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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dr. Sevier, by George W. Cable
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dr. Sevier
+
+Author: George W. Cable
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2009 [EBook #29439]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DR. SEVIER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Anne Storer and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+ SO_3HO = 3 is subscripted
+ [=u] = macron above "u"
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ GEORGE W. CABLE'S WRITINGS
+
+
+ BONAVENTURE. A Prose Pastoral of Arcadian Louisiana. 12mo, $1.25.
+ DR. SEVIER. 12mo, $1.25.
+ THE GRANDISSIMES. A Story of Creole Life. 12mo, $1.25.
+ OLD CREOLE DAYS. 12mo, $1.25.
+ STRANGE TRUE STORIES OF LOUISIANA. Illustrated. 12mo, $2.00.
+ *** _New Uniform Edition of the above five volumes, cloth, in a box,
+ $6.00._
+
+ * * *
+
+ JOHN MARCH, SOUTHERNER, 12mo, $1.50.
+ OLD CREOLE DAYS. Cameo Edition with Etching, $1.25.
+ OLD CREOLE DAYS. 2 vols. 16mo, paper, each 30 cts.
+ MADAME DELPHINE. 75 cts.
+ THE CREOLES OF LOUISIANA. Illus. Small 4to, $2.50.
+ THE SILENT SOUTH. 12mo, $1.00.
+
+
+
+
+ DR. SEVIER
+
+
+ BY
+ GEORGE W. CABLE
+
+ AUTHOR OF "OLD CREOLE DAYS," "THE GRANDISSIMES,"
+ "MADAME DELPHINE," ETC.
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+ 1897
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1883 and 1884
+ BY GEORGE W. CABLE
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+ TROW'S
+ PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY,
+ NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+
+ TO MY FRIEND
+ MARION A. BAKER
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+
+ Chapter Page
+ I.--The Doctor 5
+ II.--A Young Stranger 10
+ III.--His Wife 17
+ IV.--Convalescence and Acquaintance 22
+ V.--Hard Questions 29
+ VI.--Nesting 34
+ VII.--Disappearance 45
+ VIII.--A Question of Book-keeping 52
+ IX.--When the Wind Blows 61
+ X.--Gentles and Commons 66
+ XI.--A Pantomime 73
+ XII.--"She's all the World" 81
+ XIII.--The Bough Breaks 87
+ XIV.--Hard Speeches and High Temper 94
+ XV.--The Cradle Falls 99
+ XVI.--Many Waters 107
+ XVII.--Raphael Ristofalo 118
+ XVIII.--How He Did It 127
+ XIX.--Another Patient 134
+ XX.--Alice 138
+ XXI.--The Sun at Midnight 142
+ XXII.--Borrower Turned Lender 160
+ XXIII.--Wear and Tear 169
+ XXIV.--Brought to Bay 177
+ XXV.--The Doctor Dines Out 184
+ XXVI.--The Trough of the Sea 194
+ XXVII.--Out of the Frying-Pan 207
+ XXVIII.--"Oh, where is my Love?" 215
+ XXIX.--Release.--Narcisse 224
+ XXX.--Lighting Ship 233
+ XXXI.--At Last 243
+ XXXII.--A Rising Star 248
+ XXXIII.--Bees, Wasps, and Butterflies 258
+ XXXIV.--Toward the Zenith 262
+ XXXV.--To Sigh, yet Feel no Pain 268
+ XXXVI.--What Name? 275
+ XXXVII.--Pestilence 280
+ XXXVIII.--"I must be Cruel only to be Kind" 286
+ XXXIX.--"Pettent Prate" 294
+ XL.--Sweet Bells Jangled 300
+ XLI.--Mirage 310
+ XLII.--Ristofalo and the Rector 317
+ XLIII.--Shall she Come or Stay? 324
+ XLIV.--What would you Do? 329
+ XLV.--Narcisse with News 335
+ XLVI.--A Prison Memento 340
+ XLVII.--Now I Lay Me-- 345
+ XLVIII.--Rise up, my Love, my Fair One! 351
+ XLIX.--A Bundle of Hopes 357
+ L.--Fall In! 366
+ LI.--Blue Bonnets over the Border 372
+ LII.--A Pass through the Lines 378
+ LIII.--Try Again 384
+ LIV.--"Who Goes There?" 394
+ LV.--Dixie 412
+ LVI.--Fire and Sword 425
+ LVII.--Almost in Sight 435
+ LVIII.--A Golden Sunset 445
+ LIX.--Afterglow 454
+ LX.--"Yet shall he live" 465
+ LXI.--Peace 470
+
+
+
+
+DR. SEVIER.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE DOCTOR.
+
+
+The main road to wealth in New Orleans has long been Carondelet
+street. There you see the most alert faces; noses--it seems to
+one--with more and sharper edge, and eyes smaller and brighter
+and with less distance between them than one notices in other
+streets. It is there that the stock and bond brokers hurry to and
+fro and run together promiscuously--the cunning and the simple,
+the headlong and the wary--at the four clanging strokes of the
+Stock Exchange gong. There rises the tall façade of the Cotton
+Exchange. Looking in from the sidewalk as you pass, you see its
+main hall, thronged but decorous, the quiet engine-room of the
+surrounding city's most far-reaching occupation, and at the hall's
+farther end you descry the "Future Room," and hear the unearthly
+ramping and bellowing of the bulls and bears. Up and down the
+street, on either hand, are the ship-brokers and insurers, and in
+the upper stories foreign consuls among a multitude of lawyers and
+notaries.
+
+In 1856 this street was just assuming its present character. The cotton
+merchants were making it their favorite place of commercial domicile.
+The open thoroughfare served in lieu of the present exchanges; men made
+fortunes standing on the curb-stone, and during bank hours the sidewalks
+were perpetually crowded with cotton factors, buyers, brokers, weighers,
+reweighers, classers, pickers, pressers, and samplers, and the air was
+laden with cotton quotations and prognostications.
+
+Number 3-1/2, second floor, front, was the office of Dr. Sevier. This
+office was convenient to everything. Immediately under its windows lay
+the sidewalks where congregated the men who, of all in New Orleans,
+could best afford to pay for being sick, and least desired to die. Canal
+street, the city's leading artery, was just below, at the near left-hand
+corner. Beyond it lay the older town, not yet impoverished in those
+days,--the French quarter. A single square and a half off at the right,
+and in plain view from the front windows, shone the dazzling white walls
+of the St. Charles Hotel, where the nabobs of the river plantations
+came and dwelt with their fair-handed wives in seasons of peculiar
+anticipation, when it is well to be near the highest medical skill. In
+the opposite direction a three minutes' quick drive around the upper
+corner and down Common street carried the Doctor to his ward in the
+great Charity Hospital, and to the school of medicine, where he filled
+the chair set apart to the holy ailments of maternity. Thus, as it were,
+he laid his left hand on the rich and his right on the poor; and he was
+not left-handed.
+
+Not that his usual attitude was one of benediction. He stood straight up
+in his austere pure-mindedness, tall, slender, pale, sharp of voice,
+keen of glance, stern in judgment, aggressive in debate, and fixedly
+untender everywhere, except--but always except--in the sick chamber.
+His inner heart was all of flesh; but his demands for the rectitude of
+mankind pointed out like the muzzles of cannon through the embrasures of
+his virtues. To demolish evil!--that seemed the finest of aims; and even
+as a physician, that was, most likely, his motive until later years and
+a better self-knowledge had taught him that to do good was still finer
+and better. He waged war--against malady. To fight; to stifle; to cut
+down; to uproot; to overwhelm;--these were his springs of action. That
+their results were good proved that his sentiment of benevolence was
+strong and high; but it was well-nigh shut out of sight by that
+impatience of evil which is very fine and knightly in youngest manhood,
+but which we like to see give way to kindlier moods as the earlier heat
+of the blood begins to pass.
+
+He changed in later years; this was in 1856. To "resist not evil" seemed
+to him then only a rather feeble sort of knavery. To face it in its
+nakedness, and to inveigh against it in high places and low, seemed the
+consummation of all manliness; and manliness was the key-note of his
+creed. There was no other necessity in this life.
+
+"But a man must live," said one of his kindred, to whom, truth to tell,
+he had refused assistance.
+
+"No, sir; that is just what he can't do. A man must die! So, while he
+lives, let him be a man!"
+
+How inharmonious a setting, then, for Dr. Sevier, was 3-1/2 Carondelet
+street! As he drove, each morning, down to that point, he had to pass
+through long, irregular files of fellow-beings thronging either
+sidewalk,--a sadly unchivalric grouping of men whose daily and yearly
+life was subordinated only and entirely to the getting of wealth, and
+whose every eager motion was a repetition of the sinister old maxim that
+"Time is money."
+
+"It's a great deal more, sir; it's life!" the Doctor always retorted.
+
+Among these groups, moreover, were many who were all too well famed
+for illegitimate fortune. Many occupations connected with the handling
+of cotton yielded big harvests in perquisites. At every jog of the
+Doctor's horse, men came to view whose riches were the outcome of
+semi-respectable larceny. It was a day of reckless operation; much of
+the commerce that came to New Orleans was simply, as one might say,
+beached in Carondelet street. The sight used to keep the long, thin,
+keen-eyed doctor in perpetual indignation.
+
+"Look at the wreckers!" he would say.
+
+It was breakfast at eight, indignation at nine, dyspepsia at ten.
+
+So his setting was not merely inharmonious; it was damaging. He grew
+sore on the whole matter of money-getting.
+
+"Yes, I have money. But I don't go after it. It comes to me, because I
+seek and render service for the service's sake. It will come to anybody
+else the same way; and why should it come any other way?"
+
+He not only had a low regard for the motives of most seekers of wealth;
+he went further, and fell into much disbelief of poor men's needs. For
+instance, he looked upon a man's inability to find employment, or upon
+a poor fellow's run of bad luck, as upon the placarded woes of a
+hurdy-gurdy beggar.
+
+"If he wants work he will find it. As for begging, it ought to be easier
+for any true man to starve than to beg."
+
+The sentiment was ungentle, but it came from the bottom of his belief
+concerning himself, and a longing for moral greatness in all men.
+
+"However," he would add, thrusting his hand into his pocket and bringing
+out his purse, "I'll help any man to make himself useful. And the
+sick--well, the sick, as a matter of course. Only I must know what I'm
+doing."
+
+Have some of us known Want? To have known her--though to love her
+was impossible--is "a liberal education." The Doctor was learned;
+but this acquaintanceship, this education, he had never got. Hence his
+untenderness. Shall we condemn the fault? Yes. And the man? We have not
+the face. To be _just_, which he never knowingly failed to be, and at
+the same time to feel tenderly for the unworthy, to deal kindly with the
+erring,--it is a double grace that hangs not always in easy reach even
+of the tallest. The Doctor attained to it--but in later years; meantime,
+this story--which, I believe, had he ever been poor would never have
+been written.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+A YOUNG STRANGER.
+
+
+In 1856 New Orleans was in the midst of the darkest ten years of her
+history. Yet she was full of new-comers from all parts of the commercial
+world,--strangers seeking livelihood. The ravages of cholera and
+yellow-fever, far from keeping them away, seemed actually to draw them.
+In the three years 1853, '54, and '55, the cemeteries had received over
+thirty-five thousand dead; yet here, in 1856, besides shiploads of
+European immigrants, came hundreds of unacclimated youths, from all
+parts of the United States, to fill the wide gaps which they imagined
+had been made in the ranks of the great exporting city's clerking force.
+
+Upon these pilgrims Dr. Sevier cast an eye full of interest, and often
+of compassion hidden under outward impatience. "Who wants to see," he
+would demand, "men--_and women_--increasing the risks of this uncertain
+life?" But he was also full of respect for them. There was a certain
+nobility rightly attributable to emigration itself in the abstract.
+It was the cutting loose from friends and aid,--those sweet-named
+temptations,--and the going forth into self-appointed exile and into
+dangers known and unknown, trusting to the help of one's own right hand
+to exchange honest toil for honest bread and raiment. His eyes kindled
+to see the goodly, broad, red-cheeked fellows. Sometimes, though, he
+saw women, and sometimes tender women, by their side; and that sight
+touched the pathetic chord of his heart with a rude twangle that vexed
+him.
+
+It was on a certain bright, cool morning early in October that, as he
+drove down Carondelet street toward his office, and one of those little
+white omnibuses of the old Apollo-street line, crowding in before his
+carriage, had compelled his driver to draw close in by the curb-stone
+and slacken speed to a walk, his attention chanced to fall upon a young
+man of attractive appearance, glancing stranger-wise and eagerly at
+signs and entrances while he moved down the street. Twice, in the moment
+of the Doctor's enforced delay, he noticed the young stranger make
+inquiry of the street's more accustomed frequenters, and that in each
+case he was directed farther on. But, the way opened, the Doctor's horse
+switched his tail and was off, the stranger was left behind, and the
+next moment the Doctor stepped across the sidewalk and went up the
+stairs of Number 3-1/2 to his office. Something told him--we are apt to
+fall into thought on a stair-way--that the stranger was looking for a
+physician.
+
+He had barely disposed of the three or four waiting messengers that
+arose from their chairs against the corridor wall, and was still reading
+the anxious lines left in various handwritings on his slate, when the
+young man entered. He was of fair height, slenderly built, with soft
+auburn hair, a little untrimmed, neat dress, and a diffident, yet
+expectant and courageous, face.
+
+"Dr. Sevier?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Doctor, my wife is very ill; can I get you to come at once and see
+her?"
+
+"Who is her physician?"
+
+"I have not called any; but we must have one now."
+
+"I don't know about going at once. This is my hour for being in the
+office. How far is it, and what's the trouble?"
+
+"We are only three squares away, just here in Custom-house street."
+The speaker began to add a faltering enumeration of some very grave
+symptoms. The Doctor noticed that he was slightly deaf; he uttered his
+words as though he did not hear them.
+
+"Yes," interrupted Dr. Sevier, speaking half to himself as he turned
+around to a standing case of cruel-looking silver-plated things on
+shelves; "that's a small part of the penalty women pay for the doubtful
+honor of being our mothers. I'll go. What is your number? But you had
+better drive back with me if you can." He drew back from the glass case,
+shut the door, and took his hat.
+
+"Narcisse!"
+
+On the side of the office nearest the corridor a door let into a
+hall-room that afforded merely good space for the furniture needed by a
+single accountant. The Doctor had other interests besides those of his
+profession, and, taking them altogether, found it necessary, or at least
+convenient, to employ continuously the services of a person to keep his
+accounts and collect his bills. Through the open door the book-keeper
+could be seen sitting on a high stool at a still higher desk,--a young
+man of handsome profile and well-knit form. At the call of his name he
+unwound his legs from the rounds of the stool and leaped into the
+Doctor's presence with a superlatively high-bred bow.
+
+"I shall be back in fifteen minutes," said the Doctor. "Come,
+Mr. ----," and went out with the stranger.
+
+Narcisse had intended to speak. He stood a moment, then lifted the
+last half inch of a cigarette to his lips, took a long, meditative
+inhalation, turned half round on his heel, dashed the remnant with
+fierce emphasis into a spittoon, ejected two long streams of smoke from
+his nostrils, and extending his fist toward the door by which the Doctor
+had gone out, said:--
+
+"All right, ole hoss!" No, not that way. It is hard to give his
+pronunciation by letter. In the word "right" he substituted an a for the
+r, sounding it almost in the same instant with the i, yet distinct from
+it: "All a-ight, ole hoss!"
+
+Then he walked slowly back to his desk, with that feeling of relief
+which some men find in the renewal of a promissory note, twined his legs
+again among those of the stool, and, adding not a word, resumed his pen.
+
+The Doctor's carriage was hurrying across Canal street.
+
+"Dr. Sevier," said the physician's companion, "I don't know what your
+charges are"--
+
+"The highest," said the Doctor, whose dyspepsia was gnawing him just
+then with fine energy. The curt reply struck fire upon the young man.
+
+"I don't propose to drive a bargain, Dr. Sevier!" He flushed angrily
+after he had spoken, breathed with compressed lips, and winked savagely,
+with the sort of indignation that school-boys show to a harsh master.
+
+The physician answered with better self-control.
+
+"What do you propose?"
+
+"I was going to propose--being a stranger to you, sir--to pay in
+advance." The announcement was made with a tremulous, but triumphant,
+_hauteur_, as though it must cover the physician with mortification. The
+speaker stretched out a rather long leg, and, drawing a pocket-book,
+produced a twenty-dollar piece.
+
+The Doctor looked full in his face with impatient surprise, then turned
+his eyes away again as if he restrained himself, and said, in a subdued
+tone:--
+
+"I would rather you had haggled about the price."
+
+"I don't hear"--said the other, turning his ear.
+
+The Doctor waved his hand:--
+
+"Put that up, if you please."
+
+The young stranger was disconcerted. He remained silent for a moment,
+wearing a look of impatient embarrassment. He still extended the piece,
+turning it over and over with his thumb-nail as it lay on his fingers.
+
+"You don't know me, Doctor," he said. He got another cruel answer.
+
+"We're getting acquainted," replied the physician.
+
+The victim of the sarcasm bit his lip, and protested, by an unconscious,
+sidewise jerk of the chin:--
+
+"I wish you'd"--and he turned the coin again.
+
+The physician dropped an eagle's stare on the gold.
+
+"I don't practise medicine on those principles."
+
+"But, Doctor," insisted the other, appeasingly, "you can make an
+exception if you will. Reasons are better than rules, my old professor
+used to say. I am here without friends, or letters, or credentials of
+any sort; this is the only recommendation I can offer."
+
+"Don't recommend you at all; anybody can do that."
+
+The stranger breathed a sigh of overtasked patience, smiled with a
+baffled air, seemed once or twice about to speak, but doubtful what to
+say, and let his hand sink.
+
+"Well, Doctor,"--he rested his elbow on his knee, gave the piece one
+more turn over, and tried to draw the physician's eye by a look of
+boyish pleasantness,--"I'll not ask you to take pay in advance, but I
+will ask you to take care of this money for me. Suppose I should lose
+it, or have it stolen from me, or--Doctor, it would be a real comfort to
+me if you would."
+
+"I can't help that. I shall treat your wife, and then send in my bill."
+The Doctor folded arms and appeared to give attention to his driver.
+But at the same time he asked:--
+
+"Not subject to epilepsy, eh?"
+
+"No, sir!" The indignant shortness of the retort drew no sign of
+attention from the Doctor; he was silently asking himself what this
+nonsense meant. Was it drink, or gambling, or a confidence game? Or
+was it only vanity, or a mistake of inexperience? He turned his head
+unexpectedly, and gave the stranger's facial lines a quick, thorough
+examination. It startled them from a look of troubled meditation. The
+physician as quickly turned away again.
+
+"Doctor," began the other, but added no more.
+
+The physician was silent. He turned the matter over once more in his
+mind. The proposal was absurdly unbusiness-like. That his part in it
+might look ungenerous was nothing; so his actions were right, he rather
+liked them to bear a hideous aspect: that was his war-paint. There was
+that in the stranger's attitude that agreed fairly with his own theories
+of living. A fear of debt, for instance, if that was genuine it was
+good; and, beyond and better than that, a fear of money. He began to be
+more favorably impressed.
+
+"Give it to me," he said, frowning; "mark you, this is your way,"--he
+dropped the gold into his vest-pocket,--"it isn't mine."
+
+The young man laughed with visible relief, and rubbed his knee with his
+somewhat too delicate hand. The Doctor examined him again with a milder
+glance.
+
+"I suppose you think you've got the principles of life all right, don't
+you?"
+
+"Yes, I do," replied the other, taking his turn at folding arms.
+
+"H-m-m! I dare say you do. What you lack is the practice." The Doctor
+sealed his utterance with a nod.
+
+The young man showed amusement; more, it may be, than he felt, and
+presently pointed out his lodging-place.
+
+"Here, on this side; Number 40;" and they alighted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+HIS WIFE.
+
+
+In former times the presence in New Orleans, during the cooler half of
+the year, of large numbers of mercantile men from all parts of the
+world, who did not accept the fever-plagued city as their permanent
+residence, made much business for the renters of furnished apartments.
+At the same time there was a class of persons whose residence was
+permanent, and to whom this letting of rooms fell by an easy and natural
+gravitation; and the most respectable and comfortable rented rooms of
+which the city could boast were those _chambres garnies_ in Custom-house
+and Bienville streets, kept by worthy free or freed mulatto or quadroon
+women.
+
+In 1856 the gala days of this half-caste people were quite over.
+Difference was made between virtue and vice, and the famous quadroon
+balls were shunned by those who aspired to respectability, whether their
+whiteness was nature or only toilet powder. Generations of domestic
+service under ladies of Gallic blood had brought many of them to a
+supreme pitch of excellence as housekeepers. In many cases money had
+been inherited; in other cases it had been saved up. That Latin feminine
+ability to hold an awkward position with impregnable serenity, and, like
+the yellow Mississippi, to give back no reflection from the overhanging
+sky, emphasized this superior fitness. That bright, womanly business
+ability that comes of the same blood added again to their excellence.
+Not to be home itself, nothing could be more like it than were the
+apartments let by Madame Cécile, or Madame Sophie, or Madame Athalie,
+or Madame Polyxčne, or whatever the name might be.
+
+It was in one of these houses, that presented its dull brick front
+directly upon the sidewalk of Custom-house street, with the unfailing
+little square sign of _Chambres ŕ louer_ (Rooms to let), dangling by a
+string from the overhanging balcony and twirling in the breeze, that
+the sick wife lay. A waiting slave-girl opened the door as the two men
+approached it, and both of them went directly upstairs and into a large,
+airy room. On a high, finely carved, and heavily hung mahogany bed,
+to which the remaining furniture corresponded in ancient style and
+massiveness, was stretched the form of a pale, sweet-faced little woman.
+
+The proprietress of the house was sitting beside the bed,--a quadroon of
+good, kind face, forty-five years old or so, tall and broad. She rose
+and responded to the Doctor's silent bow with that pretty dignity of
+greeting which goes with all French blood, and remained standing. The
+invalid stirred.
+
+The physician came forward to the bedside. The patient could not have
+been much over nineteen years of age. Her face was very pleasing; a
+trifle slender in outline; the brows somewhat square, not wide; the
+mouth small. She would not have been called beautiful, even in health,
+by those who lay stress on correctness of outlines. But she had one
+thing that to some is better. Whether it was in the dark blue eyes that
+were lifted to the Doctor's with a look which changed rapidly from
+inquiry to confidence, or in the fine, scarcely perceptible strands of
+pale-brown hair that played about her temples, he did not make out; but,
+for one cause or another, her face was of that kind which almost any
+one has seen once or twice, and no one has seen often,--that seems to
+give out a soft, but veritable, light.
+
+She was very weak. Her eyes quickly dropped away from his, and turned
+wearily, but peacefully, to those of her husband.
+
+The Doctor spoke to her. His greeting and gentle inquiry were full of a
+soothing quality that was new to the young man. His long fingers moved
+twice or thrice softly across her brow, pushing back the thin, waving
+strands, and then he sat down in a chair, continuing his kind, direct
+questions. The answers were all bad.
+
+He turned his glance to the quadroon; she understood it; the patient was
+seriously ill. The nurse responded with a quiet look of comprehension.
+At the same time the Doctor disguised from the young strangers this
+interchange of meanings by an audible question to the quadroon.
+
+"Have I ever met you before?"
+
+"No, seh."
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"Zénobie."
+
+"Madame Zénobie," softly whispered the invalid, turning her eyes, with
+a glimmer of feeble pleasantry, first to the quadroon and then to her
+husband.
+
+The physician smiled at her an instant, and then gave a few concise
+directions to the quadroon. "Get me"--thus and so.
+
+The woman went and came. She was a superior nurse, like so many of her
+race. So obvious, indeed, was this, that when she gently pressed the
+young husband an inch or two aside, and murmured that "de doctah" wanted
+him to "go h-out," he left the room, although he knew the physician had
+not so indicated.
+
+By-and-by he returned, but only at her beckon, and remained at the
+bedside while Madame Zénobie led the Doctor into another room to write
+his prescription.
+
+"Who are these people?" asked the physician, in an undertone, looking up
+at the quadroon, and pausing with the prescription half torn off.
+
+She shrugged her large shoulders and smiled perplexedly.
+
+"Mizzez--Reechin?" The tone was one of query rather than assertion. "Dey
+sesso," she added.
+
+She might nurse the lady like a mother, but she was not going to be
+responsible for the genuineness of a stranger's name.
+
+"Where are they from?"
+
+"I dunno?--Some pless?--I nevva yeh dat nem biffo?"
+
+She made a timid attempt at some word ending in "walk," and smiled,
+ready to accept possible ridicule.
+
+"Milwaukee?" asked the Doctor.
+
+She lifted her palm, smiled brightly, pushed him gently with the tip of
+one finger, and nodded. He had hit the nail on the head.
+
+"What business is he in?"
+
+The questioner arose.
+
+She cast a sidelong glance at him with a slight enlargement of her eyes,
+and, compressing her lips, gave her head a little, decided shake. The
+young man was not employed.
+
+"And has no money either, I suppose," said the physician, as they
+started again toward the sick-room.
+
+She shrugged again and smiled; but it came to her mind that the Doctor
+might be considering his own interests, and she added, in a whisper:--
+
+"Dey pay me."
+
+She changed places with the husband, and the physician and he passed
+down the stairs together in silence.
+
+"Well, Doctor?" said the young man, as he stood, prescription in hand,
+before the carriage-door.
+
+"Well," responded the physician, "you should have called me sooner."
+
+The look of agony that came into the stranger's face caused the Doctor
+instantly to repent his hard speech.
+
+"You don't mean"--exclaimed the husband.
+
+"No, no; I don't think it's too late. Get that prescription filled and
+give it to Mrs. ----"
+
+"Richling," said the young man.
+
+"Let her have perfect quiet," continued the Doctor. "I shall be back
+this evening."
+
+And when he returned she had improved.
+
+She was better again the next day, and the next; but on the fourth she
+was in a very critical state. She lay quite silent during the Doctor's
+visit, until he, thinking he read in her eyes a wish to say something to
+him alone, sent her husband and the quadroon out of the room on separate
+errands at the same moment. And immediately she exclaimed:--
+
+"Doctor, save my life! You mustn't let me die! Save me, for my husband's
+sake! To lose all he's lost for me, and then to lose me too--save me,
+Doctor! save me!"
+
+"I'm going to do it!" said he. "You shall get well!"
+
+And what with his skill and her endurance it turned out so.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CONVALESCENCE AND ACQUAINTANCE.
+
+
+A man's clothing is his defence; but with a woman all dress is
+adornment. Nature decrees it; adornment is her instinctive delight. And,
+above all, the adorning of a bride; it brings out so charmingly the
+meaning of the thing. Therein centres the gay consent of all mankind and
+womankind to an innocent, sweet apostasy from the ranks of both. The
+value of living--which is loving; the sacredest wonders of life; all
+that is fairest and of best delight in thought, in feeling, yea, in
+substance,--all are apprehended under the floral crown and hymeneal
+veil. So, when at length one day Mrs. Richling said, "Madame Zénobie,
+don't you think I might sit up?" it would have been absurd to doubt the
+quadroon's willingness to assist her in dressing. True, here was neither
+wreath nor veil, but here was very young wifehood, and its re-attiring
+would be like a proclamation of victory over the malady that had striven
+to put two hearts asunder. Her willingness could hardly be doubted,
+though she smiled irresponsibly, and said:--
+
+"If you thing"-- She spread her eyes and elbows suddenly in the manner
+of a crab, with palms turned upward and thumbs outstretched--"Well!"--and
+so dropped them.
+
+"You don't want wait till de doctah comin'?" she asked.
+
+"I don't think he's coming; it's after his time."
+
+"Yass?"
+
+The woman was silent a moment, and then threw up one hand again, with
+the forefinger lifted alertly forward.
+
+"I make a lill fi' biffo."
+
+She made a fire. Then she helped the convalescent to put on a few loose
+drapings. She made no concealment of the enjoyment it gave her, though
+her words were few, and generally were answers to questions; and when
+at length she brought from the wardrobe, pretending not to notice her
+mistake, a loose and much too ample robe of woollen and silken stuffs to
+go over all, she moved as though she trod on holy ground, and distinctly
+felt, herself, the thrill with which the convalescent, her young eyes
+beaming their assent, let her arms into the big sleeves, and drew about
+her small form the soft folds of her husband's morning-gown.
+
+"He goin' to fine that droll," said the quadroon.
+
+The wife's face confessed her pleasure.
+
+"It's as much mine as his," she said.
+
+"Is you mek dat?" asked the nurse, as she drew its silken cord about the
+convalescent's waist.
+
+"Yes. Don't draw it tight; leave it loose--so; but you can tie the knot
+tight. That will do; there!" She smiled broadly. "Don't tie me in as if
+you were tying me in forever."
+
+Madame Zénobie understood perfectly, and, smiling in response, did tie
+it as if she were tying her in forever.
+
+Half an hour or so later the quadroon, being--it may have been by
+chance--at the street door, ushered in a person who simply bowed in
+silence.
+
+But as he put one foot on the stair he paused, and, bending a severe
+gaze upon her, asked:--
+
+"Why do you smile?"
+
+She folded her hands limply on her bosom, and drawing a cheek and
+shoulder toward each other, replied:--
+
+"Nuttin'"--
+
+The questioner's severity darkened.
+
+"Why do you smile at nothing?"
+
+She laid the tips of her fingers upon her lips to compose them.
+
+"You din come in you' carridge. She goin' to thing 'tis Miché Reechin."
+The smile forced its way through her fingers. The visitor turned in
+quiet disdain and went upstairs, she following.
+
+At the top he let her pass. She led the way and, softly pushing open the
+chamber-door, entered noiselessly, turned, and, as the other stepped
+across the threshold, nestled her hands one on the other at her waist,
+shrank inward with a sweet smile, and waved one palm toward the huge,
+blue-hung mahogany four-poster,--empty.
+
+The visitor gave a slight double nod and moved on across the carpet.
+Before a small coal fire, in a grate too wide for it, stood a broad,
+cushioned rocking-chair, with the corner of a pillow showing over its
+top. The visitor went on around it. The girlish form lay in it, with
+eyes closed, very still; but his professional glance quickly detected
+the false pretence of slumber. A slippered foot was still slightly
+reached out beyond the bright colors of the long gown, and toward the
+brazen edge of the hearth-pan, as though the owner had been touching her
+tiptoe against it to keep the chair in gentle motion. One cheek was on
+the pillow; down the other curled a few light strands of hair that had
+escaped from her brow.
+
+Thus for an instant. Then a smile began to wreath about the corner of
+her lips; she faintly stirred, opened her eyes--and lo! Dr. Sevier,
+motionless, tranquil, and grave.
+
+"O Doctor!" The blood surged into her face and down upon her neck.
+She put her hands over her eyes, and her face into the pillow. "O
+Doctor!"--rising to a sitting posture,--"I thought, of course, it
+was my husband."
+
+The Doctor replied while she was speaking:--
+
+"My carriage broke down." He drew a chair toward the fireplace, and
+asked, with his face toward the dying fire:--
+
+"How are you feeling to-day, madam,--stronger?"
+
+"Yes; I can almost say I'm well." The blush was still on her face
+as he turned to receive her answer, but she smiled with a bright
+courageousness that secretly amused and pleased him. "I thank you,
+Doctor, for my recovery; I certainly should thank you." Her face lighted
+up with that soft radiance which was its best quality, and her smile
+became half introspective as her eyes dropped from his, and followed her
+outstretched hand as it rearranged the farther edges of the
+dressing-gown one upon another.
+
+"If you will take better care of yourself hereafter, madam," responded
+the Doctor, thumping and brushing from his knee some specks of mud that
+he may have got when his carriage broke down, "I will thank you.
+But"--brush--brush--"I--doubt it."
+
+"Do you think you should?" she asked, leaning forward from the back of
+the great chair and letting her wrists drop over the front of its broad
+arms.
+
+"I do," said the Doctor, kindly. "Why shouldn't I? This present attack
+was by your own fault." While he spoke he was looking into her eyes,
+contracted at their corners by her slight smile. The face was one of
+those that show not merely that the world is all unknown to them, but
+that it always will be so. It beamed with inquisitive intelligence, and
+yet had the innocence almost of infancy. The Doctor made a discovery;
+that it was this that made her beautiful. "She _is_ beautiful," he
+insisted to himself when his critical faculty dissented.
+
+"You needn't doubt me, Doctor. I'll try my best to take care. Why, of
+course I will,--for John's sake." She looked up into his face from the
+tassel she was twisting around her finger, touching the floor with her
+slippers' toe and faintly rocking.
+
+"Yes, there's a chance there," replied the grave man, seemingly not
+overmuch pleased; "I dare say everything you do or leave undone is for
+his sake."
+
+The little wife betrayed for a moment a pained perplexity, and then
+exclaimed:--
+
+"Well, of course!" and waited his answer with bright eyes.
+
+"I have known women to think of their own sakes," was the response.
+
+She laughed, and with unprecedented sparkle replied:--
+
+"Why, whatever's his sake is my sake. I don't see the difference. Yes, I
+see, of course, how there might be a difference; but I don't see how a
+woman"-- She ceased, still smiling, and, dropping her eyes to her hands,
+slowly stroked one wrist and palm with the tassel of her husband's robe.
+
+The Doctor rose, turned his back to the mantel-piece, and looked down
+upon her. He thought of the great, wide world: its thorny ways, its
+deserts, its bitter waters, its unrighteousness, its self-seeking
+greeds, its weaknesses, its under and over reaching, its unfaithfulness;
+and then again of this--child, thrust all at once a thousand miles into
+it, with never--so far as he could see--an implement, a weapon, a sense
+of danger, or a refuge; well pleased with herself, as it seemed, lifted
+up into the bliss of self-obliterating wifehood, and resting in her
+husband with such an assurance of safety and happiness as a saint might
+pray for grace to show to Heaven itself. He stood silent, feeling too
+grim to speak, and presently Mrs. Richling looked up with a sudden
+liveliness of eye and a smile that was half apology and half
+persistence.
+
+"Yes, Doctor, I'm going to take care of myself."
+
+"Mrs. Richling, is your father a man of fortune?"
+
+"My father is not living," said she, gravely. "He died two years ago. He
+was the pastor of a small church. No, sir; he had nothing but his small
+salary, except that for some years he taught a few scholars. He taught
+me." She brightened up again. "I never had any other teacher."
+
+The Doctor folded his hands behind him and gazed abstractedly through
+the upper sash of the large French windows. The street-door was heard to
+open.
+
+"There's John," said the convalescent, quickly, and the next moment
+her husband entered. A tired look vanished from his face as he saw the
+Doctor. He hurried to grasp his hand, then turned and kissed his wife.
+The physician took up his hat.
+
+"Doctor," said the wife, holding the hand he gave her, and looking up
+playfully, with her cheek against the chair-back, "you surely didn't
+suspect me of being a rich girl, did you?"
+
+"Not at all, madam." His emphasis was so pronounced that the husband
+laughed.
+
+"There's one comfort in the opposite condition, Doctor," said the young
+man.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Why, yes; you see, it requires no explanation."
+
+"Yes, it does," said the physician; "it is just as binding on people
+to show good cause why they are poor as it is to show good cause why
+they're rich. Good-day, madam." The two men went out together. His word
+would have been good-by, but for the fear of fresh acknowledgments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+HARD QUESTIONS.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier had a simple abhorrence of the expression of personal
+sentiment in words. Nothing else seemed to him so utterly hollow as
+the attempt to indicate by speech a regard or affection which was not
+already demonstrated in behavior. So far did he keep himself aloof from
+insincerity that he had barely room enough left to be candid.
+
+"I need not see your wife any more," he said, as he went down the stairs
+with the young husband at his elbow; and the young man had learned him
+well enough not to oppress him with formal thanks, whatever might have
+been said or omitted upstairs.
+
+Madame Zénobie contrived to be near enough, as they reached the lower
+floor, to come in for a share of the meagre adieu. She gave her hand
+with a dainty grace and a bow that might have been imported from Paris.
+
+Dr. Sevier paused on the front step, half turned toward the open door
+where the husband still tarried. That was not speech; it was scarcely
+action; but the young man understood it and was silent. In truth, the
+Doctor himself felt a pang in this sort of farewell. A physician's way
+through the world is paved, I have heard one say, with these broken
+bits of other's lives, of all colors and all degrees of beauty. In
+his reminiscences, when he can do no better, he gathers them up,
+and, turning them over and over in the darkened chamber of his
+retrospection, sees patterns of delight lit up by the softened rays of
+bygone time. But even this renews the pain of separation, and Dr. Sevier
+felt, right here at this door-step, that, if this was to be the last of
+the Richlings, he would feel the twinge of parting every time they came
+up again in his memory.
+
+He looked at the house opposite,--where there was really nothing to look
+at,--and at a woman who happened to be passing, and who was only like a
+thousand others with whom he had nothing to do.
+
+"Richling," he said, "what brings you to New Orleans, any way?"
+
+Richling leaned his cheek against the door-post.
+
+"Simply seeking my fortune, Doctor."
+
+"Do you think it is here?"
+
+"I'm pretty sure it is; the world owes me a living."
+
+The Doctor looked up.
+
+"When did you get the world in your debt?"
+
+Richling lifted his head pleasantly, and let one foot down a step.
+
+"It owes me a chance to earn a living, doesn't it?"
+
+"I dare say," replied the other; "that's what it generally owes."
+
+"That's all I ask of it," said Richling; "if it will let us alone we'll
+let it alone."
+
+"You've no right to allow either," said the physician. "No, sir; no," he
+insisted, as the young man looked incredulous. There was a pause. "Have
+you any capital?" asked the Doctor.
+
+"Capital! No,"--with a low laugh.
+
+"But surely you have something to"--
+
+"Oh, yes,--a little!"
+
+The Doctor marked the southern "Oh." There is no "O" in Milwaukee.
+
+"You don't find as many vacancies as you expected to see, I
+suppose--h-m-m?"
+
+There was an under-glow of feeling in the young man's tone as he
+replied:--
+
+"I was misinformed."
+
+"Well," said the Doctor, staring down-street, "you'll find something.
+What can you do?"
+
+"Do? Oh, I'm willing to do anything!"
+
+Dr. Sevier turned his gaze slowly, with a shade of disappointment in it.
+Richling rallied to his defences.
+
+"I think I could make a good book-keeper, or correspondent, or cashier,
+or any such"--
+
+The Doctor interrupted, with the back of his head toward his listener,
+looking this time up the street, riverward:--
+
+"Yes;--or a shoe,--or a barrel,--h-m-m?"
+
+Richling bent forward with the frown of defective hearing, and the
+physician raised his voice:--
+
+"Or a cart-wheel--or a coat?"
+
+"I can make a living," rejoined the other, with a needlessly
+resentful-heroic manner, that was lost, or seemed to be, on the
+physician.
+
+"Richling,"--the Doctor suddenly faced around and fixed a kindly severe
+glance on him,--"why didn't you bring letters?"
+
+"Why,"--the young man stopped, looked at his feet, and distinctly
+blushed. "I think," he stammered--"it seems to me"--he looked up with a
+faltering eye--"don't you think--I think a man ought to be able to
+recommend _himself_."
+
+The Doctor's gaze remained so fixed that the self-recommended man could
+not endure it silently.
+
+"_I_ think so," he said, looking down again and swinging his foot.
+Suddenly he brightened. "Doctor, isn't this your carriage coming?"
+
+"Yes; I told the boy to drive by here when it was mended, and he might
+find me." The vehicle drew up and stopped. "Still, Richling," the
+physician continued, as he stepped toward it, "you had better get a
+letter or two, yet; you might need them."
+
+The door of the carriage clapped to. There seemed a touch of vexation in
+the sound. Richling, too, closed his door, but in the soft way of one in
+troubled meditation. Was this a proper farewell? The thought came to
+both men.
+
+"Stop a minute!" said Dr. Sevier to his driver. He leaned out a little
+at the side of the carriage and looked back. "Never mind; he has gone
+in."
+
+The young husband went upstairs slowly and heavily, more slowly and
+heavily than might be explained by his all-day unsuccessful tramp after
+employment. His wife still rested in the rocking-chair. He stood against
+it, and she took his hand and stroked it.
+
+"Tired?" she asked, looking up at him. He gazed into the languishing
+fire.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You're not discouraged, are you?"
+
+"Discouraged? N-no. And yet," he said, slowly shaking his head, "I can't
+see why I don't find something to do."
+
+"It's because you don't hunt for it," said the wife.
+
+He turned upon her with flashing countenance only to meet her laugh, and
+to have his head pulled down to her lips. He dropped into the seat left
+by the physician, laid his head back in his knit hands, and crossed his
+feet under the chair.
+
+"John, I do _like_ Dr. Sevier."
+
+"Why?" The questioner looked at the ceiling.
+
+"Why, don't you like him?" asked the wife, and, as John smiled, she
+added, "You know you like him."
+
+The husband grasped the poker in both hands, dropped his elbows upon his
+knees, and began touching the fire, saying slowly:--
+
+"I believe the Doctor thinks I'm a fool."
+
+"That's nothing," said the little wife; "that's only because you married
+me."
+
+The poker stopped rattling between the grate-bars; the husband looked at
+the wife. Her eyes, though turned partly away, betrayed their mischief.
+There was a deadly pause; then a rush to the assault, a shower of
+Cupid's arrows, a quick surrender.
+
+But we refrain. Since ever the world began it is Love's real, not his
+sham, battles that are worth the telling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+NESTING.
+
+
+A fortnight passed. What with calls on his private skill, and appeals
+to his public zeal, Dr. Sevier was always loaded like a dromedary.
+Just now he was much occupied with the affairs of the great American
+people. For all he was the furthest remove from a mere party contestant
+or spoilsman, neither his righteous pugnacity nor his human sympathy
+would allow him to "let politics alone." Often across this preoccupation
+there flitted a thought of the Richlings.
+
+At length one day he saw them. He had been called by a patient, lodging
+near Madame Zénobie's house. The proximity of the young couple occurred
+to him at once, but he instantly realized the extreme poverty of the
+chance that he should see them. To increase the improbability, the short
+afternoon was near its close,--an hour when people generally were
+sitting at dinner.
+
+But what a coquette is that same chance! As he was driving up at the
+sidewalk's edge before his patient's door, the Richlings came out of
+theirs, the husband talking with animation, and the wife, all sunshine,
+skipping up to his side, and taking his arm with both hands, and
+attending eagerly to his words.
+
+"Heels!" muttered the Doctor to himself, for the sound of Mrs.
+Richling's gaiters betrayed that fact. Heels were an innovation still
+new enough to rouse the resentment of masculine conservatism. But for
+them she would have pleased his sight entirely. Bonnets, for years
+microscopic, had again become visible, and her girlish face was prettily
+set in one whose flowers and ribbon, just joyous and no more, were
+reflected again in the double-skirted silk _barége_; while the dark
+mantilla that drooped away from the broad lace collar, shading, without
+hiding, her "Parodi" waist, seemed made for that very street of
+heavy-grated archways, iron-railed balconies, and high lattices. The
+Doctor even accepted patiently the free northern step, which is commonly
+so repugnant to the southern eye.
+
+A heightened gladness flashed into the faces of the two young people as
+they descried the physician.
+
+"Good-afternoon," they said, advancing.
+
+"Good-evening," responded the Doctor, and shook hands with each. The
+meeting was an emphatic pleasure to him. He quite forgot the young man's
+lack of credentials.
+
+"Out taking the air?" he asked.
+
+"Looking about," said the husband.
+
+"Looking up new quarters," said the wife, knitting her fingers about her
+husband's elbow and drawing closer to it.
+
+"Were you not comfortable?"
+
+"Yes; but the rooms are larger than we need."
+
+"Ah!" said the Doctor; and there the conversation sank. There was no
+topic suited to so fleeting a moment, and when they had smiled all round
+again Dr. Sevier lifted his hat. Ah, yes, there was one thing.
+
+"Have you found work?" asked the Doctor of Richling.
+
+The wife glanced up for an instant into her husband's face, and then
+down again.
+
+"No," said Richling, "not yet. If you should hear of anything,
+Doctor"--He remembered the Doctor's word about letters, stopped
+suddenly, and seemed as if he might even withdraw the request; but the
+Doctor said:--
+
+"I will; I will let you know." He gave his hand to Richling. It was on
+his lips to add: "And should you need," etc.; but there was the wife at
+the husband's side. So he said no more. The pair bowed their cheerful
+thanks; but beside the cheer, or behind it, in the husband's face, was
+there not the look of one who feels the odds against him? And yet, while
+the two men's hands still held each other, the look vanished, and the
+young man's light grasp had such firmness in it that, for this cause
+also, the Doctor withheld his patronizing utterance. He believed he
+would himself have resented it had he been in Richling's place.
+
+The young pair passed on, and that night, as Dr. Sevier sat at his
+fireside, an uncompanioned widower, he saw again the young wife look
+quickly up into her husband's face, and across that face flit and
+disappear its look of weary dismay, followed by the air of fresh courage
+with which the young couple had said good-by.
+
+"I wish I had spoken," he thought to himself; "I wish I had made the
+offer."
+
+And again:--
+
+"I hope he didn't tell her what I said about the letters. Not but I was
+right, but it'll only wound her."
+
+But Richling had told her; he always "told her everything;" she could
+not possibly have magnified wifehood more, in her way, than he did in
+his. May be both ways were faulty; but they were extravagantly,
+youthfully confident that they were not.
+
+ * * *
+
+Unknown to Dr. Sevier, the Richlings had returned from their search
+unsuccessful. Finding prices too much alike in Custom-house street they
+turned into Burgundy. From Burgundy they passed into Du Maine. As they
+went, notwithstanding disappointments, their mood grew gay and gayer.
+Everything that met the eye was quaint and droll to them: men, women,
+things, places,--all were more or less outlandish. The grotesqueness of
+the African, and especially the French-tongued African, was to Mrs.
+Richling particularly irresistible. Multiplying upon each and all of
+these things was the ludicrousness of the pecuniary strait that brought
+themselves and these things into contact. Everything turned to fun.
+
+Mrs. Richling's mirthful mood prompted her by and by to begin letting
+into her inquiries and comments covert double meanings, intended for her
+husband's private understanding. Thus they crossed Bourbon street.
+
+About there their mirth reached a climax; it was in a small house, a
+sad, single-story thing, cowering between two high buildings, its eaves,
+four or five feet deep, overshadowing its one street door and window.
+
+"Looks like a shade for weak eyes," said the wife.
+
+They had debated whether they should enter it or not. He thought no, she
+thought yes; but he would not insist and she would not insist; she
+wished him to do as he thought best, and he wished her to do as she
+thought best, and they had made two or three false starts and retreats
+before they got inside. But they were in there at length, and busily
+engaged inquiring into the availability of a small, lace-curtained,
+front room, when Richling took his wife so completely off her guard by
+addressing her as "Madam," in the tone and manner of Dr. Sevier, that
+she laughed in the face of the householder, who had been trying to talk
+English with a French accent and a hare-lip, and they fled with haste
+to the sidewalk and around the corner, where they could smile and smile
+without being villains.
+
+"We must stop this," said the wife, blushing. "We _must_ stop it. We're
+attracting attention."
+
+And this was true at least as to one ragamuffin, who stood on a
+neighboring corner staring at them. Yet there is no telling to what
+higher pitch their humor might have carried them if Mrs. Richling had
+not been weighted down by the constant necessity of correcting her
+husband's statement of their wants. This she could do, because his
+exactions were all in the direction of her comfort.
+
+"But, John," she would say each time as they returned to the street and
+resumed their quest, "those things cost; you can't afford them, can
+you?"
+
+"Why, you can't be comfortable without them," he would answer.
+
+"But that's not the question, John. We _must_ take cheaper lodgings,
+mustn't we?"
+
+Then John would be silent, and by littles their gayety would rise again.
+
+One landlady was so good-looking, so manifestly and entirely Caucasian,
+so melodious of voice, and so modest in her account of the rooms she
+showed, that Mrs. Richling was captivated. The back room on the second
+floor, overlooking the inner court and numerous low roofs beyond, was
+suitable and cheap.
+
+"Yes," said the sweet proprietress, turning to Richling, who hung in
+doubt whether it was quite good enough, "yesseh, I think you be pretty
+well in that room yeh.[1] Yesseh, I'm shoe you be _verrie_ well;
+yesseh."
+
+ [1] "Yeh"--_ye_, as in _yearn_.
+
+"Can we get them at once?"
+
+"Yes? At once? Yes? Oh, yes?"
+
+No downward inflections from her.
+
+"Well,"--the wife looked at the husband; he nodded,--"well, we'll take
+it."
+
+"Yes?" responded the landlady; "well?" leaning against a bedpost and
+smiling with infantile diffidence, "you dunt want no ref'ence?"
+
+"No," said John, generously, "oh, no; we can trust each other that far,
+eh?"
+
+"Oh, yes?" replied the sweet creature; then suddenly changing
+countenance, as though she remembered something. "But daz de troub'--de
+room not goin' be vacate for t'ree mont'."
+
+She stretched forth her open palms and smiled, with one arm still around
+the bedpost.
+
+"Why," exclaimed Mrs. Richling, the very statue of astonishment, "you
+said just now we could have it at once!"
+
+"Dis room? _Oh_, no; nod _dis_ room."
+
+"I don't see how I could have misunderstood you."
+
+The landlady lifted her shoulders, smiled, and clasped her hands across
+each other under her throat. Then throwing them apart she said
+brightly:--
+
+"No, I say at Madame La Rose. Me, my room is all fill'. At Madame La
+Rose, I say, I think you be pritty well. I'm shoe you be verrie well
+at Madame La Rose. I'm sorry. But you kin paz yondeh--'tiz juz ad the
+cawneh? And I am shoe I think you be pritty well at Madame La Rose."
+
+She kept up the repetition, though Mrs. Richling, incensed, had turned
+her back, and Richling was saying good-day.
+
+"She did say the room was vacant!" exclaimed the little wife, as they
+reached the sidewalk. But the next moment there came a quick twinkle
+from her eye, and, waving her husband to go on without her, she said,
+"You kin paz yondeh; at Madame La Rose I am shoe you be pritty sick."
+Thereupon she took his arm,--making everybody stare and smile to see a
+lady and gentleman arm in arm by daylight,--and they went merrily on
+their way.
+
+The last place they stopped at was in Royal street. The entrance
+was bad. It was narrow even for those two. The walls were stained by
+dampness, and the smell of a totally undrained soil came up through the
+floor. The stairs ascended a few steps, came too near a low ceiling, and
+shot forward into cavernous gloom to find a second rising place
+farther on. But the rooms, when reached, were a tolerably pleasant
+disappointment, and the proprietress a person of reassuring amiability.
+
+She bestirred herself in an obliging way that was the most charming
+thing yet encountered. She gratified the young people every moment
+afresh with her readiness to understand or guess their English queries
+and remarks, hung her head archly when she had to explain away little
+objections, delivered her No sirs with gravity and her Yes sirs with
+bright eagerness, shook her head slowly with each negative announcement,
+and accompanied her affirmations with a gracious bow and a smile full of
+rice powder.
+
+She rendered everything so agreeable, indeed, that it almost seemed
+impolite to inquire narrowly into matters, and when the question of
+price had to come up it was really difficult to bring it forward, and
+Richling quite lost sight of the economic rules to which he had silently
+acceded in the _Rue Du Maine_.
+
+"And you will carpet the floor?" he asked, hovering off of the main
+issue.
+
+"Put coppit? Ah! cettainlee!" she replied, with a lovely bow and a wave
+of the hand toward Mrs. Richling, whom she had already given the same
+assurance.
+
+"Yes," responded the little wife, with a captivated smile, and nodded to
+her husband.
+
+"We want to get the decentest thing that is cheap," he said, as the
+three stood close together in the middle of the room.
+
+The landlady flushed.
+
+"No, no, John," said the wife, quickly, "don't you know what we said?"
+Then, turning to the proprietress, she hurried to add, "We want the
+cheapest thing that is decent."
+
+But the landlady had not waited for the correction.
+
+"_Dis_sent! You want somesin _dis_sent!" She moved a step backward on
+the floor, scoured and smeared with brick-dust, her ire rising visibly
+at every heart-throb, and pointing her outward-turned open hand
+energetically downward, added:--
+
+"'Tis yeh!" She breathed hard. "_Mais_, no; you don't _want_ somesin
+dissent. No!" She leaned forward interrogatively: "You want somesin
+tchip?" She threw both elbows to the one side, cast her spread hands
+off in the same direction, drew the cheek on that side down into the
+collar-bone, raised her eyebrows, and pushed her upper lip with her
+lower, scornfully.
+
+At that moment her ear caught the words of the wife's apologetic
+amendment. They gave her fresh wrath and new opportunity. For her new
+foe was a woman, and a woman trying to speak in defence of the husband
+against whose arm she clung.
+
+"Ah-h-h!" Her chin went up; her eyes shot lightning; she folded her arms
+fiercely, and drew herself to her best height; and, as Richling's eyes
+shot back in rising indignation, cried:--
+
+"Ziss pless? 'Tis not ze pless! Zis pless--is diss'nt pless! I am
+diss'nt woman, me! Fo w'at you come in yeh?"
+
+"My dear madam! My husband"--
+
+"Dass you' uzban'?" pointing at him.
+
+"Yes!" cried the two Richlings at once.
+
+The woman folded her arms again, turned half-aside, and, lifting her
+eyes to the ceiling, simply remarked, with an ecstatic smile:--
+
+"Humph!" and left the pair, red with exasperation, to find the street
+again through the darkening cave of the stair-way.
+
+ * * *
+
+It was still early the next morning, when Richling entered his wife's
+apartment with an air of brisk occupation. She was pinning her brooch at
+the bureau glass.
+
+"Mary," he exclaimed, "put something on and come see what I've
+found! The queerest, most romantic old thing in the city; the most
+comfortable--and the cheapest! Here, is this the wardrobe key? To save
+time I'll get your bonnet."
+
+"No, no, no!" cried the laughing wife, confronting him with sparkling
+eyes, and throwing herself before the wardrobe; "I can't let you touch
+my bonnet!"
+
+There is a limit, it seems, even to a wife's subserviency.
+
+However, in a very short time afterward, by the feminine measure, they
+were out in the street, and people were again smiling at the pretty pair
+to see her arm in his, and she actually _keeping step_. 'Twas very
+funny.
+
+As they went John described his discovery: A pair of huge, solid green
+gates immediately on the sidewalk, in the dull façade of a tall, red
+brick building with old carved vinework on its window and door frames.
+Hinges a yard long on the gates; over the gates a semi-circular grating
+of iron bars an inch in diameter; in one of these gates a wicket, and
+on the wicket a heavy, battered, highly burnished brass knocker. A
+short-legged, big-bodied, and very black slave to usher one through the
+wicket into a large, wide, paved corridor, where from the middle joist
+overhead hung a great iron lantern. Big double doors at the far end,
+standing open, flanked with diamond-paned side-lights of colored glass,
+and with an arch at the same, fan-shaped, above. Beyond these doors and
+showing through them, a flagged court, bordered all around by a narrow,
+raised parterre under pomegranate and fruit-laden orange, and
+over-towered by vine-covered and latticed walls, from whose ragged
+eaves vagabond weeds laughed down upon the flowers of the parterre below,
+robbed of late and early suns. Stairs old fashioned, broad; rooms, their
+choice of two; one looking down into the court, the other into the
+street; furniture faded, capacious; ceilings high; windows, each opening
+upon its own separate small balcony, where, instead of balustrades, was
+graceful iron scroll-work, centered by some long-dead owner's monogram
+two feet in length; and on the balcony next the division wall, close to
+another on the adjoining property, a quarter circle of iron-work set
+like a blind-bridle, and armed with hideous prongs for house-breakers to
+get impaled on.
+
+"Why, in there," said Richling, softly, as they hurried in, "we'll be
+hid from the whole world, and the whole world from us."
+
+The wife's answer was only the upward glance of her blue eyes into his,
+and a faint smile.
+
+The place was all it had been described to be, and more,--except in one
+particular.
+
+"And my husband tells me"--The owner of said husband stood beside him,
+one foot a little in advance of the other, her folded parasol hanging
+down the front of her skirt from her gloved hands, her eyes just
+returning to the landlady's from an excursion around the ceiling, and
+her whole appearance as fresh as the pink flowers that nestled between
+her brow and the rim of its precious covering. She smiled as she began
+her speech, but not enough to spoil what she honestly believed to be a
+very business-like air and manner. John had quietly dropped out of the
+negotiations, and she felt herself put upon her mettle as his agent.
+"And my husband tells me the price of this front room is ten dollars a
+month."
+
+"Munse?"
+
+The respondent was a very white, corpulent woman, who constantly panted
+for breath, and was everywhere sinking down into chairs, with her limp,
+unfortified skirt dropping between her knees, and her hands pressed on
+them exhaustedly.
+
+"Munse?" She turned from husband to wife, and back again, a glance of
+alarmed inquiry.
+
+Mary tried her hand at French.
+
+"Yes; _oui, madame_. Ten dollah the month--_le mois_."
+
+Intelligence suddenly returned. Madame made a beautiful, silent O with
+her mouth and two others with her eyes.
+
+"Ah _non_! By munse? No, madame. Ah-h! impossybl'! By _wick_, yes; ten
+dollah de wick! Ah!"
+
+She touched her bosom with the wide-spread fingers of one hand and threw
+them toward her hearers.
+
+The room-hunters got away, yet not so quickly but they heard behind and
+above them her scornful laugh, addressed to the walls of the empty room.
+
+A day or two later they secured an apartment, cheap,
+and--morally--decent; but otherwise--ah!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+DISAPPEARANCE.
+
+
+It was the year of a presidential campaign. The party that afterward
+rose to overwhelming power was, for the first time, able to put its
+candidate fairly abreast of his competitors. The South was all afire.
+Rising up or sitting down, coming or going, week-day or Sabbath-day,
+eating or drinking, marrying or burying, the talk was all of slavery,
+abolition, and a disrupted country.
+
+Dr. Sevier became totally absorbed in the issue. He was too
+unconventional a thinker ever to find himself in harmony with all the
+declarations of any party, and yet it was a necessity of his nature to
+be in the _męlée_. He had his own array of facts, his own peculiar
+deductions; his own special charges of iniquity against this party and
+of criminal forbearance against that; his own startling political
+economy; his own theory of rights; his own interpretations of the
+Constitution; his own threats and warnings; his own exhortations, and
+his own prophecies, of which one cannot say all have come true. But he
+poured them forth from the mighty heart of one who loved his country,
+and sat down with a sense of duty fulfilled and wiped his pale forehead
+while the band played a polka.
+
+It hardly need be added that he proposed to dispense with politicians,
+or that, when "the boys" presently counted him into their party team for
+campaign haranguing, he let them clap the harness upon him and splashed
+along in the mud with an intention as pure as snow.
+
+"Hurrah for"--
+
+Whom it is no matter now. It was not Fremont. Buchanan won the race. Out
+went the lights, down came the platforms, rockets ceased to burst; it
+was of no use longer to "Wait for the wagon"; "Old Dan Tucker" got "out
+of the way," small boys were no longer fellow-citizens, dissolution was
+postponed, and men began to have an eye single to the getting of money.
+
+A mercantile friend of Dr. Sevier had a vacant clerkship which it was
+necessary to fill. A bright recollection flashed across the Doctor's
+memory.
+
+"Narcisse!"
+
+"Yesseh!"
+
+"Go to Number 40 Custom-house street and inquire for Mr. Fledgeling; or,
+if he isn't in, for Mrs. Fledge--humph! Richling, I mean; I"--
+
+Narcisse laughed aloud.
+
+"Ha-ha-ha! daz de way, sometime'! My hant she got a honcl'--he says,
+once 'pon a time"--
+
+"Never mind! Go at once!"
+
+"All a-ight, seh!"
+
+"Give him this card"--
+
+"Yesseh!"
+
+"These people"--
+
+"Yesseh!"
+
+"Well, wait till you get your errand, can't you? These"--
+
+"Yesseh!"
+
+"These people want to see him."
+
+"All a-ight, seh!"
+
+Narcisse threw open and jerked off a worsted jacket, took his coat down
+from a peg, transferred a snowy handkerchief from the breast-pocket of
+the jacket to that of the coat, felt in his pantaloons to be sure that
+he had his match-case and cigarettes, changed his shoes, got his hat
+from a high nail by a little leap, and put it on a head as handsome as
+Apollo's.
+
+"Doctah Seveeah," he said, "in fact, I fine that a ve'y gen'lemany young
+man, that Mistoo Itchlin, weely, Doctah."
+
+The Doctor murmured to himself from the letter he was writing.
+
+"Well, _au 'evoi'_, Doctah; I'm goin'."
+
+Out in the corridor he turned and jerked his chin up and curled his lip,
+brought a match and cigarette together in the lee of his hollowed hand,
+took one first, fond draw, and went down the stairs as if they were on
+fire.
+
+At Canal street he fell in with two noble fellows of his own circle, and
+the three went around by way of Exchange alley to get a glass of soda at
+McCloskey's old down-town stand. His two friends were out of employment
+at the moment,--making him, consequently, the interesting figure in the
+trio as he inveighed against his master.
+
+"Ah, phooh!" he said, indicating the end of his speech by dropping the
+stump of his cigarette into the sand on the floor and softly spitting
+upon it,--"_le_ Shylock _de la rue_ Carondelet!"--and then in English,
+not to lose the admiration of the Irish waiter:--
+
+"He don't want to haugment me! I din hass 'im, because the 'lection. But
+you juz wait till dat firce of Jannawerry!"
+
+The waiter swathed the zinc counter, and inquired why Narcisse did not
+make his demands at the present moment.
+
+"W'y I don't hass 'im now? Because w'en I hass 'im he know' he's got to
+_do_ it! You thing I'm goin' to kill myseff workin'?"
+
+Nobody said yes, and by and by he found himself alive in the house of
+Madame Zénobie. The furniture was being sold at auction, and the house
+was crowded with all sorts and colors of men and women. A huge sideboard
+was up for sale as he entered, and the crier was crying:--
+
+"Faw-ty-fi' dollah! faw-ty-fi' dollah, ladies an' gentymen! On'y
+faw-ty-fi' dollah fo' thad magniffyzan sidebode! _Quarante-cinque
+piastres, seulement, messieurs! Les_ knobs _vaut bien cette prix_!
+Gentymen, de knobs is worse de money! Ladies, if you don' stop dat
+talkin', I will not sell one thing mo'! _Et quarante cinque
+piastres_--faw-ty-fi' dollah"--
+
+"Fifty!" cried Narcisse, who had not owned that much at one time since
+his father was a constable; realizing which fact, he slipped away
+upstairs and found Madame Zénobie half crazed at the slaughter of her
+assets.
+
+She sat in a chair against the wall of the room the Richlings had
+occupied, a spectacle of agitated dejection. Here and there about the
+apartment, either motionless in chairs, or moving noiselessly about,
+and pulling and pushing softly this piece of furniture and that, were
+numerous vulture-like persons of either sex, waiting the up-coming of
+the auctioneer. Narcisse approached her briskly.
+
+"Well, Madame Zénobie!"--he spoke in French--"is it you who lives here?
+Don't you remember me? What! No? You don't remember how I used to steal
+figs from you?"
+
+The vultures slowly turned their heads. Madame Zénobie looked at him in
+a dazed way.
+
+No, she did not remember. So many had robbed her--all her life.
+
+"But you don't look at me, Madame Zénobie. Don't you remember, for
+example, once pulling a little boy--as little as _that_--out of your
+fig-tree, and taking the half of a shingle, split lengthwise, in your
+hand, and his head under your arm,--swearing you would do it if you died
+for it,--and bending him across your knee,"--he began a vigorous but
+graceful movement of the right arm, which few members of our fallen race
+could fail to recognize,--"and you don't remember me, my old friend?"
+
+She looked up into the handsome face with a faint smile of affirmation.
+He laughed with delight.
+
+"The shingle was _that_ wide. Ah! Madame Zénobie, you did it well!" He
+softly smote the memorable spot, first with one hand and then with the
+other, shrinking forward spasmodically with each contact, and throwing
+utter woe into his countenance. The general company smiled. He suddenly
+put on great seriousness.
+
+"Madame Zénobie, I hope your furniture is selling well?" He still spoke
+in French.
+
+She cast her eyes upward pleadingly, caught her breath, threw the back
+of her hand against her temple, and dashed it again to her lap, shaking
+her head.
+
+Narcisse was sorry.
+
+"I have been doing what I could for you, downstairs,--running up the
+prices of things. I wish I could stay to do more, for the sake of old
+times. I came to see Mr. Richling, Madame Zénobie; is he in? Dr. Sevier
+wants him."
+
+Richling? Why, the Richlings did not live there! The Doctor must know
+it. Why should she be made responsible for this mistake? It was his
+oversight. They had moved long ago. Dr. Sevier had seen them looking for
+apartments. Where did they live now? Ah, me! _she_ could not tell. Did
+Mr. Richling owe the Doctor something?
+
+"Owe? Certainly not. The Doctor--on the contrary"--
+
+Ah! well, indeed, she didn't know where they lived, it is true; but the
+fact was, Mr. Richling happened to be there just then!--_ŕ-ç't'eure_! He
+had come to get a few trifles left by his madame.
+
+Narcisse made instant search. Richling was not on the upper floor. He
+stepped to the landing and looked down. There he went!
+
+"Mistoo 'Itchlin!"
+
+Richling failed to hear. Sharper ears might have served him better. He
+passed out by the street door. Narcisse stopped the auction by the noise
+he made coming downstairs after him. He had some trouble with the front
+door,--lost time there, but got out.
+
+Richling was turning a corner. Narcisse ran there and looked; looked
+up--looked down--looked into every store and shop on either side of the
+way clear back to Canal street; crossed it, went back to the Doctor's
+office, and reported. If he omitted such details as having seen and then
+lost sight of the man he sought, it may have been in part from the
+Doctor's indisposition to give him speaking license. The conclusion was
+simple: the Richlings could not be found.
+
+ * * *
+
+The months of winter passed. No sign of them.
+
+"They've gone back home," the Doctor often said to himself. How
+much better that was than to stay where they had made a mistake in
+venturing, and become the nurslings of patronizing strangers! He gave his
+admiration free play, now that they were quite gone. True courage that
+Richling had--courage to retreat when retreat is best! And his wife--ah!
+what a reminder of--hush, memory!
+
+"Yes, they must have gone home!" The Doctor spoke very positively,
+because, after all, he was haunted by doubt.
+
+One spring morning he uttered a soft exclamation as he glanced at his
+office-slate. The first notice on it read:--
+
+ Please call as soon as you can at number 292 St. Mary street,
+ corner of Prytania. Lower corner--opposite the asylum.
+ JOHN RICHLING.
+
+The place was far up in the newer part of the American quarter. The
+signature had the appearance as if the writer had begun to write some
+other name, and had changed it to Richling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A QUESTION OF BOOK-KEEPING.
+
+
+A day or two after Narcisse had gone looking for Richling at the house
+of Madame Zénobie, he might have found him, had he known where to
+search, in Tchoupitoulas street.
+
+Whoever remembers that thoroughfare as it was in those days, when the
+commodious "cotton-float" had not quite yet come into use, and Poydras
+and other streets did not so vie with Tchoupitoulas in importance as
+they do now, will recall a scene of commercial hurly-burly that inspired
+much pardonable vanity in the breast of the utilitarian citizen. Drays,
+drays, drays! Not the light New York things; but big, heavy, solid
+affairs, many of them drawn by two tall mules harnessed tandem. Drays
+by threes and by dozens, drays in opposing phalanxes, drays in long
+processions, drays with all imaginable kinds of burden; cotton in bales,
+piled as high as the omnibuses; leaf tobacco in huge hogsheads; cases of
+linens and silks; stacks of raw-hides; crates of cabbages; bales of
+prints and of hay; interlocked heaps of blue and red ploughs; bags of
+coffee, and spices, and corn; bales of bagging; barrels, casks, and
+tierces; whisky, pork, onions, oats, bacon, garlic, molasses, and other
+delicacies; rice, sugar,--what was there not? Wines of France and Spain
+in pipes, in baskets, in hampers, in octaves; queensware from England;
+cheeses, like cart-wheels, from Switzerland; almonds, lemons, raisins,
+olives, boxes of citron, casks of chains; specie from Vera Cruz; cries
+of drivers, cracking of whips, rumble of wheels, tremble of earth,
+frequent gorge and stoppage. It seemed an idle tale to say that any one
+could be lacking bread and raiment. "We are a great city," said the
+patient foot-passengers, waiting long on street corners for opportunity
+to cross the way.
+
+On one of these corners paused Richling. He had not found employment,
+but you could not read that in his face; as well as he knew himself, he
+had come forward into the world prepared amiably and patiently to be, to
+do, to suffer anything, provided it was not wrong or ignominious. He did
+not see that even this is not enough in this rough world; nothing had
+yet taught him that one must often gently suffer rudeness and wrong. As
+to what constitutes ignominy he had a very young man's--and, shall we
+add? a very American--idea. He could not have believed, had he been
+told, how many establishments he had passed by, omitting to apply in
+them for employment. He little dreamed he had been too select. He had
+entered not into any house of the Samaritans, to use a figure; much
+less, to speak literally, had he gone to the lost sheep of the house of
+Israel. Mary, hiding away in uncomfortable quarters a short stone's
+throw from Madame Zénobie's, little imagined that, in her broad irony
+about his not hunting for employment, there was really a tiny seed of
+truth. She felt sure that two or three persons who had seemed about to
+employ him had failed to do so because they detected the defect in his
+hearing, and in one or two cases she was right.
+
+Other persons paused on the same corner where Richling stood, under the
+same momentary embarrassment. One man, especially busy-looking, drew
+very near him. And then and there occurred this simple accident,--that
+at last he came in contact with the man who had work to give him. This
+person good-humoredly offered an impatient comment on their enforced
+delay. Richling answered in sympathetic spirit, and the first speaker
+responded with a question:--
+
+"Stranger in the city?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Buying goods for up-country?"
+
+It was a pleasant feature of New Orleans life that sociability to
+strangers on the street was not the exclusive prerogative of gamblers'
+decoys.
+
+"No; I'm looking for employment."
+
+"Aha!" said the man, and moved away a little. But in a moment Richling,
+becoming aware that his questioner was glancing all over him with
+critical scrutiny, turned, and the man spoke.
+
+"D'you keep books?"
+
+Just then a way opened among the vehicles; and the man, young and
+muscular, darted into it, and Richling followed.
+
+"I _can_ keep books," he said, as they reached the farther curb-stone.
+
+The man seized him by the arm.
+
+"D'you see that pile of codfish and herring where that tall man is at
+work yonder with a marking-pot and brush? Well, just beyond there is a
+boarding-house, and then a hardware store; you can hear them throwing
+down sheets of iron. Here; you can see the sign. See? Well, the next is
+my store. Go in there--upstairs into the office--and wait till I come."
+
+Richling bowed and went. In the office he sat down and waited what
+seemed a very long time. Could he have misunderstood? For the man did
+not come. There was a person sitting at a desk on the farther side of
+the office, writing, who had not lifted his head from first to last,
+Richling said:--
+
+"Can you tell me when the proprietor will be in?"
+
+The writer's eyes rose, and dropped again upon his writing.
+
+"What do you want with him?"
+
+"He asked me to wait here for him."
+
+"Better wait, then."
+
+Just then in came the merchant. Richling rose, and he uttered a rude
+exclamation:--
+
+"_I_ forgot you completely! Where did you say you kept books at, last?"
+
+"I've not kept anybody's books yet, but I can do it."
+
+The merchant's response was cold and prompt. He did not look at
+Richling, but took a sample vial of molasses from a dirty mantel-piece
+and lifted it between his eyes and the light, saying:--
+
+"You can't do any such thing. I don't want you."
+
+"Sir," said Richling, so sharply that the merchant looked round, "if you
+don't want me I don't want you; but you mustn't attempt to tell me that
+what I say is not true!" He had stepped forward as he began to speak,
+but he stopped before half his words were uttered, and saw his folly.
+Even while his voice still trembled with passion and his head was up, he
+colored with mortification. That feeling grew no less when his offender
+simply looked at him, and the man at the desk did not raise his eyes. It
+rather increased when he noticed that both of them were young--as young
+as he.
+
+"I don't doubt your truthfulness," said the merchant, marking the effect
+of his forbearance; "but you ought to know you can't come in and take
+charge of a large set of books in the midst of a busy season, when
+you've never kept books before."
+
+"I don't know it at all."
+
+"Well, I do," said the merchant, still more coldly than before. "There
+are my books," he added, warming, and pointed to three great canvassed
+and black-initialled volumes standing in a low iron safe, "left only
+yesterday in such a snarl, by a fellow who had 'never kept books, but
+knew how,' that I shall have to open another set! After this I shall
+have a book-keeper who has kept books."
+
+He turned away.
+
+Some weeks afterward Richling recalled vividly a thought that had struck
+him only faintly at this time: that, beneath much superficial severity
+and energy, there was in this establishment a certain looseness of
+management. It may have been this half-recognized thought that gave him
+courage, now, to say, advancing another step:--
+
+"One word, if you please."
+
+"It's no use, my friend."
+
+"It may be."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Get an experienced book-keeper for your new set of books"--
+
+"You can bet your bottom dollar!" said the merchant, turning again and
+running his hands down into his lower pockets. "And even he'll have as
+much as he can do"--
+
+"That is just what I wanted you to say," interrupted Richling, trying
+hard to smile; "then you can let me straighten up the old set."
+
+"Give a new hand the work of an expert!"
+
+The merchant almost laughed out. He shook his head and was about to say
+more, when Richling persisted:--
+
+"If I don't do the work to your satisfaction don't pay me a cent."
+
+"I never make that sort of an arrangement; no, sir!"
+
+Unfortunately it had not been Richling's habit to show this pertinacity,
+else life might have been easier to him as a problem; but these two
+young men, his equals in age, were casting amused doubts upon his
+ability to make good his professions. The case was peculiar. He reached
+a hand out toward the books.
+
+"Let me look over them for one day; if I don't convince you the next
+morning in five minutes that I can straighten them I'll leave them
+without a word."
+
+The merchant looked down an instant, and then turned to the man at the
+desk.
+
+"What do you think of that, Sam?"
+
+Sam set his elbows upon the desk, took the small end of his pen-holder
+in his hands and teeth, and, looking up, said:--
+
+"I don't know; you might--try him."
+
+"What did you say your name was?" asked the other, again facing
+Richling. "Ah, yes! Who are your references, Mr. Richmond?"
+
+"Sir?" Richling leaned slightly forward and turned his ear.
+
+"I say, who knows you?"
+
+"Nobody."
+
+"Nobody! Where are you from?"
+
+"Milwaukee."
+
+The merchant tossed out his arm impatiently.
+
+"Oh, I can't do that kind o' business."
+
+He turned abruptly, went to his desk, and, sitting down half-hidden by
+it, took up an open letter.
+
+"I bought that coffee, Sam," he said, rising again and moving farther
+away.
+
+"Um-hum," said Sam; and all was still.
+
+Richling stood expecting every instant to turn on the next and go. Yet
+he went not. Under the dusty front windows of the counting-room the
+street was roaring below. Just beyond a glass partition at his back a
+great windlass far up under the roof was rumbling with the descent of
+goods from a hatchway at the end of its tense rope. Salesmen were
+calling, trucks were trundling, shipping clerks and porters were
+replying. One brawny fellow he saw, through the glass, take a herring
+from a broken box, and stop to feed it to a sleek, brindled mouser. Even
+the cat was valued; but he--he stood there absolutely zero. He saw it.
+He saw it as he never had seen it before in his life. This truth smote
+him like a javelin: that all this world wants is a man's permission to
+do without him. Right then it was that he thought he swallowed all his
+pride; whereas he only tasted its bitter brine as like a wave it took
+him up and lifted him forward bodily. He strode up to the desk beyond
+which stood the merchant, with the letter still in his hand, and said:--
+
+"I've not gone yet! I may have to be turned off by you, but not in this
+manner!"
+
+The merchant looked around at him with a smile of surprise, mixed with
+amusement and commendation, but said nothing. Richling held out his open
+hand.
+
+"I don't ask you to trust me. Don't trust me. Try me!"
+
+He looked distressed. He was not begging, but he seemed to feel as
+though he were.
+
+The merchant dropped his eyes again upon the letter, and in that
+attitude asked:--
+
+"What do you say, Sam?"
+
+"He can't hurt anything," said Sam.
+
+The merchant looked suddenly at Richling.
+
+"You're not from Milwaukee. You're a Southern man."
+
+Richling changed color.
+
+"I said Milwaukee."
+
+"Well," said the merchant, "I hardly know. Come and see me further about
+it to-morrow morning. I haven't time to talk now."
+
+ * * *
+
+"Take a seat," he said, the next morning, and drew up a chair sociably
+before the returned applicant. "Now, suppose I was to give you those
+books, all in confusion as they are, what would you do first of all?"
+
+Mary fortunately had asked the same question the night before, and her
+husband was entirely ready with an answer which they had studied out in
+bed.
+
+"I should send your deposit-book to bank to be balanced, and, without
+waiting for it, I should begin to take a trial-balance off the books. If
+I didn't get one pretty soon, I'd drop that for the time being, and turn
+in and render the accounts of everybody on the books, asking them to
+examine and report."
+
+"All right," said the merchant, carelessly; "we'll try you."
+
+"Sir?" Richling bent his ear.
+
+"_All right; we'll try you!_ I don't care much about recommendations. I
+generally most always make up my opinion about a man from looking at
+him. I'm that sort of a man."
+
+He smiled with inordinate complacency.
+
+So, week by week, as has been said already, the winter passed,--Richling
+on one side of the town, hidden away in his work, and Dr. Sevier on the
+other, very positive that the "young pair" must have returned to
+Milwaukee.
+
+At length the big books were readjusted in all their hundreds of pages,
+were balanced, and closed. Much satisfaction was expressed; but another
+man had meantime taken charge of the new books,--one who influenced
+business, and Richling had nothing to do but put on his hat.
+
+However, the house cheerfully recommended him to a neighboring firm,
+which also had disordered books to be righted; and so more weeks passed.
+Happy weeks! Happy days! Ah, the joy of them! John bringing home money,
+and Mary saving it!
+
+"But, John, it seems such a pity not to have stayed with A, B, & Co.;
+doesn't it?"
+
+"I don't think so. I don't think they'll last much longer."
+
+And when he brought word that A, B, & Co. had gone into a thousand
+pieces Mary was convinced that she had a very far-seeing husband.
+
+By and by, at Richling's earnest and restless desire, they moved their
+lodgings again. And thus we return by a circuit to the morning when Dr.
+Sevier, taking up his slate, read the summons that bade him call at the
+corner of St. Mary and Prytania streets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+WHEN THE WIND BLOWS.
+
+
+The house stands there to-day. A small, pinched, frame,
+ground-floor-and-attic, double tenement, with its roof sloping toward
+St. Mary street and overhanging its two door-steps that jut out on the
+sidewalk. There the Doctor's carriage stopped, and in its front room he
+found Mary in bed again, as ill as ever. A humble German woman, living
+in the adjoining half of the house, was attending to the invalid's
+wants, and had kept her daughter from the public school to send her to
+the apothecary with the Doctor's prescription.
+
+"It is the poor who help the poor," thought the physician.
+
+"Is this your home?" he asked the woman softly, as he sat down by the
+patient's pillow. He looked about upon the small, cheaply furnished
+room, full of the neat makeshifts of cramped housewifery.
+
+"It's mine," whispered Mary. Even as she lay there in peril of her life,
+and flattened out as though Juggernaut had rolled over her, her eyes
+shone with happiness and scintillated as the Doctor exclaimed in
+undertone:--
+
+"Yours!" He laid his hand upon her forehead. "Where is Mr. Richling?"
+
+"At the office." Her eyes danced with delight. She would have begun,
+then and there, to tell him all that had happened,--"had taken care of
+herself all along," she said, "until they began to move. In moving, had
+been _obliged_ to overwork--hardly _fixed_ yet"--
+
+But the Doctor gently checked her and bade her be quiet.
+
+"I will," was the faint reply; "I will; but--just one thing, Doctor,
+please let me say."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"John"--
+
+"Yes, yes; I know; he'd be here, only you wouldn't let him stay away
+from his work."
+
+She smiled assent, and he smiled in return.
+
+"'Business is business,'" he said.
+
+She turned a quick, sparkling glance of affirmation, as if she had
+lately had some trouble to maintain that ancient truism. She was going
+to speak again, but the Doctor waved his hand downward soothingly toward
+the restless form and uplifted eyes.
+
+"All right," she whispered, and closed them.
+
+The next day she was worse. The physician found himself, to use his
+words, "only the tardy attendant of offended nature." When he dropped
+his finger-ends gently upon her temple she tremblingly grasped his hand.
+
+"You'll save me?" she whispered.
+
+"Yes," he replied; "we'll do that--the Lord helping us."
+
+A glad light shone from her face as he uttered the latter clause.
+Whereat he made haste to add:--
+
+"I don't pray, but I'm sure you do."
+
+She silently pressed the hand she still held.
+
+On Sunday he found Richling at the bedside. Mary had improved
+considerably in two or three days. She lay quite still as they talked,
+only shifting her glance softly from one to the other as one and then
+the other spoke. The Doctor heard with interest Richling's full account
+of all that had occurred since he had met them last together. Mary's
+eyes filled with merriment when John told the droller part of their
+experiences in the hard quarters from which they had only lately
+removed. But the Doctor did not so much as smile. Richling finished,
+and the physician was silent.
+
+"Oh, we're getting along," said Richling, stroking the small, weak hand
+that lay near him on the coverlet. But still the Doctor kept silence.
+
+"Of course," said Richling, very quietly, looking at his wife, "we
+mustn't be surprised at a backset now and then. But we're getting on."
+
+Mary turned her eyes toward the Doctor. Was he not going to assent at
+all? She seemed about to speak. He bent his ear, and she said, with a
+quiet smile:--
+
+"'When the wind blows, the cradle will rock.'"
+
+The physician gave only a heavy-eyed "Humph!" and a faint look of
+amusement.
+
+"What did she say?" said Richling; the words had escaped his ear. The
+Doctor repeated it, and Richling, too, smiled.
+
+Yet it was a good speech,--why not? But the patient also smiled, and
+turned her eyes toward the wall with a disconcerted look, as if the
+smile might end in tears. For herein lay the very difficulty that always
+brought the Doctor's carriage to the door,--the cradle would not rock.
+
+For a few days more that carriage continued to appear, and then ceased.
+Richling dropped in one morning at Number 3-1/2 Carondelet, and settled
+his bill with Narcisse.
+
+The young Creole was much pleased to be at length brought into actual
+contact with a man of his own years, who, without visible effort, had
+made an impression on Dr. Sevier.
+
+Until the money had been paid and the bill receipted nothing more than
+a formal business phrase or two passed between them. But as Narcisse
+delivered the receipted bill, with an elaborate gesture of courtesy, and
+Richling began to fold it for his pocket, the Creole remarked:--
+
+"I 'ope you will excuse the 'an'-a-'iting."
+
+Richling reopened the paper; the penmanship was beautiful.
+
+"Do you ever write better than this?" he asked. "Why, I wish I could
+write half as well!"
+
+"No; I do not fine that well a-'itten. I cannot see 'ow that is,--I
+nevva 'ite to the satizfagtion of my abil'ty soon in the mawnin's. I am
+dest'oying my chi'og'aphy at that desk yeh."
+
+"Indeed?" said Richling; "why, I should think"--
+
+"Yesseh, 'tis the tooth. But consunning the chi'og'aphy, Mistoo Itchlin,
+I 'ave descovvud one thing to a maul cettainty, and that is, if I 'ave
+something to 'ite to a young lady, I always dizguise my chi'og'aphy.
+Ha-ah! I 'ave learn that! You will be aztonizh' to see in 'ow many
+diffe'n' fawm' I can make my 'an'-a-'iting to appeah. That paz thoo my
+fam'ly, in fact, Mistoo Itchlin. My hant, she's got a honcle w'at use'
+to be cluck in a bank, w'at could make the si'natu'e of the pwesiden',
+as well as of the cashieh, with that so absolute puffegtion, that they
+tu'n 'im out of the bank! Yesseh. In fact, I thing you ought to know 'ow
+to 'ite a ve'y fine 'an', Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+"N-not very," said Richling; "my hand is large and legible, but not well
+adapted for--book-keeping; it's too heavy."
+
+"You 'ave the 'ight physio'nomie, I am shu'. You will pe'haps believe me
+with difficulty, Mistoo Itchlin, but I assu' you I can tell if a man 'as
+a fine chi'og'aphy aw no, by juz lookin' upon his liniment. Do you know
+that Benjamin Fwanklin 'ote a v'ey fine chi'og'aphy, in fact? Also,
+Voltaire. Yesseh. An' Napoleon Bonaparte. Lawd By'on muz 'ave 'ad a
+beaucheouz chi'og'aphy. 'Tis impossible not to be, with that face. He is
+my favo'ite poet, that Lawd By'on. Moze people pwefeh 'im to Shakspere,
+in fact. Well, you muz go? I am ve'y 'appy to meck yo' acquaintanze,
+Mistoo Itchlin, seh. I am so'y Doctah Seveeah is not theh pwesently. The
+negs time you call, Mistoo Itchlin, you muz not be too much aztonizh to
+fine me gone from yeh. Yesseh. He's got to haugment me ad the en' of
+that month, an' we 'ave to-day the fifteenth Mawch. Do you smoke, Mistoo
+Itchlin?" He extended a package of cigarettes. Richling accepted one. "I
+smoke lawgely in that weatheh," striking a match on his thigh. "I feel
+ve'y sultwy to-day. Well,"--he seized the visitor's hand,--"_au' evoi'_,
+Mistoo Itchlin." And Narcisse returned to his desk happy in the
+conviction that Richling had gone away dazzled.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+GENTLES AND COMMONS.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier sat in the great easy-chair under the drop-light of his
+library table trying to read a book. But his thought was not on the
+page. He expired a long breath of annoyance, and lifted his glance
+backward from the bottom of the page to its top.
+
+Why must his mind keep going back to that little cottage in St. Mary
+street? What good reason was there? Would they thank him for his
+solicitude? Indeed! He almost smiled his contempt of the supposition.
+Why, when on one or two occasions he had betrayed a least little bit of
+kindly interest,--what? Up had gone their youthful vivacity like an
+umbrella. Oh, yes!--like all young folks--_their_ affairs were intensely
+private. Once or twice he had shaken his head at the scantiness of all
+their provisions for life. Well? They simply and unconsciously stole a
+hold upon one another's hand or arm, as much as to say, "To love is
+enough." When, gentlemen of the jury, it isn't enough!
+
+"Pshaw!" The word escaped him audibly. He drew partly up from his half
+recline, and turned back a leaf of the book to try once more to make out
+the sense of it.
+
+But there was Mary, and there was her husband. Especially Mary. Her
+image came distinctly between his eyes and the page. There she was, just
+as on his last visit,--a superfluous one--no charge,--sitting and plying
+her needle, unaware of his approach, gently moving her rocking-chair,
+and softly singing, "Flow on, thou shining river,"--the song his own
+wife used to sing. "O child, child! do you think it's always going to be
+'shining'?" They shouldn't be so contented. Was pride under that cloak?
+Oh, no, no! But even if the content was genuine, it wasn't good. Why,
+they oughtn't to be _able_ to be happy so completely out of their true
+sphere. It showed insensibility. But, there again,--Richling wasn't
+insensible, much less Mary.
+
+The Doctor let his book sink, face downward, upon his knee.
+
+"They're too big to be playing in the sand." He took up the book again.
+"'Tisn't my business to tell them so." But before he got the volume
+fairly before his eyes his professional bell rang, and he tossed the
+book upon the table.
+
+"Well, why don't you bring him in?" he asked, in a tone of reproof, of a
+servant who presented a card; and in a moment the visitor entered.
+
+He was a person of some fifty years of age, with a patrician face, in
+which it was impossible to tell where benevolence ended and pride began.
+His dress was of fine cloth, a little antique in cut, and fitting rather
+loosely on a form something above the medium height, of good width, but
+bent in the shoulders, and with arms that had been stronger. Years, it
+might be, or possibly some unflinching struggle with troublesome facts,
+had given many lines of his face a downward slant. He apologized for the
+hour of his call, and accepted with thanks the chair offered him.
+
+"You are not a resident of the city?" asked Dr. Sevier.
+
+"I am from Kentucky." The voice was rich, and the stranger's general
+air one of rather conscious social eminence.
+
+"Yes?" said the Doctor, not specially pleased, and looked at him closer.
+He wore a black satin neck-stock, and dark-blue buttoned gaiters. His
+hair was dyed brown. A slender frill adorned his shirt-front.
+
+"Mrs."--the visitor began to say, not giving the name, but waving his
+index-finger toward his card, which Dr. Sevier had laid upon the table,
+just under the lamp,--"my wife, Doctor, seems to be in a very feeble
+condition. Her physicians have advised her to try the effects of a
+change of scene, and I have brought her down to your busy city, sir."
+
+The Doctor assented. The stranger resumed:--
+
+"Its hurry and energy are a great contrast to the plantation life, sir."
+
+"They're very unlike," the physician admitted.
+
+"This chafing of thousands of competitive designs," said the visitor,
+"this great fretwork of cross purposes, is a decided change from the
+quiet order of our rural life. Hmm! There everything is under the
+administration of one undisputed will, and is executed by the
+unquestioning obedience of our happy and contented slave peasantry. I
+prefer the country. But I thought this was just the change that would
+arouse and electrify an invalid who has really no tangible complaint."
+
+"Has the result been unsatisfactory?"
+
+"Entirely so. I am unexpectedly disappointed." The speaker's thought
+seemed to be that the climate of New Orleans had not responded with
+that hospitable alacrity which was due so opulent, reasonable, and
+universally obeyed a guest.
+
+There was a pause here, and Dr. Sevier looked around at the book which
+lay at his elbow. But the visitor did not resume, and the Doctor
+presently asked:--
+
+"Do you wish me to see your wife?"
+
+"I called to see you alone first," said the other, "because there might
+be questions to be asked which were better answered in her absence."
+
+"Then you think you know the secret of her illness, do you?"
+
+"I do. I think, indeed I may say I know, it is--bereavement."
+
+The Doctor compressed his lips and bowed.
+
+The stranger drooped his head somewhat, and, resting his elbows on the
+arms of his chair, laid the tips of his thumbs and fingers softly
+together.
+
+"The truth is, sir, she cannot recover from the loss of our son."
+
+"An infant?" asked the Doctor. His bell rang again as he put the
+question.
+
+"No, sir; a young man,--one whom I had thought a person of great
+promise; just about to enter life."
+
+"When did he die?"
+
+"He has been dead nearly a year. I"-- The speaker ceased as the
+mulatto waiting-man appeared at the open door, with a large, simple,
+German face looking easily over his head from behind.
+
+"Toctor," said the owner of this face, lifting an immense open hand,
+"Toctor, uf you bleace, Toctor, you vill bleace ugscooce me."
+
+The Doctor frowned at the servant for permitting the interruption. But
+the gentleman beside him said:--
+
+"Let him come in, sir; he seems to be in haste, sir, and I am not,--I am
+not, at all."
+
+"Come in," said the physician.
+
+The new-comer stepped into the room. He was about six feet three inches
+in height, three feet six in breadth, and the same in thickness. Two
+kindly blue eyes shone softly in an expanse of face that had been
+clean-shaven every Saturday night for many years, and that ended in a
+retreating chin and a dewlap. The limp, white shirt-collar just below
+was without a necktie, and the waist of his pantaloons, which seemed
+intended to supply this deficiency, did not quite, but only almost
+reached up to the unoccupied blank. He removed from his respectful head
+a soft gray hat, whitened here and there with flour.
+
+"Yentlemen," he said, slowly, "you vill ugscooce me to interruptet
+you,--yentlemen."
+
+"Do you wish to see me?" asked Dr. Sevier.
+
+The German made an odd gesture of deferential assent, lifting one open
+hand a little in front of him to the level of his face, with the wrist
+bent forward and the fingers pointing down.
+
+"Uf you bleace, Toctor, I toose; undt tat's te fust time I effer _tit_
+vanted a toctor. Undt you mus' ugscooce me, Toctor, to callin' on you,
+ovver I vish you come undt see mine"--
+
+To the surprise of all, tears gushed from his eyes.
+
+"Mine poor vife, Toctor!" He turned to one side, pointed his broad hand
+toward the floor, and smote his forehead.
+
+"I yoost come in fun mine paykery undt comin' into mine howse, fen--I
+see someting"--he waved his hand downward again--"someting--layin' on
+te--floor--face pleck ans a nigger's; undt fen I look to see who udt
+iss,--_udt is Mississ Reisen_! Toctor, I vish you come right off! I
+couldn't shtayndt udt you toandt come right avay!"
+
+"I'll come," said the Doctor, without rising; "just write your name and
+address on that little white slate yonder."
+
+"Toctor," said the German, extending and dipping his hat, "I'm ferra
+much a-velcome to you, Toctor; undt tat's yoost fot te pottekerra by
+mine corner sayt you vould too. He sayss, 'Reisen,' he sayss, 'you yoost
+co to Toctor Tsewier.'" He bent his great body over the farther end of
+the table and slowly worked out his name, street, and number. "Dtere udt
+iss, Toctor; I put udt town on teh schlate; ovver, I hope you ugscooce
+te hayndtwriding."
+
+"Very well. That's right. That's all."
+
+The German lingered. The Doctor gave a bow of dismission.
+
+"That's all, I say. I'll be there in a moment. That's all. Dan, order my
+carriage!"
+
+"Yentlemen, you vill ugscooce me?"
+
+The German withdrew, returning each gentleman's bow with a faint wave of
+the hat.
+
+During this interview the more polished stranger had sat with bowed
+head, motionless and silent, lifting it only once and for a moment at
+the German's emotional outburst. Then the upward and backward turned
+face was marked with a commiseration partly artificial, but also partly
+natural. He now looked up at the Doctor.
+
+"I shall have to leave you," said the Doctor.
+
+"Certainly, sir," replied the other; "by all means!" The willingness
+was slightly overdone and the benevolence of tone was mixed with
+complacency. "By all means," he said again; "this is one of those cases
+where it is only a proper grace in the higher to yield place to the
+lower." He waited for a response, but the Doctor merely frowned into
+space and called for his boots. The visitor resumed:--
+
+"I have a good deal of feeling, sir, for the unlettered and the vulgar.
+They have their station, but they have also--though doubtless in smaller
+capacity than we--their pleasures and pains."
+
+Seeing the Doctor ready to go, he began to rise.
+
+"I may not be gone long," said the physician, rather coldly; "if you
+choose to wait"--
+
+"I thank you; n-no-o"--The visitor stopped between a sitting and a
+rising posture.
+
+"Here are books," said the Doctor, "and the evening papers,--'Picayune,'
+'Delta,' 'True Delta.'" It seemed for a moment as though the gentleman
+might sink into his seat again. "And there's the 'New York Herald.'"
+
+"No, sir!" said the visitor quickly, rising and smoothing himself out;
+"nothing from that quarter, if you please." Yet he smiled. The Doctor
+did not notice that, while so smiling, he took his card from the table.
+There was something familiar in the stranger's face which the Doctor was
+trying to make out. They left the house together. Outside the street
+door the physician made apologetic allusion to their interrupted
+interview.
+
+"Shall I see you at my office to-morrow? I would be happy"--
+
+The stranger had raised his hat. He smiled again, as pleasantly as he
+could, which was not delightful, and said, after a moment's
+hesitation:--
+
+"--Possibly."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+A PANTOMIME.
+
+
+It chanced one evening about this time--the vernal equinox had just
+passed--that from some small cause Richling, who was generally detained
+at the desk until a late hour, was home early. The air was soft and
+warm, and he stood out a little beyond his small front door-step,
+lifting his head to inhale the universal fragrance, and looking in
+every moment, through the unlighted front room, toward a part of the
+diminutive house where a mild rattle of domestic movements could be
+heard, and whence he had, a little before, been adroitly requested to
+absent himself. He moved restlessly on his feet, blowing a soft tune.
+
+Presently he placed a foot on the step and a hand on the door-post, and
+gave a low, urgent call.
+
+A distant response indicated that his term of suspense was nearly over.
+He turned about again once or twice, and a moment later Mary appeared in
+the door, came down upon the sidewalk, looked up into the moonlit sky
+and down the empty, silent street, then turned and sat down, throwing
+her wrists across each other in her lap, and lifting her eyes to her
+husband's with a smile that confessed her fatigue.
+
+The moon was regal. It cast its deep contrasts of clear-cut light and
+shadow among the thin, wooden, unarchitectural forms and weed-grown
+vacancies of the half-settled neighborhood, investing the matter-of-fact
+with mystery, and giving an unexpected charm to the unpicturesque. It
+was--as Richling said, taking his place beside his wife--midspring in
+March. As he spoke he noticed she had brought with her the odor of
+flowers. They were pinned at her throat.
+
+"Where did you get them?" he asked, touching them with his fingers.
+
+Her face lighted up.
+
+"Guess."
+
+How could he guess? As far as he knew neither she nor he had made an
+acquaintance in the neighborhood. He shook his head, and she replied:--
+
+"The butcher."
+
+"You're a queer girl," he said, when they had laughed.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"You let these common people take to you so."
+
+She smiled, with a faint air of concern.
+
+"You don't dislike it, do you?" she asked.
+
+"Oh, no," he said, indifferently, and spoke of other things.
+
+And thus they sat, like so many thousands and thousands of young pairs
+in this wide, free America, offering the least possible interest to
+the great human army round about them, but sharing, or believing they
+shared, in the fruitful possibilities of this land of limitless bounty,
+fondling their hopes and recounting the petty minutić of their daily
+experiences. Their converse was mainly in the form of questions from
+Mary and answers from John.
+
+"And did he say that he would?" etc. "And didn't you insist that he
+should?" etc. "I don't understand how he could require you to," etc.,
+etc. Looking at everything from John's side, as if there never could be
+any other, until at last John himself laughed softly when she asked why
+he couldn't take part of some outdoor man's work, and give him part of
+his own desk-work in exchange, and why he couldn't say plainly that his
+work was too sedentary.
+
+Then she proposed a walk in the moonlight, and insisted she was not
+tired; she wanted it on her own account. And so, when Richling had gone
+into the house and returned with some white worsted gauze for her head
+and neck and locked the door, they were ready to start.
+
+They were tarrying a moment to arrange this wrapping when they found it
+necessary to move aside from where they stood in order to let two
+persons pass on the sidewalk.
+
+These were a man and woman, who had at least reached middle age. The
+woman wore a neatly fitting calico gown; the man, a short pilot-coat.
+His pantaloons were very tight and pale. A new soft hat was pushed
+forward from the left rear corner of his closely cropped head, with
+the front of the brim turned down over his right eye. At each step he
+settled down with a little jerk alternately on this hip and that, at the
+same time faintly dropping the corresponding shoulder. They passed. John
+and Mary looked at each other with a nod of mirthful approval. Why?
+Because the strangers walked silently hand-in-hand.
+
+It was a magical night. Even the part of town where they were, so devoid
+of character by day, had become all at once romantic with phantasmal
+lights and glooms, echoes and silences. Along the edge of a wide
+chimney-top on one blank, new hulk of a house, that nothing else could
+have made poetical, a mocking-bird hopped and ran back and forth,
+singing as if he must sing or die. The mere names of the streets they
+traversed suddenly became sweet food for the fancy. Down at the first
+corner below they turned into one that had been an old country road,
+and was still named Felicity.
+
+Richling called attention to the word painted on a board. He merely
+pointed to it in playful silence, and then let his hand sink and rest
+on hers as it lay in his elbow. They were walking under the low boughs
+of a line of fig-trees that overhung a high garden wall. Then some gay
+thought took him; but when his downward glance met the eyes uplifted to
+meet his they were grave, and there came an instantaneous tenderness
+into the exchange of looks that would have been worse than uninteresting
+to you or me. But the next moment she brightened up, pressed herself
+close to him, and caught step. They had not owned each other long enough
+to have settled into sedate possession, though they sometimes thought
+they had done so. There was still a tingling ecstasy in one another's
+touch and glance that prevented them from quite behaving themselves when
+under the moon.
+
+For instance, now, they began, though in cautious undertone, to sing.
+Some person approached them, and they hushed. When the stranger had
+passed, Mary began again another song, alone:--
+
+ "Oh, don't you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?"
+
+"Hush!" said John, softly.
+
+She looked up with an air of mirthful inquiry, and he added:--
+
+"That was the name of Dr. Sevier's wife."
+
+"But he doesn't hear me singing."
+
+"No; but it seems as if he did."
+
+And they sang no more.
+
+They entered a broad, open avenue, with a treeless, grassy way in the
+middle, up which came a very large and lumbering street-car, with
+smokers' benches on the roof, and drawn by tandem horses.
+
+"Here we turn down," said Richling, "into the way of the Naiads." (That
+was the street's name.) "They're not trying to get me away."
+
+He looked down playfully. She was clinging to him with more energy than
+she knew.
+
+"I'd better hold you tight," she answered. Both laughed. The nonsense of
+those we love is better than the finest wit on earth. They walked on in
+their bliss. Shall we follow? Fie!
+
+They passed down across three or four of a group of parallel streets
+named for the nine muses. At Thalia they took the left, went one square,
+and turned up by another street toward home.
+
+Their conversation had flagged. Silence was enough. The great earth was
+beneath their feet, firm and solid; the illimitable distances of the
+heavens stretched above their heads and before their eyes. Here was Mary
+at John's side, and John at hers; John her property and she his, and
+time flowing softly, shiningly on. Yea, even more. If one might believe
+the names of the streets, there were Naiads on the left and Dryads on
+the right; a little farther on, Hercules; yonder corner the dark
+trysting-place of Bacchus and Melpomene; and here, just in advance,
+the corner where Terpsichore crossed the path of Apollo.
+
+They came now along a high, open fence that ran the entire length
+of a square. Above it a dense rank of bitter orange-trees overhung the
+sidewalk, their dark mass of foliage glittering in the moonlight. Within
+lay a deep, old-fashioned garden. Its white shell-walks gleamed in many
+directions. A sweet breath came from its parterres of mingled hyacinths
+and jonquils that hid themselves every moment in black shadows of
+lagustrums and laurestines. Here, in severe order, a pair of palms, prim
+as medićval queens, stood over against each other; and in the midst of
+the garden, rising high against the sky, appeared the pillared veranda
+and immense, four-sided roof of an old French colonial villa, as it
+stands unchanged to-day.
+
+The two loiterers slackened their pace to admire the scene. There was
+much light shining from the house. Mary could hear voices, and, in a
+moment, words. The host was speeding his parting guests.
+
+"The omnibus will put you out only one block from the hotel," some one
+said.
+
+ * * *
+
+Dr. Sevier, returning home from a visit to a friend in Polymnia street,
+had scarcely got well seated in the omnibus before he witnessed from its
+window a singular dumb show. He had handed his money up to the driver as
+they crossed Euterpe street, had received the change and deposited his
+fare as they passed Terpsichore, and was just sitting down when the only
+other passenger in the vehicle said, half-rising:--
+
+"Hello! there's going to be a shooting scrape!"
+
+A rather elderly man and woman on the sidewalk, both of them extremely
+well dressed, and seemingly on the eve of hailing the omnibus, suddenly
+transferred their attention to a younger couple a few steps from them,
+who appeared to have met them entirely by accident. The elderly lady
+threw out her arms toward the younger man with an expression on her face
+of intensest mental suffering. She seemed to cry out; but the deafening
+rattle of the omnibus, as it approached them, intercepted the sound.
+All four of the persons seemed, in various ways, to experience the most
+violent feelings. The young man more than once moved as if about to
+start forward, yet did not advance; his companion, a small, very shapely
+woman, clung to him excitedly and pleadingly. The older man shook a
+stout cane at the younger, talking furiously as he did so. He held the
+elderly lady to him with his arm thrown about her, while she now cast
+her hands upward, now covered her face with them, now wrung them,
+clasped them, or extended one of them in seeming accusation against the
+younger person of her own sex. In a moment the omnibus was opposite the
+group. The Doctor laid his hand on his fellow-passenger's arm.
+
+"Don't get out. There will be no shooting."
+
+The young man on the sidewalk suddenly started forward, with his
+companion still on his farther arm, and with his eyes steadily fixed on
+those of the elder and taller man, a clenched fist lifted defensively,
+and with a tense, defiant air walked hurriedly and silently by within
+easy sweep of the uplifted staff. At the moment when the slight distance
+between the two men began to increase, the cane rose higher, but stopped
+short in its descent and pointed after the receding figure.
+
+"I command you to leave this town, sir!"
+
+Dr. Sevier looked. He looked with all his might, drawing his knee under
+him on the cushion and leaning out. The young man had passed. He still
+moved on, turning back as he went a face full of the fear that men show
+when they are afraid of their own violence; and, as the omnibus
+clattered away, he crossed the street at the upper corner and
+disappeared in the shadows.
+
+"That's a very strange thing," said the other passenger to Dr. Sevier,
+as they resumed the corner seats by the door.
+
+"It certainly is!" replied the Doctor, and averted his face. For when
+the group and he were nearest together and the moon shone brightly
+upon the four, he saw, beyond all question, that the older man was his
+visitor of a few evenings before and that the younger pair were John and
+Mary Richling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+"SHE'S ALL THE WORLD."
+
+
+Excellent neighborhood, St. Mary street, and Prytania was even better.
+Everybody was very retired though, it seemed. Almost every house
+standing in the midst of its shady garden,--sunny gardens are a newer
+fashion of the town,--a bell-knob on the gate-post, and the gate locked.
+But the Richlings cared nothing for this; not even what they should have
+cared. Nor was there any unpleasantness in another fact.
+
+"Do you let this window stand wide this way when you are at work here,
+all day?" asked the husband. The opening alluded to was on Prytania
+street, and looked across the way to where the asylumed widows of "St
+Anna's" could glance down into it over their poor little window-gardens.
+
+"Why, yes, dear!" Mary looked up from her little cane rocker with that
+thoughtful contraction at the outer corners of her eyes and that
+illuminated smile that between them made half her beauty. And then,
+somewhat more gravely and persuasively: "Don't you suppose they like it?
+They must like it. I think we can do that much for them. Would you
+rather I'd shut it?"
+
+For answer John laid his hand on her head and gazed into her eyes.
+
+"Take care," she whispered; "they'll see you."
+
+He let his arm drop in amused despair.
+
+"Why, what's the window open for? And, anyhow, they're all abed and
+asleep these two hours."
+
+They did like it, those aged widows. It fed their hearts' hunger to
+see the pretty unknown passing and repassing that open window in the
+performance of her morning duties, or sitting down near it with her
+needle, still crooning her soft morning song,--poor, almost as poor as
+they, in this world's glitter; but rich in hope and courage, and rich
+beyond all count in the content of one who finds herself queen of ever
+so little a house, where love is.
+
+"Love is enough!" said the widows.
+
+And certainly she made it seem so. The open window brought, now and
+then, a moisture to the aged eyes, yet they liked it open.
+
+But, without warning one day, there was a change. It was the day after
+Dr. Sevier had noticed that queer street quarrel. The window was not
+closed, but it sent out no more light. The song was not heard, and many
+small, faint signs gave indication that anxiety had come to be a guest
+in the little house. At evening the wife was seen in her front door and
+about its steps, watching in a new, restless way for her husband's
+coming; and when he came it could be seen, all the way from those upper
+windows, where one or two faces appeared now and then, that he was
+troubled and care-worn. There were two more days like this one; but at
+the end of the fourth the wife read good tidings in her husband's
+countenance. He handed her a newspaper, and pointed to a list of
+departing passengers.
+
+"They're gone!" she exclaimed.
+
+He nodded, and laid off his hat. She cast her arms about his neck, and
+buried her head in his bosom. You could almost have seen Anxiety flying
+out at the window. By morning the widows knew of a certainty that the
+cloud had melted away.
+
+In the counting-room one evening, as Richling said good-night with
+noticeable alacrity, one of his employers, sitting with his legs crossed
+over the top of a desk, said to his partner:--
+
+"Richling works for his wages."
+
+"That's all," replied the other; "he don't see his interests in ours any
+more than a tinsmith would, who comes to mend the roof."
+
+The first one took a meditative puff or two from his cigar, tipped off
+its ashes, and responded:--
+
+"Common fault. He completely overlooks his immense indebtedness to the
+world at large, and his dependence on it. He's a good fellow, and
+bright; but he actually thinks that he and the world are starting even."
+
+"His wife's his world," said the other, and opened the Bills Payable
+book. Who will say it is not well to sail in an ocean of love? But the
+Richlings were becalmed in theirs, and, not knowing it, were satisfied.
+
+Day in, day out, the little wife sat at her window, and drove her
+needle. Omnibuses rumbled by; an occasional wagon or cart set the dust
+a-flying; the street venders passed, crying the praises of their goods
+and wares; the blue sky grew more and more intense as weeks piled up
+upon weeks; but the empty repetitions, and the isolation, and, worst of
+all, the escape of time,--she smiled at all, and sewed on and crooned
+on, in the sufficient thought that John would come, each time, when only
+hours enough had passed away forever.
+
+Once she saw Dr. Sevier's carriage. She bowed brightly, but he--what
+could it mean?--he lifted his hat with such austere gravity. Dr. Sevier
+was angry. He had no definite charge to make, but that did not lessen
+his displeasure. After long, unpleasant wondering, and long trusting to
+see Richling some day on the street, he had at length driven by this
+way purposely to see if they had indeed left town, as they had been so
+imperiously commanded to do.
+
+This incident, trivial as it was, roused Mary to thought; and all the
+rest of the day the thought worked with energy to dislodge the frame of
+mind that she had acquired from her husband.
+
+When John came home that night and pressed her to his bosom she was
+silent. And when he held her off a little and looked into her eyes, and
+she tried to better her smile, those eyes stood full to the lashes and
+she looked down.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked he, quickly.
+
+"Nothing!" She looked up again, with a little laugh.
+
+He took a chair and drew her down upon his lap.
+
+"What's the matter with my girl?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"How,--you don't know?"
+
+"Why, I simply don't. I can't make out what it is. If I could I'd tell
+you; but I don't know at all." After they had sat silent a few
+moments:--
+
+"I wonder"--she began.
+
+"You wonder what?" asked he, in a rallying tone.
+
+"I wonder if there's such a thing as being too contented."
+
+Richling began to hum, with a playful manner:--
+
+ "'And she's all the world to me.'
+
+Is that being too"--
+
+"Stop!" said Mary. "That's it." She laid her hand upon his shoulder.
+"You've said it. That's what I ought not to be!"
+
+"Why, Mary, what on earth"-- His face flamed up "John, I'm willing to
+be _more_ than all the rest of the world to you. I always must be
+that. I'm going to be that forever. And you"--she kissed him
+passionately--"you're all the world to me! But I've no right to be _all_
+the world to _you_. And you mustn't allow it. It's making it too small!"
+
+"Mary, what are you saying?"
+
+"Don't, John. Don't speak that way. I'm not saying anything. I'm only
+trying to say something, I don't know what."
+
+"Neither do I," was the mock-rueful answer.
+
+"I only know," replied Mary, the vision of Dr. Sevier's carriage
+passing before her abstracted eyes, and of the Doctor's pale face bowing
+austerely within it, "that if you don't take any part or interest in the
+outside world it'll take none in you; do you think it will?"
+
+"And who cares if it doesn't?" cried John, clasping her to his bosom.
+
+"I do," she replied. "Yes, I do. I've no right to steal you from the
+rest of the world, or from the place in it that you ought to fill.
+John"--
+
+"That's my name."
+
+"Why can't I do something to help you?"
+
+John lifted his head unnecessarily.
+
+"No!"
+
+"Well, then, let's think of something we can do, without just waiting
+for the wind to blow us along,--I mean," she added appeasingly, "I mean
+without waiting to be employed by others."
+
+"Oh, yes; but that takes capital!"
+
+"Yes, I know; but why don't you think up something,--some new enterprise
+or something,--and get somebody with capital to go in with you?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"You're out of your depth. And that wouldn't make so much difference,
+but you're out of mine. It isn't enough to think of something; you must
+know how to do it. And what do I know how to do? Nothing! Nothing that's
+worth doing!"
+
+"I know one thing you could do."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"You could be a professor in a college."
+
+John smiled bitterly.
+
+"Without antecedents?" he asked.
+
+Their eyes met; hers dropped, and both voices were silent. Mary drew a
+soft sigh. She thought their talk had been unprofitable. But it had not.
+John laid hold of work from that day on in a better and wiser spirit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE BOUGH BREAKS.
+
+
+By some trivial chance, she hardly knew what, Mary found herself one day
+conversing at her own door with the woman whom she and her husband had
+once smiled at for walking the moonlit street with her hand in willing
+and undisguised captivity. She was a large and strong, but extremely
+neat, well-spoken, and good-looking Irish woman, who might have seemed
+at ease but for a faintly betrayed ambition.
+
+She praised with rather ornate English the good appearance and
+convenient smallness of Mary's house; said her own was the same size.
+That person with whom she sometimes passed "of a Sundeh"--yes, and
+moonlight evenings--that was her husband. He was "ferst ingineeur" on a
+steam-boat. There was a little, just discernible waggle in her head as
+she stated things. It gave her decided character.
+
+"Ah! engineer," said Mary.
+
+"_Ferst_ ingineeur," repeated the woman; "you know there bees ferst
+ingineeurs, an' secon' ingineeurs, an' therd ingineeurs. Yes." She
+unconsciously fanned herself with a dust-pan that she had just bought
+from a tin peddler.
+
+She lived only some two or three hundred yards away, around the corner,
+in a tidy little cottage snuggled in among larger houses in Coliseum
+street. She had had children, but she had lost them; and Mary's
+sympathy when she told her of them--the girl and two boys--won the
+woman as much as the little lady's pretty manners had dazed her. It was
+not long before she began to drop in upon Mary in the hour of twilight,
+and sit through it without speaking often, or making herself especially
+interesting in any way, but finding it pleasant, notwithstanding.
+
+"John," said Mary,--her husband had come in unexpectedly,--"our
+neighbor, Mrs. Riley."
+
+John's bow was rather formal, and Mrs. Riley soon rose and said
+good-evening.
+
+"John," said the wife again, laying her hands on his shoulders as she
+tiptoed to kiss him, "what troubles you?" Then she attempted a rallying
+manner: "Don't my friends suit you?"
+
+He hesitated only an instant, and said:--
+
+"Oh, yes, that's all right!"
+
+"Well, then, I don't see why you look so."
+
+"I've finished the task I was to do."
+
+"What! you haven't"--
+
+"I'm out of employment."
+
+They went and sat down on the little hair-cloth sofa that Mrs. Riley had
+just left.
+
+"I thought they said they would have other work for you."
+
+"They said they might have; but it seems they haven't."
+
+"And it's just in the opening of summer, too," said Mary; "why, what
+right"--
+
+"Oh!"--a despairing gesture and averted gaze--"they've a perfect right
+if they think best. I asked them that myself at first--not too politely,
+either; but I soon saw I was wrong."
+
+They sat without speaking until it had grown quite dark. Then John said,
+with a long breath, as he rose:--
+
+"It passes my comprehension."
+
+"What passes it?" asked Mary, detaining him by one hand.
+
+"The reason why we are so pursued by misfortunes."
+
+"But, John," she said, still holding him, "_is_ it misfortune? When I
+know so well that you deserve to succeed, I think maybe it's good
+fortune in disguise, after all. Don't you think it's possible? You
+remember how it was last time, when A., B., & Co. failed. Maybe the best
+of all is to come now!" She beamed with courage. "Why, John, it seems to
+me I'd just go in the very best of spirits, the first thing to-morrow,
+and tell Dr. Sevier you are looking for work. Don't you think it
+might"--
+
+"I've been there."
+
+"Have you? What did he say?"
+
+"He wasn't in."
+
+ * * *
+
+There was another neighbor, with whom John and Mary did not get
+acquainted. Not that it was more his fault than theirs; it may have been
+less. Unfortunately for the Richlings there was in their dwelling no
+toddling, self-appointed child commissioner to find his way in unwatched
+moments to the play-ground of some other toddler, and so plant the good
+seed of neighbor acquaintanceship.
+
+This neighbor passed four times a day. A man of fortune, aged a hale
+sixty or so, who came and stood on the corner, and sometimes even rested
+a foot on Mary's door-step, waiting for the Prytania omnibus, and who,
+on his returns, got down from the omnibus step a little gingerly, went
+by Mary's house, and presently shut himself inside a very ornamental
+iron gate, a short way up St. Mary street. A child would have made him
+acquainted. Even as it was, they did not escape his silent notice. It
+was pleasant for him, from whose life the early dew had been dried away
+by a well-risen sun, to recall its former freshness by glimpses of this
+pair of young beginners. It was like having a bird's nest under his
+window.
+
+John, stepping backward from his door one day, saying a last word to his
+wife, who stood on the threshold, pushed against this neighbor as he was
+moving with somewhat cumbersome haste to catch the stage, turned
+quickly, and raised his hat.
+
+"Pardon!"
+
+The other uncovered his bald head and circlet of white, silken locks,
+and hurried on to the conveyance.
+
+"President of one of the banks down-town," whispered John.
+
+That is the nearest they ever came to being acquainted. And even this
+accident might not have occurred had not the man of snowy locks been
+glancing at Mary as he passed instead of at his omnibus.
+
+As he sat at home that evening he remarked:--
+
+"Very pretty little woman that, my dear, that lives in the little house
+at the corner; who is she?"
+
+The lady responded, without lifting her eyes from the newspaper in which
+she was interested; she did not know. The husband mused and twirled his
+penknife between a finger and thumb.
+
+"They seem to be starting at the bottom," he observed.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Yes; much the same as we did."
+
+"I haven't noticed them particularly."
+
+"They're worth noticing," said the banker.
+
+He threw one fat knee over the other, and laid his head on the back of
+his easy-chair.
+
+The lady's eyes were still on her paper, but she asked:--
+
+"Would you like me to go and see them?"
+
+"No, no--unless you wish."
+
+She dropped the paper into her lap with a smile and a sigh.
+
+"Don't propose it. I have so much going to do"-- She paused, removed her
+glasses, and fell to straightening the fringe of the lamp-mat. "Of
+course, if you think they're in need of a friend; but from your
+description"--
+
+"No," he answered, quickly, "not at all. They've friends, no doubt.
+Everything about them has a neat, happy look. That's what attracted my
+notice. They've got friends, you may depend." He ceased, took up a
+pamphlet, and adjusted his glasses. "I think I saw a sofa going in there
+to-day as I came to dinner. A little expansion, I suppose."
+
+"It was going out," said the only son, looking up from a story-book.
+
+But the banker was reading. He heard nothing, and the word was not
+repeated. He did not divine that a little becalmed and befogged bark,
+with only two lovers in her, too proud to cry "Help!" had drifted just
+yonder upon the rocks, and, spar by spar and plank by plank, was
+dropping into the smooth, unmerciful sea.
+
+Before the sofa went there had gone, little by little, some smaller
+valuables.
+
+"You see," said Mary to her husband, with the bright hurry of a wife
+bent upon something high-handed, "we both have to have furniture; we
+must have it; and I don't have to have jewelry. Don't you see?"
+
+"No, I"--
+
+"Now, John!" There could be but one end to the debate; she had
+determined that. The first piece was a bracelet. "No, I wouldn't pawn
+it," she said. "Better sell it outright at once."
+
+But Richling could not but cling to hope and to the adornments that had
+so often clasped her wrists and throat or pinned the folds upon her
+bosom. Piece by piece he pawned them, always looking out ahead with
+strained vision for the improbable, the incredible, to rise to his
+relief.
+
+"Is _nothing_ going to happen, Mary?"
+
+Yes; nothing happened--except in the pawn-shop.
+
+So, all the sooner, the sofa had to go.
+
+"It's no use talking about borrowing," they both said. Then the bureau
+went. Then the table. Then, one by one, the chairs. Very slyly it was
+all done, too. Neighbors mustn't know. "Who lives there?" is a question
+not asked concerning houses as small as theirs; and a young man, in a
+well-fitting suit of only too heavy goods, removing his winter hat to
+wipe the standing drops from his forehead; and a little blush-rose
+woman at his side, in a mist of cool muslin and the cunningest of
+millinery,--these, who always paused a moment, with a lost look, in
+the vestibule of the sepulchral-looking little church on the corner of
+Prytania and Josephine streets, till the sexton ushered them in, and who
+as often contrived, with no end of ingenuity, despite the little woman's
+fresh beauty, to get away after service unaccosted by the elders,--who
+could imagine that _these_ were from so deep a nook in poverty's vale?
+
+There was one person who guessed it: Mrs. Riley, who was not asked to
+walk in any more when she called at the twilight hour. She partly saw
+and partly guessed the truth, and offered what each one of the pair had
+been secretly hoping somebody, anybody, would offer--a loan. But when
+it actually confronted them it was sweetly declined.
+
+"Wasn't it kind?" said Mary; and John said emphatically, "Yes." Very
+soon it was their turn to be kind to Mrs. Riley. They attended her
+husband's funeral. He had been killed by an explosion. Mrs. Riley beat
+upon the bier with her fists, and wailed in a far-reaching voice:--
+
+"O Mike, Mike! Me jew'l, me jew'l! Why didn't ye wait to see the babe
+that's unborn?"
+
+And Mary wept. And when she and John reëntered their denuded house she
+fell upon his neck with fresh tears, and kissed him again and again, and
+could utter no word, but knew he understood. Poverty was so much better
+than sorrow! She held him fast, and he her, while he tenderly hushed
+her, lest a grief, the very opposite of Mrs. Riley's, should overtake
+her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+HARD SPEECHES AND HIGH TEMPER.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier found occasion, one morning, to speak at some length, and
+very harshly, to his book-keeper. He had hardly ceased when John
+Richling came briskly in.
+
+"Doctor," he said, with great buoyancy, "how do you do?"
+
+The physician slightly frowned.
+
+"Good-morning, Mr. Richling."
+
+Richling was tamed in an instant; but, to avoid too great a contrast
+of manner, he retained a semblance of sprightliness, as he said:--
+
+"This is the first time I have had this pleasure since you were last
+at our house, Doctor."
+
+"Did you not see me one evening, some time ago, in the omnibus?" asked
+Dr. Sevier.
+
+"Why, no," replied the other, with returning pleasure; "was I in the
+same omnibus?"
+
+"You were on the sidewalk."
+
+"No-o," said Richling, pondering. "I've seen you in your carriage
+several times, but you"--
+
+"I didn't see you."
+
+Richling was stung. The conversation failed. He recommenced it in a tone
+pitched intentionally too low for the alert ear of Narcisse.
+
+"Doctor, I've simply called to say to you that I'm out of work and
+looking for employment again."
+
+"Um--hum," said the Doctor, with a cold fulness of voice that hurt
+Richling afresh. "You'll find it hard to get anything this time of
+year," he continued, with no attempt at undertone; "it's very hard for
+anybody to get anything these days, even when well recommended."
+
+Richling smiled an instant. The Doctor did not, but turned partly away
+to his desk, and added, as if the smile had displeased him:--
+
+"Well, maybe you'll not find it so."
+
+Richling turned fiery red.
+
+"Whether I do or not," he said, rising, "my affairs sha'n't trouble
+anybody. Good-morning!"
+
+He started out.
+
+"How's Mrs. Richling?" asked the Doctor.
+
+"She's well," responded Richling, putting on his hat and disappearing in
+the corridor. Each footstep could be heard as he went down the stairs.
+
+"He's a fool!" muttered the physician.
+
+He looked up angrily, for Narcisse stood before him.
+
+"Well, Doctah," said the Creole, hurriedly arranging his coat-collar,
+and drawing his handkerchief, "I'm goin' ad the poss-office."
+
+"See here, sir!" exclaimed the Doctor, bringing his fist down upon the
+arm of his chair, "every time you've gone out of this office for the
+last six months you've told me you were going to the post-office; now
+don't you ever tell me that again!"
+
+The young man bowed with injured dignity and responded:--
+
+"All a-ight, seh."
+
+He overtook Richling just outside the street entrance. Richling had
+halted there, bereft of intention, almost of outward sense, and
+choking with bitterness. It seemed to him as if in an instant all his
+misfortunes, disappointments, and humiliations, that never before had
+seemed so many or so great, had been gathered up into the knowledge of
+that hard man upstairs, and, with one unmerciful downward wrench, had
+received his seal of approval. Indignation, wrath, self-hatred, dismay,
+in undefined confusion, usurped the faculties of sight and hearing and
+motion.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, "I 'ope you fine you'seff O.K., seh, if
+you'll egscuse the slang expwession."
+
+Richling started to move away, but checked himself.
+
+"I'm well, sir, thank you, sir; yes, sir, I'm very well."
+
+"I billieve you, seh. You ah lookin' well."
+
+Narcisse thrust his hands into his pockets, and turned upon the outer
+sides of his feet, the embodiment of sweet temper. Richling found him a
+wonderful relief at the moment. He quit gnawing his lip and winking into
+vacancy, and felt a malicious good-humor run into all his veins.
+
+"I dunno 'ow 'tis, Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, "but I muz tell you
+the tooth; you always 'ave to me the appe'ance ligue the chile of
+p'ospe'ity."
+
+"Eh?" said Richling, hollowing his hand at his ear,--"child of"--
+
+"P'ospe'ity?"
+
+"Yes--yes," replied the deaf man vaguely, "I--have a relative of that
+name."
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed the Creole, "thass good faw luck! Mistoo Itchlin, look'
+like you a lil mo' hawd to yeh--but egscuse me. I s'pose you muz be
+advancing in business, Mistoo Itchlin. I say I s'pose you muz be gittin'
+along!"
+
+"I? Yes; yes, I must."
+
+He started.
+
+"I'm 'appy to yeh it!" said Narcisse.
+
+His innocent kindness was a rebuke. Richling began to offer a cordial
+parting salutation, but Narcisse said:--
+
+"You goin' that way? Well, I kin go that way."
+
+They went.
+
+"I was goin' ad the poss-office, but"--he waved his hand and curled his
+lip. "Mistoo Itchlin, in fact, if you yeh of something suitable to me I
+would like to yeh it. I am not satisfied with that pless yondeh with
+Doctah Seveeah. I was compel this mawnin', biffo you came in, to 'epoove
+'im faw 'is 'oodness. He called me a jackass, in fact. I woon allow
+that. I 'ad to 'epoove 'im. 'Doctah Seveeah,' says I, 'don't you call me
+a jackass ag'in!' An' 'e din call it me ag'in. No, seh. But 'e din like
+to 'ush up. Thass the rizz'n 'e was a lil miscutteous to you. Me, I am
+always polite. As they say, 'A nod is juz as good as a kick f'om a bline
+hoss.' You are fon' of maxim, Mistoo Itchlin? Me, I'm ve'y fon' of them.
+But they's got one maxim what you may 'ave 'eard--I do not fine that
+maxim always come t'ue. 'Ave you evva yeah that maxim, 'A fool faw
+luck'? That don't always come t'ue. I 'ave discove'd that."
+
+"No," responded Richling, with a parting smile, "that doesn't always
+come true."
+
+Dr. Sevier denounced the world at large, and the American nation in
+particular, for two days. Within himself, for twenty-four hours, he
+grumly blamed Richling for their rupture; then for twenty-four hours
+reproached himself, and, on the morning of the third day knocked at the
+door, corner of St. Mary and Prytania.
+
+No one answered. He knocked again. A woman in bare feet showed herself
+at the corresponding door-way in the farther half of the house.
+
+"Nobody don't live there no more, sir," she said.
+
+"Where have they gone?"
+
+"Well, reely, I couldn't tell you, sir. Because, reely, I don't know
+nothing about it. I haint but jest lately moved in here myself, and I
+don't know nothing about nobody around here scarcely at all."
+
+The Doctor shut himself again in his carriage and let himself be whisked
+away, in great vacuity of mind.
+
+"They can't blame anybody but themselves," was, by-and-by, his rallying
+thought. "Still"--he said to himself after another vacant interval, and
+said no more. The thought that whether _they_ could blame others or not
+did not cover all the ground, rested heavily on him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE CRADLE FALLS.
+
+
+In the rear of the great commercial centre of New Orleans, on that part
+of Common street where it suddenly widens out, broad, unpaved, and
+dusty, rises the huge dull-brown structure of brick, famed, well-nigh
+as far as the city is known, as the Charity Hospital.
+
+Twenty-five years ago, when the emigrant ships used to unload their
+swarms of homeless and friendless strangers into the streets of New
+Orleans to fall a prey to yellow-fever or cholera, that solemn pile
+sheltered thousands on thousands of desolate and plague-stricken Irish
+and Germans, receiving them unquestioned, until at times the very floors
+were covered with the sick and dying, and the sawing and hammering in
+the coffin-shop across the inner court ceased not day or night. Sombre
+monument at once of charity and sin! For, while its comfort and succor
+cost the houseless wanderer nothing, it lived and grew, and lives and
+grows still, upon the licensed vices of the people,--drinking, harlotry,
+and gambling.
+
+The Charity Hospital of St. Charles--such is its true name--is, however,
+no mere plague-house. Whether it ought to be, let doctors decide. How
+good or necessary such modern innovations as "ridge ventilation,"
+"movable bases," the "pavilion plan," "trained nurses," etc., may be,
+let the Auxiliary Sanitary Association say. There it stands as of old,
+innocent of all sins that may be involved in any of these changes,
+rising story over story, up and up: here a ward for poisonous fevers,
+and there a ward for acute surgical cases; here a story full of simple
+ailments, and there a ward specially set aside for women.
+
+In 1857 this last was Dr. Sevier's ward. Here, at his stated hour one
+summer morning in that year, he tarried a moment, yonder by that window,
+just where you enter the ward and before you come to the beds. He had
+fallen into discourse with some of the more inquiring minds among the
+train of students that accompanied him, and waited there to finish and
+cool down to a physician's proper temperature. The question was public
+sanitation.
+
+He was telling a tall Arkansan, with high-combed hair, self-conscious
+gloves, and very broad, clean-shaven lower jaw, how the peculiar
+formation of delta lands, by which they drain away from the larger
+watercourses, instead of into them, had made the swamp there in the rear
+of the town, for more than a century, "the common dumping-ground and
+cesspool of the city, sir!"
+
+Some of the students nodded convincedly to the speaker; some looked
+askance at the Arkansan, who put one forearm meditatively under his
+coat-tail; some looked through the window over the regions alluded to,
+and some only changed their pose and looked around for a mirror.
+
+The Doctor spoke on. Several of his hearers were really interested in
+the then unusual subject, and listened intelligently as he pointed
+across the low plain at hundreds of acres of land that were nothing but
+a morass, partly filled in with the foulest refuse of a semi-tropical
+city, and beyond it where still lay the swamp, half cleared of its
+forest and festering in the sun--"every drop of its waters, and every
+inch of its mire," said the Doctor, "saturated with the poisonous
+drainage of the town!"
+
+"I happen," interjected a young city student; but the others bent their
+ear to the Doctor, who continued:--
+
+"Why, sir, were these regions compactly built on, like similar areas in
+cities confined to narrow sites, the mortality, with the climate we
+have, would be frightful."
+
+"I happen to know," essayed the city student; but the Arkansan had made
+an interrogatory answer to the Doctor, that led him to add:--
+
+"Why, yes; you see the houses here on these lands are little, flimsy,
+single ground-story affairs, loosely thrown together, and freely exposed
+to sun and air."
+
+"I hap--," said the city student.
+
+"And yet," exclaimed the Doctor, "Malaria is king!"
+
+He paused an instant for his hearers to take in the figure.
+
+"Doctor, I happen to"--
+
+Some one's fist from behind caused the speaker to turn angrily, and the
+Doctor resumed:--
+
+"Go into any of those streets off yonder,--Trémé, Prieur, Marais. Why,
+there are often ponds under the houses! The floors of bedrooms are
+within a foot or two of these ponds! The bricks of the surrounding
+pavements are often covered with a fine, dark moss! Water seeps up
+through the sidewalks! That's his realm, sir! Here and there among the
+residents--every here and there--you'll see his sallow, quaking subjects
+dragging about their work or into and out of their beds, until a fear
+of a fatal ending drives them in here. Congestion? Yes, sometimes
+congestion pulls them under suddenly, and they're gone before they know
+it. Sometimes their vitality wanes slowly, until Malaria beckons in
+Consumption."
+
+"Why, Doctor," said the city student, ruffling with pride of his town,
+"there are plenty of cities as bad as this. I happen to know, for
+instance"--
+
+Dr. Sevier turned away in quiet contempt.
+
+"It will not improve our town to dirty others, or to clean them,
+either."
+
+He moved down the ward, while two or three members among the moving
+train, who never happened to know anything, nudged each other joyfully.
+
+The group stretched out and came along, the Doctor first and the
+young men after, some of one sort, some of another,--the dull, the
+frivolous, the earnest, the kind, the cold,--following slowly, pausing,
+questioning, discoursing, advancing, moving from each clean, slender bed
+to the next, on this side and on that, down and up the long sanded
+aisles, among the poor, sick women.
+
+Among these, too, there was variety. Some were stupid and ungracious,
+hardened and dulled with long penury as some in this world are hardened
+and dulled with long riches. Some were as fat as beggars; some were old
+and shrivelled; some were shrivelled and young; some were bold; some
+were frightened; and here and there was one almost fair.
+
+Down at the far end of one aisle was a bed whose occupant lay watching
+the distant, slowly approaching group with eyes of unspeakable dread.
+There was not a word or motion, only the steadfast gaze. Gradually the
+throng drew near. The faces of the students could be distinguished.
+This one was coarse; that one was gentle; another was sleepy; another
+trivial and silly; another heavy and sour; another tender and gracious.
+Presently the tones of the Doctor's voice could be heard, soft, clear,
+and without that trumpet quality that it had beyond the sick-room. How
+slowly, yet how surely, they came! The patient's eyes turned away toward
+the ceiling; they could not bear the slowness of the encounter. They
+closed; the lips moved in prayer. The group came to the bed that was
+only the fourth away; then to the third; then to the second. There
+they pause some minutes. Now the Doctor approaches the very next bed.
+Suddenly he notices this patient. She is a small woman, young, fair to
+see, and, with closed eyes and motionless form, is suffering an agony of
+consternation. One startled look, a suppressed exclamation, two steps
+forward,--the patient's eyes slowly open. Ah, me! It is Mary Richling.
+
+"Good-morning, madam," said the physician, with a cold and distant bow;
+and to the students, "We'll pass right along to the other side," and
+they moved into the next aisle.
+
+"I am a little pressed for time this morning," he presently remarked, as
+the students showed some unwillingness to be hurried. As soon as he
+could he parted with them and returned to the ward alone.
+
+As he moved again down among the sick, straight along this time, turning
+neither to right nor left, one of the Sisters of Charity--the hospital
+and its so-called nurses are under their oversight--touched his arm. He
+stopped impatiently.
+
+"Well, Sister"--(bowing his ear).
+
+"I--I--the--the"--His frown had scared away her power of speech.
+
+"Well, what is it, Sister?"
+
+"The--the last patient down on this side"--
+
+He was further displeased. "_I'll_ attend to the patients, Sister," he
+said; and then, more kindly, "I'm going there now. No, you stay here, if
+you please." And he left her behind.
+
+He came and stood by the bed. The patient gazed on him.
+
+"Mrs. Richling," he softly began, and had to cease.
+
+She did not speak or move; she tried to smile, but her eyes filled, her
+lips quivered.
+
+"My dear madam," exclaimed the physician, in a low voice, "what brought
+you here?"
+
+The answer was inarticulate, but he saw it on the moving lips.
+
+"Want," said Mary.
+
+"But your husband?" He stooped to catch the husky answer.
+
+"Home."
+
+"Home?" He could not understand. "Not gone to--back--up the river?"
+
+She slowly shook her head: "No, home. In Prieur street."
+
+Still her words were riddles. He could not see how she had come to this.
+He stood silent, not knowing how to utter his thought. At length he
+opened his lips to speak, hesitated an instant, and then asked:--
+
+"Mrs. Richling, tell me plainly, has your husband gone wrong?"
+
+Her eyes looked up a moment, upon him, big and staring, and suddenly she
+spoke:--
+
+"O Doctor! My husband go wrong? John go wrong?" The eyelids closed down,
+the head rocked slowly from side to side on the flat hospital pillow,
+and the first two tears he had ever seen her shed welled from the long
+lashes and slipped down her cheeks.
+
+"My poor child!" said the Doctor, taking her hand in his. "No, no! God
+forgive me! He hasn't gone wrong; he's not going wrong. You'll tell me
+all about it when you're stronger."
+
+The Doctor had her removed to one of the private rooms of the pay-ward,
+and charged the Sisters to take special care of her. "Above all things,"
+he murmured, with a beetling frown, "tell that thick-headed nurse not to
+let her know that this is at anybody's expense. Ah, yes; and when her
+husband comes, tell him to see me at my office as soon as he possibly
+can."
+
+As he was leaving the hospital gate he had an afterthought. "I might
+have left a note." He paused, with his foot on the carriage-step. "I
+suppose they'll tell him,"--and so he got in and drove off, looking at
+his watch.
+
+On his second visit, although he came in with a quietly inspiring
+manner, he had also, secretly, the feeling of a culprit. But, midway of
+the room, when the young head on the pillow turned its face toward him,
+his heart rose. For the patient smiled. As he drew nearer she slid out
+her feeble hand. "I'm glad I came here," she murmured.
+
+"Yes," he replied; "this room is much better than the open ward."
+
+"I didn't mean this room," she said. "I meant the whole hospital."
+
+"The whole hospital!" He raised his eyebrows, as to a child.
+
+"Ah! Doctor," she responded, her eyes kindling, though moist.
+
+"What, my child?"
+
+She smiled upward to his bent face.
+
+"The poor--mustn't be ashamed of the poor, must they?"
+
+The Doctor only stroked her brow, and presently turned and addressed his
+professional inquiries to the nurse. He went away. Just outside the door
+he asked the nurse:--
+
+"Hasn't her husband been here?"
+
+"Yes," was the reply, "but she was asleep, and he only stood there at
+the door and looked in a bit. He trembled," the unintelligent woman
+added, for the Doctor seemed waiting to hear more,--"he trembled all
+over; and that's all he did, excepting his saying her name over to
+himself like, over and over, and wiping of his eyes."
+
+"And nobody told him anything?"
+
+"Oh, not a word, sir!" came the eager answer.
+
+"You didn't tell him to come and see me?"
+
+The woman gave a start, looked dismayed, and began:--
+
+"N-no, sir; you didn't tell"--
+
+"Um--hum," growled the Doctor. He took out a card and wrote on it. "Now
+see if you can remember to give him that."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+MANY WATERS.
+
+
+As the day faded away it began to rain. The next morning the water was
+coming down in torrents. Richling, looking out from a door in Prieur
+street, found scant room for one foot on the inner edge of the sidewalk;
+all the rest was under water. By noon the sidewalks were completely
+covered in miles of streets. By two in the afternoon the flood was
+coming into many of the houses. By three it was up at the door-sill on
+which he stood. There it stopped.
+
+He could do nothing but stand and look. Skiffs, canoes, hastily
+improvised rafts, were moving in every direction, carrying the unsightly
+chattels of the poor out of their overflowed cottages to higher ground.
+Barrels, boxes, planks, hen-coops, bridge lumber, piles of straw that
+waltzed solemnly as they went, cord-wood, old shingles, door-steps,
+floated here and there in melancholy confusion; and down upon all still
+drizzled the slackening rain. At length it ceased.
+
+Richling still stood in the door-way, the picture of mute helplessness.
+Yes, there was one other thing he could do; he could laugh. It would
+have been hard to avoid it sometimes, there were such ludicrous
+sights,--such slips and sprawls into the water; so there he stood in
+that peculiar isolation that deaf people content themselves with, now
+looking the picture of anxious waiting, now indulging a low, deaf man's
+chuckle when something made the rowdies and slatterns of the street
+roar.
+
+Presently he noticed, at a distance up the way, a young man in a canoe,
+passing, much to their good-natured chagrin, a party of three in a
+skiff, who had engaged him in a trial of speed. From both boats a shower
+of hilarious French was issuing. At the nearest corner the skiff party
+turned into another street and disappeared, throwing their lingual
+fireworks to the last. The canoe came straight on with the speed of a
+fish. Its dexterous occupant was no other than Narcisse.
+
+There was a grace in his movement that kept Richling's eyes on him, when
+he would rather have withdrawn into the house. Down went the paddle
+always on the same side, noiselessly, in front; on darted the canoe;
+backward stretched the submerged paddle and came out of the water
+edgewise at full reach behind, with an almost imperceptible swerving
+motion that kept the slender craft true to its course. No rocking; no
+rush of water before or behind; only the one constant glassy ripple
+gliding on either side as silently as a beam of light. Suddenly, without
+any apparent change of movement in the sinewy wrists, the narrow shell
+swept around in a quarter circle, and Narcisse sat face to face with
+Richling.
+
+Each smiled brightly at the other. The handsome Creole's face was aglow
+with the pure delight of existence.
+
+"Well, Mistoo Itchlin, 'ow you enjoyin' that watah? As fah as myseff am
+concerned, 'I am afloat, I am afloat on the fee-us 'olling tide.' I
+don't think you fine that stweet pwetty dusty to-day, Mistoo Itchlin?"
+
+Richling laughed.
+
+"It don't inflame my eyes to-day," he said.
+
+"You muz egscuse my i'ony, Mistoo Itchlin; I can't 'ep that sometime'.
+It come natu'al to me, in fact. I was on'y speaking i'oniously juz now
+in calling allusion to that dust; because, of co'se, theh is no dust
+to-day, because the g'ound is all covvud with watah, in fact. Some
+people don't understand that figgah of i'ony."
+
+"I don't understand as much about it myself as I'd like to," said
+Richling.
+
+"Me, I'm ve'y fon' of it," responded the Creole. "I was making seve'al
+i'onies ad those fwen' of mine juz now. We was 'unning a 'ace. An' thass
+anotheh thing I am fon' of. I would 'ather 'un a 'ace than to wuck faw a
+livin'. Ha! ha! ha! I should thing so! Anybody would, in fact. But thass
+the way with me--always making some i'onies." He stopped with a sudden
+change of countenance, and resumed gravely: "Mistoo Itchlin, looks to me
+like you' lookin' ve'y salad." He fanned himself with his hat. "I dunno
+'ow 'tis with you, Mistoo Itchlin, but I fine myseff ve'y oppwessive
+thiz evening."
+
+"I don't find you so," said Richling, smiling broadly.
+
+And he did not. The young Creole's burning face and resplendent wit were
+a sunset glow in the darkness of this day of overpowering adversity. His
+presence even supplied, for a moment, what seemed a gleam of hope. Why
+wasn't there here an opportunity to visit the hospital? He need not tell
+Narcisse the object of his visit.
+
+"Do you think," asked Richling, persuasively, crouching down upon one of
+his heels, "that I could sit in that thing without turning it over?"
+
+"In that pee-ogue?" Narcisse smiled the smile of the proficient as he
+waved his paddle across the canoe. "Mistoo Itchlin,"--the smile passed
+off,--"I dunno if you'll billiv me, but at the same time I muz tell you
+the tooth?"--
+
+He paused inquiringly.
+
+"Certainly," said Richling, with evident disappointment.
+
+"Well, it's juz a poss'bil'ty that you'll wefwain fum spillin' out
+fum yeh till the negs cawneh. Thass the manneh of those who ah not
+acquainted with the pee-ogue. 'Lost to sight, to memo'y deah'--if you'll
+egscuse the maxim. Thass Chawles Dickens mague use of that egspwession."
+
+Richling answered with a gay shake of the head. "I'll keep out of it."
+If Narcisse detected his mortified chagrin, he did not seem to. It was
+hard; the day's last hope was blown out like a candle in the wind.
+Richling dared not risk the wetting of his suit of clothes; they were
+his sole letter of recommendation and capital in trade.
+
+"Well, _au 'evoi'_, Mistoo Itchlin." He turned and moved off--dip,
+glide, and away.
+
+ * * *
+
+Dr. Sevier stamped his wet feet on the pavement of the hospital porch.
+It was afternoon of the day following that of the rain. The water still
+covering the streets about the hospital had not prevented his carriage
+from splashing through it on his double daily round. A narrow and
+unsteady plank spanned the immersed sidewalk. Three times, going and
+coming, he had crossed it safely, and this fourth time he had made half
+the distance well enough; but, hearing distant cheers and laughter, he
+looked up street; when--splatter!--and the cheers were redoubled.
+
+"Pretty thing to laugh at!" he muttered. Two or three bystanders,
+leaning on their umbrellas in the lodge at the gate and in the porch,
+where he stood stamping, turned their backs and smoothed their mouths.
+
+"Hah!" said the tall Doctor, stamping harder. Stamp!--stamp! He shook
+his leg.--"Bah!" He stamped the other long, slender, wet foot and looked
+down at it, turning one side and then the other.--"F-fah!"--The first
+one again.--"Pshaw!"--The other.--Stamp!--stamp!--"_Right_--_into_
+it!--up to my _ankles!_" He looked around with a slight scowl at one
+man, who seemed taken with a sudden softening of the spine and knees,
+and who turned his back quickly and fell against another, who, also with
+his back turned, was leaning tremulously against a pillar.
+
+But the object of mirth did not tarry. He went as he was to Mary's room,
+and found her much better--as, indeed, he had done at every visit. He
+sat by her bed and listened to her story.
+
+"Why, Doctor, you see, we did nicely for a while. John went on getting
+the same kind of work, and pleasing everybody, of course, and all he
+lacked was finding something permanent. Still, we passed through one
+month after another, and we really began to think the sun was coming
+out, so to speak."
+
+"Well, I thought so, too," put in the Doctor. "I thought if it didn't
+you'd let me know."
+
+"Why, no, Doctor, we couldn't do that; you couldn't be taking care of
+well people."
+
+"Well," said the Doctor, dropping that point, "I suppose as the busy
+season began to wane that mode of livelihood, of course, disappeared."
+
+"Yes,"--a little one-sided smile,--"and so did our money. And then, of
+course,"--she slightly lifted and waved her hand.
+
+"You had to live," said Dr. Sevier, sincerely.
+
+She smiled again, with abstracted eyes. "We thought we'd like to," she
+said. "I didn't mind the loss of the things so much,--except the little
+table we ate from. You remember that little round table, don't you?"
+
+The visitor had not the heart to say no. He nodded.
+
+"When that went there was but one thing left that could go."
+
+"Not your bed?"
+
+"The bedstead; yes."
+
+"You didn't sell your bed, Mrs. Richling?"
+
+The tears gushed from her eyes. She made a sign of assent.
+
+"But then," she resumed, "we made an excellent arrangement with a good
+woman who had just lost her husband, and wanted to live cheaply, too."
+
+"What amuses you, madam?"
+
+"Nothing great. But I wish you knew her. She's funny. Well, so we moved
+down-town again. Didn't cost much to move."
+
+She would smile a little in spite of him.
+
+"And then?" said he, stirring impatiently and leaning forward. "What
+then?"
+
+"Why, then I worked a little harder than I thought,--pulling trunks
+around and so on,--and I had this third attack."
+
+The Doctor straightened himself up, folded his arms, and muttered:--
+
+"Oh!--oh! _Why_ wasn't I instantly sent for?"
+
+The tears were in her eyes again, but--
+
+"Doctor," she answered, with her odd little argumentative smile, "how
+could we? We had nothing to pay with. It wouldn't have been just."
+
+"Just!" exclaimed the physician, angrily.
+
+"Doctor," said the invalid, and looked at him.
+
+"Oh--all right!"
+
+She made no answer but to look at him still more pleadingly.
+
+"Wouldn't it have been just as fair to let me be generous, madam?" His
+faint smile was bitter. "For once? Simply for once?"
+
+"We couldn't make that proposition, could we, Doctor?"
+
+He was checkmated.
+
+"Mrs. Richling," he said suddenly, clasping the back of his chair as if
+about to rise, "tell me,--did you or your husband act this way for
+anything I've ever said or done?"
+
+"No, Doctor! no, no; never! But"--
+
+"But kindness should seek--not be sought," said the physician, starting
+up.
+
+"No, Doctor, we didn't look on it so. Of course we didn't. If there's
+any fault it's all mine. For it was my own proposition to John, that as
+we _had_ to seek charity we should just be honest and open about it. I
+said, 'John, as I need the best attention, and as that can be offered
+free only in the hospital, why, to the hospital I ought to go.'"
+
+She lay still, and the Doctor pondered. Presently he said:--
+
+"And Mr. Richling--I suppose he looks for work all the time?"
+
+"From daylight to dark!"
+
+"Well, the water is passing off. He'll be along by and by to see you, no
+doubt. Tell him to call, first thing to-morrow morning, at my office."
+And with that the Doctor went off in his wet boots, committed a series
+of indiscretions, reached home, and fell ill.
+
+In the wanderings of fever he talked of the Richlings, and in lucid
+moments inquired for them.
+
+"Yes, yes," answered the sick Doctor's physician, "they're attended to.
+Yes, all their wants are supplied. Just dismiss them from your mind." In
+the eyes of this physician the Doctor's life was invaluable, and these
+patients, or pensioners, an unknown and, most likely, an inconsiderable
+quantity; two sparrows, as it were, worth a farthing. But the sick man
+lay thinking. He frowned.
+
+"I wish they would go home."
+
+"I have sent them."
+
+"You have? Home to Milwaukee?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Thank God!"
+
+He soon began to mend. Yet it was weeks before he could leave the house.
+When one day he reëntered the hospital, still pale and faint, he was
+prompt to express to the Mother-Superior the comfort he had felt in his
+sickness to know that his brother physician had sent those Richlings to
+their kindred.
+
+The Sister shook her head. He saw the deception in an instant. As best
+his strength would allow, he hurried to the keeper of the rolls. There
+was the truth. Home? Yes,--to Prieur street,--discharged only one week
+before. He drove quickly to his office.
+
+"Narcisse, you will find that young Mr. Richling living in Prieur
+street, somewhere between Conti and St. Louis. I don't know the house;
+you'll have to find it. Tell him I'm in my office again, and to come and
+see me."
+
+Narcisse was no such fool as to say he knew the house. He would get the
+praise of finding it quickly.
+
+"I'll do my mose awduous, seh," he said, took down his coat, hung up his
+jacket, put on his hat, and went straight to the house and knocked. Got
+no answer. Knocked again, and a third time; but in vain. Went next door
+and inquired of a pretty girl, who fell in love with him at a glance.
+
+"Yes, but they had moved. She wasn't _jess ezac'ly_ sure where they
+_had_ moved to, _unless-n_ it was in that little house yondeh between
+St. Louis and Toulouse; and if they wasn't there she didn't know _where_
+they was. People ought to leave words where they's movin' at, but they
+don't. You're very welcome," she added, as he expressed his thanks; and
+he would have been welcome had he questioned her for an hour. His
+parting bow and smile stuck in her heart a six-months.
+
+He went to the spot pointed out. As a Creole he was used to seeing very
+respectable people living in very small and plain houses. This one was
+not too plain even for his ideas of Richling, though it was but a little
+one-street-door-and-window affair, with an alley on the left running
+back into the small yard behind. He knocked. Again no one answered. He
+looked down the alley and saw, moving about the yard, a large woman,
+who, he felt certain, could not be Mrs. Richling.
+
+Two little short-skirted, bare-legged girls were playing near him. He
+spoke to them in French. Did they know where Monsieu' Itchlin lived? The
+two children repeated the name, looking inquiringly at each other.
+
+"_Non, miché._"--"No, sir, they didn't know."
+
+"_Qui reste ici?_" he asked. "Who lives here?"
+
+"_Ici? Madame qui reste lŕ c'est Mizziz Ri-i-i-ly!_" said one.
+
+"Yass," said the other, breaking into English and rubbing a musquito off
+of her well-tanned shank with the sole of her foot, "tis Mizziz
+Ri-i-i-ly what live there. She jess move een. She's got a lill
+baby.--Oh! you means dat lady what was in de Chatty Hawspill!"
+
+"No, no! A real, nice _lady_. She nevva saw that Cha'ity Hospi'l."
+
+The little girls shook their heads. They couldn't imagine a person who
+had never seen the Charity Hospital.
+
+"Was there nobody else who had moved into any of these houses about here
+lately?" He spoke again in French. They shook their heads. Two boys came
+forward and verified the testimony. Narcisse went back with his report:
+"Moved,--not found."
+
+"I fine that ve'y d'oll, Doctah Seveeah," concluded the unaugmented,
+hanging up his hat; "some peop' always 'ard to fine. I h-even notiz that
+sem thing w'en I go to colic' some bill. I dunno 'ow' tis, Doctah, but I
+assu' you I kin tell that by a man's physio'nomie. Nobody teach me that.
+'Tis my own in_geen_u'ty 'as made me to discoveh that, in fact."
+
+The Doctor was silent. Presently he drew a piece of paper toward him
+and, dipping his pen into the ink, began to write:--
+
+"Information wanted of the whereabouts of John Richling"--
+
+"Narcisse," he called, still writing, "I want you to take an
+advertisement to the 'Picayune' office."
+
+"With the gweatez of pleazheh, seh." The clerk began his usual shifting
+of costume. "Yesseh! I assu' you, Doctah, that is a p'oposition moze
+enti'ly to my satizfagtion; faw I am suffe'ing faw a smoke, and
+deztitute of a ciga'ette! I am aztonizh' 'ow I did that, to egshauz them
+unconsciouzly, in fact." He received the advertisement in an envelope,
+whipped his shoes a little with his handkerchief, and went out. One
+would think to hear him thundering down the stairs, that it was
+twenty-five cents' worth of ice.
+
+"Hold o--" The Doctor started from his seat, then turned and paced
+feebly up and down. Who, besides Richling, might see that notice? What
+might be its unexpected results? Who was John Richling? A man with a
+secret at the best; and a secret, in Dr. Sevier's eyes, was detestable.
+Might not Richling be a man who had fled from something? "No! no!" The
+Doctor spoke aloud. He had promised to think nothing ill of him. Let the
+poor children have their silly secret. He spoke again: "They'll find out
+the folly of it by and by." He let the advertisement go; and it went.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+RAPHAEL RISTOFALO.
+
+
+Richling had a dollar in his pocket. A man touched him on the shoulder.
+
+But let us see. On the day that John and Mary had sold their only
+bedstead, Mrs. Riley, watching them, had proposed the joint home. The
+offer had been accepted with an eagerness that showed itself in nervous
+laughter. Mrs. Riley then took quarters in Prieur street, where John and
+Mary, for a due consideration, were given a single neatly furnished back
+room. The bedstead had brought seven dollars. Richling, on the day after
+the removal, was in the commercial quarter, looking, as usual, for
+employment.
+
+The young man whom Dr. Sevier had first seen, in the previous October,
+moving with a springing step and alert, inquiring glances from number to
+number in Carondelet street was slightly changed. His step was firm, but
+something less elastic, and not quite so hurried. His face was more
+thoughtful, and his glance wanting in a certain dancing freshness that
+had been extremely pleasant. He was walking in Poydras street toward the
+river.
+
+As he came near to a certain man who sat in the entrance of a store with
+the freshly whittled corner of a chair between his knees, his look and
+bow were grave, but amiable, quietly hearty, deferential, and also
+self-respectful--and uncommercial: so palpably uncommercial that the
+sitter did not rise or even shut his knife.
+
+He slightly stared. Richling, in a low, private tone, was asking him for
+employment.
+
+"What?" turning his ear up and frowning downward.
+
+The application was repeated, the first words with a slightly resentful
+ring, but the rest more quietly.
+
+The store-keeper stared again, and shook his head slowly.
+
+"No, sir," he said, in a barely audible tone. Richling moved on, not
+stopping at the next place, or the next, or the next; for he felt the
+man's stare all over his back until he turned the corner and found
+himself in Tchoupitoulas street. Nor did he stop at the first place
+around the corner. It smelt of deteriorating potatoes and up-river
+cabbages, and there were open barrels of onions set ornamentally aslant
+at the entrance. He had a fatal conviction that his services would not
+be wanted in malodorous places.
+
+"Now, isn't that a shame?" asked the chair-whittler, as Richling passed
+out of sight. "Such a gentleman as that, to be beggin' for work from
+door to door!"
+
+"He's not beggin' f'om do' to do'," said a second, with a Creole accent
+on his tongue, and a match stuck behind his ear like a pen. "Beside,
+he's too _much_ of a gennlemun."
+
+"That's where you and him differs," said the first. He frowned upon the
+victim of his delicate repartee with make-believe defiance. Number Two
+drew from an outside coat-pocket a wad of common brown wrapping-paper,
+tore from it a small, neat parallelogram, dove into an opposite pocket
+for some loose smoking-tobacco, laid a pinch of it in the paper, and,
+with a single dexterous turn of the fingers, thumbs above, the rest
+beneath,--it looks simple, but 'tis an amazing art,--made a cigarette.
+Then he took down his match, struck it under his short coat-skirt,
+lighted his cigarette, drew an inhalation through it that consumed a
+third of its length, and sat there, with his eyes half-closed, and all
+that smoke somewhere inside of him.
+
+"That young man," remarked a third, wiping a toothpick on his thigh and
+putting it in his vest-pocket, as he stepped to the front, "don't know
+how to _look_ fur work. There's one way fur a day-laborer to look fur
+work, and there's another way fur a gentleman to look fur work, and
+there's another way fur a--a--a man with money to look fur somethin'
+to put his money into. _It's just like fishing!_" He threw both hands
+outward and downward, and made way for a porter's truck with a load of
+green meat. The smoke began to fall from Number Two's nostrils in two
+slender blue streams. Number Three continued:--
+
+"You've got to know what kind o' hooks you want, and what kind o' bait
+you want, and then, after _that_, you've"--
+
+Numbers One and Two did not let him finish.
+
+"--Got to know how to fish," they said; "that's so!" The smoke continued
+to leak slowly from Number Two's nostrils and teeth, though he had not
+lifted his cigarette the second time.
+
+"Yes, you've got to know how to fish," reaffirmed the third. "If you
+don't know how to fish, it's as like as not that nobody can tell you
+what's the matter; an' yet, all the same, you aint goin' to ketch no
+fish."
+
+"Well, now," said the first man, with an unconvinced swing of his chin,
+"_spunk_ 'll sometimes pull a man through; and you can't say he aint
+spunky." Number Three admitted the corollary. Number Two looked up: his
+chance had come.
+
+"He'd a w'ipped you faw a dime," said he to Number One, took a
+comforting draw from his cigarette, and felt a great peace.
+
+"I take notice he's a little deaf," said Number Three, still alluding to
+Richling.
+
+"That'd spoil him for me," said Number One.
+
+Number Three asked why.
+
+"Oh, I just wouldn't have him about me. Didn't you ever notice that a
+deaf man always seems like a sort o' stranger? I can't bear 'em."
+
+Richling meanwhile moved on. His critics were right. He was not wanting
+in courage; but no man from the moon could have been more an alien on
+those sidewalks. He was naturally diligent, active, quick-witted, and
+of good, though maybe a little too scholarly address; quick of temper,
+it is true, and uniting his quickness of temper with a certain
+bashfulness,--an unlucky combination, since, as a consequence, nobody
+had to get out of its way; but he was generous in fact and in speech,
+and never held malice a moment. But, besides the heavy odds which his
+small secret seemed to be against him, stopping him from accepting such
+valuable friendships as might otherwise have come to him, and besides
+his slight deafness, he was by nature a recluse, or, at least, a
+dreamer. Every day that he set foot on Tchoupitoulas, or Carondelet, or
+Magazine, or Fulton, or Poydras street he came from a realm of thought,
+seeking service in an empire of matter.
+
+There is a street in New Orleans called Triton _Walk_. That is what all
+the ways of commerce and finance and daily bread-getting were to
+Richling. He was a merman--ashore. It was the feeling rather than the
+knowledge of this that prompted him to this daily, aimless trudging
+after mere employment. He had a proper pride; once in a while a little
+too much; nor did he clearly see his deficiencies; and yet the
+unrecognized consciousness that he had not the commercial instinct made
+him willing--as Number Three would have said--to "cut bait" for any
+fisherman who would let him do it.
+
+He turned without any distinct motive and, retracing his steps to the
+corner, passed up across Poydras street. A little way above it he paused
+to look at some machinery in motion. He liked machinery,--for itself
+rather than for its results. He would have gone in and examined the
+workings of this apparatus had it not been for the sign above his head,
+"No Admittance." Those words always seemed painted for him. A slight
+modification in Richling's character might have made him an inventor.
+Some other faint difference, and he might have been a writer, a
+historian, an essayist, or even--there is no telling--a well-fed poet.
+With the question of food, raiment, and shelter permanently settled,
+he might have become one of those resplendent flash lights that at
+intervals dart their beams across the dark waters of the world's
+ignorance, hardly from new continents, but from the observatory, the
+study, the laboratory. But he was none of these. There had been a crime
+committed somewhere in his bringing up, and as a result he stood in the
+thick of life's battle, weaponless. He gazed upon machinery with
+childlike wonder; but when he looked around and saw on every hand
+men,--good fellows who ate in their shirt-sleeves at restaurants, told
+broad jokes, spread their mouths and smote their sides when they
+laughed, and whose best wit was to bombard one another with bread-crusts
+and hide behind the sugar-bowl; men whom he could have taught in every
+kind of knowledge that they were capable of grasping, except the
+knowledge of how to get money,--when he saw these men, as it seemed to
+him, grow rich daily by simply flipping beans into each other's faces,
+or slapping each other on the back, the wonder of machinery was
+eclipsed. Do as they did? He? He could no more reach a conviction as to
+what the price of corn would be to-morrow than he could remember what
+the price of sugar was yesterday.
+
+He called himself an accountant, gulping down his secret pride with an
+amiable glow that commanded, instantly, an amused esteem. And, to judge
+by his evident familiarity with Tonti's beautiful scheme of mercantile
+records, he certainly--those guessed whose books he had extricated
+from confusion--had handled money and money values in days before his
+unexplained coming to New Orleans. Yet a close observer would have
+noticed that he grasped these tasks only as problems, treated them in
+their mathematical and enigmatical aspect, and solved them without any
+appreciation of their concrete values. When they were done he felt less
+personal interest in them than in the architectural beauty of the
+store-front, whose window-shutters he had never helped to close without
+a little heart-leap of pleasure.
+
+But, standing thus, and looking in at the machinery, a man touched him
+on the shoulder.
+
+"Good-morning," said the man. He wore a pleasant air. It seemed to say,
+"I'm nothing much, but you'll recognize me in a moment; I'll wait." He
+was short, square, solid, beardless; in years, twenty-five or six. His
+skin was dark, his hair almost black, his eyebrows strong. In his mild
+black eyes you could see the whole Mediterranean. His dress was coarse,
+but clean; his linen soft and badly laundered. But under all the rough
+garb and careless, laughing manner was visibly written again and again
+the name of the race that once held the world under its feet.
+
+"You don't remember me?" he added, after a moment.
+
+"No," said Richling, pleasantly, but with embarrassment. The man waited
+another moment, and suddenly Richling recalled their earlier meeting.
+The man, representing a wholesale confectioner in one of the smaller
+cities up the river, had bought some cordials and syrups of the house
+whose books Richling had last put in order.
+
+"Why, yes I do, too!" said Richling. "You left your pocket-book in my
+care for two or three days; your own private money, you said."
+
+"Yes." The man laughed softly. "Lost that money. Sent it to the boss.
+Boss died--store seized--everything gone." His English was well
+pronounced, but did not escape a pretty Italian accent, too delicate for
+the printer's art.
+
+"Oh! that was too bad!" Richling laid his hand upon an awning-post and
+twined an arm and leg around it as though he were a vine. "I--I forget
+your name."
+
+"Ristofalo. Raphael Ristofalo. Yours is Richling. Yes, knocked me flat.
+Not got cent in world." The Italian's low, mellow laugh claimed
+Richling's admiration.
+
+"Why, when did that happen?" he asked.
+
+"Yes'day," replied the other, still laughing.
+
+"And how are you going to provide for the future?" Richling asked,
+smiling down into the face of the shorter man. The Italian tossed the
+future away with the back of his hand.
+
+"I got nothin' do with that." His words were low, but very distinct.
+
+Thereupon Richling laughed, leaning his cheek against the post.
+
+"Must provide for the present," said Raphael Ristofalo. Richling dropped
+his eyes in thought. The present! He had never been able to see that it
+was the present which must be provided against, until, while he was
+training his guns upon the future, the most primitive wants of the
+present burst upon him right and left like whooping savages.
+
+"Can you lend me dollar?" asked the Italian. "Give you back dollar an'
+quarter to-morrow."
+
+Richling gave a start and let go the post. "Why, Mr. Risto--falo,
+I--I--, the fact is, I"--he shook his head--"I haven't much money."
+
+"Dollar will start me," said the Italian, whose feet had not moved an
+inch since he touched Richling's shoulder. "Be aw righ' to-morrow."
+
+"You can't invest one dollar by itself," said the incredulous Richling.
+
+"Yes. Return her to-morrow."
+
+Richling swung his head from side to side as an expression of disrelish.
+"I haven't been employed for some time."
+
+"I goin' t'employ myself," said Ristofalo.
+
+Richling laughed again. There was a faint betrayal of distress in his
+voice as it fell upon the cunning ear of the Italian; but he laughed
+too, very gently and innocently, and stood in his tracks.
+
+"I wouldn't like to refuse a dollar to a man who needs it," said
+Richling. He took his hat off and ran his fingers through his hair.
+"I've seen the time when it was much easier to lend than it is just
+now." He thrust his hand down into his pocket and stood gazing at the
+sidewalk.
+
+The Italian glanced at Richling askance, and with one sweep of the eye
+from the softened crown of his hat to the slender, white bursted slit in
+the outer side of either well-polished shoe, took in the beauty of his
+face and a full understanding of his condition. His hair, somewhat dry,
+had fallen upon his forehead. His fine, smooth skin was darkened by the
+exposure of his daily wanderings. His cheek-bones, a trifle high,
+asserted their place above the softly concave cheeks. His mouth was
+closed and the lips were slightly compressed; the chin small, gracefully
+turned, not weak,--not strong. His eyes were abstracted, deep, pensive.
+His dress told much. The fine plaits of his shirt had sprung apart and
+been neatly sewed together again. His coat was a little faulty in the
+set of the collar, as if the person who had taken the garment apart and
+turned the goods had not put it together again with practised skill. It
+was without spot and the buttons were new. The edges of his shirt-cuffs
+had been trimmed with the scissors. Face and vesture alike revealed to
+the sharp eye of the Italian the woe underneath. "He has a wife,"
+thought Ristofalo.
+
+Richling looked up with a smile. "How can you be so sure you will make,
+and not lose?"
+
+"I never fail." There was not the least shade of boasting in the man's
+manner. Richling handed out his dollar. It was given without patronage
+and taken with simple thanks.
+
+"Where goin' to meet to-morrow morning?" asked Ristofalo. "Here?"
+
+"Oh! I forgot," said Richling. "Yes, I suppose so; and then you'll tell
+me how you invested it, will you?"
+
+"Yes, but you couldn't do it."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+Raphael Ristofalo laughed. "Oh! fifty reason'."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+HOW HE DID IT.
+
+
+Ristofalo and Richling had hardly separated, when it occurred to the
+latter that the Italian had first touched him from behind. Had Ristofalo
+recognized him with his back turned, or had he seen him earlier and
+followed him? The facts were these: about an hour before the time when
+Richling omitted to apply for employment in the ill-smelling store in
+Tchoupitoulas street, Mr. Raphael Ristofalo halted in front of the same
+place,--which appeared small and slovenly among its more pretentious
+neighbors,--and stepped just inside the door to where stood a single
+barrel of apples,--a fruit only the earliest varieties of which were
+beginning to appear in market. These were very small, round, and smooth,
+and with a rather wan blush confessed to more than one of the senses
+that they had seen better days. He began to pick them up and throw them
+down--one, two, three, four, seven, ten; about half of them were
+entirely sound.
+
+"How many barrel' like this?"
+
+"No got-a no more; dass all," said the dealer. He was a Sicilian. "Lame
+duck," he added. "Oäl de rest gone."
+
+"How much?" asked Ristofalo, still handling the fruit.
+
+The Sicilian came to the barrel, looked in, and said, with a gesture of
+indifference:--
+
+"'M--doll' an' 'alf."
+
+Ristofalo offered to take them at a dollar if he might wash and sort
+them under the dealer's hydrant, which could be heard running in the
+back yard. The offer would have been rejected with rude scorn but for
+one thing: it was spoken in Italian. The man looked at him with pleased
+surprise, and made the concession. The porter of the store, in a red
+worsted cap, had drawn near. Ristofalo bade him roll the barrel on its
+chine to the rear and stand it by the hydrant.
+
+"I will come back pretty soon," he said, in Italian, and went away.
+
+By and by he returned, bringing with him two swarthy, heavy-set, little
+Sicilian lads, each with his inevitable basket and some clean rags. A
+smile and gesture to the store-keeper, a word to the boys, and in a
+moment the barrel was upturned, and the pair were washing, wiping, and
+sorting the sound and unsound apples at the hydrant.
+
+Ristofalo stood a moment in the entrance of the store. The question now
+was where to get a dollar. Richling passed, looked in, seemed to
+hesitate, went on, turned, and passed again, the other way. Ristofalo
+saw him all the time and recognized him at once, but appeared not to
+observe him.
+
+"He will do," thought the Italian. "Be back few minute'," he said,
+glancing behind him.
+
+"Or-r righ'," said the store-keeper, with a hand-wave of good-natured
+confidence. He recognized Mr. Raphael Ristofalo's species.
+
+The Italian walked up across Poydras street, saw Richling stop and look
+at the machinery, approached, and touched him on the shoulder.
+
+On parting with him he did not return to the store where he had left the
+apples. He walked up Tchoupitoulas street about a mile, and where St.
+Thomas street branches acutely from it, in a squalid district full of
+the poorest Irish, stopped at a dirty fruit-stand and spoke in Spanish
+to its Catalan proprietor. Half an hour later twenty-five cents had
+changed hands, the Catalan's fruit shelves were bright with small
+pyramids--sound side foremost--of Ristofalo's second grade of apples,
+the Sicilian had Richling's dollar, and the Italian was gone with his
+boys and his better grade of fruit. Also, a grocer had sold some sugar,
+and a druggist a little paper of some harmless confectioner's dye.
+
+Down behind the French market, in a short, obscure street that runs from
+Ursulines to Barracks street, and is named in honor of Albert Gallatin,
+are some old buildings of three or four stories' height, rented, in John
+Richling's day, to a class of persons who got their livelihood by
+sub-letting the rooms, and parts of rooms, to the wretchedest poor of
+New Orleans,--organ-grinders, chimney-sweeps, professional beggars,
+street musicians, lemon-peddlers, rag-pickers, with all the yet dirtier
+herd that live by hook and crook in the streets or under the wharves; a
+room with a bed and stove, a room without, a half-room with or without
+ditto, a quarter-room with or without a blanket or quilt, and with only
+a chalk-mark on the floor instead of a partition. Into one of these went
+Mr. Raphael Ristofalo, the two boys, and the apples. Whose assistance or
+indulgence, if any, he secured in there is not recorded; but when, late
+in the afternoon, the Italian issued thence--the boys, meanwhile,
+had been coming and going--an unusual luxury had been offered the
+roustabouts and idlers of the steam-boat landings, and many had
+bought and eaten freely of the very small, round, shiny, sugary, and
+artificially crimson roasted apples, with neatly whittled white-pine
+stems to poise them on as they were lifted to the consumer's watering
+teeth. When, the next morning Richling laughed at the story, the Italian
+drew out two dollars and a half, and began to take from it a dollar.
+
+"But you have last night's lodging and so forth yet to pay for."
+
+"No. Made friends with Sicilian luggerman. Slept in his lugger." He
+showed his brow and cheeks speckled with mosquito-bites. "Ate little
+hard-tack and coffee with him this morning. Don't want much." He offered
+the dollar with a quarter added. Richling declined the bonus.
+
+"But why not?"
+
+"Oh, I just couldn't do it," laughed Richling; "that's all."
+
+"Well," said the Italian, "lend me that dollar one day more, I return
+you dollar and half in its place to-morrow."
+
+The lender had to laugh again. "You can't find an odd barrel of damaged
+apples every day."
+
+"No. No apples to-day. But there's regiment soldiers at lower landing;
+whole steam-boat load; going to sail this evenin' to Florida. They'll
+eat whole barrel hard-boil' eggs."--And they did. When they sailed, the
+Italian's pocket was stuffed with small silver.
+
+Richling received his dollar and fifty cents. As he did so, "I would
+give, if I had it, a hundred dollars for half your art," he said,
+laughing unevenly. He was beaten, surpassed, humbled. Still he said,
+"Come, don't you want this again? You needn't pay me for the use of it."
+
+But the Italian refused. He had outgrown his patron. A week afterward
+Richling saw him at the Picayune Tier, superintending the unloading of a
+small schooner-load of bananas. He had bought the cargo, and was
+reselling to small fruiterers.
+
+"Make fifty dolla' to-day," said the Italian, marking his tally-board
+with a piece of chalk.
+
+Richling clapped him joyfully on the shoulder, but turned around with
+inward distress and hurried away. He had not found work.
+
+Events followed of which we have already taken knowledge. Mary, we have
+seen, fell sick and was taken to the hospital.
+
+"I shall go mad!" Richling would moan, with his dishevelled brows
+between his hands, and then start to his feet, exclaiming, "I must not!
+I must not! I must keep my senses!" And so to the commercial regions or
+to the hospital.
+
+Dr. Sevier, as we know, left word that Richling should call and see him;
+but when he called, a servant--very curtly, it seemed to him--said the
+Doctor was not well and didn't want to see anybody. This was enough for
+a young man who _hadn't_ his senses. The more he needed a helping hand
+the more unreasonably shy he became of those who might help him.
+
+"Will nobody come and find us?" Yet he would not cry "Whoop!" and how,
+then, was anybody to come?
+
+Mary returned to the house again (ah! what joys there are in the vale of
+tribulation!), and grew strong,--stronger, she averred, than ever she
+had been.
+
+"And now you'll _not_ be cast down, _will_ you?" she said, sliding into
+her husband's lap. She was in an uncommonly playful mood.
+
+"Not a bit of it," said John. "Every dog has his day. I'll come to the
+top. You'll see."
+
+"Don't I know that?" she responded, "Look here, now," she exclaimed,
+starting to her feet and facing him, "_I'll_ recommend you to anybody.
+_I've_ got confidence in you!" Richling thought she had never looked
+quite so pretty as at that moment. He leaped from his chair with a
+laughing ejaculation, caught and swung her an instant from her feet, and
+landed her again before she could cry out. If, in retort, she smote him
+so sturdily that she had to retreat backward to rearrange her shaken
+coil of hair, it need not go down on the record; such things will
+happen. The scuffle and suppressed laughter were detected even in Mrs.
+Riley's room.
+
+"Ah!" sighed the widow to herself, "wasn't it Kate Riley that used to
+get the sweet, haird knocks!" Her grief was mellowing.
+
+Richling went out on the old search, which the advancing summer made
+more nearly futile each day than the day before.
+
+Stop. What sound was that?
+
+"Richling! Richling!"
+
+Richling, walking in a commercial street, turned. A member of the firm
+that had last employed him beckoned him to halt.
+
+"What are you doing now, Richling? Still acting deputy assistant city
+surveyor _pro tem._?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, see here! Why haven't you been in the store to see us lately? Did
+I seem a little preoccupied the last time you called?"
+
+"I"--Richling dropped his eyes with an embarrassed smile--"_I was_
+afraid I was in the way--or should be."
+
+"Well and suppose you were? A man that's looking for work must put
+himself in the way. But come with me. I think I may be able to give you
+a lift."
+
+"How's that?" asked Richling, as they started off abreast.
+
+"There's a house around the corner here that will give you some
+work,--temporary anyhow, and may be permanent."
+
+So Richling was at work again, hidden away from Dr. Sevier between
+journal and ledger. His employers asked for references. Richling looked
+dismayed for a moment, then said, "I'll bring somebody to recommend me,"
+went away, and came back with Mary.
+
+"All the recommendation I've got," said he, with timid elation. There
+was a laugh all round.
+
+"Well, madam, if you say he's all right, we don't doubt he is!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ANOTHER PATIENT.
+
+
+"Doctah Seveeah," said Narcisse, suddenly, as he finished sticking with
+great fervor the postage-stamps on some letters the Doctor had written,
+and having studied with much care the phraseology of what he had to say,
+and screwed up his courage to the pitch of utterance, "I saw yo' notiz
+on the noozpapeh this mornin'."
+
+The unresponding Doctor closed his eyes in unutterable weariness of the
+innocent young gentleman's prepared speeches.
+
+"Yesseh. 'Tis a beaucheouz notiz. I fine that w'itten with the gweatez
+ac_cu_'acy of diction, in fact. I made a twanslation of that faw my
+hant. Thaz a thing I am fon' of, twanslation. I dunno 'ow 'tis, Doctah,"
+he continued, preparing to go out,--"I dunno 'ow 'tis, but I thing, you
+goin' to fine that Mistoo Itchlin ad the en'. I dunno 'ow 'tis. Well,
+I'm goin' ad the"--
+
+The Doctor looked up fiercely.
+
+"Bank," said Narcisse, getting near the door.
+
+"All right!" grumbled the Doctor, more politely.
+
+"Yesseh--befo' I go ad the poss-office."
+
+A great many other persons had seen the advertisement. There were many
+among them who wondered if Mr. John Richling could be such a fool as to
+fall into that trap. There were others--some of them women, alas!--who
+wondered how it was that nobody advertised for information concerning
+them, and who wished, yes, "wished to God," that such a one, or such a
+one, who had had his money-bags locked up long enough, would die, and
+then you'd see who'd be advertised for. Some idlers looked in vain into
+the city directory to see if Mr. John Richling were mentioned there.
+But Richling himself did not see the paper. His employers, or some
+fellow-clerk, might have pointed it out to him, but--we shall see in a
+moment.
+
+Time passed. It always does. At length, one morning, as Dr. Sevier lay
+on his office lounge, fatigued after his attentions to callers, and much
+enervated by the prolonged summer heat, there entered a small female
+form, closely veiled. He rose to a sitting posture.
+
+"Good-morning, Doctor," said a voice, hurriedly, behind the veil.
+"Doctor," it continued, choking,--"Doctor"--
+
+"Why, Mrs. Richling!"
+
+He sprang and gave her a chair. She sank into it.
+
+"Doctor,--O Doctor! John is in the Charity Hospital!"
+
+She buried her face in her handkerchief and sobbed aloud. The Doctor was
+silent a moment, and then asked:--
+
+"What's the matter with him?"
+
+"Chills."
+
+It seemed as though she must break down again, but the Doctor stopped
+her savagely.
+
+"Well, my dear madam, don't cry! Come, now, you're making too much of a
+small matter. Why, what are chills? We'll break them in forty-eight
+hours. He'll have the best of care. You needn't cry! Certainly this
+isn't as bad as when you were there."
+
+She was still, but shook her head. She couldn't agree to that.
+
+"Doctor, will you attend him?"
+
+"Mine is a female ward."
+
+"I know; but"--
+
+"Oh--if you wish it--certainly; of course I will. But now, where have
+you moved, Mrs. Richling? I sent"-- He looked up over his desk toward
+that of Narcisse.
+
+The Creole had been neither deaf nor idle. Hospital? Then those children
+in Prieur street had told him right. He softly changed his coat and
+shoes. As the physician looked over the top of the desk Narcisse's
+silent form, just here at the left, but out of the range of vision,
+passed through the door and went downstairs with the noiselessness of a
+moonbeam.
+
+Mary explained the location and arrangement of her residence.
+
+"Yes," she said, "that's the way your clerk must have overlooked us. We
+live behind--down the alleyway."
+
+"Well, at any rate, madam," said the Doctor, "you are here now, and
+before you go I want to"-- He drew out his pocket-book.
+
+There was a quick gesture of remonstrance and a look of pleading.
+
+"No, no, Doctor, please don't! please don't! Give my poor husband one
+more chance; don't make me take that. I don't refuse it for pride's
+sake!"
+
+"I don't know about that," he replied; "why do you do it?"
+
+"For his sake, Doctor. I know just as well what he'd say--we've no right
+to take it anyhow. We don't know when we could pay it back." Her head
+sank. She wiped a tear from her hand.
+
+"Why, I don't care if you never pay it back!" The Doctor reddened
+angrily.
+
+Mary raised her veil.
+
+"Doctor,"--a smile played on her lips,--"I want to say one thing." She
+was a little care-worn and grief-worn; and yet, Narcisse, you should
+have seen her; you would not have slipped out.
+
+"Say on, madam," responded the Doctor.
+
+"If we have to ask anybody, Doctor, it will be you. John had another
+situation, but lost it by his chills. He'll get another. I'm sure he
+will." A long, broken sigh caught her unawares. Dr. Sevier thrust his
+pocket-book back into its place, compressing his lips and giving his
+head an unpersuaded jerk. And yet, was she not right, according to all
+his preaching? He asked himself that. "Why didn't your husband come to
+see me, as I requested him to do, Mrs. Richling?"
+
+She explained John's being turned away from the door during the Doctor's
+illness. "But anyhow, Doctor, John has always been a little afraid of
+you."
+
+The Doctor's face did not respond to her smile.
+
+"Why, you are not," he said.
+
+"No." Her eyes sparkled, but their softer light quickly returned. She
+smiled and said:--
+
+"I will ask a favor of you now, Doctor."
+
+They had risen, and she stood leaning sidewise against his low desk and
+looking up into his face.
+
+"Can you get me some sewing? John says I may take some."
+
+The Doctor was about to order two dozen shirts instanter, but common
+sense checked him, and he only said:--
+
+"I will. I will find you some. And I shall see your husband within an
+hour. Good-by." She reached the door. "God bless you!" he added.
+
+"What, sir?" she asked, looking back.
+
+But the Doctor was reading.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+ALICE.
+
+
+A little medicine skilfully prescribed, the proper nourishment, two or
+three days' confinement in bed, and the Doctor said, as he sat on the
+edge of Richling's couch:--
+
+"No, you'd better stay where you are to-day; but to-morrow, if the
+weather is good, you may sit up."
+
+Then Richling, with the unreasonableness of a convalescent, wanted to
+know why he couldn't just as well go home. But the Doctor said again,
+no.
+
+"Don't be impatient; you'll have to go anyhow before I would prefer to
+send you. It would be invaluable to you to pass your entire
+convalescence here, and go home only when you are completely recovered.
+But I can't arrange it very well. The Charity Hospital is for sick
+people."
+
+"And where is the place for convalescents?"
+
+"There is none," replied the physician.
+
+"I shouldn't want to go to it, myself," said Richling, lolling
+pleasantly on his pillow; "all I should ask is strength to get home,
+and I'd be off."
+
+The Doctor looked another way.
+
+"The sick are not the wise," he said, abstractedly. "However, in your
+case, I should let you go to your wife as soon as you safely could." At
+that he fell into so long a reverie that Richling studied every line of
+his face again and again.
+
+A very pleasant thought was in the convalescent's mind the while. The
+last three days had made it plain to him that the Doctor was not only
+his friend, but was willing that Richling should be his.
+
+At length the physician spoke:--
+
+"Mary is wonderfully like Alice, Richling."
+
+"Yes?" responded Richling, rather timidly. And the Doctor continued:--
+
+"The same age, the same stature, the same features. Alice was a shade
+paler in her style of beauty, just a shade. Her hair was darker; but
+otherwise her whole effect was a trifle quieter, even, than Mary's. She
+was beautiful,--outside and in. Like Mary, she had a certain richness of
+character--but of a different sort. I suppose I would not notice the
+difference if they were not so much alike. She didn't stay with me
+long."
+
+"Did you lose her--here?" asked Richling, hardly knowing how to break
+the silence that fell, and yet lead the speaker on.
+
+"No. In Virginia." The Doctor was quiet a moment, and then resumed:--
+
+"I looked at your wife when she was last in my office, Richling; she
+had a little timid, beseeching light in her eyes that is not usual with
+her--and a moisture, too; and--it seemed to me as though Alice had come
+back. For my wife lived by my moods. Her spirits rose or fell just as my
+whim, conscious or unconscious, gave out light or took on shadow." The
+Doctor was still again, and Richling only indicated his wish to hear
+more by shifting himself on his elbow.
+
+"Do you remember, Richling, when the girl you had been bowing down to
+and worshipping, all at once, in a single wedding day, was transformed
+into your adorer?"
+
+"Yes, indeed," responded the convalescent, with beaming face. "Wasn't
+it wonderful? I couldn't credit my senses. But how did you--was it the
+same"--
+
+"It's the same, Richling, with every man who has really secured a
+woman's heart with her hand. It was very strange and sweet to me. Alice
+would have been a spoiled child if her parents could have spoiled her;
+and when I was courting her she was the veriest little empress that ever
+walked over a man."
+
+"I can hardly imagine," said Richling, with subdued amusement, looking
+at the long, slender form before him. The Doctor smiled very sweetly.
+
+"Yes." Then, after another meditative pause: "But from the moment I
+became her husband she lived in continual trepidation. She so magnified
+me in her timid fancy that she was always looking tremulously to me to
+see what should be her feeling. She even couldn't help being afraid of
+me. I hate for any one to be afraid of me."
+
+"Do you, Doctor?" said Richling, with surprise and evident
+introspection.
+
+"Yes."
+
+Richling felt his own fear changing to love.
+
+"When I married," continued Dr. Sevier, "I had thought Alice was one
+that would go with me hand in hand through life, dividing its cares and
+doubling its joys, as they say; I guiding her and she guiding me. But if
+I had let her, she would have fallen into me as a planet might fall into
+the sun. I didn't want to be the sun to her. I didn't want her to shine
+only when I shone on her, and be dark when I was dark. No man ought to
+want such a thing. Yet she made life a delight to me; only she wanted
+that development which a better training, or even a harder training,
+might have given her; that subserving of the emotions to the"--he waved
+his hand--"I can't philosophize about her. We loved one another with
+our might, and she's in heaven."
+
+Richling felt an inward start. The Doctor interrupted his intended
+speech.
+
+"Our short experience together, Richling, is the one great light place
+in my life; and to me, to-day, sere as I am, the sweet--the sweetest
+sound--on God's green earth"--the corners of his mouth quivered--"is the
+name of Alice. Take care of Mary, Richling; she's a priceless treasure.
+Don't leave the making and sustaining of the home sunshine all to her,
+any more than you'd like her to leave it all to you."
+
+"I'll not, Doctor; I'll not." Richling pressed the Doctor's hand
+fervently; but the Doctor drew it away with a certain energy, and rose,
+saying:--
+
+"Yes, you can sit up to-morrow."
+
+The day that Richling went back to his malarious home in Prieur street
+Dr. Sevier happened to meet him just beyond the hospital gate. Richling
+waved his hand. He looked weak and tremulous. "Homeward bound," he said,
+gayly.
+
+The physician reached forward in his carriage and bade his driver stop.
+"Well, be careful of yourself; I'm coming to see you in a day or two."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE SUN AT MIDNIGHT.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier was daily overtasked. His campaigns against the evils of our
+disordered flesh had even kept him from what his fellow-citizens thought
+was only his share of attention to public affairs.
+
+"Why," he cried to a committee that came soliciting his coöperation,
+"here's one little unprofessional call that I've been trying every day
+for two weeks to make--and ought to have made--and must make; and I
+haven't got a step toward it yet. Oh, no, gentlemen!" He waved their
+request away.
+
+He was very tired. The afternoon was growing late. He dismissed his
+jaded horse toward home, walked down to Canal street, and took that
+yellow Bayou-Road omnibus whose big blue star painted on its corpulent
+side showed that quadroons, etc., were allowed a share of its
+accommodation, and went rumbling and tumbling over the cobble-stones
+of the French quarter.
+
+By and by he got out, walked a little way southward in the hot, luminous
+shade of low-roofed tenement cottages that closed their window-shutters
+noiselessly, in sensitive-plant fashion, at his slow, meditative
+approach, and slightly and as noiselessly reopened them behind him,
+showing a pair of wary eyes within. Presently he recognized just ahead
+of him, standing out on the sidewalk, the little house that had been
+described to him by Mary.
+
+In a door-way that opened upon two low wooden sidewalk steps stood Mrs.
+Riley, clad in a crisp black and white calico, a heavy, fat babe poised
+easily in one arm. The Doctor turned directly toward the narrow alley,
+merely touching his hat to her as he pushed its small green door inward,
+and disappeared, while she lifted her chin at the silent liberty and
+dropped her eyelids.
+
+Dr. Sevier went down the cramped, ill-paved passage very slowly and
+softly. Regarding himself objectively, he would have said the deep shade
+of his thoughts was due partly, at least, to his fatigue. But that would
+hardly have accounted for a certain faint glow of indignation that came
+into them. In truth, he began distinctly to resent this state of affairs
+in the life of John and Mary Richling. An ill-defined anger beat about
+in his brain in search of some tangible shortcoming of theirs upon which
+to thrust the blame of their helplessness. "Criminal helplessness," he
+called it, mutteringly. He tried to define the idea--or the idea tried
+to define itself--that they had somehow been recreant to their social
+caste, by getting down into the condition and estate of what one may
+call the alien poor. Carondelet street had in some way specially vexed
+him to-day, and now here was this. It was bad enough, he thought, for
+men to slip into riches through dark back windows; but here was a brace
+of youngsters who had glided into poverty, and taken a place to which
+they had no right to stoop. Treachery,--that was the name for it. And
+now he must be expected,--the Doctor quite forgot that nobody had asked
+him to do it,--he must be expected to come fishing them out of their
+hole, like a rag-picker at a trash barrel.
+
+--"Bringing me into this wretched alley!" he silently thought. His foot
+slipped on a mossy brick. Oh, no doubt they thought they were punishing
+some negligent friend or friends by letting themselves down into this
+sort of thing. Never mind! He recalled the tender, confiding, friendly
+way in which he had talked to John, sitting on the edge of his hospital
+bed. He wished, now, he had every word back he had uttered. They might
+hide away to the full content of their poverty-pride. Poverty-pride: he
+had invented the term; it was the opposite pole to purse-pride--and just
+as mean,--no, meaner. There! Must he yet slip down? He muttered an angry
+word. Well, well, this was making himself a little the cheapest he had
+ever let himself be made. And probably this was what they wanted!
+Misery's revenge. Umhum! They sit down in sour darkness, eh! and make
+relief seek them. It wouldn't be the first time he had caught the poor
+taking savage comfort in the blush which their poverty was supposed to
+bring to the cheek of better-kept kinsfolk. True, he didn't know this
+was the case with the Richlings. But wasn't it? Wasn't it? And have they
+a dog, that will presently hurl himself down this alley at one's legs?
+He hopes so. He would so like to kick him clean over the twelve-foot
+close plank fence that crowded his right shoulder. Never mind! His anger
+became solemn.
+
+The alley opened into a small, narrow yard, paved with ashes from the
+gas-works. At the bottom of the yard a rough shed spanned its breadth,
+and a woman was there, busily bending over a row of wash-tubs.
+
+The Doctor knocked on a door near at hand, then waited a moment, and,
+getting no response, turned away toward the shed and the deep, wet,
+burring sound of a wash-board. The woman bending over it did not hear
+his footfall. Presently he stopped. She had just straightened up,
+lifting a piece of the washing to the height of her head, and letting it
+down with a swash and slap upon the board. It was a woman's garment,
+but certainly not hers. For she was small and slight. Her hair was
+hidden under a towel. Her skirts were shortened to a pair of dainty
+ankles by an extra under-fold at the neat, round waist. Her feet were
+thrust into a pair of sabots. She paused a moment in her work, and,
+lifting with both smoothly rounded arms, bared nearly to the shoulder, a
+large apron from her waist, wiped the perspiration from her forehead. It
+was Mary.
+
+The red blood came up into the Doctor's pale, thin face. This was too
+outrageous. This was insult! He stirred as if to move forward. He would
+confront her. Yes, just as she was. He would speak. He would speak
+bluntly. He would chide sternly. He had the right. The only friend in
+the world from whom she had not escaped beyond reach,--he would speak
+the friendly, angry word that would stop this shocking--
+
+But, truly, deeply incensed as he was, and felt it his right to be,
+hurt, wrung, exasperated, he did not advance. She had reached down and
+taken from the wash-bench the lump of yellow soap that lay there, and
+was soaping the garment on the board before her, turning it this way and
+that. As she did this she began, all to herself and for her own ear,
+softly, with unconscious richness and tenderness of voice, to sing. And
+what was her song?
+
+ "Oh, don't you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?"
+
+Down drooped the listener's head. Remember? Ah, memory!--The old,
+heart-rending memory! Sweet Alice!
+
+ "Sweet Alice, whose hair was so brown?"
+
+Yes, yes; so brown!--so brown!
+
+ "She wept with delight when you gave her a smile,
+ And trembled with fear at your frown."
+
+Ah! but the frown is gone! There is a look of supplication now. Sing no
+more! Oh, sing no more! Yes, surely, she will stop there!
+
+No. The voice rises gently--just a little--into the higher key, soft and
+clear as the note of a distant bird, and all unaware of a listener. Oh!
