By some trivial chance, she hardly
knew what, Mary found herself one day conversing at
her own door with the woman whom she and her husband
had once smiled at for walking the moonlit street
with her hand in willing and undisguised captivity.
She was a large and strong, but extremely neat, well-spoken,
and good-looking Irish woman, who might have seemed
at ease but for a faintly betrayed ambition.
She praised with rather ornate English
the good appearance and convenient smallness of Mary’s
house; said her own was the same size. That person
with whom she sometimes passed “of a Sundeh” yes,
and moonlight evenings that was her husband.
He was “ferst ingineeur” on a steam-boat.
There was a little, just discernible waggle in her
head as she stated things. It gave her decided
character.
“Ah! engineer,” said Mary.
“Ferst ingineeur,”
repeated the woman; “you know there bees ferst
ingineeurs, an’ secón’ ingineeurs,
an’ therd ingineeurs. Yes.” She
unconsciously fanned herself with a dust-pan that she
had just bought from a tin peddler.
She lived only some two or three hundred
yards away, around the corner, in a tidy little cottage
snuggled in among larger houses in Coliseum street.
She had had children, but she had lost them; and Mary’s
sympathy when she told her of them the girl
and two boys won the woman as much as the
little lady’s pretty manners had dazed her.
It was not long before she began to drop in upon Mary
in the hour of twilight, and sit through it without
speaking often, or making herself especially interesting
in any way, but finding it pleasant, notwithstanding.
“John,” said Mary, her
husband had come in unexpectedly, “our
neighbor, Mrs. Riley.”
John’s bow was rather formal,
and Mrs. Riley soon rose and said good-evening.
“John,” said the wife
again, laying her hands on his shoulders as she tiptoed
to kiss him, “what troubles you?” Then
she attempted a rallying manner: “Don’t
my friends suit you?”
He hesitated only an instant, and said:
“Oh, yes, that’s all right!”
“Well, then, I don’t see why you look
so.”
“I’ve finished the task I was to do.”
“What! you haven’t”
“I’m out of employment.”
They went and sat down on the little
hair-cloth sofa that Mrs. Riley had just left.
“I thought they said they would have other work
for you.”
“They said they might have; but it seems they
haven’t.”
“And it’s just in the
opening of summer, too,” said Mary; “why,
what right”
“Oh!” a despairing
gesture and averted gaze “they’ve
a perfect right if they think best. I asked them
that myself at first not too politely,
either; but I soon saw I was wrong.”
They sat without speaking until it
had grown quite dark. Then John said, with a
long breath, as he rose:
“It passes my comprehension.”
“What passes it?” asked Mary, detaining
him by one hand.
“The reason why we are so pursued by misfortunes.”
“But, John,” she said,
still holding him, “is it misfortune?
When I know so well that you deserve to succeed, I
think maybe it’s good fortune in disguise, after
all. Don’t you think it’s possible?
You remember how it was last time, when A., B., &
Co. failed. Maybe the best of all is to come
now!” She beamed with courage. “Why,
John, it seems to me I’d just go in the very
best of spirits, the first thing to-morrow, and tell
Dr. Sevier you are looking for work. Don’t
you think it might”
“I’ve been there.”
“Have you? What did he say?”
“He wasn’t in.”
There was another neighbor, with whom
John and Mary did not get acquainted. Not that
it was more his fault than theirs; it may have been
less. Unfortunately for the Richlings there was
in their dwelling no toddling, self-appointed child
commissioner to find his way in unwatched moments
to the play-ground of some other toddler, and so plant
the good seed of neighbor acquaintanceship.
This neighbor passed four times a
day. A man of fortune, aged a hale sixty or so,
who came and stood on the corner, and sometimes even
rested a foot on Mary’s door-step, waiting for
the Prytania omnibus, and who, on his returns, got
down from the omnibus step a little gingerly, went
by Mary’s house, and presently shut himself inside
a very ornamental iron gate, a short way up St. Mary
street. A child would have made him acquainted.
Even as it was, they did not escape his silent notice.
It was pleasant for him, from whose life the early
dew had been dried away by a well-risen sun, to recall
its former freshness by glimpses of this pair of young
beginners. It was like having a bird’s nest
under his window.
John, stepping backward from his door
one day, saying a last word to his wife, who stood
on the threshold, pushed against this neighbor as he
was moving with somewhat cumbersome haste to catch
the stage, turned quickly, and raised his hat.
“Pardon!”
The other uncovered his bald head
and circlet of white, silken locks, and hurried on
to the conveyance.
