Pete took note of Maggie.
“Say, Mag, I’m stuck on
yer shape. It’s outa sight,” he said,
parenthetically, with an affable grin.
As he became aware that she was listening
closely, he grew still more eloquent in his descriptions
of various happenings in his career. It appeared
that he was invincible in fights.
“Why,” he said, referring
to a man with whom he had had a misunderstanding,
“dat mug scrapped like a damn dago. Dat’s
right. He was dead easy. See? He
tau’t he was a scrapper. But he foun’
out diff’ent! Hully gee.”
He walked to and fro in the small
room, which seemed then to grow even smaller and unfit
to hold his dignity, the attribute of a supreme warrior.
That swing of the shoulders that had frozen the timid
when he was but a lad had increased with his growth
and education at the ratio of ten to one. It,
combined with the sneer upon his mouth, told mankind
that there was nothing in space which could appall
him. Maggie marvelled at him and surrounded
him with greatness. She vaguely tried to calculate
the altitude of the pinnacle from which he must have
looked down upon her.
“I met a chump deh odder
day way up in deh city,” he said.
“I was goin’ teh see a frien’ of
mine. When I was a-crossin’ deh street
deh chump runned plump inteh me, an’ den
he turns aroun’ an’ says, ’Yer insolen’
ruffin,’ he says, like dat. ‘Oh,
gee,’ I says, ’oh, gee, go teh hell and
git off deh eart’,’ I says, like dat.
See? ’Go teh hell an’ git off deh
eart’,’ like dat. Den deh blokie
he got wild. He says I was a contempt’ble
scoun’el, er somet’ing like dat, an’
he says I was doom’ teh everlastin’ pe’dition
an’ all like dat. ‘Gee,’ I
says, ’gee! Deh hell I am,’
I says. ‘Deh hell I am,’ like
dat. An’ den I slugged ’im.
See?”
With Jimmie in his company, Pete departed
in a sort of a blaze of glory from the Johnson home.
Maggie, leaning from the window, watched him as he
walked down the street.
Here was a formidable man who disdained
the strength of a world full of fists. Here
was one who had contempt for brass-clothed power; one
whose knuckles could defiantly ring against the granite
of law. He was a knight.
The two men went from under the glimmering
street-lamp and passed into shadows.
Turning, Maggie contemplated the dark,
dust-stained walls, and the scant and crude furniture
of her home. A clock, in a splintered and battered
oblong box of varnished wood, she suddenly regarded
as an abomination. She noted that it ticked
raspingly. The almost vanished flowers in the
carpet-pattern, she conceived to be newly hideous.
Some faint attempts she had made with blue ribbon,
to freshen the appearance of a dingy curtain, she
now saw to be piteous.
She wondered what Pete dined on.
She reflected upon the collar and
cuff factory. It began to appear to her mind
as a dreary place of endless grinding. Pete’s
elegant occupation brought him, no doubt, into contact
with people who had money and manners. It was
probable that he had a large acquaintance of pretty
girls. He must have great sums of money to spend.
To her the earth was composed of hardships
and insults. She felt instant admiration for
a man who openly defied it. She thought that
if the grim angel of death should clutch his heart,
Pete would shrug his shoulders and say: “Oh,
ev’ryt’ing goes.”
She anticipated that he would come
again shortly. She spent some of her week’s
pay in the purchase of flowered cretonne for a lambrequin.
She made it with infinite care and hung it to the slightly-careening
mantel, over the stove, in the kitchen. She studied
it with painful anxiety from different points in the
room. She wanted it to look well on Sunday night
when, perhaps, Jimmie’s friend would come.
On Sunday night, however, Pete did not appear.
Afterward the girl looked at it with
a sense of humiliation. She was now convinced
that Pete was superior to admiration for lambrequins.
A few evenings later Pete entered
with fascinating innovations in his apparel.
As she had seen him twice and he had different suits
on each time, Maggie had a dim impression that his
wardrobe was prodigiously extensive.
“Say, Mag,” he said, “put
on yer bes’ duds Friday night an’ I’ll
take yehs teh deh show. See?”
He spent a few moments in flourishing
his clothes and then vanished, without having glanced
at the lambrequin.
Over the eternal collars and cuffs
in the factory Maggie spent the most of three days
in making imaginary sketches of Pete and his daily
environment. She imagined some half dozen women
in love with him and thought he must lean dangerously
toward an indefinite one, whom she pictured with great
charms of person, but with an altogether contemptible
disposition.
She thought he must live in a blare
of pleasure. He had friends, and people who
were afraid of him.
She saw the golden glitter of the
place where Pete was to take her. An entertainment
of many hues and many melodies where she was afraid
she might appear small and mouse-colored.
Her mother drank whiskey all Friday
morning. With lurid face and tossing hair she
cursed and destroyed furniture all Friday afternoon.
When Maggie came home at half-past six her mother lay
asleep amidst the wreck of chairs and a table.
Fragments of various household utensils were scattered
about the floor. She had vented some phase of
drunken fury upon the lambrequin. It lay in
a bedraggled heap in the corner.
“Hah,” she snorted, sitting
up suddenly, “where deh hell yeh been?
Why deh hell don’ yeh come home earlier?
Been loafin’ ’round deh streets.
Yer gettin’ teh be a reg’lar devil.”
When Pete arrived Maggie, in a worn
black dress, was waiting for him in the midst of a
floor strewn with wreckage. The curtain at the
window had been pulled by a heavy hand and hung by
one tack, dangling to and fro in the draft through
the cracks at the sash. The knots of blue ribbons
appeared like violated flowers. The fire in the
stove had gone out. The displaced lids and open
doors showed heaps of sullen grey ashes. The
remnants of a meal, ghastly, like dead flesh, lay in
a corner. Maggie’s red mother, stretched
on the floor, blasphemed and gave her daughter a bad
name.