+in mercy's name--
+
+ "In the old church-yard in the valley, Ben Bolt,
+ In a corner obscure and alone,
+ They have fitted a slab of granite so gray,
+ And sweet Alice lies under the stone."
+
+The little toiling figure bent once more across the wash-board and began
+to rub. He turned, the first dew of many a long year welling from each
+eye, and stole away, out of the little yard and down the dark, slippery
+alley, to the street.
+
+Mrs. Riley still stood on the door-sill, holding the child.
+
+"Good-evening, madam!"
+
+"Sur, to you." She bowed with dignity.
+
+"Is Mrs. Richling in?"
+
+There was a shadow of triumph in her faint smile.
+
+"She is."
+
+"I should like to see her."
+
+Mrs. Riley hoisted her chin. "I dunno if she's a-seein' comp'ny to-day."
+The voice was amiably important. "Wont ye walk in? Take a seat and sit
+down, sur, and I'll go and infarm the laydie."
+
+"Thank you," said the Doctor, but continued to stand.
+
+Mrs. Riley started and stopped again.
+
+"Ye forgot to give me yer kyaird, sur." She drew her chin in again
+austerely.
+
+"Just say Dr. Sevier."
+
+"Certainly, sur; yes, that'll be sufficiend. And dispinse with the
+kyaird." She went majestically.
+
+The Doctor, left alone, cast his uninterested glance around the smart
+little bare-floored parlor, upon its new, jig-sawed, gray hair-cloth
+furniture, and up upon a picture of the Pope. When Mrs. Riley, in a
+moment, returned he stood looking out the door.
+
+"Mrs. Richling consints to see ye, sur. She'll be in turreckly. Take a
+seat and sit down." She readjusted the infant on her arm and lifted and
+swung a hair-cloth arm-chair toward him without visible exertion.
+"There's no use o' having chayers if ye don't sit on um," she added
+affably.
+
+The Doctor sat down, and Mrs. Riley occupied the exact centre of the
+small, wide-eared, brittle-looking sofa, where she filled in the silent
+moments that followed by pulling down the skirts of the infant's
+apparel, oppressed with the necessity of keeping up a conversation and
+with the want of subject-matter. The child stared at the Doctor, and
+suddenly plunged toward him with a loud and very watery coo.
+
+"Ah-h!" said Mrs. Riley, in ostentatious rebuke. "Mike!" she cried,
+laughingly, as the action was repeated. "Ye rowdy, air ye go-un to fight
+the gintleman?"
+
+She laughed sincerely, and the Doctor could but notice how neat and
+good-looking she was. He condescended to crook his finger at the babe.
+This seemed to exasperate the so-called rowdy. He planted his pink feet
+on his mother's thigh and gave a mighty lunge and whoop.
+
+"He's go-un to be a wicked bruiser," said proud Mrs. Riley. "He"--the
+pronoun stood, this time, for her husband--"he never sah the child. He
+was kilt with an explosion before the child was barn."
+
+She held the infant on her strong arm as he struggled to throw himself,
+with wide-stretched jaws, upon her bosom; and might have been devoured
+by the wicked bruiser had not his attention been diverted by the
+entrance of Mary, who came in at last, all in fragrant white, with
+apologies for keeping the Doctor waiting.
+
+He looked down into her uplifted eyes. What a riddle is woman! Had he
+not just seen this one in sabots? Did she not certainly know, through
+Mrs. Riley, that he must have seen her so? Were not her skirts but just
+now hitched up with an under-tuck, and fastened with a string? Had she
+not just laid off, in hot haste, a suds-bespattered apron and the
+garments of toil beneath it? Had not a towel been but now unbound from
+the hair shining here under his glance in luxuriant brown coils? This
+brightness of eye, that seemed all exhilaration, was it not trepidation
+instead? And this rosiness, so like redundant vigor, was it not the
+flush of her hot task? He fancied he saw--in truth he may have seen--a
+defiance in the eyes as he glanced upon, and tardily dropped, the little
+water-soaked hand with a bow.
+
+Mary turned to present Mrs. Riley, who bowed and said, trying to hold
+herself with majesty while Mike drew her head into his mouth: "Sur,"
+then turned with great ceremony to Mary, and adding, "I'll withdrah,"
+withdrew with the head and step of a duchess.
+
+"How is your husband, madam?"
+
+"John?--is not well at all, Doctor; though he would say he was if he
+were here. He doesn't shake off his chills. He is out, though, looking
+for work. He'd go as long as he could stand."
+
+She smiled; she almost laughed; but half an eye could see it was only to
+avoid the other thing.
+
+"Where does he go?"
+
+"Everywhere!" She laughed this time audibly.
+
+"If he went everywhere I should see him," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+"Ah! naturally," responded Mary, playfully. "But he does go wherever he
+thinks there's work to be found. He doesn't wander clear out among the
+plantations, of course, where everybody has slaves, and there's no work
+but slaves' work. And he says it's useless to think of a clerkship this
+time of year. It must be, isn't it?"
+
+The Doctor made no answer.
+
+There was a footstep in the alley.
+
+"He's coming now," said Mary,--"that's he. He must have got work to-day.
+He has an acquaintance, an Italian, who promised to have something for
+him to do very soon. Doctor,"--she began to put together the split
+fractions of a palm-leaf fan, smiling diffidently at it the while,--"I
+can't see how it is any discredit to a man not to have a _knack_ for
+making money?"
+
+She lifted her peculiar look of radiant inquiry.
+
+"It is not, madam."
+
+Mary laughed for joy. The light of her face seemed to spread clear into
+her locks.
+
+"Well, I knew you'd say so! John blames himself; he can make money, you
+know, Doctor, but he blames himself because he hasn't that natural gift
+for it that Mr. Ristofalo has. Why, Mr. Ristofalo is simply wonderful!"
+She smiled upon her fan in amused reminiscence. "John is always wishing
+he had his gift."
+
+"My dear madam, don't covet it! At least don't exchange it for anything
+else."
+
+The Doctor was still in this mood of disapprobation when John entered.
+The radiancy of the young husband's greeting hid for a moment, but only
+so long, the marks of illness and adversity. Mary followed him with her
+smiling eyes as the two men shook hands, and John drew a chair near to
+her and sat down with a sigh of mingled pleasure and fatigue.
+
+She told him of whom she and their visitor had just been speaking.
+
+"Raphael Ristofalo!" said John, kindling afresh. "Yes; I've been with
+him all day. It humiliates me to think of him."
+
+Dr. Sevier responded quietly:--
+
+"You've no right to let it humiliate you, sir."
+
+Mary turned to John with dancing eyes, but he passed the utterance as a
+mere compliment, and said, through his smiles:--
+
+"Just see how it is to-day. I have been overseeing the unloading of a
+little schooner from Ruatan island loaded with bananas, cocoanuts, and
+pine-apples. I've made two dollars; he has made a hundred."
+
+Richling went on eagerly to tell about the plain, lustreless man whose
+one homely gift had fascinated him. The Doctor was entertained. The
+narrator sparkled and glowed as he told of Ristofalo's appearance, and
+reproduced his speeches and manner.
+
+"Tell about the apples and eggs," said the delighted Mary.
+
+He did so, sitting on the front edge of his chair-seat, and sprawling
+his legs now in front and now behind him as he swung now around to his
+wife and now to the Doctor. Mary laughed softly at every period, and
+watched the Doctor, to see his slight smile at each detail of the story.
+Richling enjoyed telling it; he had worked; his earnings were in his
+pocket; gladness was easy.
+
+"Why, I'm learning more from Raphael Ristofalo than I ever learned from
+my school-masters: I'm learning the art of livelihood."
+
+He ran on from Ristofalo to the men among whom he had been mingling all
+day. He mimicked the strange, long swing of their Sicilian speech; told
+of their swarthy faces and black beards, their rich instinct for color
+in costume; their fierce conversation and violent gestures; the energy
+of their movements when they worked, and the profoundness of their
+repose when they rested; the picturesqueness and grotesqueness of the
+negroes, too; the huge, flat, round baskets of fruit which the black men
+carried on their heads, and which the Sicilians bore on their shoulders
+or the nape of the neck. The "captain" of the schooner was a central
+figure.
+
+"Doctor," asked Richling, suddenly, "do you know anything about the
+island of Cozumel?"
+
+"Aha!" thought Mary. So there was something besides the day's earning
+that elated him.
+
+She had suspected it. She looked at her husband with an expression of
+the most alert pleasure. The Doctor noticed it.
+
+"No," he said, in reply to Richling's question.
+
+"It stands out in the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Yucatan," began
+Richling.
+
+"Yes, I know that."
+
+"Well, Mary, I've almost promised the schooner captain that we'll go
+there. He wants to get up a colony."
+
+Mary started.
+
+"Why, John!" She betrayed a look of dismay, glanced at their visitor,
+tried to say "Have you?" approvingly, and blushed.
+
+The Doctor made no kind of response.
+
+"Now, don't conclude," said John to Mary, coloring too, but smiling. He
+turned to the physician. "It's a wonderful spot, Doctor."
+
+But the Doctor was still silent, and Richling turned.
+
+"Just to think, Mary, of a place where you can raise all the products of
+two zones; where health is almost perfect; where the yellow fever has
+never been; and where there is such beauty as can be only in the tropics
+and a tropical sea. Why, Doctor, I can't understand why Europeans or
+Americans haven't settled it long ago."
+
+"I suppose we can find out before we go, can't we?" said Mary, looking
+timorously back and forth between John and the Doctor.
+
+"The reason is," replied John, "it's so little known. Just one island
+away out by itself. Three crops of fruit a year. One acre planted in
+bananas feeds fifty men. All the capital a man need have is an axe to
+cut down the finest cabinet and dye-woods in the world. The thermometer
+never goes above ninety nor below forty. You can hire all the labor you
+want at a few cents a day."
+
+Mary's diligent eye detected a cloud on the Doctor's face. But John,
+though nettled, pushed on the more rapidly.
+
+"A man can make--easily!--a thousand dollars the first year, and live on
+two hundred and fifty. It's the place for a poor man."
+
+He looked a little defiant.
+
+"Of course," said Mary, "I know you wouldn't come to an opinion"--she
+smiled with the same restless glance--"until you had made all the
+inquiries necessary. It mu--must--be a delightful place. Doctor?"
+
+Her eyes shone blue as the sky.
+
+"I wouldn't send a convict to such a place," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+Richling flamed up.
+
+"Don't you think," he began to say with visible restraint and a faint,
+ugly twist of the head,--"don't you think it's a better place for a poor
+man than a great, heartless town?"
+
+"This isn't a heartless town," said the Doctor.
+
+"He doesn't mean it as you do, Doctor," interposed Mary, with alarm.
+"John, you ought to explain."
+
+"Than a great town," said Richling, "where a man of honest intentions
+and real desire to live and be useful and independent; who wants to earn
+his daily bread at any honorable cost, and who can't do it because the
+town doesn't want his services, and will not have them--can
+go"-- He ceased, with his sentence all tangled.
+
+"No!" the Doctor was saying meanwhile. "No! No! No!"
+
+"Here I go, day after day," persisted Richling, extending his arm and
+pointing indefinitely through the window.
+
+"No, no, you don't, John," cried Mary, with an effort at gayety; "you
+don't go by the window, John; you go by the door." She pulled his arm
+down tenderly.
+
+"I go by the alley," said John. Silence followed. The young pair
+contrived to force a little laugh, and John made an apologetic move.
+
+"Doctor," he exclaimed, with an air of pleasantry, "the whole town's
+asleep!--sound asleep, like a negro in the sunshine! There isn't work
+for one man in fifty!" He ended tremulously. Mary looked at him with
+dropped face but lifted eyes, handling the fan, whose rent she had made
+worse.
+
+"Richling, my friend,"--the Doctor had never used that term
+before,--"what does your Italian money-maker say to the idea?"
+
+Richling gave an Italian shrug and his own pained laugh.
+
+"Exactly! Why, Mr. Richling, you're on an island now,--an island in
+mid-ocean. Both of you!" He waved his hands toward the two without
+lifting his head from the back of the easy-chair, where he had dropped
+it.
+
+"What do you mean, Doctor?"
+
+"Mean? Isn't my meaning plain enough? I mean you're too independent.
+You know very well, Richling, that you've started out in life with some
+fanciful feud against the 'world.' What it is I don't know, but I'm sure
+it's not the sort that religion requires. You've told this world--you
+remember you said it to me once--that if it will go one road you'll
+go another. You've forgotten that, mean and stupid and bad as your
+fellow-creatures are, they're your brothers and sisters, and that
+they have claims on you as such, and that you have claims on them as
+such.--Cozumel! You're there now! Has a friend no rights? I don't know
+your immediate relatives, and I say nothing about them"--
+
+John gave a slight start, and Mary looked at him suddenly.
+
+"But here am I," continued the speaker. "Is it just to me for you to
+hide away here in want that forces you and your wife--I beg your pardon,
+madam--into mortifying occupations, when one word to me--a trivial
+obligation, not worthy to be called an obligation, contracted with
+me--would remove that necessity, and tide you over the emergency of the
+hour?"
+
+Richling was already answering, not by words only, but by his confident
+smile:--
+
+"Yes, sir; yes, it is just: ask Mary."
+
+"Yes, Doctor," interposed the wife. "We went over"--
+
+"We went over it together," said John. "We weighed it well. It _is_
+just,--not to ask aid as long as there's hope without it."
+
+The Doctor responded with the quiet air of one who is sure of his
+position:--
+
+"Yes, I see. But, of course--I know without asking--you left the
+question of health out of your reckoning. Now, Richling, put the whole
+world, if you choose, in a selfish attitude"--
+
+"No, no," said Richling and his wife. "Ah, no!" But the Doctor
+persisted.
+
+"--a purely selfish attitude. Wouldn't it, nevertheless, rather help a
+well man or woman than a sick one? Wouldn't it pay better?"
+
+"Yes, but"--
+
+"Yes," said the Doctor. "But you're taking the most desperate risks
+against health and life." He leaned forward in his chair, jerked in his
+legs, and threw out his long white hands. "You're committing slow
+suicide."
+
+"Doctor," began Mary; but her husband had the floor.
+
+"Doctor," he said, "can you put yourself in our place? Wouldn't you
+rather die than beg? _Wouldn't_ you?"
+
+The Doctor rose to his feet as straight as a lance.
+
+"It isn't what you'd rather, sir! You haven't your choice! You haven't
+your choice at all, sir! When God gets ready for you to die he'll let
+you know, sir! And you've no right to trifle with his mercy in the
+meanwhile. I'm not a man to teach men to whine after each other for aid;
+but every principle has its limitations, Mr. Richling. You say you went
+over the whole subject. Yes; well, didn't you strike the fact that
+suicide is an affront to civilization and humanity?"
+
+"Why, Doctor!" cried the other two, rising also. "We're not going to
+commit suicide."
+
+"No," retorted he, "you're not. That's what I came here to tell you. I'm
+here to prevent it."
+
+"Doctor," exclaimed Mary, the big tears standing in her eyes, and the
+Doctor melting before them like wax, "it's not so bad as it looks. I
+wash--some--because it pays so much better than sewing. I find I'm
+stronger than any one would believe. I'm stronger than I ever was before
+in my life. I am, indeed. I _don't_ wash _much_. And it's only for the
+present. We'll all be laughing at this, some time, together." She began
+a small part of the laugh then and there.
+
+"You'll do it no more," the Doctor replied. He drew out his pocket-book.
+"Mr. Richling, will you please send me through the mail, or bring me,
+your note for fifty dollars,--at your leisure, you know,--payable on
+demand?" He rummaged an instant in the pocket-book, and extended his
+hand with a folded bank-note between his thumb and finger. But Richling
+compressed his lips and shook his head, and the two men stood silently
+confronting each other. Mary laid her hand upon her husband's shoulder
+and leaned against him, with her eyes on the Doctor's face.
+
+"Come, Richling,"--the Doctor smiled,--"your friend Ristofalo did not
+treat you in this way."
+
+"I never treated Ristofalo so," replied Richling, with a smile tinged
+with bitterness. It was against himself that he felt bitter; but the
+Doctor took it differently, and Richling, seeing this, hurried to
+correct the impression.
+
+"I mean I lent him no such amount as that."
+
+"It was just one-fiftieth of that," said Mary.
+
+"But you gave liberally, without upbraiding," said the Doctor.
+
+"Oh, no, Doctor! no!" exclaimed she, lifting the hand that lay on her
+husband's near shoulder and reaching it over to the farther one. "Oh! a
+thousand times no! John never meant that. Did you, John?"
+
+"How could I?" said John. "No!" Yet there was confession in his look. He
+had not meant it, but he had felt it.
+
+Dr. Sevier sat down, motioned them into their seats, drew the arm-chair
+close to theirs. Then he spoke. He spoke long, and as he had not spoken
+anywhere but at the bedside scarce ever in his life before. The young
+husband and wife forgot that he had ever said a grating word. A soft
+love-warmth began to fill them through and through. They seemed to
+listen to the gentle voice of an older and wiser brother. A hand of Mary
+sank unconsciously upon a hand of John. They smiled and assented, and
+smiled, and assented, and Mary's eyes brimmed up with tears, and John
+could hardly keep his down. The Doctor made the whole case so plain and
+his propositions so irresistibly logical that the pair looked from his
+eyes to each other's and laughed. "Cozumel!" They did not utter the
+name; they only thought of it both at one moment. It never passed their
+lips again. Their visitor brought them to an arrangement. The fifty
+dollars were to be placed to John's credit on the books kept by
+Narcisse, as a deposit from Richling, and to be drawn against by him in
+such littles as necessity might demand. It was to be "secured"--they all
+three smiled at that word--by Richling's note payable on demand. The
+Doctor left a prescription for the refractory chills.
+
+As he crossed Canal street, walking in slow meditation homeward at the
+hour of dusk, a tall man standing against a wall, tin cup in hand,--a
+full-fledged mendicant of the steam-boiler explosion, tin-proclamation
+type,--asked his alms. He passed by, but faltered, stopped, let his hand
+down into his pocket, and looked around to see if his pernicious example
+was observed. None saw him. He felt--he saw himself--a drivelling
+sentimentalist. But weak, and dazed, sore wounded of the archers, he
+turned and dropped a dime into the beggar's cup.
+
+Richling was too restless with the joy of relief to sit or stand. He
+trumped up an errand around the corner, and hardly got back before he
+contrived another. He went out to the bakery for some crackers--fresh
+baked--for Mary; listened to a long story across the baker's counter,
+and when he got back to his door found he had left the crackers at the
+bakery. He went back for them and returned, the blood about his heart
+still running and leaping and praising God.
+
+"The sun at midnight!" he exclaimed, knitting Mary's hands in his.
+"You're very tired. Go to bed. Me? I can't yet. I'm too restless."
+
+He spent more than an hour chatting with Mrs. Riley, and had never found
+her so "nice" a person before; so easy comes human fellowship when we
+have had a stroke of fortune. When he went again to his room there was
+Mary kneeling by the bedside, with her head slipped under the snowy
+mosquito net, all in fine linen, white as the moonlight, frilled and
+broidered, a remnant of her wedding glory gleaming through the long,
+heavy wefts of her unbound hair.
+
+"Why, Mary"--
+
+There was no answer.
+
+"Mary?" he said again, laying his hand upon her head.
+
+The head was slowly lifted. She smiled an infant's smile, and dropped
+her cheek again upon the bedside. She had fallen asleep at the foot of
+the Throne.
+
+At that same hour, in an upper chamber of a large, distant house, there
+knelt another form, with bared, bowed head, but in the garb in which it
+had come in from the street. Praying? This white thing overtaken by
+sleep here was not more silent. Yet--yes, praying. But, all the while,
+the prayer kept running to a little tune, and the words repeating
+themselves again and again; "Oh, don't you remember sweet Alice--with
+hair so brown--so brown--so brown? Sweet Alice, with hair so brown?" And
+God bent his ear and listened.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+BORROWER TURNED LENDER.
+
+
+It was only a day or two later that the Richlings, one afternoon, having
+been out for a sunset walk, were just reaching Mrs. Riley's door-step
+again, when they were aware of a young man approaching from the opposite
+direction with the intention of accosting them. They brought their
+conversation to a murmurous close.
+
+For it was not what a mere acquaintance could have joined them in,
+albeit its subject was the old one of meat and raiment. Their talk had
+been light enough on their starting out, notwithstanding John had earned
+nothing that day. But it had toned down, or, we might say up, to a
+sober, though not a sombre, quality. John had in some way evolved the
+assertion that even the life of the body alone is much more than food
+and clothing and shelter; so much more, that only a divine provision can
+sustain it; so much more, that the fact is, when it fails, it generally
+fails with meat and raiment within easy reach.
+
+Mary devoured his words. His spiritual vision had been a little clouded
+of late, and now, to see it clear-- She closed her eyes for bliss.
+
+"Why, John," she said, "you make it plainer than any preacher I ever
+heard."
+
+This, very naturally, silenced John. And Mary, hoping to start him
+again, said:--
+
+"Heaven provides. And yet I'm sure you're right in seeking our food and
+raiment?" She looked up inquiringly.
+
+"Yes; like the fowls, the provision is made _for_ us through us. The
+mistake is in making those things the _end_ of our search."
+
+"Why, certainly!" exclaimed Mary, softly. She took fresh hold in her
+husband's arm; the young man was drawing near.
+
+"It's Narcisse!" murmured John. The Creole pressed suddenly forward with
+a joyous smile, seized Richling's hand, and, lifting his hat to Mary as
+John presented him, brought his heels together and bowed from the hips.
+
+"I wuz juz coming at yo' 'ouse, Mistoo Itchlin. Yesseh. I wuz juz
+sitting in my 'oom afteh dinneh, envelop' in my _'obe de chambre_, when
+all at once I says to myseff, 'Faw distwaction I will go and see Mistoo
+Itchlin!'"
+
+"Will you walk in?" said the pair.
+
+Mrs. Riley, standing in the door of her parlor, made way by descending
+to the sidewalk. Her calico was white, with a small purple figure, and
+was highly starched and beautifully ironed. Purple ribbons were at her
+waist and throat. As she reached the ground Mary introduced Narcisse.
+She smiled winningly, and when she said, with a courtesy: "Proud to know
+ye, sur," Narcisse was struck with the sweetness of her tone. But she
+swept away with a dramatic tread.
+
+"Will you walk in?" Mary repeated; and Narcisse responded:--
+
+"If you will pummit me yo' attention a few moment'." He bowed again and
+made way for Mary to precede him.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," he continued, going in, "in fact you don't give Misses
+Witchlin my last name with absolute co'ectness."
+
+"Did I not? Why, I hope you'll pardon"--
+
+"Oh, I'm glad of it. I don' feel lak a pusson is my fwen' whilst they
+don't call me Nahcisse." He directed his remark particularly to Mary.
+
+"Indeed?" responded she. "But, at the same time, Mr. Richling would
+have"-- She had turned to John, who sat waiting to catch her eye with
+such intense amusement betrayed in his own that she saved herself
+from laughter and disgrace only by instant silence.
+
+"Yesseh," said Narcisse to Richling, "'tis the tooth."
+
+He cast his eye around upon the prevailing hair-cloth and varnish.
+
+"Misses Witchlin, I muz tell you I like yo' tas'e in that pawlah."
+
+"It's Mrs. Riley's taste," said Mary.
+
+"'Tis a beaucheouz tas'e," insisted the Creole, contemplatively, gazing
+at the Pope's vestments tricked out with blue, scarlet, and gilt
+spangles. "Well, Mistoo Itchlin, since some time I've been stipulating
+me to do myseff that honoh, seh, to come at yo' 'ouse; well, ad the end
+I am yeh. I think you fine yoseff not ve'y well those days. Is that nod
+the case, Mistoo Itchlin?"
+
+"Oh, I'm well enough!" Richling ended with a laugh, somewhat
+explosively. Mary looked at him with forced gravity as he suppressed it.
+He had to draw his nose slowly through his thumb and two fingers before
+he could quite command himself. Mary relieved him by responding:--
+
+"No, Mr. Richling hasn't been well for some time."
+
+Narcisse responded triumphantly:--
+
+"It stwuck me--so soon I pe'ceive you--that you 'ave the ai' of a
+valedictudina'y. Thass a ve'y fawtunate that you ah 'esiding in a
+'ealthsome pawt of the city, in fact."
+
+Both John and Mary laughed and demurred.
+
+"You don't think?" asked the smiling visitor. "Me, I dunno,--I fine one
+thing. If a man don't die fum one thing, yet, still, he'll die fum
+something. I 'ave study that out, Mistoo Itchlin. 'To be, aw to not be,
+thaz the queztion,' in fact. I don't ca'e if you live one place aw if
+you live anotheh place, 'tis all the same,--you've got to pay to live!"
+
+The Richlings laughed again, and would have been glad to laugh more; but
+each, without knowing it of the other, was reflecting with some
+mortification upon the fact that, had they been talking French, Narcisse
+would have bitten his tongue off before any of his laughter should have
+been at their expense.
+
+"Indeed you have got to pay to live," said John, stepping to the window
+and drawing up its painted paper shade. "Yes, and"--
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Mary, with gentle disapprobation. She met her husband's
+eye with a smile of protest. "John," she said, "Mr. ----" she couldn't
+think of the name.
+
+"Nahcisse," said the Creole.
+
+"Will think," she continued, her amusement climbing into her eyes in
+spite of her, "you're in earnest."
+
+"Well, I am, partly. Narcisse knows, as well as we do that there are two
+sides to the question." He resumed his seat. "I reckon"--
+
+"Yes," said Narcisse, "and what you muz look out faw, 'tis to git on the
+soff side."
+
+They all laughed.
+
+"I was going to say," said Richling, "the world takes us as we come,
+'sight-unseen.' Some of us pay expenses, some don't."
+
+"Ah!" rejoined Narcisse, looking up at the whitewashed ceiling,
+"those egspenze'!" He raised his hand and dropped it. "I _fine_ it so
+_diffycul'_ to defeat those egspenze'! In fact, Mistoo Itchlin, such ah
+the state of my financial emba'assment that I do not go out at all. I
+stay in, in fact. I stay at my 'ouse--to light' those egspenze'!"
+
+They were all agreed that expenses could be lightened thus.
+
+"And by making believe you don't want things," said Mary.
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Narcisse, "I nevvah kin do that!" and Richling gave a
+laugh that was not without sympathy. "But I muz tell you, Mistoo
+Itchlin, I am aztonizh at _you_."
+
+An instant apprehension seized John and Mary. They _knew_ their
+ill-concealed amusement would betray them, and now they were to be
+called to account. But no.
+
+"Yesseh," continued Narcisse, "you 'ave the gweatez o'casion to be the
+subjec' of congwatulation, Mistoo Itchlin, to 'ave the poweh to
+_ac_cum'late money in those hawd time' like the pwesen'!"
+
+The Richlings cried out with relief and amused surprise.
+
+"Why, you couldn't make a greater mistake!"
+
+"Mistaken! Hah! W'en I ged that memo'andum f'om Dr. Seveeah to paz that
+fifty dollah at yo' cwedit, it burz f'om me, that egs_clam_ation!
+'Acchilly! 'ow that Mistoo Itchlin deserve the 'espect to save a lill
+quantity of money like that!"
+
+The laughter of John and Mary did not impede his rhapsody, nor their
+protestations shake his convictions.
+
+"Why," said Richling, lolling back, "the Doctor has simply omitted to
+have you make the entry of"--
+
+But he had no right to interfere with the Doctor's accounts. However,
+Narcisse was not listening.
+
+"You' compel' to be witch some day, Mistoo Itchlin, ad that wate of
+p'ogwess; I am convince of that. I can deteg that indis_pu_tably in yo'
+physio'nomie. Me--I _can't_ save a cent! Mistoo Itchlin, you would be
+aztonizh to know 'ow bad I want some money, in fact; exceb that I am
+_too_ pwoud to dizclose you that state of my condition!"
+
+He paused and looked from John to Mary, and from Mary to John again.
+
+"Why, I'll declare," said Richling, sincerely, dropping forward with his
+chin on his hand, "I'm sorry to hear"--
+
+But Narcisse interrupted.
+
+"Diffyculty with me--I am not willing to baw'."
+
+Mary drew a long breath and glanced at her husband. He changed his
+attitude and, looking upon the floor, said, "Yes, yes." He slowly marked
+the bare floor with the edge of his shoe-sole. "And yet there are times
+when duty actually"--
+
+"I believe you, Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, quickly forestalling
+Mary's attempt to speak. "Ah, Mistoo Itchlin! _if_ I had baw'd money
+ligue the huncle of my hant!" He waved his hand to the ceiling and
+looked up through that obstruction, as it were, to the witnessing sky.
+"But I _hade_ that--to baw'! I tell you 'ow 'tis with me, Mistoo
+Itchlin; I nevvah would consen' to baw' money on'y if I pay a big
+inte'es' on it. An' I'm compel' to tell you one thing, Mistoo Itchlin,
+in fact: I nevvah would leave money with Doctah Seveeah to invez faw
+me--no!"
+
+Richling gave a little start, and cast his eyes an instant toward his
+wife. She spoke.
+
+"We'd rather you wouldn't say that to us, Mister ----" There was a
+commanding smile at one corner of her lips. "You don't know what a
+friend"--
+
+Narcisse had already apologized by two or three gestures to each of his
+hearers.
+
+"Misses Itchlin--Mistoo Itchlin,"--he shook his head and smiled
+skeptically,--"you think you kin admiah Doctah Seveeah mo' than me? 'Tis
+uzeless to attempt. 'With all 'is fault I love 'im still.'"
+
+Richling and his wife both spoke at once.
+
+"But John and I," exclaimed Mary, electrically, "love him, faults and
+all!"
+
+She looked from husband to visitor, and from visitor to husband, and
+laughed and laughed, pushing her small feet back and forth alternately
+and softly clapping her hands. Narcisse felt her in the centre of his
+heart. He laughed. John laughed.
+
+"What I mean, Mistoo Itchlin," resumed Narcisse, preferring to avoid
+Mary's aroused eye,--"what I mean--Doctah Seveeah don't un'stan' that
+kine of business co'ectly. Still, ad the same time, if I was you I know
+I would 'ate faw my money not to be makin' me some inte'es'. I tell you
+what I would do with you, Mistoo Itchlin, in fact: I kin baw' that fifty
+dollah f'om you myseff."
+
+Richling repressed a smile. "Thank you! But I don't care to invest it."
+
+"Pay you ten pe' cent. a month."
+
+"But we can't spare it," said Richling, smiling toward Mary. "We may
+need part of it ourselves."
+
+"I tell you, 'eally, Mistoo Itchlin, I nevveh baw' money; but it juz
+'appen I kin use that juz at the pwesent."
+
+"Why, John," said Mary, "I think you might as well say plainly that the
+money is borrowed money."
+
+"That's what it is," responded Richling, and rose to spread the
+street-door wider open, for the daylight was fading.
+
+"Well, I 'ope you'll egscuse that libbetty," said Narcisse, rising a
+little more tardily, and slower. "I muz baw' fawty dollah--some place.
+Give you good secu'ty--give you my note, Mistoo Itchlin, in fact; muz
+baw fawty--aw thutty-five."
+
+"Why, I'm very sorry," responded Richling, really ashamed that he could
+not hold his face straight. "I hope you understand"--
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, 'tis baw'd money. If you had a necessity faw it you
+would use it. If a fwend 'ave a necessity--'tis anotheh thing--you don't
+feel that libbetty--you ah 'ight--I honoh you"--
+
+"I _don't_ feel the same liberty."
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, with noble generosity, throwing himself
+a half step forward, "if it was yoze you'd baw' it to me in a minnit!"
+He smiled with benign delight. "Well, madame,--I bid you good evening,
+Misses Itchlin. The bes' of fwen's muz pawt, you know." He turned again
+to Richling with a face all beauty and a form all grace. "I was juz
+sitting--mistfully--all at once I says to myseff, 'Faw distwaction
+I'll go an' see Mistoo Itchlin.' I don't _know_ 'ow I juz
+'appen'!-- Well, _au 'evo'_, Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+Richling followed him out upon the door-step. There Narcisse intimated
+that even twenty dollars for a few days would supply a stern want. And
+when Richling was compelled again to refuse, Narcisse solicited his
+company as far as the next corner. There the Creole covered him with
+shame by forcing him to refuse the loan of ten dollars, and then of
+five.
+
+It was a full hour before Richling rejoined his wife. Mrs. Riley had
+stepped off to some neighbor's door with Mike on her arm. Mary was on
+the sidewalk.
+
+"John," she said, in a low voice, and with a long anxious look.
+
+"What?"
+
+"He _didn't_ take the only dollar of your own in the world?"
+
+"Mary, what could I do? It seemed a crime to give, and a crime not to
+give. He cried like a child; said it was all a sham about his dinner and
+his _robe de chambre_. An aunt, two little cousins, an aged uncle at
+home--and not a cent in the house! What could I do? He says he'll return
+it in three days."
+
+"And"--Mary laughed distressfully--"you believed him?" She looked at him
+with an air of tender, painful admiration, half way between a laugh and
+a cry.
+
+"Come, sit down," he said, sinking upon the little wooden buttress at
+one side of the door-step.
+
+Tears sprang into her eyes. She shook her head.
+
+"Let's go inside." And in there she told him sincerely, "No, no, no; she
+didn't think he had done wrong"--when he knew he had.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+WEAR AND TEAR.
+
+
+The arrangement for Dr. Sevier to place the loan of fifty dollars on his
+own books at Richling's credit naturally brought Narcisse into relation
+with it.
+
+It was a case of love at first sight. From the moment the record of
+Richling's "little quantity" slid from the pen to the page, Narcisse had
+felt himself betrothed to it by destiny, and hourly supplicated the
+awful fates to frown not upon the amorous hopes of him unaugmented.
+Richling descended upon him once or twice and tore away from his embrace
+small fractions of the coveted treasure, choosing, through a diffidence
+which he mistook for a sort of virtue, the time of day when he would not
+see Dr. Sevier; and at the third visitation took the entire golden
+fleece away with him rather than encounter again the always more or less
+successful courtship of the scorner of loans.
+
+A faithful suitor, however, was not thus easily shaken off. Narcisse
+became a frequent visitor at the Richlings', where he never mentioned
+money; that part was left to moments of accidental meeting with Richling
+in the street, which suddenly began to occur at singularly short
+intervals.
+
+Mary labored honestly and arduously to dislike him--to hold a repellent
+attitude toward him. But he was too much for her. It was easy enough
+when he was absent; but one look at his handsome face, so rife with
+animal innocence, and despite herself she was ready to reward his
+displays of sentiment and erudition with laughter that, mean what it
+might, always pleased and flattered him.
+
+"Can you help liking him?" she would ask John. "I can't, to save my
+life!"
+
+Had the treasure been earnings, Richling said--and believed--he could
+firmly have repelled Narcisse's importunities. But coldly to withhold an
+occasional modest heave-offering of that which was the free bounty of
+another to him was more than he could do.
+
+"But," said Mary, straightening his cravat, "you intend to pay up, and
+he--you don't think I'm uncharitable, do you?"
+
+"I'd rather give my last cent than think you so," replied John.
+"Still,"--laying the matter before her with both open hands,--"if you
+say plainly not to give him another cent I'll do as you say. The money's
+no more mine than yours."
+
+"Well, you can have all my share," said Mary, pleasantly.
+
+So the weeks passed and the hoard dwindled.
+
+"What has it got down to, now?" asked John, frowningly, on more than one
+morning as he was preparing to go out. And Mary, who had been made
+treasurer, could count it at a glance without taking it out of her
+purse.
+
+One evening, when Narcisse called, he found no one at home but Mrs.
+Riley. The infant Mike had been stuffed with rice and milk and laid away
+to slumber. The Richlings would hardly be back in less than an hour.
+
+"I'm so'y," said Narcisse, with a baffled frown, as he sat down and Mrs.
+Riley took her seat opposite. "I came to 'epay 'em some moneys which he
+made me the loan--juz in a fwenly way. And I came to 'epay 'im. The
+sum-total, in fact--I suppose he nevva mentioned you about that, eh?"
+
+"No, sir; but, still, if"--
+
+"No, and so I can't pay it to you. I'm so'y. Because I know he woon like
+it, I know, if he fine that you know he's been bawing money to me. Well,
+Misses Wiley, in fact, thass a _ve'y_ fine gen'leman and lady--that
+Mistoo and Misses Itchlin, in fact?"
+
+"Well, now, Mr. Narcisse, ye'r about right? She's just too good to
+live--and he's not much better--ha! ha!" She checked her jesting mood.
+"Yes, sur, they're very peaceable, quiet people. They're just simply
+ferst tlass."
+
+"'Tis t'ue," rejoined the Creole, fanning himself with his straw hat and
+looking at the Pope. "And they handsome and genial, as the lite'ati say
+on the noozpapeh. Seem like they almoze wedded to each otheh."
+
+"Well, now, sir, that's the trooth!" She threw her open hand down with
+emphasis.
+
+"And isn't that as man and wife should be?"
+
+"Yo' mighty co'ect, Misses Wiley!" Narcisse gave his pretty head a
+little shake from side to side as he spoke.
+
+"Ah! Mr. Narcisse,"--she pointed at herself,--"haven't I been a wife?
+The husband and wife--they'd aht to jist be each other's guairdjian
+angels! Hairt to hairt sur; sperit to sperit. All the rist is nawthing,
+Mister Narcisse." She waved her hands. "Min is different from women,
+sur." She looked about on the ceiling. Her foot noiselessly patted the
+floor.
+
+"Yes," said Narcisse, "and thass the cause that they dwess them dif'ent.
+To show the dif'ence, you know."
+
+"Ah! no. It's not the mortial frame, sur; it's the sperit. The sperit of
+man is not the sperit of woman. The sperit of woman is not the sperit of
+man. Each one needs the other, sur. They needs each other, sur, to
+purify and strinthen and enlairge each other's speritu'l life. Ah, sur!
+Doo not I feel those things, sur?" She touched her heart with one
+backward-pointed finger, "_I_ doo. It isn't good for min to be
+alone--much liss for women. Do not misunderstand me, sur; I speak as a
+widder, sur--and who always will be--ah! yes, I will--ha! ha! ha!" She
+hushed her laugh as if this were going too far, tossed her head, and
+continued smiling.
+
+So they talked on. Narcisse did not stay an hour, but there was
+little of the hour left when he rose to go. They had passed a pleasant
+time. The Creole, it is true, tried and failed to take the helm of
+conversation. Mrs. Riley held it. But she steered well. She was still
+expatiating on the "strinthenin'" spiritual value of the marriage
+relation when she, too, stood up.
+
+"And that's what Mr. and Madam Richlin's a-doin' all the time. And they
+do ut to perfiction, sur--jist to perfiction!"
+
+"I doubt it not, Misses Wiley. Well, Misses Wiley, I bid you _au
+'evoi'_. I dunno if you'll pummit me, but I am compel to tell you,
+Misses Wiley, I nevva yeh anybody in my life with such a educated and
+talented conve'sation like yo'seff. Misses Wiley, at what univussity did
+you gwaduate?"
+
+"Well, reely, Mister--eh"--she fanned herself with broad sweeps of her
+purple bordered palm-leaf--"reely, sur, if I don't furgit the name
+I--I--I'll be switched! Ha! ha! ha!"
+
+Narcisse joined in the laugh.
+
+"Thaz the way, sometime," he said, and then with sudden gravity: "And,
+by-the-by, Misses Wiley, speakin' of Mistoo Itchlin,--if you could baw'
+me two dollahs an' a 'alf juz till tomaw mawnin--till I kin sen' it you
+fum the office-- Because that money I've got faw Mistoo Itchlin is
+in the shape of a check, and anyhow I'm c'owding me a little to pay that
+whole sum-total to Mistoo Itchlin. I kin sen' it you firs' thing my bank
+open tomaw mawnin."
+
+Do you think he didn't get it?
+
+ * * *
+
+"What has it got down to now?" John asked again, a few mornings after
+Narcisse's last visit. Mary told him. He stepped a little way aside,
+averting his face, dropped his forehead into his hand, and returned.
+
+"I don't see--I don't see, Mary--I"--
+
+"Darling," she replied, reaching and capturing both his hands, "who does
+see? The rich _think_ they see; but do they, John? Now, _do_ they?"
+
+The frown did not go quite off his face, but he took her head between
+his hands and kissed her temple.
+
+"You're always trying to lift me," he said.
+
+"Don't you lift me?" she replied, looking up between his hands and
+smiling.
+
+"Do I?"
+
+"You know you do. Don't you remember the day we took that walk, and you
+said that after all it never is we who provide?" She looked at the
+button of his coat, which she twirled in her fingers. "That word lifted
+me."
+
+"But suppose I can't practice the trust I preach?" he said.
+
+"You do trust, though. You have trusted."
+
+"Past tense," said John. He lifted her hands slowly away from him, and
+moved toward the door of their chamber. He could not help looking back
+at the eyes that followed him, and then he could not bear their look.
+"I--I suppose a man mustn't trust too much," he said.
+
+"Can he?" asked Mary, leaning against a table.
+
+"Oh, yes, he can," replied John; but his tone lacked conviction.
+
+"If it's the right kind?"
+
+Her eyes were full of tears.
+
+"I'm afraid mine's not the right kind, then," said John, and passed out
+into and down the street.
+
+But what a mind he took with him--what torture of questions! Was he
+being lifted or pulled down? His tastes,--were they rising or sinking?
+Were little negligences of dress and bearing and in-door attitude
+creeping into his habits? Was he losing his discriminative sense of
+quantity, time, distance? Did he talk of small achievements, small
+gains, and small truths, as though they were great? Had he learned to
+carp at the rich, and to make honesty the excuse for all penury? Had he
+these various poverty-marks? He looked at himself outside and inside,
+and feared to answer. One thing he knew,--that he was having great
+wrestlings.
+
+He turned his thoughts to Ristofalo. This was a common habit with him.
+Not only in thought, but in person, he hovered with a positive
+infatuation about this man of perpetual success.
+
+Lately the Italian had gone out of town, into the country of La
+Fourche, to buy standing crops of oranges. Richling fed his hope on the
+possibilities that might follow Ristofalo's return. His friend would
+want him to superintend the gathering and shipment of those crops--when
+they should be ripe--away yonder in November. Frantic thought! A man and
+his wife could starve to death twenty times before then.
+
+Mrs. Riley's high esteem for John and Mary had risen from the date of
+the Doctor's visit, and the good woman thought it but right somewhat to
+increase the figures of their room-rent to others more in keeping with
+such high gentility. How fast the little hoard melted away!
+
+And the summer continued on,--the long, beautiful, glaring, implacable
+summer; its heat quaking on the low roofs; its fig-trees dropping their
+shrivelled and blackened leaves and writhing their weird, bare branches
+under the scorching sun; the long-drawn, frying note of its cicada
+throbbing through the mid-day heat from the depths of the becalmed oak;
+its universal pall of dust on the myriad red, sleep-heavy blossoms of
+the oleander and the white tulips of the lofty magnolia; its twinkling
+pomegranates hanging their apples of scarlet and gold over the garden
+wall; its little chameleons darting along the hot fence-tops; its
+far-stretching, empty streets; its wide hush of idleness; its solitary
+vultures sailing in the upper blue; its grateful clouds; its hot north
+winds, its cool south winds; its gasping twilight calms; its gorgeous
+nights,--the long, long summer lingered on into September.
+
+One evening, as the sun was sinking below the broad, flat land, its
+burning disk reddened by a low golden haze of suspended dust, Richling
+passed slowly toward his home, coming from a lower part of the town by
+way of the quadroon quarter. He was paying little notice, or none, to
+his whereabouts, wending his way mechanically, in the dejected reverie
+of weary disappointment, and with voiceless inward screamings and
+groanings under the weight of those thoughts which had lately taken up
+their stay in his dismayed mind. But all at once his attention was
+challenged by a strange, offensive odor. He looked up and around, saw
+nothing, turned a corner, and found himself at the intersection of Trémé
+and St. Anne streets, just behind the great central prison of New
+Orleans.
+
+The "Parish Prison" was then only about twenty-five years old; but it
+had made haste to become offensive to every sense and sentiment of
+reasonable man. It had been built in the Spanish style,--a massive,
+dark, grim, huge, four-sided block, the fissure-like windows of its
+cells looking down into the four public streets which ran immediately
+under its walls. Dilapidation had followed hard behind ill-building
+contractors. Down its frowning masonry ran grimy streaks of leakage over
+peeling stucco and mould-covered brick. Weeds bloomed high aloft in the
+broken gutters under the scant and ragged eaves. Here and there the
+pale, debauched face of a prisoner peered shamelessly down through
+shattered glass or rusted grating; and everywhere in the still
+atmosphere floated the stifling smell of the unseen loathsomeness
+within.
+
+Richling paused. As he looked up he noticed a bat dart out from a long
+crevice under the eaves. Two others followed. Then three--a dozen--a
+hundred--a thousand--millions. All along the two sides of the prison in
+view they poured forth in a horrid black torrent,--myriads upon myriads.
+They filled the air. They came and came. Richling stood and gazed; and
+still they streamed out in gibbering waves, until the wonder was that
+anything but a witch's dream could contain them.
+
+The approach of another passer roused him, and he started on. The step
+gained upon him--closed up with him; and at the moment when he expected
+to see the person go by, a hand was laid gently on his shoulder.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, I 'ope you well, seh!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+BROUGHT TO BAY.
+
+
+One may take his choice between the two, but there is no escaping both
+in this life: the creditor--the borrower. Either, but never neither.
+Narcisse caught step with Richling, and they walked side by side.
+
+"How I learned to mawch, I billong with a fiah comp'ny," said the
+Creole. "We mawch eve'y yeah on the fou'th of Mawch." He laughed
+heartily. "Thass a 'ime!--Mawch on the fou'th of Mawch! Thass poetwy, in
+fact, as you may _say_ in a jesting _way_--ha! ha! ha!"
+
+"Yes, and it's truth, besides," responded the drearier man.
+
+"Yes!" exclaimed Narcisse, delighted at the unusual coincidence, "at the
+same time 'tis the tooth! In fact, why should I tell a lie about such a
+thing like _that_? 'Twould be useless. Pe'haps you may 'ave notiz,
+Mistoo Itchlin, thad the noozpapehs opine us fiahmen to be the gau'dians
+of the city."
+
+"Yes," responded Richling. "I think Dr. Sevier calls you the Mamelukes,
+doesn't he? But that's much the same, I suppose."
+
+"Same thing," replied the Creole. "We combad the fiah fiend. You fine
+that building ve'y pitto'esque, Mistoo Itchlin?" He jerked his thumb
+toward the prison, that was still pouring forth its clouds of impish
+wings. "Yes? 'Tis the same with me. But I tell you one thing, Mistoo
+Itchlin, I assu' you, and you will believe me, I would 'atheh be lock'
+_out_side of that building than to be lock' _in_side of the same.
+'Cause--you know why? 'Tis ve'y 'umid in that building. An thass a thing
+w'at I believe, Mistoo Itchlin; I believe w'en a building is v'ey 'umid
+it is not ve'y 'ealthsome. What is yo' opinion consunning that, Mistoo
+Itchlin?"
+
+"My opinion?" said Richling, with a smile. "My opinion is that the
+Parish Prison would not be a good place to raise a family."
+
+Narcisse laughed.
+
+"I thing yo' _o_pinion is co'ect," he said, flatteringly; then growing
+instantly serious, he added, "Yesseh, I think you' about a-'ight, Mistoo
+Itchlin; faw even if 'twas not too 'umid, 'twould be too confining, in
+fact,--speshly faw child'en. I dunno; but thass my opinion. If you ah
+p'oceeding at yo' residence, Mistoo Itchlin, I'll juz _con_tinue my
+p'omenade in yo' society--if not intooding"--
+
+Richling smiled candidly. "Your company's worth all it costs, Narcisse.
+Excuse me; I always forget your last name--and your first is so
+appropriate." It _was_ worth all it cost, though Richling could ill
+afford the purchase. The young Latin's sweet, abysmal ignorance, his
+infantile amiability, his artless ambition, and heathenish innocence
+started the natural gladness of Richling's blood to effervescing anew
+every time they met, and, through the sheer impossibility of confiding
+any of his troubles to the Creole, made him think them smaller and
+lighter than they had just before appeared. The very light of Narcisse's
+countenance and beauty of his form--his smooth, low forehead, his thick,
+abundant locks, his faintly up-tipped nose and expanded nostrils, his
+sweet, weak mouth with its impending smile, his beautiful chin and
+bird's throat, his almond eyes, his full, round arm, and strong
+thigh--had their emphatic value.
+
+So now, Richling, a moment earlier borne down by the dreadful shadow of
+the Parish Prison, left it behind him as he walked and laughed and
+chatted with his borrower. He felt very free with Narcisse, for the
+reason that would have made a wiser person constrained,--lack of respect
+for him.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, you know," said the Creole, "I like you to call me
+Nahcisse. But at the same time my las' name is Savillot." He pronounced
+it Sav-_veel_-yo. "Thass a somewot Spanish name. That double l got a
+twist in it."
+
+"Oh, call it Papilio!" laughed Richling.
+
+"Papillon!" exclaimed Narcisse, with delight. "The buttehfly! All
+a-'ight; you kin juz style me that! 'Cause thass my natu'e, Mistoo
+Itchlin; I gatheh honey eve'y day fum eve'y opening floweh, as the bahd
+of A-von wemawk."
+
+So they went on.
+
+_Ad infinitum?_ Ah, no! The end was just as plainly in view to both from
+the beginning as it was when, at length, the two stepping across the
+street gutter at the last corner between Richling and home, Narcisse
+laid his open hand in his companion's elbow, and stopped, saying, as
+Richling turned and halted with a sudden frown of unwillingness:--
+
+"I tell you 'ow 'tis with me, Mistoo Itchlin, I've p'oject that manneh
+myseff; in weading a book--w'en I see a beaucheouz idee, I juz take a
+pencil"--he drew one from his pocket--"check! I check it. So w'en I wead
+the same book again, then I take notiz I've check that idee and I look
+to see what I check it faw. 'Ow you like that invention, eh?"
+
+"Very simple," said Richling, with an unpleasant look of expectancy.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," resumed the other, "do you not fine me impooving in my
+p'onouncement of yo' lang-widge? I fine I don't use such bad land-widge
+like biffo. I am shue you muz' 'ave notiz since some time I always soun'
+that awer in yo' name. Mistoo Itchlin, will you 'ave that kin'ness to
+baw me two-an-a-'alf till the lass of that month?"
+
+Richling looked at him a moment in silence, and then broke into a short,
+grim laugh.
+
+"It's all gone. There's no more honey in this flower." He set his jaw as
+he ceased speaking. There was a warm red place on either cheek.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, with sudden, quavering fervor, "you kin
+len' me two dollahs! I gi'e you my honah the moze sacwed of a gen'leman,
+Mistoo Itchlin, I nevvah hass you ag'in so long I live!" He extended a
+pacifying hand. "One moment, Mistoo Itchlin,--one moment,--I implo' you,
+seh! I assu' you, Mistoo Itchlin, I pay you eve'y cent in the worl' on
+the laz of that month? Mistoo Itchlin, I am in indignan' circumstan's.
+Mistoo Itchlin, if you know the distwess--Mistoo Itchlin, if you
+know--'ow bad I 'ate to baw!" The tears stood in his eyes. "It nea'ly
+_kill_ me to b--" Utterance failed him.
+
+"My friend," began Richling.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," exclaimed Narcisse, dashing away the tears and
+striking his hand on his heart, "I _am_ yo' fwend, seh!"
+
+Richling smiled scornfully. "Well, my good friend, if you had ever kept
+a single promise made to me I need not have gone since yesterday without
+a morsel of food."
+
+Narcisse tried to respond.
+
+"Hush!" said Richling, and Narcisse bowed while Richling spoke on. "I
+haven't a cent to buy bread with to carry home. And whose fault is it?
+Is it my fault--or is it yours?"
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, seh"--
+
+"Hush!" cried Richling, again; "if you try to speak before I finish I'll
+thrash you right here in the street!"
+
+Narcisse folded his arms. Richling flushed and flashed with the
+mortifying knowledge that his companion's behavior was better than his
+own.
+
+"If you want to borrow more money of me find me a chance to earn it!" He
+glanced so suddenly at two or three street lads, who were the only
+on-lookers, that they shrank back a step.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," began Narcisse, once more, in a tone of polite dismay,
+"you aztonizh me. I assu' you, Mistoo Itchlin"--
+
+Richling lifted his finger and shook it. "Don't you tell me that, sir! I
+will not be an object of astonishment to you! Not to you, sir! Not to
+you!" He paused, trembling, his anger and his shame rising together.
+
+Narcisse stood for a moment, silent, undaunted, the picture of amazed
+friendship and injured dignity, then raised his hat with the solemnity
+of affronted patience and said:--
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, seein' as 'tis you, a puffic gen'leman, 'oo is not
+goin' to 'efuse that satisfagtion w'at a gen'leman, always a-'eady to
+give a gen'leman,--I bid you--faw the pwesen'--good-evenin', seh!" He
+walked away.
+
+Richling stood in his tracks dumfounded, crushed. His eyes followed the
+receding form of the borrower until it disappeared around a distant
+corner, while the eye of his mind looked in upon himself and beheld,
+with a shame that overwhelmed anger, the folly and the puerility of his
+outburst. The nervous strain of twenty-four hours' fast, without which
+he might not have slipped at all, only sharpened his self-condemnation.
+He turned and walked to his house, and all the misery that had oppressed
+him before he had seen the prison, and all that had come with that
+sight, and all this new shame, sank down upon his heart at once. "I am
+not a man! I am not a whole man!" he suddenly moaned to himself.
+"Something is wanting--oh! what is it?"--he lifted his eyes to the
+sky,--"what is it?"--when in truth, there was little wanting just then
+besides food.
+
+He passed in at the narrow gate and up the slippery alley. Nearly at its
+end was the one window of the room he called home. Just under it--it was
+somewhat above his head--he stopped and listened. A step within was
+moving busily here and there, now fainter and now plainer; and a voice,
+the sweetest on earth to him, was singing to itself in its soft,
+habitual way.
+
+He started round to the door with a firmer tread. It stood open. He
+halted on the threshold. There was a small table in the middle of the
+room, and there was food on it. A petty reward of his wife's labor had
+brought it there.
+
+"Mary," he said, holding her off a little, "don't kiss me yet."
+
+She looked at him with consternation. He sat down, drew her upon his
+lap, and told her, in plain, quiet voice, the whole matter.
+
+"Don't look so, Mary."
+
+"How?" she asked, in a husky voice and with flashing eye.
+
+"Don't breathe so short and set your lips. I never saw you look so,
+Mary, darling!"
+
+She tried to smile, but her eyes filled.
+
+"If you had been with me," said John, musingly, "it wouldn't have
+happened."
+
+"If--if"-- Mary sat up as straight as a dart, the corners of her
+mouth twitching so that she could scarcely shape a word,--"if--if I'd
+been there, I'd have made you _whip_ him!" She flouted her handkerchief
+out of her pocket, buried her face in his neck, and sobbed like a child.
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed the tearful John, holding her away by both shoulders,
+tossing back his hair and laughing as she laughed,--"Oh! you women!
+You're all of a sort! You want us men to carry your hymn-books and your
+iniquities, too!"
+
+She laughed again.
+
+"Well, of course!"
+
+And they rose and drew up to the board.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+THE DOCTOR DINES OUT.
+
+
+On the third day after these incidents, again at the sunset hour, but in
+a very different part of the town, Dr. Sevier sat down, a guest, at
+dinner. There were flowers; there was painted and monogrammed china;
+there was Bohemian glass; there was silver of cunning work with linings
+of gold, and damasked linen, and oak of fantastic carving. There were
+ladies in summer silks and elaborate coiffures; the hostess, small,
+slender, gentle, alert; another, dark, flashing, Roman, tall; another,
+ripe but not drooping, who had been beautiful, now, for thirty years;
+and one or two others. There were jewels; there were sweet odors. And
+there were, also, some good masculine heads: Dr. Sevier's, for instance;
+and the chief guest's,--an iron-gray, with hard lines in the face, and a
+scar on the near cheek,--a colonel of the regular army passing through
+from Florida; and one crown, bald, pink, and shining, encircled by a
+silken fringe of very white hair: it was the banker who lived in St.
+Mary street. His wife was opposite. And there was much high-bred grace.
+There were tall windows thrown wide to make the blaze of gas bearable,
+and two tall mulattoes in the middle distance bringing in and bearing
+out viands too sumptuous for any but a French nomenclature.
+
+It was what you would call a quiet affair; quite out of season, and
+difficult to furnish with even this little handful of guests; but it was
+a proper and necessary attention to the colonel; conversation not too
+dull, nor yet too bright for ease, but passing gracefully from one
+agreeable topic to another without earnestness, a restless virtue, or
+frivolity, which also goes against serenity. Now it touched upon the
+prospects of young A. B. in the demise of his uncle; now upon the
+probable seriousness of C. D. in his attentions to E. F.; now upon G.'s
+amusing mishaps during a late tour in Switzerland, which had--"how
+unfortunately!"--got into the papers. Now it was concerning the
+admirable pulpit manners and easily pardoned vocal defects of a certain
+new rector. Now it turned upon Stephen A. Douglas's last speech; passed
+to the questionable merits of a new-fangled punch; and now, assuming a
+slightly explanatory form from the gentlemen to the ladies, showed why
+there was no need whatever to fear a financial crisis--which came soon
+afterward.
+
+The colonel inquired after an old gentleman whom he had known in earlier
+days in Kentucky.
+
+"It's many a year since I met him," he said. "The proudest man I ever
+saw. I understand he was down here last season."
+
+"He was," replied the host, in a voice of native kindness, and with a
+smile on his high-fed face. "He was; but only for a short time. He went
+back to his estate. That is his world. He's there now."
+
+"It used to be considered one of the finest places in the State," said
+the colonel.
+
+"It is still," rejoined the host. "Doctor, you know him?"
+
+"I think not," said Dr. Sevier; but somehow he recalled the old
+gentleman in button gaiters, who had called on him one evening to
+consult him about his sick wife.
+
+"A good man," said the colonel, looking amused; "and a superb
+gentleman. Is he as great a partisan of the church as he used to be?"
+
+"Greater! Favors an established church of America."
+
+The ladies were much amused. The host's son, a young fellow with
+sprouting side-whiskers, said he thought he could be quite happy with
+one of the finest plantations in Kentucky, and let the church go its own
+gait.
+
+"Humph!" said the father; "I doubt if there's ever a happy breath drawn
+on the place."
+
+"Why, how is that?" asked the colonel, in a cautious tone.
+
+"Hadn't he heard?" The host was surprised, but spoke low. "Hadn't he
+heard about the trouble with their only son? Why, he went abroad and
+never came back!"
+
+Every one listened.
+
+"It's a terrible thing," said the hostess to the ladies nearest her; "no
+one ever dares ask the family what the trouble is,--they have such odd,
+exclusive ideas about their matters being nobody's business. All that
+can be known is that they look upon him as worse than dead and gone
+forever."
+
+"And who will get the estate?" asked the banker.
+
+"The two girls. They're both married."
+
+"They're very much like their father," said the hostess, smiling with
+gentle significance.
+
+"Very much," echoed the host, with less delicacy. "Their mother is one
+of those women who stand in terror of their husband's will. Now, if he
+were to die and leave her with a will of her own she would hardly know
+what to do with it--I mean with her will--or the property either."
+
+The hostess protested softly against so harsh a speech, and the son,
+after one or two failures, got in his remark:--
+
+"Maybe the prodigal would come back and be taken in."
+
+But nobody gave this conjecture much attention. The host was still
+talking of the lady without a will.
+
+"Isn't she an invalid?" Dr. Sevier had asked.
+
+"Yes; the trip down here last season was on her account,--for change of
+scene. Her health is wretched."
+
+"I'm distressed that I didn't call on her," said the hostess; "but they
+went away suddenly. My dear, I wonder if they really did encounter the
+young man here?"
+
+"Pshaw!" said the husband, softly, smiling and shaking his head, and
+turned the conversation.
+
+In time it settled down with something like earnestness for a few
+minutes upon a subject which the rich find it easy to discuss without
+the least risk of undue warmth. It was about the time when one of the
+graciously murmuring mulattoes was replenishing the glasses, that remark
+in some way found utterance to this effect,--that the company present
+could congratulate themselves on living in a community where there was
+no poor class.
+
+"Poverty, of course, we see; but there is no misery, or nearly none,"
+said the ambitious son of the host.
+
+Dr. Sevier differed with him. That was one of the Doctor's blemishes as
+a table guest: he would differ with people.
+
+"There is misery," he said; "maybe not the gaunt squalor and starvation
+of London or Paris or New York; the climate does not tolerate
+that,--stamps it out before it can assume dimensions; but there is at
+least misery of that sort that needs recognition and aid from the
+well-fed."
+
+The lady who had been beautiful so many years had somewhat to say; the
+physician gave attention, and she spoke:--
+
+"If sister Jane were here, she would be perfectly triumphant to hear you
+speak so, Doctor." She turned to the hostess, and continued: "Jane is
+quite an enthusiast, you know; a sort of Dorcas, as husband says,
+modified and readapted. Yes, she is for helping everybody."
+
+"Whether help is good for them or not," said the lady's husband, a very
+straight and wiry man with a garrote collar.
+
+"It's all one," laughed the lady. "Our new rector told her plainly, the
+other day, that she was making a great mistake; that she ought to
+consider whether assistance assists. It was really amusing. Out of the
+pulpit and off his guard, you know, he lisps a little; and he said she
+ought to consider whether 'aththithtanth aththithtth.'"
+
+There was a gay laugh at this, and the lady was called a perfect and
+cruel mimic.
+
+"'Aththithtanth aththithtth!'" said two or three to their neighbors, and
+laughed again.
+
+"What did your sister say to that?" asked the banker, bending forward
+his white, tonsured head, and smiling down the board.
+
+"She said she didn't care; that it kept her own heart tender, anyhow.
+'My dear madam,' said he, 'your heart wants strengthening more than
+softening.' He told her a pound of inner resource was more true help to
+any poor person than a ton of assistance."
+
+The banker commended the rector. The hostess, very sweetly, offered her
+guarantee that Jane took the rebuke in good part.
+
+"She did," replied the time-honored beauty; "she tried to profit by it.
+But husband, here, has offered her a wager of a bonnet against a hat
+that the rector will upset her new schemes. Her idea now is to make work
+for those whom nobody will employ."
+
+"Jane," said the kind-faced host, "really wants to do good for its own
+sake."
+
+"I think she's even a little Romish in her notions," said Jane's wiry
+brother-in-law. "I talked to her as plainly as the rector. I told her,
+'Jane, my dear, all this making of work for the helpless poor is not
+worth one-fiftieth part of the same amount of effort spent in teaching
+and training those same poor to make their labor intrinsically
+marketable.'"
+
+"Yes," said the hostess; "but while we are philosophizing and offering
+advice so wisely, Jane is at work--doing the best she knows how. We
+can't claim the honor even of making her mistakes."
+
+"'Tisn't a question of honors to us, madam," said Dr. Sevier; "it's a
+question of results to the poor."
+
+The brother-in-law had not finished. He turned to the Doctor.
+
+"Poverty, Doctor, is an inner condition"--
+
+"Sometimes," interposed the Doctor.
+
+"Yes, generally," continued the brother-in-law, with some emphasis. "And
+to give help you must, first of all, 'inquire within'--within your
+beneficiary."
+
+"Not always, sir," replied the Doctor; "not if they're sick, for
+instance." The ladies bowed briskly and applauded with their eyes. "And
+not always if they're well," he added. His last words softened off
+almost into soliloquy.
+
+The banker spoke forcibly:--
+
+"Yes, there are two quite distinct kinds of poverty. One is an accident
+of the moment; the other is an inner condition of the individual"--
+
+"Of course it is," said sister Jane's brother-in-law, who felt it a
+little to have been contradicted on the side of kindness by the
+hard-spoken Doctor. "Certainly! it's a deficiency of inner resources
+or character, and what to do with it is no simple question."
+
+"That's what I was about to say," resumed the banker; "at least, when
+the poverty is of that sort. And what discourages kind people is that
+that's the sort we commonly see. It's a relief to meet the other,
+Doctor, just as it's a relief to a physician to encounter a case of
+simple surgery."
+
+"And--and," said the brother-in-law, "what is your rule about plain
+almsgiving to the difficult sort?"
+
+"My rule," replied the banker, "is, don't do it. Debt is slavery, and
+there is an ugly kink in human nature that disposes it to be content
+with slavery. No, sir; gift-making and gift-taking are twins of a bad
+blood." The speaker turned to Dr. Sevier for approval; but, though the
+Doctor could not gainsay the fraction of a point, he was silent. A lady
+near the hostess stirred softly both under and above the board. In her
+private chamber she would have yawned. Yet the banker spoke again:--
+
+"Help the old, I say. You are pretty safe there. Help the sick. But as
+for the young and strong,--now, no man could be any poorer than I was at
+twenty-one,--I say be cautious how you smooth that hard road which is
+the finest discipline the young can possibly get."
+
+"If it isn't _too_ hard," chirped the son of the host.
+
+"Too hard? Well, yes, if it isn't too hard. Still I say, hands off; you
+needn't turn your back, however." Here the speaker again singled out Dr.
+Sevier. "Watch the young man out of one corner of your eye; but make him
+swim!"
+
+"Ah-h!" said the ladies.
+
+"No, no," continued the banker; "I don't say let him drown; but I take
+it, Doctor, that your alms, for instance, are no alms if they put the
+poor fellow into your debt and at your back."
+
+"To whom do you refer?" asked Dr. Sevier. Whereat there was a burst of
+laughter, which was renewed when the banker charged the physician with
+helping so many persons, "on the sly," that he couldn't tell which one
+was alluded to unless the name were given.
+
+"Doctor," said the hostess, seeing it was high time the conversation
+should take a new direction, "they tell me you have closed your house
+and taken rooms at the St. Charles."
+
+"For the summer," said the physician.
+
+As, later, he walked toward that hotel, he went resolving to look up the
+Richlings again without delay. The banker's words rang in his ears like
+an overdose of quinine: "Watch the young man out of one corner of your
+eye. Make him swim. I don't say let him drown."
+
+"Well, I do watch him," thought the Doctor. "I've only lost sight of him
+once in a while." But the thought seemed to find an echo against his
+conscience, and when it floated back it was: "I've only _caught_ sight
+of him once in a while." The banker's words came up again: "Don't put
+the poor fellow into your debt and at your back." "Just what you've
+done," said conscience. "How do you know he isn't drowned?" He would see
+to it.
+
+While he was still on his way to the hotel he fell in with an
+acquaintance, a Judge Somebody or other, lately from Washington City.
+He, also, lodged at the St. Charles. They went together. As they
+approached the majestic porch of the edifice they noticed some confusion
+at the bottom of the stairs that led up to the rotunda; cabmen and boys
+were running to a common point, where, in the midst of a small, compact
+crowd, two or three pairs of arms were being alternately thrown aloft
+and brought down. Presently the mass took a rapid movement up St.
+Charles street.
+
+The judge gave his conjecture: "Some poor devil resisting arrest."
+
+Before he and the Doctor parted for the night they went to the clerk's
+counter.
+
+"No letters for you, Judge; mail failed. Here is a card for you,
+Doctor."
+
+The Doctor received it. It had been furnished, blank, by the clerk to
+its writer.
+
+ [Illustration: JOHN RICHLING.]
+
+At the door of his own room, with one hand on the unturned knob and one
+holding the card, the Doctor stopped and reflected. The card gave no
+indication of urgency. Did it? It was hard to tell. He didn't want to
+look foolish; morning would be time enough; he would go early next
+morning.
+
+But at daybreak he was summoned post-haste to the bedside of a lady who
+had stayed all summer in New Orleans so as not to be out of this good
+doctor's reach at this juncture. She counted him a dear friend, and in
+similar trials had always required close and continual attention. It was
+the same now.
+
+Dr. Sevier scrawled and sent to the Richlings a line, saying that, if
+either of them was sick, he would come at their call. When the messenger
+returned with word from Mrs. Riley that both of them were out, the
+Doctor's mind was much relieved. So a day and a night passed in which he
+did not close his eyes.
+
+The next morning, as he stood in his office, hat in hand, and a finger
+pointing to a prescription on his desk, which he was directing Narcisse
+to give to some one who would call for it, there came a sudden hurried
+pounding of feminine feet on the stairs, a whiff of robes in the
+corridor, and Mary Richling rushed into his presence all tears and
+cries.
+
+"O Doctor!--O Doctor! O God, my husband! my husband! O Doctor, my
+husband is in the Parish Prison!" She sank to the floor.
+
+The Doctor raised her up. Narcisse hurried forward with his hands full
+of restoratives.
+
+"Take away those things," said the Doctor, resentfully. "Here!--Mrs.
+Richling, take Narcisse's arm and go down and get into my carriage. I
+must write a short note, excusing myself from an appointment, and then I
+will join you."
+
+Mary stood alone, turned, and passed out of the office beside the young
+Creole, but without taking his proffered arm. Did she suspect him of
+having something to do with this dreadful affair?
+
+"Missez Witchlin," said he, as soon as they were out in the corridor,
+"I dunno if you goin' to billiv me, but I boun' to tell you that
+nodwithstanning that yo' 'uzban' is displease' with me, an'
+nodwithstanning 'e's in that calaboose, I h'always fine 'im a puffic
+gen'leman--that Mistoo Itchlin,--an' I'll sweah 'e _is_ a gen'leman!"
+
+She lifted her anguished eyes and looked into his beautiful face. Could
+she trust him? His little forehead was as hard as a goat's, but his eyes
+were brimming with tears, and his chin quivered. As they reached the
+head of the stairs he again offered his arm, and she took it, moaning
+softly, as they descended:--
+
+"O John! O John! O my husband, my husband!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+THE TROUGH OF THE SEA.
+
+
+Narcisse, on receiving his scolding from Richling, had gone to his home
+in Casa Calvo street, a much greater sufferer than he had appeared to
+be. While he was confronting his abaser there had been a momentary
+comfort in the contrast between Richling's ill-behavior and his own
+self-control. It had stayed his spirit and turned the edge of Richling's
+sharp denunciations. But, as he moved off the field, he found himself,
+at every step, more deeply wounded than even he had supposed. He began
+to suffocate with chagrin, and hurried his steps in sheer distress. He
+did not experience that dull, vacant acceptance of universal scorn which
+an unresentful coward feels. His pangs were all the more poignant
+because he knew his own courage.
+
+In his home he went so straight up to the withered little old lady, in
+the dingiest of flimsy black, who was his aunt, and kissed her so
+passionately, that she asked at once what was the matter. He recounted
+the facts, shedding tears of mortification. Her feeling, by the time
+he had finished the account, was a more unmixed wrath than his, and,
+harmless as she was, and wrapped up in her dear, pretty nephew as she
+was, she yet demanded to know why such a man shouldn't be called out
+upon the field of honor.
+
+"Ah!" cried Narcisse, shrinkingly. She had touched the core of the
+tumor. One gets a public tongue-lashing from a man concerning money
+borrowed; well, how is one going to challenge him without first handing
+back the borrowed money? It was a scalding thought! The rotten joists
+beneath the bare scrubbed-to-death floor quaked under Narcisse's
+to-and-fro stride.
+
+"--And then, anyhow!"--he stopped and extended both hands, speaking, of
+course, in French,--"anyhow, he is the favored friend of Dr. Sevier. If
+I hurt him--I lose my situation! If he hurts me--I lose my situation!"
+
+He dried his eyes. His aunt saw the insurmountability of the difficulty,
+and they drowned feeling in an affectionate glass of green-orangeade.
+
+"But never mind!" Narcisse set his glass down and drew out his tobacco.
+He laughed spasmodically as he rolled his cigarette. "You shall see. The
+game is not finished yet."
+
+Yet Richling passed the next day and night without assassination, and
+on the second morning afterward, as on the first, went out in quest of
+employment. He and Mary had eaten bread, and it had gone into their life
+without a remainder either in larder or purse. Richling was all aimless.
+
+"I do wish I had the _art_ of finding work," said he. He smiled. "I'll
+get it," he added, breaking their last crust in two. "I have the science
+already. Why, look you, Mary, the quiet, amiable, imperturbable,
+dignified, diurnal, inexorable haunting of men of influence will get you
+whatever you want."
+
+"Well, why don't you do it, dear? Is there any harm in it? I don't see
+any harm in it. Why don't you do that very thing?"
+
+"I'm telling you the truth," answered he, ignoring her question.
+"Nothing else short of overtowering merit will get you what you want
+half so surely."
+
+"Well, why not do it? Why not?" A fresh, glad courage sparkled in the
+wife's eyes.
+
+"Why, Mary," said John, "I never in my life tried so hard to do anything
+else as I've tried to do that! It sounds easy; but try it! You can't
+conceive how hard it is till you try it. I can't _do_ it! I _can't_ do
+it!"
+
+"_I'd_ do it!" cried Mary. Her face shone. "_I'd_ do it! You'd see if I
+didn't! Why, John"--
+
+"All right!" exclaimed he; "you sha'n't talk that way to me for nothing.
+I'll try it again! I'll begin to-day!"
+
+"Good-by," he said. He reached an arm over one of her shoulders and
+around under the other and drew her up on tiptoe. She threw both hers
+about his neck. A long kiss--then a short one.
+
+"John, something tells me we're near the end of our troubles."
+
+John laughed grimly. "Ristofalo was to get back to the city to-day:
+maybe he's going to put us out of our misery. There are two ways for
+troubles to end." He walked away as he spoke. As he passed under the
+window in the alley, its sash was thrown up and Mary leaned out on her
+elbows.
+
+"John!"
+
+"Well?"
+
+They looked into each other's eyes with the quiet pleasure of tried
+lovers, and were silent a moment. She leaned a little farther down, and
+said, softly:--
+
+"You mustn't mind what I said just now."
+
+"Why, what did you say?"
+
+"That if it were I, I'd do it. I know you can do anything I can do, and
+a hundred better things besides."
+
+He lifted his hand to her cheek. "We'll see," he whispered. She drew in,
+and he moved on.
+
+Morning passed. Noon came. From horizon to horizon the sky was one
+unbroken blue. The sun spread its bright, hot rays down upon the town
+and far beyond, ripening the distant, countless fields of the great
+delta, which by and by were to empty their abundance into the city's lap
+for the employment, the nourishing, the clothing of thousands. But in
+the dusty streets, along the ill-kept fences and shadowless walls of the
+quiet districts, and on the glaring façades and heated pavements of the
+commercial quarters, it seemed only as though the slowly retreating
+summer struck with the fury of a wounded Amazon. Richling was soon
+dust-covered and weary. He had gone his round. There were not many men
+whom he could even propose to haunt. He had been to all of them. Dr.
+Sevier was not one. "Not to-day," said Richling.
+
+"It all depends on the way it's done," he said to himself; "it needn't
+degrade a man if it's done the right way." It was only by such
+philosophy he had done it at all. Ristofalo he could have haunted
+without effort; but Ristofalo was not to be found. Richling tramped in
+vain. It may be that all plans were of equal merit just then. The
+summers of New Orleans in those times were, as to commerce, an utter
+torpor, and the autumn reawakening was very tardy. It was still too
+early for the stirrings of general mercantile life. The movement of the
+cotton crop was just beginning to be perceptible; but otherwise almost
+the only sounds were from the hammers of craftsmen making the town
+larger and preparing it for the activities of days to come.
+
+The afternoon wore along. Not a cent yet to carry home! Men began to
+shut their idle shops and go to meet their wives and children about
+their comfortable dinner-tables. The sun dipped low. Hammers and saws
+were dropped into tool-boxes, and painters pulled themselves out of
+their overalls. The mechanic's rank, hot supper began to smoke on its
+bare board; but there was one board that was still altogether bare and
+to which no one hastened. Another day and another chance of life were
+gone.
+
+Some men at a warehouse door, the only opening in the building left
+unclosed, were hurrying in a few bags of shelled corn. Night was
+falling. At an earlier hour Richling had offered the labor of his hands
+at this very door and had been rejected. Now, as they rolled in the last
+truck-load, they began to ask for rest with all the gladness he would
+have felt to be offered toil, singing,--
+
+ "To blow, to blow, some time for to blow."
+
+They swung the great leaves of the door together as they finished their
+chorus, stood grouped outside a moment while the warehouseman turned the
+resounding lock, and then went away. Richling, who had moved on, watched
+them over his shoulder, and as they left turned back. He was about to do
+what he had never done before. He went back to the door where the bags
+of grain had stood. A drunken sailor came swinging along. He stood still
+and let him pass; there must be no witnesses. The sailor turned the next
+corner. Neither up nor down nor across the street, nor at dust-begrimed,
+cobwebbed window, was there any sound or motion. Richling dropped
+quickly on one knee and gathered hastily into his pocket a little pile
+of shelled corn that had leaked from one of the bags.
+
+That was all. No harm to a living soul; no theft; no wrong; but ah! as
+he rose he felt a sudden inward lesion. Something broke. It was like a
+ship, in a dream, noiselessly striking a rock where no rock is. It
+seemed as though the very next thing was to begin going to pieces. He
+walked off in the dark shadow of the warehouse, half lifted from his
+feet by a vague, wide dismay. And yet he felt no greatness of emotion,
+but rather a painful want of it, as if he were here and emotion were
+yonder, down-street, or up-street, or around the corner. The ground
+seemed slipping from under him. He appeared to have all at once melted
+away to nothing. He stopped. He even turned to go back. He felt that if
+he should go and put that corn down where he had found it he should feel
+himself once more a living thing of substance and emotions. Then it
+occurred to him--no, he would keep it, he would take it to Mary; but
+himself--he would not touch it; and so he went home.
+
+Mary parched the corn, ground it fine in the coffee-mill and salted and
+served it close beside the candle. "It's good white corn," she said,
+laughing. "Many a time when I was a child I used to eat this in my
+playhouse and thought it delicious. Didn't you? What! not going to eat?"
+
+Richling had told her how he got the corn. Now he told his sensations.
+"You eat it, Mary," he said at the end; "you needn't feel so about it;
+but if I should eat it I should feel myself a vagabond. It may be
+foolish, but I wouldn't touch it for a hundred dollars." A hundred
+dollars had come to be his synonyme for infinity.
+
+Mary gazed at him a moment tearfully, and rose, with the dish in her
+hand, saying, with a smile, "I'd look pretty, wouldn't I!"
+
+She set it aside, and came and kissed his forehead. By and by she
+asked:--
+
+"And so you saw no work, anywhere?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" he replied, in a tone almost free from dejection. "I saw any
+amount of work--preparations for a big season. I think I certainly
+shall pick up something to-morrow--enough, anyhow, to buy something to
+eat with. If we can only hold out a little longer--just a little--I am
+sure there'll be plenty to do--for everybody." Then he began to show
+distress again. "I could have got work to-day if I had been a carpenter,
+or if I'd been a joiner, or a slater, or a bricklayer, or a plasterer,
+or a painter, or a hod-carrier. Didn't I try that, and was refused?"
+
+"I'm glad of it," said Mary.
+
+"'Show me your hands,' said the man to me. I showed them. 'You won't
+do,' said he."
+
+"I'm glad of it!" said Mary, again.
+
+"No," continued Richling; "or if I'd been a glazier, or a whitewasher,
+or a wood-sawyer, or"--he began to smile in a hard, unpleasant way,--"or
+if I'd been anything but an American gentleman. But I wasn't, and I
+didn't get the work!"
+
+Mary sank into his lap, with her very best smile.
+
+"John, if you hadn't been an American gentleman"--
+
+"We should never have met," said John. "That's true; that's true." They
+looked at each other, rejoicing in mutual ownership.
+
+"But," said John, "I needn't have been the typical American
+gentleman,--completely unfitted for prosperity and totally unequipped
+for adversity."
+
+"That's not your fault," said Mary.
+
+"No, not entirely; but it's your calamity, Mary. O Mary! I little
+thought"--
+
+She put her hand quickly upon his mouth. His eye flashed and he frowned.
+
+"Don't do so!" he exclaimed, putting the hand away; then blushed for
+shame, and kissed her.
+
+They went to bed. Bread would have put them to sleep. But after a long
+time--
+
+"John," said one voice in the darkness, "do you remember what Dr. Sevier
+told us?"
+
+"Yes, he said we had no right to commit suicide by starvation."
+
+"If you don't get work to-morrow, are you going to see him?"
+
+"I am."
+
+In the morning they rose early.
+
+During these hard days Mary was now and then conscious of one feeling
+which she never expressed, and was always a little more ashamed of than
+probably she need have been, but which, stifle it as she would, kept
+recurring in moments of stress. Mrs. Riley--such was the thought--need
+not be quite so blind. It came to her as John once more took his
+good-by, the long kiss and the short one, and went breakfastless away.
+But was Mrs. Riley as blind as she seemed? She had vision enough to
+observe that the Richlings had bought no bread the day before, though
+she did overlook the fact that emptiness would set them astir before
+their usual hour of rising. She knocked at Mary's inner door. As it
+opened a quick glance showed the little table that occupied the centre
+of the room standing clean and idle.
+
+"Why, Mrs. Riley!" cried Mary; for on one of Mrs. Riley's large hands
+there rested a blue-edged soup-plate, heaping full of the food that goes
+nearest to the Creole heart--_jambolaya_. There it was, steaming and
+smelling,--a delicious confusion of rice and red pepper, chicken legs,
+ham, and tomatoes. Mike, on her opposite arm, was struggling to lave his
+socks in it.
+
+"Ah!" said Mrs. Riley, with a disappointed lift of the head, "ye're
+after eating breakfast already! And the plates all tleared off. Well, ye
+air smairt! I knowed Mr. Richlin's taste for jumbalie"--
+
+Mary smote her hands together. "And he's just this instant gone! John!
+John! Why, he's hardly"-- She vanished through the door, glided down
+the alley, leaned out the gate, looking this way and that, tripped
+down to this corner and looked--"Oh! oh!"--no John there--back and up to
+the other corner--"Oh! which way did John go?" There was none to answer.
+
+Hours passed; the shadows shortened and shrunk under their objects,
+crawled around stealthily behind them as the sun swung through the
+south, and presently began to steal away eastward, long and slender.
+This was the day that Dr. Sevier dined out, as hereinbefore set forth.
+
+The sun set. Carondelet street was deserted. You could hear your own
+footstep on its flags. In St. Charles street the drinking-saloons and
+gamblers' drawing-rooms, and the barber-shops, and the show-cases full
+of shirt-bosoms and walking-canes, were lighted up. The smell of lemons
+and mint grew finer than ever. Wide Canal street, out under the darkling
+crimson sky, was resplendent with countless many-colored lamps. From the
+river the air came softly, cool and sweet. The telescope man set up his
+skyward-pointing cylinder hard by the dark statue of Henry Clay; the
+confectioneries were ablaze and full of beautiful life, and every little
+while a great, empty cotton-dray or two went thundering homeward over
+the stony pavements until the earth shook, and speech for the moment was
+drowned. The St. Charles, such a glittering mass in winter nights, stood
+out high and dark under the summer stars, with no glow except just in
+its midst, in the rotunda; and even the rotunda was well-nigh deserted
+The clerk at his counter saw a young man enter the great door opposite,
+and quietly marked him as he drew near.
+
+Let us not draw the stranger's portrait. If that were a pleasant task
+the clerk would not have watched him. What caught and kept that
+functionary's eye was that, whatever else might be revealed by the
+stranger's aspect,--weariness, sickness, hardship, pain,--the confession
+was written all over him, on his face, on his garb, from his hat's crown
+to his shoe's sole, Penniless! Penniless! Only when he had come quite up
+to the counter the clerk did not see him at all.
+
+"Is Dr. Sevier in?"
+
+"Gone out to dine," said the clerk, looking over the inquirer's head as
+if occupied with all the world's affairs except the subject in hand.
+
+"Do you know when he will be back?"
+
+"Ten o'clock."
+
+The visitor repeated the hour murmurously and looked something dismayed.
+He tarried.
+
+"Hem!--I will leave my card, if you please."
+
+The clerk shoved a little box of cards toward him, from which a pencil
+dangled by a string. The penniless wrote his name and handed it in. Then
+he moved away, went down the tortuous granite stair, and waited in the
+obscurity of the dimly lighted porch below. The card was to meet the
+contingency of the Doctor's coming in by some other entrance. He would
+watch for him here.
+
+By and by--he was very weary--he sat down on the stairs. But a porter,
+with a huge trunk on his back, told him very distinctly that he was in
+the way there, and he rose and stood aside. Soon he looked for another
+resting-place. He must get off of his feet somewhere, if only for a few
+moments. He moved back into the deep gloom of the stair-way shadow, and
+sank down upon the pavement. In a moment he was fast asleep.
+
+He dreamed that he, too, was dining out. Laughter and merry-making were
+on every side. The dishes of steaming viands were grotesque in bulk.
+There were mountains of fruit and torrents of wine. Strange people of no
+identity spoke in senseless vaporings that passed for side-splitting
+wit, and friends whom he had not seen since childhood appeared in
+ludicrously altered forms and announced impossible events. Every one ate
+like a Cossack. One of the party, champing like a boar, pushed him
+angrily, and when he, eating like the rest, would have turned fiercely
+on the aggressor, he awoke.
+
+A man standing over him struck him smartly with his foot.
+
+"Get up out o' this! Get up! get up!"
+
+The sleeper bounded to his feet. The man who had waked him grasped him
+by the lapel of his coat.
+
+"What do you mean?" exclaimed the awakened man, throwing the other off
+violently.
+
+"I'll show you!" replied the other, returning with a rush; but he was
+thrown off again, this time with a blow of the fist.
+
+"You scoundrel!" cried the penniless man, in a rage; "if you touch me
+again I'll kill you!"
+
+They leaped together. The one who had proposed to show what he meant was
+knocked flat upon the stones. The crowd that had run into the porch made
+room for him to fall. A leather helmet rolled from his head, and the
+silver crescent of the police flashed on his breast. The police were not
+uniformed in those days.
+
+But he is up in an instant and his adversary is down--backward, on his
+elbows. Then the penniless man is up again; they close and struggle,
+the night-watchman's club falls across his enemy's head blow upon blow,
+while the sufferer grasps him desperately, with both hands, by the
+throat. They tug, they snuffle, they reel to and fro in the yielding
+crowd; the blows grow fainter, fainter; the grip is terrible; when
+suddenly there is a violent rupture of the crowd, it closes again, and
+then there are two against one, and up sparkling St. Charles street, the
+street of all streets for flagrant, unmolested, well-dressed crime,
+moves a sight so exhilarating that a score of street lads follow behind
+and a dozen trip along in front with frequent backward glances: two
+officers of justice walking in grim silence abreast, and between them
+a limp, torn, hatless, bloody figure, partly walking, partly lifted,
+partly dragged, past the theatres, past the lawyers' rookeries of
+Commercial place, the tenpin alleys, the chop-houses, the bunko shows,
+and shooting-galleries, on, across Poydras street into the dim openness
+beyond, where glimmer the lamps of Lafayette square and the white marble
+of the municipal hall, and just on the farther side of this, with a
+sudden wheel to the right into Hevia street, a few strides there, a turn
+to the left, stumbling across a stone step and wooden sill into a
+narrow, lighted hall, and turning and entering an apartment here again
+at the right. The door is shut; the name is written down; the charge is
+made: Vagrancy, assaulting an officer, resisting arrest. An inner door
+is opened.
+
+"What have you got in number nine?" asks the captain in charge.
+
+"Chuck full," replies the turnkey.
+
+"Well, number seven?" These were the numbers of cells.
+
+"The rats'll eat him up in number seven."
+
+"How about number ten?"
+
+"Two drunk-and-disorderlies, one petty larceny, and one embezzlement and
+breach of trust."
+
+"Put him in there."
+
+ * * *
+
+And this explains what the watchman in Marais street could not
+understand,--why Mary Richling's window shone all night long.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+OUT OF THE FRYING-PAN.
+
+
+Round goes the wheel forever. Another sun rose up, not a moment hurried
+or belated by the myriads of life-and-death issues that cover the earth
+and wait in ecstasies of hope or dread the passage of time. Punctually
+at ten Justice-in-the-rough takes its seat in the Recorder's Court,
+and a moment of silent preparation at the desks follows the loud
+announcement that its session has begun. The perky clerks and smirking
+pettifoggers move apart on tiptoe, those to their respective stations,
+these to their privileged seats facing the high dais. The lounging
+police slip down from their reclining attitudes on the heel-scraped and
+whittled window-sills. The hum of voices among the forlorn humanity that
+half fills the gradually rising, greasy benches behind, allotted to
+witnesses and prisoners' friends, is hushed. In a little square, railed
+space, here at the left, the reporters tip their chairs against the
+hair-greased wall, and sharpen their pencils. A few tardy visitors,
+familiar with the place, tiptoe in through the grimy doors, ducking
+and winking, and softly lifting and placing their chairs, with a
+mock-timorous upward glance toward the long, ungainly personage who,
+under a faded and tattered crimson canopy, fills the august bench of
+magistracy with its high oaken back. On the right, behind a rude wooden
+paling that rises from the floor to the smoke-stained ceiling, are the
+peering, bloated faces of the night's prisoners.
+
+The recorder utters a name. The clerk down in front of him calls it
+aloud. A door in the palings opens, and one of the captives comes
+forth and stands before the rail. The arresting officer mounts to the
+witness-stand and confronts him. The oath is rattled and turned out like
+dice from a box, and the accusing testimony is heard. It may be that
+counsel rises and cross-examines, if there are witnesses for the
+defence. Strange and far-fetched questions, from beginners at the law
+or from old blunderers, provoke now laughter, and now the peremptory
+protestations of the court against the waste of time. Yet, in general,
+a few minutes suffices for the whole trial of a case.
+
+"You are sure she picked the handsaw up by the handle, are you?" says
+the questioner, frowning with the importance of the point.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And that she coughed as she did so?"
+
+"Well, you see, she kind o'"--
+
+"Yes, or no!"
+
+"No."
+
+"That's all." He waves the prisoner down with an air of mighty
+triumph, turns to the recorder, "trusts it is not necessary to,"
+etc., and the accused passes this way or that, according to the fate
+decreed,--discharged, sentenced to fine and imprisonment, or committed
+for trial before the courts of the State.
+
+"Order in court!" There is too much talking. Another comes and stands
+before the rail, and goes his way. Another, and another; now a ragged
+boy, now a half-sobered crone, now a battered ruffian, and now a painted
+girl of the street, and at length one who starts when his name is
+called, as though something had exploded.
+
+"John Richling!"
+
+He came.
+
+"Stand there!"
+
+Some one is in the witness-stand, speaking. The prisoner partly hears,
+but does not see. He stands and holds the rail, with his eyes fixed
+vacantly on the clerk, who bends over his desk under the seat of
+justice, writing. The lawyers notice him. His dress has been laboriously
+genteel, but is torn and soiled. A detective, with small eyes set close
+together, and a nose like a yacht's rudder, whisperingly calls the
+notice of one of these spectators who can see the prisoner's face to the
+fact that, for all its thinness and bruises, it is not a bad one. All
+can see that the man's hair is fine and waving where it is not matted
+with blood.
+
+The testifying officer had moved as if to leave the witness-stand, when
+the recorder restrained him by a gesture, and, leaning forward and
+looking down upon the prisoner, asked:--
+
+"Have you anything to say to this?"
+
+The prisoner lifted his eyes, bowed affirmatively, and spoke in a low,
+timid tone. "May I say a few words to you privately?"
+
+"No."
+
+He dropped his eyes, fumbled with the rail, and, looking up suddenly,
+said in a stronger voice, "I want somebody to go to my wife--in Prieur
+street. She is starving. This is the third day"--
+
+"We're not talking about that," said the recorder. "Have you anything to
+say against this witness's statement?"
+
+The prisoner looked upon the floor and slowly shook his head. "I never
+meant to break the law. I never expected to stand here. It's like an
+awful dream. Yesterday, at this time, I had no more idea of this--I
+didn't think I was so near it. It's like getting caught in machinery."
+He looked up at the recorder again. "I'm so confused"--he frowned and
+drew his hand slowly across his brow--"I can hardly--put my words
+together. I was hunting for work. There is no man in this city who
+wants to earn an honest living more than I do."
+
+"What's your trade?"
+
+"I have none."
+
+"I supposed not. But you profess to have some occupation, I dare say.
+What's your occupation?"
+
+"Accountant."
+
+"Hum! you're all accountants. How long have you been out of employment?"
+
+"Six months."
+
+"Why did you go to sleep under those steps?"
+
+"I didn't intend to go to sleep. I was waiting for a friend to come in
+who boards at the St. Charles."
+
+A sudden laugh ran through the room. "Silence in court!" cried a deputy.
+
+"Who is your friend?" asked the recorder.
+
+The prisoner was silent.
+
+"What is your friend's name?"
+
+Still the prisoner did not reply. One of the group of pettifoggers
+sitting behind him leaned forward, touched him on the shoulder, and
+murmured: "You'd better tell his name. It won't hurt him, and it may
+help you." The prisoner looked back at the man and shook his head.
+
+"Did you strike this officer?" asked the recorder, touching the witness,
+who was resting on both elbows in the light arm-chair on the right.
+
+The prisoner made a low response.
+
+"I don't hear you," said the recorder.
+
+"I struck him," replied the prisoner; "I knocked him down." The court
+officers below the dais smiled. "I woke and found him spurning me with
+his foot, and I resented it. I never expected to be a law-breaker.
+I"-- He pressed his temples between his hands and was silent. The
+men of the law at his back exchanged glances of approval. The case was,
+to some extent, interesting.
+
+"May it please the court," said the man who had before addressed the
+prisoner over his shoulder, stepping out on the right and speaking very
+softly and graciously, "I ask that this man be discharged. His fault
+seems so much more to be accident than intention, and his suffering so
+much more than his fault"--
+
+The recorder interrupted by a wave of the hand and a preconceived smile:
+"Why, according to the evidence, the prisoner was noisy and troublesome
+in his cell all night."
+
+"O sir," exclaimed the prisoner, "I was thrown in with thieves and
+drunkards! It was unbearable in that hole. We were right on the damp
+and slimy bricks. The smell was dreadful. A woman in the cell opposite
+screamed the whole night. One of the men in the cell tried to take my
+coat from me, and I beat him!"
+
+"It seems to me, your honor," said the volunteer advocate, "the prisoner
+is still more sinned against than sinning. This is evidently his first
+offence, and"--
+
+"Do you know even that?" asked the recorder.
+
+"I do not believe his name can be found on any criminal record. I"--
+
+The recorder interrupted once more. He leaned toward the prisoner.
+
+"Did you ever go by any other name?"
+
+The prisoner was dumb.
+
+"Isn't John Richling the only name you have ever gone by?" said his new
+friend: but the prisoner silently blushed to the roots of his hair and
+remained motionless.
+
+"I think I shall have to send you to prison," said the recorder,
+preparing to write. A low groan was the prisoner's only response.
+
+"May it please your honor," began the lawyer, taking a step forward; but
+the recorder waved his pen impatiently.
+
+"Why, the more is said the worse his case gets; he's guilty of the
+offence charged, by his own confession."
+
+"I am guilty and not guilty," said the prisoner slowly. "I never
+intended to be a criminal. I intended to be a good and useful member of
+society; but I've somehow got under its wheels. I've missed the whole
+secret of living." He dropped his face into his hands. "O Mary, Mary!
+why are you my wife?" He beckoned to his counsel. "Come here; come
+here." His manner was wild and nervous. "I want you--I want you to go
+to Prieur street, to my wife. You know--you know the place, don't you?
+Prieur street. Ask for Mrs. Riley"--
+
+"Richling," said the lawyer.
+
+"No, no! you ask for Mrs. Riley? Ask her--ask her--oh! where are my
+senses gone? Ask"--
+
+"May it please the court," said the lawyer, turning once more to the
+magistrate and drawing a limp handkerchief from the skirt of his dingy
+alpaca, with a reviving confidence, "I ask that the accused be
+discharged; he's evidently insane."
+
+The prisoner looked rapidly from counsel to magistrate, and back again,
+saying, in a low voice, "Oh, no! not that! Oh, no! not that! not that!"
+
+The recorder dropped his eyes upon a paper on the desk before him, and,
+beginning to write, said without looking up:--
+
+"Parish Prison--to be examined for insanity."
+
+A cry of remonstrance broke so sharply from the prisoner that even the
+reporters in their corner checked their energetic streams of lead-pencil
+rhetoric and looked up.
+
+"You cannot do that!" he exclaimed. "I am not insane! I'm not even
+confused now! It was only for a minute! I'm not even confused!"
+
+An officer of the court laid his hand quickly and sternly upon his arm;
+but the recorder leaned forward and motioned him off. The prisoner
+darted a single flash of anger at the officer, and then met the eye of
+the justice.
+
+"If I am a vagrant commit me for vagrancy! I expect no mercy here! I
+expect no justice! You punish me first, and try me afterward, and now
+you can punish me again; but you can't do that!"
+
+"Order in court! Sit down in those benches!" cried the deputies. The
+lawyers nodded darkly or blandly, each to each. The one who had
+volunteered his counsel wiped his bald Gothic brow. On the recorder's
+lips an austere satire played as he said to the panting prisoner:--
+
+"You are showing not only your sanity, but your contempt of court also."
+
+The prisoner's eyes shot back a fierce light as he retorted:--
+
+"I have no object in concealing either."
+
+The recorder answered with a quick, angry look; but, instantly
+restraining himself, dropped his glance upon his desk as before, began
+again to write, and said, with his eyes following his pen:--
+
+"Parish Prison, for thirty days."
+
+The officer grasped the prisoner again and pointed him to the door in
+the palings whence he had come, and whither he now returned, without a
+word or note of distress.
+
+Half an hour later the dark omnibus without windows, that went by the
+facetious name of the "Black Maria" received the convicted ones from the
+same street door by which they had been brought in out of the world the
+night before. The waifs and vagabonds of the town gleefully formed a
+line across the sidewalk from the station-house to the van, and counted
+with zest the abundant number of passengers that were ushered into it
+one by one. Heigh ho! In they went: all ages and sorts; both sexes;
+tried and untried, drunk and sober, new faces and old acquaintances; a
+man who had been counterfeiting, his wife who had been helping him, and
+their little girl of twelve, who had done nothing. Ho, ho! Bridget Fury!
+Ha, ha! Howling Lou! In they go: the passive, the violent, all kinds;
+filling the two benches against the sides, and then the standing room;
+crowding and packing, until the officer can shut the door only by
+throwing his weight against it.
+
+"Officer," said one, whose volunteer counsel had persuaded the reporters
+not to mention him by name in their thrilling account,--"officer," said
+this one, trying to pause an instant before the door of the vehicle, "is
+there no other possible way to"--
+
+"Get in! get in!"
+
+Two hands spread against his back did the rest; the door clapped to like
+the lid of a bursting trunk, the padlock rattled: away they went!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+"OH, WHERE IS MY LOVE?"
+
+
+At the prison the scene is repeated in reverse, and the Black Maria
+presently rumbles away empty. In that building, whose exterior Narcisse
+found so picturesque, the vagrant at length finds food. In that question
+of food, by the way, another question arose, not as to any degree of
+criminality past or present, nor as to age, or sex, or race, or station;
+but as to the having or lacking fifty cents. "Four bits" a day was the
+open sesame to a department where one could have bedstead and ragged
+bedding and dirty mosquito-bar, a cell whose window looked down into the
+front street, food in variety, and a seat at table with the officers of
+the prison. But those who could not pay were conducted past all these
+delights, along one of several dark galleries, the turnkeys of which
+were themselves convicts, who, by a process of reasoning best understood
+among the harvesters of perquisites, were assumed to be undergoing
+sentence.
+
+The vagrant stood at length before a grated iron gate while its bolts
+were thrown back and it growled on its hinges. What he saw within needs
+no minute description; it may be seen there still, any day: a large,
+flagged court, surrounded on three sides by two stories of cells with
+heavy, black, square doors all a-row and mostly open; about a hundred
+men sitting, lying, or lounging about in scanty rags,--some gaunt and
+feeble, some burly and alert, some scarred and maimed, some sallow, some
+red, some grizzled, some mere lads, some old and bowed,--the sentenced,
+the untried, men there for the first time, men who were oftener in than
+out,--burglars, smugglers, house-burners, highwaymen, wife-beaters,
+wharf-rats, common "drunks," pickpockets, shop-lifters, stealers of
+bread, garroters, murderers,--in common equality and fraternity. In this
+resting and refreshing place for vice, this caucus for the projection of
+future crime, this ghastly burlesque of justice and the protection of
+society, there was a man who had been convicted of a dreadful murder a
+year or two before, and sentenced to twenty-one years' labor in the
+State penitentiary. He had got his sentence commuted to confinement in
+this prison for twenty-one years of idleness. The captain of the prison
+had made him "captain of the yard." Strength, ferocity, and a terrific
+record were the qualifications for this honorary office.
+
+The gate opened. A howl of welcome came from those within, and the new
+batch, the vagrant among them, entered the yard. He passed, in his turn,
+to a tank of muddy water in this yard, washed away the soil and blood of
+the night, and so to the cell assigned him. He was lying face downward
+on its pavement, when a man with a cudgel ordered him to rise. The
+vagrant sprang to his feet and confronted the captain of the yard, a
+giant in breadth and stature, with no clothing but a ragged undershirt
+and pantaloons.
+
+"Get a bucket and rag and scrub out this cell!"
+
+He flourished his cudgel. The vagrant cast a quick glance at him, and
+answered quietly, but with burning face:--
+
+"I'll die first."
+
+A blow with the cudgel, a cry of rage, a clash together, a push, a
+sledge-hammer fist in the side, another on the head, a fall out into
+the yard, and the vagrant lay senseless on the flags.
+
+When he opened his eyes again, and struggled to his feet, a gentle grasp
+was on his arm. Somebody was steadying him. He turned his eyes. Ah! who
+is this? A short, heavy, close-shaven man, with a woollen jacket thrown
+over one shoulder and its sleeves tied together in a knot under the
+other. He speaks in a low, kind tone:--
+
+"Steady, Mr. Richling!"
+
+Richling supported himself by a hand on the man's arm, gazed in
+bewilderment at the gentle eyes that met his, and with a slow gesture of
+astonishment murmured, "Ristofalo!" and dropped his head.
+
+The Italian had just entered the prison from another station-house. With
+his hand still on Richling's shoulder, and Richling's on his, he caught
+the eye of the captain of the yard, who was striding quietly up and down
+near by, and gave him a nod to indicate that he would soon adjust
+everything to that autocrat's satisfaction. Richling, dazed and
+trembling, kept his eyes still on the ground, while Ristofalo moved with
+him slowly away from the squalid group that gazed after them. They went
+toward the Italian's cell.
+
+"Why are you in prison?" asked the vagrant, feebly.
+
+"Oh, nothin' much--witness in shootin' scrape--talk 'bout aft' while."
+
+"O Ristofalo," groaned Richling, as they entered, "my wife! my wife!
+Send some bread to my wife!"
+
+"Lie down," said the Italian, pressing softly on his shoulders; but
+Richling as quietly resisted.
+
+"She is near here, Ristofalo. You can send with the greatest ease! You
+can do anything, Ristofalo,--if you only choose!"
+
+"Lay down," said the Italian again, and pressed more heavily. The
+vagrant sank limply to the pavement, his companion quickly untying the
+jacket sleeves from under his own arms and wadding the garment under
+Richling's head.
+
+"Do you know what I'm in here for, Ristofalo?" moaned Richling.
+
+"Don't know, don't care. Yo' wife know you here?" Richling shook his
+head on the jacket. The Italian asked her address, and Richling gave it.
+
+"Goin' tell her come and see you," said the Italian. "Now, you lay still
+little while; I be back t'rectly." He went out into the yard again,
+pushing the heavy door after him till it stood only slightly ajar,
+sauntered easily around till he caught sight of the captain of the yard,
+and was presently standing before him in the same immovable way in which
+he had stood before Richling in Tchoupitoulas street, on the day he had
+borrowed the dollar. Those who idly drew around could not hear his
+words, but the "captain's" answers were intentionally audible. He
+shook his head in rejection of a proposal. "No, nobody but the prisoner
+himself should scrub out the cell. No, the Italian should not do it for
+him. The prisoner's refusal and resistance had settled that question.
+No, the knocking down had not balanced accounts at all. There was more
+scrubbing to be done. It was scrubbing day. Others might scrub the yard
+and the galleries, but he should scrub out the tank. And there were
+other things, and worse,--menial services of the lowest kind. He should
+do them when the time came, and the Italian would have to help him too.
+Never mind about the law or the terms of his sentence. Those counted for
+nothing there." Such was the sense of the decrees; the words were such
+as may be guessed or left unguessed. The scrubbing of the cell must
+commence at once. The vagrant must make up his mind to suffer. "He had
+served on jury!" said the man in the undershirt, with a final flourish
+of his stick. "He's got to pay dear for it."
+
+When Ristofalo returned to his cell, its inmate, after many upstartings
+from terrible dreams, that seemed to guard the threshold of slumber, had
+fallen asleep. The Italian touched him gently, but he roused with a wild
+start and stare.
+
+"Ristofalo," he said, and fell a-staring again.
+
+"You had some sleep," said the Italian.
+
+"It's worse than being awake," said Richling. He passed his hands across
+his face. "Has my wife been here?"
+
+"No. Haven't sent yet. Must watch good chance. Git captain yard in
+good-humor first, or else do on sly." The cunning Italian saw that
+anything looking like early extrication would bring new fury upon
+Richling. He knew _all_ the values of time. "Come," he added, "must
+scrub out cell now." He ignored the heat that kindled in Richling's
+eyes, and added, smiling, "You don't do it, I got to do it."
+
+With a little more of the like kindly guile, and some wise and simple
+reasoning, the Italian prevailed. Together, without objection from the
+captain of the yard, with many unavailing protests from Richling, who
+would now do it alone, and with Ristofalo smiling like a Chinaman at the
+obscene ribaldry of the spectators in the yard, they scrubbed the cell.
+Then came the tank. They had to stand in it with the water up to their
+knees, and rub its sides with brickbats. Richling fell down twice in the
+water, to the uproarious delight of the yard; but his companion helped
+him up, and they both agreed it was the sliminess of the tank's bottom
+that was to blame.
+
+"Soon we get through we goin' to buy drink o' whisky from jailer," said
+Ristofalo; "he keep it for sale. Then, after that, kin hire somebody to
+go to your house; captain yard think we gittin' mo' whisky."
+
+"Hire?" said Richling. "I haven't a cent in the world."
+
+"I got a little--few dimes," rejoined the other.
+
+"Then why are you here? Why are you in this part of the prison?"
+
+"Oh, 'fraid to spend it. On'y got few dimes. Broke ag'in."
+
+Richling stopped still with astonishment, brickbat in hand. The Italian
+met his gaze with an illuminated smile. "Yes," he said, "took all I had
+with me to bayou La Fourche. Coming back, slept with some men in boat.
+One git up in night-time and steal everything. Then was a big fight.
+Think that what fight was about--about dividing the money. Don't know
+sure. One man git killed. Rest run into the swamp and prairie. Officer
+arrest me for witness. Couldn't trust me to stay in the city."
+
+"Do you think the one who was killed was the thief?"
+
+"Don't know sure," said the Italian, with the same sweet face, and
+falling to again with his brickbat,--"hope so!"
+
+"Strange place to confine a witness!" said Richling, holding his hand to
+his bruised side and slowly straightening his back.
+
+"Oh, yes, good place," replied the other, scrubbing away; "git him, in
+short time, so he swear to anything."
+
+It was far on in the afternoon before the wary Ristofalo ventured to
+offer all he had in his pocket to a hanger-on of the prison office, to
+go first to Richling's house, and then to an acquaintance of his own,
+with messages looking to the procuring of their release. The messenger
+chose to go first to Ristofalo's friend, and afterward to Mrs. Riley's.
+It was growing dark when he reached the latter place. Mary was out in
+the city somewhere, wandering about, aimless and distracted, in search
+of Richling. The messenger left word with Mrs. Riley. Richling had all
+along hoped that that good friend, doubtless acquainted with the most
+approved methods of finding a missing man, would direct Mary to the
+police station at the earliest practicable hour. But time had shown
+that she had not done so. No, indeed! Mrs. Riley counted herself too
+benevolently shrewd for that. While she had made Mary's suspense of
+the night less frightful than it might have been, by surmises that
+Mr. Richling had found some form of night-work,--watching some pile
+of freight or some unfinished building,--she had come, secretly, to a
+different conviction, predicated on her own married experiences; and if
+Mr. Richling had, in a moment of gloom, tipped the bowl a little too
+high, as her dear lost husband, the best man that ever walked, had often
+done, and had been locked up at night to be let out in the morning, why,
+give him a chance! Let him invent his own little fault-hiding romance
+and come home with it. Mary was frantic. She could not be kept in; but
+Mrs. Riley, by prolonged effort, convinced her it was best not to call
+upon Dr. Sevier until she could be sure some disaster had actually
+occurred, and sent her among the fruiterers and oystermen in vain search
+for Raphael Ristofalo. Thus it was that the Doctor's morning messenger
+to the Richlings, bearing word that if any one were sick he would call
+without delay, was met by Mrs. Riley only, and by the reassuring
+statement that both of them were out. The later messenger, from the two
+men in prison, brought back word of Mary's absence from the house, of
+her physical welfare, and Mrs. Riley's promise that Mary should visit
+the prison at the earliest hour possible. This would not be till the
+next morning.
+
+While Mrs. Riley was sending this message, Mary, a great distance away,
+was emerging from the darkening and silent streets of the river front
+and moving with timid haste across the broad levee toward the edge of
+the water at the steam-boat landing. In this season of depleted streams
+and idle waiting, only an occasional boat lifted its lofty, black,
+double funnels against the sky here and there, leaving wide stretches of
+unoccupied wharf-front between. Mary hurried on, clear out to the great
+wharf's edge, and looked forth upon the broad, softly moving harbor. The
+low waters spread out and away, to and around the opposite point, in
+wide surfaces of glassy purples and wrinkled bronze. Beauty, that joy
+forever, is sometimes a terror. Was the end of her search somewhere
+underneath that fearful glory? She clasped her hands, bent down with
+dry, staring eyes, then turned again and fled homeward. She swerved once
+toward Dr. Sevier's quarters, but soon decided to see first if there
+were any tidings with Mrs. Riley, and so resumed her course. Night
+overtook her in streets where every footstep before or behind her made
+her tremble; but at length she crossed the threshold of Mrs. Riley's
+little parlor. Mrs. Riley was standing in the door, and retreated a step
+or two backward as Mary entered with a look of wild inquiry.
+
+"Not come?" cried the wife.
+
+"Mrs. Richlin'," said the widow, hurriedly, "yer husband's alive and
+found."
+
+Mary seized her frantically by the shoulders, crying with high-pitched
+voice:--
+
+"Where is he?--where is he?"
+
+"Ya can't see um till marning, Mrs. Richlin'."
+
+"Where is he?" cried Mary, louder than before.
+
+"Me dear," said Mrs. Riley, "ye kin easy git him out in the marning."
+
+"Mrs. Riley," said Mary, holding her with her eye, "is my husband in
+prison?--O Lord God! O God! my God!"
+
+Mrs. Riley wept. She clasped the moaning, sobbing wife to her bosom, and
+with streaming eyes said:--
+
+"Mrs. Richlin', me dear, Mrs. Richlin', me dear, what wad I give to have
+my husband this night where your husband is!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+RELEASE.--NARCISSE.
+
+
+As some children were playing in the street before the Parish Prison
+next morning, they suddenly started and scampered toward the prison's
+black entrance. A physician's carriage had driven briskly up to it,
+ground its wheels against the curb-stone, and halted. If any fresh
+crumbs of horror were about to be dropped, the children must be there to
+feast on them. Dr. Sevier stepped out, gave Mary his hand and then his
+arm, and went in with her. A question or two in the prison office, a
+reference to the rolls, and a turnkey led the way through a dark gallery
+lighted with dimly burning gas. The stench was suffocating. They stopped
+at the inner gate.
+
+"Why didn't you bring him to us?" asked the Doctor, scowling resentfully
+at the facetious drawings and legends on the walls, where the dampness
+glistened in the sickly light.
+
+The keeper made a low reply as he shot the bolts.
+
+"What?" quickly asked Mary.
+
+"He's not well," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+The gate swung open. They stepped into the yard and across it. The
+prisoners paused in a game of ball. Others, who were playing cards,
+merely glanced up and went on. The jailer pointed with his bunch of keys
+to a cell before him. Mary glided away from the Doctor and darted in.
+There was a cry and a wail.
+
+The Doctor followed quickly. Ristofalo passed out as he entered.
+Richling lay on a rough gray blanket spread on the pavement with the
+Italian's jacket under his head. Mary had thrown herself down beside him
+upon her knees, and their arms were around each other's neck.
+
+"Let me see, Mrs. Richling," said the physician, touching her on the
+shoulder. She drew back. Richling lifted a hand in welcome. The Doctor
+pressed it.
+
+"Mrs. Richling," he said, as they faced each other, he on one knee, she
+on both. He gave her a few laconic directions for the sick man's better
+comfort. "You must stay here, madam," he said at length; "this man
+Ristofalo will be ample protection for you; and I will go at once and
+get your husband's discharge." He went out.
+
+In the office he asked for a seat at a desk. As he finished using it he
+turned to the keeper and asked, with severe face:--
+
+"What do you do with sick prisoners here, anyway?"
+
+The keeper smiled.
+
+"Why, if they gits right sick, the hospital wagon comes and takes 'em to
+the Charity Hospital."
+
+"Umhum!" replied the Doctor, unpleasantly,--"in the same wagon they use
+for a case of scarlet fever or small-pox, eh?"
+
+The keeper, with a little resentment in his laugh, stated that he would
+be eternally lost if he knew.
+
+"_I_ know," remarked the Doctor. "But when a man is only a little
+sick,--according to your judgment,--like that one in there now, he is
+treated here, eh?"
+
+The keeper swelled with a little official pride. His tone was boastful.
+
+"We has a complete dispenisary in the prison," he said.
+
+"Yes? Who's your druggist?" Dr. Sevier was in his worst inquisitorial
+mood.
+
+"One of the prisoners," said the keeper.
+
+The Doctor looked at him steadily. The man, in the blackness of his
+ignorance, was visibly proud of this bit of economy and convenience.
+
+"How long has he held this position?" asked the physician.
+
+"Oh, a right smart while. He was sentenced for murder, but he's waiting
+for a new trial."
+
+"And he has full charge of all the drugs?" asked the Doctor, with a
+cheerful smile.
+
+"Yes, sir." The keeper was flattered.
+
+"Poisons and all, I suppose, eh?" pursued the Doctor.
+
+"Everything."
+
+The Doctor looked steadily and silently upon the officer, and tore and
+folded and tore again into small bits the prescription he had written. A
+moment later the door of his carriage shut with a smart clap and its
+wheels rattled away. There was a general laugh in the office, heavily
+spiced with maledictions.
+
+"I say, Cap', what d'you reckon he'd 'a' said if he'd 'a' seen the
+women's department?"
+
+ * * *
+
+In those days recorders had the power to release prisoners sentenced by
+them when in their judgment new information justified such action. Yet
+Dr. Sevier had a hard day's work to procure Richling's liberty. The sun
+was declining once more when a hack drove up to Mrs. Riley's door with
+John and Mary in it, and Mrs. Riley was restrained from laughing and
+crying only by the presence of the great Dr. Sevier and a romantic
+Italian stranger by the captivating name of Ristofalo. Richling, with
+repeated avowals of his ability to walk alone, was helped into the house
+between these two illustrious visitors, Mary hurrying in ahead, and Mrs.
+Riley shutting the street door with some resentment of manner toward
+the staring children who gathered without. Was there anything surprising
+in the fact that eminent persons should call at her house?
+
+When there was time for greetings she gave her hand to Dr. Sevier and
+asked him how he found himself. To Ristofalo she bowed majestically. She
+noticed that he was handsome and muscular.
+
+At different hours the next day the same two visitors called. Also the
+second day after. And the third. And frequently afterward.
+
+ * * *
+
+Ristofalo regained his financial feet almost, as one might say, at a
+single hand-spring. He amused Mary and John and Mrs. Riley almost beyond
+limit with his simple story of how he did it.
+
+"Ye'd better hurry and be getting up out o' that sick bed, Mr.
+Richlin'," said the widow, in Ristofalo's absence, "or that I-talian
+rascal'll be making himself entirely too agree'ble to yer lady here. Ha!
+ha! It's _she_ that he's a-comin' here to see."
+
+Mrs. Riley laughed again, and pointed at Mary and tossed her head, not
+knowing that Mary went through it all over again as soon as Mrs. Riley
+was out of the room, to the immense delight of John.
+
+"And now, madam," said Dr. Sevier to Mary, by and by, "let it be
+understood once more that even independence may be carried to a vicious
+extreme, and that"--he turned to Richling, by whose bed he stood--"you
+and your wife will not do it again. You've had a narrow escape. Is it
+understood?"
+
+"We'll try to be moderate," replied the invalid, playfully.
+
+"I don't believe you," said the Doctor.
+
+And his scepticism was wise. He continued to watch them, and at length
+enjoyed the sight of John up and out again with color in his cheeks and
+the old courage--nay, a new and a better courage--in his eyes.
+
+Said the Doctor on his last visit, "Take good care of your husband, my
+child." He held the little wife's hand a moment, and gazed out of Mrs.
+Riley's front door upon the western sky. Then he transferred his gaze to
+John, who stood, with his knee in a chair, just behind her. He looked at
+the convalescent with solemn steadfastness. The husband smiled broadly.
+
+"I know what you mean. I'll try to deserve her."
+
+The Doctor looked again into the west.
+
+"Good-by."
+
+Mary tried playfully to retort, but John restrained her, and when she
+contrived to utter something absurdly complimentary of her husband he
+was her only hearer.
+
+They went back into the house, talking of other matters. Something
+turned the conversation upon Mrs. Riley, and from that subject it seemed
+to pass naturally to Ristofalo. Mary, laughing and talking softly as
+they entered their room, called to John's recollection the Italian's
+account of how he had once bought a tarpaulin hat and a cottonade shirt
+of the pattern called a "jumper," and had worked as a deck-hand in
+loading and unloading steam-boats. It was so amusingly sensible to put
+on the proper badge for the kind of work sought. Richling mused. Many a
+dollar he might have earned the past summer, had he been as ingeniously
+wise, he thought.
+
+"Ristofalo is coming here this evening," said he, taking a seat in the
+alley window.
+
+Mary looked at him with sidelong merriment. The Italian was coming to
+see Mrs. Riley.
+
+"Why, John," whispered Mary, standing beside him, "she's nearly ten
+years older than he is!"
+
+But John quoted the old saying about a man's age being what he feels,
+and a woman's what she looks.
+
+"Why,--but--dear, it is scarcely a fortnight since she declared nothing
+could ever induce"--
+
+"Let her alone," said John, indulgently. "Hasn't she said half-a-dozen
+times that it isn't good for woman to be alone? A widow's a woman--and
+you never disputed it."
+
+"O John," laughed Mary, "for shame! You know I didn't mean that. You
+know I never could mean that."
+
+And when John would have maintained his ground she besought him not to
+jest in that direction, with eyes so ready for tears that he desisted.
+
+"I only meant to be generous to Mrs. Riley," he said.
+
+"I know it," said Mary, caressingly; "you're always on the generous side
+of everything."
+
+She rested her hand fondly on his arm, and he took it into his own.
+
+One evening the pair were out for that sunset walk which their young
+blood so relished, and which often led them, as it did this time, across
+the wide, open commons behind the town, where the unsettled streets were
+turf-grown, and toppling wooden lamp-posts threatened to fall into the
+wide, cattle-trodden ditches.
+
+"Fall is coming," said Mary.
+
+"Let it come!" exclaimed John; "it's hung back long enough."
+
+He looked about with pleasure. On every hand the advancing season was
+giving promise of heightened activity. The dark, plumy foliage of the
+china trees was getting a golden edge. The burnished green of the great
+magnolias was spotted brilliantly with hundreds of bursting cones, red
+with their pendent seeds. Here and there, as the sauntering pair came
+again into the region of brick sidewalks, a falling cone would now and
+then scatter its polished coral over the pavement, to be gathered by
+little girls for necklaces, or bruised under foot, staining the walk
+with its fragrant oil. The ligustrums bent low under the dragging weight
+of their small clustered berries. The oranges were turning. In the wet,
+choked ditches along the interruptions of pavement, where John followed
+Mary on narrow plank footways, bloomed thousands of little unrenowned
+asteroid flowers, blue and yellow, and the small, pink spikes of the
+water pepper. It wasn't the fashionable habit in those days, but Mary
+had John gather big bunches of this pretty floral mob, and filled her
+room with them--not Mrs. Riley's parlor--whoop, no! Weeds? Not if Mrs.
+Riley knew herself.
+
+So ran time apace. The morning skies were gray monotones, and the
+evening gorgeous reds. The birds had finished their summer singing.
+Sometimes the alert chirp of the cardinal suddenly smote the ear from
+some neighboring tree; but he would pass, a flash of crimson, from one
+garden to the next, and with another chirp or two be gone for days. The
+nervy, unmusical waking cry of the mocking-bird was often the first
+daybreak sound. At times a myriad downy seed floated everywhere, now
+softly upward, now gently downward, and the mellow rays of sunset turned
+it into a warm, golden snow-fall. By night a soft glow from distant
+burning prairies showed the hunters were afield; the call of unseen wild
+fowl was heard overhead, and--finer to the waiting poor man's ear than
+all other sounds--came at regular intervals, now from this quarter and
+now from that, the heavy, rushing blast of the cotton compress, telling
+that the flood tide of commerce was setting in.
+
+Narcisse surprised the Richlings one evening with a call. They tried
+very hard to be reserved, but they were too young for that task to be
+easy. The Creole had evidently come with his mind made up to take
+unresentfully and override all the unfriendliness they might choose to
+show. His conversation never ceased, but flitted from subject to subject
+with the swift waywardness of a humming-bird. It was remarked by Mary,
+leaning back in one end of Mrs. Riley's little sofa, that "summer
+dresses were disappearing, but that the girls looked just as sweet in
+their darker colors as they had appeared in midsummer white. Had
+Narcisse noticed? Probably he didn't care for"--
+
+"Ho! I notiz them an' they notiz me! An' thass one thing I 'ave notiz
+about young ladies: they ah juz like those bird'; in summeh lookin'
+cool, in winteh waum. I 'ave notiz that. An' I've notiz anotheh thing
+which make them juz like those bird'. They halways know if a man is
+lookin', an' they halways make like they don't see 'im! I would like to
+'ite an i'ony about that--a lill i'ony--in the he'oic measuh. You like
+that he'oic measuh, Mizzez Witchlin'?"
+
+As he rose to go he rolled a cigarette, and folded the end in with the
+long nail of his little finger.
+
+"Mizzez Witchlin', if you will allow me to light my ciga'ette fum yo'
+lamp--I can't use my sun-glass at night, because the sun is nod theh.
+But, the sun shining, I use it. I 'ave adop' that method since lately."
+
+"You borrow the sun's rays," said Mary, with wicked sweetness.
+
+"Yes; 'tis cheapeh than matches in the longue 'un."
+
+"You have discovered that, I suppose," remarked John.
+
+"Me? The sun-glass? No. I believe Ahchimides invend that, in fact. An'
+yet, out of ten thousan' who use the sun-glass only a few can account
+'ow tis done. 'Ow did you think that that's my invention, Mistoo
+Itchlin? Did you know that I am something of a chimist? I can tu'n
+litmus papeh 'ed by juz dipping it in SO_3HO. Yesseh."
+
+"Yes," said Richling, "that's one thing that I have noticed, that you're
+very fertile in devices."
+
+"Yes," echoed Mary, "I noticed that, the first time you ever came to see
+us. I only wish Mr. Richling was half as much so."
+
+She beamed upon her husband. Narcisse laughed with pure pleasure.
+
+"Well, I am compel' to say you ah co'ect. I am continually makin' some
+discove'ies. 'Necessity's the motheh of inventions.' Now thass anotheh
+thing I 'ave notiz--about that month of Octobeh: it always come befo'
+you think it's comin'. I 'ave notiz that about eve'y month. Now, to-day
+we ah the twennieth Octobeh! Is it not so?" He lighted his cigarette.
+"You ah compel' to co'obo'ate me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+LIGHTING SHIP.
+
+
+Yes, the tide was coming in. The Richlings' bark was still on the sands,
+but every now and then a wave of promise glided under her. She might
+float, now, any day. Meantime, as has no doubt been guessed, she was
+held on an even keel by loans from the Doctor.
+
+"Why you don't advertise in papers?" asked Ristofalo.
+
+"Advertise? Oh, I didn't think it would be of any use. I advertised a
+whole week, last summer."
+
+"You put advertisement in wrong time and keep it out wrong time," said
+the Italian.
+
+"I have a place in prospect, now, without advertising," said Richling,
+with an elated look.
+
+It was just here that a new mistake of Richling's emerged. He had come
+into contact with two or three men of that wretched sort that indulge
+the strange vanity of keeping others waiting upon them by promises of
+employment. He believed them, liked them heartily because they said
+nothing about references, and gratefully distended himself with their
+husks, until Ristofalo opened his eyes by saying, when one of these men
+had disappointed Richling the third time:--
+
+"Business man don't promise but once."
+
+"You lookin' for book-keeper's place?" asked the Italian at another
+time. "Why don't dress like a book-keeper?"
+
+"On borrowed money?" asked Richling, evidently looking upon that
+question as a poser.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Oh, no," said Richling, with a smile of superiority; but the other one
+smiled too, and shook his head.
+
+"Borrow mo', if you don't."
+
+Richling's heart flinched at the word. He had thought he was giving his
+true reason; but he was not. A foolish notion had floated, like a grain
+of dust, into the over-delicate wheels of his thought,--that men would
+employ him the more readily if he looked needy. His hat was unbrushed,
+his shoes unpolished; he had let his beard come out, thin and untrimmed;
+his necktie was faded. He looked battered. When the Italian's gentle
+warning showed him this additional mistake on top of all his others he
+was dismayed at himself; and when he sat down in his room and counted
+the cost of an accountant's uniform, so to speak, the remains of Dr.
+Sevier's last loan to him was too small for it. Thereupon he committed
+one error more,--but it was the last. He sunk his standard, and began
+again to look for service among industries that could offer employment
+only to manual labor. He crossed the river and stirred about among the
+dry-docks and ship-carpenters' yards of the suburb Algiers. But he could
+neither hew spars, nor paint, nor splice ropes. He watched a man half a
+day calking a boat; then he offered himself for the same work, did it
+fairly, and earned half a day's wages. But then the boat was done, and
+there was no other calking at the moment along the whole harbor front,
+except some that was being done on a ship by her own sailors.
+
+"John," said Mary, dropping into her lap the sewing that hardly paid for
+her candle, "isn't it hard to realize that it isn't twelve months since
+your hardships commenced? They _can't_ last much longer, darling."
+
+"I know that," said John. "And I know I'll find a place presently, and
+then we'll wake up to the fact that this was actually less than a year
+of trouble in a lifetime of love."
+
+"Yes," rejoined Mary, "I know your patience will be rewarded."
+
+"But what I want is work now, Mary. The bread of idleness is getting
+_too_ bitter. But never mind; I'm going to work to-morrow;--never mind
+where. It's all right. You'll see."
+
+She smiled, and looked into his eyes again with a confession of
+unreserved trust. The next day he reached the--what shall we say?--big
+end of his last mistake. What it was came out a few mornings after, when
+he called at Number 5 Carondelet street.
+
+"The Doctah is not in pwesently," said Narcisse. "He ve'y hawdly comes
+in so soon as that. He's living home again, once mo', now. He's ve'y
+un'estless. I tole 'im yistiddy, 'Doctah, I know juz 'ow you feel, seh;
+'tis the same way with myseff. You ought to git ma'ied!'"
+
+"Did he say he would?" asked Richling.
+
+"Well, you know, Mistoo Itchlin, so the povvub says, 'Silent give
+consense.' He juz look at me--nevvah said a word--ha! he couldn'! You
+not lookin' ve'y well, Mistoo Itchlin. I suppose 'tis that waum
+weatheh."
+
+"I suppose it is; at least, partly," said Richling, and added nothing
+more, but looked along and across the ceiling, and down at a skeleton in
+a corner, that was offering to shake hands with him. He was at a loss
+how to talk to Narcisse. Both Mary and he had grown a little ashamed of
+their covert sarcasms, and yet to leave them out was bread without
+yeast, meat without salt, as far as their own powers of speech were
+concerned.
+
+"I thought, the other day," he began again, with an effort, "when it
+blew up cool, that the warm weather was over."
+
+"It seem to be finishin' ad the end, I think," responded the Creole. "I
+think, like you, that we 'ave 'ad too waum weatheh. Me, I like that
+weatheh to be cole, me. I halways weigh the mose in cole weatheh. I gain
+flesh, in fact. But so soon 'tis summeh somethin' become of it. I dunno
+if 'tis the fault of my close, but I reduct in summeh. Speakin' of
+close, Mistoo Itchlin,--egscuse me if 'tis a fair question,--w'at was
+yo' objec' in buyin' that tawpaulin hat an' jacket lass week ad that
+sto' on the levee? You din know I saw you, but I juz 'appen to see you,
+in fact." (The color rose in Richling's face, and Narcisse pressed on
+without allowing an answer.) "Well, thass none o' my biziness, of
+co'se, but I think you lookin' ve'y bad, Mistoo Itchlin"-- He stopped
+very short and stepped with dignified alacrity to his desk, for Dr.
+Sevier's step was on the stair.
+
+The Doctor shook hands with Richling and sank into the chair at his
+desk. "Anything turned up yet, Richling?"
+
+"Doctor," began Richling, drawing his chair near and speaking low.
+
+"Good-mawnin', Doctah," said Narcisse, showing himself with a graceful
+flourish.
+
+The Doctor nodded, then turned again to Richling. "You were saying"--
+
+"I 'ope you well, seh," insisted the Creole, and as the Doctor glanced
+toward him impatiently, repeated the sentiment, "'Ope you well, seh."
+
+The Doctor said he was, and turned once more to Richling. Narcisse
+bowed away backward and went to his desk, filled to the eyes with fierce
+satisfaction. He had made himself felt. Richling drew his chair nearer
+and spoke low:--
+
+"If I don't get work within a day or two I shall have to come to you for
+money."
+
+"That's all right, Richling." The Doctor spoke aloud; Richling answered
+low.
+
+"Oh, no, Doctor, it's all wrong! Indeed, I can't do it any more unless
+you will let me earn the money."
+
+"My dear sir, I would most gladly do it; but I have nothing that you
+can do."
+
+"Yes, you have, Doctor."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Why, it's this: you have a slave boy driving your carriage."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Give him some other work, and let me do that."
+
+Dr. Sevier started in his seat. "Richling, I can't do that. I should
+ruin you. If you drive my carriage"--
+
+"Just for a time, Doctor, till I find something else."
+
+"No! no! If you drive my carriage in New Orleans you'll never do
+anything else."
+
+"Why, Doctor, there are men standing in the front ranks to-day, who"--
+
+"Yes, yes," replied the Doctor, impatiently, "I know,--who began with
+menial labor; but--I can't explain it to you, Richling, but you're not
+of the same sort; that's all. I say it without praise or blame; you must
+have work adapted to your abilities."
+
+"My abilities!" softly echoed Richling. Tears sprang to his eyes. He
+held out his open palms,--"Doctor, look there." They were lacerated. He
+started to rise, but the Doctor prevented him.
+
+"Let me go," said Richling, pleadingly, and with averted face. "Let me
+go. I'm sorry I showed them. It was mean and foolish and weak. Let me
+go."
+
+But Dr. Sevier kept a hand on him, and he did not resist. The Doctor
+took one of the hands and examined it. "Why, Richling, you've been
+handling freight!"
+
+"There was nothing else."
+
+"Oh, bah!"
+
+"Let me go," whispered Richling. But the Doctor held him.
+
+"You didn't do this on the steam-boat landing, did you, Richling?"
+
+The young man nodded. The Doctor dropped the hand and looked upon its
+owner with set lips and steady severity. When he spoke he said:--
+
+"Among the negro and green Irish deck-hands, and under the oaths and
+blows of steam-boat mates! Why, Richling!" He turned half away in his
+rotary chair with an air of patience worn out.
+
+"You thought I had more sense," said Richling.
+
+The Doctor put his elbows upon his desk and slowly drew his face upward
+through his hands. "Mr. Richling, what is the matter with you?" They
+gazed at each other a long moment, and then Dr. Sevier continued: "Your
+trouble isn't want of sense. I know that very well, Richling." His voice
+was low and became kind. "But you don't get the use of the sense you
+have. It isn't available." He bent forward: "Some men, Richling, carry
+their folly on the surface and their good sense at the bottom,"--he
+jerked his thumb backward toward the distant Narcisse, and added, with a
+stealthy frown,--"like that little fool in yonder. He's got plenty of
+sense, but he doesn't load any of it on deck. Some men carry their sense
+on top and their folly down below"--
+
+Richling smiled broadly through his dejection, and touched his own
+chest. "Like this big fool here," he said.
+
+"Exactly," said Dr. Sevier. "Now you've developed a defect of the
+memory. Your few merchantable qualities have been so long out of the
+market, and you've suffered such humiliation under the pressure of
+adversity, that you've--you've done a very bad thing."
+
+"Say a dozen," responded Richling, with bitter humor. But the Doctor
+swung his head in resentment of the levity.
+
+"One's enough. You've allowed yourself to forget your true value."
+
+"I'm worth whatever I'll bring."
+
+The Doctor tossed his head in impatient disdain.
+
+"Pshaw! You'll never bring what you're worth any more than some men are
+worth what they bring. You don't know how. You never will know."
+
+"Well, Doctor, I do know that I'm worth more than I ever was before.
+I've learned a thousand things in the last twelvemonth. If I can only
+get a chance to prove it!" Richling turned red and struck his knee with
+his fist.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Dr. Sevier; "that's your sense, on top. And then you
+go--in a fit of the merest impatience, as I do suspect--and offer
+yourself as a deck-hand and as a carriage-driver. That's your folly, at
+the bottom. What ought to be done to such a man?" He gave a low, harsh
+laugh. Richling dropped his eyes. A silence followed.
+
+"You say all you want is a chance," resumed the Doctor.
+
+"Yes," quickly answered Richling, looking up.
+
+"I'm going to give it to you." They looked into each other's eyes. The
+Doctor nodded. "Yes, sir." He nodded again.
+
+"Where did you come from, Richling,--when you came to New Orleans,--you
+and your wife? Milwaukee?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do your relatives know of your present condition?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Is your wife's mother comfortably situated?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then I'll tell you what you must do."
+
+"The only thing I can't do," said Richling.
+
+"Yes, you can. You must. You must send Mrs. Richling back to her
+mother."
+
+Richling shook his head.
+
+"Well," said the Doctor, warmly, "I say you must. I will lend you the
+passage-money."
+
+Richling's eye kindled an instant at the Doctor's compulsory tone, but
+he said, gently:--
+
+"Why, Doctor, Mary will never consent to leave me."
+
+"Of course she will not. But you must make her do it! That's what
+you must do. And when that's done then you must start out and go
+systematically from door to door,--of business houses, I mean,--offering
+yourself for work befitting your station--ahem!--station, I say--and
+qualifications. I will lend you money to live on until you find
+permanent employment. Now, now, don't get alarmed! I'm not going to help
+you any more than I absolutely must!"
+
+"But, Doctor, how can you expect"-- But the Doctor interrupted.
+
+"Come, now, none of that! You and your wife are brave; I must say that
+for you. She has the courage of a gladiator. You can do this if you
+will."
+
+"Doctor," said Richling, "you are the best of friends; but, you know,
+the fact is, Mary and I--well, we're still lovers."
+
+"Oh!" The Doctor turned away his head with fresh impatience. Richling
+bit his lip, but went on:--
+
+"We can bear anything on earth together; but we have sworn to stay
+together through better and worse"--
+
+"Oh, pf-f-f-f!" said the doctor, closing his eyes and swinging his head
+away again.
+
+"--And we're going to do it," concluded Richling.
+
+"But you can't do it!" cried the Doctor, so loudly that Narcisse stood
+up on the rungs of his stool and peered.
+
+"We can't separate."
+
+Dr. Sevier smote the desk and sprang to his feet:--
+
+"Sir, you've got to do it! If you continue in this way, you'll die.
+You'll die, Mr. Richling--both of you! You'll die! Are you going to let
+Mary die just because she's brave enough to do it?" He sat down again
+and busied himself, nervously placing pens on the pen-rack, the stopper
+in the inkstand, and the like.
+
+Many thoughts ran through Richling's mind in the ensuing silence.
+His eyes were on the floor. Visions of parting; of the great
+emptiness that would be left behind; the pangs and yearnings that
+must follow,--crowded one upon another. One torturing realization
+kept ever in the front,--that the Doctor had a well-earned right to
+advise, and that, if his advice was to be rejected, one must show good
+and sufficient cause for rejecting it, both in present resources and
+in expectations. The truth leaped upon him and bore him down as it never
+had done before,--the truth which he had heard this very Dr. Sevier
+proclaim,--that debt is bondage. For a moment he rebelled against it;
+but shame soon displaced mutiny, and he accepted this part, also, of
+his lot. At length he rose.
+
+"Well?" said Dr. Sevier.
+
+"May I ask Mary?"
+
+"You will do what you please, Mr. Richling." And then, in a kinder
+voice, the Doctor added, "Yes; ask her."
+
+They moved together to the office door. The Doctor opened it, and they
+said good-by, Richling trying to drop a word of gratitude, and the
+Doctor hurriedly ignoring it.
+
+The next half hour or more was spent by the physician in receiving,
+hearing, and dismissing patients and their messengers. By and by no
+others came. The only audible sound was that of the Doctor's paper-knife
+as it parted the leaves of a pamphlet. He was thinking over the late
+interview with Richling, and knew that, if this silence were not soon
+interrupted from without, he would have to encounter his book-keeper,
+who had not spoken since Richling had left. Presently the issue came.
+
+"Dr. Seveeah,"--Narcisse came forward, hat in hand,--"I dunno 'ow 'tis,
+but Mistoo Itchlin always wemine me of that povvub, 'Ully to bed, ully
+to 'ise, make a pusson to be 'ealthy an' wealthy an' wise.'"
+
+"I don't know how it is, either," grumbled the Doctor.
+
+"I believe thass not the povvub I was thinking. I am acquainting myseff
+with those povvubs; but I'm somewhat gween in that light, in fact. Well,
+Doctah, I'm goin' ad the--shoemakeh. I burs' my shoe yistiddy. I was
+juz"--
+
+"Very well, go."
+
+"Yesseh; and from the shoemakeh I'll go"--
+
+The Doctor glanced darkly over the top of the pamphlet.
+
+"--Ad the bank; yesseh," said Narcisse, and went.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+AT LAST.
+
+
+Mary, cooking supper, uttered a soft exclamation of pleasure and relief
+as she heard John's step under the alley window and then at the door.
+She turned, with an iron spoon in one hand and a candlestick in the
+other, from the little old stove with two pot-holes, where she had been
+stirring some mess in a tin pan.
+
+"Why, you're"--she reached for a kiss--"real late!"
+
+"I could not come any sooner." He dropped into a chair at the table.
+
+"Busy?"
+
+"No; no work to-day."
+
+Mary lifted the pan from the stove, whisked it to the table, and blew
+her fingers.
+
+"Same subject continued," she said laughingly, pointing with her spoon
+to the warmed-over food.
+
+Richling smiled and nodded, and then flattened his elbows out on the
+table and hid his face in them.
+
+This was the first time he had ever lingered away from his wife when he
+need not have done so. It was the Doctor's proposition that had kept him
+back. All day long it had filled his thoughts. He felt its wisdom. Its
+sheer practical value had pierced remorselessly into the deepest
+convictions of his mind. But his heart could not receive it.
+
+"Well," said Mary, brightly, as she sat down at the table, "maybe
+you'll have better luck to-morrow. Don't you think you may?"
+
+"I don't know," said John, straightening up and tossing back his hair.
+He pushed a plate up to the pan, supplied and passed it. Then he helped
+himself and fell to eating.
+
+"Have you seen Dr. Sevier to-day?" asked Mary, cautiously, seeing her
+husband pause and fall into distraction.
+
+He pushed his plate away and rose. She met him in the middle of the
+room. He extended both hands, took hers, and gazed upon her. How could
+he tell? Would she cry and lament, and spurn the proposition, and fall
+upon him with a hundred kisses? Ah, if she would! But he saw that Doctor
+Sevier, at least, was confident she would not; that she would have,
+instead, what the wife so often has in such cases, the strongest love,
+it may be, but also the strongest wisdom for that particular sort of
+issue. Which would she do? Would she go, or would she not?
+
+He tried to withdraw his hands, but she looked beseechingly into his
+eyes and knit her fingers into his. The question stuck upon his lips and
+would not be uttered. And why should it be? Was it not cowardice to
+leave the decision to her? Should not he decide? Oh! if she would only
+rebel! But would she? Would not her utmost be to give good reasons in
+her gentle, inquiring way why he should not require her to leave him?
+And were there any such? No! no! He had racked his brain to find so much
+as one, all day long.
+
+"John," said Mary, "Dr. Sevier's been talking to you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And he wants you to send me back home for a while?"
+
+"How do you know?" asked John, with a start.
+
+"I can read it in your face." She loosed one hand and laid it upon his
+brow.
+
+"What--what do you think about it, Mary?"
+
+Mary, looking into his eyes with the face of one who pleads for mercy,
+whispered, "He's right," then buried her face in his bosom and wept like
+a babe.
+
+"I felt it six months ago," she said later, sitting on her husband's
+knee and holding his folded hands tightly in hers.
+
+"Why didn't you say so?" asked John.
+
+"I was too selfish," was her reply.
+
+When, on the second day afterward, they entered the Doctor's office
+Richling was bright with that new hope which always rises up beside a
+new experiment, and Mary looked well and happy. The Doctor wrote them a
+letter of introduction to the steam-boat agent.
+
+"You're taking a very sensible course," he said, smoothing the
+blotting-paper heavily over the letter. "Of course, you think it's hard.
+It is hard. But distance needn't separate you."
+
+"It can't," said Richling.
+
+"Time," continued the Doctor,--"maybe a few months,--will bring you
+together again, prepared for a long life of secure union; and then, when
+you look back upon this, you'll be proud of your courage and good sense.
+And you'll be"-- He enclosed the note, directed the envelope, and,
+pausing with it still in his hand, turned toward the pair. They rose up.
+His rare, sick-room smile hovered about his mouth, and he said:--
+
+"You'll be all the happier--all three of you."
+
+The husband smiled. Mary colored down to the throat and looked up on the
+wall, where Harvey was explaining to his king the circulation of the
+blood. There was quite a pause, neither side caring to utter the first
+adieu.
+
+"If a physician could call any hour his own," presently said the Doctor,
+"I should say I would come down to the boat and see you off. But I might
+fail in that. Good-by!"
+
+"Good-by, Doctor!"--a little tremor in the voice,--"take care of John."
+
+The tall man looked down into the upturned blue eyes.
+
+"Good-by!" He stooped toward her forehead, but she lifted her lips and
+he kissed them. So they parted.
+
+The farewell with Mrs. Riley was mainly characterized by a generous and
+sincere exchange of compliments and promises of remembrance. Some tears
+rose up; a few ran over.
+
+At the steam-boat wharf there were only the pair themselves to cling one
+moment to each other and then wave that mute farewell that looks through
+watery eyes and sticks in the choking throat. Who ever knows what
+good-by means?
+
+ * * *
+
+"Doctor," said Richling, when he came to accept those terms in the
+Doctor's proposition which applied more exclusively to himself,--"no,
+Doctor, not that way, please." He put aside the money proffered him.
+"This is what I want to do: I will come to your house every morning and
+get enough to eat to sustain me through the day, and will continue to do
+so till I find work."
+
+"Very well," said the Doctor.
+
+The arrangement went into effect. They never met at dinner; but almost
+every morning the Doctor, going into the breakfast-room, met Richling
+just risen from his earlier and hastier meal.
+
+"Well? Anything yet?"
+
+"Nothing yet."
+
+And, unless there was some word from Mary, nothing more would be said.
+So went the month of November.
+
+But at length, one day toward the close of the Doctor's office hours, he
+noticed the sound of an agile foot springing up his stairs three steps
+at a stride, and Richling entered, panting and radiant.
+
+"Doctor, at last! At last!"
+
+"At last, what?"
+
+"I've found employment! I have, indeed! One line from you, and the place
+is mine! A good place, Doctor, and one that I can fill. The very thing
+for me! Adapted to my abilities!" He laughed so that he coughed, was
+still, and laughed again. "Just a line, if you please, Doctor."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+A RISING STAR.
+
+
+It had been many a day since Dr. Sevier had felt such pleasure as
+thrilled him when Richling, half beside himself with delight, ran in
+upon him with the news that he had found employment. Narcisse, too, was
+glad. He slipped down from his stool and came near enough to contribute
+his congratulatory smiles, though he did not venture to speak. Richling
+nodded him a happy how-d'ye-do, and the Creole replied by a wave of the
+hand.
+
+In the Doctor's manner, on the other hand, there was a decided lack of
+response that made Richling check his spirits and resume more slowly,--
+
+"Do you know a man named Reisen?"
+
+"No," said the Doctor.
+
+"Why, he says he knows you."
+
+"That may be."
+
+"He says you treated his wife one night when she was very ill"--
+
+"What name?"
+
+"Reisen."
+
+The Doctor reflected a moment.
+
+"I believe I recollect him. Is he away up on Benjamin street, close to
+the river, among the cotton-presses?"
+
+"Yes. Thalia street they call it now. He says"--
+
+"Does he keep a large bakery?" interrupted the Doctor.
+
+"The 'Star Bakery,'" said Richling, brightening again. "He says
+he knows you, and that, if you will give me just one line of
+recommendation, he will put me in charge of his accounts and give me a
+trial. And a trial's all I want, Doctor. I'm not the least fearful of
+the result."
+
+"Richling," said Dr. Sevier, slowly picking up his paper-folder and
+shaking it argumentatively, "where are the letters I advised you to send
+for?"
+
+Richling sat perfectly still, taking a long, slow breath through his
+nostrils, his eyes fixed emptily on his questioner. He was thinking,
+away down at the bottom of his heart,--and the Doctor knew it,--that
+this was the unkindest question, and the most cold-blooded, that he had
+ever heard. The Doctor shook his paper-folder again.
+
+"You see, now, as to the bare fact, I don't know you."
+
+Richling's jaw dropped with astonishment. His eye lighted up
+resentfully. But the speaker went on:--
+
+"I esteem you highly. I believe in you. I would trust you,
+Richling,"--his listener remembered how the speaker _had_ trusted him,
+and was melted,--"but as to recommending you, why, that is like going
+upon the witness-stand, as it were, and I cannot say that I know
+anything."
+
+Richling's face suddenly flashed full of light. He touched the Doctor's
+hand.
+
+"That's it! That's the very thing, sir! Write that!"
+
+The Doctor hesitated. Richling sat gazing at him, afraid to move an eye
+lest he should lose an advantage. The Doctor turned to his desk and
+wrote.
+
+ * * *
+
+On the next morning Richling did not come for his breakfast; and, not
+many days after, Dr. Sevier received through the mail the following
+letter:--
+
+ NEW ORLEANS, December 2, 1857.
+
+ DEAR DOCTOR,--I've got the place. I'm Reisen's book-keeper. I'm
+ earning my living. And I like the work. Bread, the word bread,
+ that has so long been terrible to me, is now the sweetest word
+ in the language. For eighteen months it was a prayer; now it's
+ a proclamation.
+
+ I've not only got the place, but I'm going to keep it. I find I
+ have new powers; and the first and best of them is the power to
+ throw myself into my work and make it _me_. It's not a task;
+ it's a mission. Its being bread, I suppose, makes it easier to
+ seem so; but it should be so if it was pork and garlic, or rags
+ and raw-hides.
+
+ My maxim a year ago, though I didn't know it then, was to do
+ what I liked. Now it's to like what I do. I understand it now.
+ And I understand now, too, that a man who expects to retain
+ employment must yield a profit. He must be worth more than he
+ costs. I thank God for the discipline of the last year and a
+ half. I thank him that I did not fall where, in my cowardice, I
+ so often prayed to fall, into the hands of foolish benefactors.
+ You wouldn't believe this of me, I know; but it's true. I have
+ been taught what life is; I never would have learned it any
+ other way.
+
+ And still another thing: I have been taught to know what the
+ poor suffer. I know their feelings, their temptations, their
+ hardships, their sad mistakes, and the frightful mistakes and
+ oversights the rich make concerning them, and the ways to give
+ them true and helpful help. And now, if God ever gives me
+ competency, whether he gives me abundance or not, I know what
+ he intends me to do. I was once, in fact and in sentiment, a
+ brother to the rich; but I know that now he has trained me to
+ be a brother to the poor. Don't think I am going to be foolish.
+ I remember that I'm brother to the rich too; but I'll be the
+ other as well. How wisely has God--what am I saying? Poor fools
+ that we humans are! We can hardly venture to praise God's
+ wisdom to-day when we think we see it, lest it turn out to be
+ only our own folly to-morrow.
+
+ But I find I'm only writing to myself, Doctor, not to you; so I
+ stop. Mary is well, and sends you much love.
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+ JOHN RICHLING.
+
+"Very little about Mary," murmured Dr. Sevier. Yet he was rather pleased
+than otherwise with the letter. He thrust it into his breast-pocket. In
+the evening, at his fireside, he drew it out again and re-read it.
+
+"Talks as if he had got into an impregnable castle," thought the Doctor,
+as he gazed into the fire. "Book-keeper to a baker," he muttered, slowly
+folding the sheet again. It somehow vexed him to see Richling so happy
+in so low a station. But--"It's the joy of what he has escaped _from_,
+not _to_," he presently remembered.
+
+A fortnight or more elapsed. A distant relative of Dr. Sevier, a man of
+his own years and profession, was his guest for two nights and a day as
+he passed through the city, eastward, from an all-summer's study of
+fevers in Mexico. They were sitting at evening on opposite sides of the
+library fire, conversing in the leisurely ease of those to whom life is
+not a novelty.
+
+"And so you think of having Laura and Bess come out from Charleston, and
+keep house for you this winter? Their mother wrote me to that effect."
+
+"Yes," said Dr. Sevier. "Society here will be a great delight to them.
+They will shine. And time will be less monotonous for me. It may suit
+me, or it may not."
+
+"I dare say it may," responded the kinsman, whereas in truth he was very
+doubtful about it.
+
+He added something, a moment later, about retiring for the night,
+and his host had just said, "Eh?" when a slave, in a five-year-old
+dress-coat, brought in the card of a person whose name was as well known
+in New Orleans in those days as St. Patrick's steeple or the statue of
+Jackson in the old Place d'Armes. Dr. Sevier turned it over and looked
+for a moment ponderingly upon the domestic.
+
+The relative rose.
+
+"You needn't go," said Dr. Sevier; but he said "he had intended," etc.,
+and went to his chamber.
+
+The visitor entered. He was a dark, slender, iron gray man, of finely
+cut, regular features, and seeming to be much more deeply wrinkled than
+on scrutiny he proved to be. One quickly saw that he was full of
+reposing energy. He gave the feeling of your being very near some
+weapon, of dreadful efficiency, ready for instant use whenever needed.
+His clothing fitted him neatly; his long, gray mustache was the only
+thing that hung loosely about him; his boots were fine. If he had told a
+child that all his muscles and sinews were wrapped with fine steel wire
+the child would have believed him, and continued to sit on his knee all
+the same. It is said, by those who still survive him, that in dreadful
+places and moments the flash of his fist was as quick, as irresistible,
+and as all-sufficient, as lightning, yet that years would sometimes pass
+without its ever being lifted.
+
+Dr. Sevier lifted his slender length out of his easy-chair, and bowed
+with severe gravity.
+
+"Good-evening, sir," he said, and silently thought, "Now, what can Smith
+Izard possibly want with me?"
+
+It may have been perfectly natural that this man's presence shed off all
+idea of medical consultation; but why should it instantly bring to the
+Doctor's mind, as an answer to his question, another man as different
+from this one as water from fire?
+
+The detective returned the Doctor's salutation, and they became seated.
+Then the visitor craved permission to ask a confidential question or two
+for information which he was seeking in his official capacity. His
+manners were a little old-fashioned, but perfect of their kind. The
+Doctor consented. The man put his hand into his breast-pocket, and drew
+out a daguerreotype case, touched its spring, and as it opened in
+his palm extended it to the Doctor. The Doctor took it with evident
+reluctance. It contained the picture of a youth who was just reaching
+manhood. The detective spoke:--
+
+"They say he ought to look older than that now."
+
+"He does," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+"Do you know his name?" inquired the detective.
+
+"No."
+
+"What name do you know him by?"
+
+"John Richling."
+
+"Wasn't he sent down by Recorder Munroe, last summer, for assault,
+etc.?"
+
+"Yes. I got him out the next day. He never should have been put in."
+
+To the Doctor's surprise the detective rose to go.
+
+"I'm much obliged to you, Doctor."
+
+"Is that all you wanted to ask me?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Mr. Izard, who is this young man? What has he done?"
+
+"I don't know, sir. I have a letter from a lawyer in Kentucky who says
+he represents this young man's two sisters living there,--half-sisters,
+rather,--stating that his father and mother are both dead,--died within
+three days of each other."
+
+"What name?"
+
+"He didn't give the name. He sent this daguerreotype, with instructions
+to trace up the young man, if possible. He said there was reason to
+believe he was in New Orleans. He said, if I found him, just to see him
+privately, tell him the news, and invite him to come back home. But he
+said if the young fellow had got into any kind of trouble that might
+somehow reflect on the family, you know, like getting arrested for
+something or other, you know, or some such thing, then I was just to
+drop the thing quietly, and say nothing about it to him or anybody
+else."
+
+"And doesn't that seem a strange way to manage a matter like that,--to
+put it into the hands of a detective?"
+
+"Well, I don't know," said Mr. Izard. "We're used to strange things, and
+this isn't so very strange. No, it's very common. I suppose he knew that
+if he gave it to me it would be attended to in a quiet and innocent sort
+o' way. Some people hate mighty bad to get talked about. Nobody's seen
+that picture but you and one 'aid,' and just as soon as he saw it he
+said, 'Why, that's the chap that Dr. Sevier took out of the Parish
+Prison last September.' And there won't anybody else see it."
+
+"Don't you intend to see Richling?" asked the Doctor, following the
+detective toward the door.
+
+"I don't see as it would be any use," said the detective, "seeing he's
+been sent down, and so on. I'll write to the lawyer and state the facts,
+and wait for orders."
+
+"But do you know how slight the blame was that got him into trouble
+here?"
+
+"Yes. The 'aid' who saw the picture told me all about that. It was a
+shame. I'll say so. I'll give all the particulars. But I tell you, I
+just guess--they'll drop him."
+
+"I dare say," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+"Well, Doctor," said Mr. Izard, "hope I haven't annoyed you."
+
+"No," replied the Doctor.
+
+But he had; and the annoyance had not ceased to be felt when, a few
+mornings afterward, Narcisse suddenly doubled--trebled it by saying:--
+
+"Doctah Seveeah,"--it was a cold day and the young Creole stood a
+moment with his back to the office fire, to which he had just given an
+energetic and prolonged poking,--"a man was yeh, to see you, name'
+Bison. 'F want' to see you about Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+The Doctor looked up with a start, and Narcisse continued:--
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin is wuckin' in 'is employment. I think 'e's please' with
+'im."
+
+"Then why does he come to see me about him?" asked the Doctor, so
+sharply that Narcisse shrugged as he replied:--
+
+"Reely, I cann' tell you; but thass one thing, Doctah, I dunno if you
+'ave notiz: the worl' halways take a gweat deal of welfa'e in a man w'en
+'e's 'ising. I do that myseff. Some'ow I cann' 'e'p it." This bold
+speech was too much for him. He looked down at his symmetrical legs and
+went back to his desk.
+
+The Doctor was far from reassured. After a silence he called out:--
+
+"Did he say he would come back?" A knock at the door arrested the
+answer, and a huge, wide, broad-faced German entered diffidently. The
+Doctor recognized Reisen. The visitor took off his flour-dusted hat and
+bowed with great deference.
+
+"Toc-tor," he softly drawled, "I yoost taught I trop in on you to say a
+verte to you apowt teh chung yentleman vot you hef rickomendet to me."
+
+"I didn't recommend him to you, sir. I wrote you distinctly that I did
+not feel at liberty to recommend him."
+
+"Tat iss teh troot, Toctor Tseweer; tat iss teh ectsectly troot.
+Shtill I taught I'll yoost trop in on you to say a verte to
+you,--Toctor,--apowt Mister"-- He hung his large head at one side
+to remember.
+
+"Richling," said the Doctor, impatiently.
+
+"Yes, sir. Apowt Mister Richlun. I heff a tifficuldy to rigolict naymps.
+I yoost taught I voot trop in und trop a verte to you apowt Mr. Richlun,
+vot maypy you titn't herr udt before, yet."
+
+"Yes," said the Doctor, with ill-concealed contempt. "Well, speak it
+out, Mr. Reisen; time is precious."
+
+The German smiled and made a silly gesture of assent.
+
+"Yes, udt is brecious. Shtill I taught I voot take enough time to
+yoost trop in undt say to you tat I heffent het Mr. Richlun in my
+etsteplitchmendt a veek undtil I finte owdt someting apowt him, tot, uf
+you het a-knowdt ud, voot hef mate your letter maypy a little tifferendt
+written, yet."
+
+Now, at length, Dr. Sevier's annoyance was turned to dismay. He waited
+in silence for Reisen to unfold his enigma, but already his resentment
+against Richling was gathering itself for a spring. To the baker,
+however, he betrayed only a cold hostility.
+
+"I kept a copy of my letter to you, Mr. Reisen, and there isn't a word
+in it which need have misled you, sir."
+
+The baker waved his hand amicably.
+
+"Sure, Tocter Tseweer, I toandt hef nutting to gomblain akinst teh
+vertes of tat letter. You voss mighty puttickly. Ovver, shtill, I hef
+sumpting to tell you vot ef you het a-knowdt udt pefore you writed tose
+vertes, alreatty, t'ey voot a little tifferendt pin."
+
+"Well, sir, why don't you tell it?"
+
+Reisen smiled. "Tat iss teh ectsectly vot I am coing to too. I yoost
+taught I'll trop in undt tell you, Toctor, tat I heffent het Mr. Richlun
+in my etsteplitchmendt a veek undtil I findte owdt tat he's
+a--berfect--tressure."
+
+Doctor Sevier started half up from his chair, dropped into it again,
+wheeled half away, and back again with the blood surging into his face
+and exclaimed:--
+
+"Why, what do you mean by such drivelling nonsense, sir? You've given me
+a positive fright!" He frowned the blacker as the baker smiled from ear
+to ear.
+
+"Vy, Toctor, I hope you ugscooce me! I yoost taught you voot like to
+herr udt. Undt Missis Reisen sayce, 'Reisen, you yoost co undt tell um.'
+I taught udt voot pe blessant to you to know tatt you hett sendt me teh
+fynust pissness mayn I effer het apowdt me. Undt uff he iss onnust he
+iss a berfect tressure, undt uff he aint a berfect tressure,"--he smiled
+anew and tendered his capacious hat to his listener,--"you yoost kin
+take tiss, Toctor, undt kip udt undt vare udt! Toctor, I vish you a
+merrah Chris'mus!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+BEES, WASPS, AND BUTTERFLIES.
+
+
+The merry day went by. The new year, 1858, set in. Everything gathered
+momentum. There was a panic and a crash. The brother-in-law of sister
+Jane--he whom Dr. Sevier met at that quiet dinner-party--struck an
+impediment, stumbled, staggered, fell under the feet of the racers, and
+crawled away minus not money and credit only, but all his philosophy
+about helping the poor, maimed in spirit, his pride swollen with
+bruises, his heart and his speech soured beyond all sweetening.
+
+Many were the wrecks. But over their débris, Mercury and Venus--the busy
+season and the gay season--ran lightly, hand in hand. Men getting money
+and women squandering it. Whole nights in the ball-room. Gold pouring in
+at the hopper and out at the spout,--Carondelet street emptying like a
+yellow river into Canal street. Thousands for vanity; thousands for
+pride; thousands for influence and for station; thousands for hidden
+sins; a slender fraction for the wants of the body; a slenderer for the
+cravings of the soul. Lazarus paid to stay away from the gate. John the
+Baptist, in raiment of broadcloth, a circlet of white linen about his
+neck, and his meat strawberries and ice-cream. The lower classes
+mentioned mincingly; awkward silences or visible wincings at allusions
+to death, and converse on eternal things banished as if it were the
+smell of cabbage. So looked the gay world, at least, to Dr. Sevier.
+
+He saw more of it than had been his wont for many seasons. The two
+young-lady cousins whom he had brought and installed in his home
+thirsted for that gorgeous, nocturnal moth life in which no thirst is
+truly slaked, and dragged him with them into the iridescent, gas-lighted
+spider-web of society.
+
+"Now, you know you like it!" they said.
+
+"A little of it, yes. But I don't see how you can like it, who virtually
+live in it and upon it. Why, I would as soon try to live upon cake and
+candy!"
+
+"Well, we can live very nicely upon cake and candy," retorted they.
+
+"Why, girls, it's no more life than spice is food. What lofty
+motive--what earnest, worthy object"--
+
+But they drowned his homily in a carol, and ran away arm in arm to dress
+for another ball. One of them stopped in the door with an air of mock
+bravado:--
+
+"What do we care for lofty motives or worthy objects?"
+
+A smile escaped from him as she vanished. His condemnation was flavored
+with charity. "It's their mating season," he silently thought, and, not
+knowing he did it, sighed.
+
+"There come Dr. Sevier and his two pretty cousins," was the ball-room
+whisper. "Beautiful girls--rich widower without children--great catch!
+_Passé_, how? Well, maybe so; not as much as he makes himself out,
+though." "_Passé_, yes," said a merciless belle to a blade of her own
+years; "a man of strong sense is _passé_ at any age." Sister Jane's name
+was mentioned in the same connection, but that illusion quickly passed.
+The cousins denied indignantly that he had any matrimonial intention.
+Somebody dissipated the rumor by a syllogism: "A man hunting a second
+wife always looks like a fool; the Doctor doesn't look a bit like a
+fool, ergo"--
+
+He grew very weary of the giddy rout, standing in it like a rock in a
+whirlpool. He did rejoice in the Carnival, but only because it was the
+end.
+
+"Pretty? yes, as pretty as a bonfire," he said. "I can't enjoy much
+fiddling while Rome is burning."
+
+"But Rome isn't always burning," said the cousins.
+
+"Yes, it is! Yes, it is!"
+
+The wickeder of the two cousins breathed a penitential sigh, dropped her
+bare, jewelled arms out of her cloak, and said:--
+
+"Now tell us once more about Mary Richling." He had bored them to death
+with Mary.
+
+Lent was a relief to all three. One day, as the Doctor was walking along
+the street, a large hand grasped his elbow and gently arrested his
+steps. He turned.
+
+"Well, Reisen, is that you?"
+
+The baker answered with his wide smile. "Yes, Toctor, tat iss me, sure.
+You titn't tink udt iss Mr. Richlun, tit you?"
+
+"No. How is Richling?"
+
+"Vell, Mr. Richlun kitten along so-o-o-so-o-o. He iss not ferra shtrong;
+ovver he vurks like a shteam-inchyine."
+
+"I haven't seen him for many a day," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+The baker distended his eyes, bent his enormous digestive apparatus
+forward, raised his eyebrows, and hung his arms free from his sides. "He
+toandt kit a minudt to shpare in teh tswendy-four hourss. Sumptimes he
+sayss, 'Mr. Reisen, I can't shtop to talk mit you.' Sindts Mr. Richlun
+pin py my etsteplitchmendt, I tell you teh troot, Toctor Tseweer, I am
+yoost meckin' monneh haynd ofer fist!" He swung his chest forward again,
+drew in his lower regions, revolved his fists around each other for a
+moment, and then let them fall open at his sides, with the added
+assurance, "Now you kott teh ectsectly troot."
+
+The Doctor started away, but the baker detained him by a touch:--
+
+"You toandt kott enna verte to sendt to Mr. Richlun, Toctor!"
+
+"Yes. Tell him to come and pass an hour with me some evening in my
+library."
+
+The German lifted his hand in delight.
+
+"Vy, tot's yoost teh dting! Mr. Richlun alvayss pin sayin', 'I vish he
+aysk me come undt see um;' undt I sayss, 'You holdt shtill, yet, Mr.
+Richlun; teh next time I see um I make um aysk you.' Vell, now, titn't I
+tunned udt?" He was happy.
+
+"Well, ask him," said the Doctor, and got away.
+
+"No fool is an utter fool," pondered the Doctor, as he went. Two friends
+had been kept long apart by the fear of each, lest he should seem to be
+setting up claims based on the past. It required a simpleton to bring
+them together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+TOWARD THE ZENITH.
+
+
+"Richling, I am glad to see you!"
+
+Dr. Sevier had risen from his luxurious chair beside a table, the soft
+downward beams of whose lamp partly showed, and partly hid, the rich
+appointments of his library. He grasped Richling's hand, and with an
+extensive stride drew forward another chair on its smooth-running
+casters.
+
+Then inquiries were exchanged as to the health of one and the other. The
+Doctor, with his professional eye, noticed, as the light fell full upon
+his visitor's buoyant face, how thin and pale he had grown. He rose
+again, and stepping beyond Richling with a remark, in part complimentary
+and in part critical, upon the balmy April evening, let down the sash of
+a window where the smell of honeysuckles was floating in.
+
+"Have you heard from your wife lately?" he asked, as he resumed his
+seat.
+
+"Yesterday," said Richling. "Yes, she's very well, been well ever since
+she left us. She always sends love to you."
+
+"Hum," responded the physician. He fixed his eyes on the mantel and
+asked abstractedly, "How do you bear the separation?"
+
+"Oh!" Richling laughed, "not very heroically. It's a great strain on a
+man's philosophy."
+
+"Work is the only antidote," said the Doctor, not moving his eyes.
+
+"Yes, so I find it," answered the other. "It's bearable enough while one
+is working like mad; but sooner or later one must sit down to meals, or
+lie down to rest, you know"--
+
+"Then it hurts," said the Doctor.
+
+"It's a lively discipline," mused Richling.
+
+"Do you think you learn anything by it?" asked the other, turning his
+eyes slowly upon him. "That's what it means, you notice."
+
+"Yes, I do," replied Richling, smiling; "I learn the very thing I
+suppose you're thinking of,--that separation isn't disruption, and that
+no pair of true lovers are quite fitted out for marriage until they can
+bear separation if they must."
+
+"Yes," responded the physician; "if they can muster the good sense to
+see that they'll not be so apt to marry prematurely. I needn't tell you
+I believe in marrying for love; but these needs-must marriages are so
+ineffably silly. You 'must' and you 'will' marry, and 'nobody shall
+hinder you!' And you do it! And in three or four or six months"--he drew
+in his long legs energetically from the hearth-pan--"_death_ separates
+you!--death, sometimes, resulting directly from the turn your haste has
+given to events! Now, where is your 'must' and 'will'?" He stretched his
+legs out again, and laid his head on his cushioned chair-back.
+
+"I have made a narrow escape," said Richling.
+
+"I wasn't so fortunate," responded the Doctor, turning solemnly toward
+his young friend. "Richling, just seven months after I married Alice I
+buried her. I'm not going into particulars--of course; but the sickness
+that carried her off was distinctly connected with the haste of our
+marriage. Your Bible, Richling, that you lay such store by, is right; we
+should want things as if we didn't want them. That isn't the quotation,
+exactly, but it's the idea. I swore I couldn't and wouldn't live without
+her; but, you see, this is the fifteenth year that I have had to do it."
+
+"I should think it would have unmanned you for life," said Richling.
+
+"It made a man of me! I've never felt young a day since, and yet I've
+never seemed to grow a day older. It brought me all at once to my full
+manhood. I have never consciously disputed God's arrangements since. The
+man who does is only a wayward child."
+
+"It's true," said Richling, with an air of confession, "it's true;" and
+they fell into silence.
+
+Presently Richling looked around the room. His eyes brightened rapidly
+as he beheld the ranks and tiers of good books. He breathed an audible
+delight. The multitude of volumes rose in the old-fashioned way, in
+ornate cases of dark wood from floor to ceiling, on this hand, on that,
+before him, behind; some in gay covers,--green, blue, crimson,--with
+gilding and embossing; some in the sumptuous leathers of France, Russia,
+Morocco, Turkey; others in worn attire, battered and venerable, dingy
+but precious,--the gray heads of the council.
+
+The two men rose and moved about among those silent wits and
+philosophers, and, from the very embarrassment of the inner riches, fell
+to talking of letter-press and bindings, with maybe some effort on the
+part of each to seem the better acquainted with Caxton, the Elzevirs,
+and other like immortals. They easily passed to a competitive
+enumeration of the rare books they had seen or not seen here and there
+in other towns and countries. Richling admitted he had travelled, and
+the conversation turned upon noted buildings and famous old nooks in
+distant cities where both had been. So they moved slowly back to their
+chairs, and stood by them, still contemplating the books. But as they
+sank again into their seats the one thought which had fastened itself in
+the minds of both found fresh expression.
+
+Richling began, smilingly, as if the subject had not been dropped at
+all,--"I oughtn't to speak as if I didn't realize my good fortune, for I
+do."
+
+"I believe you do," said the Doctor, reaching toward the fire-irons.
+
+"Yes. Still, I lose patience with myself to find myself taking Mary's
+absence so hard."
+
+"All hardships are comparative," said the Doctor.
+
+"Certainly they are," replied Richling. "I lie sometimes and think of
+men who have been political prisoners, shut away from wife and children,
+with war raging outside and no news coming in."
+
+"Think of the common poor," exclaimed Dr. Sevier,--"the thousands of
+sailors' wives and soldiers' wives. Where does that thought carry you?"
+
+"It carries me," responded the other, with a low laugh, "to where I'm
+always a little ashamed of myself."
+
+"I didn't mean it to do that," said the Doctor; "I can imagine how you
+miss your wife. I miss her myself."
+
+"Oh! but she's here on this earth. She's alive and well. Any burden is
+light when I think of that--pardon me, Doctor!"
+
+"Go on, go on. Anything you please about her, Richling." The Doctor half
+sat, half lay in his chair, his eyes partly closed. "Go on," he
+repeated.
+
+"I was only going to say that long before Mary went away, many a time
+when she and I were fighting starvation at close quarters, I have
+looked at her and said to myself, 'What if I were in Dr. Sevier's
+place?' and it gave me strength to rise up and go on."
+
+"You were right."
+
+"I know I was. I often wake now at night and turn and find the place by
+my side empty, and I can hardly keep from calling her aloud. It wrenches
+me, but before long I think she's no such great distance away, since
+we're both on the same earth together, and by and by she'll be here at
+my side; and so it becomes easy to me once more." Richling, in the
+self-occupation of a lover, forgot what pains he might be inflicting.
+But the Doctor did not wince.
+
+"Yes," said the physician, "of course you wouldn't want the separation
+to be painless; and it promises a reward, you know."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Richling, with an exultant smile and motion of the head,
+and then dropped his eyes in meditation. The Doctor looked at him
+steadily.
+
+"Richling, you've gathered some terribly hard experiences. But hard
+experiences are often the foundation-stones of a successful life. You
+can make them all profitable. You can make them draw you along, so to
+speak. But you must hold them well in hand, as you would a dangerous
+team, you know,--coolly and alertly, firmly and patiently,--and never
+let the reins slack till you've driven through the last gate."
+
+Richling replied, with a pleasant nod, "I believe I shall do it. Did you
+notice what I wrote you in my letter? I have got the notion strongly
+that the troubles we have gone through--Mary and I--were only our
+necessary preparation--not so necessary for her as for me"--
+
+"No," said Dr. Sevier, and Richling continued, with a smile:--
+
+"To fit us for a long and useful life, and especially a life that will
+be full of kind and valuable services to the poor. If that isn't what
+they were sent for"--he dropped into a tone of reflection--"then I don't
+understand them."
+
+"And suppose you don't understand," said the Doctor, with his cold, grim
+look.
+
+"Oh!" rejoined Richling, in amiable protest; "but a man would like to
+understand."
+
+"Like to--yes," replied the Doctor; "but be careful. The spirit that
+_must_ understand is the spirit that can't trust." He paused. Presently
+he said, "Richling!"
+
+Richling answered by an inquiring glance.
+
+"Take better care of your health," said the physician.
+
+Richling smiled--a young man's answer--and rose to say good-night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+TO SIGH, YET FEEL NO PAIN.
+
+
+Mrs. Riley missed the Richlings, she said, more than tongue could tell.
+She had easily rented the rooms they left vacant; that was not the
+trouble. The new tenant was a sallow, gaunt, wind-dried seamstress of
+sixty, who paid her rent punctually, but who was--
+
+"Mighty poor comp'ny to thim as's been used to the upper tin, Mr.
+Ristofalo."
+
+Still she was a protection. Mrs. Riley had not regarded this as a
+necessity in former days, but now, somehow, matters seemed different.
+This seamstress had, moreover, a son of eighteen years, principally
+skin and bone, who was hoping to be appointed assistant hostler at the
+fire-engine house of "Volunteer One," and who meantime hung about Mrs.
+Riley's dwelling and loved to relieve her of the care of little Mike.
+This also was something to be appreciated. Still there was a void.
+
+"Well, Mr. Richlin'!" cried Mrs. Riley, as she opened her parlor door in
+response to a knock. "Well, I'll be switched! ha! ha! I didn't think it
+was you at all. Take a seat and sit down!"
+
+It was good to see how she enjoyed the visit. Whenever she listened to
+Richling's words she rocked in her rocking-chair vigorously, and when
+she spoke stopped its motion and rested her elbows on its arms.
+
+"And how _is_ Mrs. Richlin'? And so she sent her love to me, did she,
+now? The blessed angel! Now, ye're not just a-makin' that up? No, I
+know ye wouldn't do sich a thing as that, Mr. Richlin'. Well, you must
+give her mine back again. I've nobody else on e'rth to give ud to, and
+never will have." She lifted her nose with amiable stateliness, as if to
+imply that Richling might not believe this, but that it was true,
+nevertheless.
+
+"You may change your mind, Mrs. Riley, some day," returned Richling, a
+little archly.
+
+"Ha! ha!" She tossed her head and laughed with good-natured scorn.
+"Nivver a fear o' that, Mr. Richlin'!" Her brogue was apt to broaden
+when pleasure pulled down her dignity. "And, if I did, it wuddent be for
+the likes of no I-talian Dago, if id's him ye're a-dthrivin' at,--not
+intinding anny disrespect to your friend, Mr. Richlin', and indeed I
+don't deny he's a perfect gintleman,--but, indeed, Mr. Richlin', I'm
+just after thinkin' that you and yer lady wouldn't have no self-respect
+for Kate Riley if she should be changing her name."
+
+"Still you were thinking about it," said Richling, with a twinkle.
+
+"Ah! ha! ha! Indeed I wasn', an' ye needn' be t'rowin' anny o' yer
+slyness on me. Ye know ye'd have no self-respect fur me. No; now ye know
+ye wuddent,--wud ye?"
+
+"Why, Mrs. Riley, of course we would. Why--why not?" He stood in the
+door-way, about to take his leave. "You may be sure we'll always be glad
+of anything that will make you the happier." Mrs. Riley looked so grave
+that he checked his humor.
+
+"But in the nixt life, Mr. Richlin', how about that?"
+
+"There? I suppose we shall simply each love all in absolute perfection.
+We'll"--
+
+"We'll never know the differ," interposed Mrs. Riley.
+
+"That's it," said Richling, smiling again. "And so I say,--and I've
+always said,--if a person _feels_ like marrying again, let him do it."
+
+"Have ye, now? Well, ye're just that good, Mr. Richlin'."
+
+"Yes," he responded, trying to be grave, "that's about my measure."
+
+"Would _you_ do ut?"
+
+"No, I wouldn't. I couldn't. But I should like--in good earnest, Mrs.
+Riley, I should like, now, the comfort of knowing that you were not to
+pass all the rest of your days in widowhood."
+
+"Ah! ged out, Mr. Richlin'!" She failed in her effort to laugh. "Ah!
+ye're sly!" She changed her attitude and drew a breath.
+
+"No," said Richling, "no, honestly. I should feel that you deserved
+better at this world's hands than that, and that the world deserved
+better of you. I find two people don't make a world, Mrs. Riley, though
+often they think they do. They certainly don't when one is gone."
+
+"Mr. Richlin'," exclaimed Mrs. Riley, drawing back and waving her hand
+sweetly, "stop yer flattery! Stop ud! Ah! ye're a-feeling yer oats, Mr.
+Richlin'. An' ye're a-showin' em too, ye air. Why, I hered ye was
+lookin' terrible, and here ye're lookin' just splendud!"
+
+"Who told you that?" asked Richling.
+
+"Never mind! Never mind who he was--ha, ha, ha!" She checked herself
+suddenly. "Ah, me! It's a shame for the likes o' me to be behavin' that
+foolish!" She put on additional dignity. "I will always be the Widow
+Riley." Then relaxing again into sweetness: "Marridge is a lottery, Mr.
+Richlin'; indeed an' it is; and ye know mighty well that he ye're after
+joking me about is no more nor a fri'nd." She looked sweet enough for
+somebody to kiss.
+
+"I don't know so certainly about that," said her visitor, stepping down
+upon the sidewalk and putting on his hat. "If I may judge by"-- He
+paused and glanced at the window.
+
+"Ah, now, Mr. Richlin', na-na-now, Mr. Richlin', ye daurn't say ud! Ye
+daurn't!" She smiled and blushed and arched her neck and rose and sank
+upon herself with sweet delight.
+
+"I say if I may judge by what he has said to me," insisted Richling.
+
+Mrs. Riley glided down across the door-step, and, with all the
+insinuation of her sex and nation, demanded:--
+
+"What'd he tell ye? Ah! he didn't tell ye nawthing! Ha, ha! there wasn'
+nawthing to tell!" But Richling slipped away.
+
+Mrs. Riley shook her finger: "Ah, ye're a wicket joker, Mr. Richlin'. I
+didn't think that o' the likes of a gintleman like you, anyhow!" She
+shook her finger again as she withdrew into the house, smiling broadly
+all the way in to the cradle, where she kissed and kissed again her
+ruddy, chubby, sleeping boy.
+
+ * * *
+
+Ristofalo came often. He was a man of simple words, and of few thoughts
+of the kind that were available in conversation; but his personal
+adventures had begun almost with infancy, and followed one another in
+close and strange succession over lands and seas ever since. He could
+therefore talk best about himself, though he talked modestly. "These
+things to hear would Desdemona seriously incline," and there came times
+when even a tear was not wanting to gem the poetry of the situation.
+
+"And ye might have saved yerself from all that," was sometimes her note
+of sympathy. But when he asked how she silently dried her eyes.
+
+Sometimes his experiences had been intensely ludicrous, and Mrs. Riley
+would laugh until in pure self-oblivion she smote her thigh with her
+palm, or laid her hand so smartly against his shoulder as to tip him
+half off his seat.
+
+"Ye didn't!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ah! Get out wid ye, Raphael Ristofalo,--to be telling me that for the
+trooth!"
+
+At one such time she was about to give him a second push, but he took
+the hand in his, and quietly kept it to the end of his story.
+
+He lingered late that evening, but at length took his hat from under his
+chair, rose, and extended his hand.
+
+"Man alive!" she cried, "that's my _hand_, sur, I'd have ye to know.
+Begahn wid ye! Lookut heere! What's the reason ye make it so long atween
+yer visits, eh? Tell me that. Ah--ah--ye've no need fur to tell me, Mr.
+Ristofalo! Ah--now don't tell a lie!"
+
+"Too busy. Come all time--wasn't too busy."
+
+"Ha, ha! Yes, yes; ye're too busy. Of coorse ye're too busy. Oh, yes! ye
+_air_ too busy--a-courtin' thim I-talian froot gerls around the Frinch
+Mairket. Ah! I'll bet two bits ye're a bouncer! Ah, don't tell me. I
+know ye, ye villain! Some o' thim's a-waitin' fur ye now, ha, ha! Go!
+And don't ye nivver come back heere anny more. D'ye mind?"
+
+"Aw righ'." The Italian took her hand for the third time and held it,
+standing in his simple square way before her and wearing his gentle
+smile as he looked her in the eye. "Good-by, Kate."
+
+Her eye quailed. Her hand pulled a little helplessly and in a meek voice
+she said:--
+
+"That's not right for you to do me that a-way, Mr. Ristofalo. I've got a
+handle to my name, sur."
+
+She threw some gentle rebuke into her glance, and turned it upon him. He
+met it with that same amiable absence of emotion that was always in his
+look.
+
+"Kate too short by itself?" he asked. "Aw righ'; make it Kate
+Ristofalo."
+
+"No," said Mrs. Riley, averting and drooping her face.
+
+"Take good care of you," said the Italian; "you and Mike. Always be
+kind. Good care."
+
+Mrs. Riley turned with sudden fervor.
+
+"Good cayre!--Mr. Ristofalo," she exclaimed, lifting her free hand and
+touching her bosom with the points of her fingers, "ye don't know the
+hairt of a woman, surr! No-o-o, surr! It's _love_ we wants! 'The hairt
+as has trooly loved nivver furgits, but as trooly loves ahn to the
+tlose!'"
+
+"Yes," said the Italian; "yes," nodding and ever smiling, "dass aw
+righ'."
+
+But she:--
+
+"Ah! it's no use fur you to be a-talkin' an' a-pallaverin' to Kate Riley
+when ye don't be lovin' her, Mr. Ristofalo, an' ye know ye don't."
+
+A tear glistened in her eye.
+
+"Yes, love you," said the Italian; "course, love you."
+
+He did not move a foot or change the expression of a feature.
+
+"H-yes!" said the widow. "H-yes!" she panted. "H-yes, a little! A
+little, Mr. Ristofalo! But I want"--she pressed her hand hard upon her
+bosom, and raised her eyes aloft--"I want to be--h--h--h-adaured above
+all the e'rth!"
+
+"Aw righ'," said Ristofalo; "das aw righ'; yes--door above all you
+worth."
+
+"Raphael Ristofalo," she said, "ye're a-deceivin' me! Ye came heere whin
+nobody axed ye,--an' that ye know is a fact, surr,--an' made yerself
+agree'ble to a poor, unsuspectin' widdah, an' [_tears_] rabbed me o' mie
+hairt, ye did; whin I nivver intinded to git married ag'in."
+
+"Don't cry, Kate--Kate Ristofalo," quietly observed the Italian, getting
+an arm around her waist, and laying a hand on the farther cheek. "Kate
+Ristofalo."
+
+"Shut!" she exclaimed, turning with playful fierceness, and proudly
+drawing back her head; "shut! Hah! It's Kate Ristofalo, is it? Ah, ye
+think so? Hah-h! It'll be ad least two weeks yet before the priest will
+be after giving you the right to call me that!"
+
+And, in fact, an entire fortnight did pass before they were married.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+WHAT NAME?
+
+
+Richling in Dr. Sevier's library, one evening in early May, gave him
+great amusement by an account of the Ristofalo-Riley wedding. He had
+attended it only the night before. The Doctor had received an
+invitation, but had pleaded previous engagements.
+
+"But I am glad you went," he said to Richling; "however, go on with your
+account."
+
+"Oh! I was glad to go. And I'm certainly glad I went."
+
+Richling proceeded with the recital. The Doctor smiled. It was very
+droll,--the description of persons and costumes. Richling was quite
+another than his usual restrained self this evening. Oddly enough, too,
+for this was but his second visit; the confinement of his work was
+almost like an imprisonment, it was so constant. The Doctor had never
+seen him in just such a glow. He even mimicked the brogue of two or
+three Irish gentlemen, and the soft, outlandish swing in the English of
+one or two Sicilians. He did it all so well that, when he gave an
+instance of some of the broad Hibernian repartee he had heard, the
+Doctor actually laughed audibly. One of his young-lady cousins on some
+pretext opened a door, and stole a glance within to see what could have
+produced a thing so extraordinary.
+
+"Come in, Laura; come in! Tell Bess to come in."
+
+The Doctor introduced Richling with due ceremony Richling could not, of
+course, after this accession of numbers, go on being funny. The mistake
+was trivial, but all saw it. Still the meeting was pleasant. The girls
+were very intelligent and vivacious. Richling found a certain
+refreshment in their graceful manners, like what we sometimes feel in
+catching the scent of some long-forgotten perfume. They had not been
+told all his history, but had heard enough to make them curious to see
+and speak to him. They were evidently pleased with him, and Dr. Sevier,
+observing this, betrayed an air that was much like triumph. But after a
+while they went as they had come.
+
+"Doctor," said Richling, smiling until Dr. Sevier wondered silently what
+possessed the fellow, "excuse me for bringing this here. But I find it
+so impossible to get to your office"-- He moved nearer the Doctor's table
+and put his hand into his bosom.
+
+"What's that?" asked the Doctor, frowning heavily. Richling smiled still
+broader than before.
+
+"This is a statement," he said.
+
+"Of what?"
+
+"Of the various loans you have made me, with interest to date."
+
+"Yes?" said the Doctor, frigidly.
+
+"And here," persisted the happy man, straightening out a leg as he had
+done the first time they ever met, and drawing a roll of notes from his
+pocket, "is the total amount."
+
+"Yes?" The Doctor regarded them with cold contempt. "That's all very
+pleasant for you, I suppose, Richling,--shows you're the right kind of
+man, I suppose, and so on. I know that already, however. Now just put
+all that back into your pocket; the sight of it isn't pleasant. You
+certainly don't imagine I'm going to take it, do you?"
+
+"You promised to take it when you lent it."
+
+"Humph! Well, I didn't say when."
+
+"As soon as I could pay it," said Richling.
+
+"I don't remember," replied the Doctor, picking up a newspaper. "I
+release myself from that promise."
+
+"I don't release you," persisted Richling; "neither does Mary."
+
+The Doctor was quiet awhile before he answered. He crossed his knees, a
+moment after folded his arms, and presently said:--
+
+"Foolish pride, Richling."
+
+"We know that," replied Richling; "we don't deny that that feeling
+creeps in. But we'd never do anything that's right if we waited for an
+unmixed motive, would we?"
+
+"Then you think my motive--in refusing it--is mixed, probably."
+
+"Ho-o-oh!" laughed Richling. The gladness within him would break
+through. "Why, Doctor, nothing could be more different. It doesn't seem
+to me as though you ever had a mixed motive."
+
+The Doctor did not answer. He seemed to think the same thing.
+
+"We know very well, Doctor, that if we should accept this kindness we
+might do it in a spirit of proper and commendable--a--humble-mindedness.
+But it isn't mere pride that makes us insist."
+
+"No?" asked the Doctor, cruelly. "What is it else?"
+
+"Why, I hardly know what to call it, except that it's a conviction
+that--well, that to pay is best; that it's the nearest to justice we can
+get, and that"--he spoke faster--"that it's simply duty to choose
+justice when we can and mercy when we must. There, I've hit it out!" He
+laughed again. "Don't you see, Doctor? Justice when we may--mercy when
+we must! It's your own principles!"
+
+The Doctor looked straight at the mantel-piece as he asked:--
+
+"Where did you get that idea?"
+
+"I don't know; partly from nowhere, and"--
+
+"Partly from Mary," interrupted the Doctor. He put out his long white
+palm. "It's all right. Give me the money." Richling counted it into his
+hand. He rolled it up and stuffed it into his portemonnaie.
+
+"You like to part with your hard earnings, do you, Richling?"
+
+"Earnings can't be hard," was the reply; "it's borrowings that are
+hard."
+
+The Doctor assented.
+
+"And, of course," said Richling, "I enjoy paying old debts." He stood
+and leaned his head in his hand with his elbow on the mantel. "But, even
+aside from that, I'm happy."
+
+"I see you are!" remarked the physician, emphatically, catching the arms
+of his chair and drawing his feet closer in. "You've been smiling worse
+than a boy with a love-letter."
+
+"I've been hoping you'd ask me what's the matter."
+
+"Well, then, Richling, what is the matter?"
+
+"Mary has a daughter."
+
+"What!" cried the Doctor, springing up with a radiant face, and grasping
+Richling's hand in both his own.
+
+Richling laughed aloud, nodded, laughed again, and gave either eye a
+quick, energetic wipe with all his fingers.
+
+"Doctor," he said, as the physician sank back into his chair, "we want
+to name"--he hesitated, stood on one foot and leaned again against the
+shelf--"we want to call her by the name of--if we may"--
+
+The Doctor looked up as if with alarm, and John said, timidly,--"Alice!"
+
+Dr. Sevier's eyes--what was the matter? His mouth quivered. He nodded
+and whispered huskily:--
+
+"All right."
+
+After a long pause Richling expressed the opinion that he had better be
+going, and the Doctor did not indicate any difference of conviction. At
+the door the Doctor asked:--
+
+"If the fever should break out this summer, Richling, will you go away?"
+
+"No."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+PESTILENCE.
+
+
+On the twentieth of June, 1858, an incident occurred in New Orleans
+which challenged special attention from the medical profession. Before
+the month closed there was a second, similar to the first. The press
+did not give such matters to the public in those days; it would only
+make the public--the advertising public--angry. Times have changed
+since--faced clear about: but at that period Dr. Sevier, who hated a
+secret only less than a falsehood, was right in speaking as he did.
+
+"Now you'll see," he said, pointing downward aslant, "the whole
+community stick its head in the sand!" He sent for Richling.
+
+"I give you fair warning," he said. "It's coming."
+
+"Don't cases occur sometimes in an isolated way without--anything
+further?" asked Richling, with a promptness which showed he had already
+been considering the matter.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And might not this"--
+
+"Richling, I give you fair warning."
+
+"Have you sent your cousins away, Doctor?"
+
+"They go to-morrow." After a silence the Doctor added: "I tell you now,
+because this is the time to decide what you will do. If you are not
+prepared to take all the risks and stay them through, you had better go
+at once."
+
+"What proportion of those who are taken sick of it die?" asked Richling.
+
+"The proportion varies in different seasons; say about one in seven or
+eight. But your chances would be hardly so good, for you're not strong,
+Richling, nor well either."
+
+Richling stood and swung his hat against his knee.
+
+"I really don't see, Doctor, that I have any choice at all. I couldn't
+go to Mary--when she has but just come through a mother's pains and
+dangers--and say, 'I've thrown away seven good chances of life to run
+away from one bad one.' Why, to say nothing else, Reisen can't spare
+me." He smiled with boyish vanity.
+
+"O Richling, that's silly!"
+
+"I--I know it," exclaimed the other, quickly; "I see it is. If he could
+spare me, of course he wouldn't be paying me a salary." But the Doctor
+silenced him by a gesture.
+
+"The question is not whether he can spare you, at all. It's simply, can
+you spare him?"
+
+"Without violating any pledge, you mean," added Richling.
+
+"Of course," assented the physician.
+
+"Well, I can't spare him, Doctor. He has given me a hold on life, and no
+one chance in seven, or six, or five is going to shake me loose. Why, I
+tell you I couldn't look Mary in the face!"
+
+"Have your own way," responded the Doctor. "There are some things in
+your favor. You frail fellows often pull through easier than the big,
+full-blooded ones."
+
+"Oh, it's Mary's way too, I feel certain!" retorted Richling, gayly,
+"and I venture to say"--he coughed and smiled again--"it's yours."
+
+"I didn't say it wasn't," replied the unsmiling Doctor, reaching for a
+pen and writing a prescription. "Here; get that and take it according to
+direction. It's for that cold."
+
+"If I should take the fever," said Richling, coming out of a revery,
+"Mary will want to come to me."
+
+"Well, she mustn't come a step!" exclaimed the Doctor.
+
+"You'll forbid it, will you not, Doctor? Pledge me!"
+
+"I do better, sir; I pledge myself."
+
+So the July suns rose up and moved across the beautiful blue sky; the
+moon went through all her majestic changes; on thirty-one successive
+midnights the Star Bakery sent abroad its grateful odors of bread, and
+as the last night passed into the first twinkling hour of morning the
+month chronicled one hundred and thirty-one deaths from yellow fever.
+The city shuddered because it knew, and because it did not know, what
+was in store. People began to fly by hundreds, and then by thousands.
+Many were overtaken and stricken down as they fled. Still men plied
+their vocations, children played in the streets, and the days came and
+went, fair, blue tremulous with sunshine, or cool and gray and sweet
+with summer rain. How strange it was for nature to be so beautiful and
+so unmoved! By and by one could not look down a street, on this hand or
+on that, but he saw a funeral. Doctors' gigs began to be hailed on the
+streets and to refuse to stop, and houses were pointed out that had just
+become the scenes of strange and harrowing episodes.
+
+"Do you see that bakery,--the 'Star Bakery'? Five funerals from that
+place--and another goes this afternoon."
