It had been no part of Margaret’s
plan to acknowledge the marriage so soon. Though
on pleasure bent, she had a frugal mind. She had
invested in a husband with a view of laying him away
for a rainy day that is to say, for such
time as her master and mistress should cease to need
her services; for she had promised on more than one
occasion to remain with the old people as long as
they lived. Indeed, if Mr. O’Rourke had
come to her and said in so many words, “The
day you marry me you must leave the Bilkins family,”
there is very little doubt but Margaret would have
let that young sea-monster slip back unmated, so far
as she was concerned, into his native element.
The contingency never entered into her calculations.
She intended that the ship which had brought Ulysses
to her island should take him off again after a decent
interval of honeymoon; then she would confess all
to Mrs. Bilkins, and be forgiven, and Mr. Bilkins
would not cancel that clause supposed to exist in his
will bequeathing two first-mortgage bonds of the Squedunk
E. B. Co. to a certain faithful servant. In the
mean while she would add each month to her store in
the coffers of the Rivermouth Savings Bank; for Calypso
had a neat sum to her credit on the books of that
provident institution.
But this could not be now. The
volatile bridegroom had upset the wisely conceived
plan, and “all the fat was in the fire,”
as Margaret philosophically put it. Mr. O’Rourke
had been fully instructed in the part he was to play,
and, to do him justice, had honestly intended to play
it; but destiny was against him. It may be observed
that destiny and Mr. O’Rourke were not on very
friendly terms.
After the ceremony had been performed
and Margaret had stolen back to the Bilkins mansion,
as related, Mr. O’Rourke with his own skilful
hands had brewed a noble punch for the wedding guests.
Standing at the head of the table and stirring the
pungent mixture in a small wash-tub purchased for
the occasion, Mr. O’Rourke came out in full flower.
His flow of wit, as he replenished the glasses, was
as racy and seemingly as inexhaustible as the punch
itself. When Mrs. McLaughlin held out her glass,
inadvertently upside down, for her sixth ladleful,
Mr. O’Rourke gallantly declared it should be
filled if he had to stand on his head to do it.
The elder Miss O’Leary whispered to Mrs. Connally
that Mr. O’Rourke was “a perfic gintleman,”
and the men in a body pronounced him a bit of the
raal shamrock. If Mr. O’Rourke was happy
in brewing a punch, he was happier in dispensing it,
and happiest of all in drinking a great deal of it
himself. He toasted Mrs. Finnigan, the landlady,
and the late lamented Finnigan, the father, whom he
had never seen, and Miss Biddy Finnigan, the daughter,
and a young toddling Finnigan, who was at large in
shockingly scant raiment. He drank to the company
individually and collectively, drank to the absent,
drank to a tin-peddler who chanced to pass the window,
and indeed was in that propitiatory mood when he would
have drunk to the health of each separate animal that
came out of the Ark. It was in the midst of the
confusion and applause which followed his song, “The
Wearing of the Grane,” that Mr. O’Rourke,
the punch being all gone, withdrew unobserved, and
went in quest of Mrs. O’Rourke with
what success the reader knows.
According to the love-idyl of the
period, when Laura and Charles Henry, after unheard-of
obstacles, are finally united, all cares and tribulations
and responsibilities slip from their sleek backs like
Christian’s burden. The idea is a pretty
one, theoretically, but, like some of those models
in the Patent Office at Washington, it fails to work.
Charles Henry does not go on sitting at Laura’s
feet and reading Tennyson to her forever: the
rent of the cottage by the sea falls due with prosaic
regularity; there are bakers, and butchers, and babies,
and tax-collectors, and doctors, and undertakers,
and sometimes gentlemen of the jury, to be attended
to. Wedded life is not one long amatory poem
with recurrent rhymes of love and dove, and kiss and
bliss. Yet when the average sentimental novelist
has supplied his hero and heroine with their bridal
outfit and arranged that little matter of the marriage
certificate, he usually turns off the gas, puts up
his shutters, and saunters off with his hands in his
pockets, as if the day’s business were over.
But we, who are honest dealers in real life and disdain
to give short weight, know better. The business
is by no means over; it is just begun. It is
not Christian throwing off his pack for good and all,
but Christian taking up a load heavier and more difficult
than any he has carried.
If Margaret Callaghan, when she meditated
matrimony, indulged in any roseate dreams, they were
quickly put to flight. She suddenly found herself
dispossessed of a quiet, comfortable home, and face
to face with the fact that she had a white elephant
on her hands. It is not likely that Mr. O’Rourke
assumed precisely the shape of a white elephant to
her mental vision; but he was as useless and cumbersome
and unmanageable as one.
