CHAPTER XXIII.
"PART OF THE GREAT WELL-TO-DO WORLD."
"I MUST call at this house," the doctor said, suddenly drawing rein before a quiet little house at the foot of a wide lawn. "The gatekeeper of this American castle has a sick child whom I have promised to see. Can you hold the horses, Miss Dennis, or shall I tie them? This is a quiet spot, and they are gentle."
"I am not afraid of anything," Gracie said, eyes aglow as well as cheeks.
And the doctor went into the house wondering whether Professor Ellis, if he could see her now, would not be afraid of her.
Once inside, he gave a start of surprise, almost of dismay, for the face which appeared at the open door of the sick-room belonged to Joy Saunders.
"You here?" he said, trying to control the disturbed element in his voice.
She answered quietly,—
"I came out by street-car. Did you drive?"
"Yes," he said abruptly; "but I am not alone. How is the child?" And he went forward at once to his professional duties, leaving her to wonder over his manner.
It was peculiar certainly. Joy Saunders was used to abruptness from this man, but there was a quality in it to-day that she did not recognize. She went and looked out of the window, and saw Gracie Dennis holding the horses—saw her red, "red" cheeks and flashing eyes, and the peculiar, haughty poise of her head, with which the stepmother at home was well acquainted.
She did not know this Gracie Dennis save by reputation. Once Dr. Everett had asked her to call at Mrs. Roberts's, and had made her feel as though she were foolishly conventional in declining to do so.
"How is she ever to know you, according to the rules which trammel society? There ought to be some way arranged for Christians to be free from trammels."
This had been his comment; but he had not asked her again, and she had never met Mrs. Roberts, nor yet Gracie Dennis. Yet she knew her very well, and had watched her often as she passed. She knew instantly who she was now, as she sat there in her haughty beauty, checking with determined hand the impatience of those horses. Oh, she knew more than this! It was very apparent now why Dr. Everett was peculiarly abrupt, and—well, yes—embarrassed. She had almost thought that was the name of the feeling, only it had seemed so absurd. And then Joy Saunders held her meek little head high, and told herself that he need not fear her presence; she could go as she had come, in the street-car.
The doctor came towards her now, speaking rapidly es usual:—
"Joy, the child is very sick. There ought to be an experienced person here to-night. Not you; I am sorry you came up. Do you think your mother would come? Will you ride down with me? I have Miss Dennis in the carriage, but it is quite large enough for three, you know."
Then Joy had turned away her head, holding it high, and said,—
"No, thank you; I am going down in the street-car."
And that blundering doctor drew on his gloves, saying to himself, "I don't know but that is best," and went out, only waiting to say to Joy:—
"Will you ask your mother about it? I will see her as soon as I can get around. I wish you would go directly home from here—will you?"
Then he lifted his hat to her, and sprang into his carriage and rode away with Gracie Dennis.
And Joy Saunders waited for the next yellow car, and climbed into it, and told herself all the way down town that she wished she had stayed at the little house and watched all night by the sick child.
The thoughts that Dr. Everett had given to the entire matter were few. They ran somewhat after this fashion:—
"Joy here! And I'm afraid of the fever, from all I have heard. I shall take her home as soon as possible. How will that poor little girl in the carriage manage with a new acquaintance just now, I wonder?
"I am afraid it will be quite a strain. Still, I can do the talking, and let her be quiet. The main point is that I hoped she might have a suggestion to make about Hester. If she could rouse herself to try to save that girl, it would be the best thing she could do. If she only knew it, Joy is the one who could help her in that direction or any other."
As they dashed down the avenue, he was still occupied in wishing that he had urged Joy to ride, and thus forced an acquaintance between her and the pretty girl at his side. He was not very patient with what he called the "trammels" of society. When there were two people so fitted to enjoy and help each other, as were Joy Saunders and Gracie Dennis, he held it to be a waste in Christian economy that they should not know each other.
Too much occupied with his thoughts and his driving to give heed to passers-by, he lost the careful bow that young Reid had for them as they drew near the city's whirl again.
Gracie did not; she returned it with a slightly-heightened colour in her cheeks, and wondered if that young man knew Professor Ellis, and what he thought of him, and what he thought of her for being acquainted with him.
Sometimes it seems to me a real pity that on occasion there could not be some way of looking into one another's thoughts. So many misunderstandings might thus be saved.
For instance, there was Reid, who went on his way with a clouded brow. Where had Dr. Everett been? And why was Gracie Dennis with him? Was it probable that he had been riding for pleasure? The bare suggestion astonished the young man. He found that he had never before given room to the thought that Dr. Everett took time for pleasure. Allowing this to be the case, why had he not taken Joy Saunders with him? Such a proceeding would have seemed altogether natural, though the honest-hearted young fellow admitted to himself that, had he been taking a ride for pleasure, the companion of his choice would not have been Joy Saunders. It was certainly a bewildering world.
So trying did young Reid find his thoughts on that evening that he actually set himself deliberately to learn whether the ride was the result of chance or design. The consequence was, that he learned not only of the ride, but of the afternoon entertainment at Seltzer Hall, with glass goblets for instruments. This increased his astonishment, and did not lessen the gloom on his face.
But the two in the carriage, unconscious of the gloomy young man, or of the sad-hearted young girl riding in a street-car, were almost silent during the homeward ride, until just as they turned into the avenue that led to Mr. Roberts's door. Then Gracie said:—
"Dr. Everett, I should like to know that girl. There are some things that I ought to say to her, and if I had a chance I would try to say them in a way to help her."
"I will manage it," said Dr. Everett, speaking in a quick, relieved tone. He felt encouraged for Hester now, and greatly relieved about Gracie. She might be wounded, but she was made of the material of which he had hoped. She was not going to die herself, nor fold her hands and see others ruined, merely because she had been deceived.
He bade her a cheery "Good-afternoon!" And drove away, feeling that, although he had been obliged to give up Sewell Alley, good work had been accomplished. He believed now that he understood the situation.
He was right about one thing: Gracie Dennis had not the slightest idea of dying. Her mood was better expressed, half an hour later, when she stood at the parlour window, and returned a low, lingering bow from Professor Ellis, with a haughty stare from flashing eyes, looking out from an erect and motionless head.
Dirk Colson's brain was in a whirl. He had an important question to settle. In his pocket were two blue tickets, promising to admit him to the largest and finest hall in the city to hear the great temperance orator. Dirk knew very little about orators, but he had heard of John B. Gough, and everything he had heard made him wish to have a glimpse of him. You will remember that Dirk was an imitator. He had heard that Mr. Gough was also, and down deep in his heart the boy had an ambition to hear the man. Now was his unexpected opportunity. Of course he was going, but the perplexing thing was, what to do with that other ticket.
There was Mart! Oh yes, to be sure, he had not forgotten her; but what a strange thing it would be to take her to a lecture! He had never taken her anywhere in his life. She had nothing to wear, though he remembered at that moment that the mother had, by earnest effort, succeeded in getting her shawl out of pawn.