+
+Before this was said August had completed its record of eleven hundred
+deaths, and September had begun the long list that was to add
+twenty-two hundred more. Reisen had been the first one ill in the
+establishment. He had been losing friends,--one every few days; and he
+thought it only plain duty, let fear or prudence say what they might,
+to visit them at their bedsides and follow them to their tombs. It
+was not only the outer man of Reisen, but the heart as well, that was
+elephantine. He had at length come home from one of these funerals with
+pains in his back and limbs, and the various familiar accompaniments.
+
+"I feel right clumsy," he said, as he lifted his great feet and lowered
+them into the mustard foot-bath.
+
+"Doctor Sevier," said Richling, as he and the physician paused half way
+between the sick-chambers of Reisen and his wife, "I hope you'll not
+think it foolhardy for me to expose myself by nursing these people"--
+
+"No," replied the veteran, in a tone of indifference, and passed on; the
+tincture of self-approval that had "mixed" with Richling's motives went
+away to nothing.
+
+Both Reisen and his wife recovered. But an apple-cheeked brother of the
+baker, still in a green cap and coat that he had come in from Germany,
+was struck from the first with that mortal terror which is so often an
+evil symptom of the disease, and died, on the fifth day after his
+attack, in raging delirium. Ten of the workmen, bakers and others,
+followed him. Richling alone, of all in the establishment, while the
+sick lay scattered through the town on uncounted thousands of beds, and
+the month of October passed by, bringing death to eleven hundred more,
+escaped untouched of the scourge.
+
+"I can't understand it," he said.
+
+"Demand an immediate explanation," said Dr. Sevier, with sombre irony.
+
+How did others fare? Ristofalo had, time and again, sailed with the
+fever, nursed it, slept with it. It passed him by again. Little Mike
+took it, lay two or three days very still in his mother's strong arms,
+and recovered. Madame Ristofalo had had it in "fifty-three." She became
+a heroic nurse to many, and saved life after life among the poor.
+
+The trials of those days enriched John Richling in the acquaintanceship
+and esteem of Sister Jane's little lisping rector. And, by the way, none
+of those with whom Dr. Sevier dined on that darkest night of Richling's
+life became victims. The rector had never encountered the disease
+before, but when Sister Jane and the banker, and the banker's family and
+friends, and thousands of others, fled, he ran toward it, David-like,
+swordless and armorless. He and Richling were nearly of equal age. Three
+times, four times, and again, they met at dying-beds. They became fond
+of each other.
+
+Another brave nurse was Narcisse. Dr. Sevier, it is true, could not get
+rid of the conviction for years afterward that one victim would have
+lived had not Narcisse talked him to death. But in general, where
+there was some one near to prevent his telling all his discoveries and
+inventions, he did good service, and accompanied it with very chivalric
+emotions.
+
+"Yesseh," he said, with a strutting attitude that somehow retained a
+sort of modesty, "I 'ad the gweatess success. Hah! a nuss is a nuss
+those time'. Only some time' 'e's not. 'Tis accawding to the
+povvub,--what is that povvub, now, ag'in?" The proverb did not answer
+his call, and he waved it away. "Yesseh, eve'ybody wanting me at
+once--couldn' supply the deman'."
+
+Richling listened to him with new pleasure and rising esteem.
+
+"You make me envy you," he exclaimed, honestly.
+
+"Well, I s'pose you may say so, Mistoo Itchlin, faw I nevva nuss
+a sing-le one w'at din paid me ten dollahs a night. Of co'se!
+'Consistency, thou awt a jew'l.' It's juz as the povvub says, 'All
+work an' no pay keep Jack a small boy.' An' yet," he hurriedly added,
+remembering his indebtedness to his auditor, "'tis aztonizhin' 'ow 'tis
+expensive to live. I haven' got a picayune of that money pwesently! I'm
+aztonizh' myseff!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+"I MUST BE CRUEL ONLY TO BE KIND."
+
+
+The plague grew sated and feeble. One morning frost sent a flight of icy
+arrows into the town, and it vanished. The swarthy girls and lads that
+sauntered homeward behind their mothers' cows across the wide suburban
+stretches of marshy commons heard again the deep, unbroken, cataract
+roar of the reawakened city.
+
+We call the sea cruel, seeing its waters dimple and smile where
+yesterday they dashed in pieces the ship that was black with men, women,
+and children. But what shall we say of those billows of human life, of
+which we are ourselves a part, that surge over the graves of its own
+dead with dances and laughter and many a coquetry, with panting chase
+for gain and preference, and pious regrets and tender condolences for
+the thousands that died yesterday--and need not have died?
+
+Such were the questions Dr. Sevier asked himself as he laid down the
+newspaper full of congratulations upon the return of trade's and
+fashion's boisterous flow, and praises of the deeds of benevolence and
+mercy that had abounded throughout the days of anguish.
+
+Certain currents in these human rapids had driven Richling and the
+Doctor wide apart. But at last, one day, Richling entered the office
+with a cheerfulness of countenance something overdone, and indicative to
+the Doctor's eye of inward trepidation.
+
+"Doctor," he said hurriedly, "preparing to leave the office? It was the
+only moment I could command"--
+
+"Good-morning, Richling."
+
+"I've been trying every day for a week to get down here," said Richling,
+drawing out a paper. "Doctor"--with his eyes on the paper, which he had
+begun to unfold.
+
+"Richling"-- It was the Doctor's hardest voice. Richling looked up
+at him as a child looks at a thundercloud. The Doctor pointed to the
+document:--
+
+"Is that a subscription paper?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You needn't unfold it, Richling." The Doctor made a little pushing
+motion at it with his open hand. "From whom does it come?"
+
+Richling gave a name. He had not changed color when the Doctor looked
+black, but now he did; for Dr. Sevier smiled. It was terrible.
+
+"Not the little preacher that lisps?" asked the physician.
+
+"He lisps sometimes," said Richling, with resentful subsidence of tone
+and with dropped eyes, preparing to return the paper to his pocket.
+
+"Wait," said the Doctor, more gravely, arresting the movement with his
+index finger. "What is it for?"
+
+"It's for the aid of an asylum overcrowded with orphans in consequence
+of the late epidemic." There was still a tightness in Richling's throat,
+a faint bitterness in his tone, a spark of indignation in his eye. But
+these the Doctor ignored. He reached out his hand, took the folded paper
+gently from Richling, crossed his knees, and, resting his elbows on them
+and shaking the paper in a prefatory way, spoke:--
+
+"Richling, in old times we used to go into monasteries; now we subscribe
+to orphan asylums. Nine months ago I warned this community that if it
+didn't take the necessary precautions against the foul contagion that
+has since swept over us it would pay for its wicked folly in the lives
+of thousands and the increase of fatherless and helpless children. I
+didn't know it would come this year, but I knew it might come any year.
+Richling, we deserved it!"
+
+Richling had never seen his friend in so forbidding an aspect. He had
+come to him boyishly elated with the fancied excellence and goodness and
+beauty of the task he had assumed, and a perfect confidence that his
+noble benefactor would look upon him with pride and upon the scheme with
+generous favor. When he had offered to present the paper to Dr. Sevier
+he had not understood the little rector's marked alacrity in accepting
+his service. Now it was plain enough. He was well-nigh dumfounded. The
+responses that came from him came mechanically, and in the manner of one
+who wards off unmerited buffetings from one whose unkindness may not be
+resented.
+
+"You can't think that only those died who were to blame?" he asked,
+helplessly; and the Doctor's answer came back instantly:--
+
+"Ho, no! look at the hundreds of little graves! No, sir. If only those
+who were to blame had been stricken, I should think the Judgment wasn't
+far off. Talk of God's mercy in times of health! There's no greater
+evidence of it than to see him, in these awful visitations, refusing
+still to discriminate between the innocent and the guilty! Richling,
+only Infinite Mercy joined to Infinite Power, with infinite command of
+the future, could so forbear!"
+
+Richling could not answer. The Doctor unfolded the paper and began to
+read: "'God, in his mysterious providence'--O sir!"
+
+"What!" demanded Richling.
+
+"O sir, what a foul, false charge! There's nothing mysterious about it.
+We've trampled the book of Nature's laws in the mire of our streets, and
+dragged her penalties down upon our heads! Why, Richling,"--he shifted
+his attitude, and laid the edge of one hand upon the paper that lay in
+the other, with the air of commencing a demonstration,--"you're a Bible
+man, eh? Well, yes, I think you are; but I want you never to forget that
+the book of Nature has its commandments, too; and the man who sins
+against _them_ is a sinner. There's no dispensation of mercy in that
+Scripture to Jew or Gentile, though the God of Mercy wrote it with his
+own finger. A community has got to know those laws and keep them, or
+take the consequences--and take them here and now--on this
+globe--_presently_!"
+
+"You mean, then," said Richling, extending his hand for the return of
+the paper, "that those whose negligence filled the asylums should be the
+ones to subscribe."
+
+"Yes," replied the Doctor, "yes!" drew back his hand with the paper
+still in it, turned to his desk, opened the list, and wrote. Richling's
+eyes followed the pen; his heart came slowly up into his throat.
+
+"Why, Doc--Doctor, that's more than any one else has"--
+
+"They have probably made some mistake," said Dr. Sevier, rubbing the
+blotting-paper with his finger. "Richling, do you think it's your
+mission to be a philanthropist?"
+
+"Isn't it everybody's mission?" replied Richling.
+
+"That's not what I asked you."
+
+"But you ask a question," said Richling, smiling down upon the
+subscription-paper as he folded it, "that nobody would like to answer."
+
+"Very well, then, you needn't answer. But, Richling,"--he pointed
+his long finger to the pocket of Richling's coat, where the
+subscription-list had disappeared,--"this sort of work--whether you
+distinctly propose to be a philanthropist or not--is right, of course.
+It's good. But it's the mere alphabet of beneficence. Richling, whenever
+philanthropy takes the _guise_ of philanthropy, look out. Confine your
+philanthropy--you can't do it entirely, but as much as you can--confine
+your philanthropy to the _motive_. It's the temptation of
+philanthropists to set aside the natural constitution of society
+wherever it seems out of order, and substitute some philanthropic
+machinery in its place. It's all wrong, Richling. Do as a good doctor
+would. Help nature."
+
+Richling looked down askance, pushed his fingers through his hair
+perplexedly, drew a deep breath, lifted his eyes to the Doctor's again,
+smiled incredulously, and rubbed his brow.
+
+"You don't see it?" asked the physician, in a tone of surprise.
+
+"O Doctor,"--throwing up a despairing hand,--"we're miles apart. I don't
+see how any work could be nobler. It looks to me"-- But Dr. Sevier
+interrupted.
+
+"--From an emotional stand-point, Richling. Richling,"--he changed his
+attitude again,--"if you _want_ to be a philanthropist, be
+cold-blooded."
+
+Richling laughed outright, but not heartily.
+
+"Well!" said his friend, with a shrug, as if he dismissed the whole
+matter. But when Richling moved, as if to rise, he restrained him.
+"Stop! I know you're in a hurry, but you may tell Reisen to blame me."
+
+"It's not Reisen so much as it's the work," replied Richling, but
+settled down again in his seat.
+
+"Richling, human benevolence--public benevolence--in its beginning was
+a mere nun on the battle-field, binding up wounds and wiping the damp
+from dying brows. But since then it has had time and opportunity to
+become strong, bold, masculine, potential. Once it had only the
+knowledge and power to alleviate evil consequences; now it has both the
+knowledge and the power to deal with evil causes. Now, I say to you,
+leave this emotional A B C of human charity to nuns and mite societies.
+It's a good work; let them do it. Give them money, if you can."
+
+"I see what you mean--I think," said Richling, slowly, and with a
+pondering eye.
+
+"I'm glad if you do," rejoined the Doctor, visibly relieved.
+
+"But that only throws a heavier responsibility upon strong men, if I
+understand it," said Richling, half interrogatively.
+
+"Certainly! Upon strong spirits, male or female. Upon spirits that can
+drive the axe low down into the causes of things, again and again and
+again, steadily, patiently, until at last some great evil towering above
+them totters and falls crashing to the earth, to be cut to pieces and
+burned in the fire. Richling, gather fagots for pastime if you like,
+though it's poor fun; but don't think that's your mission! _Don't_ be a
+fagot-gatherer! What are you smiling at?"
+
+"Your good opinion of me," answered Richling. "Doctor, I don't believe
+I'm fit for anything but a fagot-gatherer. But I'm willing to try."
+
+"Oh, bah!" The Doctor admired such humility as little as it deserved.
+"Richling, reduce the number of helpless orphans! Dig out the old roots
+of calamity! A spoon is not what you want; you want a _mattock_. Reduce
+crime and vice! Reduce squalor! Reduce the poor man's death-rate!
+Improve his tenements! Improve his hospitals! Carry sanitation into his
+workshops! Teach the trades! Prepare the poor for possible riches, and
+the rich for possible poverty! Ah--ah--Richling, I preach well enough, I
+think, but in practice I have missed it myself! Don't repeat my error!"
+
+"Oh, but you haven't missed it!" cried Richling.
+
+"Yes, but I have," said the Doctor. "Here I am, telling you to let your
+philanthropy be cold-blooded; why, I've always been hot-blooded."
+
+"I like the hot best," said Richling, quickly.
+
+"You ought to hate it," replied his friend. "It's been the root of all
+your troubles. Richling, God Almighty is unimpassioned. If he wasn't
+he'd be weak. You remember Young's line: 'A God all mercy is a God
+unjust.' The time has come when beneficence, to be real, must operate
+scientifically, not emotionally. Emotion is good; but it must follow,
+not guide. Here! I'll give you a single instance. Emotion never sells
+where it can give: that is an old-fashioned, effete benevolence. The
+new, the cold-blooded, is incomparably better: it never--to individual
+or to community--gives where it can sell. Your instincts have applied
+the rule to yourself; apply it to your fellow-man."
+
+"Ah!" said Richling, promptly, "that's another thing. It's not my
+business to apply it to them."
+
+"It _is_ your business to apply it to them. You have no right to do
+less."
+
+"And what will men say of me? At least--not that, but"--
+
+The Doctor pointed upward. "They will say, 'I know thee, that thou art
+an hard man.'" His voice trembled. "But, Richling," he resumed with
+fresh firmness, "if you want to lead a long and useful life,--you say
+you do,--you must take my advice; you must deny yourself for a while;
+you must shelve these fine notions for a time. I tell you once more, you
+must endeavor to reëstablish your health as it was before--before they
+locked you up, you know. When that is done you can commence right there
+if you choose; I wish you would. Give the public--sell would be better,
+but it will hardly buy--a prison system less atrocious, less destructive
+of justice, and less promotive of crime and vice, than the one it has.
+By-the-by, I suppose you know that Raphael Ristofalo went to prison last
+night again?"
+
+Richling sprang to his feet. "For what? He hasn't"--
+
+"Yes, sir; he has discovered the man who robbed him, and has killed
+him."
+
+Richling started away, but halted as the Doctor spoke again, rising from
+his seat and shaking out his legs.
+
+"He's not suffering any hardship. He's shrewd, you know,--has made
+arrangements with the keeper by which he secures very comfortable
+quarters. The star-chamber, I think they call the room he is in. He'll
+suffer very little restraint. Good-day!"
+
+He turned, as Richling left, to get his own hat and gloves. "Yes," he
+thought, as he passed slowly downstairs to his carriage, "I have erred."
+He was not only teaching, he was learning. To fight evil was not enough.
+People who wanted help for orphans did not come to him--they sent. They
+drew back from him as a child shrinks from a soldier. Even Alice, his
+buried Alice, had wept with delight when he gave her a smile, and
+trembled with fear at his frown. To fight evil is not enough. Everybody
+seemed to feel as though that were a war against himself. Oh for some
+one always to understand--never to fear--the frowning good intention of
+the lonely man!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+"PETTENT PRATE."
+
+
+It was about the time, in January, when clerks and correspondents were
+beginning to write '59 without first getting it '58, that Dr. Sevier, as
+one morning he approached his office, noticed with some grim amusement,
+standing among the brokers and speculators of Carondelet street, the
+baker, Reisen. He was earnestly conversing with and bending over a
+small, alert fellow, in a rakish beaver and very smart coat, with the
+blue flowers of modesty bunched saucily in one button-hole.
+
+Almost at the same moment Reisen saw the Doctor. He called his name
+aloud, and for all his ungainly bulk would have run directly to the
+carriage in the middle of the street, only that the Doctor made believe
+not to see, and in a moment was out of reach. But when, two or three
+hours later, the same vehicle came, tipping somewhat sidewise against
+the sidewalk at the Charity Hospital gate, and the Doctor stepped from
+it, there stood Reisen in waiting.
+
+"Toctor," he said, approaching and touching his hat, "I like to see you
+a minudt, uff you bleace, shtrict prifut."
+
+They moved slowly down the unfrequented sidewalk, along the garden wall.
+
+"Before you begin, Reisen, I want to ask you a question. I've noticed
+for a month past that Mr. Richling rides in your bread-carts alongside
+the drivers on their rounds. Don't you know you ought not to require
+such a thing as that from a person like Mr. Richling? Mr. Richling's a
+gentleman, Reisen, and you make him mount up in those bread-carts, and
+jump out every few minutes to deliver bread!"
+
+The Doctor's blood was not cold.
+
+"Vell, now!" drawled the baker, as the corners of his mouth retreated
+toward the back of his neck, "end't tat teh funn'est ting, ennahow! Vhy,
+tat iss yoost teh ferra ting fot I comin' to shpeak mit you apowdt udt!"
+He halted and looked at the Doctor to see how this coincidence struck
+him; but the Doctor merely moved on. "_I_ toant make him too udt," he
+continued, starting again; "he cumps to me sindts apowdt two-o-o mundts
+aco--ven I shtill feelin' a liddle veak, yet, fun teh yalla-feewa--undt
+yoost paygs me to let um too udt. 'Mr. Richlun,' sayss I to him, 'I
+toandt kin untershtayndt for vot you vawndts to too sich a ritickliss,
+Mr. Richlun!' Ovver he sayss, 'Mr. Reisen,'--he alvays callss me
+'Mister,' undt tat iss one dting in puttickly vot I alvays tit li-i-iked
+apowdt Mr. Richlun,--'Mr. Reisen,' he sayss, 'toandt you aysk me te
+reason, ovver yoost let me co abate undt too udt!' Undt I voss a coin'
+to kiff udt up, alretty; ovver ten cumps in _Missess_ Reisen,--who iss a
+heap shmarter mayn as fot Reisen iss, I yoost tell you te ectsectly
+troot,--and she sayss, 'Reisen, you yoost tell Mr. Richlun, Mr. Richlun,
+you toadnt coin' to too sich a ritickliss!'"
+
+The speaker paused for effect.
+
+"Undt ten Mr. Richlun, he talks!--Schweedt?--Oh yendlemuns, toandt say
+nutting!" The baker lifted up his palm and swung it down against his
+thigh with a blow that sent the flour out in a little cloud. "I tell
+you, Toctor Tseweer, ven tat mayn vawndts to too udt, he kin yoost talk
+te mo-ust like a Christun fun enna mayn I neffa he-ut in mine li-i-fe!
+'Missess Reisen,' he sayss, 'I vawndts to too udt pecause I vawndts to
+too udt.' Vell, how you coin' to arg-y ennating eagval mit Mr. Richlun?
+So teh upshodt iss he coes owdt in teh prate-cawts tistripputin' te
+prate!" Reisen threw his arms far behind him, and bowed low to his
+listener.
+
+Dr. Sevier had learned him well enough to beware of interrupting him,
+lest when he resumed it would be at the beginning again. He made no
+answer, and Reisen went on:--
+
+"Bressently"-- He stopped his slow walk, brought forward both
+palms, shrugged, dropped them, bowed, clasped them behind him, brought
+the left one forward, dropped it, then the right one, dropped it also,
+frowned, smiled, and said:--
+
+"Bressently"--then a long silence--"effrapotty in my
+etsteplitchmendt"--another long pause--"hef yoost teh same ettechmendt
+to Mr. Richlun,"--another interval,--"tey hef yoost tso much effection
+fur _him_"--another silence--"ass tey hef"--another, with a smile this
+time--"fur--te teffle himpselluf!" An oven opened in the baker's face,
+and emitted a softly rattling expiration like that of a bursted bellows.
+The Doctor neither smiled nor spoke. Reisen resumed:--
+
+"I seen udt. I seen udt. Ovver I toandt coult untershtayndt udt. Ovver
+one tay cumps in mine little poy in to me fen te pakers voss all
+ashleep, 'Pap-a, Mr. Richlun sayss you shouldt come into teh offuss.' I
+kumpt in. Mr. Richlun voss tare, shtayndting yoost so--yoost so--py teh
+shtofe; undt, Toctor Tseweer, I yoost tell you te ectsectly troot, he
+toaldt in fife minudts--six minudts--seven minudts, udt may pe--undt
+shoadt me how effrapotty, high undt low, little undt pick, Tom, Tick,
+undt Harra, pin ropping me sindts more ass fife years!"
+
+The longest pause of all followed this disclosure. The baker had
+gradually backed the Doctor up against the wall, spreading out the whole
+matter with his great palms turned now upward and now downward, the
+bulky contents of his high-waisted, barn-door trowsers now bulged
+out and now withdrawn, to be protruded yet more a moment later. He
+recommenced by holding out his down-turned hand some distance above
+the ground.
+
+"I yoompt tot hoigh!" He blew his cheeks out, and rose a half-inch off
+his heels in recollection of the mighty leap. "Ovver Mr. Richlun
+sayss,--he sayss, 'Kip shtill, Mr. Reisen;' undt I kibt shtill."
+
+The baker's auditor was gradually drawing him back toward the hospital
+gate; but he continued speaking:--
+
+"Py undt py, vun tay, I kot someting to say to Mr. _Richlun_, yet. Undt
+I sendts vert to Mr. _Richlun_ tat _he_ shouldt come into teh offuss. He
+cumps in. 'Mr. Richlun,' I sayss, sayss I to him, 'Mr. Richlun, I kot
+udt!'" The baker shook his finger in Dr. Sevier's face. "'I kot udt, udt
+layst, Mr. Richlun! I yoost het a _suspish'n_ sindts teh first tay fot I
+employedt you, ovver now I _know_ I kot udt!' Vell, sir, he yoost turnun
+so rate ass a flennen shirt!--'Mr. Reisen,' sayss he to me, 'fot iss udt
+fot you kot?' Undt sayss I to him, 'Mr. Richlun, udt iss you! Udt is
+_you_ fot I kot!'"
+
+Dr. Sevier stood sphinx-like, and once more Reisen went on.
+
+"'Yes, Mr. Richlun,'" still addressing the Doctor as though he were his
+book-keeper, "'I yoost layin, on my pett effra nighdt--effra nighdt,
+vi-i-ite ava-a-ake! undt in apowdt a veek I make udt owdt ut layst tot
+you, Mr. Richlun,'--I lookt um shtraight in te eye, undt he lookt me
+shtraight te same,--'tot, Mr. Richlun, _you_,' sayss I, 'not dtose
+fellehs fot pin py mo sindts more ass fife yearss, put _you_, Mr.
+Richlun, iss teh mayn!--teh mayn fot I--kin _trust_!'" The baker's
+middle parts bent out and his arms were drawn akimbo. Thus for ten
+seconds.
+
+"'Undt now, Mr. Richlun, do you kot teh shtrengdt for to shtart a noo
+pissness?'--Pecause, Toctor, udt pin seem to me Mr. Richlun kitten more
+undt more shecklun, undt toandt take tot meticine fot you kif um (ovver
+he sayss he toos). So ten he sayss to me, 'Mister Reisen, I am yoost so
+sollut undt shtrong like a pilly-coat! Fot is teh noo pissness?'--'Mr.
+Richlun,' sayss I, 've goin' to make pettent prate!'"
+
+"What?" asked the Doctor, frowning with impatience and venturing to
+interrupt at last.
+
+"_Pet-tent prate!_"
+
+The listener frowned heavier and shook his head.
+
+"_Pettent prate!_"
+
+"Oh! patent bread; yes. Well?"
+
+"Yes," said Reisen, "prate mate mit a mutcheen; mit copponic-essut kass
+into udt ploat pefore udt is paked. I pought teh pettent tiss mawning
+fun a yendleman in Garontelet shtreedt, alretty, naympt Kknox."
+
+"And what have I to do with all this?" asked the Doctor, consulting his
+watch, as he had already done twice before.
+
+"Vell," said Reisen, spreading his arms abroad, "I yoost taught you like
+to herr udt."
+
+"But what do you want to see me for? What have you kept me all this time
+to tell me--or ask me?"
+
+"Toctor,--you ugscooce me--ovver"--the baker held the Doctor by the
+elbow as he began to turn away--"Toctor Tseweer,"--the great face
+lighted up with a smile, the large body doubled partly together, and the
+broad left hand was held ready to smite the thigh,--"you shouldt see Mr.
+Richlun ven he fowndt owdt udt is goin' to lower teh price of prate! I
+taught he iss goin' to kiss Mississ Reisen!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+SWEET BELLS JANGLED.
+
+
+Those who knew New Orleans just before the civil war, even though they
+saw it only along its riverfront from the deck of some steam-boat, may
+easily recall a large sign painted high up on the side of the old
+"Triangle Building," which came to view through the dark web of masts
+and cordage as one drew near St. Mary's Market. "Steam Bakery" it read.
+And such as were New Orleans householders, or by any other chance
+enjoyed the experience of making their way in the early morning among
+the hundreds of baskets that on hundreds of elbows moved up and down
+along and across the quaint gas-lit arcades of any of the market-houses,
+must remember how, about this time or a little earlier, there began
+to appear on one of the tidiest of bread-stalls in each of these
+market-houses a new kind of bread. It was a small, densely compacted
+loaf of the size and shape of a badly distorted brick. When broken,
+it divided into layers, each of which showed--"teh bprindt of teh
+kkneading-mutcheen," said Reisen to Narcisse; "yoost like a tsoda
+crecker!"
+
+These two persons had met by chance at a coffee-stand one beautiful
+summer dawn in one of the markets,--the Tréiné, most likely,--where,
+perched on high stools at a zinc-covered counter, with the smell of
+fresh blood on the right and of stale fish on the left, they had
+finished half their cup of _café au lait_ before they awoke to the
+exhilarating knowledge of each other's presence.
+
+"Yesseh," said Narcisse, "now since you 'ave wemawk the mention of it, I
+think I have saw that va'iety of bwead."
+
+"Oh, surely you poundt to a-seedt udt. A uckly little prown dting"--
+
+"But cook well," said Narcisse.
+
+"Yayss," drawled the baker. It was a fact that he had to admit.
+
+"An' good flou'," persisted the Creole.
+
+"Yayss," said the smiling manufacturer. He could not deny that either.
+
+"An' honness weight!" said Narcisse, planting his empty cup in his
+saucer, with the energy of his asservation; "an', Mr. Bison, thass a
+ve'y seldom thing."
+
+"Yayss," assented Reisen, "ovver tat prate is mighdy dtry, undt
+shtickin' in ten dtroat."
+
+"No, seh!" said the flatterer, with a generous smile. "Egscuse me--I
+diffeh fum you. 'Tis a beaucheouz bwead. Yesseh. And eve'y loaf got the
+name beaucheouzly pwint on the top, with 'Patent'--sich an' sich a time.
+'Tis the tooth, Mr. Bison, I'm boun' to congwatu_late_ you on that
+bwead."
+
+"O-o-oh! tat iss not _mine_ prate," exclaimed the baker. "Tat iss not
+fun mine etsteplitchmendt. Oh, no! Tatt iss te prate--I'm yoost dtellin'
+you--tat iss te prate fun tat fellah py teh Sunk-Mary's Morrikit-house!
+Tat's teh 'shteam prate'. I to-undt know for vot effrapotty puys tat
+prate annahow! Ovver you yoost vait dtill you see _mine_ prate!"
+
+"Mr. Bison," said Narcisse, "Mr. Bison,"--he had been trying to stop
+him and get in a word of his own, but could not,--"I don't know if
+you--Mr.--Mr. Bison, in fact, you din unde'stood me. Can that be
+poss'ble that you din notiz that I was speaking in my i'ony about that
+bwead? Why, of co'se! Thass juz my i'onious cuztom, Mr. Bison. Thass one
+thing I dunno if you 'ave notiz about that 'steam bwead,' Mr. Bison, but
+with me that bwead always stick in my th'oat; an' yet I kin swallow mose
+anything, in fact. No, Mr. Bison, yo' bwead is deztyned to be the bwead;
+and I tell you how 'tis with me, I juz gladly eat yo' bwead eve'y time I
+kin git it! Mr. Bison, in fact you don't know me ve'y in_tim_itly, but
+you will oblige me ve'y much indeed to baw me five dollahs till
+tomaw--save me fum d'awing a check!"
+
+The German thrust his hand slowly and deeply into his pocket. "I alvayss
+like to oplyche a yendleman,"--he smiled benignly, drew out a toothpick,
+and added,--"ovver I nivveh bporrah or lend to ennabodda."
+
+"An' then," said Narcisse, promptly, "'tis imposs'ble faw anybody to be
+offended. Thass the bess way, Mr. Bison."
+
+"Yayss," said the baker, "I tink udt iss." As they were parting, he
+added: "Ovver you vait dtill you see _mine_ prate!"
+
+"I'll do it, seh!-- And, Mr. Bison, you muzn't think anything
+about that, my not bawing that five dollars fum you, Mr. Bison, because
+that don't make a bit o' dif'ence; an' thass one thing I like about you,
+Mr. Bison, you don't baw yo' money to eve'y Dick, Tom, an' Hawwy, do
+you?"
+
+"No, I dtoandt. Ovver, you yoost vait"--
+
+And certainly, after many vexations, difficulties, and delays, that
+took many a pound of flesh from Reisen's form, the pretty, pale-brown,
+fragrant white loaves of "aërated bread" that issued from the Star
+Bakery in Benjamin street were something pleasant to see, though they
+did not lower the price.
+
+Richling's old liking for mechanical apparatus came into play. He only,
+in the establishment, thoroughly understood the new process, and could
+be certain of daily, or rather nightly, uniform results. He even made
+one or two slight improvements in it, which he contemplated with
+ecstatic pride, and long accounts of which he wrote to Mary.
+
+In a generous and innocent way Reisen grew a little jealous of his
+accountant, and threw himself into his business as he had not done
+before since he was young, and in the ardor of his emulation ignored
+utterly a state of health that was no better because of his great length
+and breadth.
+
+"Toctor Tseweer!" he said, as the physician appeared one day in his
+office. "Vell, now, I yoost pet finfty tawllars tat iss Mississ Reisen
+sendts for you tat I'm sick! Ven udt iss not such a dting!" He laughed
+immoderately. "Ovver I'm gladt you come, Toctor, ennahow, for you pin
+yoost in time to see ever'ting runnin'. I vish you yoost come undt see
+udt!" He grinned in his old, broad way; but his face was anxious, and
+his bared arms were lean. He laid his hand on the Doctor's arm, and then
+jerked it away, and tried to blow off the floury print of his fingers.
+"Come!" He beckoned. "Come; I show you somedting putiful. Toctor, I
+_vizh_ you come!"
+
+The Doctor yielded. Richling had to be called upon at last to explain
+the hidden parts and processes.
+
+"It's yoost like putt'n' te shpirudt into teh potty," said the laughing
+German. "Now, tat prate kot life in udt yoost teh same like your own
+selluf, Toctor. Tot prate kot yoost so much sense ass Reisen kot.
+Ovver, Toctor--Toctor"--the Doctor was giving his attention to
+Richling, who was explaining something--"Toctor, toandt you come here
+uxpectin' to see nopoty sick, less-n udt iss Mr. Richlun." He caught
+Richling's face roughly between his hands, and then gave his back a
+caressing thwack. "Toctor, vot you dtink? Ve goin' teh run prate-cawts
+mit copponic-essut kass. Tispense mit hawses!" He laughed long but
+softly, and smote Richling again as the three walked across the bakery
+yard abreast.
+
+"Well?" said Dr. Sevier to Richling, in a low tone, "always working
+toward the one happy end."
+
+Richling had only time to answer with his eyes, when the baker, always
+clinging close to them, said, "Yes; if I toandt look oudt yet, he pe
+rich pefore Reisen."
+
+The Doctor looked steadily at Richling, stood still, and said, "Don't
+hurry."
+
+But Richling swung playfully half around on his heel, dropped his
+glance, and jerked his head sidewise, as one who neither resented the
+advice nor took it. A minute later he drew from his breast-pocket a
+small, thick letter stripped of its envelope, and handed it to the
+Doctor, who put it into his pocket, neither of them speaking. The action
+showed practice. Reisen winked one eye laboriously at the Doctor and
+chuckled.
+
+"See here, Reisen," said the Doctor, "I want you to pack your trunk,
+take the late boat, and go to Biloxi or Pascagoula, and spend a month
+fishing and sailing."
+
+The baker pushed his fingers up under his hat, scratched his head,
+smiled widely, and pointed at Richling.
+
+"Sendt him."
+
+The Doctor went and sat down with Reisen, and used every form of
+inducement that could be brought to bear; but the German had but one
+answer: Richling, Richling, not he. The Doctor left a prescription,
+which the baker took until he found it was making him sleep while
+Richling was at work, whereupon he amiably threw it out of his window.
+
+It was no surprise to Dr. Sevier that Richling came to him a few days
+later with a face all trouble.
+
+"How are you, Richling? How's Reisen?"
+
+"Doctor," said Richling, "I'm afraid Mr. Reisen is"--Their eyes met.
+
+"Insane," said the Doctor.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Does his wife know whether he has ever had such symptoms before--in his
+life?"
+
+"She says he hasn't."
+
+"I suppose you know his pecuniary condition perfectly; has he money?"
+
+"Plenty."
+
+"He'll not consent to go away anywhere, I suppose, will he?"
+
+"Not an inch."
+
+"There's but one sensible and proper course, Richling; he must be taken
+at once, by force if necessary, to a first-class insane hospital."
+
+"Why, Doctor, why? Can't we treat him better at home?"
+
+The Doctor gave his head its well-known swing of impatience. "If you
+want to be _criminally_ in error try that!"
+
+"I don't want to be in error at all," retorted Richling.
+
+"Then don't lose twelve hours that you can save, but send him off as
+soon as process of court will let you."
+
+"Will you come at once and see him?" asked Richling, rising up.
+
+"Yes, I'll be there nearly as soon as you will. Stop; you had better
+ride with me; I have something special to say." As the carriage started
+off, the Doctor leaned back in its cushions, folded his arms, and took a
+long, meditative breath. Richling glanced at him and said:--
+
+"We're both thinking of the same person."
+
+"Yes," replied the Doctor; "and the same day, too, I suppose: the first
+day I ever saw her; the only other time that we ever got into this
+carriage together. Hmm! hmm! With what a fearful speed time flies!"
+
+"Sometimes," said the yearning husband, and apologized by a laugh. The
+Doctor grunted, looked out of the carriage window, and, suddenly
+turning, asked:--
+
+"Do you know that Reisen instructed his wife about six months ago, in
+the event of his death or disability, to place all her interests in your
+hands, and to be guided by your advice in everything?"
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed Richling, "he can't do that! He should have asked my
+consent."
+
+"I suppose he knew he wouldn't get it. He's a cunning simpleton."
+
+"But, Doctor, if you knew this"--Richling ceased.
+
+"Six months ago. Why didn't I tell you?" said the physician. "I thought
+I would, Richling, though Reisen bade me not, when he told me; I made no
+promise. But time, that you think goes slow, was too fast for me."
+
+"I shall refuse to serve," said Richling, soliloquizing aloud. "Don't
+you see, Doctor, the delicacy of the position?"
+
+"Yes, I do; but you don't. Don't you see it would be just as delicate a
+matter for you to refuse?"
+
+Richling pondered, and presently said, quite slowly:--
+
+"It will look like coming down out of the tree to catch the apples as
+they fall," he said. "Why," he added with impatience, "it lays me wide
+open to suspicion and slander."
+
+"Does it?" asked the Doctor, heartlessly. "There's nothing remarkable in
+that. Did any one ever occupy a responsible position without those
+conditions?"
+
+"But, you know, I have made some unscrupulous enemies by defending
+Reisen's interests."
+
+"Um-hmm; what did you defend them for?"
+
+Richling was about to make a reply; but the Doctor wanted none.
+"Richling," he said, "the most of men have burrows. They never let
+anything decoy them so far from those burrows but they can pop into them
+at a moment's notice. Do you take my meaning?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Richling, pleasantly; "no trouble to understand you this
+time. I'll not run into any burrow just now. I'll face my duty and think
+of Mary."
+
+He laughed.
+
+"Excellent pastime," responded Dr. Sevier.
+
+They rode on in silence.
+
+"As to"--began Richling again,--"as to such matters as these, once a man
+confronts the question candidly, there is really no room, that I can
+see, for a man to choose: a man, at least, who is always guided by
+conscience."
+
+"If there were such a man," responded the Doctor.
+
+"True," said John.
+
+"But for common stuff, such as you and I are made of, it must sometimes
+be terrible."
+
+"I dare say," said Richling. "It sometimes requires cold blood to choose
+aright."
+
+"As cold as granite," replied the other.
+
+They arrived at the bakery.
+
+"O Doctor," said Mrs. Reisen, proffering her hand as he entered the
+house, "my poor hussband iss crazy!" She dropped into a chair and burst
+into tears. She was a large woman, with a round, red face and triple
+chin, but with a more intelligent look and a better command of English
+than Reisen. "Doctor, I want you to cure him ass quick ass possible."
+
+"Well, madam, of course; but will you do what I say?"
+
+"I will, certain shure. I do it yust like you tellin' me."
+
+The Doctor gave her such good advice as became a courageous physician.
+
+A look of dismay came upon her. Her mouth dropped open. "Oh, no,
+Doctor!" She began to shake her head. "I'll never do tha-at; oh, no;
+I'll never send my poor hussband to the crazy-house! Oh, no, sir; I'll
+do not such a thing!" There was some resentment in her emotion. Her
+nether lip went up like a crying babe's, and she breathed through her
+nostrils audibly.
+
+"Oh, yes, I know!" said the poor creature, turning her face away from
+the Doctor's kind attempts to explain, and lifting it incredulously as
+she talked to the wall,--"I know all about it. I'm not a-goin' to put no
+sich a disgrace on my poor hussband; no, indeed!" She faced around
+suddenly and threw out her hand to Richling, who leaned against a door
+twisting a bit of string between his thumbs. "Why, he wouldn't go,
+nohow, even if I gave my consents. You caynt coax him out of his room
+yet. Oh, no, Doctor! It's my duty to keep him wid me an' try to cure him
+first a little while here at home. That aint no trouble to me; I don't
+never mind no trouble if I can be any help to my hussband." She
+addressed the wall again.
+
+"Well, madam," replied the physician, with unusual tenderness of tone,
+and looking at Richling while he spoke, "of course you'll do as you
+think best."
+
+"Oh! my poor Reisen!" exclaimed the wife, wringing her hands.
+
+"Yes," said the physician, rising and looking out of the window, "I am
+afraid it will be ruin to Reisen."
+
+"No, it won't be such a thing," said Mrs. Reisen, turning this way and
+that in her chair as the physician moved from place to place. "Mr.
+Richlin',"--turning to him,--"Mr. Richlin' and me kin run the business
+yust so good as Reisen." She shifted her distressed gaze back and forth
+from Richling to the Doctor. The latter turned to Richling:--
+
+"I'll have to leave this matter to you."
+
+Richling nodded.
+
+"Where is Reisen?" asked the Doctor. "In his own room, upstairs?" The
+three passed through an inner door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+MIRAGE.
+
+
+"This spoils some of your arrangements, doesn't it?" asked Dr. Sevier of
+Richling, stepping again into his carriage. He had already said the kind
+things, concerning Reisen, that physicians commonly say when they have
+little hope. "Were you not counting on an early visit to Milwaukee?"
+
+Richling laughed.
+
+"That illusion has been just a little beyond reach for months." He
+helped the Doctor shut his carriage-door.
+
+"But now, of course--" said the physician.
+
+"Of course it's out of the question," replied Richling; and the Doctor
+drove away, with the young man's face in his mind bearing an expression
+of simple emphasis that pleased him much.
+
+Late at night Richling, in his dingy little office, unlocked a
+drawer, drew out a plump package of letters, and began to read their
+pages,--transcripts of his wife's heart, pages upon pages, hundreds of
+precious lines, dates crowding closely one upon another. Often he smiled
+as his eyes ran to and fro, or drew a soft sigh as he turned the page,
+and looked behind to see if any one had stolen in and was reading over
+his shoulder. Sometimes his smile broadened; he lifted his glance from
+the sheet and fixed it in pleasant revery on the blank wall before
+him. Often the lines were entirely taken up with mere utterances of
+affection. Now and then they were all about little Alice, who had
+fretted all the night before, her gums being swollen and tender on the
+upper left side near the front; or who had fallen violently in love with
+the house-dog, by whom, in turn, the sentiment was reciprocated; or
+whose eyes were really getting bluer and bluer, and her cheeks fatter
+and fatter, and who seemed to fear nothing that had existence. And the
+reader of the lines would rest one elbow on the desk, shut his eyes in
+one hand, and see the fair young head of the mother drooping tenderly
+over that smaller head in her bosom. Sometimes the tone of the lines
+was hopefully grave, discussing in the old tentative, interrogative
+key the future and its possibilities. Some pages were given to
+reminiscences,--recollections of all the droll things and all the good
+and glad things of the rugged past. Every here and there, but especially
+where the lines drew toward the signature, the words of longing
+multiplied, but always full of sunshine; and just at the end of each
+letter love spurned its restraints, and rose and overflowed with sweet
+confessions.
+
+Sometimes these re-read letters did Richling good; not always. Maybe he
+read them too often. It was only the very next time that the Doctor's
+carriage stood before the bakery that the departing physician turned
+before he reëntered the vehicle, and--whatever Richling had been saying
+to him--said abruptly:--
+
+"Richling, are you falling out of love with your work?"
+
+"Why do you ask me that?" asked the young man, coloring.
+
+"Because I no longer see that joy of deliverance with which you entered
+upon this humble calling. It seems to have passed like a lost perfume,
+Richling. Have you let your toil become a task once more?"
+
+Richling dropped his eyes and pushed the ground with the toe of his
+boot.
+
+"I didn't want you to find that out, Doctor."
+
+"I was afraid, from the first, it would be so," said the physician.
+
+"I don't see why you were."
+
+"Well, I saw that the zeal with which you first laid hold of your work
+was not entirely natural. It was good, but it was partly
+artificial,--the more credit to you on that account. But I saw that by
+and by you would have to keep it up mainly by your sense of necessity
+and duty. 'That'll be the pinch,' I said; and now I see it's come. For a
+long time you idealized the work; but at last its real dulness has begun
+to overcome you, and you're discontented--and with a discontentment that
+you can't justify, can you?"
+
+"But I feel myself growing smaller again."
+
+"No wonder. Why, Richling, it's the discontent makes that."
+
+"Oh, no! The discontent makes me long to expand. I never had so much
+ambition before. But what can I do here? Why, Doctor, I ought to be--I
+might be"--
+
+The physician laid a hand on the young man's shoulder.
+
+"Stop, Richling. Drop those phrases and give us a healthy 'I am,' and 'I
+must,' and 'I will.' Don't--_don't_ be like so many! You're not of the
+many. Richling, in the first illness in which I ever attended your wife,
+she watched her chance and asked me privately--implored me--not to let
+her die, for your sake. I don't suppose that tortures could have wrung
+from her, even if she realized it,--which I doubt,--the true reason. But
+don't you feel it? It was because your moral nature needs her so badly.
+Stop--let me finish. You need Mary back here now to hold you square to
+your course by the tremendous power of her timid little 'Don't you
+think?' and 'Doesn't it seem?'"
+
+"Doctor," replied Richling, with a smile of expostulation, "you touch
+one's pride."
+
+"Certainly I do. You're willing enough to say that you love her and long
+for her, but not that your moral manhood needs her. And yet isn't it
+true?"
+
+"It sha'n't be true," said Richling, swinging a playful fist.
+"'Forewarned is forearmed;' I'll not allow it. I'm man enough for that."
+He laughed, with a touch of pique.
+
+"Richling,"--the Doctor laid a finger against his companion's shoulder,
+preparing at the same time to leave him,--"don't be misled. A man who
+doesn't need a wife isn't fit to have one."
+
+"Why, Doctor," replied Richling, with sincere amiability, "you're the
+man of all men I should have picked out to prove the contrary."
+
+"No, Richling, no. I wasn't fit, and God took her."
+
+In accordance with Dr. Sevier's request Richling essayed to lift the
+mind of the baker's wife, in the matter of her husband's affliction, to
+that plane of conviction where facts, and not feelings, should become
+her motive; and when he had talked until his head reeled, as though
+he had been blowing a fire, and she would not blaze for all his
+blowing--would be governed only by a stupid sentimentality; and when
+at length she suddenly flashed up in silly anger and accused him of
+interested motives; and when he had demanded instant retraction or
+release from her employment; and when she humbly and affectionately
+apologized, and was still as deep as ever in hopeless, clinging
+sentimentalisms, repeating the dictums of her simple and ignorant German
+neighbors and intimates, and calling them in to argue with him, the
+feeling that the Doctor's exhortation had for the moment driven away
+came back with more force than ever, and he could only turn again to
+his ovens and account-books with a feeling of annihilation.
+
+"Where am I? What am I?" Silence was the only answer. The separation
+that had once been so sharp a pain had ceased to cut, and was bearing
+down upon him now with that dull, grinding weight that does the damage
+in us.
+
+Presently came another development: the lack of money, that did no harm
+while it was merely kept in the mind, settled down upon the heart.
+
+"It may be a bad thing to love, but it's a good thing to have," he said,
+one day, to the little rector, as this friend stood by him at a corner
+of the high desk where Richling was posting his ledger.
+
+"But not to seek," said the rector.
+
+Richling posted an item and shook his head doubtingly.
+
+"That depends, I should say, on how much one seeks it, and how much of
+it he seeks."
+
+"No," insisted the clergyman. Richling bent a look of inquiry upon him,
+and he added:--
+
+"The principle is bad, and you know it, Richling. 'Seek ye first'--you
+know the text, and the assurance that follows with it--'all these things
+shall be added'"--
+
+"Oh, yes; but still"--
+
+"'But still!'" exclaimed the little preacher; "why must everybody say
+'but still'? Don't you see that that 'but still' is the refusal of
+Christians to practise Christianity?"
+
+Richling looked, but said nothing; and his friend hoped the word had
+taken effect. But Richling was too deeply bitten to be cured by one or
+two good sayings. After a moment he said:--
+
+"I used to wonder to see nearly everybody struggling to be rich, but I
+don't now. I don't justify it, but I understand it. It's flight from
+oblivion. It's the natural longing to be seen and felt."
+
+"Why isn't it enough to be felt?" asked the other. "Here, you make bread
+and sell it. A thousand people eat it from your hand every day. Isn't
+that something?"
+
+"Yes; but it's all the bread. The bread's everything; I'm nothing. I'm
+not asked to do or to be. I may exist or not; there will be bread all
+the same. I see my remark pains you, but I can't help it. You've never
+tried the thing. You've never encountered the mild contempt that people
+in ease pay to those who pursue the 'industries.' You've never suffered
+the condescension of rank to the ranks. You don't know the smart of
+being only an arithmetical quantity in a world of achievements and
+possessions."
+
+"No," said the preacher, "maybe I haven't. But I should say you are just
+the sort of man that ought to come through all that unsoured and unhurt.
+Richling,"--he put on a lighter mood,--"you've got a moral indigestion.
+You've accustomed yourself to the highest motives, and now these new
+notions are not the highest, and you know and feel it. They don't
+nourish you. They don't make you happy. Where are your old sentiments?
+What's become of them?"
+
+"Ah!" said Richling, "I got them from my wife. And the supply's nearly
+run out."
+
+"Get it renewed!" said the little man, quickly, putting on his hat and
+extending a farewell hand. "Excuse me for saying so. I didn't intend it;
+I dropped in to ask you again the name of that Italian whom you visit at
+the prison,--the man I promised you I'd go and talk to. Yes--Ristofalo;
+that's it. Good-by."
+
+That night Richling wrote to his wife. What he wrote goes not down here;
+but he felt as he wrote that his mood was not the right one, and when
+Mary got the letter she answered by first mail:--
+
+ "Will you not let me come to you? Is it not surely best? Say
+ but the word, and I'll come. It will be the steamer to Chicago,
+ railroad to Cairo, and a St. Louis boat to New Orleans. Alice
+ will be both company and protection, and no burden at all. O my
+ beloved husband! I am just ungracious enough to think, some
+ days, that these times of separation are the hardest of all.
+ When we were suffering sickness and hunger together--well, we
+ were _together_. Darling, if you'll just say come, I'll come in
+ an _instant_. Oh, how gladly! Surely, with what you tell me
+ you've saved, and with your place so secure to you, can't we
+ venture to begin again? Alice and I can live with you in the
+ bakery. O my husband! if you but say the word, a little time--a
+ few days will bring us into your arms. And yet, do not yield to
+ my impatience; I trust your wisdom, and know that what you
+ decide will be best. Mother has been very feeble lately, as I
+ have told you; but she seems to be improving, and now I see
+ what I've half suspected for a long time, and ought to have
+ seen sooner, that my husband--my dear, dear husband--needs me
+ most; and I'm coming--I'm _coming_, John, if you'll only say
+ come.
+
+ Your loving
+ MARY."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+RISTOFALO AND THE RECTOR.
+
+
+Be Richling's feelings what they might, the Star Bakery shone in the
+retail firmament of the commercial heavens with new and growing
+brilliancy. There was scarcely time to talk even with the tough little
+rector who hovers on the borders of this history, and he might have
+become quite an alien had not Richling's earnest request made him one
+day a visitor, as we have seen him express his intention of being, in
+the foul corridors of the parish prison, and presently the occupant of a
+broken chair in the apartment apportioned to Raphael Ristofalo and two
+other prisoners. "Easy little tasks you cut out for your friends," said
+the rector to Richling when next they met. "I got preached _to_--not to
+say edified. I'll share my edification with you!" He told his
+experience.
+
+It was a sinister place, the prison apartment. The hand of Kate
+Ristofalo had removed some of its unsightly conditions and disguised
+others; but the bounds of the room, walls, ceiling, windows, floor,
+still displayed, with official unconcern, the grime and decay that is
+commonly thought good enough for men charged, rightly or wrongly, with
+crime.
+
+The clergyman's chair was in the centre of the floor. Ristofalo sat
+facing him a little way off on the right. A youth of nineteen sat tipped
+against the wall on the left, and a long-limbed, big-boned, red-shirted
+young Irishman occupied a poplar table, hanging one of his legs across
+a corner of it and letting the other down to the floor. Ristofalo
+remarked, in the form of polite acknowledgment, that the rector had
+preached to the assembled inmates of the prison on the Sunday previous.
+
+"Did I say anything that you thought was true?" asked the minister.
+
+The Italian smiled in the gentle manner that never failed him.
+
+"Didn't listen much," he said. He drew from a pocket of his black
+velveteen pantaloons a small crumpled tract. It may have been a favorite
+one with the clergyman, for the youth against the wall produced its
+counterpart, and the man on the edge of the table lay back on his elbow,
+and, with an indolent stretch of the opposite arm and both legs, drew a
+third one from a tin cup that rested on a greasy shelf behind him. The
+Irishman held his between his fingers and smirked a little toward the
+floor. Ristofalo extended his toward the visitor, and touched the
+caption with one finger: "Mercy offered."
+
+"Well," asked the rector, pleasantly, "what's the matter with that?"
+
+"Is no use yeh. Wrong place--this prison."
+
+"Um-hm," said the tract-distributor, glancing down at the leaf and
+smoothing it on his knee while he took time to think. "Well, why
+shouldn't mercy be offered here?"
+
+"No," replied Ristofalo, still smiling; "ought offer justice first."
+
+"Mr. Preacher," asked the young Irishman, bringing both legs to the
+front, and swinging them under the table, "d'ye vote?"
+
+"Yes; I vote."
+
+"D'ye call yerself a cidizen--with a cidizen's rights an' djuties?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"That's right." There was a deep sea of insolence in the smooth-faced,
+red-eyed smile that accompanied the commendation. "And how manny times
+have ye bean in this prison?"
+
+"I don't know; eight or ten times. That rather beats you, doesn't it?"
+
+Ristofalo smiled, the youth uttered a high rasping cackle, and the
+Irishman laughed the heartiest of all.
+
+"A little," he said; "a little. But nivver mind. Ye say ye've bin here
+eight or tin times; yes. Well, now, will I tell ye what I'd do afore and
+iver I'd kim back here ag'in,--if I was you now? Will I tell ye?"
+
+"Well, yes," replied the visitor, amiably; "I'd like to know."
+
+"Well, surr, I'd go to the mair of this city and to the judge of
+the criminal coort, and to the gov'ner of the Sta-ate, and to the
+ligislatur, if needs be, and I'd say, 'Gintlemin, I can't go back to
+that prison! There is more crimes a-being committed by the people
+outside ag'in the fellies in theyre than--than--than the--the fellies in
+theyre has committed ag'in the people! I'm ashamed to preach theyre! I'm
+afeered to do ud!'" The speaker slipped off the table, upon his feet.
+"'There's murrder a-goun' on in theyre! There's more murrder a-bein'
+done in theyre nor there is outside! Justice is a-bein' murdered theyre
+ivery hour of day and night!'"
+
+He brandished his fist with the last words, but dropped it at a glance
+from Ristofalo, and began to pace the floor along his side of the room,
+looking with a heavy-browed smile back and forth from one fellow-captive
+to the other. He waited till the visitor was about to speak, and then
+interrupted, pointing at him suddenly:--
+
+"Ye're a Prodez'n preacher! I'll bet ye fifty dollars ye have a rich
+cherch! Full of leadin' cidizens!"
+
+"You're correct."
+
+"Well, I'd go an'--an'--an' I'd say, 'Dawn't ye nivver ax me to go into
+that place ag'in a-pallaverin' about mercy, until ye gid ud chaynged
+from the hell on earth it is to a house of justice, wheyre min gits the
+sintences that the coorts decrees!' _I_ don't complain in here. _He_
+don't complain," pointing to Ristofalo; "ye'll nivver hear a complaint
+from him. But go look in that yaird!" He threw up both hands with a
+grimace of disgust--"Aw!"--and ceased again, but continued his walk,
+looked at his fellows, and resumed:--
+
+"_I_ listened to yer sermon. I heerd ye talkin' about the souls of uz.
+Do ye think ye kin make anny of thim min believe ye cayre for the souls
+of us whin ye do nahthing for the _bodies_ that's before yer eyes
+tlothed in rrags and stairved, and made to sleep on beds of brick and
+stone, and to receive a hundred abuses a day that was nivver intended to
+be a pairt of _anny_body's sintince--and manny of'm not tried yit, an'
+nivver a-goun' to have annythin' proved ag'in 'm? How _can_ ye come
+offerin' uz merrcy? For ye don't come out o' the tloister, like a poor
+Cat'lic priest or Sister. Ye come rright out o' the hairt o' the
+community that's a-committin' more crimes ag'in uz in here than all of
+us together has iver committed outside. Aw!--Bring us a better airticle
+of yer own justice ferst--I doan't cayre how _crool_ it is, so ut's
+_justice_--an' _thin_ preach about God's mercy. I'll listen to ye."
+
+Ristofalo had kept his eyes for the most of the time on the floor,
+smiling sometimes more and sometimes less. Now, however, he raised them
+and nodded to the clergyman. He approved all that had been said. The
+Irishman went and sat again on the table and swung his legs. The
+visitor was not allowed to answer before, and must answer now. He would
+have been more comfortable at the rectory.
+
+"My friend," he began, "suppose, now, I should say that you are pretty
+nearly correct in everything you've said?"
+
+The prisoner, who, with hands grasping the table's edge on either side
+of him, was looking down at his swinging brogans, simply lifted his
+lurid eyes without raising his head, and nodded. "It would be right," he
+seemed to intimate, "but nothing great."
+
+"And suppose I should say that I'm glad I've heard it, and that I even
+intend to make good use of it?"
+
+His hearer lifted his head, better pleased, but not without some
+betrayal of the distrust which a lower nature feels toward the
+condescensions of a higher. The preacher went on:--
+
+"Would you try to believe what I have to add to that?"
+
+"Yes, I'd try," replied the Irishman, looking facetiously from the youth
+to Ristofalo. But this time the Italian was grave, and turned his glance
+expectantly upon the minister, who presently replied:--
+
+"Well, neither my church nor the community has sent me here at all."
+
+The Irishman broke into a laugh.
+
+"Did God send ye?" He looked again to his comrades, with an expanded
+grin. The youth giggled. The clergyman met the attack with serenity,
+waited a moment and then responded:--
+
+"Well, in one sense, I don't mind saying--yes."
+
+"Well," said the Irishman, still full of mirth, and swinging his legs
+with fresh vigor, "he'd aht to 'a' sint ye to the ligislatur."
+
+"I'm in hopes he will," said the little rector; "but"--checking the
+Irishman's renewed laughter--"tell me why should other men's injustice
+in here stop me from preaching God's mercy?"
+
+"Because it's pairt _your_ injustice! Ye _do_ come from yer cherch, an'
+ye _do_ come from the community, an' ye can't deny ud, an' ye'd ahtn't
+to be comin' in here with yer sweet tahk and yer eyes tight shut to the
+crimes that's bein' committed ag'in uz for want of an outcry against 'em
+by you preachers an' prayers an' thract-disthributors." The speaker
+ceased and nodded fiercely. Then a new thought occurred to him, and he
+began again abruptly:--
+
+"Look ut here! Ye said in yer serrmon that as to Him"--he pointed
+through the broken ceiling--"we're all criminals alike, didn't ye?"
+
+"I did," responded the preacher, in a low tone.
+
+"Yes," said Ristofalo; and the boy echoed the same word.
+
+"Well, thin, what rights has some to be out an' some to be in?"
+
+"Only one right that I know of," responded the little man; "still that
+is a good one."
+
+"And that is--?" prompted the Irishman.
+
+"Society's right to protect itself."
+
+"Yes," said the prisoner, "to protect itself. Thin what right has it to
+keep a prison like this, where every man an' woman as goes out of ud
+goes out a blacker devil, and cunninger devil, and a more dangerous
+devil, nor when he came in? Is that anny protection? Why shouldn't such
+a prison tumble down upon the heads of thim as built it? Say."
+
+"I expect you'll have to ask somebody else," said the rector. He rose.
+
+"Ye're not a-goun'!" exclaimed the Irishman, in broad affectation of
+surprise.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ah! come, now! Ye're not goun' to be beat that a-way by a wild Mick o'
+the woods?" He held himself ready for a laugh.
+
+"No, I'm coming back," said the smiling clergyman, and the laugh came.
+
+"That's right! But"--as if the thought was a sudden one--"I'll be dead
+by thin, willn't I? Of coorse I will."
+
+"Yes?" rejoined the clergyman. "How's that?"
+
+The Irishman turned to the Italian.
+
+"Mr. Ristofalo, we're a-goin to the pinitintiary, aint we?"
+
+Ristofalo nodded.
+
+"Of coorse we air! Ah! Mr. Preechur, that's the place!"
+
+"Worse than this?"
+
+"Worse? Oh, no! It's better. This is slow death, but that's quick and
+short--and sure. If it don't git ye in five year', ye're an allygatur.
+This place? It's heaven to ud!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+SHALL SHE COME OR STAY?
+
+
+Richling read Mary's letter through three times without a smile. The
+feeling that he had prompted the missive--that it was partly his--stood
+between him and a tumult of gladness. And yet when he closed his eyes he
+could see Mary, all buoyancy and laughter, spurning his claim to each
+and every stroke of the pen. It was all hers, all!
+
+As he was slowly folding the sheet Mrs. Reisen came in upon him. It was
+one of those excessively warm spring evenings that sometimes make New
+Orleans fear it will have no May. The baker's wife stood with her
+immense red hands thrust into the pockets of an expansive pinafore, and
+her three double chins glistening with perspiration. She bade her
+manager a pleasant good-evening.
+
+Richling inquired how she had left her husband.
+
+"Kviet, Mr. Richlin', kviet. Mr. Richlin', I pelief Reisen kittin
+petter. If he don't gittin' better, how come he'ss every day a little
+more kvieter, and sit' still and don't say nutting to nobody?"
+
+"Mrs. Reisen, my wife is asking me to send for her"--Richling gave the
+folded letter a little shake as he held it by one corner--"to come down
+here and live again."
+
+"Now, Mr. Richlin'?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, I will shwear!" She dropped into a seat. "Right in de bekinning
+o' summer time! Vell, vell, vell! And you told me Mrs. Richling is a
+sentsible voman! Vell, I don't belief dat I efer see a young voman w'at
+aint de pickest kind o' fool apowt her hussbandt. Vell, vell!--And she
+comin' down heah 'n' choost kittin' all your money shpent, 'n' den her
+mudter kittin' vorse 'n' she got 'o go pack akin!"
+
+"Why, Mrs. Reisen," exclaimed Richling, warmly. "you speak as if you
+didn't want her to come." He contrived to smile as he finished.
+
+"Vell,--of--course! _You_ don't vant her to come, do you?"
+
+Richling forced a laugh.
+
+"Seems to me 'twould be natural if I did, Mrs. Reisen. Didn't the
+preacher say, when we were married, 'Let no man put asunder'?"
+
+"Oh, now, Mr. Richlin', dere aindt nopotty a-koin' to put you
+under!--'less-n it's your vife. Vot she want to come down for? Don't I
+takin' koot care you?" There was a tear in her eye as she went out.
+
+An hour or so later the little rector dropped in.
+
+"Richling, I came to see if I did any damage the last time I was here.
+My own words worried me."
+
+"You were afraid," responded Richling, "that I would understand you to
+recommend me to send for my wife."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I didn't understand you so."
+
+"Well, my mind's relieved."
+
+"Mine isn't," said Richling. He laid down his pen and gathered his
+fingers around one knee. "Why shouldn't I send for her?"
+
+"You will, some day."
+
+"But I mean now."
+
+The clergyman shook his head pleasantly.
+
+"I don't think that's what you mean."
+
+"Well, let that pass. I know what I do mean. I mean to get out of this
+business. I've lived long enough with these savages." A wave of his hand
+indicated the whole _personnel_ of the bread business.
+
+"I would try not to mind their savageness, Richling," said the little
+preacher, slowly. "The best of us are only savages hid under a harness.
+If we're not, we've somehow made a loss." Richling looked at him with
+amused astonishment, but he persisted. "I'm in earnest! We've had
+something refined out of us that we shouldn't have parted with. Now,
+there's Mrs. Reisen. I like her. She's a good woman. If the savage can
+stand you, why can't you stand the savage?"
+
+"Yes, true enough. Yet--well, I must get out of this, anyway."
+
+The little man clapped him on the shoulder.
+
+"_Climb_ out. See here, you Milwaukee man,"--he pushed Richling
+playfully,--"what are _you_ doing with these Southern notions of ours
+about the 'yoke of menial service,' anyhow?"
+
+"I was not born in Milwaukee," said Richling.
+
+"And you'll not die with these notions, either," retorted the other.
+"Look here, I am going. Good-by. You've got to get rid of them, you
+know, before your wife comes. I'm glad you are not going to send for her
+now."
+
+"I didn't say I wasn't."
+
+"I wouldn't."
+
+"Oh, you don't know what you'd do," said Richling.
+
+The little preacher eyed him steadily for a moment, and then slowly
+returned to where he still sat holding his knee.
+
+They had a long talk in very quiet tones. At the end the rector
+asked:--
+
+"Didn't you once meet Dr. Sevier's two nieces--at his house?"
+
+"Yes," said Richling.
+
+"Do you remember the one named Laura?--the dark, flashing one?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well,--oh, pshaw! I could tell you something funny, but I don't care to
+do it."
+
+What he did not care to tell was, that she had promised him five years
+before to be his wife any day when he should say the word. In all that
+time, and this very night, one letter, one line almost, and he could
+have ended his waiting; but he was not seeking his own happiness.
+
+They smiled together. "Well, good-by again. Don't think I'm always going
+to persecute you with my solicitude."
+
+"I'm not worth it," said Richling, slipping slowly down from his high
+stool and letting the little man out into the street.
+
+A little way down the street some one coming out of a dark alley just in
+time to confront the clergyman extended a hand in salutation.
+
+"Good-evenin', Mr. Blank."
+
+He took the hand. It belonged to a girl of eighteen, bareheaded and
+barefooted, holding in the other hand a small oil-can. Her eyes looked
+steadily into his.
+
+"You don't know me," she said, pleasantly.
+
+"Why, yes, now I remember you. You're Maggie."
+
+"Yes," replied the girl. "Don't you recollect--in the mission-school?
+Don't you recollect you married me and Larry? That's two years ago." She
+almost laughed out with pleasure.
+
+"And where's Larry?"
+
+"Why, don't you recollect? He's on the sloop-o'-war _Preble_." Then she
+added more gravely: "I aint seen him in twenty months. But I know he's
+all right. I aint a-scared about _that_--only if he's alive and well;
+yes, sir. Well, good-evenin', sir. Yes, sir; I think I'll come to the
+mission nex' Sunday--and I'll bring the baby, will I? All right, sir.
+Well, so long, sir. Take care of yourself, sir."
+
+What a word that was! It echoed in his ear all the way home: "Take care
+of _yourself_." What boast is there for the civilization that refines
+away the unconscious heroism of the unfriended poor?
+
+He was glad he had not told Richling all his little secret. But Richling
+found it out later from Dr. Sevier.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV.
+
+WHAT WOULD YOU DO?
+
+
+Three days Mary's letter lay unanswered. About dusk of the third, as
+Richling was hurrying across the yard of the bakery on some errand
+connected with the establishment, a light touch was laid upon his
+shoulder; a peculiar touch, which he recognized in an instant. He turned
+in the gloom and exclaimed, in a whisper:--
+
+"Why, Ristofalo!"
+
+"Howdy?" said Raphael, in his usual voice.
+
+"Why, how did you get out?" asked Richling. "Have you escaped?"
+
+"No. Just come out for little air. Captain of the prison and me. Not
+captain, exactly; one of the keepers. Goin' back some time to-night." He
+stood there in his old-fashioned way, gently smiling, and looking as
+immovable as a piece of granite. "Have you heard from wife lately?"
+
+"Yes," said Richling. "But--why--I don't understand. You and the jailer
+out together?"
+
+"Yes, takin' a little stroll 'round. He's out there in the street. You
+can see him on door-step 'cross yonder. Pretty drunk, eh?" The Italian's
+smile broadened for a moment, then came back to its usual self again. "I
+jus' lef' Kate at home. Thought I'd come see you a little while."
+
+"Return calls?" suggested Richling.
+
+"Yes, return call. Your wife well?"
+
+"Yes. But--why, this is the drollest"-- He stopped short, for the
+Italian's gravity indicated his opinion that there had been enough
+amusement shown. "Yes, she's well, thank you. By-the-by, what do you
+think of my letting her come out here now and begin life over again?
+Doesn't it seem to you it's high time, if we're ever going to do it at
+all?"
+
+"What you think?" asked Ristofalo.
+
+"Well, now, you answer my question first."
+
+"No, you answer me first."
+
+"I can't. I haven't decided. I've been three days thinking about it. It
+may seem like a small matter to hesitate so long over"--Richling paused
+for his hearer to dissent.
+
+"Yes," said Ristofalo, "pretty small." His smile remained the same. "She
+ask you? Reckon you put her up to it, eh?"
+
+"I don't see why you should reckon that," said Richling, with resentful
+coldness.
+
+"I dunno," said the Italian; "thought so--that's the way fellows do
+sometimes." There was a pause. Then he resumed: "I wouldn't let her come
+yet. Wait."
+
+"For what?"
+
+"See which way the cat goin' to jump."
+
+Richling laughed unpleasantly.
+
+"What do you mean by that?" he inquired.
+
+"We goin' to have war," said Raphael Ristofalo.
+
+"Ho! ho! ho! Why, Ristofalo, you were never more mistaken in your life!"
+
+"I dunno," replied the Italian, sticking in his tracks, "think it pretty
+certain. I read all the papers every day; nothin' else to do in parish
+prison. Think we see war nex' winter."
+
+"Ristofalo, a man of your sort can hardly conceive the amount of
+bluster this country can stand without coming to blows. We Americans are
+not like you Italians."
+
+"No," responded Ristofalo, "not much like." His smile changed
+peculiarly. "Wasn't for Kate, I go to Italia now."
+
+"Kate and the parish prison," said Richling.
+
+"Oh!"--the old smile returned,--"I get out that place any time I want."
+
+"And you'd join Garibaldi, I suppose?" The news had just come of
+Garibaldi in Sicily.
+
+"Yes," responded the Italian. There was a twinkle deep in his eyes as he
+added: "I know Garibaldi."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Yes. Sailed under him when he was ship-cap'n. He knows me."
+
+"And I dare say he'd remember you," said Richling, with enthusiasm.
+
+"He remember me," said the quieter man. "Well,--must go. Good-e'nin'.
+Better tell yo' wife wait a while."
+
+"I--don't know. I'll see. Ristofalo"--
+
+"What?"
+
+"I want to quit this business."
+
+"Better not quit. Stick to one thing."
+
+"But you never did that. You never did one thing twice in succession."
+
+"There's heap o' diff'ence."
+
+"I don't see it. What is it?"
+
+But the Italian only smiled and shrugged, and began to move away. In a
+moment he said:--
+
+"You see, Mr. Richlin', you sen' for yo' wife, you can't risk change o'
+business. You change business, you can't risk sen' for yo' wife. Well,
+good-night."
+
+Richling was left to his thoughts. Naturally they were of the man whom
+he still saw, in his imagination, picking his jailer up off the
+door-step and going back to prison. Who could say that this man might
+not any day make just such a lion's leap into the world's arena as
+Garibaldi had made, and startle the nations as Garibaldi had done? What
+was that red-shirted scourge of tyrants that this man might not be?
+Sailor, soldier, hero, patriot, prisoner! See Garibaldi: despising the
+restraints of law; careless of the simplest conventionalities that go to
+make up an honest gentleman; doing both right and wrong--like a lion;
+everything in him leonine. All this was in Ristofalo's reach. It was all
+beyond Richling's. Which was best, the capability or the incapability?
+It was a question he would have liked to ask Mary.
+
+Well, at any rate, he had strength now for one thing--"one pretty small
+thing." He would answer her letter. He answered it, and wrote: "Don't
+come; wait a little while." He put aside all those sweet lovers'
+pictures that had been floating before his eyes by night and day, and
+bade her stay until the summer, with its risks to health, should have
+passed, and she could leave her mother well and strong.
+
+It was only a day or two afterward that he fell sick. It was provoking
+to have such a cold and not know how he caught it, and to have it in
+such fine weather. He was in bed some days, and was robbed of much sleep
+by a cough. Mrs. Reisen found occasion to tell Dr. Sevier of Mary's
+desire, as communicated to her by "Mr. Richlin'," and of the advice she
+had given him.
+
+"And he didn't send for her, I suppose."
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Well, Mrs. Reisen, I wish you had kept your advice to yourself." The
+Doctor went to Richling's bedside.
+
+"Richling, why don't you send for your wife?"
+
+The patient floundered in the bed and drew himself up on his pillow.
+
+"O Doctor, just listen!" He smiled incredulously. "Bring that little
+woman and her baby down here just as the hot season is beginning?" He
+thought a moment, and then continued: "I'm afraid, Doctor, you're
+prescribing for homesickness. Pray don't tell me that's my ailment."
+
+"No, it's not. You have a bad cough, that you must take care of; but
+still, the other is one of the counts in your case, and you know how
+quickly Mary and--the little girl would cure it."
+
+Richling smiled again.
+
+"I can't do that, Doctor; when I go to Mary, or send for her, on account
+of homesickness, it must be hers, not mine."
+
+"Well, Mrs. Reisen," said the Doctor, outside the street door, "I hope
+you'll remember my request."
+
+"I'll tdo udt, Dtoctor," was the reply, so humbly spoken that he
+repented half his harshness.
+
+"I suppose you've often heard that 'you can't make a silk purse of a
+sow's ear,' haven't you?" he asked.
+
+"Yes; I pin right often heeard udt." She spoke as though she was not
+wedded to any inflexible opinion concerning the proposition.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Reisen, as a man once said to me, 'neither can you make a
+sow's ear out of a silk purse.'"
+
+"Vell, to be cettaintly!" said the poor woman, drawing not the shadow of
+an inference; "how kin you?"
+
+"Mr. Richling tells me he will write to Mrs. Richling to prepare to come
+down in the fall."
+
+"Vell," exclaimed the delighted Mrs. Reisen, in her husband's best
+manner, "t'at's te etsectly I atwised him!" And, as the Doctor drove
+away, she rubbed her mighty hands around each other in restored
+complacency. Two or three days later she had the additional pleasure of
+seeing Richling up and about his work again. It was upon her motherly
+urging that he indulged himself, one calm, warm afternoon, in a walk in
+the upper part of the city.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV.
+
+NARCISSE WITH NEWS.
+
+
+It was very beautiful to see the summer set in. Trees everywhere. You
+looked down a street, and, unless it were one of the two broad avenues
+where the only street-cars ran, it was pretty sure to be so overarched
+with boughs that, down in the distance, there was left but a narrow
+streak of vivid blue sky in the middle. Well-nigh every house had its
+garden, as every garden its countless flowers. The dark orange began to
+show its growing weight of fruitfulness, and was hiding in its thorny
+interior the nestlings of yonder mocking-bird, silently foraging down in
+the sunny grass. The yielding branches of the privet were bowed down
+with their plumy panicles, and swayed heavily from side to side, drunk
+with gladness and plenty. Here the peach was beginning to droop over a
+wall. There, and yonder again, beyond, ranks of fig-trees, that had so
+muffled themselves in their foliage that not the nakedness of a twig
+showed through, had yet more figs than leaves. The crisp, cool masses of
+the pomegranate were dotted with scarlet flowers. The cape jasmine wore
+hundreds of her own white favors, whose fragrance forerun the sight.
+Every breath of air was a new perfume. Roses, an innumerable host, ran a
+fairy riot about all grounds, and clambered from the lowest door-step to
+the highest roof. The oleander, wrapped in one great garment of red
+blossoms, nodded in the sun, and stirred and winked in the faint
+stirrings of the air The pale banana slowly fanned herself with her own
+broad leaf. High up against the intense sky, its hard, burnished foliage
+glittering in the sunlight, the magnolia spread its dark boughs, adorned
+with their queenly white flowers. Not a bird nor an insect seemed
+unmated. The little wren stood and sung to his sitting wife his loud,
+ecstatic song, made all of her own name,--Matilda, Urilda, Lucinda,
+Belinda, Adaline, Madaline, Caroline, or Melinda, as the case might
+be,--singing as though every bone of his tiny body were a golden flute.
+The hummingbirds hung on invisible wings, and twittered with delight as
+they feasted on woodbine and honeysuckle. The pigeon on the roof-tree
+cooed and wheeled about his mate, and swelled his throat, and
+tremulously bowed and walked with a smiting step, and arched his
+purpling neck, and wheeled and bowed and wheeled again. Pairs of
+butterflies rose in straight upward flight, fluttered about each other
+in amorous strife, and drifted away in the upper air. And out of every
+garden came the voices of little children at play,--the blessedest sound
+on earth.
+
+"O Mary, Mary! why should two lovers live apart on this beautiful earth?
+Autumn is no time for mating. Who can tell what autumn will bring?"
+
+The revery was interrupted.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, 'ow you enjoyin' yo' 'ealth in that beaucheouz weatheh
+juz at the pwesent? Me, I'm well. Yes, I'm always well, in fact. At the
+same time nevvatheless, I fine myseff slightly sad. I s'pose 'tis
+natu'al--a man what love the 'itings of Lawd By'on as much as me. You
+know, of co'se, the melancholic intelligens?"
+
+"No," said Richling; "has any one"--
+
+"Lady By'on, seh. Yesseh. 'In the mids' of life'--you know where we ah,
+Mistoo Itchlin, I su-pose?"
+
+"Is Lady Byron dead?"
+
+"Yesseh." Narcisse bowed solemnly. "Gone, Mistoo Itchlin. Since the
+seventeenth of last; yesseh. 'Kig the bucket,' as the povvub say." He
+showed an extra band of black drawn neatly around his new straw hat. "I
+thought it but p'opeh to put some moaning--as a species of twibute." He
+restored the hat to his head. "You like the tas'e of that, Mistoo
+Itchlin?"
+
+Richling could but confess the whole thing was delicious.
+
+"Yo humble servan', seh," responded the smiling Creole, with a flattered
+bow. Then, assuming a gravity becoming the historian, he said:--
+
+"In fact, 'tis a gweat mistake, that statement that Lawd By'on evva
+qua'led with his lady, Mistoo Itchlin. But I s'pose you know 'tis but a
+slandeh of the pwess. Yesseh. As, faw instance, thass anotheh slandeh of
+the pwess that the delegates qua'led ad the Chawleston convention.
+They only pwetend to qua'l; so, by that way, to mizguide those
+A_bol_ish-nists. Mistoo Itchlin, I am p'ojecting to 'ite some obitua'
+'emawks about that Lady By'on, but I scass know w'etheh to 'ite them in
+the poetic style aw in the p'osaic. Which would you conclude, Mistoo
+Itchlin?"
+
+Richling reflected with downcast eyes.
+
+"It seems to me," he said, when he had passed his hand across his mouth
+in apparent meditation and looked up,--"seems to me I'd conclude both,
+without delay."
+
+"Yes? But accawding to what fawmule, Mistoo Itchlin? 'Ay, 'tis theh is
+the 'ub,' in fact, as Lawd By'on say. Is it to migs the two style' that
+you advise?"
+
+"That's the favorite method," replied Richling.
+
+"Well, I dunno 'ow 'tis, Mistoo Itchlin, but I fine the moze facil'ty in
+the poetic. 'Tis t'ue, in the poetic you got to look out concehning the
+_'ime_. You got to keep the eye skin' faw it, in fact. But in the
+p'osaic, on the cont'a-ay, 'tis juz the opposite; you got to keep
+the eye skin' faw the _sense_. Yesseh. Now, if you migs the two
+style'--well--'ow's that, Mistoo Itchlin, if you migs them? Seem' to
+me I dunno."
+
+"Why, don't you see?" asked Richling. "If you mix them, you avoid both
+necessities. You sail triumphantly between Scylla and Charybdis without
+so much as skinning your eye."
+
+Narcisse looked at him a moment with a slightly searching glance,
+dropped his eyes upon his own beautiful feet, and said, in a meditative
+tone:--
+
+"I believe you co'ect." But his smile was gone, and Richling saw he had
+ventured too far.
+
+"I wish my wife were here," said Richling; "she might give you better
+advice than I."
+
+"Yes," replied Narcisse, "I believe you co'ect ag'in, Mistoo Itchlin.
+'Tis but since yeste'd'y that I jus appen to hea' Dr. Seveeah d'op a
+saying 'esembling to that. Yesseh, she's a v'ey 'emawkable, Mistoo
+Itchlin."
+
+"Is that what Dr. Sevier said?" Richling began to fear an ambush.
+
+"No, seh. What the Doctah say--'twas me'ly to 'emawk in his jocose
+way--you know the Doctah's lill callous, jocose way, Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+He waved either hand outward gladsomely.
+
+"Yes," said Richling, "I've seen specimens of it."
+
+"Yesseh. He was ve'y complimenta'y, in fact, the Doctah. 'Tis the
+trooth. He says, 'She'll make a man of Witchlin if anythin' can.' Juz in
+his jocose way, you know."
+
+The Creole's smile had returned in concentrated sweetness. He stood
+silent, his face beaming with what seemed his confidence that Richling
+would be delighted. Richling recalled the physician's saying concerning
+this very same little tale-bearer,--that he carried his nonsense on top
+and his good sense underneath.
+
+"Dr. Sevier said that, did he?" asked Richling, after a time.
+
+"'Tis the vehbatim, seh. Convussing to yo' 'eve'end fwend. You can ask
+him; he will co'obo'ate me in fact. Well, Mistoo Itchlin, it supp'ise me
+you not tickle at that. Me, I may say, I wish _I_ had a wife to make a
+man out of _me_."
+
+"I wish you had," said Richling. But Narcisse smiled on.
+
+"Well, _au 'evoi'_." He paused an instant with an earnest face.
+"Pehchance I'll meet you this evening, Mistoo Itchlin? Faw doubtless,
+like myseff, you will assist at the gweat a-ally faw the Union, the
+Const'ution, and the enfo'cemen' of the law. Dr. Seveeah will addwess."
+
+"I don't know that I care to hear him," replied Richling.
+
+"Goin' to be a gwan' out-po'-ing, Mistoo Itchlin. Citizens of Noo 'Leans
+without the leas' 'espec' faw fawmeh polly-tickle diff'ence. Also
+fiah-works. 'Come one, come all,' as says the gweat Scott--includin'
+yo'seff, Mistoo Itchlin. No? Well, _au 'evoi'_, Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI.
+
+A PRISON MEMENTO.
+
+
+The political pot began to seethe. Many yet will remember how its smoke
+went up. The summer--summer of 1860--grew fervent. Its breath became hot
+and dry. All observation--all thought--turned upon the fierce campaign.
+Discussion dropped as to whether Heenan would ever get that champion's
+belt, which even the little rector believed he had fairly won in the
+international prize-ring. The news brought by each succeeding European
+steamer of Garibaldi's splendid triumphs in the cause of a new Italy,
+the fierce rattle of partisan warfare in Mexico, that seemed almost
+within hearing, so nearly was New Orleans concerned in some of its
+movements,--all things became secondary and trivial beside the
+developments of a political canvass in which the long-foreseen,
+long-dreaded issues between two parts of the nation were at length to be
+made final. The conventions had met, the nominations were complete, and
+the clans of four parties and fractions of parties were "meeting," and
+"rallying," and "uprising," and "outpouring."
+
+All life was strung to one high pitch. This contest was
+everything,--nay, everybody,--men, women, and children. They were all
+for the Constitution; they were all for the Union; and each, even
+Richling, for the enforcement of--his own ideas. On every bosom, "no
+matteh the sex," and no matter the age, hung one of those little round,
+ribbanded medals, with a presidential candidate on one side and his
+vice-presidential man Friday on the other. Needless to say that
+Ristofalo's Kate, instructed by her husband, imported the earliest and
+many a later invoice of them, and distributing her peddlers at choice
+thronging-places, "everlastin'ly," as she laughingly and confidentially
+informed Dr. Sevier, "raked in the sponjewlicks." They were exposed for
+sale on little stalls on populous sidewalks and places of much entry and
+exit.
+
+The post-office in those days was still on Royal street, in the old
+Merchants' Exchange. The small hand-holes of the box-delivery were in
+the wide tessellated passage that still runs through the building from
+Royal street to Exchange alley. A keeper of one of these little stalls
+established himself against a pillar just where men turned into and out
+of Royal street, out of or into this passage. One day, in this place,
+just as Richling turned from a delivery window to tear the envelope of a
+letter bearing the Milwaukee stamp, his attention was arrested by a man
+running by him toward Exchange alley, pale as death, and followed by a
+crowd that suddenly broke into a cry, a howl, a roar: "Hang him! Hang
+him!"
+
+"Come!" said a small, strong man, seizing Richling's arm and turning him
+in the common direction. If the word was lost on Richling's defective
+hearing, not so the touch; for the speaker was Ristofalo. The two
+friends ran with all their speed through the passage and out into the
+alley. A few rods away the chased wretch had been overtaken, and was
+made to face his pursuers. When Richling and Ristofalo reached him there
+was already a rope about his neck.
+
+The Italian's leap, as he closed in upon the group around the victim,
+was like a tiger's. The men he touched did not fall; they were rather
+hurled, driving backward those whom they were hurled against. A man
+levelled a revolver at him; Richling struck it a blow that sent it over
+twenty men's heads. A long knife flashed in Ristofalo's right hand. He
+stood holding the rope in his left, stooping slightly forward, and
+darting his eyes about as if selecting a victim for his weapon. A
+stranger touched Richling from behind, spoke a hurried word in Italian,
+and handed him a huge dirk. But in that same moment the affair was over.
+There stood Ristofalo, gentle, self-contained, with just a perceptible
+smile turned upon the crowd, no knife in his hand, and beside him the
+slender, sinewy, form, and keen gray eye of Smith Izard.
+
+The detective was addressing the crowd. While he was speaking, half a
+score of police came from as many directions. When he had finished, he
+waved his slender hand at the mass of heads.
+
+"Stand back. Go about your business." And they began to go. He laid a
+hand upon the rescued stranger and addressed the police.
+
+"Take this rope off. Take this man to the station and keep him until
+it's safe to let him go."
+
+The explanation by which he had so quickly pacified the mob was a simple
+one. The rescued man was a seller of campaign medals. That morning, in
+opening a fresh supply of his little stock, he had failed to perceive
+that, among a lot of "Breckenridge and Lane" medals, there had crept
+in one of Lincoln. That was the sum of his offence. The mistake had
+occurred in the Northern factory. Of course, if he did not intend to
+sell Lincoln medals, there was no crime.
+
+"Don't I tell you?" said the Italian to Richling, as they were walking
+away together. "Bound to have war; is already begin-n."
+
+"It began with me the day I got married," said Richling.
+
+Ristofalo waited some time, and then asked:--
+
+"How?"
+
+"I shouldn't have said so," replied Richling; "I can't explain."
+
+"Thass all right," said the other. And, a little later: "Smith Izard
+call' you by name. How he know yo' name?"
+
+"I can't imagine!"
+
+The Italian waved his hand.
+
+"Thass all right, too; nothin' to me." Then, after another pause: "Think
+you saved my life to-day."
+
+"The honors are easy," said Richling.
+
+He went to bed again for two or three days. He liked it little when Dr.
+Sevier attributed the illness to a few moments' violent exertion and
+excitement.
+
+"It was bravely done, at any rate, Richling," said the Doctor.
+
+"_That_ it was!" said Kate Ristofalo, who had happened to call to see
+the sick man at the same hour. "Doctor, ye'r mighty right! Ha!"
+
+Mrs. Reisen expressed a like opinion, and the two kind women met the two
+men's obvious wish by leaving the room.
+
+"Doctor," said Richling at once, "the last time you said it was
+love-sickness; this time you say it's excitement; at the bottom it isn't
+either. Will you please tell me what it really is? What is this thing
+that puts me here on my back this way?"
+
+"Richling," replied the Doctor, slowly, "if I tell you the honest truth,
+it began in that prison."
+
+The patient knit his hands under his head and lay motionless and
+silent.
+
+"Yes," he said, after a time. And by and by again: "Yes; I feared as
+much. And can it be that my _physical_ manhood is going to fail me at
+such a time as this?" He drew a long breath and turned restively in the
+bed.
+
+"We'll try to keep it from doing that," replied the physician. "I've
+told you this, Richling, old fellow to impress upon you the necessity of
+keeping out of all this hubbub,--this night-marching and mass-meeting
+and exciting nonsense."
+
+"And am I always--always to be blown back--blown back this way?" said
+Richling, half to himself, half to his friend.
+
+"There, now," responded the Doctor, "just stop talking entirely. No, no;
+not always blown back. A sick man always thinks the present moment is
+the whole boundless future. Get well. And to that end possess your soul
+in patience. No newspapers. Read your Bible. It will calm you. I've been
+trying it myself." His tone was full of cheer, but it was also so
+motherly and the touch so gentle with which he put back the sick man's
+locks--as if they had been a lad's--that Richling turned away his face
+with chagrin.
+
+"Come!" said the Doctor, more sturdily, laying his hand on the patient's
+shoulder. "You'll not lie here more than a day or two. Before you know
+it summer will be gone, and you'll be sending for Mary."
+
+Richling turned again, put out a parting hand, and smiled with new
+courage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII.
+
+NOW I LAY ME--
+
+
+Time may drag slowly, but it never drags backward. So the summer wore
+on, Richling following his physician's directions; keeping to his work
+only--out of public excitements and all overstrain; and to every day, as
+he bade it good-by, his eager heart, lightened each time by that much,
+said, "When you come around again, next year, Mary and I will meet you
+hand in hand." This was _his_ excitement, and he seemed to flourish on
+it.
+
+But day by day, week by week, the excitements of the times rose. Dr.
+Sevier was deeply stirred, and ever on the alert, looking out upon every
+quarter of the political sky, listening to the rising thunder, watching
+the gathering storm. There could hardly have been any one more
+completely engrossed by it. If there was, it was his book-keeper. It
+wasn't so much the Constitution that enlisted Narcisse's concern; nor
+yet the Union, which seemed to him safe enough; much less did the desire
+to see the enforcement of the laws consume him. Nor was it altogether
+the "'oman candles" and the "'ockets"; but the rhetoric.
+
+Ah, the "'eto'ic"! He bathed, he paddled, dove, splashed, in a surf of
+it.
+
+"Doctah,"--shaking his finely turned shoulders into his coat and lifting
+his hat toward his head,--"I had the honah, and at the same time the
+pleasu', to yeh you make a shawt speech lass evening. I was p'oud to
+yeh yo' bunning eloquence, Doctah,--if you'll allow. Yesseh. Eve'ybody
+said 'twas the moze bilious effo't of the o'-casion."
+
+Dr. Sevier actually looked up and smiled, and thanked the happy young
+man for the compliment.
+
+"Yesseh," continued his admirer, "I nevveh flatteh. I give me'-it where
+the me'-it lies. Well, seh, we juz make the welkin 'ing faw joy when you
+finally stop' at the en'. Pehchance you heard my voice among that sea of
+head'? But I doubt--in 'such a vas' up'ising--so many imposing pageant',
+in fact,--and those 'ocket' exploding in the staw-y heaven', as they
+say. I think I like that exp'ession I saw on the noozpapeh, wheh it
+says: 'Long biffo the appointed owwa, thousan' of flashing tawches and
+tas'eful t'anspa'encies with divuz devices whose blazing effulgence
+turn' day into night.' Thass a ve'y talented style, in fact. Well, _au
+'evoi'_, Doctah. I'm going ad the--an' thass anotheh thing I like--'tis
+faw the ladies to 'ing bells that way on the balconies. Because Mr. Bell
+and Eve'et is name _bell_, and so is the _bells_ name' juz the same way,
+and so they 'ing the _bells_ to signify. I had to elucidate that to my
+hant. Well, _au 'evoi'_, Doctah."
+
+The Doctor raised his eyes from his letter-writing. The young man had
+turned, and was actually going out without another word. What perversity
+moved the physician no one will ever know; but he sternly called:--
+
+"Narcisse?"
+
+The Creole wheeled about on the threshold.
+
+"Yesseh?"
+
+The Doctor held him with a firm, grave eye, and slowly said:--
+
+"I suppose before you return you will go to the post office." He said
+nothing more,--only that, just in his jocose way,--and dropped his eyes
+again upon his pen. Narcisse gave him one long black look, and silently
+went out.
+
+But a sweet complacency could not stay long away from the young man's
+breast. The world was too beautiful; the white, hot sky above was in
+such fine harmony with his puffed lawn shirt-bosom and his white linen
+pantaloons, bulging at the thighs and tapering at the ankles, and at the
+corner of Canal and Royal streets he met so many members of the Yancey
+Guards and Southern Guards and Chalmette Guards and Union Guards and
+Lane Dragoons and Breckenridge Guards and Douglas Rangers and Everett
+Knights, and had the pleasant trouble of stepping aside and yielding the
+pavement to the far-spreading crinoline. Oh, life was one scintillating
+cluster breast-pin of ecstasies! And there was another thing,--General
+William Walker's filibusters! Royal street, St. Charles, the rotunda of
+the St. Charles Hotel, were full of them.
+
+It made Dr. Sevier both sad and fierce to see what hold their lawless
+enterprise took upon the youth of the city. Not that any great number
+were drawn into the movement, least of all Narcisse; but it captivated
+their interest and sympathy, and heightened the general unrest, when
+calmness was what every thoughtful man saw to be the country's greatest
+need.
+
+An incident to illustrate the Doctor's state of mind.
+
+It occurred one evening in the St. Charles rotunda. He saw some
+citizens of high standing preparing to drink at the bar with a group of
+broad-hatted men, whose bronzed foreheads and general out-of-door mien
+hinted rather ostentatiously of Honduras and Ruatan Island. As he passed
+close to them one of the citizens faced him blandly, and unexpectedly
+took his hand, but quickly let it go again. The rest only glanced at
+the Doctor, and drew nearer to the bar.
+
+"I trust you're not unwell, Doctor," said the sociable one, with
+something of a smile, and something of a frown, at the tall physician's
+gloomy brow.
+
+"I am well, sir."
+
+"I--didn't know," said the man again, throwing an aggressive resentment
+into his tone; "you seemed preoccupied."
+
+"I was," replied the Doctor, returning his glance with so keen an eye
+that the man smiled again, appeasingly. "I was thinking how barely
+skin-deep civilization is."
+
+The man ha-ha'd artificially, stepping backward as he said, "That's so!"
+He looked after the departing Doctor an instant and then joined his
+companions.
+
+Richling had a touch of this contagion. He looked from Garibaldi to
+Walker and back again, and could not see any enormous difference between
+them. He said as much to one of the bakery's customers, a restaurateur
+with a well-oiled tongue, who had praised him for his intrepidity in the
+rescue of the medal-peddler, which, it seems, he had witnessed. With
+this praise still upon his lips the caterer walked with Richling to the
+restaurant door, and detained him there to enlarge upon the subject of
+Spanish-American misrule, and the golden rewards that must naturally
+fall to those who should supplant it with stable government. Richling
+listened and replied and replied again and listened; and presently the
+restaurateur startled him with an offer to secure him a captain's
+commission under Walker. He laughed incredulously; but the restaurateur,
+very much in earnest, talked on; and by littles, but rapidly, Richling
+admitted the value of the various considerations urged. Two or three
+months of rapid adventure; complete physical renovation--of
+course--natural sequence; the plaudits of a grateful people; maybe
+fortune also, but at least a certainty of finding the road to it,--all
+this to meet Mary with next fall.
+
+"I'm in a great hurry just now," said Richling; "but I'll talk about
+this thing with you again to-morrow or next day," and so left.
+
+The restaurateur turned to his head-waiter, stuck his tongue in his
+cheek, and pulled down the lower lid of an eye with his forefinger. He
+meant to say he had been lying for the pure fun of it.
+
+When Dr. Sevier came that afternoon to see Reisen--of whom there was now
+but little left, and that little unable to leave the bed--Richling took
+occasion to raise the subject that had entangled his fancy. He was
+careful to say nothing of himself or the restaurateur, or anything,
+indeed, but a timid generality or two. But the Doctor responded with a
+clear, sudden energy that, when he was gone, left Richling feeling
+painfully blank, and yet unable to find anything to resent except the
+Doctor's superfluous--as he thought, quite superfluous--mention of the
+island of Cozumel.
+
+However, and after all, that which for the most part kept the public
+mind heated was, as we have said, the political campaign. Popular
+feeling grew tremulous with it as the landscape did under the burning
+sun. It was a very hot summer. Not a good one for feeble folk; and one
+early dawn poor Reisen suddenly felt all his reason come back to him,
+opened his eyes, and lo! he had crossed the river in the night, and was
+on the other side.
+
+Dr. Sevier's experienced horse halted of his own will to let a
+procession pass. In the carriage at its head the physician saw the
+little rector, sitting beside a man of German ecclesiastical appearance.
+Behind it followed a majestic hearse, drawn by black-plumed and
+caparisoned horses,--four of them. Then came a long line of red-shirted
+firemen; for he in the hearse had been an "exempt." Then a further line
+of big-handed, white-gloved men in beavers and regalias; for he had
+been also a Freemason and an Odd-fellow. Then another column, of
+emotionless-visaged German women, all in bunchy black gowns, walking out
+of time to the solemn roll and pulse of the muffled drums, and the
+brazen peals of the funeral march. A few carriages closed the long
+line. In the first of them the waiting Doctor marked, with a sudden
+understanding of all, the pale face of John Richling, and by his side
+the widow who had been forty years a wife,--weary and red with weeping.
+The Doctor took off his hat.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII.
+
+RISE UP, MY LOVE, MY FAIR ONE.
+
+
+The summer at length was past, and the burning heat was over and gone.
+The days were refreshed with the balm of a waning October. There had
+been no fever. True, the nights were still aglare with torches, and the
+street echoes kept awake by trumpet notes and huzzas, by the tramp of
+feet and the delicate hint of the bell-ringing; and men on the stump and
+off it; in the "wigwams;" along the sidewalks, as they came forth,
+wiping their mouths, from the free-lunch counters, and on the
+curb-stones and "flags" of Carondelet street, were saying things to make
+a patriot's heart ache. But contrariwise, in that same Carondelet
+street, and hence in all the streets of the big, scattered town, the
+most prosperous commercial year--they measure from September to
+September--that had ever risen upon New Orleans had closed its distended
+record, and no one knew or dreamed that, for nearly a quarter of a
+century to come, the proud city would never see the equal of that golden
+year just gone. And so, away yonder among the great lakes on the
+northern border of the anxious but hopeful country, Mary was calling,
+calling, like an unseen bird piping across the fields for its mate, to
+know if she and the one little nestling might not come to hers.
+
+And at length, after two or three unexpected contingencies had caused
+delays of one week after another, all in a silent tremor of joy, John
+wrote the word--"Come!"
+
+He was on his way to put it into the post-office, in Royal street. At
+the newspaper offices, in Camp street, he had to go out into the middle
+of the way to get around the crowd that surrounded the bulletin-boards,
+and that scuffled for copies of the latest issue. The day of days was
+passing; the returns of election were coming in. In front of the
+"Picayune" office he ran square against a small man, who had just pulled
+himself and the most of his clothing out of the press with the last news
+crumpled in the hand that he still held above his head.
+
+"Hello, Richling, this is pretty exciting, isn't it?" It was the little
+clergyman. "Come on, I'll go your way; let's get out of this."
+
+He took Richling's arm, and they went on down the street, the rector
+reading aloud as they walked, and shopkeepers and salesmen at their
+doors catching what they could of his words as the two passed.
+
+"It's dreadful! dreadful!" said the little man, thrusting the paper into
+his pocket in a wad.
+
+"Hi! Mistoo Itchlin," quoth Narcisse, passing them like an arrow, on his
+way to the paper offices.
+
+"He's happy," said Richling.
+
+"Well, then, he's the only happy man I know of in New Orleans to-day,"
+said the little rector, jerking his head and drawing a sigh through his
+teeth.
+
+"No," said Richling, "I'm another. You see this letter." He showed it
+with the direction turned down. "I'm going now to mail it. When my wife
+gets it she starts."
+
+The preacher glanced quickly into his face. Richling met his gaze with
+eyes that danced with suppressed joy. The two friends attracted no
+attention from those whom they passed or who passed them; the newsboys
+were scampering here and there, everybody buying from them, and the
+walls of Common street ringing with their shouted proffers of the "full
+account" of the election.
+
+"Richling, don't do it."
+
+"Why not?" Richling showed only amusement.
+
+"For several reasons," replied the other. "In the first place, look at
+your business!"
+
+"Never so good as to-day."
+
+"True. And it entirely absorbs you. What time would you have at your
+fireside, or even at your family table? None. It's--well you know what
+it is--it's a bakery, you know. You couldn't expect to lodge _your_ wife
+and little girl in a bakery in Benjamin street; you know you couldn't.
+Now, _you_--you don't mind it--or, I mean, you can stand it. Those
+things never need damage a gentleman. But with your wife it would be
+different. You smile, but--why, you know she couldn't go there. And if
+you put her anywhere where a lady ought to be, in New Orleans, she would
+be--well, don't you see she would be about as far away as if she were in
+Milwaukee? Richling, I don't know how it looks to you for me to be so
+meddlesome, and I believe you think I'm making a very poor argument; but
+you see this is only one point and the smallest. Now"--
+
+Richling raised his thin hand, and said pleasantly:--
+
+"It's no use. You can't understand; it wouldn't be possible to explain;
+for you simply don't know Mary."
+
+"But there are some things I do know. Just think; she's with her mother
+where she is. Imagine her falling ill here,--as you've told me she used
+to do,--and you with that bakery on your hands."
+
+Richling looked grave.
+
+"Oh no," continued the little man. "You've been so brave and patient,
+you and your wife, both,--do be so a little bit longer! Live close; save
+your money; go on rising in value in your business; and after a little
+you'll rise clear out of the sphere you're now in. You'll command your
+own time; you'll build your own little home; and life and happiness and
+usefulness will be fairly and broadly open before you." Richling gave
+heed with a troubled face, and let his companion draw him into the
+shadow of that "St. Charles" from the foot of whose stair-way he had
+once been dragged away as a vagrant.
+
+"See, Richling! Every few weeks you may read in some paper of how a
+man on some ferry-boat jumps for the wharf before the boat has touched
+it, falls into the water, and-- Make sure! Be brave a little
+longer--only a little longer! Wait till you're sure!"
+
+"I'm sure enough!"
+
+"Oh, no, you're not! Wait till this political broil is over. They say
+Lincoln is elected. If so, the South is not going to submit to it.
+Nobody can tell what the consequences are to be. Suppose we should have
+war? I don't think we shall, but suppose we should? There would be a
+general upheaval, commercial stagnation, industrial collapse, shrinkage
+everywhere! Wait till it's over. It may not be two weeks hence; it can
+hardly be more than ninety days at the outside. If it should the North
+would be ruined, and you may be sure they are not going to allow _that_.
+Then, when all starts fair again, bring your wife and baby. I'll tell
+you what to do, Richling!"
+
+"Will you?" responded the listener, with an amiable laugh that the
+little man tried to echo.
+
+"Yes. Ask Dr. Sevier! He's right here in the next street. He was on
+your side last time; maybe he'll be so now."
+
+"Done!" said Richling. They went. The rector said he would do an errand
+in Canal street, while Richling should go up and see the physician.
+
+Dr. Sevier was in.
+
+"Why, Richling!" He rose to receive him. "How are you?" He cast his eye
+over his visitor with professional scrutiny. "What brings _you_ here?"
+
+"To tell you that I've written for Mary," said Richling, sinking wearily
+into a chair.
+
+"Have you mailed the letter?"
+
+"I'm taking it to the post-office now."
+
+The Doctor threw one leg energetically over the other, and picked up the
+same paper-knife that he had handled when, two years and a half before,
+he had sat thus, talking to Mary and John on the eve of their
+separation.
+
+"Richling, I'll tell you. I've been thinking about this thing for some
+time, and I've decided to make you a proposal. I look at you and at Mary
+and at the times--the condition of the country--the probable
+future--everything. I know you, physically and mentally, better than
+anybody else does. I can say the same of Mary. So, of course, I don't
+make this proposal impulsively, and I don't want it rejected.
+
+"Richling, I'll lend you two thousand to twenty-five hundred dollars,
+payable at your convenience, if you will just go to your room, pack up,
+go home, and take from six to twelve months' holiday with your wife and
+child."
+
+The listener opened his mouth in blank astonishment.
+
+"Why, Doctor, you're jesting! You can't suppose"--
+
+"I don't suppose anything. I simply want you to do it."
+
+"Well, I simply can't!"
+
+"Did you ever regret taking my advice, Richling?"
+
+"No, never. But this--why, it's utterly impossible! Me leave the results
+of four years' struggle to go holidaying? I can't understand you,
+Doctor."
+
+"'Twould take weeks to explain."
+
+"It's idle to think of it," said Richling, half to himself.
+
+"Go home and think of it twenty-four hours," said the Doctor.
+
+"It is useless, Doctor."
+
+"Very good, then; send for Mary. Mail your letter."
+
+"You don't mean it!" said Richling.
+
+"Yes, I do. Send for Mary; and tell her I advised it." He turned quickly
+away to his desk, for Richling's eyes had filled with tears; but turned
+again and rose as Richling rose. They joined hands.
+
+"Yes, Richling, send for her. It's the right thing to do--if you will
+not do the other. You know I want you to be happy."
+
+"Doctor, one word. In your opinion is there going to be war?"
+
+"I don't know. But if there is it's time for husband and wife and child
+to draw close together. Good-day."
+
+And so the letter went.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+A BUNDLE OF HOPES.
+
+
+Richling insisted, in the face of much scepticism on the part of the
+baker's widow, that he felt better, was better, and would go on getting
+better, now that the weather was cool once more.
+
+"Well, I hope you vill, Mr. Richlin', dtat's a fect. 'Specially ven yo'
+vife comin'. Dough _I_ could a-tooken care ye choost tso koot as vot she
+couldt."
+
+"But maybe you couldn't take care of her as well as I can," said the
+happy Richling.
+
+"Oh, tdat's a tdifferendt. A voman kin tek care herself."
+
+Visiting the French market on one of these glad mornings, as his
+business often required him to do, he fell in with Narcisse, just
+withdrawing from the celebrated coffee-stand of Rose Nicaud. Richling
+stopped in the moving crowd and exchanged salutations very willingly;
+for here was one more chance to hear himself tell the fact of Mary's
+expected coming.
+
+"So'y, Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, whipping away the pastry crumbs
+from his lap with a handkerchief and wiping his mouth, "not to encounteh
+you a lill biffo', to join in pahtaking the cup what cheeahs at the same
+time whilce it invigo'ates; to-wit, the coffee-cup--as the maxim say. I
+dunno by what fawmule she makes that coffee, but 'tis astonishin' how
+'tis good, in fact. I dunno if you'll billieve me, but I feel almost I
+could pahtake anotheh cup--? 'Tis the tooth." He gave Richling time to
+make any handsome offer that might spontaneously suggest itself, but
+seeing that the response was only an over-gay expression of face, he
+added, "But I conclude no. In fact, Mistoo Itchlin, thass a thing I have
+discovud,--that too much coffee millytates ag'inst the chi'og'aphy; and
+thus I abstain. Well, seh, ole Abe is elected."
+
+"Yes," rejoined Richling, "and there's no telling what the result will
+be."
+
+"You co'ect, Mistoo Itchlin." Narcisse tried to look troubled.
+
+"I've got a bit of private news that I don't think you've heard," said
+Richling. And the Creole rejoined promptly:--
+
+"Well, I _thought_ I saw something on yo' thoughts--if you'll excuse my
+tautology. Thass a ve'y diffycult to p'event sometime'. But, Mistoo
+Itchlin, I trus' 'tis not you 'ave allowed somebody to swin'le
+you?--confiding them too indiscweetly, in fact?" He took a pretty
+attitude, his eyes reposing in Richling's.
+
+Richling laughed outright.
+
+"No, nothing of that kind. No, I"--
+
+"Well, I'm ve'y glad," interrupted Narcisse.
+
+"Oh, no, 'tisn't trouble at all! I've sent for Mrs. Richling. We're
+going to resume housekeeping."
+
+Narcisse gave a glad start, took his hat off, passed it to his left
+hand, extended his right, bowed from the middle with princely grace,
+and, with joy breaking all over his face, said:--
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, in fact,--shake!"
+
+They shook.
+
+"Yesseh--an' many 'appy 'eturn! I dunno if you kin billieve that, Mistoo
+Itchlin; but I was juz about to 'ead that in yo' physio'nomie! Yesseh.
+But, Mistoo Itchlin, when shall the happy o'casion take effect?"
+
+"Pretty soon. Not as soon as I thought, for I got a despatch yesterday,
+saying her mother is very ill, and of course I telegraphed her to stay
+till her mother is at least convalescent. But I think that will be soon.
+Her mother has had these attacks before. I have good hopes that before
+long Mrs. Richling will actually be here."
+
+Richling began to move away down the crowded market-house, but Narcisse
+said:--
+
+"Thass yo' di'ection? 'Tis the same, mine. We may accompany togetheh--if
+you'll allow yo' 'umble suvvant?"
+
+"Come along! You do me honor!" Richling laid his hand on Narcisse's
+shoulder and they went at a gait quickened by the happy husband's
+elation. Narcisse was very proud of the touch, and, as they began to
+traverse the vegetable market, took the most populous arcade.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," he began again, "I muz congwatu_late_ you! You know I
+always admiah yo' lady to excess. But appopo of that news, I might
+infawm you some intelligens consunning myseff."
+
+"Good!" exclaimed Richling. "For it's good news, isn't it?"
+
+"Yesseh,--as you may say,--yes. Faw in fact, Mistoo Itchlin, I 'ave ass
+Dr. Seveeah to haugment me."
+
+"Hurrah!" cried Richling. He coughed and laughed and moved aside to a
+pillar and coughed, until people looked at him, and lifted his eyes,
+tired but smiling, and, paying his compliments to the paroxysm in one or
+two ill-wishes, wiped his eyes at last, and said:--
+
+"And the Doctor augmented you?"
+
+"Well, no, I can't say that--not p'ecisely."
+
+"Why, what did he do?"
+
+"Well, he 'efuse' me, in fact."
+
+"Why--but that isn't good news, then."
+
+Narcisse gave his head a bright, argumentative twitch.
+
+"Yesseh. 'Tis t'ue he 'efuse'; but ad the same time--I dunno--I thing he
+wasn' so mad about it as he make out. An' you know thass one thing,
+Mistoo Itchlin, whilce they got life they got hope; and hence I
+ente'tain the same."
+
+They had reached that flagged area without covering or inclosure, before
+the third of the three old market-houses, where those dealers in the
+entire miscellanies of a housewife's equipment, excepting only stoves
+and furniture, spread their wares and fabrics in the open weather before
+the Bazar market rose to give them refuge. He grew suddenly fierce.
+
+"But any'ow I don't care! I had the spunk to ass 'im, an' he din 'ave
+the spunk to dischawge me! All he can do; 'tis to shake the fis' of
+impatience." He was looking into his companion's face, as they walked,
+with an eye distended with defiance.
+
+"Look out!" exclaimed Richling, reaching a hurried hand to draw him
+aside. Narcisse swerved just in time to avoid stepping into a pile of
+crockery, but in so doing went full into the arms of a stately female
+figure dressed in the crispest French calico and embarrassed with
+numerous small packages of dry goods. The bundles flew hither and yon.
+Narcisse tried to catch the largest as he saw it going, but only sent it
+farther than it would have gone, and as it struck the ground it burst
+like a pomegranate. But the contents were white: little thin,
+square-folded fractions of barred jaconet and white flannel; rolls of
+slender white lutestring ribbon; very narrow papers of tiny white pearl
+buttons, minute white worsted socks, spools of white floss, cards of
+safety-pins, pieces of white castile soap, etc.
+
+"_Mille pardons, madame!_" exclaimed Narcisse; "I make you a thousan'
+poddons, madam!"
+
+He was ill-prepared for the majestic wrath that flashed from the eyes
+and radiated from the whole dilating, and subsiding, and reëxpanding,
+and rising, and stiffening form of Kate Ristofalo!
+
+"Officerr," she panted,--for instantly there was a crowd, and a man with
+the silver-crescent badge was switching the assemblage on the legs with
+his cane to make room,--"Officerr," she gasped, levelling her tremulous
+finger at Narcisse, "arrist that man!"
+
+"Mrs. Ristofalo!" exclaimed Richling, "don't do that! It was all an
+accident! Why, don't you see it's Narcisse,--my friend?"
+
+"Yer frind rised his hand to sthrike me, sur, he did! Yer frind rised
+his hand to sthrike me, he did!" And up she went and down she went,
+shortening and lengthening, swelling and decreasing. "Yes, yes, I
+know yer frind; indeed I do! I paid two dollars and a half fur his
+acquaintans nigh upon three years agone, sur. Yer frind!" And still she
+went up and down, enlarging, diminishing, heaving her breath and waving
+her chin around, and saying, in broken utterances,--while a hackman on
+her right held his whip in her auditor's face, crying, "Carriage, sir?
+Carriage, sir?"--
+
+"Why didn'--he rin agin--a man, sur! I--I--oh! I wish Mr. Ristofalah war
+heer!--to teach um how--to walk!--Yer frind, sur--ixposing me!" She
+pointed to Narcisse and the policeman gathering up the scattered lot of
+tiny things. Her eyes filled with tears, but still shot lightning. "If
+he's hurrted me, he's got 'o suffer fur ud, Mr. Richlin'!" And she
+expanded again.
+
+"Carriage, sir, carriage?" continued the man with the whip.
+
+"Yes!" said Richling and Mrs. Ristofalo in a breath. She took his arm,
+the hackman seized the bundles from the policeman, threw open his hack
+door, laid the bundles on the front seat, and let down the folding
+steps. The crowd dwindled away to a few urchins.
+
+"Officerr," said Mrs. Ristofalo, her foot on the step and composure once
+more in her voice, "ye needn't arrist um. I could of done ud, sur," she
+added to Narcisse himself, "but I'm too much of a laydy, sur!" And she
+sank together and stretched herself up once more, entered the vehicle,
+and sat with a perpendicular back, her arms folded on her still heaving
+bosom, and her head high.
+
+As to her ability to have that arrest made, Kate Ristofalo was in error.
+Narcisse smiled to himself; for he was conscious of one advantage that
+overtopped all the sacredness of female helplessness, public right, or
+any other thing whatsoever. It lay in the simple fact that he was
+acquainted with the policeman. He bowed blandly to the officer, stepped
+backward, touching his hat, and walked away, the policeman imitating
+each movement with the promptness and faithfulness of a mirror.
+
+"Aren't ye goin' to get in, Mr. Richlin'?" asked Mrs. Ristofalo. She
+smiled first and then looked alarmed.
+
+"I--I can't very well--if you'll excuse me, ma'am."
+
+"Ah, Mr. Richlin'!"--she pouted girlishly. "Gettin' proud!" She gave her
+head a series of movements, as to say she might be angry if she would,
+but she wouldn't. "Ye won't know uz when Mrs. Richlin' comes."
+
+Richling laughed, but she gave a smiling toss to indicate that it was a
+serious matter.
+
+"Come," she insisted, patting the seat beside her with honeyed
+persuasiveness, "come and tell me all about ud. Mr. Ristofalah nivver
+goes into peticklers, an' so I har'ly know anny more than jist she's
+a-comin'. Come, git in an' tell me about Mrs. Richlin'--that is, if ye
+like the subject--and I don't believe ye do." She lifted her finger,
+shook it roguishly close to her own face, and looked at him sidewise.
+"Ah, nivver mind, sur! that's rright! Furgit yer old frinds--maybe ye
+wudden't do ud if ye knewn everythin'. But that's rright; that's the way
+with min." She suddenly changed to subdued earnestness, turned the catch
+of the door, and, as the door swung open, said: "Come, if ud's only fur
+a bit o' the way--if ud's only fur a ming-ute. I've got somethin' to
+tell ye."
+
+"I must get out at Washington Market," said Richling, as he got in. The
+hack hurried down Old Levee street.
+
+"And now," said she, merriment dancing in her eyes, her folded arms
+tightening upon her bosom, and her lips struggling against their own
+smile, "I'm just a good mind not to tell ye at ahll!"
+
+Her humor was contagious and Richling was ready to catch it. His own eye
+twinkled.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Ristofalo, of course, if you feel any embarrassment"--
+
+"Ye villain!" she cried, with delighted indignation, "I didn't mean
+nawthing about _that_, an' ye knew ud! Here, git out o' this carridge!"
+But she made no effort to eject him.
+
+"Mary and I are interested in all your hopes," said Richling, smiling
+softly upon the damaged bundle which he was making into a tight package
+again on his knee. "You'll tell me your good news if it's only that I
+may tell her, will you not?"
+
+"_I_ will. And it's joost this,--Mr. Richlin',--that if there be's a war
+Mr. Ristofalah's to be lit out o' prison."
+
+"I'm very glad!" cried Richling, but stopped short, for Mrs.
+Ristofalo's growing dignity indicated that there was more to be told.
+
+"I'm sure ye air, Mr. Richlin'; and I'm sure ye'll be glad--a heap
+gladder nor I am--that in that case he's to be Captain Ristofalah."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Yes, sur." The wife laid her palm against her floating ribs and
+breathed a sigh. "I don't like ud, Mr. Richlin'. No, sur. I don't like
+tytles." She got her fan from under her handkerchief and set it a-going.
+"I nivver liked the idee of bein' a tytled man's wife. No, sur." She
+shook her head, elevating it as she shook it. "It creates too much
+invy, Mr. Richlin'. Well, good-by." The carriage was stopping at the
+Washington Market. "Now, don't ye mintion it to a livin' soul, Mr.
+Richlin'!"
+
+Richling said "No."
+
+"No, sur; fur there be's manny a slip 'tuxt the cup an' the lip,
+ye know; an' there may be no war, after all, and we may all be
+disapp'inted. But he's bound to be tleared if he's tried, and don't ye
+see--I--I don't want um to be a captain, anyhow, don't ye see?"
+
+Richling saw, and they parted.
+
+ * * *
+
+Thus everybody hoped. Dr. Sevier, wifeless, childless, had his hopes
+too, nevertheless. Hopes for the hospital and his many patients in it
+and out of it; hopes for his town and his State; hopes for Richling
+and Mary; and hopes with fears, and fears with hopes, for the great
+sisterhood of States. Richling had one hope more. After some weeks had
+passed Dr. Sevier ventured once more to say:--
+
+"Richling, go home. Go to your wife. I must tell you you're no ordinary
+sick man. Your life is in danger."
+
+"Will I be out of danger if I go home?" asked Richling.
+
+Dr. Sevier made no answer.
+
+"Do you still think we may have war?" asked Richling again.
+
+"I know we shall."
+
+"And will the soldiers come back," asked the young man, smilingly, "when
+they find their lives in danger?"
+
+"Now, Richling, that's another thing entirely; that's the battle-field."
+
+"Isn't it all the _same_ thing, Doctor? Isn't it all a battle-field?"
+
+The Doctor turned impatiently, disdaining to reply. But in a moment he
+retorted:--
+
+"We take wounded men off the field."
+
+"They don't take themselves off," said Richling, smiling.
+
+"Well," rejoined the Doctor, rising and striding toward a window, "a
+good general may order a retreat."
+
+"Yes, but--maybe I oughtn't to say what I was thinking"--
+
+"Oh, say it."
+
+"Well, then, he don't let his surgeon order it. Doctor," continued
+Richling, smiling apologetically as his friend confronted him, "you
+know, as you say, better than any one else, all that Mary and I have
+gone through--nearly all--and how we've gone through it. Now, if my life
+should end here shortly, what would the whole thing mean? It would mean
+nothing. Doctor; it would be meaningless. No, sir; this isn't the end.
+Mary and I"--his voice trembled an instant and then was firm again--"are
+designed for a long life. I argue from the simple fitness of
+things,--this is not the end."
+
+Dr. Sevier turned his face quickly toward the window, and so remained.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER L.
+
+FALL IN!
+
+
+There came a sound of drums. Twice on such a day, once the day
+before, thrice the next day, till by and by it was the common thing.
+High-stepping childhood, with laths and broom-handles at shoulder, was
+not fated, as in the insipid days of peace, to find, on running to the
+corner, its high hopes mocked by a wagon of empty barrels rumbling over
+the cobble-stones. No; it was the Washington Artillery, or the Crescent
+Rifles, or the Orleans Battalion, or, best of all, the blue-jacketed,
+white-leggined, red-breeched, and red-fezzed Zouaves; or, better than
+the best, it was all of them together, their captains stepping backward,
+sword in both hands, calling "_Gauche! gauche!_" ("Left! left!") "Guide
+right!"--"_Portez armes!_" and facing around again, throwing their
+shining blades stiffly to belt and epaulette, and glancing askance from
+under their abundant plumes to the crowded balconies above. Yea, and the
+drum-majors before, and the brilliant-petticoated _vivandičres_ behind!
+
+What pomp! what giddy rounds! Pennons, cock-feathers, clattering steeds,
+pealing salvos, banners, columns, ladies' favors, balls, concerts,
+toasts, the Free Gift Lottery--don't you recollect?--and this uniform
+and that uniform, brother a captain, father a colonel, uncle a major,
+the little rector a chaplain, Captain Ristofalo of the Tiger Rifles; the
+levee covered with munitions of war, steam-boats unloading troops,
+troops, troops, from Opelousas, Attakapas, Texas; and a supper to this
+company, a flag to that battalion, farewell sermon to the Washington
+Artillery, tears and a kiss to a spurred and sashed lover, hurried
+weddings,--no end of them,--a sword to such a one, addresses by such and
+such, serenades to Miss and to Mademoiselle.
+
+Soon it will have been a quarter of a century ago!
+
+And yet--do you not hear them now, coming down the broad, granite-paved,
+moonlit street, the light that was made for lovers glancing on bayonet
+and sword soon to be red with brothers' blood, their brave young hearts
+already lifted up with the triumph of battles to come, and the trumpets
+waking the midnight stillness with the gay notes of the Cracovienne?--
+
+ "Again, again, the pealing drum,
+ The clashing horn, they come, they come,
+ And lofty deeds and daring high
+ Blend with their notes of victory."
+
+Ah! the laughter; the music; the bravado; the dancing; the songs!
+"_Voilŕ l'Zouzou!_" "Dixie!" "_Aux armes, vos citoyens!_" "The Bonnie
+Blue Flag!"--it wasn't bonnie very long. Later the maidens at home
+learned to sing a little song,--it is among the missing now,--a part of
+it ran:--
+
+ "Sleeping on grassy couches;
+ Pillowed on hillocks damp;
+ Of martial fame how little we know
+ Till brothers are in the camp."
+
+By and by they began to depart. How many they were! How many, many! We
+had too lightly let them go. And when all were gone, and they of
+Carondelet street and its tributaries, massed in that old gray,
+brittle-shanked regiment, the Confederate Guards, were having their
+daily dress parade in Coliseum place, and only they and the Foreign
+Legion remained; when sister Jane made lint, and flour was high, and
+the sounds of commerce were quite hushed, and in the custom-house
+gun-carriages were a-making, and in the foundries big guns were being
+cast, and the cotton gun-boats and the rams were building, and at the
+rotting wharves the masts of a few empty ships stood like dead trees in
+a blasted wilderness, and poor soldiers' wives crowded around the "Free
+Market," and grass began to spring up in the streets,--they were many
+still, while far away; but some marched no more, and others marched on
+bleeding feet, in rags; and it was very, very hard for some of us to
+hold the voice steady and sing on through the chorus of the little
+song:--
+
+ "Brave boys are they!
+ Gone at their country's call.
+ And yet--and yet--we cannot forget
+ That many brave boys must fall."
+
+Oh! Shiloh, Shiloh!
+
+But before the gloom had settled down upon us it was a gay dream.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, in fact 'ow you ligue my uniefawm? You think it suit my
+style? They got about two poun' of gole lace on that uniefawm. Yesseh.
+Me, the h-only thing--I don' ligue those epaulette'. So soon ev'ybody
+see that on me, 'tis 'Lieut'nan'!' in thiz place, an' 'Lieut'nan'!' in
+that place. My de'seh, you'd thing I'm a majo'-gen'l, in fact. Well, of
+co'se, I don' ligue that."
+
+"And so you're a lieutenant?"
+
+"Third! Of the Chasseurs-á-Pied! Coon he'p 't, in fact; the fellehs
+elected me. Goin' at Pensacola tomaw. Dr. Seveeah _con_tinue my sala'y
+whilce I'm gone. no matteh the len'th. Me, I don' care, so long the
+sala'y _con_tinue, if that waugh las' ten yeah! You ah pe'haps goin' ad
+the ball to-nighd, Mistoo Itchlin? I dunno 'ow 'tis--I suppose you'll be
+aztonizh' w'en I infawm you--that ball wemine me of that battle of
+Wattaloo! Did you evva yeh those line' of Lawd By'on,--
+
+ 'Theh was a soun' of wibalwy by night,
+ W'en--'Ush-'ark!--A deep saun' stwike'--?
+
+Thaz by Lawd By'on. Yesseh. Well"--
+
+The Creole lifted his right hand energetically, laid its inner edge
+against the brass buttons of his _képi_, and then waved it gracefully
+abroad:--
+
+"_Au 'evoi'_, Mistoo Itchlin. I leave you to defen' the city."
+
+"To-morrow," in those days of unreadiness and disconnection, glided just
+beyond reach continually. When at times its realization was at length
+grasped, it was away over on the far side of a fortnight or farther.
+However, the to-morrow for Narcisse came at last.
+
+A quiet order for attention runs down the column. Attention it is.
+Another order follows, higher-keyed, longer drawn out, and with one
+sharp "clack!" the sword-bayoneted rifles go to the shoulders of as fine
+a battalion as any in the land of Dixie.
+
+"_En avant!_"--Narcisse's heart stands still for joy--"_Marche!_"
+
+The bugle rings, the drums beat; "tramp, tramp," in quick succession, go
+the short-stepping, nimble Creole feet, and the old walls of the Rue
+Chartres ring again with the pealing huzza, as they rang in the days of
+Villeré and Lafréničre, and in the days of the young Galvez, and in the
+days of Jackson.
+
+The old Ponchartrain cars move off, packed. Down at the "Old Lake End"
+the steamer for Mobile receives the burden. The gong clangs in her
+engine-room, the walking-beam silently stirs, there is a hiss of water
+underneath, the gang-plank is in, the wet hawser-ends whip through the
+hawse-holes,--she moves; clang goes the gong again--she glides--or is it
+the crowded wharf that is gliding?--No.--Snatch the kisses! snatch them!
+Adieu! Adieu! She's off, huzza--she's off!
+
+Now she stands away. See the mass of gay colors--red, gold, blue,
+yellow, with glitter of steel and flutter of flags, a black veil of
+smoke sweeping over. Wave, mothers and daughters, wives, sisters,
+sweethearts--wave, wave; you little know the future!
+
+And now she is a little thing, her white wake following her afar across
+the green waters, the call of the bugle floating softly back. And now
+she is a speck. And now a little smoky stain against the eastern blue is
+all,--and now she is gone. Gone! Gone!
+
+Farewell, soldier boys! Light-hearted, little-forecasting, brave,
+merry boys! God accept you, our offering of first fruits! See that
+mother--that wife--take them away; it is too much. Comfort them, father,
+brother; tell them their tears may be for naught.
+
+ "And yet--and yet--we cannot forget
+ That many brave boys must fall."
+
+Never so glad a day had risen upon the head of Narcisse. For the first
+time in his life he moved beyond the corporate limits of his native
+town.
+
+"'Ezcape fum the aunt, thou sluggud!'" "_Au 'evoi'_" to his aunt and the
+uncle of his aunt. "_Au 'evoi'!_ _Au 'evoi'!_"--desk, pen, book--work,
+care, thought, restraint--all sinking, sinking beneath the receding
+horizon of Lake Ponchartrain, and the wide world and a soldier's life
+before him.
+
+Farewell, Byronic youth! You are not of so frail a stuff as you have
+seemed. You shall thirst by day and hunger by night. You shall keep
+vigil on the sands of the Gulf and on the banks of the Potomac. You
+shall grow brown, but prettier. You shall shiver in loathsome tatters,
+yet keep your grace, your courtesy, your joyousness. You shall ditch and
+lie down in ditches, and shall sing your saucy songs of defiance in the
+face of the foe, so blackened with powder and dust and smoke that your
+mother in heaven would not know her child. And you shall borrow to your
+heart's content chickens, hogs, rails, milk, buttermilk, sweet potatoes,
+what not; and shall learn the American songs, and by the camp-fire of
+Shenandoah valley sing "The years creep slowly by, Lorena" to messmates
+with shaded eyes, and "Her bright smile haunts me still." Ah, boy!
+there's an old woman still living in the Rue Casa Calvo--your bright
+smile haunts her still. And there shall be blood on your sword, and
+blood--twice--thrice--on your brow. Your captain shall die in your arms;
+and you shall lead charge after charge, and shall step up from rank to
+rank; and all at once, one day, just in the final onset, with the cheer
+on your lips, and your red sword waving high, with but one lightning
+stroke of agony, down, down you shall go in the death of your dearest
+choice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LI.
+
+BLUE BONNETS OVER THE BORDER.
+
+
+One morning, about the 1st of June, 1861, in the city of New York, two
+men of the mercantile class came from a cross street into Broadway, near
+what was then the upper region of its wholesale stores. They paused on
+the corner, near the edge of the sidewalk.
+
+"Even when the States were seceding," said one of them, "I couldn't make
+up my mind that they really meant to break up the Union."
+
+He had rosy cheeks, a retreating chin, and amiable, inquiring eyes. The
+other had a narrower face, alert eyes, thin nostrils, and a generally
+aggressive look. He did not reply at once, but, after a quick glance
+down the great thoroughfare and another one up it, said, while his eyes
+still ran here and there:--
+
+"Wonderful street, this Broadway!"
+
+He straightened up to his fullest height and looked again, now down the
+way, now up, his eye kindling with the electric contagion of the scene.
+His senses were all awake. They took in, with a spirit of welcome, all
+the vast movement: the uproar, the feeling of unbounded multitude, the
+commercial splendor, the miles of towering buildings; the long,
+writhing, grinding mass of coming and going vehicles, the rush of
+innumerable feet, and the countless forms and faces hurrying, dancing,
+gliding by, as though all the world's mankind, and womankind, and
+childhood must pass that way before night.
+
+"How many people, do you suppose, go by this corner in a single hour?"
+asked the man with the retreating chin. But again he got no answer. He
+might as well not have yielded the topic of conversation as he had done;
+so he resumed it. "No, I didn't believe it," he said. "Why, look at the
+Southern vote of last November--look at New Orleans. The way it went
+there, I shouldn't have supposed twenty-five per cent. of the people
+would be in favor of secession. Would you?"
+
+But his companion, instead of looking at New Orleans, took note of two
+women who had come to a halt within a yard of them and seemed to be
+waiting, as he and his companion were, for an opportunity to cross the
+street. The two new-comers were very different in appearance, the one
+from the other. The older and larger was much beyond middle life, red,
+fat, and dressed in black stuff, good as to fabric, but uncommonly bad
+as to fit. The other was young and pretty, refined, tastefully dressed,
+and only the more interesting for the look of permanent anxiety that
+asserted itself with distinctness about the corners of her eyes and
+mouth. She held by the hand a rosy, chubby little child, that seemed
+about three years old, and might be a girl or might be a boy, so far as
+could be discerned by masculine eyes. The man did not see this fifth
+member of their group until the elder woman caught it under the arms in
+her large hands, and, lifting it above her shoulder, said, looking far
+up the street:--
+
+"O paypy, paypy, choost look de fla-ags! One, two, dtree,--a tuzzent, a
+hundut, a dtowsant fla-ags!"
+
+Evidently the child did not know her well. The little face remained
+without a smile, the lips sealed, the shoulders drawn up, and the legs
+pointing straight to the spot whence they had been lifted. She set it
+down again.
+
+"We're not going to get by here," said the less talkative man. "They
+must be expecting some troops to pass here. Don't you see the windows
+full of women and children?"
+
+"Let's wait and look at them," responded the other, and his companion
+did not dissent.
+
+"Well, sir," said the more communicative one, after a moment's
+contemplation, "I never expected to see this!" He indicated by a gesture
+the stupendous life of Broadway beginning slowly to roll back upon
+itself like an obstructed river. It was obviously gathering in a general
+pause to concentrate its attention upon something of leading interest
+about to appear to view. "We're in earnest at last, and we can see, now,
+that the South was in the deadest kind of earnest from the word go."
+
+"They can't be any more in earnest than we are, now," said the more
+decided speaker.
+
+"I had great hopes of the peace convention," said the rosier man.
+
+"I never had a bit," responded the other.
+
+"The suspense was awful--waiting to know what Lincoln would do when he
+came in," said he of the poor chin. "My wife was in the South visiting
+her relatives; and we kept putting off her return, hoping for a quieter
+state of affairs--hoping and putting off--till first thing you knew the
+lines closed down and she had the hardest kind of a job to get through."
+
+"I never had a doubt as to what Lincoln would do," said the man with
+sharp eyes; but while he spoke he covertly rubbed his companion's elbow
+with his own, and by his glance toward the younger of the two women gave
+him to understand that, though her face was partly turned away, the very
+pretty ear, with no ear-ring in the hole pierced for it, was listening.
+And the readier speaker rejoined in a suppressed voice:--
+
+"That's the little lady I travelled in the same car with all the way
+from Chicago."
+
+"No times for ladies to be travelling alone," muttered the other.
+
+"She hoped to take a steam-ship for New Orleans, to join her husband
+there."
+
+"Some rebel fellow, I suppose."
+
+"No, a Union man, she says."
+
+"Oh, of course!" said the sharp-eyed one, sceptically. "Well, she's
+missed it. The last steamer's gone and may get back or may not." He
+looked at her again, narrowly, from behind his companion's shoulder. She
+was stooping slightly toward the child, rearranging some tie under its
+lifted chin and answering its questions in what seemed a chastened
+voice. He murmured to his fellow, "How do you know she isn't a spy?"
+
+The other one turned upon him a look of pure amusement, but, seeing the
+set lips and earnest eye of his companion, said softly, with a faint,
+scouting hiss and smile:--
+
+"She's a perfect lady--a perfect one."
+
+"Her friend isn't," said the aggressive man.
+
+"Here they come," observed the other aloud, looking up the street. There
+was a general turning of attention and concentration of the street's
+population toward the edge of either sidewalk. A force of police was
+clearing back into the by-streets a dense tangle of drays, wagons,
+carriages, and white-topped omnibuses, and far up the way could be seen
+the fluttering and tossing of handkerchiefs, and in the midst a solid
+mass of blue with a sheen of bayonets above, and every now and then a
+brazen reflection from in front, where the martial band marched before.
+It was not playing. The ear caught distantly, instead of its notes, the
+warlike thunder of the drum corps.
+
+The sharper man nudged his companion mysteriously.
+
+"Listen," he whispered. Neither they nor the other pair had materially
+changed their relative positions. The older woman was speaking.
+
+"'Twas te fun'est dting! You pe lookin' for te Noo 'Leants shteamer,
+undt me lookin' for te Hambourg shteamer, undt coompt right so togeder
+undt never vouldn't 'a' knowedt udt yet, ovver te mayne exdt me, 'Misses
+Reisen, vot iss your name?' undt you headt udt. Undt te minudt you
+shpeak, udt choost come to me like a flash o' lightenin'--'Udt iss
+Misses Richlin'!'" The speaker's companion gave her such attention as
+one may give in a crowd to words that have been heard two or three times
+already within the hour.
+
+"Yes, Alice," she said, once or twice to the little one, who pulled
+softly at her skirt asking confidential questions. But the baker's widow
+went on with her story, enjoying it for its own sake.
+
+"You know, Mr. Richlin' he told me finfty dtimes, 'Misses Reisen, doant
+kif up te pissness!' Ovver I see te mutcheenery proke undt te foundtries
+all makin' guns undt kennons, undt I choost says, 'I kot plenteh
+moneh--I tdtink I kfit undt go home.' Ovver I sayss to de Doctor, 'Dte
+oneh dting--vot Mr. Richlin' ko-in to tdo?' Undt Dr. Tseweer he sayss,
+'How menneh pa'ls flour you kot shtowed away?' Undt I sayss, 'Tsoo
+hundut finfty.' Undt he sayss, 'Misses Reisen, Mr. Richlin' done made
+you rich; you choost kif um dtat flour; udt be wort' tweny-fife tollahs
+te pa'l, yet.' Undt sayss I, 'Doctor, you' right, undt I dtank you for
+te goodt idea; I kif Mr. Richlin' innahow one pa'l.' Undt I done-d it.
+Ovver I sayss, 'Doctor, dtat's not like a rigler sellery, yet.' Undt
+dten he sayss, 'You know, _mine_ pookkeeper he gone to te vor, undt I
+need'"--
+
+A crash of brazen music burst upon the ear and drowned the voice. The
+throng of the sidewalk pushed hard upon its edge.
+
+"Let me hold the little girl up," ventured the milder man, and set her
+gently upon his shoulder, as amidst a confusion of outcries and flutter
+of hats and handkerchiefs the broad, dense column came on with
+measured tread, its stars and stripes waving in the breeze and its
+backward-slanting thicket of bayoneted arms glittering in the morning
+sun. All at once there arose from the great column, in harmony with the
+pealing music, the hoarse roar of the soldiers' own voices singing in
+time to the rhythm of their tread. And a thrill runs through the people,
+and they answer with mad huzzas and frantic wavings and smiles, half of
+wild ardor and half of wild pain; and the keen-eyed man here by Mary
+lets the tears roll down his cheeks unhindered as he swings his hat and
+cries "Hurrah! hurrah!" while on tramps the mighty column, singing from
+its thousand thirsty throats the song of John Brown's Body.
+
+Yea, so, soldiers of the Union,--though that little mother there
+weeps but does not wave, as the sharp-eyed man notes well through his
+tears,--yet even so, yea, all the more, go--"go marching on," saviors of
+the Union; your cause is just. Lo, now, since nigh twenty-five years
+have passed, we of the South can say it!
+
+ "And yet--and yet, we cannot forget"--
+
+and we would not.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LII.
+
+A PASS THROUGH THE LINES.
+
+
+About the middle of September following the date of the foregoing
+incident, there occurred in a farmhouse head-quarters on the Indiana
+shore of the Ohio river the following conversation:--
+
+"You say you wish me to give you a pass through the lines, ma'am. Why do
+you wish to go through?"
+
+"I want to join my husband in New Orleans."
+
+"Why, ma'am, you'd much better let New Orleans come through the lines.
+We shall have possession of it, most likely, within a month." The
+speaker smiled very pleasantly, for very pleasant and sweet was the
+young face before him, despite its lines of mental distress, and very
+soft and melodious the voice that proceeded from it.
+
+"Do you think so?" replied the applicant, with an unhopeful smile. "My
+friends have been keeping me at home for months on that idea, but the
+fact seems as far off now as ever. I should go straight through without
+stopping, if I had a pass."
+
+"Ho!" exclaimed the man, softly, with pitying amusement. "Certainly, I
+understand you would try to do so. But, my dear madam, you would find
+yourself very much mistaken. Suppose, now, we should let you through our
+lines. You'd be between two fires. You'd still have to get into the
+rebel lines. You don't know what you're undertaking."
+
+She smiled wistfully.
+
+"I'm undertaking to get to my husband."
+
+"Yes, yes," said the officer, pulling his handkerchief from between two
+brass buttons of his double-breasted coat and wiping his brow. She did
+not notice that he made this motion purely as a cover for the searching
+glance which he suddenly gave her from head to foot. "Yes," he
+continued, "but you don't know what it is, ma'am. After you get through
+the _other_ lines, what are you going to do _then_? There's a perfect
+reign of terror over there. I wouldn't let a lady relative of mine take
+such risks for thousands of dollars. I don't think your husband ought to
+thank me for giving you a pass. You say he's a Union man; why don't he
+come to you?"
+
+Tears leaped into the applicant's eyes.
+
+"He's become too sick to travel," she said.
+
+"Lately?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"I thought you said you hadn't heard from him for months." The officer
+looked at her with narrowed eyes.
+
+"I said I hadn't had a letter from him." The speaker blushed to find her
+veracity on trial. She bit her lip, and added, with perceptible tremor:
+"I got one lately from his physician."
+
+"How did you get it?"
+
+"What, sir?"
+
+"Now, madam, you know what I asked you, don't you?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Yes. Well, I'd like you to answer."
+
+"I found it, three mornings ago, under the front door of the house where
+I live with my mother and my little girl."
+
+"Who put it there?"
+
+"I do not know."
+
+The officer looked her steadily in the eyes. They were blue. His own
+dropped.
+
+"You ought to have brought that letter with you, ma'am," he said,
+looking up again; "don't you see how valuable it would be to you?"
+
+"I did bring it," she replied, with alacrity, rummaged a moment in a
+skirt-pocket, and brought it out. The officer received it and read the
+superscription audibly.
+
+"'Mrs. John H----.' Are you Mrs. John H----?"
+
+"That is not the envelope it was in," she replied. "It was not directed
+at all. I put it into that envelope merely to preserve it. That's the
+envelope of a different letter,--a letter from my mother."
+
+"Are you Mrs. John H----?" asked her questioner again. She had turned
+partly aside and was looking across the apartment and out through a
+window. He spoke once more. "Is this your name?"
+
+"What, sir?"
+
+He smiled cynically.
+
+"Please don't do that again, madam."
+
+She blushed down into the collar of her dress.
+
+"That is my name, sir."
+
+The man put the missive to his nose, snuffed it softly, and looked
+amused, yet displeased.
+
+"Mrs. H----, did you notice just a faint smell of--garlic--about
+this--?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Well, I have no less than three or four others with the very same
+odor." He smiled on. "And so, no doubt, we are both of the same private
+opinion that the bearer of this letter was--who, Mrs. H----?"
+
+Mrs. H---- frequently by turns raised her eyes honestly to her
+questioner's and dropped them to where, in her lap, the fingers of one
+hand fumbled with a lone wedding-ring on the other, while she said:--
+
+"Do you think, sir, if you were in my place you would like to give the
+name of the person you thought had risked his life to bring you word
+that your husband--your wife--was very ill, and needed your presence?
+Would you like to do it?"
+
+The officer looked severe.
+
+"Don't you know perfectly well that wasn't his principal errand inside
+our lines?"
+
+"No."
+
+"No!" echoed the man; "and you don't know perfectly well, I suppose,
+that he's been shot at along this line times enough to have turned his
+hair white? Or that he crossed the river for the third time last night,
+loaded down with musket-caps for the rebels?"
+
+"No."
+
+"But you must admit you know a certain person, wherever he may be, or
+whatever he may be doing, named Raphael Ristofalo?"
+
+"I do not."
+
+The officer smiled again.
+
+"Yes, I see. That is to say, you don't _admit_ it. And you don't deny
+it."
+
+The reply came more slowly:--
+
+"I do not."
+
+"Well, now, Mrs. H----, I've given you a pretty long audience. I'll tell
+you what I'll do. But do you please tell me, first, you affirm on your
+word of honor that your name is really Mrs. H----; that you are no spy,
+and have had no voluntary communication with any, and that you are a
+true and sincere Union woman."
+
+"I affirm it all."
+
+"Well, then, come in to-morrow at this hour, and if I am going to give
+you a pass at all I'll give it to you then. Here, here's your letter."
+
+As she received the missive she lifted her eyes, suffused, but full of
+hope, to his, and said:--
+
+"God grant you the heart to do it, sir, and bless you."
+
+The man laughed. Her eyes fell, she blushed, and, saying not a word,
+turned toward the door and had reached the threshold when the officer
+called, with a certain ringing energy:--
+
+"Mrs. Richling!"
+
+She wheeled as if he had struck her, and answered:--
+
+"What, sir!" Then, turning as red as a rose, she said, "O sir, that was
+cruel!" covered her face with her hands, and sobbed aloud. It was only
+as she was in the midst of these last words that she recognized in the
+officer before her the sharper-visaged of those two men who had stood by
+her in Broadway.
+
+"Step back here, Mrs. Richling."
+
+She came.
+
+"Well, madam! I should like to know what we are coming to, when a lady
+like you--a palpable, undoubted lady--can stoop to such deceptions!"
+
+"Sir," said Mary, looking at him steadfastly and then shaking her head
+in solemn asseveration, "all that I have said to you is the truth."
+
+"Then will you explain how it is that you go by one name in one part of
+the country, and by another in another part?"
+
+"No," she said. It was very hard to speak. The twitching of her mouth
+would hardly let her form a word. "No--no--I can't--tell you."
+
+"Very well, ma'am. If you don't start back to Milwaukee by the next
+train, and stay there, I shall"--
+
+"Oh, don't say that, sir! I must go to my husband! Indeed, sir, it's
+nothing but a foolish mistake, made years ago, that's never harmed any
+one but us. I'll take all the blame of it if you'll only give me a
+pass!"
+
+The officer motioned her to be silent.
+
+"You'll have to do as I tell you, ma'am. If not, I shall know it; you
+will be arrested, and I shall give you a sort of pass that you'd be a
+long time asking for." He looked at the face mutely confronting him and
+felt himself relenting. "I dare say this does sound very cruel to you,
+ma'am; but remember, this is a cruel war. I don't judge you. If I did,
+and could harden my heart as I ought to, I'd have you arrested now. But,
+I say, you'd better take my advice. Good-morning! _No, ma'am, I can't
+hear you!_ So, now, that's enough! Good-morning, madam!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIII.
+
+TRY AGAIN.
+
+
+One afternoon in the month of February, 1862, a locomotive engine and a
+single weather-beaten passenger-coach, moving southward at a very
+moderate speed through the middle of Kentucky, stopped in response to a
+handkerchief signal at the southern end of a deep, rocky valley, and, in
+a patch of gray, snow-flecked woods, took on board Mary Richling,
+dressed in deep mourning, and her little Alice. The three or four
+passengers already in the coach saw no sign of human life through the
+closed panes save the roof of one small cabin that sent up its slender
+thread of blue smoke at one corner of a little badly cleared field a
+quarter of a mile away on a huge hill-side. As the scant train crawled
+off again into a deep, ice-hung defile, it passed the silent figure of a
+man in butternut homespun, spattered with dry mud, standing close beside
+the track on a heap of cross-tie cinders and fire-bent railroad iron, a
+gray goat-beard under his chin, and a quilted homespun hat on his head.
+From beneath the limp brim of this covering, as the train moved by him,
+a tender, silly smile beamed upward toward one hastily raised window,
+whence the smile of Mary and the grave, unemotional gaze of the child
+met it for a moment before the train swung round a curve in the narrow
+way, and quickened speed on down grade.
+
+The conductor came and collected her fare. He smelt of tobacco above the
+smell of the coach in general.
+
+"Do you charge anything for the little girl?"
+
+The purse in which the inquirer's finger and thumb tarried was limber
+and flat.
+
+"No, ma'am."
+
+It was not the customary official negative; a tawdry benevolence of face
+went with it, as if to say he did not charge because he would not; and
+when Mary returned a faint beam of appreciation he went out upon the
+rear platform and wiped the plenteous dust from his shoulders and cap.
+Then he returned to his seat at the stove and renewed his conversation
+with a lieutenant in hard-used blue, who said "the rebel lines ought
+never to have been allowed to fall back to Nashville," and who knew "how
+Grant could have taken Fort Donelson a week ago if he had had any
+sense."
+
+There were but few persons, as we have said, in the car. A rough man in
+one corner had a little captive, a tiny, dappled fawn, tied by a short,
+rough bit of rope to the foot of the car-seat. When the conductor by and
+by lifted the little Alice up from the cushion, where she sat with her
+bootees straight in front of her at its edge, and carried her,
+speechless and drawn together like a kitten, and stood her beside the
+captive orphan, she simply turned about and pattered back to her
+mother's side.
+
+"I don't believe she even saw it," said the conductor, standing again by
+Mary.
+
+"Yes, she did," replied Mary, smiling upon the child's head as she
+smoothed its golden curls; "she'll talk about it to-morrow."
+
+The conductor lingered a moment, wanting to put his own hand there, but
+did not venture, perhaps because of the person sitting on the next seat
+behind, who looked at him rather steadily until he began to move away.
+
+This was a man of slender, commanding figure and advanced years. Beside
+him, next the window, sat a decidedly aristocratic woman, evidently his
+wife. She, too, was of fine stature, and so, without leaning forward
+from the back of her seat, or unfolding her arms, she could make kind
+eyes to Alice, as the child with growing frequency stole glances, at
+first over her own little shoulder, and later over her mother's, facing
+backward and kneeling on the cushion. At length a cooky passed between
+them in dead silence, and the child turned and gazed mutely in her
+mother's face, with the cooky just in sight.
+
+"It can't hurt her," said the lady, in a sweet voice, to Mary, leaning
+forward with her hands in her lap. By the time the sun began to set in
+a cool, golden haze across some wide stretches of rolling fallow, a
+conversation had sprung up, and the child was in the lady's lap, her
+little hand against the silken bosom, playing with a costly watch.
+
+The talk began about the care of Alice, passed to the diet, and then
+to the government, of children, all in a light way, a similarity of
+convictions pleasing the two ladies more and more as they found it run
+further and further. Both talked, but the strange lady sustained the
+conversation, although it was plainly both a pastime and a comfort to
+Mary. Whenever it threatened to flag the handsome stranger persisted in
+reviving it.
+
+Her husband only listened and smiled, and with one finger made every now
+and then a soft, slow pass at Alice, who each time shrank as slowly and
+softly back into his wife's fine arm. Presently, however, Mary raised
+her eyebrows a little and smiled, to see her sitting quietly in the
+gentleman's lap; and as she turned away and rested her elbow on the
+window-sill and her cheek on her hand in a manner that betrayed
+weariness, and looked out upon the ever-turning landscape, he murmured
+to his wife, "I haven't a doubt in my mind," and nodded significantly at
+the preoccupied little shape in his arms. His manner with the child was
+imperceptibly adroit, and very soon her prattle began to be heard. Mary
+was just turning to offer a gentle check to this rising volubility, when
+up jumped the little one to a standing posture on the gentleman's knee,
+and, all unsolicited and with silent clapping of hands, plumped out her
+full name:--
+
+"Alice Sevier Witchlin'!"
+
+The husband threw a quick glance toward his wife; but she avoided it
+and called Mary's attention to the sunset as seen through the opposite
+windows. Mary looked and responded with expressions of admiration, but
+was visibly disquieted, and the next moment called her child to her.
+
+"My little girl mustn't talk so loud and fast in the cars," she said,
+with tender pleasantness, standing her upon the seat and brushing back
+the stray golden waves from the baby's temples, and the brown ones, so
+like them, from her own. She turned a look of amused apology to the
+gentleman, and added, "She gets almost boisterous sometimes," then gave
+her regard once more to her offspring, seating the little one beside her
+as in the beginning, and answering her musical small questions with
+composing yeas and nays.
+
+"I suppose," she said, after a pause and a look out through the
+window,--"I suppose we ought soon to be reaching M---- station,
+now, should we not?"
+
+"What, in Tennessee? Oh! no," replied the gentleman. "In ordinary times
+we should; but at this slow rate we cannot nearly do it. We're on a
+road, you see, that was destroyed by the retreating army and made over
+by the Union forces. Besides, there are three trains of troops ahead of
+us, that must stop and unload between here and there, and keep you
+waiting, there's no telling how long."
+
+"Then I'll get there in the night!" exclaimed Mary.
+
+"Yes, probably after midnight."
+
+"Oh, I shouldn't have _thought_ of coming before to-morrow if I had
+known that!" In the extremity of her dismay she rose half from her seat
+and looked around with alarm.
+
+"Have you no friends expecting to receive you there?" asked the lady.
+
+"Not a soul! And the conductor says there's no lodging-place nearer than
+three miles"--
+
+"And that's gone now," said the gentleman.
+
+"You'll have to get out at the same station with us," said the lady, her
+manner kindness itself and at the same time absolute.
+
+"I think you have claims on us, anyhow, that we'd like to pay."
+
+"Oh! impossible," said Mary. "You're certainly mistaking me."
+
+"I think you have," insisted the lady; "that is, if your name is
+Richling."
+
+Mary blushed.
+
+"I don't think you know my husband," she said; "he lives a long way from
+here."
+
+"In New Orleans?" asked the gentleman.
+
+"Yes, sir," said Mary, boldly. She couldn't fear such good faces.
+
+"His first name is John, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, sir. Do you really know John, sir?" The lines of pleasure and
+distress mingled strangely in Mary's face. The gentleman smiled. He
+tapped little Alice's head with the tips of his fingers.
+
+"I used to hold him on my knee when he was no bigger than this little
+image of him here."
+
+The tears leaped into Mary's eyes.
+
+"Mr. Thornton," she whispered, huskily, and could say no more.
+
+"You must come home with us," said the lady, touching her tenderly on
+the shoulder. "It's a wonder of good fortune that we've met. Mr.
+Thornton has something to say to you,--a matter of business. He's the
+family's lawyer, you know."
+
+"I must get to my husband without delay," said Mary.
+
+"Get to your husband?" asked the lawyer, in astonishment.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Through the lines?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"I told him so," said the lady.
+
+"I don't know how to credit it," said he. "Why, my child, I don't think
+you can possibly know what you are attempting. Your friends ought never
+to have allowed you to conceive such a thing. You must let us dissuade
+you. It will not be taking too much liberty, will it? Has your husband
+never told you what good friends we were?"
+
+Mary nodded and tried to speak.
+
+"Often," said Mrs. Thornton to her husband, interpreting the
+half-articulated reply.
+
+They sat and talked in low tones, under the dismal lamp of the railroad
+coach, for two or three hours. Mr. Thornton came around and took the
+seat in front of Mary, and sat with one leg under him, facing back
+toward her. Mrs. Thornton sat beside her, and Alice slumbered on the
+seat behind, vacated by the lawyer and his wife.
+
+"You needn't tell me John's story," said the gentleman; "I know it. What
+I didn't know before, I got from a man with whom I corresponded in New
+Orleans."
+
+"Dr. Sevier?"
+
+"No, a man who got it from the Doctor."
+
+So they had Mary tell her own story.
+
+"I thought I should start just as soon as my mother's health would
+permit. John wouldn't have me start before that, and, after all, I don't
+see how I could have done it--rightly. But by the time she was well--or
+partly well--every one was in the greatest anxiety and doubt everywhere.
+You know how it was."
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Thornton.
+
+"And everybody thinking everything would soon be settled," continued
+Mary.
+
+"Yes," said the sympathetic lady, and her husband touched her quietly,
+meaning for her not to interrupt.
+
+"We didn't think the Union _could_ be broken so easily," pursued Mary.
+"And then all at once it was unsafe and improper to travel alone. Still
+I went to New York, to take steamer around by sea. But the last steamer
+had sailed, and I had to go back home; for--the fact is,"--she
+smiled,--"my money was all gone. It was September before I could raise
+enough to start again; but one morning I got a letter from New Orleans,
+telling me that John was very ill, and enclosing money for me to travel
+with."
+
+She went on to tell the story of her efforts to get a pass on the bank
+of the Ohio river, and how she had gone home once more, knowing she was
+watched, not daring for a long time to stir abroad, and feeding on the
+frequent hope that New Orleans was soon to be taken by one or another of
+the many naval expeditions that from time to time were, or were said to
+be, sailing.
+
+"And then suddenly--my mother died."
+
+Mrs. Thornton gave a deep sigh.
+
+"And then," said Mary, with a sudden brightening, but in a low voice, "I
+determined to make one last effort. I sold everything in the world I had
+and took Alice and started. I've come very slowly, a little way at a
+time, feeling along, for I was resolved not to be turned back. I've been
+weeks getting this far, and the lines keep moving south ahead of me. But
+I haven't been turned back," she went on to say, with a smile, "and
+everybody, white and black, everywhere, has been just as kind as kind
+can be." Tears stopped her again.
+
+"Well, never mind, Mrs. Richling," said Mrs. Thornton; then turned to
+her husband, and asked, "May I tell her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, Mrs. Richling,--but do you wish to be called Mrs. Richling?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary, and "Certainly," said Mr. Thornton.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Richling, Mr. Thornton has some money for your husband. Not
+a great deal, but still--some. The younger of the two sisters died a few
+weeks ago. She was married, but she was rich in her own right. She left
+almost everything to her sister; but Mr. Thornton persuaded her to leave
+some money--well, two thousand--'tisn't much, but it's something, you
+know--to--ah to Mr. Richling. Husband has it now at home and will give
+it to you,--at the breakfast-table to-morrow morning; can't you, dear?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Yes, and we'll not try to persuade you to give up your idea of going to
+New Orleans. I know we couldn't do it. We'll watch our chance,--eh,
+husband?--and put you through the lines; and not only that, but give
+you letters to--why, dear," said the lady, turning to her partner in
+good works, "you can give Mrs. Richling a letter to Governor Blank; and
+another to General Um-hm, can't you? and--yes, and one to Judge Youknow.
+Oh, they will take you anywhere! But first you'll stop with us till you
+get well rested--a week or two, or as much longer as you will."
+
+Mary pressed the speaker's hand.
+
+"I can't stay."
+
+"Oh, you know you needn't have the least fear of seeing any of John's
+relatives. They don't live in this part of the State at all; and, even
+if they did, husband has no business with them just now, and being a
+Union man, you know"--
+
+"I want to see my husband," said Mary, not waiting to hear what Union
+sympathies had to do with the matter.
+
+"Yes," said the lady, in a suddenly subdued tone. "Well, we'll get you
+through just as quickly as we can." And soon they all began to put on
+wraps and gather their luggage. Mary went with them to their home, laid
+her tired head beside her child's in sleep, and late next morning rose
+to hear that Fort Donelson was taken, and the Southern forces were
+falling back. A day or two later came word that Columbus, on the
+Mississippi, had been evacuated. It was idle for a woman to try just
+then to perform the task she had set for herself. The Federal lines!
+
+"Why, my dear child, they're trying to find the Confederate lines and
+strike them. You can't lose anything--you may gain much--by remaining
+quiet here awhile. The Mississippi, I don't doubt, will soon be open
+from end to end."
+
+A fortnight seemed scarcely more than a day when it was past, and
+presently two of them had gone. One day comes Mr. Thornton, saying:--
+
+"My dear child, I cannot tell you how I have the news, but you may
+depend upon its correctness. New Orleans is to be attacked by the most
+powerful naval expedition that ever sailed under the United States flag.
+If the place is not in our hands by the first of April I will put you
+through both lines, if I have to go with you myself." When Mary made no
+answer, he added, "Your delays have all been unavoidable, my child!"
+
+"Oh, I don't know; I don't know!" exclaimed Mary, with sudden
+distraction; "it seems to me I _must_ be to blame, or I'd have been
+through long ago. I ought to have _run through_ the lines. I ought to
+have 'run the blockade.'"
+
+"My child," said the lawyer, "you're mad."
+
+"You'll see," replied Mary, almost in soliloquy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIV.
+
+"WHO GOES THERE?"
+
+
+The scene and incident now to be described are without date. As Mary
+recalled them, years afterward, they hung out against the memory a bold,
+clear picture, cast upon it as the magic lantern casts its tableaux upon
+the darkened canvas. She had lost the day of the month, the day of the
+week, all sense of location, and the points of the compass. The most
+that she knew was that she was somewhere near the meeting of the
+boundaries of three States. Either she was just within the southern
+bound of Tennessee, or the extreme north-eastern corner of Mississippi,
+or else the north-western corner of Alabama. She was aware, too, that
+she had crossed the Tennessee river; that the sun had risen on her left
+and had set on her right, and that by and by this beautiful day would
+fade and pass from this unknown land, and the fire-light and lamp-light
+draw around them the home-groups under the roof-trees, here where she
+was a homeless stranger, the same as in the home-lands where she had
+once loved and been beloved.
+
+She was seated in a small, light buggy drawn by one good horse. Beside
+her the reins were held by a rather tall man, of middle age, gray, dark,
+round-shouldered, and dressed in the loose blue flannel so much worn by
+followers of the Federal camp. Under the stiff brim of his soft-crowned
+black hat a pair of clear eyes gave a continuous playful twinkle.
+Between this person and Mary protruded, at the edge of the buggy-seat,
+two small bootees that have already had mention, and from his elbow to
+hers, and back to his, continually swayed drowsily the little golden
+head to which the bootees bore a certain close relation. The dust of the
+highway was on the buggy and the blue flannel and the bootees. It showed
+with special boldness on a black sun-bonnet that covered Mary's head,
+and that somehow lost all its homeliness whenever it rose sufficiently
+in front to show the face within. But the highway itself was not there;
+it had been left behind some hours earlier. The buggy was moving at a
+quiet jog along a "neighborhood road," with unploughed fields on the
+right and a darkling woods pasture on the left. By the feathery softness
+and paleness of the sweet-smelling foliage you might have guessed it was
+not far from the middle of April, one way or another; and, by certain
+allusions to Pittsburg Landing as a place of conspicuous note, you might
+have known that Shiloh had been fought. There was that feeling of
+desolation in the land that remains after armies have passed over, let
+them tread never so lightly.
+
+"D'you know what them rails is put that way fur?" asked the man. He
+pointed down with his buggy-whip just off the roadside, first on one
+hand and then on the other.
+
+"No," said Mary, turning the sun-bonnet's limp front toward the
+questioner and then to the disjointed fence on her nearer side; "that's
+what I've been wondering for days. They've been ordinary worm fences,
+haven't they?"
+
+"Jess so," responded the man, with his accustomed twinkle. "But I think
+I see you oncet or twicet lookin' at 'em and sort o' tryin' to make out
+how come they got into that shape." The long-reiterated W's of the
+rail-fence had been pulled apart into separate V's, and the two sides
+of each of these had been drawn narrowly together, so that what had been
+two parallel lines of fence, with the lane between, was now a long
+double row of wedge-shaped piles of rails, all pointing into the woods
+on the left.
+
+"How did it happen?" asked Mary, with a smile of curiosity.
+
+"Didn't happen at all, 'twas jess _done_ by live men, and in a powerful
+few minutes at that. Sort o' shows what we're approachin' unto, as it
+were, eh? Not but they's plenty behind us done the same way, all the way
+back into Kentuck', as you already done see; but this's been done sence
+the last rain, and it rained night afore last."
+
+"Still I'm not sure what it means," said Mary; "has there been fighting
+here?"
+
+"Go up head," said the man, with a facetious gesture. "See? The fight
+came through these here woods, here. 'Taint been much over twenty-four
+hours, I reckon, since every one o' them-ah sort o' shut-up-fan-shape
+sort o' fish-traps had a gray-jacket in it layin' flat down an' firin'
+through the rails, sort o' random-like, only not much so." His manner of
+speech seemed a sort of harlequin patchwork from the bad English of many
+sections, the outcome of a humorous and eclectic fondness for verbal
+deformities. But his lightness received a sudden check.
+
+"Heigh-h-h!" he gravely and softly exclaimed, gathering the reins
+closer, as the horse swerved and dashed ahead. Two or three buzzards
+started up from the roadside, with their horrid flapping and whiff of
+quills, and circled low overhead. "Heigh-h-h!" he continued soothingly.
+"Ho-o-o-o! somebody lost a good nag there,--a six-pound shot right
+through his head and neck. Whoever made that shot killed two birds with
+one stone, sho!" He was half risen from his seat, looking back. As he
+turned again, and sat down, the drooping black sun-bonnet quite
+concealed the face within. He looked at it a moment. "If you think you
+don't like the risks we can still turn back."
+
+"No," said the voice from out the sun-bonnet; "go on."
+
+"If we don't turn back now we can't turn back at all."
+
+"Go on," said Mary; "I can't turn back."
+
+"You're a good soldier," said the man, playfully again. "You're a better
+one than me, I reckon; I kin turn back frequently, as it were. I've done
+it 'many a time and oft,' as the felleh says."
+
+Mary looked up with feminine surprise. He made a pretence of silent
+laughter, that showed a hundred crows' feet in his twinkling eyes.
+
+"Oh, don't you fret; I'm not goin' to run the wrong way with you in
+charge. Didn't you hear me promise Mr. Thornton? Well, you see, I've got
+a sort o' bad memory, that kind o' won't let me forgit when I make a
+promise;--bothers me that way a heap sometimes." He smirked in a
+self-deprecating way, and pulled his hat-brim down in front. Presently
+he spoke again, looking straight ahead over the horse's ears:--
+
+"Now, that's the mischief about comin' with me--got to run both
+blockades at oncet. Now, if you'd been a good Secesh and could somehow
+or 'nother of got a pass through the Union lines you'd of been all gay.
+But bein' Union, the fu'ther you git along the wuss off you air, 'less-n
+I kin take you and carry you 'way 'long yonder to where you kin jess
+jump onto a south-bound Rebel railroad and light down amongst folks
+that'll never think o' you havin' run through the lines."
+
+"But you can't do that," said Mary, not in the form of a request. "You
+know you agreed with Mr. Thornton that you would simply"--
+
+"Put you down in a safe place," said the man, jocosely; "that's what it
+meant, and don't you get nervous"-- His face suddenly changed; he
+raised his whip and held it up for attention and silence, looking at
+Mary, and smiling while he listened. "Do you hear anything?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary, in a hushed tone. There were some old fields on the
+right-hand now, and a wood on the left. Just within the wood a
+turtle-dove was cooing.
+
+"I don't mean that," said the man, softly.
+
+"No," said Mary, "you mean this, away over here." She pointed across the
+fields, almost straight away in front.
+
+"'Taint so scandalous far 'awa-a-ay' as you talk like," murmured the
+man, jestingly; and just then a fresh breath of the evening breeze
+brought plainer and nearer the soft boom of a bass-drum.
+
+"Are they coming this way?" asked Mary.
+
+"No; they're sort o' dress-paradin' in camp, I reckon." He began to draw
+rein. "We turn off here, anyway," he said, and drove slowly, but point
+blank into the forest.
+
+"I don't see any road," said Mary. It was so dark in the wood that even
+her child, muffled in a shawl and asleep in her arms, was a dim shape.
+
+"Yes," was the reply; "we have to sort o' smell out the way here; but my
+smellers is good, at times, and pretty soon we'll strike a little sort
+o' somepnuther like a road, about a quarter from here."
+
+Pretty soon they did so. It started suddenly from the edge of an old
+field in the forest, and ran gradually down, winding among the trees,
+into a densely wooded bottom, where even Mary's short form often had to
+bend low to avoid the boughs of beech-trees and festoons of grape-vine.
+Under one beech the buggy stood still a moment. The man drew and opened
+a large clasp-knife and cut one of the long, tough withes. He handed it
+to Mary, as they started on again.
+
+"With compliments," he said, "and hoping you won't find no use for it."
+
+"What is it for?"
+
+"Why, you see, later on we'll be in the saddle; and if such a thing
+should jess accidentally happen to happen, which I hope it won't, to be
+sho', that I should happen to sort o' absent-mindedly yell out 'Go!'
+like as if a hornet had stabbed me, you jess come down with that switch,
+and make the critter under you run like a scared dog, as it were."
+
+"Must I?"
+
+"No, I don't say you _must_, but you'd better, I bet you. You needn't if
+you don't want to."
+
+Presently the dim path led them into a clear, rippling creek, and seemed
+to Mary to end; but when the buggy wheels had crunched softly along down
+stream over some fifty or sixty yards of gravelly shallow, the road
+showed itself faintly again on the other bank, and the horse, with a
+plunge or two and a scramble, jerked them safely over the top, and moved
+forward in the direction of the rising moon. They skirted a small field
+full of ghostly dead trees, where corn was beginning to make a show,
+turned its angle, and saw the path under their feet plain to view,
+smooth and hard.
+
+"See that?" said the man, in a tone of playful triumph, as the animal
+started off at a brisk trot, lifted his head and neighed. "'My day's
+work's done,' sezee; 'I done hoed my row.'" A responsive neigh came out
+of the darkness ahead. "That's the trick!" said the man. "Thanks, as the
+felleh says." He looked to Mary for her appreciation of his humor.
+
+"I suppose that means a good deal; does it?" asked she, with a smile.
+
+"Jess so! It means, first of all, fresh hosses. And then it means a
+house what aint been burnt by jayhawkers yit, and a man and woman
+a-waitin' in it, and some bacon and cornpone, and maybe a little coffee;
+and milk, anyhow, till you can't rest, and buttermilk to fare-you-well.
+Now, have you ever learned the trick o' jess sort o' qui'lin'[2] up,
+cloze an' all, dry so, and puttin' half a night's rest into an hour's
+sleep? 'Caze why, in one hour we must be in the saddle. No mo' buggy,
+and powerful few roads. Comes as nigh coonin' it as I reckon you ever
+'lowed you'd like to do, don't it?"
+
+ [2] Coiling.
+
+He smiled, pretending to hold back much laughter, and Mary smiled too.
+At mention of a woman she had removed her bonnet and was smoothing her
+hair with her hand.
+
+"I don't care," she said, "if only you'll bring us through."
+
+The man made a ludicrous gesture of self-abasement.
+
+"Not knowin', can't say, as the felleh says; but what I can tell you--I
+always start out to make a spoon or spoil a horn, and which one I'll do
+I seldom ever promise till it's done. But I have a sneakin' notion, as
+it were, that I'm the clean sand, and no discount, as Mr. Lincoln says,
+and I do my best. Angels can do no more, as the felleh says."
+
+He drew rein. "Whoa!" Mary saw a small log cabin, and a fire-light
+shining under the bottom of the door.
+
+"The woods seem to be on fire just over there in three or four places,
+are they not?" she asked, as she passed the sleeping Alice down to the
+man, who had got out of the buggy.
+
+"Them's the camps," said another man, who had come out of the house and
+was letting the horse out of the shafts.
+
+"If we was on the rise o' the hill yonder we could see the Confedick
+camps, couldn't we, Isaiah?" asked Mary's guide.
+
+"Easy," said that prophet. "I heer 'em to-day two, three times, plain,
+cheerin' at somethin'."
+
+ * * *
+
+About the middle of that night Mary Richling was sitting very still and
+upright on a large dark horse that stood champing his Mexican bit in the
+black shadow of a great oak. Alice rested before her, fast asleep
+against her bosom. Mary held by the bridle another horse, whose naked
+saddle-tree was empty. A few steps in front of her the light of the full
+moon shone almost straight down upon a narrow road that just there
+emerged from the shadow of woods on either side, and divided into a main
+right fork and a much smaller one that curved around to Mary's left. Off
+in the direction of the main fork the sky was all aglow with camp-fires.
+Only just here on the left there was a cool and grateful darkness.
+
+She lifted her head alertly. A twig crackled under a tread, and the next
+moment a man came out of the bushes at the left, and without a word took
+the bridle of the led horse from her fingers and vaulted into the
+saddle. The hand that rested a moment on the cantle as he rose grasped a
+"navy-six." He was dressed in dull homespun but he was the same who had
+been dressed in blue. He turned his horse and led the way down the
+lesser road.
+
+"If we'd of gone three hundred yards further," he whispered, falling
+back and smiling broadly, "we'd 'a' run into the pickets. I went nigh
+enough to see the videttes settin' on their hosses in the main road.
+This here aint no road; it just goes up to a nigger quarters. I've got
+one o' the niggers to show us the way."
+
+"Where is he?" whispered Mary; but, before her companion could answer, a
+tattered form moved from behind a bush a little in advance and started
+ahead in the path, walking and beckoning. Presently they turned into a
+clear, open forest and followed the long, rapid, swinging stride of the
+negro for nearly an hour. Then they halted on the bank of a deep, narrow
+stream. The negro made a motion for them to keep well to the right when
+they should enter the water. The white man softly lifted Alice to his
+arms, directed and assisted Mary to kneel in her saddle, with her skirts
+gathered carefully under her, and so they went down into the cold
+stream, the negro first, with arms outstretched above the flood; then
+Mary, and then the white man,--or, let us say plainly the spy,--with the
+unawakened child on his breast. And so they rose out of it on the
+farther side without a shoe or garment wet save the rags of their dark
+guide.
+
+Again they followed him, along a line of stake-and-rider fence, with the
+woods on one side and the bright moonlight flooding a field of young
+cotton on the other. Now they heard the distant baying of house-dogs,
+now the doleful call of the chuck-will's-widow; and once Mary's blood
+turned, for an instant, to ice, at the unearthly shriek of the hoot-owl
+just above her head. At length they found themselves in a dim, narrow
+road, and the negro stopped.
+
+"Dess keep dish yeh road fo' 'bout half mile an' you strak 'pon the
+broad, main road. Tek de right, an' you go whah yo' fancy tek you."
+
+"Good-by," whispered Mary.
+
+"Good-by, miss," said the negro, in the same low voice; "good-by, boss;
+don't you fo'git you promise tek me thoo to de Yankee' when you come
+back. I 'feered you gwine fo'git it, boss."
+
+The spy said he would not, and they left him. The half-mile was soon
+passed, though it turned out to be a mile and a half, and at length
+Mary's companion looked back, as they rode single file, with Mary in the
+rear, and said softly, "There's the road," pointing at its broad, pale
+line with his six-shooter.
+
+As they entered it and turned to the right, Mary, with Alice again
+in her arms, moved somewhat ahead of her companion, her indifferent
+horsemanship having compelled him to drop back to avoid a prickly bush.
+His horse was just quickening his pace to regain the lost position when
+a man sprang up from the ground on the farther side of the highway,
+snatched a carbine from the earth and cried, "Halt!"
+
+The dark, recumbent forms of six or eight others could be seen,
+enveloped in their blankets, lying about a few red coals. Mary turned a
+frightened look backward and met the eyes of her companion.
+
+"Move a little faster," said he, in a low, clear voice. As she promptly
+did so she heard him answer the challenge. His horse trotted softly
+after hers.
+
+"Don't stop us, my friend; we're taking a sick child to the doctor."
+
+"Halt, you hound!" the cry rang out; and as Mary glanced back three
+or four men were just leaping into the road. But she saw, also, her
+companion, his face suffused with an earnestness that was almost an
+agony, rise in his stirrups, with the stoop of his shoulders all gone,
+and wildly cry:--
+
+"Go!"
+
+She smote the horse and flew. Alice awoke and screamed.
+
+"Hush, my darling!" said the mother, laying on the withe; "mamma's here.
+Hush, darling!--mamma's here. Don't be frightened, darling baby! O God,
+spare my child!" and away she sped.
+
+The report of a carbine rang out and went rolling away in a thousand
+echoes through the wood. Two others followed in sharp succession, and
+there went close by Mary's ear the waspish whine of a minie-ball. At the
+same moment she recognized, once,--twice,--thrice,--just at her back
+where the hoofs of her companion's horse were clattering,--the tart
+rejoinders of his navy-six.
+
+"Go!" he cried again. "Lay low! lay low! cover the child!" But his words
+were needless. With head bowed forward and form crouched over the
+crying, clinging child, with slackened rein and fluttering dress, and
+sun-bonnet and loosened hair blown back upon her shoulders, with lips
+compressed and silent prayers, Mary was riding for life and liberty and
+her husband's bedside.
+
+"O mamma! mamma!" wailed the terrified little one.
+
+"Go on! Go on!" cried the voice behind; "they're saddling--up! Go! go!
+We're goin' to make it. We're goin' to _make_ it! Go-o-o!"
+
+Half an hour later they were again riding abreast, at a moderate gallop.
+Alice's cries had been quieted, but she still clung to her mother in a
+great tremor. Mary and her companion conversed earnestly in the subdued
+tone that had become their habit.
+
+"No, I don't think they followed us fur," said the spy. "Seem like
+they's jess some scouts, most likely a-comin' in to report, feelin'
+pooty safe and sort o' takin' it easy and careless; 'dreamin' the happy
+hours away,' as the felleh says. I reckon they sort o' believed my
+story, too, the little gal yelled so sort o' skilful. We kin slack up
+some more now; we want to get our critters lookin' cool and quiet ag'in
+as quick as we kin, befo' we meet up with somebody." They reined into a
+gentle trot. He drew his revolver, whose emptied chambers he had already
+refilled. "D'd you hear this little felleh sing, 'Listen to the
+mockin'-bird'?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary; "but I hope it didn't hit any of them."
+
+He made no reply.
+
+"Don't you?" she asked.
+
+He grinned.
+
+"D'you want a felleh to wish he was a bad shot?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary, smiling.
+
+"Well, seein' as you're along, I do. For they wouldn't give us up so
+easy if I'd a hit one. Oh,--mine was only sort o' complimentary
+shots,--much as to say, 'Same to you, gents,' as the felleh says."
+
+Mary gave him a pleasant glance by way of courtesy, but was busy calming
+the child. The man let his weapon into its holster under his homespun
+coat and lapsed into silence. He looked long and steadily at the small
+feminine figure of his companion. His eyes passed slowly from the knee
+thrown over the saddle's horn to the gentle forehead slightly bowed, as
+her face sank to meet the uplifted kisses of the trembling child, then
+over the crown and down the heavy, loosened tresses that hid the
+sun-bonnet hanging back from her throat by its strings and flowed on
+down to the saddle-bow. His admiring eyes, grave for once, had made the
+journey twice before he noticed that the child was trying to comfort the
+mother, and that the light of the sinking moon was glistening back from
+Mary's falling tears.
+
+"Better let me have the little one," he said, "and you sort o' fix up a
+little, befo' we happen to meet up with somebody, as I said. It's lucky
+we haven't done it already."
+
+A little coaxing prevailed with Alice, and the transfer was made. Mary
+turned away her wet eyes, smiling for shame of them, and began to coil
+her hair, her companion's eye following.
+
+"Oh, you aint got no business to be ashamed of a few tears. I knowed you
+was a good soldier, befo' ever we started; I see' it in yo' eye. Not as
+I want to be complimentin' of you jess now. 'I come not here to talk,'
+as they used to say in school. D'd you ever hear that piece?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary.
+
+"That's taken from Romans, aint it?"
+
+"No," said Mary again, with a broad smile.
+
+"I didn't know," said the man; "I aint no brag Bible scholar." He put on
+a look of droll modesty. "I used to could say the ten commandments of
+the decalogue, oncet, and I still tries to keep 'em, in ginerally.
+There's another burnt house. That's the third one we done passed inside
+a mile. Raiders was along here about two weeks back. Hear that rooster
+crowin'? When we pass the plantation whar he is and rise the next hill,
+we'll be in sight o' the little town whar we stop for refresh_ments_, as
+the railroad man says. You must begin to feel jess about everlastin'ly
+wore out, don't you?"
+
+"No," said Mary; but he made a movement of the head to indicate that he
+had his belief to the contrary.
+
+At an abrupt angle of the road Mary's heart leaped into her throat to
+find herself and her companion suddenly face to face with two horsemen
+in gray, journeying leisurely toward them on particularly good horses.
+One wore a slouched hat, the other a Federal officer's cap. They were
+the first Confederates she had ever seen eye to eye.
+
+"Ride on a little piece and stop," murmured the spy. The strangers
+lifted their hats respectfully as she passed them.
+
+"Gents," said the spy, "good-morning!" He threw a leg over the pommel of
+his saddle and the three men halted in a group. One of them copied the
+spy's attitude. They returned the greeting in kind.
+
+"What command do you belong to?" asked the lone stranger.
+
+"Simmons's battery," said one. "Whoa!"--to his horse.
+
+"Mississippi?" asked Mary's guardian.
+
+"Rackensack," said the man in the blue cap.
+
+"Arkansas," said the other in the same breath. "What is your command?"
+
+"Signal service," replied the spy. "Reckon I look mighty like a citizen
+jess about now, don't I?" He gave them his little laugh of
+self-depreciation and looked toward Mary, where she had halted and was
+letting her horse nip the new grass of the roadside.
+
+"See any troops along the way you come?" asked the man in the hat.
+
+"No; on'y a squad o' fellehs back yonder who was all unsaddled and fast
+asleep, and jumped up worse scared'n a drove o' wile hogs. We both sort
+o' got a little mad and jess swapped a few shots, you know, kind o' tit
+for tat, as it were. Enemy's loss unknown." He stooped more than ever in
+the shoulders, and laughed. The men were amused. "If you see 'em, I'd
+like you to mention me"-- He paused to exchange smiles again. "And
+tell 'em the next time they see a man hurryin' along with a lady and
+sick child to see the doctor, they better hold their fire till they sho
+he's on'y a citizen." He let his foot down into the stirrup again and
+they all smiled broadly. "Good-morning!" The two parties went their
+ways.
+
+"Jess as leave not of met up with them two buttermilk rangers," said the
+spy, once more at Mary's side; "but seein' as thah we was the oniest
+thing was to put on all the brass I had."
+
+From the top of the next hill the travellers descended into a village
+lying fast asleep, with the morning star blazing over it, the cocks
+calling to each other from their roosts, and here and there a light
+twinkling from a kitchen window, or a lazy axe-stroke smiting the
+logs at a wood-pile. In the middle of the village one lone old man,
+half-dressed, was lazily opening the little wooden "store" that
+monopolized its commerce. The travellers responded to his silent bow,
+rode on through the place, passed over and down another hill, met an
+aged negro, who passed on the roadside, lifting his forlorn hat and
+bowing low; and, as soon as they could be sure they had gone beyond his
+sight and hearing, turned abruptly into a dark wood on the left. Twice
+again they turned to the left, going very warily through the deep
+shadows of the forest, and so returned half around the village, seeing
+no one. Then they stopped and dismounted at a stable-door, on the
+outskirts of the place. The spy opened it with a key from his own
+pocket, went in and came out again with a great armful of hay, which he
+spread for the horses' feet to muffle their tread, led them into the
+stable, removed the hay again, and closed and locked the door.
+
+"Make yourself small," he whispered, "and walk fast." They passed by a
+garden path up to the back porch and door of a small unpainted cottage.
+He knocked, three soft, measured taps.
+
+"Day's breakin'," he whispered again, as he stood with Alice asleep in
+his arms, while somebody was heard stirring within.
+
+"Sam?" said a low, wary voice just within the unopened door.
+
+"Sister," softly responded the spy, and the door swung inward, and
+revealed a tall woman, with an austere but good face, that could just be
+made out by the dim light of a tallow candle shining from the next room.
+The travellers entered and the door was shut.
+
+"Well," said the spy, standing and smiling foolishly, and bending
+playfully in the shoulders, "well, Mrs. Richlin',"--he gave his hand a
+limp wave abroad and smirked,--"'In Dixie's land you take yo' stand.'
+This is it. You're in it!--Mrs. Richlin', my sister; sister, Mrs.
+Richlin'."
+
+"Pleased to know ye," said the woman, without the faintest ray of
+emotion. "Take a seat and sit down." She produced a chair bottomed with
+raw-hide.
+
+"Thank you," was all Mary could think of to reply as she accepted the
+seat, and "Thank you" again when the woman brought a glass of water. The
+spy laid Alice on a bed in sight of Mary in another chamber. He came
+back on tiptoe.
+
+"Now, the next thing is to git you furder south. Wust of it is that,
+seein' as you got sich a weakness fur tellin' the truth, we'll jess have
+to sort o' slide you along fum one Union man to another; sort o' hole
+fass what I give ye, as you used to say yourself, I reckon. But you've
+got one strong holt." His eye went to his sister's, and he started away
+without a word, and was presently heard making a fire, while the woman
+went about spreading a small table with cold meats and corn-bread, milk
+and butter. Her brother came back once more.
+
+"Yes," he said to Mary, "you've got one mighty good card, and that's it
+in yonder on the bed. 'Humph!' folks'll say; 'didn't come fur with that
+there baby, sho!'"
+
+"I wouldn't go far without her," said Mary, brightly.
+
+"_I_ say," responded the hostess, with her back turned, and said no
+more.
+
+"Sister," said the spy, "we'll want the buggy."
+
+"All right," responded the sister.
+
+"I'll go feed the hosses," said he, and went out. In a few minutes he
+returned. "Joe must give 'em a good rubbin' when he comes, sister," he
+said.
+
+"All right," replied the woman, and then turning to Mary, "Come."
+
+"What, ma'm?"
+
+"Eat." She touched the back of a chair. "Sam, bring the baby." She stood
+and waited on the table.
+
+Mary was still eating, when suddenly she rose up, saying:--
+
+"Why, where is Mr. ----, your brother?"
+
+"He's gone to take a sleep outside," said his sister. "It's too resky
+for him to sleep in a house."
+
+She faintly smiled, for the first time, at the end of this long speech.
+
+"But," said Mary, "oh, I haven't uttered a word of thanks. What will he
+think of me?"
+
+She sank into her chair again with an elbow on the table, and looked up
+at the tall standing figure on the other side, with a little laugh of
+mortification.
+
+"You kin thank God," replied the figure. "_He_ aint gone." Another ghost
+of a smile was seen for a moment on the grave face. "Sam aint thinkin'
+about that. You hurry and finish and lay down and sleep, and when you
+wake up he'll be back here ready, to take you along furder. That's a
+healthy little one. She wants some more buttermilk. Give it to her. If
+she don't drink it the pigs'll git it, as the ole woman says.... Now you
+better lay down on the bed in yonder and go to sleep. Jess sort o'
+loosen yo' cloze; don't take off noth'n' but dress and shoes. You
+needn't be afeard to sleep sound; I'm goin' to keep a lookout."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LV.
+
+DIXIE.
+
+
+In her sleep Mary dreamed over again the late rencontre. Again she heard
+the challenging outcry, and again was lashing her horse to his utmost
+speed; but this time her enemy seemed too fleet for her. He overtook--he
+laid his hand upon her. A scream was just at her lips, when she awoke
+with a wild start, to find the tall woman standing over her, and bidding
+her in a whisper rise with all stealth and dress with all speed.
+
+"Where's Alice?" asked Mary. "Where's my little girl?"
+
+"She's there. Never mind her yit, till you're dressed. Here; not them
+cloze; these here homespun things. Make haste, but don't get excited."
+
+"How long have I slept?" asked Mary, hurriedly obeying.
+
+"You couldn't 'a' more'n got to sleep. Sam oughtn't to have shot back at
+'em. They're after 'im, hot; four of 'em jess now passed through on the
+road, right here past my front gate."
+
+"What kept them back so long?" asked Mary, tremblingly attempting to
+button her dress in the back.
+
+"Let me do that," said the woman. "They couldn't come very fast; had to
+kind o' beat the bushes every hundred yards or so. If they'd of been
+more of 'em they'd a-come faster, 'cause they'd a-left one or two behind
+at each turn-out, and come along with the rest. There; now that there
+hat, there, on the table." As Mary took the hat the speaker stepped to a
+window and peeped into the early day. A suppressed exclamation escaped
+her. "O you poor boy!" she murmured. Mary sprang toward her, but the
+stronger woman hurried her away from the spot.
+
+"Come; take up the little one 'thout wakin' her. Three more of 'em's
+a-passin'. The little young feller in the middle reelin' and swayin' in
+his saddle, and t'others givin' him water from his canteen."
+
+"Wounded?" asked Mary, with a terrified look, bringing the sleeping
+child.
+
+"Yes, the last wound he'll ever git, I reckon. Jess take the baby, so.
+Sam's already took her cloze. He's waitin' out in the woods here behind
+the house. He's got the critters down in the hollow. Now, here! This
+here bundle's a ridin'-skirt. It's not mournin', but you mustn't mind.
+It's mighty green and cottony-lookin', but--anyhow, you jess put it on
+when you git into the woods. Now it's good sun-up outside. The way you
+must do--you jess keep on the lef' side o' me, close, so as when I jess
+santer out e-easy todes the back gate you'll be hid from all the other
+houses. Then when we git to the back gate I'll kind o' stand like I was
+lookin' into the pig-pen, and you jess slide away on a line with me into
+the woods, and there'll be Sam. No, no; take your hat off and sort o'
+hide it. Now; you ready?"
+
+Mary threw her arms around the woman's neck and kissed her passionately.
+
+"Oh, don't stop for that!" said the woman, smiling with an awkward
+diffidence. "Come!"
+
+ * * *
+
+"What is the day of the month?" asked Mary of the spy.
+
+They had been riding briskly along a mere cattle-path in the woods for
+half an hour, and had just struck into an old, unused road that promised
+to lead them presently into and through some fields of cotton. Alice,
+slumbering heavily, had been, little by little, dressed, and was now in
+the man's arms. As Mary spoke they slackened pace to a quiet trot, and
+crossed a broad highway nearly at right angles.
+
+"That would 'a' been our road with the buggy," said the man, "if we
+could of took things easy." They were riding almost straight away from
+the sun. His dress had been changed again, and in a suit of new, dark
+brown homespun wool, over a pink calico shirt and white cuffs and
+collar, he presented the best possible picture of spruce gentility that
+the times would justify. "'What day of the month,' did you ask? _I_'ll
+never tell you, but I know it's Friday."
+
+"Then it's the eighteenth," said Mary.
+
+They met an old negro driving three yoke of oxen attached to a single
+empty cart.
+
+"Uncle," said the spy, "I don't reckon the boss will mind our sort o'
+ridin' straight thoo his grove, will he?"
+
+"Not 'tall, boss; on'y dess be so kyine an' shet de gates behine you,
+sah."
+
+They passed those gates and many another, shutting them faithfully, and
+journeying on through miles of fragrant lane and fields of young cotton
+and corn, and stretches of wood where the squirrel scampered before them
+and reaches of fallow grounds still wet with dew, and patches of sedge,
+and old fields grown up with thickets of young trees; now pushing their
+horses to a rapid gallop, where they were confident of escaping notice,
+and now ambling leisurely, where the eyes of men afield, or of women at
+home, followed them with rustic scrutiny; or some straggling
+Confederate soldier on foot or in the saddle met them in the way.
+
+"How far must we go before we can stop?" asked Mary.
+
+"Jess as far's the critters'll take us without showin' distress."
+
+"South is out that way, isn't it?" she asked again, pointing off to the
+left.
+
+"Look here," said the spy, with a look that was humorous, but not only
+humorous.
+
+"What?"
+
+"Two or three times last night, and now ag'in, you gimme a sort o'
+sneakin' notion you don't trust me," said he.
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed she, "I do! Only I'm so anxious to be going south."
+
+"Jess so," said the man. "Well, we're goin' sort o' due west right now.
+You see we dassent take this railroad anywheres about here,"--they were
+even then crossing the track of the Mobile and Ohio Railway--"because
+that's jess where they _sho_ to be on the lookout fur us. And I can't
+take you straight south on the dirt roads, because I don't know the
+country down that way. But this way I know it like your hand knows the
+way to your mouth, as the felleh says. Learned it most all sence the war
+broke out, too. And so the whole thing is we got to jess keep straight
+across the country here till we strike the Mississippi Central."
+
+"What time will that be?"
+
+"Time! You don't mean time o' day, do you?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said Mary, smiling.
+
+"Why, we'll be lucky to make it in two whole days. Won't we, Alice!" The
+child had waked, and was staring into her mother's face. Mary caressed
+her. The spy looked at them silently. The mother looked up, as if to
+speak, but was silent.
+
+"Hello!" said the man, softly; for a tear shone through her smile.
+Whereat she laughed.
+
+"I ought to be ashamed to be so unreasonable," she said.
+
+"Well, now, I'd like to contradict you for once," responds the spy; "but
+the fact is, how kin I, when Noo Orleens is jest about south-west frum
+here, anyhow?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary, pleasantly, "it's between south and south-west."
+
+The spy made a gesture of mock amazement.
+
+"Well, you air partickly what you say. I never hear o' but one party
+that was more partickly than you. I reckon you never hear' tell o' him,
+did you?"
+
+"Who was he?" asked Mary.
+
+"Well, I never got his name, nor his habitation, as the felleh says; but
+he was so conscientious that when a highwayman attackted him onct, he
+wouldn't holla murder nor he wouldn't holla thief, 'cause he wasn't
+certain whether the highwayman wanted to kill him or rob him. He was
+something like George Washington, who couldn't tell a lie. Did you ever
+hear that story about George Washington?"
+
+"About his chopping the cherry-tree with his hatchet?" asked Mary.
+
+"Oh, I see you done heard the story!" said the spy, and left it untold;
+but whether he was making game of his auditor or not she did not know,
+and never found out. But on they went, by many a home; through miles of
+growing crops, and now through miles of lofty pine forests, and by
+log-cabins and unpainted cottages, from within whose open doors came
+often the loud feline growl of the spinning-wheel. So on and on,
+Mary spending the first night in a lone forest cabin of pine poles,
+whose master, a Confederate deserter, fed his ague-shaken wife and
+cotton-headed children oftener with the spoils of his rifle than with
+the products of the field. The spy and the deserter lay down together,
+and together rose again with the dawn, in a deep thicket, a few hundred
+yards away.
+
+The travellers had almost reached the end of this toilsome horseback
+journey, when rains set in, and, for forty-eight hours more, swollen
+floods and broken bridges held them back, though within hearing of the
+locomotive's whistle.
+
+But at length, one morning, Mary stepped aboard the train that had not
+long before started south from the town of Holly Springs, Mississippi,
+assisted with decorous alacrity by the conductor, and followed by the
+station-agent with Alice in his arms, and by the telegraph-operator
+with a home-made satchel or two of luggage and luncheon. It was
+disgusting,--to two thin, tough-necked women, who climbed aboard,
+unassisted, at the other end of the same coach.
+
+"You kin just bet she's a widder, and them fellers knows it," said one
+to the other, taking a seat and spitting expertly through the window.
+
+"If she aint," responded the other, putting a peeled snuff-stick into
+her cheek, "then her husband's got the brass buttons, and they knows
+that. Look at 'er a-smi-i-ilin'!"
+
+"What you reckon makes her look so wore out?" asked the first. And the
+other replied promptly, with unbounded loathing, "Dayncin'," and sent
+her emphasis out of the window in liquid form without disturbing her
+intervening companion.
+
+During the delay caused by the rain Mary had found time to refit her
+borrowed costume. Her dress was a stout, close-fitting homespun of mixed
+cotton and wool, woven in a neat plaid of walnut-brown, oak-red, and the
+pale olive dye of the hickory. Her hat was a simple round thing of woven
+pine straw, with a slightly drooping brim, its native brown gloss
+undisturbed, and the low crown wrapped about with a wreath of wild
+grasses plaited together with a bit of yellow cord. Alice wore a
+much-washed pink calico frock and a hood of the same stuff.
+
+"Some officer's wife," said two very sweet and lady-like persons, of
+unequal age and equal good taste in dress, as their eyes took an
+inventory of her apparel. They wore bonnets that were quite handsome,
+and had real false flowers and silk ribbons on them.
+
+"Yes, she's been to camp somewhere to see him."
+
+"Beautiful child she's got," said one, as Alice began softly to smite
+her mother's shoulder for private attention, and to whisper gravely as
+Mary bent down.
+
+Two or three soldiers took their feet off the seats, and one of them, at
+the amiably murmured request of the conductor, put his shoes on.
