At the close of a grilling summer
that had sapped the life from the city as insidiously
as fever runs through veins and licks them up at
the close of a day that had bleached the streets as
dry as desert bones Abe Ginsburg closed
his store half an hour earlier than usual because his
clerk, Miss Ruby Cohn, was enjoying a two days’
vacation at the Long Island Recreation Farm, and because
a staggering pain behind his eyes and zigzag down
the back of his neck to his left shoulder-blade made
the shelves of shoe-boxes appear as if they were wavering
with the heat-dance of the atmosphere and ready to
cast their neatly arranged stock in a hopeless fuddle
on the center of the floor.
Up-stairs, on an exact level with
the elevated trains that tore past the kitchen windows
like speed monsters annihilating distance, Mrs. Ginsburg
poised a pie-pan aloft on the tips of five fingers
and waltzed a knife round the rim of the tin.
A ragged ruffle of dough swung for a moment; she snipped
it off, leaving the pie pat and sleek.
Then Mrs. Ginsburg smiled until a
too perfect row of badly executed teeth showed their
pink rubber gums, leaned over the delicate lid of the
pie, and with a three-pronged fork pricked out the
doughy inscription Abe. Sarah
baking cakes for Abraham’s prophetic visitors
had no more gracious zeal.
The waiting oven filled the kitchen
with its gassy breath; a train hurtled by and rattled
the chandeliers, a stack of plates on a shelf, and
a blue-glass vase on the parlor mantel. A buzz-bell
rang three staccato times. Mrs. Ginsburg placed
the pie on the table-edge and hurried down a black
aisle of hallway.
Book-agents, harbingers of a dozen-cabinet-photographs-colored-crayon-thrown-in,
and their kin have all combined to make wary the gentle
cliff-dweller. Mrs. Ginsburg opened her door
just wide enough to insert a narrow pencil, placed
the tip of her shoe in the aperture, and leaned her
face against the jamb so that from without half an
eye burned through the crack.
“Abie? It ain’t you, is it, Abie?”
“Don’t get excited, mamma!”
“It ain’t six o’clock yet, Abie something
ain’t right with you!”
“Don’t get excited, mamma!
I just closed early for the heat. For what should
I keep open when a patent-leather shoe burns a hole
in your hand?”
“Ach, such a scare as
you give me! If I’d ‘a’ known
it I could have had supper ready. It wouldn’t
hurt you to call up-stairs when you close early no
consideration that boy has got for his mother!
Poor papa! If he so much as closed the store
ten minutes earlier he used to call up for me to heat
the things no consideration that boy has
got for his old mother!”
Mr. Ginsburg placed a heavy hand on
each of his mother’s shoulders and kissed her
while the words were unfinished and smoking on her
lips.
“It’s too hot to eat,
mamma. Ain’t I asked you every night during
this heat not to cook so much?”
“Just the same, when it comes
to the table I see you eat. I never see you refuse
nothing I bet you come twice for apple-pie
to-night. Is the hall table the place for your
cuffs, Abie? I’m ashamed for the people
the way my house looks when you’re home no
order that boy has got! I go now and put my pie
in the oven.”
“I ain’t hungry, mamma honest!
Don’t fix no supper for me I go in
the front room and lay down for a while. Never
have I known such heat as I had it in the store to-day and
with Miss Ruby gone it was bad enough, I can tell
you.”
Mrs. Ginsburg reached up suddenly
and turned high a tiny bead of gas-light it
flared for a moment like a ragged-edged fan and then
settled into a sooty flare. In its low-candle-power
light their faces were far away and without outline like
shadows seen through the mirage of a dream.
“Abie tell mamma you
ain’t sick, are you? Abie, you look pale.”
“Now, mamma, begin to worry about nothing when ”
“It ain’t like you to
come up early, heat or no heat. Ach! I should
have known when he comes up-stairs early it means something.
What hurts you, Abie? That’s what I need
yet, a sickness! What hurts you, Abie?”
“Mamma, the way you go on it’s
enough to make me sick if I ain’t. Can’t
a boy come up-stairs just because ”
“I know you like a book; when
you close the store and lay down before supper there’s
something wrong. Tell me, Abie ”
“All right, then! You know
it so well I can’t tell you nothing all
I got is a little tiredness from the heat.”
“Go in and lay down. Can’t
you tell mamma what hurts you, Abie? Are you
afraid it would give me a little pleasure if you tell
me? No consideration that boy has got for his
mother!”
“Honest, mamma, ain’t
I told you three times I ain’t nothing but tired?”
“He snaps me up yet like he
was a turtle and me his worst enemy! For what
should I worry myself? For my part, I don’t
care. I only say, Abie, if there’s anything
hurts you you know how poor papa started
to complain just one night like this how he fussed
at me when I wanted the doctor. If there’s
anything hurts you ”
“There ain’t, mamma.”
“Come in and let me fix the
sofa for you. I only say when you close the store
early there’s something wrong. That Miss
Ruby should go off yet vacation she has
to have a girl like that, with her satin
shoes and all comes into the store at nine
o’clock ’cause she runs to the picture
shows all night! Yetta Washeim seen her.
Vacation yet she has to have! Twenty years I
spent with poor papa in the store, and no vacation
did I have. Lay down, Abie.”
“All right, then,” said
Mr. Ginsburg, as if duty were a geological eon, and
throwing himself across the flowered velvet lounge
in the parlor. “I’ll lay down if
it suits you better.”
Mr. Ginsburg was of a cut that never
appears on a classy clothes advertisement or in the
silver frame on the bird’s-eye maple dressing-table
of sweet sixteen or more; he belonged to the less
ornamented but not unimportant stratum that manufactures
the classy clothes by the hundred thousand, and eventually
develops into husbands and sponsors for full-length
double-breasted sealskin coats for the sweet sixteens
and more.
He was as tall as Napoleon, with a
round, un-Napoleonic head, close-shaved so that his
short-nap hair grew tight like moss on a rock, and
a beard that defied every hirsute precaution by pricking
darkly through the lower half of his face as phenomenally
as the first grass-blades of spring push out in an
hour.
“Let me fix you a little something,
Abie. I got grand broth in the ice-box all
I need to do is to heat it.”
“Ain’t I told you I ain’t hungry,
mamma?”
“When that boy don’t eat
he’s sick. I should worry yet! Poor
papa! If he’d listened to me he’d
be living to-day. I’m your worst enemy I
am! I work against my own child that’s
the thanks what I get.”
Sappho, who never wore a gingham wrapper
and whose throat was unwrinkled and full of music,
never sang more surely than did Mrs. Ginsburg into
the heart-cells of her son. He reached out for
her wrapper and drew her to him.
“Aw, mamma, you know I don’t
mean nothing; just when you get all worried over nothing
it makes me mad. Come, sit down by me.”
“To-night we don’t go
up to Washeims’. I care a lot for Yetta’s
talk her Beulah this and her Beulah that!
