It was a green land in which she woke.
The leaves were just putting forth their feathery
fronds of foliage, and the shorn lawns, the waving
floods of growing wheat, and the smooth slopes of pastures
presented pleasant pictures to the mountain-born girl.
These thickly peopled farm-lands, the almost contiguous
villages, the constant passing of trains roused in
her a surprise and wonder which left her silent.
Such weight of human life, such swarming populations,
appalled her. How did they all live?
At breakfast Haney was in unusual
flow of spirits. “’Twas here I rode the
trucks of a freight-car,” he said once and again.
“In this town I slept all night on a bench in
the depot.... I know every tie from here to Syracuse.
I wonder is the station agent living yet. ’Twould
warm me heart to toss him out ten dollars for that
night’s lodging. Them was the great days!
In Syracuse I worked for a livery-stableman as hostler,
and I would have gone hungry but for the scullion
Maggie. Cross-eyed was Maggie, but her heart
beat warm for the lad in the loft, and many’s
the plates of beef and bowls of hot soup she handed
to me poor girl! I’d like to
know where she is; had I the power of locomotion I’d
look her up, too.”
Again Bertha was brought face to face
with the great sacrifice she was obscurely contemplating.
The magic potency of money was brought before her
eyes as she contrasted the ragged, homeless boy with
the man who sat beside her. The fact that he
had not earned the money only made its magic the more
clearly inherent in the gold itself. It panoplied
the thief’s carriage. It made dwarfs admirable,
and gave dignity and honor to the lowly. It made
it possible for Marshall Haney to retrace in royal
splendor the perilous and painful journey he had made
into the West some thirty years ago rewarding
with regal generosity those who threw him a broken
steak or a half-eaten roll and she could
imaginatively enter into the exquisite pleasure this
largess gave the man.
“And there was Father McBreen,”
he resumed, with a chuckle “’sure
the mark of Satan is on the b’y,’ he used
to say every time my mother told him of one of my
divilments. And he was right. All the same,
I’d like to drop in on him and surprise him
with a check” at the moment he forgot
that he was old and a cripple “just
to let him know the divil hadn’t claimed me
yet. I’d like to show him me wife.”
He put his hand on her arm and smiled. “Sure
the old man would revise his prediction could he see
you; he might say the divil had got you but
he couldn’t pity me.”
She turned him aside from this by
saying: “I reckon New York is a great deal
bigger than Chicago. Mr. Moss says it makes any
other town seem like a county seat. I’m
dead leery of it. I want to see it, but it just
naturally locoes me to think of it.”
“’Tis the only place to
spend money so the boys tell me. I’ve
never been there but once, and then only for three
days. I went on to get a man when I was sheriff
in San Juan. I saw it then mostly as a wonderful
fine swamp to lose a thief in.”
“Did you get your man?” she asked, with
formal interest.
“I did so and nearly
died for want of sleep on the way home; he was a desprit
character, was black Hosay; but I linked him to me
arm and tuck chances.”
Once she had listened to these stories
with eager interest; now they were but empty boasting so
deeply inwrought was her soul with matters that more
nearly concerned her woman’s need and woman’s
nature. The potency of gold! could
any magic be greater? They lived like folk in
a flying palace (with books and papers, easy-chairs
and card-tables), eating carefully cooked meals, served
by attendants as considerate and as constant as those
at their own fireside. The broad windows gave
streaming panorama of town and country, hill and river,
and the young wife accepted it all with the haughty
air of one who is wearied with splendor, but inwardly
the knowledge that it all came to Haney (as to her)
unearned troubled her. Luck was his God, but she,
while accepting from him these marvellous, shining
gifts, had another God one derived from
her Saxon ancestors, one to whom luxury was akin to
harlotry.
They left the train at Albany and
went to the best hotel in the city to spend the night.
“To-morrow I’ll see if I can find anybody
who knows where the old dad is,” said Haney.
“’Tis too late, and I’m too weary
to do it to-night.”
Bertha was tired, too mentally
wearied, and glad of a chance to be alone. She
went at once to her room, leaving the Captain and Lucius
busy with the Troy directory.
Haney set about his search next day
with the eager zeal of a lad. He took an almost
childish pleasure in displaying his good-fortune.
Through Lucius he hired an auto-car as good as the
one he had left in Chicago, and together he and Bertha
rode into his native town, up into the bleak, brick-paved
ward through which he had roamed when a cub. It
had changed, of course, as all things American must,
but it was so much the same, after all, that he could
point out the alleys where he used to toss pennies
and play cards and fight. Every corner was historic
to him. “Phil O’Brien used to keep
saloon here and I’ve earned many a
dime sweepin’ out for his barkeeper. I
was never a drunken lad,” he gravely said; “I
don’t know why I had all the chance
there was. I’ve been moderate of drink
all me life. No, I won’t say that I’ll
say I tuck it as it came, with no fear and no favor.
