I
They made a handsome family group,
with just the one necessary element of contrast.
Father was the contrast.
They were convened within and about
the big three-walled divan which, according to the
fashion, was backed up against a long library-table
in what they now called the living-room. It had
once been the sitting-room and had contained a what-isn’t-it
and a sofa like an enormous bald caterpillar, crowded
against the wall so that you could fall off only one
side of it.
It was a family reunion and unexpected.
Father was not convened with the rest, but sat off
in the shadow and counted the feet sticking out from
the divan and protruding from the chairs. He counted
fourteen feet, including his wife’s and excluding
his own. All the feet were expensively shod except
his own.
Three of the children had come home
for a visit, and father, glad as he was to see them,
had a vague feeling that they had been brought in by
some other motive than their loudly proclaimed homesickness.
He was willing to wait until they disclosed it, for
he had an idea what it was and he was always glad
to postpone a payment. It meant so much less
interest to lose. Father was a business man.
Father was also dismally computing
the addition to the grocery bills, the butchery bills,
and livery bills, and the others. He was figuring
out the added expense of the dinner, with roast beef
now costing as much as peacocks’ tongues.
He had raised a large family and there was not a dyspeptic
in the lot not even a banter.
They had been photographed together
the day before and the proof had just come home.
Father was not in the picture. It was a handsome
picture. They admitted it themselves. They
had urged father to come along, but he had pleaded
his business, as usual. As they studied the picture
they would glance across at father and realize how
little the picture lost by his absence. It lost
nothing but the contrast.
While they were engaged each in that
most fascinating of employments studying
one’s own photograph they were all
waiting for the dining-room maid to appear like a
black-and-white sketch and crisply announce that dinner
was served. They had not arrived yet at having
a man. Indeed, that room could still remember
when a frowsy, blowsy hired girl was wont to stick
her head in and groan, “Supper’s ready!”
In fact, mother had never been able
to live down a memory of the time when she used to
put her own head in at a humbler dining-room door and
call with all the anger that cooks up in a cook:
“Come on! What we got’s on the table!”
But mother had entirely forgotten the first few months
of her married life, when she would sing out to father:
“Oh, honey, help me set the table, will you?
I’ve a surprise for you something
you like!”
This family had evolved along the
cycles so many families go through from
pin feathers to paradise plumes only, the
male bird had failed to improve his feathers or his
song, though he never failed to bring up the food
and keep the nest thatched.
The history of an American family
can often be traced by its monuments in the names
the children call the mother. Mrs. Grout had begun
as just one Ma. Eventually they doubled
that and progressed from the accent on the first to
the accent on the second ma. Years later one of
the inarticulate brats had come home as a collegian
in a funny hat, and Mama had become Mater. This
had lasted until one of the brattines came home as
a collégienne with a swagger and a funny sweater.
And then her Latin title was Frenchified to Mere which
always gave father a shock; for father had been raised
on a farm, where only horses’ wives were called
by that name.
Father had been dubbed Pop at an early
date. Efforts to change this title had been as
futile as the terrific endeavors to keep him from
propping his knife against his plate. He had been
browbeaten out of using the blade for transportation
purposes, but at that point he had simply ceased to
develop.
Names like Pappah, Pater, and Pere
would not cling to him; they fell off at once.
Pop he was always called to his face, whether he were
referred to abroad as “the old man,” “the
governor,” or “our dear father.”
The evolution of the Grout family
could be traced still more clearly in the names the
parents had given the children. The eldest was
a daughter, though when she grew up she dropped back
in the line and became ever so much younger than her
next younger brothers. She might have fallen still
farther to the rear if she had not run up against another
daughter who had her own age to keep down.
The eldest daughter, born in the grim
days of early penury, had been grimly entitled Julia.
The following child, a son, was soberly called by
his father’s given and his mother’s maiden
names John Pennock Grout, or Jno.
P., as his father wrote it.
A year or two later there appeared
another hostage. Labeling him was a matter of
deep concern. John urged his own father’s
name, William; but the mother wafted this away with
a gesture of airy disgust. There was a hired
girl in the kitchen now and mother was reading a good
many novels between stitches. She debated long
and hard while the child waited anonymous. At
length she ventured on Gerald. She changed that
two or three times and the boy had a narrow escape
from Sylvester. He came perilously near to carrying
Abelard through an amused world; but she harked back
to Gerald which he spelled Jerrold at times.