There was one incentive for taking her; it would please Mrs. Roberts. Dirk studied the thing for some time, to try to discover why she should care, and had finally given up the problem as too great for him. Yet he was sure she cared; there had been a wistful light in her eyes when she said, "I thought possibly you might like to take that sister with the golden hair," that he saw and interpreted.
It took him three days to decide what he should say, supposing he made up his mind to ask her.
Several people were at work helping him, though he knew nothing about that. Mrs. Roberts remarked one evening to young Reid that she wished she knew a way to induce Dirk Colson to take his sister, without actually asking him to do so. She fancied that, besides the advantage which might possibly directly follow an evening spent in that way, it would suggest new thoughts to the brother.
The young man caught at the suggestion, and wanted to help to carry it out. It was not an easy thing to do. He had not grown intimate with Dirk Colson; in fact, that misguided young fellow rather resented any attempt at intimacy. He was, however, acquainted with Sallie Calkins; the numerous trips he had made to their room during Mark's illness had brought him into such constant and pleasant contact with Sallie and her brother that they looked upon him as a tried friend. Sallie, he knew, was a friend of the shy, golden-haired sister.
So one evening he went to call at the Calkins's room, with a vague hope of helping indirectly in bringing to pass Mrs. Roberts's desires.
To Sallie, he made known the wish that Dirk would take his sister to the lecture, and secured from her a promise to help the scheme along, provided it developed.
After he went away, Sallie sat long at her sewing, making all alone, by a dim light, one of the most heroic little sacrifices that was ever offered "in His name." To fully understand it, you must know that Mark Calkins had recovered sufficiently to take his place in the office where Dr. Everett had secured him an opening, and an employment that would enable him to sit most of the time, thereby giving his injured limb a chance to rest.
Also, Mark had been admitted to the Monday evening gatherings, and was distinguishing himself there by his skill in reading and writing. Of course he had received two tickets, and equally of course, being the boy he was, he had planned to take Sallie with him to the lecture.
Great was Sallie's prospective pleasure! The event of her lifetime it was to be. To walk with Mark through the crowded streets, both neatly dressed; to walk boldly forward with the throng, and present their tickets of admittance to the great hall, hitherto seen only from the outside; to move down the long aisles as those who had a right, and select their seats unquestioned by police; in short, to be like other people—part of the great well-to-do world—this was Sallie's joy.
She had washed and mended her best calico dress; she had sewed buttons on the pretty cape, according to Mrs. Roberts's directions; she had tried on the neat bonnet which had been manufactured for her by Mrs. Roberts's own fingers, and altogether, Sallie had probably gotten, during these two days, more enjoyment out of Gough's lecture than many others who had heard him a dozen times ever secured. I do not think it any wonder that, as she rocked and sewed, and thought out her great thought, there fell tears on the work she was doing.
CHAPTER XXIV.
"FOR YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT MAY COME."
THIS was the thought: Suppose Dirk Colson should want to take his sister. Sallie did not believe it in the least probable—she had not that amount of faith in Dirk Colson; but suppose he should, Mart could not go, for the reason that she would have nothing to wear.
And here was Sallie's pretty cape, which would cover the worst of her dress, and her pretty bonnet, which she knew would make a picture of Mart; but if she lent them, it meant staying at home to Sallie. Could she do it? Could she bear to think of such a thing? What would Mark say? What would he do with his other ticket?
Would she be likely ever to have another chance to go to that wonderful hall, and be like other folks?
But Mart had never been anywhere in her life.
"And I," said poor Sallie, catching her breath with a sob, "have been often for a walk on the brightest streets, and looked in at the shop windows, and everything. I 'most know I will help her to go if I can."
Young Reid had no conception of the sacrifice for which he had asked.
It is little wonder, surely, that Sallie's voice faltered that same evening, as she explained to Mart, who had slipped in for a bit of talk, that if ever she wanted to go anywhere very much, she was to let Sallie know, and she should have her cape and bonnet to wear. Then she had anxiously planned for her a way to mend her dress, so that it would look quite well under the cape, and she had even urged,—
"Now do, Mart; if anybody should want you to go, don't say you won't, but take your chance, for you don't know what may come."
Also she bore with patience Mart's scornful laugh and emphatic statement that no chances ever came to her, and nobody ever wanted her to go anywhere.
As she talked she grew interested and eloquent; urged earnestly that Mart should embrace the first opportunity to go somewhere, and wear her new cape and bonnet. At the same time she was silent about the lecture. Suppose no chance should come? Then it would be doubly hard to Mart to have had the possibility suggested. The same delicate reasoning had held her from dwelling on her own prospects. Some people would have been very much astonished over the amount of delicate consideration for the feelings of others which could be found in that little room.
Dirk loitered strangely over his meagre dinner the next afternoon. It was late, for he had secured a position at last in one of the printing offices, and was apt to take his meals at any hour when it happened to be convenient to do without him at the office. He had only been three days at work, and Mart had taken little notice of the new departure, except to remark grimly that it would not last. But to Sallie she had boasted that Dirk had gone to work as hard as anybody. If somebody could only have told Dirk that his sister ever boasted of him, it might have helped him much during these days.
"What are you hanging around for? You've got all there will be to eat in this house to-day, and it is time you were off."
This was the ungracious manner in which the sister took note of his lingering. She was painfully afraid that he had already grown weary of regular employment, and the fear made her voice gruffer than usual.
His reply amazed her; in fact, it amazed himself.
"Mart, I've got tickets to a show—a nice place—and I want you to go along."
"Humph!" said Mart. "That is a likely story!"
Then he grew earnest, displayed his treasures, and urged her acceptance, quite astonished with himself the while. Did he really want her to go, he wondered, or did he want to please Mrs. Roberts?
You would have been interested, an hour later, to have seen Mart skip up the rickety stairs leading to the Calkins' abode. You would probably have thought that she endangered life or limb by her rapid movements; but Mart was used to such staircases, and the news she had to communicate required haste.
"There's a chance!" she said, breathless with speed and eagerness. "Sallie Calkins, there's a chance, and you'd never guess how. Dirk he wants me to go to a show with him this very night! He's got tickets. It is a big show, where all the grand folks go. It is in the very biggest hall in this city, and Dirk he says I am to go. Sallie Calkins, do you mean it, truly, that I am to wear your lovely new bonnet and cape? Do you suppose I can really go anywhere? I don't know why Dirk wants me to go so much, but he coaxed and coaxed."
Poor Sallie! She stooped quickly to pick up a pin from the floor, so that Mart might not get a glimpse of her eyes with the sudden tears in them. Yet, as she stooped, she made her final, grand sacrifice—Mart should go!
Then she entered with entire abandon into the preparations. Not only her bonnet and cape, but her shoes—new ones that Mark had bought her with his first earnings after his illness—were to attend the lecture.