It makes me sick!”
“I’ll take you up, mamma, if you want
to go.”
“Indeed, you stay where you
are! For their front steps and refreshments I
don’t need to ride in the Subway to Harlem anyway.”
“What’s the difference?
A little evening’s pleasure won’t hurt
you, mamma.”
“Such a lunch as she served
last time! I got better right now in my ice-box,
and I ain’t expecting company. They can
buy and sell us, too, I guess. Sol Washeim don’t
take a nine-room house when boys’ pants ain’t
booming but such a lunch as she served!
You can believe me, I wouldn’t have the nerve
to. Abie, I see Herschey’s got fall cloth-tops
in their windows already.”
“Yes?”
“Good business to-day not,
Abie? and such heat too! Mrs. Abrahams
called across the hallway just now that she was in
for a pair; but you was so busy with a customer she
couldn’t wait that little pink-haired
clerk, with her extravagant ways, had to go off and
leave you in the heat! Shoe-buttoners she puts
in every box like they cost nothing. I told her
so last week, too.”
“She’s a grand little
clerk, mamma such a business head I never
seen!”
“Like I couldn’t have
come down and helped you to-day! Believe me when
I was in the store with papa, Abie, we wasn’t
so up-to-date; but none of ’em got away.”
“I should know when Mrs. Abrahams
wants shoes five times a week she comes
in to be sociable.”
“I used to say to papa:
’Always leave a customer to go take a new one’s
shoes off; and then go back and take your time!
Two customers in their stockinged feet is worth more
than one in a new pair of shoes!’ Abie, you
don’t look right. You’ll tell me the
truth if you don’t feel well, won’t you?
I always say to have the doctor in time saves nine.
If poor papa had listened to me ”
“I’m all right, mamma.
Why don’t you sit down by me? Don’t
light the gas for why should you make it
hotter? Come, sit down by me.”
“I go put the oven light out.
Apple-pie I was baking for you yet; for myself I don’t
need supper I had coffee at five o’clock.”
Dusk entered the little apartment
and crowded the furniture into phantoms; a red signal
light from the skeleton of the elevated road threw
a glow as mellow as firelight across the mantelpiece.
Mrs. Ginsburg’s canary rustled himself until
he swelled up twice too fat and performed the ever-amazing
ritual of thrusting his head within himself as if
he would prey on his own vitals. The cooler breath
of night; the smells of neighboring food; the more
frequent rushing of trains, and a navy-blue sky, pit-marked
with small stars, came all at once. In the hallway
Mrs. Ginsburg worked the hook of the telephone impatiently
up and down.
“Audubon 6879! Hello!
Washeims’ residence? Yetta? Yes, this
is Carrie. Ain’t it awful? I’m
nearly dead with it. Yetta, Abie ain’t feeling
so well; so we won’t be up to-night. No it
ain’t nothing but the heat; but I worry enough,
I can tell you.”
“Mamma, don’t holler in
the telephone so she can’t hear you
when you scream.”
“It’s always something,
ain’t it? That’s what I tell him;
but he’s like his poor papa before him he’s
afraid no one can do nothing but him; his little snip
of a clerk he gives a vacation, but none for himself.
I’m glad we ain’t going then; you always
make yourself so much trouble. It’s too
hot to eat, Abie says. Beef with horseradish sauce
I had for supper, too and apple-pie I baked
in the heat for him; but not a bite will that boy
eat! And when he don’t eat I know he ain’t
feeling well. Who? Beulah? Ain’t
that grand? Yes, cooking is always good for a
girl to know even if she don’t need it.
No; I go to work and thicken my gravy with flour and
horseradish. Believe me, I cried enough when I
did it! Ach, Yetta, why should I leave that
boy? You can believe me when I tell you that
not one night except when he was took in at the lodge not
one night since poor papa died has that
boy left me at home alone. Not one step will
he take without me.”
“Aw, mamma!”
“Sometimes I say, ‘Abie,
go out like other boys and see the girls.’
But he thinks if he ain’t home to fix the windows
and the covers for my rheumatism it ain’t right.
Yes; believe me, when your children ain’t feeling
well it’s worry enough.”
“Aw, maw, I can take you up
to the Washeims’ if you want to go.”
“You ought to hear him in there,
Yetta fussing because I want to keep him
laying down. Yes, I go with you; to-morrow at
nine I meet you down by Fulton Street. Up round
here they’re forty-two cents. Ain’t
it so? And I used two whites and a yolk in my
pie-dough. Yes; I hope so too. If not I
call a doctor. Nine o’clock! Good-by,
Yetta.”
“Maw, for me you shouldn’t stay home.”
Mrs. Ginsburg flopped into a rocker beside the flowered
velvet couch.
“A little broth, Abie?”
“No.”
“When you don’t eat it’s something
wrong.”
“You needn’t fan me, mamma I
ain’t hot now.”
Insidious darkness crept into the
room like a cool hand descending on the feverish brow
of day; the red glow shifted farther along the mantel
and lay vivid as blood across the blue vase and the
photograph of a grizzled head in a seashell frame.
Mrs. Ginsburg rocked over a loose board in the floor
and waved a palm-leaf fan toward the reclining shadow
of her son until he could taste its tape-bound edge.
“Next week to-night five years
since we lost poor papa, Abie five years!
Gott! When I think of it! Just like his
picture he looked up to the last, too just
like his picture.”
“Yes, mamma.”
“I ain’t so spry as I
used to be, neither, Abie or, believe me,
I would never let you take on a clerk. Sometimes
I think, when the rheumatism gets up round my heart,
it won’t be long as I go too. Poor papa!
If I could have gone with him! How he always
hated to go alone to places! To the barber he
hated to go, till I got so I could cut it myself.”
“Mamma, you ain’t got nothing to worry
about.”
“I worry enough.”
“You can take it as easy as
you want to now I even want we should have
a better apartment. We got the best little business
between here and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street!
If poor papa could see it now he wouldn’t know
it from five years ago. Poor papa! He wasn’t
willing to spend on improvements.”
“Papa always said you had a
good business head on you, Abie; but I ain’t
one, neither, for funny businesses like a clerk.
And what you needed them new glass shoe-stands for
when the old ones ”
“Now, mamma, don’t begin on that again.”
“When I was down in the store
papa used to say to me: ’Wait till Abie’s
grown up, mamma! By how his ears stand out from
his head I can tell he’s got good business sense.’
And to think that so little of you he had in the store such
a man that deserved the best of everything! He
had to die just when things might have got easy for
him.”
“Don’t cry, mamma; everything is for the
best.”
“You’re a good boy, Abie. Sometimes
I think I stand in your way enough.”
“Such talk!”
“Any girl would do well enough
for herself to get you. Believe me, Beulah Washeim
don’t need a new pair of shoes every two weeks
for nothing! Her mother thinks I don’t
notice it she’s always braggin’
to me how hard her Beulah is on shoes and what a good
customer she makes.”