Margaret and Larry’s wedding
tour did not extend beyond Mrs. Finnigan’s establishment,
where they took two or three rooms and set up housekeeping
in a humble way. Margaret, who was a tidy housewife,
kept the floor of her apartments as white as your
hand, the tin plates on the dresser as bright as your
lady-love’s eyes, and the cooking-stove as neat
as the machinery on a Sound steamer. When she
was not rubbing the stove with lamp-black she was
cooking upon it some savory dish to tempt the palate
of her marine monster. Naturally of a hopeful
temperament, she went about her work singing softly
to herself at times, and would have been very happy
that first week if Mr. O’Rourke had known a sober
moment. But Mr. O’Rourke showed an exasperating
disposition to keep up festivities. At the end
of ten days, however, he toned down, and at Margaret’s
suggestion that he had better be looking about for
some employment he rigged up a fishing-pole, and set
out with an injured air for the wharf at the foot
of the street, where he fished for the rest of the
day. To sit for hours blinking in the sun, waiting
for a cunner to come along and take his hook, was
as exhaustive a kind of labor as he cared to engage
in. Though Mr. O’Rourke had recently returned
from a long cruise, he had not a cent to show.
During his first three days ashore he had dissipated
his three years’ pay. The housekeeping expenses
began eating a hole in Margaret’s little fund,
the existence of which was no sooner known to Mr.
O’Rourke than he stood up his fishing-rod in
one corner of the room, and thenceforth it caught nothing
but cobwebs.
“Divil a sthroke o’ work
I ’ll do,” said Mr. O’Rourke, “whin
we can live at aise on our earnin’s.
Who ‘d be afther frettin’ hisself, wid
money in the bank? How much is it, Peggy darlint?”
And divil a stroke more of work did
he do. He lounged down on the wharves, and, with
his short clay pipe stuck between his lips and his
hands in his pockets, stared off at the sail-boats
on the river. He sat on the door-step of the
Finnigan domicile, and plentifully chaffed the passers-by.
Now and then, when he could wheedle some fractional
currency out of Margaret, he spent it like a crown-prince
at The Wee Drop around the corner. With that
fine magnetism which draws together birds of a feather,
he shortly drew about him all the ne’er-do-weels
of Rivermouth.
It was really wonderful what an unsuspected
lot of them there was. From all the frowzy purlieus
of the town they crept forth into the sunlight to
array themselves under the banner of the prince of
scallawags. It was edifying of a summer afternoon
to see a dozen of them sitting in a row, like turtles,
on the string-piece of Jedediah Rand’s wharf,
with their twenty-four feet dangling over the water,
assisting Mr. O’Rourke in contemplating the
islands in the harbor, and upholding the scenery, as
it were.
The rascal had one accomplishment,
he had a heavenly voice quite in the rough,
to be sure and he played, on the violin
like an angel. He did not know one note from
another, but he played in a sweet natural way, just
as Orpheus must have played, by ear. The drunker
he was the more pathos and humor he wrung from the
old violin, his sole piece of personal property.
He had a singular fancy for getting up at two or three
o’clock in the morning, and playing by an open
casement, to the distraction of all the dogs in the
immediate neighborhood and innumerable dogs in the
distance.
Unfortunately, Mr. O’Rourke’s
freaks were not always of so innocent a complexion.
On one or two occasions, through an excess of animal
and other spirits, he took to breaking windows in
the town. Among his nocturnal feats he accomplished
the demolition of the glass in the door of The Wee
Drop. Now, breaking windows in Rivermouth is an
amusement not wholly disconnected with an interior
view of the police-station (bridewell is the local
term); so it happened that Mr. O’Rourke woke
up one fine morning and found himself snug and tight
in one of the cells in the rear of the Brick Market.
His plea that the bull’s-eye in the glass door
of The Wee Drop winked at him in an insult-in’
manner as he was passing by did not prevent Justice
Hackett from fining the delinquent ten dollars and
costs, which made sad havoc with the poor wife’s
bank account. So Margaret’s married life
wore on, and all went merry as a funeral knell.