She rejoiced over the excellent fit of the shoes. She did more than this. As Mart watched the process of buttoning them, and remarked complacently that she shouldn't wonder if Dirk would buy her a pair some day when he earned money enough, she kept her lip from curling with an incredulous sneer. You will remember that she had not the slightest faith in Dirk.
Neither must I forget that there was another thing to lend—her comb—in order that Mart's wonderful yellow hair might be for once reduced to something like order. And at the risk of leading you to think that Sallie was altogether too "æsthetic" for her position in life, I shall have to confess that this was her hardest bit of sacrifice, her comb was so new and so pretty!
However, it did its duty on Mart's tawny locks, and the transforming effect was marvellous. In fact, when all was ready, the cape adjusted, the hat which Mrs. Roberts had shown her how to wear set on the yellow head, Sallie said not a word, but went to the packing-box in the corner which served as a treasure cupboard, and drew forth the one possession about which she had been utterly silent—a little hand-glass which Mark had brought her one winter evening just before he was hurt. A cheap, little, ugly glass which you would have turned from in disgust, saying that it made your nose awry, and your chin protrude, and your eyes squint, and was altogether horrid. But, held before Mart's glowing face, what a secret did it reveal!
Mart looked, and was silent, too, and went home in a hushed frame of mind to wait for Dirk. Home was deserted. The mother had dragged her wearied body out for a day of "light" work. The time had gone by when she was able to do any that people called heavy. Where the father was none of the family knew, and their chief hope concerning him was that he would stay away as long as possible.
I find myself longing to give you an idea of what that elegant, brilliantly-lighted hall, with its brilliant audience, was to this girl, and being unable to do it.
When people live so far below us that our every-day experiences are to them like a day at the World's Fair, it is very hard indeed to describe how our special treats affect them.
It is a treat to everybody to hear Gough. How then can I tell you what it was to this girl and her brother? Dirk listened; he must have listened well, for long afterward he was able to repeat entire paragraphs, and to imitate the manner of the great orator with remarkable skill.
Yet at the time he would have seemed to a close watcher to have been absorbed in another way. He looked at Mart somewhat as he had on that Sabbath when his acquaintance with Mrs. Roberts began. But the thought which had dimly haunted him that day blossomed on this evening. Certainly Mart looked like Mrs. Roberts! It might be folly to think so. Doubtless the fellows would make no end of fun of him if he should over tell them so, which he meant to take excellent care not to do; but the fact remained, that in Sallie's bonnet and cape, and, above all, with the waves of hair floating about her, there was a look which instantly and strongly reminded him of that lady.
There was another listener at the lecture who was unexpectedly present. Part of poor Sallie's trial had been to tell her brother, who had been radiant for a week over the prospect of taking her, that she had with her own hand put away the blessing. How would Mark take it?
Dirk's forlorn-looking sister was no favourite of his. I think it would have been very difficult to have convinced him that there was a trace of Mrs. Roberts in her face.
But such curious creatures are we that it actually hurt Sallie to see how quietly he took the great sad news of her sacrifice. After the first start of surprise, he seemed preoccupied, and she could almost have thought that he did not hear her explanation. She had much ado to keep back the tears; but she had made a special little feast for him that evening, with a white cloth on the table, and a cup of actual tea, and the cup set in a saucer. She was not going to spoil the scene with tears; so after a little she said cheerily,—
"Nov you have a chance to do something nice for somebody. Who will you take on your ticket?"
"I was thinking," he answered slowly. "You know it is a temperance lecture, and it is by a wonderful man. The fellows in the shop have been talking about him all day, and they say you just can't help thinking when he gets a-going, and I was just thinking, What if we could get 'him' to go, and 'he' would listen, and get to thinking."
There are no italics that will give you an idea of the peculiar emphasis which the boy put on the pronouns.
Sallie understood; that "he" could mean but one person in the world.
But her brother must have answered the look on her face, for she spoke no word.
"Sometimes they do, Sallie. There was old Pete, you know."
Oh, yes, Sallie knew old Pete; everybody in that alley knew him—a notorious drunkard once, of the sort which people, even good Christian people, are apt to pronounce hopeless. Yet now he wore a neat suit of clothes every day, and brought home twenty pounds of flour at one time in a sack, and bought his coal by the barrel. Wonderful things occasionally happened in that alley.
"Yes," said Sallie, "that is true; and old Pete wasn't much like him."
The tone spoke volumes. It would have almost angered her, even now, to have had it hinted that old Pete was superior to that father, though hardly a person acquainted with the two but would have said that there was more hope for old Pete, even in his miserable past, than for this one. How they managed it, those two—the difficult task of getting him persuaded to go, and then the more difficult task of keeping him sufficiently sober to get there, would make a story in itself. I fancy there are many such stories in real life which will never get told. The probabilities are, if they were, some wise critic would pronounce them unnatural and sensational.
Suffice it to say that the task was accomplished, and among the most attentive listeners to the great speaker that evening was Sallie's father, while she sat at home and mended a badly torn jacket, and cried now and then, and was glad and sorry and proud and frightened and hopeful by turns all that long evening.
I am not sure but it was better for her that she sat at home. I don't know just what she might have done had she been in the hall to see her father, at the close of the meeting, shamble forward with the crowd and sign his name to the total abstinence pledge.
She might have screamed out in her excitement, or she might have fainted. For although there were those who said—some with a sneer, and some with a sigh—that "signing the pledge would not amount to anything; the miserable fellow could not keep a pledge to save his life!" Sallie would have thought nothing of the kind. She had faith in her father's word.
It is a wonderful stimulus to have some one who believes in us.
CHAPTER XXV.
"WHAT DO YOU HOPE TO ACCOMPLISH?"
"DO you know," said Mrs. Roberts, addressing Gracie Dennis, who, with young Reid, had waited in the hall for her to join them (they were ready for the lecture, and were to take up Mr. Roberts on the way)—"do you know that I have a desire which I see no way of realizing? If Mr. Colson should bring his sister with him to-night, I should like so much to get possession of her and bring her home with me. But I have been planning all day, and see no possible excuse for such an apparently wild proceeding."
I want you to notice how naturally Mrs. Roberts said "Mr. Colson." She never talked about Dirk under any other name; she even taught herself to think of him as "Mr. Colson." Consequently, when she spoke the name in his presence, there was not a trace of unnaturalness in tone or manner. The others tried in vain to follow her example. Dr. Everett could not speak of him in this way without slight hesitation and a touch of embarrassment.
"The truth is," said he, "I think 'Dirk' all the week, and on the Sabbath I find it impossible to reach up to 'Mr. Colson' without an effort."
There was no touch of "reaching up" or reaching down about Mrs. Roberts's talk with her pupils. It is possible that this is one link in the chain of influence which she was weaving around them.
Gracie Dennis's face expressed curiosity, and when they were seated in the carriage, she referred to the cause:—
"But, Flossy, I cannot imagine why you should want to do such a thing. It will certainly be too late to-night to try to get acquainted with her. I should think some time when you could have an unbroken evening would be the better for experimenting."