+
+"The car in front is your car," said the conductor to another man, in
+especially dirty gray uniform.
+
+"You kin hev it," said the soldier, throwing his palm open with an air
+of happy extravagance, and a group of gray-headed "citizens," just
+behind, exploded a loud country laugh.
+
+"D' I onderstaynd you to lafe at me, saw?" drawled the soldier, turning
+back with a pretence of heavy gloom on his uncombed brow.
+
+"Laughin' at yo' friend yondeh," said one of the citizens, grinning and
+waving his hand after the departing conductor.
+
+"'Caze if you lafe at me again, saw,"--the frown deepened,--"I'll thess
+go 'ight straight out iss caw."[3]
+
+ [3] Out of this car.
+
+The laugh that followed this dreadful threat was loud and general, the
+victims laughing loudest of all, and the soldier smiling about benignly,
+and slowly scratching his elbows. Even the two ladies smiled. Alice's
+face remained impassive. She looked twice into her mother's to see if
+there was no smile there. But the mother smiled at her, took off her
+hood and smoothed back the fine gold, then put the hood on again, and
+tied its strings under the upstretched chin.
+
+Presently Alice pulled softly at the hollow of her mother's elbow.
+
+"Mamma--mamma!" she whispered. Mary bowed her ear. The child gazed
+solemnly across the car at another stranger, then pulled the mother's
+arm again, "That man over there--winked at me."
+
+And thereupon another man, sitting sidewise on the seat in front, and
+looking back at Alice, tittered softly, and said to Mary, with a raw
+drawl:--
+
+"She's a-beginnin' young."
+
+"She means some one on the other side," said Mary, quite pleasantly, and
+the man had sense enough to hush.
+
+The jest and the laugh ran to and fro everywhere. It seemed very strange
+to Mary to find it so. There were two or three convalescent wounded men
+in the car, going home on leave, and they appeared never to weary of the
+threadbare joke of calling their wounds "furloughs." There was one
+little slip of a fellow--he could hardly have been seventeen--wounded in
+the hand, whom they kept teazed to the point of exasperation by urging
+him to confess that he had shot himself for a furlough, and of whom
+they said, later, when he had got off at a flag station, that he was the
+bravest soldier in his company. No one on the train seemed to feel that
+he had got all that was coming to him until the conductor had exchanged
+a jest with him. The land laughed. On the right hand and on the left it
+dimpled and wrinkled in gentle depressions and ridges, and rolled away
+in fields of young corn and cotton. The train skipped and clattered
+along at a happy-go-lucky, twelve-miles-an-hour gait, over trestles
+and stock-pits, through flowery cuts and along slender, rain-washed
+embankments where dewberries were ripening, and whence cattle ran down
+and galloped off across the meadows on this side and that, tails up and
+heads down, throwing their horns about, making light of the screaming
+destruction, in their dumb way, as the people made light of the war. At
+stations where the train stopped--and it stopped on the faintest
+excuse--a long line of heads and gray shoulders was thrust out of the
+windows of the soldiers' car, in front, with all manner of masculine
+head-coverings, even bloody handkerchiefs; and woe to the negro or
+negress or "citizen" who, by any conspicuous demerit or excellence of
+dress, form, stature, speech, or bearing, drew the fire of that line! No
+human power of face or tongue could stand the incessant volley of stale
+quips and mouldy jokes, affirmative, interrogative, and exclamatory,
+that fell about their victim.
+
+At one spot, in a lovely natural grove, where the air was spiced with
+the gentle pungency of the young hickory foliage, the train paused a
+moment to let off a man in fine gray cloth, whose yellow stripes and one
+golden star on the coat-collar indicated a major of cavalry. It seemed
+as though pandemonium had opened. Mules braying, negroes yodling, axes
+ringing, teamsters singing, men shouting and howling, and all at
+nothing; mess-fires smoking all about in the same hap-hazard, but
+roomy, disorder in which the trees of the grove had grown; the railroad
+side lined with a motley crowd of jolly fellows in spurs, and the
+atmosphere between them and the line of heads in the car-windows murky
+with the interchange of compliments that flew back and forth from the
+"web-foots"[4] to the "critter company," and from the "critter company"
+to the "web-foots." As the train moved off, "I say, boys," drawled a
+lank, coatless giant on the roadside, with but one suspender and one
+spur, "tha-at's right! Gen'l Beerygyard told you to strike fo' yo'
+homes, an' I see you' a-doin' it ez fass as you kin git thah." And the
+"citizens" in the rear car-windows giggled even at that; while the
+"web-foots" he-hawed their derision, and the train went on, as one might
+say, with its hands in its pockets, whooping and whistling over the
+fields--after the cows; for the day was declining.
+
+ [4] Infantry.
+
+Mary was awed. As she had been forewarned to do, she tried not to seem
+unaccustomed to, or out of harmony with, all this exuberance. But there
+was something so brave in it, coming from a people who were playing a
+losing game with their lives and fortunes for their stakes; something so
+gallant in it, laughing and gibing in the sight of blood, and smell of
+fire, and shortness of food and raiment, that she feared she had
+betrayed a stranger's wonder and admiration every time the train
+stopped, and the idlers of the station platform lingered about her
+window and silently paid their ungraceful but complimentary tribute of
+simulated casual glances.
+
+For, with all this jest, it was very plain there was but little joy. It
+was not gladness; it was bravery. It was the humor of an invincible
+spirit--the gayety of defiance. She could easily see the grim
+earnestness beneath the jocund temper, and beneath the unrepining smile
+the privation and the apprehension. What joy there was, was a martial
+joy. The people were confident of victory at last,--a victorious end,
+whatever might lie between, and of even what lay between they would
+confess no fear. Richmond was safe, Memphis safer, New Orleans safest.
+Yea, notwithstanding Porter and Farragut were pelting away at Forts
+Jackson and St. Philip. Indeed, if the rumor be true, if Farragut's
+ships had passed those forts, leaving Porter behind, then the Yankee
+sea-serpent was cut in two, and there was an end of him in that
+direction. Ha! ha!
+
+"Is to-day the twenty-sixth?" asked Mary, at last, of one of the ladies
+in real ribbons, leaning over toward her.
+
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+It was the younger one who replied. As she did so she came over and sat
+by Mary.
+
+"I judge, from what I heard your little girl asking you, that you are
+going beyond Jackson."
+
+"I'm going to New Orleans."
+
+"Do you live there?" The lady's interest seemed genuine and kind.
+
+"Yes. I am going to join my husband there."
+
+Mary saw by the reflection in the lady's face that a sudden gladness
+must have overspread her own.
+
+"He'll be mighty glad, I'm sure," said the pleasant stranger, patting
+Alice's cheek, and looking, with a pretty fellow-feeling, first into the
+child's face and then into Mary's.
+
+"Yes, he will," said Mary, looking down upon the curling locks at her
+elbow with a mother's happiness.
+
+"Is he in the army?" asked the lady.
+
+Mary's face fell.
+
+"His health is bad," she replied.
+
+"I know some nice people down in New Orleans," said the lady again.
+
+"We haven't many acquaintances," rejoined Mary, with a timidity that was
+almost trepidation. Her eyes dropped, and she began softly to smooth
+Alice's collar and hair.
+
+"I didn't know," said the lady, "but you might know some of them. For
+instance, there's Dr. Sevier."
+
+Mary gave a start and smiled.
+
+"Why, is he your friend too?" she asked. She looked up into the lady's
+quiet, brown eyes and down again into her own lap, where her hands had
+suddenly knit together, and then again into the lady's face. "We have no
+friend like Dr. Sevier."
+
+"Mother," called the lady softly, and beckoned. The senior lady leaned
+toward her. "Mother, this lady is from New Orleans and is an intimate
+friend of Dr. Sevier."
+
+The mother was pleased.
+
+"What might one call your name?" she asked, taking a seat behind Mary
+and continuing to show her pleasure.
+
+"Richling."
+
+The mother and daughter looked at each other. They had never heard the
+name before.
+
+Yet only a little while later the mother was saying to Mary,--they were
+expecting at any moment to hear the whistle for the terminus of the
+route, the central Mississippi town of Canton:--
+
+"My dear child, no! I couldn't sleep to-night if I thought you was all
+alone in one o' them old hotels in Canton. No, you must come home with
+us. We're barely two mile' from town, and we'll have the carriage ready
+for you bright and early in the morning, and our coachman will put you
+on the cars just as nice--Trouble?" She laughed at the idea. "No; I tell
+you what would trouble me,--that is, if we'd allow it; that'd be for you
+to stop in one o' them hotels all alone, child, and like' as not some
+careless servant not wake you in time for the cars to-morrow." At this
+word she saw capitulation in Mary's eyes. "Come, now, my child, we're
+not going to take no for an answer."
+
+Nor did they.
+
+But what was the result? The next morning, when Mary and Alice stood
+ready for the carriage, and it was high time they were gone, the
+carriage was not ready; the horses had got astray in the night. And
+while the black coachman was on one horse, which he had found and
+caught, and was scouring the neighboring fields and lanes and meadows
+in search of the other, there came out from townward upon the still,
+country air the long whistle of the departing train; and then the
+distant rattle and roar of its far southern journey began, and then
+its warning notes to the scattering colts and cattle.
+
+"Look away!"--it seemed to sing--"Look away!"--the notes fading,
+failing, on the ear,--"away--away--away down south in Dixie,"--the last
+train that left for New Orleans until the war was over.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI.
+
+FIRE AND SWORD.
+
+
+The year the war began dates also, for New Orleans, the advent of two
+better things: street-cars and the fire-alarm telegraph. The frantic
+incoherence of the old alarum gave way to the few solemn, numbered
+strokes that called to duty in the face of hot danger, like the electric
+voice of a calm commander. The same new system also silenced, once for
+all, the old nine-o'clock gun. For there were not only taps to signify
+each new fire-district,--one for the first, two for the second, three,
+four, five, six seven, eight, and nine,--but there was also one lone
+toll at mid-day for the hungry mechanic, and nine at the evening hour
+when the tired workman called his children in from the street and turned
+to his couch, and the slave must show cause in a master's handwriting
+why he or she was not under that master's roof.
+
+And then there was one signal more. Fire is a dreadful thing, and all
+the alarm signals were for fire except this one. Yet the profoundest
+wish of every good man and tender women in New Orleans, when this
+pleasing novelty of electro-magnetic warnings was first published for
+the common edification, was that mid-day or midnight, midsummer or
+midwinter, let come what might of danger or loss or distress, that one
+particular signal might not sound. Twelve taps. Anything but that.
+
+Dr. Sevier and Richling had that wish together. They had many wishes
+that were greatly at variance the one's from the other's. The Doctor
+had struggled for the Union until the very smoke of war began to rise
+into the sky; but then he "went with the South." He was the only one in
+New Orleans who knew--whatever some others may have suspected--that
+Richling's heart was on the other side. Had Richling's bodily strength
+remained, so that he could have been a possible factor, however small,
+in the strife, it is hard to say whether they could have been together
+day by day and night by night, as they came to be when the Doctor took
+the failing man into his own home, and have lived in amity, as they did.
+But there is this to be counted; they were both, though from different
+directions, for peace, and their gentle forbearance toward each other
+taught them a moderation of sentiment concerning the whole great issue.
+And, as I say, they both together held the one longing hope that,
+whatever war should bring of final gladness or lamentation, the steeples
+of New Orleans might never toll--twelve.
+
+But one bright Thursday April morning, as Richling was sitting, half
+dressed, by an open window of his room in Dr. Sevier's house, leaning on
+the arm of his soft chair and looking out at the passers on the street,
+among whom he had begun to notice some singular evidences of excitement,
+there came from a slender Gothic church-spire that was highest of all in
+the city, just beyond a few roofs in front of him, the clear, sudden,
+brazen peal of its one great bell.
+
+"Fire," thought Richling; and yet, he knew not why, wondered where Dr.
+Sevier might be. He had not seen him that morning. A high official had
+sent for him at sunrise and he had not returned.
+
+"Clang," went the bell again, and the softer ding--dang--dong of others,
+struck at the same instant, came floating in from various distances.
+And then it clanged again--and again--and again--the loud one near,
+the soft ones, one by one, after it--six, seven, eight, nine--ah!
+stop there! stop there! But still the alarm pealed on; ten--alas!
+alas!--eleven--oh, oh, the women and children!--twelve! And then the
+fainter, final asseverations of the more distant bells--twelve! twelve!
+twelve!--and a hundred and seventy thousand souls knew by that sign that
+the foe had passed the forts. New Orleans had fallen.
+
+Richling dressed himself hurriedly and went out. Everywhere drums were
+beating to arms. Couriers and aides-de-camp were galloping here and
+there. Men in uniform were hurrying on foot to this and that rendezvous.
+Crowds of the idle and poor were streaming out toward the levee.
+Carriages and cabs rattled frantically from place to place; men ran
+out-of-doors and leaped into them and leaped out of them and sprang up
+stair-ways; hundreds of all manner of vehicles, fit and unfit to carry
+passengers and goods, crowded toward the railroad depots and steam-boat
+landings; women ran into the streets wringing their hands and holding
+their brows; and children stood in the door-ways and gate-ways and
+trembled and called and cried.
+
+Richling took the new Dauphine street-car. Far down in the Third
+district, where there was a silence like that of a village lane, he
+approached a little cottage painted with Venetian red, setting in its
+garden of oranges, pomegranates, and bananas, and marigolds, and
+coxcombs behind its white paling fence and green gate.
+
+The gate was open. In it stood a tall, strong woman, good-looking, rosy,
+and neatly dressed. That she was tall you could prove by the gate, and
+that she was strong, by the graceful muscularity with which she held
+two infants,--pretty, swarthy little fellows, with joyous black eyes,
+and evidently of one age and parentage,--each in the hollow of a fine,
+round arm. There was just a hint of emotional disorder in her shining
+hair and a trace of tears about her eyes. As the visitor drew near, a
+fresh show of distressed exaltation was visible in the slight play of
+her form.
+
+"Ah! Mr. Richlin'," she cried, the moment he came within hearing, "'the
+dispot's heels is on our shores!'" Tears filled her eyes again. Mike,
+the bruiser, in his sixth year, who had been leaning backward against
+her knees and covering his legs with her skirts, ran forward and clasped
+the visitor's lower limbs with the nerve and intention of a wrestler.
+Kate followed with the cherubs. They were Raphael's.
+
+"Yes, it's terrible," said Richling.
+
+"Ah! no, Mr. Richlin'," replied Kate, lifting her head proudly as she
+returned with him toward the gate, "it's outrageouz; but it's not
+terrible. At least it's not for me, Mr. Richlin'. I'm only Mrs. Captain
+Ristofalah; and whin I see the collonels' and gin'r'ls' ladies
+a-prancin' around in their carridges I feel my _humility_; but it's my
+djuty to be _brave_, sur! An' I'll help to _fight_ thim, sur, if the min
+can't do ud. Mr. Richlin', my husband is the intimit frind of Gin'r'l
+Garrybaldy, sur! I'll help to burrin the cittee, sur!--rather nor give
+ud up to thim vandjals! Come in, Mr. Richlin'; come in." She led the way
+up the narrow shell-walk. "Come 'n, sur, it may be the last time ye' do
+ud before the flames is leppin' from the roof! Ah! I knowed ye'd come. I
+was a-lookin' for ye. I knowed _ye'd_ prove yerself that frind in need
+that he's the frind indeed! Take a seat an' sit down." She faced about
+on the vine-covered porch, and dropped into a rocking-chair, her eyes
+still at the point of overflow. "But ah! Mr. Richlin', where's all thim
+flatterers that fawned around uz in the days of tytled prosperity?"
+
+Richling said nothing; he had not seen any throngs of that sort.
+
+"Gone, sur! and it's a relief; it's a relief, Mr. Richlin'!" She
+marshalled the twins on her lap, Carlo commanding the right, Francisco
+the left.
+
+"You mustn't expect too much of them," said Richling, drawing Mike
+between his knees, "in such a time of alarm and confusion as this." And
+Kate responded generously:--
+
+"Well, I suppose you're right, sur."
+
+"I've come down," resumed the visitor, letting Mike count off "Rich man,
+poor man, beggar man, thief," on the buttons of his coat, "to give you
+any help I can in getting ready to leave town. For you mustn't think of
+staying. It isn't possible to be anything short of dreadful to stay in a
+city occupied by hostile troops. It's almost certain the Confederates
+will try to hold the city, and there may be a bombardment. The city may
+be taken and retaken half-a-dozen times before the war is over."
+
+"Mr. Richlin'," said Kate, with a majestic lifting of the hand, "I'll
+nivver rin away from the Yanks."
+
+"No, but you must _go_ away from them. You mustn't put yourself in such
+a position that you can't go to your husband if he needs you, Mrs.
+Ristofalo; don't get separated from him."
+
+"Ah! Mr. Richlin', it's you as has the right to say so; and I'll do as
+you say. Mr. Richlin', my husband"--her voice trembled--"may be wounded
+this hour. I'll go, sur, indeed I will; but, sur, if Captain Raphael
+Ristofalah wor _here_, sur, he'd be ad the _front_, sur, and Kate
+Ristofalah would be at his galliant side!"
+
+"Well, then, I'm glad he's not here," rejoined Richling, "for I'd have
+to take care of the children."
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" laughed Kate. "No, sur! I'd take the lion's whelps with
+me, sur! Why, that little Mike theyre can han'le the dthrum-sticks to
+beat the felley in the big hat!" And she laughed again.
+
+They made arrangements for her and the three children to go "out
+into the confederacy" within two or three days at furthest; as soon
+as she and her feeble helper could hurry a few matters of business to
+completion at and about the Picayune Tier. Richling did not get back to
+the Doctor's house until night had fallen and the sky was set aglare by
+seven miles' length of tortuous harbor front covered with millions'
+worth of burning merchandise. The city was being evacuated.
+
+Dr. Sevier and he had but few words. Richling was dejected from
+weariness, and his friend weary with dejections.
+
+"Where have you been all day?" asked the Doctor, with a touch of
+irritation.
+
+"Getting Kate Ristofalo ready to leave the city."
+
+"You shouldn't have left the house; but it's no use to tell you
+anything. Has she gone?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Well, in the name of common-sense, then, when is she going?"
+
+"In two or three days," replied Richling, almost in retort.
+
+The Doctor laughed with impatience.
+
+"If you feel responsible for her going get her off by to-morrow
+afternoon at the furthest." He dropped his tired head against the back
+of his chair.
+
+"Why," said Richling, "I don't suppose the fleet can fight its way
+through all opposition and get here short of a week."
+
+The Doctor laid his long fingers upon his brow and rolled his head from
+side to side. Then, slowly raising it:--
+
+"Well, Richling!" he said, "there must have been some mistake made when
+you was put upon the earth."
+
+Richling's thin cheek flushed. The Doctor's face confessed the bitterest
+resentment.
+
+"Why, the fleet is only eighteen miles from here now." He ceased, and
+then added, with sudden kindness of tone, "I want you to do something
+for me, will you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, go to bed; I'm going. You'll need every grain of strength
+you've got for to-morrow. I'm afraid then it will not be enough. This is
+an awful business, Richling."
+
+They went upstairs together. As they were parting at its top Richling
+said:--
+
+"You told me a few days ago that if the city should fall, which we
+didn't expect"--
+
+"That I'd not leave," said the Doctor. "No; I shall stay. I haven't the
+stamina to take the field, and I can't be a runaway. Anyhow, I couldn't
+take you along. You couldn't bear the travel, and I wouldn't go and
+leave you here, Richling--old fellow!"
+
+He laid his hand gently on the sick man's shoulder, who made no
+response, so afraid was he that another word would mar the perfection of
+the last.
+
+When Richling went out the next morning the whole city was in an ecstasy
+of rage and terror. Thousands had gathered what they could in their
+hands, and were flying by every avenue of escape. Thousands ran hither
+and thither, not knowing where or how to fly. He saw the wife and son
+of the silver-haired banker rattling and bouncing away toward one of the
+railway depots in a butcher's cart. A messenger from Kate by good chance
+met him with word that she would be ready for the afternoon train of the
+Jackson Railroad, and asking anew his earliest attention to her
+interests about the lugger landing.
+
+He hastened to the levee. The huge, writhing river, risen up above the
+town, was full to the levee's top, and, as though the enemy's fleet was
+that much more than it could bear, was silently running over by a
+hundred rills into the streets of the stricken city.
+
+As far as the eye could reach, black smoke, white smoke, brown smoke,
+and red flames rolled and spread, and licked and leaped, from unnumbered
+piles of cotton bales, and wooden wharves, and ships cut adrift, and
+steam-boats that blazed like shavings, floating down the harbor as they
+blazed. He stood for a moment to see a little revenue cutter,--a pretty
+topsail schooner,--lying at the foot of Canal street, sink before his
+eyes into the turbid yellow depths of the river, scuttled. Then he
+hurried on. Huge mobs ran to and fro in the fire and smoke, howling,
+breaking, and stealing. Women and children hurried back and forth like
+swarms of giant ants, with buckets and baskets, and dippers and bags,
+and bonnets, hats, petticoats, anything,--now empty, and now full of
+rice and sugar and meal and corn and syrup,--and robbed each other, and
+cursed and fought, and slipped down in pools of molasses, and threw live
+pigs and coops of chickens into the river, and with one voiceless rush
+left the broad levee a smoking, crackling desert, when some shells
+exploded on a burning gunboat, and presently were back again like a
+flock of evil birds.
+
+It began to rain, but Richling sought no shelter. The men he was in
+search of were not to be found. But the victorious ships, with bare
+black arms stretched wide, boarding nettings up, and the dark muzzles of
+their guns bristling from their sides, came, silently as a nightmare,
+slowly around the bend at Slaughterhouse Point and moved up the middle
+of the harbor. At the French market he found himself, without
+forewarning, witness of a sudden skirmish between some Gascon and
+Sicilian market-men, who had waved a welcome to the fleet, and some
+Texan soldiers who resented the treason. The report of a musket rang
+out, a second and third reëchoed it, a pistol cracked, and another,
+and another; there was a rush for cover; another shot, and another,
+resounded in the market-house, and presently in the street beyond. Then,
+in a moment, all was silence and emptiness, into which there ventured
+but a single stooping, peeping Sicilian, glancing this way and that,
+with his finger on trigger, eager to kill, gliding from cover to cover,
+and presently gone again from view, leaving no human life visible nearer
+than the swarming mob that Richling, by mounting a pile of ship's
+ballast, could see still on the steam-boat landing, pillaging in the
+drenching rain, and the long fleet casting anchor before the town in
+line of battle.
+
+Late that afternoon Richling, still wet to the skin, amid pushing and
+yelling and the piping calls of distracted women and children, and
+scuffling and cramming in, got Kate Ristofalo, trunks, baskets, and
+babes, safely off on the cars. And when, one week from that day, the
+sound of drums, that had been hushed for a while, fell upon his ear
+again,--no longer the jaunty rataplan of Dixie's drums, but the heavy,
+monotonous roar of the conqueror's at the head of his dark-blue
+columns,--Richling could not leave his bed.
+
+Dr. Sevier sat by him and bore the sound in silence. As it died away and
+ceased, Richling said:--
+
+"May I write to Mary?"
+
+Then the Doctor had a hard task.
+
+"I wrote for her yesterday," he said. "But, Richling, I--don't think
+she'll get the letter."
+
+"Do you think she has already started?" asked the sick man, with glad
+eagerness.
+
+"Richling, I did the best I knew how"--
+
+"Whatever you did was all right, Doctor."
+
+"I wrote to her months ago, by the hand of Ristofalo. He knows she got
+the letter. I'm afraid she's somewhere in the Confederacy, trying to get
+through. I meant it for the best, my dear boy."
+
+"It's all right, Doctor," said the invalid; but the physician could see
+the cruel fact slowly grind him.
+
+"Doctor, may I ask one favor?"
+
+"One or a hundred, Richling."
+
+"I want you to let Madame Zénobie come and nurse me."
+
+"Why, Richling, can't I nurse you well enough?"
+
+The Doctor was jealous.
+
+"Yes," answered the sick man. "But I'll need a good deal of attention.
+She wants to do it. She was here yesterday, you knew. She wanted to ask
+you, but was afraid."
+
+His wish was granted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVII.
+
+ALMOST IN SIGHT.
+
+
+In St. Tammany Parish, on the northern border of Lake Ponchartrain,
+about thirty miles from New Orleans, in a straight line across the
+waters of the lake, stood in time of the war, and may stand yet, an old
+house, of the Creole colonial fashion, all of cypress from sills to
+shingles, standing on brick pillars ten feet from the ground, a wide
+veranda in front, and a double flight of front steps running up to it
+sidewise and meeting in a balustraded landing at its edge. Scarcely
+anything short of a steamer's roof or a light-house window could have
+offered a finer stand-point from which to sweep a glass round the
+southern semi-circle of water and sky than did this stair-landing; and
+here, a long ship's-glass in her hands, and the accustomed look of care
+on her face, faintly frowning against the glare of noonday, stood Mary
+Richling. She still had on the pine-straw hat, and the skirt--stirring
+softly in a breeze that had to come around from the north side of the
+house before it reached her--was the brown and olive homespun.
+
+"No use," said an old, fat, and sun-tanned man from his willow chair on
+the veranda behind her. There was a slight palsied oscillation in his
+head. He leaned forward somewhat on a staff, and as he spoke his entire
+shapeless and nearly helpless form quaked with the effort. But Mary, for
+all his advice, raised the glass and swung it slowly from east to west.
+
+The house was near the edge of a slightly rising ground, close to the
+margin of a bayou that glided around toward the left from the woods at
+its back, and ran, deep and silent, under the shadows of a few huge,
+wide-spreading, moss-hung live-oaks that stood along its hither shore,
+laving their roots in its waters, and throwing their vast green images
+upon its glassy surface. As the dark stream slipped away from these it
+flashed a little while in the bright open space of a marsh, and, just
+entering the shade of a spectral cypress wood, turned as if to avoid it,
+swung more than half about, and shone sky-blue, silver, and green as it
+swept out into the unbroken sunshine of the prairie.
+
+It was over this flowery savanna, broadening out on either hand, and
+spreading far away until its bright green margin joined, with the
+perfection of a mosaic, the distant blue of the lake, that Mary,
+dallying a moment with hope, passed her long glass. She spoke with it
+still raised and her gaze bent through it:--
+
+"There's a big alligator crossing the bayou down in the bend."
+
+"Yes," said the aged man, moving his flat, carpet-slippered feet a
+laborious inch; "alligator. Alligator not goin' take you 'cross lake. No
+use lookin'. 'Ow Peter goin' come when win' dead ahead? Can't do it."
+
+Yet Mary lifted the glass a little higher, beyond the green, beyond the
+crimpling wavelets of the nearer distance that seemed drawn by the
+magical lens almost into her hand, out to the fine, straight line that
+cut the cool blue below from the boundless blue above. Round swung the
+glass, slowly, waveringly, in her unpractised hand, from the low cypress
+forests of Manchac on the west, to the skies that glittered over the
+unseen marshes of the Rigolets on the farthest east.
+
+"You see sail yondeh?" came the slow inquiry from behind.
+
+"No," said Mary, letting the instrument down, and resting it on the
+balustrade.
+
+"Humph! No! Dawn't I tell you is no use look?"
+
+"He was to have got here three days ago," said Mary, shutting the glass
+and gazing in anxious abstraction across the prairie.
+
+The Spanish Creole grunted.
+
+"When win' change, he goin' start. He dawn't start till win' change.
+Win' keep ligue dat, he dawn't start 't all." He moved his orange-wood
+staff an inch, to suit the previous movement of his feet, and Mary came
+and laid the glass on its brackets in the veranda, near the open door of
+a hall that ran through the dwelling to another veranda in the rear.
+
+In the middle of the hall a small woman, as dry as the peppers that hung
+in strings on the wall behind her, sat in a rush-bottomed rocking-chair
+plaiting a palmetto hat, and with her elbow swinging a tattered manilla
+hammock, in whose bulging middle lay Alice, taking her compulsory
+noonday nap. Mary came, expressed her thanks in sprightly whispers,
+lifted the child out, and carried her to a room. How had Mary got here?
+
+The morning after that on which she had missed the cars at Canton she
+had taken a south-bound train for Camp Moore, the camp of the forces
+that had evacuated New Orleans, situated near the railway station of
+Tangipahoa, some eighty miles north of the captured city. Thence, after
+a day or two of unavoidable delay, and of careful effort to know the
+wisest step, she had taken stage,--a crazy ambulance,--with some others,
+two women, three children, and an old man, and for two days had
+travelled through a beautiful country of red and yellow clays and
+sands below and murmuring pines above,--vast colonnades of towering,
+branchless brown columns holding high their green, translucent roof, and
+opening up their wide, bright, sunshot vistas of gentle, grassy hills
+that undulated far away under the balsamic forest, and melted at length
+into luminous green unity and deer-haunted solitudes. Now she went down
+into richer bottom-lands, where the cotton and corn were growing tall
+and pretty to look upon, like suddenly grown girls, and the sun was
+beginning to shine hot. Now she passed over rustic bridges, under posted
+warnings to drive slow or pay a fine, or through sandy fords across
+purling streams, hearing the monotone of some unseen mill-dam, or
+scaring the tall gray crane from his fishing, or the otter from his
+pranks. Again she went up into leagues of clear pine forest, with stems
+as straight as lances; meeting now a farmer, and now a school-girl or
+two, and once a squad of scouts, ill-mounted, worse clad, and yet more
+sorrily armed; bivouacking with the jolly, tattered fellows, Mary and
+one of the other women singing for them, and the "boys" singing for
+Mary, and each applauding each about the pine-knot fire, and the women
+and children by and by lying down to slumber, in soldier fashion, with
+their feet to the brands, under the pines and the stars, while the
+gray-coats stood guard in the wavering fire-light; but Mary lying broad
+awake staring at the great constellation of the Scorpion, and thinking
+now of him she sought, and now remorsefully of that other scout, that
+poor boy whom the spy had shot far away yonder to the north and
+eastward. Now she rose and journeyed again. Rare hours were those for
+Alice. They came at length into a low, barren land, of dwarfed and
+scrawny pines, with here and there a marshy flat; thence through a
+narrow strip of hickories, oaks, cypresses, and dwarf palmetto, and so
+on into beds of white sand and oyster-shells, and then into one of the
+villages on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain.
+
+Her many little adventures by the way, the sayings and doings and
+seeings of Alice, and all those little adroitnesses by which Mary from
+time to time succeeded in avoiding or turning aside the suspicions
+that hovered about her, and the hundred times in which Alice was her
+strongest and most perfect protection, we cannot pause to tell. But we
+give a few lines to one matter.
+
+Mary had not yet descended from the ambulance at her journey's end;
+she and Alice only were in it; its tired mules were dragging it slowly
+through the sandy street of the village, and the driver was praising
+the milk, eggs, chickens, and genteel seclusion of Mrs. ----'s
+"hotel," at that end of the village toward which he was driving, when a
+man on horseback met them, and, in passing, raised his hat to Mary. The
+act was only the usual courtesy of the highway; yet Mary was startled,
+disconcerted, and had to ask the unobservant, loquacious driver to
+repeat what he had said. Two days afterward Mary was walking at the
+twilight hour, in a narrow, sandy road, that ran from the village out
+into the country to the eastward. Alice walked beside her, plying her
+with questions. At a turn of the path, without warning, she confronted
+this horseman again. He reined up and lifted his hat. An elated look
+brightened his face.
+
+"It's all fixed," he said. But Mary looked distressed, even alarmed.
+
+"You shouldn't have done this," she replied.
+
+The man waved his hand downward repressively, but with a countenance
+full of humor.
+
+"Hold on. It's _still_ my deal. This is the last time, and then I'm
+done. Make a spoon or spoil a horn, you know. When you commence to do a
+thing, do it. Them's the words that's inscribed on my banner, as the
+felleh says; only I, Sam, aint got much banner. And if I sort o' use
+about this low country a little while for my health, as it were, and
+nibble around sort o' _pro bono p[=u]blico_ takin' notes, why you aint
+a-carin', is you? For wherefore shouldest thou?" He put on a yet more
+ludicrous look, and spread his hand off at one side, working his
+outstretched fingers.
+
+"Yes," responded Mary, with severe gravity; "I must care. You did finish
+at Holly Springs. I was to find the rest of the way as best I could.
+That was the understanding. Go away!" She made a commanding gesture,
+though she wore a pleading look. He looked grave; but his habitual
+grimace stole through his gravity and invited her smile. But she
+remained fixed. He gathered the rein and straightened up in the saddle.
+
+"Yes," she insisted, answering his inquiring attitude; "go! I shall be
+grateful to you as long as I live. It wasn't because I mistrusted you that
+I refused your aid at Camp Moore or at----that other place on this side. I
+don't mistrust you. But don't you see--you must see--it's your duty to
+see--that this staying and--and--foll--following--is--is--wrong." She
+stood, holding her skirt in one hand, and Alice's hand in the other, not
+upright, but in a slightly shrinking attitude, and as she added once more,
+"Go! I implore you--go!" her eyes filled.
+
+"I will; I'll go," said the man, with a soft chuckle intended for
+self-abasement. "I go, thou goest, he goes. 'I'll skedaddle,' as the
+felleh says. And yit it do seem to me sorter like,--if my moral sense is
+worthy of any consideration, which is doubtful, may be,--seems to me
+like it's sort o' jumpin' the bounty for you to go and go back on an
+arrangement that's been all fixed up nice and tight, and when it's on'y
+jess to sort o' 'jump into the wagon' that's to call for you to-morrow,
+sun-up, drove by a nigger boy, and ride a few mile' to a house on the
+bayou, and wait there till a man comes with a nice little schooner, and
+take you on bode and sail off, and 'good-by, Sally,' and me never in
+sight from fust to last, 'and no questions axed.'"
+
+"I don't reject the arrangement," replied Mary, with tearful
+pleasantness. "If you'll do as I say, I'll do as you say; and that will
+be final proof to you that I believe you're"--she fell back a step,
+laughingly--"'the clean sand!'" She thought the man would have
+perpetrated some small antic; but he did not. He did not even smile, but
+lifted the rein a little till the horse stepped forward, and, putting
+out his hand, said:--
+
+"Good-by. You don't need no directions. Jess tell the lady where you'
+boardin' that you've sort o' consented to spend a day or two with old
+Adrien Sanchez, and get into the wagon when it comes for you." He let go
+her hand. "Good-by, Alice." The child looked up in silence and pressed
+herself against her mother. "Good-by," said he once more.
+
+"Good-by," replied Mary.
+
+His eyes lingered as she dropped her own.
+
+"Come, Alice," she said, resisting the little one's effort to stoop and
+pick a wild-pea blossom, and the mother and child started slowly back
+the way they had come. The spy turned his horse, and moved still more
+slowly in the opposite direction. But before he had gone many rods he
+turned the animal's head again, rode as slowly back, and, beside the
+spot where Mary had stood, got down, and from the small imprint of her
+shoe in the damp sand took the pea-blossom, which, in turning to
+depart, she had unawares trodden under foot. He looked at the small,
+crushed thing for a moment, and then thrust it into his bosom; but in a
+moment, as if by a counter impulse, drew it forth again, let it flutter
+to the ground, following it with his eyes, shook his head with an amused
+air, half of defiance and half of discomfiture, turned, drew himself
+into the saddle, and with one hand laid upon another on the saddle-bow
+and his eyes resting on them in meditation, passed finally out of sight.
+
+ * * *
+
+Here, then, in this lone old Creole cottage, Mary was tarrying, prisoner
+of hope, coming out all hours of the day, and scanning the wide view,
+first, only her hand to shade her brow, and then with the old
+ship's-glass, Alice often standing by and looking up at this
+extraordinary toy with unspoken wonder. All that Mary could tell her of
+things seeable through it could never persuade the child to risk her own
+eye at either end of it. So Mary would look again and see, out in the
+prairie, in the morning, the reed birds, the marsh hen, the blackbirds,
+the sparrows, the starlings, with their red and yellow epaulets, rising
+and fluttering and sinking again among the lilies and mallows, and the
+white crane, paler than a ghost, wading in the grassy shallows. She saw
+the ravening garfish leap from the bayou, and the mullet in shining
+hundreds spatter away to left and right; and the fisherman and the
+shrimp-catcher in their canoes come gliding up the glassy stream, riding
+down the water-lilies, that rose again behind and shook the drops from
+their crowns, like water-sprites. Here and there, farther out, she saw
+the little cat-boats of the neighboring village crawling along the edge
+of the lake, taking their timid morning cruises. And far away she saw
+the titanic clouds; but on the horizon, no sail.
+
+In the evening she would see mocking-birds coming out of the savanna and
+flying into the live-oaks. A summer duck might dart from the cypresses,
+speed across the wide green level, and become a swerving, vanishing
+speck on the sky. The heron might come round the bayou's bend, and
+suddenly take fright and fly back again. The rattling kingfisher might
+come up the stream, and the blue crane sail silently through the purple
+haze that hung between the swamp and the bayou. She would see the gulls,
+gray and white, on the margin of the lake, the sun setting beyond its
+western end, and the sky and water turning all beautiful tints; and
+every now and then, low down along the cool, wrinkling waters, passed
+across the round eye of the glass the broad, downward-curved wing of the
+pelican. But when she ventured to lift the glass to the horizon, she
+swept it from east to west in vain. No sail.
+
+"Dawn't I tell you no use look? Peter dawn't comin' in day-time, nohow."
+
+But on the fifth morning Mary had hardly made her appearance on the
+veranda, and had not ventured near the spy-glass yet, when the old man
+said:--
+
+"She rain back in swamp las' night; can smell."
+
+"How do you feel this morning?" asked Mary, facing around from her first
+glance across the waters. He did not heed.
+
+"See dat win'?" he asked, lifting one hand a little from the top of his
+staff.
+
+"Yes," responded Mary, eagerly; "why, it's--hasn't it--changed?"
+
+"Yes, change' las' night 'fo' went to bed."
+
+The old man's manner betrayed his contempt for one who could be
+interested in such a change, and yet not know when it took place.
+
+"Why, then," began Mary, and started as if to take down the glass.
+
+"What you doin'?" demanded its owner. "Better let glass 'lone; fool' wid
+him enough."
+
+Mary flushed, and, with a smile of resentful apology, was about to
+reply, when he continued:--
+
+"What you want glass for? Dare Peter' schooner--right dare in bayou.
+What want glass for? Can't see schooner hundred yard' off 'dout glass?"
+And he turned away his poor wabbling head in disgust.
+
+Mary looked an instant at two bare, rakish, yellow poles showing out
+against the clump of cypresses, and the trim little white hull and
+apple-green deck from which they sprang, then clasped her hands and ran
+into the house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVIII.
+
+A GOLDEN SUNSET.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier came to Richling's room one afternoon, and handed him a
+sealed letter. The postmark was blurred, but it was easy still to read
+the abbreviation of the State's name,--Kentucky. It had come by way of
+New York and the sea. The sick man reached out for it with avidity from
+the large bed in which he sat bolstered up. He tore it open with
+unsteady fingers, and sought the signature.
+
+"It's from a lawyer."
+
+"An old acquaintance?" asked the doctor.
+
+"Yes," responded Richling, his eyes glancing eagerly along the lines.
+"Mary's in the Confederate lines!--Mary and Alice!" The hand that held
+the letter dropped to his lap. "It doesn't say a word about how she got
+through!"
+
+"But _where_ did she get through?" asked the physician. "Whereabouts is
+she now?"
+
+"She got through away up to the eastward of Corinth, Mississippi.
+Doctor, she may be within fifty miles of us this very minute! Do you
+think they'll give her a pass to come in?"
+
+"They may, Richling; I hope they will."
+
+"I think I'd get well if she'd come," said the invalid. But his friend
+made no answer.
+
+A day or two afterward--it was drawing to the close of a beautiful
+afternoon in early May--Dr. Sevier came into the room and stood at a
+window looking out. Madame Zénobie sat by the bedside softly fanning the
+patient. Richling, with his eyes, motioned her to retire. She smiled and
+nodded approvingly, as if to say that that was just what she was about
+to propose, and went out, shutting the door with just sound enough to
+announce her departure to Dr. Sevier.
+
+He came from the window to the bedside and sat down. The sick man looked
+at him, with a feeble eye, and said, in little more than a whisper:--
+
+"Mary and Alice"--
+
+"Yes," said the Doctor.
+
+"If they don't come to-night they'll be too late."
+
+"God knows, my dear boy!"
+
+"Doctor"--
+
+"What, Richling?"
+
+"Did you ever try to guess"--
+
+"Guess what, Richling?"
+
+"_His_ use of my life."
+
+"Why, yes, my poor boy, I have tried. But I only make out its use to
+me."
+
+The sick man's eye brightened.
+
+"Has it been?"
+
+The Doctor nodded. He reached out and took the wasted hand in his. It
+tried to answer his pressure. The invalid spoke.
+
+"I'm glad you told me that before--before it was too late."
+
+"Are you, my dear boy? Shall I tell you more?"
+
+"Yes," the sick man huskily replied; "oh, yes."
+
+"Well, Richling,--you know we're great cowards about saying such things;
+it's a part of our poor human weakness and distrust of each other, and
+the emptiness of words,--but--lately--only just here, very lately, I've
+learned to call the meekest, lovingest One that ever trod our earth,
+Master; and it's been your life, my dear fellow, that has taught me." He
+pressed the sick man's hand slowly and tremulously, then let it go, but
+continued to caress it in a tender, absent way, looking on the floor as
+he spoke on.
+
+"Richling, Nature herself appoints some men to poverty and some to
+riches. God throws the poor upon our charge--in mercy to _us_. Couldn't
+he take care of them without us if he wished? Are they not his? It's
+easy for the poor to feel, when they are helped by us, that the rich are
+a godsend to them; but they don't see, and many of their helpers don't
+see, that the poor are a godsend to the rich. They're set over against
+each other to keep pity and mercy and charity in the human heart. If
+every one were entirely able to take care of himself we'd turn to
+stone." The speaker ceased.
+
+"Go on," whispered the listener.
+
+"That will never be," continued the Doctor. "God Almighty will never let
+us find a way to quite abolish poverty. Riches don't always bless the
+man they come to, but they bless the world. And so with poverty; and
+it's no contemptible commission, Richling, to be appointed by God to
+bear that blessing to mankind which keeps its brotherhood universal.
+See, now,"--he looked up with a gentle smile,--"from what a distance he
+brought our two hearts together. Why, Richling, the man that can make
+the rich and poor love each other will make the world happier than it
+has ever been since man fell!"
+
+"Go on," whispered Richling.
+
+"No," said the Doctor.
+
+"Well, now, Doctor--_I_ want to say--something." The invalid spoke with
+a weak and broken utterance, with many breaks and starts that we may set
+aside.
+
+"For a long time," he said, beginning as if half in soliloquy, "I
+couldn't believe I was coming to this early end, simply because I
+didn't see why I should. I know that was foolish. I thought my
+hardships"-- He ceased entirely, and, when his strength would
+allow, resumed:--
+
+"I thought they were sent in order that when I should come to fortune I
+might take part in correcting some evils that are strangely overlooked."
+
+The Doctor nodded, and, after a moment of rest, Richling said again:--
+
+"But now I see--that is not my work. May be it is Mary's. May be it's my
+little girl's."
+
+"Or mine," murmured the Doctor.
+
+"Yes, Doctor, I've been lying here to-day thinking of something I never
+thought of before, though I dare say you have, often. There could be no
+art of healing till the earth was full of graves. It is by shipwreck
+that we learn to build ships. All our safety--all our betterment--is
+secured by our knowledge of others' disasters that need not have
+happened had they only _known_. Will you--finish my mission?" The sick
+man's hand softly grasped the hand that lay upon it. And the Doctor
+responded:--
+
+"How shall I do that, Richling?"
+
+"Tell my story."
+
+"But I don't know it all, Richling."
+
+"I'll tell you all that's behind. You know I'm a native of Kentucky.
+My name is not Richling. I belong to one of the proudest, most
+distinguished families in that State or in all the land. Until I married
+I never knew an ungratified wish. I think my bringing-up, not to be
+wicked, was as bad as could be. It was based upon the idea that I was
+always to be master, and never servant. I was to go through life with
+soft hands. I was educated to know, but not to do. When I left school
+my parents let me travel. They would have let me do anything except
+work. In the West--in Milwaukee--I met Mary. It was by mere chance. She
+was poor, but cultivated and refined; trained--you know--for knowing,
+not doing. I loved her and courted her, and she encouraged my suit,
+under the idea, you know, again,"--he smiled faintly and sadly,--"that
+it was nobody's business but ours. I offered my hand and was accepted.
+But, when I came to announce our engagement to my family, they warned me
+that if I married her they would disinherit and disown me."
+
+"What was their reason, Richling?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"But, Richling, they had a reason of some sort."
+
+"Nothing in the world but that Mary was a Northern girl. Simple
+sectional prejudice. I didn't tell Mary. I didn't think they would do
+it; but I knew Mary would refuse to put me to the risk. We married, and
+they carried out their threat."
+
+The Doctor uttered a low exclamation, and both were silent.
+
+"Doctor," began the sick man once more.
+
+"Yes, Richling."
+
+"I suppose you never looked into the case of a man who needed help, but
+you were sure to find that some one thing was the key to all his
+troubles; did you?"
+
+The Doctor was silent again.
+
+"I'll give you the key to mine, Doctor: I took up the gage thrown down
+by my family as though it were thrown down by society at large. I said I
+would match pride with pride. I said I would go among strangers, take a
+new name, and make it as honorable as the old. I saw Mary didn't think
+it wise; but she believed whatever I did was best, and"--he smiled and
+whispered--"I thought so too. I suppose my troubles have more than one
+key; but that's the outside one. Let me rest a little.
+
+"Doctor, I die nameless. I had a name, a good name, and only too proud a
+one. It's mine still. I've never tarnished it--not even in prison. I
+will not stain it now by disclosing it. I carry it with me to God's
+throne."
+
+The whisperer ceased, exhausted. The Doctor rested an elbow on a knee
+and laid his face in his hand. Presently Richling moved, and he raised a
+look of sad inquiry.
+
+"Bury me here in New Orleans, Doctor, will you?"
+
+"Why, Richling?"
+
+"Well--this has been--my--battle-ground. I'd like to be buried on the
+field,--like the other soldiers. Not that I've been a good one; but--I
+want to lie where you can point to me as you tell my story. If it could
+be so, I should like to lie in sight--of that old prison."
+
+The Doctor brushed his eyes with his handkerchief and wiped his brow.
+
+"Doctor," said the invalid again, "will you read me just four verses in
+the Bible?"
+
+"Why, yes, my boy, as many as you wish to hear."
+
+"No, only four." His free hand moved for the book that lay on the bed,
+and presently the Doctor read:--
+
+ "'My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers
+ temptations;
+
+ "'Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience.
+
+ "'But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be
+ perfect and entire, wanting nothing.
+
+ "'If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to
+ all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given
+ him.'"
+
+"There," whispered the sick man, and rested with a peaceful look in all
+his face. "It--doesn't mean wisdom in general, Doctor,--such as Solomon
+asked for."
+
+"Doesn't it?" said the other, meekly.
+
+"No. It means the wisdom necessary to let--patience--have her
+perf-- I was a long time--getting any where near that.
+
+"Doctor--do you remember how fond--Mary was of singing--all kinds
+of--little old songs?"
+
+"Of course I do, my dear boy."
+
+"Did you ever sing--Doctor?"
+
+"O my dear fellow! I never did really sing, and I haven't uttered a note
+since--for twenty years."
+
+"Can't you sing--ever so softly--just a verse--of--'I'm a Pilgrim'?"
+
+"I--I--it's impossible, Richling, old fellow. I don't know either the
+words or the tune. I never sing." He smiled at himself through his
+tears.
+
+"Well, all right," whispered Richling. He lay with closed eyes for a
+moment, and then, as he opened them, breathed faintly through his parted
+lips the words, spoken, not sung, while his hand feebly beat the
+imagined cadence:--
+
+ "'The sun shines bright in my old Kentucky home;
+ 'Tis summer, the darkies are gay;
+ The corn-tops are ripe, and the meadows are in bloom,
+ And the birds make music all the day.'"
+
+The Doctor hid his face in his hands, and all was still.
+
+By and by there came a whisper again. The Doctor raised his head.
+
+"Doctor, there's one thing"--
+
+"Yes, I know there is, Richling."
+
+"Doctor,--I've been a poor stick of a husband."
+
+"I never knew a good one, Richling."
+
+"Doctor, you'll be a friend to Mary?"
+
+The Doctor nodded; his eyes were full.
+
+The sick man drew from his breast a small ambrotype, pressed it to his
+lips, and poised it in his trembling fingers. It was the likeness of the
+little Alice. He turned his eyes to his friend.
+
+"I didn't need Mary's. But this is all I've ever seen of my little girl.
+To-morrow, at daybreak,--it will be just at daybreak,--when you see that
+I've passed, I want you to lay this here on my breast. Then fold my
+hands upon it"--
+
+His speech was arrested. He seemed to hearken an instant.
+
+"Doctor," he said, with excitement in his eye and sudden strength of
+voice, "what is that I hear?"
+
+"I don't know," replied his friend; "one of the servants probably down
+in the hall." But he, too, seemed to have been startled. He lifted his
+head. There was a sound of some one coming up the stairs in haste.
+
+"Doctor." The Doctor was rising from his chair.
+
+"Lie still, Richling."
+
+But the sick man suddenly sat erect.
+
+"Doctor--it's--O Doctor, I"--
+
+The door flew open; there was a low outcry from the threshold, a moan of
+joy from the sick man, a throwing wide of arms, and a rush to the
+bedside, and John and Mary Richling--and the little Alice, too--
+
+Come, Doctor Sevier; come out and close the door.
+
+ * * *
+
+"Strangest thing on earth!" I once heard a physician say,--"the
+mysterious power that the dying so often have to fix the very hour of
+their approaching end!" It was so in John Richling's case. It was as he
+said. Had Mary and Alice not come when they did, they would have been
+too late. He "tarried but a night;" and at the dawn Mary uttered the
+bitter cry of the widow, and Doctor Sevier closed the eyes of the one
+who had committed no fault,--against this world, at least,--save that he
+had been by nature a pilgrim and a stranger in it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIX.
+
+AFTERGLOW.
+
+
+Mary, with Alice holding one hand, flowers in the other, was walking one
+day down the central avenue of the old Girod Cemetery, breaking the
+silence of the place only by the soft grinding of her footsteps on the
+shell-walk, and was just entering a transverse alley, when she stopped.
+
+Just at hand a large, broad woman, very plainly dressed, was drawing
+back a single step from the front of a tomb, and dropping her hands from
+a coarse vase of flowers that she had that moment placed on the narrow
+stone shelf under the tablet. The blossoms touched, without hiding, the
+newly cut name. She had hung a little plaster crucifix against it from
+above. She must have heard the footfall so near by, and marked its
+stoppage; but, with the oblivion common to the practisers of her
+religion, she took no outward notice. She crossed herself, sank upon her
+knees, and with her eyes upon the shrine she had made remained thus. The
+tears ran down Mary's face. It was Madame Zénobie. They went and lived
+together.
+
+The name of the street where their house stood has slipped me, as has
+that of the clean, unfrequented, round-stoned way up which one looked
+from the small cottage's veranda, and which, running down to their old
+arched gate, came there to an end, as if that were a pretty place to
+stop at in the shade until evening. Grass grows now, as it did then,
+between the round stones; and in the towering sycamores of the reddened
+brick sidewalk the long, quavering note of the cicada parts the wide
+summer noonday silence. The stillness yields to little else, save now
+and then the tinkle of a mule-bell, where in the distance the softly
+rumbling street-car invites one to the centre of the town's activities,
+or the voice of some fowl that, having laid an egg, is asserting her
+right to the credit of it. Some forty feet back, within a mossy brick
+wall that stands waist-high, surmounted by a white, open fence, the
+green wooden balls on top of whose posts are full eight feet above the
+sidewalk, the cottage stands high up among a sweet confusion of pale
+purple and pink crape myrtles, oleanders white and red, and the
+bristling leaves and plumes of white bells of the Spanish bayonet,
+all in the shade of lofty magnolias, and one great pecan.
+
+"And this is little Alice," said Doctor Sevier with gentle gravity, as,
+on his first visit to the place, he shook hands with Mary at the top of
+the veranda stairs, and laid his fingers upon the child's forehead. He
+smiled into her uplifted face as her eyes examined his, and stroked the
+little crown as she turned her glance silently upon her mother, as if to
+inquire if this were a trustworthy person. Mary led the way to chairs
+at the veranda's end where the south breeze fanned them, and Alice
+retreated to her mother's side until her silent question should be
+settled.
+
+It was still May. They spoke the praises of the day whose sun was
+just setting. And Mary commended the house, the convenience of its
+construction, its salubrity; and also, and especially, the excellence
+and goodness of Madame Zénobie. What a complete and satisfactory
+arrangement! Was it not? Did not the Doctor think so?
+
+But the Doctor's affirmative responses were unfrequent, and quite
+without enthusiasm; and Mary's face, wearing more cheer than was felt
+within, betrayed, moreover, the feeling of one who, having done the best
+she knew, falls short of commendation.
+
+She was once more in deep black. Her face was pale, and some of its
+lines had yielded up a part of their excellence. The outward curves of
+the rose had given place to the inward curves of the lily--nay, hardly
+all that; for as she had never had the full red queenliness of the one,
+neither had she now the severe sanctitude of the other; that soft glow
+of inquiry, at once so blithe and so self-contained, so modest and so
+courageous, humble, yet free, still played about her saddened eyes and
+in her tones. Through the glistening sadness of those eyes smiled
+resignation; and although the Doctor plainly read care about them and
+about the mouth, it was a care that was forbearing to feed upon itself,
+or to take its seat on her brow. The brow was the old one; that is, the
+young. The joy of life's morning was gone from it forever; but a
+chastened hope was there, and one could see peace hovering just above
+it, as though it might in time alight. Such were the things that divided
+her austere friend's attention as she sat before him, seeking, with
+timid smiles and interrogative argument, for this new beginning of life
+some heartiness of approval from him.
+
+"Doctor," she plucked up courage to say at last, with a geniality that
+scantily hid the inner distress, "you don't seem pleased."
+
+"I can't say I am, Mary. You've provided for things in sight; but I see
+no provision for unseen contingencies. They're sure to come, you know.
+How are you going to meet them?"
+
+"Well," said Mary, with slow, smiling caution, "there's my two thousand
+dollars that you've put at interest for me."
+
+"Why, no; you've already counted the interest on that as part of your
+necessary income."
+
+"Doctor, 'the Lord will provide,' will he not?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Why, Doctor!"--
+
+"No, Mary; you've got to provide. He's not going to set aside the laws
+of nature to cover our improvidence. That would be to break faith with
+all creation for the sake of one or two creatures."
+
+"No; but still, Doctor, without breaking the laws of nature, he will
+provide. It's in his word."
+
+"Yes, and it ought to be in his word--not in ours. It's for him to say
+to us, not for us to say to him. But there's another thing, Mary."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"It's this. But first I'll say plainly you've passed through the fires
+of poverty, and they haven't hurt you. You have one of those
+imperishable natures that fire can't stain or warp."
+
+"O Doctor, how absurd!" said Mary, with bright genuineness, and a tear
+in either eye. She drew Alice closer.
+
+"Well, then, I do see two ill effects," replied the Doctor. "In the
+first place, as I've just tried to show you, you have caught a little of
+the _recklessness_ of the poor."
+
+"I was born with it," exclaimed Mary, with amusement.
+
+"Maybe so," replied her friend; "at any rate you show it." He was
+silent.
+
+"But what is the other?" asked Mary.
+
+"Why, as to that, I may mistake; but--you seem inclined to settle down
+and be satisfied with poverty."
+
+"Having food and raiment," said Mary, smiling with some archness, "to be
+therewith content."
+
+"Yes, but"--the physician shook his head--"that doesn't mean to be
+satisfied. It's one thing to be content with God's providence, and it's
+another to be satisfied with poverty. There's not one in a thousand that
+I'd venture to say it to. He wouldn't understand the fine difference.
+But you will. I'm sure you do."
+
+"Yes, I do."
+
+"I know you do. You know poverty has its temptations, and warping
+influences, and debasing effects, just as truly as riches have. See how
+it narrows our usefulness. Not always, it is true. Sometimes our best
+usefulness keeps us poor. That's poverty with a good excuse. But that's
+not poverty satisfying, Mary"--
+
+"No, of course not," said Mary, exhibiting a degree of distress that the
+Doctor somehow overlooked.
+
+"It's merely," said he, half-extending his open palm,--"it's merely
+poverty accepted, as a good soldier accepts the dust and smut that are a
+necessary part of the battle. Now, here's this little girl."--As his
+open white hand pointed toward Alice she shrank back; but the Doctor
+seemed blind this afternoon and drove on.--"In a few years--it will not
+seem like any time at all--she'll be half grown up; she'll have wants
+that ought to be supplied."
+
+"Oh! don't," exclaimed Mary, and burst into a flood of tears; and the
+Doctor, while she hid them from her child, sat silently loathing his own
+stupidity.
+
+"Please, don't mind it," said Mary, stanching the flow. "You were not so
+badly mistaken. I wasn't satisfied, but I was about to surrender." She
+smiled at herself and her warlike figure of speech.
+
+He looked away, passed his hand across his forehead and must have
+muttered audibly his self-reproach: for Mary looked up again with a
+faint gleam of the old radiance in her face, saying:--
+
+"I'm glad you didn't let me do it. I'll not do it. I'll take up the
+struggle again. Indeed, I had already thought of one thing I could do,
+but I--I--in fact, Doctor, I thought you might not like it."
+
+"What was it?"
+
+"It was teaching in the public schools. They're in the hands of the
+military government, I am told. Are they not?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Still," said Mary, speaking rapidly, "I say I'll keep up the"--
+
+But the Doctor lifted his hand.
+
+"No, no. There's to be no more struggle."
+
+"No?" Mary tried to look pleasantly incredulous.
+
+"No; and you're not going to be put upon anybody's bounty, either. No.
+What I was going to say about this little girl here was this,--her name
+is Alice, is it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The mother dropped an arm around the child, and both she and Alice
+looked timidly at the questioner.
+
+"Well, by that name, Mary, I claim the care of her."
+
+The color mounted to Mary's brows, but the Doctor raised a finger.
+
+"I mean, of course, Mary, only in so far as such care can go without
+molesting your perfect motherhood, and all its offices and pleasures."
+
+Her eyes filled again, and her lips parted; but the Doctor was not going
+to let her reply.
+
+"Don't try to debate it, Mary. You must see you have no case. Nobody's
+going to take her from you, nor do any other of the foolish things, I
+hope, that are so often done in such cases. But you've called her
+Alice, and Alice she must be. I don't propose to take care of her for
+you"--
+
+"Oh, no; of course not," interjected Mary.
+
+"No," said the Doctor; "you'll take care of her for me. I intended it
+from the first. And that brings up another point. You mustn't teach
+school. No. I have something else--something better--to suggest. Mary,
+you and John have been a kind of blessing to me"--
+
+She would have interrupted with expressions of astonishment and dissent,
+but he would not hear them.
+
+"I think I ought to know best about that," he said. "Your husband taught
+me a great deal, I think. I want to put some of it into practice. We had
+a--an understanding, you might say--one day toward the--end--that I
+should do for him some of the things he had so longed and hoped to
+do--for the poor and the unfortunate."
+
+"I know," said Mary, the tears dropping down her face.
+
+"He told you?" asked the Doctor.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Well," resumed the Doctor, "those may not be his words precisely, but
+it's what they meant to me. And I said I'd do it. But I shall need
+assistance. I'm a medical practitioner. I attend the sick. But I see a
+great deal of other sorts of sufferers; and I can't stop for them."
+
+"Certainly not," said Mary, softly.
+
+"No," said he; "I can't make the inquiries and investigations about them
+and study them, and all that kind of thing, as one should if one's help
+is going to be help. I can't turn aside for all that. A man must have
+one direction, you know. But you could look after those things"--
+
+"I?"
+
+"Certainly. You could do it just as I--just as John--would wish to see
+it done. You're just the kind of person to do it right."
+
+"O Doctor, don't say so! I'm not fitted for it at all."
+
+"I'm sure you are, Mary. You're fitted by character and outward
+disposition, and by experience. You're full of cheer"--
+
+She tearfully shook her head. But he insisted.
+
+"You will be--for _his_ sake, as you once said to me. Don't you
+remember?"
+
+She remembered. She recalled all he wished her to: the prayer she had
+made that, whenever death should part her husband and her, he might not
+be the one left behind. Yes, she remembered; and the Doctor spoke
+again:--
+
+"Now, I invite you to make this your principal business. I'll pay you
+for it, regularly and well, what I think it's worth; and it's worth no
+trifle. There's not one in a thousand that I'd trust to do it, woman
+or man; but I know you will do it all, and do it well, without any
+nonsense. And if you want to look at it so, Mary, you can just consider
+that it's John doing it, all the time; for, in fact, that's just what it
+is. It beats sewing, Mary, or teaching school, or making preserves, I
+think."
+
+"Yes," said Mary, looking down on Alice, and stroking her head.
+
+"You can stay right here where you are, with Madame Zénobie, as you had
+planned; but you'll give yourself to this better work. I'll give you a
+_carte blanche_. Only one mistake I charge you not to make; don't go and
+come from day to day on the assumption that only the poor are poor, and
+need counsel and attention."
+
+"I know that would be a mistake," said Mary.
+
+"But I mean more than that," continued the Doctor. "You must keep a
+hold on the rich and comfortable and happy. You want to be a medium
+between the two, identified with both as completely as possible. It's a
+hard task, Mary. It will take all your cunning."
+
+"And more, too," replied she, half-musing.
+
+"You know," said the Doctor, "I'm not to appear in the matter, of
+course; I'm not to be mentioned: that must be one of the conditions."
+
+Mary smiled at him through her welling eyes.
+
+"I'm not fit to do it," she said, folding the wet spots of her
+handkerchief under. "But still, I'd rather not refuse. If I might try
+it, I'd like to do so. If I could do it well, it would be a finer
+monument--to _him_"--
+
+"Than brass or marble," said Dr. Sevier. "Yes, more to his liking."
+
+"Well," said Mary again, "if you think I can do it I'll try it."
+
+"Very well. There's one place you can go to, to begin with, to-morrow
+morning, if you choose. I'll give you the number. It's just across here
+in Casa Calvo street."
+
+"Narcisse's aunt?" asked Mary, with a soft gleam of amusement.
+
+"Yes. Have you been there already?"
+
+She had; but she only said:--
+
+"There's one thing that I'm afraid will go against me, Doctor, almost
+everywhere." She lifted a timid look.
+
+The Doctor looked at her inquiringly, and in his private thought said
+that it was certainly not her face or voice.
+
+"Ah!" he said, as he suddenly recollected. "Yes; I had forgotten. You
+mean your being a Union woman."
+
+"Yes. It seems to me they'll be sure to find it out. Don't you think it
+will interfere?"
+
+The Doctor mused.
+
+"I forgot that," he repeated and mused again. "You can't blame us, Mary;
+we're at white heat"--
+
+"Indeed I don't!" said Mary, with eager earnestness.
+
+He reflected yet again.
+
+"But--I don't know, either. It may be not as great a drawback as you
+think. Here's Madame Zénobie, for instance"--
+
+Madame Zénobie was just coming up the front steps from the garden,
+pulling herself up upon the veranda wearily by the balustrade. She came
+forward, and, with graceful acknowledgment, accepted the physician's
+outstretched hand and courtesied.
+
+"Here's Madame Zénobie, I say; you seem to get along with her."
+
+Mary smiled again, looked up at the standing quadroon, and replied in a
+low voice:--
+
+"Madame Zénobie is for the Union herself."
+
+"Ah! no-o-o!" exclaimed the good woman, with an alarmed face. She lifted
+her shoulders and extended what Narcisse would have called the han' of
+rep-u-diation; then turned away her face, lifted up her underlip with
+disrelish, and asked the surrounding atmosphere,--"What I got to do wid
+Union? Nuttin' do wid Union--nuttin' do wid Confédéracie!" She moved
+away, addressing the garden and the house by turns. "Ah! no!" She went
+in by the front door, talking Creole French, until she was beyond
+hearing.
+
+Dr. Sevier reached out toward the child at Mary's knee. Here was one who
+was neither for nor against, nor yet a fear-constrained neutral. Mary
+pushed her persuasively toward the Doctor, and Alice let herself be
+lifted to his lap.
+
+"I used to be for it myself," he said, little dreaming he would one day
+be for it again. As the child sank back into his arm, he noticed a
+miniature of her father hanging from her neck. He took it into his
+fingers, and all were silent while he looked long upon the face.
+
+By and by he asked Mary for an account of her wanderings. She gave it.
+Many of the experiences, that had been hard and dangerous enough when
+she was passing through them, were full of drollery when they came to be
+told, and there was much quiet amusement over them. The sunlight faded
+out, the cicadas hushed their long-drawn, ear-splitting strains, and the
+moon had begun to shine in the shadowy garden when Dr. Sevier at length
+let Alice down and rose to take his lonely homeward way, leaving Mary to
+Alice's prattle, and, when that was hushed in slumber, to gentle tears
+and whispered thanksgivings above the little head.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LX.
+
+"YET SHALL HE LIVE."
+
+
+We need not follow Mary through her ministrations. Her office was no
+sinecure. It took not only much labor, but, as the Doctor had expected,
+it took all her cunning. True, nature and experience had equipped her
+for such work; but for all that there was an art to be learned, and time
+and again there were cases of mental and moral decrepitude or deformity
+that baffled all her skill until her skill grew up to them, which in
+some cases it never did. The greatest tax of all was to seem, and to be,
+unprofessional; to avoid regarding her work in quantity, and to be
+simply, merely, in every case, a personal friend; not to become known as
+a benevolent itinerary, but only a kind and thoughtful neighbor. Blessed
+word! not benefactor--neighbor!
+
+She had no schemes for helping the unfortunate by multitude. Possibly on
+that account her usefulness was less than it might have been. But I am
+not sure; for they say her actual words and deeds were but the seed of
+ultimate harvests; and that others, moreover, seeing her light shine so
+brightly along this seemingly narrow path, and moved to imitate her,
+took that other and broader way, and so both fields were reaped.
+
+But, I say, we need not follow her steps. They would lead deviously
+through ill-smelling military hospitals, and into buildings that had
+once been the counting-rooms of Carondelet-street cotton merchants, but
+were now become the prisons of soldiers in gray. One of these places,
+restored after the war as a cotton factor's counting-room again, had,
+until a few years ago, a queer, clumsy patch in the plastering of one
+wall, near the base-board. Some one had made a rough inscription on it
+with a cotton sampler's marking-brush. It commemorates an incident. Mary
+by some means became aware beforehand that this incident was going to
+occur; and one of the most trying struggles of conscience she ever had
+in her life was that in which she debated with herself one whole night
+whether she ought to give her knowledge to others or keep it to herself.
+She kept it. In fact, she said nothing until the war was all over and
+done, and she never was quite sure whether her silence was right or
+wrong. And when she asked Dr. Sevier if he thought she had done wrong,
+he asked:--
+
+"You knew it was going to take place, and kept silence?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary.
+
+"And you want to know whether you did right?"
+
+"Yes. I'd like to know what you think."
+
+He sat very straight, and said not a word, nor changed a line of his
+face. She got no answer at all.
+
+The inscription was as follows; I used to see it every work-day of the
+week for years--it may be there yet--190 Common street, first flight,
+back office:
+
+ [Illustration:
+ Oct 14 1864
+ 17 Confederate
+ Prisoners escaped
+ Through this hole]
+
+But we move too fast. Let us go back into the war for a moment longer.
+Mary pursued her calling. The most of it she succeeded in doing in a
+very sunshiny way. She carried with her, and left behind her, cheer,
+courage, hope. Yet she had a widow's heart, and whenever she took a
+widow's hand in hers, and oftentimes, alone or against her sleeping
+child's bedside, she had a widow's tears. But this work, or these
+works,--she made each particular ministration seem as if it were the
+only one,--these works, that she might never have had the opportunity to
+perform had her nest-mate never been taken from her, seemed to keep John
+near. Almost, sometimes, he seemed to walk at her side in her errands of
+mercy, or to spread above her the arms of benediction. And so even the
+bitter was sweet, and she came to believe that never before had widow
+such blessed commutation.
+
+One day, a short, slight Confederate prisoner, newly brought in, and
+hobbling about the place where he was confined, with a vile bullet-hole
+in his foot, came up to her and said:--
+
+"Allow me, madam,--did that man call you by your right name, just now?"
+
+Mary looked at him. She had never seen him before.
+
+"Yes, sir," she said.
+
+She could see the gentleman, under much rags and dirt.
+
+"Are you Mrs. John Richling?"
+
+A look of dismay came into his face as he asked the grave question.
+
+"Yes, sir," replied Mary.
+
+His voice dropped, and he asked, with subdued haste:--
+
+"Ith it pothible you're in mourning for him?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+It was the little rector. He had somehow got it into his head that
+preachers ought to fight, and this was one of the results. Mary went
+away quickly, and told Dr. Sevier. The Doctor went to the commanding
+general. It was a great humiliation to do so, he thought. There was none
+worse, those days, in the eyes of the people. He craved and got the
+little man's release on parole. A fortnight later, as Dr. Sevier was
+sitting at the breakfast table, with the little rector at its opposite
+end, he all at once rose to his full attenuated height, with a frown and
+then a smile, and, tumbling the chair backward behind him, exclaimed:--
+
+"Why, Laura!"--for it was that one of his two gay young nieces who stood
+in the door-way. The banker's wife followed in just behind, and was
+presently saying, with the prettiest heartiness, that Dr. Sevier looked
+no older than the day they met the Florida general at dinner years
+before. She had just come in from the Confederacy, smuggling her son of
+eighteen back to the city, to save him from the conscript officers, and
+Laura had come with her. And when the clergyman got his crutches into
+his armpits and stood on one foot, and he and Laura both blushed as they
+shook hands, the Doctor knew that she had come to nurse her wounded
+lover. That she might do this without embarrassment, they got married,
+and were thereupon as vexed with themselves as they could be under the
+circumstances that they had not done it four or five years before. Of
+course there was no parade; but Dr. Sevier gave a neat little dinner.
+Mary and Laura were its designers; Madame Zénobie was the master-builder
+and made the gumbo. One word about the war, whose smoke was over all the
+land, would have spoiled the broth. But no such word was spoken.
+
+It happened that the company was almost the same as that which had sat
+down in brighter days to that other dinner, which the banker's wife
+recalled with so much pleasure. She and her husband and son were guests;
+also that Sister Jane, of whom they had talked, a woman of real goodness
+and rather unrelieved sweetness; also her sister and bankrupted
+brother-in-law. The brother-in-law mentioned several persons who, he
+said, once used to be very cordial to him and his wife, but now did not
+remember them; and his wife chid him, with the air of a fellow-martyr;
+but they could not spoil the tender gladness of the occasion.
+
+"Well, Doctor," said the banker's wife, looking quite the old lady now,
+"I suppose your lonely days are over, now that Laura and her husband are
+to keep house for you."
+
+"Yes," said the Doctor.
+
+But the very thought of it made him more lonely than ever.
+
+"It's a very pleasant and sensible arrangement," said the lady, looking
+very practical and confidential; "Laura has told me all about it. It's
+just the thing for them and for you."
+
+"I think so, ma'am," replied Dr. Sevier, and tried to make his statement
+good.
+
+"I'm sure of it," said the lady, very sweetly and gayly, and made a
+faint time-to-go beckon with a fan to her husband, to whom, in the
+farther drawing-room, Laura and Mary stood talking, each with an arm
+about the other's waist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXI
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+It came with tears. But, ah! it lifted such an awful load from the
+hearts even of those who loved the lost cause. Husbands snatched
+their wives once more to their bosoms, and the dear, brave, swarthy,
+rough-bearded, gray-jacketed boys were caught again in the wild arms
+of mothers and sisters. Everywhere there was glad, tearful kissing.
+Everywhere? Alas for the silent lips that remained unkissed, and the
+arms that remained empty! And alas for those to whom peace came too
+suddenly and too soon! Poor Narcisse!
+
+His salary still continues. So does his aunt.
+
+The Ristofalos came back all together. How delighted Mrs. Colonel
+Ristofalo--I say Mrs. _Colonel_ Ristofalo--was to see Mary! And how
+impossible it was, when they sat down together for a long talk, to avoid
+every moment coming back to the one subject of "him."
+
+"Yes, ye see, there bees thim as is _called_ col-o-nels, whin in fact
+they bees only _liftinent_ col-o-nels. Yes. But it's not so wid him. And
+he's no different from the plain Raphael Ristofalah of eight year
+ago--the same perfict gintleman that he was when he sold b'iled eggs!"
+
+And the colonel's "lady" smiled a gay triumph that gave Mary a new
+affection for her.
+
+Sister Jane bowed to the rod of an inscrutable Providence. She could not
+understand how the Confederacy could fail, and justice still be justice;
+so, without understanding, she left it all to Heaven, and clung to
+her faith. Her brother-in-law never recovered his fortunes nor his
+sweetness. He could not bend his neck to the conqueror's yoke; he went
+in search of liberty to Brazil--or was it Honduras? Little matter which,
+now, for he died there, both he and his wife, just as their faces were
+turning again homeward, and it was dawning upon them once more that
+there is no land like Dixie in all the wide world over.
+
+The little rector--thanks, he says, to the skill of Dr.
+Sevier!--recovered perfectly the use of his mangled foot, so that he
+even loves long walks. I was out walking with him one sunset hour in the
+autumn of--if I remember aright--1870, when whom should we spy but our
+good Kate Ristofalo, out driving in her family carriage? The cherubs
+were beside her,--strong, handsome boys. Mike held the reins; he was but
+thirteen, but he looked full three years better than that, and had
+evidently employed the best tailor in St. Charles street to fit his
+rather noticeable clothes. His mother had changed her mind about his
+being a bruiser, though there isn't a doubt he had a Derringer in one or
+another of his pockets. No, she was proposing to make him a doctor--"a
+surgeon," she said; "and thin, if there bees another war"-- She was
+for making every edge cut.
+
+She did us the honor to stop the carriage, and drive up to the
+curb-stone for a little chat. Her spirits were up, for Colonel Ristofalo
+had just been made a city councilman by a rousing majority.
+
+We expressed our regret not to see Raphael himself in the family group
+enjoying the exquisite air.
+
+"Ha, ha! He ride out for pleasure?"--And then, with sudden
+gravity,--"Aw, naw, sur! He's too busy. Much use ut is to be married to
+a public man! Ah! surs, I'm mighty tired of ut, now I tell ye!" Yet she
+laughed again, without betraying much fatigue. "And how's Dr. Sevier?"
+
+"He's well," said the clergyman.
+
+"And Mrs. Richling?"
+
+"She's well, too."
+
+Kate looked at the little rector out of the corners of her roguish Irish
+eyes, a killing look, and said:--
+
+"Ye're sure the both o' thim bees well?"
+
+"Yes, quite well," replied he, ignoring the inane effort at jest. She
+nodded a blithe good-day, and rolled on toward the lake, happy as the
+harvest weather, and with a kind heart for all the world. We walked on,
+and after the walk I dined with the rector. Dr. Sevier's place was
+vacant, and we talked of him. The prettiest piece of furniture in the
+dining-room was an extremely handsome child's high chair that remained,
+unused, against the wall. It was Alice's, and Alice was an almost daily
+visitor. It had come in almost simultaneously with Laura's marriage, and
+more and more frequently, as time had passed, the waiter had set it up
+to the table, at the Doctor's right hand, and lifted Goldenhair into it,
+until by and by she had totally outgrown it. But she had not grown out
+of the place of favor at the table. In these later days she had become
+quite a school-girl, and the Doctor, in his place at the table, would
+often sit with a faint, continuous smile on his face that no one could
+bring there but her, to hear her prattle about Madame Locquet, and the
+various girls at Madame Locquet's school.
+
+ * * *
+
+"It's actually pathetic," said Laura, as we sat sipping our coffee after
+the meal, "to see how he idolizes that child." Alice had just left the
+room.
+
+"Why don't he idolize the child's"--began her husband, in undertone,
+and did not have to finish to make us understand.
+
+"He does," murmured the smiling wife.
+
+"Then why shouldn't he tell her so?"
+
+"My dear!" objected the wife, very softly and prettily.
+
+"I don't mean to speak lightly," responded the husband, "but--they love
+each other; they suit each other; they complete each other; they don't
+feel their disparity of years; they're both so linked to Alice that it
+would break either heart over again to be separated from her. I don't
+see why"--
+
+Laura shook her head, smiling in the gentle way that only the happy
+wives of good men have.
+
+"It will never be."
+
+ * * *
+
+What changes!
+
+ "The years creep slowly by"--
+
+We seem to hear the old song yet. What changes! Laura has put two more
+leaves into her dining-table. Children fill three seats. Alice has
+another. It is she, now, not her chair, that is tall--and fair. Mary,
+too, has a seat at the same board. This is their home now. Her hair is
+turning all to silver. So early? Yes; but she is--she never was--so
+beautiful! They all see it--feel it; Dr. Sevier--the gentle, kind,
+straight old Doctor--most of all. And oh! when they two, who have never
+joined hands on this earth, go to meet John and Alice,--which God grant
+may be at one and the same time,--what weeping there will be among God's
+poor!
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Dr. Sevier, by George W. Cable
+
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Dr. Sevier, by George W. Cable.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dr. Sevier, by George W. Cable
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dr. Sevier
+
+Author: George W. Cable
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2009 [EBook #29439]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DR. SEVIER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Anne Storer and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="box">
+<h2><span class="smcap">George W. Cable&#8217;s Writings</span></h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+
+<p>BONAVENTURE. A Prose Pastoral of Arcadian Louisiana.
+12mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>DR. SEVIER. 12mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>THE GRANDISSIMES. A Story of Creole Life. 12mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>OLD CREOLE DAYS. 12mo, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>STRANGE TRUE STORIES OF LOUISIANA. Illustrated.
+12mo, $2.00.</p>
+
+<p class="tbhigh">*&nbsp;<span class="tblow">*</span>&nbsp;* <em>New Uniform Edition of the above five volumes,
+cloth, in a box, $6.00.</em></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+
+<p>JOHN MARCH, SOUTHERNER, 12mo, $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>OLD CREOLE DAYS. Cameo Edition with Etching, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>OLD CREOLE DAYS. 2 vols. 16mo, paper, each 30 cts.</p>
+
+<p>MADAME DELPHINE. 75 cts.</p>
+
+<p>THE CREOLES OF LOUISIANA. Illus. Small 4to, $2.50.</p>
+
+<p>THE SILENT SOUTH. 12mo, $1.00.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h6>DR. SEVIER</h6>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>GEORGE W. CABLE</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">author of &ldquo;old creole days,&rdquo; &ldquo;the grandissimes,&rdquo;</span>
+<span class="smcap">&ldquo;madame delphine,&rdquo; etc.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">NEW YORK<br />
+CHARLES SCRIBNER&#8217;S SONS<br />
+1897
+</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p class="center">Copyright, 1883 and 1884</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By</span> GEORGE W. CABLE</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 10%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><em>All rights reserved</em></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">
+TROW&#8217;S<br />
+PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY,<br />
+NEW YORK.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>TO MY FRIEND</h3>
+
+<h2>MARION A. BAKER</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+
+<tr> <td align='right'>Chapter</td> <td align='left'></td> <td align='right'>Page</td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>I.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;The Doctor</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>II.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;A Young Stranger</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>III.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;His Wife</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>IV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Convalescence and Acquaintance</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_22">22</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>V.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Hard Questions</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>VI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Nesting</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_34">34</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>VII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Disappearance</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_45">45</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>VIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;A Question of Book-keeping</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>IX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;When the Wind Blows</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>X.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Gentles and Commons</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;A Pantomime</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;&ldquo;She's all the World&rdquo;</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;The Bough Breaks</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XIV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Hard Speeches and High Temper</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;The Cradle Falls</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XVI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Many Waters</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XVII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Raphael Ristofalo</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XVIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;How He Did It</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XIX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Another Patient</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Alice</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;The Sun at Midnight</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Borrower Turned Lender</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Wear and Tear</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XIV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Brought to Bay</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;The Doctor Dines Out</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_184">184</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XVI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;The Trough of the Sea</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XVII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Out of the Frying-Pan</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXVIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;&ldquo;Oh, where is my Love?&rdquo;</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXIX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Release.&mdash;Narcisse</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Lighting Ship</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;At Last</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;A Rising Star</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_248">248</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Bees, Wasps, and Butterflies</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_258">258</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXIV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Toward the Zenith</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_262">262</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;To Sigh, yet Feel no Pain</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_268">268</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXVI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;What Name?</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXVII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Pestilence</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_280">280</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXVIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;&ldquo;I must be Cruel only to be Kind&rdquo;</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_286">286</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XXXIX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;&ldquo;Pettent Prate&rdquo;</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_294">294</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XL.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Sweet Bells Jangled</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_300">300</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Mirage</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_310">310</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Ristofalo and the Rector</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Shall she Come or Stay?</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_324">324</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLIV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;What would you Do?</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_329">329</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Narcisse with News</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_335">335</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLVI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;A Prison Memento</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_340">340</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLVII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Now I Lay Me&mdash;</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_345">345</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLVIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Rise up, my Love, my Fair One!</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_351">351</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>XLIX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;A Bundle of Hopes</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_357">357</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>L.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Fall In!</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_366">366</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Blue Bonnets over the Border</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_372">372</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;A Pass through the Lines</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_378">378</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Try Again</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_384">384</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LIV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;&ldquo;Who Goes There?&rdquo;</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_394">394</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LV.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Dixie</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_412">412</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LVI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Fire and Sword</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_425">425</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LVII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Almost in Sight</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_435">435</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LVIII.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;A Golden Sunset</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_445">445</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LIX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Afterglow</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_454">454</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LX.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;&ldquo;Yet shall he live&rdquo;</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_465">465</a></td> </tr>
+<tr> <td align='right'>LXI.</td> <td align='left'>&mdash;Peace</td> <td align='right'><a href="#Page_470">470</a></td> </tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
+<h1>DR. SEVIER.</h1>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>THE DOCTOR.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The main road to wealth in New Orleans has long
+been Carondelet street. There you see the most
+alert faces; noses&mdash;it seems to one&mdash;with more and
+sharper edge, and eyes smaller and brighter and with
+less distance between them than one notices in other
+streets. It is there that the stock and bond brokers
+hurry to and fro and run together promiscuously&mdash;the
+cunning and the simple, the headlong and the wary&mdash;at
+the four clanging strokes of the Stock Exchange gong.
+There rises the tall fa&ccedil;ade of the Cotton Exchange.
+Looking in from the sidewalk as you pass, you see its
+main hall, thronged but decorous, the quiet engine-room
+of the surrounding city&#8217;s most far-reaching occupation,
+and at the hall&#8217;s farther end you descry the &ldquo;Future
+Room,&rdquo; and hear the unearthly ramping and bellowing
+of the bulls and bears. Up and down the street, on
+either hand, are the ship-brokers and insurers, and in the
+upper stories foreign consuls among a multitude of lawyers
+and notaries.</p>
+
+<p>In 1856 this street was just assuming its present
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+character. The cotton merchants were making it their
+favorite place of commercial domicile. The open thoroughfare
+served in lieu of the present exchanges; men
+made fortunes standing on the curb-stone, and during
+bank hours the sidewalks were perpetually crowded with
+cotton factors, buyers, brokers, weighers, reweighers,
+classers, pickers, pressers, and samplers, and the air was
+laden with cotton quotations and prognostications.</p>
+
+<p>Number 3&frac12;, second floor, front, was the office of Dr.
+Sevier. This office was convenient to everything. Immediately
+under its windows lay the sidewalks where
+congregated the men who, of all in New Orleans, could
+best afford to pay for being sick, and least desired to
+die. Canal street, the city&#8217;s leading artery, was just
+below, at the near left-hand corner. Beyond it lay the
+older town, not yet impoverished in those days,&mdash;the
+French quarter. A single square and a half off at the
+right, and in plain view from the front windows, shone
+the dazzling white walls of the St. Charles Hotel, where
+the nabobs of the river plantations came and dwelt with
+their fair-handed wives in seasons of peculiar anticipation,
+when it is well to be near the highest medical skill. In
+the opposite direction a three minutes&#8217; quick drive
+around the upper corner and down Common street carried
+the Doctor to his ward in the great Charity Hospital, and
+to the school of medicine, where he filled the chair set
+apart to the holy ailments of maternity. Thus, as it
+were, he laid his left hand on the rich and his right on
+the poor; and he was not left-handed.</p>
+
+<p>Not that his usual attitude was one of benediction.
+He stood straight up in his austere pure-mindedness, tall,
+slender, pale, sharp of voice, keen of glance, stern in
+judgment, aggressive in debate, and fixedly untender
+everywhere, except&mdash;but always except&mdash;in the sick
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+chamber. His inner heart was all of flesh; but his
+demands for the rectitude of mankind pointed out like
+the muzzles of cannon through the embrasures of his
+virtues. To demolish evil!&mdash;that seemed the finest of
+aims; and even as a physician, that was, most likely, his
+motive until later years and a better self-knowledge had
+taught him that to do good was still finer and better. He
+waged war&mdash;against malady. To fight; to stifle; to cut
+down; to uproot; to overwhelm;&mdash;these were his springs
+of action. That their results were good proved that his
+sentiment of benevolence was strong and high; but it
+was well-nigh shut out of sight by that impatience of evil
+which is very fine and knightly in youngest manhood, but
+which we like to see give way to kindlier moods as the
+earlier heat of the blood begins to pass.</p>
+
+<p>He changed in later years; this was in 1856. To
+&ldquo;resist not evil&rdquo; seemed to him then only a rather feeble
+sort of knavery. To face it in its nakedness, and to
+inveigh against it in high places and low, seemed the
+consummation of all manliness; and manliness was the
+key-note of his creed. There was no other necessity in
+this life.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But a man must live,&rdquo; said one of his kindred, to
+whom, truth to tell, he had refused assistance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir; that is just what he can&#8217;t do. A man must
+die! So, while he lives, let him be a man!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How inharmonious a setting, then, for Dr. Sevier,
+was 3&frac12; Carondelet street! As he drove, each morning,
+down to that point, he had to pass through long, irregular
+files of fellow-beings thronging either sidewalk,&mdash;a sadly
+unchivalric grouping of men whose daily and yearly life
+was subordinated only and entirely to the getting of
+wealth, and whose every eager motion was a repetition of
+the sinister old maxim that &ldquo;Time is money.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+&ldquo;It&#8217;s a great deal more, sir; it&#8217;s life!&rdquo; the Doctor
+always retorted.</p>
+
+<p>Among these groups, moreover, were many who were
+all too well famed for illegitimate fortune. Many occupations
+connected with the handling of cotton yielded big
+harvests in perquisites. At every jog of the Doctor&#8217;s
+horse, men came to view whose riches were the outcome
+of semi-respectable larceny. It was a day of reckless
+operation; much of the commerce that came to New
+Orleans was simply, as one might say, beached in Carondelet
+street. The sight used to keep the long, thin, keen-eyed
+doctor in perpetual indignation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Look at the wreckers!&rdquo; he would say.</p>
+
+<p>It was breakfast at eight, indignation at nine, dyspepsia
+at ten.</p>
+
+<p>So his setting was not merely inharmonious; it was
+damaging. He grew sore on the whole matter of money-getting.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I have money. But I don&#8217;t go after it. It
+comes to me, because I seek and render service for the
+service&#8217;s sake. It will come to anybody else the same
+way; and why should it come any other way?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He not only had a low regard for the motives of most
+seekers of wealth; he went further, and fell into much
+disbelief of poor men&#8217;s needs. For instance, he looked
+upon a man&#8217;s inability to find employment, or upon a poor
+fellow&#8217;s run of bad luck, as upon the placarded woes of
+a hurdy-gurdy beggar.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If he wants work he will find it. As for begging, it
+ought to be easier for any true man to starve than to
+beg.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The sentiment was ungentle, but it came from the
+bottom of his belief concerning himself, and a longing for
+moral greatness in all men.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+&ldquo;However,&rdquo; he would add, thrusting his hand into his
+pocket and bringing out his purse, &ldquo;I&#8217;ll help any man to
+make himself useful. And the sick&mdash;well, the sick, as a
+matter of course. Only I must know what I&#8217;m doing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Have some of us known Want? To have known her&mdash;though
+to love her was impossible&mdash;is &ldquo;a liberal education.&rdquo;
+The Doctor was learned; but this acquaintanceship,
+this education, he had never got. Hence his untenderness.
+Shall we condemn the fault? Yes. And the
+man? We have not the face. To be <em>just</em>, which he never
+knowingly failed to be, and at the same time to feel
+tenderly for the unworthy, to deal kindly with the erring,&mdash;it
+is a double grace that hangs not always in easy reach
+even of the tallest. The Doctor attained to it&mdash;but in
+later years; meantime, this story&mdash;which, I believe, had
+he ever been poor would never have been written.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>A YOUNG STRANGER.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>In 1856 New Orleans was in the midst of the darkest
+ten years of her history. Yet she was full of new-comers
+from all parts of the commercial world,&mdash;strangers seeking
+livelihood. The ravages of cholera and yellow-fever,
+far from keeping them away, seemed actually to draw
+them. In the three years 1853, &#8217;54, and &#8217;55, the cemeteries
+had received over thirty-five thousand dead; yet
+here, in 1856, besides shiploads of European immigrants,
+came hundreds of unacclimated youths, from all parts of
+the United States, to fill the wide gaps which they
+imagined had been made in the ranks of the great exporting
+city&#8217;s clerking force.</p>
+
+<p>Upon these pilgrims Dr. Sevier cast an eye full of
+interest, and often of compassion hidden under outward
+impatience. &ldquo;Who wants to see,&rdquo; he would demand,
+&ldquo;men&mdash;<em>and women</em>&mdash;increasing the risks of this uncertain
+life?&rdquo; But he was also full of respect for them.
+There was a certain nobility rightly attributable to emigration
+itself in the abstract. It was the cutting loose
+from friends and aid,&mdash;those sweet-named temptations,&mdash;and
+the going forth into self-appointed exile and into dangers
+known and unknown, trusting to the help of one&#8217;s
+own right hand to exchange honest toil for honest bread
+and raiment. His eyes kindled to see the goodly, broad,
+red-cheeked fellows. Sometimes, though, he saw women,
+and sometimes tender women, by their side; and that
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+sight touched the pathetic chord of his heart with a rude
+twangle that vexed him.</p>
+
+<p>It was on a certain bright, cool morning early in
+October that, as he drove down Carondelet street toward
+his office, and one of those little white omnibuses of the
+old Apollo-street line, crowding in before his carriage,
+had compelled his driver to draw close in by the curb-stone
+and slacken speed to a walk, his attention chanced
+to fall upon a young man of attractive appearance, glancing
+stranger-wise and eagerly at signs and entrances while
+he moved down the street. Twice, in the moment of the
+Doctor&#8217;s enforced delay, he noticed the young stranger
+make inquiry of the street&#8217;s more accustomed frequenters,
+and that in each case he was directed farther on. But,
+the way opened, the Doctor&#8217;s horse switched his tail and
+was off, the stranger was left behind, and the next
+moment the Doctor stepped across the sidewalk and went
+up the stairs of Number 3&frac12; to his office. Something told
+him&mdash;we are apt to fall into thought on a stair-way&mdash;that
+the stranger was looking for a physician.</p>
+
+<p>He had barely disposed of the three or four waiting
+messengers that arose from their chairs against the corridor
+wall, and was still reading the anxious lines left in
+various handwritings on his slate, when the young man
+entered. He was of fair height, slenderly built, with
+soft auburn hair, a little untrimmed, neat dress, and a
+diffident, yet expectant and courageous, face.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Sevier?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, my wife is very ill; can I get you to come at
+once and see her?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Who is her physician?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have not called any; but we must have one now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know about going at once. This is my hour
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+for being in the office. How far is it, and what&#8217;s the
+trouble?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We are only three squares away, just here in Custom-house
+street.&rdquo; The speaker began to add a faltering
+enumeration of some very grave symptoms. The Doctor
+noticed that he was slightly deaf; he uttered his words
+as though he did not hear them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; interrupted Dr. Sevier, speaking half to himself
+as he turned around to a standing case of cruel-looking
+silver-plated things on shelves; &ldquo;that&#8217;s a small
+part of the penalty women pay for the doubtful honor
+of being our mothers. I&#8217;ll go. What is your number?
+But you had better drive back with me if you can.&rdquo; He
+drew back from the glass case, shut the door, and took
+his hat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Narcisse!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On the side of the office nearest the corridor a door let
+into a hall-room that afforded merely good space for the
+furniture needed by a single accountant. The Doctor
+had other interests besides those of his profession, and,
+taking them altogether, found it necessary, or at least
+convenient, to employ continuously the services of a person
+to keep his accounts and collect his bills. Through
+the open door the book-keeper could be seen sitting on a
+high stool at a still higher desk,&mdash;a young man of handsome
+profile and well-knit form. At the call of his
+name he unwound his legs from the rounds of the stool
+and leaped into the Doctor&#8217;s presence with a superlatively
+high-bred bow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I shall be back in fifteen minutes,&rdquo; said the Doctor.
+&ldquo;Come, Mr.&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;,&rdquo; and went out with the stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse had intended to speak. He stood a moment,
+then lifted the last half inch of a cigarette to his lips,
+took a long, meditative inhalation, turned half round on
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+his heel, dashed the remnant with fierce emphasis into a
+spittoon, ejected two long streams of smoke from his
+nostrils, and extending his fist toward the door by which
+the Doctor had gone out, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right, ole hoss!&rdquo; No, not that way. It is hard
+to give his pronunciation by letter. In the word &ldquo;right&rdquo;
+he substituted an a for the r, sounding it almost in the
+same instant with the i, yet distinct from it: &ldquo;All a-ight,
+ole hoss!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then he walked slowly back to his desk, with that feeling
+of relief which some men find in the renewal of a
+promissory note, twined his legs again among those of
+the stool, and, adding not a word, resumed his pen.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor&#8217;s carriage was hurrying across Canal street.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Sevier,&rdquo; said the physician&#8217;s companion, &ldquo;I
+don&#8217;t know what your charges are&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The highest,&rdquo; said the Doctor, whose dyspepsia was
+gnawing him just then with fine energy. The curt reply
+struck fire upon the young man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t propose to drive a bargain, Dr. Sevier!&rdquo;
+He flushed angrily after he had spoken, breathed with
+compressed lips, and winked savagely, with the sort of
+indignation that school-boys show to a harsh master.</p>
+
+<p>The physician answered with better self-control.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do you propose?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was going to propose&mdash;being a stranger to you,
+sir&mdash;to pay in advance.&rdquo; The announcement was made
+with a tremulous, but triumphant, <em>hauteur</em>, as though it
+must cover the physician with mortification. The speaker
+stretched out a rather long leg, and, drawing a pocket-book,
+produced a twenty-dollar piece.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked full in his face with impatient surprise,
+then turned his eyes away again as if he restrained
+himself, and said, in a subdued tone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I would rather you had haggled about the price.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t hear&rdquo;&mdash;said the other, turning his ear.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor waved his hand:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Put that up, if you please.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The young stranger was disconcerted. He remained
+silent for a moment, wearing a look of impatient embarrassment.
+He still extended the piece, turning it over
+and over with his thumb-nail as it lay on his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You don&#8217;t know me, Doctor,&rdquo; he said. He got another
+cruel answer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We&#8217;re getting acquainted,&rdquo; replied the physician.</p>
+
+<p>The victim of the sarcasm bit his lip, and protested, by
+an unconscious, sidewise jerk of the chin:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you&#8217;d&rdquo;&mdash;and he turned the coin again.</p>
+
+<p>The physician dropped an eagle&#8217;s stare on the gold.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t practise medicine on those principles.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, Doctor,&rdquo; insisted the other, appeasingly, &ldquo;you
+can make an exception if you will. Reasons are better
+than rules, my old professor used to say. I am here
+without friends, or letters, or credentials of any sort; this
+is the only recommendation I can offer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t recommend you at all; anybody can do that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger breathed a sigh of overtasked patience,
+smiled with a baffled air, seemed once or twice about to
+speak, but doubtful what to say, and let his hand sink.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Doctor,&rdquo;&mdash;he rested his elbow on his knee,
+gave the piece one more turn over, and tried to draw the
+physician&#8217;s eye by a look of boyish pleasantness,&mdash;&ldquo;I&#8217;ll
+not ask you to take pay in advance, but I will ask you to
+take care of this money for me. Suppose I should lose
+it, or have it stolen from me, or&mdash;Doctor, it would be a
+real comfort to me if you would.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can&#8217;t help that. I shall treat your wife, and then
+send in my bill.&rdquo; The Doctor folded arms and appeared
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+to give attention to his driver. But at the same time he
+asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not subject to epilepsy, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir!&rdquo; The indignant shortness of the retort
+drew no sign of attention from the Doctor; he was silently
+asking himself what this nonsense meant. Was it drink,
+or gambling, or a confidence game? Or was it only vanity,
+or a mistake of inexperience? He turned his head unexpectedly,
+and gave the stranger&#8217;s facial lines a quick,
+thorough examination. It startled them from a look of
+troubled meditation. The physician as quickly turned
+away again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; began the other, but added no more.</p>
+
+<p>The physician was silent. He turned the matter over
+once more in his mind. The proposal was absurdly unbusiness-like.
+That his part in it might look ungenerous was
+nothing; so his actions were right, he rather liked them
+to bear a hideous aspect: that was his war-paint. There
+was that in the stranger&#8217;s attitude that agreed fairly with
+his own theories of living. A fear of debt, for instance,
+if that was genuine it was good; and, beyond and better
+than that, a fear of money. He began to be more favorably
+impressed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Give it to me,&rdquo; he said, frowning; &ldquo;mark you, this
+is your way,&rdquo;&mdash;he dropped the gold into his vest-pocket,&mdash;&ldquo;it
+isn&#8217;t mine.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The young man laughed with visible relief, and rubbed
+his knee with his somewhat too delicate hand. The
+Doctor examined him again with a milder glance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you think you&#8217;ve got the principles of life
+all right, don&#8217;t you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do,&rdquo; replied the other, taking his turn at
+folding arms.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+&ldquo;H-m-m! I dare say you do. What you lack is the
+practice.&rdquo; The Doctor sealed his utterance with a
+nod.</p>
+
+<p>The young man showed amusement; more, it may be,
+than he felt, and presently pointed out his lodging-place.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Here, on this side; Number 40;&rdquo; and they alighted.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>HIS WIFE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>In former times the presence in New Orleans, during
+the cooler half of the year, of large numbers of mercantile
+men from all parts of the world, who did not accept
+the fever-plagued city as their permanent residence, made
+much business for the renters of furnished apartments.
+At the same time there was a class of persons whose residence
+was permanent, and to whom this letting of rooms
+fell by an easy and natural gravitation; and the most
+respectable and comfortable rented rooms of which the
+city could boast were those <em>chambres garnies</em> in Custom-house
+and Bienville streets, kept by worthy free or freed
+mulatto or quadroon women.</p>
+
+<p>In 1856 the gala days of this half-caste people were
+quite over. Difference was made between virtue and vice,
+and the famous quadroon balls were shunned by those
+who aspired to respectability, whether their whiteness was
+nature or only toilet powder. Generations of domestic
+service under ladies of Gallic blood had brought many of
+them to a supreme pitch of excellence as housekeepers.
+In many cases money had been inherited; in other cases
+it had been saved up. That Latin feminine ability to
+hold an awkward position with impregnable serenity, and,
+like the yellow Mississippi, to give back no reflection from
+the overhanging sky, emphasized this superior fitness.
+That bright, womanly business ability that comes of the
+same blood added again to their excellence. Not to be
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+home itself, nothing could be more like it than were the
+apartments let by Madame C&eacute;cile, or Madame Sophie, or
+Madame Athalie, or Madame Polyx&egrave;ne, or whatever the
+name might be.</p>
+
+<p>It was in one of these houses, that presented its dull
+brick front directly upon the sidewalk of Custom-house
+street, with the unfailing little square sign of <em>Chambres &agrave;
+louer</em> (Rooms to let), dangling by a string from the overhanging
+balcony and twirling in the breeze, that the sick
+wife lay. A waiting slave-girl opened the door as the
+two men approached it, and both of them went directly
+upstairs and into a large, airy room. On a high, finely
+carved, and heavily hung mahogany bed, to which the
+remaining furniture corresponded in ancient style and
+massiveness, was stretched the form of a pale, sweet-faced
+little woman.</p>
+
+<p>The proprietress of the house was sitting beside the
+bed,&mdash;a quadroon of good, kind face, forty-five years old
+or so, tall and broad. She rose and responded to the
+Doctor&#8217;s silent bow with that pretty dignity of greeting
+which goes with all French blood, and remained standing.
+The invalid stirred.</p>
+
+<p>The physician came forward to the bedside. The
+patient could not have been much over nineteen years of
+age. Her face was very pleasing; a trifle slender in outline;
+the brows somewhat square, not wide; the mouth
+small. She would not have been called beautiful, even
+in health, by those who lay stress on correctness of
+outlines. But she had one thing that to some is better.
+Whether it was in the dark blue eyes that were lifted
+to the Doctor&#8217;s with a look which changed rapidly
+from inquiry to confidence, or in the fine, scarcely
+perceptible strands of pale-brown hair that played about
+her temples, he did not make out; but, for one cause
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+or another, her face was of that kind which almost
+any one has seen once or twice, and no one has seen
+often,&mdash;that seems to give out a soft, but veritable,
+light.</p>
+
+<p>She was very weak. Her eyes quickly dropped away
+from his, and turned wearily, but peacefully, to those of
+her husband.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor spoke to her. His greeting and gentle
+inquiry were full of a soothing quality that was new to
+the young man. His long fingers moved twice or thrice
+softly across her brow, pushing back the thin, waving
+strands, and then he sat down in a chair, continuing his
+kind, direct questions. The answers were all bad.</p>
+
+<p>He turned his glance to the quadroon; she understood
+it; the patient was seriously ill. The nurse responded
+with a quiet look of comprehension. At the same time
+the Doctor disguised from the young strangers this interchange
+of meanings by an audible question to the quadroon.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have I ever met you before?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, seh.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What is your name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Z&eacute;nobie.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Madame Z&eacute;nobie,&rdquo; softly whispered the invalid,
+turning her eyes, with a glimmer of feeble pleasantry,
+first to the quadroon and then to her husband.</p>
+
+<p>The physician smiled at her an instant, and then gave
+a few concise directions to the quadroon. &ldquo;Get me&rdquo;&mdash;thus
+and so.</p>
+
+<p>The woman went and came. She was a superior nurse,
+like so many of her race. So obvious, indeed, was this,
+that when she gently pressed the young husband an inch
+or two aside, and murmured that &ldquo;de doctah&rdquo; wanted him
+to &ldquo;go h-out,&rdquo; he left the room, although he knew the
+physician had not so indicated.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+By-and-by he returned, but only at her beckon, and
+remained at the bedside while Madame Z&eacute;nobie led the
+Doctor into another room to write his prescription.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Who are these people?&rdquo; asked the physician, in an
+undertone, looking up at the quadroon, and pausing with
+the prescription half torn off.</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged her large shoulders and smiled perplexedly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mizzez&mdash;Reechin?&rdquo; The tone was one of query
+rather than assertion. &ldquo;Dey sesso,&rdquo; she added.</p>
+
+<p>She might nurse the lady like a mother, but she was
+not going to be responsible for the genuineness of a
+stranger&#8217;s name.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where are they from?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I dunno?&mdash;Some pless?&mdash;I nevva yeh dat nem
+biffo?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She made a timid attempt at some word ending in
+&ldquo;walk,&rdquo; and smiled, ready to accept possible ridicule.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Milwaukee?&rdquo; asked the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her palm, smiled brightly, pushed him gently
+with the tip of one finger, and nodded. He had hit the
+nail on the head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What business is he in?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The questioner arose.</p>
+
+<p>She cast a sidelong glance at him with a slight enlargement
+of her eyes, and, compressing her lips, gave her
+head a little, decided shake. The young man was not
+employed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And has no money either, I suppose,&rdquo; said the physician,
+as they started again toward the sick-room.</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged again and smiled; but it came to her
+mind that the Doctor might be considering his own interests,
+and she added, in a whisper:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dey pay me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+She changed places with the husband, and the physician
+and he passed down the stairs together in silence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Doctor?&rdquo; said the young man, as he stood,
+prescription in hand, before the carriage-door.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; responded the physician, &ldquo;you should have
+called me sooner.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The look of agony that came into the stranger&#8217;s face
+caused the Doctor instantly to repent his hard speech.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You don&#8217;t mean&rdquo;&mdash;exclaimed the husband.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no; I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s too late. Get that
+prescription filled and give it to Mrs.&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling,&rdquo; said the young man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let her have perfect quiet,&rdquo; continued the Doctor.
+&ldquo;I shall be back this evening.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And when he returned she had improved.</p>
+
+<p>She was better again the next day, and the next; but
+on the fourth she was in a very critical state. She lay
+quite silent during the Doctor&#8217;s visit, until he, thinking
+he read in her eyes a wish to say something to him alone,
+sent her husband and the quadroon out of the room on
+separate errands at the same moment. And immediately
+she exclaimed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, save my life! You mustn&#8217;t let me die! Save
+me, for my husband&#8217;s sake! To lose all he&#8217;s lost for me,
+and then to lose me too&mdash;save me, Doctor! save me!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m going to do it!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;You shall get
+well!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And what with his skill and her endurance it turned
+out so.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>CONVALESCENCE AND ACQUAINTANCE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>A man&#8217;s clothing is his defence; but with a woman
+all dress is adornment. Nature decrees it; adornment
+is her instinctive delight. And, above all, the
+adorning of a bride; it brings out so charmingly the
+meaning of the thing. Therein centres the gay consent
+of all mankind and womankind to an innocent, sweet
+apostasy from the ranks of both. The value of living&mdash;which
+is loving; the sacredest wonders of life; all that is
+fairest and of best delight in thought, in feeling, yea, in
+substance,&mdash;all are apprehended under the floral crown
+and hymeneal veil. So, when at length one day Mrs.
+Richling said, &ldquo;Madame Z&eacute;nobie, don&#8217;t you think I
+might sit up?&rdquo; it would have been absurd to doubt the
+quadroon&#8217;s willingness to assist her in dressing. True,
+here was neither wreath nor veil, but here was very young
+wifehood, and its re-attiring would be like a proclamation
+of victory over the malady that had striven to put
+two hearts asunder. Her willingness could hardly be
+doubted, though she smiled irresponsibly, and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you thing&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;She spread her eyes and elbows
+suddenly in the manner of a crab, with palms turned
+upward and thumbs outstretched&mdash;&ldquo;Well!&rdquo;&mdash;and so
+dropped them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You don&#8217;t want wait till de doctah comin&#8217;?&rdquo; she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;s coming; it&#8217;s after his time.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Yass?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The woman was silent a moment, and then threw up
+one hand again, with the forefinger lifted alertly forward.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I make a lill fi&#8217; biffo.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She made a fire. Then she helped the convalescent to
+put on a few loose drapings. She made no concealment
+of the enjoyment it gave her, though her words were few,
+and generally were answers to questions; and when at
+length she brought from the wardrobe, pretending not to
+notice her mistake, a loose and much too ample robe of
+woollen and silken stuffs to go over all, she moved as
+though she trod on holy ground, and distinctly felt, herself,
+the thrill with which the convalescent, her young
+eyes beaming their assent, let her arms into the big
+sleeves, and drew about her small form the soft folds of
+her husband&#8217;s morning-gown.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He goin&#8217; to fine that droll,&rdquo; said the quadroon.</p>
+
+<p>The wife&#8217;s face confessed her pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s as much mine as his,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is you mek dat?&rdquo; asked the nurse, as she drew its
+silken cord about the convalescent&#8217;s waist.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Don&#8217;t draw it tight; leave it loose&mdash;so; but
+you can tie the knot tight. That will do; there!&rdquo; She
+smiled broadly. &ldquo;Don&#8217;t tie me in as if you were tying
+me in forever.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Madame Z&eacute;nobie understood perfectly, and, smiling in
+response, did tie it as if she were tying her in forever.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour or so later the quadroon, being&mdash;it may
+have been by chance&mdash;at the street door, ushered in a
+person who simply bowed in silence.</p>
+
+<p>But as he put one foot on the stair he paused, and,
+bending a severe gaze upon her, asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why do you smile?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She folded her hands limply on her bosom, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+drawing a cheek and shoulder toward each other, replied:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nuttin&#8217;&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The questioner&#8217;s severity darkened.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why do you smile at nothing?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She laid the tips of her fingers upon her lips to compose
+them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You din come in you&#8217; carridge. She goin&#8217; to thing
+&#8217;tis Mich&eacute; Reechin.&rdquo; The smile forced its way through
+her fingers. The visitor turned in quiet disdain and went
+upstairs, she following.</p>
+
+<p>At the top he let her pass. She led the way and,
+softly pushing open the chamber-door, entered noiselessly,
+turned, and, as the other stepped across the
+threshold, nestled her hands one on the other at her waist,
+shrank inward with a sweet smile, and waved one palm toward
+the huge, blue-hung mahogany four-poster,&mdash;empty.</p>
+
+<p>The visitor gave a slight double nod and moved on
+across the carpet. Before a small coal fire, in a grate too
+wide for it, stood a broad, cushioned rocking-chair, with
+the corner of a pillow showing over its top. The visitor
+went on around it. The girlish form lay in it, with
+eyes closed, very still; but his professional glance quickly
+detected the false pretence of slumber. A slippered foot
+was still slightly reached out beyond the bright colors of
+the long gown, and toward the brazen edge of the hearth-pan,
+as though the owner had been touching her tiptoe
+against it to keep the chair in gentle motion. One cheek
+was on the pillow; down the other curled a few light
+strands of hair that had escaped from her brow.</p>
+
+<p>Thus for an instant. Then a smile began to wreath
+about the corner of her lips; she faintly stirred, opened
+her eyes&mdash;and lo! Dr. Sevier, motionless, tranquil, and
+grave.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+&ldquo;O Doctor!&rdquo; The blood surged into her face and
+down upon her neck. She put her hands over her eyes,
+and her face into the pillow. &ldquo;O Doctor!&rdquo;&mdash;rising
+to a sitting posture,&mdash;&ldquo;I thought, of course, it was
+my husband.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor replied while she was speaking:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My carriage broke down.&rdquo; He drew a chair toward
+the fireplace, and asked, with his face toward the dying
+fire:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How are you feeling to-day, madam,&mdash;stronger?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; I can almost say I&#8217;m well.&rdquo; The blush was still
+on her face as he turned to receive her answer, but she
+smiled with a bright courageousness that secretly amused
+and pleased him. &ldquo;I thank you, Doctor, for my recovery;
+I certainly should thank you.&rdquo; Her face lighted up
+with that soft radiance which was its best quality, and
+her smile became half introspective as her eyes dropped
+from his, and followed her outstretched hand as it rearranged
+the farther edges of the dressing-gown one upon
+another.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you will take better care of yourself hereafter,
+madam,&rdquo; responded the Doctor, thumping and brushing
+from his knee some specks of mud that he may have got
+when his carriage broke down, &ldquo;I will thank you.
+But&rdquo;&mdash;brush&mdash;brush&mdash;&ldquo;I&mdash;doubt it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think you should?&rdquo; she asked, leaning forward
+from the back of the great chair and letting her
+wrists drop over the front of its broad arms.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I do,&rdquo; said the Doctor, kindly. &ldquo;Why shouldn&#8217;t I?
+This present attack was by your own fault.&rdquo; While he
+spoke he was looking into her eyes, contracted at their
+corners by her slight smile. The face was one of those
+that show not merely that the world is all unknown to
+them, but that it always will be so. It beamed with inquisitive
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+intelligence, and yet had the innocence almost of
+infancy. The Doctor made a discovery; that it was this
+that made her beautiful. &ldquo;She <em>is</em> beautiful,&rdquo; he insisted
+to himself when his critical faculty dissented.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You needn&#8217;t doubt me, Doctor. I&#8217;ll try my best to
+take care. Why, of course I will,&mdash;for John&#8217;s sake.&rdquo;
+She looked up into his face from the tassel she was twisting
+around her finger, touching the floor with her slippers&#8217;
+toe and faintly rocking.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, there&#8217;s a chance there,&rdquo; replied the grave man,
+seemingly not overmuch pleased; &ldquo;I dare say everything
+you do or leave undone is for his sake.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The little wife betrayed for a moment a pained perplexity,
+and then exclaimed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, of course!&rdquo; and waited his answer with bright
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have known women to think of their own sakes,&rdquo;
+was the response.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed, and with unprecedented sparkle replied:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, whatever&#8217;s his sake is my sake. I don&#8217;t see the
+difference. Yes, I see, of course, how there might be a
+difference; but I don&#8217;t see how a woman&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;She
+ceased, still smiling, and, dropping her eyes to her hands,
+slowly stroked one wrist and palm with the tassel of her
+husband&#8217;s robe.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor rose, turned his back to the mantel-piece,
+and looked down upon her. He thought of the great,
+wide world: its thorny ways, its deserts, its bitter waters,
+its unrighteousness, its self-seeking greeds, its weaknesses,
+its under and over reaching, its unfaithfulness; and
+then again of this&mdash;child, thrust all at once a thousand
+miles into it, with never&mdash;so far as he could see&mdash;an
+implement, a weapon, a sense of danger, or a refuge;
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+well pleased with herself, as it seemed, lifted up into the
+bliss of self-obliterating wifehood, and resting in her husband
+with such an assurance of safety and happiness as a
+saint might pray for grace to show to Heaven itself. He
+stood silent, feeling too grim to speak, and presently Mrs.
+Richling looked up with a sudden liveliness of eye and a
+smile that was half apology and half persistence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Doctor, I&#8217;m going to take care of myself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richling, is your father a man of fortune?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My father is not living,&rdquo; said she, gravely. &ldquo;He
+died two years ago. He was the pastor of a small church.
+No, sir; he had nothing but his small salary, except that
+for some years he taught a few scholars. He taught
+me.&rdquo; She brightened up again. &ldquo;I never had any
+other teacher.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor folded his hands behind him and gazed
+abstractedly through the upper sash of the large French
+windows. The street-door was heard to open.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There&#8217;s John,&rdquo; said the convalescent, quickly, and
+the next moment her husband entered. A tired look
+vanished from his face as he saw the Doctor. He hurried
+to grasp his hand, then turned and kissed his wife. The
+physician took up his hat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said the wife, holding the hand he gave her,
+and looking up playfully, with her cheek against the chair-back,
+&ldquo;you surely didn&#8217;t suspect me of being a rich girl,
+did you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all, madam.&rdquo; His emphasis was so pronounced
+that the husband laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There&#8217;s one comfort in the opposite condition, Doctor,&rdquo;
+said the young man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes; you see, it requires no explanation.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Yes, it does,&rdquo; said the physician; &ldquo;it is just as binding
+on people to show good cause why they are poor as it
+is to show good cause why they&#8217;re rich. Good-day,
+madam.&rdquo; The two men went out together. His word
+would have been good-by, but for the fear of fresh
+acknowledgments.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>HARD QUESTIONS.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier had a simple abhorrence of the expression
+of personal sentiment in words. Nothing else
+seemed to him so utterly hollow as the attempt to indicate
+by speech a regard or affection which was not already
+demonstrated in behavior. So far did he keep himself
+aloof from insincerity that he had barely room enough
+left to be candid.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I need not see your wife any more,&rdquo; he said, as he
+went down the stairs with the young husband at his elbow;
+and the young man had learned him well enough not to
+oppress him with formal thanks, whatever might have
+been said or omitted upstairs.</p>
+
+<p>Madame Z&eacute;nobie contrived to be near enough, as they
+reached the lower floor, to come in for a share of the
+meagre adieu. She gave her hand with a dainty grace
+and a bow that might have been imported from Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier paused on the front step, half turned toward
+the open door where the husband still tarried. That was
+not speech; it was scarcely action; but the young man
+understood it and was silent. In truth, the Doctor himself
+felt a pang in this sort of farewell. A physician&#8217;s
+way through the world is paved, I have heard one say,
+with these broken bits of other&#8217;s lives, of all colors and
+all degrees of beauty. In his reminiscences, when he can
+do no better, he gathers them up, and, turning them over
+and over in the darkened chamber of his retrospection,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+sees patterns of delight lit up by the softened rays of bygone
+time. But even this renews the pain of separation,
+and Dr. Sevier felt, right here at this door-step, that, if
+this was to be the last of the Richlings, he would feel the
+twinge of parting every time they came up again in his
+memory.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at the house opposite,&mdash;where there was
+really nothing to look at,&mdash;and at a woman who happened
+to be passing, and who was only like a thousand others
+with whom he had nothing to do.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;what brings you to New Orleans,
+any way?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling leaned his cheek against the door-post.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Simply seeking my fortune, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think it is here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m pretty sure it is; the world owes me a living.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked up.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When did you get the world in your debt?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling lifted his head pleasantly, and let one foot
+down a step.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It owes me a chance to earn a living, doesn&#8217;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I dare say,&rdquo; replied the other; &ldquo;that&#8217;s what it generally
+owes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s all I ask of it,&rdquo; said Richling; &ldquo;if it will let
+us alone we&#8217;ll let it alone.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ve no right to allow either,&rdquo; said the physician.
+&ldquo;No, sir; no,&rdquo; he insisted, as the young man looked incredulous.
+There was a pause. &ldquo;Have you any capital?&rdquo;
+asked the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Capital! No,&rdquo;&mdash;with a low laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But surely you have something to&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&mdash;a little!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor marked the southern &ldquo;Oh.&rdquo; There is no
+&ldquo;O&rdquo; in Milwaukee.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You don&#8217;t find as many vacancies as you expected to
+see, I suppose&mdash;h-m-m?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There was an under-glow of feeling in the young man&#8217;s
+tone as he replied:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was misinformed.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Doctor, staring down-street, &ldquo;you&#8217;ll
+find something. What can you do?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do? Oh, I&#8217;m willing to do anything!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier turned his gaze slowly, with a shade of disappointment
+in it. Richling rallied to his defences.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think I could make a good book-keeper, or correspondent,
+or cashier, or any such&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor interrupted, with the back of his head
+toward his listener, looking this time up the street,
+riverward:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes;&mdash;or a shoe,&mdash;or a barrel,&mdash;h-m-m?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling bent forward with the frown of defective hearing,
+and the physician raised his voice:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Or a cart-wheel&mdash;or a coat?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can make a living,&rdquo; rejoined the other, with a needlessly
+resentful-heroic manner, that was lost, or seemed to
+be, on the physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling,&rdquo;&mdash;the Doctor suddenly faced around and
+fixed a kindly severe glance on him,&mdash;&ldquo;why didn&#8217;t you
+bring letters?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo;&mdash;the young man stopped, looked at his feet,
+and distinctly blushed. &ldquo;I think,&rdquo; he stammered&mdash;&ldquo;it
+seems to me&rdquo;&mdash;he looked up with a faltering eye&mdash;&ldquo;don&#8217;t
+you think&mdash;I think a man ought to be able to
+recommend <em>himself</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor&#8217;s gaze remained so fixed that the self-recommended
+man could not endure it silently.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>I</em> think so,&rdquo; he said, looking down again and swinging
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+his foot. Suddenly he brightened. &ldquo;Doctor, isn&#8217;t
+this your carriage coming?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; I told the boy to drive by here when it was
+mended, and he might find me.&rdquo; The vehicle drew up
+and stopped. &ldquo;Still, Richling,&rdquo; the physician continued,
+as he stepped toward it, &ldquo;you had better get a letter or
+two, yet; you might need them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The door of the carriage clapped to. There seemed a
+touch of vexation in the sound. Richling, too, closed
+his door, but in the soft way of one in troubled meditation.
+Was this a proper farewell? The thought came
+to both men.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Stop a minute!&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier to his driver. He
+leaned out a little at the side of the carriage and looked
+back. &ldquo;Never mind; he has gone in.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The young husband went upstairs slowly and heavily,
+more slowly and heavily than might be explained by his
+all-day unsuccessful tramp after employment. His wife
+still rested in the rocking-chair. He stood against it,
+and she took his hand and stroked it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Tired?&rdquo; she asked, looking up at him. He gazed
+into the languishing fire.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;re not discouraged, are you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Discouraged? N-no. And yet,&rdquo; he said, slowly
+shaking his head, &ldquo;I can&#8217;t see why I don&#8217;t find something
+to do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s because you don&#8217;t hunt for it,&rdquo; said the wife.</p>
+
+<p>He turned upon her with flashing countenance only to
+meet her laugh, and to have his head pulled down to her
+lips. He dropped into the seat left by the physician,
+laid his head back in his knit hands, and crossed his feet
+under the chair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John, I do <em>like</em> Dr. Sevier.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; The questioner looked at the ceiling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, don&#8217;t you like him?&rdquo; asked the wife, and, as
+John smiled, she added, &ldquo;You know you like him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The husband grasped the poker in both hands, dropped
+his elbows upon his knees, and began touching the fire,
+saying slowly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I believe the Doctor thinks I&#8217;m a fool.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s nothing,&rdquo; said the little wife; &ldquo;that&#8217;s only
+because you married me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The poker stopped rattling between the grate-bars; the
+husband looked at the wife. Her eyes, though turned
+partly away, betrayed their mischief. There was a
+deadly pause; then a rush to the assault, a shower of
+Cupid&#8217;s arrows, a quick surrender.</p>
+
+<p>But we refrain. Since ever the world began it is
+Love&#8217;s real, not his sham, battles that are worth the
+telling.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>NESTING.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>A fortnight passed. What with calls on his
+private skill, and appeals to his public zeal, Dr.
+Sevier was always loaded like a dromedary. Just now he
+was much occupied with the affairs of the great American
+people. For all he was the furthest remove from a mere
+party contestant or spoilsman, neither his righteous pugnacity
+nor his human sympathy would allow him to &ldquo;let
+politics alone.&rdquo; Often across this preoccupation there
+flitted a thought of the Richlings.</p>
+
+<p>At length one day he saw them. He had been called
+by a patient, lodging near Madame Z&eacute;nobie&#8217;s house. The
+proximity of the young couple occurred to him at once,
+but he instantly realized the extreme poverty of the chance
+that he should see them. To increase the improbability,
+the short afternoon was near its close,&mdash;an hour when
+people generally were sitting at dinner.</p>
+
+<p>But what a coquette is that same chance! As he was
+driving up at the sidewalk&#8217;s edge before his patient&#8217;s door,
+the Richlings came out of theirs, the husband talking with
+animation, and the wife, all sunshine, skipping up to his
+side, and taking his arm with both hands, and attending
+eagerly to his words.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Heels!&rdquo; muttered the Doctor to himself, for the
+sound of Mrs. Richling&#8217;s gaiters betrayed that fact.
+Heels were an innovation still new enough to rouse the
+resentment of masculine conservatism. But for them
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+she would have pleased his sight entirely. Bonnets, for
+years microscopic, had again become visible, and her
+girlish face was prettily set in one whose flowers and
+ribbon, just joyous and no more, were reflected again in
+the double-skirted silk <em>bar&eacute;ge</em>; while the dark mantilla that
+drooped away from the broad lace collar, shading, without
+hiding, her &ldquo;Parodi&rdquo; waist, seemed made for that
+very street of heavy-grated archways, iron-railed balconies,
+and high lattices. The Doctor even accepted patiently
+the free northern step, which is commonly so repugnant to
+the southern eye.</p>
+
+<p>A heightened gladness flashed into the faces of the
+two young people as they descried the physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-afternoon,&rdquo; they said, advancing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-evening,&rdquo; responded the Doctor, and shook
+hands with each. The meeting was an emphatic pleasure
+to him. He quite forgot the young man&#8217;s lack of credentials.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Out taking the air?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Looking about,&rdquo; said the husband.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Looking up new quarters,&rdquo; said the wife, knitting
+her fingers about her husband&#8217;s elbow and drawing closer
+to it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Were you not comfortable?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; but the rooms are larger than we need.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said the Doctor; and there the conversation
+sank. There was no topic suited to so fleeting a moment,
+and when they had smiled all round again Dr. Sevier
+lifted his hat. Ah, yes, there was one thing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have you found work?&rdquo; asked the Doctor of Richling.</p>
+
+<p>The wife glanced up for an instant into her husband&#8217;s
+face, and then down again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;not yet. If you should hear
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+of anything, Doctor&rdquo;&mdash;He remembered the Doctor&#8217;s
+word about letters, stopped suddenly, and seemed as if
+he might even withdraw the request; but the Doctor
+said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will; I will let you know.&rdquo; He gave his hand to
+Richling. It was on his lips to add: &ldquo;And should you
+need,&rdquo; etc.; but there was the wife at the husband&#8217;s side.
+So he said no more. The pair bowed their cheerful
+thanks; but beside the cheer, or behind it, in the husband&#8217;s
+face, was there not the look of one who feels the
+odds against him? And yet, while the two men&#8217;s hands
+still held each other, the look vanished, and the young
+man&#8217;s light grasp had such firmness in it that, for this
+cause also, the Doctor withheld his patronizing utterance.
+He believed he would himself have resented it had
+he been in Richling&#8217;s place.</p>
+
+<p>The young pair passed on, and that night, as Dr.
+Sevier sat at his fireside, an uncompanioned widower, he
+saw again the young wife look quickly up into her husband&#8217;s
+face, and across that face flit and disappear its
+look of weary dismay, followed by the air of fresh
+courage with which the young couple had said good-by.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I had spoken,&rdquo; he thought to himself; &ldquo;I
+wish I had made the offer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And again:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I hope he didn&#8217;t tell her what I said about the letters.
+Not but I was right, but it&#8217;ll only wound her.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But Richling had told her; he always &ldquo;told her everything;&rdquo;
+she could not possibly have magnified wifehood
+more, in her way, than he did in his. May be both ways
+were faulty; but they were extravagantly, youthfully
+confident that they were not.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Unknown to Dr. Sevier, the Richlings had returned
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+from their search unsuccessful. Finding prices too much
+alike in Custom-house street they turned into Burgundy.
+From Burgundy they passed into Du Maine. As they
+went, notwithstanding disappointments, their mood grew
+gay and gayer. Everything that met the eye was quaint
+and droll to them: men, women, things, places,&mdash;all
+were more or less outlandish. The grotesqueness of the
+African, and especially the French-tongued African, was
+to Mrs. Richling particularly irresistible. Multiplying
+upon each and all of these things was the ludicrousness
+of the pecuniary strait that brought themselves and these
+things into contact. Everything turned to fun.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Richling&#8217;s mirthful mood prompted her by and
+by to begin letting into her inquiries and comments
+covert double meanings, intended for her husband&#8217;s
+private understanding. Thus they crossed Bourbon
+street.</p>
+
+<p>About there their mirth reached a climax; it was in a
+small house, a sad, single-story thing, cowering between
+two high buildings, its eaves, four or five feet deep, overshadowing
+its one street door and window.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Looks like a shade for weak eyes,&rdquo; said the wife.</p>
+
+<p>They had debated whether they should enter it or not.
+He thought no, she thought yes; but he would not insist
+and she would not insist; she wished him to do as he
+thought best, and he wished her to do as she thought
+best, and they had made two or three false starts and
+retreats before they got inside. But they were in there
+at length, and busily engaged inquiring into the availability
+of a small, lace-curtained, front room, when Richling
+took his wife so completely off her guard by
+addressing her as &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; in the tone and manner of
+Dr. Sevier, that she laughed in the face of the householder,
+who had been trying to talk English with a French
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+accent and a hare-lip, and they fled with haste to the
+sidewalk and around the corner, where they could smile
+and smile without being villains.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We must stop this,&rdquo; said the wife, blushing. &ldquo;We
+<em>must</em> stop it. We&#8217;re attracting attention.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And this was true at least as to one ragamuffin, who
+stood on a neighboring corner staring at them. Yet there
+is no telling to what higher pitch their humor might have
+carried them if Mrs. Richling had not been weighted
+down by the constant necessity of correcting her husband&#8217;s
+statement of their wants. This she could do,
+because his exactions were all in the direction of her
+comfort.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, John,&rdquo; she would say each time as they returned
+to the street and resumed their quest, &ldquo;those things cost;
+you can&#8217;t afford them, can you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you can&#8217;t be comfortable without them,&rdquo; he
+would answer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But that&#8217;s not the question, John. We <em>must</em> take
+cheaper lodgings, mustn&#8217;t we?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then John would be silent, and by littles their gayety
+would rise again.</p>
+
+<p>One landlady was so good-looking, so manifestly and
+entirely Caucasian, so melodious of voice, and so modest
+in her account of the rooms she showed, that Mrs. Richling
+was captivated. The back room on the second floor,
+overlooking the inner court and numerous low roofs
+beyond, was suitable and cheap.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the sweet proprietress, turning to Richling,
+who hung in doubt whether it was quite good enough,
+&ldquo;yesseh, I think you be pretty well in that room
+yeh.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
+Yesseh, I&#8217;m shoe you be <em>verrie</em> well; yesseh.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Can we get them at once?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Yes? At once? Yes? Oh, yes?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>No downward inflections from her.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo;&mdash;the wife looked at the husband; he nodded,&mdash;&ldquo;well,
+we&#8217;ll take it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; responded the landlady; &ldquo;well?&rdquo; leaning
+against a bedpost and smiling with infantile diffidence,
+&ldquo;you dunt want no ref&#8217;ence?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said John, generously, &ldquo;oh, no; we can trust
+each other that far, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes?&rdquo; replied the sweet creature; then suddenly
+changing countenance, as though she remembered
+something. &ldquo;But daz de troub&#8217;&mdash;de room not goin&#8217; be
+vacate for t&#8217;ree mont&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She stretched forth her open palms and smiled, with
+one arm still around the bedpost.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Richling, the very statue of
+astonishment, &ldquo;you said just now we could have it at
+once!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dis room? <em>Oh</em>, no; nod <em>dis</em> room.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t see how I could have misunderstood you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The landlady lifted her shoulders, smiled, and clasped
+her hands across each other under her throat. Then
+throwing them apart she said brightly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, I say at Madame La Rose. Me, my room is all
+fill&#8217;. At Madame La Rose, I say, I think you be pritty
+well. I&#8217;m shoe you be verrie well at Madame La Rose.
+I&#8217;m sorry. But you kin paz yondeh&mdash;&#8217;tiz juz ad the
+cawneh? And I am shoe I think you be pritty well at
+Madame La Rose.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She kept up the repetition, though Mrs. Richling,
+incensed, had turned her back, and Richling was saying
+good-day.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She did say the room was vacant!&rdquo; exclaimed the
+little wife, as they reached the sidewalk. But the next
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+moment there came a quick twinkle from her eye, and,
+waving her husband to go on without her, she said, &ldquo;You
+kin paz yondeh; at Madame La Rose I am shoe you be
+pritty sick.&rdquo; Thereupon she took his arm,&mdash;making
+everybody stare and smile to see a lady and gentleman
+arm in arm by daylight,&mdash;and they went merrily on their
+way.</p>
+
+<p>The last place they stopped at was in Royal street.
+The entrance was bad. It was narrow even for those
+two. The walls were stained by dampness, and the smell
+of a totally undrained soil came up through the floor.
+The stairs ascended a few steps, came too near a low
+ceiling, and shot forward into cavernous gloom to find a
+second rising place farther on. But the rooms, when
+reached, were a tolerably pleasant disappointment, and
+the proprietress a person of reassuring amiability.</p>
+
+<p>She bestirred herself in an obliging way that was the
+most charming thing yet encountered. She gratified the
+young people every moment afresh with her readiness to
+understand or guess their English queries and remarks,
+hung her head archly when she had to explain away
+little objections, delivered her No sirs with gravity and
+her Yes sirs with bright eagerness, shook her head slowly
+with each negative announcement, and accompanied her
+affirmations with a gracious bow and a smile full of rice
+powder.</p>
+
+<p>She rendered everything so agreeable, indeed, that it
+almost seemed impolite to inquire narrowly into matters,
+and when the question of price had to come up it was
+really difficult to bring it forward, and Richling quite lost
+sight of the economic rules to which he had silently
+acceded in the <em>Rue Du Maine</em>.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And you will carpet the floor?&rdquo; he asked, hovering
+off of the main issue.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Put coppit? Ah! cettainlee!&rdquo; she replied, with a
+lovely bow and a wave of the hand toward Mrs. Richling,
+whom she had already given the same assurance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; responded the little wife, with a captivated
+smile, and nodded to her husband.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We want to get the decentest thing that is cheap,&rdquo; he
+said, as the three stood close together in the middle of
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>The landlady flushed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, John,&rdquo; said the wife, quickly, &ldquo;don&#8217;t you
+know what we said?&rdquo; Then, turning to the proprietress,
+she hurried to add, &ldquo;We want the cheapest thing that is
+decent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the landlady had not waited for the correction.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Dis</em>sent! You want somesin <em>dis</em>sent!&rdquo; She moved
+a step backward on the floor, scoured and smeared with
+brick-dust, her ire rising visibly at every heart-throb, and
+pointing her outward-turned open hand energetically
+downward, added:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;Tis yeh!&rdquo; She breathed hard. &ldquo;<em>Mais</em>, no; you
+don&#8217;t <em>want</em> somesin dissent. No!&rdquo; She leaned forward
+interrogatively: &ldquo;You want somesin tchip?&rdquo; She threw
+both elbows to the one side, cast her spread hands off in
+the same direction, drew the cheek on that side down into
+the collar-bone, raised her eyebrows, and pushed her upper
+lip with her lower, scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment her ear caught the words of the wife&#8217;s
+apologetic amendment. They gave her fresh wrath and
+new opportunity. For her new foe was a woman, and a
+woman trying to speak in defence of the husband against
+whose arm she clung.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah-h-h!&rdquo; Her chin went up; her eyes shot lightning;
+she folded her arms fiercely, and drew herself to her
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+best height; and, as Richling&#8217;s eyes shot back in rising
+indignation, cried:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ziss pless? &#8217;Tis not ze pless! Zis pless&mdash;is diss&#8217;nt
+pless! I am diss&#8217;nt woman, me! Fo w&#8217;at you come in
+yeh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My dear madam! My husband&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dass you&#8217; uzban&#8217;?&rdquo; pointing at him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; cried the two Richlings at once.</p>
+
+<p>The woman folded her arms again, turned half-aside,
+and, lifting her eyes to the ceiling, simply remarked, with
+an ecstatic smile:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; and left the pair, red with exasperation,
+to find the street again through the darkening cave of the
+stair-way.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It was still early the next morning, when Richling entered
+his wife&#8217;s apartment with an air of brisk occupation.
+She was pinning her brooch at the bureau glass.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;put something on and come
+see what I&#8217;ve found! The queerest, most romantic old
+thing in the city; the most comfortable&mdash;and the cheapest!
+Here, is this the wardrobe key? To save time I&#8217;ll
+get your bonnet.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, no!&rdquo; cried the laughing wife, confronting
+him with sparkling eyes, and throwing herself before the
+wardrobe; &ldquo;I can&#8217;t let you touch my bonnet!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There is a limit, it seems, even to a wife&#8217;s subserviency.</p>
+
+<p>However, in a very short time afterward, by the feminine
+measure, they were out in the street, and people were
+again smiling at the pretty pair to see her arm in his, and
+she actually <em>keeping step</em>. &#8217;Twas very funny.</p>
+
+<p>As they went John described his discovery: A pair of
+huge, solid green gates immediately on the sidewalk, in
+the dull fa&ccedil;ade of a tall, red brick building with old
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+carved vinework on its window and door frames. Hinges
+a yard long on the gates; over the gates a semi-circular
+grating of iron bars an inch in diameter; in one of these
+gates a wicket, and on the wicket a heavy, battered, highly
+burnished brass knocker. A short-legged, big-bodied, and
+very black slave to usher one through the wicket into a
+large, wide, paved corridor, where from the middle joist
+overhead hung a great iron lantern. Big double doors at
+the far end, standing open, flanked with diamond-paned
+side-lights of colored glass, and with an arch at the same,
+fan-shaped, above. Beyond these doors and showing
+through them, a flagged court, bordered all around by a
+narrow, raised parterre under pomegranate and fruit-laden
+orange, and over-towered by vine-covered and latticed
+walls, from whose ragged eaves vagabond weeds laughed
+down upon the flowers of the parterre below, robbed of late
+and early suns. Stairs old fashioned, broad; rooms, their
+choice of two; one looking down into the court, the other
+into the street; furniture faded, capacious; ceilings high;
+windows, each opening upon its own separate small balcony,
+where, instead of balustrades, was graceful iron
+scroll-work, centered by some long-dead owner&#8217;s monogram
+two feet in length; and on the balcony next the division
+wall, close to another on the adjoining property, a quarter
+circle of iron-work set like a blind-bridle, and armed with
+hideous prongs for house-breakers to get impaled on.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, in there,&rdquo; said Richling, softly, as they hurried
+in, &ldquo;we&#8217;ll be hid from the whole world, and the whole
+world from us.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The wife&#8217;s answer was only the upward glance of her
+blue eyes into his, and a faint smile.</p>
+
+<p>The place was all it had been described to be, and
+more,&mdash;except in one particular.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And my husband tells me&rdquo;&mdash;The owner of said
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+husband stood beside him, one foot a little in advance of
+the other, her folded parasol hanging down the front of
+her skirt from her gloved hands, her eyes just returning
+to the landlady&#8217;s from an excursion around the ceiling,
+and her whole appearance as fresh as the pink flowers
+that nestled between her brow and the rim of its precious
+covering. She smiled as she began her speech, but not
+enough to spoil what she honestly believed to be a very
+business-like air and manner. John had quietly dropped
+out of the negotiations, and she felt herself put upon her
+mettle as his agent. &ldquo;And my husband tells me the price
+of this front room is ten dollars a month.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Munse?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The respondent was a very white, corpulent woman,
+who constantly panted for breath, and was everywhere
+sinking down into chairs, with her limp, unfortified skirt
+dropping between her knees, and her hands pressed on
+them exhaustedly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Munse?&rdquo; She turned from husband to wife, and
+back again, a glance of alarmed inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>Mary tried her hand at French.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; <em>oui, madame</em>. Ten dollah the month&mdash;<em>le mois</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Intelligence suddenly returned. Madame made a beautiful,
+silent O with her mouth and two others with her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah <em>non</em>! By munse? No, madame. Ah-h! impossybl&#8217;!
+By <em>wick</em>, yes; ten dollah de wick! Ah!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She touched her bosom with the wide-spread fingers of
+one hand and threw them toward her hearers.</p>
+
+<p>The room-hunters got away, yet not so quickly but they
+heard behind and above them her scornful laugh, addressed
+to the walls of the empty room.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two later they secured an apartment, cheap,
+and&mdash;morally&mdash;decent; but otherwise&mdash;ah!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>DISAPPEARANCE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It was the year of a presidential campaign. The party
+that afterward rose to overwhelming power was, for
+the first time, able to put its candidate fairly abreast of
+his competitors. The South was all afire. Rising up or
+sitting down, coming or going, week-day or Sabbath-day,
+eating or drinking, marrying or burying, the talk was all
+of slavery, abolition, and a disrupted country.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier became totally absorbed in the issue. He
+was too unconventional a thinker ever to find himself in
+harmony with all the declarations of any party, and yet it
+was a necessity of his nature to be in the <em>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</em>. He had
+his own array of facts, his own peculiar deductions; his
+own special charges of iniquity against this party and of
+criminal forbearance against that; his own startling political
+economy; his own theory of rights; his own interpretations
+of the Constitution; his own threats and
+warnings; his own exhortations, and his own prophecies,
+of which one cannot say all have come true. But he
+poured them forth from the mighty heart of one who
+loved his country, and sat down with a sense of duty fulfilled
+and wiped his pale forehead while the band played
+a polka.</p>
+
+<p>It hardly need be added that he proposed to dispense
+with politicians, or that, when &ldquo;the boys&rdquo; presently
+counted him into their party team for campaign haranguing,
+he let them clap the harness upon him and splashed
+along in the mud with an intention as pure as snow.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Hurrah for&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Whom it is no matter now. It was not Fremont.
+Buchanan won the race. Out went the lights, down came
+the platforms, rockets ceased to burst; it was of no use
+longer to &ldquo;Wait for the wagon&rdquo;; &ldquo;Old Dan Tucker&rdquo;
+got &ldquo;out of the way,&rdquo; small boys were no longer fellow-citizens,
+dissolution was postponed, and men began to
+have an eye single to the getting of money.</p>
+
+<p>A mercantile friend of Dr. Sevier had a vacant clerkship
+which it was necessary to fill. A bright recollection
+flashed across the Doctor&#8217;s memory.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Narcisse!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go to Number 40 Custom-house street and inquire
+for Mr. Fledgeling; or, if he isn&#8217;t in, for Mrs. Fledge&mdash;humph!
+Richling, I mean; I&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse laughed aloud.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ha-ha-ha! daz de way, sometime&#8217;! My hant she got
+a honcl&#8217;&mdash;he says, once &#8217;pon a time&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind! Go at once!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All a-ight, seh!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Give him this card&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;These people&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, wait till you get your errand, can&#8217;t you?
+These&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;These people want to see him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All a-ight, seh!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse threw open and jerked off a worsted jacket,
+took his coat down from a peg, transferred a snowy
+handkerchief from the breast-pocket of the jacket to that
+of the coat, felt in his pantaloons to be sure that he had
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+his match-case and cigarettes, changed his shoes, got his
+hat from a high nail by a little leap, and put it on a head
+as handsome as Apollo&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctah Seveeah,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;in fact, I fine that a
+ve&#8217;y gen&#8217;lemany young man, that Mistoo Itchlin, weely,
+Doctah.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor murmured to himself from the letter he was
+writing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, <em>au &#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>, Doctah; I&#8217;m goin&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Out in the corridor he turned and jerked his chin up
+and curled his lip, brought a match and cigarette together
+in the lee of his hollowed hand, took one first, fond draw,
+and went down the stairs as if they were on fire.</p>
+
+<p>At Canal street he fell in with two noble fellows of his
+own circle, and the three went around by way of Exchange
+alley to get a glass of soda at McCloskey&#8217;s old down-town
+stand. His two friends were out of employment at the
+moment,&mdash;making him, consequently, the interesting
+figure in the trio as he inveighed against his master.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, phooh!&rdquo; he said, indicating the end of his speech
+by dropping the stump of his cigarette into the sand on
+the floor and softly spitting upon it,&mdash;&ldquo;<em>le</em> Shylock <em>de la rue</em>
+Carondelet!&rdquo;&mdash;and then in English, not to lose the admiration
+of the Irish waiter:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He don&#8217;t want to haugment me! I din hass &#8217;im, because
+the &#8217;lection. But you juz wait till dat firce of
+Jannawerry!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The waiter swathed the zinc counter, and inquired why
+Narcisse did not make his demands at the present
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;W&#8217;y I don&#8217;t hass &#8217;im now? Because w&#8217;en I hass &#8217;im
+he know&#8217; he&#8217;s got to <em>do</em> it! You thing I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to kill
+myseff workin&#8217;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Nobody said yes, and by and by he found himself alive
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+in the house of Madame Z&eacute;nobie. The furniture was
+being sold at auction, and the house was crowded with
+all sorts and colors of men and women. A huge sideboard
+was up for sale as he entered, and the crier was
+crying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Faw-ty-fi&#8217; dollah! faw-ty-fi&#8217; dollah, ladies an&#8217; gentymen!
+On&#8217;y faw-ty-fi&#8217; dollah fo&#8217; thad magniffyzan sidebode!
+<em>Quarante-cinque piastres, seulement, messieurs!
+Les</em> knobs <em>vaut bien cette prix</em>! Gentymen, de knobs is
+worse de money! Ladies, if you don&#8217; stop dat talkin&#8217;, I
+will not sell one thing mo&#8217;! <em>Et quarante cinque piastres</em>&mdash;faw-ty-fi&#8217;
+dollah&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Fifty!&rdquo; cried Narcisse, who had not owned that much
+at one time since his father was a constable; realizing
+which fact, he slipped away upstairs and found Madame
+Z&eacute;nobie half crazed at the slaughter of her assets.</p>
+
+<p>She sat in a chair against the wall of the room the Richlings
+had occupied, a spectacle of agitated dejection.
+Here and there about the apartment, either motionless in
+chairs, or moving noiselessly about, and pulling and pushing
+softly this piece of furniture and that, were numerous
+vulture-like persons of either sex, waiting the up-coming
+of the auctioneer. Narcisse approached her briskly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Madame Z&eacute;nobie!&rdquo;&mdash;he spoke in French&mdash;&ldquo;is
+it you who lives here? Don&#8217;t you remember me?
+What! No? You don&#8217;t remember how I used to steal figs
+from you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The vultures slowly turned their heads. Madame
+Z&eacute;nobie looked at him in a dazed way.</p>
+
+<p>No, she did not remember. So many had robbed her&mdash;all
+her life.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you don&#8217;t look at me, Madame Z&eacute;nobie. Don&#8217;t
+you remember, for example, once pulling a little boy&mdash;as
+little as <em>that</em>&mdash;out of your fig-tree, and taking the half of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+a shingle, split lengthwise, in your hand, and his head
+under your arm,&mdash;swearing you would do it if you died
+for it,&mdash;and bending him across your knee,&rdquo;&mdash;he began
+a vigorous but graceful movement of the right arm, which
+few members of our fallen race could fail to recognize,&mdash;&ldquo;and
+you don&#8217;t remember me, my old friend?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She looked up into the handsome face with a faint
+smile of affirmation. He laughed with delight.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The shingle was <em>that</em> wide. Ah! Madame Z&eacute;nobie,
+you did it well!&rdquo; He softly smote the memorable spot,
+first with one hand and then with the other, shrinking forward
+spasmodically with each contact, and throwing utter
+woe into his countenance. The general company smiled.
+He suddenly put on great seriousness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Madame Z&eacute;nobie, I hope your furniture is selling
+well?&rdquo; He still spoke in French.</p>
+
+<p>She cast her eyes upward pleadingly, caught her breath,
+threw the back of her hand against her temple, and dashed
+it again to her lap, shaking her head.</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse was sorry.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have been doing what I could for you, downstairs,&mdash;running
+up the prices of things. I wish I could stay to
+do more, for the sake of old times. I came to see Mr.
+Richling, Madame Z&eacute;nobie; is he in? Dr. Sevier wants
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling? Why, the Richlings did not live there! The
+Doctor must know it. Why should she be made responsible
+for this mistake? It was his oversight. They had
+moved long ago. Dr. Sevier had seen them looking for
+apartments. Where did they live now? Ah, me! <em>she</em>
+could not tell. Did Mr. Richling owe the Doctor something?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Owe? Certainly not. The Doctor&mdash;on the contrary&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+Ah! well, indeed, she didn&#8217;t know where they lived, it
+is true; but the fact was, Mr. Richling happened to be
+there just then!&mdash;<em>&agrave;-&ccedil;&#8217;t&#8217;eure</em>! He had come to get a few
+trifles left by his madame.</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse made instant search. Richling was not on the
+upper floor. He stepped to the landing and looked down.
+There he went!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo &#8217;Itchlin!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling failed to hear. Sharper ears might have served
+him better. He passed out by the street door. Narcisse
+stopped the auction by the noise he made coming downstairs
+after him. He had some trouble with the front
+door,&mdash;lost time there, but got out.</p>
+
+<p>Richling was turning a corner. Narcisse ran there and
+looked; looked up&mdash;looked down&mdash;looked into every
+store and shop on either side of the way clear back to
+Canal street; crossed it, went back to the Doctor&#8217;s office,
+and reported. If he omitted such details as having seen
+and then lost sight of the man he sought, it may have
+been in part from the Doctor&#8217;s indisposition to give him
+speaking license. The conclusion was simple: the Richlings
+could not be found.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The months of winter passed. No sign of them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They&#8217;ve gone back home,&rdquo; the Doctor often said to
+himself. How much better that was than to stay where
+they had made a mistake in venturing, and become the
+nurslings of patronizing strangers! He gave his admiration
+free play, now that they were quite gone. True
+courage that Richling had&mdash;courage to retreat when retreat
+is best! And his wife&mdash;ah! what a reminder of&mdash;hush,
+memory!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, they must have gone home!&rdquo; The Doctor spoke
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+very positively, because, after all, he was haunted by
+doubt.</p>
+
+<p>One spring morning he uttered a soft exclamation as he
+glanced at his office-slate. The first notice on it read:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Please call as soon as you can at number 292 St. Mary street,
+corner of Prytania. Lower corner&mdash;opposite the asylum.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 70%;" class="smcap">John Richling</span>.</p></div>
+
+<p>The place was far up in the newer part of the American
+quarter. The signature had the appearance as if the
+writer had begun to write some other name, and had
+changed it to Richling.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>A QUESTION OF BOOK-KEEPING.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>A day or two after Narcisse had gone looking for
+Richling at the house of Madame Z&eacute;nobie, he might
+have found him, had he known where to search, in
+Tchoupitoulas street.</p>
+
+<p>Whoever remembers that thoroughfare as it was in
+those days, when the commodious &ldquo;cotton-float&rdquo; had not
+quite yet come into use, and Poydras and other streets
+did not so vie with Tchoupitoulas in importance as they
+do now, will recall a scene of commercial hurly-burly that
+inspired much pardonable vanity in the breast of the
+utilitarian citizen. Drays, drays, drays! Not the light
+New York things; but big, heavy, solid affairs, many of
+them drawn by two tall mules harnessed tandem. Drays
+by threes and by dozens, drays in opposing phalanxes,
+drays in long processions, drays with all imaginable kinds
+of burden; cotton in bales, piled as high as the omnibuses;
+leaf tobacco in huge hogsheads; cases of linens and silks;
+stacks of raw-hides; crates of cabbages; bales of prints
+and of hay; interlocked heaps of blue and red ploughs;
+bags of coffee, and spices, and corn; bales of bagging;
+barrels, casks, and tierces; whisky, pork, onions, oats,
+bacon, garlic, molasses, and other delicacies; rice, sugar,&mdash;what
+was there not? Wines of France and Spain in
+pipes, in baskets, in hampers, in octaves; queensware
+from England; cheeses, like cart-wheels, from Switzerland;
+almonds, lemons, raisins, olives, boxes of citron,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+casks of chains; specie from Vera Cruz; cries of drivers,
+cracking of whips, rumble of wheels, tremble of earth,
+frequent gorge and stoppage. It seemed an idle tale to
+say that any one could be lacking bread and raiment.
+&ldquo;We are a great city,&rdquo; said the patient foot-passengers,
+waiting long on street corners for opportunity to cross the
+way.</p>
+
+<p>On one of these corners paused Richling. He had not
+found employment, but you could not read that in his
+face; as well as he knew himself, he had come forward
+into the world prepared amiably and patiently to be, to
+do, to suffer anything, provided it was not wrong or
+ignominious. He did not see that even this is not enough
+in this rough world; nothing had yet taught him that one
+must often gently suffer rudeness and wrong. As to
+what constitutes ignominy he had a very young man&#8217;s&mdash;and,
+shall we add? a very American&mdash;idea. He could
+not have believed, had he been told, how many establishments
+he had passed by, omitting to apply in them for
+employment. He little dreamed he had been too select.
+He had entered not into any house of the Samaritans, to
+use a figure; much less, to speak literally, had he gone
+to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. Mary, hiding
+away in uncomfortable quarters a short stone&#8217;s throw
+from Madame Z&eacute;nobie&#8217;s, little imagined that, in her broad
+irony about his not hunting for employment, there was
+really a tiny seed of truth. She felt sure that two or
+three persons who had seemed about to employ him had
+failed to do so because they detected the defect in his
+hearing, and in one or two cases she was right.</p>
+
+<p>Other persons paused on the same corner where Richling
+stood, under the same momentary embarrassment.
+One man, especially busy-looking, drew very near him.
+And then and there occurred this simple accident,&mdash;that
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+at last he came in contact with the man who had work to
+give him. This person good-humoredly offered an
+impatient comment on their enforced delay. Richling
+answered in sympathetic spirit, and the first speaker responded
+with a question:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Stranger in the city?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Buying goods for up-country?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was a pleasant feature of New Orleans life that
+sociability to strangers on the street was not the exclusive
+prerogative of gamblers&#8217; decoys.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; I&#8217;m looking for employment.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; said the man, and moved away a little. But
+in a moment Richling, becoming aware that his questioner
+was glancing all over him with critical scrutiny, turned,
+and the man spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;D&#8217;you keep books?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Just then a way opened among the vehicles; and the
+man, young and muscular, darted into it, and Richling
+followed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I <em>can</em> keep books,&rdquo; he said, as they reached the
+farther curb-stone.</p>
+
+<p>The man seized him by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;D&#8217;you see that pile of codfish and herring where that
+tall man is at work yonder with a marking-pot and brush?
+Well, just beyond there is a boarding-house, and then a
+hardware store; you can hear them throwing down sheets
+of iron. Here; you can see the sign. See? Well, the
+next is my store. Go in there&mdash;upstairs into the office&mdash;and
+wait till I come.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling bowed and went. In the office he sat down
+and waited what seemed a very long time. Could he have
+misunderstood? For the man did not come. There was
+a person sitting at a desk on the farther side of the office,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+writing, who had not lifted his head from first to last,
+Richling said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Can you tell me when the proprietor will be in?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The writer&#8217;s eyes rose, and dropped again upon his
+writing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do you want with him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He asked me to wait here for him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Better wait, then.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Just then in came the merchant. Richling rose, and
+he uttered a rude exclamation:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>I</em> forgot you completely! Where did you say you
+kept books at, last?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve not kept anybody&#8217;s books yet, but I can do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The merchant&#8217;s response was cold and prompt. He
+did not look at Richling, but took a sample vial of molasses
+from a dirty mantel-piece and lifted it between his
+eyes and the light, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You can&#8217;t do any such thing. I don&#8217;t want you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Richling, so sharply that the merchant
+looked round, &ldquo;if you don&#8217;t want me I don&#8217;t want you;
+but you mustn&#8217;t attempt to tell me that what I say is not
+true!&rdquo; He had stepped forward as he began to speak,
+but he stopped before half his words were uttered, and
+saw his folly. Even while his voice still trembled with
+passion and his head was up, he colored with mortification.
+That feeling grew no less when his offender simply
+looked at him, and the man at the desk did not raise his
+eyes. It rather increased when he noticed that both of
+them were young&mdash;as young as he.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t doubt your truthfulness,&rdquo; said the merchant,
+marking the effect of his forbearance; &ldquo;but you ought to
+know you can&#8217;t come in and take charge of a large set of
+books in the midst of a busy season, when you&#8217;ve never
+kept books before.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know it at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I do,&rdquo; said the merchant, still more coldly than
+before. &ldquo;There are my books,&rdquo; he added, warming, and
+pointed to three great canvassed and black-initialled volumes
+standing in a low iron safe, &ldquo;left only yesterday in
+such a snarl, by a fellow who had &lsquo;never kept books, but
+knew how,&rsquo; that I shall have to open another set! After
+this I shall have a book-keeper who has kept books.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He turned away.</p>
+
+<p>Some weeks afterward Richling recalled vividly a
+thought that had struck him only faintly at this time:
+that, beneath much superficial severity and energy, there
+was in this establishment a certain looseness of management.
+It may have been this half-recognized thought that
+gave him courage, now, to say, advancing another step:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;One word, if you please.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s no use, my friend.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It may be.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get an experienced book-keeper for your new set of
+books&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You can bet your bottom dollar!&rdquo; said the merchant,
+turning again and running his hands down into his lower
+pockets. &ldquo;And even he&#8217;ll have as much as he can do&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That is just what I wanted you to say,&rdquo; interrupted
+Richling, trying hard to smile; &ldquo;then you can let me
+straighten up the old set.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Give a new hand the work of an expert!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The merchant almost laughed out. He shook his head
+and was about to say more, when Richling persisted:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If I don&#8217;t do the work to your satisfaction don&#8217;t pay
+me a cent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I never make that sort of an arrangement; no, sir!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+Unfortunately it had not been Richling&#8217;s habit to show
+this pertinacity, else life might have been easier to him as
+a problem; but these two young men, his equals in age,
+were casting amused doubts upon his ability to make good
+his professions. The case was peculiar. He reached a
+hand out toward the books.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let me look over them for one day; if I don&#8217;t convince
+you the next morning in five minutes that I can
+straighten them I&#8217;ll leave them without a word.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The merchant looked down an instant, and then turned
+to the man at the desk.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do you think of that, Sam?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Sam set his elbows upon the desk, took the small end
+of his pen-holder in his hands and teeth, and, looking up,
+said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know; you might&mdash;try him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What did you say your name was?&rdquo; asked the other,
+again facing Richling. &ldquo;Ah, yes! Who are your references,
+Mr. Richmond?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir?&rdquo; Richling leaned slightly forward and turned
+his ear.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I say, who knows you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nobody.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nobody! Where are you from?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Milwaukee.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The merchant tossed out his arm impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I can&#8217;t do that kind o&#8217; business.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He turned abruptly, went to his desk, and, sitting
+down half-hidden by it, took up an open letter.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I bought that coffee, Sam,&rdquo; he said, rising again and
+moving farther away.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Um-hum,&rdquo; said Sam; and all was still.</p>
+
+<p>Richling stood expecting every instant to turn on the
+next and go. Yet he went not. Under the dusty front
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+windows of the counting-room the street was roaring
+below. Just beyond a glass partition at his back a great
+windlass far up under the roof was rumbling with the
+descent of goods from a hatchway at the end of its tense
+rope. Salesmen were calling, trucks were trundling,
+shipping clerks and porters were replying. One brawny
+fellow he saw, through the glass, take a herring from a
+broken box, and stop to feed it to a sleek, brindled mouser.
+Even the cat was valued; but he&mdash;he stood there absolutely
+zero. He saw it. He saw it as he never had seen
+it before in his life. This truth smote him like a javelin:
+that all this world wants is a man&#8217;s permission to do
+without him. Right then it was that he thought he
+swallowed all his pride; whereas he only tasted its bitter
+brine as like a wave it took him up and lifted him forward
+bodily. He strode up to the desk beyond which stood
+the merchant, with the letter still in his hand, and
+said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve not gone yet! I may have to be turned off by
+you, but not in this manner!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The merchant looked around at him with a smile of
+surprise, mixed with amusement and commendation, but
+said nothing. Richling held out his open hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t ask you to trust me. Don&#8217;t trust me. Try
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He looked distressed. He was not begging, but he
+seemed to feel as though he were.</p>
+
+<p>The merchant dropped his eyes again upon the letter,
+and in that attitude asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do you say, Sam?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He can&#8217;t hurt anything,&rdquo; said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>The merchant looked suddenly at Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;re not from Milwaukee. You&#8217;re a Southern
+man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+Richling changed color.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I said Milwaukee.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the merchant, &ldquo;I hardly know. Come
+and see me further about it to-morrow morning. I
+haven&#8217;t time to talk now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&ldquo;Take a seat,&rdquo; he said, the next morning, and drew
+up a chair sociably before the returned applicant.
+&ldquo;Now, suppose I was to give you those books, all in confusion
+as they are, what would you do first of all?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary fortunately had asked the same question the
+night before, and her husband was entirely ready with an
+answer which they had studied out in bed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I should send your deposit-book to bank to be
+balanced, and, without waiting for it, I should begin to
+take a trial-balance off the books. If I didn&#8217;t get one
+pretty soon, I&#8217;d drop that for the time being, and turn
+in and render the accounts of everybody on the books,
+asking them to examine and report.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said the merchant, carelessly; &ldquo;we&#8217;ll
+try you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir?&rdquo; Richling bent his ear.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>All right; we&#8217;ll try you!</em> I don&#8217;t care much about
+recommendations. I generally most always make up my
+opinion about a man from looking at him. I&#8217;m that sort
+of a man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He smiled with inordinate complacency.</p>
+
+<p>So, week by week, as has been said already, the winter
+passed,&mdash;Richling on one side of the town, hidden away
+in his work, and Dr. Sevier on the other, very positive
+that the &ldquo;young pair&rdquo; must have returned to Milwaukee.</p>
+
+<p>At length the big books were readjusted in all their
+hundreds of pages, were balanced, and closed. Much
+satisfaction was expressed; but another man had meantime
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+taken charge of the new books,&mdash;one who influenced
+business, and Richling had nothing to do but put on his
+hat.</p>
+
+<p>However, the house cheerfully recommended him to a
+neighboring firm, which also had disordered books to be
+righted; and so more weeks passed. Happy weeks!
+Happy days! Ah, the joy of them! John bringing home
+money, and Mary saving it!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, John, it seems such a pity not to have stayed
+with A, B, &amp; Co.; doesn&#8217;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t think so. I don&#8217;t think they&#8217;ll last much
+longer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And when he brought word that A, B, &amp; Co. had gone
+into a thousand pieces Mary was convinced that she had
+a very far-seeing husband.</p>
+
+<p>By and by, at Richling&#8217;s earnest and restless desire,
+they moved their lodgings again. And thus we return by
+a circuit to the morning when Dr. Sevier, taking up his
+slate, read the summons that bade him call at the corner
+of St. Mary and Prytania streets.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>WHEN THE WIND BLOWS.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The house stands there to-day. A small, pinched,
+frame, ground-floor-and-attic, double tenement, with
+its roof sloping toward St. Mary street and overhanging
+its two door-steps that jut out on the sidewalk. There
+the Doctor&#8217;s carriage stopped, and in its front room he
+found Mary in bed again, as ill as ever. A humble German
+woman, living in the adjoining half of the house,
+was attending to the invalid&#8217;s wants, and had kept her
+daughter from the public school to send her to the
+apothecary with the Doctor&#8217;s prescription.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It is the poor who help the poor,&rdquo; thought the
+physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is this your home?&rdquo; he asked the woman softly, as
+he sat down by the patient&#8217;s pillow. He looked about
+upon the small, cheaply furnished room, full of the neat
+makeshifts of cramped housewifery.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s mine,&rdquo; whispered Mary. Even as she lay there
+in peril of her life, and flattened out as though Juggernaut
+had rolled over her, her eyes shone with happiness
+and scintillated as the Doctor exclaimed in undertone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yours!&rdquo; He laid his hand upon her forehead.
+&ldquo;Where is Mr. Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;At the office.&rdquo; Her eyes danced with delight. She
+would have begun, then and there, to tell him all that had
+happened,&mdash;&ldquo;had taken care of herself all along,&rdquo; she
+said, &ldquo;until they began to move. In moving, had been
+<em>obliged</em> to overwork&mdash;hardly <em>fixed</em> yet&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+But the Doctor gently checked her and bade her be
+quiet.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will,&rdquo; was the faint reply; &ldquo;I will; but&mdash;just
+one thing, Doctor, please let me say.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes; I know; he&#8217;d be here, only you wouldn&#8217;t
+let him stay away from his work.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She smiled assent, and he smiled in return.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Business is business,&rsquo;&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>She turned a quick, sparkling glance of affirmation, as
+if she had lately had some trouble to maintain that
+ancient truism. She was going to speak again, but the
+Doctor waved his hand downward soothingly toward the
+restless form and uplifted eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; she whispered, and closed them.</p>
+
+<p>The next day she was worse. The physician found
+himself, to use his words, &ldquo;only the tardy attendant of
+offended nature.&rdquo; When he dropped his finger-ends
+gently upon her temple she tremblingly grasped his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ll save me?&rdquo; she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;we&#8217;ll do that&mdash;the Lord helping us.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A glad light shone from her face as he uttered the
+latter clause. Whereat he made haste to add:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t pray, but I&#8217;m sure you do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She silently pressed the hand she still held.</p>
+
+<p>On Sunday he found Richling at the bedside. Mary
+had improved considerably in two or three days. She
+lay quite still as they talked, only shifting her glance
+softly from one to the other as one and then the other
+spoke. The Doctor heard with interest Richling&#8217;s full
+account of all that had occurred since he had met them
+last together. Mary&#8217;s eyes filled with merriment when
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+John told the droller part of their experiences in the
+hard quarters from which they had only lately removed.
+But the Doctor did not so much as smile. Richling
+finished, and the physician was silent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, we&#8217;re getting along,&rdquo; said Richling, stroking the
+small, weak hand that lay near him on the coverlet.
+But still the Doctor kept silence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Richling, very quietly, looking at
+his wife, &ldquo;we mustn&#8217;t be surprised at a backset now and
+then. But we&#8217;re getting on.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary turned her eyes toward the Doctor. Was he not
+going to assent at all? She seemed about to speak. He
+bent his ear, and she said, with a quiet smile:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;When the wind blows, the cradle will rock.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The physician gave only a heavy-eyed &ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; and
+a faint look of amusement.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What did she say?&rdquo; said Richling; the words had
+escaped his ear. The Doctor repeated it, and Richling,
+too, smiled.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was a good speech,&mdash;why not? But the patient
+also smiled, and turned her eyes toward the wall with a
+disconcerted look, as if the smile might end in tears.
+For herein lay the very difficulty that always brought the
+Doctor&#8217;s carriage to the door,&mdash;the cradle would not
+rock.</p>
+
+<p>For a few days more that carriage continued to appear,
+and then ceased. Richling dropped in one morning at
+Number 3&frac12; Carondelet, and settled his bill with Narcisse.</p>
+
+<p>The young Creole was much pleased to be at length
+brought into actual contact with a man of his own years,
+who, without visible effort, had made an impression on
+Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>Until the money had been paid and the bill receipted
+nothing more than a formal business phrase or two
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+passed between them. But as Narcisse delivered the
+receipted bill, with an elaborate gesture of courtesy, and
+Richling began to fold it for his pocket, the Creole remarked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I &#8217;ope you will excuse the &#8217;an&#8217;-a-&#8217;iting.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling reopened the paper; the penmanship was
+beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you ever write better than this?&rdquo; he asked.
+&ldquo;Why, I wish I could write half as well!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; I do not fine that well a-&#8217;itten. I cannot see &#8217;ow
+that is,&mdash;I nevva &#8217;ite to the satizfagtion of my abil&#8217;ty
+soon in the mawnin&#8217;s. I am dest&#8217;oying my chi&#8217;og&#8217;aphy
+at that desk yeh.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed?&rdquo; said Richling; &ldquo;why, I should think&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh, &#8217;tis the tooth. But consunning the chi&#8217;og&#8217;aphy,
+Mistoo Itchlin, I &#8217;ave descovvud one thing to a
+maul cettainty, and that is, if I &#8217;ave something to &#8217;ite to
+a young lady, I always dizguise my chi&#8217;og&#8217;aphy. Ha-ah!
+I &#8217;ave learn that! You will be aztonizh&#8217; to see in &#8217;ow
+many diffe&#8217;n&#8217; fawm&#8217; I can make my &#8217;an&#8217;-a-&#8217;iting to appeah.
+That paz thoo my fam&#8217;ly, in fact, Mistoo Itchlin. My
+hant, she&#8217;s got a honcle w&#8217;at use&#8217; to be cluck in a bank,
+w&#8217;at could make the si&#8217;natu&#8217;e of the pwesiden&#8217;, as well as
+of the cashieh, with that so absolute puffegtion, that they
+tu&#8217;n &#8217;im out of the bank! Yesseh. In fact, I thing you
+ought to know &#8217;ow to &#8217;ite a ve&#8217;y fine &#8217;an&#8217;, Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;N-not very,&rdquo; said Richling; &ldquo;my hand is large and
+legible, but not well adapted for&mdash;book-keeping; it&#8217;s too
+heavy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You &#8217;ave the &#8217;ight physio&#8217;nomie, I am shu&#8217;. You
+will pe&#8217;haps believe me with difficulty, Mistoo Itchlin,
+but I assu&#8217; you I can tell if a man &#8217;as a fine chi&#8217;og&#8217;aphy
+aw no, by juz lookin&#8217; upon his liniment. Do you know
+that Benjamin Fwanklin &#8217;ote a v&#8217;ey fine chi&#8217;og&#8217;aphy, in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+fact? Also, Voltaire. Yesseh. An&#8217; Napoleon Bonaparte.
+Lawd By&#8217;on muz &#8217;ave &#8217;ad a beaucheouz chi&#8217;og&#8217;aphy.
+&#8217;Tis impossible not to be, with that face. He is
+my favo&#8217;ite poet, that Lawd By&#8217;on. Moze people pwefeh
+&#8217;im to Shakspere, in fact. Well, you muz go? I am ve&#8217;y
+&#8217;appy to meck yo&#8217; acquaintanze, Mistoo Itchlin, seh. I
+am so&#8217;y Doctah Seveeah is not theh pwesently. The negs
+time you call, Mistoo Itchlin, you muz not be too much
+aztonizh to fine me gone from yeh. Yesseh. He&#8217;s got to
+haugment me ad the en&#8217; of that month, an&#8217; we &#8217;ave to-day
+the fifteenth Mawch. Do you smoke, Mistoo Itchlin?&rdquo;
+He extended a package of cigarettes. Richling accepted
+one. &ldquo;I smoke lawgely in that weatheh,&rdquo; striking a
+match on his thigh. &ldquo;I feel ve&#8217;y sultwy to-day. Well,&rdquo;&mdash;he
+seized the visitor&#8217;s hand,&mdash;&ldquo;<em>au&#8217; evoi&#8217;</em>, Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo;
+And Narcisse returned to his desk happy in the
+conviction that Richling had gone away dazzled.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>GENTLES AND COMMONS.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier sat in the great easy-chair under the
+drop-light of his library table trying to read a book.
+But his thought was not on the page. He expired a long
+breath of annoyance, and lifted his glance backward from
+the bottom of the page to its top.</p>
+
+<p>Why must his mind keep going back to that little cottage
+in St. Mary street? What good reason was there?
+Would they thank him for his solicitude? Indeed! He
+almost smiled his contempt of the supposition. Why,
+when on one or two occasions he had betrayed a least
+little bit of kindly interest,&mdash;what? Up had gone their
+youthful vivacity like an umbrella. Oh, yes!&mdash;like all
+young folks&mdash;<em>their</em> affairs were intensely private. Once
+or twice he had shaken his head at the scantiness of all
+their provisions for life. Well? They simply and unconsciously
+stole a hold upon one another&#8217;s hand or arm,
+as much as to say, &ldquo;To love is enough.&rdquo; When, gentlemen
+of the jury, it isn&#8217;t enough!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pshaw!&rdquo; The word escaped him audibly. He drew
+partly up from his half recline, and turned back a leaf of
+the book to try once more to make out the sense of it.</p>
+
+<p>But there was Mary, and there was her husband. Especially
+Mary. Her image came distinctly between his
+eyes and the page. There she was, just as on his last
+visit,&mdash;a superfluous one&mdash;no charge,&mdash;sitting and plying
+her needle, unaware of his approach, gently moving
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+her rocking-chair, and softly singing, &ldquo;Flow on, thou
+shining river,&rdquo;&mdash;the song his own wife used to sing.
+&ldquo;O child, child! do you think it&#8217;s always going to be
+&lsquo;shining&rsquo;?&rdquo; They shouldn&#8217;t be so contented. Was
+pride under that cloak? Oh, no, no! But even if the
+content was genuine, it wasn&#8217;t good. Why, they oughtn&#8217;t
+to be <em>able</em> to be happy so completely out of their true
+sphere. It showed insensibility. But, there again,&mdash;Richling
+wasn&#8217;t insensible, much less Mary.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor let his book sink, face downward, upon his
+knee.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They&#8217;re too big to be playing in the sand.&rdquo; He took
+up the book again. &ldquo;&#8217;Tisn&#8217;t my business to tell them so.&rdquo;
+But before he got the volume fairly before his eyes his
+professional bell rang, and he tossed the book upon the
+table.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, why don&#8217;t you bring him in?&rdquo; he asked, in a
+tone of reproof, of a servant who presented a card; and
+in a moment the visitor entered.</p>
+
+<p>He was a person of some fifty years of age, with a
+patrician face, in which it was impossible to tell where
+benevolence ended and pride began. His dress was of
+fine cloth, a little antique in cut, and fitting rather loosely
+on a form something above the medium height, of good
+width, but bent in the shoulders, and with arms that had
+been stronger. Years, it might be, or possibly some unflinching
+struggle with troublesome facts, had given many
+lines of his face a downward slant. He apologized for
+the hour of his call, and accepted with thanks the chair
+offered him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You are not a resident of the city?&rdquo; asked Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I am from Kentucky.&rdquo; The voice was rich, and the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+stranger&#8217;s general air one of rather conscious social
+eminence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; said the Doctor, not specially pleased, and
+looked at him closer. He wore a black satin neck-stock,
+and dark-blue buttoned gaiters. His hair was dyed brown.
+A slender frill adorned his shirt-front.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs.&rdquo;&mdash;the visitor began to say, not giving the
+name, but waving his index-finger toward his card, which
+Dr. Sevier had laid upon the table, just under the lamp,&mdash;&ldquo;my
+wife, Doctor, seems to be in a very feeble condition.
+Her physicians have advised her to try the effects of a
+change of scene, and I have brought her down to your
+busy city, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor assented. The stranger resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Its hurry and energy are a great contrast to the plantation
+life, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They&#8217;re very unlike,&rdquo; the physician admitted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This chafing of thousands of competitive designs,&rdquo;
+said the visitor, &ldquo;this great fretwork of cross purposes,
+is a decided change from the quiet order of our rural life.
+Hmm! There everything is under the administration of
+one undisputed will, and is executed by the unquestioning
+obedience of our happy and contented slave peasantry. I
+prefer the country. But I thought this was just the change
+that would arouse and electrify an invalid who has really
+no tangible complaint.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Has the result been unsatisfactory?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Entirely so. I am unexpectedly disappointed.&rdquo; The
+speaker&#8217;s thought seemed to be that the climate of New
+Orleans had not responded with that hospitable alacrity
+which was due so opulent, reasonable, and universally
+obeyed a guest.</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause here, and Dr. Sevier looked around
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+at the book which lay at his elbow. But the visitor did
+not resume, and the Doctor presently asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you wish me to see your wife?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I called to see you alone first,&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;because
+there might be questions to be asked which were
+better answered in her absence.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then you think you know the secret of her illness, do
+you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I do. I think, indeed I may say I know, it is&mdash;bereavement.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor compressed his lips and bowed.</p>
+
+<p>The stranger drooped his head somewhat, and, resting
+his elbows on the arms of his chair, laid the tips of his
+thumbs and fingers softly together.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The truth is, sir, she cannot recover from the loss of
+our son.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;An infant?&rdquo; asked the Doctor. His bell rang again
+as he put the question.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir; a young man,&mdash;one whom I had thought a
+person of great promise; just about to enter life.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When did he die?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He has been dead nearly a year. I&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;The speaker
+ceased as the mulatto waiting-man appeared at the open
+door, with a large, simple, German face looking easily
+over his head from behind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Toctor,&rdquo; said the owner of this face, lifting an immense
+open hand, &ldquo;Toctor, uf you bleace, Toctor, you
+vill bleace ugscooce me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor frowned at the servant for permitting the
+interruption. But the gentleman beside him said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let him come in, sir; he seems to be in haste, sir,
+and I am not,&mdash;I am not, at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; said the physician.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+The new-comer stepped into the room. He was about
+six feet three inches in height, three feet six in breadth,
+and the same in thickness. Two kindly blue eyes shone
+softly in an expanse of face that had been clean-shaven
+every Saturday night for many years, and that ended in
+a retreating chin and a dewlap. The limp, white shirt-collar
+just below was without a necktie, and the waist of
+his pantaloons, which seemed intended to supply this deficiency,
+did not quite, but only almost reached up to the
+unoccupied blank. He removed from his respectful head
+a soft gray hat, whitened here and there with flour.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yentlemen,&rdquo; he said, slowly, &ldquo;you vill ugscooce me
+to interruptet you,&mdash;yentlemen.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you wish to see me?&rdquo; asked Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>The German made an odd gesture of deferential assent,
+lifting one open hand a little in front of him to the level
+of his face, with the wrist bent forward and the fingers
+pointing down.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Uf you bleace, Toctor, I toose; undt tat&#8217;s te fust
+time I effer <em>tit</em> vanted a toctor. Undt you mus&#8217; ugscooce
+me, Toctor, to callin&#8217; on you, ovver I vish you come undt
+see mine&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>To the surprise of all, tears gushed from his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mine poor vife, Toctor!&rdquo; He turned to one side,
+pointed his broad hand toward the floor, and smote his
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I yoost come in fun mine paykery undt comin&#8217; into
+mine howse, fen&mdash;I see someting&rdquo;&mdash;he waved his
+hand downward again&mdash;&ldquo;someting&mdash;layin&#8217; on te&mdash;floor&mdash;face
+pleck ans a nigger&#8217;s; undt fen I look to see who
+udt iss,&mdash;<em>udt is Mississ Reisen</em>! Toctor, I vish you
+come right off! I couldn&#8217;t shtayndt udt you toandt come
+right avay!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll come,&rdquo; said the Doctor, without rising; &ldquo;just
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+write your name and address on that little white slate
+yonder.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Toctor,&rdquo; said the German, extending and dipping his
+hat, &ldquo;I&#8217;m ferra much a-velcome to you, Toctor; undt
+tat&#8217;s yoost fot te pottekerra by mine corner sayt you
+vould too. He sayss, &lsquo;Reisen,&rsquo; he sayss, &lsquo;you yoost co
+to Toctor Tsewier.&rsquo;&rdquo; He bent his great body over the
+farther end of the table and slowly worked out his name,
+street, and number. &ldquo;Dtere udt iss, Toctor; I put udt
+town on teh schlate; ovver, I hope you ugscooce te
+hayndtwriding.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very well. That&#8217;s right. That&#8217;s all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The German lingered. The Doctor gave a bow of
+dismission.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s all, I say. I&#8217;ll be there in a moment. That&#8217;s
+all. Dan, order my carriage!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yentlemen, you vill ugscooce me?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The German withdrew, returning each gentleman&#8217;s bow
+with a faint wave of the hat.</p>
+
+<p>During this interview the more polished stranger had
+sat with bowed head, motionless and silent, lifting it only
+once and for a moment at the German&#8217;s emotional outburst.
+Then the upward and backward turned face was
+marked with a commiseration partly artificial, but also
+partly natural. He now looked up at the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I shall have to leave you,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, sir,&rdquo; replied the other; &ldquo;by all means!&rdquo;
+The willingness was slightly overdone and the benevolence
+of tone was mixed with complacency. &ldquo;By all means,&rdquo;
+he said again; &ldquo;this is one of those cases where it is
+only a proper grace in the higher to yield place to the
+lower.&rdquo; He waited for a response, but the Doctor merely
+frowned into space and called for his boots. The visitor
+resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I have a good deal of feeling, sir, for the unlettered
+and the vulgar. They have their station, but they have
+also&mdash;though doubtless in smaller capacity than we&mdash;their
+pleasures and pains.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Seeing the Doctor ready to go, he began to rise.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I may not be gone long,&rdquo; said the physician, rather
+coldly; &ldquo;if you choose to wait&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I thank you; n-no-o&rdquo;&mdash;The visitor stopped between
+a sitting and a rising posture.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Here are books,&rdquo; said the Doctor, &ldquo;and the evening
+papers,&mdash;&lsquo;Picayune,&rsquo; &lsquo;Delta,&rsquo; &lsquo;True Delta.&rsquo;&rdquo; It seemed
+for a moment as though the gentleman might sink into
+his seat again. &ldquo;And there&#8217;s the &lsquo;New York Herald.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir!&rdquo; said the visitor quickly, rising and smoothing
+himself out; &ldquo;nothing from that quarter, if you
+please.&rdquo; Yet he smiled. The Doctor did not notice that,
+while so smiling, he took his card from the table. There
+was something familiar in the stranger&#8217;s face which the
+Doctor was trying to make out. They left the house
+together. Outside the street door the physician made
+apologetic allusion to their interrupted interview.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Shall I see you at my office to-morrow? I would be
+happy&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The stranger had raised his hat. He smiled again, as
+pleasantly as he could, which was not delightful, and
+said, after a moment&#8217;s hesitation:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&mdash;Possibly.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>A PANTOMIME.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It chanced one evening about this time&mdash;the vernal
+equinox had just passed&mdash;that from some small cause
+Richling, who was generally detained at the desk until a
+late hour, was home early. The air was soft and warm,
+and he stood out a little beyond his small front door-step,
+lifting his head to inhale the universal fragrance, and
+looking in every moment, through the unlighted front
+room, toward a part of the diminutive house where a mild
+rattle of domestic movements could be heard, and whence
+he had, a little before, been adroitly requested to absent
+himself. He moved restlessly on his feet, blowing a soft
+tune.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he placed a foot on the step and a hand on
+the door-post, and gave a low, urgent call.</p>
+
+<p>A distant response indicated that his term of suspense
+was nearly over. He turned about again once or twice,
+and a moment later Mary appeared in the door, came
+down upon the sidewalk, looked up into the moonlit sky
+and down the empty, silent street, then turned and sat
+down, throwing her wrists across each other in her lap,
+and lifting her eyes to her husband&#8217;s with a smile that
+confessed her fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>The moon was regal. It cast its deep contrasts of
+clear-cut light and shadow among the thin, wooden, unarchitectural
+forms and weed-grown vacancies of the half-settled
+neighborhood, investing the matter-of-fact with
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+mystery, and giving an unexpected charm to the unpicturesque.
+It was&mdash;as Richling said, taking his place
+beside his wife&mdash;midspring in March. As he spoke he
+noticed she had brought with her the odor of flowers.
+They were pinned at her throat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where did you get them?&rdquo; he asked, touching them
+with his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Her face lighted up.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Guess.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How could he guess? As far as he knew neither she
+nor he had made an acquaintance in the neighborhood.
+He shook his head, and she replied:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The butcher.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;re a queer girl,&rdquo; he said, when they had
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You let these common people take to you so.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She smiled, with a faint air of concern.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You don&#8217;t dislike it, do you?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; he said, indifferently, and spoke of other
+things.</p>
+
+<p>And thus they sat, like so many thousands and thousands
+of young pairs in this wide, free America, offering
+the least possible interest to the great human army round
+about them, but sharing, or believing they shared, in the
+fruitful possibilities of this land of limitless bounty,
+fondling their hopes and recounting the petty minuti&aelig; of
+their daily experiences. Their converse was mainly in
+the form of questions from Mary and answers from
+John.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And did he say that he would?&rdquo; etc. &ldquo;And didn&#8217;t
+you insist that he should?&rdquo; etc. &ldquo;I don&#8217;t understand
+how he could require you to,&rdquo; etc., etc. Looking at everything
+from John&#8217;s side, as if there never could be any other,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+until at last John himself laughed softly when she asked
+why he couldn&#8217;t take part of some outdoor man&#8217;s work,
+and give him part of his own desk-work in exchange,
+and why he couldn&#8217;t say plainly that his work was too
+sedentary.</p>
+
+<p>Then she proposed a walk in the moonlight, and
+insisted she was not tired; she wanted it on her own
+account. And so, when Richling had gone into the house
+and returned with some white worsted gauze for her head
+and neck and locked the door, they were ready to start.</p>
+
+<p>They were tarrying a moment to arrange this wrapping
+when they found it necessary to move aside from where
+they stood in order to let two persons pass on the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p>These were a man and woman, who had at least reached
+middle age. The woman wore a neatly fitting calico gown;
+the man, a short pilot-coat. His pantaloons were very
+tight and pale. A new soft hat was pushed forward from
+the left rear corner of his closely cropped head, with the
+front of the brim turned down over his right eye. At
+each step he settled down with a little jerk alternately on
+this hip and that, at the same time faintly dropping the
+corresponding shoulder. They passed. John and Mary
+looked at each other with a nod of mirthful approval.
+Why? Because the strangers walked silently hand-in-hand.</p>
+
+<p>It was a magical night. Even the part of town where
+they were, so devoid of character by day, had become
+all at once romantic with phantasmal lights and glooms,
+echoes and silences. Along the edge of a wide chimney-top
+on one blank, new hulk of a house, that nothing else
+could have made poetical, a mocking-bird hopped and
+ran back and forth, singing as if he must sing or die.
+The mere names of the streets they traversed suddenly
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+became sweet food for the fancy. Down at the first
+corner below they turned into one that had been an old
+country road, and was still named Felicity.</p>
+
+<p>Richling called attention to the word painted on a
+board. He merely pointed to it in playful silence, and
+then let his hand sink and rest on hers as it lay in his
+elbow. They were walking under the low boughs of a
+line of fig-trees that overhung a high garden wall. Then
+some gay thought took him; but when his downward
+glance met the eyes uplifted to meet his they were grave,
+and there came an instantaneous tenderness into the
+exchange of looks that would have been worse than
+uninteresting to you or me. But the next moment she
+brightened up, pressed herself close to him, and caught
+step. They had not owned each other long enough to
+have settled into sedate possession, though they sometimes
+thought they had done so. There was still a
+tingling ecstasy in one another&#8217;s touch and glance that
+prevented them from quite behaving themselves when
+under the moon.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, now, they began, though in cautious
+undertone, to sing. Some person approached them, and
+they hushed. When the stranger had passed, Mary
+began again another song, alone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;Oh, don&#8217;t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; said John, softly.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up with an air of mirthful inquiry, and he
+added:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That was the name of Dr. Sevier&#8217;s wife.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But he doesn&#8217;t hear me singing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; but it seems as if he did.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And they sang no more.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+They entered a broad, open avenue, with a treeless,
+grassy way in the middle, up which came a very large and
+lumbering street-car, with smokers&#8217; benches on the roof,
+and drawn by tandem horses.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Here we turn down,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;into the way
+of the Naiads.&rdquo; (That was the street&#8217;s name.) &ldquo;They&#8217;re
+not trying to get me away.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He looked down playfully. She was clinging to him
+with more energy than she knew.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;d better hold you tight,&rdquo; she answered. Both
+laughed. The nonsense of those we love is better than
+the finest wit on earth. They walked on in their bliss.
+Shall we follow? Fie!</p>
+
+<p>They passed down across three or four of a group of
+parallel streets named for the nine muses. At Thalia
+they took the left, went one square, and turned up by
+another street toward home.</p>
+
+<p>Their conversation had flagged. Silence was enough.
+The great earth was beneath their feet, firm and solid;
+the illimitable distances of the heavens stretched above
+their heads and before their eyes. Here was Mary at
+John&#8217;s side, and John at hers; John her property and
+she his, and time flowing softly, shiningly on. Yea, even
+more. If one might believe the names of the streets,
+there were Naiads on the left and Dryads on the right;
+a little farther on, Hercules; yonder corner the dark
+trysting-place of Bacchus and Melpomene; and here, just
+in advance, the corner where Terpsichore crossed the path
+of Apollo.</p>
+
+<p>They came now along a high, open fence that ran the
+entire length of a square. Above it a dense rank of
+bitter orange-trees overhung the sidewalk, their dark mass
+of foliage glittering in the moonlight. Within lay a deep,
+old-fashioned garden. Its white shell-walks gleamed in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+many directions. A sweet breath came from its parterres
+of mingled hyacinths and jonquils that hid themselves
+every moment in black shadows of lagustrums and laurestines.
+Here, in severe order, a pair of palms, prim as
+medi&aelig;val queens, stood over against each other; and in
+the midst of the garden, rising high against the sky, appeared
+the pillared veranda and immense, four-sided roof
+of an old French colonial villa, as it stands unchanged
+to-day.</p>
+
+<p>The two loiterers slackened their pace to admire the
+scene. There was much light shining from the house.
+Mary could hear voices, and, in a moment, words. The
+host was speeding his parting guests.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The omnibus will put you out only one block from
+the hotel,&rdquo; some one said.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier, returning home from a visit to a friend in
+Polymnia street, had scarcely got well seated in the omnibus
+before he witnessed from its window a singular
+dumb show. He had handed his money up to the driver
+as they crossed Euterpe street, had received the change
+and deposited his fare as they passed Terpsichore, and
+was just sitting down when the only other passenger in the
+vehicle said, half-rising:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hello! there&#8217;s going to be a shooting scrape!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A rather elderly man and woman on the sidewalk, both
+of them extremely well dressed, and seemingly on the eve
+of hailing the omnibus, suddenly transferred their attention
+to a younger couple a few steps from them, who
+appeared to have met them entirely by accident. The
+elderly lady threw out her arms toward the younger man
+with an expression on her face of intensest mental suffering.
+She seemed to cry out; but the deafening rattle
+of the omnibus, as it approached them, intercepted the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+sound. All four of the persons seemed, in various ways,
+to experience the most violent feelings. The young man
+more than once moved as if about to start forward, yet
+did not advance; his companion, a small, very shapely
+woman, clung to him excitedly and pleadingly. The
+older man shook a stout cane at the younger, talking
+furiously as he did so. He held the elderly lady to him
+with his arm thrown about her, while she now cast her
+hands upward, now covered her face with them, now
+wrung them, clasped them, or extended one of them in
+seeming accusation against the younger person of her own
+sex. In a moment the omnibus was opposite the group.
+The Doctor laid his hand on his fellow-passenger&#8217;s arm.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t get out. There will be no shooting.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The young man on the sidewalk suddenly started forward,
+with his companion still on his farther arm, and
+with his eyes steadily fixed on those of the elder and taller
+man, a clenched fist lifted defensively, and with a tense,
+defiant air walked hurriedly and silently by within easy
+sweep of the uplifted staff. At the moment when the
+slight distance between the two men began to increase,
+the cane rose higher, but stopped short in its descent and
+pointed after the receding figure.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I command you to leave this town, sir!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier looked. He looked with all his might,
+drawing his knee under him on the cushion and leaning
+out. The young man had passed. He still moved on,
+turning back as he went a face full of the fear that men
+show when they are afraid of their own violence; and, as
+the omnibus clattered away, he crossed the street at the
+upper corner and disappeared in the shadows.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s a very strange thing,&rdquo; said the other passenger
+to Dr. Sevier, as they resumed the corner seats by the
+door.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+&ldquo;It certainly is!&rdquo; replied the Doctor, and averted his
+face. For when the group and he were nearest together
+and the moon shone brightly upon the four, he saw, beyond
+all question, that the older man was his visitor of a
+few evenings before and that the younger pair were John
+and Mary Richling.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>&ldquo;SHE&#8217;S ALL THE WORLD.&rdquo;</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Excellent neighborhood, St. Mary street, and
+Prytania was even better. Everybody was very retired
+though, it seemed. Almost every house standing in
+the midst of its shady garden,&mdash;sunny gardens are a
+newer fashion of the town,&mdash;a bell-knob on the gate-post,
+and the gate locked. But the Richlings cared nothing
+for this; not even what they should have cared. Nor
+was there any unpleasantness in another fact.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you let this window stand wide this way when you
+are at work here, all day?&rdquo; asked the husband. The
+opening alluded to was on Prytania street, and looked
+across the way to where the asylumed widows of &ldquo;St
+Anna&#8217;s&rdquo; could glance down into it over their poor little
+window-gardens.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, dear!&rdquo; Mary looked up from her little
+cane rocker with that thoughtful contraction at the outer
+corners of her eyes and that illuminated smile that between
+them made half her beauty. And then, somewhat
+more gravely and persuasively: &ldquo;Don&#8217;t you suppose they
+like it? They must like it. I think we can do that much
+for them. Would you rather I&#8217;d shut it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>For answer John laid his hand on her head and gazed
+into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Take care,&rdquo; she whispered; &ldquo;they&#8217;ll see you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He let his arm drop in amused despair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what&#8217;s the window open for? And, anyhow,
+they&#8217;re all abed and asleep these two hours.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+They did like it, those aged widows. It fed their
+hearts&#8217; hunger to see the pretty unknown passing and repassing
+that open window in the performance of her
+morning duties, or sitting down near it with her needle,
+still crooning her soft morning song,&mdash;poor, almost as
+poor as they, in this world&#8217;s glitter; but rich in hope and
+courage, and rich beyond all count in the content of one
+who finds herself queen of ever so little a house, where
+love is.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Love is enough!&rdquo; said the widows.</p>
+
+<p>And certainly she made it seem so. The open window
+brought, now and then, a moisture to the aged eyes,
+yet they liked it open.</p>
+
+<p>But, without warning one day, there was a change. It
+was the day after Dr. Sevier had noticed that queer street
+quarrel. The window was not closed, but it sent out no
+more light. The song was not heard, and many small,
+faint signs gave indication that anxiety had come to be a
+guest in the little house. At evening the wife was seen in
+her front door and about its steps, watching in a new,
+restless way for her husband&#8217;s coming; and when he came
+it could be seen, all the way from those upper windows,
+where one or two faces appeared now and then, that he
+was troubled and care-worn. There were two more days
+like this one; but at the end of the fourth the wife read
+good tidings in her husband&#8217;s countenance. He handed
+her a newspaper, and pointed to a list of departing
+passengers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They&#8217;re gone!&rdquo; she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded, and laid off his hat. She cast her arms
+about his neck, and buried her head in his bosom. You
+could almost have seen Anxiety flying out at the window.