When playin’, I always let it alone it
spiled me nerve I let the other felly do
the drinkin’.”
Some of the signs were unchanged,
and he sent Lucius in to ask the proprietor of the
“Hoosac Market” to step out; and when he
appeared, a plump man with close-clipped gray hair
and smoothly shaven face, he shouted, “’Tis
old Otto just the man I nade. Howdy,
Otto Siegel?”
Siegel shaded his eyes and looked
up at Haney. “You haff the edventege off
me alretty.”
“I’m Mart Haney you remember
Mart Haney.”
Siegel grasped the situation.
“Sure! Vy, how you vass dis dime,
eh! Vell, vell you gome pack
in style, ain’t it? Your daughter yes?”
“My wife,” said Haney.
Siegel raised a fat arm, which a dirty
blue undershirt imperfectly draped, and Bertha shook
hands with curt politeness. “Vell, vell,
Mart, you must haff struck a cold-mine by now, hah?”
“That’s what.”
“Vell, vell! and I licked you
fer hookin’ apples off me vonce aind
dot right?”
Mart grinned. “I reckon
that’s so. I said I’d cut you in two
when I grew up; all boys say such things, but I reckon
your whalin’ did me good. But what I want
to know is this, can you tell me where to find the
old man?”
“Your fader? He’s
in Brooklyn so I heart. I don’t
know. My, my! he’ll be clad to see you ”
“You don’t know his address?”
“No, I heart he was livin’ mit your
sister Kate.”
“Donahue’s in a saloon, I reckon.”
“Always. He tondt know
nodding else. You can fint him in the directory Chon
Donahue, barkeep.”
“All right. Much obleeged.”
Haney looked around. “I don’t suppose
any of the boys are livin’ here now?”
“Von or two. Chake Schmidt
iss a boliceman, Harry Sullivan iss in te vater-vorks
department, ant a few oders. Mostly dey are scattered;
some are teadt many are teadt,” he
added, on second thought.
“Well, good-luck,” and
Haney reached down to shake hands again, and the machine
began to whiz. “Tell all the boys ‘How.’”
For half an hour they ran about the
streets at his direction, while he talked on about
his youthful joys and sorrows. “You wouldn’t
suppose a lad could have any fun in such a place as
this,” he said, musingly, “but I did.
I was a careless, go-divil pup, and had a power of
friends, and these alleys and bare brick walls were
the only play-ground we had. You can’t
cheat a boy he’s goin’ to have
a good time if he has three grains of corn in his
belly and a place to sleep when he’s tired.
I was all right till me old dad started to put me
into the factory to work; then I broke loose.
I could work for an hour or two as hard as anny one;
but a whole long day not for Mart!
Right there I decided to emigrate and grow up with
the Injuns.”
Bertha listened to his musing comment
with a new light upon his life. She had little
cause for the feeling of disgust which came to her
while studying the scenes of his boyhood her
own childhood had been almost as humble, almost as
cheerless and yet she could not prevent
a sinking at the heart. The gambler, so picturesque
in his wickedness, was becoming commonplace.
He rose from such petty conditions, after all.
Thus far the question of his family
relations had not troubled her very much, for, aside
from the chance coming of Charles, she had had little
opportunity of knowing anything about the Haneys, and
they had seemed a very long way off; but now, as she
was rushing down upon New York City, with the promise
of not only finding the father, but of taking him back
with them to live, she began to doubt. His character
was of the greatest importance, in view of his taking
a seat beside their fire.
It was singular, it was bewildering,
this change in her estimate of Marshall Haney.
The deeper he sank in reminiscent meditation the farther
he withdrew from the bold and splendid freebooter he
had once seemed to her. She was now unjust to
him for he was still capable of what his kind call
“standing pat.” The rough-and-ready
borderman was still housed under the same thatch of
hair with the sentimental old Irishman, and yet it
would have sorely puzzled the keenest observer to discover
the relationship of that handsome, rather serious-browed,
richly clothed young woman and her big, elderly, garrulous
companion. Bertha was not easy to classify, in
herself, for she gave out an air of reserve not readily
accounted for. She looked to be the well-clothed,
carefully reared American girl, but her gestures,
the silent, unsmiling way in which she received what
was said to her something indefinably alert
and self-masterful without being self-conscious gave
her a mysterious charm.
She was profoundly absorbed in the
great, historic river on her right, and yet she did
not cry out as other girls of her age would have done.