“Beulah Washeim! I don’t
even know what last she wears that’s
how much I think of Beulah Washeim.”
“Don’t let me stand in
your way, Abie. Ain’t I often told you,
now since you do a grand business and we’re
all paid up, don’t let your old mother stand
in your way?”
“Like you could be in my way!”
“Once I said to poor papa, the
night we paid the mortgage off and had wine for supper:
‘Papa,’ I said, ’we’re out
of debt now Gott sei Dank! except
one debt we owe to some girl when Abie grows up; and
that debt we got to pay with money that won’t
come from work and struggle and saving; we got to
pay that debt with our boy with blood-money.’
Poor papa! Already he was asleep when I said it half
a glass of wine, and he was mussy-headed.”
“Yes, yes, mamma.”
“A girl like Beulah Washeim
I ain’t got so much use for neither with
her silk petticoats and silk stockings; but Sol Washeim’s
got a grand business there, Abie. They don’t
move in a nine-room house from a four-room apartment
for nothing.”
“For Beulah’s weight in
gold I don’t want her the way she
looks at me with her eyes and shoots ’em round
like I was a three-ringed circus.”
“You’re right for
money you shouldn’t marry neither; only I always
say it’s just as easy to fall in love with a
rich one as a poor one. But I’m the last
one to force you. There’s Hannah Rosenblatt a
grand, economical girl!”
“Hannah Rosenblatt a
girl that teaches school, she pushes on me. I
got to get educated yet!”
Mrs. Ginsburg rocked and fanned rhythmically;
her unsubtle lips curled upward with the subtle smile
of a zingaro. The placidity of peace on a
mountain-top, shade in a dell, and love in a garden
crept into her tones.
“I just want you to know I don’t
stand in your way, Abie. You ain’t a child
no more; but while I’m here you got so good a
home as you want not?”
“Sure!”
“Girls you can always get not?
Girls nowadays ain’t what they used to be neither.
I’d like to see a girl do to-day for papa what
I did how I was in the store and kitchen
all at once; then we didn’t have no satin-shoe
clerks! Girls ain’t what they used to be;
in my day working-girls had no time for fine-smelling
cologne-water and ”
“All girls ain’t alike,
mamma satin shoes cost no more nowadays
as leather. We got a dollar-ninety-eight satin
pump, you wouldn’t believe it and
such a seller! All girls ain’t alike, mamma.”
“What you mean, Abie?”
Mr. Ginsburg turned on the couch so
that his face was close to the wall, and his voice
half lost in the curve of his arm.
“Well, once in a while you come
across a girl that ain’t ain’t
like the rest of ’em. Well, there ought
to be girls that ain’t like the rest of ’em,
oughtn’t there?”
Mrs. Ginsburg’s rocking and
fanning slowed down a bit; a curious moment fell over
the little room; a nerve-tingling quiescence that in
its pregnant moment can race the mind back over an
eternity a silence that is cold with sweat,
like the second when a doctor removes his stethoscope
from over a patient’s left breast and looks at
him with a film of pity glazing his eyes.
“What you mean, Abie? Tell
mamma what you mean. I ain’t the one to
stand in your light.” Mrs. Ginsburg’s
speech clogged in her throat.
“You know you always got a home
with me, mamma. You know, no matter what comes,
I always got to tuck you in bed at night and fix the
windows for you. You know you always got with
me the best kind of a home I got to give you.
Ain’t it?”
His hand crept out and rested lightly ever
so lightly on his mother’s knee.
“Abie, you never talked like
this before I won’t stand in your
way, Abie. If you can make up your mind, Beulah
Washeim or Hannah Rosenblatt, either would be ”
“Aw, mamma, it ain’t them.”
Mrs. Ginsburg’s hand closed
tightly over her son’s; a train swooped past
and created a flurry of warm breeze in the room.
“Who is it, Abie?
Don’t be afraid to tell mamma.”
“Why, mamma, it ain’t
no one! Can’t a fellow just talk? You
started it, didn’t you? I was just talking
’cause you was.”
“He scares me yet! No consideration
that boy has got for his mother! Abie, a little
broth you ain’t got no fever, Abie your
head is cool like ice.”
“You ain’t had no supper yet, mamma.”
“I had coffee at five o’clock;
for myself I never worry. I’m glad enough
you feel all right. It’s eight o’clock,
Abie I go me to bed. To-morrow I go
to market with Yetta.”
“Aw, mamma, now why for do you ”
“I ain’t too proud such
high-toned notions I ain’t got. For what
I pay forty-two cents for eggs up here when I can
get ’em for thirty-eight?”
“Be careful, mamma; don’t
fall over the chair you want a light?”
“No. Write me a note for
the milkman, Abie, before you go to bed, and leave
it out with the bottles half a pint of double
cream I want. I make you cream-potatoes for supper
to-morrow. I laid your blue shirt on your bed,
Abie don’t go to bed on it. It’s
the last time I iron it; but once more you can wear
it, then I make dust-rags. I ironed it soft like
you like.”
“Yes, mamma.”
“Put the cover on the canary,
too, Abie. That night you went to the lodge he
chirped and chirped, just like you was lost and he
was crying ’cause me and him was lonely.”
“Yes, mamma. Wait till
I light the gas in your room for you you’ll
stumble.”
“It’s too hot for light;
I can see by the Magintys’ kitchen light across
the air-shaft. What she does in her kitchen so
late I don’t know such housekeeping!
Yesterday with my own eyes I seen her shake a table-cloth
out the window with a hole like my hand in it.
She should know what I think of such ways.”
Mrs. Ginsburg moved through the gloom,
steering carefully round the phantom furniture.
From his place on the couch her son could hear her
moving about her tiny room adjoining the kitchen.
A shoe dropped and, after a satisfying interval, another;
the padding of bare feet across a floor; the tink
of a china pitcher against its bowl; the slam of a
drawer; the rusty squeal of spiral bed-springs under
pressure.
“Abie, I’m ready.”
When Mr. Ginsburg groped into his
mother’s room she lay in the casual attitude
of sleep, but the yellow patch of light from the shaft
fell across her open eyes and gray wisps of hair that
lay on her pillow like a sickly aura.
“Good night, Abie. You’re a good
boy, Abie.”
“Good night, mamma. A sheet
ain’t enough you got to have the
blue-and-white quilt on you, too.”
“Don’t, Abie do
you want to suffocate me? I can’t stand
so much. Take off the quilt.”
“Your rheumatism, you know,
mamma you’ll see how much cooler it
will get in the night.”
“Ach, Abie, leave that
window all the way up. So hot, and that boy closes
me up like ”
“When the lace curtain blows
in it means you’re in a draught, mamma half-way
open you can have it, but not all. Without me
to fuss you’d have a fine rheumatism like
it ain’t dangerous for you to sleep where there’s
enough draught to blow the curtain in.”
