Uncle William sniffed the air of the
docks with keen relish. The spring warmth had
brought out the smells of lower New York teemingly.
There was a dash of salt air and tar, and a dim odor
of floating of decayed vegetables and engine-grease
and dirt. It was the universal port-smell the
world over, and Uncle William took it in in leisurely
whiffs as he watched the play of life in the dockshed the
backing of horses and the shouting of the men, the
hollow sound of hoofs on the worn planks and the trundling
hither and thither of boxes and barrels and bales.
He was in no hurry to leave the dock.
It was a part of the journey the sense
of leisure. Men who travel habitually by sea do
not rush from the vessel that has brought them to
port, gripsack in hand. There are innumerable
details duties, inspections and quarantines,
and delays and questionings. The sea gives up
her cargo slowly. The customs move with the swift
leisure of those who live daily between Life and the
Deep Sea without hurry and without rest.
Uncle William watched it all in good-humored
detachment. He made friends with half the shed,
wandering in and out through the crowd, his great
bulk towering above it. Here and there he helped
a fat, heavy baby down the length of the shed, or
lifted aside a big box that blocked the way.
He might have been the Presiding Genius of the place.
Men took him in with a good-humored wink, as he towered
along, and women looked after him gratefully.
Amid the bustle and enforced waiting, he was the only
soul at rest. Time belonged to him. He was
at home. He had played his part in similar scenes
in hundreds of ports. The city bubbling and calling
outside had no bewilderments for Uncle William.
New York was only one more foreign port, and he had
touched too many to have fear of them. They were
all alike exorbitant cab-men, who came down
on their fare if you stood by your box and refused
to let it be lifted till terms were made; rum-shops
and gambling-holes, and worse, hedging the way from
the wharf; soiled women haunting one’s steps,
if one halted a bit or turned to the right or left
in indecision. He had talked with women of every
port. They were a huge band, a great sisterhood
that reached thin hands about the earth, touching
it with shame; and they congregated most where the
rivers empty their burden of filth into the sea.
Uncle William knew them well. He could steer
a safe path among them; and he could turn a young
man, hesitating, with foolish, confident smile on his
face. Uncle William had not been in New York
for twelve years, but he had a sailor’s unerring
instinct for the dangers and the comforts of a port.
He knew which way hell lay, and which of the drivers,
backing and cursing and calling, one could trust.
He signaled to one with his eye.
“What’ll ye charge to
give this young feller a lift?” Uncle William
indicated the youth beside him.
The driver looked him over with keen
eye. “That’s all right.”
He moved along on the seat to make room. “Come
on, young man.”
The youth climbed up with clumsy foot.
“You might know of a job,”
suggested Uncle William. “He looks strong
and willin’.”
The man nodded back. “I’ll
keep an eye on him, sir.” The van rumbled
away and Uncle William faced the crowed once more.
He made friends as he moved among
the throngs of hurrying men and women. Men who
never saw him again recalled his face sometimes at
night, as they wakened for a minute from sleep.
The big smile reached to them across time and gave
them a sense of the goodness of life before they turned
again and slept.
If he had been a little man, Uncle
William would still have run hither and thither through
the crowd, a kind of gnome of usefulness. But
his great frame gave him advantage. He was like
a mountain among them with the breath of
winds about it or some huge, quiet engine
at sea, making its way with throbbing power.
If the thought of the artist crossed
Uncle William’s mind, it did not disturb him.
He was accustomed to do what he called his duty; and
it had for him the simplicity, common to big men,
of being the thing next at hand. Like a force
of nature he laid hold on it, and out of the ground
and the sky and the thrill of life, he wrought beauty
upon it. If this were philosophy or religion,
Uncle William did not know it. He called it “jest
livin’ along.”
It was ten o’clock before he
reached the artist’s rooms, and his rap at the
door, gentle as a woman’s, brought no response.
He rapped again.
“What’s wanted?”
It was the querulous voice of a sick man.
Uncle William set the door ajar with
his foot while he reached behind him for his box.
The artist had sprung up in bed and
was staring at the door. In the dim light from
the street below, his face stood out rigidly white.
Uncle William looked at it kindly
as he came across. “There, there,”
he said soothingly. “I guess I’d
lie down.” He put his hands on the young
man’s shoulders, pushing him back gently.
The artist yielded to the touch, staring
at him with wide eyes. “Who are you?”
he said. The words were a whisper.
Uncle Williams’ smile deepened.
“I guess ye know me all right, don’t
ye?”
The artist continued to stare at him.
“You came through the door. It was locked.”
“Shucks, no!” said Uncle
William. “’T wa’n’t locked
any more’n I be. You jest forgot it.”
“Did I?” The tense look
broke. “I thought you had come again.”
“Well, I hev.”
“I don’t mean that way. Sit down.”
He looked feebly for a chair.
Uncle William had drawn one up to
the bed. He sat down, bending forward a little.
One big hand rested on the young man’s wrist.
“Now, tell me all about it,” he said quietly.
The artist raised his eyes with a
smile. He drew a deep breath. “Yes you’ve
come,” he said. “You’ve come.”
“I’ve come,” said
Uncle William. His big bulk had not stirred.
It seemed to fill the room.
The sick man rested in it. His
eyes closed. “I’ve wanted you.”
Uncle William nodded. “Sick folks get fancies,”
he said.
“ and I kept seeing
you in the fever and you ”
The voice droned away and was still.
Uncle William sat quiet, one hand
on the thin wrist. The galloping pulse slowed and
leaped again and fluttered, and fell at
last to even beats. The tense muscles relaxed.
The parted lips closed with a half-smile.
Uncle William bent forward, watching
it. In the dim light of the room, his face had
a kind of gentleness a kindliness and bigness
that watched over the night and reached out beyond
it to the ends of the earth.