"For some sorts of experimenting it would," Mrs. Roberts answered, smiling quietly; "my experiment, in part at least, was to see how the pink room might impress her."
"Flossy Shipley!"
When Gracie took refuge in that name, her hostess knew she was not only much excited, but a trifle disapproving; at such times she made haste to change the subject.
It happened that the thing for which she had been planning shaped itself so naturally as to give not the slightest colour of premeditation to the act.
When Dirk and his sister worked their way through the dense crowds to the open air, they discovered that it was raining heavily. For almost the first time in her life the fact struck terror to Mart Colson's soul. Ordinarily no duck could have been more indifferent to a rain-storm than herself. On this evening she gave vent to her dismay in short, expressive words,—
"Sallie's bonnet!—And cape!" This last after a moment's thought. "And shoes!" she added, as the magnitude of her troubles grew upon her.
Drawn up close to the sidewalk stood a carriage and a pair of horses that Dirk could not help giving admiring attention to, despite the rain. A fine horse always held his attention. No thought of the occupants of the carriage came to him, not even after a head leaned forward and a hand beckoned; of course it was beckoning to somebody else. Then a clear voice spoke:—
"Mr. Colson."
He started quickly forward; there was but one person who ever said "Mr. Colson," and besides, that voice belonged only to one.
"I want your sister to go home with me. It is raining so hard that she ought not to walk, and I should like very much to have her stay with me to-night. Won't you ask her to, please?"
If Mrs. Roberts had been asking a favour, instead of conferring one, her voice could not have been sweeter and more winning.
Dirk went back to his sister, too much bewildered by the state of affairs even to express surprise. "Mart," he said, "she wants you."
A quick spring to the sidewalk, and young Reid was standing beside Mart.
"It is raining so hard," he explained, "Mrs. Roberts would be very glad if you would come."
And Mart, thinking of nothing at all save Sallie's bonnet and cape and shoes, turned toward the waiting carriage.
Mr. Reid had his umbrella raised, and carefully shielded the bonnet, assisting its wearer to enter the carriage with as much courtesy as he had bestowed on Gracie Dennis but a few moments before. Not a movement was lost on the watching Dirk.
When the door was closed and the good-nights had been said—Mrs. Roberts leaning from the carriage again for that purpose—and when the horses had dashed around the corner, he still occupied his position on the curbstone, gazing down the street, gazing at nothing unless he saw a reflection of his own bewildered thoughts.
"Come!" said a policeman who knew him, and was therefore suspicious. "What are you hanging about here for? Move on!"
"Humph!" said Dirk, as he slowly took his hands out of his pockets, eyes still fixed on the corner where the carriage had turned. "What if I should?"
Something in his eye would have told Mrs. Roberts, had she been there, that he meant more than moving down the street, though that he presently did, regardless of wind and rain.
Meantime the bonnet and cape in the carriage stepped somewhat into the background, and the girl who wore them allowed herself once more to think of her individuality, and to wonder at her position. She sat bolt upright on the edge of the soft, gray seat, and gazed about her as well as she could by the glimmer of the street lamps. She in a carriage! Mart Colson sitting on a back seat, beside a grand lady, and rolling down the avenue! Who would have supposed that such a thing could have happened to Sallie Calkins's bonnet?
Mrs. Roberts recognized the bonnet and cape with a smile of satisfaction. She had studied much over the possibilities of this girl's costume. Was it probable that she had anything suitable to wear to a lecture? She had passed the cellar where the girl lived but once, and had had but one glimpse of her; yet these glimpses had been enough to render it highly improbable that she had any street costume. Then had Mrs. Roberts canvassed the possibilities of getting a street suit for her; there were apparently insurmountable difficulties in the way. She was too utterly unacquainted with the ground to venture. Besides, there were reasons for believing that anything of value would find its way from that cellar to a pawnbroker's in a very short space of time.
Having spent hours over many different schemes, and rejected each one as liable to bring disaster, Mrs. Roberts was obliged to betake herself to prayer. If the watching Saviour wanted her to work through the medium of this lecture on this particular child of his, he could certainly see that she was present; could furnish her with clothes to wear, either through herself or some other of his servants. She would wait and watch.
Not once had she thought of Sallie Calkins and the new bonnet that her own fingers had helped to fashion; yet here it was beside her on the head of this girl, toward whom she was drawn! The fact made Mrs. Roberts radiant.
She said almost nothing to the startled prisoner at her side, beyond a murmured, "So glad you let me carry you home with me!" Then she drew a bright-coloured wrap about her, and left her to her amazement, while the eager tongues of the rest of the party talked continuously.
By the way, you are not acquainted with the pink room, I think. You should see it before it is invaded for the night. Large it is. I think little people sometimes have a peculiar fondness for large rooms; Mrs. Roberts had. The walls were tinted with what might be called a suggestion of pink, with just a touch of sunset gold about the mouldings. The carpet was soft and rich; it gave back no sound of footfall. It was strewn with pink buds; some just opening into beauty, some half-blown. Accustomed to the sight of elegant carpets as you are, you would almost have stooped to pick one of these buds, they looked so real. The curtains to the windows were white, but lined with rose pink; they were looped back with knots of pink ribbons. The bed was a marvel of pink and white drapery; so was the dressing-bureau. The easy-chairs were upholstered in soft grays with a pinkish tinge; and the tidies, lavishly displayed, were all of pink and white.
There was nothing conventional about the room. A professional would have been shocked by some of its appointments. Many a lady of wealth, accustomed to having things as "they" decree, would have been more than doubtful over the pink ribbons and the profusion of white drapery. Aside from the carpet, and a choice picture or two, there was nothing especially expensive about the furnishings. It was simply a room in which Mrs. Roberts had allowed her own sweet little fancies to take her captive.
The gas was lighted; the door was ajar into a toilet-room; a lavish display of great, beautiful towels could be seen as you peeped in, and various touches told of an expected guest. Flowers were blossoming on the mantle, and a tiny vase which stood on a bracket near the toilet-stand held a single rose of a peculiar hue and perfume, which had blossomed for this hour—at least, Mrs. Roberts thought it had.
Into this room, in all its purity and beauty, went Sallie Calkins's bonnet and cape and her strong, new, thick shoes; and the wearer thereof pushed the bonnet away from her flushed face, and stood and looked about her.
Downstairs they discussed in curious tones not her, but the mistress of the mansion.
"Flossy, I do think you are too queer for anything! Why don't you have her go to Katy's room? Katy is away for the night, you know, and I'm sure her room is as neat and pretty as can be. Imagine what a contrast it would be to anything that she has ever seen!—Mr. Reid, you ought to see the room into which she has been put. There isn't a more elegant one in the house. Some of its furnishings are so delicate that I hardly like to touch them. What sort of a disease is it that has taken Mrs. Roberts, do you suppose, to send her there?—Flossy, she will get no rest to-night; she will be afraid of that immaculate bed."