“Abie, if you don’t feel
good, in two minutes I can get up and heat the broth
if ”
“I’m grand, mamma.
Here, I move this chair so the light from Magintys’
don’t shine in your eyes.”
“What she does in her kitchen
so late I don’t know. Good night, Abie.
In the dark you look like poor papa. How he used
to fuss round the room at night fixing me just like
you poor papa, Abie not?
Poor papa?”
“Good night, mamma.”
Mr. Ginsburg leaned over and kissed his mother lightly
on the forehead.
“Double cream did you say I should write the
milkman?”
“Yes and, Abie, don’t forget
to cover the bird.”
“Yes. Here, I leave the door half-way open,
mamma. Good night.”
“Abie! Abie!”
“Yes?”
“Oh, it ain’t nothing at all, Abie never
mind.”
“I’m right here, mamma. Anything
you want me to do?”
“Nothing. Good night, Abie.”
“Good night, mamma.”
At eight-fifteen Monday morning Miss
Ruby Cohn blew into the Ginsburg & Son’s shoe
store like a breath of thirty-nine-cents-an-ounce perfume
shot from a strong-spray atomizer. The street
hung with the strong breath of Mayflower a full second
after her small, tall-heeled feet had crossed its
soft asphalt.
At the first whiff Mr. Ginsburg drew
the upper half of his body out from a case of misses’
ten-button welt soles he was unpacking and smiled as
if Aurora and spring, and all the heyday misses that
Guido Reni and Botticelli loved to paint, had suddenly
danced into his shop.
“Well, well, Miss Ruby, are you back?”
Miss Cohn titillated toward the rear
of the store, the tail of a cockatoo titillated at
a sharp angle from her hat, a patent-leather handbag
titillated from a long cord at her wrist, and a smile
iridescent as sunlight on spray played about her lips.
She placed her hand blinker-fashion against her mouth
as if she would curb the smile.
“Don’t tell anybody, Mr.
Ginsburg, and I’ll whisper you something.
Listen! I ain’t back; I’m shooting
porcelain ducks off the shelf in a china shop.”
“Ah, you’re back again
with your fun, ain’t you? Miss Ruby believe
me I missed you enough. I bet you had
a grand time at the farm!”
Mr. Ginsburg shook hands with her
shyly, with a sudden red in his face, and as if her
fingers were holy with the dust of a butterfly’s
wings and he feared to brush it off.
“Say, Mr. Ginsburg, you should
have seen me! What I think of a shoe-tree after
laying all yesterday afternoon under a oak-tree next
to a brook that made a noise like playing a tune on
wine-glasses, I’d hate to tell you. Say,
you’re unpacking them ten-button welts, ain’t
you? Good! It ain’t too soon for the
school stock.”
Miss Cohn withdrew two super-long,
sapphire-headed hat-pins from her super-small hat,
slid out of a tan summer-silk jacket, dallied with
the froth of white frills at her throat, ran her fingers
through the flame of her hair and turned to Mr. Ginsburg.
Her skin was like thick cream and smattered with large,
light-brown freckles, which enhanced its creaminess
as a crescent of black plaster laid against a lady’s
cheek makes fairness fairer.
“Well, how’s business?
I’ve come back feeling like I could sell storm
rubbers to a mermaid.”
“You look grand for certain,
Miss Ruby. They just can’t look any grander’n
you. Believe me, I missed you enough! To-day
it’s cool; but the day before yesterday you
can know I was done up when I closed before six.”
“Can you beat it? And I
was laying flat on the grass, with ants running up
my sleeves and down my neck and wishing for my sealskin it
was so cool. I see Herschey’s got cloth-tops
in his windows. What’s the matter with
us springing them patent-tip kids? Say, I got
a swell idea for a window comin’ home on the
train lookin’ at the wheat-fields
made me think of it.”
“Whatta you know about that?
Wheat-fields made her think of a shoe window like
a whip she is so sharp!”
“It’s a yellow season,
Mr. Ginsburg; and we can use them old-oak stands and
have a tan school window that’ll make every plate-glass
front between here and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth
Street look like a Sixth Avenue slightly worn display.”
“Good! You can have just
what kind of a window you like, Miss Ruby just
anything you you like. After such a
summer we can afford such a fall window as we want.
I see the Busy Bee’s got red-paper poppies in
theirs something like that, maybe, with ”
“Nix on paper flowers for us!
I got a china-silk idea from a little drummer I met
up in the country one nice little fellow!
I wonder if you know him? Simon Leavitt; he says
he sold you goods. Simon Leavitt. Know him?”
“No.”
“One nice little fellow!”
Silence.
“I missed you lots, Miss Ruby.
When Saturday came I said to mamma: ’How
I miss that girl! Only one month she’s been
with us, but how I miss that girl!’ Oh eh,
Miss Ruby!”
Miss Cohn adjusted a pair of tissue-paper
sleevelets and smoothed her smooth tan hips as if
she would erase them entirely; then she looked up
at him delicately, and for the instant the pink aura
of her hair and the rise and fall of her too high
bosom gave her some of the fleshly beauty of a Flora.
“Like you had time to think
of me! I bet the Washeim girl was in every other
day for a pair of ”
“Now, Miss Ruby, you ”
“’Sh! There’s
some one out front. It’s that cashier from
Truman’s grocery. You finish unpacking
that case, Mr. Ginsburg. I’ll wait on her.
I bet she wants tango slippers.”
Miss Cohn flitted to the front of
the store as rapidly as the span of her narrow skirt
would permit, and Mr. Ginsburg dived deep into the
depths of his wooden case. But in his nostrils,
in the creases of his coat, and in the recesses of
his heart was the strong breath of the Mayflower;
and in the phantasmagoria of bonfire-colored hair and
cream-colored skin, and the fragrance of his own emotions,
he bent so dreamily over the packing-case that the
blood rushed as if by capillary attraction to his
temples; and when he staggered to an upright posture
large black blotches were doing an elf dance before
his eyes.
“Mr. Ginsburg! Oh, Mr. Ginsburg!”
“Yes, Miss Ruby.”
From the highest rung of a ladder,
parallel with the top row of a wall of shoe-boxes,
Miss Cohn poised like a humming-bird.
“Say, have we got any more of them 4567 French
heel, chiffon rosette?”
“Yes, Miss Ruby right there under
the 5678’s.”
“Sure enough. Never mind
coming out; I can find ’em yes, here
they are.”
From her height she smiled down at
him, pushed her ladder leftward along its track, clapped
a shoe-box under her arm, and hurried down, her shoe-buttoner
jangling from a pink ribbon at her waist-line.
Mr. Ginsburg delved deeper.
“Mr. Ginsburg!”
“Yes, Miss Ruby.”
“Just a moment, please there’s
a lady out here wants low-cuts, and I’m busy
with a customer. Front, please just
this way, madam. I’ll have some one to
wait on you in a moment.”