Then two daughters entered the family
in succession and were stamped Beatrice pronounced
Bay-ah-treat-she by those who had the time and the
energy and Consuelo, which Pop would call
Counser-eller.
By this time Julia had grown up and
was beginning at finishing-school. She soon saw
that Julia would never do never! She
had started with a handicap, but she caught up with
the rest and passed them gracefully by ingeniously
altering the final a to an e, and pronouncing
it Zheelee.
Her father never could get within
hailing distance of the French j and u,
and teetered awkwardly between Jilly and Jelly.
He was apt to relax sickeningly into plain Julia especially
before folks, when he was nervous anyway. Only
they did not say “before folks” now; the
Grouts never said “before folks” now they
said, “In the presence of guests.”
By the time the next son came the
mother was shamelessly literary enough to name him
Ethelwolf, which his school companions joyously abbreviated
to Ethel, overlooking the wolf.
Ethelwolf was the last of the visitors.
For by this time Mere had accumulated so many
absolutely unforgivable grievances against her absolutely
impossible husband that she felt qualified for that
crown of comfortable martyrhood, that womanly ideal,
“a wife in name only” and only
that “for the sake of the children.”
By this time the children, too, had
acquired grievances against Pop. The more refined
they grew the coarser-grained he seemed. They
could not pulverize him in the coffee-mill of criticism.
He was as hopeless in ideas as in language. It
was impossible to make him realize that the best is
always the cheapest; that fine clothes make fine people;
that petty economies are death to “the larger
flights of the soul”; and that parents have
no right to have children unless they can give them
what other people’s children have.
If John Grout complained that he was
not a millionaire the younger Grouts retorted that
this was not their fault, but their misfortune; and
it was “up to Pop” to do the best he could
during what Mere was now calling their “formative
years.” The children had liberal ideas,
artistic and refined ideals; but Pop was forever talking
poor, always splitting pennies, always dolefully reiterating,
“I don’t know where the money is coming
from!”
It was so foolish of him, too for
it always came from somewhere. The children went
to the best schools, traveled in Europe, wore as good
clothes as anybody though they did not admit
this, of course, within father’s hearing, lest
it put false notions into his head; and the sons made
investments that had not yet begun to turn out right.
Parents cannot fool their children
long, and the Grout youngsters had learned at an early
date that Pop always forked over when he was nagged
into it. Any of the children in trouble could
always write or telegraph home a “must have,”
and it was always forthcoming. There usually
followed a querulous note about “Sorry you have
to have so much, but I suppose it costs a lot where
you are. Make it go as far as you can, for I’m
a little pinched just now.” But this was
taken as a mere detail an unfortunate paternal
habit.
That was Pop’s vice his
only one and about the least attractive of vices.
It was harrowing to be the children of a miser for
he must have a lot hoarded away. His poor talk,
his allusions to notes at the bank and mortgages and
drafts to meet, were just bogies to frighten them with
and to keep them down.
It was most humiliating for high-spirited
children to be so misunderstood. Pop lacked refined
tastes. It was a harsh thing to say of one’s
parent, but when you came right down to it Pop was
a hopeless plebeian.
Pop noticed the difference himself.
He would have doubted that these magnificent youngsters
could be his own if that had not implied a criticism
of his unimpeachable wife. So he gave her all
the credit. For Mere was different.
She was well read; she entertained charmingly; she
loved good clothes, up-to-the-minute hats; she knew
who was who and what was what. She was ambitious,
progressive. She nearly took up French once.
But Pop was shabby. Pop always
wore a suit until it glistened and his children ridiculed
him into a new one. As for wearing evening dress,
in the words of Gerald they “had to blindfold
him and back him into his soup-and-fish, even on the
night the Italian Opera Company came to town.”
Pop never could take them anywhere.
A vacation was a thing of horror to him. It was
almost impossible to drag him to a lake or the sea,
and it was quite impossible to keep him there more
than a few days. His business always called him
home.
And such a business! Dry-goods! and
in a small town.
And such a town, with such a name!
To the children who knew their Paris and their London,
their New York and their Washington, a visit home was
like a sentence to jail. It was humiliating to
make a good impression on acquaintances of importance
and then have to confess to a home town named Waupoos.
People either said, “I beg your
pardon!” as if they had not heard it right,
or they laughed and said, “Honestly?”
The children had tried again and again
to pry Pop out of Waupoos, but he clung to it like
a limpet. He had had opportunities, too, to move
his business to big cities, but he was afraid to venture.
