy walking out with a Swedish girl whose cheeks
were bursting with red. He eyed his mistress
casually and without recognition.
At Third Avenue she boarded a down-town
street-car, a bit winded from the dive across cobbles,
but smiling. Within, and after a preliminary
method of paying fare new and confusing to her, she
sat back against the rattly sides, her feet just lifted
off the floor. She could hardly keep back the
ejaculations as old streets and old memories swam into
view.
“Look at the old lay-dee talking
to her-sel-uph,” sang an urchin across
the aisle.
“Shut up,” said the mother, slapping him
sidewise.
At one of the most terrific of these
down-town streets Mrs. Meyerburg descended. Beneath
the clang and bang of the Elevated she stood confused
for the moment and then, with her sure stride regained,
swung farther eastward.
Slitlike streets flowed with holiday
copiousness, whole families abroad on foot mothers
swayback with babies, and older children who ran ahead
shouting and jostling. Houses lean and evil-looking
marched shoulder to shoulder for blocks, no gaps except
intersecting streets. Fire-escapes ran zigzag
down the meanest of them. Women shouted their
neighborhood jargon from windows flung momentarily
open. Poverty scuttled along close to the scant
shelter of these houses. An old man, with a beard
to his chest, paused in a doorway to cough, and it
was like the gripe-gripe of a saw with its teeth in
hard wood. A woman sold apples from a stoop, the
form of a child showing through her shawl. Yet
Mrs. Meyerburg smiled as she hurried.
Midway in one of these blocks and
without a pretense of hesitancy she turned into a
black mouth of an entrance and up two flights.
On each landing she paused more for tears than for
breath. At a rear door leading off the second
landing she knocked softly, but with insistence.
It opened to a slight crack, then immediately swung
back full span.
“Gott in Himmel, Mrs.
Meyerburg! Mrs. Meyerburg! Kommen Sie herein.
Mrs. Meyerburg, for why you didn’t let me know?
To think not one of my children home and to-day a
holiday, my place not in order ”
“Now, now, Mrs. Fischlowitz,
just so soon you go to one little bit of trouble,
right away I got no more pleasure. Please, Mrs.
Fischlowitz. Ach, if you ’ain’t
got on your pantry shelfs just the same paper edge
like my Roody used to cut out for me.”
“Come, come, Mrs. Meyerburg, in parlor where ”
“Go way mit you. Ain’t
the kitchen where I spent seventeen years, the best
years in my life, good enough yet? Parlor yet
she wants to take me.”
An immediate negligee of manner enveloped
her like an old wrapper. A certain tulle of bewilderment
had fallen. She was bold, even dictatorial.
“Don’t fuss round me so
much, Mrs. Fischlowitz. Just like old times I
want it should seem. Like maybe I just dropped
in on you a lump of butter to borrow. No, no,
don’t I know where to hang mine own bonnet in
mine own house? Ach, the same coat nails
what he drove in himself!”
“To think, Mrs. Meyerburg, all
my children gone out for a good time this afternoon,
my Tillie with Morris Rinabauer, who can’t keep
his eyes off her ”
“How polished she keeps her stove, just like
I used to.”
“Right when you knocked I was
thinking, well, I clean up a bit. Please, Mrs.
Meyerburg, let me fix you right away a cup coffee ”
“Right away, Mrs. Fischlowitz,
just so soon you begin to make fuss over me, I don’t
enjoy it no more. Please, Mrs. Fischlowitz, right
here in this old rocker-chair by the range let me,
please, sit quiet a minute.”
In the wooden rocker beside the warm
stove she sat down quietly, lapping her hands over
her waist-line.
"Gott in Himmel," sitting well
away from the chair-back and letting her eyes travel
slowly about the room, “just like it was yesterday;
just like yesterday.” And fell to reciting
the phrase softly.
“Ja, ja,” said
Mrs. Fischlowitz, concealing an unwashed litter of
dishes beneath a hastily flung cloth. “I
can tell you, Mrs. Meyerburg, my house ain’t
always this dirty; only to-day not ”
“Just like it was yesterday,”
said Mrs. Meyerburg, musing through a tangle of memories.
She fell to rocking. A narrow band of sunshine
lay across the bare floor, even glinted off a pan
or two hung along the wall over the sink. Along
that same wall hung a festoon of red and green peppers
and a necklace of garlic. Toward the back of the
range a pan of hot water let off a lazy vapor.
