No one intended to leave Martha alone
that afternoon, but it happened that everyone was
called away, for one reason or another. Mrs.
McFarland was attending the weekly card party held
by the Women’s Anti-Gambling League. Sister
Nell’s young man had called quite unexpectedly
to take her for a long drive. Papa was at the
office, as usual. It was Mary Ann’s day
out. As for Emeline, she certainly should have
stayed in the house and looked after the little girl;
but Emeline had a restless nature.
“Would you mind, miss, if I
just crossed the alley to speak a word to Mrs. Carleton’s
girl?” she asked Martha.
“’Course not,” replied
the child. “You’d better lock the
back door, though, and take the key, for I shall be
upstairs.”
“Oh, I’ll do that, of
course, miss,” said the delighted maid, and
ran away to spend the afternoon with her friend, leaving
Martha quite alone in the big house, and locked in,
into the bargain.
The little girl read a few pages in
her new book, sewed a few stitches in her embroidery
and started to “play visiting” with her
four favorite dolls. Then she remembered that
in the attic was a doll’s playhouse that hadn’t
been used for months, so she decided she would dust
it and put it in order.
Filled with this idea, the girl climbed
the winding stairs to the big room under the roof.
It was well lighted by three dormer windows and was
warm and pleasant. Around the walls were rows
of boxes and trunks, piles of old carpeting, pieces
of damaged furniture, bundles of discarded clothing
and other odds and ends of more or less value.
Every well-regulated house has an attic of this sort,
so I need not describe it.
The doll’s house had been moved,
but after a search Martha found it away over in a
corner near the big chimney.
She drew it out and noticed that behind
it was a black wooden chest which Uncle Walter had
sent over from Italy years and years ago before
Martha was born, in fact. Mamma had told her about
it one day; how there was no key to it, because Uncle
Walter wished it to remain unopened until he returned
home; and how this wandering uncle, who was a mighty
hunter, had gone into Africa to hunt elephants and
had never been heard from afterwards.
The little girl looked at the chest
curiously, now that it had by accident attracted her
attention.
It was quite big bigger
even than mamma’s traveling trunk and
was studded all over with tarnished brassheaded nails.
It was heavy, too, for when Martha tried to lift one
end of it she found she could not stir it a bit.
But there was a place in the side of the cover for
a key. She stooped to examine the lock, and saw
that it would take a rather big key to open it.
Then, as you may suspect, the little
girl longed to open Uncle Walter’s big box and
see what was in it. For we are all curious, and
little girls are just as curious as the rest of us.
“I don’t b’lieve
Uncle Walter’ll ever come back,” she thought.
“Papa said once that some elephant must have
killed him. If I only had a key ”
She stopped and clapped her little hands together gayly
as she remembered a big basket of keys on the shelf
in the linen closet. They were of all sorts and
sizes; perhaps one of them would unlock the mysterious
chest!
She flew down the stairs, found the
basket and returned with it to the attic. Then
she sat down before the brass-studded box and began
trying one key after another in the curious old lock.
Some were too large, but most were too small.
One would go into the lock but would not turn; another
stuck so fast that she feared for a time that she
would never get it out again. But at last, when
the basket was almost empty, an oddly-shaped, ancient
brass key slipped easily into the lock. With
a cry of joy Martha turned the key with both hands;
then she heard a sharp “click,” and the
next moment the heavy lid flew up of its own accord!
The little girl leaned over the edge
of the chest an instant, and the sight that met her
eyes caused her to start back in amazement.
Slowly and carefully a man unpacked
himself from the chest, stepped out upon the floor,
stretched his limbs and then took off his hat and
bowed politely to the astonished child.
He was tall and thin and his face
seemed badly tanned or sunburnt.
Then another man emerged from the
chest, yawning and rubbing his eyes like a sleepy
schoolboy. He was of middle size and his skin
seemed as badly tanned as that of the first.
While Martha stared open-mouthed at
the remarkable sight a third man crawled from the
chest. He had the same complexion as his fellows,
but was short and fat.
All three were dressed in a curious
manner. They wore short jackets of red velvet
braided with gold, and knee breeches of sky-blue satin
with silver buttons. Over their stockings were
laced wide ribbons of red and yellow and blue, while
their hats had broad brims with high, peaked crowns,
from which fluttered yards of bright-colored ribbons.
They had big gold rings in their ears
and rows of knives and pistols in their belts.
Their eyes were black and glittering and they wore
long, fierce mustaches, curling at the ends like a
pig’s tail.
“My! but you were heavy,”
exclaimed the fat one, when he had pulled down his
velvet jacket and brushed the dust from his sky-blue
breeches. “And you squeezed me all out of
shape.”
“It was unavoidable, Luigi,”
responded the thin man, lightly; “the lid of
the chest pressed me down upon you. Yet I tender
you my regrets.”