He was fairly sure of sustenance in Waupoos so long
as he nursed every penny; but he could never find
the courage to transplant himself to another place.
The worst of his cowardice was that
he blamed the children at least, he said
he dared not face a year or two of possible loss lest
they might need something. So he stayed in Waupoos
and managed somehow to keep the family afloat and
the store open.
When Mere revolted and longed
for a glimpse of the outer world he always advised
her to take a trip and have a good time. He always
said he could afford that much, and he took an interest
in seeing that she had funds to buy some city clothes
with; but he never had funds enough to go along.
That was one of mother’s grievances.
Pop bored her to death at home and she wanted to scream
every time he mentioned his business it
was so selfish of him to talk of that at night when
she had so much to tell him of the misbehavior of
the servants. But, greatly as he annoyed her round
the house, she cherished an illusion that she would
like him in a hotel.
She had tried to get him to read a
certain novel a wonderful book mercilessly
exposing the curse of modern America; which is the
men’s habit of sticking to their business so
closely that they give their poor wives no companionship.
They leave their poor wives to languish at home or
to go shopping or gossiping, while they indulge themselves
in the luxuries of vibration between creditor and
debtor.
In this novel, and in several others
she could have named, the poor wife naturally fell
a prey to the fascinations of a handsome devil with
dark eyes, a motor or two, and no office hours.
Mere often wondered why she
herself had not taken up with some handsome devil
fully equipped for the entertainment of neglected wives.
If she had not been a member of that
stanch American womanhood to which the glory of the
country and its progress are really due, she might
have startled her husband into realizing too late,
as the too-late husbands in the novels realized, that
a man’s business is a side issue and that the
perpetuation of romance is the main task. Her
self-respect was all that held Mere to the
home; that and whisper! the fact
that no handsome devil with any kind of eyes ever
tried to lure her away.
When she reproached Pop and threatened
him he refused to be scared. He paid his wife
that most odious of tributes a monotonous
trust in her loyalty and an insulting immunity to
jealousy. Almost worse was his monotonous loyalty
to her and his failure to give her jealousy any excuse.
They quarreled incessantly, but the
wrangles were not gorgeously dramatic charges of intrigue
with handsome men or painted women, followed by rapturous
make-ups. They were quarrels over expenditures,
extravagances, and voyages.
Mere charged Pop with parsimony
and he charged her with recklessness. She accused
him of trying to tie them down to a village; he accused
her of trying to drive him to bankruptcy. She
demanded to know whether he wanted his children to
be like children of their neighbors clerks
in small stores, starveling tradespeople and wives
of little merchants. He answered that she was
breeding a pack of snobs that despised their father
and had no mercy on him and no use for him
except as a lemon to squeeze dry. She answered
with a laugh of scorn that lemon was a good word;
and he threw up his hands and returned to the shop
if the war broke out at noon, or slunk up to bed if
it followed dinner.
This was the pattern of their daily
life. Every night there was a new theme, but
the duet they built on it ran along the same formulas.
The children sided with Mere,
of course. In the first place, she was a poor,
downtrodden woman; in the second, she was their broker.
Her job was to get them things. They gave her
the credit for what she got them. They gave Pop
no praise for yielding no credit for extracting
somehow from the dry-soil of an arid town the money
they extracted from him. They knew nothing of
the myriad little agonies, the ingenuity, the tireless
attention to detail, the exquisite finesse that make
success possible in the melee of competition.
Their souls were above trade and its petty nigglings.
Jno. P., who was now known as
J. Pennock, was aiming at a million dollars in New
York, and his mother was sure that he would get it
next time if Pop would only raise him a little more
money to meet an irritating obligation or seize a
glittering opportunity. Pop always raised the
money and J. Pennock always lost it. Yet Pennock
was a financier and Pop was a village merchant.
And now Pen had come home unexpectedly. He was
showing a great interest in Pop’s affairs.
Gerald was home also unexpectedly.
He was an artist of the most wonderful promise.
None of his promises was more wonderful than those
he made his father to repay just one more loan to
tide him over until he sold his next picture; but
it never sold, or it sold for a mere song. Gerald
solaced himself and Mere solaced him for being
ahead of his time, unappreciated, too good for the
public. She thanked Heaven that Gerald was a
genius, not a salesman. One salesman in the family
was enough!
And Gerald had beaten Pen home by
one train. He had greeted Pen somewhat coldly as
if Pen were a trespasser on his side of the street.