Beside the scuttle a cat purred and fought off sleep.
“Already I got the hot water,
Mrs. Meyerburg, to make you a cup coffee if ”
“Please, Mrs. Fischlowitz, let
me rest like this. In a minute I want you should
take me all through in the children’s room and ”
“If I had only known it how
I could have cleaned for you.”
“Ach, my noodle-board over
there! How grand and white you keep it.”
“Ja, I ”
“Mrs. Fischlowitz!”
“Yes, Mrs. Meyerburg?”
“Mrs. Fischlowitz, if you want
to to give me a real treat I tell you what.
I tell you what!”
“Ja, ja, Mrs. Meyerburg; anything
what I can do I ”
“I want you should let me mix you on that old
board a mess noodles!”
“Ach, Mrs. Meyerburg, your hands and that
grand black-silk dress!”
“For why not, Mrs. Fischlowitz?
Wide ones, like he used to like. Just for fun,
please, Mrs. Fischlowitz. To-morrow I send you
two barrels flour for what I use up.”
“But, Mrs. Meyerburg, I should make for you
noodles, not you for me ”
“It’s good I should learn,
Mrs. Fischlowitz, to get back my hand in such things.
Maybe you don’t believe me, but I ain’t
so rich like I was yesterday when you seen me, Mrs.
Fischlowitz. To-day I’m a poor woman, Mrs.
Fischlowitz, with ”
Mrs. Fischlowitz threw out two hands
in a liberal gesture. “Such a good woman
she is! In my house where I’m poor she wants,
too, to play like she’s a poor woman. That
any one should want to play such a game with themselves!
Noodles she wants to make for me, instead I should
wait on her like she was a queen.”
“It takes me back, Mrs. Fischlowitz,
to old times. Please, Mrs. Fischlowitz, to-morrow
I send you two barrels.”
“Like you ain’t welcome
to everything what I got in the house. All right,
noodles you should make and always I keep ’em
for remembrance. Just let me run down to cellar
and bring you up flour. No, no, you set there
and let me fold down the board for you. Rock there,
Mrs. Meyerburg, till I come up with the flour.
Eggs plenty I got.”
“And a little butter, Mrs. Fischlowitz,
the size of an egg, and always a pinch of salt.”
“The neighbors should see this!
Mrs. Simon Meyerburg making for me noodles in my kitchen!”
She was off and down a small rear stairway, a ribbon
of ejaculations trailing back over one shoulder.
In her chair beside the warm range
Mrs. Meyerburg sat quiescent, her head back against
the rest, eyes half closed, and slanting toward the
kitchen door. Against the creaking floor her chair
swayed rhythmically. Tears ran down to meet the
corners of her mouth, but her lips were looped up
in a smile.
The cat regarded her through green
eyes slit down their middle. Toward the rear
of the stove the pan of water seethed.
Suddenly Mrs. Meyerburg leaned forward
with a great flash across her face. “Simon,”
she cried, leaning to the door and stretching forward
quavering arms. “Simon, my darling!”
She leaned further, the rims of her eyes stretched
wide. “Simon come, my darling.
Simon!”
Into the opposite doorway, smirched
with flour and a white pail of it dangling, flashed
Mrs. Fischlowitz, breathing hard from her climb.
“What, Mrs. Meyerburg, you want something?”
“Simon,” cried Mrs. Meyerburg,
her voice lifted in a pæan of welcome; “come,
my darling, come in. Come!” And she tried
to rise, but sat back, quivering, her brow drenched
in sudden sweat.
Raucous terror tore through Mrs. Fischlowitz’s
voice, and she let fall her pail, a white cloud rising
from off the spill. “Mrs. Meyerburg, there
ain’t nobody there. Mrs. Meyerburg, he ain’t
there. Mrs. Meyerburg!”
“Simon!”
“Mrs. Meyerburg, he ain’t there.
Nobody’s there!
Ach help doctor Tillie!”
Back against Mrs. Fischlowitz’s
frenzied arms lay Mrs. Meyerburg, very gray, her hand
against her left breast and down toward the ribs.
“Gott! Gott! Please,
Mrs. Meyerburg Mrs. Meyerburg!” dragging
back one of the weary eyelids and crying out at what
she saw there. “Help doctor Tillie quick quick ”
She could not see, poor dear, that
into those locked features was crystallized the great
ecstasy of reunion.