“As for me,” said the
middle-sized man, carelessly rolling a cigarette and
lighting it, “you must acknowledge I have been
your nearest friend for years; so do not be disagreeable.”
“You mustn’t smoke in
the attic,” said Martha, recovering herself at
sight of the cigarette. “You might set the
house on fire.”
The middle-sized man, who had not
noticed her before, at this speech turned to the girl
and bowed.
“Since a lady requests it,”
said he, “I shall abandon my cigarette,”
and he threw it on the floor and extinguished it with
his foot.
“Who are you?” asked Martha,
who until now had been too astonished to be frightened.
“Permit us to introduce ourselves,”
said the thin man, flourishing his hat gracefully.
“This is Lugui,” the fat man nodded; “and
this is Beni,” the middle-sized man bowed; “and
I am Victor. We are three bandits Italian
bandits.”
“Bandits!” cried Martha, with a look of
horror.
“Exactly. Perhaps in all
the world there are not three other bandits so terrible
and fierce as ourselves,” said Victor, proudly.
“’Tis so,” said the fat man, nodding
gravely.
“But it’s wicked!” exclaimed Martha.
“Yes, indeed,” replied
Victor. “We are extremely and tremendously
wicked. Perhaps in all the world you could not
find three men more wicked than those who now stand
before you.”
“’Tis so,” said the fat man, approvingly.
“But you shouldn’t be
so wicked,” said the girl; “it’s it’s naughty!”
Victor cast down his eyes and blushed.
“Naughty!” gasped Beni, with a horrified
look.
“’Tis a hard word,”
said Luigi, sadly, and buried his face in his hands.
“I little thought,” murmured
Victor, in a voice broken by emotion, “ever
to be so reviled and by a lady! Yet,
perhaps you spoke thoughtlessly. You must consider,
miss, that our wickedness has an excuse. For
how are we to be bandits, let me ask, unless we are
wicked?”
Martha was puzzled and shook her head,
thoughtfully. Then she remembered something.
“You can’t remain bandits
any longer,” said she, “because you are
now in America.”
“America!” cried the three, together.
“Certainly. You are on
Prairie avenue, in Chicago. Uncle Walter sent
you here from Italy in this chest.”
The bandits seemed greatly bewildered
by this announcement. Lugui sat down on an old
chair with a broken rocker and wiped his forehead
with a yellow silk handkerchief. Beni and Victor
fell back upon the chest and looked at her with pale
faces and staring eyes.
When he had somewhat recovered himself Victor spoke.
“Your Uncle Walter has greatly
wronged us,” he said, reproachfully. “He
has taken us from our beloved Italy, where bandits
are highly respected, and brought us to a strange
country where we shall not know whom to rob or how
much to ask for a ransom.”
“’Tis so!” said the fat man, slapping
his leg sharply.
“And we had won such fine reputations
in Italy!” said Beni, regretfully.
“Perhaps Uncle Walter wanted
to reform you,” suggested Martha.
“Are there, then, no bandits
in Chicago?” asked Victor.
“Well,” replied the girl,
blushing in her turn, “we do not call them bandits.”
“Then what shall we do for a
living?” inquired Beni, despairingly.
“A great deal can be done in
a big American city,” said the child. “My
father is a lawyer” (the bandits shuddered),
“and my mother’s cousin is a police inspector.”
“Ah,” said Victor, “that
is a good employment. The police need to be inspected,
especially in Italy.”
“Everywhere!” added Beni.
“Then you could do other things,”
continued Martha, encouragingly. “You could
be motor men on trolley cars, or clerks in a department
store. Some people even become aldermen to earn
a living.”
The bandits shook their heads sadly.
“We are not fitted for such
work,” said Victor. “Our business
is to rob.”
Martha tried to think.
“It is rather hard to get positions
in the gas office,” she said, “but you
might become politicians.”
“No!” cried Beni, with
sudden fierceness; “we must not abandon our
high calling. Bandits we have always been, and
bandits we must remain!”
“’Tis so!” agreed the fat man.
“Even in Chicago there must
be people to rob,” remarked Victor, with cheerfulness.
Martha was distressed.
“I think they have all been robbed,” she
objected.
“Then we can rob the robbers,
for we have experience and talent beyond the ordinary,”
said Beni.
“Oh, dear; oh, dear!”
moaned the girl; “why did Uncle Walter ever
send you here in this chest?”
The bandits became interested.
“That is what we should like to know,”
declared Victor, eagerly.
“But no one will ever know,
for Uncle Walter was lost while hunting elephants
in Africa,” she continued, with conviction.
“Then we must accept our fate
and rob to the best of our ability,” said Victor.
“So long as we are faithful to our beloved profession
we need not be ashamed.”
“’Tis so!” cried the fat man.
“Brothers! we will begin now. Let us rob
the house we are in.”
“Good!” shouted the others and sprang
to their feet.
Beni turned threateningly upon the child.