She read her folder and kept vigilant eyes upon all
the passing points of interest even as
Haney rumbled on about Charles and his father and
Kate more than half distraught by the vague
recollections she had of her school histories and
geographies. How little she knew! “I
must buckle down to some kind of study,” she
repeatedly said to herself, as if it helped her to
a more inflexible resolution.
Soon the mighty city and its fabled
sea-shore began to scare her soul with vague alarms
and exultations. Manhattan was as remote
to her as London, and as splendidly alien as Paris.
It was, indeed, both London and Paris to her.
Its millions of people appalled her. How could
so many folk live in one place?
Again the magic power of money bucklered
her. It was good to think that they were to go
to the best hotels, and that she had no need to trouble
herself about anything, for Lucius settled everything.
He telegraphed for rooms, he assembled all their baggage
and tipped their porters: and when they rushed
into the long tunnel in Harlem he was free to take
the Captain by the arm and help him to the forward
end of the car ready to alight, leaving Bertha to
follow without so much as a satchel to burden her
arm. Haney had accepted Lucius’ assurance
that the Park Palace was the smart hostelry, and to
this they drove as to some unknown inn in a foreign
capital.
It was gorgeous enough to belong in
the tale of Aladdin’s lamp a palace,
in very truth, with entrance-hall in keeping with the
glittering, roaring Avenue through which they drove,
and which was to Bertha quite as strange as a boulevard
in Berlin would have been. Lucius conducted them
into the reception-room with an air of proprietorship,
and soon had waiters, maids and bell-boys “jumping.”
His management was masterful. He knew just what
time to give each man, and just how much to say concerning
his master and mistress. He conveyed to the clerk
that while Captain Haney didn’t want any foolish
display, he liked things comfortable round him, and
the colored man’s tone, as he spoke that word
“comfortable,” was far-reaching in effect.
The best available places were put at his command.
Bertha accepted it all with cold impassivity;
it was only a little higher gloss, a little more glitter
than they had suffered in Chicago; and she was getting
used to seeing men in braid and buttons “hustle”
when she came near. The suite of rooms to which
they were conducted looked out on Fifth Avenue, as
Lucius proudly explained; and from their windows he
designated some of the houses of the millionaires who
receive the homage of the less rich (and of the very
poor) which only nobility can command in Europe.
Bertha betrayed no eager interest in these notables,
but she was very deeply impressed by the far-famed
Avenue, which was already thickening with the daily
five-o’clock parade of carriages, auto-cars,
and pedestrians.
Lucius explained this custom, and
said: “If you’d like to go out I’ll
get a car.”
“Let’s do it!” she exclaimed to
Haney.
“Sure! get one. These smell-wagons
must have been invented for cripples like me.”
Bertha took that ride in the spirit
of one who never expects to do it again, and so deeply
did the city print itself upon her memory that she
was able to recall years afterwards a hundred of its
glittering points, angles, and facets. She felt
herself up-borne by money. Without Haney’s
bank-book she would have been merely one of those minute
insects who timidly sought to cross the street, and
yet philosophers marvel at the race men make for gold!
So long as silken parasols and automobiles mad with
pride are keenly enjoyed, so long will Americans and
all others who have them not struggle for
them; for they are not only the signs of distinction
and luxury, they are delights. A private car is
not merely display; it is comfort. To have a
suite of rooms at the Park Palace is not all show;
it makes for homely ease, cleanliness, repose.
And these people riding imperiously to and fro in
Fifth Avenue buy not merely diamonds, but well-cooked
food, warm and shining raiment, and freedom from the
scramble on the pave.
Some understanding of all this was
beating home to Bertha’s head and heart.
She had as yet no keen desire for the glitter of wealth,
but its grateful shelter, its power to defend and
nurture, were qualities which had begun to make its
lure almost irresistible. Haney liked the auto-car,
not for its red and gold (which delighted Lucius),
but for its handiness in taking him about the city.
It saved him from climbing in and out of a high car
door; it was swifter and safer than a carriage; therefore,
he was ready to purchase its speed and convenience.
He cared little for the sensation he would create
in riding up to his sister’s door in Brooklyn,
though he chuckled mightily at the thought of what
his old dad would say; and as they claimed a place
among the millionaires he broke into a sly smile.
“If ever a bog-trotter landed at Castle Garden,
me father was wan o’ them. I can remember
the hat he wore. ’Twas a ‘stovepipe,’
sure enough. It had no rim at all at all!
It was fuzzy as a cat. If he didn’t have
a green vest it was a wonder. He took me to see
a play once just to show me how he did look.