Mr. Ginsburg clapped his hands dry
of dust, wriggled into his unlined alpaca coat, brushed
his plush-like hair with his palms, and advanced to
the front of the store. His voice was lubricated
with the sweet-oil of willing servitude.
“What can I do for you, madam? Low-cuts
for yourself?”
He straddled a stool and took the
foot in the cup of his hand. Beside him on a
similar stool that brought their heads parallel Miss
Ruby smoothed her hand across her customer’s
instep.
“Ain’t that effect great,
Mr. Ginsburg, with that swell little rosette?
I was just telling this young lady if I had her instep
I’d never wear anything but our dancing-shoes.”
“It certainly is swell,”
agreed Mr. Ginsburg, peering into the lining of the
shoe he removed to read its size.
The day’s tide quickened; the
yellow benches, with ceiling fans purring over them,
were filled with rows of trade who tamped the floor
with shiny, untried soles, bent themselves double
to feel of toe and instep, and walked the narrow strip
of green felt as if on clay feet they feared would
break.
Came noon and afternoon. Miss
Cohn ascended and descended the ladder with the agility
of a street vender’s mechanical toy, shoes tucked
under each arm, and a pencil at a violent angle in
the nest of her hair.
“Have we got any more of them
543 flat heels, Mr. Ginsburg?”
“Yes, Miss Ruby right there in back
of you.”
“Say, you’d think I was
using my eyes for something besides seeing, wouldn’t
you? Wait on that lady next, Mr. Ginsburg.
She wants white kids.”
“Certainly.”
“Yes’m; we sell lots of
them russet browns. It’s a little shoe that
gives satisfaction every time. Mr. Ginsburg is
always ordering more. I wore a pair of them for
two years myself. There ain’t no wear-out
to them. We carry that in stock, too, and it
keeps them like new just rub with a flannel
cloth fifteen cents a bottle. Just
a moment, madam; I’ll be over to you as soon
as I’m finished here. Mr. Ginsburg, take
off that lady’s shoe and show her a pair of
them dollar-ninety-eight elastic sides while I finish
with this lady. Sure, you can have ’em by
five, madam. Name? Hornschein, 3456 Eighth
Avenue? Dollar-eighty out of two. Thank
you! Call again. Now, madam, what can I do
for you? Yes, we have them in moccasins in year-old
size sixty cents, and grand and soft for
their little feet. Wait; I’ll see.
Mr. Ginsburg, have we got those 672 infants’
in pink?”
“Sure thing. Wait, Miss
Ruby I’ll climb for you. I have
to go up anyway.”
“Aw, you’re busy with your own customers.
Don’t trouble.”
“Nothing’s trouble when
it’s for you, Miss Ruby. Show her those
tassel tops, too.”
“Oh, Mr. Ginsburg, ain’t
you the kidder, though! Yes’m; the tassel
tops are eighty. Ain’t they the cutest
little things?”
At six o’clock a medley of whistles
shrieked out the eventide clarions that
ripped upward like sky-rockets in flight; hard-throated
soprano whistles that juggled with the topmost note
like a colorature diva. The oak benches emptied,
Mr. Ginsburg raised the front awning and kicked the
carpet-covered brick away from the door, so that it
swung quietly closed; daubed at his wrists and collar-top
with a damp handkerchief.
“First breathing space we’ve
had to-day, ain’t it, Miss Ruby?”
Miss Cohn flopped down on a bench
and breathed heavily; her hair lay damp on her temples;
the ruffles at her neck were limp as the ruff of a
Pierette the morning after the costume ball.
“You should worry, Mr. Ginsburg!
With such a business next year at this time you’ll
have two clerks and more breathing space than you got
breath.”
Mr. Ginsburg seated himself carefully
beside her at a wide range, so that a customer for
a seven-E last could have fitted in between them.
“I’ve built up a good
business here, Miss Ruby. The trouble with poor
papa was he was afraid to spend, and he was afraid
of novelties. I couldn’t learn him that
a windowful of satin pumps helps swell the storm-rubber
sale. Those little dollar-ninety-eights look swell
on your feet, Miss Ruby; you’re a good advertisement
for the stock not?”
“Funny what a hit them pumps
make! Mr. Leavitt was crazy about them, too;
but, say, what your mother thinks of these satin slippers
I’d hate to tell you. When she was down
the day before I left she looked at ’em till
I got so nervous I tripped over the cracks between
the boards. Say, but wasn’t she sore about
the new glass fixtures! I kinda felt like it
was my fault, too; but I was strong for ’em because ”
“Mamma’s the old-fashioned
kind, Miss Ruby her and poor papa like the
old way of doing things. She’s getting old,
Miss Ruby, but she means well. She’s a
good mother a good mother.”
“She’s sure a grand woman carrying
soup across to old Levinsky every day, and all.”
“She’s more’n you
know she is, too, Miss Ruby little things
that woman does I could tell you about when
she didn’t have it so good as now neither.”
Miss Ruby dropped her lids until her
eyes were as soft as plush behind the portieres of
her lashes; her voice dropped into a throat that might
have been lined with that same soft plush.
“I had a mother for two days like
I said to Mr. Leavitt the other day up in the country we
was talking about different things. I says to
him, I says, she quit when she looked at me just
laid down and died when I was two days old. I
must have been enough to scare the daylights out of
any one. Next to a pink worm on a fish-hook gimme
a red-headed baby for the horrors! Say, you ought
to seen Mr. Leavitt fish! Six bass he caught
in one day I sat next him and watched; we
had ’em fried for supper. He’s some
little ”
“What a pleasure you’d
‘a’ been to your mother, Miss Ruby!
Such a girl like you I could wish my own mother.”
“That’s just what Mr.
Leavitt used to tell me; but, gee! he was a kidder!
I I oughtta had a mother! Sometimes
I sometimes in the night when I can’t
sleep daytimes you don’t care so much but
sometimes at night I I just don’t
care about nothing. With a girl like me, that
ain’t even known a mother or father, it ain’t
always so easy to keep her head above water.”
“Poor little girl!”
“Since the day I left the Institootion
I been dodging the city and jumping its mud-holes
like a lady trying to cross Sixth Avenue when it’s
torn up. I oh, ain’t I the silly
one? treating you to my troubles!
Say, I got a swell riddle! I can’t give
it like Leavitt like Simon did; but ”
“Always Mr. Leavitt, and now
it’s Simon yet such a hit as that
man made with you not?”
“Hit! Can’t a girl
have a gentleman friend? Can’t you have
a lady friend a friend like Miss Washeim,
who comes in for shoes three times ”
“Ruby, can I help it when she comes in here?”
“Can I help it when I go to the country and
meet Mr. Leavitt?”
“Ruby!”
Mr. Ginsburg slid himself along the
bench until a customer for a AA misses’ last
would have fitted with difficulty between, and looked
at her as ancient Phidias must have looked at his
Athene.