And when it was learned that Julie had telegraphed
that she would arrive the next day, both the brothers
had frowned.
Pop had sighed. He was glad to
see his wonderful offspring, but he had already put
off the grocer and the butcher and even
his life-insurance premium because he had
an opportunity by a quick use of cash to obtain the
bankrupt stock of a rival dealer who had not nursed
his pennies as Pop had. It was by such purchases
that Pop had managed to keep his store alive and his
brilliant children in funds.
He had temporarily drawn his bank
account down to the irreducible minimum and borrowed
on his securities up to the insurmountable maximum.
It was a bad time for his children to tap him.
But here they were Jno. P., Jerry,
and Julia all very unctuous over the home-coming,
and yet all of them evidently cherishing an ulterior
idea.
He watched them lounging in fashionable
awkwardness. They were brilliant children.
And he was as proud of them as he was afraid of them and
for them.
II
If the children looked brilliant to
Pop he did not reflect their refulgence. As they
glanced from the photographer’s proof to Pop
they were not impressed. They were not afraid
of him or for him.
His bodily arrangement was pitifully
gawky; he neither sat erect nor lounged he
slumped spineless. Big spectacles were in style
now, but Pop’s big spectacles were just out
of it. His face was like a parchment that had
been left out in the rain and had dried carelessly
in deep, stiff wrinkles with the writing
washed off.
Ethelwolf, the last born, had no ulterior
idea. He always spent his monthly allowance by
the second Tuesday after the first Monday, and sulked
through a period of famine and debt until the next
month. It was now the third Tuesday and he was
disposed to sarcasm.
“Look at Pop!” he muttered.
“He looks just like the old boy they put in
the cartoons to represent The Common People.”
“He’s the Beau Brummel
of Waupoos, all right!” said Bayahtreatshe, who
was soon returning to Wellesley. And Consuelo,
who was preparing for Vassar, added under her breath,
“Mere, can’t you steal up on him and swipe
that already-tied tie?”
Had Pop overheard, he would have made
no complaint. He had known the time when they
had thrown things at him. The reverence of American
children for their fathers is almost as famous as the
meekness of American wives before their husbands.
Yet it might have hurt Pop a little to see Mother
shake her head and hear her sigh:
“He’s hopeless, children!
Do take warning from my misfortune and be careful
what you marry.”
Poor Mere had absolutely forgotten
how proud she had been when Johnnie Grout came courting
her, and how she had extracted a proposal before he
knew what he was about, and had him at the altar before
he was ready to support a wife in the style she had
been accustomed to hope for. She remembered only
the dreams he had not brought true, the harsh realities
of their struggle upward. She had worked and skimped
with him then. Now she was like a lolling passenger
in a jinrikisha, who berates the shabby coolie because
he stumbles where the roads are rough and sweats where
they are steep.
Julie spoke up in answer to her mother’s word
of caution:
“There’s one thing better
than being careful what you marry and that’s
not marrying at all!”
The rest of them were used to Julie’s
views; but Pop, who had paid little heed to them,
almost collapsed from his chair. Julie went on:
“Men are all alike, Mere.
They’re very soft-spoken when they come to make
love; but it’s only a bluff to make us give up
our freedom. Before we know it they drag us up
before another man, a preacher, and make us swear
to love, honor, and obey. They kill the love,
make the honor impossible, and the obey ridiculous.
Then they coop us up at home and expect us to let
them run the world to suit themselves. They’ve
been running it for thousands of years and
look at the botch they’ve made of it! It’s
time for us to take the helm.”
“Go to it, sis,” said
Ethelwolf. “I care not who makes the laws
so long as I can break them.”
“Let your sister alone!” said Mere.
“Go on, Julie!”
“I’ve put it all in the
address I read before the Federation last week,”
said Julie. “It was reported at length in
one of the papers. I’ve got a clipping
in my handbag here somewhere.”
She began to rummage through a little
condensed chaos of handkerchiefs, gloves, powder-puff,
powdery dollar bills, powdery coins, loose bits of
paper, samples, thread, pins, buttons everything every-whichway.
J. Pennock laughed. “Pipe
what’s going to run the world! Better get
a few pockets first.”
“Don’t be a brute, Pen!” said Mere.
At last Julie found the clipping she
sought and, shaking the powder from it, handed it
to her mother.
“It’s on the strength
of this speech that I was elected delegate to the
international convention at San Francisco,” she
said.
“You were!” Mere
gasped, and Beatrice and Consuelo exclaimed, “Ripsnorting!”