+By morning the widows knew of a certainty that the
+cloud had melted away.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+In the counting-room one evening, as Richling said
+good-night with noticeable alacrity, one of his employers,
+sitting with his legs crossed over the top of a desk, said
+to his partner:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling works for his wages.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s all,&rdquo; replied the other; &ldquo;he don&#8217;t see his interests
+in ours any more than a tinsmith would, who comes
+to mend the roof.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The first one took a meditative puff or two from his
+cigar, tipped off its ashes, and responded:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Common fault. He completely overlooks his immense
+indebtedness to the world at large, and his dependence on
+it. He&#8217;s a good fellow, and bright; but he actually
+thinks that he and the world are starting even.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;His wife&#8217;s his world,&rdquo; said the other, and opened the
+Bills Payable book. Who will say it is not well to sail in
+an ocean of love? But the Richlings were becalmed in
+theirs, and, not knowing it, were satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>Day in, day out, the little wife sat at her window, and
+drove her needle. Omnibuses rumbled by; an occasional
+wagon or cart set the dust a-flying; the street venders
+passed, crying the praises of their goods and wares; the
+blue sky grew more and more intense as weeks piled up
+upon weeks; but the empty repetitions, and the isolation,
+and, worst of all, the escape of time,&mdash;she smiled at all,
+and sewed on and crooned on, in the sufficient thought
+that John would come, each time, when only hours enough
+had passed away forever.</p>
+
+<p>Once she saw Dr. Sevier&#8217;s carriage. She bowed brightly,
+but he&mdash;what could it mean?&mdash;he lifted his hat with such
+austere gravity. Dr. Sevier was angry. He had no definite
+charge to make, but that did not lessen his displeasure.
+After long, unpleasant wondering, and long trusting
+to see Richling some day on the street, he had at length
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+driven by this way purposely to see if they had indeed
+left town, as they had been so imperiously commanded
+to do.</p>
+
+<p>This incident, trivial as it was, roused Mary to thought;
+and all the rest of the day the thought worked with energy
+to dislodge the frame of mind that she had acquired from
+her husband.</p>
+
+<p>When John came home that night and pressed her to
+his bosom she was silent. And when he held her off a
+little and looked into her eyes, and she tried to better
+her smile, those eyes stood full to the lashes and she
+looked down.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What&#8217;s the matter?&rdquo; asked he, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing!&rdquo; She looked up again, with a little laugh.</p>
+
+<p>He took a chair and drew her down upon his lap.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What&#8217;s the matter with my girl?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How,&mdash;you don&#8217;t know?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I simply don&#8217;t. I can&#8217;t make out what it is.
+If I could I&#8217;d tell you; but I don&#8217;t know at all.&rdquo; After
+they had sat silent a few moments:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder&rdquo;&mdash;she began.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You wonder what?&rdquo; asked he, in a rallying tone.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder if there&#8217;s such a thing as being too contented.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling began to hum, with a playful manner:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;&lsquo;And she&#8217;s all the world to me.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>Is that being too&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; said Mary. &ldquo;That&#8217;s it.&rdquo; She laid her hand
+upon his shoulder. &ldquo;You&#8217;ve said it. That&#8217;s what I
+ought not to be!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mary, what on earth&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;His face flamed up
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+&ldquo;John, I&#8217;m willing to be <em>more</em> than all the rest of the
+world to you. I always must be that. I&#8217;m going to be
+that forever. And you&rdquo;&mdash;she kissed him passionately&mdash;&ldquo;you&#8217;re
+all the world to me! But I&#8217;ve no right to be
+<em>all</em> the world to <em>you</em>. And you mustn&#8217;t allow it. It&#8217;s
+making it too small!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary, what are you saying?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t, John. Don&#8217;t speak that way. I&#8217;m not saying
+anything. I&#8217;m only trying to say something, I don&#8217;t
+know what.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Neither do I,&rdquo; was the mock-rueful answer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I only know,&rdquo; replied Mary, the vision of Dr. Sevier&#8217;s
+carriage passing before her abstracted eyes, and of the
+Doctor&#8217;s pale face bowing austerely within it, &ldquo;that if
+you don&#8217;t take any part or interest in the outside world
+it&#8217;ll take none in you; do you think it will?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And who cares if it doesn&#8217;t?&rdquo; cried John, clasping
+her to his bosom.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I do,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Yes, I do. I&#8217;ve no right to
+steal you from the rest of the world, or from the place in
+it that you ought to fill. John&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s my name.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why can&#8217;t I do something to help you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>John lifted his head unnecessarily.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, let&#8217;s think of something we can do, without
+just waiting for the wind to blow us along,&mdash;I mean,&rdquo;
+she added appeasingly, &ldquo;I mean without waiting to be
+employed by others.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes; but that takes capital!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I know; but why don&#8217;t you think up something,&mdash;some
+new enterprise or something,&mdash;and get somebody
+with capital to go in with you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You&#8217;re out of your depth. And that wouldn&#8217;t make
+so much difference, but you&#8217;re out of mine. It isn&#8217;t enough
+to think of something; you must know how to do it. And
+what do I know how to do? Nothing! Nothing that&#8217;s
+worth doing!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know one thing you could do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What&#8217;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You could be a professor in a college.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>John smiled bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Without antecedents?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Their eyes met; hers dropped, and both voices were
+silent. Mary drew a soft sigh. She thought their talk
+had been unprofitable. But it had not. John laid hold
+of work from that day on in a better and wiser spirit.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>THE BOUGH BREAKS.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>By some trivial chance, she hardly knew what, Mary
+found herself one day conversing at her own door
+with the woman whom she and her husband had once
+smiled at for walking the moonlit street with her hand in
+willing and undisguised captivity. She was a large and
+strong, but extremely neat, well-spoken, and good-looking
+Irish woman, who might have seemed at ease but for a
+faintly betrayed ambition.</p>
+
+<p>She praised with rather ornate English the good appearance
+and convenient smallness of Mary&#8217;s house; said her
+own was the same size. That person with whom she
+sometimes passed &ldquo;of a Sundeh&rdquo;&mdash;yes, and moonlight
+evenings&mdash;that was her husband. He was &ldquo;ferst ingineeur&rdquo;
+on a steam-boat. There was a little, just discernible
+waggle in her head as she stated things. It gave
+her decided character.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! engineer,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Ferst</em> ingineeur,&rdquo; repeated the woman; &ldquo;you know
+there bees ferst ingineeurs, an&#8217; secon&#8217; ingineeurs, an&#8217;
+therd ingineeurs. Yes.&rdquo; She unconsciously fanned herself
+with a dust-pan that she had just bought from a tin
+peddler.</p>
+
+<p>She lived only some two or three hundred yards away,
+around the corner, in a tidy little cottage snuggled in
+among larger houses in Coliseum street. She had had
+children, but she had lost them; and Mary&#8217;s sympathy
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+when she told her of them&mdash;the girl and two boys&mdash;won
+the woman as much as the little lady&#8217;s pretty manners had
+dazed her. It was not long before she began to drop in
+upon Mary in the hour of twilight, and sit through it without
+speaking often, or making herself especially interesting
+in any way, but finding it pleasant, notwithstanding.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John,&rdquo; said Mary,&mdash;her husband had come in unexpectedly,&mdash;&ldquo;our
+neighbor, Mrs. Riley.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>John&#8217;s bow was rather formal, and Mrs. Riley soon rose
+and said good-evening.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John,&rdquo; said the wife again, laying her hands on his
+shoulders as she tiptoed to kiss him, &ldquo;what troubles
+you?&rdquo; Then she attempted a rallying manner: &ldquo;Don&#8217;t
+my friends suit you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated only an instant, and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, that&#8217;s all right!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, I don&#8217;t see why you look so.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve finished the task I was to do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What! you haven&#8217;t&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m out of employment.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They went and sat down on the little hair-cloth sofa
+that Mrs. Riley had just left.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I thought they said they would have other work for
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They said they might have; but it seems they
+haven&#8217;t.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And it&#8217;s just in the opening of summer, too,&rdquo; said
+Mary; &ldquo;why, what right&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo;&mdash;a despairing gesture and averted gaze&mdash;&ldquo;they&#8217;ve
+a perfect right if they think best. I asked them
+that myself at first&mdash;not too politely, either; but I soon
+saw I was wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They sat without speaking until it had grown quite
+dark. Then John said, with a long breath, as he rose:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+&ldquo;It passes my comprehension.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What passes it?&rdquo; asked Mary, detaining him by one
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The reason why we are so pursued by misfortunes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, John,&rdquo; she said, still holding him, &ldquo;<em>is</em> it misfortune?
+When I know so well that you deserve to succeed,
+I think maybe it&#8217;s good fortune in disguise, after all.
+Don&#8217;t you think it&#8217;s possible? You remember how it was
+last time, when A., B., &amp; Co. failed. Maybe the best of
+all is to come now!&rdquo; She beamed with courage. &ldquo;Why,
+John, it seems to me I&#8217;d just go in the very best of spirits,
+the first thing to-morrow, and tell Dr. Sevier you are
+looking for work. Don&#8217;t you think it might&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve been there.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have you? What did he say?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He wasn&#8217;t in.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>There was another neighbor, with whom John and Mary
+did not get acquainted. Not that it was more his fault
+than theirs; it may have been less. Unfortunately for
+the Richlings there was in their dwelling no toddling,
+self-appointed child commissioner to find his way in unwatched
+moments to the play-ground of some other
+toddler, and so plant the good seed of neighbor acquaintanceship.</p>
+
+<p>This neighbor passed four times a day. A man of fortune,
+aged a hale sixty or so, who came and stood on the
+corner, and sometimes even rested a foot on Mary&#8217;s door-step,
+waiting for the Prytania omnibus, and who, on his
+returns, got down from the omnibus step a little gingerly,
+went by Mary&#8217;s house, and presently shut himself inside a
+very ornamental iron gate, a short way up St. Mary street.
+A child would have made him acquainted. Even as it
+was, they did not escape his silent notice. It was pleasant
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+for him, from whose life the early dew had been dried
+away by a well-risen sun, to recall its former freshness
+by glimpses of this pair of young beginners. It was like
+having a bird&#8217;s nest under his window.</p>
+
+<p>John, stepping backward from his door one day, saying
+a last word to his wife, who stood on the threshold,
+pushed against this neighbor as he was moving with somewhat
+cumbersome haste to catch the stage, turned quickly,
+and raised his hat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pardon!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The other uncovered his bald head and circlet of white,
+silken locks, and hurried on to the conveyance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;President of one of the banks down-town,&rdquo; whispered
+John.</p>
+
+<p>That is the nearest they ever came to being acquainted.
+And even this accident might not have occurred had not
+the man of snowy locks been glancing at Mary as he
+passed instead of at his omnibus.</p>
+
+<p>As he sat at home that evening he remarked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very pretty little woman that, my dear, that lives
+in the little house at the corner; who is she?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The lady responded, without lifting her eyes from the
+newspaper in which she was interested; she did not
+know. The husband mused and twirled his penknife
+between a finger and thumb.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They seem to be starting at the bottom,&rdquo; he observed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; much the same as we did.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&#8217;t noticed them particularly.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They&#8217;re worth noticing,&rdquo; said the banker.</p>
+
+<p>He threw one fat knee over the other, and laid his head
+on the back of his easy-chair.</p>
+
+<p>The lady&#8217;s eyes were still on her paper, but she
+asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Would you like me to go and see them?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no&mdash;unless you wish.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She dropped the paper into her lap with a smile and
+a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t propose it. I have so much going to do&rdquo;&mdash; She
+paused, removed her glasses, and fell to straightening
+the fringe of the lamp-mat. &ldquo;Of course, if you think
+they&#8217;re in need of a friend; but from your description&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered, quickly, &ldquo;not at all. They&#8217;ve
+friends, no doubt. Everything about them has a neat,
+happy look. That&#8217;s what attracted my notice. They&#8217;ve
+got friends, you may depend.&rdquo; He ceased, took up a
+pamphlet, and adjusted his glasses. &ldquo;I think I saw a
+sofa going in there to-day as I came to dinner. A little
+expansion, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was going out,&rdquo; said the only son, looking up from
+a story-book.</p>
+
+<p>But the banker was reading. He heard nothing, and
+the word was not repeated. He did not divine that a
+little becalmed and befogged bark, with only two lovers
+in her, too proud to cry &ldquo;Help!&rdquo; had drifted just
+yonder upon the rocks, and, spar by spar and plank by
+plank, was dropping into the smooth, unmerciful sea.</p>
+
+<p>Before the sofa went there had gone, little by little,
+some smaller valuables.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said Mary to her husband, with the bright
+hurry of a wife bent upon something high-handed, &ldquo;we
+both have to have furniture; we must have it; and I
+don&#8217;t have to have jewelry. Don&#8217;t you see?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, I&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, John!&rdquo; There could be but one end to the
+debate; she had determined that. The first piece was a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+bracelet. &ldquo;No, I wouldn&#8217;t pawn it,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Better
+sell it outright at once.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But Richling could not but cling to hope and to the
+adornments that had so often clasped her wrists and
+throat or pinned the folds upon her bosom. Piece by
+piece he pawned them, always looking out ahead with
+strained vision for the improbable, the incredible, to rise
+to his relief.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is <em>nothing</em> going to happen, Mary?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Yes; nothing happened&mdash;except in the pawn-shop.</p>
+
+<p>So, all the sooner, the sofa had to go.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s no use talking about borrowing,&rdquo; they both said.
+Then the bureau went. Then the table. Then, one by
+one, the chairs. Very slyly it was all done, too.
+Neighbors mustn&#8217;t know. &ldquo;Who lives there?&rdquo; is a
+question not asked concerning houses as small as theirs;
+and a young man, in a well-fitting suit of only too heavy
+goods, removing his winter hat to wipe the standing drops
+from his forehead; and a little blush-rose woman at his
+side, in a mist of cool muslin and the cunningest of
+millinery,&mdash;these, who always paused a moment, with
+a lost look, in the vestibule of the sepulchral-looking
+little church on the corner of Prytania and Josephine
+streets, till the sexton ushered them in, and who as often
+contrived, with no end of ingenuity, despite the little
+woman&#8217;s fresh beauty, to get away after service unaccosted
+by the elders,&mdash;who could imagine that <em>these</em> were
+from so deep a nook in poverty&#8217;s vale?</p>
+
+<p>There was one person who guessed it: Mrs. Riley, who
+was not asked to walk in any more when she called at the
+twilight hour. She partly saw and partly guessed the
+truth, and offered what each one of the pair had been
+secretly hoping somebody, anybody, would offer&mdash;a loan.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+But when it actually confronted them it was sweetly
+declined.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Wasn&#8217;t it kind?&rdquo; said Mary; and John said emphatically,
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; Very soon it was their turn to be kind to
+Mrs. Riley. They attended her husband&#8217;s funeral. He
+had been killed by an explosion. Mrs. Riley beat upon
+the bier with her fists, and wailed in a far-reaching
+voice:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Mike, Mike! Me jew&#8217;l, me jew&#8217;l! Why didn&#8217;t ye
+wait to see the babe that&#8217;s unborn?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And Mary wept. And when she and John re&euml;ntered
+their denuded house she fell upon his neck with fresh
+tears, and kissed him again and again, and could utter no
+word, but knew he understood. Poverty was so much
+better than sorrow! She held him fast, and he her,
+while he tenderly hushed her, lest a grief, the very opposite
+of Mrs. Riley&#8217;s, should overtake her.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>HARD SPEECHES AND HIGH TEMPER.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier found occasion, one morning, to speak
+at some length, and very harshly, to his book-keeper.
+He had hardly ceased when John Richling came briskly
+in.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; he said, with great buoyancy, &ldquo;how do you
+do?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The physician slightly frowned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-morning, Mr. Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling was tamed in an instant; but, to avoid too
+great a contrast of manner, he retained a semblance of
+sprightliness, as he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This is the first time I have had this pleasure since
+you were last at our house, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you not see me one evening, some time ago, in
+the omnibus?&rdquo; asked Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, no,&rdquo; replied the other, with returning pleasure;
+&ldquo;was I in the same omnibus?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You were on the sidewalk.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No-o,&rdquo; said Richling, pondering. &ldquo;I&#8217;ve seen you in
+your carriage several times, but you&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t see you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling was stung. The conversation failed. He
+recommenced it in a tone pitched intentionally too low
+for the alert ear of Narcisse.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, I&#8217;ve simply called to say to you that I&#8217;m out
+of work and looking for employment again.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Um&mdash;hum,&rdquo; said the Doctor, with a cold fulness of
+voice that hurt Richling afresh. &ldquo;You&#8217;ll find it hard to
+get anything this time of year,&rdquo; he continued, with no
+attempt at undertone; &ldquo;it&#8217;s very hard for anybody to
+get anything these days, even when well recommended.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling smiled an instant. The Doctor did not, but
+turned partly away to his desk, and added, as if the smile
+had displeased him:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, maybe you&#8217;ll not find it so.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling turned fiery red.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Whether I do or not,&rdquo; he said, rising, &ldquo;my affairs
+sha&#8217;n&#8217;t trouble anybody. Good-morning!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He started out.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How&#8217;s Mrs. Richling?&rdquo; asked the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She&#8217;s well,&rdquo; responded Richling, putting on his hat
+and disappearing in the corridor. Each footstep could
+be heard as he went down the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s a fool!&rdquo; muttered the physician.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up angrily, for Narcisse stood before him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Doctah,&rdquo; said the Creole, hurriedly arranging
+his coat-collar, and drawing his handkerchief, &ldquo;I&#8217;m goin&#8217;
+ad the poss-office.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;See here, sir!&rdquo; exclaimed the Doctor, bringing his
+fist down upon the arm of his chair, &ldquo;every time you&#8217;ve
+gone out of this office for the last six months you&#8217;ve told
+me you were going to the post-office; now don&#8217;t you ever
+tell me that again!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The young man bowed with injured dignity and responded:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All a-ight, seh.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He overtook Richling just outside the street entrance.
+Richling had halted there, bereft of intention, almost of
+outward sense, and choking with bitterness. It seemed to
+him as if in an instant all his misfortunes, disappointments,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+and humiliations, that never before had seemed so
+many or so great, had been gathered up into the knowledge
+of that hard man upstairs, and, with one unmerciful
+downward wrench, had received his seal of approval.
+Indignation, wrath, self-hatred, dismay, in undefined
+confusion, usurped the faculties of sight and hearing and
+motion.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; said Narcisse, &ldquo;I &#8217;ope you fine
+you&#8217;seff O.K., seh, if you&#8217;ll egscuse the slang expwession.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling started to move away, but checked himself.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m well, sir, thank you, sir; yes, sir, I&#8217;m very well.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I billieve you, seh. You ah lookin&#8217; well.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse thrust his hands into his pockets, and turned
+upon the outer sides of his feet, the embodiment of sweet
+temper. Richling found him a wonderful relief at the
+moment. He quit gnawing his lip and winking into
+vacancy, and felt a malicious good-humor run into all his
+veins.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I dunno &#8217;ow &#8217;tis, Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; said Narcisse,
+&ldquo;but I muz tell you the tooth; you always &#8217;ave to me the
+appe&#8217;ance ligue the chile of p&#8217;ospe&#8217;ity.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Eh?&rdquo; said Richling, hollowing his hand at his ear,&mdash;&ldquo;child
+of&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;P&#8217;ospe&#8217;ity?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes,&rdquo; replied the deaf man vaguely, &ldquo;I&mdash;have
+a relative of that name.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; exclaimed the Creole, &ldquo;thass good faw luck!
+Mistoo Itchlin, look&#8217; like you a lil mo&#8217; hawd to yeh&mdash;but
+egscuse me. I s&#8217;pose you muz be advancing in
+business, Mistoo Itchlin. I say I s&#8217;pose you muz be
+gittin&#8217; along!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I? Yes; yes, I must.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He started.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I&#8217;m &#8217;appy to yeh it!&rdquo; said Narcisse.</p>
+
+<p>His innocent kindness was a rebuke. Richling began
+to offer a cordial parting salutation, but Narcisse said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You goin&#8217; that way? Well, I kin go that way.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They went.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was goin&#8217; ad the poss-office, but&rdquo;&mdash;he waved his
+hand and curled his lip. &ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, in fact, if
+you yeh of something suitable to me I would like to yeh
+it. I am not satisfied with that pless yondeh with Doctah
+Seveeah. I was compel this mawnin&#8217;, biffo you came in,
+to &#8217;epoove &#8217;im faw &#8217;is &#8217;oodness. He called me a jackass,
+in fact. I woon allow that. I &#8217;ad to &#8217;epoove &#8217;im.
+&lsquo;Doctah Seveeah,&rsquo; says I, &lsquo;don&#8217;t you call me a jackass
+ag&#8217;in!&rsquo; An&#8217; &#8217;e din call it me ag&#8217;in. No, seh. But &#8217;e
+din like to &#8217;ush up. Thass the rizz&#8217;n &#8217;e was a lil miscutteous
+to you. Me, I am always polite. As they say,
+&lsquo;A nod is juz as good as a kick f&#8217;om a bline hoss.&rsquo; You
+are fon&#8217; of maxim, Mistoo Itchlin? Me, I&#8217;m ve&#8217;y fon&#8217;
+of them. But they&#8217;s got one maxim what you may &#8217;ave
+&#8217;eard&mdash;I do not fine that maxim always come t&#8217;ue. &#8217;Ave
+you evva yeah that maxim, &lsquo;A fool faw luck&rsquo;? That
+don&#8217;t always come t&#8217;ue. I &#8217;ave discove&#8217;d that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; responded Richling, with a parting smile, &ldquo;that
+doesn&#8217;t always come true.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier denounced the world at large, and the
+American nation in particular, for two days. Within
+himself, for twenty-four hours, he grumly blamed Richling
+for their rupture; then for twenty-four hours reproached
+himself, and, on the morning of the third day
+knocked at the door, corner of St. Mary and Prytania.</p>
+
+<p>No one answered. He knocked again. A woman in
+bare feet showed herself at the corresponding door-way
+in the farther half of the house.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nobody don&#8217;t live there no more, sir,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Where have they gone?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, reely, I couldn&#8217;t tell you, sir. Because, reely,
+I don&#8217;t know nothing about it. I haint but jest lately
+moved in here myself, and I don&#8217;t know nothing about
+nobody around here scarcely at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor shut himself again in his carriage and let
+himself be whisked away, in great vacuity of mind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They can&#8217;t blame anybody but themselves,&rdquo; was, by-and-by,
+his rallying thought. &ldquo;Still&rdquo;&mdash;he said to himself
+after another vacant interval, and said no more.
+The thought that whether <em>they</em> could blame others or not
+did not cover all the ground, rested heavily on him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>THE CRADLE FALLS.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>In the rear of the great commercial centre of New
+Orleans, on that part of Common street where it suddenly
+widens out, broad, unpaved, and dusty, rises the
+huge dull-brown structure of brick, famed, well-nigh as
+far as the city is known, as the Charity Hospital.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-five years ago, when the emigrant ships used to
+unload their swarms of homeless and friendless strangers
+into the streets of New Orleans to fall a prey to yellow-fever
+or cholera, that solemn pile sheltered thousands on
+thousands of desolate and plague-stricken Irish and
+Germans, receiving them unquestioned, until at times the
+very floors were covered with the sick and dying, and the
+sawing and hammering in the coffin-shop across the inner
+court ceased not day or night. Sombre monument at
+once of charity and sin! For, while its comfort and
+succor cost the houseless wanderer nothing, it lived and
+grew, and lives and grows still, upon the licensed vices of
+the people,&mdash;drinking, harlotry, and gambling.</p>
+
+<p>The Charity Hospital of St. Charles&mdash;such is its true
+name&mdash;is, however, no mere plague-house. Whether it
+ought to be, let doctors decide. How good or necessary
+such modern innovations as &ldquo;ridge ventilation,&rdquo; &ldquo;movable bases,&rdquo;
+the &ldquo;pavilion plan,&rdquo; &ldquo;trained nurses,&rdquo; etc.,
+may be, let the Auxiliary Sanitary Association say.
+There it stands as of old, innocent of all sins that may
+be involved in any of these changes, rising story over
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+story, up and up: here a ward for poisonous fevers, and
+there a ward for acute surgical cases; here a story full of
+simple ailments, and there a ward specially set aside for
+women.</p>
+
+<p>In 1857 this last was Dr. Sevier&#8217;s ward. Here, at his
+stated hour one summer morning in that year, he tarried
+a moment, yonder by that window, just where you enter
+the ward and before you come to the beds. He had fallen
+into discourse with some of the more inquiring minds
+among the train of students that accompanied him, and
+waited there to finish and cool down to a physician&#8217;s
+proper temperature. The question was public sanitation.</p>
+
+<p>He was telling a tall Arkansan, with high-combed hair,
+self-conscious gloves, and very broad, clean-shaven lower
+jaw, how the peculiar formation of delta lands, by which
+they drain away from the larger watercourses, instead of
+into them, had made the swamp there in the rear of the
+town, for more than a century, &ldquo;the common dumping-ground
+and cesspool of the city, sir!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Some of the students nodded convincedly to the
+speaker; some looked askance at the Arkansan, who put
+one forearm meditatively under his coat-tail; some
+looked through the window over the regions alluded to,
+and some only changed their pose and looked around for
+a mirror.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor spoke on. Several of his hearers were
+really interested in the then unusual subject, and listened
+intelligently as he pointed across the low plain at hundreds
+of acres of land that were nothing but a morass, partly
+filled in with the foulest refuse of a semi-tropical city, and
+beyond it where still lay the swamp, half cleared of its
+forest and festering in the sun&mdash;&ldquo;every drop of its
+waters, and every inch of its mire,&rdquo; said the Doctor,
+&ldquo;saturated with the poisonous drainage of the town!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I happen,&rdquo; interjected a young city student; but the
+others bent their ear to the Doctor, who continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, sir, were these regions compactly built on, like
+similar areas in cities confined to narrow sites, the mortality,
+with the climate we have, would be frightful.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I happen to know,&rdquo; essayed the city student; but the
+Arkansan had made an interrogatory answer to the
+Doctor, that led him to add:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes; you see the houses here on these lands
+are little, flimsy, single ground-story affairs, loosely
+thrown together, and freely exposed to sun and air.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I hap&mdash;,&rdquo; said the city student.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; exclaimed the Doctor, &ldquo;Malaria is king!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He paused an instant for his hearers to take in the
+figure.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, I happen to&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Some one&#8217;s fist from behind caused the speaker to turn
+angrily, and the Doctor resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go into any of those streets off yonder,&mdash;Tr&eacute;m&eacute;,
+Prieur, Marais. Why, there are often ponds under the
+houses! The floors of bedrooms are within a foot or
+two of these ponds! The bricks of the surrounding pavements
+are often covered with a fine, dark moss! Water
+seeps up through the sidewalks! That&#8217;s his realm, sir!
+Here and there among the residents&mdash;every here and
+there&mdash;you&#8217;ll see his sallow, quaking subjects dragging
+about their work or into and out of their beds, until a fear
+of a fatal ending drives them in here. Congestion? Yes,
+sometimes congestion pulls them under suddenly, and
+they&#8217;re gone before they know it. Sometimes their vitality
+wanes slowly, until Malaria beckons in Consumption.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor,&rdquo; said the city student, ruffling with
+pride of his town, &ldquo;there are plenty of cities as bad as
+this. I happen to know, for instance&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+Dr. Sevier turned away in quiet contempt.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It will not improve our town to dirty others, or to
+clean them, either.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He moved down the ward, while two or three members
+among the moving train, who never happened to know anything,
+nudged each other joyfully.</p>
+
+<p>The group stretched out and came along, the Doctor
+first and the young men after, some of one sort, some of
+another,&mdash;the dull, the frivolous, the earnest, the kind,
+the cold,&mdash;following slowly, pausing, questioning, discoursing,
+advancing, moving from each clean, slender bed
+to the next, on this side and on that, down and up the
+long sanded aisles, among the poor, sick women.</p>
+
+<p>Among these, too, there was variety. Some were
+stupid and ungracious, hardened and dulled with long
+penury as some in this world are hardened and dulled with
+long riches. Some were as fat as beggars; some were old
+and shrivelled; some were shrivelled and young; some
+were bold; some were frightened; and here and there
+was one almost fair.</p>
+
+<p>Down at the far end of one aisle was a bed whose occupant
+lay watching the distant, slowly approaching group
+with eyes of unspeakable dread. There was not a word
+or motion, only the steadfast gaze. Gradually the
+throng drew near. The faces of the students could be
+distinguished. This one was coarse; that one was gentle;
+another was sleepy; another trivial and silly; another
+heavy and sour; another tender and gracious. Presently
+the tones of the Doctor&#8217;s voice could be heard, soft, clear,
+and without that trumpet quality that it had beyond the
+sick-room. How slowly, yet how surely, they came! The
+patient&#8217;s eyes turned away toward the ceiling; they
+could not bear the slowness of the encounter. They
+closed; the lips moved in prayer. The group came to the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+bed that was only the fourth away; then to the third;
+then to the second. There they pause some minutes. Now
+the Doctor approaches the very next bed. Suddenly he
+notices this patient. She is a small woman, young, fair
+to see, and, with closed eyes and motionless form, is suffering
+an agony of consternation. One startled look, a
+suppressed exclamation, two steps forward,&mdash;the patient&#8217;s
+eyes slowly open. Ah, me! It is Mary Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-morning, madam,&rdquo; said the physician, with a
+cold and distant bow; and to the students, &ldquo;We&#8217;ll pass
+right along to the other side,&rdquo; and they moved into the
+next aisle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I am a little pressed for time this morning,&rdquo; he presently
+remarked, as the students showed some unwillingness
+to be hurried. As soon as he could he parted with them
+and returned to the ward alone.</p>
+
+<p>As he moved again down among the sick, straight along
+this time, turning neither to right nor left, one of the
+Sisters of Charity&mdash;the hospital and its so-called nurses
+are under their oversight&mdash;touched his arm. He stopped
+impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Sister&rdquo;&mdash;(bowing his ear).</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I&mdash;the&mdash;the&rdquo;&mdash;His frown had scared away
+her power of speech.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, what is it, Sister?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The&mdash;the last patient down on this side&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>He was further displeased. &ldquo;<em>I&#8217;ll</em> attend to the patients,
+Sister,&rdquo; he said; and then, more kindly, &ldquo;I&#8217;m going there
+now. No, you stay here, if you please.&rdquo; And he left
+her behind.</p>
+
+<p>He came and stood by the bed. The patient gazed on him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richling,&rdquo; he softly began, and had to cease.</p>
+
+<p>She did not speak or move; she tried to smile, but her
+eyes filled, her lips quivered.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+&ldquo;My dear madam,&rdquo; exclaimed the physician, in a low
+voice, &ldquo;what brought you here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The answer was inarticulate, but he saw it on the moving
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Want,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But your husband?&rdquo; He stooped to catch the husky
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Home.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Home?&rdquo; He could not understand. &ldquo;Not gone to&mdash;back&mdash;up
+the river?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She slowly shook her head: &ldquo;No, home. In Prieur
+street.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Still her words were riddles. He could not see how she
+had come to this. He stood silent, not knowing how to
+utter his thought. At length he opened his lips to speak,
+hesitated an instant, and then asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richling, tell me plainly, has your husband gone
+wrong?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes looked up a moment, upon him, big and
+staring, and suddenly she spoke:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Doctor! My husband go wrong? John go wrong?&rdquo;
+The eyelids closed down, the head rocked slowly from side
+to side on the flat hospital pillow, and the first two tears
+he had ever seen her shed welled from the long lashes and
+slipped down her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My poor child!&rdquo; said the Doctor, taking her hand in
+his. &ldquo;No, no! God forgive me! He hasn&#8217;t gone wrong;
+he&#8217;s not going wrong. You&#8217;ll tell me all about it when
+you&#8217;re stronger.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor had her removed to one of the private rooms
+of the pay-ward, and charged the Sisters to take special
+care of her. &ldquo;Above all things,&rdquo; he murmured, with a
+beetling frown, &ldquo;tell that thick-headed nurse not to let
+her know that this is at anybody&#8217;s expense. Ah, yes; and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+when her husband comes, tell him to see me at my office
+as soon as he possibly can.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As he was leaving the hospital gate he had an afterthought.
+&ldquo;I might have left a note.&rdquo; He paused, with
+his foot on the carriage-step. &ldquo;I suppose they&#8217;ll tell
+him,&rdquo;&mdash;and so he got in and drove off, looking at his
+watch.</p>
+
+<p>On his second visit, although he came in with a quietly
+inspiring manner, he had also, secretly, the feeling of a
+culprit. But, midway of the room, when the young head
+on the pillow turned its face toward him, his heart rose.
+For the patient smiled. As he drew nearer she slid out
+her feeble hand. &ldquo;I&#8217;m glad I came here,&rdquo; she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;this room is much better than
+the open ward.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t mean this room,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I meant the
+whole hospital.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The whole hospital!&rdquo; He raised his eyebrows, as to
+a child.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! Doctor,&rdquo; she responded, her eyes kindling,
+though moist.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What, my child?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She smiled upward to his bent face.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The poor&mdash;mustn&#8217;t be ashamed of the poor, must
+they?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor only stroked her brow, and presently turned
+and addressed his professional inquiries to the nurse. He
+went away. Just outside the door he asked the nurse:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hasn&#8217;t her husband been here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;but she was asleep, and he
+only stood there at the door and looked in a bit. He
+trembled,&rdquo; the unintelligent woman added, for the Doctor
+seemed waiting to hear more,&mdash;&ldquo;he trembled all over;
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+and that&#8217;s all he did, excepting his saying her name over
+to himself like, over and over, and wiping of his eyes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And nobody told him anything?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, not a word, sir!&rdquo; came the eager answer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&#8217;t tell him to come and see me?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The woman gave a start, looked dismayed, and
+began:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;N-no, sir; you didn&#8217;t tell&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Um&mdash;hum,&rdquo; growled the Doctor. He took out a
+card and wrote on it. &ldquo;Now see if you can remember to
+give him that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>MANY WATERS.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>As the day faded away it began to rain. The next
+morning the water was coming down in torrents.
+Richling, looking out from a door in Prieur street, found
+scant room for one foot on the inner edge of the sidewalk;
+all the rest was under water. By noon the sidewalks
+were completely covered in miles of streets. By two in
+the afternoon the flood was coming into many of the
+houses. By three it was up at the door-sill on which he
+stood. There it stopped.</p>
+
+<p>He could do nothing but stand and look. Skiffs,
+canoes, hastily improvised rafts, were moving in every
+direction, carrying the unsightly chattels of the poor out
+of their overflowed cottages to higher ground. Barrels,
+boxes, planks, hen-coops, bridge lumber, piles of straw
+that waltzed solemnly as they went, cord-wood, old
+shingles, door-steps, floated here and there in melancholy
+confusion; and down upon all still drizzled the slackening
+rain. At length it ceased.</p>
+
+<p>Richling still stood in the door-way, the picture of mute
+helplessness. Yes, there was one other thing he could
+do; he could laugh. It would have been hard to avoid it
+sometimes, there were such ludicrous sights,&mdash;such slips
+and sprawls into the water; so there he stood in that
+peculiar isolation that deaf people content themselves
+with, now looking the picture of anxious waiting, now indulging
+a low, deaf man&#8217;s chuckle when something made
+the rowdies and slatterns of the street roar.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+Presently he noticed, at a distance up the way, a young
+man in a canoe, passing, much to their good-natured
+chagrin, a party of three in a skiff, who had engaged him
+in a trial of speed. From both boats a shower of hilarious
+French was issuing. At the nearest corner the skiff
+party turned into another street and disappeared, throwing
+their lingual fireworks to the last. The canoe came
+straight on with the speed of a fish. Its dexterous occupant
+was no other than Narcisse.</p>
+
+<p>There was a grace in his movement that kept Richling&#8217;s
+eyes on him, when he would rather have withdrawn into
+the house. Down went the paddle always on the same
+side, noiselessly, in front; on darted the canoe; backward
+stretched the submerged paddle and came out of the water
+edgewise at full reach behind, with an almost imperceptible
+swerving motion that kept the slender craft true to its
+course. No rocking; no rush of water before or behind;
+only the one constant glassy ripple gliding on either side
+as silently as a beam of light. Suddenly, without any
+apparent change of movement in the sinewy wrists, the
+narrow shell swept around in a quarter circle, and Narcisse
+sat face to face with Richling.</p>
+
+<p>Each smiled brightly at the other. The handsome Creole&#8217;s
+face was aglow with the pure delight of existence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mistoo Itchlin, &#8217;ow you enjoyin&#8217; that watah?
+As fah as myseff am concerned, &lsquo;I am afloat, I am afloat
+on the fee-us &#8217;olling tide.&rsquo; I don&#8217;t think you fine that
+stweet pwetty dusty to-day, Mistoo Itchlin?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It don&#8217;t inflame my eyes to-day,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You muz egscuse my i&#8217;ony, Mistoo Itchlin; I can&#8217;t
+&#8217;ep that sometime&#8217;. It come natu&#8217;al to me, in fact. I
+was on&#8217;y speaking i&#8217;oniously juz now in calling allusion
+to that dust; because, of co&#8217;se, theh is no dust to-day,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+because the g&#8217;ound is all covvud with watah, in fact.
+Some people don&#8217;t understand that figgah of i&#8217;ony.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t understand as much about it myself as I&#8217;d like
+to,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Me, I&#8217;m ve&#8217;y fon&#8217; of it,&rdquo; responded the Creole. &ldquo;I
+was making seve&#8217;al i&#8217;onies ad those fwen&#8217; of mine juz now.
+We was &#8217;unning a &#8217;ace. An&#8217; thass anotheh thing I am
+fon&#8217; of. I would &#8217;ather &#8217;un a &#8217;ace than to wuck faw a
+livin&#8217;. Ha! ha! ha! I should thing so! Anybody would,
+in fact. But thass the way with me&mdash;always making
+some i&#8217;onies.&rdquo; He stopped with a sudden change of
+countenance, and resumed gravely: &ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,
+looks to me like you&#8217; lookin&#8217; ve&#8217;y salad.&rdquo; He fanned himself
+with his hat. &ldquo;I dunno &#8217;ow &#8217;tis with you, Mistoo
+Itchlin, but I fine myseff ve&#8217;y oppwessive thiz evening.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t find you so,&rdquo; said Richling, smiling broadly.</p>
+
+<p>And he did not. The young Creole&#8217;s burning face and
+resplendent wit were a sunset glow in the darkness of this
+day of overpowering adversity. His presence even supplied,
+for a moment, what seemed a gleam of hope. Why
+wasn&#8217;t there here an opportunity to visit the hospital?
+He need not tell Narcisse the object of his visit.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think,&rdquo; asked Richling, persuasively, crouching
+down upon one of his heels, &ldquo;that I could sit in that
+thing without turning it over?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In that pee-ogue?&rdquo; Narcisse smiled the smile of
+the proficient as he waved his paddle across the canoe.
+&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo;&mdash;the smile passed off,&mdash;&ldquo;I dunno
+if you&#8217;ll billiv me, but at the same time I muz tell you the
+tooth?&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>He paused inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Richling, with evident disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it&#8217;s juz a poss&#8217;bil&#8217;ty that you&#8217;ll wefwain fum
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+spillin&#8217; out fum yeh till the negs cawneh. Thass the
+manneh of those who ah not acquainted with the pee-ogue.
+&lsquo;Lost to sight, to memo&#8217;y deah&rsquo;&mdash;if you&#8217;ll egscuse the
+maxim. Thass Chawles Dickens mague use of that egspwession.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling answered with a gay shake of the head. &ldquo;I&#8217;ll
+keep out of it.&rdquo; If Narcisse detected his mortified chagrin,
+he did not seem to. It was hard; the day&#8217;s last
+hope was blown out like a candle in the wind. Richling
+dared not risk the wetting of his suit of clothes; they
+were his sole letter of recommendation and capital in
+trade.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, <em>au &#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>, Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo; He turned and moved
+off&mdash;dip, glide, and away.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier stamped his wet feet on the pavement of the
+hospital porch. It was afternoon of the day following
+that of the rain. The water still covering the streets
+about the hospital had not prevented his carriage from
+splashing through it on his double daily round. A narrow
+and unsteady plank spanned the immersed sidewalk.
+Three times, going and coming, he had crossed it safely,
+and this fourth time he had made half the distance well
+enough; but, hearing distant cheers and laughter, he looked
+up street; when&mdash;splatter!&mdash;and the cheers were redoubled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pretty thing to laugh at!&rdquo; he muttered. Two or
+three bystanders, leaning on their umbrellas in the lodge
+at the gate and in the porch, where he stood stamping,
+turned their backs and smoothed their mouths.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hah!&rdquo; said the tall Doctor, stamping harder.
+Stamp!&mdash;stamp! He shook his leg.&mdash;&ldquo;Bah!&rdquo; He
+stamped the other long, slender, wet foot and looked down
+at it, turning one side and then the other.&mdash;&ldquo;F-fah!&rdquo;&mdash;The
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+first one again.&mdash;&ldquo;Pshaw!&ldquo;&mdash;The other.&mdash;Stamp!&mdash;stamp!&mdash;&rdquo;<em>Right</em>&mdash;<em>into</em>
+it!&mdash;up to my <em>ankles!</em>&rdquo; He
+looked around with a slight scowl at one man, who seemed
+taken with a sudden softening of the spine and knees,
+and who turned his back quickly and fell against another,
+who, also with his back turned, was leaning tremulously
+against a pillar.</p>
+
+<p>But the object of mirth did not tarry. He went as he
+was to Mary&#8217;s room, and found her much better&mdash;as,
+indeed, he had done at every visit. He sat by her bed
+and listened to her story.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor, you see, we did nicely for a while.
+John went on getting the same kind of work, and pleasing
+everybody, of course, and all he lacked was finding something
+permanent. Still, we passed through one month
+after another, and we really began to think the sun was
+coming out, so to speak.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I thought so, too,&rdquo; put in the Doctor. &ldquo;I
+thought if it didn&#8217;t you&#8217;d let me know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, no, Doctor, we couldn&#8217;t do that; you couldn&#8217;t
+be taking care of well people.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Doctor, dropping that point, &ldquo;I
+suppose as the busy season began to wane that mode of
+livelihood, of course, disappeared.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo;&mdash;a little one-sided smile,&mdash;&ldquo;and so did our
+money. And then, of course,&rdquo;&mdash;she slightly lifted and
+waved her hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You had to live,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier, sincerely.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled again, with abstracted eyes. &ldquo;We thought
+we&#8217;d like to,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I didn&#8217;t mind the loss of the
+things so much,&mdash;except the little table we ate from.
+You remember that little round table, don&#8217;t you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The visitor had not the heart to say no. He nodded.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+&ldquo;When that went there was but one thing left that could go.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not your bed?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The bedstead; yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&#8217;t sell your bed, Mrs. Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tears gushed from her eyes. She made a sign of
+assent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But then,&rdquo; she resumed, &ldquo;we made an excellent arrangement
+with a good woman who had just lost her
+husband, and wanted to live cheaply, too.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What amuses you, madam?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing great. But I wish you knew her. She&#8217;s
+funny. Well, so we moved down-town again. Didn&#8217;t
+cost much to move.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She would smile a little in spite of him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And then?&rdquo; said he, stirring impatiently and leaning
+forward. &ldquo;What then?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, then I worked a little harder than I thought,&mdash;pulling
+trunks around and so on,&mdash;and I had this third attack.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor straightened himself up, folded his arms,
+and muttered:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&mdash;oh! <em>Why</em> wasn&#8217;t I instantly sent for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tears were in her eyes again, but&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; she answered, with her odd little argumentative
+smile, &ldquo;how could we? We had nothing to pay
+with. It wouldn&#8217;t have been just.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Just!&rdquo; exclaimed the physician, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said the invalid, and looked at him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh&mdash;all right!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She made no answer but to look at him still more
+pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Wouldn&#8217;t it have been just as fair to let me be generous,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+madam?&rdquo; His faint smile was bitter. &ldquo;For once?
+Simply for once?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We couldn&#8217;t make that proposition, could we, Doctor?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was checkmated.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richling,&rdquo; he said suddenly, clasping the back
+of his chair as if about to rise, &ldquo;tell me,&mdash;did you or
+your husband act this way for anything I&#8217;ve ever said
+or done?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, Doctor! no, no; never! But&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But kindness should seek&mdash;not be sought,&rdquo; said the
+physician, starting up.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, Doctor, we didn&#8217;t look on it so. Of course we
+didn&#8217;t. If there&#8217;s any fault it&#8217;s all mine. For it was my
+own proposition to John, that as we <em>had</em> to seek charity
+we should just be honest and open about it. I said,
+&lsquo;John, as I need the best attention, and as that can be
+offered free only in the hospital, why, to the hospital I
+ought to go.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She lay still, and the Doctor pondered. Presently he
+said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And Mr. Richling&mdash;I suppose he looks for work all the time?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;From daylight to dark!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the water is passing off. He&#8217;ll be along by
+and by to see you, no doubt. Tell him to call, first thing
+to-morrow morning, at my office.&rdquo; And with that the
+Doctor went off in his wet boots, committed a series of
+indiscretions, reached home, and fell ill.</p>
+
+<p>In the wanderings of fever he talked of the Richlings,
+and in lucid moments inquired for them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; answered the sick Doctor&#8217;s physician,
+&ldquo;they&#8217;re attended to. Yes, all their wants are supplied.
+Just dismiss them from your mind.&rdquo; In the eyes of this
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+physician the Doctor&#8217;s life was invaluable, and these
+patients, or pensioners, an unknown and, most likely, an
+inconsiderable quantity; two sparrows, as it were,
+worth a farthing. But the sick man lay thinking. He
+frowned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wish they would go home.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have sent them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You have? Home to Milwaukee?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thank God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He soon began to mend. Yet it was weeks before he
+could leave the house. When one day he re&euml;ntered the
+hospital, still pale and faint, he was prompt to express to
+the Mother-Superior the comfort he had felt in his sickness
+to know that his brother physician had sent those
+Richlings to their kindred.</p>
+
+<p>The Sister shook her head. He saw the deception in
+an instant. As best his strength would allow, he hurried
+to the keeper of the rolls. There was the truth. Home?
+Yes,&mdash;to Prieur street,&mdash;discharged only one week
+before. He drove quickly to his office.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Narcisse, you will find that young Mr. Richling living
+in Prieur street, somewhere between Conti and St. Louis.
+I don&#8217;t know the house; you&#8217;ll have to find it. Tell him
+I&#8217;m in my office again, and to come and see me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse was no such fool as to say he knew the house.
+He would get the praise of finding it quickly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll do my mose awduous, seh,&rdquo; he said, took down
+his coat, hung up his jacket, put on his hat, and went
+straight to the house and knocked. Got no answer.
+Knocked again, and a third time; but in vain. Went
+next door and inquired of a pretty girl, who fell in love
+with him at a glance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but they had moved. She wasn&#8217;t <em>jess ezac&#8217;ly</em>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+sure where they <em>had</em> moved to, <em>unless-n</em> it was in that little
+house yondeh between St. Louis and Toulouse; and if
+they wasn&#8217;t there she didn&#8217;t know <em>where</em> they was.
+People ought to leave words where they&#8217;s movin&#8217; at, but
+they don&#8217;t. You&#8217;re very welcome,&rdquo; she added, as he expressed
+his thanks; and he would have been welcome had
+he questioned her for an hour. His parting bow and
+smile stuck in her heart a six-months.</p>
+
+<p>He went to the spot pointed out. As a Creole he was
+used to seeing very respectable people living in very small
+and plain houses. This one was not too plain even for
+his ideas of Richling, though it was but a little one-street-door-and-window
+affair, with an alley on the left running
+back into the small yard behind. He knocked. Again
+no one answered. He looked down the alley and saw,
+moving about the yard, a large woman, who, he felt certain,
+could not be Mrs. Richling.</p>
+
+<p>Two little short-skirted, bare-legged girls were playing
+near him. He spoke to them in French. Did they know
+where Monsieu&#8217; Itchlin lived? The two children repeated
+the name, looking inquiringly at each other.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Non, mich&eacute;.</em>&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;No, sir, they didn&#8217;t know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Qui reste ici?</em>&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Who lives here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Ici? Madame qui reste l&agrave; c&#8217;est Mizziz Ri-i-i-ly!</em>&rdquo;
+said one.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yass,&rdquo; said the other, breaking into English and rubbing
+a musquito off of her well-tanned shank with the sole
+of her foot, &ldquo;tis Mizziz Ri-i-i-ly what live there. She
+jess move een. She&#8217;s got a lill baby.&mdash;Oh! you means
+dat lady what was in de Chatty Hawspill!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no! A real, nice <em>lady</em>. She nevva saw that
+Cha&#8217;ity Hospi&#8217;l.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The little girls shook their heads. They couldn&#8217;t imagine
+a person who had never seen the Charity Hospital.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Was there nobody else who had moved into any of
+these houses about here lately?&rdquo; He spoke again in
+French. They shook their heads. Two boys came forward
+and verified the testimony. Narcisse went back
+with his report: &ldquo;Moved,&mdash;not found.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I fine that ve&#8217;y d&#8217;oll, Doctah Seveeah,&rdquo; concluded the
+unaugmented, hanging up his hat; &ldquo;some peop&#8217; always
+&#8217;ard to fine. I h-even notiz that sem thing w&#8217;en I go to
+colic&#8217; some bill. I dunno &#8217;ow&#8217; tis, Doctah, but I assu&#8217; you
+I kin tell that by a man&#8217;s physio&#8217;nomie. Nobody teach
+me that. &#8217;Tis my own in<em>geen</em>u&#8217;ty &#8217;as made me to discoveh
+that, in fact.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor was silent. Presently he drew a piece of
+paper toward him and, dipping his pen into the ink, began
+to write:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Information wanted of the whereabouts of John
+Richling&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Narcisse,&rdquo; he called, still writing, &ldquo;I want you to
+take an advertisement to the &lsquo;Picayune&rsquo; office.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;With the gweatez of pleazheh, seh.&rdquo; The clerk
+began his usual shifting of costume. &ldquo;Yesseh! I assu&#8217;
+you, Doctah, that is a p&#8217;oposition moze enti&#8217;ly to my satizfagtion;
+faw I am suffe&#8217;ing faw a smoke, and deztitute
+of a ciga&#8217;ette! I am aztonizh&#8217; &#8217;ow I did that, to egshauz
+them unconsciouzly, in fact.&rdquo; He received the
+advertisement in an envelope, whipped his shoes a little
+with his handkerchief, and went out. One would think
+to hear him thundering down the stairs, that it was
+twenty-five cents&#8217; worth of ice.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hold o&mdash;&rdquo; The Doctor started from his seat, then
+turned and paced feebly up and down. Who, besides
+Richling, might see that notice? What might be its unexpected
+results? Who was John Richling? A man
+with a secret at the best; and a secret, in Dr. Sevier&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+eyes, was detestable. Might not Richling be a man who
+had fled from something? &ldquo;No! no!&rdquo; The Doctor
+spoke aloud. He had promised to think nothing ill of
+him. Let the poor children have their silly secret. He
+spoke again: &ldquo;They&#8217;ll find out the folly of it by and
+by.&rdquo; He let the advertisement go; and it went.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>RAPHAEL RISTOFALO.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Richling had a dollar in his pocket. A man touched
+him on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>But let us see. On the day that John and Mary had
+sold their only bedstead, Mrs. Riley, watching them, had
+proposed the joint home. The offer had been accepted
+with an eagerness that showed itself in nervous laughter.
+Mrs. Riley then took quarters in Prieur street, where John
+and Mary, for a due consideration, were given a single
+neatly furnished back room. The bedstead had brought
+seven dollars. Richling, on the day after the removal,
+was in the commercial quarter, looking, as usual, for employment.</p>
+
+<p>The young man whom Dr. Sevier had first seen, in
+the previous October, moving with a springing step and
+alert, inquiring glances from number to number in Carondelet
+street was slightly changed. His step was firm,
+but something less elastic, and not quite so hurried. His
+face was more thoughtful, and his glance wanting in a
+certain dancing freshness that had been extremely pleasant.
+He was walking in Poydras street toward the river.</p>
+
+<p>As he came near to a certain man who sat in the
+entrance of a store with the freshly whittled corner of a
+chair between his knees, his look and bow were grave, but
+amiable, quietly hearty, deferential, and also self-respectful&mdash;and
+uncommercial: so palpably uncommercial that
+the sitter did not rise or even shut his knife.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+He slightly stared. Richling, in a low, private tone,
+was asking him for employment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; turning his ear up and frowning downward.</p>
+
+<p>The application was repeated, the first words with a
+slightly resentful ring, but the rest more quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The store-keeper stared again, and shook his head
+slowly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; he said, in a barely audible tone. Richling
+moved on, not stopping at the next place, or the next, or
+the next; for he felt the man&#8217;s stare all over his back
+until he turned the corner and found himself in Tchoupitoulas
+street. Nor did he stop at the first place around
+the corner. It smelt of deteriorating potatoes and up-river
+cabbages, and there were open barrels of onions
+set ornamentally aslant at the entrance. He had a fatal
+conviction that his services would not be wanted in malodorous
+places.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, isn&#8217;t that a shame?&rdquo; asked the chair-whittler, as
+Richling passed out of sight. &ldquo;Such a gentleman as
+that, to be beggin&#8217; for work from door to door!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s not beggin&#8217; f&#8217;om do&#8217; to do&#8217;,&rdquo; said a second, with
+a Creole accent on his tongue, and a match stuck behind
+his ear like a pen. &ldquo;Beside, he&#8217;s too <em>much</em> of a gennlemun.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s where you and him differs,&rdquo; said the first. He
+frowned upon the victim of his delicate repartee with
+make-believe defiance. Number Two drew from an outside
+coat-pocket a wad of common brown wrapping-paper,
+tore from it a small, neat parallelogram, dove into an
+opposite pocket for some loose smoking-tobacco, laid a
+pinch of it in the paper, and, with a single dexterous turn
+of the fingers, thumbs above, the rest beneath,&mdash;it looks
+simple, but &#8217;tis an amazing art,&mdash;made a cigarette. Then
+he took down his match, struck it under his short coat-skirt,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+lighted his cigarette, drew an inhalation through it
+that consumed a third of its length, and sat there, with
+his eyes half-closed, and all that smoke somewhere inside
+of him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That young man,&rdquo; remarked a third, wiping a toothpick
+on his thigh and putting it in his vest-pocket, as he
+stepped to the front, &ldquo;don&#8217;t know how to <em>look</em> fur work.
+There&#8217;s one way fur a day-laborer to look fur work, and
+there&#8217;s another way fur a gentleman to look fur work, and
+there&#8217;s another way fur a&mdash;a&mdash;a man with money to
+look fur somethin&#8217; to put his money into. <em>It&#8217;s just like
+fishing!</em>&rdquo; He threw both hands outward and downward,
+and made way for a porter&#8217;s truck with a load of green
+meat. The smoke began to fall from Number Two&#8217;s
+nostrils in two slender blue streams. Number Three
+continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ve got to know what kind o&#8217; hooks you want,
+and what kind o&#8217; bait you want, and then, after <em>that</em>,
+you&#8217;ve&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Numbers One and Two did not let him finish.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&mdash;Got to know how to fish,&rdquo; they said; &ldquo;that&#8217;s so!&rdquo;
+The smoke continued to leak slowly from Number Two&#8217;s
+nostrils and teeth, though he had not lifted his cigarette
+the second time.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you&#8217;ve got to know how to fish,&rdquo; reaffirmed the
+third. &ldquo;If you don&#8217;t know how to fish, it&#8217;s as like as
+not that nobody can tell you what&#8217;s the matter; an&#8217; yet,
+all the same, you aint goin&#8217; to ketch no fish.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now,&rdquo; said the first man, with an unconvinced
+swing of his chin, &ldquo;<em>spunk</em> &#8217;ll sometimes pull a man
+through; and you can&#8217;t say he aint spunky.&rdquo; Number
+Three admitted the corollary. Number Two looked up:
+his chance had come.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;d a w&#8217;ipped you faw a dime,&rdquo; said he to Number
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+One, took a comforting draw from his cigarette, and felt
+a great peace.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I take notice he&#8217;s a little deaf,&rdquo; said Number Three,
+still alluding to Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;d spoil him for me,&rdquo; said Number One.</p>
+
+<p>Number Three asked why.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I just wouldn&#8217;t have him about me. Didn&#8217;t
+you ever notice that a deaf man always seems like a
+sort o&#8217; stranger? I can&#8217;t bear &#8217;em.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling meanwhile moved on. His critics were right.
+He was not wanting in courage; but no man from the
+moon could have been more an alien on those sidewalks.
+He was naturally diligent, active, quick-witted, and of
+good, though maybe a little too scholarly address; quick
+of temper, it is true, and uniting his quickness of temper
+with a certain bashfulness,&mdash;an unlucky combination,
+since, as a consequence, nobody had to get out of its
+way; but he was generous in fact and in speech, and
+never held malice a moment. But, besides the heavy
+odds which his small secret seemed to be against him,
+stopping him from accepting such valuable friendships
+as might otherwise have come to him, and besides his
+slight deafness, he was by nature a recluse, or, at least,
+a dreamer. Every day that he set foot on Tchoupitoulas,
+or Carondelet, or Magazine, or Fulton, or Poydras street
+he came from a realm of thought, seeking service in an
+empire of matter.</p>
+
+<p>There is a street in New Orleans called Triton <em>Walk</em>.
+That is what all the ways of commerce and finance and
+daily bread-getting were to Richling. He was a merman&mdash;ashore.
+It was the feeling rather than the knowledge
+of this that prompted him to this daily, aimless trudging
+after mere employment. He had a proper pride; once
+in a while a little too much; nor did he clearly see his
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+deficiencies; and yet the unrecognized consciousness
+that he had not the commercial instinct made him willing&mdash;as
+Number Three would have said&mdash;to &ldquo;cut bait&rdquo;
+for any fisherman who would let him do it.</p>
+
+<p>He turned without any distinct motive and, retracing
+his steps to the corner, passed up across Poydras street.
+A little way above it he paused to look at some machinery
+in motion. He liked machinery,&mdash;for itself rather
+than for its results. He would have gone in and examined
+the workings of this apparatus had it not been
+for the sign above his head, &ldquo;No Admittance.&rdquo; Those
+words always seemed painted for him. A slight modification
+in Richling&#8217;s character might have made him an
+inventor. Some other faint difference, and he might
+have been a writer, a historian, an essayist, or even&mdash;there
+is no telling&mdash;a well-fed poet. With the question
+of food, raiment, and shelter permanently settled, he
+might have become one of those resplendent flash lights
+that at intervals dart their beams across the dark waters
+of the world&#8217;s ignorance, hardly from new continents,
+but from the observatory, the study, the laboratory. But
+he was none of these. There had been a crime committed
+somewhere in his bringing up, and as a result he
+stood in the thick of life&#8217;s battle, weaponless. He gazed
+upon machinery with childlike wonder; but when he
+looked around and saw on every hand men,&mdash;good fellows
+who ate in their shirt-sleeves at restaurants, told
+broad jokes, spread their mouths and smote their sides
+when they laughed, and whose best wit was to bombard
+one another with bread-crusts and hide behind the sugar-bowl;
+men whom he could have taught in every kind
+of knowledge that they were capable of grasping, except
+the knowledge of how to get money,&mdash;when he saw
+these men, as it seemed to him, grow rich daily by
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+simply flipping beans into each other&#8217;s faces, or slapping
+each other on the back, the wonder of machinery was
+eclipsed. Do as they did? He? He could no more reach
+a conviction as to what the price of corn would be to-morrow
+than he could remember what the price of sugar
+was yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>He called himself an accountant, gulping down his
+secret pride with an amiable glow that commanded, instantly,
+an amused esteem. And, to judge by his evident
+familiarity with Tonti&#8217;s beautiful scheme of mercantile
+records, he certainly&mdash;those guessed whose books he
+had extricated from confusion&mdash;had handled money and
+money values in days before his unexplained coming to
+New Orleans. Yet a close observer would have noticed
+that he grasped these tasks only as problems, treated
+them in their mathematical and enigmatical aspect, and
+solved them without any appreciation of their concrete
+values. When they were done he felt less personal interest
+in them than in the architectural beauty of the
+store-front, whose window-shutters he had never helped
+to close without a little heart-leap of pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>But, standing thus, and looking in at the machinery,
+a man touched him on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-morning,&rdquo; said the man. He wore a pleasant
+air. It seemed to say, &ldquo;I&#8217;m nothing much, but you&#8217;ll
+recognize me in a moment; I&#8217;ll wait.&rdquo; He was short,
+square, solid, beardless; in years, twenty-five or six.
+His skin was dark, his hair almost black, his eyebrows
+strong. In his mild black eyes you could see the whole
+Mediterranean. His dress was coarse, but clean; his
+linen soft and badly laundered. But under all the rough
+garb and careless, laughing manner was visibly written
+again and again the name of the race that once held the
+world under its feet.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You don&#8217;t remember me?&rdquo; he added, after a moment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Richling, pleasantly, but with embarrassment.
+The man waited another moment, and suddenly
+Richling recalled their earlier meeting. The man, representing
+a wholesale confectioner in one of the smaller
+cities up the river, had bought some cordials and syrups
+of the house whose books Richling had last put in order.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes I do, too!&rdquo; said Richling. &ldquo;You left
+your pocket-book in my care for two or three days; your
+own private money, you said.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; The man laughed softly. &ldquo;Lost that money.
+Sent it to the boss. Boss died&mdash;store seized&mdash;everything
+gone.&rdquo; His English was well pronounced, but did
+not escape a pretty Italian accent, too delicate for the
+printer&#8217;s art.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! that was too bad!&rdquo; Richling laid his hand upon
+an awning-post and twined an arm and leg around it as
+though he were a vine. &ldquo;I&mdash;I forget your name.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ristofalo. Raphael Ristofalo. Yours is Richling.
+Yes, knocked me flat. Not got cent in world.&rdquo; The
+Italian&#8217;s low, mellow laugh claimed Richling&#8217;s admiration.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, when did that happen?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&#8217;day,&rdquo; replied the other, still laughing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And how are you going to provide for the future?&rdquo;
+Richling asked, smiling down into the face of the shorter
+man. The Italian tossed the future away with the back
+of his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I got nothin&#8217; do with that.&rdquo; His words were low, but
+very distinct.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Richling laughed, leaning his cheek against
+the post.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Must provide for the present,&rdquo; said Raphael Ristofalo.
+Richling dropped his eyes in thought. The present! He
+had never been able to see that it was the present which
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+must be provided against, until, while he was training his
+guns upon the future, the most primitive wants of the
+present burst upon him right and left like whooping
+savages.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Can you lend me dollar?&rdquo; asked the Italian. &ldquo;Give
+you back dollar an&#8217; quarter to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling gave a start and let go the post. &ldquo;Why, Mr.
+Risto&mdash;falo, I&mdash;I&mdash;, the fact is, I&rdquo;&mdash;he shook his
+head&mdash;&ldquo;I haven&#8217;t much money.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dollar will start me,&rdquo; said the Italian, whose feet
+had not moved an inch since he touched Richling&#8217;s
+shoulder. &ldquo;Be aw righ&#8217; to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You can&#8217;t invest one dollar by itself,&rdquo; said the incredulous
+Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Return her to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling swung his head from side to side as an expression
+of disrelish. &ldquo;I haven&#8217;t been employed for some time.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I goin&#8217; t&#8217;employ myself,&rdquo; said Ristofalo.</p>
+
+<p>Richling laughed again. There was a faint betrayal of
+distress in his voice as it fell upon the cunning ear of the
+Italian; but he laughed too, very gently and innocently,
+and stood in his tracks.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&#8217;t like to refuse a dollar to a man who needs
+it,&rdquo; said Richling. He took his hat off and ran his fingers
+through his hair. &ldquo;I&#8217;ve seen the time when it was much
+easier to lend than it is just now.&rdquo; He thrust his hand
+down into his pocket and stood gazing at the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p>The Italian glanced at Richling askance, and with one
+sweep of the eye from the softened crown of his hat
+to the slender, white bursted slit in the outer side of
+either well-polished shoe, took in the beauty of his face
+and a full understanding of his condition. His hair, somewhat
+dry, had fallen upon his forehead. His fine, smooth
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+skin was darkened by the exposure of his daily wanderings.
+His cheek-bones, a trifle high, asserted their place
+above the softly concave cheeks. His mouth was closed
+and the lips were slightly compressed; the chin small,
+gracefully turned, not weak,&mdash;not strong. His eyes were
+abstracted, deep, pensive. His dress told much. The
+fine plaits of his shirt had sprung apart and been neatly
+sewed together again. His coat was a little faulty in the
+set of the collar, as if the person who had taken the garment
+apart and turned the goods had not put it together
+again with practised skill. It was without spot and the
+buttons were new. The edges of his shirt-cuffs had been
+trimmed with the scissors. Face and vesture alike revealed
+to the sharp eye of the Italian the woe underneath.
+&ldquo;He has a wife,&rdquo; thought Ristofalo.</p>
+
+<p>Richling looked up with a smile. &ldquo;How can you be
+so sure you will make, and not lose?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I never fail.&rdquo; There was not the least shade of
+boasting in the man&#8217;s manner. Richling handed out his
+dollar. It was given without patronage and taken with
+simple thanks.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where goin&#8217; to meet to-morrow morning?&rdquo; asked
+Ristofalo. &ldquo;Here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! I forgot,&rdquo; said Richling. &ldquo;Yes, I suppose so;
+and then you&#8217;ll tell me how you invested it, will you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but you couldn&#8217;t do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Raphael Ristofalo laughed. &ldquo;Oh! fifty reason&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>HOW HE DID IT.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Ristofalo and Richling had hardly separated,
+when it occurred to the latter that the Italian had
+first touched him from behind. Had Ristofalo recognized
+him with his back turned, or had he seen him earlier and
+followed him? The facts were these: about an hour
+before the time when Richling omitted to apply for employment
+in the ill-smelling store in Tchoupitoulas street,
+Mr. Raphael Ristofalo halted in front of the same place,&mdash;which
+appeared small and slovenly among its more
+pretentious neighbors,&mdash;and stepped just inside the door
+to where stood a single barrel of apples,&mdash;a fruit only the
+earliest varieties of which were beginning to appear in
+market. These were very small, round, and smooth, and
+with a rather wan blush confessed to more than one of
+the senses that they had seen better days. He began to
+pick them up and throw them down&mdash;one, two, three,
+four, seven, ten; about half of them were entirely sound.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How many barrel&#8217; like this?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No got-a no more; dass all,&rdquo; said the dealer. He
+was a Sicilian. &ldquo;Lame duck,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;O&auml;l de
+rest gone.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How much?&rdquo; asked Ristofalo, still handling the
+fruit.</p>
+
+<p>The Sicilian came to the barrel, looked in, and said,
+with a gesture of indifference:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;M&mdash;doll&#8217; an&#8217; &#8217;alf.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+Ristofalo offered to take them at a dollar if he might
+wash and sort them under the dealer&#8217;s hydrant, which
+could be heard running in the back yard. The offer
+would have been rejected with rude scorn but for one
+thing: it was spoken in Italian. The man looked at
+him with pleased surprise, and made the concession.
+The porter of the store, in a red worsted cap, had drawn
+near. Ristofalo bade him roll the barrel on its chine
+to the rear and stand it by the hydrant.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will come back pretty soon,&rdquo; he said, in Italian,
+and went away.</p>
+
+<p>By and by he returned, bringing with him two swarthy,
+heavy-set, little Sicilian lads, each with his inevitable
+basket and some clean rags. A smile and gesture to the
+store-keeper, a word to the boys, and in a moment the
+barrel was upturned, and the pair were washing, wiping,
+and sorting the sound and unsound apples at the hydrant.</p>
+
+<p>Ristofalo stood a moment in the entrance of the store.
+The question now was where to get a dollar. Richling
+passed, looked in, seemed to hesitate, went on, turned,
+and passed again, the other way. Ristofalo saw him all
+the time and recognized him at once, but appeared not to
+observe him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He will do,&rdquo; thought the Italian. &ldquo;Be back few
+minute&#8217;,&rdquo; he said, glancing behind him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Or-r righ&#8217;,&rdquo; said the store-keeper, with a hand-wave
+of good-natured confidence. He recognized Mr. Raphael
+Ristofalo&#8217;s species.</p>
+
+<p>The Italian walked up across Poydras street, saw
+Richling stop and look at the machinery, approached,
+and touched him on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>On parting with him he did not return to the store
+where he had left the apples. He walked up Tchoupitoulas
+street about a mile, and where St. Thomas street
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+branches acutely from it, in a squalid district full of the
+poorest Irish, stopped at a dirty fruit-stand and spoke
+in Spanish to its Catalan proprietor. Half an hour later
+twenty-five cents had changed hands, the Catalan&#8217;s fruit
+shelves were bright with small pyramids&mdash;sound side
+foremost&mdash;of Ristofalo&#8217;s second grade of apples, the
+Sicilian had Richling&#8217;s dollar, and the Italian was gone
+with his boys and his better grade of fruit. Also, a grocer
+had sold some sugar, and a druggist a little paper of
+some harmless confectioner&#8217;s dye.</p>
+
+<p>Down behind the French market, in a short, obscure
+street that runs from Ursulines to Barracks street, and is
+named in honor of Albert Gallatin, are some old buildings
+of three or four stories&#8217; height, rented, in John
+Richling&#8217;s day, to a class of persons who got their
+livelihood by sub-letting the rooms, and parts of rooms,
+to the wretchedest poor of New Orleans,&mdash;organ-grinders,
+chimney-sweeps, professional beggars, street musicians,
+lemon-peddlers, rag-pickers, with all the yet dirtier
+herd that live by hook and crook in the streets or under
+the wharves; a room with a bed and stove, a room
+without, a half-room with or without ditto, a quarter-room
+with or without a blanket or quilt, and with only a
+chalk-mark on the floor instead of a partition. Into one
+of these went Mr. Raphael Ristofalo, the two boys, and
+the apples. Whose assistance or indulgence, if any, he
+secured in there is not recorded; but when, late in
+the afternoon, the Italian issued thence&mdash;the boys,
+meanwhile, had been coming and going&mdash;an unusual
+luxury had been offered the roustabouts and idlers of the
+steam-boat landings, and many had bought and eaten
+freely of the very small, round, shiny, sugary, and artificially
+crimson roasted apples, with neatly whittled white-pine
+stems to poise them on as they were lifted to the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+consumer&#8217;s watering teeth. When, the next morning
+Richling laughed at the story, the Italian drew out two
+dollars and a half, and began to take from it a dollar.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you have last night&#8217;s lodging and so forth yet to
+pay for.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No. Made friends with Sicilian luggerman. Slept
+in his lugger.&rdquo; He showed his brow and cheeks speckled
+with mosquito-bites. &ldquo;Ate little hard-tack and coffee
+with him this morning. Don&#8217;t want much.&rdquo; He offered
+the dollar with a quarter added. Richling declined the
+bonus.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But why not?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I just couldn&#8217;t do it,&rdquo; laughed Richling; &ldquo;that&#8217;s
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Italian, &ldquo;lend me that dollar one day
+more, I return you dollar and half in its place to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The lender had to laugh again. &ldquo;You can&#8217;t find an
+odd barrel of damaged apples every day.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No. No apples to-day. But there&#8217;s regiment soldiers
+at lower landing; whole steam-boat load; going to sail
+this evenin&#8217; to Florida. They&#8217;ll eat whole barrel hard-boil&#8217;
+eggs.&rdquo;&mdash;And they did. When they sailed, the
+Italian&#8217;s pocket was stuffed with small silver.</p>
+
+<p>Richling received his dollar and fifty cents. As he
+did so, &ldquo;I would give, if I had it, a hundred dollars for
+half your art,&rdquo; he said, laughing unevenly. He was
+beaten, surpassed, humbled. Still he said, &ldquo;Come, don&#8217;t
+you want this again? You needn&#8217;t pay me for the use
+of it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the Italian refused. He had outgrown his patron.
+A week afterward Richling saw him at the Picayune Tier,
+superintending the unloading of a small schooner-load of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+bananas. He had bought the cargo, and was reselling
+to small fruiterers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Make fifty dolla&#8217; to-day,&rdquo; said the Italian, marking
+his tally-board with a piece of chalk.</p>
+
+<p>Richling clapped him joyfully on the shoulder, but
+turned around with inward distress and hurried away.
+He had not found work.</p>
+
+<p>Events followed of which we have already taken knowledge.
+Mary, we have seen, fell sick and was taken to
+the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I shall go mad!&rdquo; Richling would moan, with his
+dishevelled brows between his hands, and then start to
+his feet, exclaiming, &ldquo;I must not! I must not! I must
+keep my senses!&rdquo; And so to the commercial regions or
+to the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier, as we know, left word that Richling should
+call and see him; but when he called, a servant&mdash;very
+curtly, it seemed to him&mdash;said the Doctor was not well
+and didn&#8217;t want to see anybody. This was enough for a
+young man who <em>hadn&#8217;t</em> his senses. The more he needed
+a helping hand the more unreasonably shy he became
+of those who might help him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will nobody come and find us?&rdquo; Yet he would not
+cry &ldquo;Whoop!&rdquo; and how, then, was anybody to come?</p>
+
+<p>Mary returned to the house again (ah! what joys
+there are in the vale of tribulation!), and grew strong,&mdash;stronger,
+she averred, than ever she had been.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And now you&#8217;ll <em>not</em> be cast down, <em>will</em> you?&rdquo; she
+said, sliding into her husband&#8217;s lap. She was in an
+uncommonly playful mood.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not a bit of it,&rdquo; said John. &ldquo;Every dog has his
+day. I&#8217;ll come to the top. You&#8217;ll see.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t I know that?&rdquo; she responded, &ldquo;Look here,
+now,&rdquo; she exclaimed, starting to her feet and facing him,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+&ldquo;<em>I&#8217;ll</em> recommend you to anybody. <em>I&#8217;ve</em> got confidence
+in you!&rdquo; Richling thought she had never looked quite
+so pretty as at that moment. He leaped from his chair
+with a laughing ejaculation, caught and swung her an
+instant from her feet, and landed her again before she
+could cry out. If, in retort, she smote him so sturdily
+that she had to retreat backward to rearrange her shaken
+coil of hair, it need not go down on the record; such
+things will happen. The scuffle and suppressed laughter
+were detected even in Mrs. Riley&#8217;s room.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; sighed the widow to herself, &ldquo;wasn&#8217;t it Kate
+Riley that used to get the sweet, haird knocks!&rdquo; Her
+grief was mellowing.</p>
+
+<p>Richling went out on the old search, which the advancing
+summer made more nearly futile each day than the day before.</p>
+
+<p>Stop. What sound was that?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling! Richling!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling, walking in a commercial street, turned. A
+member of the firm that had last employed him beckoned
+him to halt.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What are you doing now, Richling? Still acting
+deputy assistant city surveyor <em>pro tem.</em>?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, see here! Why haven&#8217;t you been in the store
+to see us lately? Did I seem a little preoccupied the
+last time you called?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&rdquo;&mdash;Richling dropped his eyes with an embarrassed
+smile&mdash;&ldquo;<em>I was</em> afraid I was in the way&mdash;or should be.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well and suppose you were? A man that&#8217;s looking
+for work must put himself in the way. But come with
+me. I think I may be able to give you a lift.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How&#8217;s that?&rdquo; asked Richling, as they started off
+abreast.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+&ldquo;There&#8217;s a house around the corner here that will give
+you some work,&mdash;temporary anyhow, and may be permanent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>So Richling was at work again, hidden away from Dr.
+Sevier between journal and ledger. His employers asked
+for references. Richling looked dismayed for a moment,
+then said, &ldquo;I&#8217;ll bring somebody to recommend me,&rdquo; went
+away, and came back with Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All the recommendation I&#8217;ve got,&rdquo; said he, with
+timid elation. There was a laugh all round.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, madam, if you say he&#8217;s all right, we don&#8217;t
+doubt he is!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>ANOTHER PATIENT.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctah Seveeah,&rdquo; said Narcisse, suddenly, as
+he finished sticking with great fervor the postage-stamps
+on some letters the Doctor had written, and
+having studied with much care the phraseology of what
+he had to say, and screwed up his courage to the pitch of
+utterance, &ldquo;I saw yo&#8217; notiz on the noozpapeh this
+mornin&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The unresponding Doctor closed his eyes in unutterable
+weariness of the innocent young gentleman&#8217;s prepared
+speeches.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh. &#8217;Tis a beaucheouz notiz. I fine that w&#8217;itten
+with the gweatez ac<em>cu</em>&#8217;acy of diction, in fact. I made a
+twanslation of that faw my hant. Thaz a thing I am
+fon&#8217; of, twanslation. I dunno &#8217;ow &#8217;tis, Doctah,&rdquo; he continued,
+preparing to go out,&mdash;&ldquo;I dunno &#8217;ow &#8217;tis, but I
+thing, you goin&#8217; to fine that Mistoo Itchlin ad the en&#8217;.
+I dunno &#8217;ow &#8217;tis. Well, I&#8217;m goin&#8217; ad the&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked up fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Bank,&rdquo; said Narcisse, getting near the door.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right!&rdquo; grumbled the Doctor, more politely.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh&mdash;befo&#8217; I go ad the poss-office.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A great many other persons had seen the advertisement.
+There were many among them who wondered if Mr. John
+Richling could be such a fool as to fall into that trap.
+There were others&mdash;some of them women, alas!&mdash;who
+wondered how it was that nobody advertised for information
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+concerning them, and who wished, yes, &ldquo;wished to
+God,&rdquo; that such a one, or such a one, who had had his
+money-bags locked up long enough, would die, and then
+you&#8217;d see who&#8217;d be advertised for. Some idlers looked in
+vain into the city directory to see if Mr. John Richling
+were mentioned there. But Richling himself did not see
+the paper. His employers, or some fellow-clerk, might
+have pointed it out to him, but&mdash;we shall see in a moment.</p>
+
+<p>Time passed. It always does. At length, one morning,
+as Dr. Sevier lay on his office lounge, fatigued after
+his attentions to callers, and much enervated by the
+prolonged summer heat, there entered a small female
+form, closely veiled. He rose to a sitting posture.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-morning, Doctor,&rdquo; said a voice, hurriedly,
+behind the veil. &ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; it continued, choking,&mdash;&ldquo;Doctor&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mrs. Richling!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He sprang and gave her a chair. She sank into it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&mdash;O Doctor! John is in the Charity Hospital!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She buried her face in her handkerchief and sobbed
+aloud. The Doctor was silent a moment, and then asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What&#8217;s the matter with him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Chills.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It seemed as though she must break down again, but
+the Doctor stopped her savagely.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, my dear madam, don&#8217;t cry! Come, now, you&#8217;re
+making too much of a small matter. Why, what are
+chills? We&#8217;ll break them in forty-eight hours. He&#8217;ll have
+the best of care. You needn&#8217;t cry! Certainly this isn&#8217;t
+as bad as when you were there.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She was still, but shook her head. She couldn&#8217;t agree
+to that.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Doctor, will you attend him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mine is a female ward.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know; but&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh&mdash;if you wish it&mdash;certainly; of course I will.
+But now, where have you moved, Mrs. Richling? I sent&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He
+looked up over his desk toward that of Narcisse.</p>
+
+<p>The Creole had been neither deaf nor idle. Hospital?
+Then those children in Prieur street had told him right.
+He softly changed his coat and shoes. As the physician
+looked over the top of the desk Narcisse&#8217;s silent form,
+just here at the left, but out of the range of vision,
+passed through the door and went downstairs with the
+noiselessness of a moonbeam.</p>
+
+<p>Mary explained the location and arrangement of her
+residence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that&#8217;s the way your clerk must
+have overlooked us. We live behind&mdash;down the alleyway.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, at any rate, madam,&rdquo; said the Doctor, &ldquo;you
+are here now, and before you go I want to&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He drew
+out his pocket-book.</p>
+
+<p>There was a quick gesture of remonstrance and a look
+of pleading.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, Doctor, please don&#8217;t! please don&#8217;t! Give
+my poor husband one more chance; don&#8217;t make me take
+that. I don&#8217;t refuse it for pride&#8217;s sake!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know about that,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;why do you
+do it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For his sake, Doctor. I know just as well what he&#8217;d
+say&mdash;we&#8217;ve no right to take it anyhow. We don&#8217;t know
+when we could pay it back.&rdquo; Her head sank. She wiped
+a tear from her hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I don&#8217;t care if you never pay it back!&rdquo; The
+Doctor reddened angrily.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+Mary raised her veil.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo;&mdash;a smile played on her lips,&mdash;&ldquo;I want to
+say one thing.&rdquo; She was a little care-worn and grief-worn;
+and yet, Narcisse, you should have seen her; you
+would not have slipped out.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Say on, madam,&rdquo; responded the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If we have to ask anybody, Doctor, it will be you.
+John had another situation, but lost it by his chills.
+He&#8217;ll get another. I&#8217;m sure he will.&rdquo; A long, broken
+sigh caught her unawares. Dr. Sevier thrust his pocket-book
+back into its place, compressing his lips and giving
+his head an unpersuaded jerk. And yet, was she not
+right, according to all his preaching? He asked himself
+that. &ldquo;Why didn&#8217;t your husband come to see me, as I
+requested him to do, Mrs. Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She explained John&#8217;s being turned away from the door
+during the Doctor&#8217;s illness. &ldquo;But anyhow, Doctor, John
+has always been a little afraid of you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor&#8217;s face did not respond to her smile.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you are not,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo; Her eyes sparkled, but their softer light
+quickly returned. She smiled and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will ask a favor of you now, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They had risen, and she stood leaning sidewise against
+his low desk and looking up into his face.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Can you get me some sewing? John says I may take some.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor was about to order two dozen shirts instanter,
+but common sense checked him, and he only said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will. I will find you some. And I shall see your
+husband within an hour. Good-by.&rdquo; She reached the
+door. &ldquo;God bless you!&rdquo; he added.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What, sir?&rdquo; she asked, looking back.</p>
+
+<p>But the Doctor was reading.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>ALICE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>A little medicine skilfully prescribed, the proper
+nourishment, two or three days&#8217; confinement in bed,
+and the Doctor said, as he sat on the edge of Richling&#8217;s
+couch:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, you&#8217;d better stay where you are to-day; but to-morrow,
+if the weather is good, you may sit up.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then Richling, with the unreasonableness of a convalescent,
+wanted to know why he couldn&#8217;t just as well go
+home. But the Doctor said again, no.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t be impatient; you&#8217;ll have to go anyhow before
+I would prefer to send you. It would be invaluable to
+you to pass your entire convalescence here, and go home
+only when you are completely recovered. But I can&#8217;t
+arrange it very well. The Charity Hospital is for sick
+people.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And where is the place for convalescents?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There is none,&rdquo; replied the physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&#8217;t want to go to it, myself,&rdquo; said Richling,
+lolling pleasantly on his pillow; &ldquo;all I should ask is
+strength to get home, and I&#8217;d be off.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked another way.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The sick are not the wise,&rdquo; he said, abstractedly.
+&ldquo;However, in your case, I should let you go to your wife
+as soon as you safely could.&rdquo; At that he fell into so long
+a reverie that Richling studied every line of his face again
+and again.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+A very pleasant thought was in the convalescent&#8217;s mind
+the while. The last three days had made it plain to him
+that the Doctor was not only his friend, but was willing
+that Richling should be his.</p>
+
+<p>At length the physician spoke:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary is wonderfully like Alice, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; responded Richling, rather timidly. And the
+Doctor continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The same age, the same stature, the same features.
+Alice was a shade paler in her style of beauty, just a
+shade. Her hair was darker; but otherwise her whole
+effect was a trifle quieter, even, than Mary&#8217;s. She was
+beautiful,&mdash;outside and in. Like Mary, she had a certain
+richness of character&mdash;but of a different sort. I suppose
+I would not notice the difference if they were not so much
+alike. She didn&#8217;t stay with me long.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you lose her&mdash;here?&rdquo; asked Richling, hardly
+knowing how to break the silence that fell, and yet lead
+the speaker on.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No. In Virginia.&rdquo; The Doctor was quiet a moment,
+and then resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I looked at your wife when she was last in my office,
+Richling; she had a little timid, beseeching light in her
+eyes that is not usual with her&mdash;and a moisture, too;
+and&mdash;it seemed to me as though Alice had come back.
+For my wife lived by my moods. Her spirits rose or fell
+just as my whim, conscious or unconscious, gave out
+light or took on shadow.&rdquo; The Doctor was still again,
+and Richling only indicated his wish to hear more by
+shifting himself on his elbow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you remember, Richling, when the girl you had
+been bowing down to and worshipping, all at once, in a
+single wedding day, was transformed into your adorer?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, indeed,&rdquo; responded the convalescent, with
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+beaming face. &ldquo;Wasn&#8217;t it wonderful? I couldn&#8217;t credit
+my senses. But how did you&mdash;was it the same&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s the same, Richling, with every man who has
+really secured a woman&#8217;s heart with her hand. It was
+very strange and sweet to me. Alice would have been a
+spoiled child if her parents could have spoiled her; and
+when I was courting her she was the veriest little empress
+that ever walked over a man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can hardly imagine,&rdquo; said Richling, with subdued
+amusement, looking at the long, slender form before him.
+The Doctor smiled very sweetly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; Then, after another meditative pause: &ldquo;But
+from the moment I became her husband she lived in continual
+trepidation. She so magnified me in her timid
+fancy that she was always looking tremulously to me to
+see what should be her feeling. She even couldn&#8217;t help
+being afraid of me. I hate for any one to be afraid of
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you, Doctor?&rdquo; said Richling, with surprise and
+evident introspection.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling felt his own fear changing to love.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When I married,&rdquo; continued Dr. Sevier, &ldquo;I had
+thought Alice was one that would go with me hand in
+hand through life, dividing its cares and doubling its joys,
+as they say; I guiding her and she guiding me. But if I
+had let her, she would have fallen into me as a planet
+might fall into the sun. I didn&#8217;t want to be the sun to
+her. I didn&#8217;t want her to shine only when I shone on her,
+and be dark when I was dark. No man ought to want
+such a thing. Yet she made life a delight to me; only
+she wanted that development which a better training, or
+even a harder training, might have given her; that subserving
+of the emotions to the&rdquo;&mdash;he waved his hand&mdash;&ldquo;I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+can&#8217;t philosophize about her. We loved one another with
+our might, and she&#8217;s in heaven.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling felt an inward start. The Doctor interrupted
+his intended speech.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Our short experience together, Richling, is the one
+great light place in my life; and to me, to-day, sere as I
+am, the sweet&mdash;the sweetest sound&mdash;on God&#8217;s green
+earth&rdquo;&mdash;the corners of his mouth quivered&mdash;&ldquo;is the name
+of Alice. Take care of Mary, Richling; she&#8217;s a priceless
+treasure. Don&#8217;t leave the making and sustaining of the
+home sunshine all to her, any more than you&#8217;d like her to
+leave it all to you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll not, Doctor; I&#8217;ll not.&rdquo; Richling pressed the
+Doctor&#8217;s hand fervently; but the Doctor drew it away
+with a certain energy, and rose, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you can sit up to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The day that Richling went back to his malarious home
+in Prieur street Dr. Sevier happened to meet him just
+beyond the hospital gate. Richling waved his hand. He
+looked weak and tremulous. &ldquo;Homeward bound,&rdquo; he
+said, gayly.</p>
+
+<p>The physician reached forward in his carriage and bade
+his driver stop. &ldquo;Well, be careful of yourself; I&#8217;m
+coming to see you in a day or two.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>THE SUN AT MIDNIGHT.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier was daily overtasked. His campaigns
+against the evils of our disordered flesh had even
+kept him from what his fellow-citizens thought was only
+his share of attention to public affairs.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; he cried to a committee that came soliciting
+his co&ouml;peration, &ldquo;here&#8217;s one little unprofessional call that
+I&#8217;ve been trying every day for two weeks to make&mdash;and
+ought to have made&mdash;and must make; and I haven&#8217;t got
+a step toward it yet. Oh, no, gentlemen!&rdquo; He waved
+their request away.</p>
+
+<p>He was very tired. The afternoon was growing late.
+He dismissed his jaded horse toward home, walked down
+to Canal street, and took that yellow Bayou-Road omnibus
+whose big blue star painted on its corpulent side showed
+that quadroons, etc., were allowed a share of its accommodation,
+and went rumbling and tumbling over the cobble-stones of the
+French quarter.</p>
+
+<p>By and by he got out, walked a little way southward in
+the hot, luminous shade of low-roofed tenement cottages
+that closed their window-shutters noiselessly, in sensitive-plant
+fashion, at his slow, meditative approach, and
+slightly and as noiselessly reopened them behind him,
+showing a pair of wary eyes within. Presently he recognized
+just ahead of him, standing out on the sidewalk,
+the little house that had been described to him by Mary.</p>
+
+<p>In a door-way that opened upon two low wooden
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+sidewalk steps stood Mrs. Riley, clad in a crisp black
+and white calico, a heavy, fat babe poised easily in one
+arm. The Doctor turned directly toward the narrow alley,
+merely touching his hat to her as he pushed its small green
+door inward, and disappeared, while she lifted her chin
+at the silent liberty and dropped her eyelids.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier went down the cramped, ill-paved passage
+very slowly and softly. Regarding himself objectively,
+he would have said the deep shade of his thoughts was
+due partly, at least, to his fatigue. But that would hardly
+have accounted for a certain faint glow of indignation
+that came into them. In truth, he began distinctly to
+resent this state of affairs in the life of John and Mary
+Richling. An ill-defined anger beat about in his brain in
+search of some tangible shortcoming of theirs upon which
+to thrust the blame of their helplessness. &ldquo;Criminal
+helplessness,&rdquo; he called it, mutteringly. He tried to
+define the idea&mdash;or the idea tried to define itself&mdash;that
+they had somehow been recreant to their social caste, by
+getting down into the condition and estate of what one
+may call the alien poor. Carondelet street had in some
+way specially vexed him to-day, and now here was this.
+It was bad enough, he thought, for men to slip into
+riches through dark back windows; but here was a brace
+of youngsters who had glided into poverty, and taken a
+place to which they had no right to stoop. Treachery,&mdash;that
+was the name for it. And now he must be expected,&mdash;the
+Doctor quite forgot that nobody had asked him to
+do it,&mdash;he must be expected to come fishing them out of
+their hole, like a rag-picker at a trash barrel.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;&ldquo;Bringing me into this wretched alley!&rdquo; he silently
+thought. His foot slipped on a mossy brick. Oh, no
+doubt they thought they were punishing some negligent
+friend or friends by letting themselves down into this sort
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+of thing. Never mind! He recalled the tender, confiding,
+friendly way in which he had talked to John, sitting
+on the edge of his hospital bed. He wished, now, he had
+every word back he had uttered. They might hide away
+to the full content of their poverty-pride. Poverty-pride:
+he had invented the term; it was the opposite pole to
+purse-pride&mdash;and just as mean,&mdash;no, meaner. There!
+Must he yet slip down? He muttered an angry word.
+Well, well, this was making himself a little the cheapest
+he had ever let himself be made. And probably this
+was what they wanted! Misery&#8217;s revenge. Umhum!
+They sit down in sour darkness, eh! and make relief
+seek them. It wouldn&#8217;t be the first time he had caught
+the poor taking savage comfort in the blush which their
+poverty was supposed to bring to the cheek of better-kept
+kinsfolk. True, he didn&#8217;t know this was the case with
+the Richlings. But wasn&#8217;t it? Wasn&#8217;t it? And have
+they a dog, that will presently hurl himself down this
+alley at one&#8217;s legs? He hopes so. He would so like
+to kick him clean over the twelve-foot close plank fence
+that crowded his right shoulder. Never mind! His anger
+became solemn.</p>
+
+<p>The alley opened into a small, narrow yard, paved with
+ashes from the gas-works. At the bottom of the yard a
+rough shed spanned its breadth, and a woman was there,
+busily bending over a row of wash-tubs.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor knocked on a door near at hand, then
+waited a moment, and, getting no response, turned away
+toward the shed and the deep, wet, burring sound of a
+wash-board. The woman bending over it did not hear
+his footfall. Presently he stopped. She had just
+straightened up, lifting a piece of the washing to the
+height of her head, and letting it down with a swash and
+slap upon the board. It was a woman&#8217;s garment, but
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+certainly not hers. For she was small and slight. Her
+hair was hidden under a towel. Her skirts were shortened
+to a pair of dainty ankles by an extra under-fold at
+the neat, round waist. Her feet were thrust into a pair
+of sabots. She paused a moment in her work, and,
+lifting with both smoothly rounded arms, bared nearly to
+the shoulder, a large apron from her waist, wiped the
+perspiration from her forehead. It was Mary.</p>
+
+<p>The red blood came up into the Doctor&#8217;s pale, thin face.
+This was too outrageous. This was insult! He stirred as
+if to move forward. He would confront her. Yes, just
+as she was. He would speak. He would speak bluntly.
+He would chide sternly. He had the right. The only
+friend in the world from whom she had not escaped
+beyond reach,&mdash;he would speak the friendly, angry word
+that would stop this shocking&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But, truly, deeply incensed as he was, and felt it his
+right to be, hurt, wrung, exasperated, he did not advance.
+She had reached down and taken from the wash-bench
+the lump of yellow soap that lay there, and was soaping
+the garment on the board before her, turning it this way
+and that. As she did this she began, all to herself and
+for her own ear, softly, with unconscious richness and
+tenderness of voice, to sing. And what was her song?</p>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;Oh, don&#8217;t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Down drooped the listener&#8217;s head. Remember? Ah,
+memory!&mdash;The old, heart-rending memory! Sweet Alice!</p>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;Sweet Alice, whose hair was so brown?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Yes, yes; so brown!&mdash;so brown!</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+&ldquo;She wept with delight when you gave her a smile,<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: .4em;">And trembled with fear at your frown.&rdquo;</span></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+Ah! but the frown is gone! There is a look of supplication
+now. Sing no more! Oh, sing no more! Yes,
+surely, she will stop there!</p>
+
+<p>No. The voice rises gently&mdash;just a little&mdash;into the
+higher key, soft and clear as the note of a distant bird,
+and all unaware of a listener. Oh! in mercy&#8217;s name&mdash;</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+&ldquo;In the old church-yard in the valley, Ben Bolt,<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.4em;">In a corner obscure and alone,</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: .4em;">They have fitted a slab of granite so gray,</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.4em;">And sweet Alice lies under the stone.&rdquo;</span></p>
+
+<p>The little toiling figure bent once more across the wash-board
+and began to rub. He turned, the first dew of
+many a long year welling from each eye, and stole away,
+out of the little yard and down the dark, slippery alley,
+to the street.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley still stood on the door-sill, holding the
+child.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-evening, madam!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sur, to you.&rdquo; She bowed with dignity.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is Mrs. Richling in?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There was a shadow of triumph in her faint smile.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She is.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I should like to see her.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley hoisted her chin. &ldquo;I dunno if she&#8217;s a-seein&#8217;
+comp&#8217;ny to-day.&rdquo; The voice was amiably important.
+&ldquo;Wont ye walk in? Take a seat and sit down, sur, and
+I&#8217;ll go and infarm the laydie.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said the Doctor, but continued to stand.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley started and stopped again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ye forgot to give me yer kyaird, sur.&rdquo; She drew
+her chin in again austerely.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Just say Dr. Sevier.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, sur; yes, that&#8217;ll be sufficiend. And dispinse
+with the kyaird.&rdquo; She went majestically.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+The Doctor, left alone, cast his uninterested glance
+around the smart little bare-floored parlor, upon its new,
+jig-sawed, gray hair-cloth furniture, and up upon a
+picture of the Pope. When Mrs. Riley, in a moment, returned
+he stood looking out the door.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richling consints to see ye, sur. She&#8217;ll be in
+turreckly. Take a seat and sit down.&rdquo; She readjusted
+the infant on her arm and lifted and swung a hair-cloth
+arm-chair toward him without visible exertion. &ldquo;There&#8217;s
+no use o&#8217; having chayers if ye don&#8217;t sit on um,&rdquo; she added
+affably.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor sat down, and Mrs. Riley occupied the
+exact centre of the small, wide-eared, brittle-looking sofa,
+where she filled in the silent moments that followed by
+pulling down the skirts of the infant&#8217;s apparel, oppressed
+with the necessity of keeping up a conversation and with
+the want of subject-matter. The child stared at the
+Doctor, and suddenly plunged toward him with a loud and
+very watery coo.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah-h!&rdquo; said Mrs. Riley, in ostentatious rebuke.
+&ldquo;Mike!&rdquo; she cried, laughingly, as the action was repeated.
+&ldquo;Ye rowdy, air ye go-un to fight the gintleman?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She laughed sincerely, and the Doctor could but notice
+how neat and good-looking she was. He condescended
+to crook his finger at the babe. This seemed to exasperate
+the so-called rowdy. He planted his pink feet on
+his mother&#8217;s thigh and gave a mighty lunge and whoop.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s go-un to be a wicked bruiser,&rdquo; said proud Mrs.
+Riley. &ldquo;He&rdquo;&mdash;the pronoun stood, this time, for her
+husband&mdash;&ldquo;he never sah the child. He was kilt with an
+explosion before the child was barn.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She held the infant on her strong arm as he struggled
+to throw himself, with wide-stretched jaws, upon her
+bosom; and might have been devoured by the wicked
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+bruiser had not his attention been diverted by the entrance
+of Mary, who came in at last, all in fragrant white, with
+apologies for keeping the Doctor waiting.</p>
+
+<p>He looked down into her uplifted eyes. What a riddle
+is woman! Had he not just seen this one in sabots? Did
+she not certainly know, through Mrs. Riley, that he must
+have seen her so? Were not her skirts but just now
+hitched up with an under-tuck, and fastened with a string?
+Had she not just laid off, in hot haste, a suds-bespattered
+apron and the garments of toil beneath it? Had not a
+towel been but now unbound from the hair shining here
+under his glance in luxuriant brown coils? This brightness
+of eye, that seemed all exhilaration, was it not trepidation
+instead? And this rosiness, so like redundant
+vigor, was it not the flush of her hot task? He fancied he
+saw&mdash;in truth he may have seen&mdash;a defiance in the eyes
+as he glanced upon, and tardily dropped, the little water-soaked
+hand with a bow.</p>
+
+<p>Mary turned to present Mrs. Riley, who bowed and
+said, trying to hold herself with majesty while Mike drew
+her head into his mouth: &ldquo;Sur,&rdquo; then turned with great
+ceremony to Mary, and adding, &ldquo;I&#8217;ll withdrah,&rdquo; withdrew
+with the head and step of a duchess.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How is your husband, madam?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John?&mdash;is not well at all, Doctor; though he would
+say he was if he were here. He doesn&#8217;t shake off his
+chills. He is out, though, looking for work. He&#8217;d go as
+long as he could stand.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She smiled; she almost laughed; but half an eye could
+see it was only to avoid the other thing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where does he go?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Everywhere!&rdquo; She laughed this time audibly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If he went everywhere I should see him,&rdquo; said Dr.
+Sevier.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Ah! naturally,&rdquo; responded Mary, playfully. &ldquo;But
+he does go wherever he thinks there&#8217;s work to be found.
+He doesn&#8217;t wander clear out among the plantations, of
+course, where everybody has slaves, and there&#8217;s no work
+but slaves&#8217; work. And he says it&#8217;s useless to think of a
+clerkship this time of year. It must be, isn&#8217;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>There was a footstep in the alley.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s coming now,&rdquo; said Mary,&mdash;&ldquo;that&#8217;s he. He
+must have got work to-day. He has an acquaintance, an
+Italian, who promised to have something for him to do
+very soon. Doctor,&rdquo;&mdash;she began to put together the
+split fractions of a palm-leaf fan, smiling diffidently at it
+the while,&mdash;&ldquo;I can&#8217;t see how it is any discredit to a
+man not to have a <em>knack</em> for making money?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her peculiar look of radiant inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It is not, madam.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary laughed for joy. The light of her face seemed to
+spread clear into her locks.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I knew you&#8217;d say so! John blames himself;
+he can make money, you know, Doctor, but he blames
+himself because he hasn&#8217;t that natural gift for it that Mr.
+Ristofalo has. Why, Mr. Ristofalo is simply wonderful!&rdquo;
+She smiled upon her fan in amused reminiscence. &ldquo;John
+is always wishing he had his gift.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My dear madam, don&#8217;t covet it! At least don&#8217;t exchange
+it for anything else.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor was still in this mood of disapprobation
+when John entered. The radiancy of the young husband&#8217;s
+greeting hid for a moment, but only so long, the
+marks of illness and adversity. Mary followed him with
+her smiling eyes as the two men shook hands, and John
+drew a chair near to her and sat down with a sigh of
+mingled pleasure and fatigue.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+She told him of whom she and their visitor had just
+been speaking.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Raphael Ristofalo!&rdquo; said John, kindling afresh.
+&ldquo;Yes; I&#8217;ve been with him all day. It humiliates me to
+think of him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier responded quietly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ve no right to let it humiliate you, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary turned to John with dancing eyes, but he passed
+the utterance as a mere compliment, and said, through his
+smiles:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Just see how it is to-day. I have been overseeing
+the unloading of a little schooner from Ruatan island
+loaded with bananas, cocoanuts, and pine-apples. I&#8217;ve
+made two dollars; he has made a hundred.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling went on eagerly to tell about the plain, lustreless
+man whose one homely gift had fascinated him. The
+Doctor was entertained. The narrator sparkled and
+glowed as he told of Ristofalo&#8217;s appearance, and reproduced
+his speeches and manner.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Tell about the apples and eggs,&rdquo; said the delighted Mary.</p>
+
+<p>He did so, sitting on the front edge of his chair-seat,
+and sprawling his legs now in front and now behind him
+as he swung now around to his wife and now to the
+Doctor. Mary laughed softly at every period, and
+watched the Doctor, to see his slight smile at each detail of
+the story. Richling enjoyed telling it; he had worked;
+his earnings were in his pocket; gladness was easy.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I&#8217;m learning more from Raphael Ristofalo
+than I ever learned from my school-masters: I&#8217;m learning
+the art of livelihood.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He ran on from Ristofalo to the men among whom he
+had been mingling all day. He mimicked the strange,
+long swing of their Sicilian speech; told of their swarthy
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+faces and black beards, their rich instinct for color in
+costume; their fierce conversation and violent gestures;
+the energy of their movements when they worked, and
+the profoundness of their repose when they rested; the
+picturesqueness and grotesqueness of the negroes, too;
+the huge, flat, round baskets of fruit which the black men
+carried on their heads, and which the Sicilians bore on
+their shoulders or the nape of the neck. The &ldquo;captain&rdquo;
+of the schooner was a central figure.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; asked Richling, suddenly, &ldquo;do you know
+anything about the island of Cozumel?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; thought Mary. So there was something besides
+the day&#8217;s earning that elated him.</p>
+
+<p>She had suspected it. She looked at her husband with
+an expression of the most alert pleasure. The Doctor
+noticed it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, in reply to Richling&#8217;s question.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It stands out in the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of
+Yucatan,&rdquo; began Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I know that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mary, I&#8217;ve almost promised the schooner
+captain that we&#8217;ll go there. He wants to get up a colony.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary started.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, John!&rdquo; She betrayed a look of dismay,
+glanced at their visitor, tried to say &ldquo;Have you?&rdquo; approvingly,
+and blushed.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor made no kind of response.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, don&#8217;t conclude,&rdquo; said John to Mary, coloring
+too, but smiling. He turned to the physician. &ldquo;It&#8217;s a
+wonderful spot, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the Doctor was still silent, and Richling turned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Just to think, Mary, of a place where you can raise
+all the products of two zones; where health is almost
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+perfect; where the yellow fever has never been; and
+where there is such beauty as can be only in the tropics
+and a tropical sea. Why, Doctor, I can&#8217;t understand
+why Europeans or Americans haven&#8217;t settled it long ago.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose we can find out before we go, can&#8217;t we?&rdquo;
+said Mary, looking timorously back and forth between
+John and the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The reason is,&rdquo; replied John, &ldquo;it&#8217;s so little known.
+Just one island away out by itself. Three crops of fruit
+a year. One acre planted in bananas feeds fifty men.
+All the capital a man need have is an axe to cut down the
+finest cabinet and dye-woods in the world. The thermometer
+never goes above ninety nor below forty. You
+can hire all the labor you want at a few cents a day.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary&#8217;s diligent eye detected a cloud on the Doctor&#8217;s
+face. But John, though nettled, pushed on the more rapidly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A man can make&mdash;easily!&mdash;a thousand dollars the
+first year, and live on two hundred and fifty. It&#8217;s the
+place for a poor man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He looked a little defiant.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Mary, &ldquo;I know you wouldn&#8217;t come
+to an opinion&rdquo;&mdash;she smiled with the same restless glance&mdash;&ldquo;until
+you had made all the inquiries necessary. It
+mu&mdash;must&mdash;be a delightful place. Doctor?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes shone blue as the sky.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&#8217;t send a convict to such a place,&rdquo; said Dr.
+Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>Richling flamed up.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t you think,&rdquo; he began to say with visible
+restraint and a faint, ugly twist of the head,&mdash;&ldquo;don&#8217;t
+you think it&#8217;s a better place for a poor man than a great,
+heartless town?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This isn&#8217;t a heartless town,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+&ldquo;He doesn&#8217;t mean it as you do, Doctor,&rdquo; interposed
+Mary, with alarm. &ldquo;John, you ought to explain.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Than a great town,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;where a man of
+honest intentions and real desire to live and be useful and
+independent; who wants to earn his daily bread at any
+honorable cost, and who can&#8217;t do it because the town
+doesn&#8217;t want his services, and will not have them&mdash;can
+go&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He ceased, with his sentence all tangled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; the Doctor was saying meanwhile. &ldquo;No! No! No!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Here I go, day after day,&rdquo; persisted Richling,
+extending his arm and pointing indefinitely through the
+window.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, you don&#8217;t, John,&rdquo; cried Mary, with an effort
+at gayety; &ldquo;you don&#8217;t go by the window, John; you go
+by the door.&rdquo; She pulled his arm down tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I go by the alley,&rdquo; said John. Silence followed.
+The young pair contrived to force a little laugh, and John
+made an apologetic move.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; he exclaimed, with an air of pleasantry,
+&ldquo;the whole town&#8217;s asleep!&mdash;sound asleep, like a negro
+in the sunshine! There isn&#8217;t work for one man in fifty!&rdquo;
+He ended tremulously. Mary looked at him with dropped
+face but lifted eyes, handling the fan, whose rent she had
+made worse.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, my friend,&rdquo;&mdash;the Doctor had never used
+that term before,&mdash;&ldquo;what does your Italian money-maker
+say to the idea?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling gave an Italian shrug and his own pained laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly! Why, Mr. Richling, you&#8217;re on an island
+now,&mdash;an island in mid-ocean. Both of you!&rdquo; He
+waved his hands toward the two without lifting his head
+from the back of the easy-chair, where he had dropped it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean, Doctor?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Mean? Isn&#8217;t my meaning plain enough? I mean
+you&#8217;re too independent. You know very well, Richling,
+that you&#8217;ve started out in life with some fanciful feud
+against the &lsquo;world.&rsquo; What it is I don&#8217;t know, but I&#8217;m
+sure it&#8217;s not the sort that religion requires. You&#8217;ve told
+this world&mdash;you remember you said it to me once&mdash;that
+if it will go one road you&#8217;ll go another. You&#8217;ve forgotten
+that, mean and stupid and bad as your fellow-creatures
+are, they&#8217;re your brothers and sisters, and that they have
+claims on you as such, and that you have claims on them
+as such.&mdash;Cozumel! You&#8217;re there now! Has a friend
+no rights? I don&#8217;t know your immediate relatives, and I
+say nothing about them&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>John gave a slight start, and Mary looked at him suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But here am I,&rdquo; continued the speaker. &ldquo;Is it just
+to me for you to hide away here in want that forces you
+and your wife&mdash;I beg your pardon, madam&mdash;into mortifying
+occupations, when one word to me&mdash;a trivial obligation,
+not worthy to be called an obligation, contracted
+with me&mdash;would remove that necessity, and tide you over
+the emergency of the hour?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling was already answering, not by words only,
+but by his confident smile:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir; yes, it is just: ask Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Doctor,&rdquo; interposed the wife. &ldquo;We went over&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We went over it together,&rdquo; said John. &ldquo;We
+weighed it well. It <em>is</em> just,&mdash;not to ask aid as long as
+there&#8217;s hope without it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor responded with the quiet air of one who is
+sure of his position:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I see. But, of course&mdash;I know without asking&mdash;you
+left the question of health out of your reckoning.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+Now, Richling, put the whole world, if you choose, in a
+selfish attitude&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said Richling and his wife. &ldquo;Ah, no!&rdquo;
+But the Doctor persisted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&mdash;a purely selfish attitude. Wouldn&#8217;t it, nevertheless,
+rather help a well man or woman than a sick one?
+Wouldn&#8217;t it pay better?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Doctor. &ldquo;But you&#8217;re taking the most
+desperate risks against health and life.&rdquo; He leaned
+forward in his chair, jerked in his legs, and threw out
+his long white hands. &ldquo;You&#8217;re committing slow suicide.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; began Mary; but her husband had the floor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;can you put yourself in our place?
+Wouldn&#8217;t you rather die than beg? <em>Wouldn&#8217;t</em> you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor rose to his feet as straight as a lance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It isn&#8217;t what you&#8217;d rather, sir! You haven&#8217;t your
+choice! You haven&#8217;t your choice at all, sir! When God
+gets ready for you to die he&#8217;ll let you know, sir! And
+you&#8217;ve no right to trifle with his mercy in the meanwhile.
+I&#8217;m not a man to teach men to whine after each other for
+aid; but every principle has its limitations, Mr. Richling.
+You say you went over the whole subject. Yes; well,
+didn&#8217;t you strike the fact that suicide is an affront to
+civilization and humanity?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor!&rdquo; cried the other two, rising also.
+&ldquo;We&#8217;re not going to commit suicide.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; retorted he, &ldquo;you&#8217;re not. That&#8217;s what I came
+here to tell you. I&#8217;m here to prevent it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; exclaimed Mary, the big tears standing in
+her eyes, and the Doctor melting before them like wax,
+&ldquo;it&#8217;s not so bad as it looks. I wash&mdash;some&mdash;because it
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+pays so much better than sewing. I find I&#8217;m stronger
+than any one would believe. I&#8217;m stronger than I ever
+was before in my life. I am, indeed. I <em>don&#8217;t</em> wash <em>much</em>.
+And it&#8217;s only for the present. We&#8217;ll all be laughing at
+this, some time, together.&rdquo; She began a small part of
+the laugh then and there.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ll do it no more,&rdquo; the Doctor replied. He drew
+out his pocket-book. &ldquo;Mr. Richling, will you please send
+me through the mail, or bring me, your note for fifty dollars,&mdash;at
+your leisure, you know,&mdash;payable on demand?&rdquo;
+He rummaged an instant in the pocket-book, and extended
+his hand with a folded bank-note between his
+thumb and finger. But Richling compressed his lips and
+shook his head, and the two men stood silently confronting
+each other. Mary laid her hand upon her husband&#8217;s
+shoulder and leaned against him, with her eyes on the
+Doctor&#8217;s face.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Richling,&rdquo;&mdash;the Doctor smiled,&mdash;&ldquo;your
+friend Ristofalo did not treat you in this way.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I never treated Ristofalo so,&rdquo; replied Richling, with
+a smile tinged with bitterness. It was against himself
+that he felt bitter; but the Doctor took it differently, and
+Richling, seeing this, hurried to correct the impression.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I mean I lent him no such amount as that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was just one-fiftieth of that,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you gave liberally, without upbraiding,&rdquo; said the
+Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, Doctor! no!&rdquo; exclaimed she, lifting the hand
+that lay on her husband&#8217;s near shoulder and reaching it
+over to the farther one. &ldquo;Oh! a thousand times no!
+John never meant that. Did you, John?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How could I?&rdquo; said John. &ldquo;No!&rdquo; Yet there was
+confession in his look. He had not meant it, but he had
+felt it.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+Dr. Sevier sat down, motioned them into their seats,
+drew the arm-chair close to theirs. Then he spoke.
+He spoke long, and as he had not spoken anywhere but
+at the bedside scarce ever in his life before. The young
+husband and wife forgot that he had ever said a grating
+word. A soft love-warmth began to fill them through
+and through. They seemed to listen to the gentle voice
+of an older and wiser brother. A hand of Mary sank
+unconsciously upon a hand of John. They smiled and
+assented, and smiled, and assented, and Mary&#8217;s eyes
+brimmed up with tears, and John could hardly keep his
+down. The Doctor made the whole case so plain and
+his propositions so irresistibly logical that the pair looked
+from his eyes to each other&#8217;s and laughed. &ldquo;Cozumel!&rdquo;
+They did not utter the name; they only thought of it
+both at one moment. It never passed their lips again.
+Their visitor brought them to an arrangement. The
+fifty dollars were to be placed to John&#8217;s credit on the
+books kept by Narcisse, as a deposit from Richling,
+and to be drawn against by him in such littles as necessity
+might demand. It was to be &ldquo;secured&rdquo;&mdash;they
+all three smiled at that word&mdash;by Richling&#8217;s note payable
+on demand. The Doctor left a prescription for the
+refractory chills.</p>
+
+<p>As he crossed Canal street, walking in slow meditation
+homeward at the hour of dusk, a tall man standing
+against a wall, tin cup in hand,&mdash;a full-fledged mendicant
+of the steam-boiler explosion, tin-proclamation type,&mdash;asked
+his alms. He passed by, but faltered, stopped,
+let his hand down into his pocket, and looked around to
+see if his pernicious example was observed. None saw
+him. He felt&mdash;he saw himself&mdash;a drivelling sentimentalist.
+But weak, and dazed, sore wounded of the archers,
+he turned and dropped a dime into the beggar&#8217;s cup.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+Richling was too restless with the joy of relief to sit
+or stand. He trumped up an errand around the corner,
+and hardly got back before he contrived another. He
+went out to the bakery for some crackers&mdash;fresh baked&mdash;for
+Mary; listened to a long story across the baker&#8217;s
+counter, and when he got back to his door found he had
+left the crackers at the bakery. He went back for them
+and returned, the blood about his heart still running and
+leaping and praising God.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The sun at midnight!&rdquo; he exclaimed, knitting Mary&#8217;s
+hands in his. &ldquo;You&#8217;re very tired. Go to bed. Me? I
+can&#8217;t yet. I&#8217;m too restless.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He spent more than an hour chatting with Mrs. Riley,
+and had never found her so &ldquo;nice&rdquo; a person before; so
+easy comes human fellowship when we have had a stroke
+of fortune. When he went again to his room there was
+Mary kneeling by the bedside, with her head slipped under
+the snowy mosquito net, all in fine linen, white as the
+moonlight, frilled and broidered, a remnant of her wedding
+glory gleaming through the long, heavy wefts of her
+unbound hair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mary&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary?&rdquo; he said again, laying his hand upon her head.</p>
+
+<p>The head was slowly lifted. She smiled an infant&#8217;s
+smile, and dropped her cheek again upon the bedside.
+She had fallen asleep at the foot of the Throne.</p>
+
+<p>At that same hour, in an upper chamber of a large,
+distant house, there knelt another form, with bared,
+bowed head, but in the garb in which it had come in from
+the street. Praying? This white thing overtaken by
+sleep here was not more silent. Yet&mdash;yes, praying. But,
+all the while, the prayer kept running to a little tune, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+the words repeating themselves again and again; &ldquo;Oh,
+don&#8217;t you remember sweet Alice&mdash;with hair so brown&mdash;so
+brown&mdash;so brown? Sweet Alice, with hair so
+brown?&rdquo; And God bent his ear and listened.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>BORROWER TURNED LENDER.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It was only a day or two later that the Richlings, one
+afternoon, having been out for a sunset walk, were
+just reaching Mrs. Riley&#8217;s door-step again, when they
+were aware of a young man approaching from the opposite
+direction with the intention of accosting them. They
+brought their conversation to a murmurous close.</p>
+
+<p>For it was not what a mere acquaintance could have
+joined them in, albeit its subject was the old one of meat
+and raiment. Their talk had been light enough on their
+starting out, notwithstanding John had earned nothing
+that day. But it had toned down, or, we might say up,
+to a sober, though not a sombre, quality. John had in
+some way evolved the assertion that even the life of the
+body alone is much more than food and clothing and
+shelter; so much more, that only a divine provision can
+sustain it; so much more, that the fact is, when it fails,
+it generally fails with meat and raiment within easy
+reach.</p>
+
+<p>Mary devoured his words. His spiritual vision had
+been a little clouded of late, and now, to see it clear&mdash;&nbsp;She
+closed her eyes for bliss.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, John,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you make it plainer than
+any preacher I ever heard.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This, very naturally, silenced John. And Mary, hoping
+to start him again, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Heaven provides. And yet I&#8217;m sure you&#8217;re right in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+seeking our food and raiment?&rdquo; She looked up inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; like the fowls, the provision is made <em>for</em> us
+through us. The mistake is in making those things the
+<em>end</em> of our search.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, certainly!&rdquo; exclaimed Mary, softly. She
+took fresh hold in her husband&#8217;s arm; the young man was
+drawing near.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s Narcisse!&rdquo; murmured John. The Creole pressed
+suddenly forward with a joyous smile, seized Richling&#8217;s
+hand, and, lifting his hat to Mary as John presented him,
+brought his heels together and bowed from the hips.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wuz juz coming at yo&#8217; &#8217;ouse, Mistoo Itchlin.
+Yesseh. I wuz juz sitting in my &#8217;oom afteh dinneh,
+envelop&#8217; in my <em>&#8217;obe de chambre</em>, when all at once I says
+to myseff, &#8217;Faw distwaction I will go and see Mistoo
+Itchlin!&#8217;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will you walk in?&rdquo; said the pair.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley, standing in the door of her parlor, made
+way by descending to the sidewalk. Her calico was white,
+with a small purple figure, and was highly starched and
+beautifully ironed. Purple ribbons were at her waist and
+throat. As she reached the ground Mary introduced
+Narcisse. She smiled winningly, and when she said, with
+a courtesy: &ldquo;Proud to know ye, sur,&rdquo; Narcisse was struck
+with the sweetness of her tone. But she swept away with
+a dramatic tread.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will you walk in?&rdquo; Mary repeated; and Narcisse
+responded:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you will pummit me yo&#8217; attention a few moment&#8217;.&rdquo;
+He bowed again and made way for Mary to precede him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; he continued, going in, &ldquo;in fact
+you don&#8217;t give Misses Witchlin my last name with absolute
+co&#8217;ectness.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Did I not? Why, I hope you&#8217;ll pardon&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&#8217;m glad of it. I don&#8217; feel lak a pusson is my
+fwen&#8217; whilst they don&#8217;t call me Nahcisse.&rdquo; He directed
+his remark particularly to Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed?&rdquo; responded she. &ldquo;But, at the same time,
+Mr. Richling would have&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;She had turned to John,
+who sat waiting to catch her eye with such intense amusement
+betrayed in his own that she saved herself from
+laughter and disgrace only by instant silence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh,&rdquo; said Narcisse to Richling, &ldquo;&#8217;tis the tooth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He cast his eye around upon the prevailing hair-cloth
+and varnish.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Misses Witchlin, I muz tell you I like yo&#8217; tas&#8217;e in that
+pawlah.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s Mrs. Riley&#8217;s taste,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;Tis a beaucheouz tas&#8217;e,&rdquo; insisted the Creole, contemplatively,
+gazing at the Pope&#8217;s vestments tricked out
+with blue, scarlet, and gilt spangles. &ldquo;Well, Mistoo
+Itchlin, since some time I&#8217;ve been stipulating me to do
+myseff that honoh, seh, to come at yo&#8217; &#8217;ouse; well, ad the
+end I am yeh. I think you fine yoseff not ve&#8217;y well those
+days. Is that nod the case, Mistoo Itchlin?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&#8217;m well enough!&rdquo; Richling ended with a
+laugh, somewhat explosively. Mary looked at him with
+forced gravity as he suppressed it. He had to draw his
+nose slowly through his thumb and two fingers before he
+could quite command himself. Mary relieved him by responding:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, Mr. Richling hasn&#8217;t been well for some time.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse responded triumphantly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It stwuck me&mdash;so soon I pe&#8217;ceive you&mdash;that you
+&#8217;ave the ai&#8217; of a valedictudina&#8217;y. Thass a ve&#8217;y fawtunate
+that you ah &#8217;esiding in a &#8217;ealthsome pawt of the city, in
+fact.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+Both John and Mary laughed and demurred.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You don&#8217;t think?&rdquo; asked the smiling visitor. &ldquo;Me,
+I dunno,&mdash;I fine one thing. If a man don&#8217;t die fum one
+thing, yet, still, he&#8217;ll die fum something. I &#8217;ave study
+that out, Mistoo Itchlin. &lsquo;To be, aw to not be, thaz
+the queztion,&rsquo; in fact. I don&#8217;t ca&#8217;e if you live one place
+aw if you live anotheh place, &#8217;tis all the same,&mdash;you&#8217;ve
+got to pay to live!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Richlings laughed again, and would have been
+glad to laugh more; but each, without knowing it of the
+other, was reflecting with some mortification upon the
+fact that, had they been talking French, Narcisse would
+have bitten his tongue off before any of his laughter
+should have been at their expense.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed you have got to pay to live,&rdquo; said John, stepping
+to the window and drawing up its painted paper
+shade. &ldquo;Yes, and&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; exclaimed Mary, with gentle disapprobation.
+She met her husband&#8217;s eye with a smile of protest.
+&ldquo;John,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Mr.&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; she couldn&#8217;t think of the
+name.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nahcisse,&rdquo; said the Creole.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will think,&rdquo; she continued, her amusement climbing
+into her eyes in spite of her, &ldquo;you&#8217;re in earnest.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I am, partly. Narcisse knows, as well as we do
+that there are two sides to the question.&rdquo; He resumed
+his seat. &ldquo;I reckon&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Narcisse, &ldquo;and what you muz look out
+faw, &#8217;tis to git on the soff side.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They all laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was going to say,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;the world takes
+us as we come, &lsquo;sight-unseen.&rsquo; Some of us pay expenses,
+some don&#8217;t.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; rejoined Narcisse, looking up at the whitewashed
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+ceiling, &ldquo;those egspenze&#8217;!&rdquo; He raised his hand
+and dropped it. &ldquo;I <em>fine</em> it so <em>diffycul&#8217;</em> to defeat those
+egspenze&#8217;! In fact, Mistoo Itchlin, such ah the state
+of my financial emba&#8217;assment that I do not go out at all.
+I stay in, in fact. I stay at my &#8217;ouse&mdash;to light&#8217; those
+egspenze&#8217;!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They were all agreed that expenses could be lightened
+thus.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And by making believe you don&#8217;t want things,&rdquo; said
+Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; exclaimed Narcisse, &ldquo;I nevvah kin do that!&rdquo;
+and Richling gave a laugh that was not without sympathy.
+&ldquo;But I muz tell you, Mistoo Itchlin, I am aztonizh at
+<em>you</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>An instant apprehension seized John and Mary. They
+<em>knew</em> their ill-concealed amusement would betray them,
+and now they were to be called to account. But no.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh,&rdquo; continued Narcisse, &ldquo;you &#8217;ave the gweatez
+o&#8217;casion to be the subjec&#8217; of congwatulation, Mistoo
+Itchlin, to &#8217;ave the poweh to <em>ac</em>cum&#8217;late money in those
+hawd time&#8217; like the pwesen&#8217;!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Richlings cried out with relief and amused surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you couldn&#8217;t make a greater mistake!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistaken! Hah! W&#8217;en I ged that memo&#8217;andum
+f&#8217;om Dr. Seveeah to paz that fifty dollah at yo&#8217; cwedit, it
+burz f&#8217;om me, that egs<em>clam</em>ation! &#8217;Acchilly! &#8217;ow that
+Mistoo Itchlin deserve the &#8217;espect to save a lill quantity
+of money like that!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The laughter of John and Mary did not impede his
+rhapsody, nor their protestations shake his convictions.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Richling, lolling back, &ldquo;the Doctor has
+simply omitted to have you make the entry of&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+But he had no right to interfere with the Doctor&#8217;s
+accounts. However, Narcisse was not listening.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217; compel&#8217; to be witch some day, Mistoo Itchlin,
+ad that wate of p&#8217;ogwess; I am convince of that. I can
+deteg that indis<em>pu</em>tably in yo&#8217; physio&#8217;nomie. Me&mdash;I
+<em>can&#8217;t</em> save a cent! Mistoo Itchlin, you would be aztonizh
+to know &#8217;ow bad I want some money, in fact; exceb that I am <em>too</em>
+pwoud to dizclose you that state of my condition!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He paused and looked from John to Mary, and from
+Mary to John again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I&#8217;ll declare,&rdquo; said Richling, sincerely, dropping
+forward with his chin on his hand, &ldquo;I&#8217;m sorry to hear&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But Narcisse interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Diffyculty with me&mdash;I am not willing to baw&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary drew a long breath and glanced at her husband.
+He changed his attitude and, looking upon the floor, said,
+&ldquo;Yes, yes.&rdquo; He slowly marked the bare floor with the
+edge of his shoe-sole. &ldquo;And yet there are times when
+duty actually&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I believe you, Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; said Narcisse,
+quickly forestalling Mary&#8217;s attempt to speak. &ldquo;Ah,
+Mistoo Itchlin! <em>if</em> I had baw&#8217;d money ligue the huncle
+of my hant!&rdquo; He waved his hand to the ceiling and
+looked up through that obstruction, as it were, to the
+witnessing sky. &ldquo;But I <em>hade</em> that&mdash;to baw&#8217;! I tell
+you &#8217;ow &#8217;tis with me, Mistoo Itchlin; I nevvah would
+consen&#8217; to baw&#8217; money on&#8217;y if I pay a big inte&#8217;es&#8217; on it.
+An&#8217; I&#8217;m compel&#8217; to tell you one thing, Mistoo Itchlin, in
+fact: I nevvah would leave money with Doctah Seveeah
+to invez faw me&mdash;no!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling gave a little start, and cast his eyes an instant
+toward his wife. She spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We&#8217;d rather you wouldn&#8217;t say that to us, Mister&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+There was a commanding smile at one corner of
+her lips. &ldquo;You don&#8217;t know what a friend&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse had already apologized by two or three gestures
+to each of his hearers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Misses Itchlin&mdash;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo;&mdash;he shook his
+head and smiled skeptically,&mdash;&ldquo;you think you kin admiah
+Doctah Seveeah mo&#8217; than me? &#8217;Tis uzeless to attempt.
+&lsquo;With all &#8217;is fault I love &#8217;im still.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling and his wife both spoke at once.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But John and I,&rdquo; exclaimed Mary, electrically, &ldquo;love
+him, faults and all!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She looked from husband to visitor, and from visitor to
+husband, and laughed and laughed, pushing her small
+feet back and forth alternately and softly clapping her
+hands. Narcisse felt her in the centre of his heart. He
+laughed. John laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What I mean, Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; resumed Narcisse, preferring
+to avoid Mary&#8217;s aroused eye,&mdash;&ldquo;what I mean&mdash;Doctah
+Seveeah don&#8217;t un&#8217;stan&#8217; that kine of business
+co&#8217;ectly. Still, ad the same time, if I was you I know
+I would &#8217;ate faw my money not to be makin&#8217; me some inte&#8217;es&#8217;.
+I tell you what I would do with you, Mistoo
+Itchlin, in fact: I kin baw&#8217; that fifty dollah f&#8217;om you
+myseff.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling repressed a smile. &ldquo;Thank you! But I
+don&#8217;t care to invest it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pay you ten pe&#8217; cent. a month.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But we can&#8217;t spare it,&rdquo; said Richling, smiling toward
+Mary. &ldquo;We may need part of it ourselves.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you, &#8217;eally, Mistoo Itchlin, I nevveh baw&#8217;
+money; but it juz &#8217;appen I kin use that juz at the
+pwesent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, John,&rdquo; said Mary, &ldquo;I think you might as well
+say plainly that the money is borrowed money.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+&ldquo;That&#8217;s what it is,&rdquo; responded Richling, and rose to
+spread the street-door wider open, for the daylight was
+fading.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I &#8217;ope you&#8217;ll egscuse that libbetty,&rdquo; said Narcisse,
+rising a little more tardily, and slower. &ldquo;I muz
+baw&#8217; fawty dollah&mdash;some place. Give you good secu&#8217;ty&mdash;give
+you my note, Mistoo Itchlin, in fact; muz baw
+fawty&mdash;aw thutty-five.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I&#8217;m very sorry,&rdquo; responded Richling, really
+ashamed that he could not hold his face straight. &ldquo;I
+hope you understand&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, &#8217;tis baw&#8217;d money. If you had a necessity
+faw it you would use it. If a fwend &#8217;ave a necessity&mdash;&#8217;tis
+anotheh thing&mdash;you don&#8217;t feel that libbetty&mdash;you
+ah &#8217;ight&mdash;I honoh you&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I <em>don&#8217;t</em> feel the same liberty.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; said Narcisse, with noble generosity,
+throwing himself a half step forward, &ldquo;if it was
+yoze you&#8217;d baw&#8217; it to me in a minnit!&rdquo; He smiled with
+benign delight. &ldquo;Well, madame,&mdash;I bid you good evening,
+Misses Itchlin. The bes&#8217; of fwen&#8217;s muz pawt, you
+know.&rdquo; He turned again to Richling with a face all
+beauty and a form all grace. &ldquo;I was juz sitting&mdash;mistfully&mdash;all
+at once I says to myseff, &lsquo;Faw distwaction
+I&#8217;ll go an&#8217; see Mistoo Itchlin.&rsquo; I don&#8217;t <em>know</em> &#8217;ow I
+juz &#8217;appen&#8217;!&mdash;&nbsp;Well, <em>au &#8217;evoi</em>&#8217;, Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling followed him out upon the door-step. There
+Narcisse intimated that even twenty dollars for a few
+days would supply a stern want. And when Richling
+was compelled again to refuse, Narcisse solicited his company
+as far as the next corner. There the Creole covered
+him with shame by forcing him to refuse the loan of ten
+dollars, and then of five.</p>
+
+<p>It was a full hour before Richling rejoined his wife.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+Mrs. Riley had stepped off to some neighbor&#8217;s door with
+Mike on her arm. Mary was on the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John,&rdquo; she said, in a low voice, and with a long
+anxious look.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He <em>didn&#8217;t</em> take the only dollar of your own in the
+world?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary, what could I do? It seemed a crime to give,
+and a crime not to give. He cried like a child; said it
+was all a sham about his dinner and his <em>robe de chambre</em>.
+An aunt, two little cousins, an aged uncle at home&mdash;and
+not a cent in the house! What could I do? He says
+he&#8217;ll return it in three days.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And&rdquo;&mdash;Mary laughed distressfully&mdash;&ldquo;you believed
+him?&rdquo; She looked at him with an air of tender, painful
+admiration, half way between a laugh and a cry.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come, sit down,&rdquo; he said, sinking upon the little
+wooden buttress at one side of the door-step.</p>
+
+<p>Tears sprang into her eyes. She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let&#8217;s go inside.&rdquo; And in there she told him sincerely,
+&ldquo;No, no, no; she didn&#8217;t think he had done wrong&rdquo;&mdash;when
+he knew he had.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>WEAR AND TEAR.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The arrangement for Dr. Sevier to place the loan of
+fifty dollars on his own books at Richling&#8217;s credit
+naturally brought Narcisse into relation with it.</p>
+
+<p>It was a case of love at first sight. From the moment
+the record of Richling&#8217;s &ldquo;little quantity&rdquo; slid from the pen
+to the page, Narcisse had felt himself betrothed to it by
+destiny, and hourly supplicated the awful fates to frown
+not upon the amorous hopes of him unaugmented.
+Richling descended upon him once or twice and tore away
+from his embrace small fractions of the coveted treasure,
+choosing, through a diffidence which he mistook for a
+sort of virtue, the time of day when he would not see Dr.
+Sevier; and at the third visitation took the entire golden
+fleece away with him rather than encounter again the
+always more or less successful courtship of the scorner
+of loans.</p>
+
+<p>A faithful suitor, however, was not thus easily shaken
+off. Narcisse became a frequent visitor at the Richlings&#8217;,
+where he never mentioned money; that part was left to
+moments of accidental meeting with Richling in the street,
+which suddenly began to occur at singularly short intervals.</p>
+
+<p>Mary labored honestly and arduously to dislike him&mdash;to
+hold a repellent attitude toward him. But he was too
+much for her. It was easy enough when he was absent;
+but one look at his handsome face, so rife with animal
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+innocence, and despite herself she was ready to reward
+his displays of sentiment and erudition with laughter
+that, mean what it might, always pleased and flattered
+him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Can you help liking him?&rdquo; she would ask John. &ldquo;I
+can&#8217;t, to save my life!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Had the treasure been earnings, Richling said&mdash;and
+believed&mdash;he could firmly have repelled Narcisse&#8217;s importunities.
+But coldly to withhold an occasional modest
+heave-offering of that which was the free bounty
+of another to him was more than he could do.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Mary, straightening his cravat, &ldquo;you intend
+to pay up, and he&mdash;you don&#8217;t think I&#8217;m uncharitable, do
+you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;d rather give my last cent than think you so,&rdquo;
+replied John. &ldquo;Still,&rdquo;&mdash;laying the matter before her
+with both open hands,&mdash;&ldquo;if you say plainly not to give
+him another cent I&#8217;ll do as you say. The money&#8217;s no
+more mine than yours.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you can have all my share,&rdquo; said Mary, pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>So the weeks passed and the hoard dwindled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What has it got down to, now?&rdquo; asked John, frowningly,
+on more than one morning as he was preparing to
+go out. And Mary, who had been made treasurer, could
+count it at a glance without taking it out of her purse.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, when Narcisse called, he found no one at
+home but Mrs. Riley. The infant Mike had been stuffed
+with rice and milk and laid away to slumber. The Richlings
+would hardly be back in less than an hour.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m so&#8217;y,&rdquo; said Narcisse, with a baffled frown, as he
+sat down and Mrs. Riley took her seat opposite. &ldquo;I
+came to &#8217;epay &#8217;em some moneys which he made me the
+loan&mdash;juz in a fwenly way. And I came to &#8217;epay &#8217;im.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+The sum-total, in fact&mdash;I suppose he nevva mentioned
+you about that, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir; but, still, if&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, and so I can&#8217;t pay it to you. I&#8217;m so&#8217;y. Because
+I know he woon like it, I know, if he fine that you
+know he&#8217;s been bawing money to me. Well, Misses
+Wiley, in fact, thass a <em>ve&#8217;y</em> fine gen&#8217;leman and lady&mdash;that
+Mistoo and Misses Itchlin, in fact?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, Mr. Narcisse, ye&#8217;r about right? She&#8217;s
+just too good to live&mdash;and he&#8217;s not much better&mdash;ha!
+ha!&rdquo; She checked her jesting mood. &ldquo;Yes, sur,
+they&#8217;re very peaceable, quiet people. They&#8217;re just
+simply ferst tlass.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;Tis t&#8217;ue,&rdquo; rejoined the Creole, fanning himself with
+his straw hat and looking at the Pope. &ldquo;And they
+handsome and genial, as the lite&#8217;ati say on the noozpapeh.
+Seem like they almoze wedded to each otheh.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, sir, that&#8217;s the trooth!&rdquo; She threw her
+open hand down with emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And isn&#8217;t that as man and wife should be?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yo&#8217; mighty co&#8217;ect, Misses Wiley!&rdquo; Narcisse gave
+his pretty head a little shake from side to side as he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! Mr. Narcisse,&rdquo;&mdash;she pointed at herself,&mdash;&ldquo;haven&#8217;t
+I been a wife? The husband and wife&mdash;they&#8217;d
+aht to jist be each other&#8217;s guairdjian angels! Hairt to hairt
+sur; sperit to sperit. All the rist is nawthing, Mister
+Narcisse.&rdquo; She waved her hands. &ldquo;Min is different
+from women, sur.&rdquo; She looked about on the ceiling. Her
+foot noiselessly patted the floor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Narcisse, &ldquo;and thass the cause that they
+dwess them dif&#8217;ent. To show the dif&#8217;ence, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! no. It&#8217;s not the mortial frame, sur; it&#8217;s the
+sperit. The sperit of man is not the sperit of woman.
+The sperit of woman is not the sperit of man. Each one
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+needs the other, sur. They needs each other, sur, to
+purify and strinthen and enlairge each other&#8217;s speritu&#8217;l
+life. Ah, sur! Doo not I feel those things, sur?&rdquo; She
+touched her heart with one backward-pointed finger,
+&ldquo;<em>I</em> doo. It isn&#8217;t good for min to be alone&mdash;much liss
+for women. Do not misunderstand me, sur; I speak as a
+widder, sur&mdash;and who always will be&mdash;ah! yes, I will&mdash;ha!
+ha! ha!&rdquo; She hushed her laugh as if this were
+going too far, tossed her head, and continued smiling.</p>
+
+<p>So they talked on. Narcisse did not stay an hour, but
+there was little of the hour left when he rose to go. They
+had passed a pleasant time. The Creole, it is true, tried
+and failed to take the helm of conversation. Mrs. Riley
+held it. But she steered well. She was still expatiating
+on the &ldquo;strinthenin&#8217;&rdquo; spiritual value of the marriage
+relation when she, too, stood up.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And that&#8217;s what Mr. and Madam Richlin&#8217;s a-doin&#8217; all
+the time. And they do ut to perfiction, sur&mdash;jist to
+perfiction!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt it not, Misses Wiley. Well, Misses Wiley,
+I bid you <em>au &#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>. I dunno if you&#8217;ll pummit me, but I
+am compel to tell you, Misses Wiley, I nevva yeh anybody
+in my life with such a educated and talented conve&#8217;sation
+like yo&#8217;seff. Misses Wiley, at what univussity did you
+gwaduate?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, reely, Mister&mdash;eh&rdquo;&mdash;she fanned herself with
+broad sweeps of her purple bordered palm-leaf&mdash;&ldquo;reely,
+sur, if I don&#8217;t furgit the name I&mdash;I&mdash;I&#8217;ll be switched!
+Ha! ha! ha!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse joined in the laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thaz the way, sometime,&rdquo; he said, and then with
+sudden gravity: &ldquo;And, by-the-by, Misses Wiley, speakin&#8217;
+of Mistoo Itchlin,&mdash;if you could baw&#8217; me two dollahs
+an&#8217; a &#8217;alf juz till tomaw mawnin&mdash;till I kin sen&#8217; it you
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+fum the office&mdash;&nbsp;Because that money I&#8217;ve got faw Mistoo
+Itchlin is in the shape of a check, and anyhow I&#8217;m
+c&#8217;owding me a little to pay that whole sum-total to Mistoo
+Itchlin. I kin sen&#8217; it you firs&#8217; thing my bank open
+tomaw mawnin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Do you think he didn&#8217;t get it?</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&ldquo;What has it got down to now?&rdquo; John asked again,
+a few mornings after Narcisse&#8217;s last visit. Mary told him.
+He stepped a little way aside, averting his face, dropped
+his forehead into his hand, and returned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t see&mdash;I don&#8217;t see, Mary&mdash;I&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Darling,&rdquo; she replied, reaching and capturing both
+his hands, &ldquo;who does see? The rich <em>think</em> they see; but
+do they, John? Now, <em>do</em> they?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The frown did not go quite off his face, but he took her
+head between his hands and kissed her temple.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;re always trying to lift me,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t you lift me?&rdquo; she replied, looking up between
+his hands and smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do I?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You know you do. Don&#8217;t you remember the day we
+took that walk, and you said that after all it never is we
+who provide?&rdquo; She looked at the button of his coat,
+which she twirled in her fingers. &ldquo;That word lifted me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But suppose I can&#8217;t practice the trust I preach?&rdquo; he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You do trust, though. You have trusted.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Past tense,&rdquo; said John. He lifted her hands slowly
+away from him, and moved toward the door of their
+chamber. He could not help looking back at the eyes
+that followed him, and then he could not bear their look.
+&ldquo;I&mdash;I suppose a man mustn&#8217;t trust too much,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Can he?&rdquo; asked Mary, leaning against a table.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Oh, yes, he can,&rdquo; replied John; but his tone lacked
+conviction.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If it&#8217;s the right kind?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes were full of tears.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m afraid mine&#8217;s not the right kind, then,&rdquo; said
+John, and passed out into and down the street.</p>
+
+<p>But what a mind he took with him&mdash;what torture of
+questions! Was he being lifted or pulled down? His
+tastes,&mdash;were they rising or sinking? Were little negligences
+of dress and bearing and in-door attitude creeping
+into his habits? Was he losing his discriminative sense
+of quantity, time, distance? Did he talk of small achievements,
+small gains, and small truths, as though they were
+great? Had he learned to carp at the rich, and to make
+honesty the excuse for all penury? Had he these various
+poverty-marks? He looked at himself outside and
+inside, and feared to answer. One thing he knew,&mdash;that
+he was having great wrestlings.</p>
+
+<p>He turned his thoughts to Ristofalo. This was a
+common habit with him. Not only in thought, but in
+person, he hovered with a positive infatuation about this
+man of perpetual success.</p>
+
+<p>Lately the Italian had gone out of town, into the country
+of La Fourche, to buy standing crops of oranges.
+Richling fed his hope on the possibilities that might
+follow Ristofalo&#8217;s return. His friend would want him to
+superintend the gathering and shipment of those crops&mdash;when
+they should be ripe&mdash;away yonder in November.
+Frantic thought! A man and his wife could starve to
+death twenty times before then.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley&#8217;s high esteem for John and Mary had risen
+from the date of the Doctor&#8217;s visit, and the good woman
+thought it but right somewhat to increase the figures
+of their room-rent to others more in keeping with
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+such high gentility. How fast the little hoard melted
+away!</p>
+
+<p>And the summer continued on,&mdash;the long, beautiful,
+glaring, implacable summer; its heat quaking on the low
+roofs; its fig-trees dropping their shrivelled and blackened
+leaves and writhing their weird, bare branches under the
+scorching sun; the long-drawn, frying note of its cicada
+throbbing through the mid-day heat from the depths of
+the becalmed oak; its universal pall of dust on the myriad
+red, sleep-heavy blossoms of the oleander and the white
+tulips of the lofty magnolia; its twinkling pomegranates
+hanging their apples of scarlet and gold over the garden
+wall; its little chameleons darting along the hot fence-tops;
+its far-stretching, empty streets; its wide hush of
+idleness; its solitary vultures sailing in the upper blue;
+its grateful clouds; its hot north winds, its cool south
+winds; its gasping twilight calms; its gorgeous nights,&mdash;the
+long, long summer lingered on into September.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, as the sun was sinking below the broad,
+flat land, its burning disk reddened by a low golden haze
+of suspended dust, Richling passed slowly toward his
+home, coming from a lower part of the town by way of
+the quadroon quarter. He was paying little notice, or
+none, to his whereabouts, wending his way mechanically,
+in the dejected reverie of weary disappointment, and with
+voiceless inward screamings and groanings under the
+weight of those thoughts which had lately taken up their
+stay in his dismayed mind. But all at once his attention
+was challenged by a strange, offensive odor. He looked
+up and around, saw nothing, turned a corner, and found
+himself at the intersection of Tr&eacute;m&eacute; and St. Anne streets,
+just behind the great central prison of New Orleans.</p>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;Parish Prison&rdquo; was then only about twenty-five
+years old; but it had made haste to become offensive to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+every sense and sentiment of reasonable man. It had
+been built in the Spanish style,&mdash;a massive, dark, grim,
+huge, four-sided block, the fissure-like windows of its
+cells looking down into the four public streets which ran
+immediately under its walls. Dilapidation had followed
+hard behind ill-building contractors. Down its frowning
+masonry ran grimy streaks of leakage over peeling stucco
+and mould-covered brick. Weeds bloomed high aloft in
+the broken gutters under the scant and ragged eaves.
+Here and there the pale, debauched face of a prisoner
+peered shamelessly down through shattered glass or
+rusted grating; and everywhere in the still atmosphere
+floated the stifling smell of the unseen loathsomeness
+within.</p>
+
+<p>Richling paused. As he looked up he noticed a bat
+dart out from a long crevice under the eaves. Two
+others followed. Then three&mdash;a dozen&mdash;a hundred&mdash;a
+thousand&mdash;millions. All along the two sides of the
+prison in view they poured forth in a horrid black torrent,&mdash;myriads
+upon myriads. They filled the air. They
+came and came. Richling stood and gazed; and still
+they streamed out in gibbering waves, until the wonder
+was that anything but a witch&#8217;s dream could contain
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The approach of another passer roused him, and he
+started on. The step gained upon him&mdash;closed up with
+him; and at the moment when he expected to see the
+person go by, a hand was laid gently on his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, I &#8217;ope you well, seh!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>BROUGHT TO BAY.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>One may take his choice between the two, but there
+is no escaping both in this life: the creditor&mdash;the
+borrower. Either, but never neither. Narcisse caught
+step with Richling, and they walked side by side.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How I learned to mawch, I billong with a fiah
+comp&#8217;ny,&rdquo; said the Creole. &ldquo;We mawch eve&#8217;y yeah on
+the fou&#8217;th of Mawch.&rdquo; He laughed heartily. &ldquo;Thass a
+&#8217;ime!&mdash;Mawch on the fou&#8217;th of Mawch! Thass poetwy,
+in fact, as you may <em>say</em> in a jesting <em>way</em>&mdash;ha! ha! ha!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, and it&#8217;s truth, besides,&rdquo; responded the drearier
+man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; exclaimed Narcisse, delighted at the unusual
+coincidence, &ldquo;at the same time &#8217;tis the tooth! In fact,
+why should I tell a lie about such a thing like <em>that</em>?
+&#8217;Twould be useless. Pe&#8217;haps you may &#8217;ave notiz, Mistoo
+Itchlin, thad the noozpapehs opine us fiahmen to be
+the gau&#8217;dians of the city.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; responded Richling. &ldquo;I think Dr. Sevier
+calls you the Mamelukes, doesn&#8217;t he? But that&#8217;s much
+the same, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Same thing,&rdquo; replied the Creole. &ldquo;We combad the
+fiah fiend. You fine that building ve&#8217;y pitto&#8217;esque,
+Mistoo Itchlin?&rdquo; He jerked his thumb toward the
+prison, that was still pouring forth its clouds of impish
+wings. &ldquo;Yes? &#8217;Tis the same with me. But I tell you
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+one thing, Mistoo Itchlin, I assu&#8217; you, and you will
+believe me, I would &#8217;atheh be lock&#8217; <em>out</em>side of that building
+than to be lock&#8217; <em>in</em>side of the same. &#8217;Cause&mdash;you know
+why? &#8217;Tis ve&#8217;y &#8217;umid in that building. An thass a
+thing w&#8217;at I believe, Mistoo Itchlin; I believe w&#8217;en a
+building is v&#8217;ey &#8217;umid it is not ve&#8217;y &#8217;ealthsome. What is
+yo&#8217; opinion consunning that, Mistoo Itchlin?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My opinion?&rdquo; said Richling, with a smile. &ldquo;My
+opinion is that the Parish Prison would not be a good
+place to raise a family.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I thing yo&#8217; <em>o</em>pinion is co&#8217;ect,&rdquo; he said, flatteringly;
+then growing instantly serious, he added, &ldquo;Yesseh, I
+think you&#8217; about a-&#8217;ight, Mistoo Itchlin; faw even if
+&#8217;twas not too &#8217;umid, &#8217;twould be too confining, in fact,&mdash;speshly
+faw child&#8217;en. I dunno; but thass my opinion.
+If you ah p&#8217;oceeding at yo&#8217; residence, Mistoo Itchlin,
+I&#8217;ll juz <em>con</em>tinue my p&#8217;omenade in yo&#8217; society&mdash;if not
+intooding&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Richling smiled candidly. &ldquo;Your company&#8217;s worth all
+it costs, Narcisse. Excuse me; I always forget your
+last name&mdash;and your first is so appropriate.&rdquo; It <em>was</em>
+worth all it cost, though Richling could ill afford the
+purchase. The young Latin&#8217;s sweet, abysmal ignorance,
+his infantile amiability, his artless ambition, and heathenish
+innocence started the natural gladness of Richling&#8217;s
+blood to effervescing anew every time they met, and,
+through the sheer impossibility of confiding any of his
+troubles to the Creole, made him think them smaller and
+lighter than they had just before appeared. The very light
+of Narcisse&#8217;s countenance and beauty of his form&mdash;his
+smooth, low forehead, his thick, abundant locks, his
+faintly up-tipped nose and expanded nostrils, his sweet,
+weak mouth with its impending smile, his beautiful chin
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+and bird&#8217;s throat, his almond eyes, his full, round arm,
+and strong thigh&mdash;had their emphatic value.</p>
+
+<p>So now, Richling, a moment earlier borne down by
+the dreadful shadow of the Parish Prison, left it
+behind him as he walked and laughed and chatted with
+his borrower. He felt very free with Narcisse, for the
+reason that would have made a wiser person constrained,&mdash;lack
+of respect for him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, you know,&rdquo; said the Creole, &ldquo;I like
+you to call me Nahcisse. But at the same time my las&#8217;
+name is Savillot.&rdquo; He pronounced it Sav-<em>veel</em>-yo. &ldquo;Thass
+a somewot Spanish name. That double l got a twist in it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, call it Papilio!&rdquo; laughed Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Papillon!&rdquo; exclaimed Narcisse, with delight. &ldquo;The
+buttehfly! All a-&#8217;ight; you kin juz style me that! &#8217;Cause
+thass my natu&#8217;e, Mistoo Itchlin; I gatheh honey eve&#8217;y
+day fum eve&#8217;y opening floweh, as the bahd of A-von
+wemawk.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>So they went on.</p>
+
+<p><em>Ad infinitum?</em> Ah, no! The end was just as plainly
+in view to both from the beginning as it was when, at
+length, the two stepping across the street gutter at the
+last corner between Richling and home, Narcisse laid his
+open hand in his companion&#8217;s elbow, and stopped, saying,
+as Richling turned and halted with a sudden frown of
+unwillingness:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you &#8217;ow &#8217;tis with me, Mistoo Itchlin, I&#8217;ve
+p&#8217;oject that manneh myseff; in weading a book&mdash;w&#8217;en
+I see a beaucheouz idee, I juz take a pencil&rdquo;&mdash;he drew
+one from his pocket&mdash;&ldquo;check! I check it. So w&#8217;en I
+wead the same book again, then I take notiz I&#8217;ve check
+that idee and I look to see what I check it faw. &#8217;Ow
+you like that invention, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Very simple,&rdquo; said Richling, with an unpleasant look
+of expectancy.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; resumed the other, &ldquo;do you not
+fine me impooving in my p&#8217;onouncement of yo&#8217; lang-widge?
+I fine I don&#8217;t use such bad land-widge like biffo. I am
+shue you muz&#8217; &#8217;ave notiz since some time I always soun&#8217;
+that awer in yo&#8217; name. Mistoo Itchlin, will you &#8217;ave that
+kin&#8217;ness to baw me two-an-a-&#8217;alf till the lass of that
+month?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling looked at him a moment in silence, and then
+broke into a short, grim laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s all gone. There&#8217;s no more honey in this flower.&rdquo;
+He set his jaw as he ceased speaking. There was a
+warm red place on either cheek.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; said Narcisse, with sudden, quavering
+fervor, &ldquo;you kin len&#8217; me two dollahs! I gi&#8217;e you
+my honah the moze sacwed of a gen&#8217;leman, Mistoo
+Itchlin, I nevvah hass you ag&#8217;in so long I live!&rdquo; He
+extended a pacifying hand. &ldquo;One moment, Mistoo
+Itchlin,&mdash;one moment,&mdash;I implo&#8217; you, seh! I assu&#8217; you,
+Mistoo Itchlin, I pay you eve&#8217;y cent in the worl&#8217; on the
+laz of that month? Mistoo Itchlin, I am in indignan&#8217;
+circumstan&#8217;s. Mistoo Itchlin, if you know the distwess&mdash;Mistoo
+Itchlin, if you know&mdash;&#8217;ow bad I &#8217;ate to baw!&rdquo;
+The tears stood in his eyes. &ldquo;It nea&#8217;ly <em>kill</em> me to b&mdash;&rdquo;
+Utterance failed him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My friend,&rdquo; began Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; exclaimed Narcisse, dashing away
+the tears and striking his hand on his heart, &ldquo;I <em>am</em> yo&#8217;
+fwend, seh!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling smiled scornfully. &ldquo;Well, my good friend, if
+you had ever kept a single promise made to me I need
+not have gone since yesterday without a morsel of food.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse tried to respond.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; said Richling, and Narcisse bowed while
+Richling spoke on. &ldquo;I haven&#8217;t a cent to buy bread with
+to carry home. And whose fault is it? Is it my fault&mdash;or
+is it yours?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, seh&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; cried Richling, again; &ldquo;if you try to speak
+before I finish I&#8217;ll thrash you right here in the street!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse folded his arms. Richling flushed and flashed
+with the mortifying knowledge that his companion&#8217;s behavior
+was better than his own.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you want to borrow more money of me find me a
+chance to earn it!&rdquo; He glanced so suddenly at two or
+three street lads, who were the only on-lookers, that they
+shrank back a step.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; began Narcisse, once more, in a
+tone of polite dismay, &ldquo;you aztonizh me. I assu&#8217; you,
+Mistoo Itchlin&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Richling lifted his finger and shook it. &ldquo;Don&#8217;t you
+tell me that, sir! I will not be an object of astonishment
+to you! Not to you, sir! Not to you!&rdquo; He paused,
+trembling, his anger and his shame rising together.</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse stood for a moment, silent, undaunted, the
+picture of amazed friendship and injured dignity, then
+raised his hat with the solemnity of affronted patience
+and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, seein&#8217; as &#8217;tis you, a puffic gen&#8217;leman,
+&#8217;oo is not goin&#8217; to &#8217;efuse that satisfagtion w&#8217;at a gen&#8217;leman,
+always a-&#8217;eady to give a gen&#8217;leman,&mdash;I bid you&mdash;faw
+the pwesen&#8217;&mdash;good-evenin&#8217;, seh!&rdquo; He walked away.</p>
+
+<p>Richling stood in his tracks dumfounded, crushed.
+His eyes followed the receding form of the borrower until
+it disappeared around a distant corner, while the eye of
+his mind looked in upon himself and beheld, with a shame
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+that overwhelmed anger, the folly and the puerility of his
+outburst. The nervous strain of twenty-four hours&#8217; fast,
+without which he might not have slipped at all, only
+sharpened his self-condemnation. He turned and walked
+to his house, and all the misery that had oppressed him
+before he had seen the prison, and all that had come with
+that sight, and all this new shame, sank down upon his
+heart at once. &ldquo;I am not a man! I am not a whole
+man!&rdquo; he suddenly moaned to himself. &ldquo;Something is
+wanting&mdash;oh! what is it?&rdquo;&mdash;he lifted his eyes to the
+sky,&mdash;&ldquo;what is it?&rdquo;&mdash;when in truth, there was little
+wanting just then besides food.</p>
+
+<p>He passed in at the narrow gate and up the slippery
+alley. Nearly at its end was the one window of the room
+he called home. Just under it&mdash;it was somewhat above
+his head&mdash;he stopped and listened. A step within was
+moving busily here and there, now fainter and now
+plainer; and a voice, the sweetest on earth to him, was
+singing to itself in its soft, habitual way.</p>
+
+<p>He started round to the door with a firmer tread. It
+stood open. He halted on the threshold. There was a
+small table in the middle of the room, and there was food
+on it. A petty reward of his wife&#8217;s labor had brought it
+there.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; he said, holding her off a little, &ldquo;don&#8217;t kiss
+me yet.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with consternation. He sat down,
+drew her upon his lap, and told her, in plain, quiet voice,
+the whole matter.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t look so, Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo; she asked, in a husky voice and with flashing eye.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t breathe so short and set your lips. I never
+saw you look so, Mary, darling!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+She tried to smile, but her eyes filled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you had been with me,&rdquo; said John, musingly, &ldquo;it
+wouldn&#8217;t have happened.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If&mdash;if&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;Mary sat up as straight as a dart, the
+corners of her mouth twitching so that she could scarcely
+shape a word,&mdash;&ldquo;if&mdash;if I&#8217;d been there, I&#8217;d have made
+you <em>whip</em> him!&rdquo; She flouted her handkerchief out of her
+pocket, buried her face in his neck, and sobbed like a
+child.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; exclaimed the tearful John, holding her away
+by both shoulders, tossing back his hair and laughing as
+she laughed,&mdash;&ldquo;Oh! you women! You&#8217;re all of a sort!
+You want us men to carry your hymn-books and your
+iniquities, too!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She laughed again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, of course!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And they rose and drew up to the board.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>THE DOCTOR DINES OUT.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>On the third day after these incidents, again at the
+sunset hour, but in a very different part of the
+town, Dr. Sevier sat down, a guest, at dinner. There
+were flowers; there was painted and monogrammed china;
+there was Bohemian glass; there was silver of cunning
+work with linings of gold, and damasked linen, and oak
+of fantastic carving. There were ladies in summer silks
+and elaborate coiffures; the hostess, small, slender,
+gentle, alert; another, dark, flashing, Roman, tall;
+another, ripe but not drooping, who had been beautiful,
+now, for thirty years; and one or two others. There
+were jewels; there were sweet odors. And there were,
+also, some good masculine heads: Dr. Sevier&#8217;s, for instance;
+and the chief guest&#8217;s,&mdash;an iron-gray, with hard
+lines in the face, and a scar on the near cheek,&mdash;a colonel
+of the regular army passing through from Florida; and
+one crown, bald, pink, and shining, encircled by a silken
+fringe of very white hair: it was the banker who lived in
+St. Mary street. His wife was opposite. And there was
+much high-bred grace. There were tall windows thrown
+wide to make the blaze of gas bearable, and two tall mulattoes
+in the middle distance bringing in and bearing out
+viands too sumptuous for any but a French nomenclature.</p>
+
+<p>It was what you would call a quiet affair; quite out of
+season, and difficult to furnish with even this little handful
+of guests; but it was a proper and necessary attention
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+to the colonel; conversation not too dull, nor yet too
+bright for ease, but passing gracefully from one agreeable
+topic to another without earnestness, a restless virtue, or
+frivolity, which also goes against serenity. Now it
+touched upon the prospects of young A. B. in the demise
+of his uncle; now upon the probable seriousness of C. D.
+in his attentions to E. F.; now upon G.&#8217;s amusing mishaps
+during a late tour in Switzerland, which had&mdash;&ldquo;how
+unfortunately!&rdquo;&mdash;got into the papers. Now it
+was concerning the admirable pulpit manners and easily
+pardoned vocal defects of a certain new rector. Now it
+turned upon Stephen A. Douglas&#8217;s last speech; passed to
+the questionable merits of a new-fangled punch; and
+now, assuming a slightly explanatory form from the
+gentlemen to the ladies, showed why there was no need
+whatever to fear a financial crisis&mdash;which came soon
+afterward.</p>
+
+<p>The colonel inquired after an old gentleman whom he
+had known in earlier days in Kentucky.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s many a year since I met him,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The
+proudest man I ever saw. I understand he was down
+here last season.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He was,&rdquo; replied the host, in a voice of native kindness,
+and with a smile on his high-fed face. &ldquo;He was;
+but only for a short time. He went back to his estate.
+That is his world. He&#8217;s there now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It used to be considered one of the finest places in
+the State,&rdquo; said the colonel.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It is still,&rdquo; rejoined the host. &ldquo;Doctor, you know
+him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier; but somehow he recalled
+the old gentleman in button gaiters, who had called
+on him one evening to consult him about his sick wife.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A good man,&rdquo; said the colonel, looking amused;
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+&ldquo;and a superb gentleman. Is he as great a partisan of
+the church as he used to be?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Greater! Favors an established church of America.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The ladies were much amused. The host&#8217;s son, a
+young fellow with sprouting side-whiskers, said he thought
+he could be quite happy with one of the finest plantations
+in Kentucky, and let the church go its own gait.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; said the father; &ldquo;I doubt if there&#8217;s ever a
+happy breath drawn on the place.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, how is that?&rdquo; asked the colonel, in a cautious
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hadn&#8217;t he heard?&rdquo; The host was surprised, but
+spoke low. &ldquo;Hadn&#8217;t he heard about the trouble with their
+only son? Why, he went abroad and never came back!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Every one listened.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s a terrible thing,&rdquo; said the hostess to the ladies
+nearest her; &ldquo;no one ever dares ask the family what the
+trouble is,&mdash;they have such odd, exclusive ideas about
+their matters being nobody&#8217;s business. All that can be
+known is that they look upon him as worse than dead and
+gone forever.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And who will get the estate?&rdquo; asked the banker.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The two girls. They&#8217;re both married.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They&#8217;re very much like their father,&rdquo; said the hostess,
+smiling with gentle significance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very much,&rdquo; echoed the host, with less delicacy.
+&ldquo;Their mother is one of those women who stand in terror
+of their husband&#8217;s will. Now, if he were to die and leave
+her with a will of her own she would hardly know what to
+do with it&mdash;I mean with her will&mdash;or the property either.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The hostess protested softly against so harsh a speech,
+and the son, after one or two failures, got in his remark:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Maybe the prodigal would come back and be taken in.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But nobody gave this conjecture much attention. The
+host was still talking of the lady without a will.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&#8217;t she an invalid?&rdquo; Dr. Sevier had asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; the trip down here last season was on her
+account,&mdash;for change of scene. Her health is wretched.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m distressed that I didn&#8217;t call on her,&rdquo; said the
+hostess; &ldquo;but they went away suddenly. My dear, I
+wonder if they really did encounter the young man here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pshaw!&rdquo; said the husband, softly, smiling and shaking
+his head, and turned the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>In time it settled down with something like earnestness
+for a few minutes upon a subject which the rich find it
+easy to discuss without the least risk of undue warmth.
+It was about the time when one of the graciously murmuring
+mulattoes was replenishing the glasses, that
+remark in some way found utterance to this effect,&mdash;that
+the company present could congratulate themselves on
+living in a community where there was no poor class.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Poverty, of course, we see; but there is no misery,
+or nearly none,&rdquo; said the ambitious son of the host.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier differed with him. That was one of the
+Doctor&#8217;s blemishes as a table guest: he would differ with
+people.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There is misery,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;maybe not the gaunt
+squalor and starvation of London or Paris or New York;
+the climate does not tolerate that,&mdash;stamps it out before
+it can assume dimensions; but there is at least misery of
+that sort that needs recognition and aid from the well-fed.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The lady who had been beautiful so many years had
+somewhat to say; the physician gave attention, and she
+spoke:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+&ldquo;If sister Jane were here, she would be perfectly triumphant
+to hear you speak so, Doctor.&rdquo; She turned to
+the hostess, and continued: &ldquo;Jane is quite an enthusiast,
+you know; a sort of Dorcas, as husband says, modified
+and readapted. Yes, she is for helping everybody.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Whether help is good for them or not,&rdquo; said the lady&#8217;s
+husband, a very straight and wiry man with a garrote
+collar.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s all one,&rdquo; laughed the lady. &ldquo;Our new rector told
+her plainly, the other day, that she was making a great
+mistake; that she ought to consider whether assistance
+assists. It was really amusing. Out of the pulpit and
+off his guard, you know, he lisps a little; and he said she
+ought to consider whether &lsquo;aththithtanth aththithtth.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There was a gay laugh at this, and the lady was called
+a perfect and cruel mimic.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Aththithtanth aththithtth!&rsquo;&rdquo; said two or three to
+their neighbors, and laughed again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What did your sister say to that?&rdquo; asked the banker,
+bending forward his white, tonsured head, and smiling
+down the board.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She said she didn&#8217;t care; that it kept her own heart
+tender, anyhow. &lsquo;My dear madam,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;your heart
+wants strengthening more than softening.&rsquo; He told her
+a pound of inner resource was more true help to any poor
+person than a ton of assistance.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The banker commended the rector. The hostess, very
+sweetly, offered her guarantee that Jane took the rebuke
+in good part.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She did,&rdquo; replied the time-honored beauty; &ldquo;she
+tried to profit by it. But husband, here, has offered her
+a wager of a bonnet against a hat that the rector will
+upset her new schemes. Her idea now is to make work
+for those whom nobody will employ.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Jane,&rdquo; said the kind-faced host, &ldquo;really wants to do
+good for its own sake.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think she&#8217;s even a little Romish in her notions,&rdquo;
+said Jane&#8217;s wiry brother-in-law. &ldquo;I talked to her as
+plainly as the rector. I told her, &lsquo;Jane, my dear, all this
+making of work for the helpless poor is not worth one-fiftieth
+part of the same amount of effort spent in teaching
+and training those same poor to make their labor intrinsically
+marketable.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the hostess; &ldquo;but while we are philosophizing
+and offering advice so wisely, Jane is at work&mdash;doing
+the best she knows how. We can&#8217;t claim the honor
+even of making her mistakes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;Tisn&#8217;t a question of honors to us, madam,&rdquo; said Dr.
+Sevier; &ldquo;it&#8217;s a question of results to the poor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The brother-in-law had not finished. He turned to the
+Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Poverty, Doctor, is an inner condition&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sometimes,&rdquo; interposed the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, generally,&rdquo; continued the brother-in-law, with
+some emphasis. &ldquo;And to give help you must, first of all,
+&lsquo;inquire within&rsquo;&mdash;within your beneficiary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not always, sir,&rdquo; replied the Doctor; &ldquo;not if they&#8217;re
+sick, for instance.&rdquo; The ladies bowed briskly and applauded
+with their eyes. &ldquo;And not always if they&#8217;re
+well,&rdquo; he added. His last words softened off almost into
+soliloquy.</p>
+
+<p>The banker spoke forcibly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, there are two quite distinct kinds of poverty.
+One is an accident of the moment; the other is an inner
+condition of the individual&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course it is,&rdquo; said sister Jane&#8217;s brother-in-law,
+who felt it a little to have been contradicted on the side
+of kindness by the hard-spoken Doctor. &ldquo;Certainly! it&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+a deficiency of inner resources or character, and what to
+do with it is no simple question.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s what I was about to say,&rdquo; resumed the
+banker; &ldquo;at least, when the poverty is of that sort.
+And what discourages kind people is that that&#8217;s the sort
+we commonly see. It&#8217;s a relief to meet the other, Doctor,
+just as it&#8217;s a relief to a physician to encounter a case of
+simple surgery.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And&mdash;and,&rdquo; said the brother-in-law, &ldquo;what is your
+rule about plain almsgiving to the difficult sort?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My rule,&rdquo; replied the banker, &ldquo;is, don&#8217;t do it. Debt
+is slavery, and there is an ugly kink in human nature
+that disposes it to be content with slavery. No, sir;
+gift-making and gift-taking are twins of a bad blood.&rdquo;
+The speaker turned to Dr. Sevier for approval; but,
+though the Doctor could not gainsay the fraction of a
+point, he was silent. A lady near the hostess stirred
+softly both under and above the board. In her private
+chamber she would have yawned. Yet the banker spoke
+again:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Help the old, I say. You are pretty safe there.
+Help the sick. But as for the young and strong,&mdash;now,
+no man could be any poorer than I was at twenty-one,&mdash;I
+say be cautious how you smooth that hard road which
+is the finest discipline the young can possibly get.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If it isn&#8217;t <em>too</em> hard,&rdquo; chirped the son of the host.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Too hard? Well, yes, if it isn&#8217;t too hard. Still I
+say, hands off; you needn&#8217;t turn your back, however.&rdquo;
+Here the speaker again singled out Dr. Sevier. &ldquo;Watch
+the young man out of one corner of your eye; but make
+him swim!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah-h!&rdquo; said the ladies.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; continued the banker; &ldquo;I don&#8217;t say let him
+drown; but I take it, Doctor, that your alms, for instance,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+are no alms if they put the poor fellow into your
+debt and at your back.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;To whom do you refer?&rdquo; asked Dr. Sevier. Whereat
+there was a burst of laughter, which was renewed when
+the banker charged the physician with helping so many
+persons, &ldquo;on the sly,&rdquo; that he couldn&#8217;t tell which one
+was alluded to unless the name were given.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said the hostess, seeing it was high time the
+conversation should take a new direction, &ldquo;they tell me
+you have closed your house and taken rooms at the St.
+Charles.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For the summer,&rdquo; said the physician.</p>
+
+<p>As, later, he walked toward that hotel, he went resolving
+to look up the Richlings again without delay. The
+banker&#8217;s words rang in his ears like an overdose of quinine:
+&ldquo;Watch the young man out of one corner of your
+eye. Make him swim. I don&#8217;t say let him drown.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I do watch him,&rdquo; thought the Doctor. &ldquo;I&#8217;ve
+only lost sight of him once in a while.&rdquo; But the thought
+seemed to find an echo against his conscience, and when
+it floated back it was: &ldquo;I&#8217;ve only <em>caught</em> sight of him
+once in a while.&rdquo; The banker&#8217;s words came up again:
+&ldquo;Don&#8217;t put the poor fellow into your debt and at your
+back.&rdquo; &ldquo;Just what you&#8217;ve done,&rdquo; said conscience.
+&ldquo;How do you know he isn&#8217;t drowned?&rdquo; He would see
+to it.</p>
+
+<p>While he was still on his way to the hotel he fell in
+with an acquaintance, a Judge Somebody or other, lately
+from Washington City. He, also, lodged at the St.
+Charles. They went together. As they approached the
+majestic porch of the edifice they noticed some confusion
+at the bottom of the stairs that led up to the rotunda;
+cabmen and boys were running to a common point, where,
+in the midst of a small, compact crowd, two or three
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+pairs of arms were being alternately thrown aloft and
+brought down. Presently the mass took a rapid movement
+up St. Charles street.</p>
+
+<p>The judge gave his conjecture: &ldquo;Some poor devil
+resisting arrest.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Before he and the Doctor parted for the night they
+went to the clerk&#8217;s counter.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No letters for you, Judge; mail failed. Here is a
+card for you, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor received it. It had been furnished, blank,
+by the clerk to its writer.</p>
+
+<div class="box1">
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">John Richling</span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>At the door of his own room, with one hand on the
+unturned knob and one holding the card, the Doctor
+stopped and reflected. The card gave no indication of
+urgency. Did it? It was hard to tell. He didn&#8217;t want
+to look foolish; morning would be time enough; he
+would go early next morning.</p>
+
+<p>But at daybreak he was summoned post-haste to the
+bedside of a lady who had stayed all summer in New
+Orleans so as not to be out of this good doctor&#8217;s reach at
+this juncture. She counted him a dear friend, and in
+similar trials had always required close and continual
+attention. It was the same now.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier scrawled and sent to the Richlings a line,
+saying that, if either of them was sick, he would come at
+their call. When the messenger returned with word from
+Mrs. Riley that both of them were out, the Doctor&#8217;s
+mind was much relieved. So a day and a night passed
+in which he did not close his eyes.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+The next morning, as he stood in his office, hat in
+hand, and a finger pointing to a prescription on his desk,
+which he was directing Narcisse to give to some one who
+would call for it, there came a sudden hurried pounding
+of feminine feet on the stairs, a whiff of robes in the
+corridor, and Mary Richling rushed into his presence all
+tears and cries.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Doctor!&mdash;O Doctor! O God, my husband! my
+husband! O Doctor, my husband is in the Parish
+Prison!&rdquo; She sank to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor raised her up. Narcisse hurried forward
+with his hands full of restoratives.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Take away those things,&rdquo; said the Doctor, resentfully.
+&ldquo;Here!&mdash;Mrs. Richling, take Narcisse&#8217;s arm
+and go down and get into my carriage. I must write a
+short note, excusing myself from an appointment, and
+then I will join you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary stood alone, turned, and passed out of the office
+beside the young Creole, but without taking his proffered
+arm. Did she suspect him of having something to do
+with this dreadful affair?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Missez Witchlin,&rdquo; said he, as soon as they were out
+in the corridor, &ldquo;I dunno if you goin&#8217; to billiv me, but I
+boun&#8217; to tell you that nodwithstanning that yo&#8217; &#8217;uzban&#8217; is
+displease&#8217; with me, an&#8217; nodwithstanning &#8217;e&#8217;s in that calaboose,
+I h&#8217;always fine &#8217;im a puffic gen&#8217;leman&mdash;that
+Mistoo Itchlin,&mdash;an&#8217; I&#8217;ll sweah &#8217;e <em>is</em> a gen&#8217;leman!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her anguished eyes and looked into his
+beautiful face. Could she trust him? His little forehead
+was as hard as a goat&#8217;s, but his eyes were brimming with
+tears, and his chin quivered. As they reached the head
+of the stairs he again offered his arm, and she took it,
+moaning softly, as they descended:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O John! O John! O my husband, my husband!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>THE TROUGH OF THE SEA.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Narcisse, on receiving his scolding from Richling,
+had gone to his home in Casa Calvo street, a much
+greater sufferer than he had appeared to be. While he
+was confronting his abaser there had been a momentary
+comfort in the contrast between Richling&#8217;s ill-behavior
+and his own self-control. It had stayed his spirit and
+turned the edge of Richling&#8217;s sharp denunciations. But,
+as he moved off the field, he found himself, at every step,
+more deeply wounded than even he had supposed. He
+began to suffocate with chagrin, and hurried his steps in
+sheer distress. He did not experience that dull, vacant
+acceptance of universal scorn which an unresentful
+coward feels. His pangs were all the more poignant
+because he knew his own courage.</p>
+
+<p>In his home he went so straight up to the withered
+little old lady, in the dingiest of flimsy black, who was his
+aunt, and kissed her so passionately, that she asked at
+once what was the matter. He recounted the facts,
+shedding tears of mortification. Her feeling, by the
+time he had finished the account, was a more unmixed
+wrath than his, and, harmless as she was, and wrapped
+up in her dear, pretty nephew as she was, she yet demanded
+to know why such a man shouldn&#8217;t be called out
+upon the field of honor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Narcisse, shrinkingly. She had touched
+the core of the tumor. One gets a public tongue-lashing
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+from a man concerning money borrowed; well, how is one
+going to challenge him without first handing back the
+borrowed money? It was a scalding thought! The rotten
+joists beneath the bare scrubbed-to-death floor quaked
+under Narcisse&#8217;s to-and-fro stride.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&mdash;And then, anyhow!&rdquo;&mdash;he stopped and extended
+both hands, speaking, of course, in French,&mdash;&ldquo;anyhow,
+he is the favored friend of Dr. Sevier. If I hurt him&mdash;I
+lose my situation! If he hurts me&mdash;I lose my situation!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He dried his eyes. His aunt saw the insurmountability
+of the difficulty, and they drowned feeling in an affectionate
+glass of green-orangeade.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But never mind!&rdquo; Narcisse set his glass down and
+drew out his tobacco. He laughed spasmodically as he
+rolled his cigarette. &ldquo;You shall see. The game is not
+finished yet.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Yet Richling passed the next day and night without
+assassination, and on the second morning afterward, as
+on the first, went out in quest of employment. He and
+Mary had eaten bread, and it had gone into their life
+without a remainder either in larder or purse. Richling
+was all aimless.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I do wish I had the <em>art</em> of finding work,&rdquo; said he.
+He smiled. &ldquo;I&#8217;ll get it,&rdquo; he added, breaking their last
+crust in two. &ldquo;I have the science already. Why, look
+you, Mary, the quiet, amiable, imperturbable, dignified,
+diurnal, inexorable haunting of men of influence will get
+you whatever you want.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, why don&#8217;t you do it, dear? Is there any harm
+in it? I don&#8217;t see any harm in it. Why don&#8217;t you do
+that very thing?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m telling you the truth,&rdquo; answered he, ignoring her
+question. &ldquo;Nothing else short of overtowering merit
+will get you what you want half so surely.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Well, why not do it? Why not?&rdquo; A fresh, glad
+courage sparkled in the wife&#8217;s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mary,&rdquo; said John, &ldquo;I never in my life tried so
+hard to do anything else as I&#8217;ve tried to do that! It
+sounds easy; but try it! You can&#8217;t conceive how hard it
+is till you try it. I can&#8217;t <em>do</em> it! I <em>can&#8217;t</em> do it!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>I&#8217;d</em> do it!&rdquo; cried Mary. Her face shone. &ldquo;<em>I&#8217;d</em> do
+it! You&#8217;d see if I didn&#8217;t! Why, John&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right!&rdquo; exclaimed he; &ldquo;you sha&#8217;n&#8217;t talk that
+way to me for nothing. I&#8217;ll try it again! I&#8217;ll begin to-day!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo; he said. He reached an arm over one of
+her shoulders and around under the other and drew her
+up on tiptoe. She threw both hers about his neck. A
+long kiss&mdash;then a short one.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John, something tells me we&#8217;re near the end of our
+troubles.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>John laughed grimly. &ldquo;Ristofalo was to get back to
+the city to-day: maybe he&#8217;s going to put us out of our
+misery. There are two ways for troubles to end.&rdquo; He
+walked away as he spoke. As he passed under the
+window in the alley, its sash was thrown up and Mary
+leaned out on her elbows.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They looked into each other&#8217;s eyes with the quiet pleasure
+of tried lovers, and were silent a moment. She
+leaned a little farther down, and said, softly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&#8217;t mind what I said just now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what did you say?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That if it were I, I&#8217;d do it. I know you can do anything
+I can do, and a hundred better things besides.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He lifted his hand to her cheek. &ldquo;We&#8217;ll see,&rdquo; he
+whispered. She drew in, and he moved on.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+Morning passed. Noon came. From horizon to horizon
+the sky was one unbroken blue. The sun spread its
+bright, hot rays down upon the town and far beyond,
+ripening the distant, countless fields of the great delta,
+which by and by were to empty their abundance into the
+city&#8217;s lap for the employment, the nourishing, the clothing
+of thousands. But in the dusty streets, along the
+ill-kept fences and shadowless walls of the quiet districts,
+and on the glaring fa&ccedil;ades and heated pavements of the
+commercial quarters, it seemed only as though the slowly
+retreating summer struck with the fury of a wounded
+Amazon. Richling was soon dust-covered and weary.
+He had gone his round. There were not many men
+whom he could even propose to haunt. He had been to
+all of them. Dr. Sevier was not one. &ldquo;Not to-day,&rdquo;
+said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It all depends on the way it&#8217;s done,&rdquo; he said to himself;
+&ldquo;it needn&#8217;t degrade a man if it&#8217;s done the right
+way.&rdquo; It was only by such philosophy he had done it at
+all. Ristofalo he could have haunted without effort; but
+Ristofalo was not to be found. Richling tramped in vain.
+It may be that all plans were of equal merit just then.
+The summers of New Orleans in those times were, as to
+commerce, an utter torpor, and the autumn reawakening
+was very tardy. It was still too early for the stirrings of
+general mercantile life. The movement of the cotton crop
+was just beginning to be perceptible; but otherwise almost
+the only sounds were from the hammers of craftsmen
+making the town larger and preparing it for the activities
+of days to come.</p>
+
+<p>The afternoon wore along. Not a cent yet to carry
+home! Men began to shut their idle shops and go to
+meet their wives and children about their comfortable
+dinner-tables. The sun dipped low. Hammers and saws
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+were dropped into tool-boxes, and painters pulled themselves
+out of their overalls. The mechanic&#8217;s rank, hot
+supper began to smoke on its bare board; but there was
+one board that was still altogether bare and to which no
+one hastened. Another day and another chance of life
+were gone.</p>
+
+<p>Some men at a warehouse door, the only opening in the
+building left unclosed, were hurrying in a few bags of
+shelled corn. Night was falling. At an earlier hour
+Richling had offered the labor of his hands at this very
+door and had been rejected. Now, as they rolled in the
+last truck-load, they began to ask for rest with all the
+gladness he would have felt to be offered toil, singing,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">&ldquo;To blow, to blow, some time for to blow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They swung the great leaves of the door together as they
+finished their chorus, stood grouped outside a moment
+while the warehouseman turned the resounding lock, and
+then went away. Richling, who had moved on, watched
+them over his shoulder, and as they left turned back. He
+was about to do what he had never done before. He went
+back to the door where the bags of grain had stood. A
+drunken sailor came swinging along. He stood still and
+let him pass; there must be no witnesses. The sailor
+turned the next corner. Neither up nor down nor across
+the street, nor at dust-begrimed, cobwebbed window, was
+there any sound or motion. Richling dropped quickly on
+one knee and gathered hastily into his pocket a little pile
+of shelled corn that had leaked from one of the bags.</p>
+
+<p>That was all. No harm to a living soul; no theft; no
+wrong; but ah! as he rose he felt a sudden inward lesion.
+Something broke. It was like a ship, in a dream, noiselessly
+striking a rock where no rock is. It seemed as
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+though the very next thing was to begin going to pieces.
+He walked off in the dark shadow of the warehouse, half
+lifted from his feet by a vague, wide dismay. And yet
+he felt no greatness of emotion, but rather a painful want
+of it, as if he were here and emotion were yonder, down-street,
+or up-street, or around the corner. The ground
+seemed slipping from under him. He appeared to have
+all at once melted away to nothing. He stopped. He
+even turned to go back. He felt that if he should go and
+put that corn down where he had found it he should feel
+himself once more a living thing of substance and emotions.
+Then it occurred to him&mdash;no, he would keep it,
+he would take it to Mary; but himself&mdash;he would not
+touch it; and so he went home.</p>
+
+<p>Mary parched the corn, ground it fine in the coffee-mill
+and salted and served it close beside the candle. &ldquo;It&#8217;s
+good white corn,&rdquo; she said, laughing. &ldquo;Many a time
+when I was a child I used to eat this in my playhouse
+and thought it delicious. Didn&#8217;t you? What! not going
+to eat?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling had told her how he got the corn. Now he
+told his sensations. &ldquo;You eat it, Mary,&rdquo; he said at the
+end; &ldquo;you needn&#8217;t feel so about it; but if I should eat
+it I should feel myself a vagabond. It may be foolish,
+but I wouldn&#8217;t touch it for a hundred dollars.&rdquo; A hundred
+dollars had come to be his synonyme for infinity.</p>
+
+<p>Mary gazed at him a moment tearfully, and rose, with
+the dish in her hand, saying, with a smile, &ldquo;I&#8217;d look
+pretty, wouldn&#8217;t I!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She set it aside, and came and kissed his forehead. By
+and by she asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And so you saw no work, anywhere?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes!&rdquo; he replied, in a tone almost free from dejection.
+&ldquo;I saw any amount of work&mdash;preparations for a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+big season. I think I certainly shall pick up something
+to-morrow&mdash;enough, anyhow, to buy something to eat
+with. If we can only hold out a little longer&mdash;just a
+little&mdash;I am sure there&#8217;ll be plenty to do&mdash;for everybody.&rdquo;
+Then he began to show distress again. &ldquo;I could have
+got work to-day if I had been a carpenter, or if I&#8217;d
+been a joiner, or a slater, or a bricklayer, or a plasterer, or
+a painter, or a hod-carrier. Didn&#8217;t I try that, and was
+refused?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m glad of it,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Show me your hands,&rsquo; said the man to me. I
+showed them. &lsquo;You won&#8217;t do,&rsquo; said he.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m glad of it!&rdquo; said Mary, again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; continued Richling; &ldquo;or if I&#8217;d been a glazier,
+or a whitewasher, or a wood-sawyer, or&rdquo;&mdash;he began to
+smile in a hard, unpleasant way,&mdash;&ldquo;or if I&#8217;d been anything
+but an American gentleman. But I wasn&#8217;t, and I
+didn&#8217;t get the work!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary sank into his lap, with her very best smile.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John, if you hadn&#8217;t been an American gentleman&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We should never have met,&rdquo; said John. &ldquo;That&#8217;s
+true; that&#8217;s true.&rdquo; They looked at each other, rejoicing
+in mutual ownership.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said John, &ldquo;I needn&#8217;t have been the typical
+American gentleman,&mdash;completely unfitted for prosperity
+and totally unequipped for adversity.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s not your fault,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, not entirely; but it&#8217;s your calamity, Mary. O
+Mary! I little thought&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>She put her hand quickly upon his mouth. His eye
+flashed and he frowned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t do so!&rdquo; he exclaimed, putting the hand away;
+then blushed for shame, and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+They went to bed. Bread would have put them to
+sleep. But after a long time&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John,&rdquo; said one voice in the darkness, &ldquo;do you
+remember what Dr. Sevier told us?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, he said we had no right to commit suicide by
+starvation.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you don&#8217;t get work to-morrow, are you going to
+see him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I am.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In the morning they rose early.</p>
+
+<p>During these hard days Mary was now and then
+conscious of one feeling which she never expressed, and
+was always a little more ashamed of than probably she
+need have been, but which, stifle it as she would, kept recurring
+in moments of stress. Mrs. Riley&mdash;such was the
+thought&mdash;need not be quite so blind. It came to her as
+John once more took his good-by, the long kiss and
+the short one, and went breakfastless away. But was
+Mrs. Riley as blind as she seemed? She had vision
+enough to observe that the Richlings had bought no bread
+the day before, though she did overlook the fact that
+emptiness would set them astir before their usual hour of
+rising. She knocked at Mary&#8217;s inner door. As it
+opened a quick glance showed the little table that
+occupied the centre of the room standing clean and
+idle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mrs. Riley!&rdquo; cried Mary; for on one of Mrs.
+Riley&#8217;s large hands there rested a blue-edged soup-plate,
+heaping full of the food that goes nearest to the Creole
+heart&mdash;<em>jambolaya</em>. There it was, steaming and smelling,&mdash;a
+delicious confusion of rice and red pepper, chicken
+legs, ham, and tomatoes. Mike, on her opposite arm,
+was struggling to lave his socks in it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Mrs. Riley, with a disappointed lift of the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+head, &ldquo;ye&#8217;re after eating breakfast already! And the
+plates all tleared off. Well, ye air smairt! I knowed
+Mr. Richlin&#8217;s taste for jumbalie&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Mary smote her hands together. &ldquo;And he&#8217;s just this
+instant gone! John! John! Why, he&#8217;s hardly&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;She
+vanished through the door, glided down the alley, leaned
+out the gate, looking this way and that, tripped down to
+this corner and looked&mdash;&ldquo;Oh! oh!&rdquo;&mdash;no John there&mdash;back
+and up to the other corner&mdash;&ldquo;Oh! which way did John go?&rdquo;
+There was none to answer.</p>
+
+<p>Hours passed; the shadows shortened and shrunk under
+their objects, crawled around stealthily behind them as
+the sun swung through the south, and presently began to
+steal away eastward, long and slender. This was the
+day that Dr. Sevier dined out, as hereinbefore set
+forth.</p>
+
+<p>The sun set. Carondelet street was deserted. You
+could hear your own footstep on its flags. In St. Charles
+street the drinking-saloons and gamblers&#8217; drawing-rooms,
+and the barber-shops, and the show-cases full of shirt-bosoms
+and walking-canes, were lighted up. The smell
+of lemons and mint grew finer than ever. Wide Canal
+street, out under the darkling crimson sky, was resplendent
+with countless many-colored lamps. From the river
+the air came softly, cool and sweet. The telescope man
+set up his skyward-pointing cylinder hard by the dark
+statue of Henry Clay; the confectioneries were ablaze and
+full of beautiful life, and every little while a great, empty
+cotton-dray or two went thundering homeward over the
+stony pavements until the earth shook, and speech for the
+moment was drowned. The St. Charles, such a glittering
+mass in winter nights, stood out high and dark under the
+summer stars, with no glow except just in its midst, in the
+rotunda; and even the rotunda was well-nigh deserted
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+The clerk at his counter saw a young man enter the
+great door opposite, and quietly marked him as he drew
+near.</p>
+
+<p>Let us not draw the stranger&#8217;s portrait. If that were a
+pleasant task the clerk would not have watched him.
+What caught and kept that functionary&#8217;s eye was that,
+whatever else might be revealed by the stranger&#8217;s aspect,&mdash;weariness,
+sickness, hardship, pain,&mdash;the confession
+was written all over him, on his face, on his garb, from
+his hat&#8217;s crown to his shoe&#8217;s sole, Penniless! Penniless!
+Only when he had come quite up to the counter the clerk
+did not see him at all.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is Dr. Sevier in?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Gone out to dine,&rdquo; said the clerk, looking over the
+inquirer&#8217;s head as if occupied with all the world&#8217;s affairs
+except the subject in hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know when he will be back?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ten o&#8217;clock.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The visitor repeated the hour murmurously and looked
+something dismayed. He tarried.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hem!&mdash;I will leave my card, if you please.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The clerk shoved a little box of cards toward him, from
+which a pencil dangled by a string. The penniless wrote
+his name and handed it in. Then he moved away, went
+down the tortuous granite stair, and waited in the obscurity
+of the dimly lighted porch below. The card
+was to meet the contingency of the Doctor&#8217;s coming
+in by some other entrance. He would watch for him
+here.</p>
+
+<p>By and by&mdash;he was very weary&mdash;he sat down on the
+stairs. But a porter, with a huge trunk on his back, told
+him very distinctly that he was in the way there, and he
+rose and stood aside. Soon he looked for another resting-place.
+He must get off of his feet somewhere, if only for
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+a few moments. He moved back into the deep gloom
+of the stair-way shadow, and sank down upon the pavement.
+In a moment he was fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>He dreamed that he, too, was dining out. Laughter
+and merry-making were on every side. The dishes of
+steaming viands were grotesque in bulk. There were
+mountains of fruit and torrents of wine. Strange people
+of no identity spoke in senseless vaporings that passed
+for side-splitting wit, and friends whom he had not seen
+since childhood appeared in ludicrously altered forms and
+announced impossible events. Every one ate like a Cossack.
+One of the party, champing like a boar, pushed
+him angrily, and when he, eating like the rest, would
+have turned fiercely on the aggressor, he awoke.</p>
+
+<p>A man standing over him struck him smartly with his
+foot.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get up out o&#8217; this! Get up! get up!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The sleeper bounded to his feet. The man who had
+waked him grasped him by the lapel of his coat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; exclaimed the awakened man,
+throwing the other off violently.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll show you!&rdquo; replied the other, returning with a
+rush; but he was thrown off again, this time with a blow
+of the fist.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You scoundrel!&rdquo; cried the penniless man, in a rage;
+&ldquo;if you touch me again I&#8217;ll kill you!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They leaped together. The one who had proposed to
+show what he meant was knocked flat upon the stones.
+The crowd that had run into the porch made room for him
+to fall. A leather helmet rolled from his head, and the
+silver crescent of the police flashed on his breast. The
+police were not uniformed in those days.</p>
+
+<p>But he is up in an instant and his adversary is down&mdash;backward,
+on his elbows. Then the penniless man is up
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+again; they close and struggle, the night-watchman&#8217;s club
+falls across his enemy&#8217;s head blow upon blow, while the
+sufferer grasps him desperately, with both hands, by the
+throat. They tug, they snuffle, they reel to and fro in
+the yielding crowd; the blows grow fainter, fainter; the
+grip is terrible; when suddenly there is a violent rupture
+of the crowd, it closes again, and then there are two
+against one, and up sparkling St. Charles street, the street
+of all streets for flagrant, unmolested, well-dressed crime,
+moves a sight so exhilarating that a score of street lads
+follow behind and a dozen trip along in front with frequent
+backward glances: two officers of justice walking in grim
+silence abreast, and between them a limp, torn, hatless,
+bloody figure, partly walking, partly lifted, partly dragged,
+past the theatres, past the lawyers&#8217; rookeries of Commercial
+place, the tenpin alleys, the chop-houses, the bunko
+shows, and shooting-galleries, on, across Poydras street
+into the dim openness beyond, where glimmer the lamps
+of Lafayette square and the white marble of the municipal
+hall, and just on the farther side of this, with a sudden
+wheel to the right into Hevia street, a few strides there,
+a turn to the left, stumbling across a stone step and
+wooden sill into a narrow, lighted hall, and turning and
+entering an apartment here again at the right. The door
+is shut; the name is written down; the charge is made:
+Vagrancy, assaulting an officer, resisting arrest. An inner
+door is opened.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What have you got in number nine?&rdquo; asks the captain
+in charge.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Chuck full,&rdquo; replies the turnkey.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, number seven?&rdquo; These were the numbers of cells.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The rats&#8217;ll eat him up in number seven.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How about number ten?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Two drunk-and-disorderlies, one petty larceny, and
+one embezzlement and breach of trust.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Put him in there.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>And this explains what the watchman in Marais street
+could not understand,&mdash;why Mary Richling&#8217;s window
+shone all night long.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>OUT OF THE FRYING-PAN.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Round goes the wheel forever. Another sun rose up,
+not a moment hurried or belated by the myriads
+of life-and-death issues that cover the earth and wait in
+ecstasies of hope or dread the passage of time. Punctually
+at ten Justice-in-the-rough takes its seat in the
+Recorder&#8217;s Court, and a moment of silent preparation at
+the desks follows the loud announcement that its session
+has begun. The perky clerks and smirking pettifoggers
+move apart on tiptoe, those to their respective stations,
+these to their privileged seats facing the high dais. The
+lounging police slip down from their reclining attitudes on
+the heel-scraped and whittled window-sills. The hum of
+voices among the forlorn humanity that half fills the
+gradually rising, greasy benches behind, allotted to witnesses
+and prisoners&#8217; friends, is hushed. In a little
+square, railed space, here at the left, the reporters tip
+their chairs against the hair-greased wall, and sharpen
+their pencils. A few tardy visitors, familiar with the place,
+tiptoe in through the grimy doors, ducking and winking,
+and softly lifting and placing their chairs, with a mock-timorous
+upward glance toward the long, ungainly personage
+who, under a faded and tattered crimson canopy,
+fills the august bench of magistracy with its high oaken
+back. On the right, behind a rude wooden paling that
+rises from the floor to the smoke-stained ceiling, are the
+peering, bloated faces of the night&#8217;s prisoners.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+The recorder utters a name. The clerk down in front
+of him calls it aloud. A door in the palings opens, and
+one of the captives comes forth and stands before the
+rail. The arresting officer mounts to the witness-stand
+and confronts him. The oath is rattled and turned out
+like dice from a box, and the accusing testimony is heard.