This, of course, was Gracie Dennis.
Mr. Roberts looked from her to his wife, his face smiling, curious, yet with a sort of at-rest expression.
"What do you hope to accomplish, Flossy?" He asked the question as one who was pleased to watch a new experiment, yet felt sure that the experimenter had an end to attain which would justify any measures that she might take. Mr. Roberts had believed in his wife when he chose her from all others; but he was learning to believe in her in a peculiar sense, as one led by a hand that made no mistakes.
She turned to answer his question, her face bright, yet half puzzled:—
"I am not sure that I can explain to you what I hoped for," she said; "I caught the idea from Mr. Reid."
"From me!" and the young man thus mentioned looked so astonished and incredulous that Gracie laughed.
"He is sure he never thought of anything so wild," she said gaily. "Flossy, you must find a better excuse than that."
"Yet it was something that he said.—Do you remember telling me, not long ago, about your sister's idea that all the world had lost its place because of sin; that God intended everything here to be beautiful, and all life to be bright with joy, and that Satan had gotten hold of men's lives, and was trying to ruin them, and that every beautiful creation was God's picture to the world of what his intention had been? I'm telling it poorly; but it made a very deep impression. This girl's face, you know, is beautiful. It is what God meant some faces to be—at least, I mean he has given her the frame for a face of beauty. I have a vague, half-understood sort of wish to give her a glimpse of harmony—something that will fit her golden hair and lovely complexion—and see what she will think of God's idea, and whether she will understand that it is sin which has spoiled it, and whether she is willing to serve the author of her ruin. I don't believe I am making myself plain, but I know what I mean, at least."
"If we do not, I think it must be because you have caught a thought from God that we are not able to reach up to."
It was Mr. Roberts who made this reply. Something in his wife's experiment had deeply moved him.
As for Mr. Reid, his face lighted, as it always did, at the mention of his sister's name.
"Sometimes I almost think that it is Esther still at work, and that He lets her work through this woman."
It was what he said to Gracie Dennis in an aside. Mrs. Roberts had already gone to see, in person, to the comfort of her guest.
CHAPTER XXVI.
"O LORD, TAKE DIRK TOO!"
SHE found her standing before the mirror. By reason of the fact that she understood no pretty trick of braid or curl, her long yellow hair hung just as nature had made it, with no waves or ripples save those which had grown with its growth. It fell about her now like a sunset cloud. She had taken from the vase near at hand a rose, which she had pushed in among the masses of hair, with no knowledge as to how it should be arranged, or indeed thought; yet the effect was something which made Mrs. Roberts give an involuntary start of admiration.
Still it was evident that, though apparently gazing at herself, she was thinking away beyond herself. It is doubtful if at that moment she saw the flower or her own reflection, or knew that she was looking. Her eyes had the faraway expression which one sometimes sees in great power on faces like hers.
She turned as Mrs. Roberts, having softly knocked and received no answer, softly entered. And her first words indicated the intensity of her thought, whatever it was.
"Dirk has 'got' to go there!"
"Go where?" asked Mrs. Roberts, startled out of the words she meant to speak—startled by the hint of power in the voice and manner. "Of whom are you thinking, my dear girl, and where do you want him to go?"
"I'm thinking about Dirk, ma'am; I thought about him all the evening—the man made me; and I've made up my mind. He's 'got' to go to heaven!"
I suppose I cannot give you an idea of the force in her voice. It was as though a resolution, from which there could be no appeal, had been taken, and the person resolving felt her own power to accomplish. It was altogether an unexpected answer to Mrs. Roberts. She did not know whether to be half-frightened or to laugh.
She sat down in one of the easy-chairs to study the girl, and consider what answer to make. Mart, meantime, turned back to the survey of herself in the mirror, or to the survey of whatever she saw there, and continued talking:—
"I never knew much about heaven. You may guess that if you have ever been in our alley. Only lately, Sallie Calkins she's been telling me what you told her, and I had a kind of notion that you must know what you was talking about, and that it was for rich folks and grand folks like you; but the man told about that Madge, you know, to-night—an awful drunkard and swearer, and all that—how she reformed and went to heaven.
"Dirk ain't no drunkard, but he will be. Everybody says he will, because father is such an awful one. Mother, she's never had no hope of him. She says father didn't drink till he was most twenty, and then he begun; and she's looking for Dirk to begin, and I haven't thought he could help it either. What if he doesn't care for it much yet? He will, it's likely. I've never told nobody that, not even Sallie; and I've been mad at mother every time she said any such thing. But all the time I've been expecting him to begin; and I know well enough when once they begin how it goes on.
"But that man to-night told things that made a difference. He says that God can keep them from wanting to drink, and help them right straight along; and that they can go to heaven as well as the best one. I've wanted nice things for Dirk all my life; but I never saw no way to get them, and it made me mad. To-night I saw a way, but I never had no kind of a notion how heaven looked till I come into this room, and see the light and the flowers and the shine, and another room spread out there in the glass; and now I know, and Dirk shall go."
Mrs. Roberts was in no mood for laughing; the tears were dropping slowly on the flower she held in her hand. Mart saw in the glass just then a sight which seemed to add to her surprise. She turned wondering eyes on her hostess.
"What are you crying for?" she asked. "Don't spoil the flower; it is like the one Dirk brought me once. He said you sent it to me. I kept it 'most a week. I took it over to Sallie's, and she got fresh water for it every day, somehow; and it was then she begun to tell me what you said about heaven, and I thought if God had made such flowers as that for you, it was likely he had made a heaven for you. But I didn't believe it was for Dirk till to-night, and I didn't have no kind of a notion how it looked till just now. Do you believe what that man said—that folks like Dirk can go? Of course, if Madge went, why, Dirk would have a right. He is bad, just because he has to be. He never had no chance to be anything else; and he ain't very bad, anyhow—nothing to compare with some." Her voice was almost fierce in its earnestness; she was beginning to resent the creeping doubt that Mrs. Roberts's silence suggested.
Careful words must be spoken now. What if this awakening soul should be turned aside? No wonder that the unspoken words were prayers.
"Dirk 'has' a right to go to heaven," she said steadily, sweetly; "there is not the shadow of a doubt as to his right. No one in the world—not Satan himself—can deprive him of it; and it is not only his right, but his 'duty' to go."
"Then he shall!"
I wish I could give you an idea of the strength in the girl's voice. It almost carried conviction with it to Mrs. Roberts's heart.
"Come and sit down," she said, and she drew her towards one of the low cushions.
If Mart sat on that, her head would be just where a gentle hand could stroke the masses of hair.
"Let me talk with you about this. You are mistaken in one thing. Dirk is very bad. He is bad enough to shut him out of heaven for ever."
The girl started, and tried to fling off the caressing hand.
"So are you," said the gentle voice.
"Oh 'me'! Don't talk about me. Who ever said I wasn't bad? Let me go; I want to go home. I don't care how hard it rains."
"And so am I," continued the gentle voice.