“Are you going?” said
Mere when she recovered from her awe.
“Well, it’s a pretty expensive
trip. That’s why I came home to
see if Well, we can take that up later.
Tell me how you like the speech.”
Mere mumbled the report aloud
to the delighted audience. Pop heard little of
it. He was having a chill. It was very like
plain ague, but he credited it to the terror of Julie’s
mission home. All she wanted him to do was to
send her on a little jaunt to San Francisco! The
tyrant, as usual, was expected to finance the rebellion.
When Mere had finished reading
everybody applauded Julie except Pop. Mere
overheard his silence and rounded on him across the
aristocratic reading-glass she wielded.
“Did you hear that?”
Pop was so startled that he answered, “Uh-huh!”
“Didn’t you think it was splendid?”
Mere demanded.
“Uh-huh!” said Pop.
“What didn’t you like about it?”
“I liked it all first-rate. Julie is a
smart girl, I tell you.”
Mere scented his evasion, and
she would never tolerate evasions. She repeated:
“What didn’t you like about it?”
“I liked all I could understand.”
“Understand!” snapped Mere, who
rarely wasted her culture on Pop.
“What didn’t you understand? Could
anything be clearer than this?
Listen!” She read in an oratorical voice:
“’Woman has been for ages
man’s mere beast of burden, his household drudge.
Being a wife has meant being a slave the
only servant without wages or holiday. But the
woman of to-day at last demands that the shackles
be stricken off; she demands freedom to live her life
her own way to express her selfhood without
the hampering restrictions imposed on her by the barbaric
customs inherited from the time of the cave-man.’”
Mere folded up the clipping
and glared defiance at the cave-man slumped in the
uneasy chair.
“What’s clearer than that?” she
reiterated.
Pop was at bay. He was like a desperate rabbit.
He answered:
“It’s clear enough, I
guess; but it’s more than I can take in.
Seems to me the women folks are hollering at the men
folks to give ’em what the men folks have never
been able to get for themselves.”
It was peevish. Coming from Pop,
it amounted to an outburst, a riot, a mutiny.
Such a tendency was dangerous. He must be sharply
repressed at once as a new servant must
be taught her place. Mere administered the
necessary rebuke, aided and abetted by the daughters.
The sons did not rally to their father’s defense.
He was soon reduced to submission, but his apology
was further irritation:
“I’m kind of rattled like.
I ain’t feeling as chipper as usual.”
“Chipper” was bad enough, but “ain’t”
was unendurable! They rebuked him for that and
he put in another irrelevant plea: “I had
a kind of sick spell at the store. I had to lay
down.”
“Lie down!” Beatrice corrected.
“Lie down,” he accepted. “But
as soon as I laid down ”
“Lay down!”
“Lay down I had chills and shootin’
pains; and I ”
“It’s the weather,”
Mere interrupted, impatiently. “I’ve
had a headache all day such a headache
as never was known! It seemed as if hammers were
beating upon my very brain. It was ”
“I’m not feeling at all well myself,”
said Consuelo.
There was almost a tournament of rivalry in describing
sufferings.
Pop felt as if he had wakened a sleeping
hospital. He sank back ashamed of his own outburst.
He rarely spoke of the few ailments he could afford.
When he did it was like one of his new clerks pulling
a bolt of goods from the shelf and bringing down a
silken avalanche.
The clinic was interrupted by the
crisp voice of Nora: “Dinner is served!”
Everybody rose and moved to the door
with quiet determination. Pop alone failed to
rise. Mere glowered at him. He pleaded:
“I don’t feel very good. I guess
I’d better leave my stummick rest.”
The children protested politely, but
he refused to be moved and Mere decided to
humor him.
“Let him alone, children.
It won’t hurt him to skip a meal.”
They said: “Too bad, Pop!” “You’ll
be all right soon,” and went out and forgot
him.
Pop heard them chattering briskly.
It was polite talk. If slang were used it was
the very newest. He gleaned that Pen and Gerald
were opposing Julie’s mission to San Francisco
on the ground of the expense. He smiled bitterly
to hear that word from them. He heard Julie’s
retort:
“I suppose you boys want the
money yourselves! Well, I’ve got first
havers at Pop. I saw him first!”
At about this point the conversation
lost its coherence in Pop’s ears. It was
mingled with a curious buzzing and a dizziness that
made him grip his chair lest it pitch him to the floor.