“Remain here!” he commanded.
“If you stir one step your blood will be on
your own head!” Then he added, in a gentler voice:
“Don’t be afraid; that’s the way
all bandits talk to their captives. But of course
we wouldn’t hurt a young lady under any circumstances.”
“Of course not,” said Victor.
The fat man drew a big knife from
his belt and flourished it about his head.
“S’blood!” he ejaculated, fiercely.
“S’bananas!” cried Beni, in a terrible
voice.
“Confusion to our foes!” hissed Victor.
And then the three bent themselves
nearly double and crept stealthily down the stairway
with cocked pistols in their hands and glittering
knives between their teeth, leaving Martha trembling
with fear and too horrified to even cry for help.
How long she remained alone in the
attic she never knew, but finally she heard the catlike
tread of the returning bandits and saw them coming
up the stairs in single file.
All bore heavy loads of plunder in
their arms, and Lugui was balancing a mince pie on
the top of a pile of her mother’s best evening
dresses. Victor came next with an armful of bric-a-brac,
a brass candelabra and the parlor clock. Beni
had the family Bible, the basket of silverware from
the sideboard, a copper kettle and papa’s fur
overcoat.
“Oh, joy!” said Victor,
putting down his load; “it is pleasant to rob
once more.”
“Oh, ecstacy!” said Beni;
but he let the kettle drop on his toe and immediately
began dancing around in anguish, while he muttered
queer words in the Italian language.
“We have much wealth,”
continued Victor, holding the mince pie while Lugui
added his spoils to the heap; “and all from one
house! This America must be a rich place.”
With a dagger he then cut himself
a piece of the pie and handed the remainder to his
comrades. Whereupon all three sat upon the floor
and consumed the pie while Martha looked on sadly.
“We should have a cave,”
remarked Beni; “for we must store our plunder
in a safe place. Can you tell us of a secret cave?”
he asked Martha.
“There’s a Mammoth cave,”
she answered, “but it’s in Kentucky.
You would be obliged to ride on the cars a long time
to get there.”
The three bandits looked thoughtful
and munched their pie silently, but the next moment
they were startled by the ringing of the electric
doorbell, which was heard plainly even in the remote
attic.
“What’s that?” demanded
Victor, in a hoarse voice, as the three scrambled
to their feet with drawn daggers.
Martha ran to the window and saw it
was only the postman, who had dropped a letter in
the box and gone away again. But the incident
gave her an idea of how to get rid of her troublesome
bandits, so she began wringing her hands as if in
great distress and cried out:
“It’s the police!”
The robbers looked at one another
with genuine alarm, and Lugui asked, tremblingly:
“Are there many of them?”
“A hundred and twelve!”
exclaimed Martha, after pretending to count them.
“Then we are lost!” declared
Beni; “for we could never fight so many and
live.”
“Are they armed?” inquired
Victor, who was shivering as if cold.
“Oh, yes,” said she.
“They have guns and swords and pistols and axes
and and ”
“And what?” demanded Lugui.
“And cannons!”
The three wicked ones groaned aloud
and Beni said, in a hollow voice:
“I hope they will kill us quickly
and not put us to the torture. I have been told
these Americans are painted Indians, who are bloodthirsty
and terrible.”
“’Tis so!” gasped the fat man, with
a shudder.
Suddenly Martha turned from the window.
“You are my friends, are you not?” she
asked.
“We are devoted!” answered Victor.
“We adore you!” cried Beni.
“We would die for you!”
added Lugui, thinking he was about to die anyway.
“Then I will save you,” said the girl.
“How?” asked the three, with one voice.
“Get back into the chest,”
she said. “I will then close the lid, so
they will be unable to find you.”
They looked around the room in a dazed
and irresolute way, but she exclaimed:
“You must be quick! They will soon be here
to arrest you.”
Then Lugui sprang into the chest and
lay fat upon the bottom. Beni tumbled in next
and packed himself in the back side. Victor followed
after pausing to kiss her hand to the girl in a graceful
manner.
Then Martha ran up to press down the
lid, but could not make it catch.
“You must squeeze down,” she said to them.
Lugui groaned.
“I am doing my best, miss,”
said Victor, who was nearest the top; “but although
we fitted in very nicely before, the chest now seems
rather small for us.”
“’Tis so!” came the muffled voice
of the fat man from the bottom.
“I know what takes up the room,” said
Beni.
“What?” inquired Victor, anxiously.
“The pie,” returned Beni.
“’Tis so!” came from the bottom,
in faint accents.
Then Martha sat upon the lid and pressed
it down with all her weight. To her great delight
the lock caught, and, springing down, she exerted
all her strength and turned the key.
This story should teach us not to
interfere in matters that do not concern us.
For had Martha refrained from opening Uncle Walter’s
mysterious chest she would not have been obliged to
carry downstairs all the plunder the robbers had brought
into the attic.