“Ruby I can’t
keep it back no longer since you went away
on your vacation I’ve had it inside of me, but
I never knew what it was till you walked back this
morning. First, I thought I was sick with the
heat; but now I know it was you ”
“What what you ”
“I I invite you to
get married, Ruby. I got a feeling for you like
I never had for any girl! I want it that mamma
should have a good girl like you to make it easy for
her. I can’t say what I want to say, Ruby;
I don’t say it so good, but a girl
could do worse than me not, Ruby?”
Miss Cohn’s fingers closed over
the shoe-hook at her belt until the knuckles sprang
out whiter than her white skin.
“Oh, Mr. Ginsburg! What
would your mamma say? A young man like you, with
a grand business and all you could do for
yourself what you wanted. If you was only a drummer
like Simon; but ”
A wisp of Miss Cohn’s hair,
warm as sunset, brushed close to Mr. Ginsburg’s
lips; he groped for her hand, because the mist of his
emotions was over his eyes.
“Ruby, I invite you to get married;
that’s all I want is that mamma should
have it good with me always like she has it now.
She’s getting old, Ruby, and I always say what’s
the difference if I humor her? When she don’t
want to move in an apartment with a marble hall and
built-in wash-tubs, I say: All right; we stay
over the store. When she don’t like it
that I put a telephone in, I tell her I got a friend
in the business put it in for nothing. You could
give it to her as good as a daughter not,
Ruby?”
“She’s a grand woman, Abie; she ”
“Ruby!”
“Oh! Oh!”
In the eventide quiescence of the
shop, with the heliotrope of early dusk about them,
and passers-by flashing by the plate-glass window in
a stream that paused neither for love nor life, Mr.
Ginsburg leaned over and gathered Miss Cohn in his
arms, pushed back the hair from her forehead and kissed
her thrice once on each lowered eyelid,
and once on her lips, which were puckered to resemble
a rosebud.
“Abie, you you mustn’t!
We’re in the store!”
“I should worry!”
“What will what will they say?”
“For what they say I care that
much!” cried Mr. Ginsburg, with insouciance.
“Ain’t I got a ruby finer than what they
got in the finest jewelry store?”
Miss Cohn raised her smooth cheek
from the rough weft of Mr. Ginsburg’s sleeve.
“What your mamma will say I
don’t know! You that could have Beulah
Washeim or Birdie Harburger, or any of those grand
girls that are grand catches I ain’t
bringing you nothing, Abie.”
“We’re going to make it
grand for mamma, Ruby that’s all I
want you to bring me. She’ll have it so
good as never in her life. You are going to be
a good daughter to her not, Ruby?”
“Yes, Abe. If we take a
bigger apartment she can have an outside room, and
I can take all the housekeeping off her hands.
Such nut-salad as I can make you never tasted like
they serve it in the finest restaurant! I got
the recipe from my landlady. If we take a bigger
apartment ”
“What mamma wants we do how’s
that? She’s so used to having her own way
I always say, What’s the difference? When
poor papa lived she ”
“Abe, there’s your mamma
calling you down the back stairs now you
should go up to your supper. I must go, too; my
landlady gets mad when I’m late it’s
half past six already. Oh, I feel scared!
What’ll she say when she hears?”
“Scared for what, my little
girl?... Yes, mamma; I’m coming!...
There ain’t a week passes that mamma don’t
say if I find the right girl I should get married.
Even the other night, before I knew it myself, she
said it to me. ‘Abie,’ she always
says, ’don’t let me stand in your way!’...
Yes, mamma; I’ll be right up!... You and
her can get along grand when you two know each other grand!”
“Your mamma’s calling like she was mad,
Abie.”
“To-night, Ruby, you come up
to us for supper we bring her a surprise-party.”
“Oh, you ain’t going to
tell her to-night right away are
you?”
“For what I have secrets from
my own mother? She should know the good news.
Get your hat, Ruby. Come on, Ruby-la! Come
on!”
“Oh, Abie, you ain’t going
to forget to lock the front store door, are you?”
“Ach! that
should happen to me yet. The things a man don’t
do when he’s engaged! If mamma should know
I forget to lock the store she’d think I’ve
gone crazy with being in love you little
Ruby-la!”
Mr. Ginsburg hastened to the front
of the store on feet that bounded off the floor like
rubber balls, and switched on the electric show-window
display.
“Abe, you got the double switch
on! What you think this is convention
or Christmas week?”
“To-night we celebrate with
double window lights. What’s the difference
if it costs a little more or a little less? The
night he gets engaged a fellow should afford what
he wants.”
“Abe!”
“There now with two
locks on the door we should worry about burglars!
I’m the burglar that’s stealing the ruby,
ain’t I?... One, two, three up
we go, to mamma and supper. Watch out for the
step there! I want her to see my Ruby finer
than you can buy in the finest jewelry store!”
cried Mr. Ginsburg, clinging proudly to his metaphor.
Any of three emotions were crowded
into his voice excitement, trepidation,
the love that is beyond understanding or
the trilogy of them all.
“Come along, Ruby-la!”
Through the rear of the store and
up a winding back stairway they marched like glorified
children; and at the first landing he must pause and
kiss away the words of fear and nervousness from her
lips and look into her diffident eyes with the same
rapture that was Jupiter’s when he gazed on
Antiope.
“Such a little scarey she is like
mamma was going to bite!”
At the top of the flight the door
of the apartment stood open; a blob of gas lighted
a yellowish way to the kitchen, and through the yellow
Mrs. Ginsburg’s voice drifted out to them:
“Once more I call you, Abie,
and then I dish up supper and eat alone no
consideration that boy has got for his mother!
He should know what it is not to have a mother who
fixes him Pfannkuechen in this heat! Don’t
complain to me if everything is not fit to eat!
In the heat I stand and cook, and that boy closes
so late Abie! Once more I call you
and then I dish up. Ab-ie!” Mrs. Ginsburg’s
voice rose to an acidulated high C.
“Mamma! Mamma, don’t
get so excited it ain’t late.
The days get shorter, that’s all. Look!
I brought company for supper. We don’t stand
on no ceremony. Come right in the kitchen, Ruby.”
Mr. Ginsburg pushed Miss Cohn into
the room before him, and Mrs. Ginsburg raised her
face from over the steaming stove-top the
pink of heat and exertion high in her cheek.
Reflexly her hand clutched at the collar of her black
wrapper, where it fell away to reveal the line where
the double scallop of her chin met the high swell of
her bosom.
“Miss Cohn! Miss Cohn!”
“How do you do, Mrs. Ginsburg? I ”
“Sit right down, Miss Cohn or
you and Abie go in the front room till I dish up.
You must excuse me the way I holler, but so mad that
boy makes me. Just like his poor papa, he makes
a long face if his supper is cold, but not once does
he come up on time.”
“All men are alike, Mrs. Ginsburg that’s
what they say about ’em anyway.”