Chills, in which his bones were a mere rattlebox,
alternated with little rushes of prairie fire across
his skin. Throes of pain wrung him.
Also, he was a little afraid he
was afraid he might not be able to get to the store
in the morning. And important people were coming!
He had to make the first payment on the invoice of
that bankrupt stock. A semiannual premium was
overdue on his life insurance. The month of grace
had nearly expired, and if he failed to pay the policy
would lapse now of all times! He had
kept it up all these years; it must not lapse now,
for he was going to be right sick. He wanted somebody
to nurse him: his mother or that long-lost
girl he had married in the far past.
His shoes irked him; his vest what
they wanted called his waistcoat was as
tight as a corset. He felt that he would be safer
in bed. He’d better go up to his own room
and stretch out. He rose with extraordinary difficulty
and negotiated a swimming floor on swaying legs.
The laughter from the dining-room
irritated him. He would be better off up-stairs,
where he could not hear it. The noise in his ears
was all he could stand. He attained the foot
of the stairs and the flight of steps seemed as long
and as misty as Jacob’s Ladder. And he was
no angel!
The Grouts lingered at dinner and
over their black coffee and tobacco until it was time
to dress for the reception at Mrs. Alvin Mitnick’s,
at which Waupoos society would pass itself in review.
The later you got there the smarter you were, and
most people put off dressing until the last possible
minute in order to keep themselves from falling asleep
before it was time to start.
The Grouts, however, were eager to
go early and get it over with. They loved to
trample on Waupoos traditions. As they drifted
into the hall they found it dark. They shook
their heads in dismal recognition of a familiar phenomenon,
and Ethelwolf groaned:
“Pop has gone up-stairs.
You can always trace Pop. Wherever he has passed
by the lights are out.”
“He has figured out that by
darkening the halls while we are at dinner he saves
nearly a cent a day,” Mere groaned.
“If Pop were dying he’d
turn out a light somewhere because he wouldn’t
need it.” And Ethelwolf laughed.
But Mere groaned again:
“Can you wonder that I get depressed? Now,
children, I ask you ”
“Poor old Mere! It’s awful!” “Ghastly!” “Maddening!”
They gathered round her lovingly,
echoing her moans. They started up the dark stairway,
Consuelo first and turning back to say to Beatrice:
“Pop can cut a penny into more
slices than ” Then she screamed and
started back.
Her agitation went down the stairway
through the climbing Grouts like a cold breeze.
What was it? She looked close. A hand was
just visible on the floor at the head of the stairs.
She had stepped on it.
III
Pop had evidently reached the upper
hall, when the ruling passion burning even through
his fever had led him to grope about for the electric
switch. His last remaining energy had been expended
for an economy and he had collapsed.
They switched the light on again;
they were always switching on currents that he switched
off and paid for. They found him lying
in a crumpled sprawl that was awkward, even for Pop.
They stared at him in bewilderment.
They would have said he was drunk; but Pop never drank nor
smoked nor played cards. Perhaps he
was dead!
This thought was like a thunderbolt.
There was a great thumping in the breasts of the Grouts.
Suddenly Mere strode forward,
dropped to her knees and put her hand on Pop’s
heart. It was not still far from that.
She placed her cold palm on his forehead. His
brow was clammy, hot and cold and wet.
“He has a high fever!” she said.
Then, with a curious emotion, she
brushed back the scant wet hair; closed her eyes and
felt in her bosom a sudden ache like the turning of
a rusty iron. She felt young and afraid a
young wife who finds her man wounded.
She looked up and saw standing about
her a number of tall ladies and gentlemen important-looking
strangers. Then she remembered that they had
once been nobodies. She felt ashamed before them
and she said, quickly:
“He’s going to be ill.
Telephone for the doctor to come right away. And
you girls get his bed ready. No, you’d better
put him in my room it gets the sunlight.
And you boys fill the ice-cap and the hot-water
bag and hurry! Hurry!”
The specters vanished. She was
alone with her lover. She was drying his forehead
with her best lace handkerchief and murmuring:
“John honey, what’s the
matter! Why, honey why didn’t
you tell me?”
Then a tall gentleman or two returned
and one of them said:
“Better let us get him off the floor, Mere.”
And the big sons of the frail little
man picked him up and carried him into the room and
pulled off his elastic congress gaiters, and his coat
and vest, and his detached cuffs, and his permanently
tied tie, and his ridiculous collar.
Then Mere put them out, and
when the doctor arrived Pop was in bed in his best
nightshirt.