The girl on the cushion ceased struggling to free herself from the caressing touch, and remained motionless. "Let me tell you of something that we have each done a great many times. We have been asked and urged and coaxed, day after day and year after year, to accept an invitation to go to this very heaven, and we have paid no attention at all; and this after Jesus Christ had given his life to make a way for us to go. Is not that being bad?"
"Dirk he never had no invitation—never heard anything about it."
"Yes, he has," speaking with quiet firmness. "The Lord Jesus Christ told me to invite him, and I have done so a great many times, and he has made no answer; and Sallie Calkins has invited you, and you have treated it in just the same way."
"I didn't believe it."
"Isn't that being bad? What has He ever done that you should refuse to believe his word, when he died an awful death to prove to you that he was in earnest?"
"You said Dirk had a right to go."
"So he has. Jesus Christ has given him a right if he will. I have invited you to my house, and asked you to spend the night in this room, and sleep in this bed. Has any person a right to keep you from doing so?"
"No." An emphatic nod of the head, and a lingering, almost loving look at the white bed behind her.
"Then cannot you truthfully say that you have a right to be here? My dear girl, it is so faint an illustration of what Jesus Christ has done to give you a right to heaven, that I almost wonder at your understanding it. But can you imagine something of how I should have felt had I urged you to come to me night after night, for weeks and years, and you had turned from me with no answer, or else with scorn?"
"You wouldn't have kept on asking me." Mart spoke with the assurance of one who had firm faith in her statement.
"No, I presume I should not. I would have said, after the third or fourth invitation, 'If she really will not have anything to do with me, I cannot help it.' And I should have tried to forget you. This is one of the many differences between Christ and me. He waits, and asks, and 'asks.' How long will you keep him waiting?"
I have given you only the beginning of the conversation. It was long ere it was concluded.
Downstairs Mr. Reid waited as long as he could, curious to know the result of Mart's first impressions. Then he went away, and Gracie went to her room, and the house settled into quiet. And Mr. Roberts in the library waited for his wife, while she told over again, with tender words and simple illustrations, the "old, old story," so fitted to the wants of the world.
How many times has there been a like result!
It was midnight when they knelt together, the fair child of luxury and the child of poverty; but the Saviour, who intercedes for both, bent his ear, and heard again the cry of a groping soul seeking him out of darkness, and held out his loving, never-failing arms, able to reach down to her depth, and received her to himself. Who can tell that story? Who can describe how heaven seemed to the girl just then?
It was not what Mrs. Roberts had expected. I cannot even say that it was what she had hoped for. Her faith had not reached to such a height at all. She could hardly have put into words what she hoped. When she ventured to try to tell it to the friends in the parlour and to you, I doubt whether you understood. She thought to get a hold on the girl; to show her something of God's beauty and love, as it shone through herself; to make her long after something her life did not give, and to gradually lead her to seek after satisfaction in Christ. A long process—something that should unfold gradually, with many discouraging drawbacks, and some days that would look like utter failures. She had schooled herself to be prepared for this; but she had not looked for Him to exert his mighty power to save in a moment. How it had touched her to find a soul hungry, not for itself, but for a brother, I shall not attempt to tell.
The first words she said, after she went back to her waiting husband a little after midnight, were these:—
"'He could not do many mighty works there because of their unbelief.' I think that is what is the matter with the world to-day. I wonder if He would not be pleased with one who could throw herself at his feet with a childlike abandon of faith, and expect wonders, yes, and impossibilities, just as a child feels that anything can be done by father? God has shamed my faith to-night. It is as though I had asked for a crumb of bread, and he gave me the entire loaf. That girl upstairs has not heard of him before as a Saviour for her—has never thought of such a thing, or, at least, dreamed of its possibility; and yet she has given herself to him. And, Evan, what do you think were the first words she said?
"'O Lord, take Dirk too!'
"She is on her knees at this moment praying for him. If you could have seen her face when it first dawned upon her that she could tell God about him, and ask for his mighty power to be exerted in his behalf, it would have been a picture for your lifetime. O Evan, Evan, why can we not expect great things of God?"
CHAPTER XXVII.
"AN AWFUL PROBLEM!"
ISN'T it strange the ways the Lord takes to answer prayers?
Much prayer had been made for Dirk Colson, but few had thought of his sister. Sallie Calkins, it is true, had come with trembling steps into the light of Christ's love, and had immediately desired to have Mart enjoy it with her, but was very trembling and doubting as to her ability to reach Mart, or to influence her in the right direction. She sent the bonnet and cape to the lecture with a prayer, but she did not look for the prayer to be answered. Verily, He has to be content with faith "less than a grain of mustard-seed."
Was the rest of the story an answer to prayer? We are to remember that he has strange ways. Events startling enough in their import followed each other in rapid succession. In the first place, Dirk's father, poor, wrecked man, returned no more. Whether he had wandered among the network of railroads which lined the southern portion of the city and lost his life there, or whether he had fallen into the river, or just how he had disappeared, could not be discovered.
There were three men killed by an accident on the road one night, but their disfigured bodies were buried before Dirk heard of it. There was a man seen struggling in the water off the lower wharf one evening, but he sank before help could reach him, and his body was not recovered. There were half-a-dozen men killed by a boiler explosion, but that was not heard of in time to look into it. There were so many ways in which the wreck might have gone out of life and left no sign. They were safe in supposing that he was intoxicated, and that was about all they could be perfectly sure of concerning him—that, and the fact that he came no more. Of course, there was no such search for him as is made for the man of respectability and position.
To one who had some idea of the worth of a soul, it was pitiful to see what a tiny ripple this disappearance made on the surface of life.
A moment of startled questioning by those who lived in the immediate neighbourhood; a few women with aprons thrown over their heads congregating in groups around the pump or before the door of the bakery; a crowd of dirty children, stopping their play for a moment, and speaking lower: then the tide of noisy, fighting, swearing life went on.
One was gone out from it. Whither? None knew, few cared; and there were such crowds and crowds left, how could he be missed?
One missed him—an abused, insulted, down-trodden woman—one whom, years before, he had promised to love and cherish, until death parted them, and had broken the vows almost as soon as taken, and never renewed them again. Yet that woman wept bitter tears over his absence; watched for him, listened nightly for his staggering footsteps; rose up from her heap of straw in the corner in the middle of the night, and set wide-open the cellar door, and listened to the angry voices floating down to her from some drunken brawl further up the street, if, perchance, she might hear his; listened, and held her breath, and quivered all over with hope and fear; then crept back to her miserable bed, covered her head with the ragged quilt, and cried herself into a few hours of forgetfulness.
"She is crying herself to death about him!" Mart said. There was surprise mingled with awe in her voice.
She told it to Dirk, and the two stood thoughtfully for a moment looking out at the one window. They carefully avoided looking at each other. They did not understand. To them there was simply relief in the father's absence. They had no trace of love for him in their hearts. The word "father" meant nothing to them but misery.
