Ristofalo and Richling had hardly
separated, when it occurred to the latter that the
Italian had first touched him from behind. Had
Ristofalo recognized him with his back turned, or
had he seen him earlier and followed him? The
facts were these: about an hour before the time
when Richling omitted to apply for employment in the
ill-smelling store in Tchoupitoulas street, Mr. Raphael
Ristofalo halted in front of the same place, which
appeared small and slovenly among its more pretentious
neighbors, and stepped just inside the door
to where stood a single barrel of apples, a
fruit only the earliest varieties of which were beginning
to appear in market. These were very small, round,
and smooth, and with a rather wan blush confessed
to more than one of the senses that they had seen
better days. He began to pick them up and throw
them down one, two, three, four, seven,
ten; about half of them were entirely sound.
“How many barrel’ like this?”
“No got-a no more; dass
all,” said the dealer. He was a Sicilian.
“Lame duck,” he added. “Oael
de rest gone.”
“How much?” asked Ristofalo, still handling
the fruit.
The Sicilian came to the barrel, looked
in, and said, with a gesture of indifference:
“‘M doll’ an’ ’alf.”
Ristofalo offered to take them at
a dollar if he might wash and sort them under the
dealer’s hydrant, which could be heard running
in the back yard. The offer would have been rejected
with rude scorn but for one thing: it was spoken
in Italian. The man looked at him with pleased
surprise, and made the concession. The porter
of the store, in a red worsted cap, had drawn near.
Ristofalo bade him roll the barrel on its chine to
the rear and stand it by the hydrant.
“I will come back pretty soon,” he said,
in Italian, and went away.
By and by he returned, bringing with
him two swarthy, heavy-set, little Sicilian lads,
each with his inevitable basket and some clean rags.
A smile and gesture to the store-keeper, a word to
the boys, and in a moment the barrel was upturned,
and the pair were washing, wiping, and sorting the
sound and unsound apples at the hydrant.
Ristofalo stood a moment in the entrance
of the store. The question now was where to get
a dollar. Richling passed, looked in, seemed to
hesitate, went on, turned, and passed again, the other
way. Ristofalo saw him all the time and recognized
him at once, but appeared not to observe him.
“He will do,” thought
the Italian. “Be back few minute’,”
he said, glancing behind him.
“Or-r righ’,” said
the store-keeper, with a hand-wave of good-natured
confidence. He recognized Mr. Raphael Ristofalo’s
species.
The Italian walked up across Poydras
street, saw Richling stop and look at the machinery,
approached, and touched him on the shoulder.
On parting with him he did not return
to the store where he had left the apples. He
walked up Tchoupitoulas street about a mile, and where
St. Thomas street branches acutely from it, in a squalid
district full of the poorest Irish, stopped at a dirty
fruit-stand and spoke in Spanish to its Catalan proprietor.
Half an hour later twenty-five cents had changed hands,
the Catalan’s fruit shelves were bright with
small pyramids sound side foremost of
Ristofalo’s second grade of apples, the Sicilian
had Richling’s dollar, and the Italian was gone
with his boys and his better grade of fruit.
Also, a grocer had sold some sugar, and a druggist
a little paper of some harmless confectioner’s
dye.
Down behind the French market, in
a short, obscure street that runs from Ursulines
to Barracks street, and is named in honor of Albert
Gallatin, are some old buildings of three or four
stories’ height, rented, in John Richling’s
day, to a class of persons who got their livelihood
by sub-letting the rooms, and parts of rooms, to the
wretchedest poor of New Orleans, organ-grinders,
chimney-sweeps, professional beggars, street musicians,
lemon-peddlers, rag-pickers, with all the yet dirtier
herd that live by hook and crook in the streets or
under the wharves; a room with a bed and stove, a
room without, a half-room with or without ditto, a
quarter-room with or without a blanket or quilt, and
with only a chalk-mark on the floor instead of a partition.
Into one of these went Mr. Raphael Ristofalo, the
two boys, and the apples. Whose assistance or
indulgence, if any, he secured in there is not recorded;
but when, late in the afternoon, the Italian issued
thence the boys, meanwhile, had been coming
and going an unusual luxury had been offered
the roustabouts and idlers of the steam-boat landings,
and many had bought and eaten freely of the very small,
round, shiny, sugary, and artificially crimson roasted
apples, with neatly whittled white-pine stems to poise
them on as they were lifted to the consumer’s
watering teeth. When, the next morning Richling
laughed at the story, the Italian drew out two dollars
and a half, and began to take from it a dollar.
“But you have last night’s
lodging and so forth yet to pay for.”