The doctor made his way up through
the little mob of terrified children. He found
Mrs. Grout vastly agitated and much ashamed of herself.
She did not wish to look sentimental. She had
reached the Indian-summer modesty of old married couples.
The doctor went through the usual
ritual of pulse-feeling and tongue-examining and question-asking,
while Pop lay inert, with a little thermometer protruding
from his mouth like a most inappropriate cigarette.
The doctor was uncertain yet whether
it were one of the big fevers or pneumonia or just
a bilious attack. Blood-tests would show; and
he scraped the lobe of the ear of the unresisting,
indifferent old man, and took a drop of thin pink
fluid on a bit of glass. The doctor tried to
reassure the panicky family, but his voice was low
and important.
IV
The brilliant receptions and displays
that Mere and the children had planned were
abandoned without regret. All minor regrets were
lost in the one big regret for the poor old, worn-out
man up-stairs.
There was a dignity about Pop now.
The lowliest peasant takes on majesty when he is battling
for his life and his home.
There was dismay in all the hearts
now dismay at the things they had said
and the thoughts and sneers; dismay at the future without
this shabby but unfailing provider.
The proofs of the family photograph
lay scattered about the living-room. Pop was
not there. They had smiled about it before.
Now it looked ominous! What would become of this
family if Pop were not there?
The house was filled with a thick
sense of hush like a heavy fog; but thoughts seemed
to be all the louder in the silence jumbled
thoughts of selfish alarm; filial terror; remorse;
tenderness; mutual rebuke; dread of death, of the
future, of the past.
The day nurse and the night nurse
were in command of the house. The only events
were the arrivals of the doctor, his long stops, his
whispered conferences with the nurses, and the unsatisfactory,
evasive answers he gave as the family ambushed him
at the foot of the stairs on his way out.
Meanwhile they could not help Pop
in his long wrestle. They had drained his strength
and bruised his heart while he had his power, and now
that he needed their help and their youth they could
not lend him anything; they could not pay a single
instalment on the mortgages they had incurred.
They could only stand at the door
now and then and look in at him. They could not
beat off one of the invisible vultures of fever and
pain that hovered over him, swooped, and tore him.
They could not even get word to him not
a message of love or of repentance or of hope.
His brain was in a turmoil of its own. His white
lips were muttering delirious nonsense; his soul was
fluttering from scene to scene and year to year, like
a restless dragon-fly. He was young; he was old;
he was married; he was a bachelor; he was at home;
he was in his store; he was pondering campaigns of
business, slicing pennies or making daring purchases;
he was retrenching; he was advertising; but he was
afraid always that he might sink in the bog of competition
with rival merchants, with creditors, debtors, bankers,
with his wife, his children, his neighbors, his ideals,
his business axioms
“Ain’t the moon pirty
to-night, honey! Gee! I’m scared of
that preacher! What do I say when he says, ’Do
you take this woman for your’ The
pay-roll? I can’t meet it Saturday.
How am I going to meet the pay-roll? I don’t
see how we can sell those goods any cheaper, but we
got to get rid of ’em. My premium!
My premium! I haven’t paid my premium!
What’ll become of the children? Three cents
a yard it’s robbery! Eight cents
a yard that’s givin’ it away!
Don’t misunderstand me, Sally. It’s
my way of making love. I can’t say pirty
things like some folks can, but I can think ’em.
My premium the pay-roll so many
children! Couldn’t they do without that?
I ain’t a millionaire, you know. Every time
I begin to get ahead a little seems like one of the
children gets sick or in trouble the pay-roll!
Three cents a yard the new invoice I
can’t buy myself a noo soot. The doctor’s
bills! I ain’t complaining of ’em;
but I’ve got to pay ’em! Let me stay
home I’d rather. I’ve had
a hard day. My premium! Don’t put
false notions in their heads! The pay-roll!
Don’t scold me, honey! I got feelings,
too. You haven’t said a word of love to
me in years! I’ll raise the money somehow.
I know I’m close; but somebody’s got to
be the pay-roll so many people
depending on me. So many mouths to feed the
children all the clerks the delivery-wagon
drivers the advertising bills the
pay-roll the children! I ain’t
as young as I was honey, don’t scold
me!”
The ceaseless babbling grew intolerable.
Then it ceased; and the stupor that succeeded was
worse, for it meant exhaustion. The doctor grew
more grave. He ceased to talk of hope. He
looked ashamed. He tried to throw the blame from
himself.