“Such a supper we got you’ll
have to excuse, Miss Cohn. Abie, take them German
papers off the chair. Miss Cohn can sit out here
a minute if she don’t mind such heat. If
Abie had taken the trouble to tell me you was coming
I’d have fixed ”
“I am glad you don’t fix
no extras for me, Mrs. Ginsburg. I like to take
just pot-luck.”
“Abie likes Pfannkuechen
and pot-roast better than the finest I can fix him,
and this morning at Fulton Market I seen such grand
green beans; and I said to Yetta, ’I fix ’em
sweet-sour for supper; he likes them so.’”
“I love sweet-sour beans, too,
Mrs. Ginsburg. My landlady fixes all them German
dishes swell.”
“Well, you don’t mind
that I don’t make no extras for you? You
had a nice vacation? I tell Abie he should take
one himself not? He worked hisself
sick last week. I was scared enough about him.
Abie, why don’t you find a chair for yourself?
Why you stand there like like ”
Even as she spoke the red suddenly
ran out of Mrs. Ginsburg’s face, leaving it
the color of oysters packed in ice.
“Abie!”
For answer Mr. Ginsburg crossed the
room and took his mother in a wide-armed embrace,
so that his mouth was close to her ear. His lips
were pale and tinged with a faintly green aura, like
a child’s who holds his breath from rage or
a lyceum reader’s who feels the icy clutch of
stage-panic on him.
“Mamma, we we me
and Ruby got a surprise-party for you. Guess,
mamma such a grand surprise for you!”
Mrs. Ginsburg placed her two fists
against her son’s blue shirt-front, threw back
her head, and looked into his eyes; her heavy waist-line
swayed backward against his firm embrace; immediate
tears sprang into her eyes.
“Abie! Abie!”
“Mamma, look how happy you should
be! Ain’t you always wanted a daughter,
mamma? For joy she cries, Ruby.”
“Abie, my boy! Ach, Miss Cohn, you must
excuse me.”
“Aw, now, mamma, don’t
cry so. Look! You make my shoulder all wet shame
on you! You should laugh like never in your life!
Ruby, you and mamma kiss right away you
should get to know each other now.”
“Ach, Miss Cohn, you
must excuse me. I always told him I mustn’t
stand in his way; but what that boy is to me, Miss
Cohn what what ”
“Ruby mamma, call
her Ruby. Ain’t she your little Ruby as
much as mine now, ain’t she?”
“Yes; come here, Ruby, and let
me kiss you. Since poor papa’s gone you
can never know what that boy has been to me, Ruby such
a son; not out of the house would he go without me!
It’s like I was giving away my heart to give
him up like I was tearing it right out from
inside of me! Ach, but how glad I am for him!”
“Aw, mamma like you was giving me
up!”
Mr. Ginsburg swallowed with such difficulty
that the tears sprang into his eyes.
“I ain’t taking him away
from you, Mrs. Ginsburg he’s your
son as much as ever and more.”
“Call her mamma, Ruby just like I
do.”
“Mamma! Just don’t
you worry, mamma; it’s going to be grand for
you and me and all of us.”
“Hear her, mamma, how she talks!
Ain’t she a girl for you?”
“You you children
mustn’t mind me I’m an old woman.
You go in the front room, and I’ll be all right
in a minute so happy I am for my boy.
You bad boy, you not to tell your mamma
the other night!”
“Mamma, so help me, I didn’t
know it myself till I seen her come back to-day so
pretty, and all I just felt it inside of
me all of a sudden.”
“Aw, Abe ain’t
he the silly talker, Mrs. Ginsburg? mamma!
You mustn’t cry, mamma; we’ll make it
grand for you.”
“Ain’t I the silly one
myself to cry when I’m so happy for you?
I’ll be all right in a minute so
happy I am!”
“Ruby, you tell mamma how grand it’ll
be.”
Miss Cohn placed her arms about Mrs.
Ginsburg’s neck, stood on tiptoe, and kissed
her on the tear-wet lips.
“You always got a home with
us, mamma. Me and Abie wouldn’t be engaged
this minute if it wasn’t that you would always
have a home with us.”
With one swoop Mr. Ginsburg gathered
the two women in a mutual embrace that strained his
arms from their sockets; his voice was taut, like one
who talks through a throat that aches.
“My little mamma and my little Ruby ain’t
it?”
Mrs. Ginsburg dried her eyes on a
corner of her apron and smiled at them with fresh
tears forming instantly.
“He’s been a good boy,
Ruby. I only want that he should make just so
good a husband. I always said the girl that gets
him does well enough for herself. I don’t
want to brag on my own child, but if ”
“Aw, mamma!”
“But, if I do say it myself, he’s been
a good boy to his mother.”
“Now, mamma, don’t begin ”
“I always said to him, Ruby,
looks in a girl don’t count the most such
girls as you see nowadays, with their big ideas, ain’t
worth house-room. I always say to him, Ruby,
a girl that ain’t ashamed to work and knows
the value of a dollar, and can help a young man save
and get a start without such big ideas like apartments
and dummy waiters ”
“Honest, wouldn’t you
think this was a funeral! Mamma, to-night we have
a party not? I go down and get up that
bottle of wine!”
“Himmel! My Pfannkuechen!
Yes, Abie, run down in the cellar; on the top shelf
it is, under the grape-jelly row left yet
from poor papa’s last birthday. Ach,
Ruby, you should have known poor papa that
such a man could have been taken before his time!
Sit down, Ruby, while I dish up.”
The tears dried on Mrs. Ginsburg’s
cheeks, leaving the ravages of dry paths down them;
Mr. Ginsburg’s footsteps clacked down the bare
flight of stairs.
“Abie! Oh, Abie!”
“Yes, mamma!”
His voice came up remotely from two
flights down, like a banshee voice drifting through
a yellow sheol of dim-lit hallway.
“Abe, bring up some dill pickles
from the jar there’s a dish in the
closet.”
“Yes, I bring them.”
Between the two women fell silence a
silence that in its brief moment spawned the eggs
of a thousand unborn thoughts.
From her corner the girl regarded
the older woman with a nervous diffidence, her small,
black-satin feet curled well inward and round the
rungs of the chair.
“I I hope you ain’t
mad at me, Mrs. Ginsburg you ain’t
more surprised than me.”
A note as thin as sheet tin crept
into Mrs. Ginsburg’s voice.
“He’s my boy, Ruby, and
what he wants I want. I know you ain’t the
kind of a girl, Ruby, that won’t help my boy
along not? Extravagant ways and high
living never got a young couple nowheres. Abie
should take out a thousand more life insurance now;
and, with economical ways, you got a grand future.
For myself I don’t care I ain’t
so young any more, and ”
“You always got a home with
us, Mrs. Ginsburg. You won’t know yourself,
you’ll have it so good! If we move you with
us out of this dark little flat we you
won’t know yourself, you’ll have it so
good!”