“No. Made friends with
Sicilian luggerman. Slept in his lugger.”
He showed his brow and cheeks speckled with mosquito-bites.
“Ate little hard-tack and coffee with him this
morning. Don’t want much.” He
offered the dollar with a quarter added. Richling
declined the bonus.
“But why not?”
“Oh, I just couldn’t do it,” laughed
Richling; “that’s all.”
“Well,” said the Italian,
“lend me that dollar one day more, I return
you dollar and half in its place to-morrow.”
The lender had to laugh again.
“You can’t find an odd barrel of damaged
apples every day.”
“No. No apples to-day.
But there’s regiment soldiers at lower landing;
whole steam-boat load; going to sail this evenin’
to Florida. They’ll eat whole barrel hard-boil’
eggs.” And they did. When they
sailed, the Italian’s pocket was stuffed with
small silver.
Richling received his dollar and fifty
cents. As he did so, “I would give, if
I had it, a hundred dollars for half your art,”
he said, laughing unevenly. He was beaten, surpassed,
humbled. Still he said, “Come, don’t
you want this again? You needn’t pay me
for the use of it.”
But the Italian refused. He had
outgrown his patron. A week afterward Richling
saw him at the Picayune Tier, superintending the unloading
of a small schooner-load of bananas. He had bought
the cargo, and was reselling to small fruiterers.
“Make fifty dolla’ to-day,”
said the Italian, marking his tally-board with a piece
of chalk.
Richling clapped him joyfully on the
shoulder, but turned around with inward distress and
hurried away. He had not found work.
Events followed of which we have already
taken knowledge. Mary, we have seen, fell sick
and was taken to the hospital.
“I shall go mad!” Richling
would moan, with his dishevelled brows between his
hands, and then start to his feet, exclaiming, “I
must not! I must not! I must keep my senses!”
And so to the commercial regions or to the hospital.
Dr. Sevier, as we know, left word
that Richling should call and see him; but when he
called, a servant very curtly, it seemed
to him said the Doctor was not well and
didn’t want to see anybody. This was enough
for a young man who hadn’t his senses.
The more he needed a helping hand the more unreasonably
shy he became of those who might help him.
“Will nobody come and find us?”
Yet he would not cry “Whoop!” and how,
then, was anybody to come?
Mary returned to the house again (ah!
what joys there are in the vale of tribulation!),
and grew strong, stronger, she averred,
than ever she had been.
“And now you’ll not
be cast down, will you?” she said, sliding
into her husband’s lap. She was in an uncommonly
playful mood.
“Not a bit of it,” said
John. “Every dog has his day. I’ll
come to the top. You’ll see.”
“Don’t I know that?”
she responded, “Look here, now,” she exclaimed,
starting to her feet and facing him, “I’ll
recommend you to anybody. I’ve got confidence
in you!” Richling thought she had never looked
quite so pretty as at that moment. He leaped from
his chair with a laughing ejaculation, caught and
swung her an instant from her feet, and landed her
again before she could cry out. If, in retort,
she smote him so sturdily that she had to retreat
backward to rearrange her shaken coil of hair, it
need not go down on the record; such things will happen.
The scuffle and suppressed laughter were detected even
in Mrs. Riley’s room.
“Ah!” sighed the widow
to herself, “wasn’t it Kate Riley that
used to get the sweet, haird knocks!” Her grief
was mellowing.
Richling went out on the old search,
which the advancing summer made more nearly futile
each day than the day before.
Stop. What sound was that?
“Richling! Richling!”
Richling, walking in a commercial
street, turned. A member of the firm that had
last employed him beckoned him to halt.
“What are you doing now, Richling?
Still acting deputy assistant city surveyor pro
tem.?”
“Yes.”
“Well, see here! Why haven’t
you been in the store to see us lately? Did I
seem a little preoccupied the last time you called?”
“I” Richling
dropped his eyes with an embarrassed smile “I
was afraid I was in the way or should
be.”
“Well and suppose you were?
A man that’s looking for work must put himself
in the way. But come with me. I think I may
be able to give you a lift.”
“How’s that?” asked
Richling, as they started off abreast.
“There’s a house around
the corner here that will give you some work, temporary
anyhow, and may be permanent.”
So Richling was at work again, hidden
away from Dr. Sevier between journal and ledger.
His employers asked for references. Richling looked
dismayed for a moment, then said, “I’ll
bring somebody to recommend me,” went away,
and came back with Mary.
“All the recommendation I’ve
got,” said he, with timid elation. There
was a laugh all round.
“Well, madam, if you say he’s
all right, we don’t doubt he is!”