Still there was that in them which respected the mother's grief; they tried to shield her. Dirk, of his own thoughtfulness, brought home some tea in a paper, and bought half a pint of milk at the corner dairy. And Mart took lessons of Sallie, and made a delicate slice of toast, and borrowed Sallie's one cup and saucer to serve the tea in. She was disappointed that the mother cried, and could hardly drink the tea. She was even almost vexed that the mother said with tears that:
"Poor Jock always did like tea so much, and she had always thought that maybe if he could have had it hot and strong, he would not have taken to the drink."
Mart had no faith in this, no belief that anything in her father's past life could have kept him from the drink; but she held herself silent, and let the tears have their way. All the time she had in her heart one great solemn regret. There was One who would have helped her father, would and could have saved him, even from rum. What if she, his daughter, had known the Lord Jesus, and could have taken the miserable father to him and had him transformed! Mart had no doubt about his power to do it. An unanswerable argument had been given her. No infidel need try to assail her now.
But the father! Why had everybody kept silence and let him sink away?
Awful!
Why had not she known Christ? Why had she not listened to Sallie but a week before? Why had not Dirk learned the way and saved his father? An awful problem! Mart's life must henceforth be shadowed by it.
Meantime what was Mrs. Roberts to do for this new-born soul? How was she to help her, and, through her, to help her brother?
She, in her elegant home, sat down to study this problem.
Life at East Fifty-fifth Street was so far removed from life in the alley that she knew nothing about the missing father. Days passed, and, busy with many claims of society, she had made no movement toward helping the girl, and knew as yet no way to do it; yet she carried her on her heart. Monday evening came and went, and still she had been detained from any effort.
One afternoon her thoughts shaped themselves into action. She would go and see Mart. She would get Dirk to protect her in her journey down the alley; also, in accomplishing this, she would accomplish another thing. She would call on Dirk at his place of business. The chief of the office was a Christian man; yet she had reason to believe that he knew less about Dirk, and cared much less for him, than he did for his little dog that sat in the window and barked at passers-by.
She had no difficulty in securing attention. Ladies were not often admitted, but a card bearing the name "Mrs. Evan Roberts" was sufficient passport among any of the business men of the city.
Mr. Stone was more than ready—he was eager to serve her. What could he do for the elegantly-dressed lady whose carriage waited at the door, while she came in person among the bales and boxes? Her business must be urgent.
It was. Could she speak with Mr. Colson just for a moment? She would not detain him long, but she wished to make an appointment with him for the next day.
"Mr. Colson!" The chief and his perplexed assistant looked at each other thoughtfully and shook their heads. There was no such person connected with their establishment. She must have the wrong number.
No; she was positive.
"He told me only three days ago that he was in your employment. He is on the third floor, I believe."
The gentlemen looked at each other again.
"Colson!" repeated Mr. Stone. "There is certainly a mistake. Briggs is in charge on the third floor front, and Dickson has the back rooms. No, Mrs. Roberts, we have no such name among our men, I am positive."
But Mrs. Roberts gently held her ground. She was sure she was not mistaken, for she had talked with him about his work and the different men. He was in Mr. Briggs's department, she felt quite sure. He was not a foreman, she explained, but quite a young man, had been there but a few weeks, and Dr. Everett was the one who had interested himself in securing the place.
Light of some sort began to dawn on the perplexed faces of the gentlemen.
"Can she mean black Dirk, do you suppose?" questioned the elder, looking hard at his associate.
Then came the sweet voice of the visitor.
"Oh, no, he is not a coloured gentleman. His name is Colson—Mr. Derrick Colson."
"That is the one," said the gentleman quickly. Should he laugh or be annoyed?
It took but a moment after that to summon "Mr. Derrick Colson." Black he was, certainly, not only by reason of his naturally dark skin, but because of the grimy work, whatever it was, which fell to his lot. His big apron was soiled with ink and oil, and daubed with bits of dark colour which seemed not to be either.
He came forward with his usual shambling gait, and an additional shade of sullenness apparent on his face, but it glowed a swarthy red when he recognized the lady.
"Good-afternoon, Mr. Colson," she said, and she held forth her delicately-gloved hand.
His own went forward to meet it, then drew suddenly back.
"It is not clean enough," he said; "there's ink or something on it."
But the lavender kids were not withdrawn.
"Never mind the ink; a little honest soil never hurt anybody," and the rough, dark hand was taken in her own.
Then occurred a few moments' chat; at least the lady chatted with easy familiarity. She referred to the "Social Parlours," to the "Monday Evenings," to Miss Dennis's "Musicale," to half-a-dozen themes about which the bewildered gentlemen within hearing knew nothing.
Could it be that the low-voiced, gentle lady was trying to give them a lesson as well as to talk with Dirk? Finally she made an appointment for the next afternoon. Would his employer be so kind as to excuse him for an hour, if convenient? Certainly, it would be convenient, to please Mrs. Evan Roberts.
Dirk was very much embarrassed. He blushed and stammered, and did not know how to answer any of the kindnesses.
But there were two things during the interview which gave Mrs. Roberts more pleasure than you, perhaps, are able to understand.
One was, that at sight of her he had suddenly snatched off the paper cap which he wore; and the other, that having set it again on his head as he turned from her, he glanced back from the door, and, in answer to her bow and smile, lifted the ugly little cap with an air that was an exact imitation of young Reid, and yet so well done that you would not have thought of it as an imitation.
Mrs. Roberts could have clapped her bands, but she did not. Instead she said sweetly,—
"I am very glad that Mr. Colson is in the employment of a Christian gentleman. He is greatly in need of help from all Christian sources, and I am sure there is that in him which will respond to judicious effort."
Then she let the bewildered man attend her to her carriage, and went on her way rejoicing.
But there were plans being laid for her at that moment of which she knew nothing.
To-morrow she would go and see the golden-haired girl. In a neatly-packed basket she had certain things—among them a bonnet and a sack that she knew would fit the hair and face, and she believed would give Mart pleasure. If only she could contrive a natural way to give them to her, and there could be planned ways of keeping them safe from the pawnbroker's grasp.
All this time she knew nothing of the fact that the hand which had grasped for years to furnish the pawnbroker was stilled for ever. It had not once occurred to Dirk to tell her. It is a solemn fact that in this greater excitement he had actually forgotten it!
As for the "Christian employer," he did not know of it to tell. He had not so much as known whether black Dirk had a father or not. He was simply a street rough whom Dr. Everett was trying experiments with. And because there was an unusual pressure on the office, and poor help was better than none, he was helping the experiment.
However, when Dirk went home from the office that night, he remembered that the father was gone.
Mart met him at the door, a look of solemn determination on her face.