+It may be that counsel rises and cross-examines, if there
+are witnesses for the defence. Strange and far-fetched
+questions, from beginners at the law or from old blunderers,
+provoke now laughter, and now the peremptory
+protestations of the court against the waste of time. Yet,
+in general, a few minutes suffices for the whole trial of a
+case.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You are sure she picked the handsaw up by the
+handle, are you?&rdquo; says the questioner, frowning with the
+importance of the point.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And that she coughed as she did so?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you see, she kind o&#8217;&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, or no!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s all.&rdquo; He waves the prisoner down with an
+air of mighty triumph, turns to the recorder, &ldquo;trusts it is
+not necessary to,&rdquo; etc., and the accused passes this way
+or that, according to the fate decreed,&mdash;discharged, sentenced
+to fine and imprisonment, or committed for trial
+before the courts of the State.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Order in court!&rdquo; There is too much talking. Another
+comes and stands before the rail, and goes his way.
+Another, and another; now a ragged boy, now a half-sobered
+crone, now a battered ruffian, and now a painted
+girl of the street, and at length one who starts when his
+name is called, as though something had exploded.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John Richling!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+He came.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Stand there!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Some one is in the witness-stand, speaking. The
+prisoner partly hears, but does not see. He stands and
+holds the rail, with his eyes fixed vacantly on the clerk,
+who bends over his desk under the seat of justice, writing.
+The lawyers notice him. His dress has been laboriously
+genteel, but is torn and soiled. A detective, with small
+eyes set close together, and a nose like a yacht&#8217;s rudder,
+whisperingly calls the notice of one of these spectators
+who can see the prisoner&#8217;s face to the fact that, for all its
+thinness and bruises, it is not a bad one. All can see
+that the man&#8217;s hair is fine and waving where it is not
+matted with blood.</p>
+
+<p>The testifying officer had moved as if to leave the
+witness-stand, when the recorder restrained him by a
+gesture, and, leaning forward and looking down upon the
+prisoner, asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have you anything to say to this?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner lifted his eyes, bowed affirmatively, and
+spoke in a low, timid tone. &ldquo;May I say a few words to
+you privately?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He dropped his eyes, fumbled with the rail, and, looking
+up suddenly, said in a stronger voice, &ldquo;I want
+somebody to go to my wife&mdash;in Prieur street. She is
+starving. This is the third day&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We&#8217;re not talking about that,&rdquo; said the recorder.
+&ldquo;Have you anything to say against this witness&#8217;s statement?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner looked upon the floor and slowly shook
+his head. &ldquo;I never meant to break the law. I never
+expected to stand here. It&#8217;s like an awful dream. Yesterday,
+at this time, I had no more idea of this&mdash;I didn&#8217;t
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+think I was so near it. It&#8217;s like getting caught in
+machinery.&rdquo; He looked up at the recorder again. &ldquo;I&#8217;m
+so confused&rdquo;&mdash;he frowned and drew his hand slowly
+across his brow&mdash;&ldquo;I can hardly&mdash;put my words together.
+I was hunting for work. There is no man in
+this city who wants to earn an honest living more than
+I do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What&#8217;s your trade?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have none.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I supposed not. But you profess to have some occupation,
+I dare say. What&#8217;s your occupation?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Accountant.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hum! you&#8217;re all accountants. How long have you
+been out of employment?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Six months.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you go to sleep under those steps?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t intend to go to sleep. I was waiting for a
+friend to come in who boards at the St. Charles.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A sudden laugh ran through the room. &ldquo;Silence in
+court!&rdquo; cried a deputy.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Who is your friend?&rdquo; asked the recorder.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner was silent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What is your friend&#8217;s name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Still the prisoner did not reply. One of the group of
+pettifoggers sitting behind him leaned forward, touched
+him on the shoulder, and murmured: &ldquo;You&#8217;d better tell
+his name. It won&#8217;t hurt him, and it may help you.&rdquo; The
+prisoner looked back at the man and shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you strike this officer?&rdquo; asked the recorder,
+touching the witness, who was resting on both elbows in
+the light arm-chair on the right.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner made a low response.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t hear you,&rdquo; said the recorder.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I struck him,&rdquo; replied the prisoner; &ldquo;I knocked him
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+down.&rdquo; The court officers below the dais smiled. &ldquo;I woke
+and found him spurning me with his foot, and I resented
+it. I never expected to be a law-breaker. I&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He
+pressed his temples between his hands and was silent.
+The men of the law at his back exchanged glances of
+approval. The case was, to some extent, interesting.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;May it please the court,&rdquo; said the man who had
+before addressed the prisoner over his shoulder, stepping
+out on the right and speaking very softly and graciously,
+&ldquo;I ask that this man be discharged. His fault seems so
+much more to be accident than intention, and his suffering
+so much more than his fault&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The recorder interrupted by a wave of the hand and a
+preconceived smile: &ldquo;Why, according to the evidence,
+the prisoner was noisy and troublesome in his cell all
+night.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O sir,&rdquo; exclaimed the prisoner, &ldquo;I was thrown in
+with thieves and drunkards! It was unbearable in that
+hole. We were right on the damp and slimy bricks.
+The smell was dreadful. A woman in the cell opposite
+screamed the whole night. One of the men in the cell
+tried to take my coat from me, and I beat him!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It seems to me, your honor,&rdquo; said the volunteer advocate,
+&ldquo;the prisoner is still more sinned against than
+sinning. This is evidently his first offence, and&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know even that?&rdquo; asked the recorder.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I do not believe his name can be found on any
+criminal record. I&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The recorder interrupted once more. He leaned toward
+the prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever go by any other name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner was dumb.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&#8217;t John Richling the only name you have ever
+gone by?&rdquo; said his new friend: but the prisoner silently
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+blushed to the roots of his hair and remained motionless.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think I shall have to send you to prison,&rdquo; said the
+recorder, preparing to write. A low groan was the
+prisoner&#8217;s only response.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;May it please your honor,&rdquo; began the lawyer, taking
+a step forward; but the recorder waved his pen impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the more is said the worse his case gets; he&#8217;s
+guilty of the offence charged, by his own confession.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I am guilty and not guilty,&rdquo; said the prisoner slowly.
+&ldquo;I never intended to be a criminal. I intended to be
+a good and useful member of society; but I&#8217;ve somehow
+got under its wheels. I&#8217;ve missed the whole secret of
+living.&rdquo; He dropped his face into his hands. &ldquo;O Mary,
+Mary! why are you my wife?&rdquo; He beckoned to his counsel.
+&ldquo;Come here; come here.&rdquo; His manner was wild
+and nervous. &ldquo;I want you&mdash;I want you to go to Prieur
+street, to my wife. You know&mdash;you know the place,
+don&#8217;t you? Prieur street. Ask for Mrs. Riley&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling,&rdquo; said the lawyer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no! you ask for Mrs. Riley? Ask her&mdash;ask her&mdash;oh!
+where are my senses gone? Ask&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;May it please the court,&rdquo; said the lawyer, turning
+once more to the magistrate and drawing a limp handkerchief
+from the skirt of his dingy alpaca, with a reviving
+confidence, &ldquo;I ask that the accused be discharged; he&#8217;s
+evidently insane.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner looked rapidly from counsel to magistrate,
+and back again, saying, in a low voice, &ldquo;Oh, no! not that!
+Oh, no! not that! not that!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The recorder dropped his eyes upon a paper on the
+desk before him, and, beginning to write, said without
+looking up:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Parish Prison&mdash;to be examined for insanity.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A cry of remonstrance broke so sharply from the prisoner
+that even the reporters in their corner checked their
+energetic streams of lead-pencil rhetoric and looked up.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You cannot do that!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;I am not
+insane! I&#8217;m not even confused now! It was only for a
+minute! I&#8217;m not even confused!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>An officer of the court laid his hand quickly and sternly
+upon his arm; but the recorder leaned forward and motioned
+him off. The prisoner darted a single flash of
+anger at the officer, and then met the eye of the
+justice.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If I am a vagrant commit me for vagrancy! I expect
+no mercy here! I expect no justice! You punish me
+first, and try me afterward, and now you can punish me
+again; but you can&#8217;t do that!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Order in court! Sit down in those benches!&rdquo; cried
+the deputies. The lawyers nodded darkly or blandly,
+each to each. The one who had volunteered his counsel
+wiped his bald Gothic brow. On the recorder&#8217;s lips
+an austere satire played as he said to the panting prisoner:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You are showing not only your sanity, but your contempt
+of court also.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner&#8217;s eyes shot back a fierce light as he
+retorted:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have no object in concealing either.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The recorder answered with a quick, angry look; but,
+instantly restraining himself, dropped his glance upon his
+desk as before, began again to write, and said, with his
+eyes following his pen:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Parish Prison, for thirty days.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The officer grasped the prisoner again and pointed him
+to the door in the palings whence he had come, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+whither he now returned, without a word or note of distress.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later the dark omnibus without windows,
+that went by the facetious name of the &ldquo;Black Maria&rdquo;
+received the convicted ones from the same street door by
+which they had been brought in out of the world the night
+before. The waifs and vagabonds of the town gleefully
+formed a line across the sidewalk from the station-house
+to the van, and counted with zest the abundant number
+of passengers that were ushered into it one by one.
+Heigh ho! In they went: all ages and sorts; both
+sexes; tried and untried, drunk and sober, new faces and
+old acquaintances; a man who had been counterfeiting,
+his wife who had been helping him, and their little girl of
+twelve, who had done nothing. Ho, ho! Bridget Fury!
+Ha, ha! Howling Lou! In they go: the passive, the
+violent, all kinds; filling the two benches against the
+sides, and then the standing room; crowding and packing,
+until the officer can shut the door only by throwing his
+weight against it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Officer,&rdquo; said one, whose volunteer counsel had persuaded
+the reporters not to mention him by name in their
+thrilling account,&mdash;&ldquo;officer,&rdquo; said this one, trying to
+pause an instant before the door of the vehicle, &ldquo;is there
+no other possible way to&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get in! get in!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Two hands spread against his back did the rest; the
+door clapped to like the lid of a bursting trunk, the padlock
+rattled: away they went!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>&ldquo;OH, WHERE IS MY LOVE?&rdquo;</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>At the prison the scene is repeated in reverse, and
+the Black Maria presently rumbles away empty.
+In that building, whose exterior Narcisse found so picturesque,
+the vagrant at length finds food. In that question
+of food, by the way, another question arose, not as to any
+degree of criminality past or present, nor as to age, or
+sex, or race, or station; but as to the having or lacking
+fifty cents. &ldquo;Four bits&rdquo; a day was the open sesame to
+a department where one could have bedstead and ragged
+bedding and dirty mosquito-bar, a cell whose window
+looked down into the front street, food in variety, and a
+seat at table with the officers of the prison. But those
+who could not pay were conducted past all these delights,
+along one of several dark galleries, the turnkeys of which
+were themselves convicts, who, by a process of reasoning
+best understood among the harvesters of perquisites,
+were assumed to be undergoing sentence.</p>
+
+<p>The vagrant stood at length before a grated iron gate
+while its bolts were thrown back and it growled on its
+hinges. What he saw within needs no minute description;
+it may be seen there still, any day: a large, flagged court,
+surrounded on three sides by two stories of cells with
+heavy, black, square doors all a-row and mostly open;
+about a hundred men sitting, lying, or lounging about in
+scanty rags,&mdash;some gaunt and feeble, some burly and
+alert, some scarred and maimed, some sallow, some red,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+some grizzled, some mere lads, some old and bowed,&mdash;the
+sentenced, the untried, men there for the first time,
+men who were oftener in than out,&mdash;burglars, smugglers,
+house-burners, highwaymen, wife-beaters, wharf-rats,
+common &ldquo;drunks,&rdquo; pickpockets, shop-lifters, stealers of
+bread, garroters, murderers,&mdash;in common equality and
+fraternity. In this resting and refreshing place for vice,
+this caucus for the projection of future crime, this ghastly
+burlesque of justice and the protection of society, there
+was a man who had been convicted of a dreadful murder
+a year or two before, and sentenced to twenty-one years&#8217;
+labor in the State penitentiary. He had got his sentence
+commuted to confinement in this prison for twenty-one
+years of idleness. The captain of the prison had made
+him &ldquo;captain of the yard.&rdquo; Strength, ferocity, and a
+terrific record were the qualifications for this honorary
+office.</p>
+
+<p>The gate opened. A howl of welcome came from those
+within, and the new batch, the vagrant among them,
+entered the yard. He passed, in his turn, to a tank of
+muddy water in this yard, washed away the soil and blood
+of the night, and so to the cell assigned him. He was lying
+face downward on its pavement, when a man with a cudgel
+ordered him to rise. The vagrant sprang to his feet and
+confronted the captain of the yard, a giant in breadth and
+stature, with no clothing but a ragged undershirt and
+pantaloons.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get a bucket and rag and scrub out this cell!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He flourished his cudgel. The vagrant cast a quick
+glance at him, and answered quietly, but with burning
+face:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll die first.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A blow with the cudgel, a cry of rage, a clash together,
+a push, a sledge-hammer fist in the side, another on the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+head, a fall out into the yard, and the vagrant lay senseless
+on the flags.</p>
+
+<p>When he opened his eyes again, and struggled to his
+feet, a gentle grasp was on his arm. Somebody was
+steadying him. He turned his eyes. Ah! who is this?
+A short, heavy, close-shaven man, with a woollen jacket
+thrown over one shoulder and its sleeves tied together in
+a knot under the other. He speaks in a low, kind tone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Steady, Mr. Richling!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling supported himself by a hand on the man&#8217;s arm,
+gazed in bewilderment at the gentle eyes that met his, and
+with a slow gesture of astonishment murmured, &ldquo;Ristofalo!&rdquo;
+and dropped his head.</p>
+
+<p>The Italian had just entered the prison from another
+station-house. With his hand still on Richling&#8217;s shoulder,
+and Richling&#8217;s on his, he caught the eye of the captain of
+the yard, who was striding quietly up and down near by,
+and gave him a nod to indicate that he would soon adjust
+everything to that autocrat&#8217;s satisfaction. Richling,
+dazed and trembling, kept his eyes still on the ground,
+while Ristofalo moved with him slowly away from the
+squalid group that gazed after them. They went toward
+the Italian&#8217;s cell.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why are you in prison?&rdquo; asked the vagrant, feebly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, nothin&#8217; much&mdash;witness in shootin&#8217; scrape&mdash;talk
+&#8217;bout aft&#8217; while.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Ristofalo,&rdquo; groaned Richling, as they entered,
+&ldquo;my wife! my wife! Send some bread to my wife!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Lie down,&rdquo; said the Italian, pressing softly on his
+shoulders; but Richling as quietly resisted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She is near here, Ristofalo. You can send with the
+greatest ease! You can do anything, Ristofalo,&mdash;if you
+only choose!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Lay down,&rdquo; said the Italian again, and pressed more
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+heavily. The vagrant sank limply to the pavement, his
+companion quickly untying the jacket sleeves from under
+his own arms and wadding the garment under Richling&#8217;s
+head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know what I&#8217;m in here for, Ristofalo?&rdquo;
+moaned Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t know, don&#8217;t care. Yo&#8217; wife know you here?&rdquo;
+Richling shook his head on the jacket. The Italian asked
+her address, and Richling gave it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Goin&#8217; tell her come and see you,&rdquo; said the Italian.
+&ldquo;Now, you lay still little while; I be back t&#8217;rectly.&rdquo; He
+went out into the yard again, pushing the heavy door
+after him till it stood only slightly ajar, sauntered easily
+around till he caught sight of the captain of the yard, and
+was presently standing before him in the same immovable
+way in which he had stood before Richling in Tchoupitoulas
+street, on the day he had borrowed the dollar.
+Those who idly drew around could not hear his words, but
+the &ldquo;captain&#8217;s&rdquo; answers were intentionally audible. He
+shook his head in rejection of a proposal. &ldquo;No, nobody
+but the prisoner himself should scrub out the cell. No,
+the Italian should not do it for him. The prisoner&#8217;s
+refusal and resistance had settled that question. No, the
+knocking down had not balanced accounts at all. There
+was more scrubbing to be done. It was scrubbing day.
+Others might scrub the yard and the galleries, but he
+should scrub out the tank. And there were other things,
+and worse,&mdash;menial services of the lowest kind. He
+should do them when the time came, and the Italian
+would have to help him too. Never mind about the law
+or the terms of his sentence. Those counted for nothing
+there.&rdquo; Such was the sense of the decrees; the words
+were such as may be guessed or left unguessed. The
+scrubbing of the cell must commence at once. The
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+vagrant must make up his mind to suffer. &ldquo;He had
+served on jury!&rdquo; said the man in the undershirt, with a
+final flourish of his stick. &ldquo;He&#8217;s got to pay dear for
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>When Ristofalo returned to his cell, its inmate, after
+many upstartings from terrible dreams, that seemed to
+guard the threshold of slumber, had fallen asleep. The
+Italian touched him gently, but he roused with a wild
+start and stare.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ristofalo,&rdquo; he said, and fell a-staring again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You had some sleep,&rdquo; said the Italian.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s worse than being awake,&rdquo; said Richling. He
+passed his hands across his face. &ldquo;Has my wife been
+here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No. Haven&#8217;t sent yet. Must watch good chance.
+Git captain yard in good-humor first, or else do on sly.&rdquo;
+The cunning Italian saw that anything looking like early
+extrication would bring new fury upon Richling. He
+knew <em>all</em> the values of time. &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;must
+scrub out cell now.&rdquo; He ignored the heat that kindled
+in Richling&#8217;s eyes, and added, smiling, &ldquo;You don&#8217;t do
+it, I got to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>With a little more of the like kindly guile, and some
+wise and simple reasoning, the Italian prevailed. Together,
+without objection from the captain of the yard,
+with many unavailing protests from Richling, who would
+now do it alone, and with Ristofalo smiling like a Chinaman
+at the obscene ribaldry of the spectators in the yard,
+they scrubbed the cell. Then came the tank. They had
+to stand in it with the water up to their knees, and rub
+its sides with brickbats. Richling fell down twice in the
+water, to the uproarious delight of the yard; but his
+companion helped him up, and they both agreed it was
+the sliminess of the tank&#8217;s bottom that was to blame.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Soon we get through we goin&#8217; to buy drink o&#8217; whisky
+from jailer,&rdquo; said Ristofalo; &ldquo;he keep it for sale. Then,
+after that, kin hire somebody to go to your house;
+captain yard think we gittin&#8217; mo&#8217; whisky.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hire?&rdquo; said Richling. &ldquo;I haven&#8217;t a cent in the
+world.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I got a little&mdash;few dimes,&rdquo; rejoined the other.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then why are you here? Why are you in this part
+of the prison?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, &#8217;fraid to spend it. On&#8217;y got few dimes. Broke
+ag&#8217;in.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling stopped still with astonishment, brickbat in
+hand. The Italian met his gaze with an illuminated smile.
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;took all I had with me to bayou La
+Fourche. Coming back, slept with some men in boat.
+One git up in night-time and steal everything. Then was
+a big fight. Think that what fight was about&mdash;about
+dividing the money. Don&#8217;t know sure. One man git
+killed. Rest run into the swamp and prairie. Officer arrest
+me for witness. Couldn&#8217;t trust me to stay in the city.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think the one who was killed was the thief?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t know sure,&rdquo; said the Italian, with the same
+sweet face, and falling to again with his brickbat,&mdash;&ldquo;hope so!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Strange place to confine a witness!&rdquo; said Richling,
+holding his hand to his bruised side and slowly straightening
+his back.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, good place,&rdquo; replied the other, scrubbing
+away; &ldquo;git him, in short time, so he swear to anything.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was far on in the afternoon before the wary Ristofalo
+ventured to offer all he had in his pocket to a
+hanger-on of the prison office, to go first to Richling&#8217;s
+house, and then to an acquaintance of his own, with
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+messages looking to the procuring of their release. The
+messenger chose to go first to Ristofalo&#8217;s friend, and
+afterward to Mrs. Riley&#8217;s. It was growing dark when he
+reached the latter place. Mary was out in the city somewhere,
+wandering about, aimless and distracted, in search
+of Richling. The messenger left word with Mrs. Riley.
+Richling had all along hoped that that good friend,
+doubtless acquainted with the most approved methods of
+finding a missing man, would direct Mary to the police
+station at the earliest practicable hour. But time had
+shown that she had not done so. No, indeed! Mrs.
+Riley counted herself too benevolently shrewd for that.
+While she had made Mary&#8217;s suspense of the night less
+frightful than it might have been, by surmises that Mr.
+Richling had found some form of night-work,&mdash;watching
+some pile of freight or some unfinished building,&mdash;she
+had come, secretly, to a different conviction, predicated
+on her own married experiences; and if Mr. Richling had,
+in a moment of gloom, tipped the bowl a little too high,
+as her dear lost husband, the best man that ever walked,
+had often done, and had been locked up at night to be
+let out in the morning, why, give him a chance! Let him
+invent his own little fault-hiding romance and come home
+with it. Mary was frantic. She could not be kept in;
+but Mrs. Riley, by prolonged effort, convinced her it was
+best not to call upon Dr. Sevier until she could be sure
+some disaster had actually occurred, and sent her among
+the fruiterers and oystermen in vain search for Raphael
+Ristofalo. Thus it was that the Doctor&#8217;s morning messenger
+to the Richlings, bearing word that if any one
+were sick he would call without delay, was met by Mrs.
+Riley only, and by the reassuring statement that both of
+them were out. The later messenger, from the two men
+in prison, brought back word of Mary&#8217;s absence from the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+house, of her physical welfare, and Mrs. Riley&#8217;s promise
+that Mary should visit the prison at the earliest hour
+possible. This would not be till the next morning.</p>
+
+<p>While Mrs. Riley was sending this message, Mary, a
+great distance away, was emerging from the darkening
+and silent streets of the river front and moving with timid
+haste across the broad levee toward the edge of the water
+at the steam-boat landing. In this season of depleted
+streams and idle waiting, only an occasional boat lifted
+its lofty, black, double funnels against the sky here and
+there, leaving wide stretches of unoccupied wharf-front
+between. Mary hurried on, clear out to the great wharf&#8217;s
+edge, and looked forth upon the broad, softly moving harbor.
+The low waters spread out and away, to and around
+the opposite point, in wide surfaces of glassy purples and
+wrinkled bronze. Beauty, that joy forever, is sometimes
+a terror. Was the end of her search somewhere underneath
+that fearful glory? She clasped her hands, bent
+down with dry, staring eyes, then turned again and fled
+homeward. She swerved once toward Dr. Sevier&#8217;s quarters,
+but soon decided to see first if there were any tidings
+with Mrs. Riley, and so resumed her course. Night
+overtook her in streets where every footstep before or
+behind her made her tremble; but at length she crossed
+the threshold of Mrs. Riley&#8217;s little parlor. Mrs. Riley
+was standing in the door, and retreated a step or two
+backward as Mary entered with a look of wild inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not come?&rdquo; cried the wife.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo; said the widow, hurriedly, &ldquo;yer husband&#8217;s
+alive and found.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary seized her frantically by the shoulders, crying
+with high-pitched voice:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where is he?&mdash;where is he?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ya can&#8217;t see um till marning, Mrs. Richlin&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Where is he?&rdquo; cried Mary, louder than before.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Me dear,&rdquo; said Mrs. Riley, &ldquo;ye kin easy git him out
+in the marning.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Riley,&rdquo; said Mary, holding her with her eye,
+&ldquo;is my husband in prison?&mdash;O Lord God! O God! my
+God!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley wept. She clasped the moaning, sobbing
+wife to her bosom, and with streaming eyes said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richlin&#8217;, me dear, Mrs. Richlin&#8217;, me dear, what
+wad I give to have my husband this night where your
+husband is!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>RELEASE.&mdash;NARCISSE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>As some children were playing in the street before the
+Parish Prison next morning, they suddenly started
+and scampered toward the prison&#8217;s black entrance. A
+physician&#8217;s carriage had driven briskly up to it, ground its
+wheels against the curb-stone, and halted. If any fresh
+crumbs of horror were about to be dropped, the children
+must be there to feast on them. Dr. Sevier stepped out,
+gave Mary his hand and then his arm, and went in with
+her. A question or two in the prison office, a reference
+to the rolls, and a turnkey led the way through a dark
+gallery lighted with dimly burning gas. The stench was
+suffocating. They stopped at the inner gate.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&#8217;t you bring him to us?&rdquo; asked the Doctor,
+scowling resentfully at the facetious drawings and legends
+on the walls, where the dampness glistened in the sickly
+light.</p>
+
+<p>The keeper made a low reply as he shot the bolts.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; quickly asked Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s not well,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>The gate swung open. They stepped into the yard
+and across it. The prisoners paused in a game of ball.
+Others, who were playing cards, merely glanced up and
+went on. The jailer pointed with his bunch of keys to a
+cell before him. Mary glided away from the Doctor and
+darted in. There was a cry and a wail.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor followed quickly. Ristofalo passed out as
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+he entered. Richling lay on a rough gray blanket spread
+on the pavement with the Italian&#8217;s jacket under his head.
+Mary had thrown herself down beside him upon her knees,
+and their arms were around each other&#8217;s neck.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let me see, Mrs. Richling,&rdquo; said the physician,
+touching her on the shoulder. She drew back. Richling
+lifted a hand in welcome. The Doctor pressed it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richling,&rdquo; he said, as they faced each other, he
+on one knee, she on both. He gave her a few laconic
+directions for the sick man&#8217;s better comfort. &ldquo;You
+must stay here, madam,&rdquo; he said at length; &ldquo;this man
+Ristofalo will be ample protection for you; and I will go
+at once and get your husband&#8217;s discharge.&rdquo; He went out.</p>
+
+<p>In the office he asked for a seat at a desk. As he finished
+using it he turned to the keeper and asked, with
+severe face:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do you do with sick prisoners here, anyway?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The keeper smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, if they gits right sick, the hospital wagon comes
+and takes &#8217;em to the Charity Hospital.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Umhum!&rdquo; replied the Doctor, unpleasantly,&mdash;&ldquo;in
+the same wagon they use for a case of scarlet fever or
+small-pox, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The keeper, with a little resentment in his laugh, stated
+that he would be eternally lost if he knew.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>I</em> know,&rdquo; remarked the Doctor. &ldquo;But when a man
+is only a little sick,&mdash;according to your judgment,&mdash;like
+that one in there now, he is treated here, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The keeper swelled with a little official pride. His tone
+was boastful.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We has a complete dispenisary in the prison,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes? Who&#8217;s your druggist?&rdquo; Dr. Sevier was in his
+worst inquisitorial mood.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+&ldquo;One of the prisoners,&rdquo; said the keeper.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked at him steadily. The man, in the
+blackness of his ignorance, was visibly proud of this bit
+of economy and convenience.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How long has he held this position?&rdquo; asked the physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, a right smart while. He was sentenced for
+murder, but he&#8217;s waiting for a new trial.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And he has full charge of all the drugs?&rdquo; asked the
+Doctor, with a cheerful smile.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo; The keeper was flattered.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Poisons and all, I suppose, eh?&rdquo; pursued the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Everything.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked steadily and silently upon the officer,
+and tore and folded and tore again into small bits the
+prescription he had written. A moment later the door of
+his carriage shut with a smart clap and its wheels rattled
+away. There was a general laugh in the office, heavily
+spiced with maledictions.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I say, Cap&#8217;, what d&#8217;you reckon he&#8217;d &#8217;a&#8217; said if he&#8217;d
+&#8217;a&#8217; seen the women&#8217;s department?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>In those days recorders had the power to release prisoners
+sentenced by them when in their judgment new
+information justified such action. Yet Dr. Sevier had a
+hard day&#8217;s work to procure Richling&#8217;s liberty. The sun
+was declining once more when a hack drove up to Mrs.
+Riley&#8217;s door with John and Mary in it, and Mrs. Riley
+was restrained from laughing and crying only by the
+presence of the great Dr. Sevier and a romantic Italian
+stranger by the captivating name of Ristofalo. Richling,
+with repeated avowals of his ability to walk alone, was
+helped into the house between these two illustrious visitors,
+Mary hurrying in ahead, and Mrs. Riley shutting
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+the street door with some resentment of manner toward
+the staring children who gathered without. Was there
+anything surprising in the fact that eminent persons should
+call at her house?</p>
+
+<p>When there was time for greetings she gave her hand
+to Dr. Sevier and asked him how he found himself. To
+Ristofalo she bowed majestically. She noticed that he
+was handsome and muscular.</p>
+
+<p>At different hours the next day the same two visitors
+called. Also the second day after. And the third. And
+frequently afterward.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Ristofalo regained his financial feet almost, as one
+might say, at a single hand-spring. He amused Mary
+and John and Mrs. Riley almost beyond limit with his
+simple story of how he did it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&#8217;d better hurry and be getting up out o&#8217; that sick
+bed, Mr. Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo; said the widow, in Ristofalo&#8217;s absence,
+&ldquo;or that I-talian rascal&#8217;ll be making himself entirely too
+agree&#8217;ble to yer lady here. Ha! ha! It&#8217;s <em>she</em> that he&#8217;s
+a-comin&#8217; here to see.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley laughed again, and pointed at Mary and
+tossed her head, not knowing that Mary went through it
+all over again as soon as Mrs. Riley was out of the room,
+to the immense delight of John.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And now, madam,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier to Mary, by and
+by, &ldquo;let it be understood once more that even independence
+may be carried to a vicious extreme, and that&rdquo;&mdash;he
+turned to Richling, by whose bed he stood&mdash;&ldquo;you and
+your wife will not do it again. You&#8217;ve had a narrow
+escape. Is it understood?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We&#8217;ll try to be moderate,&rdquo; replied the invalid, playfully.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t believe you,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+And his scepticism was wise. He continued to watch
+them, and at length enjoyed the sight of John up and out
+again with color in his cheeks and the old courage&mdash;nay,
+a new and a better courage&mdash;in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Said the Doctor on his last visit, &ldquo;Take good care of
+your husband, my child.&rdquo; He held the little wife&#8217;s hand a
+moment, and gazed out of Mrs. Riley&#8217;s front door upon
+the western sky. Then he transferred his gaze to John,
+who stood, with his knee in a chair, just behind her. He
+looked at the convalescent with solemn steadfastness.
+The husband smiled broadly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know what you mean. I&#8217;ll try to deserve her.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked again into the west.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-by.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary tried playfully to retort, but John restrained her,
+and when she contrived to utter something absurdly
+complimentary of her husband he was her only hearer.</p>
+
+<p>They went back into the house, talking of other
+matters. Something turned the conversation upon Mrs.
+Riley, and from that subject it seemed to pass naturally
+to Ristofalo. Mary, laughing and talking softly as they
+entered their room, called to John&#8217;s recollection the Italian&#8217;s
+account of how he had once bought a tarpaulin hat
+and a cottonade shirt of the pattern called a &ldquo;jumper,&rdquo;
+and had worked as a deck-hand in loading and unloading
+steam-boats. It was so amusingly sensible to put on the
+proper badge for the kind of work sought. Richling
+mused. Many a dollar he might have earned the past
+summer, had he been as ingeniously wise, he thought.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ristofalo is coming here this evening,&rdquo; said he,
+taking a seat in the alley window.</p>
+
+<p>Mary looked at him with sidelong merriment. The
+Italian was coming to see Mrs. Riley.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Why, John,&rdquo; whispered Mary, standing beside him,
+&ldquo;she&#8217;s nearly ten years older than he is!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But John quoted the old saying about a man&#8217;s age being
+what he feels, and a woman&#8217;s what she looks.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&mdash;but&mdash;dear, it is scarcely a fortnight since
+she declared nothing could ever induce&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let her alone,&rdquo; said John, indulgently. &ldquo;Hasn&#8217;t she
+said half-a-dozen times that it isn&#8217;t good for woman to be
+alone? A widow&#8217;s a woman&mdash;and you never disputed it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O John,&rdquo; laughed Mary, &ldquo;for shame! You know I
+didn&#8217;t mean that. You know I never could mean that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And when John would have maintained his ground she
+besought him not to jest in that direction, with eyes so
+ready for tears that he desisted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I only meant to be generous to Mrs. Riley,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; said Mary, caressingly; &ldquo;you&#8217;re always
+on the generous side of everything.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She rested her hand fondly on his arm, and he took it
+into his own.</p>
+
+<p>One evening the pair were out for that sunset walk
+which their young blood so relished, and which often led
+them, as it did this time, across the wide, open commons
+behind the town, where the unsettled streets were turf-grown,
+and toppling wooden lamp-posts threatened to fall
+into the wide, cattle-trodden ditches.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Fall is coming,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let it come!&rdquo; exclaimed John; &ldquo;it&#8217;s hung back long enough.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He looked about with pleasure. On every hand the
+advancing season was giving promise of heightened activity.
+The dark, plumy foliage of the china trees was
+getting a golden edge. The burnished green of the great
+magnolias was spotted brilliantly with hundreds of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+bursting cones, red with their pendent seeds. Here and
+there, as the sauntering pair came again into the region of
+brick sidewalks, a falling cone would now and then
+scatter its polished coral over the pavement, to be gathered
+by little girls for necklaces, or bruised under foot,
+staining the walk with its fragrant oil. The ligustrums
+bent low under the dragging weight of their small clustered
+berries. The oranges were turning. In the wet,
+choked ditches along the interruptions of pavement,
+where John followed Mary on narrow plank footways,
+bloomed thousands of little unrenowned asteroid flowers,
+blue and yellow, and the small, pink spikes of the water
+pepper. It wasn&#8217;t the fashionable habit in those days,
+but Mary had John gather big bunches of this pretty
+floral mob, and filled her room with them&mdash;not Mrs.
+Riley&#8217;s parlor&mdash;whoop, no! Weeds? Not if Mrs.
+Riley knew herself.</p>
+
+<p>So ran time apace. The morning skies were gray
+monotones, and the evening gorgeous reds. The birds
+had finished their summer singing. Sometimes the alert
+chirp of the cardinal suddenly smote the ear from some
+neighboring tree; but he would pass, a flash of crimson,
+from one garden to the next, and with another chirp or
+two be gone for days. The nervy, unmusical waking cry
+of the mocking-bird was often the first daybreak sound.
+At times a myriad downy seed floated everywhere, now
+softly upward, now gently downward, and the mellow
+rays of sunset turned it into a warm, golden snow-fall.
+By night a soft glow from distant burning prairies showed
+the hunters were afield; the call of unseen wild fowl
+was heard overhead, and&mdash;finer to the waiting poor
+man&#8217;s ear than all other sounds&mdash;came at regular intervals,
+now from this quarter and now from that, the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+heavy, rushing blast of the cotton compress, telling that
+the flood tide of commerce was setting in.</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse surprised the Richlings one evening with a
+call. They tried very hard to be reserved, but they were
+too young for that task to be easy. The Creole had evidently
+come with his mind made up to take unresentfully
+and override all the unfriendliness they might choose to
+show. His conversation never ceased, but flitted from
+subject to subject with the swift waywardness of a humming-bird.
+It was remarked by Mary, leaning back in
+one end of Mrs. Riley&#8217;s little sofa, that &ldquo;summer dresses
+were disappearing, but that the girls looked just as sweet
+in their darker colors as they had appeared in midsummer
+white. Had Narcisse noticed? Probably he didn&#8217;t care for&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ho! I notiz them an&#8217; they notiz me! An&#8217; thass one
+thing I &#8217;ave notiz about young ladies: they ah juz like those
+bird&#8217;; in summeh lookin&#8217; cool, in winteh waum. I &#8217;ave
+notiz that. An&#8217; I&#8217;ve notiz anotheh thing which make
+them juz like those bird&#8217;. They halways know if a man
+is lookin&#8217;, an&#8217; they halways make like they don&#8217;t see &#8217;im!
+I would like to &#8217;ite an i&#8217;ony about that&mdash;a lill i&#8217;ony&mdash;in
+the he&#8217;oic measuh. You like that he&#8217;oic measuh, Mizzez
+Witchlin&#8217;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As he rose to go he rolled a cigarette, and folded the
+end in with the long nail of his little finger.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mizzez Witchlin&#8217;, if you will allow me to light my
+ciga&#8217;ette fum yo&#8217; lamp&mdash;I can&#8217;t use my sun-glass at
+night, because the sun is nod theh. But, the sun shining,
+I use it. I &#8217;ave adop&#8217; that method since lately.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You borrow the sun&#8217;s rays,&rdquo; said Mary, with wicked
+sweetness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; &#8217;tis cheapeh than matches in the longue &#8217;un.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You have discovered that, I suppose,&rdquo; remarked John.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Me? The sun-glass? No. I believe Ahchimides
+invend that, in fact. An&#8217; yet, out of ten thousan&#8217; who
+use the sun-glass only a few can account &#8217;ow tis done.
+&#8217;Ow did you think that that&#8217;s my invention, Mistoo Itchlin?
+Did you know that I am something of a chimist?
+I can tu&#8217;n litmus papeh &#8217;ed by juz dipping it in SO<sub>3</sub>HO.
+Yesseh.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;that&#8217;s one thing that I have
+noticed, that you&#8217;re very fertile in devices.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; echoed Mary, &ldquo;I noticed that, the first time
+you ever came to see us. I only wish Mr. Richling was
+half as much so.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She beamed upon her husband. Narcisse laughed with
+pure pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I am compel&#8217; to say you ah co&#8217;ect. I am continually
+makin&#8217; some discove&#8217;ies. &lsquo;Necessity&#8217;s the
+motheh of inventions.&rsquo; Now thass anotheh thing I &#8217;ave
+notiz&mdash;about that month of Octobeh: it always come
+befo&#8217; you think it&#8217;s comin&#8217;. I &#8217;ave notiz that about eve&#8217;y
+month. Now, to-day we ah the twennieth Octobeh! Is it
+not so?&rdquo; He lighted his cigarette. &ldquo;You ah compel&#8217; to
+co&#8217;obo&#8217;ate me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>LIGHTING SHIP.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Yes, the tide was coming in. The Richlings&#8217; bark
+was still on the sands, but every now and then a
+wave of promise glided under her. She might float, now,
+any day. Meantime, as has no doubt been guessed, she
+was held on an even keel by loans from the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why you don&#8217;t advertise in papers?&rdquo; asked Ristofalo.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Advertise? Oh, I didn&#8217;t think it would be of any use.
+I advertised a whole week, last summer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You put advertisement in wrong time and keep it out
+wrong time,&rdquo; said the Italian.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have a place in prospect, now, without advertising,&rdquo;
+said Richling, with an elated look.</p>
+
+<p>It was just here that a new mistake of Richling&#8217;s
+emerged. He had come into contact with two or three
+men of that wretched sort that indulge the strange vanity
+of keeping others waiting upon them by promises of
+employment. He believed them, liked them heartily
+because they said nothing about references, and gratefully
+distended himself with their husks, until Ristofalo
+opened his eyes by saying, when one of these men had
+disappointed Richling the third time:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Business man don&#8217;t promise but once.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You lookin&#8217; for book-keeper&#8217;s place?&rdquo; asked the
+Italian at another time. &ldquo;Why don&#8217;t dress like a book-keeper?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+&ldquo;On borrowed money?&rdquo; asked Richling, evidently looking
+upon that question as a poser.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; said Richling, with a smile of superiority;
+but the other one smiled too, and shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Borrow mo&#8217;, if you don&#8217;t.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling&#8217;s heart flinched at the word. He had thought
+he was giving his true reason; but he was not. A foolish
+notion had floated, like a grain of dust, into the over-delicate
+wheels of his thought,&mdash;that men would employ
+him the more readily if he looked needy. His hat was
+unbrushed, his shoes unpolished; he had let his beard
+come out, thin and untrimmed; his necktie was faded.
+He looked battered. When the Italian&#8217;s gentle warning
+showed him this additional mistake on top of all his
+others he was dismayed at himself; and when he sat
+down in his room and counted the cost of an accountant&#8217;s
+uniform, so to speak, the remains of Dr. Sevier&#8217;s last loan
+to him was too small for it. Thereupon he committed
+one error more,&mdash;but it was the last. He sunk his
+standard, and began again to look for service among
+industries that could offer employment only to manual
+labor. He crossed the river and stirred about among the
+dry-docks and ship-carpenters&#8217; yards of the suburb
+Algiers. But he could neither hew spars, nor paint, nor
+splice ropes. He watched a man half a day calking a
+boat; then he offered himself for the same work, did it
+fairly, and earned half a day&#8217;s wages. But then the boat
+was done, and there was no other calking at the moment
+along the whole harbor front, except some that was being
+done on a ship by her own sailors.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John,&rdquo; said Mary, dropping into her lap the sewing
+that hardly paid for her candle, &ldquo;isn&#8217;t it hard to realize
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+that it isn&#8217;t twelve months since your hardships commenced?
+They <em>can&#8217;t</em> last much longer, darling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know that,&rdquo; said John. &ldquo;And I know I&#8217;ll find a
+place presently, and then we&#8217;ll wake up to the fact that
+this was actually less than a year of trouble in a lifetime
+of love.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; rejoined Mary, &ldquo;I know your patience will be rewarded.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But what I want is work now, Mary. The bread of
+idleness is getting <em>too</em> bitter. But never mind; I&#8217;m going
+to work to-morrow;&mdash;never mind where. It&#8217;s all right. You&#8217;ll see.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She smiled, and looked into his eyes again with a confession
+of unreserved trust. The next day he reached the&mdash;what
+shall we say?&mdash;big end of his last mistake. What it was came
+out a few mornings after, when he called at Number 5 Carondelet
+street.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Doctah is not in pwesently,&rdquo; said Narcisse. &ldquo;He
+ve&#8217;y hawdly comes in so soon as that. He&#8217;s living home
+again, once mo&#8217;, now. He&#8217;s ve&#8217;y un&#8217;estless. I tole &#8217;im
+yistiddy, &lsquo;Doctah, I know juz &#8217;ow you feel, seh; &#8217;tis the
+same way with myseff. You ought to git ma&#8217;ied!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did he say he would?&rdquo; asked Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you know, Mistoo Itchlin, so the povvub says,
+&lsquo;Silent give consense.&rsquo; He juz look at me&mdash;nevvah
+said a word&mdash;ha! he couldn&#8217;! You not lookin&#8217; ve&#8217;y
+well, Mistoo Itchlin. I suppose &#8217;tis that waum weatheh.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose it is; at least, partly,&rdquo; said Richling, and
+added nothing more, but looked along and across the
+ceiling, and down at a skeleton in a corner, that was
+offering to shake hands with him. He was at a loss how
+to talk to Narcisse. Both Mary and he had grown a
+little ashamed of their covert sarcasms, and yet to leave
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+them out was bread without yeast, meat without salt, as
+far as their own powers of speech were concerned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I thought, the other day,&rdquo; he began again, with an
+effort, &ldquo;when it blew up cool, that the warm weather was over.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It seem to be finishin&#8217; ad the end, I think,&rdquo; responded
+the Creole. &ldquo;I think, like you, that we &#8217;ave &#8217;ad too
+waum weatheh. Me, I like that weatheh to be cole, me.
+I halways weigh the mose in cole weatheh. I gain flesh,
+in fact. But so soon &#8217;tis summeh somethin&#8217; become of
+it. I dunno if &#8217;tis the fault of my close, but I reduct in
+summeh. Speakin&#8217; of close, Mistoo Itchlin,&mdash;egscuse
+me if &#8217;tis a fair question,&mdash;w&#8217;at was yo&#8217; objec&#8217; in buyin&#8217;
+that tawpaulin hat an&#8217; jacket lass week ad that sto&#8217; on
+the levee? You din know I saw you, but I juz &#8217;appen to
+see you, in fact.&rdquo; (The color rose in Richling&#8217;s face, and
+Narcisse pressed on without allowing an answer.) &ldquo;Well,
+thass none o&#8217; my biziness, of co&#8217;se, but I think you
+lookin&#8217; ve&#8217;y bad, Mistoo Itchlin&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He stopped very
+short and stepped with dignified alacrity to his desk, for
+Dr. Sevier&#8217;s step was on the stair.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor shook hands with Richling and sank into
+the chair at his desk. &ldquo;Anything turned up yet, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; began Richling, drawing his chair near and
+speaking low.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-mawnin&#8217;, Doctah,&rdquo; said Narcisse, showing himself
+with a graceful flourish.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor nodded, then turned again to Richling.
+&ldquo;You were saying&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I &#8217;ope you well, seh,&rdquo; insisted the Creole, and as the
+Doctor glanced toward him impatiently, repeated the sentiment,
+&ldquo;&#8217;Ope you well, seh.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor said he was, and turned once more to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+Richling. Narcisse bowed away backward and went to
+his desk, filled to the eyes with fierce satisfaction. He
+had made himself felt. Richling drew his chair nearer
+and spoke low:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If I don&#8217;t get work within a day or two I shall have
+to come to you for money.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s all right, Richling.&rdquo; The Doctor spoke aloud;
+Richling answered low.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, Doctor, it&#8217;s all wrong! Indeed, I can&#8217;t do it
+any more unless you will let me earn the money.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My dear sir, I would most gladly do it; but I have
+nothing that you can do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you have, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, it&#8217;s this: you have a slave boy driving your carriage.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Give him some other work, and let me do that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier started in his seat. &ldquo;Richling, I can&#8217;t do
+that. I should ruin you. If you drive my carriage&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Just for a time, Doctor, till I find something else.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No! no! If you drive my carriage in New Orleans
+you&#8217;ll never do anything else.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor, there are men standing in the front
+ranks to-day, who&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; replied the Doctor, impatiently, &ldquo;I know,&mdash;who
+began with menial labor; but&mdash;I can&#8217;t explain
+it to you, Richling, but you&#8217;re not of the same sort; that&#8217;s
+all. I say it without praise or blame; you must have
+work adapted to your abilities.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My abilities!&rdquo; softly echoed Richling. Tears sprang
+to his eyes. He held out his open palms,&mdash;&ldquo;Doctor, look
+there.&rdquo; They were lacerated. He started to rise, but
+the Doctor prevented him.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Let me go,&rdquo; said Richling, pleadingly, and with
+averted face. &ldquo;Let me go. I&#8217;m sorry I showed them.
+It was mean and foolish and weak. Let me go.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But Dr. Sevier kept a hand on him, and he did not
+resist. The Doctor took one of the hands and examined
+it. &ldquo;Why, Richling, you&#8217;ve been handling freight!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There was nothing else.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, bah!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let me go,&rdquo; whispered Richling. But the Doctor
+held him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&#8217;t do this on the steam-boat landing, did
+you, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The young man nodded. The Doctor dropped the hand
+and looked upon its owner with set lips and steady severity.
+When he spoke he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Among the negro and green Irish deck-hands, and
+under the oaths and blows of steam-boat mates! Why,
+Richling!&rdquo; He turned half away in his rotary chair with
+an air of patience worn out.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You thought I had more sense,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor put his elbows upon his desk and slowly
+drew his face upward through his hands. &ldquo;Mr. Richling,
+what is the matter with you?&rdquo; They gazed at each other
+a long moment, and then Dr. Sevier continued: &ldquo;Your
+trouble isn&#8217;t want of sense. I know that very well, Richling.&rdquo;
+His voice was low and became kind. &ldquo;But you
+don&#8217;t get the use of the sense you have. It isn&#8217;t available.&rdquo;
+He bent forward: &ldquo;Some men, Richling, carry their folly
+on the surface and their good sense at the bottom,&rdquo;&mdash;he
+jerked his thumb backward toward the distant Narcisse,
+and added, with a stealthy frown,&mdash;&ldquo;like that little fool
+in yonder. He&#8217;s got plenty of sense, but he doesn&#8217;t load
+any of it on deck. Some men carry their sense on top and
+their folly down below&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+Richling smiled broadly through his dejection, and
+touched his own chest. &ldquo;Like this big fool here,&rdquo; he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier. &ldquo;Now you&#8217;ve developed
+a defect of the memory. Your few merchantable qualities
+have been so long out of the market, and you&#8217;ve suffered
+such humiliation under the pressure of adversity, that
+you&#8217;ve&mdash;you&#8217;ve done a very bad thing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Say a dozen,&rdquo; responded Richling, with bitter humor.
+But the Doctor swung his head in resentment of the levity.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;One&#8217;s enough. You&#8217;ve allowed yourself to forget
+your true value.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m worth whatever I&#8217;ll bring.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor tossed his head in impatient disdain.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pshaw! You&#8217;ll never bring what you&#8217;re worth any
+more than some men are worth what they bring. You
+don&#8217;t know how. You never will know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Doctor, I do know that I&#8217;m worth more than I
+ever was before. I&#8217;ve learned a thousand things in the
+last twelvemonth. If I can only get a chance to prove
+it!&rdquo; Richling turned red and struck his knee with his
+fist.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier; &ldquo;that&#8217;s your sense, on
+top. And then you go&mdash;in a fit of the merest impatience,
+as I do suspect&mdash;and offer yourself as a deck-hand and
+as a carriage-driver. That&#8217;s your folly, at the bottom.
+What ought to be done to such a man?&rdquo; He gave a low,
+harsh laugh. Richling dropped his eyes. A silence
+followed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You say all you want is a chance,&rdquo; resumed the
+Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; quickly answered Richling, looking up.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m going to give it to you.&rdquo; They looked into each
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+other&#8217;s eyes. The Doctor nodded. &ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo; He
+nodded again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where did you come from, Richling,&mdash;when you
+came to New Orleans,&mdash;you and your wife? Milwaukee?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do your relatives know of your present condition?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is your wife&#8217;s mother comfortably situated?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&#8217;ll tell you what you must do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The only thing I can&#8217;t do,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, you can. You must. You must send Mrs.
+Richling back to her mother.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Doctor, warmly, &ldquo;I say you must. I
+will lend you the passage-money.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling&#8217;s eye kindled an instant at the Doctor&#8217;s compulsory
+tone, but he said, gently:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor, Mary will never consent to leave me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course she will not. But you must make her do
+it! That&#8217;s what you must do. And when that&#8217;s done
+then you must start out and go systematically from door
+to door,&mdash;of business houses, I mean,&mdash;offering yourself
+for work befitting your station&mdash;ahem!&mdash;station, I say&mdash;and
+qualifications. I will lend you money to live on
+until you find permanent employment. Now, now, don&#8217;t
+get alarmed! I&#8217;m not going to help you any more than
+I absolutely must!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, Doctor, how can you expect&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;But the Doctor
+interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come, now, none of that! You and your wife are
+brave; I must say that for you. She has the courage of
+a gladiator. You can do this if you will.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;you are the best of friends;
+but, you know, the fact is, Mary and I&mdash;well, we&#8217;re still
+lovers.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; The Doctor turned away his head with fresh
+impatience. Richling bit his lip, but went on:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We can bear anything on earth together; but we
+have sworn to stay together through better and worse&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, pf-f-f-f!&rdquo; said the doctor, closing his eyes and
+swinging his head away again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&mdash;And we&#8217;re going to do it,&rdquo; concluded Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you can&#8217;t do it!&rdquo; cried the Doctor, so loudly that
+Narcisse stood up on the rungs of his stool and peered.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We can&#8217;t separate.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier smote the desk and sprang to his feet:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, you&#8217;ve got to do it! If you continue in this
+way, you&#8217;ll die. You&#8217;ll die, Mr. Richling&mdash;both of you!
+You&#8217;ll die! Are you going to let Mary die just because
+she&#8217;s brave enough to do it?&rdquo; He sat down again and
+busied himself, nervously placing pens on the pen-rack,
+the stopper in the inkstand, and the like.</p>
+
+<p>Many thoughts ran through Richling&#8217;s mind in the
+ensuing silence. His eyes were on the floor. Visions of
+parting; of the great emptiness that would be left behind;
+the pangs and yearnings that must follow,&mdash;crowded
+one upon another. One torturing realization
+kept ever in the front,&mdash;that the Doctor had a well-earned
+right to advise, and that, if his advice was to be rejected,
+one must show good and sufficient cause for rejecting it,
+both in present resources and in expectations. The truth
+leaped upon him and bore him down as it never had done
+before,&mdash;the truth which he had heard this very Dr.
+Sevier proclaim,&mdash;that debt is bondage. For a moment
+he rebelled against it; but shame soon displaced mutiny,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+and he accepted this part, also, of his lot. At length he
+rose.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;May I ask Mary?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You will do what you please, Mr. Richling.&rdquo; And
+then, in a kinder voice, the Doctor added, &ldquo;Yes; ask
+her.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They moved together to the office door. The Doctor
+opened it, and they said good-by, Richling trying to
+drop a word of gratitude, and the Doctor hurriedly ignoring
+it.</p>
+
+<p>The next half hour or more was spent by the physician
+in receiving, hearing, and dismissing patients and their
+messengers. By and by no others came. The only
+audible sound was that of the Doctor&#8217;s paper-knife as it
+parted the leaves of a pamphlet. He was thinking over
+the late interview with Richling, and knew that, if this
+silence were not soon interrupted from without, he would
+have to encounter his book-keeper, who had not spoken
+since Richling had left. Presently the issue came.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Seveeah,&rdquo;&mdash;Narcisse came forward, hat in hand,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+dunno &#8217;ow &#8217;tis, but Mistoo Itchlin always wemine
+me of that povvub, &lsquo;Ully to bed, ully to &#8217;ise, make a
+pusson to be &#8217;ealthy an&#8217; wealthy an&#8217; wise.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know how it is, either,&rdquo; grumbled the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I believe thass not the povvub I was thinking. I am
+acquainting myseff with those povvubs; but I&#8217;m somewhat
+gween in that light, in fact. Well, Doctah, I&#8217;m
+goin&#8217; ad the&mdash;shoemakeh. I burs&#8217; my shoe yistiddy. I
+was juz&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, go.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh; and from the shoemakeh I&#8217;ll go&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor glanced darkly over the top of the pamphlet.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&mdash;Ad the bank; yesseh,&rdquo; said Narcisse, and went.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>AT LAST.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Mary, cooking supper, uttered a soft exclamation
+of pleasure and relief as she heard John&#8217;s step
+under the alley window and then at the door. She turned,
+with an iron spoon in one hand and a candlestick in the
+other, from the little old stove with two pot-holes, where
+she had been stirring some mess in a tin pan.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you&#8217;re&rdquo;&mdash;she reached for a kiss&mdash;&ldquo;real late!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I could not come any sooner.&rdquo; He dropped into a
+chair at the table.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Busy?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; no work to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary lifted the pan from the stove, whisked it to the
+table, and blew her fingers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Same subject continued,&rdquo; she said laughingly, pointing
+with her spoon to the warmed-over food.</p>
+
+<p>Richling smiled and nodded, and then flattened his
+elbows out on the table and hid his face in them.</p>
+
+<p>This was the first time he had ever lingered away from
+his wife when he need not have done so. It was the
+Doctor&#8217;s proposition that had kept him back. All day
+long it had filled his thoughts. He felt its wisdom. Its
+sheer practical value had pierced remorselessly into the
+deepest convictions of his mind. But his heart could not
+receive it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mary, brightly, as she sat down at the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+table, &ldquo;maybe you&#8217;ll have better luck to-morrow. Don&#8217;t
+you think you may?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know,&rdquo; said John, straightening up and tossing
+back his hair. He pushed a plate up to the pan,
+supplied and passed it. Then he helped himself and fell
+to eating.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have you seen Dr. Sevier to-day?&rdquo; asked Mary,
+cautiously, seeing her husband pause and fall into distraction.</p>
+
+<p>He pushed his plate away and rose. She met him in
+the middle of the room. He extended both hands, took
+hers, and gazed upon her. How could he tell? Would
+she cry and lament, and spurn the proposition, and fall
+upon him with a hundred kisses? Ah, if she would!
+But he saw that Doctor Sevier, at least, was confident she
+would not; that she would have, instead, what the wife so
+often has in such cases, the strongest love, it may be, but
+also the strongest wisdom for that particular sort of issue.
+Which would she do? Would she go, or would she not?</p>
+
+<p>He tried to withdraw his hands, but she looked beseechingly
+into his eyes and knit her fingers into his.
+The question stuck upon his lips and would not be uttered.
+And why should it be? Was it not cowardice to leave
+the decision to her? Should not he decide? Oh! if she
+would only rebel! But would she? Would not her utmost
+be to give good reasons in her gentle, inquiring way
+why he should not require her to leave him? And were
+there any such? No! no! He had racked his brain to
+find so much as one, all day long.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John,&rdquo; said Mary, &ldquo;Dr. Sevier&#8217;s been talking to you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And he wants you to send me back home for a while?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+&ldquo;How do you know?&rdquo; asked John, with a start.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can read it in your face.&rdquo; She loosed one hand
+and laid it upon his brow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What&mdash;what do you think about it, Mary?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary, looking into his eyes with the face of one who
+pleads for mercy, whispered, &ldquo;He&#8217;s right,&rdquo; then buried
+her face in his bosom and wept like a babe.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I felt it six months ago,&rdquo; she said later, sitting on
+her husband&#8217;s knee and holding his folded hands tightly
+in hers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&#8217;t you say so?&rdquo; asked John.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was too selfish,&rdquo; was her reply.</p>
+
+<p>When, on the second day afterward, they entered the
+Doctor&#8217;s office Richling was bright with that new hope
+which always rises up beside a new experiment, and Mary
+looked well and happy. The Doctor wrote them a letter
+of introduction to the steam-boat agent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;re taking a very sensible course,&rdquo; he said,
+smoothing the blotting-paper heavily over the letter.
+&ldquo;Of course, you think it&#8217;s hard. It is hard. But distance
+needn&#8217;t separate you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It can&#8217;t,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Time,&rdquo; continued the Doctor,&mdash;&ldquo;maybe a few months,&mdash;will
+bring you together again, prepared for a long life
+of secure union; and then, when you look back upon this,
+you&#8217;ll be proud of your courage and good sense. And
+you&#8217;ll be&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He enclosed the note, directed the envelope,
+and, pausing with it still in his hand, turned toward the
+pair. They rose up. His rare, sick-room smile hovered
+about his mouth, and he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ll be all the happier&mdash;all three of you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The husband smiled. Mary colored down to the throat
+and looked up on the wall, where Harvey was explaining
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+to his king the circulation of the blood. There was quite
+a pause, neither side caring to utter the first adieu.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If a physician could call any hour his own,&rdquo; presently
+said the Doctor, &ldquo;I should say I would come down to the
+boat and see you off. But I might fail in that. Good-by!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-by, Doctor!&rdquo;&mdash;a little tremor in the voice,&mdash;&ldquo;take
+care of John.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tall man looked down into the upturned blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-by!&rdquo; He stooped toward her forehead, but
+she lifted her lips and he kissed them. So they parted.</p>
+
+<p>The farewell with Mrs. Riley was mainly characterized
+by a generous and sincere exchange of compliments and
+promises of remembrance. Some tears rose up; a few
+ran over.</p>
+
+<p>At the steam-boat wharf there were only the pair themselves
+to cling one moment to each other and then wave
+that mute farewell that looks through watery eyes and
+sticks in the choking throat. Who ever knows what
+good-by means?</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said Richling, when he came to accept those
+terms in the Doctor&#8217;s proposition which applied more exclusively
+to himself,&mdash;&ldquo;no, Doctor, not that way, please.&rdquo; He
+put aside the money proffered him. &ldquo;This
+is what I want to do: I will come to your house every
+morning and get enough to eat to sustain me through the
+day, and will continue to do so till I find work.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>The arrangement went into effect. They never met at
+dinner; but almost every morning the Doctor, going into
+the breakfast-room, met Richling just risen from his
+earlier and hastier meal.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Well? Anything yet?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing yet.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And, unless there was some word from Mary, nothing
+more would be said. So went the month of November.</p>
+
+<p>But at length, one day toward the close of the Doctor&#8217;s
+office hours, he noticed the sound of an agile foot springing
+up his stairs three steps at a stride, and Richling
+entered, panting and radiant.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, at last! At last!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;At last, what?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve found employment! I have, indeed! One line
+from you, and the place is mine! A good place, Doctor,
+and one that I can fill. The very thing for me! Adapted
+to my abilities!&rdquo; He laughed so that he coughed, was
+still, and laughed again. &ldquo;Just a line, if you please,
+Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>A RISING STAR.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It had been many a day since Dr. Sevier had felt such
+pleasure as thrilled him when Richling, half beside
+himself with delight, ran in upon him with the news that
+he had found employment. Narcisse, too, was glad. He
+slipped down from his stool and came near enough to
+contribute his congratulatory smiles, though he did not
+venture to speak. Richling nodded him a happy how-d&#8217;ye-do,
+and the Creole replied by a wave of the hand.</p>
+
+<p>In the Doctor&#8217;s manner, on the other hand, there was a
+decided lack of response that made Richling check his
+spirits and resume more slowly,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know a man named Reisen?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, he says he knows you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That may be.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He says you treated his wife one night when she was very ill&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Reisen.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor reflected a moment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I believe I recollect him. Is he away up on Benjamin
+street, close to the river, among the cotton-presses?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Thalia street they call it now. He says&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Does he keep a large bakery?&rdquo; interrupted the
+Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The &lsquo;Star Bakery,&rsquo;&rdquo; said Richling, brightening
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+again. &ldquo;He says he knows you, and that, if you will
+give me just one line of recommendation, he will put me
+in charge of his accounts and give me a trial. And a
+trial&#8217;s all I want, Doctor. I&#8217;m not the least fearful of
+the result.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier, slowly picking up his
+paper-folder and shaking it argumentatively, &ldquo;where are
+the letters I advised you to send for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling sat perfectly still, taking a long, slow breath
+through his nostrils, his eyes fixed emptily on his questioner.
+He was thinking, away down at the bottom of
+his heart,&mdash;and the Doctor knew it,&mdash;that this was the
+unkindest question, and the most cold-blooded, that he
+had ever heard. The Doctor shook his paper-folder again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You see, now, as to the bare fact, I don&#8217;t know you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling&#8217;s jaw dropped with astonishment. His eye
+lighted up resentfully. But the speaker went on:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I esteem you highly. I believe in you. I would
+trust you, Richling,&rdquo;&mdash;his listener remembered how the
+speaker <em>had</em> trusted him, and was melted,&mdash;&ldquo;but as to
+recommending you, why, that is like going upon the
+witness-stand, as it were, and I cannot say that I know
+anything.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling&#8217;s face suddenly flashed full of light. He
+touched the Doctor&#8217;s hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s it! That&#8217;s the very thing, sir! Write that!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor hesitated. Richling sat gazing at him,
+afraid to move an eye lest he should lose an advantage.
+The Doctor turned to his desk and wrote.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>On the next morning Richling did not come for his
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+breakfast; and, not many days after, Dr. Sevier received
+through the mail the following letter:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p style="margin-left: 60%;">
+<span class="smcap">New Orleans</span>, December 2, 1857.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Doctor</span>,&mdash;I&#8217;ve got the place. I&#8217;m Reisen&#8217;s book-keeper.
+I&#8217;m earning my living. And I like the work. Bread, the word
+bread, that has so long been terrible to me, is now the sweetest
+word in the language. For eighteen months it was a prayer; now
+it&#8217;s a proclamation.</p>
+
+<p>I&#8217;ve not only got the place, but I&#8217;m going to keep it. I find I
+have new powers; and the first and best of them is the power to
+throw myself into my work and make it <em>me</em>. It&#8217;s not a task; it&#8217;s a
+mission. Its being bread, I suppose, makes it easier to seem so;
+but it should be so if it was pork and garlic, or rags and raw-hides.</p>
+
+<p>My maxim a year ago, though I didn&#8217;t know it then, was to do
+what I liked. Now it&#8217;s to like what I do. I understand it now.
+And I understand now, too, that a man who expects to retain employment
+must yield a profit. He must be worth more than he
+costs. I thank God for the discipline of the last year and a half.
+I thank him that I did not fall where, in my cowardice, I so often
+prayed to fall, into the hands of foolish benefactors. You wouldn&#8217;t
+believe this of me, I know; but it&#8217;s true. I have been taught
+what life is; I never would have learned it any other way.</p>
+
+<p>And still another thing: I have been taught to know what the
+poor suffer. I know their feelings, their temptations, their hardships,
+their sad mistakes, and the frightful mistakes and oversights
+the rich make concerning them, and the ways to give them true and
+helpful help. And now, if God ever gives me competency, whether
+he gives me abundance or not, I know what he intends me to do.
+I was once, in fact and in sentiment, a brother to the rich; but I
+know that now he has trained me to be a brother to the poor.
+Don&#8217;t think I am going to be foolish. I remember that I&#8217;m brother
+to the rich too; but I&#8217;ll be the other as well. How wisely has God&mdash;what
+am I saying? Poor fools that we humans are! We can
+hardly venture to praise God&#8217;s wisdom to-day when we think we see
+it, lest it turn out to be only our own folly to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>But I find I&#8217;m only writing to myself, Doctor, not to you; so I
+stop. Mary is well, and sends you much love.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 70%;">Yours faithfully,</span><br />
+
+<span style="margin-left: 80%;" class="smcap">John Richling.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Very little about Mary,&rdquo; murmured Dr. Sevier.
+Yet he was rather pleased than otherwise with the letter.
+He thrust it into his breast-pocket. In the evening, at his
+fireside, he drew it out again and re-read it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Talks as if he had got into an impregnable castle,&rdquo;
+thought the Doctor, as he gazed into the fire. &ldquo;Book-keeper
+to a baker,&rdquo; he muttered, slowly folding the sheet
+again. It somehow vexed him to see Richling so happy
+in so low a station. But&mdash;&ldquo;It&#8217;s the joy of what he has
+escaped <em>from</em>, not <em>to</em>,&rdquo; he presently remembered.</p>
+
+<p>A fortnight or more elapsed. A distant relative of Dr.
+Sevier, a man of his own years and profession, was his
+guest for two nights and a day as he passed through the
+city, eastward, from an all-summer&#8217;s study of fevers in
+Mexico. They were sitting at evening on opposite sides
+of the library fire, conversing in the leisurely ease of those
+to whom life is not a novelty.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And so you think of having Laura and Bess come
+out from Charleston, and keep house for you this winter?
+Their mother wrote me to that effect.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier. &ldquo;Society here will be a
+great delight to them. They will shine. And time will
+be less monotonous for me. It may suit me, or it may
+not.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I dare say it may,&rdquo; responded the kinsman, whereas
+in truth he was very doubtful about it.</p>
+
+<p>He added something, a moment later, about retiring
+for the night, and his host had just said, &ldquo;Eh?&rdquo; when a
+slave, in a five-year-old dress-coat, brought in the card of a
+person whose name was as well known in New Orleans in
+those days as St. Patrick&#8217;s steeple or the statue of Jackson
+in the old Place d&#8217;Armes. Dr. Sevier turned it over
+and looked for a moment ponderingly upon the domestic.</p>
+
+<p>The relative rose.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You needn&#8217;t go,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier; but he said &ldquo;he
+had intended,&rdquo; etc., and went to his chamber.</p>
+
+<p>The visitor entered. He was a dark, slender, iron
+gray man, of finely cut, regular features, and seeming to
+be much more deeply wrinkled than on scrutiny he proved
+to be. One quickly saw that he was full of reposing
+energy. He gave the feeling of your being very near
+some weapon, of dreadful efficiency, ready for instant use
+whenever needed. His clothing fitted him neatly; his
+long, gray mustache was the only thing that hung loosely
+about him; his boots were fine. If he had told a child
+that all his muscles and sinews were wrapped with fine
+steel wire the child would have believed him, and continued
+to sit on his knee all the same. It is said, by those
+who still survive him, that in dreadful places and moments
+the flash of his fist was as quick, as irresistible, and as
+all-sufficient, as lightning, yet that years would sometimes
+pass without its ever being lifted.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier lifted his slender length out of his easy-chair,
+and bowed with severe gravity.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-evening, sir,&rdquo; he said, and silently thought,
+&ldquo;Now, what can Smith Izard possibly want with me?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It may have been perfectly natural that this man&#8217;s
+presence shed off all idea of medical consultation; but
+why should it instantly bring to the Doctor&#8217;s mind, as an
+answer to his question, another man as different from
+this one as water from fire?</p>
+
+<p>The detective returned the Doctor&#8217;s salutation, and they
+became seated. Then the visitor craved permission to ask
+a confidential question or two for information which he
+was seeking in his official capacity. His manners were a
+little old-fashioned, but perfect of their kind. The Doctor
+consented. The man put his hand into his breast-pocket,
+and drew out a daguerreotype case, touched its
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+spring, and as it opened in his palm extended it to the
+Doctor. The Doctor took it with evident reluctance. It
+contained the picture of a youth who was just reaching
+manhood. The detective spoke:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They say he ought to look older than that now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He does,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know his name?&rdquo; inquired the detective.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What name do you know him by?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;John Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Wasn&#8217;t he sent down by Recorder Munroe, last summer,
+for assault, etc.?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I got him out the next day. He never should
+have been put in.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To the Doctor&#8217;s surprise the detective rose to go.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m much obliged to you, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is that all you wanted to ask me?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Izard, who is this young man? What has he done?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know, sir. I have a letter from a lawyer in
+Kentucky who says he represents this young man&#8217;s two
+sisters living there,&mdash;half-sisters, rather,&mdash;stating that
+his father and mother are both dead,&mdash;died within three
+days of each other.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He didn&#8217;t give the name. He sent this daguerreotype,
+with instructions to trace up the young man, if possible.
+He said there was reason to believe he was in New
+Orleans. He said, if I found him, just to see him privately,
+tell him the news, and invite him to come back home.
+But he said if the young fellow had got into any kind of
+trouble that might somehow reflect on the family, you
+know, like getting arrested for something or other, you
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+know, or some such thing, then I was just to drop the
+thing quietly, and say nothing about it to him or anybody
+else.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And doesn&#8217;t that seem a strange way to manage a
+matter like that,&mdash;to put it into the hands of a detective?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I don&#8217;t know,&rdquo; said Mr. Izard. &ldquo;We&#8217;re used
+to strange things, and this isn&#8217;t so very strange. No, it&#8217;s
+very common. I suppose he knew that if he gave it to
+me it would be attended to in a quiet and innocent sort
+o&#8217; way. Some people hate mighty bad to get talked about.
+Nobody&#8217;s seen that picture but you and one &#8217;aid,&#8217; and
+just as soon as he saw it he said, &lsquo;Why, that&#8217;s the chap
+that Dr. Sevier took out of the Parish Prison last September.&rsquo;
+And there won&#8217;t anybody else see it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t you intend to see Richling?&rdquo; asked the Doctor,
+following the detective toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t see as it would be any use,&rdquo; said the detective,
+&ldquo;seeing he&#8217;s been sent down, and so on. I&#8217;ll write to the
+lawyer and state the facts, and wait for orders.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But do you know how slight the blame was that got
+him into trouble here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. The &#8217;aid&#8217; who saw the picture told me all about
+that. It was a shame. I&#8217;ll say so. I&#8217;ll give all the particulars.
+But I tell you, I just guess&mdash;they&#8217;ll drop him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I dare say,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Doctor,&rdquo; said Mr. Izard, &ldquo;hope I haven&#8217;t annoyed you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>But he had; and the annoyance had not ceased to be
+felt when, a few mornings afterward, Narcisse suddenly
+doubled&mdash;trebled it by saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctah Seveeah,&rdquo;&mdash;it was a cold day and the young
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+Creole stood a moment with his back to the office fire, to
+which he had just given an energetic and prolonged
+poking,&mdash;&ldquo;a man was yeh, to see you, name&#8217; Bison. &#8217;F
+want&#8217; to see you about Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked up with a start, and Narcisse continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin is wuckin&#8217; in &#8217;is employment. I think
+&#8217;e&#8217;s please&#8217; with &#8217;im.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then why does he come to see me about him?&rdquo; asked
+the Doctor, so sharply that Narcisse shrugged as he
+replied:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Reely, I cann&#8217; tell you; but thass one thing, Doctah,
+I dunno if you &#8217;ave notiz: the worl&#8217; halways take a gweat
+deal of welfa&#8217;e in a man w&#8217;en &#8217;e&#8217;s &#8217;ising. I do that myseff.
+Some&#8217;ow I cann&#8217; &#8217;e&#8217;p it.&rdquo; This bold speech was too much
+for him. He looked down at his symmetrical legs and
+went back to his desk.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor was far from reassured. After a silence
+he called out:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did he say he would come back?&rdquo; A knock at the
+door arrested the answer, and a huge, wide, broad-faced
+German entered diffidently. The Doctor recognized
+Reisen. The visitor took off his flour-dusted hat and
+bowed with great deference.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Toc-tor,&rdquo; he softly drawled, &ldquo;I yoost taught I
+trop in on you to say a verte to you apowt teh chung
+yentleman vot you hef rickomendet to me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t recommend him to you, sir. I wrote you
+distinctly that I did not feel at liberty to recommend
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Tat iss teh troot, Toctor Tseweer; tat iss teh ectsectly
+troot. Shtill I taught I&#8217;ll yoost trop in on you to say a
+verte to you,&mdash;Toctor,&mdash;apowt Mister&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He hung
+his large head at one side to remember.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Richling,&rdquo; said the Doctor, impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir. Apowt Mister Richlun. I heff a tifficuldy
+to rigolict naymps. I yoost taught I voot trop in und trop
+a verte to you apowt Mr. Richlun, vot maypy you titn&#8217;t
+herr udt before, yet.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Doctor, with ill-concealed contempt.
+&ldquo;Well, speak it out, Mr. Reisen; time is precious.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The German smiled and made a silly gesture of assent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, udt is brecious. Shtill I taught I voot take
+enough time to yoost trop in undt say to you tat I heffent
+het Mr. Richlun in my etsteplitchmendt a veek undtil I
+finte owdt someting apowt him, tot, uf you het a-knowdt
+ud, voot hef mate your letter maypy a little tifferendt
+written, yet.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Now, at length, Dr. Sevier&#8217;s annoyance was turned to
+dismay. He waited in silence for Reisen to unfold his
+enigma, but already his resentment against Richling was
+gathering itself for a spring. To the baker, however, he
+betrayed only a cold hostility.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I kept a copy of my letter to you, Mr. Reisen, and
+there isn&#8217;t a word in it which need have misled you, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The baker waved his hand amicably.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sure, Tocter Tseweer, I toandt hef nutting to gomblain
+akinst teh vertes of tat letter. You voss mighty
+puttickly. Ovver, shtill, I hef sumpting to tell you vot
+ef you het a-knowdt udt pefore you writed tose vertes,
+alreatty, t&#8217;ey voot a little tifferendt pin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, why don&#8217;t you tell it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Reisen smiled. &ldquo;Tat iss teh ectsectly vot I am coing
+to too. I yoost taught I&#8217;ll trop in undt tell you, Toctor,
+tat I heffent het Mr. Richlun in my etsteplitchmendt
+a veek undtil I findte owdt tat he&#8217;s a&mdash;berfect&mdash;tressure.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Doctor Sevier started half up from his chair, dropped
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+into it again, wheeled half away, and back again with the
+blood surging into his face and exclaimed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what do you mean by such drivelling nonsense,
+sir? You&#8217;ve given me a positive fright!&rdquo; He frowned
+the blacker as the baker smiled from ear to ear.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vy, Toctor, I hope you ugscooce me! I yoost taught
+you voot like to herr udt. Undt Missis Reisen sayce,
+&lsquo;Reisen, you yoost co undt tell um.&rsquo; I taught udt voot
+pe blessant to you to know tatt you hett sendt me teh
+fynust pissness mayn I effer het apowdt me. Undt uff he
+iss onnust he iss a berfect tressure, undt uff he aint a
+berfect tressure,&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled anew and tendered his
+capacious hat to his listener,&mdash;&ldquo;you yoost kin take tiss,
+Toctor, undt kip udt undt vare udt! Toctor, I vish you
+a merrah Chris&#8217;mus!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>BEES, WASPS, AND BUTTERFLIES.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The merry day went by. The new year, 1858, set in.
+Everything gathered momentum. There was a
+panic and a crash. The brother-in-law of sister Jane&mdash;he
+whom Dr. Sevier met at that quiet dinner-party&mdash;struck
+an impediment, stumbled, staggered, fell under
+the feet of the racers, and crawled away minus not money
+and credit only, but all his philosophy about helping the
+poor, maimed in spirit, his pride swollen with bruises, his
+heart and his speech soured beyond all sweetening.</p>
+
+<p>Many were the wrecks. But over their d&eacute;bris, Mercury
+and Venus&mdash;the busy season and the gay season&mdash;ran
+lightly, hand in hand. Men getting money and women
+squandering it. Whole nights in the ball-room. Gold
+pouring in at the hopper and out at the spout,&mdash;Carondelet
+street emptying like a yellow river into Canal street.
+Thousands for vanity; thousands for pride; thousands for
+influence and for station; thousands for hidden sins; a
+slender fraction for the wants of the body; a slenderer
+for the cravings of the soul. Lazarus paid to stay away
+from the gate. John the Baptist, in raiment of broadcloth,
+a circlet of white linen about his neck, and his
+meat strawberries and ice-cream. The lower classes
+mentioned mincingly; awkward silences or visible wincings
+at allusions to death, and converse on eternal things
+banished as if it were the smell of cabbage. So looked
+the gay world, at least, to Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+He saw more of it than had been his wont for many
+seasons. The two young-lady cousins whom he had
+brought and installed in his home thirsted for that gorgeous,
+nocturnal moth life in which no thirst is truly
+slaked, and dragged him with them into the iridescent,
+gas-lighted spider-web of society.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, you know you like it!&rdquo; they said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A little of it, yes. But I don&#8217;t see how you can like
+it, who virtually live in it and upon it. Why, I would as
+soon try to live upon cake and candy!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, we can live very nicely upon cake and candy,&rdquo;
+retorted they.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, girls, it&#8217;s no more life than spice is food.
+What lofty motive&mdash;what earnest, worthy object&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But they drowned his homily in a carol, and ran away
+arm in arm to dress for another ball. One of them
+stopped in the door with an air of mock bravado:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do we care for lofty motives or worthy objects?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A smile escaped from him as she vanished. His condemnation
+was flavored with charity. &ldquo;It&#8217;s their mating
+season,&rdquo; he silently thought, and, not knowing he did it,
+sighed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There come Dr. Sevier and his two pretty cousins,&rdquo;
+was the ball-room whisper. &ldquo;Beautiful girls&mdash;rich widower
+without children&mdash;great catch! <em>Pass&eacute;</em>, how? Well,
+maybe so; not as much as he makes himself out, though.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;<em>Pass&eacute;</em>, yes,&rdquo; said a merciless belle to a blade of her
+own years; &ldquo;a man of strong sense is <em>pass&eacute;</em> at any age.&rdquo;
+Sister Jane&#8217;s name was mentioned in the same connection,
+but that illusion quickly passed. The cousins denied indignantly
+that he had any matrimonial intention. Somebody
+dissipated the rumor by a syllogism: &ldquo;A man
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+hunting a second wife always looks like a fool; the Doctor
+doesn&#8217;t look a bit like a fool, ergo&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>He grew very weary of the giddy rout, standing in it
+like a rock in a whirlpool. He did rejoice in the Carnival,
+but only because it was the end.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pretty? yes, as pretty as a bonfire,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I
+can&#8217;t enjoy much fiddling while Rome is burning.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But Rome isn&#8217;t always burning,&rdquo; said the cousins.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it is! Yes, it is!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The wickeder of the two cousins breathed a penitential
+sigh, dropped her bare, jewelled arms out of her cloak,
+and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now tell us once more about Mary Richling.&rdquo; He
+had bored them to death with Mary.</p>
+
+<p>Lent was a relief to all three. One day, as the Doctor
+was walking along the street, a large hand grasped his
+elbow and gently arrested his steps. He turned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Reisen, is that you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The baker answered with his wide smile. &ldquo;Yes, Toctor,
+tat iss me, sure. You titn&#8217;t tink udt iss Mr. Richlun,
+tit you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No. How is Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vell, Mr. Richlun kitten along so-o-o-so-o-o. He iss
+not ferra shtrong; ovver he vurks like a shteam-inchyine.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&#8217;t seen him for many a day,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>The baker distended his eyes, bent his enormous digestive
+apparatus forward, raised his eyebrows, and hung
+his arms free from his sides. &ldquo;He toandt kit a minudt
+to shpare in teh tswendy-four hourss. Sumptimes he
+sayss, &lsquo;Mr. Reisen, I can&#8217;t shtop to talk mit you.&rsquo; Sindts
+Mr. Richlun pin py my etsteplitchmendt, I tell you teh
+troot, Toctor Tseweer, I am yoost meckin&#8217; monneh
+haynd ofer fist!&rdquo; He swung his chest forward again,
+drew in his lower regions, revolved his fists around each
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+other for a moment, and then let them fall open at his
+sides, with the added assurance, &ldquo;Now you kott teh
+ectsectly troot.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor started away, but the baker detained him
+by a touch:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You toandt kott enna verte to sendt to Mr. Richlun, Toctor!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Tell him to come and pass an hour with me
+some evening in my library.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The German lifted his hand in delight.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vy, tot&#8217;s yoost teh dting! Mr. Richlun alvayss pin
+sayin&#8217;, &lsquo;I vish he aysk me come undt see um;&rsquo; undt
+I sayss, &lsquo;You holdt shtill, yet, Mr. Richlun; teh next
+time I see um I make um aysk you.&rsquo; Vell, now, titn&#8217;t I
+tunned udt?&rdquo; He was happy.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, ask him,&rdquo; said the Doctor, and got away.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No fool is an utter fool,&rdquo; pondered the Doctor, as he
+went. Two friends had been kept long apart by the fear
+of each, lest he should seem to be setting up claims based
+on the past. It required a simpleton to bring them together.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>TOWARD THE ZENITH.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, I am glad to see you!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier had risen from his luxurious chair
+beside a table, the soft downward beams of whose lamp
+partly showed, and partly hid, the rich appointments of
+his library. He grasped Richling&#8217;s hand, and with an
+extensive stride drew forward another chair on its smooth-running
+casters.</p>
+
+<p>Then inquiries were exchanged as to the health of one
+and the other. The Doctor, with his professional eye,
+noticed, as the light fell full upon his visitor&#8217;s buoyant
+face, how thin and pale he had grown. He rose again, and
+stepping beyond Richling with a remark, in part complimentary
+and in part critical, upon the balmy April evening,
+let down the sash of a window where the smell of
+honeysuckles was floating in.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have you heard from your wife lately?&rdquo; he asked,
+as he resumed his seat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesterday,&rdquo; said Richling. &ldquo;Yes, she&#8217;s very well,
+been well ever since she left us. She always sends love
+to you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hum,&rdquo; responded the physician. He fixed his eyes
+on the mantel and asked abstractedly, &ldquo;How do you bear
+the separation?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Richling laughed, &ldquo;not very heroically. It&#8217;s
+a great strain on a man&#8217;s philosophy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Work is the only antidote,&rdquo; said the Doctor, not
+moving his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, so I find it,&rdquo; answered the other. &ldquo;It&#8217;s bearable
+enough while one is working like mad; but sooner or
+later one must sit down to meals, or lie down to rest, you
+know&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then it hurts,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s a lively discipline,&rdquo; mused Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think you learn anything by it?&rdquo; asked the
+other, turning his eyes slowly upon him. &ldquo;That&#8217;s what
+it means, you notice.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do,&rdquo; replied Richling, smiling; &ldquo;I learn the
+very thing I suppose you&#8217;re thinking of,&mdash;that separation
+isn&#8217;t disruption, and that no pair of true lovers are quite
+fitted out for marriage until they can bear separation if
+they must.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; responded the physician; &ldquo;if they can muster
+the good sense to see that they&#8217;ll not be so apt to marry
+prematurely. I needn&#8217;t tell you I believe in marrying
+for love; but these needs-must marriages are so ineffably
+silly. You &lsquo;must&rsquo; and you &lsquo;will&rsquo; marry, and &lsquo;nobody
+shall hinder you!&rsquo; And you do it! And in three or four
+or six months&rdquo;&mdash;he drew in his long legs energetically
+from the hearth-pan&mdash;&ldquo;<em>death</em> separates you!&mdash;death,
+sometimes, resulting directly from the turn your haste
+has given to events! Now, where is your &lsquo;must&rsquo; and
+&lsquo;will&rsquo;?&rdquo; He stretched his legs out again, and laid his
+head on his cushioned chair-back.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have made a narrow escape,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wasn&#8217;t so fortunate,&rdquo; responded the Doctor, turning
+solemnly toward his young friend. &ldquo;Richling, just seven
+months after I married Alice I buried her. I&#8217;m not going
+into particulars&mdash;of course; but the sickness that
+carried her off was distinctly connected with the haste
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+of our marriage. Your Bible, Richling, that you lay such
+store by, is right; we should want things as if we didn&#8217;t
+want them. That isn&#8217;t the quotation, exactly, but it&#8217;s
+the idea. I swore I couldn&#8217;t and wouldn&#8217;t live without
+her; but, you see, this is the fifteenth year that I have
+had to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I should think it would have unmanned you for life,&rdquo;
+said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It made a man of me! I&#8217;ve never felt young a day
+since, and yet I&#8217;ve never seemed to grow a day older.
+It brought me all at once to my full manhood. I have
+never consciously disputed God&#8217;s arrangements since.
+The man who does is only a wayward child.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s true,&rdquo; said Richling, with an air of confession,
+&ldquo;it&#8217;s true;&rdquo; and they fell into silence.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Richling looked around the room. His eyes
+brightened rapidly as he beheld the ranks and tiers of
+good books. He breathed an audible delight. The multitude
+of volumes rose in the old-fashioned way, in ornate
+cases of dark wood from floor to ceiling, on this hand,
+on that, before him, behind; some in gay covers,&mdash;green,
+blue, crimson,&mdash;with gilding and embossing; some in the
+sumptuous leathers of France, Russia, Morocco, Turkey;
+others in worn attire, battered and venerable, dingy but
+precious,&mdash;the gray heads of the council.</p>
+
+<p>The two men rose and moved about among those silent
+wits and philosophers, and, from the very embarrassment
+of the inner riches, fell to talking of letter-press and
+bindings, with maybe some effort on the part of each to
+seem the better acquainted with Caxton, the Elzevirs, and
+other like immortals. They easily passed to a competitive
+enumeration of the rare books they had seen or not seen
+here and there in other towns and countries. Richling
+admitted he had travelled, and the conversation turned
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+upon noted buildings and famous old nooks in distant
+cities where both had been. So they moved slowly back
+to their chairs, and stood by them, still contemplating the
+books. But as they sank again into their seats the one
+thought which had fastened itself in the minds of both
+found fresh expression.</p>
+
+<p>Richling began, smilingly, as if the subject had not
+been dropped at all,&mdash;&ldquo;I oughtn&#8217;t to speak as if I didn&#8217;t
+realize my good fortune, for I do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I believe you do,&rdquo; said the Doctor, reaching toward
+the fire-irons.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Still, I lose patience with myself to find myself
+taking Mary&#8217;s absence so hard.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All hardships are comparative,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly they are,&rdquo; replied Richling. &ldquo;I lie sometimes
+and think of men who have been political prisoners,
+shut away from wife and children, with war raging outside
+and no news coming in.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Think of the common poor,&rdquo; exclaimed Dr. Sevier,&mdash;&ldquo;the
+thousands of sailors&#8217; wives and soldiers&#8217; wives.
+Where does that thought carry you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It carries me,&rdquo; responded the other, with a low laugh,
+&ldquo;to where I&#8217;m always a little ashamed of myself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t mean it to do that,&rdquo; said the Doctor; &ldquo;I
+can imagine how you miss your wife. I miss her myself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! but she&#8217;s here on this earth. She&#8217;s alive and
+well. Any burden is light when I think of that&mdash;pardon
+me, Doctor!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go on, go on. Anything you please about her, Richling.&rdquo;
+The Doctor half sat, half lay in his chair, his
+eyes partly closed. &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was only going to say that long before Mary went
+away, many a time when she and I were fighting starvation
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+at close quarters, I have looked at her and said to
+myself, &lsquo;What if I were in Dr. Sevier&#8217;s place?&rsquo; and it
+gave me strength to rise up and go on.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You were right.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know I was. I often wake now at night and turn
+and find the place by my side empty, and I can hardly
+keep from calling her aloud. It wrenches me, but before
+long I think she&#8217;s no such great distance away, since
+we&#8217;re both on the same earth together, and by and by
+she&#8217;ll be here at my side; and so it becomes easy to me
+once more.&rdquo; Richling, in the self-occupation of a lover,
+forgot what pains he might be inflicting. But the Doctor
+did not wince.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the physician, &ldquo;of course you wouldn&#8217;t
+want the separation to be painless; and it promises a
+reward, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; exclaimed Richling, with an exultant smile and
+motion of the head, and then dropped his eyes in meditation.
+The Doctor looked at him steadily.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, you&#8217;ve gathered some terribly hard experiences.
+But hard experiences are often the foundation-stones
+of a successful life. You can make them all
+profitable. You can make them draw you along, so to
+speak. But you must hold them well in hand, as you
+would a dangerous team, you know,&mdash;coolly and alertly,
+firmly and patiently,&mdash;and never let the reins slack till
+you&#8217;ve driven through the last gate.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling replied, with a pleasant nod, &ldquo;I believe I shall
+do it. Did you notice what I wrote you in my letter? I
+have got the notion strongly that the troubles we have
+gone through&mdash;Mary and I&mdash;were only our necessary
+preparation&mdash;not so necessary for her as for me&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier, and Richling continued, with a
+smile:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+&ldquo;To fit us for a long and useful life, and especially a
+life that will be full of kind and valuable services to the
+poor. If that isn&#8217;t what they were sent for&rdquo;&mdash;he dropped
+into a tone of reflection&mdash;&ldquo;then I don&#8217;t understand them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And suppose you don&#8217;t understand,&rdquo; said the Doctor,
+with his cold, grim look.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; rejoined Richling, in amiable protest;
+&ldquo;but a man would like to understand.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Like to&mdash;yes,&rdquo; replied the Doctor; &ldquo;but be careful.
+The spirit that <em>must</em> understand is the spirit that can&#8217;t
+trust.&rdquo; He paused. Presently he said, &ldquo;Richling!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling answered by an inquiring glance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Take better care of your health,&rdquo; said the physician.</p>
+
+<p>Richling smiled&mdash;a young man&#8217;s answer&mdash;and rose to
+say good-night.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>TO SIGH, YET FEEL NO PAIN.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley missed the Richlings, she said, more
+than tongue could tell. She had easily rented the
+rooms they left vacant; that was not the trouble. The
+new tenant was a sallow, gaunt, wind-dried seamstress of
+sixty, who paid her rent punctually, but who was&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mighty poor comp&#8217;ny to thim as&#8217;s been used to the
+upper tin, Mr. Ristofalo.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Still she was a protection. Mrs. Riley had not regarded
+this as a necessity in former days, but now, somehow,
+matters seemed different. This seamstress had, moreover,
+a son of eighteen years, principally skin and bone, who
+was hoping to be appointed assistant hostler at the fire-engine
+house of &ldquo;Volunteer One,&rdquo; and who meantime
+hung about Mrs. Riley&#8217;s dwelling and loved to relieve her
+of the care of little Mike. This also was something to be
+appreciated. Still there was a void.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mr. Richlin&#8217;!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Riley, as she opened
+her parlor door in response to a knock. &ldquo;Well, I&#8217;ll be
+switched! ha! ha! I didn&#8217;t think it was you at all. Take
+a seat and sit down!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was good to see how she enjoyed the visit. Whenever
+she listened to Richling&#8217;s words she rocked in her
+rocking-chair vigorously, and when she spoke stopped
+its motion and rested her elbows on its arms.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And how <em>is</em> Mrs. Richlin&#8217;? And so she sent her
+love to me, did she, now? The blessed angel! Now,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+ye&#8217;re not just a-makin&#8217; that up? No, I know ye wouldn&#8217;t
+do sich a thing as that, Mr. Richlin&#8217;. Well, you must
+give her mine back again. I&#8217;ve nobody else on e&#8217;rth to
+give ud to, and never will have.&rdquo; She lifted her nose
+with amiable stateliness, as if to imply that Richling
+might not believe this, but that it was true, nevertheless.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You may change your mind, Mrs. Riley, some day,&rdquo;
+returned Richling, a little archly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ha! ha!&rdquo; She tossed her head and laughed with
+good-natured scorn. &ldquo;Nivver a fear o&#8217; that, Mr. Richlin&#8217;!&rdquo;
+Her brogue was apt to broaden when pleasure
+pulled down her dignity. &ldquo;And, if I did, it wuddent be
+for the likes of no I-talian Dago, if id&#8217;s him ye&#8217;re
+a-dthrivin&#8217; at,&mdash;not intinding anny disrespect to your
+friend, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, and indeed I don&#8217;t deny he&#8217;s a perfect
+gintleman,&mdash;but, indeed, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, I&#8217;m just after
+thinkin&#8217; that you and yer lady wouldn&#8217;t have no self-respect
+for Kate Riley if she should be changing her name.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Still you were thinking about it,&rdquo; said Richling, with
+a twinkle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! ha! ha! Indeed I wasn&#8217;, an&#8217; ye needn&#8217; be t&#8217;rowin&#8217;
+anny o&#8217; yer slyness on me. Ye know ye&#8217;d have no self-respect
+fur me. No; now ye know ye wuddent,&mdash;wud ye?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mrs. Riley, of course we would. Why&mdash;why not?&rdquo;
+He stood in the door-way, about to take his leave.
+&ldquo;You may be sure we&#8217;ll always be glad of anything that
+will make you the happier.&rdquo; Mrs. Riley looked so grave
+that he checked his humor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But in the nixt life, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, how about that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There? I suppose we shall simply each love all in
+absolute perfection. We&#8217;ll&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We&#8217;ll never know the differ,&rdquo; interposed Mrs. Riley.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+&ldquo;That&#8217;s it,&rdquo; said Richling, smiling again. &ldquo;And so
+I say,&mdash;and I&#8217;ve always said,&mdash;if a person <em>feels</em> like
+marrying again, let him do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have ye, now? Well, ye&#8217;re just that good, Mr.
+Richlin&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he responded, trying to be grave, &ldquo;that&#8217;s about my measure.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Would <em>you</em> do ut?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, I wouldn&#8217;t. I couldn&#8217;t. But I should like&mdash;in
+good earnest, Mrs. Riley, I should like, now, the comfort
+of knowing that you were not to pass all the rest of your
+days in widowhood.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! ged out, Mr. Richlin&#8217;!&rdquo; She failed in her effort
+to laugh. &ldquo;Ah! ye&#8217;re sly!&rdquo; She changed her attitude
+and drew a breath.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;no, honestly. I should feel
+that you deserved better at this world&#8217;s hands than that,
+and that the world deserved better of you. I find two
+people don&#8217;t make a world, Mrs. Riley, though often they
+think they do. They certainly don&#8217;t when one is gone.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Riley, drawing back
+and waving her hand sweetly, &ldquo;stop yer flattery! Stop
+ud! Ah! ye&#8217;re a-feeling yer oats, Mr. Richlin&#8217;. An&#8217; ye&#8217;re
+a-showin&#8217; em too, ye air. Why, I hered ye was lookin&#8217;
+terrible, and here ye&#8217;re lookin&#8217; just splendud!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Who told you that?&rdquo; asked Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind! Never mind who he was&mdash;ha, ha, ha!&rdquo; She
+checked herself suddenly. &ldquo;Ah, me! It&#8217;s a
+shame for the likes o&#8217; me to be behavin&#8217; that foolish!&rdquo;
+She put on additional dignity. &ldquo;I will always be the
+Widow Riley.&rdquo; Then relaxing again into sweetness:
+&ldquo;Marridge is a lottery, Mr. Richlin&#8217;; indeed an&#8217; it is;
+and ye know mighty well that he ye&#8217;re after joking me
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+about is no more nor a fri&#8217;nd.&rdquo; She looked sweet enough
+for somebody to kiss.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know so certainly about that,&rdquo; said her visitor,
+stepping down upon the sidewalk and putting on his
+hat. &ldquo;If I may judge by&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He paused and glanced
+at the window.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, now, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, na-na-now, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, ye
+daurn&#8217;t say ud! Ye daurn&#8217;t!&rdquo; She smiled and blushed
+and arched her neck and rose and sank upon herself with
+sweet delight.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I say if I may judge by what he has said to me,&rdquo;
+insisted Richling.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley glided down across the door-step, and, with
+all the insinuation of her sex and nation, demanded:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What&#8217;d he tell ye? Ah! he didn&#8217;t tell ye nawthing!
+Ha, ha! there wasn&#8217; nawthing to tell!&rdquo; But Richling
+slipped away.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley shook her finger: &ldquo;Ah, ye&#8217;re a wicket joker,
+Mr. Richlin&#8217;. I didn&#8217;t think that o&#8217; the likes of a gintleman
+like you, anyhow!&rdquo; She shook her finger again as
+she withdrew into the house, smiling broadly all the way
+in to the cradle, where she kissed and kissed again her
+ruddy, chubby, sleeping boy.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Ristofalo came often. He was a man of simple words,
+and of few thoughts of the kind that were available in
+conversation; but his personal adventures had begun almost
+with infancy, and followed one another in close and strange
+succession over lands and seas ever since. He could therefore
+talk best about himself, though he talked modestly.
+&ldquo;These things to hear would Desdemona seriously incline,&rdquo;
+and there came times when even a tear was not wanting to
+gem the poetry of the situation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And ye might have saved yerself from all that,&rdquo; was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+sometimes her note of sympathy. But when he asked
+how she silently dried her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes his experiences had been intensely ludicrous,
+and Mrs. Riley would laugh until in pure self-oblivion she
+smote her thigh with her palm, or laid her hand so smartly
+against his shoulder as to tip him half off his seat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ye didn&#8217;t!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! Get out wid ye, Raphael Ristofalo,&mdash;to be
+telling me that for the trooth!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>At one such time she was about to give him a second
+push, but he took the hand in his, and quietly kept it to
+the end of his story.</p>
+
+<p>He lingered late that evening, but at length took his hat
+from under his chair, rose, and extended his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Man alive!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;that&#8217;s my <em>hand</em>, sur, I&#8217;d
+have ye to know. Begahn wid ye! Lookut heere!
+What&#8217;s the reason ye make it so long atween yer visits,
+eh? Tell me that. Ah&mdash;ah&mdash;ye&#8217;ve no need fur to tell
+me, Mr. Ristofalo! Ah&mdash;now don&#8217;t tell a lie!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Too busy. Come all time&mdash;wasn&#8217;t too busy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, ha! Yes, yes; ye&#8217;re too busy. Of coorse ye&#8217;re
+too busy. Oh, yes! ye <em>air</em> too busy&mdash;a-courtin&#8217; thim
+I-talian froot gerls around the Frinch Mairket. Ah! I&#8217;ll
+bet two bits ye&#8217;re a bouncer! Ah, don&#8217;t tell me. I know
+ye, ye villain! Some o&#8217; thim&#8217;s a-waitin&#8217; fur ye now, ha,
+ha! Go! And don&#8217;t ye nivver come back heere anny
+more. D&#8217;ye mind?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Aw righ&#8217;.&rdquo; The Italian took her hand for the third
+time and held it, standing in his simple square way before
+her and wearing his gentle smile as he looked her in the
+eye. &ldquo;Good-by, Kate.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Her eye quailed. Her hand pulled a little helplessly
+and in a meek voice she said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+&ldquo;That&#8217;s not right for you to do me that a-way, Mr.
+Ristofalo. I&#8217;ve got a handle to my name, sur.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She threw some gentle rebuke into her glance, and
+turned it upon him. He met it with that same amiable
+absence of emotion that was always in his look.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Kate too short by itself?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Aw righ&#8217;;
+make it Kate Ristofalo.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mrs. Riley, averting and drooping her
+face.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Take good care of you,&rdquo; said the Italian; &ldquo;you and
+Mike. Always be kind. Good care.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Riley turned with sudden fervor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good cayre!&mdash;Mr. Ristofalo,&rdquo; she exclaimed, lifting
+her free hand and touching her bosom with the points of
+her fingers, &ldquo;ye don&#8217;t know the hairt of a woman, surr!
+No-o-o, surr! It&#8217;s <em>love</em> we wants! &lsquo;The hairt as has trooly
+loved nivver furgits, but as trooly loves ahn to the tlose!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Italian; &ldquo;yes,&rdquo; nodding and ever
+smiling, &ldquo;dass aw righ&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But she:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! it&#8217;s no use fur you to be a-talkin&#8217; an&#8217; a-pallaverin&#8217;
+to Kate Riley when ye don&#8217;t be lovin&#8217; her, Mr.
+Ristofalo, an&#8217; ye know ye don&#8217;t.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A tear glistened in her eye.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, love you,&rdquo; said the Italian; &ldquo;course, love you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He did not move a foot or change the expression of a
+feature.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;H-yes!&rdquo; said the widow. &ldquo;H-yes!&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;H-yes,
+a little! A little, Mr. Ristofalo! But I want&rdquo;&mdash;she
+pressed her hand hard upon her bosom, and raised
+her eyes aloft&mdash;&ldquo;I want to be&mdash;h&mdash;h&mdash;h-adaured
+above all the e&#8217;rth!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Aw righ&#8217;,&rdquo; said Ristofalo; &ldquo;das aw righ&#8217;; yes&mdash;door
+above all you worth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Raphael Ristofalo,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;ye&#8217;re a-deceivin&#8217; me!
+Ye came heere whin nobody axed ye,&mdash;an&#8217; that ye know
+is a fact, surr,&mdash;an&#8217; made yerself agree&#8217;ble to a poor,
+unsuspectin&#8217; widdah, an&#8217; [<em>tears</em>] rabbed me o&#8217; mie hairt,
+ye did; whin I nivver intinded to git married ag&#8217;in.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t cry, Kate&mdash;Kate Ristofalo,&rdquo; quietly observed
+the Italian, getting an arm around her waist, and laying
+a hand on the farther cheek. &ldquo;Kate Ristofalo.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Shut!&rdquo; she exclaimed, turning with playful fierceness,
+and proudly drawing back her head; &ldquo;shut! Hah!
+It&#8217;s Kate Ristofalo, is it? Ah, ye think so? Hah-h!
+It&#8217;ll be ad least two weeks yet before the priest will be
+after giving you the right to call me that!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And, in fact, an entire fortnight did pass before they
+were married.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>WHAT NAME?</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Richling in Dr. Sevier&#8217;s library, one evening in
+early May, gave him great amusement by an account
+of the Ristofalo-Riley wedding. He had attended it only
+the night before. The Doctor had received an invitation,
+but had pleaded previous engagements.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I am glad you went,&rdquo; he said to Richling; &ldquo;however,
+go on with your account.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! I was glad to go. And I&#8217;m certainly glad I went.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling proceeded with the recital. The Doctor
+smiled. It was very droll,&mdash;the description of persons
+and costumes. Richling was quite another than his usual
+restrained self this evening. Oddly enough, too, for this
+was but his second visit; the confinement of his work was
+almost like an imprisonment, it was so constant. The
+Doctor had never seen him in just such a glow. He even
+mimicked the brogue of two or three Irish gentlemen, and
+the soft, outlandish swing in the English of one or two
+Sicilians. He did it all so well that, when he gave an
+instance of some of the broad Hibernian repartee he had
+heard, the Doctor actually laughed audibly. One of his
+young-lady cousins on some pretext opened a door, and
+stole a glance within to see what could have produced a
+thing so extraordinary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come in, Laura; come in! Tell Bess to come in.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor introduced Richling with due ceremony
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+Richling could not, of course, after this accession of
+numbers, go on being funny. The mistake was trivial,
+but all saw it. Still the meeting was pleasant. The girls
+were very intelligent and vivacious. Richling found a
+certain refreshment in their graceful manners, like what
+we sometimes feel in catching the scent of some long-forgotten
+perfume. They had not been told all his history,
+but had heard enough to make them curious to see
+and speak to him. They were evidently pleased with
+him, and Dr. Sevier, observing this, betrayed an air that
+was much like triumph. But after a while they went as
+they had come.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said Richling, smiling until Dr. Sevier wondered
+silently what possessed the fellow, &ldquo;excuse me for
+bringing this here. But I find it so impossible to get to
+your office&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He moved nearer the Doctor&#8217;s table and
+put his hand into his bosom.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What&#8217;s that?&rdquo; asked the Doctor, frowning heavily.
+Richling smiled still broader than before.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This is a statement,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of what?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of the various loans you have made me, with interest to date.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; said the Doctor, frigidly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And here,&rdquo; persisted the happy man, straightening
+out a leg as he had done the first time they ever met,
+and drawing a roll of notes from his pocket, &ldquo;is the total amount.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; The Doctor regarded them with cold contempt.
+&ldquo;That&#8217;s all very pleasant for you, I suppose,
+Richling,&mdash;shows you&#8217;re the right kind of man, I suppose,
+and so on. I know that already, however. Now
+just put all that back into your pocket; the sight of it
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+isn&#8217;t pleasant. You certainly don&#8217;t imagine I&#8217;m going
+to take it, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You promised to take it when you lent it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Humph! Well, I didn&#8217;t say when.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;As soon as I could pay it,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t remember,&rdquo; replied the Doctor, picking up a
+newspaper. &ldquo;I release myself from that promise.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t release you,&rdquo; persisted Richling;
+&ldquo;neither does Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor was quiet awhile before he answered. He
+crossed his knees, a moment after folded his arms, and
+presently said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Foolish pride, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We know that,&rdquo; replied Richling; &ldquo;we don&#8217;t deny
+that that feeling creeps in. But we&#8217;d never do anything
+that&#8217;s right if we waited for an unmixed motive, would
+we?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then you think my motive&mdash;in refusing it&mdash;is
+mixed, probably.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ho-o-oh!&rdquo; laughed Richling. The gladness within
+him would break through. &ldquo;Why, Doctor, nothing could
+be more different. It doesn&#8217;t seem to me as though you
+ever had a mixed motive.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor did not answer. He seemed to think the
+same thing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We know very well, Doctor, that if we should accept
+this kindness we might do it in a spirit of proper and
+commendable&mdash;a&mdash;humble-mindedness. But it isn&#8217;t
+mere pride that makes us insist.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo; asked the Doctor, cruelly. &ldquo;What is it else?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I hardly know what to call it, except that it&#8217;s
+a conviction that&mdash;well, that to pay is best; that it&#8217;s the
+nearest to justice we can get, and that&rdquo;&mdash;he spoke faster&mdash;&ldquo;that
+it&#8217;s simply duty to choose justice when we can
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+and mercy when we must. There, I&#8217;ve hit it out!&rdquo; He
+laughed again. &ldquo;Don&#8217;t you see, Doctor? Justice when
+we may&mdash;mercy when we must! It&#8217;s your own principles!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked straight at the mantel-piece as he
+asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where did you get that idea?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know; partly from nowhere, and&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Partly from Mary,&rdquo; interrupted the Doctor. He put
+out his long white palm. &ldquo;It&#8217;s all right. Give me the
+money.&rdquo; Richling counted it into his hand. He rolled
+it up and stuffed it into his portemonnaie.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You like to part with your hard earnings, do you, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Earnings can&#8217;t be hard,&rdquo; was the reply;
+&ldquo;it&#8217;s borrowings that are hard.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor assented.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And, of course,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;I enjoy paying old debts.&rdquo;
+He stood and leaned his head in his hand with his elbow on
+the mantel. &ldquo;But, even aside from that, I&#8217;m happy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I see you are!&rdquo; remarked the physician, emphatically,
+catching the arms of his chair and drawing his feet closer
+in. &ldquo;You&#8217;ve been smiling worse than a boy with a love-letter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve been hoping you&#8217;d ask me what&#8217;s the matter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, Richling, what is the matter?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary has a daughter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What!&rdquo; cried the Doctor, springing up with a radiant
+face, and grasping Richling&#8217;s hand in both his own.</p>
+
+<p>Richling laughed aloud, nodded, laughed again, and
+gave either eye a quick, energetic wipe with all his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; he said, as the physician sank back into his
+chair, &ldquo;we want to name&rdquo;&mdash;he hesitated, stood on one
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+foot and leaned again against the shelf&mdash;&ldquo;we want to
+call her by the name of&mdash;if we may&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked up as if with alarm, and John said,
+timidly,&mdash;&ldquo;Alice!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier&#8217;s eyes&mdash;what was the matter? His mouth
+quivered. He nodded and whispered huskily:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>After a long pause Richling expressed the opinion
+that he had better be going, and the Doctor did not indicate
+any difference of conviction. At the door the
+Doctor asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If the fever should break out this summer, Richling,
+will you go away?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>PESTILENCE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>On the twentieth of June, 1858, an incident occurred
+in New Orleans which challenged special attention
+from the medical profession. Before the month closed
+there was a second, similar to the first. The press did
+not give such matters to the public in those days; it
+would only make the public&mdash;the advertising public&mdash;angry.
+Times have changed since&mdash;faced clear about:
+but at that period Dr. Sevier, who hated a secret only
+less than a falsehood, was right in speaking as he did.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now you&#8217;ll see,&rdquo; he said, pointing downward aslant,
+&ldquo;the whole community stick its head in the sand!&rdquo; He
+sent for Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I give you fair warning,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It&#8217;s coming.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t cases occur sometimes in an isolated way without&mdash;anything
+further?&rdquo; asked Richling, with a promptness
+which showed he had already been considering the
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And might not this&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, I give you fair warning.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have you sent your cousins away, Doctor?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They go to-morrow.&rdquo; After a silence the Doctor
+added: &ldquo;I tell you now, because this is the time to
+decide what you will do. If you are not prepared to take
+all the risks and stay them through, you had better go at
+once.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+&ldquo;What proportion of those who are taken sick of it die?&rdquo; asked Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The proportion varies in different seasons; say about
+one in seven or eight. But your chances would be
+hardly so good, for you&#8217;re not strong, Richling, nor well
+either.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling stood and swung his hat against his knee.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I really don&#8217;t see, Doctor, that I have any choice at
+all. I couldn&#8217;t go to Mary&mdash;when she has but just come
+through a mother&#8217;s pains and dangers&mdash;and say, &lsquo;I&#8217;ve
+thrown away seven good chances of life to run away from
+one bad one.&rsquo; Why, to say nothing else, Reisen can&#8217;t
+spare me.&rdquo; He smiled with boyish vanity.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Richling, that&#8217;s silly!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I know it,&rdquo; exclaimed the other, quickly; &ldquo;I
+see it is. If he could spare me, of course he wouldn&#8217;t be
+paying me a salary.&rdquo; But the Doctor silenced him by a
+gesture.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The question is not whether he can spare you, at all.
+It&#8217;s simply, can you spare him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Without violating any pledge, you mean,&rdquo; added
+Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; assented the physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I can&#8217;t spare him, Doctor. He has given me a
+hold on life, and no one chance in seven, or six, or five
+is going to shake me loose. Why, I tell you I couldn&#8217;t
+look Mary in the face!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have your own way,&rdquo; responded the Doctor. &ldquo;There
+are some things in your favor. You frail fellows often
+pull through easier than the big, full-blooded ones.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&#8217;s Mary&#8217;s way too, I feel certain!&rdquo; retorted
+Richling, gayly, &ldquo;and I venture to say&rdquo;&mdash;he coughed
+and smiled again&mdash;&ldquo;it&#8217;s yours.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t say it wasn&#8217;t,&rdquo; replied the unsmiling Doctor,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+reaching for a pen and writing a prescription. &ldquo;Here;
+get that and take it according to direction. It&#8217;s for that
+cold.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If I should take the fever,&rdquo; said Richling, coming
+out of a revery, &ldquo;Mary will want to come to me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, she mustn&#8217;t come a step!&rdquo; exclaimed the
+Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ll forbid it, will you not, Doctor? Pledge me!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I do better, sir; I pledge myself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>So the July suns rose up and moved across the beautiful
+blue sky; the moon went through all her majestic
+changes; on thirty-one successive midnights the Star
+Bakery sent abroad its grateful odors of bread, and as
+the last night passed into the first twinkling hour of
+morning the month chronicled one hundred and thirty-one
+deaths from yellow fever. The city shuddered because
+it knew, and because it did not know, what was in
+store. People began to fly by hundreds, and then by
+thousands. Many were overtaken and stricken down as
+they fled. Still men plied their vocations, children played
+in the streets, and the days came and went, fair, blue
+tremulous with sunshine, or cool and gray and sweet with
+summer rain. How strange it was for nature to be so
+beautiful and so unmoved! By and by one could not
+look down a street, on this hand or on that, but he saw a
+funeral. Doctors&#8217; gigs began to be hailed on the streets
+and to refuse to stop, and houses were pointed out that
+had just become the scenes of strange and harrowing
+episodes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you see that bakery,&mdash;the &lsquo;Star Bakery&rsquo;? Five
+funerals from that place&mdash;and another goes this afternoon.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Before this was said August had completed its record
+of eleven hundred deaths, and September had begun the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+long list that was to add twenty-two hundred more.
+Reisen had been the first one ill in the establishment.
+He had been losing friends,&mdash;one every few days; and
+he thought it only plain duty, let fear or prudence say
+what they might, to visit them at their bedsides and
+follow them to their tombs. It was not only the outer
+man of Reisen, but the heart as well, that was elephantine.
+He had at length come home from one of these
+funerals with pains in his back and limbs, and the various
+familiar accompaniments.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I feel right clumsy,&rdquo; he said, as he lifted his great
+feet and lowered them into the mustard foot-bath.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor Sevier,&rdquo; said Richling, as he and the physician
+paused half way between the sick-chambers of Reisen
+and his wife, &ldquo;I hope you&#8217;ll not think it foolhardy for
+me to expose myself by nursing these people&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the veteran, in a tone of indifference, and
+passed on; the tincture of self-approval that had &ldquo;mixed&rdquo;
+with Richling&#8217;s motives went away to nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Both Reisen and his wife recovered. But an apple-cheeked
+brother of the baker, still in a green cap and
+coat that he had come in from Germany, was struck from
+the first with that mortal terror which is so often an evil
+symptom of the disease, and died, on the fifth day after
+his attack, in raging delirium. Ten of the workmen,
+bakers and others, followed him. Richling alone, of all
+in the establishment, while the sick lay scattered through
+the town on uncounted thousands of beds, and the month
+of October passed by, bringing death to eleven hundred
+more, escaped untouched of the scourge.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can&#8217;t understand it,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Demand an immediate explanation,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier,
+with sombre irony.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+How did others fare? Ristofalo had, time and again,
+sailed with the fever, nursed it, slept with it. It passed
+him by again. Little Mike took it, lay two or three days
+very still in his mother&#8217;s strong arms, and recovered.
+Madame Ristofalo had had it in &ldquo;fifty-three.&rdquo; She
+became a heroic nurse to many, and saved life after life
+among the poor.</p>
+
+<p>The trials of those days enriched John Richling in the
+acquaintanceship and esteem of Sister Jane&#8217;s little lisping
+rector. And, by the way, none of those with whom Dr.
+Sevier dined on that darkest night of Richling&#8217;s life
+became victims. The rector had never encountered the
+disease before, but when Sister Jane and the banker, and
+the banker&#8217;s family and friends, and thousands of others,
+fled, he ran toward it, David-like, swordless and armorless.
+He and Richling were nearly of equal age. Three
+times, four times, and again, they met at dying-beds.
+They became fond of each other.</p>
+
+<p>Another brave nurse was Narcisse. Dr. Sevier, it is
+true, could not get rid of the conviction for years afterward
+that one victim would have lived had not Narcisse
+talked him to death. But in general, where there was
+some one near to prevent his telling all his discoveries
+and inventions, he did good service, and accompanied it
+with very chivalric emotions.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh,&rdquo; he said, with a strutting attitude that somehow
+retained a sort of modesty, &ldquo;I &#8217;ad the gweatess
+success. Hah! a nuss is a nuss those time&#8217;. Only some
+time&#8217; &#8217;e&#8217;s not. &#8217;Tis accawding to the povvub,&mdash;what is
+that povvub, now, ag&#8217;in?&rdquo; The proverb did not answer
+his call, and he waved it away. &ldquo;Yesseh, eve&#8217;ybody
+wanting me at once&mdash;couldn&#8217; supply the deman&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling listened to him with new pleasure and rising
+esteem.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You make me envy you,&rdquo; he exclaimed, honestly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I s&#8217;pose you may say so, Mistoo Itchlin, faw I
+nevva nuss a sing-le one w&#8217;at din paid me ten dollahs a
+night. Of co&#8217;se! &lsquo;Consistency, thou awt a jew&#8217;l.&rsquo; It&#8217;s
+juz as the povvub says, &lsquo;All work an&#8217; no pay keep Jack
+a small boy.&rsquo; An&#8217; yet,&rdquo; he hurriedly added, remembering
+his indebtedness to his auditor, &ldquo;&#8217;tis aztonizhin&#8217; &#8217;ow &#8217;tis
+expensive to live. I haven&#8217; got a picayune of that money
+pwesently! I&#8217;m aztonizh&#8217; myseff!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>&ldquo;I MUST BE CRUEL ONLY TO BE KIND.&rdquo;</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The plague grew sated and feeble. One morning
+frost sent a flight of icy arrows into the town, and it
+vanished. The swarthy girls and lads that sauntered
+homeward behind their mothers&#8217; cows across the wide
+suburban stretches of marshy commons heard again the
+deep, unbroken, cataract roar of the reawakened city.</p>
+
+<p>We call the sea cruel, seeing its waters dimple and
+smile where yesterday they dashed in pieces the ship that
+was black with men, women, and children. But what
+shall we say of those billows of human life, of which we
+are ourselves a part, that surge over the graves of its own
+dead with dances and laughter and many a coquetry, with
+panting chase for gain and preference, and pious regrets
+and tender condolences for the thousands that died
+yesterday&mdash;and need not have died?</p>
+
+<p>Such were the questions Dr. Sevier asked himself as he
+laid down the newspaper full of congratulations upon the
+return of trade&#8217;s and fashion&#8217;s boisterous flow, and praises
+of the deeds of benevolence and mercy that had abounded
+throughout the days of anguish.</p>
+
+<p>Certain currents in these human rapids had driven
+Richling and the Doctor wide apart. But at last, one
+day, Richling entered the office with a cheerfulness of
+countenance something overdone, and indicative to the
+Doctor&#8217;s eye of inward trepidation.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; he said hurriedly, &ldquo;preparing to leave the
+office? It was the only moment I could command&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-morning, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve been trying every day for a week to get down
+here,&rdquo; said Richling, drawing out a paper. &ldquo;Doctor&rdquo;&mdash;with
+his eyes on the paper, which he had begun to unfold.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;It was the Doctor&#8217;s hardest voice.
+Richling looked up at him as a child looks at a thundercloud.
+The Doctor pointed to the document:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is that a subscription paper?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You needn&#8217;t unfold it, Richling.&rdquo; The Doctor made
+a little pushing motion at it with his open hand. &ldquo;From
+whom does it come?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling gave a name. He had not changed color when
+the Doctor looked black, but now he did; for Dr. Sevier
+smiled. It was terrible.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not the little preacher that lisps?&rdquo; asked the physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He lisps sometimes,&rdquo; said Richling, with resentful
+subsidence of tone and with dropped eyes, preparing to
+return the paper to his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Wait,&rdquo; said the Doctor, more gravely, arresting the
+movement with his index finger. &ldquo;What is it for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s for the aid of an asylum overcrowded with
+orphans in consequence of the late epidemic.&rdquo; There
+was still a tightness in Richling&#8217;s throat, a faint bitterness
+in his tone, a spark of indignation in his eye. But these
+the Doctor ignored. He reached out his hand, took the
+folded paper gently from Richling, crossed his knees, and,
+resting his elbows on them and shaking the paper in a
+prefatory way, spoke:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, in old times we used to go into monasteries;
+now we subscribe to orphan asylums. Nine months ago
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+I warned this community that if it didn&#8217;t take the necessary
+precautions against the foul contagion that has since
+swept over us it would pay for its wicked folly in the lives
+of thousands and the increase of fatherless and helpless
+children. I didn&#8217;t know it would come this year, but I
+knew it might come any year. Richling, we deserved it!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling had never seen his friend in so forbidding an
+aspect. He had come to him boyishly elated with the
+fancied excellence and goodness and beauty of the task
+he had assumed, and a perfect confidence that his noble
+benefactor would look upon him with pride and upon the
+scheme with generous favor. When he had offered to
+present the paper to Dr. Sevier he had not understood
+the little rector&#8217;s marked alacrity in accepting his service.
+Now it was plain enough. He was well-nigh dumfounded.
+The responses that came from him came mechanically,
+and in the manner of one who wards off unmerited buffetings
+from one whose unkindness may not be resented.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You can&#8217;t think that only those died who were to
+blame?&rdquo; he asked, helplessly; and the Doctor&#8217;s answer
+came back instantly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ho, no! look at the hundreds of little graves! No,
+sir. If only those who were to blame had been stricken,
+I should think the Judgment wasn&#8217;t far off. Talk of
+God&#8217;s mercy in times of health! There&#8217;s no greater evidence
+of it than to see him, in these awful visitations,
+refusing still to discriminate between the innocent and
+the guilty! Richling, only Infinite Mercy joined to Infinite
+Power, with infinite command of the future, could so
+forbear!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling could not answer. The Doctor unfolded the
+paper and began to read: &ldquo;&lsquo;God, in his mysterious
+providence&rsquo;&mdash;O sir!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+&ldquo;What!&rdquo; demanded Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O sir, what a foul, false charge! There&#8217;s nothing
+mysterious about it. We&#8217;ve trampled the book of Nature&#8217;s
+laws in the mire of our streets, and dragged her penalties
+down upon our heads! Why, Richling,&rdquo;&mdash;he shifted
+his attitude, and laid the edge of one hand upon the paper
+that lay in the other, with the air of commencing a demonstration,&mdash;&ldquo;you&#8217;re
+a Bible man, eh? Well, yes, I think
+you are; but I want you never to forget that the book of
+Nature has its commandments, too; and the man who
+sins against <em>them</em> is a sinner. There&#8217;s no dispensation of
+mercy in that Scripture to Jew or Gentile, though the God
+of Mercy wrote it with his own finger. A community has
+got to know those laws and keep them, or take the consequences&mdash;and
+take them here and now&mdash;on this globe&mdash;<em>presently</em>!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You mean, then,&rdquo; said Richling, extending his hand
+for the return of the paper, &ldquo;that those whose negligence
+filled the asylums should be the ones to subscribe.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the Doctor, &ldquo;yes!&rdquo; drew back his
+hand with the paper still in it, turned to his desk, opened
+the list, and wrote. Richling&#8217;s eyes followed the pen;
+his heart came slowly up into his throat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doc&mdash;Doctor, that&#8217;s more than any one else has&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They have probably made some mistake,&rdquo; said
+Dr. Sevier, rubbing the blotting-paper with his finger.
+&ldquo;Richling, do you think it&#8217;s your mission to be a philanthropist?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&#8217;t it everybody&#8217;s mission?&rdquo; replied Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s not what I asked you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you ask a question,&rdquo; said Richling, smiling down
+upon the subscription-paper as he folded it, &ldquo;that nobody
+would like to answer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Very well, then, you needn&#8217;t answer. But, Richling,&rdquo;&mdash;he
+pointed his long finger to the pocket of Richling&#8217;s
+coat, where the subscription-list had disappeared,&mdash;&ldquo;this
+sort of work&mdash;whether you distinctly propose to be a
+philanthropist or not&mdash;is right, of course. It&#8217;s good.
+But it&#8217;s the mere alphabet of beneficence. Richling,
+whenever philanthropy takes the <em>guise</em> of philanthropy,
+look out. Confine your philanthropy&mdash;you can&#8217;t do it
+entirely, but as much as you can&mdash;confine your philanthropy
+to the <em>motive</em>. It&#8217;s the temptation of philanthropists
+to set aside the natural constitution of society
+wherever it seems out of order, and substitute some
+philanthropic machinery in its place. It&#8217;s all wrong,
+Richling. Do as a good doctor would. Help nature.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling looked down askance, pushed his fingers
+through his hair perplexedly, drew a deep breath, lifted
+his eyes to the Doctor&#8217;s again, smiled incredulously, and
+rubbed his brow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You don&#8217;t see it?&rdquo; asked the physician, in a tone of
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Doctor,&rdquo;&mdash;throwing up a despairing hand,&mdash;&ldquo;we&#8217;re
+miles apart. I don&#8217;t see how any work could be
+nobler. It looks to me&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;But Dr. Sevier interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&mdash;From an emotional stand-point, Richling. Richling,&rdquo;&mdash;he
+changed his attitude again,&mdash;&ldquo;if you <em>want</em>
+to be a philanthropist, be cold-blooded.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling laughed outright, but not heartily.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said his friend, with a shrug, as if he dismissed
+the whole matter. But when Richling moved, as
+if to rise, he restrained him. &ldquo;Stop! I know you&#8217;re in
+a hurry, but you may tell Reisen to blame me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s not Reisen so much as it&#8217;s the work,&rdquo; replied
+Richling, but settled down again in his seat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, human benevolence&mdash;public benevolence&mdash;in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
+its beginning was a mere nun on the battle-field, binding
+up wounds and wiping the damp from dying brows.
+But since then it has had time and opportunity to become
+strong, bold, masculine, potential. Once it had only the
+knowledge and power to alleviate evil consequences; now
+it has both the knowledge and the power to deal with evil
+causes. Now, I say to you, leave this emotional A B C
+of human charity to nuns and mite societies. It&#8217;s a good
+work; let them do it. Give them money, if you can.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I see what you mean&mdash;I think,&rdquo; said Richling,
+slowly, and with a pondering eye.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m glad if you do,&rdquo; rejoined the Doctor, visibly
+relieved.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But that only throws a heavier responsibility upon
+strong men, if I understand it,&rdquo; said Richling, half interrogatively.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly! Upon strong spirits, male or female.
+Upon spirits that can drive the axe low down into the
+causes of things, again and again and again, steadily, patiently,
+until at last some great evil towering above them
+totters and falls crashing to the earth, to be cut to pieces
+and burned in the fire. Richling, gather fagots for pastime
+if you like, though it&#8217;s poor fun; but don&#8217;t think that&#8217;s
+your mission! <em>Don&#8217;t</em> be a fagot-gatherer! What are you
+smiling at?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Your good opinion of me,&rdquo; answered Richling.
+&ldquo;Doctor, I don&#8217;t believe I&#8217;m fit for anything but a fagot-gatherer.
+But I&#8217;m willing to try.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, bah!&rdquo; The Doctor admired such humility as
+little as it deserved. &ldquo;Richling, reduce the number of
+helpless orphans! Dig out the old roots of calamity! A
+spoon is not what you want; you want a <em>mattock</em>. Reduce
+crime and vice! Reduce squalor! Reduce the poor man&#8217;s
+death-rate! Improve his tenements! Improve his hospitals!
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+Carry sanitation into his workshops! Teach the
+trades! Prepare the poor for possible riches, and the
+rich for possible poverty! Ah&mdash;ah&mdash;Richling, I preach
+well enough, I think, but in practice I have missed it
+myself! Don&#8217;t repeat my error!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, but you haven&#8217;t missed it!&rdquo; cried Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but I have,&rdquo; said the Doctor. &ldquo;Here I am,
+telling you to let your philanthropy be cold-blooded;
+why, I&#8217;ve always been hot-blooded.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I like the hot best,&rdquo; said Richling, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You ought to hate it,&rdquo; replied his friend. &ldquo;It&#8217;s
+been the root of all your troubles. Richling, God Almighty
+is unimpassioned. If he wasn&#8217;t he&#8217;d be weak.
+You remember Young&#8217;s line: &lsquo;A God all mercy is a God
+unjust.&rsquo; The time has come when beneficence, to be real,
+must operate scientifically, not emotionally. Emotion is
+good; but it must follow, not guide. Here! I&#8217;ll give
+you a single instance. Emotion never sells where it can
+give: that is an old-fashioned, effete benevolence. The
+new, the cold-blooded, is incomparably better: it never&mdash;to
+individual or to community&mdash;gives where it can sell.
+Your instincts have applied the rule to yourself; apply it
+to your fellow-man.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Richling, promptly, &ldquo;that&#8217;s another thing.
+It&#8217;s not my business to apply it to them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It <em>is</em> your business to apply it to them. You have
+no right to do less.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what will men say of me? At least&mdash;not that, but&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor pointed upward. &ldquo;They will say, &lsquo;I
+know thee, that thou art an hard man.&rsquo;&rdquo; His voice
+trembled. &ldquo;But, Richling,&rdquo; he resumed with fresh firmness,
+&ldquo;if you want to lead a long and useful life,&mdash;you
+say you do,&mdash;you must take my advice; you must deny
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+yourself for a while; you must shelve these fine notions
+for a time. I tell you once more, you must endeavor to
+re&euml;stablish your health as it was before&mdash;before they
+locked you up, you know. When that is done you can
+commence right there if you choose; I wish you would.
+Give the public&mdash;sell would be better, but it will hardly
+buy&mdash;a prison system less atrocious, less destructive of
+justice, and less promotive of crime and vice, than the
+one it has. By-the-by, I suppose you know that Raphael
+Ristofalo went to prison last night again?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling sprang to his feet. &ldquo;For what? He hasn&#8217;t&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir; he has discovered the man who robbed him,
+and has killed him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling started away, but halted as the Doctor spoke
+again, rising from his seat and shaking out his legs.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s not suffering any hardship. He&#8217;s shrewd, you
+know,&mdash;has made arrangements with the keeper by
+which he secures very comfortable quarters. The star-chamber,
+I think they call the room he is in. He&#8217;ll suffer
+very little restraint. Good-day!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He turned, as Richling left, to get his own hat and
+gloves. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he thought, as he passed slowly downstairs
+to his carriage, &ldquo;I have erred.&rdquo; He was not only
+teaching, he was learning. To fight evil was not enough.
+People who wanted help for orphans did not come to him&mdash;they
+sent. They drew back from him as a child
+shrinks from a soldier. Even Alice, his buried Alice,
+had wept with delight when he gave her a smile, and
+trembled with fear at his frown. To fight evil is not
+enough. Everybody seemed to feel as though that were
+a war against himself. Oh for some one always to understand&mdash;never
+to fear&mdash;the frowning good intention of the lonely man!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>&ldquo;PETTENT PRATE.&rdquo;</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It was about the time, in January, when clerks and
+correspondents were beginning to write &#8217;59 without
+first getting it &#8217;58, that Dr. Sevier, as one morning he approached
+his office, noticed with some grim amusement,
+standing among the brokers and speculators of Carondelet
+street, the baker, Reisen. He was earnestly conversing
+with and bending over a small, alert fellow, in a rakish
+beaver and very smart coat, with the blue flowers of
+modesty bunched saucily in one button-hole.</p>
+
+<p>Almost at the same moment Reisen saw the Doctor.
+He called his name aloud, and for all his ungainly bulk
+would have run directly to the carriage in the middle of
+the street, only that the Doctor made believe not to see,
+and in a moment was out of reach. But when, two or
+three hours later, the same vehicle came, tipping somewhat
+sidewise against the sidewalk at the Charity Hospital
+gate, and the Doctor stepped from it, there stood
+Reisen in waiting.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Toctor,&rdquo; he said, approaching and touching his hat,
+&ldquo;I like to see you a minudt, uff you bleace, shtrict prifut.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They moved slowly down the unfrequented sidewalk,
+along the garden wall.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Before you begin, Reisen, I want to ask you a question.
+I&#8217;ve noticed for a month past that Mr. Richling
+rides in your bread-carts alongside the drivers on their
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+rounds. Don&#8217;t you know you ought not to require such a
+thing as that from a person like Mr. Richling? Mr.
+Richling&#8217;s a gentleman, Reisen, and you make him mount
+up in those bread-carts, and jump out every few minutes
+to deliver bread!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor&#8217;s blood was not cold.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vell, now!&rdquo; drawled the baker, as the corners of
+his mouth retreated toward the back of his neck, &ldquo;end&#8217;t
+tat teh funn&#8217;est ting, ennahow! Vhy, tat iss yoost teh
+ferra ting fot I comin&#8217; to shpeak mit you apowdt udt!&rdquo;
+He halted and looked at the Doctor to see how this coincidence
+struck him; but the Doctor merely moved on.
+&ldquo;<em>I</em> toant make him too udt,&rdquo; he continued, starting
+again; &ldquo;he cumps to me sindts apowdt two-o-o mundts
+aco&mdash;ven I shtill feelin&#8217; a liddle veak, yet, fun teh yalla-feewa&mdash;undt
+yoost paygs me to let um too udt. &lsquo;Mr.
+Richlun,&rsquo; sayss I to him, &lsquo;I toandt kin untershtayndt for
+vot you vawndts to too sich a ritickliss, Mr. Richlun!&rsquo;
+Ovver he sayss, &lsquo;Mr. Reisen,&rsquo;&mdash;he alvays callss me
+&lsquo;Mister,&rsquo; undt tat iss one dting in puttickly vot I alvays
+tit li-i-iked apowdt Mr. Richlun,&mdash;&lsquo;Mr. Reisen,&rsquo; he sayss,
+&lsquo;toandt you aysk me te reason, ovver yoost let me co
+abate undt too udt!&rsquo; Undt I voss a coin&#8217; to kiff udt up,
+alretty; ovver ten cumps in <em>Missess</em> Reisen,&mdash;who iss a
+heap shmarter mayn as fot Reisen iss, I yoost tell you te
+ectsectly troot,&mdash;and she sayss, &lsquo;Reisen, you yoost tell
+Mr. Richlun, Mr. Richlun, you toadnt coin&#8217; to too sich a
+ritickliss!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The speaker paused for effect.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Undt ten Mr. Richlun, he talks!&mdash;Schweedt?&mdash;Oh
+yendlemuns, toandt say nutting!&rdquo; The baker lifted up
+his palm and swung it down against his thigh with a blow
+that sent the flour out in a little cloud. &ldquo;I tell you,
+Toctor Tseweer, ven tat mayn vawndts to too udt, he kin
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+yoost talk te mo-ust like a Christun fun enna mayn I
+neffa he-ut in mine li-i-fe! &lsquo;Missess Reisen,&rsquo; he sayss,
+&lsquo;I vawndts to too udt pecause I vawndts to too udt.&rsquo;
+Vell, how you coin&#8217; to arg-y ennating eagval mit Mr.
+Richlun? So teh upshodt iss he coes owdt in teh prate-cawts
+tistripputin&#8217; te prate!&rdquo; Reisen threw his arms far
+behind him, and bowed low to his listener.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier had learned him well enough to beware of
+interrupting him, lest when he resumed it would be at the
+beginning again. He made no answer, and Reisen went on:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Bressently&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He stopped his slow walk, brought
+forward both palms, shrugged, dropped them, bowed,
+clasped them behind him, brought the left one forward,
+dropped it, then the right one, dropped it also, frowned,
+smiled, and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Bressently&rdquo;&mdash;then a long silence&mdash;&ldquo;effrapotty in
+my etsteplitchmendt&rdquo;&mdash;another long pause&mdash;&ldquo;hef
+yoost teh same ettechmendt to Mr. Richlun,&rdquo;&mdash;another
+interval,&mdash;&ldquo;tey hef yoost tso much effection fur <em>him</em>&rdquo;&mdash;another
+silence&mdash;&ldquo;ass tey hef&rdquo;&mdash;another, with a smile
+this time&mdash;&ldquo;fur&mdash;te teffle himpselluf!&rdquo; An oven
+opened in the baker&#8217;s face, and emitted a softly rattling
+expiration like that of a bursted bellows. The Doctor
+neither smiled nor spoke. Reisen resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I seen udt. I seen udt. Ovver I toandt coult untershtayndt
+udt. Ovver one tay cumps in mine little poy in
+to me fen te pakers voss all ashleep, &lsquo;Pap-a, Mr.
+Richlun sayss you shouldt come into teh offuss.&rsquo; I
+kumpt in. Mr. Richlun voss tare, shtayndting yoost so&mdash;yoost
+so&mdash;py teh shtofe; undt, Toctor Tseweer, I
+yoost tell you te ectsectly troot, he toaldt in fife minudts&mdash;six
+minudts&mdash;seven minudts, udt may pe&mdash;undt shoadt
+me how effrapotty, high undt low, little undt pick, Tom,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+Tick, undt Harra, pin ropping me sindts more ass fife
+years!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The longest pause of all followed this disclosure. The
+baker had gradually backed the Doctor up against the
+wall, spreading out the whole matter with his great palms
+turned now upward and now downward, the bulky
+contents of his high-waisted, barn-door trowsers now
+bulged out and now withdrawn, to be protruded yet more
+a moment later. He recommenced by holding out his
+down-turned hand some distance above the ground.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I yoompt tot hoigh!&rdquo; He blew his cheeks out, and
+rose a half-inch off his heels in recollection of the mighty
+leap. &ldquo;Ovver Mr. Richlun sayss,&mdash;he sayss, &lsquo;Kip
+shtill, Mr. Reisen;&rsquo; undt I kibt shtill.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The baker&#8217;s auditor was gradually drawing him back
+toward the hospital gate; but he continued speaking:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Py undt py, vun tay, I kot someting to say to Mr.
+<em>Richlun</em>, yet. Undt I sendts vert to Mr. <em>Richlun</em> tat <em>he</em>
+shouldt come into teh offuss. He cumps in. &lsquo;Mr.
+Richlun,&rsquo; I sayss, sayss I to him, &lsquo;Mr. Richlun, I kot
+udt!&rsquo;&rdquo; The baker shook his finger in Dr. Sevier&#8217;s face.
+&ldquo;&lsquo;I kot udt, udt layst, Mr. Richlun! I yoost het a
+<em>suspish&#8217;n</em> sindts teh first tay fot I employedt you, ovver
+now I <em>know</em> I kot udt!&rsquo; Vell, sir, he yoost turnun so rate
+ass a flennen shirt!&mdash;&lsquo;Mr. Reisen,&rsquo; sayss he to me,
+&lsquo;fot iss udt fot you kot?&rsquo; Undt sayss I to him, &lsquo;Mr.
+Richlun, udt iss you! Udt is <em>you</em> fot I kot!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier stood sphinx-like, and once more Reisen
+went on.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Yes, Mr. Richlun,&rsquo;&rdquo; still addressing the Doctor as
+though he were his book-keeper, &ldquo;&lsquo;I yoost layin, on my
+pett effra nighdt&mdash;effra nighdt, vi-i-ite ava-a-ake! undt
+in apowdt a veek I make udt owdt ut layst tot you, Mr.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+Richlun,&rsquo;&mdash;I lookt um shtraight in te eye, undt he lookt
+me shtraight te same,&mdash;&lsquo;tot, Mr. Richlun, <em>you</em>,&rsquo; sayss I,
+&lsquo;not dtose fellehs fot pin py mo sindts more ass fife
+yearss, put <em>you</em>, Mr. Richlun, iss teh mayn!&mdash;teh mayn
+fot I&mdash;kin <em>trust</em>!&rsquo;&rdquo; The baker&#8217;s middle parts bent out
+and his arms were drawn akimbo. Thus for ten seconds.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Undt now, Mr. Richlun, do you kot teh shtrengdt
+for to shtart a noo pissness?&rsquo;&mdash;Pecause, Toctor, udt pin
+seem to me Mr. Richlun kitten more undt more shecklun,
+undt toandt take tot meticine fot you kif um (ovver he
+sayss he toos). So ten he sayss to me, &lsquo;Mister Reisen,
+I am yoost so sollut undt shtrong like a pilly-coat! Fot
+is teh noo pissness?&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Mr. Richlun,&rsquo; sayss I, &lsquo;ve goin&#8217;
+to make pettent prate!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; asked the Doctor, frowning with impatience
+and venturing to interrupt at last.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Pet-tent prate!</em>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The listener frowned heavier and shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Pettent prate!</em>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! patent bread; yes. Well?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Reisen, &ldquo;prate mate mit a mutcheen;
+mit copponic-essut kass into udt ploat pefore udt is paked.
+I pought teh pettent tiss mawning fun a yendleman in
+Garontelet shtreedt, alretty, naympt Kknox.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what have I to do with all this?&rdquo; asked the
+Doctor, consulting his watch, as he had already done
+twice before.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vell,&rdquo; said Reisen, spreading his arms abroad, &ldquo;I
+yoost taught you like to herr udt.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But what do you want to see me for? What have
+you kept me all this time to tell me&mdash;or ask me?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Toctor,&mdash;you ugscooce me&mdash;ovver&rdquo;&mdash;the baker
+held the Doctor by the elbow as he began to turn away&mdash;&ldquo;Toctor
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+Tseweer,&rdquo;&mdash;the great face lighted up with a
+smile, the large body doubled partly together, and the
+broad left hand was held ready to smite the thigh,&mdash;&ldquo;you
+shouldt see Mr. Richlun ven he fowndt owdt udt is
+goin&#8217; to lower teh price of prate! I taught he iss goin&#8217; to
+kiss Mississ Reisen!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XL.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>SWEET BELLS JANGLED.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Those who knew New Orleans just before the civil
+war, even though they saw it only along its riverfront
+from the deck of some steam-boat, may easily recall
+a large sign painted high up on the side of the old &ldquo;Triangle
+Building,&rdquo; which came to view through the dark
+web of masts and cordage as one drew near St. Mary&#8217;s
+Market. &ldquo;Steam Bakery&rdquo; it read. And such as were
+New Orleans householders, or by any other chance enjoyed
+the experience of making their way in the early
+morning among the hundreds of baskets that on hundreds
+of elbows moved up and down along and across the quaint
+gas-lit arcades of any of the market-houses, must remember
+how, about this time or a little earlier, there
+began to appear on one of the tidiest of bread-stalls in
+each of these market-houses a new kind of bread. It was
+a small, densely compacted loaf of the size and shape of
+a badly distorted brick. When broken, it divided into
+layers, each of which showed&mdash;&ldquo;teh bprindt of teh
+kkneading-mutcheen,&rdquo; said Reisen to Narcisse; &ldquo;yoost
+like a tsoda crecker!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>These two persons had met by chance at a coffee-stand
+one beautiful summer dawn in one of the markets,&mdash;the
+Tr&eacute;in&eacute;, most likely,&mdash;where, perched on high stools at a
+zinc-covered counter, with the smell of fresh blood on the
+right and of stale fish on the left, they had finished half
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+their cup of <em>caf&eacute; au lait</em> before they awoke to the exhilarating
+knowledge of each other&#8217;s presence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh,&rdquo; said Narcisse, &ldquo;now since you &#8217;ave wemawk
+the mention of it, I think I have saw that va&#8217;iety
+of bwead.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, surely you poundt to a-seedt udt. A uckly little
+prown dting&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But cook well,&rdquo; said Narcisse.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yayss,&rdquo; drawled the baker. It was a fact that he
+had to admit.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;An&#8217; good flou&#8217;,&rdquo; persisted the Creole.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yayss,&rdquo; said the smiling manufacturer. He could
+not deny that either.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;An&#8217; honness weight!&rdquo; said Narcisse, planting his
+empty cup in his saucer, with the energy of his asservation;
+&ldquo;an&#8217;, Mr. Bison, thass a ve&#8217;y seldom thing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yayss,&rdquo; assented Reisen, &ldquo;ovver tat prate is mighdy
+dtry, undt shtickin&#8217; in ten dtroat.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, seh!&rdquo; said the flatterer, with a generous smile.
+&ldquo;Egscuse me&mdash;I diffeh fum you. &#8217;Tis a beaucheouz
+bwead. Yesseh. And eve&#8217;y loaf got the name beaucheouzly
+pwint on the top, with &lsquo;Patent&rsquo;&mdash;sich an&#8217; sich a
+time. &#8217;Tis the tooth, Mr. Bison, I&#8217;m boun&#8217; to congwatu<em>late</em>
+you on that bwead.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O-o-oh! tat iss not <em>mine</em> prate,&rdquo; exclaimed the baker.
+&ldquo;Tat iss not fun mine etsteplitchmendt. Oh, no! Tatt
+iss te prate&mdash;I&#8217;m yoost dtellin&#8217; you&mdash;tat iss te prate fun
+tat fellah py teh Sunk-Mary&#8217;s Morrikit-house! Tat&#8217;s teh
+&lsquo;shteam prate&rsquo;. I to-undt know for vot effrapotty puys tat
+prate annahow! Ovver you yoost vait dtill you see <em>mine</em>
+prate!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Bison,&rdquo; said Narcisse, &ldquo;Mr. Bison,&rdquo;&mdash;he had
+been trying to stop him and get in a word of his own,
+but could not,&mdash;&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know if you&mdash;Mr.&mdash;Mr.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+Bison, in fact, you din unde&#8217;stood me. Can that be
+poss&#8217;ble that you din notiz that I was speaking in my
+i&#8217;ony about that bwead? Why, of co&#8217;se! Thass juz my
+i&#8217;onious cuztom, Mr. Bison. Thass one thing I dunno if
+you &#8217;ave notiz about that &lsquo;steam bwead,&rsquo; Mr. Bison, but
+with me that bwead always stick in my th&#8217;oat; an&#8217; yet I
+kin swallow mose anything, in fact. No, Mr. Bison, yo&#8217;
+bwead is deztyned to be the bwead; and I tell you how
+&#8217;tis with me, I juz gladly eat yo&#8217; bwead eve&#8217;y time I kin
+git it! Mr. Bison, in fact you don&#8217;t know me ve&#8217;y in<em>tim</em>itly,
+but you will oblige me ve&#8217;y much indeed to baw
+me five dollahs till tomaw&mdash;save me fum d&#8217;awing a check!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The German thrust his hand slowly and deeply into his
+pocket. &ldquo;I alvayss like to oplyche a yendleman,&rdquo;&mdash;he
+smiled benignly, drew out a toothpick, and added,&mdash;&ldquo;ovver
+I nivveh bporrah or lend to ennabodda.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;An&#8217; then,&rdquo; said Narcisse, promptly, &ldquo;&#8217;tis imposs&#8217;ble
+faw anybody to be offended. Thass the bess way, Mr. Bison.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yayss,&rdquo; said the baker, &ldquo;I tink udt iss.&rdquo; As they
+were parting, he added: &ldquo;Ovver you vait dtill you see
+<em>mine</em> prate!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll do it, seh!&mdash;&nbsp;And, Mr. Bison, you muzn&#8217;t think
+anything about that, my not bawing that five dollars fum
+you, Mr. Bison, because that don&#8217;t make a bit o&#8217; dif&#8217;ence;
+an&#8217; thass one thing I like about you, Mr. Bison, you
+don&#8217;t baw yo&#8217; money to eve&#8217;y Dick, Tom, an&#8217; Hawwy, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, I dtoandt. Ovver, you yoost vait&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>And certainly, after many vexations, difficulties, and
+delays, that took many a pound of flesh from Reisen&#8217;s
+form, the pretty, pale-brown, fragrant white loaves of
+&ldquo;a&euml;rated bread&rdquo; that issued from the Star Bakery in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+Benjamin street were something pleasant to see, though
+they did not lower the price.</p>
+
+<p>Richling&#8217;s old liking for mechanical apparatus came
+into play. He only, in the establishment, thoroughly
+understood the new process, and could be certain of daily,
+or rather nightly, uniform results. He even made one or
+two slight improvements in it, which he contemplated
+with ecstatic pride, and long accounts of which he wrote
+to Mary.</p>
+
+<p>In a generous and innocent way Reisen grew a little
+jealous of his accountant, and threw himself into his
+business as he had not done before since he was young,
+and in the ardor of his emulation ignored utterly a state
+of health that was no better because of his great length
+and breadth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Toctor Tseweer!&rdquo; he said, as the physician appeared
+one day in his office. &ldquo;Vell, now, I yoost pet finfty
+tawllars tat iss Mississ Reisen sendts for you tat I&#8217;m
+sick! Ven udt iss not such a dting!&rdquo; He laughed immoderately.
+&ldquo;Ovver I&#8217;m gladt you come, Toctor, ennahow,
+for you pin yoost in time to see ever&#8217;ting runnin&#8217;.
+I vish you yoost come undt see udt!&rdquo; He grinned in
+his old, broad way; but his face was anxious, and his
+bared arms were lean. He laid his hand on the Doctor&#8217;s
+arm, and then jerked it away, and tried to blow off the
+floury print of his fingers. &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; He beckoned.
+&ldquo;Come; I show you somedting putiful. Toctor, I <em>vizh</em>
+you come!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor yielded. Richling had to be called upon
+at last to explain the hidden parts and processes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s yoost like putt&#8217;n&#8217; te shpirudt into teh potty,&rdquo;
+said the laughing German. &ldquo;Now, tat prate kot life in
+udt yoost teh same like your own selluf, Toctor. Tot
+prate kot yoost so much sense ass Reisen kot. Ovver,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+Toctor&mdash;Toctor&rdquo;&mdash;the Doctor was giving his attention
+to Richling, who was explaining something&mdash;&ldquo;Toctor,
+toandt you come here uxpectin&#8217; to see nopoty sick, less-n
+udt iss Mr. Richlun.&rdquo; He caught Richling&#8217;s face roughly
+between his hands, and then gave his back a caressing
+thwack. &ldquo;Toctor, vot you dtink? Ve goin&#8217; teh run prate-cawts
+mit copponic-essut kass. Tispense mit hawses!&rdquo;
+He laughed long but softly, and smote Richling again as
+the three walked across the bakery yard abreast.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier to Richling, in a low tone,
+&ldquo;always working toward the one happy end.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling had only time to answer with his eyes, when
+the baker, always clinging close to them, said, &ldquo;Yes; if
+I toandt look oudt yet, he pe rich pefore Reisen.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked steadily at Richling, stood still, and
+said, &ldquo;Don&#8217;t hurry.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But Richling swung playfully half around on his heel,
+dropped his glance, and jerked his head sidewise, as one
+who neither resented the advice nor took it. A minute
+later he drew from his breast-pocket a small, thick letter
+stripped of its envelope, and handed it to the Doctor,
+who put it into his pocket, neither of them speaking. The
+action showed practice. Reisen winked one eye laboriously
+at the Doctor and chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;See here, Reisen,&rdquo; said the Doctor, &ldquo;I want you to
+pack your trunk, take the late boat, and go to Biloxi or
+Pascagoula, and spend a month fishing and sailing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The baker pushed his fingers up under his hat, scratched
+his head, smiled widely, and pointed at Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sendt him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor went and sat down with Reisen, and used
+every form of inducement that could be brought to bear;
+but the German had but one answer: Richling, Richling,
+not he. The Doctor left a prescription, which the baker
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+took until he found it was making him sleep while Richling
+was at work, whereupon he amiably threw it out of
+his window.</p>
+
+<p>It was no surprise to Dr. Sevier that Richling came to
+him a few days later with a face all trouble.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How are you, Richling? How&#8217;s Reisen?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;I&#8217;m afraid Mr. Reisen is&rdquo;&mdash;Their
+eyes met.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Insane,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Does his wife know whether he has ever had such
+symptoms before&mdash;in his life?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She says he hasn&#8217;t.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you know his pecuniary condition perfectly;
+has he money?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Plenty.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;ll not consent to go away anywhere, I suppose, will he?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not an inch.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There&#8217;s but one sensible and proper course, Richling;
+he must be taken at once, by force if necessary, to a
+first-class insane hospital.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor, why? Can&#8217;t we treat him better at home?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor gave his head its well-known swing of
+impatience. &ldquo;If you want to be <em>criminally</em> in error try that!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t want to be in error at all,&rdquo; retorted Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then don&#8217;t lose twelve hours that you can save, but
+send him off as soon as process of court will let you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will you come at once and see him?&rdquo; asked Richling,
+rising up.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&#8217;ll be there nearly as soon as you will. Stop;
+you had better ride with me; I have something special to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
+say.&rdquo; As the carriage started off, the Doctor leaned back
+in its cushions, folded his arms, and took a long, meditative
+breath. Richling glanced at him and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We&#8217;re both thinking of the same person.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the Doctor; &ldquo;and the same day, too,
+I suppose: the first day I ever saw her; the only other
+time that we ever got into this carriage together. Hmm!
+hmm! With what a fearful speed time flies!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sometimes,&rdquo; said the yearning husband, and apologized
+by a laugh. The Doctor grunted, looked out of
+the carriage window, and, suddenly turning, asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know that Reisen instructed his wife about
+six months ago, in the event of his death or disability, to
+place all her interests in your hands, and to be guided by
+your advice in everything?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; exclaimed Richling, &ldquo;he can&#8217;t do that! He
+should have asked my consent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose he knew he wouldn&#8217;t get it. He&#8217;s a cunning
+simpleton.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, Doctor, if you knew this&rdquo;&mdash;Richling ceased.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Six months ago. Why didn&#8217;t I tell you?&rdquo; said the
+physician. &ldquo;I thought I would, Richling, though Reisen
+bade me not, when he told me; I made no promise. But
+time, that you think goes slow, was too fast for me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I shall refuse to serve,&rdquo; said Richling, soliloquizing
+aloud. &ldquo;Don&#8217;t you see, Doctor, the delicacy of the position?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do; but you don&#8217;t. Don&#8217;t you see it would be
+just as delicate a matter for you to refuse?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling pondered, and presently said, quite slowly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It will look like coming down out of the tree to catch
+the apples as they fall,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; he added
+with impatience, &ldquo;it lays me wide open to suspicion and slander.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Does it?&rdquo; asked the Doctor, heartlessly. &ldquo;There&#8217;s
+nothing remarkable in that. Did any one ever occupy a
+responsible position without those conditions?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, you know, I have made some unscrupulous
+enemies by defending Reisen&#8217;s interests.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Um-hmm; what did you defend them for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling was about to make a reply; but the Doctor
+wanted none. &ldquo;Richling,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the most of men
+have burrows. They never let anything decoy them so
+far from those burrows but they can pop into them at a
+moment&#8217;s notice. Do you take my meaning?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes!&rdquo; said Richling, pleasantly; &ldquo;no trouble to
+understand you this time. I&#8217;ll not run into any burrow
+just now. I&#8217;ll face my duty and think of Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Excellent pastime,&rdquo; responded Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>They rode on in silence.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;As to&rdquo;&mdash;began Richling again,&mdash;&ldquo;as to such matters
+as these, once a man confronts the question candidly,
+there is really no room, that I can see, for a man to
+choose: a man, at least, who is always guided by conscience.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If there were such a man,&rdquo; responded the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;True,&rdquo; said John.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But for common stuff, such as you and I are made of,
+it must sometimes be terrible.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I dare say,&rdquo; said Richling. &ldquo;It sometimes requires
+cold blood to choose aright.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;As cold as granite,&rdquo; replied the other.</p>
+
+<p>They arrived at the bakery.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Doctor,&rdquo; said Mrs. Reisen, proffering her hand as
+he entered the house, &ldquo;my poor hussband iss crazy!&rdquo; She
+dropped into a chair and burst into tears. She was a
+large woman, with a round, red face and triple chin, but
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
+with a more intelligent look and a better command of
+English than Reisen. &ldquo;Doctor, I want you to cure him
+ass quick ass possible.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, madam, of course; but will you do what I say?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will, certain shure. I do it yust like you tellin&#8217; me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor gave her such good advice as became a
+courageous physician.</p>
+
+<p>A look of dismay came upon her. Her mouth dropped
+open. &ldquo;Oh, no, Doctor!&rdquo; She began to shake her head.
+&ldquo;I&#8217;ll never do tha-at; oh, no; I&#8217;ll never send my poor
+hussband to the crazy-house! Oh, no, sir; I&#8217;ll do not such
+a thing!&rdquo; There was some resentment in her emotion.
+Her nether lip went up like a crying babe&#8217;s, and she
+breathed through her nostrils audibly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, I know!&rdquo; said the poor creature, turning her
+face away from the Doctor&#8217;s kind attempts to explain, and
+lifting it incredulously as she talked to the wall,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+know all about it. I&#8217;m not a-goin&#8217; to put no sich a disgrace
+on my poor hussband; no, indeed!&rdquo; She faced around
+suddenly and threw out her hand to Richling, who leaned
+against a door twisting a bit of string between his thumbs.
+&ldquo;Why, he wouldn&#8217;t go, nohow, even if I gave my consents.
+You caynt coax him out of his room yet. Oh, no, Doctor!
+It&#8217;s my duty to keep him wid me an&#8217; try to cure him first
+a little while here at home. That aint no trouble to me;
+I don&#8217;t never mind no trouble if I can be any help to my
+hussband.&rdquo; She addressed the wall again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, madam,&rdquo; replied the physician, with unusual
+tenderness of tone, and looking at Richling while he
+spoke, &ldquo;of course you&#8217;ll do as you think best.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! my poor Reisen!&rdquo; exclaimed the wife, wringing
+her hands.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the physician, rising and looking out of
+the window, &ldquo;I am afraid it will be ruin to Reisen.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, it won&#8217;t be such a thing,&rdquo; said Mrs. Reisen, turning
+this way and that in her chair as the physician moved
+from place to place. &ldquo;Mr. Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo;&mdash;turning to him,&mdash;&ldquo;Mr.
+Richlin&#8217; and me kin run the business yust so
+good as Reisen.&rdquo; She shifted her distressed gaze back
+and forth from Richling to the Doctor. The latter turned
+to Richling:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll have to leave this matter to you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling nodded.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where is Reisen?&rdquo; asked the Doctor. &ldquo;In his own
+room, upstairs?&rdquo; The three passed through an inner
+door.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>MIRAGE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;This spoils some of your arrangements, doesn&#8217;t it?&rdquo;
+asked Dr. Sevier of Richling, stepping again into his
+carriage. He had already said the kind things, concerning
+Reisen, that physicians commonly say when they have little
+hope. &ldquo;Were you not counting on an early visit to Milwaukee?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That illusion has been just a little beyond reach for
+months.&rdquo; He helped the Doctor shut his carriage-door.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But now, of course&mdash;&rdquo; said the physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course it&#8217;s out of the question,&rdquo; replied Richling;
+and the Doctor drove away, with the young man&#8217;s face in
+his mind bearing an expression of simple emphasis that
+pleased him much.</p>
+
+<p>Late at night Richling, in his dingy little office, unlocked
+a drawer, drew out a plump package of letters, and began
+to read their pages,&mdash;transcripts of his wife&#8217;s heart, pages
+upon pages, hundreds of precious lines, dates crowding
+closely one upon another. Often he smiled as his eyes ran
+to and fro, or drew a soft sigh as he turned the page, and
+looked behind to see if any one had stolen in and was reading
+over his shoulder. Sometimes his smile broadened;
+he lifted his glance from the sheet and fixed it in pleasant
+revery on the blank wall before him. Often the lines
+were entirely taken up with mere utterances of affection.
+Now and then they were all about little Alice, who had
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
+fretted all the night before, her gums being swollen and
+tender on the upper left side near the front; or who had
+fallen violently in love with the house-dog, by whom, in
+turn, the sentiment was reciprocated; or whose eyes were
+really getting bluer and bluer, and her cheeks fatter and
+fatter, and who seemed to fear nothing that had existence.
+And the reader of the lines would rest one elbow on the
+desk, shut his eyes in one hand, and see the fair young head
+of the mother drooping tenderly over that smaller head in
+her bosom. Sometimes the tone of the lines was hopefully
+grave, discussing in the old tentative, interrogative key
+the future and its possibilities. Some pages were given
+to reminiscences,&mdash;recollections of all the droll things and
+all the good and glad things of the rugged past. Every
+here and there, but especially where the lines drew toward
+the signature, the words of longing multiplied, but always
+full of sunshine; and just at the end of each letter love
+spurned its restraints, and rose and overflowed with sweet
+confessions.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes these re-read letters did Richling good;
+not always. Maybe he read them too often. It was
+only the very next time that the Doctor&#8217;s carriage stood
+before the bakery that the departing physician turned
+before he re&euml;ntered the vehicle, and&mdash;whatever Richling
+had been saying to him&mdash;said abruptly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, are you falling out of love with your work?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why do you ask me that?&rdquo; asked the young man, coloring.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Because I no longer see that joy of deliverance with
+which you entered upon this humble calling. It seems to
+have passed like a lost perfume, Richling. Have you let
+your toil become a task once more?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling dropped his eyes and pushed the ground with
+the toe of his boot.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t want you to find that out, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was afraid, from the first, it would be so,&rdquo; said the
+physician.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t see why you were.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I saw that the zeal with which you first laid hold
+of your work was not entirely natural. It was good,
+but it was partly artificial,&mdash;the more credit to you on
+that account. But I saw that by and by you would have
+to keep it up mainly by your sense of necessity and duty.
+&lsquo;That&#8217;ll be the pinch,&rsquo; I said; and now I see it&#8217;s come.
+For a long time you idealized the work; but at last its
+real dulness has begun to overcome you, and you&#8217;re
+discontented&mdash;and with a discontentment that you can&#8217;t
+justify, can you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I feel myself growing smaller again.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No wonder. Why, Richling, it&#8217;s the discontent makes that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no! The discontent makes me long to expand.
+I never had so much ambition before. But what can I
+do here? Why, Doctor, I ought to be&mdash;I might be&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The physician laid a hand on the young man&#8217;s shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Stop, Richling. Drop those phrases and give us a
+healthy &lsquo;I am,&rsquo; and &lsquo;I must,&rsquo; and &lsquo;I will.&rsquo; Don&#8217;t&mdash;<em>don&#8217;t</em>
+be like so many! You&#8217;re not of the many. Richling,
+in the first illness in which I ever attended your
+wife, she watched her chance and asked me privately&mdash;implored
+me&mdash;not to let her die, for your sake. I don&#8217;t
+suppose that tortures could have wrung from her, even
+if she realized it,&mdash;which I doubt,&mdash;the true reason.
+But don&#8217;t you feel it? It was because your moral nature
+needs her so badly. Stop&mdash;let me finish. You need
+Mary back here now to hold you square to your course
+by the tremendous power of her timid little &lsquo;Don&#8217;t you think?&rsquo;
+and &lsquo;Doesn&#8217;t it seem?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; replied Richling, with a smile of expostulation,
+&ldquo;you touch one&#8217;s pride.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly I do. You&#8217;re willing enough to say that
+you love her and long for her, but not that your moral
+manhood needs her. And yet isn&#8217;t it true?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It sha&#8217;n&#8217;t be true,&rdquo; said Richling, swinging a playful
+fist. &ldquo;&lsquo;Forewarned is forearmed;&rsquo; I&#8217;ll not allow it.
+I&#8217;m man enough for that.&rdquo; He laughed, with a touch of
+pique.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling,&rdquo;&mdash;the Doctor laid a finger against his
+companion&#8217;s shoulder, preparing at the same time to leave
+him,&mdash;&ldquo;don&#8217;t be misled. A man who doesn&#8217;t need a
+wife isn&#8217;t fit to have one.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor,&rdquo; replied Richling, with sincere amiability,
+&ldquo;you&#8217;re the man of all men I should have picked
+out to prove the contrary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, Richling, no. I wasn&#8217;t fit, and God took her.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In accordance with Dr. Sevier&#8217;s request Richling essayed
+to lift the mind of the baker&#8217;s wife, in the matter
+of her husband&#8217;s affliction, to that plane of conviction
+where facts, and not feelings, should become her motive;
+and when he had talked until his head reeled, as though
+he had been blowing a fire, and she would not blaze for
+all his blowing&mdash;would be governed only by a stupid
+sentimentality; and when at length she suddenly flashed
+up in silly anger and accused him of interested motives;
+and when he had demanded instant retraction or release
+from her employment; and when she humbly and affectionately
+apologized, and was still as deep as ever in
+hopeless, clinging sentimentalisms, repeating the dictums
+of her simple and ignorant German neighbors and intimates,
+and calling them in to argue with him, the feeling
+that the Doctor&#8217;s exhortation had for the moment driven
+away came back with more force than ever, and he could
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+only turn again to his ovens and account-books with a
+feeling of annihilation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where am I? What am I?&rdquo; Silence was the only
+answer. The separation that had once been so sharp a
+pain had ceased to cut, and was bearing down upon him
+now with that dull, grinding weight that does the damage
+in us.</p>
+
+<p>Presently came another development: the lack of
+money, that did no harm while it was merely kept in the
+mind, settled down upon the heart.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It may be a bad thing to love, but it&#8217;s a good thing
+to have,&rdquo; he said, one day, to the little rector, as this
+friend stood by him at a corner of the high desk where
+Richling was posting his ledger.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But not to seek,&rdquo; said the rector.</p>
+
+<p>Richling posted an item and shook his head doubtingly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That depends, I should say, on how much one seeks
+it, and how much of it he seeks.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; insisted the clergyman. Richling bent a look
+of inquiry upon him, and he added:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The principle is bad, and you know it, Richling.
+&lsquo;Seek ye first&rsquo;&mdash;you know the text, and the assurance
+that follows with it&mdash;&lsquo;all these things shall be added&rsquo;&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes; but still&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;But still!&rsquo;&rdquo; exclaimed the little preacher; &ldquo;why
+must everybody say &lsquo;but still&rsquo;? Don&#8217;t you see that that
+&lsquo;but still&rsquo; is the refusal of Christians to practise Christianity?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling looked, but said nothing; and his friend hoped
+the word had taken effect. But Richling was too deeply
+bitten to be cured by one or two good sayings. After a
+moment he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I used to wonder to see nearly everybody struggling
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+to be rich, but I don&#8217;t now. I don&#8217;t justify it, but I
+understand it. It&#8217;s flight from oblivion. It&#8217;s the natural
+longing to be seen and felt.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why isn&#8217;t it enough to be felt?&rdquo; asked the other.
+&ldquo;Here, you make bread and sell it. A thousand people
+eat it from your hand every day. Isn&#8217;t that something?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; but it&#8217;s all the bread. The bread&#8217;s everything;
+I&#8217;m nothing. I&#8217;m not asked to do or to be. I may exist
+or not; there will be bread all the same. I see my
+remark pains you, but I can&#8217;t help it. You&#8217;ve never tried
+the thing. You&#8217;ve never encountered the mild contempt
+that people in ease pay to those who pursue the &lsquo;industries.&rsquo;
+You&#8217;ve never suffered the condescension of rank
+to the ranks. You don&#8217;t know the smart of being only
+an arithmetical quantity in a world of achievements and
+possessions.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the preacher, &ldquo;maybe I haven&#8217;t. But I
+should say you are just the sort of man that ought to
+come through all that unsoured and unhurt. Richling,&rdquo;&mdash;he
+put on a lighter mood,&mdash;&ldquo;you&#8217;ve got a moral indigestion.
+You&#8217;ve accustomed yourself to the highest motives,
+and now these new notions are not the highest, and you
+know and feel it. They don&#8217;t nourish you. They don&#8217;t
+make you happy. Where are your old sentiments?
+What&#8217;s become of them?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;I got them from my wife.
+And the supply&#8217;s nearly run out.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get it renewed!&rdquo; said the little man, quickly, putting
+on his hat and extending a farewell hand. &ldquo;Excuse me
+for saying so. I didn&#8217;t intend it; I dropped in to ask
+you again the name of that Italian whom you visit at the
+prison,&mdash;the man I promised you I&#8217;d go and talk to.
+Yes&mdash;Ristofalo; that&#8217;s it. Good-by.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+That night Richling wrote to his wife. What he wrote
+goes not down here; but he felt as he wrote that his mood
+was not the right one, and when Mary got the letter she
+answered by first mail:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;Will you not let me come to you? Is it not surely best? Say
+but the word, and I&#8217;ll come. It will be the steamer to Chicago,
+railroad to Cairo, and a St. Louis boat to New Orleans. Alice will
+be both company and protection, and no burden at all. O my
+beloved husband! I am just ungracious enough to think, some days,
+that these times of separation are the hardest of all. When we
+were suffering sickness and hunger together&mdash;well, we were
+<em>together</em>. Darling, if you&#8217;ll just say come, I&#8217;ll come in an <em>instant</em>.
+Oh, how gladly! Surely, with what you tell me you&#8217;ve saved, and
+with your place so secure to you, can&#8217;t we venture to begin again?
+Alice and I can live with you in the bakery. O my husband! if
+you but say the word, a little time&mdash;a few days will bring us into
+your arms. And yet, do not yield to my impatience; I trust your
+wisdom, and know that what you decide will be best. Mother has
+been very feeble lately, as I have told you; but she seems to be
+improving, and now I see what I&#8217;ve half suspected for a long time,
+and ought to have seen sooner, that my husband&mdash;my dear, dear
+husband&mdash;needs me most; and I&#8217;m coming&mdash;I&#8217;m <em>coming</em>, John,
+if you&#8217;ll only say come.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 80%;">Your loving</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 85%;" class="smcap">Mary.</span>&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>RISTOFALO AND THE RECTOR.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Be Richling&#8217;s feelings what they might, the Star Bakery
+shone in the retail firmament of the commercial heavens
+with new and growing brilliancy. There was scarcely
+time to talk even with the tough little rector who hovers
+on the borders of this history, and he might have become
+quite an alien had not Richling&#8217;s earnest request made
+him one day a visitor, as we have seen him express his
+intention of being, in the foul corridors of the parish
+prison, and presently the occupant of a broken chair in
+the apartment apportioned to Raphael Ristofalo and two
+other prisoners. &ldquo;Easy little tasks you cut out for your
+friends,&rdquo; said the rector to Richling when next they met.
+&ldquo;I got preached <em>to</em>&mdash;not to say edified. I&#8217;ll share my
+edification with you!&rdquo; He told his experience.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sinister place, the prison apartment. The
+hand of Kate Ristofalo had removed some of its unsightly
+conditions and disguised others; but the bounds
+of the room, walls, ceiling, windows, floor, still displayed,
+with official unconcern, the grime and decay that is commonly
+thought good enough for men charged, rightly or
+wrongly, with crime.</p>
+
+<p>The clergyman&#8217;s chair was in the centre of the floor.
+Ristofalo sat facing him a little way off on the right. A
+youth of nineteen sat tipped against the wall on the left,
+and a long-limbed, big-boned, red-shirted young Irishman
+occupied a poplar table, hanging one of his legs across a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+corner of it and letting the other down to the floor. Ristofalo
+remarked, in the form of polite acknowledgment,
+that the rector had preached to the assembled inmates of
+the prison on the Sunday previous.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did I say anything that you thought was true?&rdquo;
+asked the minister.</p>
+
+<p>The Italian smiled in the gentle manner that never
+failed him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&#8217;t listen much,&rdquo; he said. He drew from a
+pocket of his black velveteen pantaloons a small crumpled
+tract. It may have been a favorite one with the clergyman,
+for the youth against the wall produced its counterpart,
+and the man on the edge of the table lay back on
+his elbow, and, with an indolent stretch of the opposite
+arm and both legs, drew a third one from a tin cup that
+rested on a greasy shelf behind him. The Irishman held
+his between his fingers and smirked a little toward the
+floor. Ristofalo extended his toward the visitor, and
+touched the caption with one finger: &ldquo;Mercy offered.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; asked the rector, pleasantly, &ldquo;what&#8217;s the
+matter with that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is no use yeh. Wrong place&mdash;this prison.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Um-hm,&rdquo; said the tract-distributor, glancing down
+at the leaf and smoothing it on his knee while he took
+time to think. &ldquo;Well, why shouldn&#8217;t mercy be offered here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied Ristofalo, still smiling; &ldquo;ought offer
+justice first.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Preacher,&rdquo; asked the young Irishman, bringing
+both legs to the front, and swinging them under the table,
+&ldquo;d&#8217;ye vote?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; I vote.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;D&#8217;ye call yerself a cidizen&mdash;with a cidizen&#8217;s rights
+an&#8217; djuties?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s right.&rdquo; There was a deep sea of insolence in
+the smooth-faced, red-eyed smile that accompanied the
+commendation. &ldquo;And how manny times have ye bean
+in this prison?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know; eight or ten times. That rather beats
+you, doesn&#8217;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Ristofalo smiled, the youth uttered a high rasping
+cackle, and the Irishman laughed the heartiest of all.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A little,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;a little. But nivver mind. Ye
+say ye&#8217;ve bin here eight or tin times; yes. Well, now,
+will I tell ye what I&#8217;d do afore and iver I&#8217;d kim back here
+ag&#8217;in,&mdash;if I was you now? Will I tell ye?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, yes,&rdquo; replied the visitor, amiably; &ldquo;I&#8217;d like to
+know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, surr, I&#8217;d go to the mair of this city and to the
+judge of the criminal coort, and to the gov&#8217;ner of the
+Sta-ate, and to the ligislatur, if needs be, and I&#8217;d say,
+&lsquo;Gintlemin, I can&#8217;t go back to that prison! There is
+more crimes a-being committed by the people outside ag&#8217;in
+the fellies in theyre than&mdash;than&mdash;than the&mdash;the fellies
+in theyre has committed ag&#8217;in the people! I&#8217;m ashamed
+to preach theyre! I&#8217;m afeered to do ud!&rsquo;&rdquo; The speaker
+slipped off the table, upon his feet. &ldquo;&lsquo;There&#8217;s murrder a-goun&#8217;
+on in theyre! There&#8217;s more murrder a-bein&#8217; done
+in theyre nor there is outside! Justice is a-bein&#8217; murdered
+theyre ivery hour of day and night!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He brandished his fist with the last words, but dropped
+it at a glance from Ristofalo, and began to pace the floor
+along his side of the room, looking with a heavy-browed
+smile back and forth from one fellow-captive to the other.
+He waited till the visitor was about to speak, and then
+interrupted, pointing at him suddenly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Ye&#8217;re a Prodez&#8217;n preacher! I&#8217;ll bet ye fifty dollars
+ye have a rich cherch! Full of leadin&#8217; cidizens!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;re correct.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&#8217;d go an&#8217;&mdash;an&#8217;&mdash;an&#8217; I&#8217;d say, &lsquo;Dawn&#8217;t ye
+nivver ax me to go into that place ag&#8217;in a-pallaverin&#8217;
+about mercy, until ye gid ud chaynged from the hell on
+earth it is to a house of justice, wheyre min gits the sintences
+that the coorts decrees!&rsquo; <em>I</em> don&#8217;t complain in
+here. <em>He</em> don&#8217;t complain,&rdquo; pointing to Ristofalo; &ldquo;ye&#8217;ll
+nivver hear a complaint from him. But go look in that
+yaird!&rdquo; He threw up both hands with a grimace of
+disgust&mdash;&ldquo;Aw!&rdquo;&mdash;and ceased again, but continued his
+walk, looked at his fellows, and resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>I</em> listened to yer sermon. I heerd ye talkin&#8217; about
+the souls of uz. Do ye think ye kin make anny of thim
+min believe ye cayre for the souls of us whin ye do
+nahthing for the <em>bodies</em> that&#8217;s before yer eyes tlothed in
+rrags and stairved, and made to sleep on beds of brick
+and stone, and to receive a hundred abuses a day that
+was nivver intended to be a pairt of <em>anny</em>body&#8217;s sintince&mdash;and
+manny of&#8217;m not tried yit, an&#8217; nivver a-goun&#8217; to
+have annythin&#8217; proved ag&#8217;in &#8217;m? How <em>can</em> ye come offerin&#8217;
+uz merrcy? For ye don&#8217;t come out o&#8217; the tloister, like a
+poor Cat&#8217;lic priest or Sister. Ye come rright out o&#8217; the
+hairt o&#8217; the community that&#8217;s a-committin&#8217; more crimes
+ag&#8217;in uz in here than all of us together has iver committed
+outside. Aw!&mdash;Bring us a better airticle of yer own
+justice ferst&mdash;I doan&#8217;t cayre how <em>crool</em> it is, so ut&#8217;s
+<em>justice</em>&mdash;an&#8217; <em>thin</em> preach about God&#8217;s mercy. I&#8217;ll listen
+to ye.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Ristofalo had kept his eyes for the most of the time on
+the floor, smiling sometimes more and sometimes less. Now,
+however, he raised them and nodded to the clergyman.
+He approved all that had been said. The Irishman went
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+and sat again on the table and swung his legs. The
+visitor was not allowed to answer before, and must
+answer now. He would have been more comfortable at
+the rectory.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My friend,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;suppose, now, I should say
+that you are pretty nearly correct in everything you&#8217;ve
+said?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The prisoner, who, with hands grasping the table&#8217;s
+edge on either side of him, was looking down at his
+swinging brogans, simply lifted his lurid eyes without
+raising his head, and nodded. &ldquo;It would be right,&rdquo; he
+seemed to intimate, &ldquo;but nothing great.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And suppose I should say that I&#8217;m glad I&#8217;ve heard
+it, and that I even intend to make good use of it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>His hearer lifted his head, better pleased, but not
+without some betrayal of the distrust which a lower
+nature feels toward the condescensions of a higher. The
+preacher went on:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Would you try to believe what I have to add to that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&#8217;d try,&rdquo; replied the Irishman, looking facetiously
+from the youth to Ristofalo. But this time the
+Italian was grave, and turned his glance expectantly upon
+the minister, who presently replied:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, neither my church nor the community has sent
+me here at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Irishman broke into a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did God send ye?&rdquo; He looked again to his comrades,
+with an expanded grin. The youth giggled. The clergyman
+met the attack with serenity, waited a moment and
+then responded:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, in one sense, I don&#8217;t mind saying&mdash;yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Irishman, still full of mirth, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>
+swinging his legs with fresh vigor, &ldquo;he&#8217;d aht to &#8217;a&#8217; sint
+ye to the ligislatur.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m in hopes he will,&rdquo; said the little rector; &ldquo;but&rdquo;&mdash;checking
+the Irishman&#8217;s renewed laughter&mdash;&ldquo;tell me
+why should other men&#8217;s injustice in here stop me from
+preaching God&#8217;s mercy?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Because it&#8217;s pairt <em>your</em> injustice! Ye <em>do</em> come from
+yer cherch, an&#8217; ye <em>do</em> come from the community, an&#8217; ye
+can&#8217;t deny ud, an&#8217; ye&#8217;d ahtn&#8217;t to be comin&#8217; in here with
+yer sweet tahk and yer eyes tight shut to the crimes that&#8217;s
+bein&#8217; committed ag&#8217;in uz for want of an outcry against
+&#8217;em by you preachers an&#8217; prayers an&#8217; thract-disthributors.&rdquo;
+The speaker ceased and nodded fiercely. Then a new
+thought occurred to him, and he began again abruptly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Look ut here! Ye said in yer serrmon that as to
+Him&rdquo;&mdash;he pointed through the broken ceiling&mdash;&ldquo;we&#8217;re
+all criminals alike, didn&#8217;t ye?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I did,&rdquo; responded the preacher, in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Ristofalo; and the boy echoed the same word.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, thin, what rights has some to be out an&#8217; some to be in?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Only one right that I know of,&rdquo; responded the little
+man; &ldquo;still that is a good one.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And that is&mdash;?&rdquo; prompted the Irishman.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Society&#8217;s right to protect itself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the prisoner, &ldquo;to protect itself. Thin
+what right has it to keep a prison like this, where every
+man an&#8217; woman as goes out of ud goes out a blacker
+devil, and cunninger devil, and a more dangerous devil,
+nor when he came in? Is that anny protection? Why
+shouldn&#8217;t such a prison tumble down upon the heads of
+thim as built it? Say.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I expect you&#8217;ll have to ask somebody else,&rdquo; said the
+rector. He rose.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&#8217;re not a-goun&#8217;!&rdquo; exclaimed the Irishman, in
+broad affectation of surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! come, now! Ye&#8217;re not goun&#8217; to be beat that
+a-way by a wild Mick o&#8217; the woods?&rdquo; He held himself
+ready for a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, I&#8217;m coming back,&rdquo; said the smiling clergyman,
+and the laugh came.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s right! But&rdquo;&mdash;as if the thought was a sudden
+one&mdash;&ldquo;I&#8217;ll be dead by thin, willn&#8217;t I? Of coorse I will.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; rejoined the clergyman. &ldquo;How&#8217;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Irishman turned to the Italian.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Ristofalo, we&#8217;re a-goin to the pinitintiary, aint we?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Ristofalo nodded.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of coorse we air! Ah! Mr. Preechur, that&#8217;s the place!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Worse than this?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Worse? Oh, no! It&#8217;s better. This is slow death,
+but that&#8217;s quick and short&mdash;and sure. If it don&#8217;t git ye
+in five year&#8217;, ye&#8217;re an allygatur. This place? It&#8217;s heaven
+to ud!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>SHALL SHE COME OR STAY?</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Richling read Mary&#8217;s letter through three times without
+a smile. The feeling that he had prompted the
+missive&mdash;that it was partly his&mdash;stood between him and
+a tumult of gladness. And yet when he closed his eyes he
+could see Mary, all buoyancy and laughter, spurning his
+claim to each and every stroke of the pen. It was all
+hers, all!</p>
+
+<p>As he was slowly folding the sheet Mrs. Reisen came
+in upon him. It was one of those excessively warm
+spring evenings that sometimes make New Orleans fear it
+will have no May. The baker&#8217;s wife stood with her
+immense red hands thrust into the pockets of an expansive
+pinafore, and her three double chins glistening with
+perspiration. She bade her manager a pleasant good-evening.</p>
+
+<p>Richling inquired how she had left her husband.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Kviet, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, kviet. Mr. Richlin&#8217;, I pelief
+Reisen kittin petter. If he don&#8217;t gittin&#8217; better, how come
+he&#8217;ss every day a little more kvieter, and sit&#8217; still and
+don&#8217;t say nutting to nobody?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Reisen, my wife is asking me to send for her&rdquo;&mdash;Richling
+gave the folded letter a little shake as he held it
+by one corner&mdash;&ldquo;to come down here and live again.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Mr. Richlin&#8217;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I will shwear!&rdquo; She dropped into a seat.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Right in de bekinning o&#8217; summer time! Vell, vell,
+vell! And you told me Mrs. Richling is a sentsible
+voman! Vell, I don&#8217;t belief dat I efer see a young
+voman w&#8217;at aint de pickest kind o&#8217; fool apowt her hussbandt.
+Vell, vell!&mdash;And she comin&#8217; down heah &#8217;n&#8217;
+choost kittin&#8217; all your money shpent, &#8217;n&#8217; den her mudter
+kittin&#8217; vorse &#8217;n&#8217; she got &#8217;o go pack akin!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Mrs. Reisen,&rdquo; exclaimed Richling, warmly.
+&ldquo;you speak as if you didn&#8217;t want her to come.&rdquo; He contrived
+to smile as he finished.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vell,&mdash;of&mdash;course! <em>You</em> don&#8217;t vant her to come, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling forced a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Seems to me &#8217;twould be natural if I did, Mrs. Reisen.
+Didn&#8217;t the preacher say, when we were married, &lsquo;Let no
+man put asunder&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, now, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, dere aindt nopotty a-koin&#8217; to
+put you under!&mdash;&#8217;less-n it&#8217;s your vife. Vot she want to
+come down for? Don&#8217;t I takin&#8217; koot care you?&rdquo; There
+was a tear in her eye as she went out.</p>
+
+<p>An hour or so later the little rector dropped in.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, I came to see if I did any damage the last
+time I was here. My own words worried me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You were afraid,&rdquo; responded Richling, &ldquo;that I would
+understand you to recommend me to send for my wife.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t understand you so.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, my mind&#8217;s relieved.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mine isn&#8217;t,&rdquo; said Richling. He laid down his pen
+and gathered his fingers around one knee. &ldquo;Why
+shouldn&#8217;t I send for her?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You will, some day.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I mean now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The clergyman shook his head pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I don&#8217;t think that&#8217;s what you mean.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, let that pass. I know what I do mean. I
+mean to get out of this business. I&#8217;ve lived long enough
+with these savages.&rdquo; A wave of his hand indicated the
+whole <em>personnel</em> of the bread business.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I would try not to mind their savageness, Richling,&rdquo;
+said the little preacher, slowly. &ldquo;The best of us are only
+savages hid under a harness. If we&#8217;re not, we&#8217;ve somehow
+made a loss.&rdquo; Richling looked at him with amused
+astonishment, but he persisted. &ldquo;I&#8217;m in earnest! We&#8217;ve
+had something refined out of us that we shouldn&#8217;t have
+parted with. Now, there&#8217;s Mrs. Reisen. I like her.
+She&#8217;s a good woman. If the savage can stand you, why
+can&#8217;t you stand the savage?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, true enough. Yet&mdash;well, I must get out of this, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The little man clapped him on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Climb</em> out. See here, you Milwaukee man,&rdquo;&mdash;he
+pushed Richling playfully,&mdash;&ldquo;what are <em>you</em> doing with
+these Southern notions of ours about the &lsquo;yoke of menial
+service,&rsquo; anyhow?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was not born in Milwaukee,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And you&#8217;ll not die with these notions, either,&rdquo; retorted
+the other. &ldquo;Look here, I am going. Good-by. You&#8217;ve
+got to get rid of them, you know, before your wife comes.
+I&#8217;m glad you are not going to send for her now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t say I wasn&#8217;t.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&#8217;t.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you don&#8217;t know what you&#8217;d do,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>The little preacher eyed him steadily for a moment, and
+then slowly returned to where he still sat holding his
+knee.</p>
+
+<p>They had a long talk in very quiet tones. At the end
+the rector asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Didn&#8217;t you once meet Dr. Sevier&#8217;s two nieces&mdash;at his house?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you remember the one named Laura?&mdash;the dark,
+flashing one?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&mdash;oh, pshaw! I could tell you something
+funny, but I don&#8217;t care to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>What he did not care to tell was, that she had promised
+him five years before to be his wife any day when he
+should say the word. In all that time, and this very
+night, one letter, one line almost, and he could have ended
+his waiting; but he was not seeking his own happiness.</p>
+
+<p>They smiled together. &ldquo;Well, good-by again. Don&#8217;t
+think I&#8217;m always going to persecute you with my solicitude.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m not worth it,&rdquo; said Richling, slipping slowly
+down from his high stool and letting the little man out
+into the street.</p>
+
+<p>A little way down the street some one coming out of a
+dark alley just in time to confront the clergyman extended
+a hand in salutation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-evenin&#8217;, Mr. Blank.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He took the hand. It belonged to a girl of eighteen,
+bareheaded and barefooted, holding in the other hand a
+small oil-can. Her eyes looked steadily into his.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You don&#8217;t know me,&rdquo; she said, pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, now I remember you. You&#8217;re Maggie.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the girl. &ldquo;Don&#8217;t you recollect&mdash;in
+the mission-school? Don&#8217;t you recollect you married me
+and Larry? That&#8217;s two years ago.&rdquo; She almost laughed
+out with pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And where&#8217;s Larry?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, don&#8217;t you recollect? He&#8217;s on the sloop-o&#8217;-war
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+<em>Preble</em>.&rdquo; Then she added more gravely: &ldquo;I aint seen
+him in twenty months. But I know he&#8217;s all right. I aint
+a-scared about <em>that</em>&mdash;only if he&#8217;s alive and well; yes, sir.
+Well, good-evenin&#8217;, sir. Yes, sir; I think I&#8217;ll come to
+the mission nex&#8217; Sunday&mdash;and I&#8217;ll bring the baby, will I?
+All right, sir. Well, so long, sir. Take care of yourself,
+sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>What a word that was! It echoed in his ear all the
+way home: &ldquo;Take care of <em>yourself</em>.&rdquo; What boast is
+there for the civilization that refines away the unconscious
+heroism of the unfriended poor?</p>
+
+<p>He was glad he had not told Richling all his little
+secret. But Richling found it out later from Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLIV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>WHAT WOULD YOU DO?</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Three days Mary&#8217;s letter lay unanswered. About
+dusk of the third, as Richling was hurrying across
+the yard of the bakery on some errand connected with the
+establishment, a light touch was laid upon his shoulder;
+a peculiar touch, which he recognized in an instant. He
+turned in the gloom and exclaimed, in a whisper:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Ristofalo!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Howdy?&rdquo; said Raphael, in his usual voice.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, how did you get out?&rdquo; asked Richling. &ldquo;Have
+you escaped?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No. Just come out for little air. Captain of the
+prison and me. Not captain, exactly; one of the keepers.
+Goin&#8217; back some time to-night.&rdquo; He stood there in his
+old-fashioned way, gently smiling, and looking as immovable
+as a piece of granite. &ldquo;Have you heard from wife lately?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Richling. &ldquo;But&mdash;why&mdash;I don&#8217;t understand.
+You and the jailer out together?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, takin&#8217; a little stroll &#8217;round. He&#8217;s out there in
+the street. You can see him on door-step &#8217;cross yonder.
+Pretty drunk, eh?&rdquo; The Italian&#8217;s smile broadened for a
+moment, then came back to its usual self again. &ldquo;I jus&#8217;
+lef&#8217; Kate at home. Thought I&#8217;d come see you a little
+while.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Return calls?&rdquo; suggested Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, return call. Your wife well?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Yes. But&mdash;why, this is the drollest&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He stopped
+short, for the Italian&#8217;s gravity indicated his opinion that
+there had been enough amusement shown. &ldquo;Yes, she&#8217;s
+well, thank you. By-the-by, what do you think of my
+letting her come out here now and begin life over again?
+Doesn&#8217;t it seem to you it&#8217;s high time, if we&#8217;re ever going
+to do it at all?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What you think?&rdquo; asked Ristofalo.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, you answer my question first.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, you answer me first.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can&#8217;t. I haven&#8217;t decided. I&#8217;ve been three days
+thinking about it. It may seem like a small matter to
+hesitate so long over&rdquo;&mdash;Richling paused for his hearer
+to dissent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Ristofalo, &ldquo;pretty small.&rdquo; His smile
+remained the same. &ldquo;She ask you? Reckon you put
+her up to it, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t see why you should reckon that,&rdquo; said Richling,
+with resentful coldness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I dunno,&rdquo; said the Italian; &ldquo;thought so&mdash;that&#8217;s
+the way fellows do sometimes.&rdquo; There was a pause. Then
+he resumed: &ldquo;I wouldn&#8217;t let her come yet. Wait.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For what?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;See which way the cat goin&#8217; to jump.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling laughed unpleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean by that?&rdquo; he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We goin&#8217; to have war,&rdquo; said Raphael Ristofalo.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ho! ho! ho! Why, Ristofalo, you were never more
+mistaken in your life!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I dunno,&rdquo; replied the Italian, sticking in his tracks,
+&ldquo;think it pretty certain. I read all the papers every
+day; nothin&#8217; else to do in parish prison. Think we see
+war nex&#8217; winter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ristofalo, a man of your sort can hardly conceive
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+the amount of bluster this country can stand without
+coming to blows. We Americans are not like you
+Italians.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; responded Ristofalo, &ldquo;not much like.&rdquo; His
+smile changed peculiarly. &ldquo;Wasn&#8217;t for Kate, I go to
+Italia now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Kate and the parish prison,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo;&mdash;the old smile returned,&mdash;&ldquo;I get out that
+place any time I want.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And you&#8217;d join Garibaldi, I suppose?&rdquo; The news
+had just come of Garibaldi in Sicily.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; responded the Italian. There was a twinkle
+deep in his eyes as he added: &ldquo;I know Garibaldi.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Sailed under him when he was ship-cap&#8217;n. He
+knows me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And I dare say he&#8217;d remember you,&rdquo; said Richling,
+with enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He remember me,&rdquo; said the quieter man. &ldquo;Well,&mdash;must
+go. Good-e&#8217;nin&#8217;. Better tell yo&#8217; wife wait a while.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;don&#8217;t know. I&#8217;ll see. Ristofalo&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I want to quit this business.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Better not quit. Stick to one thing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you never did that. You never did one thing
+twice in succession.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There&#8217;s heap o&#8217; diff&#8217;ence.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t see it. What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the Italian only smiled and shrugged, and began to
+move away. In a moment he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You see, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, you sen&#8217; for yo&#8217; wife, you
+can&#8217;t risk change o&#8217; business. You change business, you
+can&#8217;t risk sen&#8217; for yo&#8217; wife. Well, good-night.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling was left to his thoughts. Naturally they were
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+of the man whom he still saw, in his imagination, picking
+his jailer up off the door-step and going back to prison.
+Who could say that this man might not any day make
+just such a lion&#8217;s leap into the world&#8217;s arena as Garibaldi
+had made, and startle the nations as Garibaldi had done?
+What was that red-shirted scourge of tyrants that this
+man might not be? Sailor, soldier, hero, patriot, prisoner!
+See Garibaldi: despising the restraints of law;
+careless of the simplest conventionalities that go to make
+up an honest gentleman; doing both right and wrong&mdash;like
+a lion; everything in him leonine. All this was in
+Ristofalo&#8217;s reach. It was all beyond Richling&#8217;s. Which
+was best, the capability or the incapability? It was a
+question he would have liked to ask Mary.</p>
+
+<p>Well, at any rate, he had strength now for one thing&mdash;&ldquo;one
+pretty small thing.&rdquo; He would answer her letter.