“I hope you ain’t starting
out with no big ideas, Ruby this flat ain’t
so dark but it could be worse. For young people
with good eyes it should do all right. If it
was good enough for Abie’s papa and me it ”
Mr. Ginsburg burst into the kitchen,
a wine-bottle tucked under one arm and a white china
dish held at arm’s-length.
“Such pickles as mamma makes,
Ruby, you never tasted! You should learn how.
You two can get out here in the kitchen, with your
sleeves rolled up to your elbows, and such housekeeping
times you can have! I’ll get dill down
by Anchute’s like last year not, mamma?...
Come; we sit down now. We can all eat in the
kitchen, mamma. Don’t make company out of
Ruby she knows we got a front room to eat
in if we want it. Come and sit down, Ruby, across
from mamma, so we get used to it right away sit
here, you little Ruby-la, you!”
Mr. Ginsburg exuded radiance like
August bricks exude the heat of day. He kissed
Miss Cohn playfully under the pink lobe of each ear
and repeated the performance beneath Mrs. Ginsburg’s
not so pink lobes; carved the gravy-oozing slices
of pot-roast with a hand that was no less skilful
because it trembled under pressure of a sublime agitation.
“Ruby, I learn you right away we
always got to save mamma the heel of the bread, ’cause
she likes it.”
Miss Cohn smiled and regarded Mr.
Ginsburg from the left corner of each eye.
“I wasn’t so slow learning
the shoe business, was I, Abe?”
“You look at me so cute-like,
and I’ll come over to you right this minute!
Look at her, mamma, how she flirts with me just
like it wasn’t all settled.”
“Abie, pass Ruby the beans.
Honest, for a beau, you don’t know nothing your
papa was a better beau as you. Pass her the beans.
Don’t you see she ain’t got none?
You two with your love-making! You remind me
of me and poor papa; he he ”
“Now, mamma, don’t you
go getting sad again like a funeral.”
“I ain’t, Abie. I’m so
happy for you.”
“To-night we just play, and
to-morrow mamma decides when we get married not,
Ruby? We do like she wants it to-night
we just play. Ruby, pass your glass and mamma’s,
and we drink to our three selves with claret.”
Mr. Ginsburg poured with agitated
hand, and the red in his face mounted even as the
wine in the glass.
“To the two grandest women in
the world! May we all be happy and prosperous
from to-night!” Mr. Ginsburg swung his right
arm far from him and brought his glass round to his
lips in a grand semi-circle. “To the two
grandest women in the world!”
Mrs. Ginsburg tipped the glass against her lips.
“To my two children! God bless them and
poor papa!”
“The first time I ever seen
mamma drink wine, Ruby. She hates it that
shows how much she likes you already. Eat your
dessert, mamma; it’ll take the taste away.
You like noodle dumplings? Such dumplings as these
you should learn to make, Ruby-la.”
“Children, you have had enough supper?”
“It was a grand supper, mamma.”
They scraped their chairs backward
from the table and smiled satiated, soul-deep smiles.
From the sitting-room a clock chimed the half-hour.
“So late, children! Ach,
how time flies when there’s excitement!
You and Ruby go in the parlor I do the
dishes so quick you won’t know it.”
“Ruby can help you with the dishes, mamma.”
“Sure I can; we can do ’em
in a hurry, and then go maybe to a picture show or
some place.”
“Picture show nine o’clock!”
“There’s always two shows,
Mrs. Ginsburg the second don’t begin
till then. I always go to the second show it’s
always the liveliest.”
“Come on, mamma; you and Ruby
do the dishes, and we go. It’s a grand
night, and for once late hours won’t hurt you.”
“Ach, you ain’t
got no time for a old lady like me in the
night air I get rheumatism. Abie can tell you
how on cool nights like this I get rheumatism.
You two children go. I’m sleepy already.
These few dishes I can do quicker as with you, Ruby.”
“Without you we don’t go me
and Ruby won’t go then.”
“We won’t go, then, like Abe says we
won’t go then.”
“Abie, if it pleases me that
you go to the picture show for an hour you
can do that much for mamma the first night you’re
engaged; some other night maybe I go too. Let
me stay at home, Abie, and get my sleep like always.”
“Ah, mamma, you’re afraid.
I know you even get scared when the bed-post creaks.
We stay home, too.”
“Ruby, for me will you make him go?”
“Abie, if your mamma wants you
to go for an hour you go. If she comes,
too, we’re glad; but many a night I’ve
stayed in the boarding-house alone. If you was
afraid you’d say so wouldn’t
you, Mrs. Ginsburg mamma?”
“Afraid of what? Nobody won’t steal
me!”
“Sure, mamma?”
“Get Ruby’s hat and coat,
Abie. Good-by, you children, you! Have a
good time. Abie, stop with your nonsense on
the nose he has to kiss me!”
“Ruby, just as easy we can stay at home with
mamma not?”
“Sure! Aw, Abe, don’t
you know how to hold a girl’s coat? So clumsy
he is!”
“Good night, Ruby. I congratulate
you on being my daughter. Good night, Ruby you
come to-morrow.”
“Good night, mamma to-morrow I see
you.”
“Good night, mamma. In
less than an hour I be back before the clock
strikes ten. You shouldn’t make me go I
don’t like to leave you here.”
“Ach, you silly children!
I’m glad for peace by myself. Look!
I close the door right on you.”
“Good night, mamma. I be back by ten.”
“Good-by, Abie.”
“What?”
“Good night, children!”
When the clock in the parlor struck
eleven Mrs. Ginsburg wiped dry her last dish, flapped
out her damp dish-towel, and hung it over a cord stretched
diagonally across a corner of the kitchen. Then
she closed the cupboard door on the rows of still
warm dishes, slammed down the window and locked it,
reached up, turned out the gas, and groped into her
adjoining bedroom.
Reflected light from the Maginty kitchen
lay in an oblong on the floor and climbed half-way
on the bed. By aid of the yellow oblong Mrs.
Ginsburg undressed slowly and like a withered Suzanne,
who dared not blush through her wrinkles.
The black wrapper, with empty arms
dangling, she spread across a chair, and atop of it
a black cotton petticoat, sans all the gentle mysteries
of lace and frill. Lastly, beside the bed, in
the very attitude of the service of love, she placed
her shoes expressive shoes, swollen from
swollen joints, and full of the capacity for labor.
Then Mrs. Ginsburg climbed into bed,
knees first, threw backward over the foot-board the
blue-and-white coverlet, and drew the sheet up about
her. A fresh-as-water breeze blew inward the lace
curtain, admitting a streak of light across her eyes
and a merry draught about her head. The parlor
clock tonged the half-hour.
Silence for a while, then the black
rush of a train, an intermittent little plaint like
the chirrup of a bird in its cage, the squeak of a
bed-post, and a succession of the unimportant noises
that belong solely to the mystery of night.
Finally, from under the sheet, the
tremolo of a moan the sob of a heart that
aches and, aching, dares not break.