"Dirk," she said, "she's going; as sure as you live, she's going. She's been bad all the afternoon. Sallie says that Mark's doctor will come to see her—she knows he will, and Mark shall go for him as soon as he comes home; but I don't mean to wait for no doctor. I want 'her' to come. 'She' knows the way, and I want mother to be told it right, so there won't be no mistake. You go for her, Dirk, right off straight. There ain't any time to lose, for I tell you now she's 'going.' She's been failing all along, you know, and she has just cried herself down. Dirk, will you go for 'her' as fast as you can?"
The confusion of pronouns might have bewildered you. They did not Dirk. "Her" meant to him exactly what it did to Mart. He could not think how it could possibly mean any other person. But this was astounding news about his mother! It was one thing to have a father disappear whom he had simply feared until he had learned to hate. It was quite another thing to talk about the going away of the only one who had ever tried to mend his clothes, and who had sat up nights to wash them when she could.
He strode past Mart into the wretched room, and looked at the bed in the corner.
The mother was asleep, but on her face was a strange change—a something that he had never seen there before, worn and sunken as it always was. It made him understand Mart's fears.
"I'll go," he said huskily, and rushed from the house.
"Her" carriage was just rolling down the avenue as his swift feet cleared the alley. He knew the horses. He was a little ahead of them; but it was not probable that the driver would stop for him.
"Won't you stop that carriage?" he said in breathless haste to a policeman at the corner. "I've got to speak to the lady that's in it."
"I'll be quite likely to, no doubt!" said the policeman in quiet irony. "What rascality are you up to now, Dirk? Can't you be decent for a few days?"
But Dirk was trying to free himself from the detaining hand, and threw up one arm in a sort of despairing gesture to the coachman. Mr. Roberts caught the signal, recognized the face, and in another moment the horses stood restlessly by the curbstone, and Dirk, his embarrassment gone, told his brief story rapidly:—
"Father went off a little ago, and never came back; and mother, she is sickly, and it set her crying; and she's going, Mart thinks, and I guess it's so; and Mart wants you to come and show her the way. She said you knew how, and you would come."
CHAPTER XXVIII.
"MAY SHE GO WITH ME?"
OF course she went. And of course, now that the truth was known, much was done.
Dr. Everett was summoned. The wretched bed, with its distressing rags, was turned out altogether, and a comfortable one took its place. Broths and teas and jellies and physical comfort of every kind were furnished, and the doctor did his best to battle with the disease that long years of want and misery had fastened upon their victim. It was all too late, of course. It was true what Mr. Roberts sadly said, that half of the effort, expended years or even months before, might have saved the poor, tortured life; but now!
How awful those "too lates" are! Isn't it a wonder that we ever take the risk of having one ring in our ears for ever? There was one thing over which some of these Christian workers shed tears of joy.
"'I' am too late," said Dr. Everett, "but my Master has as much power to-day as ever. He can save her."
And he did. The poor, tired woman, who years before had remembered an old story well enough to name her one daughter "Martha," in memory of the one who "loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus," roused her dull heart at the mention of His name, and listened while the wonderful story was told her that he loved not only Martha and her sister, but her own poor, sinful, wrecked self—loved her enough to reach after her, and call and wait, and prepare for her a home in his glory.
Dear! Why has not some one come with the news before? Surely she would have listened during those long, sad years. Well, they made the way plain. Neither was it a difficult thing to do. The woman was weary, and travel-stained, and afraid, and longed for nothing so much as a place of refuge. She knew that she was a sinner; she knew that she was, and had been for many a year, powerless to help herself. Why should she not hail with joy the story of a great and willing Helper?
"Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden."
She opened her eyes with a gleam of eagerness to hear the words: "Weary?" Yes, indeed! "Heavy laden?" Who more so? If the call was not for her, whom could it mean? What else? Why, what but the glorious old story,—
"I will give you rest."
What wonder that she closed her eyes and smiled. What wonder that the first words after that were, "I'll come; show me how." And he showed her how.
"Dirk," the sister said, when the mother had gone the last and only restful journey of her life—"Dirk, she went to heaven, and I'm going. I've been wanting to tell you for more than a week, but I didn't know how. He asked me to, and I'm going. Now, you must. 'Cause we never had a good time here, and she'll kind of expect it in heaven, and be looking out for you;—she always looked out for you, Dirk."
Then did Dirk lose his half-sullen self-control, and great tears rolled down his dark cheeks.
But the sister shed no tears. She had serious business to attend to. Dirk must go to heaven now without fail.
One day there was an unusual scene in the alley. It was no uncommon thing to see a coffin carried out from there, but on this day there was a hearse, and a minister in Dr. Everett's carriage, and Dirk and his sister, in neat apparel, came out together and were seated in Mr. Roberts's carriage; and all the boys of the Monday evening class walked arm in arm after the slow-moving carriages. And the children of the alley stopped their playing and their fighting, and the women stood silent in doorways, and took, most of them, their very first lesson in the proprieties of life.
"She's got a ride in a carriage at last, poor soul!" said one, thinking of the worn-out body in the coffin.
And another said, "I wonder what poor old Jock would think of all this."
But the scene made its impression and left its lesson. I think the voices of some of them were lower during the rest of the day because of it.
What next? It was the question that filled Mrs. Roberts's thoughts. Something must be done for Dirk and Mart. That fearful alley was no place for human beings—certainly not for these two. But what to do with them was a question not easily answered.
Various plans were proposed. Sallie Calkins's two rooms were much better than the cellar in which the Colson family had lived; and there was a chance to rent a room next to Sallie's, with a closet opening from it for Dirk. How would it do to have them board with Sallie? The suggestion came first from Gracie Dennis, and sounded reasonable. Mrs. Roberts was almost ashamed to dislike it as much as she did. Sallie's neat rooms were home now. The father, for this length of time at least, held to his pledge; and son and daughter were radiant over him. He had gone to work, and already the two rooms were taking on an air of greater comfort because of the little things that he proudly brought home.
Sallie was doing her part wisely. The table was regularly laid now, with a white cloth and knives and forks; and two new cups and plates had been added to the dishes. Would it be wise to invade this home just at this juncture and introduce boarders? Mrs. Roberts did not believe that it would. It was not as though the father had an established character, and stood ready to shield his children; they were still acting the protective, and he had but too recently risen from the depths where Dirk and Mart had laughed and jeered at him.
Besides, the rooms were located in that dreadful alley; and do what she would, Mrs. Roberts could not feel that that dangerously-beautiful face could find a safe abiding-place in that alley. Some other way must be thought of.
Their immediate future was arranged through the intervention of a house agent; for even that dreary and desolate cellar had its agent, who was eager to secure his rent. He was unwise enough to undertake to interview Mrs. Roberts as she descended from her carriage, not long after it had followed Mart's mother to the grave.
He considered this effort of his, a special stroke of business energy. He wanted to be patient with the poor, he said; there wasn't an agent in the city who waited for them oftener than he did; but business was business, and it stood to reason that he could not depend on a fellow like Dirk. It had been bad enough when the mother was there, but he couldn't think of such a thing as risking it now. What was he to understand? Did she mean to rent the room for them, and for how long? Because it was his duty to look out for the future.