+He answered it, and wrote: &ldquo;Don&#8217;t come; wait a little
+while.&rdquo; He put aside all those sweet lovers&#8217; pictures that
+had been floating before his eyes by night and day, and
+bade her stay until the summer, with its risks to health,
+should have passed, and she could leave her mother well
+and strong.</p>
+
+<p>It was only a day or two afterward that he fell sick.
+It was provoking to have such a cold and not know how
+he caught it, and to have it in such fine weather. He was
+in bed some days, and was robbed of much sleep by a
+cough. Mrs. Reisen found occasion to tell Dr. Sevier of
+Mary&#8217;s desire, as communicated to her by &ldquo;Mr. Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo;
+and of the advice she had given him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And he didn&#8217;t send for her, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mrs. Reisen, I wish you had kept your advice
+to yourself.&rdquo; The Doctor went to Richling&#8217;s bedside.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, why don&#8217;t you send for your wife?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+The patient floundered in the bed and drew himself up
+on his pillow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Doctor, just listen!&rdquo; He smiled incredulously.
+&ldquo;Bring that little woman and her baby down here just as
+the hot season is beginning?&rdquo; He thought a moment,
+and then continued: &ldquo;I&#8217;m afraid, Doctor, you&#8217;re prescribing
+for homesickness. Pray don&#8217;t tell me that&#8217;s my ailment.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, it&#8217;s not. You have a bad cough, that you must
+take care of; but still, the other is one of the counts in
+your case, and you know how quickly Mary and&mdash;the
+little girl would cure it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling smiled again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can&#8217;t do that, Doctor; when I go to Mary, or send
+for her, on account of homesickness, it must be hers, not
+mine.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mrs. Reisen,&rdquo; said the Doctor, outside the street
+door, &ldquo;I hope you&#8217;ll remember my request.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll tdo udt, Dtoctor,&rdquo; was the reply, so humbly
+spoken that he repented half his harshness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you&#8217;ve often heard that &lsquo;you can&#8217;t make a
+silk purse of a sow&#8217;s ear,&rsquo; haven&#8217;t you?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; I pin right often heeard udt.&rdquo; She spoke as
+though she was not wedded to any inflexible opinion concerning
+the proposition.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mrs. Reisen, as a man once said to me,
+&lsquo;neither can you make a sow&#8217;s ear out of a silk purse.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vell, to be cettaintly!&rdquo; said the poor woman, drawing
+not the shadow of an inference; &ldquo;how kin you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Richling tells me he will write to Mrs. Richling
+to prepare to come down in the fall.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vell,&rdquo; exclaimed the delighted Mrs. Reisen, in her
+husband&#8217;s best manner, &ldquo;t&#8217;at&#8217;s te etsectly I atwised
+him!&rdquo; And, as the Doctor drove away, she rubbed her
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
+mighty hands around each other in restored complacency.
+Two or three days later she had the additional pleasure
+of seeing Richling up and about his work again. It was
+upon her motherly urging that he indulged himself, one
+calm, warm afternoon, in a walk in the upper part of the
+city.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>NARCISSE WITH NEWS.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It was very beautiful to see the summer set in. Trees
+everywhere. You looked down a street, and, unless it
+were one of the two broad avenues where the only street-cars
+ran, it was pretty sure to be so overarched with
+boughs that, down in the distance, there was left but a
+narrow streak of vivid blue sky in the middle. Well-nigh
+every house had its garden, as every garden its countless
+flowers. The dark orange began to show its growing
+weight of fruitfulness, and was hiding in its thorny interior
+the nestlings of yonder mocking-bird, silently foraging
+down in the sunny grass. The yielding branches of
+the privet were bowed down with their plumy panicles,
+and swayed heavily from side to side, drunk with gladness
+and plenty. Here the peach was beginning to droop
+over a wall. There, and yonder again, beyond, ranks of
+fig-trees, that had so muffled themselves in their foliage
+that not the nakedness of a twig showed through, had yet
+more figs than leaves. The crisp, cool masses of the
+pomegranate were dotted with scarlet flowers. The cape
+jasmine wore hundreds of her own white favors, whose
+fragrance forerun the sight. Every breath of air was a
+new perfume. Roses, an innumerable host, ran a fairy
+riot about all grounds, and clambered from the lowest
+door-step to the highest roof. The oleander, wrapped in
+one great garment of red blossoms, nodded in the sun,
+and stirred and winked in the faint stirrings of the air
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+The pale banana slowly fanned herself with her own
+broad leaf. High up against the intense sky, its hard,
+burnished foliage glittering in the sunlight, the magnolia
+spread its dark boughs, adorned with their queenly white
+flowers. Not a bird nor an insect seemed unmated. The
+little wren stood and sung to his sitting wife his loud,
+ecstatic song, made all of her own name,&mdash;Matilda,
+Urilda, Lucinda, Belinda, Adaline, Madaline, Caroline, or
+Melinda, as the case might be,&mdash;singing as though every
+bone of his tiny body were a golden flute. The hummingbirds
+hung on invisible wings, and twittered with delight
+as they feasted on woodbine and honeysuckle. The
+pigeon on the roof-tree cooed and wheeled about his mate,
+and swelled his throat, and tremulously bowed and walked
+with a smiting step, and arched his purpling neck, and
+wheeled and bowed and wheeled again. Pairs of butterflies
+rose in straight upward flight, fluttered about each
+other in amorous strife, and drifted away in the upper air.
+And out of every garden came the voices of little children
+at play,&mdash;the blessedest sound on earth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Mary, Mary! why should two lovers live apart on
+this beautiful earth? Autumn is no time for mating.
+Who can tell what autumn will bring?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The revery was interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, &#8217;ow you enjoyin&#8217; yo&#8217; &#8217;ealth in that
+beaucheouz weatheh juz at the pwesent? Me, I&#8217;m well.
+Yes, I&#8217;m always well, in fact. At the same time nevvatheless,
+I fine myseff slightly sad. I s&#8217;pose &#8217;tis natu&#8217;al&mdash;a
+man what love the &#8217;itings of Lawd By&#8217;on as much as
+me. You know, of co&#8217;se, the melancholic intelligens?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Richling; &ldquo;has any one&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Lady By&#8217;on, seh. Yesseh. &lsquo;In the mids&#8217; of life&rsquo;&mdash;you
+know where we ah, Mistoo Itchlin, I su-pose?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is Lady Byron dead?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Yesseh.&rdquo; Narcisse bowed solemnly. &ldquo;Gone, Mistoo
+Itchlin. Since the seventeenth of last; yesseh. &lsquo;Kig
+the bucket,&rsquo; as the povvub say.&rdquo; He showed an extra
+band of black drawn neatly around his new straw hat.
+&ldquo;I thought it but p&#8217;opeh to put some moaning&mdash;as a
+species of twibute.&rdquo; He restored the hat to his head.
+&ldquo;You like the tas&#8217;e of that, Mistoo Itchlin?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling could but confess the whole thing was delicious.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yo humble servan&#8217;, seh,&rdquo; responded the smiling Creole,
+with a flattered bow. Then, assuming a gravity becoming
+the historian, he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In fact, &#8217;tis a gweat mistake, that statement that
+Lawd By&#8217;on evva qua&#8217;led with his lady, Mistoo Itchlin.
+But I s&#8217;pose you know &#8217;tis but a slandeh of the pwess.
+Yesseh. As, faw instance, thass anotheh slandeh of the
+pwess that the delegates qua&#8217;led ad the Chawleston convention.
+They only pwetend to qua&#8217;l; so, by that way,
+to mizguide those A<em>bol</em>ish-nists. Mistoo Itchlin, I am
+p&#8217;ojecting to &#8217;ite some obitua&#8217; &#8217;emawks about that Lady
+By&#8217;on, but I scass know w&#8217;etheh to &#8217;ite them in the poetic
+style aw in the p&#8217;osaic. Which would you conclude,
+Mistoo Itchlin?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling reflected with downcast eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It seems to me,&rdquo; he said, when he had passed his
+hand across his mouth in apparent meditation and looked
+up,&mdash;&ldquo;seems to me I&#8217;d conclude both, without delay.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes? But accawding to what fawmule, Mistoo
+Itchlin? &#8217;Ay, &#8217;tis theh is the &#8217;ub,&#8217; in fact, as Lawd
+By&#8217;on say. Is it to migs the two style&#8217; that you
+advise?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s the favorite method,&rdquo; replied Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I dunno &#8217;ow &#8217;tis, Mistoo Itchlin, but I fine the
+moze facil&#8217;ty in the poetic. &#8217;Tis t&#8217;ue, in the poetic you
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+got to look out concehning the <em>&#8217;ime</em>. You got to keep
+the eye skin&#8217; faw it, in fact. But in the p&#8217;osaic, on the
+cont&#8217;a-ay, &#8217;tis juz the opposite; you got to keep the eye
+skin&#8217; faw the <em>sense</em>. Yesseh. Now, if you migs the two
+style&#8217;&mdash;well&mdash;&#8217;ow&#8217;s that, Mistoo Itchlin, if you migs
+them? Seem&#8217; to me I dunno.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, don&#8217;t you see?&rdquo; asked Richling. &ldquo;If you
+mix them, you avoid both necessities. You sail triumphantly
+between Scylla and Charybdis without so much
+as skinning your eye.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse looked at him a moment with a slightly searching
+glance, dropped his eyes upon his own beautiful feet,
+and said, in a meditative tone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I believe you co&#8217;ect.&rdquo; But his smile was gone, and
+Richling saw he had ventured too far.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wish my wife were here,&rdquo; said Richling; &ldquo;she
+might give you better advice than I.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Narcisse, &ldquo;I believe you co&#8217;ect ag&#8217;in,
+Mistoo Itchlin. &#8217;Tis but since yeste&#8217;d&#8217;y that I jus appen
+to hea&#8217; Dr. Seveeah d&#8217;op a saying &#8217;esembling to that.
+Yesseh, she&#8217;s a v&#8217;ey &#8217;emawkable, Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is that what Dr. Sevier said?&rdquo; Richling began to
+fear an ambush.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, seh. What the Doctah say&mdash;&#8217;twas me&#8217;ly to
+&#8217;emawk in his jocose way&mdash;you know the Doctah&#8217;s lill
+callous, jocose way, Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He waved either hand outward gladsomely.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;I&#8217;ve seen specimens of it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh. He was ve&#8217;y complimenta&#8217;y, in fact, the
+Doctah. &#8217;Tis the trooth. He says, &lsquo;She&#8217;ll make a man
+of Witchlin if anythin&#8217; can.&rsquo; Juz in his jocose way, you
+know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Creole&#8217;s smile had returned in concentrated sweetness.
+He stood silent, his face beaming with what
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
+seemed his confidence that Richling would be delighted.
+Richling recalled the physician&#8217;s saying concerning this
+very same little tale-bearer,&mdash;that he carried his nonsense
+on top and his good sense underneath.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Sevier said that, did he?&rdquo; asked Richling, after
+a time.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;Tis the vehbatim, seh. Convussing to yo&#8217; &#8217;eve&#8217;end
+fwend. You can ask him; he will co&#8217;obo&#8217;ate me in fact.
+Well, Mistoo Itchlin, it supp&#8217;ise me you not tickle at that.
+Me, I may say, I wish <em>I</em> had a wife to make a man out of
+<em>me</em>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wish you had,&rdquo; said Richling. But Narcisse smiled on.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, <em>au &#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>.&rdquo; He paused an instant with an
+earnest face. &ldquo;Pehchance I&#8217;ll meet you this evening,
+Mistoo Itchlin? Faw doubtless, like myseff, you will
+assist at the gweat a-ally faw the Union, the Const&#8217;ution,
+and the enfo&#8217;cemen&#8217; of the law. Dr. Seveeah will addwess.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know that I care to hear him,&rdquo; replied Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Goin&#8217; to be a gwan&#8217; out-po&#8217;-ing, Mistoo Itchlin.
+Citizens of Noo &#8217;Leans without the leas&#8217; &#8217;espec&#8217; faw
+fawmeh polly-tickle diff&#8217;ence. Also fiah-works. &lsquo;Come
+one, come all,&rsquo; as says the gweat Scott&mdash;includin&#8217; yo&#8217;seff,
+Mistoo Itchlin. No? Well, <em>au &#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>, Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLVI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>A PRISON MEMENTO.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The political pot began to seethe. Many yet will
+remember how its smoke went up. The summer&mdash;summer
+of 1860&mdash;grew fervent. Its breath became hot
+and dry. All observation&mdash;all thought&mdash;turned upon
+the fierce campaign. Discussion dropped as to whether
+Heenan would ever get that champion&#8217;s belt, which even
+the little rector believed he had fairly won in the international
+prize-ring. The news brought by each succeeding
+European steamer of Garibaldi&#8217;s splendid triumphs in
+the cause of a new Italy, the fierce rattle of partisan warfare
+in Mexico, that seemed almost within hearing, so
+nearly was New Orleans concerned in some of its
+movements,&mdash;all things became secondary and trivial
+beside the developments of a political canvass in which
+the long-foreseen, long-dreaded issues between two parts
+of the nation were at length to be made final. The conventions
+had met, the nominations were complete, and
+the clans of four parties and fractions of parties were
+&ldquo;meeting,&rdquo; and &ldquo;rallying,&rdquo; and &ldquo;uprising,&rdquo; and &ldquo;outpouring.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>All life was strung to one high pitch. This contest
+was everything,&mdash;nay, everybody,&mdash;men, women, and
+children. They were all for the Constitution; they were
+all for the Union; and each, even Richling, for the
+enforcement of&mdash;his own ideas. On every bosom, &ldquo;no
+matteh the sex,&rdquo; and no matter the age, hung one of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>
+those little round, ribbanded medals, with a presidential
+candidate on one side and his vice-presidential man
+Friday on the other. Needless to say that Ristofalo&#8217;s
+Kate, instructed by her husband, imported the earliest
+and many a later invoice of them, and distributing her
+peddlers at choice thronging-places, &ldquo;everlastin&#8217;ly,&rdquo; as
+she laughingly and confidentially informed Dr. Sevier,
+&ldquo;raked in the sponjewlicks.&rdquo; They were exposed for
+sale on little stalls on populous sidewalks and places of
+much entry and exit.</p>
+
+<p>The post-office in those days was still on Royal street,
+in the old Merchants&#8217; Exchange. The small hand-holes
+of the box-delivery were in the wide tessellated passage
+that still runs through the building from Royal street to
+Exchange alley. A keeper of one of these little stalls
+established himself against a pillar just where men turned
+into and out of Royal street, out of or into this passage.
+One day, in this place, just as Richling turned from a
+delivery window to tear the envelope of a letter bearing
+the Milwaukee stamp, his attention was arrested by a
+man running by him toward Exchange alley, pale as
+death, and followed by a crowd that suddenly broke into
+a cry, a howl, a roar: &ldquo;Hang him! Hang him!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come!&rdquo; said a small, strong man, seizing Richling&#8217;s
+arm and turning him in the common direction. If the
+word was lost on Richling&#8217;s defective hearing, not so the
+touch; for the speaker was Ristofalo. The two friends
+ran with all their speed through the passage and out into
+the alley. A few rods away the chased wretch had been
+overtaken, and was made to face his pursuers. When
+Richling and Ristofalo reached him there was already a
+rope about his neck.</p>
+
+<p>The Italian&#8217;s leap, as he closed in upon the group
+around the victim, was like a tiger&#8217;s. The men he
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+touched did not fall; they were rather hurled, driving
+backward those whom they were hurled against. A man
+levelled a revolver at him; Richling struck it a blow that
+sent it over twenty men&#8217;s heads. A long knife flashed in
+Ristofalo&#8217;s right hand. He stood holding the rope in his
+left, stooping slightly forward, and darting his eyes about
+as if selecting a victim for his weapon. A stranger
+touched Richling from behind, spoke a hurried word in
+Italian, and handed him a huge dirk. But in that same
+moment the affair was over. There stood Ristofalo,
+gentle, self-contained, with just a perceptible smile turned
+upon the crowd, no knife in his hand, and beside him the
+slender, sinewy, form, and keen gray eye of Smith Izard.</p>
+
+<p>The detective was addressing the crowd. While he was
+speaking, half a score of police came from as many directions.
+When he had finished, he waved his slender hand
+at the mass of heads.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Stand back. Go about your business.&rdquo; And they
+began to go. He laid a hand upon the rescued stranger
+and addressed the police.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Take this rope off. Take this man to the station and
+keep him until it&#8217;s safe to let him go.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The explanation by which he had so quickly pacified
+the mob was a simple one. The rescued man was a seller
+of campaign medals. That morning, in opening a fresh
+supply of his little stock, he had failed to perceive that,
+among a lot of &ldquo;Breckenridge and Lane&rdquo; medals, there
+had crept in one of Lincoln. That was the sum of his
+offence. The mistake had occurred in the Northern factory.
+Of course, if he did not intend to sell Lincoln medals,
+there was no crime.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t I tell you?&rdquo; said the Italian to Richling, as
+they were walking away together. &ldquo;Bound to have war;
+is already begin-n.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
+&ldquo;It began with me the day I got married,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>Ristofalo waited some time, and then asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&#8217;t have said so,&rdquo; replied Richling; &ldquo;I can&#8217;t explain.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thass all right,&rdquo; said the other. And, a little later:
+&ldquo;Smith Izard call&#8217; you by name. How he know yo&#8217; name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can&#8217;t imagine!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Italian waved his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thass all right, too; nothin&#8217; to me.&rdquo; Then, after
+another pause: &ldquo;Think you saved my life to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The honors are easy,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>He went to bed again for two or three days. He liked
+it little when Dr. Sevier attributed the illness to a few
+moments&#8217; violent exertion and excitement.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was bravely done, at any rate, Richling,&rdquo; said the
+Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>That</em> it was!&rdquo; said Kate Ristofalo, who had happened
+to call to see the sick man at the same hour.
+&ldquo;Doctor, ye&#8217;r mighty right! Ha!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Reisen expressed a like opinion, and the two kind
+women met the two men&#8217;s obvious wish by leaving the room.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said Richling at once, &ldquo;the last time you
+said it was love-sickness; this time you say it&#8217;s excitement;
+at the bottom it isn&#8217;t either. Will you please tell
+me what it really is? What is this thing that puts me
+here on my back this way?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling,&rdquo; replied the Doctor, slowly, &ldquo;if I tell you
+the honest truth, it began in that prison.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The patient knit his hands under his head and lay
+motionless and silent.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, after a time. And by and by again:
+&ldquo;Yes; I feared as much. And can it be that my <em>physical</em>
+manhood is going to fail me at such a time as this?&rdquo; He
+drew a long breath and turned restively in the bed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We&#8217;ll try to keep it from doing that,&rdquo; replied the
+physician. &ldquo;I&#8217;ve told you this, Richling, old fellow to
+impress upon you the necessity of keeping out of all this
+hubbub,&mdash;this night-marching and mass-meeting and
+exciting nonsense.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And am I always&mdash;always to be blown back&mdash;blown
+back this way?&rdquo; said Richling, half to himself, half to his
+friend.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There, now,&rdquo; responded the Doctor, &ldquo;just stop talking
+entirely. No, no; not always blown back. A sick
+man always thinks the present moment is the whole boundless
+future. Get well. And to that end possess your
+soul in patience. No newspapers. Read your Bible. It
+will calm you. I&#8217;ve been trying it myself.&rdquo; His tone was
+full of cheer, but it was also so motherly and the touch so
+gentle with which he put back the sick man&#8217;s locks&mdash;as
+if they had been a lad&#8217;s&mdash;that Richling turned away his
+face with chagrin.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come!&rdquo; said the Doctor, more sturdily, laying his
+hand on the patient&#8217;s shoulder. &ldquo;You&#8217;ll not lie here
+more than a day or two. Before you know it summer
+will be gone, and you&#8217;ll be sending for Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling turned again, put out a parting hand, and
+smiled with new courage.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLVII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>NOW I LAY ME&mdash;</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Time may drag slowly, but it never drags backward.
+So the summer wore on, Richling following his physician&#8217;s
+directions; keeping to his work only&mdash;out of
+public excitements and all overstrain; and to every day,
+as he bade it good-by, his eager heart, lightened each
+time by that much, said, &ldquo;When you come around again,
+next year, Mary and I will meet you hand in hand.&rdquo;
+This was <em>his</em> excitement, and he seemed to flourish on it.</p>
+
+<p>But day by day, week by week, the excitements of
+the times rose. Dr. Sevier was deeply stirred, and ever
+on the alert, looking out upon every quarter of the political
+sky, listening to the rising thunder, watching the
+gathering storm. There could hardly have been any one
+more completely engrossed by it. If there was, it was
+his book-keeper. It wasn&#8217;t so much the Constitution that
+enlisted Narcisse&#8217;s concern; nor yet the Union, which
+seemed to him safe enough; much less did the desire to
+see the enforcement of the laws consume him. Nor was
+it altogether the &ldquo;&#8217;oman candles&rdquo; and the &ldquo;&#8217;ockets&rdquo;;
+but the rhetoric.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, the &ldquo;&#8217;eto&#8217;ic&rdquo;! He bathed, he paddled, dove,
+splashed, in a surf of it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctah,&rdquo;&mdash;shaking his finely turned shoulders into
+his coat and lifting his hat toward his head,&mdash;&ldquo;I had
+the honah, and at the same time the pleasu&#8217;, to yeh you
+make a shawt speech lass evening. I was p&#8217;oud to yeh
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+yo&#8217; bunning eloquence, Doctah,&mdash;if you&#8217;ll allow. Yesseh.
+Eve&#8217;ybody said &#8217;twas the moze bilious effo&#8217;t of the o&#8217;-casion.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier actually looked up and smiled, and thanked
+the happy young man for the compliment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh,&rdquo; continued his admirer, &ldquo;I nevveh flatteh.
+I give me&#8217;-it where the me&#8217;-it lies. Well, seh, we juz
+make the welkin &#8217;ing faw joy when you finally stop&#8217; at the
+en&#8217;. Pehchance you heard my voice among that sea of
+head&#8217;? But I doubt&mdash;in &#8217;such a vas&#8217; up&#8217;ising&mdash;so
+many imposing pageant&#8217;, in fact,&mdash;and those &#8217;ocket&#8217;
+exploding in the staw-y heaven&#8217;, as they say. I think I
+like that exp&#8217;ession I saw on the noozpapeh, wheh it says:
+&lsquo;Long biffo the appointed owwa, thousan&#8217; of flashing
+tawches and tas&#8217;eful t&#8217;anspa&#8217;encies with divuz devices
+whose blazing effulgence turn&#8217; day into night.&rsquo; Thass a
+ve&#8217;y talented style, in fact. Well, <em>au &#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>, Doctah.
+I&#8217;m going ad the&mdash;an&#8217; thass anotheh thing I like&mdash;&#8217;tis
+faw the ladies to &#8217;ing bells that way on the balconies.
+Because Mr. Bell and Eve&#8217;et is name <em>bell</em>, and so is the
+<em>bells</em> name&#8217; juz the same way, and so they &#8217;ing the <em>bells</em> to
+signify. I had to elucidate that to my hant. Well, <em>au
+&#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>, Doctah.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor raised his eyes from his letter-writing.
+The young man had turned, and was actually going out
+without another word. What perversity moved the physician
+no one will ever know; but he sternly called:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Narcisse?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Creole wheeled about on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor held him with a firm, grave eye, and slowly
+said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose before you return you will go to the post
+office.&rdquo; He said nothing more,&mdash;only that, just in his
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
+jocose way,&mdash;and dropped his eyes again upon his pen.
+Narcisse gave him one long black look, and silently went
+out.</p>
+
+<p>But a sweet complacency could not stay long away
+from the young man&#8217;s breast. The world was too beautiful;
+the white, hot sky above was in such fine harmony
+with his puffed lawn shirt-bosom and his white linen
+pantaloons, bulging at the thighs and tapering at the
+ankles, and at the corner of Canal and Royal streets he
+met so many members of the Yancey Guards and Southern
+Guards and Chalmette Guards and Union Guards and
+Lane Dragoons and Breckenridge Guards and Douglas
+Rangers and Everett Knights, and had the pleasant
+trouble of stepping aside and yielding the pavement to
+the far-spreading crinoline. Oh, life was one scintillating
+cluster breast-pin of ecstasies! And there was another
+thing,&mdash;General William Walker&#8217;s filibusters! Royal
+street, St. Charles, the rotunda of the St. Charles Hotel,
+were full of them.</p>
+
+<p>It made Dr. Sevier both sad and fierce to see what
+hold their lawless enterprise took upon the youth of the
+city. Not that any great number were drawn into
+the movement, least of all Narcisse; but it captivated
+their interest and sympathy, and heightened the general
+unrest, when calmness was what every thoughtful man
+saw to be the country&#8217;s greatest need.</p>
+
+<p>An incident to illustrate the Doctor&#8217;s state of mind.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred one evening in the St. Charles rotunda.
+He saw some citizens of high standing preparing to drink
+at the bar with a group of broad-hatted men, whose
+bronzed foreheads and general out-of-door mien hinted
+rather ostentatiously of Honduras and Ruatan Island.
+As he passed close to them one of the citizens faced him
+blandly, and unexpectedly took his hand, but quickly let
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span>
+it go again. The rest only glanced at the Doctor, and
+drew nearer to the bar.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I trust you&#8217;re not unwell, Doctor,&rdquo; said the sociable
+one, with something of a smile, and something of a frown,
+at the tall physician&#8217;s gloomy brow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I am well, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;didn&#8217;t know,&rdquo; said the man again, throwing an
+aggressive resentment into his tone; &ldquo;you seemed preoccupied.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was,&rdquo; replied the Doctor, returning his glance with
+so keen an eye that the man smiled again, appeasingly.
+&ldquo;I was thinking how barely skin-deep civilization is.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The man ha-ha&#8217;d artificially, stepping backward as he
+said, &ldquo;That&#8217;s so!&rdquo; He looked after the departing Doctor
+an instant and then joined his companions.</p>
+
+<p>Richling had a touch of this contagion. He looked
+from Garibaldi to Walker and back again, and could not
+see any enormous difference between them. He said as
+much to one of the bakery&#8217;s customers, a restaurateur
+with a well-oiled tongue, who had praised him for his
+intrepidity in the rescue of the medal-peddler, which, it
+seems, he had witnessed. With this praise still upon his
+lips the caterer walked with Richling to the restaurant
+door, and detained him there to enlarge upon the subject
+of Spanish-American misrule, and the golden rewards that
+must naturally fall to those who should supplant it with
+stable government. Richling listened and replied and
+replied again and listened; and presently the restaurateur
+startled him with an offer to secure him a captain&#8217;s commission
+under Walker. He laughed incredulously; but
+the restaurateur, very much in earnest, talked on; and by
+littles, but rapidly, Richling admitted the value of the
+various considerations urged. Two or three months of
+rapid adventure; complete physical renovation&mdash;of course&mdash;natural
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span>
+sequence; the plaudits of a grateful people;
+maybe fortune also, but at least a certainty of finding the
+road to it,&mdash;all this to meet Mary with next fall.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m in a great hurry just now,&rdquo; said Richling; &ldquo;but
+I&#8217;ll talk about this thing with you again to-morrow or next
+day,&rdquo; and so left.</p>
+
+<p>The restaurateur turned to his head-waiter, stuck his
+tongue in his cheek, and pulled down the lower lid of an
+eye with his forefinger. He meant to say he had been
+lying for the pure fun of it.</p>
+
+<p>When Dr. Sevier came that afternoon to see Reisen&mdash;of
+whom there was now but little left, and that little
+unable to leave the bed&mdash;Richling took occasion to raise
+the subject that had entangled his fancy. He was careful
+to say nothing of himself or the restaurateur, or
+anything, indeed, but a timid generality or two. But the
+Doctor responded with a clear, sudden energy that, when
+he was gone, left Richling feeling painfully blank, and yet
+unable to find anything to resent except the Doctor&#8217;s
+superfluous&mdash;as he thought, quite superfluous&mdash;mention
+of the island of Cozumel.</p>
+
+<p>However, and after all, that which for the most part
+kept the public mind heated was, as we have said, the
+political campaign. Popular feeling grew tremulous with
+it as the landscape did under the burning sun. It was a
+very hot summer. Not a good one for feeble folk; and
+one early dawn poor Reisen suddenly felt all his reason
+come back to him, opened his eyes, and lo! he had
+crossed the river in the night, and was on the other side.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier&#8217;s experienced horse halted of his own will
+to let a procession pass. In the carriage at its head
+the physician saw the little rector, sitting beside a man of
+German ecclesiastical appearance. Behind it followed a
+majestic hearse, drawn by black-plumed and caparisoned
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span>
+horses,&mdash;four of them. Then came a long line of red-shirted
+firemen; for he in the hearse had been an
+&ldquo;exempt.&rdquo; Then a further line of big-handed, white-gloved
+men in beavers and regalias; for he had been also
+a Freemason and an Odd-fellow. Then another column,
+of emotionless-visaged German women, all in bunchy black
+gowns, walking out of time to the solemn roll and pulse
+of the muffled drums, and the brazen peals of the funeral
+march. A few carriages closed the long line. In the
+first of them the waiting Doctor marked, with a sudden
+understanding of all, the pale face of John Richling, and
+by his side the widow who had been forty years a wife,&mdash;weary
+and red with weeping. The Doctor took off his hat.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLVIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>RISE UP, MY LOVE, MY FAIR ONE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The summer at length was past, and the burning heat
+was over and gone. The days were refreshed with
+the balm of a waning October. There had been no fever.
+True, the nights were still aglare with torches, and the
+street echoes kept awake by trumpet notes and huzzas,
+by the tramp of feet and the delicate hint of the
+bell-ringing; and men on the stump and off it; in the
+&ldquo;wigwams;&rdquo; along the sidewalks, as they came forth,
+wiping their mouths, from the free-lunch counters, and on
+the curb-stones and &ldquo;flags&rdquo; of Carondelet street, were
+saying things to make a patriot&#8217;s heart ache. But contrariwise,
+in that same Carondelet street, and hence in all
+the streets of the big, scattered town, the most prosperous
+commercial year&mdash;they measure from September
+to September&mdash;that had ever risen upon New Orleans
+had closed its distended record, and no one knew or
+dreamed that, for nearly a quarter of a century to come,
+the proud city would never see the equal of that golden
+year just gone. And so, away yonder among the great
+lakes on the northern border of the anxious but hopeful
+country, Mary was calling, calling, like an unseen bird
+piping across the fields for its mate, to know if she and
+the one little nestling might not come to hers.</p>
+
+<p>And at length, after two or three unexpected contingencies
+had caused delays of one week after another, all
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>
+in a silent tremor of joy, John wrote the word&mdash;&ldquo;Come!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was on his way to put it into the post-office, in
+Royal street. At the newspaper offices, in Camp street,
+he had to go out into the middle of the way to get around
+the crowd that surrounded the bulletin-boards, and that
+scuffled for copies of the latest issue. The day of days
+was passing; the returns of election were coming in. In
+front of the &ldquo;Picayune&rdquo; office he ran square against a
+small man, who had just pulled himself and the most of
+his clothing out of the press with the last news crumpled
+in the hand that he still held above his head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hello, Richling, this is pretty exciting, isn&#8217;t it?&rdquo; It
+was the little clergyman. &ldquo;Come on, I&#8217;ll go your way;
+let&#8217;s get out of this.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He took Richling&#8217;s arm, and they went on down the
+street, the rector reading aloud as they walked, and
+shopkeepers and salesmen at their doors catching what they
+could of his words as the two passed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s dreadful! dreadful!&rdquo; said the little man, thrusting
+the paper into his pocket in a wad.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hi! Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; quoth Narcisse, passing them
+like an arrow, on his way to the paper offices.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s happy,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, he&#8217;s the only happy man I know of in
+New Orleans to-day,&rdquo; said the little rector, jerking his
+head and drawing a sigh through his teeth.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;I&#8217;m another. You see this
+letter.&rdquo; He showed it with the direction turned down.
+&ldquo;I&#8217;m going now to mail it. When my wife gets it she
+starts.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The preacher glanced quickly into his face. Richling
+met his gaze with eyes that danced with suppressed joy.
+The two friends attracted no attention from those whom
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span>
+they passed or who passed them; the newsboys were
+scampering here and there, everybody buying from them,
+and the walls of Common street ringing with their
+shouted proffers of the &ldquo;full account&rdquo; of the election.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, don&#8217;t do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; Richling showed only amusement.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;For several reasons,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;In the
+first place, look at your business!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Never so good as to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;True. And it entirely absorbs you. What time
+would you have at your fireside, or even at your family
+table? None. It&#8217;s&mdash;well you know what it is&mdash;it&#8217;s a
+bakery, you know. You couldn&#8217;t expect to lodge <em>your</em>
+wife and little girl in a bakery in Benjamin street; you
+know you couldn&#8217;t. Now, <em>you</em>&mdash;you don&#8217;t mind it&mdash;or,
+I mean, you can stand it. Those things never need
+damage a gentleman. But with your wife it would be
+different. You smile, but&mdash;why, you know she couldn&#8217;t
+go there. And if you put her anywhere where a lady
+ought to be, in New Orleans, she would be&mdash;well, don&#8217;t
+you see she would be about as far away as if she were in
+Milwaukee? Richling, I don&#8217;t know how it looks to you
+for me to be so meddlesome, and I believe you think I&#8217;m
+making a very poor argument; but you see this is only
+one point and the smallest. Now&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Richling raised his thin hand, and said pleasantly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s no use. You can&#8217;t understand; it wouldn&#8217;t be
+possible to explain; for you simply don&#8217;t know Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But there are some things I do know. Just think;
+she&#8217;s with her mother where she is. Imagine her falling
+ill here,&mdash;as you&#8217;ve told me she used to do,&mdash;and you
+with that bakery on your hands.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling looked grave.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no,&rdquo; continued the little man. &ldquo;You&#8217;ve been so
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span>
+brave and patient, you and your wife, both,&mdash;do be so a
+little bit longer! Live close; save your money; go on
+rising in value in your business; and after a little you&#8217;ll
+rise clear out of the sphere you&#8217;re now in. You&#8217;ll
+command your own time; you&#8217;ll build your own little
+home; and life and happiness and usefulness will be
+fairly and broadly open before you.&rdquo; Richling gave heed
+with a troubled face, and let his companion draw him
+into the shadow of that &ldquo;St. Charles&rdquo; from the foot of
+whose stair-way he had once been dragged away as a
+vagrant.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;See, Richling! Every few weeks you may read in
+some paper of how a man on some ferry-boat jumps for
+the wharf before the boat has touched it, falls into the
+water, and&mdash;&nbsp;Make sure! Be brave a little longer&mdash;only
+a little longer! Wait till you&#8217;re sure!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m sure enough!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, you&#8217;re not! Wait till this political broil is
+over. They say Lincoln is elected. If so, the South is
+not going to submit to it. Nobody can tell what the
+consequences are to be. Suppose we should have war?
+I don&#8217;t think we shall, but suppose we should? There
+would be a general upheaval, commercial stagnation,
+industrial collapse, shrinkage everywhere! Wait till it&#8217;s
+over. It may not be two weeks hence; it can hardly be
+more than ninety days at the outside. If it should the
+North would be ruined, and you may be sure they are not
+going to allow <em>that</em>. Then, when all starts fair again,
+bring your wife and baby. I&#8217;ll tell you what to do, Richling!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will you?&rdquo; responded the listener, with an amiable
+laugh that the little man tried to echo.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Ask Dr. Sevier! He&#8217;s right here in the next
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span>
+street. He was on your side last time; maybe he&#8217;ll be so
+now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Done!&rdquo; said Richling. They went. The rector said
+he would do an errand in Canal street, while Richling
+should go up and see the physician.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier was in.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Richling!&rdquo; He rose to receive him. &ldquo;How
+are you?&rdquo; He cast his eye over his visitor with professional
+scrutiny. &ldquo;What brings <em>you</em> here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;To tell you that I&#8217;ve written for Mary,&rdquo; said Richling,
+sinking wearily into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have you mailed the letter?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m taking it to the post-office now.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor threw one leg energetically over the other,
+and picked up the same paper-knife that he had handled
+when, two years and a half before, he had sat thus, talking
+to Mary and John on the eve of their separation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, I&#8217;ll tell you. I&#8217;ve been thinking about this
+thing for some time, and I&#8217;ve decided to make you a
+proposal. I look at you and at Mary and at the times&mdash;the
+condition of the country&mdash;the probable future&mdash;everything.
+I know you, physically and mentally, better
+than anybody else does. I can say the same of Mary.
+So, of course, I don&#8217;t make this proposal impulsively,
+and I don&#8217;t want it rejected.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, I&#8217;ll lend you two thousand to twenty-five
+hundred dollars, payable at your convenience, if you will
+just go to your room, pack up, go home, and take from
+six to twelve months&#8217; holiday with your wife and child.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The listener opened his mouth in blank astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor, you&#8217;re jesting! You can&#8217;t suppose&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t suppose anything. I simply want you to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I simply can&#8217;t!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Did you ever regret taking my advice, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, never. But this&mdash;why, it&#8217;s utterly impossible!
+Me leave the results of four years&#8217; struggle to go holidaying?
+I can&#8217;t understand you, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;Twould take weeks to explain.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s idle to think of it,&rdquo; said Richling, half to himself.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go home and think of it twenty-four hours,&rdquo; said the
+Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It is useless, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very good, then; send for Mary. Mail your letter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You don&#8217;t mean it!&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do. Send for Mary; and tell her I advised it.&rdquo;
+He turned quickly away to his desk, for Richling&#8217;s
+eyes had filled with tears; but turned again and rose as
+Richling rose. They joined hands.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Richling, send for her. It&#8217;s the right thing to
+do&mdash;if you will not do the other. You know I want you
+to be happy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, one word. In your opinion is there going to
+be war?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know. But if there is it&#8217;s time for husband
+and wife and child to draw close together. Good-day.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And so the letter went.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLIX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>A BUNDLE OF HOPES.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Richling insisted, in the face of much scepticism
+on the part of the baker&#8217;s widow, that he felt better,
+was better, and would go on getting better, now that the
+weather was cool once more.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I hope you vill, Mr. Richlin&#8217;, dtat&#8217;s a fect.
+&#8217;Specially ven yo&#8217; vife comin&#8217;. Dough <em>I</em> could a-tooken
+care ye choost tso koot as vot she couldt.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But maybe you couldn&#8217;t take care of her as well as I
+can,&rdquo; said the happy Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, tdat&#8217;s a tdifferendt. A voman kin tek care
+herself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Visiting the French market on one of these glad mornings,
+as his business often required him to do, he fell in
+with Narcisse, just withdrawing from the celebrated coffee-stand
+of Rose Nicaud. Richling stopped in the moving
+crowd and exchanged salutations very willingly; for here
+was one more chance to hear himself tell the fact of
+Mary&#8217;s expected coming.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;So&#8217;y, Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; said Narcisse, whipping away
+the pastry crumbs from his lap with a handkerchief and
+wiping his mouth, &ldquo;not to encounteh you a lill biffo&#8217;, to
+join in pahtaking the cup what cheeahs at the same time
+whilce it invigo&#8217;ates; to-wit, the coffee-cup&mdash;as the
+maxim say. I dunno by what fawmule she makes that
+coffee, but &#8217;tis astonishin&#8217; how &#8217;tis good, in fact. I dunno
+if you&#8217;ll billieve me, but I feel almost I could pahtake
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span>
+anotheh cup&mdash;? &#8217;Tis the tooth.&rdquo; He gave Richling
+time to make any handsome offer that might spontaneously
+suggest itself, but seeing that the response was only an
+over-gay expression of face, he added, &ldquo;But I conclude
+no. In fact, Mistoo Itchlin, thass a thing I have
+discovud,&mdash;that too much coffee millytates ag&#8217;inst the
+chi&#8217;og&#8217;aphy; and thus I abstain. Well, seh, ole Abe is
+elected.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; rejoined Richling, &ldquo;and there&#8217;s no telling what
+the result will be.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You co&#8217;ect, Mistoo Itchlin.&rdquo; Narcisse tried to look
+troubled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve got a bit of private news that I don&#8217;t think
+you&#8217;ve heard,&rdquo; said Richling. And the Creole rejoined
+promptly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I <em>thought</em> I saw something on yo&#8217; thoughts&mdash;if
+you&#8217;ll excuse my tautology. Thass a ve&#8217;y diffycult to
+p&#8217;event sometime&#8217;. But, Mistoo Itchlin, I trus&#8217; &#8217;tis not
+you &#8217;ave allowed somebody to swin&#8217;le you?&mdash;confiding
+them too indiscweetly, in fact?&rdquo; He took a pretty
+attitude, his eyes reposing in Richling&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>Richling laughed outright.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, nothing of that kind. No, I&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&#8217;m ve&#8217;y glad,&rdquo; interrupted Narcisse.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, &#8217;tisn&#8217;t trouble at all! I&#8217;ve sent for Mrs.
+Richling. We&#8217;re going to resume housekeeping.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse gave a glad start, took his hat off, passed it
+to his left hand, extended his right, bowed from the
+middle with princely grace, and, with joy breaking all
+over his face, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, in fact,&mdash;shake!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They shook.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh&mdash;an&#8217; many &#8217;appy &#8217;eturn! I dunno if you kin
+billieve that, Mistoo Itchlin; but I was juz about to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span>
+&#8217;ead that in yo&#8217; physio&#8217;nomie! Yesseh. But, Mistoo
+Itchlin, when shall the happy o&#8217;casion take effect?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pretty soon. Not as soon as I thought, for I got a
+despatch yesterday, saying her mother is very ill, and of
+course I telegraphed her to stay till her mother is at
+least convalescent. But I think that will be soon. Her
+mother has had these attacks before. I have good hopes
+that before long Mrs. Richling will actually be here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling began to move away down the crowded
+market-house, but Narcisse said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thass yo&#8217; di&#8217;ection? &#8217;Tis the same, mine. We may
+accompany togetheh&mdash;if you&#8217;ll allow yo&#8217; &#8217;umble suvvant?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come along! You do me honor!&rdquo; Richling laid
+his hand on Narcisse&#8217;s shoulder and they went at a gait
+quickened by the happy husband&#8217;s elation. Narcisse was
+very proud of the touch, and, as they began to traverse
+the vegetable market, took the most populous arcade.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin,&rdquo; he began again, &ldquo;I muz congwatu<em>late</em>
+you! You know I always admiah yo&#8217; lady to
+excess. But appopo of that news, I might infawm you
+some intelligens consunning myseff.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good!&rdquo; exclaimed Richling. &ldquo;For it&#8217;s good news,
+isn&#8217;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh,&mdash;as you may say,&mdash;yes. Faw in fact,
+Mistoo Itchlin, I &#8217;ave ass Dr. Seveeah to haugment me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hurrah!&rdquo; cried Richling. He coughed and laughed
+and moved aside to a pillar and coughed, until people
+looked at him, and lifted his eyes, tired but smiling, and,
+paying his compliments to the paroxysm in one or two ill-wishes,
+wiped his eyes at last, and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And the Doctor augmented you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, no, I can&#8217;t say that&mdash;not p&#8217;ecisely.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what did he do?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Well, he &#8217;efuse&#8217; me, in fact.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why&mdash;but that isn&#8217;t good news, then.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Narcisse gave his head a bright, argumentative
+twitch.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yesseh. &#8217;Tis t&#8217;ue he &#8217;efuse&#8217;; but ad the same time&mdash;I
+dunno&mdash;I thing he wasn&#8217; so mad about it as he make
+out. An&#8217; you know thass one thing, Mistoo Itchlin,
+whilce they got life they got hope; and hence I ente&#8217;tain
+the same.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They had reached that flagged area without covering or
+inclosure, before the third of the three old market-houses,
+where those dealers in the entire miscellanies of a housewife&#8217;s
+equipment, excepting only stoves and furniture,
+spread their wares and fabrics in the open weather before
+the Bazar market rose to give them refuge. He grew
+suddenly fierce.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But any&#8217;ow I don&#8217;t care! I had the spunk to ass &#8217;im,
+an&#8217; he din &#8217;ave the spunk to dischawge me! All he can
+do; &#8217;tis to shake the fis&#8217; of impatience.&rdquo; He was looking
+into his companion&#8217;s face, as they walked, with an eye
+distended with defiance.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Look out!&rdquo; exclaimed Richling, reaching a hurried
+hand to draw him aside. Narcisse swerved just in time
+to avoid stepping into a pile of crockery, but in so doing
+went full into the arms of a stately female figure dressed
+in the crispest French calico and embarrassed with numerous
+small packages of dry goods. The bundles flew
+hither and yon. Narcisse tried to catch the largest as he
+saw it going, but only sent it farther than it would have
+gone, and as it struck the ground it burst like a pomegranate.
+But the contents were white: little thin, square-folded
+fractions of barred jaconet and white flannel; rolls
+of slender white lutestring ribbon; very narrow papers
+of tiny white pearl buttons, minute white worsted socks,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span>
+spools of white floss, cards of safety-pins, pieces of white
+castile soap, etc.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Mille pardons, madame!</em>&rdquo; exclaimed Narcisse; &ldquo;I
+make you a thousan&#8217; poddons, madam!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He was ill-prepared for the majestic wrath that flashed
+from the eyes and radiated from the whole dilating, and
+subsiding, and re&euml;xpanding, and rising, and stiffening
+form of Kate Ristofalo!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Officerr,&rdquo; she panted,&mdash;for instantly there was a
+crowd, and a man with the silver-crescent badge was
+switching the assemblage on the legs with his cane to
+make room,&mdash;&ldquo;Officerr,&rdquo; she gasped, levelling her tremulous
+finger at Narcisse, &ldquo;arrist that man!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Ristofalo!&rdquo; exclaimed Richling, &ldquo;don&#8217;t do that!
+It was all an accident! Why, don&#8217;t you see it&#8217;s Narcisse,&mdash;my
+friend?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yer frind rised his hand to sthrike me, sur, he did!
+Yer frind rised his hand to sthrike me, he did!&rdquo; And
+up she went and down she went, shortening and lengthening,
+swelling and decreasing. &ldquo;Yes, yes, I know yer
+frind; indeed I do! I paid two dollars and a half fur his
+acquaintans nigh upon three years agone, sur. Yer
+frind!&rdquo; And still she went up and down, enlarging,
+diminishing, heaving her breath and waving her chin
+around, and saying, in broken utterances,&mdash;while a hackman
+on her right held his whip in her auditor&#8217;s face,
+crying, &ldquo;Carriage, sir? Carriage, sir?&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&#8217;&mdash;he rin agin&mdash;a man, sur! I&mdash;I&mdash;oh!
+I wish Mr. Ristofalah war heer!&mdash;to teach um how&mdash;to
+walk!&mdash;Yer frind, sur&mdash;ixposing me!&rdquo; She pointed
+to Narcisse and the policeman gathering up the scattered
+lot of tiny things. Her eyes filled with tears, but still
+shot lightning. &ldquo;If he&#8217;s hurrted me, he&#8217;s got &#8217;o suffer
+fur ud, Mr. Richlin&#8217;!&rdquo; And she expanded again.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Carriage, sir, carriage?&rdquo; continued the man with the
+whip.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; said Richling and Mrs. Ristofalo in a breath.
+She took his arm, the hackman seized the bundles from
+the policeman, threw open his hack door, laid the bundles
+on the front seat, and let down the folding steps. The
+crowd dwindled away to a few urchins.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Officerr,&rdquo; said Mrs. Ristofalo, her foot on the step and
+composure once more in her voice, &ldquo;ye needn&#8217;t arrist
+um. I could of done ud, sur,&rdquo; she added to Narcisse
+himself, &ldquo;but I&#8217;m too much of a laydy, sur!&rdquo; And she
+sank together and stretched herself up once more, entered
+the vehicle, and sat with a perpendicular back, her arms
+folded on her still heaving bosom, and her head high.</p>
+
+<p>As to her ability to have that arrest made, Kate Ristofalo
+was in error. Narcisse smiled to himself; for he
+was conscious of one advantage that overtopped all the
+sacredness of female helplessness, public right, or any
+other thing whatsoever. It lay in the simple fact that he
+was acquainted with the policeman. He bowed blandly
+to the officer, stepped backward, touching his hat, and
+walked away, the policeman imitating each movement with
+the promptness and faithfulness of a mirror.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Aren&#8217;t ye goin&#8217; to get in, Mr. Richlin&#8217;?&rdquo; asked Mrs.
+Ristofalo. She smiled first and then looked alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I can&#8217;t very well&mdash;if you&#8217;ll excuse me, ma&#8217;am.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Mr. Richlin&#8217;!&rdquo;&mdash;she pouted girlishly. &ldquo;Gettin&#8217;
+proud!&rdquo; She gave her head a series of movements, as to
+say she might be angry if she would, but she wouldn&#8217;t.
+&ldquo;Ye won&#8217;t know uz when Mrs. Richlin&#8217; comes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling laughed, but she gave a smiling toss to indicate
+that it was a serious matter.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; she insisted, patting the seat beside her with
+honeyed persuasiveness, &ldquo;come and tell me all about ud.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span>
+Mr. Ristofalah nivver goes into peticklers, an&#8217; so I har&#8217;ly
+know anny more than jist she&#8217;s a-comin&#8217;. Come, git in
+an&#8217; tell me about Mrs. Richlin&#8217;&mdash;that is, if ye like the
+subject&mdash;and I don&#8217;t believe ye do.&rdquo; She lifted her
+finger, shook it roguishly close to her own face, and looked
+at him sidewise. &ldquo;Ah, nivver mind, sur! that&#8217;s rright!
+Furgit yer old frinds&mdash;maybe ye wudden&#8217;t do ud if ye
+knewn everythin&#8217;. But that&#8217;s rright; that&#8217;s the way with
+min.&rdquo; She suddenly changed to subdued earnestness,
+turned the catch of the door, and, as the door swung
+open, said: &ldquo;Come, if ud&#8217;s only fur a bit o&#8217; the way&mdash;if
+ud&#8217;s only fur a ming-ute. I&#8217;ve got somethin&#8217; to tell ye.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I must get out at Washington Market,&rdquo; said Richling,
+as he got in. The hack hurried down Old Levee street.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said she, merriment dancing in her eyes,
+her folded arms tightening upon her bosom, and her lips
+struggling against their own smile, &ldquo;I&#8217;m just a good
+mind not to tell ye at ahll!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Her humor was contagious and Richling was ready to
+catch it. His own eye twinkled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mrs. Ristofalo, of course, if you feel any
+embarrassment&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ye villain!&rdquo; she cried, with delighted indignation,
+&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t mean nawthing about <em>that</em>, an&#8217; ye knew ud!
+Here, git out o&#8217; this carridge!&rdquo; But she made no effort
+to eject him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary and I are interested in all your hopes,&rdquo; said
+Richling, smiling softly upon the damaged bundle which
+he was making into a tight package again on his knee.
+&ldquo;You&#8217;ll tell me your good news if it&#8217;s only that I may
+tell her, will you not?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>I</em> will. And it&#8217;s joost this,&mdash;Mr. Richlin&#8217;,&mdash;that if
+there be&#8217;s a war Mr. Ristofalah&#8217;s to be lit out o&#8217; prison.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m very glad!&rdquo; cried Richling, but stopped short,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span>
+for Mrs. Ristofalo&#8217;s growing dignity indicated that there
+was more to be told.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m sure ye air, Mr. Richlin&#8217;; and I&#8217;m sure ye&#8217;ll be
+glad&mdash;a heap gladder nor I am&mdash;that in that case he&#8217;s
+to be Captain Ristofalah.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sur.&rdquo; The wife laid her palm against her
+floating ribs and breathed a sigh. &ldquo;I don&#8217;t like ud,
+Mr. Richlin&#8217;. No, sur. I don&#8217;t like tytles.&rdquo; She
+got her fan from under her handkerchief and set it
+a-going. &ldquo;I nivver liked the idee of bein&#8217; a tytled man&#8217;s
+wife. No, sur.&rdquo; She shook her head, elevating it as she
+shook it. &ldquo;It creates too much invy, Mr. Richlin&#8217;. Well,
+good-by.&rdquo; The carriage was stopping at the Washington
+Market. &ldquo;Now, don&#8217;t ye mintion it to a livin&#8217; soul,
+Mr. Richlin&#8217;!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling said &ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, sur; fur there be&#8217;s manny a slip &#8217;tuxt the cup
+an&#8217; the lip, ye know; an&#8217; there may be no war, after all,
+and we may all be disapp&#8217;inted. But he&#8217;s bound to be
+tleared if he&#8217;s tried, and don&#8217;t ye see&mdash;I&mdash;I don&#8217;t want
+um to be a captain, anyhow, don&#8217;t ye see?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling saw, and they parted.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Thus everybody hoped. Dr. Sevier, wifeless, childless,
+had his hopes too, nevertheless. Hopes for the hospital
+and his many patients in it and out of it; hopes for his
+town and his State; hopes for Richling and Mary; and
+hopes with fears, and fears with hopes, for the great
+sisterhood of States. Richling had one hope more.
+After some weeks had passed Dr. Sevier ventured once
+more to say:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, go home. Go to your wife. I must tell
+you you&#8217;re no ordinary sick man. Your life is in danger.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Will I be out of danger if I go home?&rdquo; asked Richling.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you still think we may have war?&rdquo; asked Richling
+again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know we shall.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And will the soldiers come back,&rdquo; asked the young
+man, smilingly, &ldquo;when they find their lives in danger?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Richling, that&#8217;s another thing entirely; that&#8217;s
+the battle-field.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&#8217;t it all the <em>same</em> thing, Doctor? Isn&#8217;t it all a battle-field?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor turned impatiently, disdaining to reply.
+But in a moment he retorted:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We take wounded men off the field.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They don&#8217;t take themselves off,&rdquo; said Richling,
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; rejoined the Doctor, rising and striding toward
+a window, &ldquo;a good general may order a retreat.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but&mdash;maybe I oughtn&#8217;t to say what I was thinking&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, say it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, he don&#8217;t let his surgeon order it. Doctor,&rdquo;
+continued Richling, smiling apologetically as his
+friend confronted him, &ldquo;you know, as you say, better
+than any one else, all that Mary and I have gone through&mdash;nearly
+all&mdash;and how we&#8217;ve gone through it. Now,
+if my life should end here shortly, what would the whole
+thing mean? It would mean nothing. Doctor; it would
+be meaningless. No, sir; this isn&#8217;t the end. Mary and
+I&rdquo;&mdash;his voice trembled an instant and then was firm
+again&mdash;&ldquo;are designed for a long life. I argue from the
+simple fitness of things,&mdash;this is not the end.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier turned his face quickly toward the window,
+and so remained.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER L.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>FALL IN!</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>There came a sound of drums. Twice on such a day,
+once the day before, thrice the next day, till by and
+by it was the common thing. High-stepping childhood,
+with laths and broom-handles at shoulder, was not fated,
+as in the insipid days of peace, to find, on running to the
+corner, its high hopes mocked by a wagon of empty
+barrels rumbling over the cobble-stones. No; it was the
+Washington Artillery, or the Crescent Rifles, or the
+Orleans Battalion, or, best of all, the blue-jacketed,
+white-leggined, red-breeched, and red-fezzed Zouaves;
+or, better than the best, it was all of them together, their
+captains stepping backward, sword in both hands, calling
+&ldquo;<em>Gauche! gauche!</em>&rdquo; (&ldquo;Left! left!&rdquo;) &ldquo;Guide right!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;<em>Portez
+armes!</em>&rdquo; and facing around again, throwing
+their shining blades stiffly to belt and epaulette, and
+glancing askance from under their abundant plumes to
+the crowded balconies above. Yea, and the drum-majors
+before, and the brilliant-petticoated <em>vivandi&egrave;res</em> behind!</p>
+
+<p>What pomp! what giddy rounds! Pennons, cock-feathers,
+clattering steeds, pealing salvos, banners,
+columns, ladies&#8217; favors, balls, concerts, toasts, the Free
+Gift Lottery&mdash;don&#8217;t you recollect?&mdash;and this uniform
+and that uniform, brother a captain, father a colonel,
+uncle a major, the little rector a chaplain, Captain Ristofalo
+of the Tiger Rifles; the levee covered with munitions
+of war, steam-boats unloading troops, troops, troops,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span>
+from Opelousas, Attakapas, Texas; and a supper to this
+company, a flag to that battalion, farewell sermon to the
+Washington Artillery, tears and a kiss to a spurred and
+sashed lover, hurried weddings,&mdash;no end of them,&mdash;a
+sword to such a one, addresses by such and such, serenades
+to Miss and to Mademoiselle.</p>
+
+<p>Soon it will have been a quarter of a century ago!</p>
+
+<p>And yet&mdash;do you not hear them now, coming down
+the broad, granite-paved, moonlit street, the light that
+was made for lovers glancing on bayonet and sword soon
+to be red with brothers&#8217; blood, their brave young hearts
+already lifted up with the triumph of battles to come, and
+the trumpets waking the midnight stillness with the gay
+notes of the Cracovienne?&mdash;</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<span style="margin-left: -.4em;">&ldquo;Again, again, the pealing drum,</span><br />
+ The clashing horn, they come, they come,<br />
+ And lofty deeds and daring high<br />
+ Blend with their notes of victory.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Ah! the laughter; the music; the bravado; the dancing;
+the songs! &ldquo;<em>Voil&agrave; l&#8217;Zouzou!</em>&rdquo; &ldquo;Dixie!&rdquo; &ldquo;<em>Aux
+armes, vos citoyens!</em>&rdquo; &ldquo;The Bonnie Blue Flag!&rdquo;&mdash;it
+wasn&#8217;t bonnie very long. Later the maidens at home
+learned to sing a little song,&mdash;it is among the missing
+now,&mdash;a part of it ran:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<span style="margin-left: -.4em;">&ldquo;Sleeping on grassy couches;</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pillowed on hillocks damp;</span><br />
+ Of martial fame how little we know<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Till brothers are in the camp.&rdquo;</span></p>
+
+<p>By and by they began to depart. How many they
+were! How many, many! We had too lightly let them
+go. And when all were gone, and they of Carondelet
+street and its tributaries, massed in that old gray, brittle-shanked
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span>
+regiment, the Confederate Guards, were having
+their daily dress parade in Coliseum place, and only they
+and the Foreign Legion remained; when sister Jane made
+lint, and flour was high, and the sounds of commerce
+were quite hushed, and in the custom-house gun-carriages
+were a-making, and in the foundries big guns were being
+cast, and the cotton gun-boats and the rams were building,
+and at the rotting wharves the masts of a few empty
+ships stood like dead trees in a blasted wilderness, and
+poor soldiers&#8217; wives crowded around the &ldquo;Free Market,&rdquo;
+and grass began to spring up in the streets,&mdash;they were
+many still, while far away; but some marched no more,
+and others marched on bleeding feet, in rags; and it was
+very, very hard for some of us to hold the voice steady
+and sing on through the chorus of the little song:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<span style="margin-left: -.4em;">&ldquo;Brave boys are they!</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gone at their country&#8217;s call.</span><br />
+ And yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;we cannot forget<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">That many brave boys must fall.&rdquo;</span></p>
+
+<p>Oh! Shiloh, Shiloh!</p>
+
+<p>But before the gloom had settled down upon us it was
+a gay dream.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mistoo Itchlin, in fact &#8217;ow you ligue my uniefawm?
+You think it suit my style? They got about two poun&#8217;
+of gole lace on that uniefawm. Yesseh. Me, the h-only
+thing&mdash;I don&#8217; ligue those epaulette&#8217;. So soon ev&#8217;ybody
+see that on me, &#8217;tis &lsquo;Lieut&#8217;nan&#8217;!&rsquo; in thiz place, an&#8217; &lsquo;Lieut&#8217;nan&#8217;!&rsquo;
+in that place. My de&#8217;seh, you&#8217;d thing I&#8217;m a
+majo&#8217;-gen&#8217;l, in fact. Well, of co&#8217;se, I don&#8217; ligue that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And so you&#8217;re a lieutenant?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Third! Of the Chasseurs-&aacute;-Pied! Coon he&#8217;p &#8217;t, in
+fact; the fellehs elected me. Goin&#8217; at Pensacola tomaw.
+Dr. Seveeah <em>con</em>tinue my sala&#8217;y whilce I&#8217;m gone.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span>
+no matteh the len&#8217;th. Me, I don&#8217; care, so long the sala&#8217;y
+<em>con</em>tinue, if that waugh las&#8217; ten yeah! You ah pe&#8217;haps
+goin&#8217; ad the ball to-nighd, Mistoo Itchlin? I dunno &#8217;ow
+&#8217;tis&mdash;I suppose you&#8217;ll be aztonizh&#8217; w&#8217;en I infawm you&mdash;that
+ball wemine me of that battle of Wattaloo! Did
+you evva yeh those line&#8217; of Lawd By&#8217;on,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<span style="margin-left: -.2em;">&lsquo;Theh was a soun&#8217; of wibalwy by night,</span><br />
+ W&#8217;en&mdash;&#8217;Ush-&#8217;ark!&mdash;A deep saun&#8217; stwike&rsquo;&mdash;?</p>
+
+<p>Thaz by Lawd By&#8217;on. Yesseh. Well&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The Creole lifted his right hand energetically, laid its
+inner edge against the brass buttons of his <em>k&eacute;pi</em>, and
+then waved it gracefully abroad:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Au &#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>, Mistoo Itchlin. I leave you to defen&#8217; the
+city.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;To-morrow,&rdquo; in those days of unreadiness and
+disconnection, glided just beyond reach continually. When
+at times its realization was at length grasped, it was
+away over on the far side of a fortnight or farther.
+However, the to-morrow for Narcisse came at last.</p>
+
+<p>A quiet order for attention runs down the column.
+Attention it is. Another order follows, higher-keyed,
+longer drawn out, and with one sharp &ldquo;clack!&rdquo; the
+sword-bayoneted rifles go to the shoulders of as fine a
+battalion as any in the land of Dixie.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>En avant!</em>&rdquo;&mdash;Narcisse&#8217;s heart stands still
+for joy&mdash;&ldquo;<em>Marche!</em>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The bugle rings, the drums beat; &ldquo;tramp, tramp,&rdquo; in
+quick succession, go the short-stepping, nimble Creole
+feet, and the old walls of the Rue Chartres ring again
+with the pealing huzza, as they rang in the days of Viller&eacute;
+and Lafr&eacute;ni&egrave;re, and in the days of the young Galvez,
+and in the days of Jackson.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span>
+The old Ponchartrain cars move off, packed. Down
+at the &ldquo;Old Lake End&rdquo; the steamer for Mobile receives
+the burden. The gong clangs in her engine-room,
+the walking-beam silently stirs, there is a hiss of
+water underneath, the gang-plank is in, the wet hawser-ends
+whip through the hawse-holes,&mdash;she moves; clang
+goes the gong again&mdash;she glides&mdash;or is it the crowded
+wharf that is gliding?&mdash;No.&mdash;Snatch the kisses! snatch
+them! Adieu! Adieu! She&#8217;s off, huzza&mdash;she&#8217;s off!</p>
+
+<p>Now she stands away. See the mass of gay colors&mdash;red,
+gold, blue, yellow, with glitter of steel and flutter of
+flags, a black veil of smoke sweeping over. Wave,
+mothers and daughters, wives, sisters, sweethearts&mdash;wave,
+wave; you little know the future!</p>
+
+<p>And now she is a little thing, her white wake following
+her afar across the green waters, the call of the bugle
+floating softly back. And now she is a speck. And
+now a little smoky stain against the eastern blue is all,&mdash;and
+now she is gone. Gone! Gone!</p>
+
+<p>Farewell, soldier boys! Light-hearted, little-forecasting,
+brave, merry boys! God accept you, our offering
+of first fruits! See that mother&mdash;that wife&mdash;take them
+away; it is too much. Comfort them, father, brother;
+tell them their tears may be for naught.</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+&ldquo;And yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;we cannot forget<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">That many brave boys must fall.&rdquo;</span></p>
+
+<p>Never so glad a day had risen upon the head of Narcisse.
+For the first time in his life he moved beyond the
+corporate limits of his native town.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Ezcape fum the aunt, thou sluggud!&rsquo;&rdquo; &ldquo;<em>Au &#8217;evoi&#8217;</em>&rdquo;
+to his aunt and the uncle of his aunt.
+&ldquo;<em>Au &#8217;evoi&#8217;!</em> <em>Au &#8217;evoi&#8217;!</em>&rdquo;&mdash;desk, pen,
+book&mdash;work, care,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span>
+thought, restraint&mdash;all sinking, sinking beneath the receding
+horizon of Lake Ponchartrain, and the wide world
+and a soldier&#8217;s life before him.</p>
+
+<p>Farewell, Byronic youth! You are not of so frail a
+stuff as you have seemed. You shall thirst by day and
+hunger by night. You shall keep vigil on the sands of
+the Gulf and on the banks of the Potomac. You shall
+grow brown, but prettier. You shall shiver in loathsome
+tatters, yet keep your grace, your courtesy, your joyousness.
+You shall ditch and lie down in ditches, and shall
+sing your saucy songs of defiance in the face of the foe,
+so blackened with powder and dust and smoke that your
+mother in heaven would not know her child. And you
+shall borrow to your heart&#8217;s content chickens, hogs, rails,
+milk, buttermilk, sweet potatoes, what not; and shall
+learn the American songs, and by the camp-fire of Shenandoah
+valley sing &ldquo;The years creep slowly by, Lorena&rdquo;
+to messmates with shaded eyes, and &ldquo;Her bright smile
+haunts me still.&rdquo; Ah, boy! there&#8217;s an old woman still
+living in the Rue Casa Calvo&mdash;your bright smile haunts
+her still. And there shall be blood on your sword, and
+blood&mdash;twice&mdash;thrice&mdash;on your brow. Your captain
+shall die in your arms; and you shall lead charge after
+charge, and shall step up from rank to rank; and all at
+once, one day, just in the final onset, with the cheer on
+your lips, and your red sword waving high, with but one
+lightning stroke of agony, down, down you shall go in the
+death of your dearest choice.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>BLUE BONNETS OVER THE BORDER.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>One morning, about the 1st of June, 1861, in the
+city of New York, two men of the mercantile class
+came from a cross street into Broadway, near what was
+then the upper region of its wholesale stores. They
+paused on the corner, near the edge of the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Even when the States were seceding,&rdquo; said one of
+them, &ldquo;I couldn&#8217;t make up my mind that they really meant
+to break up the Union.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He had rosy cheeks, a retreating chin, and amiable,
+inquiring eyes. The other had a narrower face, alert
+eyes, thin nostrils, and a generally aggressive look. He
+did not reply at once, but, after a quick glance down the
+great thoroughfare and another one up it, said, while
+his eyes still ran here and there:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Wonderful street, this Broadway!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He straightened up to his fullest height and looked
+again, now down the way, now up, his eye kindling with
+the electric contagion of the scene. His senses were all
+awake. They took in, with a spirit of welcome, all the
+vast movement: the uproar, the feeling of unbounded
+multitude, the commercial splendor, the miles of towering
+buildings; the long, writhing, grinding mass of coming
+and going vehicles, the rush of innumerable feet, and
+the countless forms and faces hurrying, dancing, gliding
+by, as though all the world&#8217;s mankind, and womankind,
+and childhood must pass that way before night.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span>
+&ldquo;How many people, do you suppose, go by this corner
+in a single hour?&rdquo; asked the man with the retreating chin.
+But again he got no answer. He might as well not have
+yielded the topic of conversation as he had done; so he
+resumed it. &ldquo;No, I didn&#8217;t believe it,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Why,
+look at the Southern vote of last November&mdash;look at
+New Orleans. The way it went there, I shouldn&#8217;t have
+supposed twenty-five per cent. of the people would be in
+favor of secession. Would you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But his companion, instead of looking at New Orleans,
+took note of two women who had come to a halt within a
+yard of them and seemed to be waiting, as he and his
+companion were, for an opportunity to cross the street.
+The two new-comers were very different in appearance,
+the one from the other. The older and larger was much
+beyond middle life, red, fat, and dressed in black stuff,
+good as to fabric, but uncommonly bad as to fit. The
+other was young and pretty, refined, tastefully dressed, and
+only the more interesting for the look of permanent anxiety
+that asserted itself with distinctness about the corners
+of her eyes and mouth. She held by the hand a rosy,
+chubby little child, that seemed about three years old, and
+might be a girl or might be a boy, so far as could be
+discerned by masculine eyes. The man did not see this
+fifth member of their group until the elder woman caught
+it under the arms in her large hands, and, lifting it above
+her shoulder, said, looking far up the street:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O paypy, paypy, choost look de fla-ags! One, two,
+dtree,&mdash;a tuzzent, a hundut, a dtowsant fla-ags!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Evidently the child did not know her well. The little
+face remained without a smile, the lips sealed, the shoulders
+drawn up, and the legs pointing straight to the spot
+whence they had been lifted. She set it down again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We&#8217;re not going to get by here,&rdquo; said the less talkative
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span>
+man. &ldquo;They must be expecting some troops to pass
+here. Don&#8217;t you see the windows full of women and
+children?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let&#8217;s wait and look at them,&rdquo; responded the other,
+and his companion did not dissent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; said the more communicative one, after
+a moment&#8217;s contemplation, &ldquo;I never expected to see
+this!&rdquo; He indicated by a gesture the stupendous life of
+Broadway beginning slowly to roll back upon itself like
+an obstructed river. It was obviously gathering in a
+general pause to concentrate its attention upon something
+of leading interest about to appear to view. &ldquo;We&#8217;re in
+earnest at last, and we can see, now, that the South was
+in the deadest kind of earnest from the word go.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They can&#8217;t be any more in earnest than we are, now,&rdquo;
+said the more decided speaker.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had great hopes of the peace convention,&rdquo; said the
+rosier man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I never had a bit,&rdquo; responded the other.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The suspense was awful&mdash;waiting to know what
+Lincoln would do when he came in,&rdquo; said he of the poor
+chin. &ldquo;My wife was in the South visiting her relatives;
+and we kept putting off her return, hoping for a quieter
+state of affairs&mdash;hoping and putting off&mdash;till first thing
+you knew the lines closed down and she had the hardest
+kind of a job to get through.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I never had a doubt as to what Lincoln would do,&rdquo;
+said the man with sharp eyes; but while he spoke he
+covertly rubbed his companion&#8217;s elbow with his own, and
+by his glance toward the younger of the two women gave
+him to understand that, though her face was partly turned
+away, the very pretty ear, with no ear-ring in the hole
+pierced for it, was listening. And the readier speaker
+rejoined in a suppressed voice:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span>
+&ldquo;That&#8217;s the little lady I travelled in the same car with
+all the way from Chicago.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No times for ladies to be travelling alone,&rdquo; muttered
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She hoped to take a steam-ship for New Orleans, to
+join her husband there.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Some rebel fellow, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, a Union man, she says.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, of course!&rdquo; said the sharp-eyed one, sceptically.
+&ldquo;Well, she&#8217;s missed it. The last steamer&#8217;s gone and
+may get back or may not.&rdquo; He looked at her again,
+narrowly, from behind his companion&#8217;s shoulder. She
+was stooping slightly toward the child, rearranging some
+tie under its lifted chin and answering its questions in
+what seemed a chastened voice. He murmured to his
+fellow, &ldquo;How do you know she isn&#8217;t a spy?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The other one turned upon him a look of pure amusement,
+but, seeing the set lips and earnest eye of his
+companion, said softly, with a faint, scouting hiss and
+smile:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She&#8217;s a perfect lady&mdash;a perfect one.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Her friend isn&#8217;t,&rdquo; said the aggressive man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Here they come,&rdquo; observed the other aloud, looking
+up the street. There was a general turning of attention
+and concentration of the street&#8217;s population toward the
+edge of either sidewalk. A force of police was clearing
+back into the by-streets a dense tangle of drays, wagons,
+carriages, and white-topped omnibuses, and far up the
+way could be seen the fluttering and tossing of handkerchiefs,
+and in the midst a solid mass of blue with a sheen
+of bayonets above, and every now and then a brazen reflection
+from in front, where the martial band marched before.
+It was not playing. The ear caught distantly, instead of
+its notes, the warlike thunder of the drum corps.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span>
+The sharper man nudged his companion mysteriously.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; he whispered. Neither they nor the other
+pair had materially changed their relative positions. The
+older woman was speaking.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;Twas te fun&#8217;est dting! You pe lookin&#8217; for te
+Noo &#8217;Leants shteamer, undt me lookin&#8217; for te Hambourg
+shteamer, undt coompt right so togeder undt never
+vouldn&#8217;t &#8217;a&#8217; knowedt udt yet, ovver te mayne exdt me,
+&lsquo;Misses Reisen, vot iss your name?&rsquo; undt you headt udt.
+Undt te minudt you shpeak, udt choost come to me
+like a flash o&#8217; lightenin&#8217;&mdash;&lsquo;Udt iss Misses Richlin&#8217;!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+The speaker&#8217;s companion gave her such attention as one
+may give in a crowd to words that have been heard two
+or three times already within the hour.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Alice,&rdquo; she said, once or twice to the little one,
+who pulled softly at her skirt asking confidential questions.
+But the baker&#8217;s widow went on with her story, enjoying
+it for its own sake.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You know, Mr. Richlin&#8217; he told me finfty dtimes,
+&lsquo;Misses Reisen, doant kif up te pissness!&rsquo; Ovver I see
+te mutcheenery proke undt te foundtries all makin&#8217; guns
+undt kennons, undt I choost says, &lsquo;I kot plenteh moneh&mdash;I
+tdtink I kfit undt go home.&rsquo; Ovver I sayss to de
+Doctor, &lsquo;Dte oneh dting&mdash;vot Mr. Richlin&#8217; ko-in to tdo?&rsquo;
+Undt Dr. Tseweer he sayss, &lsquo;How menneh pa&#8217;ls flour you
+kot shtowed away?&rsquo; Undt I sayss, &lsquo;Tsoo hundut finfty.&rsquo;
+Undt he sayss, &lsquo;Misses Reisen, Mr. Richlin&#8217; done made you
+rich; you choost kif um dtat flour; udt be wort&#8217; tweny-fife
+tollahs te pa&#8217;l, yet.&rsquo; Undt sayss I, &lsquo;Doctor, you&#8217; right,
+undt I dtank you for te goodt idea; I kif Mr. Richlin&#8217;
+innahow one pa&#8217;l.&rsquo; Undt I done-d it. Ovver I sayss,
+&lsquo;Doctor, dtat&#8217;s not like a rigler sellery, yet.&rsquo; Undt dten
+he sayss, &lsquo;You know, <em>mine</em> pookkeeper he gone to te vor,
+undt I need&rsquo;&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span>
+A crash of brazen music burst upon the ear and drowned
+the voice. The throng of the sidewalk pushed hard upon
+its edge.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let me hold the little girl up,&rdquo; ventured the milder
+man, and set her gently upon his shoulder, as amidst a
+confusion of outcries and flutter of hats and handkerchiefs
+the broad, dense column came on with measured tread,
+its stars and stripes waving in the breeze and its backward-slanting
+thicket of bayoneted arms glittering in the
+morning sun. All at once there arose from the great
+column, in harmony with the pealing music, the hoarse
+roar of the soldiers&#8217; own voices singing in time to the
+rhythm of their tread. And a thrill runs through the
+people, and they answer with mad huzzas and frantic
+wavings and smiles, half of wild ardor and half of wild
+pain; and the keen-eyed man here by Mary lets the tears
+roll down his cheeks unhindered as he swings his hat and
+cries &ldquo;Hurrah! hurrah!&rdquo; while on tramps the mighty
+column, singing from its thousand thirsty throats the song
+of John Brown&#8217;s Body.</p>
+
+<p>Yea, so, soldiers of the Union,&mdash;though that little
+mother there weeps but does not wave, as the sharp-eyed
+man notes well through his tears,&mdash;yet even so, yea, all
+the more, go&mdash;&ldquo;go marching on,&rdquo; saviors of the Union;
+your cause is just. Lo, now, since nigh twenty-five years
+have passed, we of the South can say it!</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+&ldquo;And yet&mdash;and yet, we cannot forget&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>and we would not.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>A PASS THROUGH THE LINES.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>About the middle of September following the date
+of the foregoing incident, there occurred in a farmhouse
+head-quarters on the Indiana shore of the Ohio
+river the following conversation:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You say you wish me to give you a pass through the
+lines, ma&#8217;am. Why do you wish to go through?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I want to join my husband in New Orleans.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, ma&#8217;am, you&#8217;d much better let New Orleans
+come through the lines. We shall have possession of it,
+most likely, within a month.&rdquo; The speaker smiled very
+pleasantly, for very pleasant and sweet was the young
+face before him, despite its lines of mental distress, and
+very soft and melodious the voice that proceeded from it.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think so?&rdquo; replied the applicant, with an
+unhopeful smile. &ldquo;My friends have been keeping me at
+home for months on that idea, but the fact seems as far
+off now as ever. I should go straight through without
+stopping, if I had a pass.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; exclaimed the man, softly, with pitying amusement.
+&ldquo;Certainly, I understand you would try to do so.
+But, my dear madam, you would find yourself very much
+mistaken. Suppose, now, we should let you through our
+lines. You&#8217;d be between two fires. You&#8217;d still have to
+get into the rebel lines. You don&#8217;t know what you&#8217;re
+undertaking.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span>
+She smiled wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m undertaking to get to my husband.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; said the officer, pulling his handkerchief
+from between two brass buttons of his double-breasted
+coat and wiping his brow. She did not notice that he
+made this motion purely as a cover for the searching
+glance which he suddenly gave her from head to foot.
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;but you don&#8217;t know what it is,
+ma&#8217;am. After you get through the <em>other</em> lines, what are
+you going to do <em>then</em>? There&#8217;s a perfect reign of terror
+over there. I wouldn&#8217;t let a lady relative of mine take
+such risks for thousands of dollars. I don&#8217;t think your
+husband ought to thank me for giving you a pass. You
+say he&#8217;s a Union man; why don&#8217;t he come to you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Tears leaped into the applicant&#8217;s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s become too sick to travel,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Lately?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I thought you said you hadn&#8217;t heard from him for
+months.&rdquo; The officer looked at her with narrowed eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I said I hadn&#8217;t had a letter from him.&rdquo; The speaker
+blushed to find her veracity on trial. She bit her lip, and
+added, with perceptible tremor: &ldquo;I got one lately from
+his physician.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How did you get it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, madam, you know what I asked you, don&#8217;t you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Well, I&#8217;d like you to answer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I found it, three mornings ago, under the front door
+of the house where I live with my mother and my little
+girl.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Who put it there?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I do not know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The officer looked her steadily in the eyes. They were
+blue. His own dropped.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You ought to have brought that letter with you,
+ma&#8217;am,&rdquo; he said, looking up again; &ldquo;don&#8217;t you see how
+valuable it would be to you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I did bring it,&rdquo; she replied, with alacrity, rummaged
+a moment in a skirt-pocket, and brought it out. The
+officer received it and read the superscription audibly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Mrs. John H&mdash;&mdash;.&rsquo; Are you Mrs. John H&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That is not the envelope it was in,&rdquo; she replied.
+&ldquo;It was not directed at all. I put it into that envelope
+merely to preserve it. That&#8217;s the envelope of a different
+letter,&mdash;a letter from my mother.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Are you Mrs. John H&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo; asked her questioner
+again. She had turned partly aside and was looking
+across the apartment and out through a window. He
+spoke once more. &ldquo;Is this your name?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He smiled cynically.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Please don&#8217;t do that again, madam.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She blushed down into the collar of her dress.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That is my name, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The man put the missive to his nose, snuffed it softly,
+and looked amused, yet displeased.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. H&mdash;&mdash;, did you notice just a faint smell of&mdash;garlic&mdash;about
+this&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I have no less than three or four others with
+the very same odor.&rdquo; He smiled on. &ldquo;And so, no
+doubt, we are both of the same private opinion that the
+bearer of this letter was&mdash;who, Mrs. H&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. H&mdash;&mdash; &nbsp;frequently by turns raised her eyes honestly
+to her questioner&#8217;s and dropped them to where, in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span>
+her lap, the fingers of one hand fumbled with a lone
+wedding-ring on the other, while she said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think, sir, if you were in my place you would
+like to give the name of the person you thought had risked
+his life to bring you word that your husband&mdash;your wife&mdash;was
+very ill, and needed your presence? Would you like to do it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The officer looked severe.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t you know perfectly well that wasn&#8217;t his principal
+errand inside our lines?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; echoed the man; &ldquo;and you don&#8217;t know perfectly
+well, I suppose, that he&#8217;s been shot at along this
+line times enough to have turned his hair white? Or
+that he crossed the river for the third time last night,
+loaded down with musket-caps for the rebels?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But you must admit you know a certain person,
+wherever he may be, or whatever he may be doing, named
+Raphael Ristofalo?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I do not.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The officer smiled again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I see. That is to say, you don&#8217;t <em>admit</em> it. And
+you don&#8217;t deny it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The reply came more slowly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I do not.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, Mrs. H&mdash;&mdash;, I&#8217;ve given you a pretty
+long audience. I&#8217;ll tell you what I&#8217;ll do. But do you
+please tell me, first, you affirm on your word of honor
+that your name is really Mrs. H&mdash;&mdash;; that you are no
+spy, and have had no voluntary communication with any,
+and that you are a true and sincere Union woman.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I affirm it all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, come in to-morrow at this hour, and if I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span>
+am going to give you a pass at all I&#8217;ll give it to you then.
+Here, here&#8217;s your letter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>As she received the missive she lifted her eyes, suffused,
+but full of hope, to his, and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;God grant you the heart to do it, sir, and bless you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The man laughed. Her eyes fell, she blushed, and,
+saying not a word, turned toward the door and had
+reached the threshold when the officer called, with a
+certain ringing energy:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Richling!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She wheeled as if he had struck her, and answered:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What, sir!&rdquo; Then, turning as red as a rose, she
+said, &ldquo;O sir, that was cruel!&rdquo; covered her face with
+her hands, and sobbed aloud. It was only as she was in
+the midst of these last words that she recognized in the
+officer before her the sharper-visaged of those two men
+who had stood by her in Broadway.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Step back here, Mrs. Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She came.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, madam! I should like to know what we are
+coming to, when a lady like you&mdash;a palpable, undoubted
+lady&mdash;can stoop to such deceptions!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Mary, looking at him steadfastly and then
+shaking her head in solemn asseveration, &ldquo;all that I have
+said to you is the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then will you explain how it is that you go by one
+name in one part of the country, and by another in
+another part?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said. It was very hard to speak. The
+twitching of her mouth would hardly let her form a word.
+&ldquo;No&mdash;no&mdash;I can&#8217;t&mdash;tell you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, ma&#8217;am. If you don&#8217;t start back to Milwaukee
+by the next train, and stay there, I shall&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Oh, don&#8217;t say that, sir! I must go to my husband!
+Indeed, sir, it&#8217;s nothing but a foolish mistake, made years
+ago, that&#8217;s never harmed any one but us. I&#8217;ll take all the
+blame of it if you&#8217;ll only give me a pass!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The officer motioned her to be silent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ll have to do as I tell you, ma&#8217;am. If not, I
+shall know it; you will be arrested, and I shall give you
+a sort of pass that you&#8217;d be a long time asking for.&rdquo; He
+looked at the face mutely confronting him and felt himself
+relenting. &ldquo;I dare say this does sound very cruel to you,
+ma&#8217;am; but remember, this is a cruel war. I don&#8217;t judge
+you. If I did, and could harden my heart as I ought to,
+I&#8217;d have you arrested now. But, I say, you&#8217;d better take
+my advice. Good-morning! <em>No, ma&#8217;am, I can&#8217;t hear
+you!</em> So, now, that&#8217;s enough! Good-morning, madam!&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>TRY AGAIN.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>One afternoon in the month of February, 1862, a
+locomotive engine and a single weather-beaten
+passenger-coach, moving southward at a very moderate speed
+through the middle of Kentucky, stopped in response to a
+handkerchief signal at the southern end of a deep, rocky
+valley, and, in a patch of gray, snow-flecked woods, took
+on board Mary Richling, dressed in deep mourning, and
+her little Alice. The three or four passengers already in
+the coach saw no sign of human life through the closed
+panes save the roof of one small cabin that sent up its
+slender thread of blue smoke at one corner of a little
+badly cleared field a quarter of a mile away on a huge
+hill-side. As the scant train crawled off again into a
+deep, ice-hung defile, it passed the silent figure of a man
+in butternut homespun, spattered with dry mud, standing
+close beside the track on a heap of cross-tie cinders and
+fire-bent railroad iron, a gray goat-beard under his chin,
+and a quilted homespun hat on his head. From beneath
+the limp brim of this covering, as the train moved by him,
+a tender, silly smile beamed upward toward one hastily
+raised window, whence the smile of Mary and the grave,
+unemotional gaze of the child met it for a moment before
+the train swung round a curve in the narrow way, and
+quickened speed on down grade.</p>
+
+<p>The conductor came and collected her fare. He smelt
+of tobacco above the smell of the coach in general.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Do you charge anything for the little girl?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The purse in which the inquirer&#8217;s finger and thumb
+tarried was limber and flat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, ma&#8217;am.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was not the customary official negative; a tawdry
+benevolence of face went with it, as if to say he did not
+charge because he would not; and when Mary returned a
+faint beam of appreciation he went out upon the rear
+platform and wiped the plenteous dust from his shoulders
+and cap. Then he returned to his seat at the stove and
+renewed his conversation with a lieutenant in hard-used
+blue, who said &ldquo;the rebel lines ought never to have been
+allowed to fall back to Nashville,&rdquo; and who knew &ldquo;how
+Grant could have taken Fort Donelson a week ago if he
+had had any sense.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>There were but few persons, as we have said, in the car.
+A rough man in one corner had a little captive, a tiny,
+dappled fawn, tied by a short, rough bit of rope to the
+foot of the car-seat. When the conductor by and by
+lifted the little Alice up from the cushion, where she sat
+with her bootees straight in front of her at its edge, and
+carried her, speechless and drawn together like a kitten,
+and stood her beside the captive orphan, she simply turned
+about and pattered back to her mother&#8217;s side.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t believe she even saw it,&rdquo; said the conductor,
+standing again by Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, she did,&rdquo; replied Mary, smiling upon the child&#8217;s
+head as she smoothed its golden curls; &ldquo;she&#8217;ll talk about
+it to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The conductor lingered a moment, wanting to put his
+own hand there, but did not venture, perhaps because of
+the person sitting on the next seat behind, who looked at
+him rather steadily until he began to move away.</p>
+
+<p>This was a man of slender, commanding figure and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span>
+advanced years. Beside him, next the window, sat a
+decidedly aristocratic woman, evidently his wife. She,
+too, was of fine stature, and so, without leaning forward
+from the back of her seat, or unfolding her arms, she
+could make kind eyes to Alice, as the child with growing
+frequency stole glances, at first over her own little
+shoulder, and later over her mother&#8217;s, facing backward
+and kneeling on the cushion. At length a cooky passed
+between them in dead silence, and the child turned and
+gazed mutely in her mother&#8217;s face, with the cooky just in
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It can&#8217;t hurt her,&rdquo; said the lady, in a sweet voice, to
+Mary, leaning forward with her hands in her lap. By the
+time the sun began to set in a cool, golden haze across
+some wide stretches of rolling fallow, a conversation had
+sprung up, and the child was in the lady&#8217;s lap, her little
+hand against the silken bosom, playing with a costly watch.</p>
+
+<p>The talk began about the care of Alice, passed to the
+diet, and then to the government, of children, all in a light
+way, a similarity of convictions pleasing the two ladies
+more and more as they found it run further and further.
+Both talked, but the strange lady sustained the conversation,
+although it was plainly both a pastime and a
+comfort to Mary. Whenever it threatened to flag the
+handsome stranger persisted in reviving it.</p>
+
+<p>Her husband only listened and smiled, and with one
+finger made every now and then a soft, slow pass at Alice,
+who each time shrank as slowly and softly back into his
+wife&#8217;s fine arm. Presently, however, Mary raised her
+eyebrows a little and smiled, to see her sitting quietly in
+the gentleman&#8217;s lap; and as she turned away and rested
+her elbow on the window-sill and her cheek on her hand
+in a manner that betrayed weariness, and looked out
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span>
+upon the ever-turning landscape, he murmured to his
+wife, &ldquo;I haven&#8217;t a doubt in my mind,&rdquo; and nodded significantly
+at the preoccupied little shape in his arms. His
+manner with the child was imperceptibly adroit, and very
+soon her prattle began to be heard. Mary was just
+turning to offer a gentle check to this rising volubility,
+when up jumped the little one to a standing posture on the
+gentleman&#8217;s knee, and, all unsolicited and with silent
+clapping of hands, plumped out her full name:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Alice Sevier Witchlin&#8217;!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The husband threw a quick glance toward his wife; but
+she avoided it and called Mary&#8217;s attention to the sunset as
+seen through the opposite windows. Mary looked and responded
+with expressions of admiration, but was visibly
+disquieted, and the next moment called her child to her.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My little girl mustn&#8217;t talk so loud and fast in the
+cars,&rdquo; she said, with tender pleasantness, standing her
+upon the seat and brushing back the stray golden waves
+from the baby&#8217;s temples, and the brown ones, so like them,
+from her own. She turned a look of amused apology to
+the gentleman, and added, &ldquo;She gets almost boisterous
+sometimes,&rdquo; then gave her regard once more to her offspring,
+seating the little one beside her as in the beginning,
+and answering her musical small questions with composing
+yeas and nays.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; she said, after a pause and a look out
+through the window,&mdash;&ldquo;I suppose we ought soon to be
+reaching M&mdash;&mdash; &nbsp;station, now, should we not?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What, in Tennessee? Oh! no,&rdquo; replied the gentleman.
+&ldquo;In ordinary times we should; but at this slow
+rate we cannot nearly do it. We&#8217;re on a road, you see,
+that was destroyed by the retreating army and made over
+by the Union forces. Besides, there are three trains of
+troops ahead of us, that must stop and unload between
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span>
+here and there, and keep you waiting, there&#8217;s no telling
+how long.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&#8217;ll get there in the night!&rdquo; exclaimed Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, probably after midnight.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I shouldn&#8217;t have <em>thought</em> of coming before to-morrow
+if I had known that!&rdquo; In the extremity of her dismay she rose
+half from her seat and looked around with alarm.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Have you no friends expecting to receive you there?&rdquo;
+asked the lady.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not a soul! And the conductor says there&#8217;s no
+lodging-place nearer than three miles&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And that&#8217;s gone now,&rdquo; said the gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ll have to get out at the same station with us,&rdquo;
+said the lady, her manner kindness itself and at the same
+time absolute.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think you have claims on us, anyhow, that we&#8217;d like to pay.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! impossible,&rdquo; said Mary. &ldquo;You&#8217;re certainly mistaking me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think you have,&rdquo; insisted the
+lady; &ldquo;that is, if your name is Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary blushed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t think you know my husband,&rdquo; she
+said; &ldquo;he lives a long way from here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In New Orleans?&rdquo; asked the gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; said Mary, boldly. She couldn&#8217;t fear
+such good faces.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;His first name is John, isn&#8217;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir. Do you really know John, sir?&rdquo; The
+lines of pleasure and distress mingled strangely in Mary&#8217;s
+face. The gentleman smiled. He tapped little Alice&#8217;s
+head with the tips of his fingers.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I used to hold him on my knee when he was no
+bigger than this little image of him here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tears leaped into Mary&#8217;s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Thornton,&rdquo; she whispered, huskily, and could say
+no more.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You must come home with us,&rdquo; said the lady,
+touching her tenderly on the shoulder. &ldquo;It&#8217;s a wonder
+of good fortune that we&#8217;ve met. Mr. Thornton has something
+to say to you,&mdash;a matter of business. He&#8217;s the
+family&#8217;s lawyer, you know.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I must get to my husband without delay,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get to your husband?&rdquo; asked the lawyer, in astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Through the lines?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I told him so,&rdquo; said the lady.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know how to credit it,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Why, my
+child, I don&#8217;t think you can possibly know what you are
+attempting. Your friends ought never to have allowed
+you to conceive such a thing. You must let us dissuade
+you. It will not be taking too much liberty, will it?
+Has your husband never told you what good friends we
+were?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary nodded and tried to speak.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Often,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thornton to her husband, interpreting
+the half-articulated reply.</p>
+
+<p>They sat and talked in low tones, under the dismal
+lamp of the railroad coach, for two or three hours. Mr.
+Thornton came around and took the seat in front of
+Mary, and sat with one leg under him, facing back toward
+her. Mrs. Thornton sat beside her, and Alice slumbered
+on the seat behind, vacated by the lawyer and his wife.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You needn&#8217;t tell me John&#8217;s story,&rdquo; said the gentleman;
+&ldquo;I know it. What I didn&#8217;t know before, I got from a
+man with whom I corresponded in New Orleans.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Sevier?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, a man who got it from the Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>So they had Mary tell her own story.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I thought I should start just as soon as my mother&#8217;s
+health would permit. John wouldn&#8217;t have me start
+before that, and, after all, I don&#8217;t see how I could have
+done it&mdash;rightly. But by the time she was well&mdash;or
+partly well&mdash;every one was in the greatest anxiety
+and doubt everywhere. You know how it was.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thornton.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And everybody thinking everything would soon be settled,&rdquo;
+continued Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the sympathetic lady, and her husband
+touched her quietly, meaning for her not to interrupt.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We didn&#8217;t think the Union <em>could</em> be broken so easily,&rdquo;
+pursued Mary. &ldquo;And then all at once it was unsafe and
+improper to travel alone. Still I went to New York, to
+take steamer around by sea. But the last steamer had
+sailed, and I had to go back home; for&mdash;the fact is,&rdquo;&mdash;she
+smiled,&mdash;&ldquo;my money was all gone. It was September
+before I could raise enough to start again; but
+one morning I got a letter from New Orleans, telling me
+that John was very ill, and enclosing money for me to
+travel with.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She went on to tell the story of her efforts to get a pass
+on the bank of the Ohio river, and how she had gone
+home once more, knowing she was watched, not daring
+for a long time to stir abroad, and feeding on the frequent
+hope that New Orleans was soon to be taken by one or
+another of the many naval expeditions that from time to
+time were, or were said to be, sailing.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span>
+&ldquo;And then suddenly&mdash;my mother died.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Thornton gave a deep sigh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And then,&rdquo; said Mary, with a sudden brightening,
+but in a low voice, &ldquo;I determined to make one last
+effort. I sold everything in the world I had and took
+Alice and started. I&#8217;ve come very slowly, a little way at
+a time, feeling along, for I was resolved not to be turned
+back. I&#8217;ve been weeks getting this far, and the lines
+keep moving south ahead of me. But I haven&#8217;t been
+turned back,&rdquo; she went on to say, with a smile, &ldquo;and
+everybody, white and black, everywhere, has been just as
+kind as kind can be.&rdquo; Tears stopped her again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, never mind, Mrs. Richling,&rdquo; said Mrs. Thornton;
+then turned to her husband, and asked, &ldquo;May I tell her?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mrs. Richling,&mdash;but do you wish to be called Mrs. Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary, and &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Mr. Thornton.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mrs. Richling, Mr. Thornton has some money
+for your husband. Not a great deal, but still&mdash;some.
+The younger of the two sisters died a few weeks ago.
+She was married, but she was rich in her own right. She
+left almost everything to her sister; but Mr. Thornton
+persuaded her to leave some money&mdash;well, two thousand&mdash;&#8217;tisn&#8217;t
+much, but it&#8217;s something, you know&mdash;to&mdash;ah
+to Mr. Richling. Husband has it now at home and will
+give it to you,&mdash;at the breakfast-table to-morrow morning;
+can&#8217;t you, dear?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, and we&#8217;ll not try to persuade you to give up
+your idea of going to New Orleans. I know we couldn&#8217;t
+do it. We&#8217;ll watch our chance,&mdash;eh, husband?&mdash;and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span>
+put you through the lines; and not only that, but give
+you letters to&mdash;why, dear,&rdquo; said the lady, turning to her
+partner in good works, &ldquo;you can give Mrs. Richling a
+letter to Governor Blank; and another to General Um-hm,
+can&#8217;t you? and&mdash;yes, and one to Judge Youknow.
+Oh, they will take you anywhere! But first you&#8217;ll stop
+with us till you get well rested&mdash;a week or two, or as
+much longer as you will.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary pressed the speaker&#8217;s hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can&#8217;t stay.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you know you needn&#8217;t have the least fear of
+seeing any of John&#8217;s relatives. They don&#8217;t live in this
+part of the State at all; and, even if they did, husband
+has no business with them just now, and being a Union
+man, you know&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I want to see my husband,&rdquo; said Mary, not waiting
+to hear what Union sympathies had to do with the
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the lady, in a suddenly subdued tone.
+&ldquo;Well, we&#8217;ll get you through just as quickly as we can.&rdquo;
+And soon they all began to put on wraps and gather their
+luggage. Mary went with them to their home, laid her
+tired head beside her child&#8217;s in sleep, and late next morning
+rose to hear that Fort Donelson was taken, and the
+Southern forces were falling back. A day or two later
+came word that Columbus, on the Mississippi, had been
+evacuated. It was idle for a woman to try just then to
+perform the task she had set for herself. The Federal
+lines!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, my dear child, they&#8217;re trying to find the Confederate
+lines and strike them. You can&#8217;t lose anything&mdash;you
+may gain much&mdash;by remaining quiet here awhile.
+The Mississippi, I don&#8217;t doubt, will soon be open from
+end to end.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a></span>
+A fortnight seemed scarcely more than a day when it
+was past, and presently two of them had gone. One day
+comes Mr. Thornton, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My dear child, I cannot tell you how I have the
+news, but you may depend upon its correctness. New
+Orleans is to be attacked by the most powerful naval expedition
+that ever sailed under the United States flag. If
+the place is not in our hands by the first of April I will
+put you through both lines, if I have to go with you myself.&rdquo;
+When Mary made no answer, he added,
+&ldquo;Your delays have all been unavoidable, my child!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&#8217;t know; I don&#8217;t know!&rdquo; exclaimed Mary,
+with sudden distraction; &ldquo;it seems to me I <em>must</em> be to
+blame, or I&#8217;d have been through long ago. I ought to
+have <em>run through</em> the lines. I ought to have &lsquo;run the
+blockade.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My child,&rdquo; said the lawyer, &ldquo;you&#8217;re mad.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;ll see,&rdquo; replied Mary, almost in soliloquy.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LIV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>&ldquo;WHO GOES THERE?&rdquo;</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The scene and incident now to be described are without
+date. As Mary recalled them, years afterward,
+they hung out against the memory a bold, clear picture,
+cast upon it as the magic lantern casts its tableaux upon
+the darkened canvas. She had lost the day of the month,
+the day of the week, all sense of location, and the points
+of the compass. The most that she knew was that she
+was somewhere near the meeting of the boundaries of
+three States. Either she was just within the southern
+bound of Tennessee, or the extreme north-eastern corner
+of Mississippi, or else the north-western corner of Alabama.
+She was aware, too, that she had crossed the
+Tennessee river; that the sun had risen on her left and
+had set on her right, and that by and by this beautiful
+day would fade and pass from this unknown land, and
+the fire-light and lamp-light draw around them the home-groups
+under the roof-trees, here where she was a homeless
+stranger, the same as in the home-lands where she had
+once loved and been beloved.</p>
+
+<p>She was seated in a small, light buggy drawn by one
+good horse. Beside her the reins were held by a rather
+tall man, of middle age, gray, dark, round-shouldered,
+and dressed in the loose blue flannel so much worn by
+followers of the Federal camp. Under the stiff brim of
+his soft-crowned black hat a pair of clear eyes gave a
+continuous playful twinkle. Between this person and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span>
+Mary protruded, at the edge of the buggy-seat, two
+small bootees that have already had mention, and from
+his elbow to hers, and back to his, continually swayed
+drowsily the little golden head to which the bootees bore
+a certain close relation. The dust of the highway was
+on the buggy and the blue flannel and the bootees. It
+showed with special boldness on a black sun-bonnet that
+covered Mary&#8217;s head, and that somehow lost all its
+homeliness whenever it rose sufficiently in front to show
+the face within. But the highway itself was not there;
+it had been left behind some hours earlier. The buggy
+was moving at a quiet jog along a &ldquo;neighborhood road,&rdquo;
+with unploughed fields on the right and a darkling woods
+pasture on the left. By the feathery softness and paleness
+of the sweet-smelling foliage you might have guessed
+it was not far from the middle of April, one way or
+another; and, by certain allusions to Pittsburg Landing
+as a place of conspicuous note, you might have known
+that Shiloh had been fought. There was that feeling of
+desolation in the land that remains after armies have
+passed over, let them tread never so lightly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;D&#8217;you know what them rails is put that way fur?&rdquo;
+asked the man. He pointed down with his buggy-whip
+just off the roadside, first on one hand and then on the
+other.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mary, turning the sun-bonnet&#8217;s limp front
+toward the questioner and then to the disjointed fence
+on her nearer side; &ldquo;that&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve been wondering
+for days. They&#8217;ve been ordinary worm fences, haven&#8217;t
+they?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Jess so,&rdquo; responded the man, with his accustomed
+twinkle. &ldquo;But I think I see you oncet or twicet lookin&#8217;
+at &#8217;em and sort o&#8217; tryin&#8217; to make out how come they got
+into that shape.&rdquo; The long-reiterated W&#8217;s of the rail-fence
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span>
+had been pulled apart into separate V&#8217;s, and the two
+sides of each of these had been drawn narrowly together,
+so that what had been two parallel lines of fence,
+with the lane between, was now a long double row of
+wedge-shaped piles of rails, all pointing into the woods
+on the left.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How did it happen?&rdquo; asked Mary, with a smile of
+curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&#8217;t happen at all, &#8217;twas jess <em>done</em> by live men,
+and in a powerful few minutes at that. Sort o&#8217; shows
+what we&#8217;re approachin&#8217; unto, as it were, eh? Not but
+they&#8217;s plenty behind us done the same way, all the way
+back into Kentuck&#8217;, as you already done see; but this&#8217;s
+been done sence the last rain, and it rained night afore
+last.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Still I&#8217;m not sure what it means,&rdquo; said Mary;
+&ldquo;has there been fighting here?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go up head,&rdquo; said the man, with a facetious gesture.
+&ldquo;See? The fight came through these here woods,
+here. &#8217;Taint been much over twenty-four hours, I
+reckon, since every one o&#8217; them-ah sort o&#8217; shut-up-fan-shape
+sort o&#8217; fish-traps had a gray-jacket in it layin&#8217; flat
+down an&#8217; firin&#8217; through the rails, sort o&#8217; random-like,
+only not much so.&rdquo; His manner of speech seemed a sort
+of harlequin patchwork from the bad English of many
+sections, the outcome of a humorous and eclectic fondness
+for verbal deformities. But his lightness received a
+sudden check.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Heigh-h-h!&rdquo; he gravely and softly exclaimed, gathering
+the reins closer, as the horse swerved and dashed
+ahead. Two or three buzzards started up from the roadside,
+with their horrid flapping and whiff of quills, and
+circled low overhead. &ldquo;Heigh-h-h!&rdquo; he continued soothingly.
+&ldquo;Ho-o-o-o! somebody lost a good nag there,&mdash;a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a></span>
+six-pound shot right through his head and neck. Whoever
+made that shot killed two birds with one stone,
+sho!&rdquo; He was half risen from his seat, looking back.
+As he turned again, and sat down, the drooping black
+sun-bonnet quite concealed the face within. He looked
+at it a moment. &ldquo;If you think you don&#8217;t like the risks
+we can still turn back.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the voice from out the sun-bonnet; &ldquo;go on.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If we don&#8217;t turn back now we can&#8217;t turn back at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; said Mary; &ldquo;I can&#8217;t turn back.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You&#8217;re a good soldier,&rdquo; said the man, playfully
+again. &ldquo;You&#8217;re a better one than me, I reckon; I kin
+turn back frequently, as it were. I&#8217;ve done it &lsquo;many a
+time and oft,&rsquo; as the felleh says.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary looked up with feminine surprise. He made a
+pretence of silent laughter, that showed a hundred crows&#8217;
+feet in his twinkling eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, don&#8217;t you fret; I&#8217;m not goin&#8217; to run the wrong
+way with you in charge. Didn&#8217;t you hear me promise
+Mr. Thornton? Well, you see, I&#8217;ve got a sort o&#8217; bad
+memory, that kind o&#8217; won&#8217;t let me forgit when I make a
+promise;&mdash;bothers me that way a heap sometimes.&rdquo;
+He smirked in a self-deprecating way, and pulled his
+hat-brim down in front. Presently he spoke again,
+looking straight ahead over the horse&#8217;s ears:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, that&#8217;s the mischief about comin&#8217; with me&mdash;got
+to run both blockades at oncet. Now, if you&#8217;d been a
+good Secesh and could somehow or &#8217;nother of got a pass
+through the Union lines you&#8217;d of been all gay. But bein&#8217;
+Union, the fu&#8217;ther you git along the wuss off you air,
+&#8217;less-n I kin take you and carry you &#8217;way &#8217;long yonder to
+where you kin jess jump onto a south-bound Rebel railroad
+and light down amongst folks that&#8217;ll never think o&#8217;
+you havin&#8217; run through the lines.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a></span>
+&ldquo;But you can&#8217;t do that,&rdquo; said Mary, not in the form
+of a request. &ldquo;You know you agreed with Mr. Thornton
+that you would simply&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Put you down in a safe place,&rdquo; said the man,
+jocosely; &ldquo;that&#8217;s what it meant, and don&#8217;t you get
+nervous&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;His face suddenly changed; he raised his
+whip and held it up for attention and silence, looking at
+Mary, and smiling while he listened. &ldquo;Do you hear anything?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary, in a hushed tone. There were
+some old fields on the right-hand now, and a wood on
+the left. Just within the wood a turtle-dove was cooing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t mean that,&rdquo; said the man, softly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mary, &ldquo;you mean this, away over here.&rdquo;
+She pointed across the fields, almost straight away in
+front.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&#8217;Taint so scandalous far &lsquo;awa-a-ay&rsquo; as you talk like,&rdquo;
+murmured the man, jestingly; and just then a fresh
+breath of the evening breeze brought plainer and nearer
+the soft boom of a bass-drum.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Are they coming this way?&rdquo; asked Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; they&#8217;re sort o&#8217; dress-paradin&#8217; in camp, I reckon.&rdquo;
+He began to draw rein. &ldquo;We turn off here, anyway,&rdquo;
+he said, and drove slowly, but point blank into the
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t see any road,&rdquo; said Mary. It was so dark in
+the wood that even her child, muffled in a shawl and
+asleep in her arms, was a dim shape.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;we have to sort o&#8217; smell out
+the way here; but my smellers is good, at times, and
+pretty soon we&#8217;ll strike a little sort o&#8217; somepnuther like a
+road, about a quarter from here.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Pretty soon they did so. It started suddenly from the
+edge of an old field in the forest, and ran gradually down,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a></span>
+winding among the trees, into a densely wooded bottom,
+where even Mary&#8217;s short form often had to bend low to
+avoid the boughs of beech-trees and festoons of grape-vine.
+Under one beech the buggy stood still a moment.
+The man drew and opened a large clasp-knife and cut
+one of the long, tough withes. He handed it to Mary, as
+they started on again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;With compliments,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and hoping you won&#8217;t
+find no use for it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What is it for?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you see, later on we&#8217;ll be in the saddle; and
+if such a thing should jess accidentally happen to happen,
+which I hope it won&#8217;t, to be sho&#8217;, that I should happen to
+sort o&#8217; absent-mindedly yell out &lsquo;Go!&rsquo; like as if a hornet
+had stabbed me, you jess come down with that switch,
+and make the critter under you run like a scared dog, as
+it were.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Must I?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, I don&#8217;t say you <em>must</em>, but you&#8217;d better, I bet you.
+You needn&#8217;t if you don&#8217;t want to.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Presently the dim path led them into a clear, rippling
+creek, and seemed to Mary to end; but when the buggy
+wheels had crunched softly along down stream over some
+fifty or sixty yards of gravelly shallow, the road showed
+itself faintly again on the other bank, and the horse, with
+a plunge or two and a scramble, jerked them safely over
+the top, and moved forward in the direction of the rising
+moon. They skirted a small field full of ghostly dead
+trees, where corn was beginning to make a show, turned
+its angle, and saw the path under their feet plain to view,
+smooth and hard.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;See that?&rdquo; said the man, in a tone of playful
+triumph, as the animal started off at a brisk trot, lifted
+his head and neighed. &ldquo;&lsquo;My day&#8217;s work&#8217;s done,&rsquo; sezee;
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span>
+&lsquo;I done hoed my row.&rsquo;&rdquo; A responsive neigh came out
+of the darkness ahead. &ldquo;That&#8217;s the trick!&rdquo; said the
+man. &ldquo;Thanks, as the felleh says.&rdquo; He looked to
+Mary for her appreciation of his humor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose that means a good deal; does it?&rdquo; asked
+she, with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Jess so! It means, first of all, fresh hosses. And
+then it means a house what aint been burnt by jayhawkers
+yit, and a man and woman a-waitin&#8217; in it, and some bacon
+and cornpone, and maybe a little coffee; and milk, anyhow,
+till you can&#8217;t rest, and buttermilk to fare-you-well.
+Now, have you ever learned the trick o&#8217; jess sort o&#8217;
+qui&#8217;lin&#8217;<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
+up, cloze an&#8217; all, dry so, and puttin&#8217; half a night&#8217;s rest
+into an hour&#8217;s sleep? &#8217;Caze why, in one hour we must
+be in the saddle. No mo&#8217; buggy, and powerful few
+roads. Comes as nigh coonin&#8217; it as I reckon you ever
+&#8217;lowed you&#8217;d like to do, don&#8217;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, pretending to hold back much laughter,
+and Mary smiled too. At mention of a woman she had
+removed her bonnet and was smoothing her hair with
+her hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t care,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if only you&#8217;ll bring us through.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The man made a ludicrous gesture of self-abasement.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not knowin&#8217;, can&#8217;t say, as the felleh says; but what
+I can tell you&mdash;I always start out to make a spoon or
+spoil a horn, and which one I&#8217;ll do I seldom ever promise
+till it&#8217;s done. But I have a sneakin&#8217; notion, as it were,
+that I&#8217;m the clean sand, and no discount, as Mr. Lincoln
+says, and I do my best. Angels can do no more, as the
+felleh says.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He drew rein. &ldquo;Whoa!&rdquo; Mary saw a small log
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a></span>
+cabin, and a fire-light shining under the bottom of the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The woods seem to be on fire just over there in three
+or four places, are they not?&rdquo; she asked, as she passed
+the sleeping Alice down to the man, who had got out of
+the buggy.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Them&#8217;s the camps,&rdquo; said another man, who had come
+out of the house and was letting the horse out of the
+shafts.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If we was on the rise o&#8217; the hill yonder we could see
+the Confedick camps, couldn&#8217;t we, Isaiah?&rdquo; asked Mary&#8217;s
+guide.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Easy,&rdquo; said that prophet. &ldquo;I heer &#8217;em to-day two,
+three times, plain, cheerin&#8217; at somethin&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>About the middle of that night Mary Richling was
+sitting very still and upright on a large dark horse that
+stood champing his Mexican bit in the black shadow of a
+great oak. Alice rested before her, fast asleep against
+her bosom. Mary held by the bridle another horse, whose
+naked saddle-tree was empty. A few steps in front of
+her the light of the full moon shone almost straight down
+upon a narrow road that just there emerged from the
+shadow of woods on either side, and divided into a main
+right fork and a much smaller one that curved around to
+Mary&#8217;s left. Off in the direction of the main fork the sky
+was all aglow with camp-fires. Only just here on the left
+there was a cool and grateful darkness.</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her head alertly. A twig crackled under a
+tread, and the next moment a man came out of the bushes
+at the left, and without a word took the bridle of the led
+horse from her fingers and vaulted into the saddle. The
+hand that rested a moment on the cantle as he rose
+grasped a &ldquo;navy-six.&rdquo; He was dressed in dull homespun
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a></span>
+but he was the same who had been dressed in blue.
+He turned his horse and led the way down the lesser road.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If we&#8217;d of gone three hundred yards further,&rdquo; he
+whispered, falling back and smiling broadly, &ldquo;we&#8217;d &#8217;a&#8217;
+run into the pickets. I went nigh enough to see the
+videttes settin&#8217; on their hosses in the main road. This
+here aint no road; it just goes up to a nigger quarters.
+I&#8217;ve got one o&#8217; the niggers to show us the way.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where is he?&rdquo; whispered Mary; but, before her companion
+could answer, a tattered form moved from behind
+a bush a little in advance and started ahead in the path,
+walking and beckoning. Presently they turned into a
+clear, open forest and followed the long, rapid, swinging
+stride of the negro for nearly an hour. Then they halted
+on the bank of a deep, narrow stream. The negro made
+a motion for them to keep well to the right when they
+should enter the water. The white man softly lifted Alice
+to his arms, directed and assisted Mary to kneel in her
+saddle, with her skirts gathered carefully under her, and
+so they went down into the cold stream, the negro first,
+with arms outstretched above the flood; then Mary, and
+then the white man,&mdash;or, let us say plainly the spy,&mdash;with
+the unawakened child on his breast. And so they
+rose out of it on the farther side without a shoe or garment
+wet save the rags of their dark guide.</p>
+
+<p>Again they followed him, along a line of stake-and-rider
+fence, with the woods on one side and the bright
+moonlight flooding a field of young cotton on the other.
+Now they heard the distant baying of house-dogs, now
+the doleful call of the chuck-will&#8217;s-widow; and once Mary&#8217;s
+blood turned, for an instant, to ice, at the unearthly shriek
+of the hoot-owl just above her head. At length they
+found themselves in a dim, narrow road, and the negro
+stopped.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Dess keep dish yeh road fo&#8217; &#8217;bout half mile an&#8217; you
+strak &#8217;pon the broad, main road. Tek de right, an&#8217; you
+go whah yo&#8217; fancy tek you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo; whispered Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-by, miss,&rdquo; said the negro, in the same low
+voice; &ldquo;good-by, boss; don&#8217;t you fo&#8217;git you promise tek
+me thoo to de Yankee&#8217; when you come back. I &#8217;feered
+you gwine fo&#8217;git it, boss.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The spy said he would not, and they left him. The
+half-mile was soon passed, though it turned out to be a
+mile and a half, and at length Mary&#8217;s companion looked
+back, as they rode single file, with Mary in the rear, and
+said softly, &ldquo;There&#8217;s the road,&rdquo; pointing at its broad,
+pale line with his six-shooter.</p>
+
+<p>As they entered it and turned to the right, Mary, with
+Alice again in her arms, moved somewhat ahead of her
+companion, her indifferent horsemanship having compelled
+him to drop back to avoid a prickly bush. His horse was
+just quickening his pace to regain the lost position when
+a man sprang up from the ground on the farther side of
+the highway, snatched a carbine from the earth and cried,
+&ldquo;Halt!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The dark, recumbent forms of six or eight others could
+be seen, enveloped in their blankets, lying about a few
+red coals. Mary turned a frightened look backward and
+met the eyes of her companion.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Move a little faster,&rdquo; said he, in a low, clear voice.
+As she promptly did so she heard him answer the challenge.
+His horse trotted softly after hers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t stop us, my friend; we&#8217;re taking a sick child to
+the doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Halt, you hound!&rdquo; the cry rang out; and as Mary
+glanced back three or four men were just leaping into the
+road. But she saw, also, her companion, his face suffused
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a></span>
+with an earnestness that was almost an agony, rise in his
+stirrups, with the stoop of his shoulders all gone, and
+wildly cry:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She smote the horse and flew. Alice awoke and
+screamed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, my darling!&rdquo; said the mother, laying on the
+withe; &ldquo;mamma&#8217;s here. Hush, darling!&mdash;mamma&#8217;s here.
+Don&#8217;t be frightened, darling baby! O God, spare my
+child!&rdquo; and away she sped.</p>
+
+<p>The report of a carbine rang out and went rolling away
+in a thousand echoes through the wood. Two others
+followed in sharp succession, and there went close by
+Mary&#8217;s ear the waspish whine of a minie-ball. At the
+same moment she recognized, once,&mdash;twice,&mdash;thrice,&mdash;just
+at her back where the hoofs of her companion&#8217;s horse
+were clattering,&mdash;the tart rejoinders of his navy-six.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go!&rdquo; he cried again. &ldquo;Lay low! lay low! cover the
+child!&rdquo; But his words were needless. With head
+bowed forward and form crouched over the crying, clinging
+child, with slackened rein and fluttering dress, and
+sun-bonnet and loosened hair blown back upon her
+shoulders, with lips compressed and silent prayers, Mary
+was riding for life and liberty and her husband&#8217;s bedside.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O mamma! mamma!&rdquo; wailed the terrified little one.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go on! Go on!&rdquo; cried the voice behind; &ldquo;they&#8217;re
+saddling&mdash;up! Go! go! We&#8217;re goin&#8217; to make it. We&#8217;re
+goin&#8217; to <em>make</em> it! Go-o-o!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later they were again riding abreast, at a
+moderate gallop. Alice&#8217;s cries had been quieted, but she
+still clung to her mother in a great tremor. Mary and
+her companion conversed earnestly in the subdued tone
+that had become their habit.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</a></span>
+&ldquo;No, I don&#8217;t think they followed us fur,&rdquo; said the spy.
+&ldquo;Seem like they&#8217;s jess some scouts, most likely a-comin&#8217;
+in to report, feelin&#8217; pooty safe and sort o&#8217; takin&#8217; it easy
+and careless; &lsquo;dreamin&#8217; the happy hours away,&rsquo; as the
+felleh says. I reckon they sort o&#8217; believed my story, too,
+the little gal yelled so sort o&#8217; skilful. We kin slack up
+some more now; we want to get our critters lookin&#8217; cool
+and quiet ag&#8217;in as quick as we kin, befo&#8217; we meet up with
+somebody.&rdquo; They reined into a gentle trot. He drew
+his revolver, whose emptied chambers he had already refilled.
+&ldquo;D&#8217;d you hear this little felleh sing, &lsquo;Listen to
+the mockin&#8217;-bird&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary; &ldquo;but I hope it didn&#8217;t hit any of them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He made no reply.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t you?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>He grinned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;D&#8217;you want a felleh to wish he was a bad shot?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, seein&#8217; as you&#8217;re along, I do. For they wouldn&#8217;t
+give us up so easy if I&#8217;d a hit one. Oh,&mdash;mine was only
+sort o&#8217; complimentary shots,&mdash;much as to say, &lsquo;Same to
+you, gents,&rsquo; as the felleh says.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary gave him a pleasant glance by way of courtesy,
+but was busy calming the child. The man let his weapon
+into its holster under his homespun coat and lapsed into
+silence. He looked long and steadily at the small feminine
+figure of his companion. His eyes passed slowly
+from the knee thrown over the saddle&#8217;s horn to the gentle
+forehead slightly bowed, as her face sank to meet the uplifted
+kisses of the trembling child, then over the crown
+and down the heavy, loosened tresses that hid the sun-bonnet
+hanging back from her throat by its strings and
+flowed on down to the saddle-bow. His admiring eyes,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</a></span>
+grave for once, had made the journey twice before he
+noticed that the child was trying to comfort the mother,
+and that the light of the sinking moon was glistening
+back from Mary&#8217;s falling tears.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Better let me have the little one,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and you
+sort o&#8217; fix up a little, befo&#8217; we happen to meet up with
+somebody, as I said. It&#8217;s lucky we haven&#8217;t done it
+already.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A little coaxing prevailed with Alice, and the transfer
+was made. Mary turned away her wet eyes, smiling for
+shame of them, and began to coil her hair, her companion&#8217;s
+eye following.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you aint got no business to be ashamed of a few
+tears. I knowed you was a good soldier, befo&#8217; ever we
+started; I see&#8217; it in yo&#8217; eye. Not as I want to be complimentin&#8217;
+of you jess now. &lsquo;I come not here to talk,&rsquo; as
+they used to say in school. D&#8217;d you ever hear that piece?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That&#8217;s taken from Romans, aint it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mary again, with a broad smile.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t know,&rdquo; said the man; &ldquo;I aint no brag Bible
+scholar.&rdquo; He put on a look of droll modesty. &ldquo;I used
+to could say the ten commandments of the decalogue,
+oncet, and I still tries to keep &#8217;em, in ginerally. There&#8217;s
+another burnt house. That&#8217;s the third one we done
+passed inside a mile. Raiders was along here about two
+weeks back. Hear that rooster crowin&#8217;? When we pass
+the plantation whar he is and rise the next hill, we&#8217;ll be
+in sight o&#8217; the little town whar we stop for refresh<em>ments</em>,
+as the railroad man says. You must begin to feel jess
+about everlastin&#8217;ly wore out, don&#8217;t you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mary; but he made a movement of the
+head to indicate that he had his belief to the contrary.</p>
+
+<p>At an abrupt angle of the road Mary&#8217;s heart leaped
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</a></span>
+into her throat to find herself and her companion suddenly
+face to face with two horsemen in gray, journeying leisurely
+toward them on particularly good horses. One
+wore a slouched hat, the other a Federal officer&#8217;s cap.
+They were the first Confederates she had ever seen eye to
+eye.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ride on a little piece and stop,&rdquo; murmured the spy.
+The strangers lifted their hats respectfully as she passed
+them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Gents,&rdquo; said the spy, &ldquo;good-morning!&rdquo; He threw a
+leg over the pommel of his saddle and the three men
+halted in a group. One of them copied the spy&#8217;s attitude.
+They returned the greeting in kind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What command do you belong to?&rdquo; asked the lone
+stranger.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Simmons&#8217;s battery,&rdquo; said one. &ldquo;Whoa!&rdquo;&mdash;to his
+horse.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mississippi?&rdquo; asked Mary&#8217;s guardian.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Rackensack,&rdquo; said the man in the blue cap.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Arkansas,&rdquo; said the other in the same breath.
+&ldquo;What is your command?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Signal service,&rdquo; replied the spy. &ldquo;Reckon I look
+mighty like a citizen jess about now, don&#8217;t I?&rdquo; He gave
+them his little laugh of self-depreciation and looked
+toward Mary, where she had halted and was letting her
+horse nip the new grass of the roadside.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;See any troops along the way you come?&rdquo; asked the
+man in the hat.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; on&#8217;y a squad o&#8217; fellehs back yonder who was all
+unsaddled and fast asleep, and jumped up worse scared&#8217;n
+a drove o&#8217; wile hogs. We both sort o&#8217; got a little mad
+and jess swapped a few shots, you know, kind o&#8217; tit for
+tat, as it were. Enemy&#8217;s loss unknown.&rdquo; He stooped
+more than ever in the shoulders, and laughed. The men
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</a></span>
+were amused. &ldquo;If you see &#8217;em, I&#8217;d like you to mention
+me&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He paused to exchange smiles again. &ldquo;And
+tell &#8217;em the next time they see a man hurryin&#8217; along with a
+lady and sick child to see the doctor, they better hold their
+fire till they sho he&#8217;s on&#8217;y a citizen.&rdquo; He let his foot
+down into the stirrup again and they all smiled broadly.
+&ldquo;Good-morning!&rdquo; The two parties went their ways.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Jess as leave not of met up with them two buttermilk
+rangers,&rdquo; said the spy, once more at Mary&#8217;s side;
+&ldquo;but seein&#8217; as thah we was the oniest thing was to put
+on all the brass I had.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>From the top of the next hill the travellers descended
+into a village lying fast asleep, with the morning star
+blazing over it, the cocks calling to each other from their
+roosts, and here and there a light twinkling from a
+kitchen window, or a lazy axe-stroke smiting the logs at
+a wood-pile. In the middle of the village one lone old
+man, half-dressed, was lazily opening the little wooden
+&ldquo;store&rdquo; that monopolized its commerce. The travellers
+responded to his silent bow, rode on through the place,
+passed over and down another hill, met an aged negro,
+who passed on the roadside, lifting his forlorn hat and
+bowing low; and, as soon as they could be sure they had
+gone beyond his sight and hearing, turned abruptly into a
+dark wood on the left. Twice again they turned to the
+left, going very warily through the deep shadows of the
+forest, and so returned half around the village, seeing no
+one. Then they stopped and dismounted at a stable-door,
+on the outskirts of the place. The spy opened it
+with a key from his own pocket, went in and came out
+again with a great armful of hay, which he spread for the
+horses&#8217; feet to muffle their tread, led them into the stable,
+removed the hay again, and closed and locked the door.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Make yourself small,&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;and walk
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</a></span>
+fast.&rdquo; They passed by a garden path up to the back
+porch and door of a small unpainted cottage. He
+knocked, three soft, measured taps.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Day&#8217;s breakin&#8217;,&rdquo; he whispered again, as he stood
+with Alice asleep in his arms, while somebody was heard
+stirring within.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sam?&rdquo; said a low, wary voice just within the unopened
+door.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sister,&rdquo; softly responded the spy, and the door swung
+inward, and revealed a tall woman, with an austere but
+good face, that could just be made out by the dim light
+of a tallow candle shining from the next room. The
+travellers entered and the door was shut.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the spy, standing and smiling foolishly,
+and bending playfully in the shoulders, &ldquo;well, Mrs.
+Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo;&mdash;he gave his hand a limp wave abroad and
+smirked,&mdash;&ldquo;&lsquo;In Dixie&#8217;s land you take yo&#8217; stand.&rsquo; This
+is it. You&#8217;re in it!&mdash;Mrs. Richlin&#8217;, my sister; sister,
+Mrs. Richlin&#8217;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Pleased to know ye,&rdquo; said the woman, without the
+faintest ray of emotion. &ldquo;Take a seat and sit down.&rdquo;
+She produced a chair bottomed with raw-hide.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; was all Mary could think of to reply as
+she accepted the seat, and &ldquo;Thank you&rdquo; again when the
+woman brought a glass of water. The spy laid Alice on
+a bed in sight of Mary in another chamber. He came
+back on tiptoe.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, the next thing is to git you furder south.
+Wust of it is that, seein&#8217; as you got sich a weakness fur
+tellin&#8217; the truth, we&#8217;ll jess have to sort o&#8217; slide you along
+fum one Union man to another; sort o&#8217; hole fass what I
+give ye, as you used to say yourself, I reckon. But
+you&#8217;ve got one strong holt.&rdquo; His eye went to his sister&#8217;s,
+and he started away without a word, and was presently
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</a></span>
+heard making a fire, while the woman went about spreading
+a small table with cold meats and corn-bread, milk
+and butter. Her brother came back once more.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said to Mary, &ldquo;you&#8217;ve got one mighty good
+card, and that&#8217;s it in yonder on the bed. &lsquo;Humph!&rsquo;
+folks&#8217;ll say; &lsquo;didn&#8217;t come fur with that there baby,
+sho!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&#8217;t go far without her,&rdquo; said Mary, brightly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>I</em> say,&rdquo; responded the hostess, with her back turned,
+and said no more.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sister,&rdquo; said the spy, &ldquo;we&#8217;ll want the buggy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; responded the sister.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll go feed the hosses,&rdquo; said he, and went out. In
+a few minutes he returned. &ldquo;Joe must give &#8217;em a good
+rubbin&#8217; when he comes, sister,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; replied the woman, and then turning to
+Mary, &ldquo;Come.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What, ma&#8217;m?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Eat.&rdquo; She touched the back of a chair. &ldquo;Sam, bring the baby.&rdquo;
+She stood and waited on the table.</p>
+
+<p>Mary was still eating, when suddenly she rose up, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, where is Mr.&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;, your brother?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s gone to take a sleep outside,&rdquo; said his sister.
+&ldquo;It&#8217;s too resky for him to sleep in a house.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She faintly smiled, for the first time, at the end of this
+long speech.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Mary, &ldquo;oh, I haven&#8217;t uttered a word of
+thanks. What will he think of me?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She sank into her chair again with an elbow on the
+table, and looked up at the tall standing figure on the
+other side, with a little laugh of mortification.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You kin thank God,&rdquo; replied the figure. &ldquo;<em>He</em> aint
+gone.&rdquo; Another ghost of a smile was seen for a moment
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</a></span>
+on the grave face. &ldquo;Sam aint thinkin&#8217; about that. You
+hurry and finish and lay down and sleep, and when you
+wake up he&#8217;ll be back here ready, to take you along
+furder. That&#8217;s a healthy little one. She wants some
+more buttermilk. Give it to her. If she don&#8217;t drink it
+the pigs&#8217;ll git it, as the ole woman says.... Now you
+better lay down on the bed in yonder and go to sleep.
+Jess sort o&#8217; loosen yo&#8217; cloze; don&#8217;t take off noth&#8217;n&#8217; but
+dress and shoes. You needn&#8217;t be afeard to sleep sound;
+I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to keep a lookout.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LV.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>DIXIE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>In her sleep Mary dreamed over again the late rencontre.
+Again she heard the challenging outcry, and
+again was lashing her horse to his utmost speed; but
+this time her enemy seemed too fleet for her. He
+overtook&mdash;he laid his hand upon her. A scream was just at
+her lips, when she awoke with a wild start, to find the tall
+woman standing over her, and bidding her in a whisper
+rise with all stealth and dress with all speed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where&#8217;s Alice?&rdquo; asked Mary. &ldquo;Where&#8217;s my little girl?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She&#8217;s there. Never mind her yit, till you&#8217;re dressed.
+Here; not them cloze; these here homespun things.
+Make haste, but don&#8217;t get excited.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How long have I slept?&rdquo; asked Mary, hurriedly obeying.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You couldn&#8217;t &#8217;a&#8217; more&#8217;n got to sleep. Sam oughtn&#8217;t
+to have shot back at &#8217;em. They&#8217;re after &#8217;im, hot; four of
+&#8217;em jess now passed through on the road, right here past
+my front gate.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What kept them back so long?&rdquo; asked Mary, tremblingly
+attempting to button her dress in the back.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Let me do that,&rdquo; said the woman. &ldquo;They couldn&#8217;t
+come very fast; had to kind o&#8217; beat the bushes every
+hundred yards or so. If they&#8217;d of been more of &#8217;em
+they&#8217;d a-come faster, &#8217;cause they&#8217;d a-left one or two
+behind at each turn-out, and come along with the rest.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</a></span>
+There; now that there hat, there, on the table.&rdquo; As
+Mary took the hat the speaker stepped to a window and
+peeped into the early day. A suppressed exclamation
+escaped her. &ldquo;O you poor boy!&rdquo; she murmured. Mary
+sprang toward her, but the stronger woman hurried her
+away from the spot.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come; take up the little one &#8217;thout wakin&#8217; her.
+Three more of &#8217;em&#8217;s a-passin&#8217;. The little young feller in
+the middle reelin&#8217; and swayin&#8217; in his saddle, and t&#8217;others
+givin&#8217; him water from his canteen.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Wounded?&rdquo; asked Mary, with a terrified look, bringing
+the sleeping child.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, the last wound he&#8217;ll ever git, I reckon. Jess
+take the baby, so. Sam&#8217;s already took her cloze. He&#8217;s
+waitin&#8217; out in the woods here behind the house. He&#8217;s got
+the critters down in the hollow. Now, here! This here
+bundle&#8217;s a ridin&#8217;-skirt. It&#8217;s not mournin&#8217;, but you mustn&#8217;t
+mind. It&#8217;s mighty green and cottony-lookin&#8217;, but&mdash;anyhow,
+you jess put it on when you git into the woods.
+Now it&#8217;s good sun-up outside. The way you must do&mdash;you
+jess keep on the lef&#8217; side o&#8217; me, close, so as when I
+jess santer out e-easy todes the back gate you&#8217;ll be hid
+from all the other houses. Then when we git to the back
+gate I&#8217;ll kind o&#8217; stand like I was lookin&#8217; into the pig-pen,
+and you jess slide away on a line with me into the woods,
+and there&#8217;ll be Sam. No, no; take your hat off and sort
+o&#8217; hide it. Now; you ready?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary threw her arms around the woman&#8217;s neck and
+kissed her passionately.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, don&#8217;t stop for that!&rdquo; said the woman, smiling
+with an awkward diffidence. &ldquo;Come!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&ldquo;What is the day of the month?&rdquo; asked Mary of the spy.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</a></span>
+They had been riding briskly along a mere cattle-path
+in the woods for half an hour, and had just struck into an
+old, unused road that promised to lead them presently into
+and through some fields of cotton. Alice, slumbering
+heavily, had been, little by little, dressed, and was now
+in the man&#8217;s arms. As Mary spoke they slackened pace
+to a quiet trot, and crossed a broad highway nearly at
+right angles.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That would &#8217;a&#8217; been our road with the buggy,&rdquo; said
+the man, &ldquo;if we could of took things easy.&rdquo; They were
+riding almost straight away from the sun. His dress had
+been changed again, and in a suit of new, dark brown
+homespun wool, over a pink calico shirt and white cuffs
+and collar, he presented the best possible picture of
+spruce gentility that the times would justify. &ldquo;&lsquo;What
+day of the month,&rsquo; did you ask? <em>I</em>&#8217;ll never tell you, but
+I know it&#8217;s Friday.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then it&#8217;s the eighteenth,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>They met an old negro driving three yoke of oxen
+attached to a single empty cart.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Uncle,&rdquo; said the spy, &ldquo;I don&#8217;t reckon the boss will
+mind our sort o&#8217; ridin&#8217; straight thoo his grove, will he?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not &#8217;tall, boss; on&#8217;y dess be so kyine an&#8217; shet de
+gates behine you, sah.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They passed those gates and many another, shutting
+them faithfully, and journeying on through miles of fragrant
+lane and fields of young cotton and corn, and
+stretches of wood where the squirrel scampered before
+them and reaches of fallow grounds still wet with dew,
+and patches of sedge, and old fields grown up with
+thickets of young trees; now pushing their horses to a
+rapid gallop, where they were confident of escaping
+notice, and now ambling leisurely, where the eyes of men
+afield, or of women at home, followed them with rustic
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</a></span>
+scrutiny; or some straggling Confederate soldier on foot
+or in the saddle met them in the way.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How far must we go before we can stop?&rdquo; asked Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Jess as far&#8217;s the critters&#8217;ll take us without showin&#8217; distress.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;South is out that way, isn&#8217;t it?&rdquo; she asked again,
+pointing off to the left.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; said the spy, with a look that was humorous,
+but not only humorous.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Two or three times last night, and now ag&#8217;in, you
+gimme a sort o&#8217; sneakin&#8217; notion you don&#8217;t trust me,&rdquo;
+said he.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; exclaimed she, &ldquo;I do! Only I&#8217;m so anxious
+to be going south.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Jess so,&rdquo; said the man. &ldquo;Well, we&#8217;re goin&#8217; sort o&#8217;
+due west right now. You see we dassent take this railroad
+anywheres about here,&rdquo;&mdash;they were even then crossing
+the track of the Mobile and Ohio Railway&mdash;&ldquo;because
+that&#8217;s jess where they <em>sho</em> to be on the lookout fur us.
+And I can&#8217;t take you straight south on the dirt roads,
+because I don&#8217;t know the country down that way. But
+this way I know it like your hand knows the way to your
+mouth, as the felleh says. Learned it most all sence the
+war broke out, too. And so the whole thing is we got to
+jess keep straight across the country here till we strike the
+Mississippi Central.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What time will that be?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Time! You don&#8217;t mean time o&#8217; day, do you?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, we&#8217;ll be lucky to make it in two whole days.
+Won&#8217;t we, Alice!&rdquo; The child had waked, and was staring
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</a></span>
+into her mother&#8217;s face. Mary caressed her. The spy
+looked at them silently. The mother looked up, as if to
+speak, but was silent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; said the man, softly; for a tear shone
+through her smile. Whereat she laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I ought to be ashamed to be so unreasonable,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, I&#8217;d like to contradict you for once,&rdquo;
+responds the spy; &ldquo;but the fact is, how kin I, when Noo
+Orleens is jest about south-west frum here, anyhow?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary, pleasantly, &ldquo;it&#8217;s between south and
+south-west.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The spy made a gesture of mock amazement.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you air partickly what you say. I never hear
+o&#8217; but one party that was more partickly than you. I
+reckon you never hear&#8217; tell o&#8217; him, did you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Who was he?&rdquo; asked Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I never got his name, nor his habitation, as the
+felleh says; but he was so conscientious that when a
+highwayman attackted him onct, he wouldn&#8217;t holla murder
+nor he wouldn&#8217;t holla thief, &#8217;cause he wasn&#8217;t certain
+whether the highwayman wanted to kill him or rob him.
+He was something like George Washington, who couldn&#8217;t
+tell a lie. Did you ever hear that story about George
+Washington?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;About his chopping the cherry-tree with his hatchet?&rdquo;
+asked Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I see you done heard the story!&rdquo; said the spy,
+and left it untold; but whether he was making game of
+his auditor or not she did not know, and never found out.
+But on they went, by many a home; through miles of
+growing crops, and now through miles of lofty pine
+forests, and by log-cabins and unpainted cottages, from
+within whose open doors came often the loud feline growl
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</a></span>
+of the spinning-wheel. So on and on, Mary spending the
+first night in a lone forest cabin of pine poles, whose
+master, a Confederate deserter, fed his ague-shaken wife
+and cotton-headed children oftener with the spoils of his
+rifle than with the products of the field. The spy and the
+deserter lay down together, and together rose again with
+the dawn, in a deep thicket, a few hundred yards away.</p>
+
+<p>The travellers had almost reached the end of this toilsome
+horseback journey, when rains set in, and, for
+forty-eight hours more, swollen floods and broken bridges
+held them back, though within hearing of the locomotive&#8217;s
+whistle.</p>
+
+<p>But at length, one morning, Mary stepped aboard the
+train that had not long before started south from the
+town of Holly Springs, Mississippi, assisted with decorous
+alacrity by the conductor, and followed by the station-agent
+with Alice in his arms, and by the telegraph-operator
+with a home-made satchel or two of luggage and
+luncheon. It was disgusting,&mdash;to two thin, tough-necked
+women, who climbed aboard, unassisted, at the other end of
+the same coach.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You kin just bet she&#8217;s a widder, and them fellers
+knows it,&rdquo; said one to the other, taking a seat and spitting
+expertly through the window.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If she aint,&rdquo; responded the other, putting a peeled
+snuff-stick into her cheek, &ldquo;then her husband&#8217;s got the
+brass buttons, and they knows that. Look at &#8217;er a-smi-i-ilin&#8217;!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What you reckon makes her look so wore out?&rdquo;
+asked the first. And the other replied promptly, with
+unbounded loathing, &ldquo;Dayncin&#8217;,&rdquo; and sent her emphasis
+out of the window in liquid form without disturbing her
+intervening companion.</p>
+
+<p>During the delay caused by the rain Mary had found
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[Pg 418]</a></span>
+time to refit her borrowed costume. Her dress was a
+stout, close-fitting homespun of mixed cotton and wool,
+woven in a neat plaid of walnut-brown, oak-red, and the
+pale olive dye of the hickory. Her hat was a simple
+round thing of woven pine straw, with a slightly drooping
+brim, its native brown gloss undisturbed, and the low
+crown wrapped about with a wreath of wild grasses
+plaited together with a bit of yellow cord. Alice wore a
+much-washed pink calico frock and a hood of the same
+stuff.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Some officer&#8217;s wife,&rdquo; said two very sweet and lady-like
+persons, of unequal age and equal good taste in dress, as
+their eyes took an inventory of her apparel. They wore
+bonnets that were quite handsome, and had real false
+flowers and silk ribbons on them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, she&#8217;s been to camp somewhere to see him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Beautiful child she&#8217;s got,&rdquo; said one, as Alice began
+softly to smite her mother&#8217;s shoulder for private attention,
+and to whisper gravely as Mary bent down.</p>
+
+<p>Two or three soldiers took their feet off the seats, and
+one of them, at the amiably murmured request of the conductor,
+put his shoes on.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The car in front is your car,&rdquo; said the conductor to
+another man, in especially dirty gray uniform.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You kin hev it,&rdquo; said the soldier, throwing his palm
+open with an air of happy extravagance, and a group of
+gray-headed &ldquo;citizens,&rdquo; just behind, exploded a loud
+country laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;D&#8217; I onderstaynd you to lafe at me, saw?&rdquo; drawled the
+soldier, turning back with a pretence of heavy gloom on
+his uncombed brow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Laughin&#8217; at yo&#8217; friend yondeh,&rdquo; said one of the
+citizens, grinning and waving his hand after the departing
+conductor.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</a></span>
+&ldquo;&#8217;Caze if you lafe at me again, saw,&rdquo;&mdash;the frown
+deepened,&mdash;&ldquo;I&#8217;ll thess go &#8217;ight straight out iss
+caw.&rdquo;<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>The laugh that followed this dreadful threat was loud
+and general, the victims laughing loudest of all, and the
+soldier smiling about benignly, and slowly scratching his
+elbows. Even the two ladies smiled. Alice&#8217;s face remained
+impassive. She looked twice into her mother&#8217;s to
+see if there was no smile there. But the mother smiled
+at her, took off her hood and smoothed back the fine gold,
+then put the hood on again, and tied its strings under the
+upstretched chin.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Alice pulled softly at the hollow of her
+mother&#8217;s elbow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mamma&mdash;mamma!&rdquo; she whispered. Mary bowed
+her ear. The child gazed solemnly across the car at another
+stranger, then pulled the mother&#8217;s arm again,
+&ldquo;That man over there&mdash;winked at me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And thereupon another man, sitting sidewise on the
+seat in front, and looking back at Alice, tittered softly,
+and said to Mary, with a raw drawl:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She&#8217;s a-beginnin&#8217; young.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She means some one on the other side,&rdquo; said Mary,
+quite pleasantly, and the man had sense enough to hush.</p>
+
+<p>The jest and the laugh ran to and fro everywhere. It
+seemed very strange to Mary to find it so. There were
+two or three convalescent wounded men in the car, going
+home on leave, and they appeared never to weary of the
+threadbare joke of calling their wounds &ldquo;furloughs.&rdquo;
+There was one little slip of a fellow&mdash;he could hardly
+have been seventeen&mdash;wounded in the hand, whom they
+kept teazed to the point of exasperation by urging him to
+confess that he had shot himself for a furlough, and of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</a></span>
+whom they said, later, when he had got off at a flag
+station, that he was the bravest soldier in his company.
+No one on the train seemed to feel that he had got all
+that was coming to him until the conductor had exchanged
+a jest with him. The land laughed. On the right hand
+and on the left it dimpled and wrinkled in gentle depressions
+and ridges, and rolled away in fields of young corn
+and cotton. The train skipped and clattered along at a
+happy-go-lucky, twelve-miles-an-hour gait, over trestles
+and stock-pits, through flowery cuts and along slender,
+rain-washed embankments where dewberries were ripening,
+and whence cattle ran down and galloped off across the
+meadows on this side and that, tails up and heads down,
+throwing their horns about, making light of the screaming
+destruction, in their dumb way, as the people made
+light of the war. At stations where the train stopped&mdash;and
+it stopped on the faintest excuse&mdash;a long line of
+heads and gray shoulders was thrust out of the windows
+of the soldiers&#8217; car, in front, with all manner of masculine
+head-coverings, even bloody handkerchiefs; and woe to
+the negro or negress or &ldquo;citizen&rdquo; who, by any conspicuous
+demerit or excellence of dress, form, stature, speech,
+or bearing, drew the fire of that line! No human power
+of face or tongue could stand the incessant volley of stale
+quips and mouldy jokes, affirmative, interrogative, and
+exclamatory, that fell about their victim.</p>
+
+<p>At one spot, in a lovely natural grove, where the air
+was spiced with the gentle pungency of the young hickory
+foliage, the train paused a moment to let off a man in fine
+gray cloth, whose yellow stripes and one golden star on
+the coat-collar indicated a major of cavalry. It seemed
+as though pandemonium had opened. Mules braying,
+negroes yodling, axes ringing, teamsters singing, men
+shouting and howling, and all at nothing; mess-fires
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</a></span>
+smoking all about in the same hap-hazard, but roomy, disorder
+in which the trees of the grove had grown; the
+railroad side lined with a motley crowd of jolly fellows
+in spurs, and the atmosphere between them and the line
+of heads in the car-windows murky with the interchange
+of compliments that flew back and forth from the
+&ldquo;web-foots&rdquo;<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
+to the &ldquo;critter company,&rdquo; and from the &ldquo;critter
+company&rdquo; to the &ldquo;web-foots.&rdquo; As the train moved off,
+&ldquo;I say, boys,&rdquo; drawled a lank, coatless giant on the
+roadside, with but one suspender and one spur, &ldquo;tha-at&#8217;s
+right! Gen&#8217;l Beerygyard told you to strike fo&#8217; yo&#8217; homes,
+an&#8217; I see you&#8217; a-doin&#8217; it ez fass as you kin git thah.&rdquo;
+And the &ldquo;citizens&rdquo; in the rear car-windows giggled even
+at that; while the &ldquo;web-foots&rdquo; he-hawed their derision,
+and the train went on, as one might say, with its hands
+in its pockets, whooping and whistling over the fields&mdash;after
+the cows; for the day was declining.</p>
+
+<p>Mary was awed. As she had been forewarned to do,
+she tried not to seem unaccustomed to, or out of harmony
+with, all this exuberance. But there was something so
+brave in it, coming from a people who were playing a losing
+game with their lives and fortunes for their stakes;
+something so gallant in it, laughing and gibing in the
+sight of blood, and smell of fire, and shortness of food and
+raiment, that she feared she had betrayed a stranger&#8217;s
+wonder and admiration every time the train stopped, and
+the idlers of the station platform lingered about her window
+and silently paid their ungraceful but complimentary
+tribute of simulated casual glances.</p>
+
+<p>For, with all this jest, it was very plain there was but
+little joy. It was not gladness; it was bravery. It was
+the humor of an invincible spirit&mdash;the gayety of defiance.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</a></span>
+She could easily see the grim earnestness beneath
+the jocund temper, and beneath the unrepining smile the
+privation and the apprehension. What joy there was, was
+a martial joy. The people were confident of victory at
+last,&mdash;a victorious end, whatever might lie between,
+and of even what lay between they would confess no
+fear. Richmond was safe, Memphis safer, New Orleans
+safest. Yea, notwithstanding Porter and Farragut were
+pelting away at Forts Jackson and St. Philip. Indeed,
+if the rumor be true, if Farragut&#8217;s ships had passed those
+forts, leaving Porter behind, then the Yankee sea-serpent
+was cut in two, and there was an end of him in that direction.
+Ha! ha!</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is to-day the twenty-sixth?&rdquo; asked Mary, at last, of
+one of the ladies in real ribbons, leaning over toward
+her.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, ma&#8217;am.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was the younger one who replied. As she did so she
+came over and sat by Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I judge, from what I heard your little girl asking you,
+that you are going beyond Jackson.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m going to New Orleans.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you live there?&rdquo; The lady&#8217;s interest seemed
+genuine and kind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I am going to join my husband there.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary saw by the reflection in the lady&#8217;s face that a
+sudden gladness must have overspread her own.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;ll be mighty glad, I&#8217;m sure,&rdquo; said the pleasant
+stranger, patting Alice&#8217;s cheek, and looking, with a pretty
+fellow-feeling, first into the child&#8217;s face and then into
+Mary&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, he will,&rdquo; said Mary, looking down upon the
+curling locks at her elbow with a mother&#8217;s happiness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Is he in the army?&rdquo; asked the lady.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</a></span>
+Mary&#8217;s face fell.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;His health is bad,&rdquo; she replied.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know some nice people down in New Orleans,&rdquo; said
+the lady again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;We haven&#8217;t many acquaintances,&rdquo; rejoined Mary,
+with a timidity that was almost trepidation. Her eyes
+dropped, and she began softly to smooth Alice&#8217;s collar and
+hair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t know,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;but you might know
+some of them. For instance, there&#8217;s Dr. Sevier.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary gave a start and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, is he your friend too?&rdquo; she asked. She looked
+up into the lady&#8217;s quiet, brown eyes and down again into
+her own lap, where her hands had suddenly knit together,
+and then again into the lady&#8217;s face. &ldquo;We have no friend
+like Dr. Sevier.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; called the lady softly, and beckoned. The
+senior lady leaned toward her. &ldquo;Mother, this lady is
+from New Orleans and is an intimate friend of Dr. Sevier.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The mother was pleased.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What might one call your name?&rdquo; she asked, taking
+a seat behind Mary and continuing to show her pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The mother and daughter looked at each other. They
+had never heard the name before.</p>
+
+<p>Yet only a little while later the mother was saying to
+Mary,&mdash;they were expecting at any moment to hear the
+whistle for the terminus of the route, the central Mississippi
+town of Canton:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My dear child, no! I couldn&#8217;t sleep to-night if I
+thought you was all alone in one o&#8217; them old hotels in
+Canton. No, you must come home with us. We&#8217;re
+barely two mile&#8217; from town, and we&#8217;ll have the carriage
+ready for you bright and early in the morning, and our
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</a></span>
+coachman will put you on the cars just as nice&mdash;Trouble?&rdquo;
+She laughed at the idea. &ldquo;No; I tell you
+what would trouble me,&mdash;that is, if we&#8217;d allow it; that&#8217;d
+be for you to stop in one o&#8217; them hotels all alone, child,
+and like&#8217; as not some careless servant not wake you in
+time for the cars to-morrow.&rdquo; At this word she saw
+capitulation in Mary&#8217;s eyes. &ldquo;Come, now, my child,
+we&#8217;re not going to take no for an answer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Nor did they.</p>
+
+<p>But what was the result? The next morning, when
+Mary and Alice stood ready for the carriage, and it was
+high time they were gone, the carriage was not ready;
+the horses had got astray in the night. And while the
+black coachman was on one horse, which he had found
+and caught, and was scouring the neighboring fields and
+lanes and meadows in search of the other, there came out
+from townward upon the still, country air the long whistle
+of the departing train; and then the distant rattle and roar
+of its far southern journey began, and then its warning
+notes to the scattering colts and cattle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Look away!&rdquo;&mdash;it seemed to sing&mdash;&ldquo;Look away!&rdquo;&mdash;the
+notes fading, failing, on the ear,&mdash;&ldquo;away&mdash;away&mdash;away
+down south in Dixie,&rdquo;&mdash;the last train that left
+for New Orleans until the war was over.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LVI.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>FIRE AND SWORD.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>The year the war began dates also, for New Orleans,
+the advent of two better things: street-cars and the
+fire-alarm telegraph. The frantic incoherence of the old
+alarum gave way to the few solemn, numbered strokes that
+called to duty in the face of hot danger, like the electric
+voice of a calm commander. The same new system also
+silenced, once for all, the old nine-o&#8217;clock gun. For there
+were not only taps to signify each new fire-district,&mdash;one
+for the first, two for the second, three, four, five, six
+seven, eight, and nine,&mdash;but there was also one lone toll
+at mid-day for the hungry mechanic, and nine at the
+evening hour when the tired workman called his children
+in from the street and turned to his couch, and the slave
+must show cause in a master&#8217;s handwriting why he or she
+was not under that master&#8217;s roof.</p>
+
+<p>And then there was one signal more. Fire is a dreadful
+thing, and all the alarm signals were for fire except
+this one. Yet the profoundest wish of every good man
+and tender women in New Orleans, when this pleasing
+novelty of electro-magnetic warnings was first published
+for the common edification, was that mid-day or midnight,
+midsummer or midwinter, let come what might of
+danger or loss or distress, that one particular signal might
+not sound. Twelve taps. Anything but that.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier and Richling had that wish together. They
+had many wishes that were greatly at variance the one&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[Pg 426]</a></span>
+from the other&#8217;s. The Doctor had struggled for the
+Union until the very smoke of war began to rise into the
+sky; but then he &ldquo;went with the South.&rdquo; He was the
+only one in New Orleans who knew&mdash;whatever some
+others may have suspected&mdash;that Richling&#8217;s heart was
+on the other side. Had Richling&#8217;s bodily strength remained,
+so that he could have been a possible factor,
+however small, in the strife, it is hard to say whether
+they could have been together day by day and night by
+night, as they came to be when the Doctor took the failing
+man into his own home, and have lived in amity, as
+they did. But there is this to be counted; they were
+both, though from different directions, for peace, and
+their gentle forbearance toward each other taught them
+a moderation of sentiment concerning the whole great
+issue. And, as I say, they both together held the one
+longing hope that, whatever war should bring of final
+gladness or lamentation, the steeples of New Orleans
+might never toll&mdash;twelve.</p>
+
+<p>But one bright Thursday April morning, as Richling
+was sitting, half dressed, by an open window of his room
+in Dr. Sevier&#8217;s house, leaning on the arm of his soft chair
+and looking out at the passers on the street, among whom
+he had begun to notice some singular evidences of excitement,
+there came from a slender Gothic church-spire that
+was highest of all in the city, just beyond a few roofs in
+front of him, the clear, sudden, brazen peal of its one
+great bell.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Fire,&rdquo; thought Richling; and yet, he knew not why,
+wondered where Dr. Sevier might be. He had not seen
+him that morning. A high official had sent for him at
+sunrise and he had not returned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Clang,&rdquo; went the bell again, and the softer ding&mdash;dang&mdash;dong
+of others, struck at the same instant, came
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[Pg 427]</a></span>
+floating in from various distances. And then it clanged
+again&mdash;and again&mdash;and again&mdash;the loud one near, the
+soft ones, one by one, after it&mdash;six, seven, eight, nine&mdash;ah!
+stop there! stop there! But still the alarm pealed
+on; ten&mdash;alas! alas!&mdash;eleven&mdash;oh, oh, the women and
+children!&mdash;twelve! And then the fainter, final asseverations
+of the more distant bells&mdash;twelve! twelve! twelve!&mdash;and
+a hundred and seventy thousand souls knew by
+that sign that the foe had passed the forts. New Orleans
+had fallen.</p>
+
+<p>Richling dressed himself hurriedly and went out.
+Everywhere drums were beating to arms. Couriers and
+aides-de-camp were galloping here and there. Men in
+uniform were hurrying on foot to this and that rendezvous.
+Crowds of the idle and poor were streaming out
+toward the levee. Carriages and cabs rattled frantically
+from place to place; men ran out-of-doors and leaped
+into them and leaped out of them and sprang up stair-ways;
+hundreds of all manner of vehicles, fit and unfit to
+carry passengers and goods, crowded toward the railroad
+depots and steam-boat landings; women ran into the
+streets wringing their hands and holding their brows;
+and children stood in the door-ways and gate-ways and
+trembled and called and cried.</p>
+
+<p>Richling took the new Dauphine street-car. Far down
+in the Third district, where there was a silence like that
+of a village lane, he approached a little cottage painted
+with Venetian red, setting in its garden of oranges, pomegranates,
+and bananas, and marigolds, and coxcombs
+behind its white paling fence and green gate.</p>
+
+<p>The gate was open. In it stood a tall, strong woman,
+good-looking, rosy, and neatly dressed. That she was
+tall you could prove by the gate, and that she was strong,
+by the graceful muscularity with which she held two
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[Pg 428]</a></span>
+infants,&mdash;pretty, swarthy little fellows, with joyous black
+eyes, and evidently of one age and parentage,&mdash;each in
+the hollow of a fine, round arm. There was just a hint
+of emotional disorder in her shining hair and a trace of
+tears about her eyes. As the visitor drew near, a fresh
+show of distressed exaltation was visible in the slight
+play of her form.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! Mr. Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo; she cried, the moment he came
+within hearing, &ldquo;&lsquo;the dispot&#8217;s heels is on our shores!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+Tears filled her eyes again. Mike, the bruiser, in his
+sixth year, who had been leaning backward against her
+knees and covering his legs with her skirts, ran forward
+and clasped the visitor&#8217;s lower limbs with the nerve and
+intention of a wrestler. Kate followed with the cherubs.
+They were Raphael&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it&#8217;s terrible,&rdquo; said Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! no, Mr. Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo; replied Kate, lifting her head
+proudly as she returned with him toward the gate, &ldquo;it&#8217;s
+outrageouz; but it&#8217;s not terrible. At least it&#8217;s not for
+me, Mr. Richlin&#8217;. I&#8217;m only Mrs. Captain Ristofalah;
+and whin I see the collonels&#8217; and gin&#8217;r&#8217;ls&#8217; ladies a-prancin&#8217;
+around in their carridges I feel my <em>humility</em>; but it&#8217;s my
+djuty to be <em>brave</em>, sur! An&#8217; I&#8217;ll help to <em>fight</em> thim, sur, if
+the min can&#8217;t do ud. Mr. Richlin&#8217;, my husband is the
+intimit frind of Gin&#8217;r&#8217;l Garrybaldy, sur! I&#8217;ll help to
+burrin the cittee, sur!&mdash;rather nor give ud up to thim
+vandjals! Come in, Mr. Richlin&#8217;; come in.&rdquo; She led the
+way up the narrow shell-walk. &ldquo;Come &#8217;n, sur, it may
+be the last time ye&#8217; do ud before the flames is leppin&#8217;
+from the roof! Ah! I knowed ye&#8217;d come. I was a-lookin&#8217;
+for ye. I knowed <em>ye&#8217;d</em> prove yerself that frind in need
+that he&#8217;s the frind indeed! Take a seat an&#8217; sit down.&rdquo;
+She faced about on the vine-covered porch, and dropped
+into a rocking-chair, her eyes still at the point of overflow.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[Pg 429]</a></span>
+&ldquo;But ah! Mr. Richlin&#8217;, where&#8217;s all thim flatterers
+that fawned around uz in the days of tytled prosperity?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling said nothing; he had not seen any throngs of
+that sort.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Gone, sur! and it&#8217;s a relief; it&#8217;s a relief, Mr. Richlin&#8217;!&rdquo;
+She marshalled the twins on her lap, Carlo commanding
+the right, Francisco the left.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&#8217;t expect too much of them,&rdquo; said Richling,
+drawing Mike between his knees, &ldquo;in such a time
+of alarm and confusion as this.&rdquo; And Kate responded
+generously:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I suppose you&#8217;re right, sur.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ve come down,&rdquo; resumed the visitor, letting Mike
+count off &ldquo;Rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief,&rdquo; on
+the buttons of his coat, &ldquo;to give you any help I can in
+getting ready to leave town. For you mustn&#8217;t think of
+staying. It isn&#8217;t possible to be anything short of dreadful
+to stay in a city occupied by hostile troops. It&#8217;s
+almost certain the Confederates will try to hold the city,
+and there may be a bombardment. The city may be
+taken and retaken half-a-dozen times before the war is
+over.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Richlin&#8217;,&rdquo; said Kate, with a majestic lifting of
+the hand, &ldquo;I&#8217;ll nivver rin away from the Yanks.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, but you must <em>go</em> away from them. You mustn&#8217;t
+put yourself in such a position that you can&#8217;t go to your
+husband if he needs you, Mrs. Ristofalo; don&#8217;t get separated
+from him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! Mr. Richlin&#8217;, it&#8217;s you as has the right to say
+so; and I&#8217;ll do as you say. Mr. Richlin&#8217;, my husband&rdquo;&mdash;her
+voice trembled&mdash;&ldquo;may be wounded this hour.
+I&#8217;ll go, sur, indeed I will; but, sur, if Captain Raphael
+Ristofalah wor <em>here</em>, sur, he&#8217;d be ad the <em>front</em>, sur, and
+Kate Ristofalah would be at his galliant side!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[Pg 430]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Well, then, I&#8217;m glad he&#8217;s not here,&rdquo; rejoined Richling,
+&ldquo;for I&#8217;d have to take care of the children.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ha! ha! ha!&rdquo; laughed Kate. &ldquo;No, sur! I&#8217;d take
+the lion&#8217;s whelps with me, sur! Why, that little Mike
+theyre can han&#8217;le the dthrum-sticks to beat the felley in
+the big hat!&rdquo; And she laughed again.</p>
+
+<p>They made arrangements for her and the three children
+to go &ldquo;out into the confederacy&rdquo; within two or three
+days at furthest; as soon as she and her feeble helper
+could hurry a few matters of business to completion at and
+about the Picayune Tier. Richling did not get back to
+the Doctor&#8217;s house until night had fallen and the sky was
+set aglare by seven miles&#8217; length of tortuous harbor front
+covered with millions&#8217; worth of burning merchandise.
+The city was being evacuated.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier and he had but few words. Richling was
+dejected from weariness, and his friend weary with dejections.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Where have you been all day?&rdquo; asked the Doctor,
+with a touch of irritation.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Getting Kate Ristofalo ready to leave the city.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You shouldn&#8217;t have left the house; but it&#8217;s no use to
+tell you anything. Has she gone?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, in the name of common-sense, then, when is she going?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;In two or three days,&rdquo; replied Richling, almost in retort.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor laughed with impatience.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you feel responsible for her going get her off by
+to-morrow afternoon at the furthest.&rdquo; He dropped his
+tired head against the back of his chair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Richling, &ldquo;I don&#8217;t suppose the fleet can
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[Pg 431]</a></span>
+fight its way through all opposition and get here short of
+a week.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor laid his long fingers upon his brow and
+rolled his head from side to side. Then, slowly raising
+it:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Richling!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;there must have been
+some mistake made when you was put upon the earth.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Richling&#8217;s thin cheek flushed. The Doctor&#8217;s face confessed
+the bitterest resentment.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the fleet is only eighteen miles from here now.&rdquo;
+He ceased, and then added, with sudden kindness of tone,
+&ldquo;I want you to do something for me, will you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, go to bed; I&#8217;m going. You&#8217;ll need every
+grain of strength you&#8217;ve got for to-morrow. I&#8217;m afraid
+then it will not be enough. This is an awful business,
+Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>They went upstairs together. As they were parting at
+its top Richling said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You told me a few days ago that if the city should
+fall, which we didn&#8217;t expect&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That I&#8217;d not leave,&rdquo; said the Doctor. &ldquo;No; I shall
+stay. I haven&#8217;t the stamina to take the field, and I can&#8217;t
+be a runaway. Anyhow, I couldn&#8217;t take you along.
+You couldn&#8217;t bear the travel, and I wouldn&#8217;t go and leave
+you here, Richling&mdash;old fellow!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He laid his hand gently on the sick man&#8217;s shoulder,
+who made no response, so afraid was he that another word
+would mar the perfection of the last.</p>
+
+<p>When Richling went out the next morning the whole
+city was in an ecstasy of rage and terror. Thousands
+had gathered what they could in their hands, and were
+flying by every avenue of escape. Thousands ran hither
+and thither, not knowing where or how to fly. He saw
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[Pg 432]</a></span>
+the wife and son of the silver-haired banker rattling and
+bouncing away toward one of the railway depots in a
+butcher&#8217;s cart. A messenger from Kate by good chance
+met him with word that she would be ready for the
+afternoon train of the Jackson Railroad, and asking anew
+his earliest attention to her interests about the lugger
+landing.</p>
+
+<p>He hastened to the levee. The huge, writhing river,
+risen up above the town, was full to the levee&#8217;s top, and,
+as though the enemy&#8217;s fleet was that much more than it
+could bear, was silently running over by a hundred rills
+into the streets of the stricken city.</p>
+
+<p>As far as the eye could reach, black smoke, white smoke,
+brown smoke, and red flames rolled and spread, and licked
+and leaped, from unnumbered piles of cotton bales, and
+wooden wharves, and ships cut adrift, and steam-boats
+that blazed like shavings, floating down the harbor as they
+blazed. He stood for a moment to see a little revenue
+cutter,&mdash;a pretty topsail schooner,&mdash;lying at the foot of
+Canal street, sink before his eyes into the turbid yellow
+depths of the river, scuttled. Then he hurried on. Huge
+mobs ran to and fro in the fire and smoke, howling, breaking,
+and stealing. Women and children hurried back and
+forth like swarms of giant ants, with buckets and baskets,
+and dippers and bags, and bonnets, hats, petticoats,
+anything,&mdash;now empty, and now full of rice and sugar
+and meal and corn and syrup,&mdash;and robbed each other,
+and cursed and fought, and slipped down in pools of
+molasses, and threw live pigs and coops of chickens into
+the river, and with one voiceless rush left the broad levee
+a smoking, crackling desert, when some shells exploded
+on a burning gunboat, and presently were back again like
+a flock of evil birds.</p>
+
+<p>It began to rain, but Richling sought no shelter. The
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</a></span>
+men he was in search of were not to be found. But the
+victorious ships, with bare black arms stretched wide,
+boarding nettings up, and the dark muzzles of their guns
+bristling from their sides, came, silently as a nightmare,
+slowly around the bend at Slaughterhouse Point and
+moved up the middle of the harbor. At the French
+market he found himself, without forewarning, witness
+of a sudden skirmish between some Gascon and Sicilian
+market-men, who had waved a welcome to the fleet, and
+some Texan soldiers who resented the treason. The
+report of a musket rang out, a second and third re&euml;choed
+it, a pistol cracked, and another, and another; there was
+a rush for cover; another shot, and another, resounded in
+the market-house, and presently in the street beyond.
+Then, in a moment, all was silence and emptiness, into
+which there ventured but a single stooping, peeping
+Sicilian, glancing this way and that, with his finger on
+trigger, eager to kill, gliding from cover to cover, and
+presently gone again from view, leaving no human life
+visible nearer than the swarming mob that Richling, by
+mounting a pile of ship&#8217;s ballast, could see still on the
+steam-boat landing, pillaging in the drenching rain, and
+the long fleet casting anchor before the town in line of
+battle.</p>
+
+<p>Late that afternoon Richling, still wet to the skin,
+amid pushing and yelling and the piping calls of distracted
+women and children, and scuffling and cramming
+in, got Kate Ristofalo, trunks, baskets, and babes, safely
+off on the cars. And when, one week from that day, the
+sound of drums, that had been hushed for a while, fell
+upon his ear again,&mdash;no longer the jaunty rataplan of
+Dixie&#8217;s drums, but the heavy, monotonous roar of the
+conqueror&#8217;s at the head of his dark-blue columns,&mdash;Richling
+could not leave his bed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[Pg 434]</a></span>
+Dr. Sevier sat by him and bore the sound in silence.
+As it died away and ceased, Richling said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;May I write to Mary?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Then the Doctor had a hard task.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wrote for her yesterday,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But, Richling,
+I&mdash;don&#8217;t think she&#8217;ll get the letter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think she has already started?&rdquo; asked the
+sick man, with glad eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, I did the best I knew how&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Whatever you did was all right, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wrote to her months ago, by the hand of Ristofalo.
+He knows she got the letter. I&#8217;m afraid she&#8217;s somewhere
+in the Confederacy, trying to get through. I meant it for
+the best, my dear boy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s all right, Doctor,&rdquo; said the invalid; but the
+physician could see the cruel fact slowly grind him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, may I ask one favor?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;One or a hundred, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I want you to let Madame Z&eacute;nobie come and nurse me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Richling, can&#8217;t I nurse you well enough?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor was jealous.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered the sick man. &ldquo;But I&#8217;ll need a
+good deal of attention. She wants to do it. She was
+here yesterday, you knew. She wanted to ask you, but
+was afraid.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>His wish was granted.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[Pg 435]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LVII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>ALMOST IN SIGHT.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>In St. Tammany Parish, on the northern border of
+Lake Ponchartrain, about thirty miles from New
+Orleans, in a straight line across the waters of the lake,
+stood in time of the war, and may stand yet, an old
+house, of the Creole colonial fashion, all of cypress from
+sills to shingles, standing on brick pillars ten feet from
+the ground, a wide veranda in front, and a double flight
+of front steps running up to it sidewise and meeting in a
+balustraded landing at its edge. Scarcely anything short
+of a steamer&#8217;s roof or a light-house window could have
+offered a finer stand-point from which to sweep a glass
+round the southern semi-circle of water and sky than did
+this stair-landing; and here, a long ship&#8217;s-glass in her
+hands, and the accustomed look of care on her face, faintly
+frowning against the glare of noonday, stood Mary
+Richling. She still had on the pine-straw hat, and the
+skirt&mdash;stirring softly in a breeze that had to come around
+from the north side of the house before it reached her&mdash;was
+the brown and olive homespun.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No use,&rdquo; said an old, fat, and sun-tanned man from
+his willow chair on the veranda behind her. There was a
+slight palsied oscillation in his head. He leaned forward
+somewhat on a staff, and as he spoke his entire shapeless
+and nearly helpless form quaked with the effort. But
+Mary, for all his advice, raised the glass and swung it
+slowly from east to west.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[Pg 436]</a></span>
+The house was near the edge of a slightly rising ground,
+close to the margin of a bayou that glided around toward
+the left from the woods at its back, and ran, deep and
+silent, under the shadows of a few huge, wide-spreading,
+moss-hung live-oaks that stood along its hither shore,
+laving their roots in its waters, and throwing their vast
+green images upon its glassy surface. As the dark stream
+slipped away from these it flashed a little while in the
+bright open space of a marsh, and, just entering the shade
+of a spectral cypress wood, turned as if to avoid it, swung
+more than half about, and shone sky-blue, silver, and
+green as it swept out into the unbroken sunshine of the
+prairie.</p>
+
+<p>It was over this flowery savanna, broadening out on
+either hand, and spreading far away until its bright green
+margin joined, with the perfection of a mosaic, the distant
+blue of the lake, that Mary, dallying a moment with hope,
+passed her long glass. She spoke with it still raised and
+her gaze bent through it:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There&#8217;s a big alligator crossing the bayou down in the bend.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the aged man, moving his flat, carpet-slippered
+feet a laborious inch; &ldquo;alligator. Alligator not
+goin&#8217; take you &#8217;cross lake. No use lookin&#8217;. &#8217;Ow Peter
+goin&#8217; come when win&#8217; dead ahead? Can&#8217;t do it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Yet Mary lifted the glass a little higher, beyond the
+green, beyond the crimpling wavelets of the nearer distance
+that seemed drawn by the magical lens almost into
+her hand, out to the fine, straight line that cut the cool
+blue below from the boundless blue above. Round swung
+the glass, slowly, waveringly, in her unpractised hand,
+from the low cypress forests of Manchac on the west, to
+the skies that glittered over the unseen marshes of the
+Rigolets on the farthest east.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[Pg 437]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You see sail yondeh?&rdquo; came the slow inquiry from
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mary, letting the instrument down, and
+resting it on the balustrade.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Humph! No! Dawn&#8217;t I tell you is no use look?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He was to have got here three days ago,&rdquo; said Mary,
+shutting the glass and gazing in anxious abstraction across
+the prairie.</p>
+
+<p>The Spanish Creole grunted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When win&#8217; change, he goin&#8217; start. He dawn&#8217;t start
+till win&#8217; change. Win&#8217; keep ligue dat, he dawn&#8217;t start
+&#8217;t all.&rdquo; He moved his orange-wood staff an inch, to suit
+the previous movement of his feet, and Mary came and
+laid the glass on its brackets in the veranda, near the
+open door of a hall that ran through the dwelling to
+another veranda in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>In the middle of the hall a small woman, as dry as the
+peppers that hung in strings on the wall behind her, sat
+in a rush-bottomed rocking-chair plaiting a palmetto hat,
+and with her elbow swinging a tattered manilla hammock,
+in whose bulging middle lay Alice, taking her compulsory
+noonday nap. Mary came, expressed her thanks in
+sprightly whispers, lifted the child out, and carried her
+to a room. How had Mary got here?</p>
+
+<p>The morning after that on which she had missed the
+cars at Canton she had taken a south-bound train for
+Camp Moore, the camp of the forces that had evacuated
+New Orleans, situated near the railway station of Tangipahoa,
+some eighty miles north of the captured city.
+Thence, after a day or two of unavoidable delay, and of
+careful effort to know the wisest step, she had taken stage,&mdash;a
+crazy ambulance,&mdash;with some others, two women,
+three children, and an old man, and for two days had travelled
+through a beautiful country of red and yellow clays
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[Pg 438]</a></span>
+and sands below and murmuring pines above,&mdash;vast colonnades
+of towering, branchless brown columns holding
+high their green, translucent roof, and opening up their
+wide, bright, sunshot vistas of gentle, grassy hills that
+undulated far away under the balsamic forest, and melted
+at length into luminous green unity and deer-haunted
+solitudes. Now she went down into richer bottom-lands,
+where the cotton and corn were growing tall and pretty
+to look upon, like suddenly grown girls, and the sun
+was beginning to shine hot. Now she passed over rustic
+bridges, under posted warnings to drive slow or pay a fine,
+or through sandy fords across purling streams, hearing
+the monotone of some unseen mill-dam, or scaring the
+tall gray crane from his fishing, or the otter from his
+pranks. Again she went up into leagues of clear pine
+forest, with stems as straight as lances; meeting now a
+farmer, and now a school-girl or two, and once a squad
+of scouts, ill-mounted, worse clad, and yet more sorrily
+armed; bivouacking with the jolly, tattered fellows, Mary
+and one of the other women singing for them, and the
+&ldquo;boys&rdquo; singing for Mary, and each applauding each
+about the pine-knot fire, and the women and children by
+and by lying down to slumber, in soldier fashion, with
+their feet to the brands, under the pines and the stars,
+while the gray-coats stood guard in the wavering fire-light;
+but Mary lying broad awake staring at the great
+constellation of the Scorpion, and thinking now of him
+she sought, and now remorsefully of that other scout, that
+poor boy whom the spy had shot far away yonder to the
+north and eastward. Now she rose and journeyed again.
+Rare hours were those for Alice. They came at length
+into a low, barren land, of dwarfed and scrawny pines,
+with here and there a marshy flat; thence through a
+narrow strip of hickories, oaks, cypresses, and dwarf
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[Pg 439]</a></span>
+palmetto, and so on into beds of white sand and oyster-shells,
+and then into one of the villages on the north
+shore of Lake Pontchartrain.</p>
+
+<p>Her many little adventures by the way, the sayings
+and doings and seeings of Alice, and all those little
+adroitnesses by which Mary from time to time succeeded
+in avoiding or turning aside the suspicions that hovered
+about her, and the hundred times in which Alice was her
+strongest and most perfect protection, we cannot pause
+to tell. But we give a few lines to one matter.</p>
+
+<p>Mary had not yet descended from the ambulance at
+her journey&#8217;s end; she and Alice only were in it; its
+tired mules were dragging it slowly through the sandy
+street of the village, and the driver was praising the
+milk, eggs, chickens, and genteel seclusion of Mrs.&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash; &#8217;s
+&ldquo;hotel,&rdquo; at that end of the village toward which he was
+driving, when a man on horseback met them, and, in
+passing, raised his hat to Mary. The act was only the
+usual courtesy of the highway; yet Mary was startled,
+disconcerted, and had to ask the unobservant, loquacious
+driver to repeat what he had said. Two days afterward
+Mary was walking at the twilight hour, in a narrow, sandy
+road, that ran from the village out into the country to the
+eastward. Alice walked beside her, plying her with
+questions. At a turn of the path, without warning, she
+confronted this horseman again. He reined up and lifted
+his hat. An elated look brightened his face.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s all fixed,&rdquo; he said. But Mary looked distressed,
+even alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You shouldn&#8217;t have done this,&rdquo; she replied.</p>
+
+<p>The man waved his hand downward repressively, but
+with a countenance full of humor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hold on. It&#8217;s <em>still</em> my deal. This is the last time,
+and then I&#8217;m done. Make a spoon or spoil a horn, you
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[Pg 440]</a></span>
+know. When you commence to do a thing, do it.
+Them&#8217;s the words that&#8217;s inscribed on my banner, as the
+felleh says; only I, Sam, aint got much banner. And
+if I sort o&#8217; use about this low country a little while for
+my health, as it were, and nibble around sort o&#8217; <em>pro bono
+p&#363;blico</em> takin&#8217; notes, why you aint a-carin&#8217;, is you? For
+wherefore shouldest thou?&rdquo; He put on a yet more ludicrous
+look, and spread his hand off at one side, working
+his outstretched fingers.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; responded Mary, with severe gravity; &ldquo;I
+must care. You did finish at Holly Springs. I was to
+find the rest of the way as best I could. That was the
+understanding. Go away!&rdquo; She made a commanding
+gesture, though she wore a pleading look. He looked
+grave; but his habitual grimace stole through his gravity
+and invited her smile. But she remained fixed. He
+gathered the rein and straightened up in the saddle.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she insisted, answering his inquiring attitude;
+&ldquo;go! I shall be grateful to you as long as I live. It
+wasn&#8217;t because I mistrusted you that I refused your aid
+at Camp Moore or at&mdash;&mdash;that other place on this side.
+I don&#8217;t mistrust you. But don&#8217;t you see&mdash;you must see&mdash;it&#8217;s
+your duty to see&mdash;that this staying
+and&mdash;and&mdash;foll&mdash;following&mdash;is&mdash;is&mdash;wrong.&rdquo;
+She stood, holding her skirt in one hand, and Alice&#8217;s hand in
+the other, not upright, but in a slightly shrinking attitude,
+and as she added once more, &ldquo;Go! I implore you&mdash;go!&rdquo; her
+eyes filled.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will; I&#8217;ll go,&rdquo; said the man, with a soft chuckle
+intended for self-abasement. &ldquo;I go, thou goest, he goes.
+&lsquo;I&#8217;ll skedaddle,&rsquo; as the felleh says. And yit it do seem
+to me sorter like,&mdash;if my moral sense is worthy of any
+consideration, which is doubtful, may be,&mdash;seems to me
+like it&#8217;s sort o&#8217; jumpin&#8217; the bounty for you to go and go
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[Pg 441]</a></span>
+back on an arrangement that&#8217;s been all fixed up nice and
+tight, and when it&#8217;s on&#8217;y jess to sort o&#8217; &#8217;jump into the
+wagon&#8217; that&#8217;s to call for you to-morrow, sun-up, drove by
+a nigger boy, and ride a few mile&#8217; to a house on the
+bayou, and wait there till a man comes with a nice little
+schooner, and take you on bode and sail off, and &lsquo;good-by,
+Sally,&rsquo; and me never in sight from fust to last,
+&lsquo;and no questions axed.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t reject the arrangement,&rdquo; replied Mary, with
+tearful pleasantness. &ldquo;If you&#8217;ll do as I say, I&#8217;ll do as
+you say; and that will be final proof to you that I believe
+you&#8217;re&rdquo;&mdash;she fell back a step, laughingly&mdash;&ldquo;&lsquo;the clean
+sand!&rsquo;&rdquo; She thought the man would have perpetrated
+some small antic; but he did not. He did not even smile,
+but lifted the rein a little till the horse stepped forward,
+and, putting out his hand, said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-by. You don&#8217;t need no directions. Jess tell
+the lady where you&#8217; boardin&#8217; that you&#8217;ve sort o&#8217; consented
+to spend a day or two with old Adrien Sanchez, and get
+into the wagon when it comes for you.&rdquo; He let go her
+hand. &ldquo;Good-by, Alice.&rdquo; The child looked up in
+silence and pressed herself against her mother. &ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo;
+said he once more.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo; replied Mary.</p>
+
+<p>His eyes lingered as she dropped her own.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Alice,&rdquo; she said, resisting the little one&#8217;s
+effort to stoop and pick a wild-pea blossom, and the
+mother and child started slowly back the way they
+had come. The spy turned his horse, and moved
+still more slowly in the opposite direction. But before
+he had gone many rods he turned the animal&#8217;s head again,
+rode as slowly back, and, beside the spot where Mary had
+stood, got down, and from the small imprint of her shoe in
+the damp sand took the pea-blossom, which, in turning to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[Pg 442]</a></span>
+depart, she had unawares trodden under foot. He looked
+at the small, crushed thing for a moment, and then thrust
+it into his bosom; but in a moment, as if by a counter
+impulse, drew it forth again, let it flutter to the ground,
+following it with his eyes, shook his head with an amused
+air, half of defiance and half of discomfiture, turned, drew
+himself into the saddle, and with one hand laid upon
+another on the saddle-bow and his eyes resting on them
+in meditation, passed finally out of sight.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Here, then, in this lone old Creole cottage, Mary was
+tarrying, prisoner of hope, coming out all hours of the
+day, and scanning the wide view, first, only her hand to
+shade her brow, and then with the old ship&#8217;s-glass, Alice
+often standing by and looking up at this extraordinary
+toy with unspoken wonder. All that Mary could tell her
+of things seeable through it could never persuade the
+child to risk her own eye at either end of it. So Mary
+would look again and see, out in the prairie, in the morning,
+the reed birds, the marsh hen, the blackbirds, the
+sparrows, the starlings, with their red and yellow epaulets,
+rising and fluttering and sinking again among the lilies
+and mallows, and the white crane, paler than a ghost,
+wading in the grassy shallows. She saw the ravening
+garfish leap from the bayou, and the mullet in shining
+hundreds spatter away to left and right; and the fisherman
+and the shrimp-catcher in their canoes come gliding
+up the glassy stream, riding down the water-lilies, that
+rose again behind and shook the drops from their crowns,
+like water-sprites. Here and there, farther out, she saw
+the little cat-boats of the neighboring village crawling along
+the edge of the lake, taking their timid morning cruises.
+And far away she saw the titanic clouds; but on the horizon,
+no sail.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[Pg 443]</a></span>
+In the evening she would see mocking-birds coming out
+of the savanna and flying into the live-oaks. A summer
+duck might dart from the cypresses, speed across the
+wide green level, and become a swerving, vanishing speck
+on the sky. The heron might come round the bayou&#8217;s
+bend, and suddenly take fright and fly back again. The
+rattling kingfisher might come up the stream, and the
+blue crane sail silently through the purple haze that hung
+between the swamp and the bayou. She would see the
+gulls, gray and white, on the margin of the lake, the sun
+setting beyond its western end, and the sky and water
+turning all beautiful tints; and every now and then, low
+down along the cool, wrinkling waters, passed across the
+round eye of the glass the broad, downward-curved wing
+of the pelican. But when she ventured to lift the glass
+to the horizon, she swept it from east to west in vain.
+No sail.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dawn&#8217;t I tell you no use look? Peter dawn&#8217;t comin&#8217;
+in day-time, nohow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But on the fifth morning Mary had hardly made her
+appearance on the veranda, and had not ventured near
+the spy-glass yet, when the old man said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She rain back in swamp las&#8217; night; can smell.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How do you feel this morning?&rdquo; asked Mary, facing
+around from her first glance across the waters. He did
+not heed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;See dat win&#8217;?&rdquo; he asked, lifting one hand a little
+from the top of his staff.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; responded Mary, eagerly; &ldquo;why, it&#8217;s&mdash;hasn&#8217;t
+it&mdash;changed?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, change&#8217; las&#8217; night &#8217;fo&#8217; went to bed.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The old man&#8217;s manner betrayed his contempt for one
+who could be interested in such a change, and yet not
+know when it took place.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[Pg 444]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Why, then,&rdquo; began Mary, and started as if to take
+down the glass.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What you doin&#8217;?&rdquo; demanded its owner. &ldquo;Better let
+glass &#8217;lone; fool&#8217; wid him enough.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary flushed, and, with a smile of resentful apology,
+was about to reply, when he continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What you want glass for? Dare Peter&#8217; schooner&mdash;right
+dare in bayou. What want glass for? Can&#8217;t see
+schooner hundred yard&#8217; off &#8217;dout glass?&rdquo; And he turned
+away his poor wabbling head in disgust.</p>
+
+<p>Mary looked an instant at two bare, rakish, yellow
+poles showing out against the clump of cypresses, and the
+trim little white hull and apple-green deck from which
+they sprang, then clasped her hands and ran into the
+house.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[Pg 445]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LVIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>A GOLDEN SUNSET.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier came to Richling&#8217;s room one afternoon,
+and handed him a sealed letter. The postmark
+was blurred, but it was easy still to read the abbreviation
+of the State&#8217;s name,&mdash;Kentucky. It had come by way
+of New York and the sea. The sick man reached out for
+it with avidity from the large bed in which he sat bolstered
+up. He tore it open with unsteady fingers, and
+sought the signature.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s from a lawyer.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;An old acquaintance?&rdquo; asked the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; responded Richling, his eyes glancing eagerly
+along the lines. &ldquo;Mary&#8217;s in the Confederate lines!&mdash;Mary
+and Alice!&rdquo; The hand that held the letter dropped
+to his lap. &ldquo;It doesn&#8217;t say a word about how she got through!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But <em>where</em> did she get through?&rdquo; asked the physician.
+&ldquo;Whereabouts is she now?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She got through away up to the eastward of Corinth,
+Mississippi. Doctor, she may be within fifty miles of us
+this very minute! Do you think they&#8217;ll give her a pass
+to come in?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;They may, Richling; I hope they will.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think I&#8217;d get well if she&#8217;d come,&rdquo; said the invalid.
+But his friend made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two afterward&mdash;it was drawing to the close
+of a beautiful afternoon in early May&mdash;Dr. Sevier came
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[Pg 446]</a></span>
+into the room and stood at a window looking out. Madame
+Z&eacute;nobie sat by the bedside softly fanning the patient.
+Richling, with his eyes, motioned her to retire. She
+smiled and nodded approvingly, as if to say that that was
+just what she was about to propose, and went out, shutting
+the door with just sound enough to announce her departure
+to Dr. Sevier.</p>
+
+<p>He came from the window to the bedside and sat down.
+The sick man looked at him, with a feeble eye, and said,
+in little more than a whisper:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Mary and Alice&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If they don&#8217;t come to-night they&#8217;ll be too late.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;God knows, my dear boy!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever try to guess&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Guess what, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;<em>His</em> use of my life.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, my poor boy, I have tried. But I only
+make out its use to me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The sick man&#8217;s eye brightened.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Has it been?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor nodded. He reached out and took the
+wasted hand in his. It tried to answer his pressure.
+The invalid spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m glad you told me that before&mdash;before it was too late.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Are you, my dear boy? Shall I tell you more?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the sick man huskily replied; &ldquo;oh, yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Richling,&mdash;you know we&#8217;re great cowards about
+saying such things; it&#8217;s a part of our poor human weakness
+and distrust of each other, and the emptiness of
+words,&mdash;but&mdash;lately&mdash;only just here, very lately, I&#8217;ve
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[Pg 447]</a></span>
+learned to call the meekest, lovingest One that ever trod
+our earth, Master; and it&#8217;s been your life, my dear fellow,
+that has taught me.&rdquo; He pressed the sick man&#8217;s hand
+slowly and tremulously, then let it go, but continued to
+caress it in a tender, absent way, looking on the floor as
+he spoke on.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Richling, Nature herself appoints some men to poverty
+and some to riches. God throws the poor upon our
+charge&mdash;in mercy to <em>us</em>. Couldn&#8217;t he take care of them
+without us if he wished? Are they not his? It&#8217;s easy
+for the poor to feel, when they are helped by us, that the
+rich are a godsend to them; but they don&#8217;t see, and
+many of their helpers don&#8217;t see, that the poor are a godsend
+to the rich. They&#8217;re set over against each other to
+keep pity and mercy and charity in the human heart.
+If every one were entirely able to take care of himself
+we&#8217;d turn to stone.&rdquo; The speaker ceased.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; whispered the listener.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That will never be,&rdquo; continued the Doctor. &ldquo;God
+Almighty will never let us find a way to quite abolish
+poverty. Riches don&#8217;t always bless the man they come
+to, but they bless the world. And so with poverty; and
+it&#8217;s no contemptible commission, Richling, to be appointed
+by God to bear that blessing to mankind which
+keeps its brotherhood universal. See, now,&rdquo;&mdash;he looked
+up with a gentle smile,&mdash;&ldquo;from what a distance he
+brought our two hearts together. Why, Richling, the man
+that can make the rich and poor love each other will make
+the world happier than it has ever been since man fell!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; whispered Richling.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, Doctor&mdash;<em>I</em> want to say&mdash;something.&rdquo;
+The invalid spoke with a weak and broken utterance, with
+many breaks and starts that we may set aside.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[Pg 448]</a></span>
+&ldquo;For a long time,&rdquo; he said, beginning as if half in
+soliloquy, &ldquo;I couldn&#8217;t believe I was coming to this early
+end, simply because I didn&#8217;t see why I should. I know
+that was foolish. I thought my hardships&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;He ceased
+entirely, and, when his strength would allow, resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I thought they were sent in order that when I should
+come to fortune I might take part in correcting some
+evils that are strangely overlooked.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor nodded, and, after a moment of rest,
+Richling said again:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But now I see&mdash;that is not my work. May be it is
+Mary&#8217;s. May be it&#8217;s my little girl&#8217;s.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Or mine,&rdquo; murmured the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Doctor, I&#8217;ve been lying here to-day thinking of
+something I never thought of before, though I dare say
+you have, often. There could be no art of healing till
+the earth was full of graves. It is by shipwreck that we
+learn to build ships. All our safety&mdash;all our betterment&mdash;is
+secured by our knowledge of others&#8217; disasters that
+need not have happened had they only <em>known</em>. Will you&mdash;finish
+my mission?&rdquo; The sick man&#8217;s hand softly grasped the hand that
+lay upon it. And the Doctor responded:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How shall I do that, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Tell my story.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I don&#8217;t know it all, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll tell you all that&#8217;s behind. You know I&#8217;m a
+native of Kentucky. My name is not Richling. I belong
+to one of the proudest, most distinguished families in
+that State or in all the land. Until I married I never
+knew an ungratified wish. I think my bringing-up, not
+to be wicked, was as bad as could be. It was based
+upon the idea that I was always to be master, and never
+servant. I was to go through life with soft hands. I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[Pg 449]</a></span>
+was educated to know, but not to do. When I left
+school my parents let me travel. They would have let
+me do anything except work. In the West&mdash;in Milwaukee&mdash;I
+met Mary. It was by mere chance. She was poor, but
+cultivated and refined; trained&mdash;you know&mdash;for
+knowing, not doing. I loved her and courted her,
+and she encouraged my suit, under the idea, you know,
+again,&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled faintly and sadly,&mdash;&ldquo;that it was
+nobody&#8217;s business but ours. I offered my hand and was
+accepted. But, when I came to announce our engagement
+to my family, they warned me that if I married her
+they would disinherit and disown me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What was their reason, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But, Richling, they had a reason of some sort.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing in the world but that Mary was a Northern
+girl. Simple sectional prejudice. I didn&#8217;t tell Mary.
+I didn&#8217;t think they would do it; but I knew Mary would
+refuse to put me to the risk. We married, and they
+carried out their threat.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor uttered a low exclamation, and both were
+silent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; began the sick man once more.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you never looked into the case of a man
+who needed help, but you were sure to find that some one
+thing was the key to all his troubles; did you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor was silent again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;ll give you the key to mine, Doctor: I took up the
+gage thrown down by my family as though it were
+thrown down by society at large. I said I would match
+pride with pride. I said I would go among strangers,
+take a new name, and make it as honorable as the old.
+I saw Mary didn&#8217;t think it wise; but she believed whatever
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[Pg 450]</a></span>
+I did was best, and&rdquo;&mdash;he smiled and whispered&mdash;&ldquo;I
+thought so too. I suppose my troubles have more
+than one key; but that&#8217;s the outside one. Let me rest a
+little.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, I die nameless. I had a name, a good name,
+and only too proud a one. It&#8217;s mine still. I&#8217;ve never
+tarnished it&mdash;not even in prison. I will not stain it now
+by disclosing it. I carry it with me to God&#8217;s throne.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The whisperer ceased, exhausted. The Doctor rested an
+elbow on a knee and laid his face in his hand. Presently
+Richling moved, and he raised a look of sad inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Bury me here in New Orleans, Doctor, will you?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;this has been&mdash;my&mdash;battle-ground. I&#8217;d
+like to be buried on the field,&mdash;like the other soldiers.
+Not that I&#8217;ve been a good one; but&mdash;I want to lie where
+you can point to me as you tell my story. If it could be
+so, I should like to lie in sight&mdash;of that old prison.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor brushed his eyes with his handkerchief and
+wiped his brow.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; said the invalid again, &ldquo;will you read me
+just four verses in the Bible?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, yes, my boy, as many as you wish to hear.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, only four.&rdquo; His free hand moved for the book
+that lay on the bed, and presently the Doctor read:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect
+and entire, wanting nothing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to
+all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There,&rdquo; whispered the sick man, and rested with a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[Pg 451]</a></span>
+peaceful look in all his face. &ldquo;It&mdash;doesn&#8217;t mean wisdom
+in general, Doctor,&mdash;such as Solomon asked for.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doesn&#8217;t it?&rdquo; said the other, meekly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No. It means the wisdom necessary to let&mdash;patience&mdash;have
+her perf&mdash;&nbsp;I was a long time&mdash;getting
+any where near that.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor&mdash;do you remember how fond&mdash;Mary was
+of singing&mdash;all kinds of&mdash;little old songs?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I do, my dear boy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever sing&mdash;Doctor?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O my dear fellow! I never did really sing, and I
+haven&#8217;t uttered a note since&mdash;for twenty years.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Can&#8217;t you sing&mdash;ever so softly&mdash;just a verse&mdash;of&mdash;&lsquo;I&#8217;m
+a Pilgrim&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I&mdash;it&#8217;s impossible, Richling, old fellow. I don&#8217;t
+know either the words or the tune. I never sing.&rdquo; He
+smiled at himself through his tears.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, all right,&rdquo; whispered Richling. He lay with
+closed eyes for a moment, and then, as he opened them,
+breathed faintly through his parted lips the words, spoken,
+not sung, while his hand feebly beat the imagined cadence:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<span style="margin-left: -.4em;">&ldquo;&lsquo;The sun shines bright in my old Kentucky home;</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">&lsquo;Tis summer, the darkies are gay;</span><br />
+ The corn-tops are ripe, and the meadows are in bloom,<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And the birds make music all the day.&rsquo;&rdquo;</span></p>
+
+<p>The Doctor hid his face in his hands, and all was still.</p>
+
+<p>By and by there came a whisper again. The Doctor
+raised his head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, there&#8217;s one thing&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I know there is, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&mdash;I&#8217;ve been a poor stick of a husband.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I never knew a good one, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[Pg 452]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Doctor, you&#8217;ll be a friend to Mary?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor nodded; his eyes were full.</p>
+
+<p>The sick man drew from his breast a small ambrotype,
+pressed it to his lips, and poised it in his trembling fingers.