“President of one of the banks
down-town,” whispered John.
That is the nearest they ever came
to being acquainted. And even this accident might
not have occurred had not the man of snowy locks been
glancing at Mary as he passed instead of at his omnibus.
As he sat at home that evening he remarked:
“Very pretty little woman that,
my dear, that lives in the little house at the corner;
who is she?”
The lady responded, without lifting
her eyes from the newspaper in which she was interested;
she did not know. The husband mused and twirled
his penknife between a finger and thumb.
“They seem to be starting at the bottom,”
he observed.
“Yes?”
“Yes; much the same as we did.”
“I haven’t noticed them particularly.”
“They’re worth noticing,” said the
banker.
He threw one fat knee over the other,
and laid his head on the back of his easy-chair.
The lady’s eyes were still on her paper, but
she asked:
“Would you like me to go and see them?”
“No, no unless you wish.”
She dropped the paper into her lap with a smile and
a sigh.
“Don’t propose it.
I have so much going to do” She paused,
removed her glasses, and fell to straightening the
fringe of the lamp-mat. “Of course, if
you think they’re in need of a friend; but from
your description”
“No,” he answered, quickly,
“not at all. They’ve friends, no doubt.
Everything about them has a neat, happy look.
That’s what attracted my notice. They’ve
got friends, you may depend.” He ceased,
took up a pamphlet, and adjusted his glasses.
“I think I saw a sofa going in there to-day
as I came to dinner. A little expansion, I suppose.”
“It was going out,” said the only son,
looking up from a story-book.
But the banker was reading. He
heard nothing, and the word was not repeated.
He did not divine that a little becalmed and befogged
bark, with only two lovers in her, too proud to cry
“Help!” had drifted just yonder upon the
rocks, and, spar by spar and plank by plank, was dropping
into the smooth, unmerciful sea.
Before the sofa went there had gone,
little by little, some smaller valuables.
“You see,” said Mary to
her husband, with the bright hurry of a wife bent
upon something high-handed, “we both have to
have furniture; we must have it; and I don’t
have to have jewelry. Don’t you see?”
“No, I”
“Now, John!” There could
be but one end to the debate; she had determined that.
The first piece was a bracelet. “No, I wouldn’t
pawn it,” she said. “Better sell
it outright at once.”
But Richling could not but cling to
hope and to the adornments that had so often clasped
her wrists and throat or pinned the folds upon her
bosom. Piece by piece he pawned them, always looking
out ahead with strained vision for the improbable,
the incredible, to rise to his relief.
“Is nothing going to happen, Mary?”
Yes; nothing happened except in the pawn-shop.
So, all the sooner, the sofa had to go.
“It’s no use talking about
borrowing,” they both said. Then the bureau
went. Then the table. Then, one by one, the
chairs. Very slyly it was all done, too.
Neighbors mustn’t know. “Who lives
there?” is a question not asked concerning houses
as small as theirs; and a young man, in a well-fitting
suit of only too heavy goods, removing his winter hat
to wipe the standing drops from his forehead; and
a little blush-rose woman at his side, in a mist of
cool muslin and the cunningest of millinery, these,
who always paused a moment, with a lost look, in the
vestibule of the sepulchral-looking little church on
the corner of Prytania and Josephine streets, till
the sexton ushered them in, and who as often contrived,
with no end of ingenuity, despite the little woman’s
fresh beauty, to get away after service unaccosted
by the elders, who could imagine that these
were from so deep a nook in poverty’s vale?
There was one person who guessed it:
Mrs. Riley, who was not asked to walk in any more
when she called at the twilight hour. She partly
saw and partly guessed the truth, and offered what
each one of the pair had been secretly hoping somebody,
anybody, would offer a loan. But when
it actually confronted them it was sweetly declined.
“Wasn’t it kind?”
said Mary; and John said emphatically, “Yes.”
Very soon it was their turn to be kind to Mrs. Riley.
They attended her husband’s funeral. He
had been killed by an explosion. Mrs. Riley beat
upon the bier with her fists, and wailed in a far-reaching
voice:
“O Mike, Mike! Me jew’l,
me jew’l! Why didn’t ye wait to see
the babe that’s unborn?”
And Mary wept. And when she and
John reentered their denuded house she fell upon his
neck with fresh tears, and kissed him again and again,
and could utter no word, but knew he understood.
Poverty was so much better than sorrow! She held
him fast, and he her, while he tenderly hushed her,
lest a grief, the very opposite of Mrs. Riley’s,
should overtake her.