And one dreadful day he called the
family together in the living-room. Once more
they were all there all those expensively
shod feet; those well-clothed, well-fed bodies.
In the chair where Pop had slumped the doctor sat
upright. He was saying:
“Of course there’s always
hope. While there’s life there’s always
hope. The fever is pretty well gone, but so is
the patient. The crisis left him drained.
You see he has lived this American business man’s
life no exercise, no vacations, no change.
The worst of it is that he seems to have given up
the fight. You know we doctors can only stand
guard outside. The patient has to fight it out
inside himself. It’s a very serious sign
when the sick man loses interest in the battle.
Mr. Grout does not rally. His powerful mind has
given up.”
In spite of themselves there was a
general lifting of the brows of surprise at the allusion
to Pop’s poor little footling brain as a powerful
mind. Perhaps the doctor saw it. He said:
“For it was a powerful mind!
Mr. Grout has carried that store of his from a little
shop to a big institution; he has kept it afloat in
a dull town through hard times. He has kept his
credit good and he has given his family wonderful
advantages. Look where he has placed you all!
He was a great man.”
When the doctor had gone they began
to understand that the town had looked upon Pop as
a giant of industry, a prodigal of vicarious extravagance.
They began to feel more keenly still how good a man
he was. While they were flourishing like orchids
in the sun and air, he had grubbed in the earth, sinking
roots everywhere in search of moisture and of sustenance.
Through him, things that were lowly and ugly and cheap
were gathered and transformed and sent aloft as sap
to make flowers of and color them and give them velvet
petals and exquisite perfume.
They gathered silently in his room
to watch him. He was white and still, hardly
breathing, already the overdue chattel of the grave.
They talked of him in whispers, for
he did not answer when they praised him. He did
not move when they caressed him. He was very far
away and drifting farther.
They spoke of how much they missed
him, of how perfect a father he had been, competing
with one another in regrets and in praise. Back
of all this belated tribute there was a silent dismay
they did not give voice to the keen, immediately
personal reasons for regret.
“What will become of us?”
they were thinking, each in his or her own terrified
soul.
“I can’t go back to school!”
“This means no college for me!”
“I’ll have to stay in this awful town
the rest of my life!”
“I can’t go to San Francisco!
The greatest honor of my life is taken from me just
as I grasped it.”
“I had a commission to paint
the portrait of an ambassador at Washington it
would have been the making of me! It meant a lot
of money, too. I came home to ask Pop to stake
me to money enough to live on until it was finished.”
“My business will go to smash!
I’ll be saddled with debts for the rest of my
life. If I could have hung on a little longer
I’d have reached the shore; but the bank wouldn’t
lend me a cent. Nobody would. I came home
to ask Pop to raise me some cash. I counted on
him. He never failed me before.”
“What will become of us all?”
There was a stir on the pillow.
The still head began to rock, the throat to swell,
the lips to twitch.
Mere ran to the bedside and
knelt by it, laying her hand on the forehead.
A miracle had been wrought in the very texture of his
brow. He was whispering something. She put
her ear to his lips.
“Yes, honey. What is it? I’m
here.”
She caught the faint rustling of words.
It was as if his hovering soul had been eavesdropping
on their thoughts. Perhaps it was merely that
he had learned so well in all these years just what
each of them would be thinking. For he murmured:
“I’ve been figuring out how
much the funeral will cost you
know they’re awful expensive funerals
are of course I wouldn’t want anything
fancy but well besides and
I’ve been thinking the children have got to
have so many things I can’t afford
to be away from the store any longer.
I ain’t got time to die! I’ve had
vacation enough! Where’s my clothes at?”
They held him back. But not for
long. He was the most irritatingly impatient
of convalescents. In due course of time the family
was redistributed about the face of the earth.
Ethelwolf was at preparatory school; Beatrice and
Consuelo were acquiring and lending luster at Wellesley
and Vassar; Gerald was painting a portrait at Washington;
and J. Pennock was like a returned Napoleon in Wall
Street.
Pop was at his desk in the store.
All his employees had gone home. He was fretfully
twiddling a telegram from San Francisco:
Julie’s address sublime please
telegraph two hundred more love
MERE.
Pop was remembering the words of the
address: “Woman has been for ages man’s
mere beast of burden.... Being a wife has meant
being a slave.”
Pop could not understand it yet.
But he told everybody he met about the first three
words of the telegram, and added:
“I got the smartest children
that ever was and they owe it all to their mother,
every bit.”