After Mrs. Bilkins, with a brow as
severe as that of one of the Parcae, had closed the
door upon the O’Rourkes that summer morning,
she sat down on the stairs, and, sinking the indignant
goddess in the woman, burst into tears. She was
still very wroth with Margaret Callaghan, as she persisted
in calling her; very merciless and unforgiving, as
the gentler sex are apt to be to the gentler
sex. Mr. Bilkins, however, after the first vexation,
missed Margaret from the household; missed her singing,
which was in itself as helpful as a second girl; missed
her hand in the preparation of those hundred and one
nameless comforts which are necessities to the old,
and wished in his soul that he had her back again.
Who could make a gruel, when he was ill, or cook a
steak, when he was well, like Margaret? So, meeting
her one morning at the fish-market for
Mr. O’Rourke had long since given over the onerous
labor of catching dinners he spoke to her
kindly, and asked her how she liked the change in
her life, and if Mr. O’Rourke was good to her.
“Troth, thin, sur,” said
Margaret, with a short, dry laugh, “he ’s
the divil’s own!”
Margaret was thin and careworn, and
her laugh had the mild gayety of champagne not properly
corked. These things were apparent even to Mr.
Bilkins, who was not a shrewd observer.
“I ’m afraid, Margaret,”
he remarked sorrowfully, “that you are not making
both ends meet.”
“Begorra, I ’d be glad
if I could make one ind meet!” returned Margaret.
With a duplicity quite foreign to
his nature, Mr. Bilkins gradually drew from her the
true state of affairs. Mr. O’Rourke was
a very bad case indeed; he did nothing towards her
support; he was almost constantly drunk; the little
money she had laid by was melting away, and would
not last until winter. Mr. O’Rourke was
perpetually coming home with a sprained ankle, or
a bruised shoulder, or a broken head. He had broken
most of the furniture in his festive hours, including
the cooking-stove. “In short,” as
Mr. Bilkins said in relating the matter afterwards
to Mrs. Bilkins, “he had broken all those things
which he should n’t have broken, and failed
to break the one thing he ought to have broken long
ago his neck, namely.”
The revelation which startled Mr.
Bilkins most was this: in spite of all, Margaret
loved Larry with the whole of her warm Irish heart.
Further than keeping the poor creature up waiting for
him until ever so much o’clock at night, it
did not appear that he treated her with personal cruelty.
If he had beaten her, perhaps she would have worshipped
him. It needed only that.
Revolving Margaret’s troubles
in his thoughts as he walked homeward, Mr. Bilkins
struck upon a plan by which he could help her.
When this plan was laid before Mrs. Bilkins, she opposed
it with a vehemence that convinced him she had made
up her mind to adopt it.
“Never, never will I have that
ungrateful woman under this roof!” cried Mrs.
Bilkins; and accordingly the next day Mr. and Mrs.
O’Rourke took up their abode in the Bilkins
mansion Margaret as cook, and Larry as
gardener.
“I ’m convanient if the
owld gintleman is,” had been Mr. O’Rourke’s
remark, when the proposition was submitted to him.
Not that Mr. O’Rourke had the faintest idea
of gardening. He did n’t know a tulip from
a tomato. He was one of those sanguine people
who never hesitate to undertake anything, and are
never abashed by their herculean inability.
Mr. Bilkins did not look to Margaret’s
husband for any great botanical knowledge; but he
was rather surprised one day when Mr. O’Rourke
pointed to the triangular bed of lilies-of-the-valley,
then out of flower, and remarked, “Thim ‘s
a nate lot o’ pur-taties ye ’ve
got there, sur.” Mr. Bilkins, we repeat,
did not expect much from Mr. O’Rourke’s
skill in gardening; his purpose was to reform the
fellow if possible, and in any case to make Margaret’s
lot easier.
Reestablished in her old home, Margaret
broke into song again, and Mr. O’Rourke himself
promised to do very well; morally, we mean, not agriculturally.
His ignorance of the simplest laws of nature, if nature
has any simple laws, and his dense stupidity on every
other subject were heavy trials to Mr. Bilkins.
Happily, Mr. Bilkins was not without a sense of humor,
else he would have found Mr. O’Rourke insupportable.
Just when the old gentleman’s patience was about
exhausted, the gardener would commit some atrocity
so perfectly comical that his master all but loved
him for the moment.
“Larry,” said Mr. Bilkins,
one breathless afternoon in the middle of September,
“just see how the thermometer on the back porch
stands.”
Mr. O’Rourke disappeared, and
after a prolonged absence returned with the monstrous
announcement that the thermometer stood at 820!
Mr. Bilkins looked at the man closely.
He was unmistakably sober.
“Eight hundred and twenty what?”
cried Mr. Bilkins, feeling very warm, as he naturally
would in so high a temperature.