He was onto his own curves, was old dad. I hope
he’s livin’ yet. I’d like to
take him up the Avenue in this car and hear the speel
he’d put up.”
Bertha was in growing uneasiness,
and when alone at the close of her wonderful ride
through this marvellous city, so clean, so vast, so
packed with stores of all things rich and beautiful,
she went to her room in a blur of doubt. Now
that an unspoken, half-formed resolution to free herself
was in her mind, she realized that every extravagance
like this ride, these gorgeous rooms, sank her deeper
into helpless indebtedness to Marshall Haney.
And this knowledge now took away the keen edge of
her delight, making her food bitter and her pillow
hot.
In the midst of her troubled thinking,
Lucius knocked at the door to ask: “Will
you go down to dinner or shall I have it sent up?”
“Oh no, I’ll go down.”
“They dress for dinner, ma’am.”
“Do they? What’ll I wear?”
He considered a moment. “Any
light silk semi-dress will do. I’ll
send a maid in to help you.”
“No, I don’t need a maid. They’re
a nuisance,” she quickly answered.
Lucius’ attitude towards her
was more than respectful it was paternal;
for she made no more secret of her early condition
than Haney, and the colored man enjoyed serving them.
He seemed perfectly happy in advising, cautioning,
directing them, and was deeply impressed with their
powers of adaptability was, in truth, developing
a genuine affection for them both. He was a lonely
little man, Bertha had learned, with no near kin in
the States, and the fact that he came from an Island
in the sea made him less of a “nigger”
to the Captain, who had the usual amount of prejudice
against both black and red men.
The high-keyed, sumptuous dining-hall
was filled with small tables exquisitely furnished,
and the carpets underfoot, thick-piled and deep-toned,
gave a singular solemnity to the function of eating.
It was a temple raised to the glory of terrapin and
“alligator pears”; and as the Captain
moved slowly across the aisles, closely attended by
a zealous waiter he smiled and said to his wife:
“This is a long ways from Sibley and the Golden
Eagle, Bertie, don’t you think?”
“It sure is,” she replied,
and her laughing lips and big pansy-purple eyes made
her seem very young and very gay again.
Around her men and women in evening
dress were feeding subduedly, while bevies of hawklike
waiters swooped and circled, bearing platters, tureens,
and baskets of iced wine-bottles. It made the
hotel at Chicago appear like a plain, old-fashioned
tavern, so remote, so European, so lavish, and yet
so exaggeratedly quiet, was this service. Some
of the women at the tables were spangled like the
queens of the stage; mainly they were not only gloriously
gowned, but in harmony with the sumptuous beauty around
them. Their adornments made Bertha feel very rural
and very shy.
“I wish I was younger,”
the Captain said, “I’d take ye to the theatre
to-night, but I’m too tired. I could go
for a couple of hours, but to miss me sleep ”
“Don’t think of it,”
she hastened to command. “I don’t
want to go. I’m just about all in, myself.”
“‘Tis a shame, darlin’,
surely it is, to keep you from havin’ a good
time just because I am an old helpless side o’
beef. ’Tis not in me heart to play dog
in the manger, Bertie. If ye’d like to go,
do so. Lucius will take ye.”
“Nit,” she curtly replied;
“you rest up, and we’ll go to-morrow night.
We might take another turn and see the town by electric
light; you could kind o’ lean back in the car
and take it easy.”
This they did; and it was more moving,
more appalling, to the girl than by day. The
fury of traffic on Broadway, the crowds of people,
the endless strings of brilliantly lighted street-cars,
the floods of ’busses, auto-cars, cabs, and
carriages poured in upon the girl’s receptive
brain a tide of perceptions of the city’s wealth,
power, and complexity of social life which amazed
while it exalted her. The idea that she might
share in all this dazzled her. “We could
live here,” she thought; “the Captain’s
income would keep us just anyway we wanted to live.”
But a vision of her own beautiful house under the shadow
of the great peak came back to reproach her.
Her horses and dogs awaited her. This tumultuous
island was only a place to visit, after all.
“Do you suppose this goes on
every night?” she said to Haney, as they turned
off Broadway.
“I reckon it does,” he
said. “How is that, Lucius?” he asked.
“Is this a special performance, or does the
old town do this every night?”
“In the season, yes, sir.
It’s the last week of the Opera, and it’ll
be quieter now till November.”
They returned to their hotel with
a sense of having touched the ultimate in civic splendor,
human pride, and social complexity. New York had
met most of their ideals. They were glad it was
on American soil and in the nation’s metropolis;
but, after all, it remained alien and mysterious,
of a rank with Paris and London the gateway
city of the nation, where the Old World meets and
mingles with the New.