“Eight hundthred an’ twinty degrays, I
suppose, sur.”
“Larry, you ’re an idiot.”
This was obviously not to Mr. O’Rourke’s
taste; for he went out and brought the thermometer,
and, pointing triumphantly to the line of numerals
running parallel with the glass tube, exclaimed, “Add
’em up yerself, thin!”
Perhaps this would not have been amusing
if Mr. Bilkins had not spent the greater part of the
previous forenoon in initiating Mr. O’Rourke
into the mysteries of the thermometer. Nothing
could make amusing Mr. O’Rourke’s method
of setting out crocus bulbs. Mr. Bilkins had received
a lot of a very choice variety from Boston, and having
a headache that morning, turned over to Mr. O’Rourke
the duty of planting them. Though he had never
seen a bulb in his life, Larry unblushingly asserted
that he had set out thousands for Sir Lucius O’Grady
of O’Grady Castle, “an illegant place
intirely, wid tin miles o’ garden-walks,”
added Mr. O’Rourke, crushing Mr. Bilkins, who
boasted only of a few humble flower-beds.
The following day he stepped into
the garden to see how Larry had done his work.
There stood the parched bulbs, carefully arranged in
circles and squares on top of the soil.
“Did n’t I tell you to
set out these bulbs?” cried Mr. Bilkins, wrathfully.
“An’ did n’t I set
’em out?” expostulated Mr. O’Rourke.
“An’ ain’t they a settin’
there beautiful?”
“But you should have put them into the ground,
stupid!”
“Is it bury ’em, ye mane?
Be jabbers! how could they iver git out agin?
Give the little jokers a fair show, Misther Bilkins!”
For two weeks Mr. O’Rourke conducted
himself with comparative propriety; that is to say,
be rendered himself useless about the place, appeared
regularly at his meals, and kept sober. Perhaps
the hilarious strains of music which sometimes issued
at midnight from the upper window of the north gable
were not just what a quiet, unostentatious family would
desire; but on the whole there was not much to complain
of.
The third week witnessed a falling
off. Though always promptly on hand at the serving
out of rations, Mr. O’Rourke did not even make
a pretence of working in the garden. He would
disappear mysteriously immediately after breakfast,
and reappear with supernatural abruptness at dinner.
Nobody knew what he did with himself in the interval,
until one day he was observed to fall out of an apple-tree
near the stable. His retreat discovered, he took
to the wharves and the alleys in the distant part
of the town. It soon became evident that his ways
were not the ways of temperance, and that all his
paths led to The Wee Drop.
Of course Margaret tried to keep this
from the family. Being a woman, she coined excuses
for him in her heart. It was a dull life for the
lad, any way, and it was worse than him that was leading
Larry astray. Hours and hours after the old people
had gone to bed, she would sit without a light in
the lonely kitchen, listening for that shuffling step
along the gravel walk. Night after night she
never closed her eyes, and went about the house the
next day with that smooth, impenetrable face behind
which women hide their care.
One morning found Margaret sitting
pale and anxious by the kitchen stove. O’Rourke
had not come home at all. Noon came, and night,
but not Larry. Whenever Mrs. Bilkins approached
her that day, Margaret was humming “Kate Kearney”
quite merrily. But when her work was done, she
stole out at the back gate and went in search of him.
She scoured the neighborhood like a madwoman.
O’Rourke had not been at the ‘Finnigans’.
He had not been at The Wee Drop since Monday, and this
was Wednesday night. Her heart sunk within her
when she failed to find him in the police-station.
Some dreadful thing had happened to him. She came
back to the house with one hand pressed wearily against
her cheek. The dawn struggled through the kitchen
windows, and fell upon Margaret crouched by the stove.
She could no longer wear her mask.
When Mr. Bilkins came down she confessed that Larry
had taken to drinking again, and had not been home
for two nights.
“Mayhap he ’s drownded
hisself,” suggested Margaret, wringing her hands.
“Not he,” said Mr. Bilkins;
“he does n’t like the taste of water well
enough.”
“Troth, thin, he does n’t,”
reflected Margaret, and the reflection comforted her.
“At any rate, I ’ll go
and look him up after breakfast,” said Mr. Bilkins.
And after breakfast, accordingly, Mr. Bilkins sallied
forth with the depressing expectation of finding Mr.
O’Rourke without much difficulty. “Come
to think of it,” said the old gentleman to himself,
drawing on his white cotton gloves as he walked up
Anchor Street “I don’t want to
find him.”