+It was the likeness of the little Alice. He turned his eyes
+to his friend.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&#8217;t need Mary&#8217;s. But this is all I&#8217;ve ever seen of
+my little girl. To-morrow, at daybreak,&mdash;it will be just
+at daybreak,&mdash;when you see that I&#8217;ve passed, I want you
+to lay this here on my breast. Then fold my hands upon
+it&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>His speech was arrested. He seemed to hearken an instant.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; he said, with excitement in his eye and
+sudden strength of voice, &ldquo;what is that I hear?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t know,&rdquo; replied his friend; &ldquo;one of the servants
+probably down in the hall.&rdquo; But he, too, seemed to
+have been startled. He lifted his head. There was a
+sound of some one coming up the stairs in haste.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor.&rdquo; The Doctor was rising from his chair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Lie still, Richling.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the sick man suddenly sat erect.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor&mdash;it&#8217;s&mdash;O Doctor, I&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The door flew open; there was a low outcry from the
+threshold, a moan of joy from the sick man, a throwing
+wide of arms, and a rush to the bedside, and John and
+Mary Richling&mdash;and the little Alice, too&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Come, Doctor Sevier; come out and close the door.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&ldquo;Strangest thing on earth!&rdquo; I once heard a physician
+say,&mdash;&ldquo;the mysterious power that the dying so often
+have to fix the very hour of their approaching end!&rdquo; It
+was so in John Richling&#8217;s case. It was as he said. Had
+Mary and Alice not come when they did, they would
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[Pg 453]</a></span>
+have been too late. He &ldquo;tarried but a night;&rdquo; and at
+the dawn Mary uttered the bitter cry of the widow, and
+Doctor Sevier closed the eyes of the one who had committed
+no fault,&mdash;against this world, at least,&mdash;save
+that he had been by nature a pilgrim and a stranger in it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[Pg 454]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LIX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>AFTERGLOW.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>Mary, with Alice holding one hand, flowers in the
+other, was walking one day down the central
+avenue of the old Girod Cemetery, breaking the silence
+of the place only by the soft grinding of her footsteps on
+the shell-walk, and was just entering a transverse alley,
+when she stopped.</p>
+
+<p>Just at hand a large, broad woman, very plainly
+dressed, was drawing back a single step from the front
+of a tomb, and dropping her hands from a coarse vase of
+flowers that she had that moment placed on the narrow
+stone shelf under the tablet. The blossoms touched,
+without hiding, the newly cut name. She had hung a
+little plaster crucifix against it from above. She must
+have heard the footfall so near by, and marked its stoppage;
+but, with the oblivion common to the practisers of
+her religion, she took no outward notice. She crossed
+herself, sank upon her knees, and with her eyes upon the
+shrine she had made remained thus. The tears ran down
+Mary&#8217;s face. It was Madame Z&eacute;nobie. They went and
+lived together.</p>
+
+<p>The name of the street where their house stood has
+slipped me, as has that of the clean, unfrequented, round-stoned
+way up which one looked from the small cottage&#8217;s
+veranda, and which, running down to their old arched
+gate, came there to an end, as if that were a pretty place
+to stop at in the shade until evening. Grass grows now,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[Pg 455]</a></span>
+as it did then, between the round stones; and in the towering
+sycamores of the reddened brick sidewalk the long,
+quavering note of the cicada parts the wide summer noonday
+silence. The stillness yields to little else, save now and
+then the tinkle of a mule-bell, where in the distance the
+softly rumbling street-car invites one to the centre of the
+town&#8217;s activities, or the voice of some fowl that, having
+laid an egg, is asserting her right to the credit of it.
+Some forty feet back, within a mossy brick wall that
+stands waist-high, surmounted by a white, open fence, the
+green wooden balls on top of whose posts are full eight
+feet above the sidewalk, the cottage stands high up among
+a sweet confusion of pale purple and pink crape myrtles,
+oleanders white and red, and the bristling leaves and
+plumes of white bells of the Spanish bayonet, all in the
+shade of lofty magnolias, and one great pecan.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And this is little Alice,&rdquo; said Doctor Sevier with
+gentle gravity, as, on his first visit to the place, he shook
+hands with Mary at the top of the veranda stairs, and laid
+his fingers upon the child&#8217;s forehead. He smiled into her
+uplifted face as her eyes examined his, and stroked the little
+crown as she turned her glance silently upon her mother,
+as if to inquire if this were a trustworthy person. Mary
+led the way to chairs at the veranda&#8217;s end where the south
+breeze fanned them, and Alice retreated to her mother&#8217;s
+side until her silent question should be settled.</p>
+
+<p>It was still May. They spoke the praises of the day
+whose sun was just setting. And Mary commended the
+house, the convenience of its construction, its salubrity;
+and also, and especially, the excellence and goodness of
+Madame Z&eacute;nobie. What a complete and satisfactory
+arrangement! Was it not? Did not the Doctor think so?</p>
+
+<p>But the Doctor&#8217;s affirmative responses were unfrequent,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[Pg 456]</a></span>
+and quite without enthusiasm; and Mary&#8217;s face, wearing
+more cheer than was felt within, betrayed, moreover, the
+feeling of one who, having done the best she knew, falls
+short of commendation.</p>
+
+<p>She was once more in deep black. Her face was pale,
+and some of its lines had yielded up a part of their
+excellence. The outward curves of the rose had given
+place to the inward curves of the lily&mdash;nay, hardly all
+that; for as she had never had the full red queenliness of
+the one, neither had she now the severe sanctitude of the
+other; that soft glow of inquiry, at once so blithe and so
+self-contained, so modest and so courageous, humble, yet
+free, still played about her saddened eyes and in her
+tones. Through the glistening sadness of those eyes
+smiled resignation; and although the Doctor plainly read
+care about them and about the mouth, it was a care that
+was forbearing to feed upon itself, or to take its seat on
+her brow. The brow was the old one; that is, the young.
+The joy of life&#8217;s morning was gone from it forever; but a
+chastened hope was there, and one could see peace hovering
+just above it, as though it might in time alight.
+Such were the things that divided her austere friend&#8217;s attention
+as she sat before him, seeking, with timid smiles
+and interrogative argument, for this new beginning of life
+some heartiness of approval from him.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor,&rdquo; she plucked up courage to say at last, with
+a geniality that scantily hid the inner distress, &ldquo;you
+don&#8217;t seem pleased.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I can&#8217;t say I am, Mary. You&#8217;ve provided for things
+in sight; but I see no provision for unseen contingencies.
+They&#8217;re sure to come, you know. How are you going to
+meet them?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mary, with slow, smiling caution, &ldquo;there&#8217;s
+my two thousand dollars that you&#8217;ve put at interest for me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[Pg 457]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Why, no; you&#8217;ve already counted the interest on
+that as part of your necessary income.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor, &lsquo;the Lord will provide,&rsquo; will he not?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Doctor!&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, Mary; you&#8217;ve got to provide. He&#8217;s not going
+to set aside the laws of nature to cover our improvidence.
+That would be to break faith with all creation for the sake
+of one or two creatures.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; but still, Doctor, without breaking the laws
+of nature, he will provide. It&#8217;s in his word.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, and it ought to be in his word&mdash;not in ours.
+It&#8217;s for him to say to us, not for us to say to him. But
+there&#8217;s another thing, Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s this. But first I&#8217;ll say plainly you&#8217;ve passed
+through the fires of poverty, and they haven&#8217;t hurt you.
+You have one of those imperishable natures that fire
+can&#8217;t stain or warp.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Doctor, how absurd!&rdquo; said Mary, with bright
+genuineness, and a tear in either eye. She drew Alice
+closer.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, I do see two ill effects,&rdquo; replied the Doctor.
+&ldquo;In the first place, as I&#8217;ve just tried to show you,
+you have caught a little of the <em>recklessness</em> of the poor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I was born with it,&rdquo; exclaimed Mary, with amusement.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe so,&rdquo; replied her friend; &ldquo;at any rate you
+show it.&rdquo; He was silent.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But what is the other?&rdquo; asked Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, as to that, I may mistake; but&mdash;you seem
+inclined to settle down and be satisfied with poverty.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Having food and raiment,&rdquo; said Mary, smiling with
+some archness, &ldquo;to be therewith content.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[Pg 458]</a></span>
+&ldquo;Yes, but&rdquo;&mdash;the physician shook his head&mdash;&ldquo;that
+doesn&#8217;t mean to be satisfied. It&#8217;s one thing to be content
+with God&#8217;s providence, and it&#8217;s another to be satisfied
+with poverty. There&#8217;s not one in a thousand that I&#8217;d
+venture to say it to. He wouldn&#8217;t understand the fine
+difference. But you will. I&#8217;m sure you do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know you do. You know poverty has its temptations,
+and warping influences, and debasing effects, just
+as truly as riches have. See how it narrows our usefulness.
+Not always, it is true. Sometimes our best usefulness
+keeps us poor. That&#8217;s poverty with a good
+excuse. But that&#8217;s not poverty satisfying, Mary&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, of course not,&rdquo; said Mary, exhibiting a degree
+of distress that the Doctor somehow overlooked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s merely,&rdquo; said he, half-extending his open palm,&mdash;&ldquo;it&#8217;s
+merely poverty accepted, as a good soldier accepts
+the dust and smut that are a necessary part of the battle.
+Now, here&#8217;s this little girl.&rdquo;&mdash;As his open white hand
+pointed toward Alice she shrank back; but the Doctor
+seemed blind this afternoon and drove on.&mdash;&ldquo;In a few
+years&mdash;it will not seem like any time at all&mdash;she&#8217;ll be
+half grown up; she&#8217;ll have wants that ought to be supplied.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! don&#8217;t,&rdquo; exclaimed Mary, and burst into a flood
+of tears; and the Doctor, while she hid them from her
+child, sat silently loathing his own stupidity.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Please, don&#8217;t mind it,&rdquo; said Mary, stanching the flow.
+&ldquo;You were not so badly mistaken. I wasn&#8217;t satisfied,
+but I was about to surrender.&rdquo; She smiled at herself
+and her warlike figure of speech.</p>
+
+<p>He looked away, passed his hand across his forehead
+and must have muttered audibly his self-reproach: for
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[Pg 459]</a></span>
+Mary looked up again with a faint gleam of the old
+radiance in her face, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m glad you didn&#8217;t let me do it. I&#8217;ll not do it. I&#8217;ll
+take up the struggle again. Indeed, I had already thought
+of one thing I could do, but I&mdash;I&mdash;in fact, Doctor, I
+thought you might not like it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What was it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It was teaching in the public schools. They&#8217;re in
+the hands of the military government, I am told. Are
+they not?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Still,&rdquo; said Mary, speaking rapidly, &ldquo;I say I&#8217;ll keep
+up the&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But the Doctor lifted his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No, no. There&#8217;s to be no more struggle.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo; Mary tried to look pleasantly incredulous.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No; and you&#8217;re not going to be put upon anybody&#8217;s
+bounty, either. No. What I was going to say about
+this little girl here was this,&mdash;her name is Alice, is it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The mother dropped an arm around the child, and both
+she and Alice looked timidly at the questioner.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, by that name, Mary, I claim the care of her.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The color mounted to Mary&#8217;s brows, but the Doctor
+raised a finger.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I mean, of course, Mary, only in so far as such care
+can go without molesting your perfect motherhood, and
+all its offices and pleasures.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes filled again, and her lips parted; but the
+Doctor was not going to let her reply.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Don&#8217;t try to debate it, Mary. You must see you
+have no case. Nobody&#8217;s going to take her from you,
+nor do any other of the foolish things, I hope, that are
+so often done in such cases. But you&#8217;ve called her
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[Pg 460]</a></span>
+Alice, and Alice she must be. I don&#8217;t propose to take
+care of her for you&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no; of course not,&rdquo; interjected Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the Doctor; &ldquo;you&#8217;ll take care of her for
+me. I intended it from the first. And that brings up
+another point. You mustn&#8217;t teach school. No. I have
+something else&mdash;something better&mdash;to suggest. Mary,
+you and John have been a kind of blessing to me&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>She would have interrupted with expressions of astonishment
+and dissent, but he would not hear them.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think I ought to know best about that,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;Your husband taught me a great deal, I think. I want
+to put some of it into practice. We had a&mdash;an understanding,
+you might say&mdash;one day toward the&mdash;end&mdash;that
+I should do for him some of the things he had so
+longed and hoped to do&mdash;for the poor and the unfortunate.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; said Mary, the tears dropping down her face.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He told you?&rdquo; asked the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; resumed the Doctor, &ldquo;those may not be his
+words precisely, but it&#8217;s what they meant to me. And I
+said I&#8217;d do it. But I shall need assistance. I&#8217;m a medical
+practitioner. I attend the sick. But I see a great
+deal of other sorts of sufferers; and I can&#8217;t stop for them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; said Mary, softly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;I can&#8217;t make the inquiries and
+investigations about them and study them, and all that
+kind of thing, as one should if one&#8217;s help is going to be
+help. I can&#8217;t turn aside for all that. A man must have
+one direction, you know. But you could look after
+those things&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly. You could do it just as I&mdash;just as
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[Pg 461]</a></span>
+John&mdash;would wish to see it done. You&#8217;re just the kind
+of person to do it right.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Doctor, don&#8217;t say so! I&#8217;m not fitted for it at all.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m sure you are, Mary. You&#8217;re fitted by character
+and outward disposition, and by experience. You&#8217;re full
+of cheer&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>She tearfully shook her head. But he insisted.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You will be&mdash;for <em>his</em> sake, as you once said to me.
+Don&#8217;t you remember?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She remembered. She recalled all he wished her to:
+the prayer she had made that, whenever death should part
+her husband and her, he might not be the one left behind.
+Yes, she remembered; and the Doctor spoke again:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Now, I invite you to make this your principal business.
+I&#8217;ll pay you for it, regularly and well, what I
+think it&#8217;s worth; and it&#8217;s worth no trifle. There&#8217;s not
+one in a thousand that I&#8217;d trust to do it, woman or
+man; but I know you will do it all, and do it well,
+without any nonsense. And if you want to look at
+it so, Mary, you can just consider that it&#8217;s John doing it,
+all the time; for, in fact, that&#8217;s just what it is. It beats
+sewing, Mary, or teaching school, or making preserves,
+I think.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary, looking down on Alice, and stroking
+her head.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You can stay right here where you are, with Madame
+Z&eacute;nobie, as you had planned; but you&#8217;ll give yourself to
+this better work. I&#8217;ll give you a <em>carte blanche</em>. Only
+one mistake I charge you not to make; don&#8217;t go and come
+from day to day on the assumption that only the poor are
+poor, and need counsel and attention.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I know that would be a mistake,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But I mean more than that,&rdquo; continued the Doctor.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[Pg 462]</a></span>
+&ldquo;You must keep a hold on the rich and comfortable and
+happy. You want to be a medium between the two,
+identified with both as completely as possible. It&#8217;s a
+hard task, Mary. It will take all your cunning.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And more, too,&rdquo; replied she, half-musing.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You know,&rdquo; said the Doctor, &ldquo;I&#8217;m not to appear in
+the matter, of course; I&#8217;m not to be mentioned: that
+must be one of the conditions.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary smiled at him through her welling eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m not fit to do it,&rdquo; she said, folding the wet spots
+of her handkerchief under. &ldquo;But still, I&#8217;d rather not
+refuse. If I might try it, I&#8217;d like to do so. If I could
+do it well, it would be a finer monument&mdash;to <em>him</em>&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Than brass or marble,&rdquo; said Dr. Sevier. &ldquo;Yes,
+more to his liking.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mary again, &ldquo;if you think I can do it
+I&#8217;ll try it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Very well. There&#8217;s one place you can go to, to begin
+with, to-morrow morning, if you choose. I&#8217;ll give you
+the number. It&#8217;s just across here in Casa Calvo street.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Narcisse&#8217;s aunt?&rdquo; asked Mary, with a soft gleam of
+amusement.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Have you been there already?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She had; but she only said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There&#8217;s one thing that I&#8217;m afraid will go against me,
+Doctor, almost everywhere.&rdquo; She lifted a timid look.</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor looked at her inquiringly, and in his private
+thought said that it was certainly not her face or voice.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he said, as he suddenly recollected. &ldquo;Yes; I
+had forgotten. You mean your being a Union woman.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. It seems to me they&#8217;ll be sure to find it out.
+Don&#8217;t you think it will interfere?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Doctor mused.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[Pg 463]</a></span>
+&ldquo;I forgot that,&rdquo; he repeated and mused again.
+&ldquo;You can&#8217;t blame us, Mary; we&#8217;re at white heat&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed I don&#8217;t!&rdquo; said Mary, with eager earnestness.</p>
+
+<p>He reflected yet again.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;I don&#8217;t know, either. It may be not as great
+a drawback as you think. Here&#8217;s Madame Z&eacute;nobie, for
+instance&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Madame Z&eacute;nobie was just coming up the front steps
+from the garden, pulling herself up upon the veranda
+wearily by the balustrade. She came forward, and, with
+graceful acknowledgment, accepted the physician&#8217;s outstretched
+hand and courtesied.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Here&#8217;s Madame Z&eacute;nobie, I say; you seem to get along with her.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary smiled again, looked up at the standing quadroon,
+and replied in a low voice:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Madame Z&eacute;nobie is for the Union herself.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! no-o-o!&rdquo; exclaimed the good woman, with an
+alarmed face. She lifted her shoulders and extended
+what Narcisse would have called the han&#8217;
+of rep-u-diation; then turned away her face, lifted up
+her underlip with disrelish, and asked the surrounding
+atmosphere,&mdash;&ldquo;What I got to do wid Union? Nuttin&#8217;
+do wid Union&mdash;nuttin&#8217; do wid Conf&eacute;d&eacute;racie!&rdquo; She
+moved away, addressing the garden and the house by
+turns. &ldquo;Ah! no!&rdquo; She went in by the front door,
+talking Creole French, until she was beyond hearing.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Sevier reached out toward the child at Mary&#8217;s knee.
+Here was one who was neither for nor against, nor yet a
+fear-constrained neutral. Mary pushed her persuasively
+toward the Doctor, and Alice let herself be lifted to
+his lap.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I used to be for it myself,&rdquo; he said, little dreaming
+he would one day be for it again. As the child sank
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[Pg 464]</a></span>
+back into his arm, he noticed a miniature of her father
+hanging from her neck. He took it into his fingers, and
+all were silent while he looked long upon the face.</p>
+
+<p>By and by he asked Mary for an account of her wanderings.
+She gave it. Many of the experiences, that
+had been hard and dangerous enough when she was
+passing through them, were full of drollery when they
+came to be told, and there was much quiet amusement
+over them. The sunlight faded out, the cicadas hushed
+their long-drawn, ear-splitting strains, and the moon had
+begun to shine in the shadowy garden when Dr. Sevier
+at length let Alice down and rose to take his lonely homeward
+way, leaving Mary to Alice&#8217;s prattle, and, when
+that was hushed in slumber, to gentle tears and whispered
+thanksgivings above the little head.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[Pg 465]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LX.</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>&ldquo;YET SHALL HE LIVE.&rdquo;</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>We need not follow Mary through her ministrations.
+Her office was no sinecure. It took not only much
+labor, but, as the Doctor had expected, it took all her
+cunning. True, nature and experience had equipped her
+for such work; but for all that there was an art to be
+learned, and time and again there were cases of mental
+and moral decrepitude or deformity that baffled all her skill
+until her skill grew up to them, which in some cases it
+never did. The greatest tax of all was to seem, and to
+be, unprofessional; to avoid regarding her work in quantity,
+and to be simply, merely, in every case, a personal
+friend; not to become known as a benevolent itinerary,
+but only a kind and thoughtful neighbor. Blessed word!
+not benefactor&mdash;neighbor!</p>
+
+<p>She had no schemes for helping the unfortunate by
+multitude. Possibly on that account her usefulness was
+less than it might have been. But I am not sure; for
+they say her actual words and deeds were but the seed
+of ultimate harvests; and that others, moreover, seeing
+her light shine so brightly along this seemingly narrow
+path, and moved to imitate her, took that other and
+broader way, and so both fields were reaped.</p>
+
+<p>But, I say, we need not follow her steps. They would
+lead deviously through ill-smelling military hospitals,
+and into buildings that had once been the counting-rooms
+of Carondelet-street cotton merchants, but were now become
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[Pg 466]</a></span>
+the prisons of soldiers in gray. One of these places,
+restored after the war as a cotton factor&#8217;s counting-room
+again, had, until a few years ago, a queer, clumsy patch
+in the plastering of one wall, near the base-board. Some
+one had made a rough inscription on it with a cotton
+sampler&#8217;s marking-brush. It commemorates an incident.
+Mary by some means became aware beforehand that this
+incident was going to occur; and one of the most trying
+struggles of conscience she ever had in her life was that
+in which she debated with herself one whole night whether
+she ought to give her knowledge to others or keep it to
+herself. She kept it. In fact, she said nothing until
+the war was all over and done, and she never was quite
+sure whether her silence was right or wrong. And
+when she asked Dr. Sevier if he thought she had
+done wrong, he asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You knew it was going to take place, and kept silence?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mary.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And you want to know whether you did right?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I&#8217;d like to know what you think.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He sat very straight, and said not a word, nor changed
+a line of his face. She got no answer at all.</p>
+
+<p>The inscription was as follows; I used to see it every
+work-day of the week for years&mdash;it may be there yet&mdash;190
+Common street, first flight, back office:</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 309px;">
+<img src="images/img1.png" width="309" height="273" alt="Oct 14 1864 17 Confederate Prisoners escaped Through this hole" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[Pg 467]</a></span>
+But we move too fast. Let us go back into the war for
+a moment longer. Mary pursued her calling. The most
+of it she succeeded in doing in a very sunshiny way.
+She carried with her, and left behind her, cheer, courage,
+hope. Yet she had a widow&#8217;s heart, and whenever she
+took a widow&#8217;s hand in hers, and oftentimes, alone or
+against her sleeping child&#8217;s bedside, she had a widow&#8217;s
+tears. But this work, or these works,&mdash;she made each
+particular ministration seem as if it were the only one,&mdash;these
+works, that she might never have had the opportunity
+to perform had her nest-mate never been taken from
+her, seemed to keep John near. Almost, sometimes, he
+seemed to walk at her side in her errands of mercy, or to
+spread above her the arms of benediction. And so even
+the bitter was sweet, and she came to believe that never
+before had widow such blessed commutation.</p>
+
+<p>One day, a short, slight Confederate prisoner, newly
+brought in, and hobbling about the place where he was
+confined, with a vile bullet-hole in his foot, came up to
+her and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Allow me, madam,&mdash;did that man call you by your
+right name, just now?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mary looked at him. She had never seen him before.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+
+<p>She could see the gentleman, under much rags and dirt.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Are you Mrs. John Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A look of dismay came into his face as he asked the
+grave question.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; replied Mary.</p>
+
+<p>His voice dropped, and he asked, with subdued haste:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ith it pothible you&#8217;re in mourning for him?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>It was the little rector. He had somehow got it into
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[Pg 468]</a></span>
+his head that preachers ought to fight, and this was one
+of the results. Mary went away quickly, and told Dr.
+Sevier. The Doctor went to the commanding general.
+It was a great humiliation to do so, he thought. There
+was none worse, those days, in the eyes of the people.
+He craved and got the little man&#8217;s release on parole. A
+fortnight later, as Dr. Sevier was sitting at the breakfast
+table, with the little rector at its opposite end, he all at
+once rose to his full attenuated height, with a frown and
+then a smile, and, tumbling the chair backward behind
+him, exclaimed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Laura!&rdquo;&mdash;for it was that one of his two gay
+young nieces who stood in the door-way. The banker&#8217;s
+wife followed in just behind, and was presently saying,
+with the prettiest heartiness, that Dr. Sevier looked no
+older than the day they met the Florida general at dinner
+years before. She had just come in from the Confederacy,
+smuggling her son of eighteen back to the city, to
+save him from the conscript officers, and Laura had come
+with her. And when the clergyman got his crutches
+into his armpits and stood on one foot, and he and Laura
+both blushed as they shook hands, the Doctor knew that
+she had come to nurse her wounded lover. That she
+might do this without embarrassment, they got married,
+and were thereupon as vexed with themselves as they
+could be under the circumstances that they had not done
+it four or five years before. Of course there was no
+parade; but Dr. Sevier gave a neat little dinner. Mary
+and Laura were its designers; Madame Z&eacute;nobie was the
+master-builder and made the gumbo. One word about
+the war, whose smoke was over all the land, would have
+spoiled the broth. But no such word was spoken.</p>
+
+<p>It happened that the company was almost the same as
+that which had sat down in brighter days to that other dinner,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[Pg 469]</a></span>
+which the banker&#8217;s wife recalled with so much pleasure.
+She and her husband and son were guests; also that
+Sister Jane, of whom they had talked, a woman of real
+goodness and rather unrelieved sweetness; also her sister
+and bankrupted brother-in-law. The brother-in-law mentioned
+several persons who, he said, once used to be very
+cordial to him and his wife, but now did not remember
+them; and his wife chid him, with the air of a fellow-martyr;
+but they could not spoil the tender gladness of
+the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Doctor,&rdquo; said the banker&#8217;s wife, looking quite
+the old lady now, &ldquo;I suppose your lonely days are over,
+now that Laura and her husband are to keep house for you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>But the very thought of it made him more lonely than
+ever.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s a very pleasant and sensible arrangement,&rdquo; said
+the lady, looking very practical and confidential; &ldquo;Laura
+has told me all about it. It&#8217;s just the thing for them and
+for you.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I think so, ma&#8217;am,&rdquo; replied Dr. Sevier, and tried to
+make his statement good.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I&#8217;m sure of it,&rdquo; said the lady, very sweetly and gayly,
+and made a faint time-to-go beckon with a fan to her
+husband, to whom, in the farther drawing-room, Laura
+and Mary stood talking, each with an arm about the
+other&#8217;s waist.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[Pg 470]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER LXI</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><strong>PEACE.</strong></p>
+
+
+<p>It came with tears. But, ah! it lifted such an awful
+load from the hearts even of those who loved the lost
+cause. Husbands snatched their wives once more to their
+bosoms, and the dear, brave, swarthy, rough-bearded,
+gray-jacketed boys were caught again in the wild arms of
+mothers and sisters. Everywhere there was glad, tearful
+kissing. Everywhere? Alas for the silent lips that remained
+unkissed, and the arms that remained empty!
+And alas for those to whom peace came too suddenly
+and too soon! Poor Narcisse!</p>
+
+<p>His salary still continues. So does his aunt.</p>
+
+<p>The Ristofalos came back all together. How delighted
+Mrs. Colonel Ristofalo&mdash;I say Mrs. <em>Colonel</em> Ristofalo&mdash;was
+to see Mary! And how impossible it was, when they
+sat down together for a long talk, to avoid every moment
+coming back to the one subject of &ldquo;him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, ye see, there bees thim as is <em>called</em> col-o-nels,
+whin in fact they bees only <em>liftinent</em> col-o-nels. Yes.
+But it&#8217;s not so wid him. And he&#8217;s no different from the
+plain Raphael Ristofalah of eight year ago&mdash;the same
+perfict gintleman that he was when he sold b&#8217;iled eggs!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And the colonel&#8217;s &ldquo;lady&rdquo; smiled a gay triumph that
+gave Mary a new affection for her.</p>
+
+<p>Sister Jane bowed to the rod of an inscrutable
+Providence. She could not understand how the Confederacy
+could fail, and justice still be justice; so, without
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[Pg 471]</a></span>
+understanding, she left it all to Heaven, and clung to her
+faith. Her brother-in-law never recovered his fortunes
+nor his sweetness. He could not bend his neck to the
+conqueror&#8217;s yoke; he went in search of liberty to Brazil&mdash;or
+was it Honduras? Little matter which, now, for
+he died there, both he and his wife, just as their faces
+were turning again homeward, and it was dawning upon
+them once more that there is no land like Dixie in all the
+wide world over.</p>
+
+<p>The little rector&mdash;thanks, he says, to the skill of Dr.
+Sevier!&mdash;recovered perfectly the use of his mangled foot,
+so that he even loves long walks. I was out walking
+with him one sunset hour in the autumn of&mdash;if I remember
+aright&mdash;1870, when whom should we spy but our
+good Kate Ristofalo, out driving in her family carriage?
+The cherubs were beside her,&mdash;strong, handsome boys.
+Mike held the reins; he was but thirteen, but he looked
+full three years better than that, and had evidently employed
+the best tailor in St. Charles street to fit his rather
+noticeable clothes. His mother had changed her mind
+about his being a bruiser, though there isn&#8217;t a doubt he
+had a Derringer in one or another of his pockets. No,
+she was proposing to make him a doctor&mdash;&ldquo;a surgeon,&rdquo;
+she said; &ldquo;and thin, if there bees another war&rdquo;&mdash;&nbsp;She
+was for making every edge cut.</p>
+
+<p>She did us the honor to stop the carriage, and drive up
+to the curb-stone for a little chat. Her spirits were up,
+for Colonel Ristofalo had just been made a city councilman
+by a rousing majority.</p>
+
+<p>We expressed our regret not to see Raphael himself in
+the family group enjoying the exquisite air.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, ha! He ride out for pleasure?&rdquo;&mdash;And then,
+with sudden gravity,&mdash;&ldquo;Aw, naw, sur! He&#8217;s too busy.
+Much use ut is to be married to a public man! Ah! surs,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[Pg 472]</a></span>
+I&#8217;m mighty tired of ut, now I tell ye!&rdquo; Yet she laughed
+again, without betraying much fatigue. &ldquo;And how&#8217;s Dr. Sevier?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He&#8217;s well,&rdquo; said the clergyman.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And Mrs. Richling?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She&#8217;s well, too.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Kate looked at the little rector out of the corners of her
+roguish Irish eyes, a killing look, and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&#8217;re sure the both o&#8217; thim bees well?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, quite well,&rdquo; replied he, ignoring the inane effort
+at jest. She nodded a blithe good-day, and rolled on
+toward the lake, happy as the harvest weather, and with
+a kind heart for all the world. We walked on, and after
+the walk I dined with the rector. Dr. Sevier&#8217;s place was
+vacant, and we talked of him. The prettiest piece of
+furniture in the dining-room was an extremely handsome
+child&#8217;s high chair that remained, unused, against the
+wall. It was Alice&#8217;s, and Alice was an almost daily visitor.
+It had come in almost simultaneously with Laura&#8217;s
+marriage, and more and more frequently, as time had
+passed, the waiter had set it up to the table, at the Doctor&#8217;s
+right hand, and lifted Goldenhair into it, until by
+and by she had totally outgrown it. But she had not
+grown out of the place of favor at the table. In these
+later days she had become quite a school-girl, and the
+Doctor, in his place at the table, would often sit with a
+faint, continuous smile on his face that no one could bring
+there but her, to hear her prattle about Madame Locquet,
+and the various girls at Madame Locquet&#8217;s school.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&ldquo;It&#8217;s actually pathetic,&rdquo; said Laura, as we sat sipping
+our coffee after the meal, &ldquo;to see how he idolizes that
+child.&rdquo; Alice had just left the room.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&#8217;t he idolize the child&#8217;s&rdquo;&mdash;began her husband,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[Pg 473]</a></span>
+in undertone, and did not have to finish to make us
+understand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He does,&rdquo; murmured the smiling wife.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Then why shouldn&#8217;t he tell her so?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My dear!&rdquo; objected the wife, very softly and prettily.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don&#8217;t mean to speak lightly,&rdquo; responded the husband,
+&ldquo;but&mdash;they love each other; they suit each other;
+they complete each other; they don&#8217;t feel their disparity
+of years; they&#8217;re both so linked to Alice that it would
+break either heart over again to be separated from her.
+I don&#8217;t see why&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Laura shook her head, smiling in the gentle way that
+only the happy wives of good men have.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It will never be.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>What changes!</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+&ldquo;The years creep slowly by&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>We seem to hear the old song yet. What changes!
+Laura has put two more leaves into her dining-table.
+Children fill three seats. Alice has another. It is she,
+now, not her chair, that is tall&mdash;and fair. Mary, too,
+has a seat at the same board. This is their home now.
+Her hair is turning all to silver. So early? Yes; but
+she is&mdash;she never was&mdash;so beautiful! They all see it&mdash;feel
+it; Dr. Sevier&mdash;the gentle, kind, straight old
+Doctor&mdash;most of all. And oh! when they two, who
+have never joined hands on this earth, go to meet John
+and Alice,&mdash;which God grant may be at one and the
+same time,&mdash;what weeping there will be among God&#8217;s poor!</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><strong>THE END.</strong></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 95%;" />
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a>
+<a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a>
+&ldquo;Yeh&rdquo;&mdash;<em>ye</em>, as in <em>yearn</em>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a>
+<a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a>
+Coiling.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a>
+<a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a>
+Out of this car.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a>
+<a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a>
+Infantry.</p></div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Dr. Sevier, by George W. Cable
+
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Dr. Sevier, by George W. Cable
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Dr. Sevier
+
+Author: George W. Cable
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2009 [EBook #29439]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DR. SEVIER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Anne Storer and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+ SO_3HO = 3 is subscripted
+ [=u] = macron above "u"
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ GEORGE W. CABLE'S WRITINGS
+
+
+ BONAVENTURE. A Prose Pastoral of Arcadian Louisiana. 12mo, $1.25.
+ DR. SEVIER. 12mo, $1.25.
+ THE GRANDISSIMES. A Story of Creole Life. 12mo, $1.25.
+ OLD CREOLE DAYS. 12mo, $1.25.
+ STRANGE TRUE STORIES OF LOUISIANA. Illustrated. 12mo, $2.00.
+ *** _New Uniform Edition of the above five volumes, cloth, in a box,
+ $6.00._
+
+ * * *
+
+ JOHN MARCH, SOUTHERNER, 12mo, $1.50.
+ OLD CREOLE DAYS. Cameo Edition with Etching, $1.25.
+ OLD CREOLE DAYS. 2 vols. 16mo, paper, each 30 cts.
+ MADAME DELPHINE. 75 cts.
+ THE CREOLES OF LOUISIANA. Illus. Small 4to, $2.50.
+ THE SILENT SOUTH. 12mo, $1.00.
+
+
+
+
+ DR. SEVIER
+
+
+ BY
+ GEORGE W. CABLE
+
+ AUTHOR OF "OLD CREOLE DAYS," "THE GRANDISSIMES,"
+ "MADAME DELPHINE," ETC.
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+ CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+ 1897
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1883 and 1884
+ BY GEORGE W. CABLE
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+ TROW'S
+ PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY,
+ NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+
+ TO MY FRIEND
+ MARION A. BAKER
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+
+ Chapter Page
+ I.--The Doctor 5
+ II.--A Young Stranger 10
+ III.--His Wife 17
+ IV.--Convalescence and Acquaintance 22
+ V.--Hard Questions 29
+ VI.--Nesting 34
+ VII.--Disappearance 45
+ VIII.--A Question of Book-keeping 52
+ IX.--When the Wind Blows 61
+ X.--Gentles and Commons 66
+ XI.--A Pantomime 73
+ XII.--"She's all the World" 81
+ XIII.--The Bough Breaks 87
+ XIV.--Hard Speeches and High Temper 94
+ XV.--The Cradle Falls 99
+ XVI.--Many Waters 107
+ XVII.--Raphael Ristofalo 118
+ XVIII.--How He Did It 127
+ XIX.--Another Patient 134
+ XX.--Alice 138
+ XXI.--The Sun at Midnight 142
+ XXII.--Borrower Turned Lender 160
+ XXIII.--Wear and Tear 169
+ XXIV.--Brought to Bay 177
+ XXV.--The Doctor Dines Out 184
+ XXVI.--The Trough of the Sea 194
+ XXVII.--Out of the Frying-Pan 207
+ XXVIII.--"Oh, where is my Love?" 215
+ XXIX.--Release.--Narcisse 224
+ XXX.--Lighting Ship 233
+ XXXI.--At Last 243
+ XXXII.--A Rising Star 248
+ XXXIII.--Bees, Wasps, and Butterflies 258
+ XXXIV.--Toward the Zenith 262
+ XXXV.--To Sigh, yet Feel no Pain 268
+ XXXVI.--What Name? 275
+ XXXVII.--Pestilence 280
+ XXXVIII.--"I must be Cruel only to be Kind" 286
+ XXXIX.--"Pettent Prate" 294
+ XL.--Sweet Bells Jangled 300
+ XLI.--Mirage 310
+ XLII.--Ristofalo and the Rector 317
+ XLIII.--Shall she Come or Stay? 324
+ XLIV.--What would you Do? 329
+ XLV.--Narcisse with News 335
+ XLVI.--A Prison Memento 340
+ XLVII.--Now I Lay Me-- 345
+ XLVIII.--Rise up, my Love, my Fair One! 351
+ XLIX.--A Bundle of Hopes 357
+ L.--Fall In! 366
+ LI.--Blue Bonnets over the Border 372
+ LII.--A Pass through the Lines 378
+ LIII.--Try Again 384
+ LIV.--"Who Goes There?" 394
+ LV.--Dixie 412
+ LVI.--Fire and Sword 425
+ LVII.--Almost in Sight 435
+ LVIII.--A Golden Sunset 445
+ LIX.--Afterglow 454
+ LX.--"Yet shall he live" 465
+ LXI.--Peace 470
+
+
+
+
+DR. SEVIER.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE DOCTOR.
+
+
+The main road to wealth in New Orleans has long been Carondelet
+street. There you see the most alert faces; noses--it seems to
+one--with more and sharper edge, and eyes smaller and brighter
+and with less distance between them than one notices in other
+streets. It is there that the stock and bond brokers hurry to and
+fro and run together promiscuously--the cunning and the simple,
+the headlong and the wary--at the four clanging strokes of the
+Stock Exchange gong. There rises the tall facade of the Cotton
+Exchange. Looking in from the sidewalk as you pass, you see its
+main hall, thronged but decorous, the quiet engine-room of the
+surrounding city's most far-reaching occupation, and at the hall's
+farther end you descry the "Future Room," and hear the unearthly
+ramping and bellowing of the bulls and bears. Up and down the
+street, on either hand, are the ship-brokers and insurers, and in
+the upper stories foreign consuls among a multitude of lawyers and
+notaries.
+
+In 1856 this street was just assuming its present character. The cotton
+merchants were making it their favorite place of commercial domicile.
+The open thoroughfare served in lieu of the present exchanges; men made
+fortunes standing on the curb-stone, and during bank hours the sidewalks
+were perpetually crowded with cotton factors, buyers, brokers, weighers,
+reweighers, classers, pickers, pressers, and samplers, and the air was
+laden with cotton quotations and prognostications.
+
+Number 3-1/2, second floor, front, was the office of Dr. Sevier. This
+office was convenient to everything. Immediately under its windows lay
+the sidewalks where congregated the men who, of all in New Orleans,
+could best afford to pay for being sick, and least desired to die. Canal
+street, the city's leading artery, was just below, at the near left-hand
+corner. Beyond it lay the older town, not yet impoverished in those
+days,--the French quarter. A single square and a half off at the right,
+and in plain view from the front windows, shone the dazzling white walls
+of the St. Charles Hotel, where the nabobs of the river plantations
+came and dwelt with their fair-handed wives in seasons of peculiar
+anticipation, when it is well to be near the highest medical skill. In
+the opposite direction a three minutes' quick drive around the upper
+corner and down Common street carried the Doctor to his ward in the
+great Charity Hospital, and to the school of medicine, where he filled
+the chair set apart to the holy ailments of maternity. Thus, as it were,
+he laid his left hand on the rich and his right on the poor; and he was
+not left-handed.
+
+Not that his usual attitude was one of benediction. He stood straight up
+in his austere pure-mindedness, tall, slender, pale, sharp of voice,
+keen of glance, stern in judgment, aggressive in debate, and fixedly
+untender everywhere, except--but always except--in the sick chamber.
+His inner heart was all of flesh; but his demands for the rectitude of
+mankind pointed out like the muzzles of cannon through the embrasures of
+his virtues. To demolish evil!--that seemed the finest of aims; and even
+as a physician, that was, most likely, his motive until later years and
+a better self-knowledge had taught him that to do good was still finer
+and better. He waged war--against malady. To fight; to stifle; to cut
+down; to uproot; to overwhelm;--these were his springs of action. That
+their results were good proved that his sentiment of benevolence was
+strong and high; but it was well-nigh shut out of sight by that
+impatience of evil which is very fine and knightly in youngest manhood,
+but which we like to see give way to kindlier moods as the earlier heat
+of the blood begins to pass.
+
+He changed in later years; this was in 1856. To "resist not evil" seemed
+to him then only a rather feeble sort of knavery. To face it in its
+nakedness, and to inveigh against it in high places and low, seemed the
+consummation of all manliness; and manliness was the key-note of his
+creed. There was no other necessity in this life.
+
+"But a man must live," said one of his kindred, to whom, truth to tell,
+he had refused assistance.
+
+"No, sir; that is just what he can't do. A man must die! So, while he
+lives, let him be a man!"
+
+How inharmonious a setting, then, for Dr. Sevier, was 3-1/2 Carondelet
+street! As he drove, each morning, down to that point, he had to pass
+through long, irregular files of fellow-beings thronging either
+sidewalk,--a sadly unchivalric grouping of men whose daily and yearly
+life was subordinated only and entirely to the getting of wealth, and
+whose every eager motion was a repetition of the sinister old maxim that
+"Time is money."
+
+"It's a great deal more, sir; it's life!" the Doctor always retorted.
+
+Among these groups, moreover, were many who were all too well famed
+for illegitimate fortune. Many occupations connected with the handling
+of cotton yielded big harvests in perquisites. At every jog of the
+Doctor's horse, men came to view whose riches were the outcome of
+semi-respectable larceny. It was a day of reckless operation; much of
+the commerce that came to New Orleans was simply, as one might say,
+beached in Carondelet street. The sight used to keep the long, thin,
+keen-eyed doctor in perpetual indignation.
+
+"Look at the wreckers!" he would say.
+
+It was breakfast at eight, indignation at nine, dyspepsia at ten.
+
+So his setting was not merely inharmonious; it was damaging. He grew
+sore on the whole matter of money-getting.
+
+"Yes, I have money. But I don't go after it. It comes to me, because I
+seek and render service for the service's sake. It will come to anybody
+else the same way; and why should it come any other way?"
+
+He not only had a low regard for the motives of most seekers of wealth;
+he went further, and fell into much disbelief of poor men's needs. For
+instance, he looked upon a man's inability to find employment, or upon
+a poor fellow's run of bad luck, as upon the placarded woes of a
+hurdy-gurdy beggar.
+
+"If he wants work he will find it. As for begging, it ought to be easier
+for any true man to starve than to beg."
+
+The sentiment was ungentle, but it came from the bottom of his belief
+concerning himself, and a longing for moral greatness in all men.
+
+"However," he would add, thrusting his hand into his pocket and bringing
+out his purse, "I'll help any man to make himself useful. And the
+sick--well, the sick, as a matter of course. Only I must know what I'm
+doing."
+
+Have some of us known Want? To have known her--though to love her
+was impossible--is "a liberal education." The Doctor was learned;
+but this acquaintanceship, this education, he had never got. Hence his
+untenderness. Shall we condemn the fault? Yes. And the man? We have not
+the face. To be _just_, which he never knowingly failed to be, and at
+the same time to feel tenderly for the unworthy, to deal kindly with the
+erring,--it is a double grace that hangs not always in easy reach even
+of the tallest. The Doctor attained to it--but in later years; meantime,
+this story--which, I believe, had he ever been poor would never have
+been written.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+A YOUNG STRANGER.
+
+
+In 1856 New Orleans was in the midst of the darkest ten years of her
+history. Yet she was full of new-comers from all parts of the commercial
+world,--strangers seeking livelihood. The ravages of cholera and
+yellow-fever, far from keeping them away, seemed actually to draw them.
+In the three years 1853, '54, and '55, the cemeteries had received over
+thirty-five thousand dead; yet here, in 1856, besides shiploads of
+European immigrants, came hundreds of unacclimated youths, from all
+parts of the United States, to fill the wide gaps which they imagined
+had been made in the ranks of the great exporting city's clerking force.
+
+Upon these pilgrims Dr. Sevier cast an eye full of interest, and often
+of compassion hidden under outward impatience. "Who wants to see," he
+would demand, "men--_and women_--increasing the risks of this uncertain
+life?" But he was also full of respect for them. There was a certain
+nobility rightly attributable to emigration itself in the abstract.
+It was the cutting loose from friends and aid,--those sweet-named
+temptations,--and the going forth into self-appointed exile and into
+dangers known and unknown, trusting to the help of one's own right hand
+to exchange honest toil for honest bread and raiment. His eyes kindled
+to see the goodly, broad, red-cheeked fellows. Sometimes, though, he
+saw women, and sometimes tender women, by their side; and that sight
+touched the pathetic chord of his heart with a rude twangle that vexed
+him.
+
+It was on a certain bright, cool morning early in October that, as he
+drove down Carondelet street toward his office, and one of those little
+white omnibuses of the old Apollo-street line, crowding in before his
+carriage, had compelled his driver to draw close in by the curb-stone
+and slacken speed to a walk, his attention chanced to fall upon a young
+man of attractive appearance, glancing stranger-wise and eagerly at
+signs and entrances while he moved down the street. Twice, in the moment
+of the Doctor's enforced delay, he noticed the young stranger make
+inquiry of the street's more accustomed frequenters, and that in each
+case he was directed farther on. But, the way opened, the Doctor's horse
+switched his tail and was off, the stranger was left behind, and the
+next moment the Doctor stepped across the sidewalk and went up the
+stairs of Number 3-1/2 to his office. Something told him--we are apt to
+fall into thought on a stair-way--that the stranger was looking for a
+physician.
+
+He had barely disposed of the three or four waiting messengers that
+arose from their chairs against the corridor wall, and was still reading
+the anxious lines left in various handwritings on his slate, when the
+young man entered. He was of fair height, slenderly built, with soft
+auburn hair, a little untrimmed, neat dress, and a diffident, yet
+expectant and courageous, face.
+
+"Dr. Sevier?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Doctor, my wife is very ill; can I get you to come at once and see
+her?"
+
+"Who is her physician?"
+
+"I have not called any; but we must have one now."
+
+"I don't know about going at once. This is my hour for being in the
+office. How far is it, and what's the trouble?"
+
+"We are only three squares away, just here in Custom-house street."
+The speaker began to add a faltering enumeration of some very grave
+symptoms. The Doctor noticed that he was slightly deaf; he uttered his
+words as though he did not hear them.
+
+"Yes," interrupted Dr. Sevier, speaking half to himself as he turned
+around to a standing case of cruel-looking silver-plated things on
+shelves; "that's a small part of the penalty women pay for the doubtful
+honor of being our mothers. I'll go. What is your number? But you had
+better drive back with me if you can." He drew back from the glass case,
+shut the door, and took his hat.
+
+"Narcisse!"
+
+On the side of the office nearest the corridor a door let into a
+hall-room that afforded merely good space for the furniture needed by a
+single accountant. The Doctor had other interests besides those of his
+profession, and, taking them altogether, found it necessary, or at least
+convenient, to employ continuously the services of a person to keep his
+accounts and collect his bills. Through the open door the book-keeper
+could be seen sitting on a high stool at a still higher desk,--a young
+man of handsome profile and well-knit form. At the call of his name he
+unwound his legs from the rounds of the stool and leaped into the
+Doctor's presence with a superlatively high-bred bow.
+
+"I shall be back in fifteen minutes," said the Doctor. "Come,
+Mr. ----," and went out with the stranger.
+
+Narcisse had intended to speak. He stood a moment, then lifted the
+last half inch of a cigarette to his lips, took a long, meditative
+inhalation, turned half round on his heel, dashed the remnant with
+fierce emphasis into a spittoon, ejected two long streams of smoke from
+his nostrils, and extending his fist toward the door by which the Doctor
+had gone out, said:--
+
+"All right, ole hoss!" No, not that way. It is hard to give his
+pronunciation by letter. In the word "right" he substituted an a for the
+r, sounding it almost in the same instant with the i, yet distinct from
+it: "All a-ight, ole hoss!"
+
+Then he walked slowly back to his desk, with that feeling of relief
+which some men find in the renewal of a promissory note, twined his legs
+again among those of the stool, and, adding not a word, resumed his pen.
+
+The Doctor's carriage was hurrying across Canal street.
+
+"Dr. Sevier," said the physician's companion, "I don't know what your
+charges are"--
+
+"The highest," said the Doctor, whose dyspepsia was gnawing him just
+then with fine energy. The curt reply struck fire upon the young man.
+
+"I don't propose to drive a bargain, Dr. Sevier!" He flushed angrily
+after he had spoken, breathed with compressed lips, and winked savagely,
+with the sort of indignation that school-boys show to a harsh master.
+
+The physician answered with better self-control.
+
+"What do you propose?"
+
+"I was going to propose--being a stranger to you, sir--to pay in
+advance." The announcement was made with a tremulous, but triumphant,
+_hauteur_, as though it must cover the physician with mortification. The
+speaker stretched out a rather long leg, and, drawing a pocket-book,
+produced a twenty-dollar piece.
+
+The Doctor looked full in his face with impatient surprise, then turned
+his eyes away again as if he restrained himself, and said, in a subdued
+tone:--
+
+"I would rather you had haggled about the price."
+
+"I don't hear"--said the other, turning his ear.
+
+The Doctor waved his hand:--
+
+"Put that up, if you please."
+
+The young stranger was disconcerted. He remained silent for a moment,
+wearing a look of impatient embarrassment. He still extended the piece,
+turning it over and over with his thumb-nail as it lay on his fingers.
+
+"You don't know me, Doctor," he said. He got another cruel answer.
+
+"We're getting acquainted," replied the physician.
+
+The victim of the sarcasm bit his lip, and protested, by an unconscious,
+sidewise jerk of the chin:--
+
+"I wish you'd"--and he turned the coin again.
+
+The physician dropped an eagle's stare on the gold.
+
+"I don't practise medicine on those principles."
+
+"But, Doctor," insisted the other, appeasingly, "you can make an
+exception if you will. Reasons are better than rules, my old professor
+used to say. I am here without friends, or letters, or credentials of
+any sort; this is the only recommendation I can offer."
+
+"Don't recommend you at all; anybody can do that."
+
+The stranger breathed a sigh of overtasked patience, smiled with a
+baffled air, seemed once or twice about to speak, but doubtful what to
+say, and let his hand sink.
+
+"Well, Doctor,"--he rested his elbow on his knee, gave the piece one
+more turn over, and tried to draw the physician's eye by a look of
+boyish pleasantness,--"I'll not ask you to take pay in advance, but I
+will ask you to take care of this money for me. Suppose I should lose
+it, or have it stolen from me, or--Doctor, it would be a real comfort to
+me if you would."
+
+"I can't help that. I shall treat your wife, and then send in my bill."
+The Doctor folded arms and appeared to give attention to his driver.
+But at the same time he asked:--
+
+"Not subject to epilepsy, eh?"
+
+"No, sir!" The indignant shortness of the retort drew no sign of
+attention from the Doctor; he was silently asking himself what this
+nonsense meant. Was it drink, or gambling, or a confidence game? Or
+was it only vanity, or a mistake of inexperience? He turned his head
+unexpectedly, and gave the stranger's facial lines a quick, thorough
+examination. It startled them from a look of troubled meditation. The
+physician as quickly turned away again.
+
+"Doctor," began the other, but added no more.
+
+The physician was silent. He turned the matter over once more in his
+mind. The proposal was absurdly unbusiness-like. That his part in it
+might look ungenerous was nothing; so his actions were right, he rather
+liked them to bear a hideous aspect: that was his war-paint. There was
+that in the stranger's attitude that agreed fairly with his own theories
+of living. A fear of debt, for instance, if that was genuine it was
+good; and, beyond and better than that, a fear of money. He began to be
+more favorably impressed.
+
+"Give it to me," he said, frowning; "mark you, this is your way,"--he
+dropped the gold into his vest-pocket,--"it isn't mine."
+
+The young man laughed with visible relief, and rubbed his knee with his
+somewhat too delicate hand. The Doctor examined him again with a milder
+glance.
+
+"I suppose you think you've got the principles of life all right, don't
+you?"
+
+"Yes, I do," replied the other, taking his turn at folding arms.
+
+"H-m-m! I dare say you do. What you lack is the practice." The Doctor
+sealed his utterance with a nod.
+
+The young man showed amusement; more, it may be, than he felt, and
+presently pointed out his lodging-place.
+
+"Here, on this side; Number 40;" and they alighted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+HIS WIFE.
+
+
+In former times the presence in New Orleans, during the cooler half of
+the year, of large numbers of mercantile men from all parts of the
+world, who did not accept the fever-plagued city as their permanent
+residence, made much business for the renters of furnished apartments.
+At the same time there was a class of persons whose residence was
+permanent, and to whom this letting of rooms fell by an easy and natural
+gravitation; and the most respectable and comfortable rented rooms of
+which the city could boast were those _chambres garnies_ in Custom-house
+and Bienville streets, kept by worthy free or freed mulatto or quadroon
+women.
+
+In 1856 the gala days of this half-caste people were quite over.
+Difference was made between virtue and vice, and the famous quadroon
+balls were shunned by those who aspired to respectability, whether their
+whiteness was nature or only toilet powder. Generations of domestic
+service under ladies of Gallic blood had brought many of them to a
+supreme pitch of excellence as housekeepers. In many cases money had
+been inherited; in other cases it had been saved up. That Latin feminine
+ability to hold an awkward position with impregnable serenity, and, like
+the yellow Mississippi, to give back no reflection from the overhanging
+sky, emphasized this superior fitness. That bright, womanly business
+ability that comes of the same blood added again to their excellence.
+Not to be home itself, nothing could be more like it than were the
+apartments let by Madame Cecile, or Madame Sophie, or Madame Athalie,
+or Madame Polyxene, or whatever the name might be.
+
+It was in one of these houses, that presented its dull brick front
+directly upon the sidewalk of Custom-house street, with the unfailing
+little square sign of _Chambres a louer_ (Rooms to let), dangling by a
+string from the overhanging balcony and twirling in the breeze, that
+the sick wife lay. A waiting slave-girl opened the door as the two men
+approached it, and both of them went directly upstairs and into a large,
+airy room. On a high, finely carved, and heavily hung mahogany bed,
+to which the remaining furniture corresponded in ancient style and
+massiveness, was stretched the form of a pale, sweet-faced little woman.
+
+The proprietress of the house was sitting beside the bed,--a quadroon of
+good, kind face, forty-five years old or so, tall and broad. She rose
+and responded to the Doctor's silent bow with that pretty dignity of
+greeting which goes with all French blood, and remained standing. The
+invalid stirred.
+
+The physician came forward to the bedside. The patient could not have
+been much over nineteen years of age. Her face was very pleasing; a
+trifle slender in outline; the brows somewhat square, not wide; the
+mouth small. She would not have been called beautiful, even in health,
+by those who lay stress on correctness of outlines. But she had one
+thing that to some is better. Whether it was in the dark blue eyes that
+were lifted to the Doctor's with a look which changed rapidly from
+inquiry to confidence, or in the fine, scarcely perceptible strands of
+pale-brown hair that played about her temples, he did not make out; but,
+for one cause or another, her face was of that kind which almost any
+one has seen once or twice, and no one has seen often,--that seems to
+give out a soft, but veritable, light.
+
+She was very weak. Her eyes quickly dropped away from his, and turned
+wearily, but peacefully, to those of her husband.
+
+The Doctor spoke to her. His greeting and gentle inquiry were full of a
+soothing quality that was new to the young man. His long fingers moved
+twice or thrice softly across her brow, pushing back the thin, waving
+strands, and then he sat down in a chair, continuing his kind, direct
+questions. The answers were all bad.
+
+He turned his glance to the quadroon; she understood it; the patient was
+seriously ill. The nurse responded with a quiet look of comprehension.
+At the same time the Doctor disguised from the young strangers this
+interchange of meanings by an audible question to the quadroon.
+
+"Have I ever met you before?"
+
+"No, seh."
+
+"What is your name?"
+
+"Zenobie."
+
+"Madame Zenobie," softly whispered the invalid, turning her eyes, with
+a glimmer of feeble pleasantry, first to the quadroon and then to her
+husband.
+
+The physician smiled at her an instant, and then gave a few concise
+directions to the quadroon. "Get me"--thus and so.
+
+The woman went and came. She was a superior nurse, like so many of her
+race. So obvious, indeed, was this, that when she gently pressed the
+young husband an inch or two aside, and murmured that "de doctah" wanted
+him to "go h-out," he left the room, although he knew the physician had
+not so indicated.
+
+By-and-by he returned, but only at her beckon, and remained at the
+bedside while Madame Zenobie led the Doctor into another room to write
+his prescription.
+
+"Who are these people?" asked the physician, in an undertone, looking up
+at the quadroon, and pausing with the prescription half torn off.
+
+She shrugged her large shoulders and smiled perplexedly.
+
+"Mizzez--Reechin?" The tone was one of query rather than assertion. "Dey
+sesso," she added.
+
+She might nurse the lady like a mother, but she was not going to be
+responsible for the genuineness of a stranger's name.
+
+"Where are they from?"
+
+"I dunno?--Some pless?--I nevva yeh dat nem biffo?"
+
+She made a timid attempt at some word ending in "walk," and smiled,
+ready to accept possible ridicule.
+
+"Milwaukee?" asked the Doctor.
+
+She lifted her palm, smiled brightly, pushed him gently with the tip of
+one finger, and nodded. He had hit the nail on the head.
+
+"What business is he in?"
+
+The questioner arose.
+
+She cast a sidelong glance at him with a slight enlargement of her eyes,
+and, compressing her lips, gave her head a little, decided shake. The
+young man was not employed.
+
+"And has no money either, I suppose," said the physician, as they
+started again toward the sick-room.
+
+She shrugged again and smiled; but it came to her mind that the Doctor
+might be considering his own interests, and she added, in a whisper:--
+
+"Dey pay me."
+
+She changed places with the husband, and the physician and he passed
+down the stairs together in silence.
+
+"Well, Doctor?" said the young man, as he stood, prescription in hand,
+before the carriage-door.
+
+"Well," responded the physician, "you should have called me sooner."
+
+The look of agony that came into the stranger's face caused the Doctor
+instantly to repent his hard speech.
+
+"You don't mean"--exclaimed the husband.
+
+"No, no; I don't think it's too late. Get that prescription filled and
+give it to Mrs. ----"
+
+"Richling," said the young man.
+
+"Let her have perfect quiet," continued the Doctor. "I shall be back
+this evening."
+
+And when he returned she had improved.
+
+She was better again the next day, and the next; but on the fourth she
+was in a very critical state. She lay quite silent during the Doctor's
+visit, until he, thinking he read in her eyes a wish to say something to
+him alone, sent her husband and the quadroon out of the room on separate
+errands at the same moment. And immediately she exclaimed:--
+
+"Doctor, save my life! You mustn't let me die! Save me, for my husband's
+sake! To lose all he's lost for me, and then to lose me too--save me,
+Doctor! save me!"
+
+"I'm going to do it!" said he. "You shall get well!"
+
+And what with his skill and her endurance it turned out so.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CONVALESCENCE AND ACQUAINTANCE.
+
+
+A man's clothing is his defence; but with a woman all dress is
+adornment. Nature decrees it; adornment is her instinctive delight. And,
+above all, the adorning of a bride; it brings out so charmingly the
+meaning of the thing. Therein centres the gay consent of all mankind and
+womankind to an innocent, sweet apostasy from the ranks of both. The
+value of living--which is loving; the sacredest wonders of life; all
+that is fairest and of best delight in thought, in feeling, yea, in
+substance,--all are apprehended under the floral crown and hymeneal
+veil. So, when at length one day Mrs. Richling said, "Madame Zenobie,
+don't you think I might sit up?" it would have been absurd to doubt the
+quadroon's willingness to assist her in dressing. True, here was neither
+wreath nor veil, but here was very young wifehood, and its re-attiring
+would be like a proclamation of victory over the malady that had striven
+to put two hearts asunder. Her willingness could hardly be doubted,
+though she smiled irresponsibly, and said:--
+
+"If you thing"-- She spread her eyes and elbows suddenly in the manner
+of a crab, with palms turned upward and thumbs outstretched--"Well!"--and
+so dropped them.
+
+"You don't want wait till de doctah comin'?" she asked.
+
+"I don't think he's coming; it's after his time."
+
+"Yass?"
+
+The woman was silent a moment, and then threw up one hand again, with
+the forefinger lifted alertly forward.
+
+"I make a lill fi' biffo."
+
+She made a fire. Then she helped the convalescent to put on a few loose
+drapings. She made no concealment of the enjoyment it gave her, though
+her words were few, and generally were answers to questions; and when
+at length she brought from the wardrobe, pretending not to notice her
+mistake, a loose and much too ample robe of woollen and silken stuffs to
+go over all, she moved as though she trod on holy ground, and distinctly
+felt, herself, the thrill with which the convalescent, her young eyes
+beaming their assent, let her arms into the big sleeves, and drew about
+her small form the soft folds of her husband's morning-gown.
+
+"He goin' to fine that droll," said the quadroon.
+
+The wife's face confessed her pleasure.
+
+"It's as much mine as his," she said.
+
+"Is you mek dat?" asked the nurse, as she drew its silken cord about the
+convalescent's waist.
+
+"Yes. Don't draw it tight; leave it loose--so; but you can tie the knot
+tight. That will do; there!" She smiled broadly. "Don't tie me in as if
+you were tying me in forever."
+
+Madame Zenobie understood perfectly, and, smiling in response, did tie
+it as if she were tying her in forever.
+
+Half an hour or so later the quadroon, being--it may have been by
+chance--at the street door, ushered in a person who simply bowed in
+silence.
+
+But as he put one foot on the stair he paused, and, bending a severe
+gaze upon her, asked:--
+
+"Why do you smile?"
+
+She folded her hands limply on her bosom, and drawing a cheek and
+shoulder toward each other, replied:--
+
+"Nuttin'"--
+
+The questioner's severity darkened.
+
+"Why do you smile at nothing?"
+
+She laid the tips of her fingers upon her lips to compose them.
+
+"You din come in you' carridge. She goin' to thing 'tis Miche Reechin."
+The smile forced its way through her fingers. The visitor turned in
+quiet disdain and went upstairs, she following.
+
+At the top he let her pass. She led the way and, softly pushing open the
+chamber-door, entered noiselessly, turned, and, as the other stepped
+across the threshold, nestled her hands one on the other at her waist,
+shrank inward with a sweet smile, and waved one palm toward the huge,
+blue-hung mahogany four-poster,--empty.
+
+The visitor gave a slight double nod and moved on across the carpet.
+Before a small coal fire, in a grate too wide for it, stood a broad,
+cushioned rocking-chair, with the corner of a pillow showing over its
+top. The visitor went on around it. The girlish form lay in it, with
+eyes closed, very still; but his professional glance quickly detected
+the false pretence of slumber. A slippered foot was still slightly
+reached out beyond the bright colors of the long gown, and toward the
+brazen edge of the hearth-pan, as though the owner had been touching her
+tiptoe against it to keep the chair in gentle motion. One cheek was on
+the pillow; down the other curled a few light strands of hair that had
+escaped from her brow.
+
+Thus for an instant. Then a smile began to wreath about the corner of
+her lips; she faintly stirred, opened her eyes--and lo! Dr. Sevier,
+motionless, tranquil, and grave.
+
+"O Doctor!" The blood surged into her face and down upon her neck.
+She put her hands over her eyes, and her face into the pillow. "O
+Doctor!"--rising to a sitting posture,--"I thought, of course, it
+was my husband."
+
+The Doctor replied while she was speaking:--
+
+"My carriage broke down." He drew a chair toward the fireplace, and
+asked, with his face toward the dying fire:--
+
+"How are you feeling to-day, madam,--stronger?"
+
+"Yes; I can almost say I'm well." The blush was still on her face
+as he turned to receive her answer, but she smiled with a bright
+courageousness that secretly amused and pleased him. "I thank you,
+Doctor, for my recovery; I certainly should thank you." Her face lighted
+up with that soft radiance which was its best quality, and her smile
+became half introspective as her eyes dropped from his, and followed her
+outstretched hand as it rearranged the farther edges of the
+dressing-gown one upon another.
+
+"If you will take better care of yourself hereafter, madam," responded
+the Doctor, thumping and brushing from his knee some specks of mud that
+he may have got when his carriage broke down, "I will thank you.
+But"--brush--brush--"I--doubt it."
+
+"Do you think you should?" she asked, leaning forward from the back of
+the great chair and letting her wrists drop over the front of its broad
+arms.
+
+"I do," said the Doctor, kindly. "Why shouldn't I? This present attack
+was by your own fault." While he spoke he was looking into her eyes,
+contracted at their corners by her slight smile. The face was one of
+those that show not merely that the world is all unknown to them, but
+that it always will be so. It beamed with inquisitive intelligence, and
+yet had the innocence almost of infancy. The Doctor made a discovery;
+that it was this that made her beautiful. "She _is_ beautiful," he
+insisted to himself when his critical faculty dissented.
+
+"You needn't doubt me, Doctor. I'll try my best to take care. Why, of
+course I will,--for John's sake." She looked up into his face from the
+tassel she was twisting around her finger, touching the floor with her
+slippers' toe and faintly rocking.
+
+"Yes, there's a chance there," replied the grave man, seemingly not
+overmuch pleased; "I dare say everything you do or leave undone is for
+his sake."
+
+The little wife betrayed for a moment a pained perplexity, and then
+exclaimed:--
+
+"Well, of course!" and waited his answer with bright eyes.
+
+"I have known women to think of their own sakes," was the response.
+
+She laughed, and with unprecedented sparkle replied:--
+
+"Why, whatever's his sake is my sake. I don't see the difference. Yes, I
+see, of course, how there might be a difference; but I don't see how a
+woman"-- She ceased, still smiling, and, dropping her eyes to her hands,
+slowly stroked one wrist and palm with the tassel of her husband's robe.
+
+The Doctor rose, turned his back to the mantel-piece, and looked down
+upon her. He thought of the great, wide world: its thorny ways, its
+deserts, its bitter waters, its unrighteousness, its self-seeking
+greeds, its weaknesses, its under and over reaching, its unfaithfulness;
+and then again of this--child, thrust all at once a thousand miles into
+it, with never--so far as he could see--an implement, a weapon, a sense
+of danger, or a refuge; well pleased with herself, as it seemed, lifted
+up into the bliss of self-obliterating wifehood, and resting in her
+husband with such an assurance of safety and happiness as a saint might
+pray for grace to show to Heaven itself. He stood silent, feeling too
+grim to speak, and presently Mrs. Richling looked up with a sudden
+liveliness of eye and a smile that was half apology and half
+persistence.
+
+"Yes, Doctor, I'm going to take care of myself."
+
+"Mrs. Richling, is your father a man of fortune?"
+
+"My father is not living," said she, gravely. "He died two years ago. He
+was the pastor of a small church. No, sir; he had nothing but his small
+salary, except that for some years he taught a few scholars. He taught
+me." She brightened up again. "I never had any other teacher."
+
+The Doctor folded his hands behind him and gazed abstractedly through
+the upper sash of the large French windows. The street-door was heard to
+open.
+
+"There's John," said the convalescent, quickly, and the next moment
+her husband entered. A tired look vanished from his face as he saw the
+Doctor. He hurried to grasp his hand, then turned and kissed his wife.
+The physician took up his hat.
+
+"Doctor," said the wife, holding the hand he gave her, and looking up
+playfully, with her cheek against the chair-back, "you surely didn't
+suspect me of being a rich girl, did you?"
+
+"Not at all, madam." His emphasis was so pronounced that the husband
+laughed.
+
+"There's one comfort in the opposite condition, Doctor," said the young
+man.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Why, yes; you see, it requires no explanation."
+
+"Yes, it does," said the physician; "it is just as binding on people
+to show good cause why they are poor as it is to show good cause why
+they're rich. Good-day, madam." The two men went out together. His word
+would have been good-by, but for the fear of fresh acknowledgments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+HARD QUESTIONS.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier had a simple abhorrence of the expression of personal
+sentiment in words. Nothing else seemed to him so utterly hollow as
+the attempt to indicate by speech a regard or affection which was not
+already demonstrated in behavior. So far did he keep himself aloof from
+insincerity that he had barely room enough left to be candid.
+
+"I need not see your wife any more," he said, as he went down the stairs
+with the young husband at his elbow; and the young man had learned him
+well enough not to oppress him with formal thanks, whatever might have
+been said or omitted upstairs.
+
+Madame Zenobie contrived to be near enough, as they reached the lower
+floor, to come in for a share of the meagre adieu. She gave her hand
+with a dainty grace and a bow that might have been imported from Paris.
+
+Dr. Sevier paused on the front step, half turned toward the open door
+where the husband still tarried. That was not speech; it was scarcely
+action; but the young man understood it and was silent. In truth, the
+Doctor himself felt a pang in this sort of farewell. A physician's way
+through the world is paved, I have heard one say, with these broken
+bits of other's lives, of all colors and all degrees of beauty. In
+his reminiscences, when he can do no better, he gathers them up,
+and, turning them over and over in the darkened chamber of his
+retrospection, sees patterns of delight lit up by the softened rays of
+bygone time. But even this renews the pain of separation, and Dr. Sevier
+felt, right here at this door-step, that, if this was to be the last of
+the Richlings, he would feel the twinge of parting every time they came
+up again in his memory.
+
+He looked at the house opposite,--where there was really nothing to look
+at,--and at a woman who happened to be passing, and who was only like a
+thousand others with whom he had nothing to do.
+
+"Richling," he said, "what brings you to New Orleans, any way?"
+
+Richling leaned his cheek against the door-post.
+
+"Simply seeking my fortune, Doctor."
+
+"Do you think it is here?"
+
+"I'm pretty sure it is; the world owes me a living."
+
+The Doctor looked up.
+
+"When did you get the world in your debt?"
+
+Richling lifted his head pleasantly, and let one foot down a step.
+
+"It owes me a chance to earn a living, doesn't it?"
+
+"I dare say," replied the other; "that's what it generally owes."
+
+"That's all I ask of it," said Richling; "if it will let us alone we'll
+let it alone."
+
+"You've no right to allow either," said the physician. "No, sir; no," he
+insisted, as the young man looked incredulous. There was a pause. "Have
+you any capital?" asked the Doctor.
+
+"Capital! No,"--with a low laugh.
+
+"But surely you have something to"--
+
+"Oh, yes,--a little!"
+
+The Doctor marked the southern "Oh." There is no "O" in Milwaukee.
+
+"You don't find as many vacancies as you expected to see, I
+suppose--h-m-m?"
+
+There was an under-glow of feeling in the young man's tone as he
+replied:--
+
+"I was misinformed."
+
+"Well," said the Doctor, staring down-street, "you'll find something.
+What can you do?"
+
+"Do? Oh, I'm willing to do anything!"
+
+Dr. Sevier turned his gaze slowly, with a shade of disappointment in it.
+Richling rallied to his defences.
+
+"I think I could make a good book-keeper, or correspondent, or cashier,
+or any such"--
+
+The Doctor interrupted, with the back of his head toward his listener,
+looking this time up the street, riverward:--
+
+"Yes;--or a shoe,--or a barrel,--h-m-m?"
+
+Richling bent forward with the frown of defective hearing, and the
+physician raised his voice:--
+
+"Or a cart-wheel--or a coat?"
+
+"I can make a living," rejoined the other, with a needlessly
+resentful-heroic manner, that was lost, or seemed to be, on the
+physician.
+
+"Richling,"--the Doctor suddenly faced around and fixed a kindly severe
+glance on him,--"why didn't you bring letters?"
+
+"Why,"--the young man stopped, looked at his feet, and distinctly
+blushed. "I think," he stammered--"it seems to me"--he looked up with a
+faltering eye--"don't you think--I think a man ought to be able to
+recommend _himself_."
+
+The Doctor's gaze remained so fixed that the self-recommended man could
+not endure it silently.
+
+"_I_ think so," he said, looking down again and swinging his foot.
+Suddenly he brightened. "Doctor, isn't this your carriage coming?"
+
+"Yes; I told the boy to drive by here when it was mended, and he might
+find me." The vehicle drew up and stopped. "Still, Richling," the
+physician continued, as he stepped toward it, "you had better get a
+letter or two, yet; you might need them."
+
+The door of the carriage clapped to. There seemed a touch of vexation in
+the sound. Richling, too, closed his door, but in the soft way of one in
+troubled meditation. Was this a proper farewell? The thought came to
+both men.
+
+"Stop a minute!" said Dr. Sevier to his driver. He leaned out a little
+at the side of the carriage and looked back. "Never mind; he has gone
+in."
+
+The young husband went upstairs slowly and heavily, more slowly and
+heavily than might be explained by his all-day unsuccessful tramp after
+employment. His wife still rested in the rocking-chair. He stood against
+it, and she took his hand and stroked it.
+
+"Tired?" she asked, looking up at him. He gazed into the languishing
+fire.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You're not discouraged, are you?"
+
+"Discouraged? N-no. And yet," he said, slowly shaking his head, "I can't
+see why I don't find something to do."
+
+"It's because you don't hunt for it," said the wife.
+
+He turned upon her with flashing countenance only to meet her laugh, and
+to have his head pulled down to her lips. He dropped into the seat left
+by the physician, laid his head back in his knit hands, and crossed his
+feet under the chair.
+
+"John, I do _like_ Dr. Sevier."
+
+"Why?" The questioner looked at the ceiling.
+
+"Why, don't you like him?" asked the wife, and, as John smiled, she
+added, "You know you like him."
+
+The husband grasped the poker in both hands, dropped his elbows upon his
+knees, and began touching the fire, saying slowly:--
+
+"I believe the Doctor thinks I'm a fool."
+
+"That's nothing," said the little wife; "that's only because you married
+me."
+
+The poker stopped rattling between the grate-bars; the husband looked at
+the wife. Her eyes, though turned partly away, betrayed their mischief.
+There was a deadly pause; then a rush to the assault, a shower of
+Cupid's arrows, a quick surrender.
+
+But we refrain. Since ever the world began it is Love's real, not his
+sham, battles that are worth the telling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+NESTING.
+
+
+A fortnight passed. What with calls on his private skill, and appeals
+to his public zeal, Dr. Sevier was always loaded like a dromedary.
+Just now he was much occupied with the affairs of the great American
+people. For all he was the furthest remove from a mere party contestant
+or spoilsman, neither his righteous pugnacity nor his human sympathy
+would allow him to "let politics alone." Often across this preoccupation
+there flitted a thought of the Richlings.
+
+At length one day he saw them. He had been called by a patient, lodging
+near Madame Zenobie's house. The proximity of the young couple occurred
+to him at once, but he instantly realized the extreme poverty of the
+chance that he should see them. To increase the improbability, the short
+afternoon was near its close,--an hour when people generally were
+sitting at dinner.
+
+But what a coquette is that same chance! As he was driving up at the
+sidewalk's edge before his patient's door, the Richlings came out of
+theirs, the husband talking with animation, and the wife, all sunshine,
+skipping up to his side, and taking his arm with both hands, and
+attending eagerly to his words.
+
+"Heels!" muttered the Doctor to himself, for the sound of Mrs.
+Richling's gaiters betrayed that fact. Heels were an innovation still
+new enough to rouse the resentment of masculine conservatism. But for
+them she would have pleased his sight entirely. Bonnets, for years
+microscopic, had again become visible, and her girlish face was prettily
+set in one whose flowers and ribbon, just joyous and no more, were
+reflected again in the double-skirted silk _barege_; while the dark
+mantilla that drooped away from the broad lace collar, shading, without
+hiding, her "Parodi" waist, seemed made for that very street of
+heavy-grated archways, iron-railed balconies, and high lattices. The
+Doctor even accepted patiently the free northern step, which is commonly
+so repugnant to the southern eye.
+
+A heightened gladness flashed into the faces of the two young people as
+they descried the physician.
+
+"Good-afternoon," they said, advancing.
+
+"Good-evening," responded the Doctor, and shook hands with each. The
+meeting was an emphatic pleasure to him. He quite forgot the young man's
+lack of credentials.
+
+"Out taking the air?" he asked.
+
+"Looking about," said the husband.
+
+"Looking up new quarters," said the wife, knitting her fingers about her
+husband's elbow and drawing closer to it.
+
+"Were you not comfortable?"
+
+"Yes; but the rooms are larger than we need."
+
+"Ah!" said the Doctor; and there the conversation sank. There was no
+topic suited to so fleeting a moment, and when they had smiled all round
+again Dr. Sevier lifted his hat. Ah, yes, there was one thing.
+
+"Have you found work?" asked the Doctor of Richling.
+
+The wife glanced up for an instant into her husband's face, and then
+down again.
+
+"No," said Richling, "not yet. If you should hear of anything,
+Doctor"--He remembered the Doctor's word about letters, stopped
+suddenly, and seemed as if he might even withdraw the request; but the
+Doctor said:--
+
+"I will; I will let you know." He gave his hand to Richling. It was on
+his lips to add: "And should you need," etc.; but there was the wife at
+the husband's side. So he said no more. The pair bowed their cheerful
+thanks; but beside the cheer, or behind it, in the husband's face, was
+there not the look of one who feels the odds against him? And yet, while
+the two men's hands still held each other, the look vanished, and the
+young man's light grasp had such firmness in it that, for this cause
+also, the Doctor withheld his patronizing utterance. He believed he
+would himself have resented it had he been in Richling's place.
+
+The young pair passed on, and that night, as Dr. Sevier sat at his
+fireside, an uncompanioned widower, he saw again the young wife look
+quickly up into her husband's face, and across that face flit and
+disappear its look of weary dismay, followed by the air of fresh courage
+with which the young couple had said good-by.
+
+"I wish I had spoken," he thought to himself; "I wish I had made the
+offer."
+
+And again:--
+
+"I hope he didn't tell her what I said about the letters. Not but I was
+right, but it'll only wound her."
+
+But Richling had told her; he always "told her everything;" she could
+not possibly have magnified wifehood more, in her way, than he did in
+his. May be both ways were faulty; but they were extravagantly,
+youthfully confident that they were not.
+
+ * * *
+
+Unknown to Dr. Sevier, the Richlings had returned from their search
+unsuccessful. Finding prices too much alike in Custom-house street they
+turned into Burgundy. From Burgundy they passed into Du Maine. As they
+went, notwithstanding disappointments, their mood grew gay and gayer.
+Everything that met the eye was quaint and droll to them: men, women,
+things, places,--all were more or less outlandish. The grotesqueness of
+the African, and especially the French-tongued African, was to Mrs.
+Richling particularly irresistible. Multiplying upon each and all of
+these things was the ludicrousness of the pecuniary strait that brought
+themselves and these things into contact. Everything turned to fun.
+
+Mrs. Richling's mirthful mood prompted her by and by to begin letting
+into her inquiries and comments covert double meanings, intended for her
+husband's private understanding. Thus they crossed Bourbon street.
+
+About there their mirth reached a climax; it was in a small house, a
+sad, single-story thing, cowering between two high buildings, its eaves,
+four or five feet deep, overshadowing its one street door and window.
+
+"Looks like a shade for weak eyes," said the wife.
+
+They had debated whether they should enter it or not. He thought no, she
+thought yes; but he would not insist and she would not insist; she
+wished him to do as he thought best, and he wished her to do as she
+thought best, and they had made two or three false starts and retreats
+before they got inside. But they were in there at length, and busily
+engaged inquiring into the availability of a small, lace-curtained,
+front room, when Richling took his wife so completely off her guard by
+addressing her as "Madam," in the tone and manner of Dr. Sevier, that
+she laughed in the face of the householder, who had been trying to talk
+English with a French accent and a hare-lip, and they fled with haste
+to the sidewalk and around the corner, where they could smile and smile
+without being villains.
+
+"We must stop this," said the wife, blushing. "We _must_ stop it. We're
+attracting attention."
+
+And this was true at least as to one ragamuffin, who stood on a
+neighboring corner staring at them. Yet there is no telling to what
+higher pitch their humor might have carried them if Mrs. Richling had
+not been weighted down by the constant necessity of correcting her
+husband's statement of their wants. This she could do, because his
+exactions were all in the direction of her comfort.
+
+"But, John," she would say each time as they returned to the street and
+resumed their quest, "those things cost; you can't afford them, can
+you?"
+
+"Why, you can't be comfortable without them," he would answer.
+
+"But that's not the question, John. We _must_ take cheaper lodgings,
+mustn't we?"
+
+Then John would be silent, and by littles their gayety would rise again.
+
+One landlady was so good-looking, so manifestly and entirely Caucasian,
+so melodious of voice, and so modest in her account of the rooms she
+showed, that Mrs. Richling was captivated. The back room on the second
+floor, overlooking the inner court and numerous low roofs beyond, was
+suitable and cheap.
+
+"Yes," said the sweet proprietress, turning to Richling, who hung in
+doubt whether it was quite good enough, "yesseh, I think you be pretty
+well in that room yeh.[1] Yesseh, I'm shoe you be _verrie_ well;
+yesseh."
+
+ [1] "Yeh"--_ye_, as in _yearn_.
+
+"Can we get them at once?"
+
+"Yes? At once? Yes? Oh, yes?"
+
+No downward inflections from her.
+
+"Well,"--the wife looked at the husband; he nodded,--"well, we'll take
+it."
+
+"Yes?" responded the landlady; "well?" leaning against a bedpost and
+smiling with infantile diffidence, "you dunt want no ref'ence?"
+
+"No," said John, generously, "oh, no; we can trust each other that far,
+eh?"
+
+"Oh, yes?" replied the sweet creature; then suddenly changing
+countenance, as though she remembered something. "But daz de troub'--de
+room not goin' be vacate for t'ree mont'."
+
+She stretched forth her open palms and smiled, with one arm still around
+the bedpost.
+
+"Why," exclaimed Mrs. Richling, the very statue of astonishment, "you
+said just now we could have it at once!"
+
+"Dis room? _Oh_, no; nod _dis_ room."
+
+"I don't see how I could have misunderstood you."
+
+The landlady lifted her shoulders, smiled, and clasped her hands across
+each other under her throat. Then throwing them apart she said
+brightly:--
+
+"No, I say at Madame La Rose. Me, my room is all fill'. At Madame La
+Rose, I say, I think you be pritty well. I'm shoe you be verrie well
+at Madame La Rose. I'm sorry. But you kin paz yondeh--'tiz juz ad the
+cawneh? And I am shoe I think you be pritty well at Madame La Rose."
+
+She kept up the repetition, though Mrs. Richling, incensed, had turned
+her back, and Richling was saying good-day.
+
+"She did say the room was vacant!" exclaimed the little wife, as they
+reached the sidewalk. But the next moment there came a quick twinkle
+from her eye, and, waving her husband to go on without her, she said,
+"You kin paz yondeh; at Madame La Rose I am shoe you be pritty sick."
+Thereupon she took his arm,--making everybody stare and smile to see a
+lady and gentleman arm in arm by daylight,--and they went merrily on
+their way.
+
+The last place they stopped at was in Royal street. The entrance
+was bad. It was narrow even for those two. The walls were stained by
+dampness, and the smell of a totally undrained soil came up through the
+floor. The stairs ascended a few steps, came too near a low ceiling, and
+shot forward into cavernous gloom to find a second rising place
+farther on. But the rooms, when reached, were a tolerably pleasant
+disappointment, and the proprietress a person of reassuring amiability.
+
+She bestirred herself in an obliging way that was the most charming
+thing yet encountered. She gratified the young people every moment
+afresh with her readiness to understand or guess their English queries
+and remarks, hung her head archly when she had to explain away little
+objections, delivered her No sirs with gravity and her Yes sirs with
+bright eagerness, shook her head slowly with each negative announcement,
+and accompanied her affirmations with a gracious bow and a smile full of
+rice powder.
+
+She rendered everything so agreeable, indeed, that it almost seemed
+impolite to inquire narrowly into matters, and when the question of
+price had to come up it was really difficult to bring it forward, and
+Richling quite lost sight of the economic rules to which he had silently
+acceded in the _Rue Du Maine_.
+
+"And you will carpet the floor?" he asked, hovering off of the main
+issue.
+
+"Put coppit? Ah! cettainlee!" she replied, with a lovely bow and a wave
+of the hand toward Mrs. Richling, whom she had already given the same
+assurance.
+
+"Yes," responded the little wife, with a captivated smile, and nodded to
+her husband.
+
+"We want to get the decentest thing that is cheap," he said, as the
+three stood close together in the middle of the room.
+
+The landlady flushed.
+
+"No, no, John," said the wife, quickly, "don't you know what we said?"
+Then, turning to the proprietress, she hurried to add, "We want the
+cheapest thing that is decent."
+
+But the landlady had not waited for the correction.
+
+"_Dis_sent! You want somesin _dis_sent!" She moved a step backward on
+the floor, scoured and smeared with brick-dust, her ire rising visibly
+at every heart-throb, and pointing her outward-turned open hand
+energetically downward, added:--
+
+"'Tis yeh!" She breathed hard. "_Mais_, no; you don't _want_ somesin
+dissent. No!" She leaned forward interrogatively: "You want somesin
+tchip?" She threw both elbows to the one side, cast her spread hands
+off in the same direction, drew the cheek on that side down into the
+collar-bone, raised her eyebrows, and pushed her upper lip with her
+lower, scornfully.
+
+At that moment her ear caught the words of the wife's apologetic
+amendment. They gave her fresh wrath and new opportunity. For her new
+foe was a woman, and a woman trying to speak in defence of the husband
+against whose arm she clung.
+
+"Ah-h-h!" Her chin went up; her eyes shot lightning; she folded her arms
+fiercely, and drew herself to her best height; and, as Richling's eyes
+shot back in rising indignation, cried:--
+
+"Ziss pless? 'Tis not ze pless! Zis pless--is diss'nt pless! I am
+diss'nt woman, me! Fo w'at you come in yeh?"
+
+"My dear madam! My husband"--
+
+"Dass you' uzban'?" pointing at him.
+
+"Yes!" cried the two Richlings at once.
+
+The woman folded her arms again, turned half-aside, and, lifting her
+eyes to the ceiling, simply remarked, with an ecstatic smile:--
+
+"Humph!" and left the pair, red with exasperation, to find the street
+again through the darkening cave of the stair-way.
+
+ * * *
+
+It was still early the next morning, when Richling entered his wife's
+apartment with an air of brisk occupation. She was pinning her brooch at
+the bureau glass.
+
+"Mary," he exclaimed, "put something on and come see what I've
+found! The queerest, most romantic old thing in the city; the most
+comfortable--and the cheapest! Here, is this the wardrobe key? To save
+time I'll get your bonnet."
+
+"No, no, no!" cried the laughing wife, confronting him with sparkling
+eyes, and throwing herself before the wardrobe; "I can't let you touch
+my bonnet!"
+
+There is a limit, it seems, even to a wife's subserviency.
+
+However, in a very short time afterward, by the feminine measure, they
+were out in the street, and people were again smiling at the pretty pair
+to see her arm in his, and she actually _keeping step_. 'Twas very
+funny.
+
+As they went John described his discovery: A pair of huge, solid green
+gates immediately on the sidewalk, in the dull facade of a tall, red
+brick building with old carved vinework on its window and door frames.
+Hinges a yard long on the gates; over the gates a semi-circular grating
+of iron bars an inch in diameter; in one of these gates a wicket, and
+on the wicket a heavy, battered, highly burnished brass knocker. A
+short-legged, big-bodied, and very black slave to usher one through the
+wicket into a large, wide, paved corridor, where from the middle joist
+overhead hung a great iron lantern. Big double doors at the far end,
+standing open, flanked with diamond-paned side-lights of colored glass,
+and with an arch at the same, fan-shaped, above. Beyond these doors and
+showing through them, a flagged court, bordered all around by a narrow,
+raised parterre under pomegranate and fruit-laden orange, and
+over-towered by vine-covered and latticed walls, from whose ragged
+eaves vagabond weeds laughed down upon the flowers of the parterre below,
+robbed of late and early suns. Stairs old fashioned, broad; rooms, their
+choice of two; one looking down into the court, the other into the
+street; furniture faded, capacious; ceilings high; windows, each opening
+upon its own separate small balcony, where, instead of balustrades, was
+graceful iron scroll-work, centered by some long-dead owner's monogram
+two feet in length; and on the balcony next the division wall, close to
+another on the adjoining property, a quarter circle of iron-work set
+like a blind-bridle, and armed with hideous prongs for house-breakers to
+get impaled on.
+
+"Why, in there," said Richling, softly, as they hurried in, "we'll be
+hid from the whole world, and the whole world from us."
+
+The wife's answer was only the upward glance of her blue eyes into his,
+and a faint smile.
+
+The place was all it had been described to be, and more,--except in one
+particular.
+
+"And my husband tells me"--The owner of said husband stood beside him,
+one foot a little in advance of the other, her folded parasol hanging
+down the front of her skirt from her gloved hands, her eyes just
+returning to the landlady's from an excursion around the ceiling, and
+her whole appearance as fresh as the pink flowers that nestled between
+her brow and the rim of its precious covering. She smiled as she began
+her speech, but not enough to spoil what she honestly believed to be a
+very business-like air and manner. John had quietly dropped out of the
+negotiations, and she felt herself put upon her mettle as his agent.
+"And my husband tells me the price of this front room is ten dollars a
+month."
+
+"Munse?"
+
+The respondent was a very white, corpulent woman, who constantly panted
+for breath, and was everywhere sinking down into chairs, with her limp,
+unfortified skirt dropping between her knees, and her hands pressed on
+them exhaustedly.
+
+"Munse?" She turned from husband to wife, and back again, a glance of
+alarmed inquiry.
+
+Mary tried her hand at French.
+
+"Yes; _oui, madame_. Ten dollah the month--_le mois_."
+
+Intelligence suddenly returned. Madame made a beautiful, silent O with
+her mouth and two others with her eyes.
+
+"Ah _non_! By munse? No, madame. Ah-h! impossybl'! By _wick_, yes; ten
+dollah de wick! Ah!"
+
+She touched her bosom with the wide-spread fingers of one hand and threw
+them toward her hearers.
+
+The room-hunters got away, yet not so quickly but they heard behind and
+above them her scornful laugh, addressed to the walls of the empty room.
+
+A day or two later they secured an apartment, cheap,
+and--morally--decent; but otherwise--ah!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+DISAPPEARANCE.
+
+
+It was the year of a presidential campaign. The party that afterward
+rose to overwhelming power was, for the first time, able to put its
+candidate fairly abreast of his competitors. The South was all afire.
+Rising up or sitting down, coming or going, week-day or Sabbath-day,
+eating or drinking, marrying or burying, the talk was all of slavery,
+abolition, and a disrupted country.
+
+Dr. Sevier became totally absorbed in the issue. He was too
+unconventional a thinker ever to find himself in harmony with all the
+declarations of any party, and yet it was a necessity of his nature to
+be in the _melee_. He had his own array of facts, his own peculiar
+deductions; his own special charges of iniquity against this party and
+of criminal forbearance against that; his own startling political
+economy; his own theory of rights; his own interpretations of the
+Constitution; his own threats and warnings; his own exhortations, and
+his own prophecies, of which one cannot say all have come true. But he
+poured them forth from the mighty heart of one who loved his country,
+and sat down with a sense of duty fulfilled and wiped his pale forehead
+while the band played a polka.
+
+It hardly need be added that he proposed to dispense with politicians,
+or that, when "the boys" presently counted him into their party team for
+campaign haranguing, he let them clap the harness upon him and splashed
+along in the mud with an intention as pure as snow.
+
+"Hurrah for"--
+
+Whom it is no matter now. It was not Fremont. Buchanan won the race. Out
+went the lights, down came the platforms, rockets ceased to burst; it
+was of no use longer to "Wait for the wagon"; "Old Dan Tucker" got "out
+of the way," small boys were no longer fellow-citizens, dissolution was
+postponed, and men began to have an eye single to the getting of money.
+
+A mercantile friend of Dr. Sevier had a vacant clerkship which it was
+necessary to fill. A bright recollection flashed across the Doctor's
+memory.
+
+"Narcisse!"
+
+"Yesseh!"
+
+"Go to Number 40 Custom-house street and inquire for Mr. Fledgeling; or,
+if he isn't in, for Mrs. Fledge--humph! Richling, I mean; I"--
+
+Narcisse laughed aloud.
+
+"Ha-ha-ha! daz de way, sometime'! My hant she got a honcl'--he says,
+once 'pon a time"--
+
+"Never mind! Go at once!"
+
+"All a-ight, seh!"
+
+"Give him this card"--
+
+"Yesseh!"
+
+"These people"--
+
+"Yesseh!"
+
+"Well, wait till you get your errand, can't you? These"--
+
+"Yesseh!"
+
+"These people want to see him."
+
+"All a-ight, seh!"
+
+Narcisse threw open and jerked off a worsted jacket, took his coat down
+from a peg, transferred a snowy handkerchief from the breast-pocket of
+the jacket to that of the coat, felt in his pantaloons to be sure that
+he had his match-case and cigarettes, changed his shoes, got his hat
+from a high nail by a little leap, and put it on a head as handsome as
+Apollo's.
+
+"Doctah Seveeah," he said, "in fact, I fine that a ve'y gen'lemany young
+man, that Mistoo Itchlin, weely, Doctah."
+
+The Doctor murmured to himself from the letter he was writing.
+
+"Well, _au 'evoi'_, Doctah; I'm goin'."
+
+Out in the corridor he turned and jerked his chin up and curled his lip,
+brought a match and cigarette together in the lee of his hollowed hand,
+took one first, fond draw, and went down the stairs as if they were on
+fire.
+
+At Canal street he fell in with two noble fellows of his own circle, and
+the three went around by way of Exchange alley to get a glass of soda at
+McCloskey's old down-town stand. His two friends were out of employment
+at the moment,--making him, consequently, the interesting figure in the
+trio as he inveighed against his master.
+
+"Ah, phooh!" he said, indicating the end of his speech by dropping the
+stump of his cigarette into the sand on the floor and softly spitting
+upon it,--"_le_ Shylock _de la rue_ Carondelet!"--and then in English,
+not to lose the admiration of the Irish waiter:--
+
+"He don't want to haugment me! I din hass 'im, because the 'lection. But
+you juz wait till dat firce of Jannawerry!"
+
+The waiter swathed the zinc counter, and inquired why Narcisse did not
+make his demands at the present moment.
+
+"W'y I don't hass 'im now? Because w'en I hass 'im he know' he's got to
+_do_ it! You thing I'm goin' to kill myseff workin'?"
+
+Nobody said yes, and by and by he found himself alive in the house of
+Madame Zenobie. The furniture was being sold at auction, and the house
+was crowded with all sorts and colors of men and women. A huge sideboard
+was up for sale as he entered, and the crier was crying:--
+
+"Faw-ty-fi' dollah! faw-ty-fi' dollah, ladies an' gentymen! On'y
+faw-ty-fi' dollah fo' thad magniffyzan sidebode! _Quarante-cinque
+piastres, seulement, messieurs! Les_ knobs _vaut bien cette prix_!
+Gentymen, de knobs is worse de money! Ladies, if you don' stop dat
+talkin', I will not sell one thing mo'! _Et quarante cinque
+piastres_--faw-ty-fi' dollah"--
+
+"Fifty!" cried Narcisse, who had not owned that much at one time since
+his father was a constable; realizing which fact, he slipped away
+upstairs and found Madame Zenobie half crazed at the slaughter of her
+assets.
+
+She sat in a chair against the wall of the room the Richlings had
+occupied, a spectacle of agitated dejection. Here and there about the
+apartment, either motionless in chairs, or moving noiselessly about,
+and pulling and pushing softly this piece of furniture and that, were
+numerous vulture-like persons of either sex, waiting the up-coming of
+the auctioneer. Narcisse approached her briskly.
+
+"Well, Madame Zenobie!"--he spoke in French--"is it you who lives here?
+Don't you remember me? What! No? You don't remember how I used to steal
+figs from you?"
+
+The vultures slowly turned their heads. Madame Zenobie looked at him in
+a dazed way.
+
+No, she did not remember. So many had robbed her--all her life.
+
+"But you don't look at me, Madame Zenobie. Don't you remember, for
+example, once pulling a little boy--as little as _that_--out of your
+fig-tree, and taking the half of a shingle, split lengthwise, in your
+hand, and his head under your arm,--swearing you would do it if you died
+for it,--and bending him across your knee,"--he began a vigorous but
+graceful movement of the right arm, which few members of our fallen race
+could fail to recognize,--"and you don't remember me, my old friend?"
+
+She looked up into the handsome face with a faint smile of affirmation.
+He laughed with delight.
+
+"The shingle was _that_ wide. Ah! Madame Zenobie, you did it well!" He
+softly smote the memorable spot, first with one hand and then with the
+other, shrinking forward spasmodically with each contact, and throwing
+utter woe into his countenance. The general company smiled. He suddenly
+put on great seriousness.
+
+"Madame Zenobie, I hope your furniture is selling well?" He still spoke
+in French.
+
+She cast her eyes upward pleadingly, caught her breath, threw the back
+of her hand against her temple, and dashed it again to her lap, shaking
+her head.
+
+Narcisse was sorry.
+
+"I have been doing what I could for you, downstairs,--running up the
+prices of things. I wish I could stay to do more, for the sake of old
+times. I came to see Mr. Richling, Madame Zenobie; is he in? Dr. Sevier
+wants him."
+
+Richling? Why, the Richlings did not live there! The Doctor must know
+it. Why should she be made responsible for this mistake? It was his
+oversight. They had moved long ago. Dr. Sevier had seen them looking for
+apartments. Where did they live now? Ah, me! _she_ could not tell. Did
+Mr. Richling owe the Doctor something?
+
+"Owe? Certainly not. The Doctor--on the contrary"--
+
+Ah! well, indeed, she didn't know where they lived, it is true; but the
+fact was, Mr. Richling happened to be there just then!--_a-c't'eure_! He
+had come to get a few trifles left by his madame.
+
+Narcisse made instant search. Richling was not on the upper floor. He
+stepped to the landing and looked down. There he went!
+
+"Mistoo 'Itchlin!"
+
+Richling failed to hear. Sharper ears might have served him better. He
+passed out by the street door. Narcisse stopped the auction by the noise
+he made coming downstairs after him. He had some trouble with the front
+door,--lost time there, but got out.
+
+Richling was turning a corner. Narcisse ran there and looked; looked
+up--looked down--looked into every store and shop on either side of the
+way clear back to Canal street; crossed it, went back to the Doctor's
+office, and reported. If he omitted such details as having seen and then
+lost sight of the man he sought, it may have been in part from the
+Doctor's indisposition to give him speaking license. The conclusion was
+simple: the Richlings could not be found.
+
+ * * *
+
+The months of winter passed. No sign of them.
+
+"They've gone back home," the Doctor often said to himself. How
+much better that was than to stay where they had made a mistake in
+venturing, and become the nurslings of patronizing strangers! He gave his
+admiration free play, now that they were quite gone. True courage that
+Richling had--courage to retreat when retreat is best! And his wife--ah!
+what a reminder of--hush, memory!
+
+"Yes, they must have gone home!" The Doctor spoke very positively,
+because, after all, he was haunted by doubt.
+
+One spring morning he uttered a soft exclamation as he glanced at his
+office-slate. The first notice on it read:--
+
+ Please call as soon as you can at number 292 St. Mary street,
+ corner of Prytania. Lower corner--opposite the asylum.
+ JOHN RICHLING.
+
+The place was far up in the newer part of the American quarter. The
+signature had the appearance as if the writer had begun to write some
+other name, and had changed it to Richling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A QUESTION OF BOOK-KEEPING.
+
+
+A day or two after Narcisse had gone looking for Richling at the house
+of Madame Zenobie, he might have found him, had he known where to
+search, in Tchoupitoulas street.
+
+Whoever remembers that thoroughfare as it was in those days, when the
+commodious "cotton-float" had not quite yet come into use, and Poydras
+and other streets did not so vie with Tchoupitoulas in importance as
+they do now, will recall a scene of commercial hurly-burly that inspired
+much pardonable vanity in the breast of the utilitarian citizen. Drays,
+drays, drays! Not the light New York things; but big, heavy, solid
+affairs, many of them drawn by two tall mules harnessed tandem. Drays
+by threes and by dozens, drays in opposing phalanxes, drays in long
+processions, drays with all imaginable kinds of burden; cotton in bales,
+piled as high as the omnibuses; leaf tobacco in huge hogsheads; cases of
+linens and silks; stacks of raw-hides; crates of cabbages; bales of
+prints and of hay; interlocked heaps of blue and red ploughs; bags of
+coffee, and spices, and corn; bales of bagging; barrels, casks, and
+tierces; whisky, pork, onions, oats, bacon, garlic, molasses, and other
+delicacies; rice, sugar,--what was there not? Wines of France and Spain
+in pipes, in baskets, in hampers, in octaves; queensware from England;
+cheeses, like cart-wheels, from Switzerland; almonds, lemons, raisins,
+olives, boxes of citron, casks of chains; specie from Vera Cruz; cries
+of drivers, cracking of whips, rumble of wheels, tremble of earth,
+frequent gorge and stoppage. It seemed an idle tale to say that any one
+could be lacking bread and raiment. "We are a great city," said the
+patient foot-passengers, waiting long on street corners for opportunity
+to cross the way.
+
+On one of these corners paused Richling. He had not found employment,
+but you could not read that in his face; as well as he knew himself, he
+had come forward into the world prepared amiably and patiently to be, to
+do, to suffer anything, provided it was not wrong or ignominious. He did
+not see that even this is not enough in this rough world; nothing had
+yet taught him that one must often gently suffer rudeness and wrong. As
+to what constitutes ignominy he had a very young man's--and, shall we
+add? a very American--idea. He could not have believed, had he been
+told, how many establishments he had passed by, omitting to apply in
+them for employment. He little dreamed he had been too select. He had
+entered not into any house of the Samaritans, to use a figure; much
+less, to speak literally, had he gone to the lost sheep of the house of
+Israel. Mary, hiding away in uncomfortable quarters a short stone's
+throw from Madame Zenobie's, little imagined that, in her broad irony
+about his not hunting for employment, there was really a tiny seed of
+truth. She felt sure that two or three persons who had seemed about to
+employ him had failed to do so because they detected the defect in his
+hearing, and in one or two cases she was right.
+
+Other persons paused on the same corner where Richling stood, under the
+same momentary embarrassment. One man, especially busy-looking, drew
+very near him. And then and there occurred this simple accident,--that
+at last he came in contact with the man who had work to give him. This
+person good-humoredly offered an impatient comment on their enforced
+delay. Richling answered in sympathetic spirit, and the first speaker
+responded with a question:--
+
+"Stranger in the city?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Buying goods for up-country?"
+
+It was a pleasant feature of New Orleans life that sociability to
+strangers on the street was not the exclusive prerogative of gamblers'
+decoys.
+
+"No; I'm looking for employment."
+
+"Aha!" said the man, and moved away a little. But in a moment Richling,
+becoming aware that his questioner was glancing all over him with
+critical scrutiny, turned, and the man spoke.
+
+"D'you keep books?"
+
+Just then a way opened among the vehicles; and the man, young and
+muscular, darted into it, and Richling followed.
+
+"I _can_ keep books," he said, as they reached the farther curb-stone.
+
+The man seized him by the arm.
+
+"D'you see that pile of codfish and herring where that tall man is at
+work yonder with a marking-pot and brush? Well, just beyond there is a
+boarding-house, and then a hardware store; you can hear them throwing
+down sheets of iron. Here; you can see the sign. See? Well, the next is
+my store. Go in there--upstairs into the office--and wait till I come."
+
+Richling bowed and went. In the office he sat down and waited what
+seemed a very long time. Could he have misunderstood? For the man did
+not come. There was a person sitting at a desk on the farther side of
+the office, writing, who had not lifted his head from first to last,
+Richling said:--
+
+"Can you tell me when the proprietor will be in?"
+
+The writer's eyes rose, and dropped again upon his writing.
+
+"What do you want with him?"
+
+"He asked me to wait here for him."
+
+"Better wait, then."
+
+Just then in came the merchant. Richling rose, and he uttered a rude
+exclamation:--
+
+"_I_ forgot you completely! Where did you say you kept books at, last?"
+
+"I've not kept anybody's books yet, but I can do it."
+
+The merchant's response was cold and prompt. He did not look at
+Richling, but took a sample vial of molasses from a dirty mantel-piece
+and lifted it between his eyes and the light, saying:--
+
+"You can't do any such thing. I don't want you."
+
+"Sir," said Richling, so sharply that the merchant looked round, "if you
+don't want me I don't want you; but you mustn't attempt to tell me that
+what I say is not true!" He had stepped forward as he began to speak,
+but he stopped before half his words were uttered, and saw his folly.
+Even while his voice still trembled with passion and his head was up, he
+colored with mortification. That feeling grew no less when his offender
+simply looked at him, and the man at the desk did not raise his eyes. It
+rather increased when he noticed that both of them were young--as young
+as he.
+
+"I don't doubt your truthfulness," said the merchant, marking the effect
+of his forbearance; "but you ought to know you can't come in and take
+charge of a large set of books in the midst of a busy season, when
+you've never kept books before."
+
+"I don't know it at all."
+
+"Well, I do," said the merchant, still more coldly than before. "There
+are my books," he added, warming, and pointed to three great canvassed
+and black-initialled volumes standing in a low iron safe, "left only
+yesterday in such a snarl, by a fellow who had 'never kept books, but
+knew how,' that I shall have to open another set! After this I shall
+have a book-keeper who has kept books."
+
+He turned away.
+
+Some weeks afterward Richling recalled vividly a thought that had struck
+him only faintly at this time: that, beneath much superficial severity
+and energy, there was in this establishment a certain looseness of
+management. It may have been this half-recognized thought that gave him
+courage, now, to say, advancing another step:--
+
+"One word, if you please."
+
+"It's no use, my friend."
+
+"It may be."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Get an experienced book-keeper for your new set of books"--
+
+"You can bet your bottom dollar!" said the merchant, turning again and
+running his hands down into his lower pockets. "And even he'll have as
+much as he can do"--
+
+"That is just what I wanted you to say," interrupted Richling, trying
+hard to smile; "then you can let me straighten up the old set."
+
+"Give a new hand the work of an expert!"
+
+The merchant almost laughed out. He shook his head and was about to say
+more, when Richling persisted:--
+
+"If I don't do the work to your satisfaction don't pay me a cent."
+
+"I never make that sort of an arrangement; no, sir!"
+
+Unfortunately it had not been Richling's habit to show this pertinacity,
+else life might have been easier to him as a problem; but these two
+young men, his equals in age, were casting amused doubts upon his
+ability to make good his professions. The case was peculiar. He reached
+a hand out toward the books.
+
+"Let me look over them for one day; if I don't convince you the next
+morning in five minutes that I can straighten them I'll leave them
+without a word."
+
+The merchant looked down an instant, and then turned to the man at the
+desk.
+
+"What do you think of that, Sam?"
+
+Sam set his elbows upon the desk, took the small end of his pen-holder
+in his hands and teeth, and, looking up, said:--
+
+"I don't know; you might--try him."
+
+"What did you say your name was?" asked the other, again facing
+Richling. "Ah, yes! Who are your references, Mr. Richmond?"
+
+"Sir?" Richling leaned slightly forward and turned his ear.
+
+"I say, who knows you?"
+
+"Nobody."
+
+"Nobody! Where are you from?"
+
+"Milwaukee."
+
+The merchant tossed out his arm impatiently.
+
+"Oh, I can't do that kind o' business."
+
+He turned abruptly, went to his desk, and, sitting down half-hidden by
+it, took up an open letter.
+
+"I bought that coffee, Sam," he said, rising again and moving farther
+away.
+
+"Um-hum," said Sam; and all was still.
+
+Richling stood expecting every instant to turn on the next and go. Yet
+he went not. Under the dusty front windows of the counting-room the
+street was roaring below. Just beyond a glass partition at his back a
+great windlass far up under the roof was rumbling with the descent of
+goods from a hatchway at the end of its tense rope. Salesmen were
+calling, trucks were trundling, shipping clerks and porters were
+replying. One brawny fellow he saw, through the glass, take a herring
+from a broken box, and stop to feed it to a sleek, brindled mouser. Even
+the cat was valued; but he--he stood there absolutely zero. He saw it.
+He saw it as he never had seen it before in his life. This truth smote
+him like a javelin: that all this world wants is a man's permission to
+do without him. Right then it was that he thought he swallowed all his
+pride; whereas he only tasted its bitter brine as like a wave it took
+him up and lifted him forward bodily. He strode up to the desk beyond
+which stood the merchant, with the letter still in his hand, and said:--
+
+"I've not gone yet! I may have to be turned off by you, but not in this
+manner!"
+
+The merchant looked around at him with a smile of surprise, mixed with
+amusement and commendation, but said nothing. Richling held out his open
+hand.
+
+"I don't ask you to trust me. Don't trust me. Try me!"
+
+He looked distressed. He was not begging, but he seemed to feel as
+though he were.
+
+The merchant dropped his eyes again upon the letter, and in that
+attitude asked:--
+
+"What do you say, Sam?"
+
+"He can't hurt anything," said Sam.
+
+The merchant looked suddenly at Richling.
+
+"You're not from Milwaukee. You're a Southern man."
+
+Richling changed color.
+
+"I said Milwaukee."
+
+"Well," said the merchant, "I hardly know. Come and see me further about
+it to-morrow morning. I haven't time to talk now."
+
+ * * *
+
+"Take a seat," he said, the next morning, and drew up a chair sociably
+before the returned applicant. "Now, suppose I was to give you those
+books, all in confusion as they are, what would you do first of all?"
+
+Mary fortunately had asked the same question the night before, and her
+husband was entirely ready with an answer which they had studied out in
+bed.
+
+"I should send your deposit-book to bank to be balanced, and, without
+waiting for it, I should begin to take a trial-balance off the books. If
+I didn't get one pretty soon, I'd drop that for the time being, and turn
+in and render the accounts of everybody on the books, asking them to
+examine and report."
+
+"All right," said the merchant, carelessly; "we'll try you."
+
+"Sir?" Richling bent his ear.
+
+"_All right; we'll try you!_ I don't care much about recommendations. I
+generally most always make up my opinion about a man from looking at
+him. I'm that sort of a man."
+
+He smiled with inordinate complacency.
+
+So, week by week, as has been said already, the winter passed,--Richling
+on one side of the town, hidden away in his work, and Dr. Sevier on the
+other, very positive that the "young pair" must have returned to
+Milwaukee.
+
+At length the big books were readjusted in all their hundreds of pages,
+were balanced, and closed. Much satisfaction was expressed; but another
+man had meantime taken charge of the new books,--one who influenced
+business, and Richling had nothing to do but put on his hat.
+
+However, the house cheerfully recommended him to a neighboring firm,
+which also had disordered books to be righted; and so more weeks passed.
+Happy weeks! Happy days! Ah, the joy of them! John bringing home money,
+and Mary saving it!
+
+"But, John, it seems such a pity not to have stayed with A, B, & Co.;
+doesn't it?"
+
+"I don't think so. I don't think they'll last much longer."
+
+And when he brought word that A, B, & Co. had gone into a thousand
+pieces Mary was convinced that she had a very far-seeing husband.
+
+By and by, at Richling's earnest and restless desire, they moved their
+lodgings again. And thus we return by a circuit to the morning when Dr.
+Sevier, taking up his slate, read the summons that bade him call at the
+corner of St. Mary and Prytania streets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+WHEN THE WIND BLOWS.
+
+
+The house stands there to-day. A small, pinched, frame,
+ground-floor-and-attic, double tenement, with its roof sloping toward
+St. Mary street and overhanging its two door-steps that jut out on the
+sidewalk. There the Doctor's carriage stopped, and in its front room he
+found Mary in bed again, as ill as ever. A humble German woman, living
+in the adjoining half of the house, was attending to the invalid's
+wants, and had kept her daughter from the public school to send her to
+the apothecary with the Doctor's prescription.
+
+"It is the poor who help the poor," thought the physician.
+
+"Is this your home?" he asked the woman softly, as he sat down by the
+patient's pillow. He looked about upon the small, cheaply furnished
+room, full of the neat makeshifts of cramped housewifery.
+
+"It's mine," whispered Mary. Even as she lay there in peril of her life,
+and flattened out as though Juggernaut had rolled over her, her eyes
+shone with happiness and scintillated as the Doctor exclaimed in
+undertone:--
+
+"Yours!" He laid his hand upon her forehead. "Where is Mr. Richling?"
+
+"At the office." Her eyes danced with delight. She would have begun,
+then and there, to tell him all that had happened,--"had taken care of
+herself all along," she said, "until they began to move. In moving, had
+been _obliged_ to overwork--hardly _fixed_ yet"--
+
+But the Doctor gently checked her and bade her be quiet.
+
+"I will," was the faint reply; "I will; but--just one thing, Doctor,
+please let me say."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"John"--
+
+"Yes, yes; I know; he'd be here, only you wouldn't let him stay away
+from his work."
+
+She smiled assent, and he smiled in return.
+
+"'Business is business,'" he said.
+
+She turned a quick, sparkling glance of affirmation, as if she had
+lately had some trouble to maintain that ancient truism. She was going
+to speak again, but the Doctor waved his hand downward soothingly toward
+the restless form and uplifted eyes.
+
+"All right," she whispered, and closed them.
+
+The next day she was worse. The physician found himself, to use his
+words, "only the tardy attendant of offended nature." When he dropped
+his finger-ends gently upon her temple she tremblingly grasped his hand.
+
+"You'll save me?" she whispered.
+
+"Yes," he replied; "we'll do that--the Lord helping us."
+
+A glad light shone from her face as he uttered the latter clause.
+Whereat he made haste to add:--
+
+"I don't pray, but I'm sure you do."
+
+She silently pressed the hand she still held.
+
+On Sunday he found Richling at the bedside. Mary had improved
+considerably in two or three days. She lay quite still as they talked,
+only shifting her glance softly from one to the other as one and then
+the other spoke. The Doctor heard with interest Richling's full account
+of all that had occurred since he had met them last together. Mary's
+eyes filled with merriment when John told the droller part of their
+experiences in the hard quarters from which they had only lately
+removed. But the Doctor did not so much as smile. Richling finished,
+and the physician was silent.
+
+"Oh, we're getting along," said Richling, stroking the small, weak hand
+that lay near him on the coverlet. But still the Doctor kept silence.
+
+"Of course," said Richling, very quietly, looking at his wife, "we
+mustn't be surprised at a backset now and then. But we're getting on."
+
+Mary turned her eyes toward the Doctor. Was he not going to assent at
+all? She seemed about to speak. He bent his ear, and she said, with a
+quiet smile:--
+
+"'When the wind blows, the cradle will rock.'"
+
+The physician gave only a heavy-eyed "Humph!" and a faint look of
+amusement.
+
+"What did she say?" said Richling; the words had escaped his ear. The
+Doctor repeated it, and Richling, too, smiled.
+
+Yet it was a good speech,--why not? But the patient also smiled, and
+turned her eyes toward the wall with a disconcerted look, as if the
+smile might end in tears. For herein lay the very difficulty that always
+brought the Doctor's carriage to the door,--the cradle would not rock.
+
+For a few days more that carriage continued to appear, and then ceased.
+Richling dropped in one morning at Number 3-1/2 Carondelet, and settled
+his bill with Narcisse.
+
+The young Creole was much pleased to be at length brought into actual
+contact with a man of his own years, who, without visible effort, had
+made an impression on Dr. Sevier.
+
+Until the money had been paid and the bill receipted nothing more than
+a formal business phrase or two passed between them. But as Narcisse
+delivered the receipted bill, with an elaborate gesture of courtesy, and
+Richling began to fold it for his pocket, the Creole remarked:--
+
+"I 'ope you will excuse the 'an'-a-'iting."
+
+Richling reopened the paper; the penmanship was beautiful.
+
+"Do you ever write better than this?" he asked. "Why, I wish I could
+write half as well!"
+
+"No; I do not fine that well a-'itten. I cannot see 'ow that is,--I
+nevva 'ite to the satizfagtion of my abil'ty soon in the mawnin's. I am
+dest'oying my chi'og'aphy at that desk yeh."
+
+"Indeed?" said Richling; "why, I should think"--
+
+"Yesseh, 'tis the tooth. But consunning the chi'og'aphy, Mistoo Itchlin,
+I 'ave descovvud one thing to a maul cettainty, and that is, if I 'ave
+something to 'ite to a young lady, I always dizguise my chi'og'aphy.
+Ha-ah! I 'ave learn that! You will be aztonizh' to see in 'ow many
+diffe'n' fawm' I can make my 'an'-a-'iting to appeah. That paz thoo my
+fam'ly, in fact, Mistoo Itchlin. My hant, she's got a honcle w'at use'
+to be cluck in a bank, w'at could make the si'natu'e of the pwesiden',
+as well as of the cashieh, with that so absolute puffegtion, that they
+tu'n 'im out of the bank! Yesseh. In fact, I thing you ought to know 'ow
+to 'ite a ve'y fine 'an', Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+"N-not very," said Richling; "my hand is large and legible, but not well
+adapted for--book-keeping; it's too heavy."
+
+"You 'ave the 'ight physio'nomie, I am shu'. You will pe'haps believe me
+with difficulty, Mistoo Itchlin, but I assu' you I can tell if a man 'as
+a fine chi'og'aphy aw no, by juz lookin' upon his liniment. Do you know
+that Benjamin Fwanklin 'ote a v'ey fine chi'og'aphy, in fact? Also,
+Voltaire. Yesseh. An' Napoleon Bonaparte. Lawd By'on muz 'ave 'ad a
+beaucheouz chi'og'aphy. 'Tis impossible not to be, with that face. He is
+my favo'ite poet, that Lawd By'on. Moze people pwefeh 'im to Shakspere,
+in fact. Well, you muz go? I am ve'y 'appy to meck yo' acquaintanze,
+Mistoo Itchlin, seh. I am so'y Doctah Seveeah is not theh pwesently. The
+negs time you call, Mistoo Itchlin, you muz not be too much aztonizh to
+fine me gone from yeh. Yesseh. He's got to haugment me ad the en' of
+that month, an' we 'ave to-day the fifteenth Mawch. Do you smoke, Mistoo
+Itchlin?" He extended a package of cigarettes. Richling accepted one. "I
+smoke lawgely in that weatheh," striking a match on his thigh. "I feel
+ve'y sultwy to-day. Well,"--he seized the visitor's hand,--"_au' evoi'_,
+Mistoo Itchlin." And Narcisse returned to his desk happy in the
+conviction that Richling had gone away dazzled.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+GENTLES AND COMMONS.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier sat in the great easy-chair under the drop-light of his
+library table trying to read a book. But his thought was not on the
+page. He expired a long breath of annoyance, and lifted his glance
+backward from the bottom of the page to its top.
+
+Why must his mind keep going back to that little cottage in St. Mary
+street? What good reason was there? Would they thank him for his
+solicitude? Indeed! He almost smiled his contempt of the supposition.
+Why, when on one or two occasions he had betrayed a least little bit of
+kindly interest,--what? Up had gone their youthful vivacity like an
+umbrella. Oh, yes!--like all young folks--_their_ affairs were intensely
+private. Once or twice he had shaken his head at the scantiness of all
+their provisions for life. Well? They simply and unconsciously stole a
+hold upon one another's hand or arm, as much as to say, "To love is
+enough." When, gentlemen of the jury, it isn't enough!
+
+"Pshaw!" The word escaped him audibly. He drew partly up from his half
+recline, and turned back a leaf of the book to try once more to make out
+the sense of it.
+
+But there was Mary, and there was her husband. Especially Mary. Her
+image came distinctly between his eyes and the page. There she was, just
+as on his last visit,--a superfluous one--no charge,--sitting and plying
+her needle, unaware of his approach, gently moving her rocking-chair,
+and softly singing, "Flow on, thou shining river,"--the song his own
+wife used to sing. "O child, child! do you think it's always going to be
+'shining'?" They shouldn't be so contented. Was pride under that cloak?
+Oh, no, no! But even if the content was genuine, it wasn't good. Why,
+they oughtn't to be _able_ to be happy so completely out of their true
+sphere. It showed insensibility. But, there again,--Richling wasn't
+insensible, much less Mary.
+
+The Doctor let his book sink, face downward, upon his knee.
+
+"They're too big to be playing in the sand." He took up the book again.
+"'Tisn't my business to tell them so." But before he got the volume
+fairly before his eyes his professional bell rang, and he tossed the
+book upon the table.
+
+"Well, why don't you bring him in?" he asked, in a tone of reproof, of a
+servant who presented a card; and in a moment the visitor entered.
+
+He was a person of some fifty years of age, with a patrician face, in
+which it was impossible to tell where benevolence ended and pride began.
+His dress was of fine cloth, a little antique in cut, and fitting rather
+loosely on a form something above the medium height, of good width, but
+bent in the shoulders, and with arms that had been stronger. Years, it
+might be, or possibly some unflinching struggle with troublesome facts,
+had given many lines of his face a downward slant. He apologized for the
+hour of his call, and accepted with thanks the chair offered him.
+
+"You are not a resident of the city?" asked Dr. Sevier.
+
+"I am from Kentucky." The voice was rich, and the stranger's general
+air one of rather conscious social eminence.
+
+"Yes?" said the Doctor, not specially pleased, and looked at him closer.
+He wore a black satin neck-stock, and dark-blue buttoned gaiters. His
+hair was dyed brown. A slender frill adorned his shirt-front.
+
+"Mrs."--the visitor began to say, not giving the name, but waving his
+index-finger toward his card, which Dr. Sevier had laid upon the table,
+just under the lamp,--"my wife, Doctor, seems to be in a very feeble
+condition. Her physicians have advised her to try the effects of a
+change of scene, and I have brought her down to your busy city, sir."
+
+The Doctor assented. The stranger resumed:--
+
+"Its hurry and energy are a great contrast to the plantation life, sir."
+
+"They're very unlike," the physician admitted.
+
+"This chafing of thousands of competitive designs," said the visitor,
+"this great fretwork of cross purposes, is a decided change from the
+quiet order of our rural life. Hmm! There everything is under the
+administration of one undisputed will, and is executed by the
+unquestioning obedience of our happy and contented slave peasantry. I
+prefer the country. But I thought this was just the change that would
+arouse and electrify an invalid who has really no tangible complaint."
+
+"Has the result been unsatisfactory?"
+
+"Entirely so. I am unexpectedly disappointed." The speaker's thought
+seemed to be that the climate of New Orleans had not responded with
+that hospitable alacrity which was due so opulent, reasonable, and
+universally obeyed a guest.
+
+There was a pause here, and Dr. Sevier looked around at the book which
+lay at his elbow. But the visitor did not resume, and the Doctor
+presently asked:--
+
+"Do you wish me to see your wife?"
+
+"I called to see you alone first," said the other, "because there might
+be questions to be asked which were better answered in her absence."
+
+"Then you think you know the secret of her illness, do you?"
+
+"I do. I think, indeed I may say I know, it is--bereavement."
+
+The Doctor compressed his lips and bowed.
+
+The stranger drooped his head somewhat, and, resting his elbows on the
+arms of his chair, laid the tips of his thumbs and fingers softly
+together.
+
+"The truth is, sir, she cannot recover from the loss of our son."
+
+"An infant?" asked the Doctor. His bell rang again as he put the
+question.
+
+"No, sir; a young man,--one whom I had thought a person of great
+promise; just about to enter life."
+
+"When did he die?"
+
+"He has been dead nearly a year. I"-- The speaker ceased as the
+mulatto waiting-man appeared at the open door, with a large, simple,
+German face looking easily over his head from behind.
+
+"Toctor," said the owner of this face, lifting an immense open hand,
+"Toctor, uf you bleace, Toctor, you vill bleace ugscooce me."
+
+The Doctor frowned at the servant for permitting the interruption. But
+the gentleman beside him said:--
+
+"Let him come in, sir; he seems to be in haste, sir, and I am not,--I am
+not, at all."
+
+"Come in," said the physician.
+
+The new-comer stepped into the room. He was about six feet three inches
+in height, three feet six in breadth, and the same in thickness. Two
+kindly blue eyes shone softly in an expanse of face that had been
+clean-shaven every Saturday night for many years, and that ended in a
+retreating chin and a dewlap. The limp, white shirt-collar just below
+was without a necktie, and the waist of his pantaloons, which seemed
+intended to supply this deficiency, did not quite, but only almost
+reached up to the unoccupied blank. He removed from his respectful head
+a soft gray hat, whitened here and there with flour.
+
+"Yentlemen," he said, slowly, "you vill ugscooce me to interruptet
+you,--yentlemen."
+
+"Do you wish to see me?" asked Dr. Sevier.
+
+The German made an odd gesture of deferential assent, lifting one open
+hand a little in front of him to the level of his face, with the wrist
+bent forward and the fingers pointing down.
+
+"Uf you bleace, Toctor, I toose; undt tat's te fust time I effer _tit_
+vanted a toctor. Undt you mus' ugscooce me, Toctor, to callin' on you,
+ovver I vish you come undt see mine"--
+
+To the surprise of all, tears gushed from his eyes.
+
+"Mine poor vife, Toctor!" He turned to one side, pointed his broad hand
+toward the floor, and smote his forehead.
+
+"I yoost come in fun mine paykery undt comin' into mine howse, fen--I
+see someting"--he waved his hand downward again--"someting--layin' on
+te--floor--face pleck ans a nigger's; undt fen I look to see who udt
+iss,--_udt is Mississ Reisen_! Toctor, I vish you come right off! I
+couldn't shtayndt udt you toandt come right avay!"
+
+"I'll come," said the Doctor, without rising; "just write your name and
+address on that little white slate yonder."
+
+"Toctor," said the German, extending and dipping his hat, "I'm ferra
+much a-velcome to you, Toctor; undt tat's yoost fot te pottekerra by
+mine corner sayt you vould too. He sayss, 'Reisen,' he sayss, 'you yoost
+co to Toctor Tsewier.'" He bent his great body over the farther end of
+the table and slowly worked out his name, street, and number. "Dtere udt
+iss, Toctor; I put udt town on teh schlate; ovver, I hope you ugscooce
+te hayndtwriding."
+
+"Very well. That's right. That's all."
+
+The German lingered. The Doctor gave a bow of dismission.
+
+"That's all, I say. I'll be there in a moment. That's all. Dan, order my
+carriage!"
+
+"Yentlemen, you vill ugscooce me?"
+
+The German withdrew, returning each gentleman's bow with a faint wave of
+the hat.
+
+During this interview the more polished stranger had sat with bowed
+head, motionless and silent, lifting it only once and for a moment at
+the German's emotional outburst. Then the upward and backward turned
+face was marked with a commiseration partly artificial, but also partly
+natural. He now looked up at the Doctor.
+
+"I shall have to leave you," said the Doctor.
+
+"Certainly, sir," replied the other; "by all means!" The willingness
+was slightly overdone and the benevolence of tone was mixed with
+complacency. "By all means," he said again; "this is one of those cases
+where it is only a proper grace in the higher to yield place to the
+lower." He waited for a response, but the Doctor merely frowned into
+space and called for his boots. The visitor resumed:--
+
+"I have a good deal of feeling, sir, for the unlettered and the vulgar.
+They have their station, but they have also--though doubtless in smaller
+capacity than we--their pleasures and pains."
+
+Seeing the Doctor ready to go, he began to rise.
+
+"I may not be gone long," said the physician, rather coldly; "if you
+choose to wait"--
+
+"I thank you; n-no-o"--The visitor stopped between a sitting and a
+rising posture.
+
+"Here are books," said the Doctor, "and the evening papers,--'Picayune,'
+'Delta,' 'True Delta.'" It seemed for a moment as though the gentleman
+might sink into his seat again. "And there's the 'New York Herald.'"
+
+"No, sir!" said the visitor quickly, rising and smoothing himself out;
+"nothing from that quarter, if you please." Yet he smiled. The Doctor
+did not notice that, while so smiling, he took his card from the table.
+There was something familiar in the stranger's face which the Doctor was
+trying to make out. They left the house together. Outside the street
+door the physician made apologetic allusion to their interrupted
+interview.
+
+"Shall I see you at my office to-morrow? I would be happy"--
+
+The stranger had raised his hat. He smiled again, as pleasantly as he
+could, which was not delightful, and said, after a moment's
+hesitation:--
+
+"--Possibly."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+A PANTOMIME.
+
+
+It chanced one evening about this time--the vernal equinox had just
+passed--that from some small cause Richling, who was generally detained
+at the desk until a late hour, was home early. The air was soft and
+warm, and he stood out a little beyond his small front door-step,
+lifting his head to inhale the universal fragrance, and looking in
+every moment, through the unlighted front room, toward a part of the
+diminutive house where a mild rattle of domestic movements could be
+heard, and whence he had, a little before, been adroitly requested to
+absent himself. He moved restlessly on his feet, blowing a soft tune.
+
+Presently he placed a foot on the step and a hand on the door-post, and
+gave a low, urgent call.
+
+A distant response indicated that his term of suspense was nearly over.
+He turned about again once or twice, and a moment later Mary appeared in
+the door, came down upon the sidewalk, looked up into the moonlit sky
+and down the empty, silent street, then turned and sat down, throwing
+her wrists across each other in her lap, and lifting her eyes to her
+husband's with a smile that confessed her fatigue.
+
+The moon was regal. It cast its deep contrasts of clear-cut light and
+shadow among the thin, wooden, unarchitectural forms and weed-grown
+vacancies of the half-settled neighborhood, investing the matter-of-fact
+with mystery, and giving an unexpected charm to the unpicturesque. It
+was--as Richling said, taking his place beside his wife--midspring in
+March. As he spoke he noticed she had brought with her the odor of
+flowers. They were pinned at her throat.
+
+"Where did you get them?" he asked, touching them with his fingers.
+
+Her face lighted up.
+
+"Guess."
+
+How could he guess? As far as he knew neither she nor he had made an
+acquaintance in the neighborhood. He shook his head, and she replied:--
+
+"The butcher."
+
+"You're a queer girl," he said, when they had laughed.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"You let these common people take to you so."
+
+She smiled, with a faint air of concern.
+
+"You don't dislike it, do you?" she asked.
+
+"Oh, no," he said, indifferently, and spoke of other things.
+
+And thus they sat, like so many thousands and thousands of young pairs
+in this wide, free America, offering the least possible interest to
+the great human army round about them, but sharing, or believing they
+shared, in the fruitful possibilities of this land of limitless bounty,
+fondling their hopes and recounting the petty minutiae of their daily
+experiences. Their converse was mainly in the form of questions from
+Mary and answers from John.
+
+"And did he say that he would?" etc. "And didn't you insist that he
+should?" etc. "I don't understand how he could require you to," etc.,
+etc. Looking at everything from John's side, as if there never could be
+any other, until at last John himself laughed softly when she asked why
+he couldn't take part of some outdoor man's work, and give him part of
+his own desk-work in exchange, and why he couldn't say plainly that his
+work was too sedentary.
+
+Then she proposed a walk in the moonlight, and insisted she was not
+tired; she wanted it on her own account. And so, when Richling had gone
+into the house and returned with some white worsted gauze for her head
+and neck and locked the door, they were ready to start.
+
+They were tarrying a moment to arrange this wrapping when they found it
+necessary to move aside from where they stood in order to let two
+persons pass on the sidewalk.
+
+These were a man and woman, who had at least reached middle age. The
+woman wore a neatly fitting calico gown; the man, a short pilot-coat.
+His pantaloons were very tight and pale. A new soft hat was pushed
+forward from the left rear corner of his closely cropped head, with
+the front of the brim turned down over his right eye. At each step he
+settled down with a little jerk alternately on this hip and that, at the
+same time faintly dropping the corresponding shoulder. They passed. John
+and Mary looked at each other with a nod of mirthful approval. Why?
+Because the strangers walked silently hand-in-hand.
+
+It was a magical night. Even the part of town where they were, so devoid
+of character by day, had become all at once romantic with phantasmal
+lights and glooms, echoes and silences. Along the edge of a wide
+chimney-top on one blank, new hulk of a house, that nothing else could
+have made poetical, a mocking-bird hopped and ran back and forth,
+singing as if he must sing or die. The mere names of the streets they
+traversed suddenly became sweet food for the fancy. Down at the first
+corner below they turned into one that had been an old country road,
+and was still named Felicity.
+
+Richling called attention to the word painted on a board. He merely
+pointed to it in playful silence, and then let his hand sink and rest
+on hers as it lay in his elbow. They were walking under the low boughs
+of a line of fig-trees that overhung a high garden wall. Then some gay
+thought took him; but when his downward glance met the eyes uplifted to
+meet his they were grave, and there came an instantaneous tenderness
+into the exchange of looks that would have been worse than uninteresting
+to you or me. But the next moment she brightened up, pressed herself
+close to him, and caught step. They had not owned each other long enough
+to have settled into sedate possession, though they sometimes thought
+they had done so. There was still a tingling ecstasy in one another's
+touch and glance that prevented them from quite behaving themselves when
+under the moon.
+
+For instance, now, they began, though in cautious undertone, to sing.
+Some person approached them, and they hushed. When the stranger had
+passed, Mary began again another song, alone:--
+
+ "Oh, don't you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?"
+
+"Hush!" said John, softly.
+
+She looked up with an air of mirthful inquiry, and he added:--
+
+"That was the name of Dr. Sevier's wife."
+
+"But he doesn't hear me singing."
+
+"No; but it seems as if he did."
+
+And they sang no more.
+
+They entered a broad, open avenue, with a treeless, grassy way in the
+middle, up which came a very large and lumbering street-car, with
+smokers' benches on the roof, and drawn by tandem horses.
+
+"Here we turn down," said Richling, "into the way of the Naiads." (That
+was the street's name.) "They're not trying to get me away."
+
+He looked down playfully. She was clinging to him with more energy than
+she knew.
+
+"I'd better hold you tight," she answered. Both laughed. The nonsense of
+those we love is better than the finest wit on earth. They walked on in
+their bliss. Shall we follow? Fie!
+
+They passed down across three or four of a group of parallel streets
+named for the nine muses. At Thalia they took the left, went one square,
+and turned up by another street toward home.
+
+Their conversation had flagged. Silence was enough. The great earth was
+beneath their feet, firm and solid; the illimitable distances of the
+heavens stretched above their heads and before their eyes. Here was Mary
+at John's side, and John at hers; John her property and she his, and
+time flowing softly, shiningly on. Yea, even more. If one might believe
+the names of the streets, there were Naiads on the left and Dryads on
+the right; a little farther on, Hercules; yonder corner the dark
+trysting-place of Bacchus and Melpomene; and here, just in advance,
+the corner where Terpsichore crossed the path of Apollo.
+
+They came now along a high, open fence that ran the entire length
+of a square. Above it a dense rank of bitter orange-trees overhung the
+sidewalk, their dark mass of foliage glittering in the moonlight. Within
+lay a deep, old-fashioned garden. Its white shell-walks gleamed in many
+directions. A sweet breath came from its parterres of mingled hyacinths
+and jonquils that hid themselves every moment in black shadows of
+lagustrums and laurestines. Here, in severe order, a pair of palms, prim
+as mediaeval queens, stood over against each other; and in the midst of
+the garden, rising high against the sky, appeared the pillared veranda
+and immense, four-sided roof of an old French colonial villa, as it
+stands unchanged to-day.
+
+The two loiterers slackened their pace to admire the scene. There was
+much light shining from the house. Mary could hear voices, and, in a
+moment, words. The host was speeding his parting guests.
+
+"The omnibus will put you out only one block from the hotel," some one
+said.
+
+ * * *
+
+Dr. Sevier, returning home from a visit to a friend in Polymnia street,
+had scarcely got well seated in the omnibus before he witnessed from its
+window a singular dumb show. He had handed his money up to the driver as
+they crossed Euterpe street, had received the change and deposited his
+fare as they passed Terpsichore, and was just sitting down when the only
+other passenger in the vehicle said, half-rising:--
+
+"Hello! there's going to be a shooting scrape!"
+
+A rather elderly man and woman on the sidewalk, both of them extremely
+well dressed, and seemingly on the eve of hailing the omnibus, suddenly
+transferred their attention to a younger couple a few steps from them,
+who appeared to have met them entirely by accident. The elderly lady
+threw out her arms toward the younger man with an expression on her face
+of intensest mental suffering. She seemed to cry out; but the deafening
+rattle of the omnibus, as it approached them, intercepted the sound.
+All four of the persons seemed, in various ways, to experience the most
+violent feelings. The young man more than once moved as if about to
+start forward, yet did not advance; his companion, a small, very shapely
+woman, clung to him excitedly and pleadingly. The older man shook a
+stout cane at the younger, talking furiously as he did so. He held the
+elderly lady to him with his arm thrown about her, while she now cast
+her hands upward, now covered her face with them, now wrung them,
+clasped them, or extended one of them in seeming accusation against the
+younger person of her own sex. In a moment the omnibus was opposite the
+group. The Doctor laid his hand on his fellow-passenger's arm.
+
+"Don't get out. There will be no shooting."
+
+The young man on the sidewalk suddenly started forward, with his
+companion still on his farther arm, and with his eyes steadily fixed on
+those of the elder and taller man, a clenched fist lifted defensively,
+and with a tense, defiant air walked hurriedly and silently by within
+easy sweep of the uplifted staff. At the moment when the slight distance
+between the two men began to increase, the cane rose higher, but stopped
+short in its descent and pointed after the receding figure.
+
+"I command you to leave this town, sir!"
+
+Dr. Sevier looked. He looked with all his might, drawing his knee under
+him on the cushion and leaning out. The young man had passed. He still
+moved on, turning back as he went a face full of the fear that men show
+when they are afraid of their own violence; and, as the omnibus
+clattered away, he crossed the street at the upper corner and
+disappeared in the shadows.
+
+"That's a very strange thing," said the other passenger to Dr. Sevier,
+as they resumed the corner seats by the door.
+
+"It certainly is!" replied the Doctor, and averted his face. For when
+the group and he were nearest together and the moon shone brightly
+upon the four, he saw, beyond all question, that the older man was his
+visitor of a few evenings before and that the younger pair were John and
+Mary Richling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+"SHE'S ALL THE WORLD."
+
+
+Excellent neighborhood, St. Mary street, and Prytania was even better.
+Everybody was very retired though, it seemed. Almost every house
+standing in the midst of its shady garden,--sunny gardens are a newer
+fashion of the town,--a bell-knob on the gate-post, and the gate locked.
+But the Richlings cared nothing for this; not even what they should have
+cared. Nor was there any unpleasantness in another fact.
+
+"Do you let this window stand wide this way when you are at work here,
+all day?" asked the husband. The opening alluded to was on Prytania
+street, and looked across the way to where the asylumed widows of "St
+Anna's" could glance down into it over their poor little window-gardens.
+
+"Why, yes, dear!" Mary looked up from her little cane rocker with that
+thoughtful contraction at the outer corners of her eyes and that
+illuminated smile that between them made half her beauty. And then,
+somewhat more gravely and persuasively: "Don't you suppose they like it?
+They must like it. I think we can do that much for them. Would you
+rather I'd shut it?"
+
+For answer John laid his hand on her head and gazed into her eyes.
+
+"Take care," she whispered; "they'll see you."
+
+He let his arm drop in amused despair.
+
+"Why, what's the window open for? And, anyhow, they're all abed and
+asleep these two hours."
+
+They did like it, those aged widows. It fed their hearts' hunger to
+see the pretty unknown passing and repassing that open window in the
+performance of her morning duties, or sitting down near it with her
+needle, still crooning her soft morning song,--poor, almost as poor as
+they, in this world's glitter; but rich in hope and courage, and rich
+beyond all count in the content of one who finds herself queen of ever
+so little a house, where love is.
+
+"Love is enough!" said the widows.
+
+And certainly she made it seem so. The open window brought, now and
+then, a moisture to the aged eyes, yet they liked it open.
+
+But, without warning one day, there was a change. It was the day after
+Dr. Sevier had noticed that queer street quarrel. The window was not
+closed, but it sent out no more light. The song was not heard, and many
+small, faint signs gave indication that anxiety had come to be a guest
+in the little house. At evening the wife was seen in her front door and
+about its steps, watching in a new, restless way for her husband's
+coming; and when he came it could be seen, all the way from those upper
+windows, where one or two faces appeared now and then, that he was
+troubled and care-worn. There were two more days like this one; but at
+the end of the fourth the wife read good tidings in her husband's
+countenance. He handed her a newspaper, and pointed to a list of
+departing passengers.
+
+"They're gone!" she exclaimed.
+
+He nodded, and laid off his hat. She cast her arms about his neck, and
+buried her head in his bosom. You could almost have seen Anxiety flying
+out at the window. By morning the widows knew of a certainty that the
+cloud had melted away.
+
+In the counting-room one evening, as Richling said good-night with
+noticeable alacrity, one of his employers, sitting with his legs crossed
+over the top of a desk, said to his partner:--
+
+"Richling works for his wages."
+
+"That's all," replied the other; "he don't see his interests in ours any
+more than a tinsmith would, who comes to mend the roof."
+
+The first one took a meditative puff or two from his cigar, tipped off
+its ashes, and responded:--
+
+"Common fault. He completely overlooks his immense indebtedness to the
+world at large, and his dependence on it. He's a good fellow, and
+bright; but he actually thinks that he and the world are starting even."
+
+"His wife's his world," said the other, and opened the Bills Payable
+book. Who will say it is not well to sail in an ocean of love? But the
+Richlings were becalmed in theirs, and, not knowing it, were satisfied.
+
+Day in, day out, the little wife sat at her window, and drove her
+needle. Omnibuses rumbled by; an occasional wagon or cart set the dust
+a-flying; the street venders passed, crying the praises of their goods
+and wares; the blue sky grew more and more intense as weeks piled up
+upon weeks; but the empty repetitions, and the isolation, and, worst of
+all, the escape of time,--she smiled at all, and sewed on and crooned
+on, in the sufficient thought that John would come, each time, when only
+hours enough had passed away forever.
+
+Once she saw Dr. Sevier's carriage. She bowed brightly, but he--what
+could it mean?--he lifted his hat with such austere gravity. Dr. Sevier
+was angry. He had no definite charge to make, but that did not lessen
+his displeasure. After long, unpleasant wondering, and long trusting to
+see Richling some day on the street, he had at length driven by this
+way purposely to see if they had indeed left town, as they had been so
+imperiously commanded to do.
+
+This incident, trivial as it was, roused Mary to thought; and all the
+rest of the day the thought worked with energy to dislodge the frame of
+mind that she had acquired from her husband.
+
+When John came home that night and pressed her to his bosom she was
+silent. And when he held her off a little and looked into her eyes, and
+she tried to better her smile, those eyes stood full to the lashes and
+she looked down.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked he, quickly.
+
+"Nothing!" She looked up again, with a little laugh.
+
+He took a chair and drew her down upon his lap.
+
+"What's the matter with my girl?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"How,--you don't know?"
+
+"Why, I simply don't. I can't make out what it is. If I could I'd tell
+you; but I don't know at all." After they had sat silent a few
+moments:--
+
+"I wonder"--she began.
+
+"You wonder what?" asked he, in a rallying tone.
+
+"I wonder if there's such a thing as being too contented."
+
+Richling began to hum, with a playful manner:--
+
+ "'And she's all the world to me.'
+
+Is that being too"--
+
+"Stop!" said Mary. "That's it." She laid her hand upon his shoulder.
+"You've said it. That's what I ought not to be!"
+
+"Why, Mary, what on earth"-- His face flamed up "John, I'm willing to
+be _more_ than all the rest of the world to you. I always must be
+that. I'm going to be that forever. And you"--she kissed him
+passionately--"you're all the world to me! But I've no right to be _all_
+the world to _you_. And you mustn't allow it. It's making it too small!"
+
+"Mary, what are you saying?"
+
+"Don't, John. Don't speak that way. I'm not saying anything. I'm only
+trying to say something, I don't know what."
+
+"Neither do I," was the mock-rueful answer.
+
+"I only know," replied Mary, the vision of Dr. Sevier's carriage
+passing before her abstracted eyes, and of the Doctor's pale face bowing
+austerely within it, "that if you don't take any part or interest in the
+outside world it'll take none in you; do you think it will?"
+
+"And who cares if it doesn't?" cried John, clasping her to his bosom.
+
+"I do," she replied. "Yes, I do. I've no right to steal you from the
+rest of the world, or from the place in it that you ought to fill.
+John"--
+
+"That's my name."
+
+"Why can't I do something to help you?"
+
+John lifted his head unnecessarily.
+
+"No!"
+
+"Well, then, let's think of something we can do, without just waiting
+for the wind to blow us along,--I mean," she added appeasingly, "I mean
+without waiting to be employed by others."
+
+"Oh, yes; but that takes capital!"
+
+"Yes, I know; but why don't you think up something,--some new enterprise
+or something,--and get somebody with capital to go in with you?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"You're out of your depth. And that wouldn't make so much difference,
+but you're out of mine. It isn't enough to think of something; you must
+know how to do it. And what do I know how to do? Nothing! Nothing that's
+worth doing!"
+
+"I know one thing you could do."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"You could be a professor in a college."
+
+John smiled bitterly.
+
+"Without antecedents?" he asked.
+
+Their eyes met; hers dropped, and both voices were silent. Mary drew a
+soft sigh. She thought their talk had been unprofitable. But it had not.
+John laid hold of work from that day on in a better and wiser spirit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE BOUGH BREAKS.
+
+
+By some trivial chance, she hardly knew what, Mary found herself one day
+conversing at her own door with the woman whom she and her husband had
+once smiled at for walking the moonlit street with her hand in willing
+and undisguised captivity. She was a large and strong, but extremely
+neat, well-spoken, and good-looking Irish woman, who might have seemed
+at ease but for a faintly betrayed ambition.
+
+She praised with rather ornate English the good appearance and
+convenient smallness of Mary's house; said her own was the same size.
+That person with whom she sometimes passed "of a Sundeh"--yes, and
+moonlight evenings--that was her husband. He was "ferst ingineeur" on a
+steam-boat. There was a little, just discernible waggle in her head as
+she stated things. It gave her decided character.
+
+"Ah! engineer," said Mary.
+
+"_Ferst_ ingineeur," repeated the woman; "you know there bees ferst
+ingineeurs, an' secon' ingineeurs, an' therd ingineeurs. Yes." She
+unconsciously fanned herself with a dust-pan that she had just bought
+from a tin peddler.
+
+She lived only some two or three hundred yards away, around the corner,
+in a tidy little cottage snuggled in among larger houses in Coliseum
+street. She had had children, but she had lost them; and Mary's
+sympathy when she told her of them--the girl and two boys--won the
+woman as much as the little lady's pretty manners had dazed her. It was
+not long before she began to drop in upon Mary in the hour of twilight,
+and sit through it without speaking often, or making herself especially
+interesting in any way, but finding it pleasant, notwithstanding.
+
+"John," said Mary,--her husband had come in unexpectedly,--"our
+neighbor, Mrs. Riley."
+
+John's bow was rather formal, and Mrs. Riley soon rose and said
+good-evening.
+
+"John," said the wife again, laying her hands on his shoulders as she
+tiptoed to kiss him, "what troubles you?" Then she attempted a rallying
+manner: "Don't my friends suit you?"
+
+He hesitated only an instant, and said:--
+
+"Oh, yes, that's all right!"
+
+"Well, then, I don't see why you look so."
+
+"I've finished the task I was to do."
+
+"What! you haven't"--
+
+"I'm out of employment."
+
+They went and sat down on the little hair-cloth sofa that Mrs. Riley had
+just left.
+
+"I thought they said they would have other work for you."
+
+"They said they might have; but it seems they haven't."
+
+"And it's just in the opening of summer, too," said Mary; "why, what
+right"--
+
+"Oh!"--a despairing gesture and averted gaze--"they've a perfect right
+if they think best. I asked them that myself at first--not too politely,
+either; but I soon saw I was wrong."
+
+They sat without speaking until it had grown quite dark. Then John said,
+with a long breath, as he rose:--
+
+"It passes my comprehension."
+
+"What passes it?" asked Mary, detaining him by one hand.
+
+"The reason why we are so pursued by misfortunes."
+
+"But, John," she said, still holding him, "_is_ it misfortune? When I
+know so well that you deserve to succeed, I think maybe it's good
+fortune in disguise, after all. Don't you think it's possible? You
+remember how it was last time, when A., B., & Co. failed. Maybe the best
+of all is to come now!" She beamed with courage. "Why, John, it seems to
+me I'd just go in the very best of spirits, the first thing to-morrow,
+and tell Dr. Sevier you are looking for work. Don't you think it
+might"--
+
+"I've been there."
+
+"Have you? What did he say?"
+
+"He wasn't in."
+
+ * * *
+
+There was another neighbor, with whom John and Mary did not get
+acquainted. Not that it was more his fault than theirs; it may have been
+less. Unfortunately for the Richlings there was in their dwelling no
+toddling, self-appointed child commissioner to find his way in unwatched
+moments to the play-ground of some other toddler, and so plant the good
+seed of neighbor acquaintanceship.
+
+This neighbor passed four times a day. A man of fortune, aged a hale
+sixty or so, who came and stood on the corner, and sometimes even rested
+a foot on Mary's door-step, waiting for the Prytania omnibus, and who,
+on his returns, got down from the omnibus step a little gingerly, went
+by Mary's house, and presently shut himself inside a very ornamental
+iron gate, a short way up St. Mary street. A child would have made him
+acquainted. Even as it was, they did not escape his silent notice. It
+was pleasant for him, from whose life the early dew had been dried away
+by a well-risen sun, to recall its former freshness by glimpses of this
+pair of young beginners. It was like having a bird's nest under his
+window.
+
+John, stepping backward from his door one day, saying a last word to his
+wife, who stood on the threshold, pushed against this neighbor as he was
+moving with somewhat cumbersome haste to catch the stage, turned
+quickly, and raised his hat.
+
+"Pardon!"
+
+The other uncovered his bald head and circlet of white, silken locks,
+and hurried on to the conveyance.
+
+"President of one of the banks down-town," whispered John.
+
+That is the nearest they ever came to being acquainted. And even this
+accident might not have occurred had not the man of snowy locks been
+glancing at Mary as he passed instead of at his omnibus.
+
+As he sat at home that evening he remarked:--
+
+"Very pretty little woman that, my dear, that lives in the little house
+at the corner; who is she?"
+
+The lady responded, without lifting her eyes from the newspaper in which
+she was interested; she did not know. The husband mused and twirled his
+penknife between a finger and thumb.
+
+"They seem to be starting at the bottom," he observed.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Yes; much the same as we did."
+
+"I haven't noticed them particularly."
+
+"They're worth noticing," said the banker.
+
+He threw one fat knee over the other, and laid his head on the back of
+his easy-chair.
+
+The lady's eyes were still on her paper, but she asked:--
+
+"Would you like me to go and see them?"
+
+"No, no--unless you wish."
+
+She dropped the paper into her lap with a smile and a sigh.
+
+"Don't propose it. I have so much going to do"-- She paused, removed her
+glasses, and fell to straightening the fringe of the lamp-mat. "Of
+course, if you think they're in need of a friend; but from your
+description"--
+
+"No," he answered, quickly, "not at all. They've friends, no doubt.
+Everything about them has a neat, happy look. That's what attracted my
+notice. They've got friends, you may depend." He ceased, took up a
+pamphlet, and adjusted his glasses. "I think I saw a sofa going in there
+to-day as I came to dinner. A little expansion, I suppose."
+
+"It was going out," said the only son, looking up from a story-book.
+
+But the banker was reading. He heard nothing, and the word was not
+repeated. He did not divine that a little becalmed and befogged bark,
+with only two lovers in her, too proud to cry "Help!" had drifted just
+yonder upon the rocks, and, spar by spar and plank by plank, was
+dropping into the smooth, unmerciful sea.
+
+Before the sofa went there had gone, little by little, some smaller
+valuables.
+
+"You see," said Mary to her husband, with the bright hurry of a wife
+bent upon something high-handed, "we both have to have furniture; we
+must have it; and I don't have to have jewelry. Don't you see?"
+
+"No, I"--
+
+"Now, John!" There could be but one end to the debate; she had
+determined that. The first piece was a bracelet. "No, I wouldn't pawn
+it," she said. "Better sell it outright at once."
+
+But Richling could not but cling to hope and to the adornments that had
+so often clasped her wrists and throat or pinned the folds upon her
+bosom. Piece by piece he pawned them, always looking out ahead with
+strained vision for the improbable, the incredible, to rise to his
+relief.
+
+"Is _nothing_ going to happen, Mary?"
+
+Yes; nothing happened--except in the pawn-shop.
+
+So, all the sooner, the sofa had to go.
+
+"It's no use talking about borrowing," they both said. Then the bureau
+went. Then the table. Then, one by one, the chairs. Very slyly it was
+all done, too. Neighbors mustn't know. "Who lives there?" is a question
+not asked concerning houses as small as theirs; and a young man, in a
+well-fitting suit of only too heavy goods, removing his winter hat to
+wipe the standing drops from his forehead; and a little blush-rose
+woman at his side, in a mist of cool muslin and the cunningest of
+millinery,--these, who always paused a moment, with a lost look, in
+the vestibule of the sepulchral-looking little church on the corner of
+Prytania and Josephine streets, till the sexton ushered them in, and who
+as often contrived, with no end of ingenuity, despite the little woman's
+fresh beauty, to get away after service unaccosted by the elders,--who
+could imagine that _these_ were from so deep a nook in poverty's vale?
+
+There was one person who guessed it: Mrs. Riley, who was not asked to
+walk in any more when she called at the twilight hour. She partly saw
+and partly guessed the truth, and offered what each one of the pair had
+been secretly hoping somebody, anybody, would offer--a loan. But when
+it actually confronted them it was sweetly declined.
+
+"Wasn't it kind?" said Mary; and John said emphatically, "Yes." Very
+soon it was their turn to be kind to Mrs. Riley. They attended her
+husband's funeral. He had been killed by an explosion. Mrs. Riley beat
+upon the bier with her fists, and wailed in a far-reaching voice:--
+
+"O Mike, Mike! Me jew'l, me jew'l! Why didn't ye wait to see the babe
+that's unborn?"
+
+And Mary wept. And when she and John reentered their denuded house she
+fell upon his neck with fresh tears, and kissed him again and again, and
+could utter no word, but knew he understood. Poverty was so much better
+than sorrow! She held him fast, and he her, while he tenderly hushed
+her, lest a grief, the very opposite of Mrs. Riley's, should overtake
+her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+HARD SPEECHES AND HIGH TEMPER.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier found occasion, one morning, to speak at some length, and
+very harshly, to his book-keeper. He had hardly ceased when John
+Richling came briskly in.
+
+"Doctor," he said, with great buoyancy, "how do you do?"
+
+The physician slightly frowned.
+
+"Good-morning, Mr. Richling."
+
+Richling was tamed in an instant; but, to avoid too great a contrast
+of manner, he retained a semblance of sprightliness, as he said:--
+
+"This is the first time I have had this pleasure since you were last
+at our house, Doctor."
+
+"Did you not see me one evening, some time ago, in the omnibus?" asked
+Dr. Sevier.
+
+"Why, no," replied the other, with returning pleasure; "was I in the
+same omnibus?"
+
+"You were on the sidewalk."
+
+"No-o," said Richling, pondering. "I've seen you in your carriage
+several times, but you"--
+
+"I didn't see you."
+
+Richling was stung. The conversation failed. He recommenced it in a tone
+pitched intentionally too low for the alert ear of Narcisse.
+
+"Doctor, I've simply called to say to you that I'm out of work and
+looking for employment again."
+
+"Um--hum," said the Doctor, with a cold fulness of voice that hurt
+Richling afresh. "You'll find it hard to get anything this time of
+year," he continued, with no attempt at undertone; "it's very hard for
+anybody to get anything these days, even when well recommended."
+
+Richling smiled an instant. The Doctor did not, but turned partly away
+to his desk, and added, as if the smile had displeased him:--
+
+"Well, maybe you'll not find it so."
+
+Richling turned fiery red.
+
+"Whether I do or not," he said, rising, "my affairs sha'n't trouble
+anybody. Good-morning!"
+
+He started out.
+
+"How's Mrs. Richling?" asked the Doctor.
+
+"She's well," responded Richling, putting on his hat and disappearing in
+the corridor. Each footstep could be heard as he went down the stairs.
+
+"He's a fool!" muttered the physician.
+
+He looked up angrily, for Narcisse stood before him.
+
+"Well, Doctah," said the Creole, hurriedly arranging his coat-collar,
+and drawing his handkerchief, "I'm goin' ad the poss-office."
+
+"See here, sir!" exclaimed the Doctor, bringing his fist down upon the
+arm of his chair, "every time you've gone out of this office for the
+last six months you've told me you were going to the post-office; now
+don't you ever tell me that again!"
+
+The young man bowed with injured dignity and responded:--
+
+"All a-ight, seh."
+
+He overtook Richling just outside the street entrance. Richling had
+halted there, bereft of intention, almost of outward sense, and
+choking with bitterness. It seemed to him as if in an instant all his
+misfortunes, disappointments, and humiliations, that never before had
+seemed so many or so great, had been gathered up into the knowledge of
+that hard man upstairs, and, with one unmerciful downward wrench, had
+received his seal of approval. Indignation, wrath, self-hatred, dismay,
+in undefined confusion, usurped the faculties of sight and hearing and
+motion.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, "I 'ope you fine you'seff O.K., seh, if
+you'll egscuse the slang expwession."
+
+Richling started to move away, but checked himself.
+
+"I'm well, sir, thank you, sir; yes, sir, I'm very well."
+
+"I billieve you, seh. You ah lookin' well."
+
+Narcisse thrust his hands into his pockets, and turned upon the outer
+sides of his feet, the embodiment of sweet temper. Richling found him a
+wonderful relief at the moment. He quit gnawing his lip and winking into
+vacancy, and felt a malicious good-humor run into all his veins.
+
+"I dunno 'ow 'tis, Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, "but I muz tell you
+the tooth; you always 'ave to me the appe'ance ligue the chile of
+p'ospe'ity."
+
+"Eh?" said Richling, hollowing his hand at his ear,--"child of"--
+
+"P'ospe'ity?"
+
+"Yes--yes," replied the deaf man vaguely, "I--have a relative of that
+name."
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed the Creole, "thass good faw luck! Mistoo Itchlin, look'
+like you a lil mo' hawd to yeh--but egscuse me. I s'pose you muz be
+advancing in business, Mistoo Itchlin. I say I s'pose you muz be gittin'
+along!"
+
+"I? Yes; yes, I must."
+
+He started.
+
+"I'm 'appy to yeh it!" said Narcisse.
+
+His innocent kindness was a rebuke. Richling began to offer a cordial
+parting salutation, but Narcisse said:--
+
+"You goin' that way? Well, I kin go that way."
+
+They went.
+
+"I was goin' ad the poss-office, but"--he waved his hand and curled his
+lip. "Mistoo Itchlin, in fact, if you yeh of something suitable to me I
+would like to yeh it. I am not satisfied with that pless yondeh with
+Doctah Seveeah. I was compel this mawnin', biffo you came in, to 'epoove
+'im faw 'is 'oodness. He called me a jackass, in fact. I woon allow
+that. I 'ad to 'epoove 'im. 'Doctah Seveeah,' says I, 'don't you call me
+a jackass ag'in!' An' 'e din call it me ag'in. No, seh. But 'e din like
+to 'ush up. Thass the rizz'n 'e was a lil miscutteous to you. Me, I am
+always polite. As they say, 'A nod is juz as good as a kick f'om a bline
+hoss.' You are fon' of maxim, Mistoo Itchlin? Me, I'm ve'y fon' of them.
+But they's got one maxim what you may 'ave 'eard--I do not fine that
+maxim always come t'ue. 'Ave you evva yeah that maxim, 'A fool faw
+luck'? That don't always come t'ue. I 'ave discove'd that."
+
+"No," responded Richling, with a parting smile, "that doesn't always
+come true."
+
+Dr. Sevier denounced the world at large, and the American nation in
+particular, for two days. Within himself, for twenty-four hours, he
+grumly blamed Richling for their rupture; then for twenty-four hours
+reproached himself, and, on the morning of the third day knocked at the
+door, corner of St. Mary and Prytania.
+
+No one answered. He knocked again. A woman in bare feet showed herself
+at the corresponding door-way in the farther half of the house.
+
+"Nobody don't live there no more, sir," she said.
+
+"Where have they gone?"
+
+"Well, reely, I couldn't tell you, sir. Because, reely, I don't know
+nothing about it. I haint but jest lately moved in here myself, and I
+don't know nothing about nobody around here scarcely at all."
+
+The Doctor shut himself again in his carriage and let himself be whisked
+away, in great vacuity of mind.
+
+"They can't blame anybody but themselves," was, by-and-by, his rallying
+thought. "Still"--he said to himself after another vacant interval, and
+said no more. The thought that whether _they_ could blame others or not
+did not cover all the ground, rested heavily on him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE CRADLE FALLS.
+
+
+In the rear of the great commercial centre of New Orleans, on that part
+of Common street where it suddenly widens out, broad, unpaved, and
+dusty, rises the huge dull-brown structure of brick, famed, well-nigh
+as far as the city is known, as the Charity Hospital.
+
+Twenty-five years ago, when the emigrant ships used to unload their
+swarms of homeless and friendless strangers into the streets of New
+Orleans to fall a prey to yellow-fever or cholera, that solemn pile
+sheltered thousands on thousands of desolate and plague-stricken Irish
+and Germans, receiving them unquestioned, until at times the very floors
+were covered with the sick and dying, and the sawing and hammering in
+the coffin-shop across the inner court ceased not day or night. Sombre
+monument at once of charity and sin! For, while its comfort and succor
+cost the houseless wanderer nothing, it lived and grew, and lives and
+grows still, upon the licensed vices of the people,--drinking, harlotry,
+and gambling.
+
+The Charity Hospital of St. Charles--such is its true name--is, however,
+no mere plague-house. Whether it ought to be, let doctors decide. How
+good or necessary such modern innovations as "ridge ventilation,"
+"movable bases," the "pavilion plan," "trained nurses," etc., may be,
+let the Auxiliary Sanitary Association say. There it stands as of old,
+innocent of all sins that may be involved in any of these changes,
+rising story over story, up and up: here a ward for poisonous fevers,
+and there a ward for acute surgical cases; here a story full of simple
+ailments, and there a ward specially set aside for women.
+
+In 1857 this last was Dr. Sevier's ward. Here, at his stated hour one
+summer morning in that year, he tarried a moment, yonder by that window,
+just where you enter the ward and before you come to the beds. He had
+fallen into discourse with some of the more inquiring minds among the
+train of students that accompanied him, and waited there to finish and
+cool down to a physician's proper temperature. The question was public
+sanitation.
+
+He was telling a tall Arkansan, with high-combed hair, self-conscious
+gloves, and very broad, clean-shaven lower jaw, how the peculiar
+formation of delta lands, by which they drain away from the larger
+watercourses, instead of into them, had made the swamp there in the rear
+of the town, for more than a century, "the common dumping-ground and
+cesspool of the city, sir!"
+
+Some of the students nodded convincedly to the speaker; some looked
+askance at the Arkansan, who put one forearm meditatively under his
+coat-tail; some looked through the window over the regions alluded to,
+and some only changed their pose and looked around for a mirror.
+
+The Doctor spoke on. Several of his hearers were really interested in
+the then unusual subject, and listened intelligently as he pointed
+across the low plain at hundreds of acres of land that were nothing but
+a morass, partly filled in with the foulest refuse of a semi-tropical
+city, and beyond it where still lay the swamp, half cleared of its
+forest and festering in the sun--"every drop of its waters, and every
+inch of its mire," said the Doctor, "saturated with the poisonous
+drainage of the town!"
+
+"I happen," interjected a young city student; but the others bent their
+ear to the Doctor, who continued:--
+
+"Why, sir, were these regions compactly built on, like similar areas in
+cities confined to narrow sites, the mortality, with the climate we
+have, would be frightful."
+
+"I happen to know," essayed the city student; but the Arkansan had made
+an interrogatory answer to the Doctor, that led him to add:--
+
+"Why, yes; you see the houses here on these lands are little, flimsy,
+single ground-story affairs, loosely thrown together, and freely exposed
+to sun and air."
+
+"I hap--," said the city student.
+
+"And yet," exclaimed the Doctor, "Malaria is king!"
+
+He paused an instant for his hearers to take in the figure.
+
+"Doctor, I happen to"--
+
+Some one's fist from behind caused the speaker to turn angrily, and the
+Doctor resumed:--
+
+"Go into any of those streets off yonder,--Treme, Prieur, Marais. Why,
+there are often ponds under the houses! The floors of bedrooms are
+within a foot or two of these ponds! The bricks of the surrounding
+pavements are often covered with a fine, dark moss! Water seeps up
+through the sidewalks! That's his realm, sir! Here and there among the
+residents--every here and there--you'll see his sallow, quaking subjects
+dragging about their work or into and out of their beds, until a fear
+of a fatal ending drives them in here. Congestion? Yes, sometimes
+congestion pulls them under suddenly, and they're gone before they know
+it. Sometimes their vitality wanes slowly, until Malaria beckons in
+Consumption."
+
+"Why, Doctor," said the city student, ruffling with pride of his town,
+"there are plenty of cities as bad as this. I happen to know, for
+instance"--
+
+Dr. Sevier turned away in quiet contempt.
+
+"It will not improve our town to dirty others, or to clean them,
+either."
+
+He moved down the ward, while two or three members among the moving
+train, who never happened to know anything, nudged each other joyfully.
+
+The group stretched out and came along, the Doctor first and the
+young men after, some of one sort, some of another,--the dull, the
+frivolous, the earnest, the kind, the cold,--following slowly, pausing,
+questioning, discoursing, advancing, moving from each clean, slender bed
+to the next, on this side and on that, down and up the long sanded
+aisles, among the poor, sick women.
+
+Among these, too, there was variety. Some were stupid and ungracious,
+hardened and dulled with long penury as some in this world are hardened
+and dulled with long riches. Some were as fat as beggars; some were old
+and shrivelled; some were shrivelled and young; some were bold; some
+were frightened; and here and there was one almost fair.
+
+Down at the far end of one aisle was a bed whose occupant lay watching
+the distant, slowly approaching group with eyes of unspeakable dread.
+There was not a word or motion, only the steadfast gaze. Gradually the
+throng drew near. The faces of the students could be distinguished.
+This one was coarse; that one was gentle; another was sleepy; another
+trivial and silly; another heavy and sour; another tender and gracious.
+Presently the tones of the Doctor's voice could be heard, soft, clear,
+and without that trumpet quality that it had beyond the sick-room. How
+slowly, yet how surely, they came! The patient's eyes turned away toward
+the ceiling; they could not bear the slowness of the encounter. They
+closed; the lips moved in prayer. The group came to the bed that was
+only the fourth away; then to the third; then to the second. There
+they pause some minutes. Now the Doctor approaches the very next bed.
+Suddenly he notices this patient. She is a small woman, young, fair to
+see, and, with closed eyes and motionless form, is suffering an agony of
+consternation. One startled look, a suppressed exclamation, two steps
+forward,--the patient's eyes slowly open. Ah, me! It is Mary Richling.
+
+"Good-morning, madam," said the physician, with a cold and distant bow;
+and to the students, "We'll pass right along to the other side," and
+they moved into the next aisle.
+
+"I am a little pressed for time this morning," he presently remarked, as
+the students showed some unwillingness to be hurried. As soon as he
+could he parted with them and returned to the ward alone.
+
+As he moved again down among the sick, straight along this time, turning
+neither to right nor left, one of the Sisters of Charity--the hospital
+and its so-called nurses are under their oversight--touched his arm. He
+stopped impatiently.
+
+"Well, Sister"--(bowing his ear).
+
+"I--I--the--the"--His frown had scared away her power of speech.
+
+"Well, what is it, Sister?"
+
+"The--the last patient down on this side"--
+
+He was further displeased. "_I'll_ attend to the patients, Sister," he
+said; and then, more kindly, "I'm going there now. No, you stay here, if
+you please." And he left her behind.
+
+He came and stood by the bed. The patient gazed on him.
+
+"Mrs. Richling," he softly began, and had to cease.
+
+She did not speak or move; she tried to smile, but her eyes filled, her
+lips quivered.
+
+"My dear madam," exclaimed the physician, in a low voice, "what brought
+you here?"
+
+The answer was inarticulate, but he saw it on the moving lips.
+
+"Want," said Mary.
+
+"But your husband?" He stooped to catch the husky answer.
+
+"Home."
+
+"Home?" He could not understand. "Not gone to--back--up the river?"
+
+She slowly shook her head: "No, home. In Prieur street."
+
+Still her words were riddles. He could not see how she had come to this.
+He stood silent, not knowing how to utter his thought. At length he
+opened his lips to speak, hesitated an instant, and then asked:--
+
+"Mrs. Richling, tell me plainly, has your husband gone wrong?"
+
+Her eyes looked up a moment, upon him, big and staring, and suddenly she
+spoke:--
+
+"O Doctor! My husband go wrong? John go wrong?" The eyelids closed down,
+the head rocked slowly from side to side on the flat hospital pillow,
+and the first two tears he had ever seen her shed welled from the long
+lashes and slipped down her cheeks.
+
+"My poor child!" said the Doctor, taking her hand in his. "No, no! God
+forgive me! He hasn't gone wrong; he's not going wrong. You'll tell me
+all about it when you're stronger."
+
+The Doctor had her removed to one of the private rooms of the pay-ward,
+and charged the Sisters to take special care of her. "Above all things,"
+he murmured, with a beetling frown, "tell that thick-headed nurse not to
+let her know that this is at anybody's expense. Ah, yes; and when her
+husband comes, tell him to see me at my office as soon as he possibly
+can."
+
+As he was leaving the hospital gate he had an afterthought. "I might
+have left a note." He paused, with his foot on the carriage-step. "I
+suppose they'll tell him,"--and so he got in and drove off, looking at
+his watch.
+
+On his second visit, although he came in with a quietly inspiring
+manner, he had also, secretly, the feeling of a culprit. But, midway of
+the room, when the young head on the pillow turned its face toward him,
+his heart rose. For the patient smiled. As he drew nearer she slid out
+her feeble hand. "I'm glad I came here," she murmured.
+
+"Yes," he replied; "this room is much better than the open ward."
+
+"I didn't mean this room," she said. "I meant the whole hospital."
+
+"The whole hospital!" He raised his eyebrows, as to a child.
+
+"Ah! Doctor," she responded, her eyes kindling, though moist.
+
+"What, my child?"
+
+She smiled upward to his bent face.
+
+"The poor--mustn't be ashamed of the poor, must they?"
+
+The Doctor only stroked her brow, and presently turned and addressed his
+professional inquiries to the nurse. He went away. Just outside the door
+he asked the nurse:--
+
+"Hasn't her husband been here?"
+
+"Yes," was the reply, "but she was asleep, and he only stood there at
+the door and looked in a bit. He trembled," the unintelligent woman
+added, for the Doctor seemed waiting to hear more,--"he trembled all
+over; and that's all he did, excepting his saying her name over to
+himself like, over and over, and wiping of his eyes."
+
+"And nobody told him anything?"
+
+"Oh, not a word, sir!" came the eager answer.
+
+"You didn't tell him to come and see me?"
+
+The woman gave a start, looked dismayed, and began:--
+
+"N-no, sir; you didn't tell"--
+
+"Um--hum," growled the Doctor. He took out a card and wrote on it. "Now
+see if you can remember to give him that."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+MANY WATERS.
+
+
+As the day faded away it began to rain. The next morning the water was
+coming down in torrents. Richling, looking out from a door in Prieur
+street, found scant room for one foot on the inner edge of the sidewalk;
+all the rest was under water. By noon the sidewalks were completely
+covered in miles of streets. By two in the afternoon the flood was
+coming into many of the houses. By three it was up at the door-sill on
+which he stood. There it stopped.
+
+He could do nothing but stand and look. Skiffs, canoes, hastily
+improvised rafts, were moving in every direction, carrying the unsightly
+chattels of the poor out of their overflowed cottages to higher ground.
+Barrels, boxes, planks, hen-coops, bridge lumber, piles of straw that
+waltzed solemnly as they went, cord-wood, old shingles, door-steps,
+floated here and there in melancholy confusion; and down upon all still
+drizzled the slackening rain. At length it ceased.
+
+Richling still stood in the door-way, the picture of mute helplessness.
+Yes, there was one other thing he could do; he could laugh. It would
+have been hard to avoid it sometimes, there were such ludicrous
+sights,--such slips and sprawls into the water; so there he stood in
+that peculiar isolation that deaf people content themselves with, now
+looking the picture of anxious waiting, now indulging a low, deaf man's
+chuckle when something made the rowdies and slatterns of the street
+roar.
+
+Presently he noticed, at a distance up the way, a young man in a canoe,
+passing, much to their good-natured chagrin, a party of three in a
+skiff, who had engaged him in a trial of speed. From both boats a shower
+of hilarious French was issuing. At the nearest corner the skiff party
+turned into another street and disappeared, throwing their lingual
+fireworks to the last. The canoe came straight on with the speed of a
+fish. Its dexterous occupant was no other than Narcisse.
+
+There was a grace in his movement that kept Richling's eyes on him, when
+he would rather have withdrawn into the house. Down went the paddle
+always on the same side, noiselessly, in front; on darted the canoe;
+backward stretched the submerged paddle and came out of the water
+edgewise at full reach behind, with an almost imperceptible swerving
+motion that kept the slender craft true to its course. No rocking; no
+rush of water before or behind; only the one constant glassy ripple
+gliding on either side as silently as a beam of light. Suddenly, without
+any apparent change of movement in the sinewy wrists, the narrow shell
+swept around in a quarter circle, and Narcisse sat face to face with
+Richling.
+
+Each smiled brightly at the other. The handsome Creole's face was aglow
+with the pure delight of existence.
+
+"Well, Mistoo Itchlin, 'ow you enjoyin' that watah? As fah as myseff am
+concerned, 'I am afloat, I am afloat on the fee-us 'olling tide.' I
+don't think you fine that stweet pwetty dusty to-day, Mistoo Itchlin?"
+
+Richling laughed.
+
+"It don't inflame my eyes to-day," he said.
+
+"You muz egscuse my i'ony, Mistoo Itchlin; I can't 'ep that sometime'.
+It come natu'al to me, in fact. I was on'y speaking i'oniously juz now
+in calling allusion to that dust; because, of co'se, theh is no dust
+to-day, because the g'ound is all covvud with watah, in fact. Some
+people don't understand that figgah of i'ony."
+
+"I don't understand as much about it myself as I'd like to," said
+Richling.
+
+"Me, I'm ve'y fon' of it," responded the Creole. "I was making seve'al
+i'onies ad those fwen' of mine juz now. We was 'unning a 'ace. An' thass
+anotheh thing I am fon' of. I would 'ather 'un a 'ace than to wuck faw a
+livin'. Ha! ha! ha! I should thing so! Anybody would, in fact. But thass
+the way with me--always making some i'onies." He stopped with a sudden
+change of countenance, and resumed gravely: "Mistoo Itchlin, looks to me
+like you' lookin' ve'y salad." He fanned himself with his hat. "I dunno
+'ow 'tis with you, Mistoo Itchlin, but I fine myseff ve'y oppwessive
+thiz evening."
+
+"I don't find you so," said Richling, smiling broadly.
+
+And he did not. The young Creole's burning face and resplendent wit were
+a sunset glow in the darkness of this day of overpowering adversity. His
+presence even supplied, for a moment, what seemed a gleam of hope. Why
+wasn't there here an opportunity to visit the hospital? He need not tell
+Narcisse the object of his visit.
+
+"Do you think," asked Richling, persuasively, crouching down upon one of
+his heels, "that I could sit in that thing without turning it over?"
+
+"In that pee-ogue?" Narcisse smiled the smile of the proficient as he
+waved his paddle across the canoe. "Mistoo Itchlin,"--the smile passed
+off,--"I dunno if you'll billiv me, but at the same time I muz tell you
+the tooth?"--
+
+He paused inquiringly.
+
+"Certainly," said Richling, with evident disappointment.
+
+"Well, it's juz a poss'bil'ty that you'll wefwain fum spillin' out
+fum yeh till the negs cawneh. Thass the manneh of those who ah not
+acquainted with the pee-ogue. 'Lost to sight, to memo'y deah'--if you'll
+egscuse the maxim. Thass Chawles Dickens mague use of that egspwession."
+
+Richling answered with a gay shake of the head. "I'll keep out of it."
+If Narcisse detected his mortified chagrin, he did not seem to. It was
+hard; the day's last hope was blown out like a candle in the wind.
+Richling dared not risk the wetting of his suit of clothes; they were
+his sole letter of recommendation and capital in trade.
+
+"Well, _au 'evoi'_, Mistoo Itchlin." He turned and moved off--dip,
+glide, and away.
+
+ * * *
+
+Dr. Sevier stamped his wet feet on the pavement of the hospital porch.
+It was afternoon of the day following that of the rain. The water still
+covering the streets about the hospital had not prevented his carriage
+from splashing through it on his double daily round. A narrow and
+unsteady plank spanned the immersed sidewalk. Three times, going and
+coming, he had crossed it safely, and this fourth time he had made half
+the distance well enough; but, hearing distant cheers and laughter, he
+looked up street; when--splatter!--and the cheers were redoubled.
+
+"Pretty thing to laugh at!" he muttered. Two or three bystanders,
+leaning on their umbrellas in the lodge at the gate and in the porch,
+where he stood stamping, turned their backs and smoothed their mouths.
+
+"Hah!" said the tall Doctor, stamping harder. Stamp!--stamp! He shook
+his leg.--"Bah!" He stamped the other long, slender, wet foot and looked
+down at it, turning one side and then the other.--"F-fah!"--The first
+one again.--"Pshaw!"--The other.--Stamp!--stamp!--"_Right_--_into_
+it!--up to my _ankles!_" He looked around with a slight scowl at one
+man, who seemed taken with a sudden softening of the spine and knees,
+and who turned his back quickly and fell against another, who, also with
+his back turned, was leaning tremulously against a pillar.
+
+But the object of mirth did not tarry. He went as he was to Mary's room,
+and found her much better--as, indeed, he had done at every visit. He
+sat by her bed and listened to her story.
+
+"Why, Doctor, you see, we did nicely for a while. John went on getting
+the same kind of work, and pleasing everybody, of course, and all he
+lacked was finding something permanent. Still, we passed through one
+month after another, and we really began to think the sun was coming
+out, so to speak."
+
+"Well, I thought so, too," put in the Doctor. "I thought if it didn't
+you'd let me know."
+
+"Why, no, Doctor, we couldn't do that; you couldn't be taking care of
+well people."
+
+"Well," said the Doctor, dropping that point, "I suppose as the busy
+season began to wane that mode of livelihood, of course, disappeared."
+
+"Yes,"--a little one-sided smile,--"and so did our money. And then, of
+course,"--she slightly lifted and waved her hand.
+
+"You had to live," said Dr. Sevier, sincerely.
+
+She smiled again, with abstracted eyes. "We thought we'd like to," she
+said. "I didn't mind the loss of the things so much,--except the little
+table we ate from. You remember that little round table, don't you?"
+
+The visitor had not the heart to say no. He nodded.
+
+"When that went there was but one thing left that could go."
+
+"Not your bed?"
+
+"The bedstead; yes."
+
+"You didn't sell your bed, Mrs. Richling?"
+
+The tears gushed from her eyes. She made a sign of assent.
+
+"But then," she resumed, "we made an excellent arrangement with a good
+woman who had just lost her husband, and wanted to live cheaply, too."
+
+"What amuses you, madam?"
+
+"Nothing great. But I wish you knew her. She's funny. Well, so we moved
+down-town again. Didn't cost much to move."
+
+She would smile a little in spite of him.
+
+"And then?" said he, stirring impatiently and leaning forward. "What
+then?"
+
+"Why, then I worked a little harder than I thought,--pulling trunks
+around and so on,--and I had this third attack."
+
+The Doctor straightened himself up, folded his arms, and muttered:--
+
+"Oh!--oh! _Why_ wasn't I instantly sent for?"
+
+The tears were in her eyes again, but--
+
+"Doctor," she answered, with her odd little argumentative smile, "how
+could we? We had nothing to pay with. It wouldn't have been just."
+
+"Just!" exclaimed the physician, angrily.
+
+"Doctor," said the invalid, and looked at him.
+
+"Oh--all right!"
+
+She made no answer but to look at him still more pleadingly.
+
+"Wouldn't it have been just as fair to let me be generous, madam?" His
+faint smile was bitter. "For once? Simply for once?"
+
+"We couldn't make that proposition, could we, Doctor?"
+
+He was checkmated.
+
+"Mrs. Richling," he said suddenly, clasping the back of his chair as if
+about to rise, "tell me,--did you or your husband act this way for
+anything I've ever said or done?"
+
+"No, Doctor! no, no; never! But"--
+
+"But kindness should seek--not be sought," said the physician, starting
+up.
+
+"No, Doctor, we didn't look on it so. Of course we didn't. If there's
+any fault it's all mine. For it was my own proposition to John, that as
+we _had_ to seek charity we should just be honest and open about it. I
+said, 'John, as I need the best attention, and as that can be offered
+free only in the hospital, why, to the hospital I ought to go.'"
+
+She lay still, and the Doctor pondered. Presently he said:--
+
+"And Mr. Richling--I suppose he looks for work all the time?"
+
+"From daylight to dark!"
+
+"Well, the water is passing off. He'll be along by and by to see you, no
+doubt. Tell him to call, first thing to-morrow morning, at my office."
+And with that the Doctor went off in his wet boots, committed a series
+of indiscretions, reached home, and fell ill.
+
+In the wanderings of fever he talked of the Richlings, and in lucid
+moments inquired for them.
+
+"Yes, yes," answered the sick Doctor's physician, "they're attended to.
+Yes, all their wants are supplied. Just dismiss them from your mind." In
+the eyes of this physician the Doctor's life was invaluable, and these
+patients, or pensioners, an unknown and, most likely, an inconsiderable
+quantity; two sparrows, as it were, worth a farthing. But the sick man
+lay thinking. He frowned.
+
+"I wish they would go home."
+
+"I have sent them."
+
+"You have? Home to Milwaukee?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Thank God!"
+
+He soon began to mend. Yet it was weeks before he could leave the house.
+When one day he reentered the hospital, still pale and faint, he was
+prompt to express to the Mother-Superior the comfort he had felt in his
+sickness to know that his brother physician had sent those Richlings to
+their kindred.
+
+The Sister shook her head. He saw the deception in an instant. As best
+his strength would allow, he hurried to the keeper of the rolls. There
+was the truth. Home? Yes,--to Prieur street,--discharged only one week
+before. He drove quickly to his office.
+
+"Narcisse, you will find that young Mr. Richling living in Prieur
+street, somewhere between Conti and St. Louis. I don't know the house;
+you'll have to find it. Tell him I'm in my office again, and to come and
+see me."
+
+Narcisse was no such fool as to say he knew the house. He would get the
+praise of finding it quickly.
+
+"I'll do my mose awduous, seh," he said, took down his coat, hung up his
+jacket, put on his hat, and went straight to the house and knocked. Got
+no answer. Knocked again, and a third time; but in vain. Went next door
+and inquired of a pretty girl, who fell in love with him at a glance.
+
+"Yes, but they had moved. She wasn't _jess ezac'ly_ sure where they
+_had_ moved to, _unless-n_ it was in that little house yondeh between
+St. Louis and Toulouse; and if they wasn't there she didn't know _where_
+they was. People ought to leave words where they's movin' at, but they
+don't. You're very welcome," she added, as he expressed his thanks; and
+he would have been welcome had he questioned her for an hour. His
+parting bow and smile stuck in her heart a six-months.
+
+He went to the spot pointed out. As a Creole he was used to seeing very
+respectable people living in very small and plain houses. This one was
+not too plain even for his ideas of Richling, though it was but a little
+one-street-door-and-window affair, with an alley on the left running
+back into the small yard behind. He knocked. Again no one answered. He
+looked down the alley and saw, moving about the yard, a large woman,
+who, he felt certain, could not be Mrs. Richling.
+
+Two little short-skirted, bare-legged girls were playing near him. He
+spoke to them in French. Did they know where Monsieu' Itchlin lived? The
+two children repeated the name, looking inquiringly at each other.
+
+"_Non, miche._"--"No, sir, they didn't know."
+
+"_Qui reste ici?_" he asked. "Who lives here?"
+
+"_Ici? Madame qui reste la c'est Mizziz Ri-i-i-ly!_" said one.
+
+"Yass," said the other, breaking into English and rubbing a musquito off
+of her well-tanned shank with the sole of her foot, "tis Mizziz
+Ri-i-i-ly what live there. She jess move een. She's got a lill
+baby.--Oh! you means dat lady what was in de Chatty Hawspill!"
+
+"No, no! A real, nice _lady_. She nevva saw that Cha'ity Hospi'l."
+
+The little girls shook their heads. They couldn't imagine a person who
+had never seen the Charity Hospital.
+
+"Was there nobody else who had moved into any of these houses about here
+lately?" He spoke again in French. They shook their heads. Two boys came
+forward and verified the testimony. Narcisse went back with his report:
+"Moved,--not found."
+
+"I fine that ve'y d'oll, Doctah Seveeah," concluded the unaugmented,
+hanging up his hat; "some peop' always 'ard to fine. I h-even notiz that
+sem thing w'en I go to colic' some bill. I dunno 'ow' tis, Doctah, but I
+assu' you I kin tell that by a man's physio'nomie. Nobody teach me that.
+'Tis my own in_geen_u'ty 'as made me to discoveh that, in fact."
+
+The Doctor was silent. Presently he drew a piece of paper toward him
+and, dipping his pen into the ink, began to write:--
+
+"Information wanted of the whereabouts of John Richling"--
+
+"Narcisse," he called, still writing, "I want you to take an
+advertisement to the 'Picayune' office."
+
+"With the gweatez of pleazheh, seh." The clerk began his usual shifting
+of costume. "Yesseh! I assu' you, Doctah, that is a p'oposition moze
+enti'ly to my satizfagtion; faw I am suffe'ing faw a smoke, and
+deztitute of a ciga'ette! I am aztonizh' 'ow I did that, to egshauz them
+unconsciouzly, in fact." He received the advertisement in an envelope,
+whipped his shoes a little with his handkerchief, and went out. One
+would think to hear him thundering down the stairs, that it was
+twenty-five cents' worth of ice.
+
+"Hold o--" The Doctor started from his seat, then turned and paced
+feebly up and down. Who, besides Richling, might see that notice? What
+might be its unexpected results? Who was John Richling? A man with a
+secret at the best; and a secret, in Dr. Sevier's eyes, was detestable.
+Might not Richling be a man who had fled from something? "No! no!" The
+Doctor spoke aloud. He had promised to think nothing ill of him. Let the
+poor children have their silly secret. He spoke again: "They'll find out
+the folly of it by and by." He let the advertisement go; and it went.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+RAPHAEL RISTOFALO.
+
+
+Richling had a dollar in his pocket. A man touched him on the shoulder.
+
+But let us see. On the day that John and Mary had sold their only
+bedstead, Mrs. Riley, watching them, had proposed the joint home. The
+offer had been accepted with an eagerness that showed itself in nervous
+laughter. Mrs. Riley then took quarters in Prieur street, where John and
+Mary, for a due consideration, were given a single neatly furnished back
+room. The bedstead had brought seven dollars. Richling, on the day after
+the removal, was in the commercial quarter, looking, as usual, for
+employment.
+
+The young man whom Dr. Sevier had first seen, in the previous October,
+moving with a springing step and alert, inquiring glances from number to
+number in Carondelet street was slightly changed. His step was firm, but
+something less elastic, and not quite so hurried. His face was more
+thoughtful, and his glance wanting in a certain dancing freshness that
+had been extremely pleasant. He was walking in Poydras street toward the
+river.
+
+As he came near to a certain man who sat in the entrance of a store with
+the freshly whittled corner of a chair between his knees, his look and
+bow were grave, but amiable, quietly hearty, deferential, and also
+self-respectful--and uncommercial: so palpably uncommercial that the
+sitter did not rise or even shut his knife.
+
+He slightly stared. Richling, in a low, private tone, was asking him for
+employment.
+
+"What?" turning his ear up and frowning downward.
+
+The application was repeated, the first words with a slightly resentful
+ring, but the rest more quietly.
+
+The store-keeper stared again, and shook his head slowly.
+
+"No, sir," he said, in a barely audible tone. Richling moved on, not
+stopping at the next place, or the next, or the next; for he felt the
+man's stare all over his back until he turned the corner and found
+himself in Tchoupitoulas street. Nor did he stop at the first place
+around the corner. It smelt of deteriorating potatoes and up-river
+cabbages, and there were open barrels of onions set ornamentally aslant
+at the entrance. He had a fatal conviction that his services would not
+be wanted in malodorous places.
+
+"Now, isn't that a shame?" asked the chair-whittler, as Richling passed
+out of sight. "Such a gentleman as that, to be beggin' for work from
+door to door!"
+
+"He's not beggin' f'om do' to do'," said a second, with a Creole accent
+on his tongue, and a match stuck behind his ear like a pen. "Beside,
+he's too _much_ of a gennlemun."
+
+"That's where you and him differs," said the first. He frowned upon the
+victim of his delicate repartee with make-believe defiance. Number Two
+drew from an outside coat-pocket a wad of common brown wrapping-paper,
+tore from it a small, neat parallelogram, dove into an opposite pocket
+for some loose smoking-tobacco, laid a pinch of it in the paper, and,
+with a single dexterous turn of the fingers, thumbs above, the rest
+beneath,--it looks simple, but 'tis an amazing art,--made a cigarette.
+Then he took down his match, struck it under his short coat-skirt,
+lighted his cigarette, drew an inhalation through it that consumed a
+third of its length, and sat there, with his eyes half-closed, and all
+that smoke somewhere inside of him.
+
+"That young man," remarked a third, wiping a toothpick on his thigh and
+putting it in his vest-pocket, as he stepped to the front, "don't know
+how to _look_ fur work. There's one way fur a day-laborer to look fur
+work, and there's another way fur a gentleman to look fur work, and
+there's another way fur a--a--a man with money to look fur somethin'
+to put his money into. _It's just like fishing!_" He threw both hands
+outward and downward, and made way for a porter's truck with a load of
+green meat. The smoke began to fall from Number Two's nostrils in two
+slender blue streams. Number Three continued:--
+
+"You've got to know what kind o' hooks you want, and what kind o' bait
+you want, and then, after _that_, you've"--
+
+Numbers One and Two did not let him finish.
+
+"--Got to know how to fish," they said; "that's so!" The smoke continued
+to leak slowly from Number Two's nostrils and teeth, though he had not
+lifted his cigarette the second time.
+
+"Yes, you've got to know how to fish," reaffirmed the third. "If you
+don't know how to fish, it's as like as not that nobody can tell you
+what's the matter; an' yet, all the same, you aint goin' to ketch no
+fish."
+
+"Well, now," said the first man, with an unconvinced swing of his chin,
+"_spunk_ 'll sometimes pull a man through; and you can't say he aint
+spunky." Number Three admitted the corollary. Number Two looked up: his
+chance had come.
+
+"He'd a w'ipped you faw a dime," said he to Number One, took a
+comforting draw from his cigarette, and felt a great peace.
+
+"I take notice he's a little deaf," said Number Three, still alluding to
+Richling.
+
+"That'd spoil him for me," said Number One.
+
+Number Three asked why.
+
+"Oh, I just wouldn't have him about me. Didn't you ever notice that a
+deaf man always seems like a sort o' stranger? I can't bear 'em."
+
+Richling meanwhile moved on. His critics were right. He was not wanting
+in courage; but no man from the moon could have been more an alien on
+those sidewalks. He was naturally diligent, active, quick-witted, and
+of good, though maybe a little too scholarly address; quick of temper,
+it is true, and uniting his quickness of temper with a certain
+bashfulness,--an unlucky combination, since, as a consequence, nobody
+had to get out of its way; but he was generous in fact and in speech,
+and never held malice a moment. But, besides the heavy odds which his
+small secret seemed to be against him, stopping him from accepting such
+valuable friendships as might otherwise have come to him, and besides
+his slight deafness, he was by nature a recluse, or, at least, a
+dreamer. Every day that he set foot on Tchoupitoulas, or Carondelet, or
+Magazine, or Fulton, or Poydras street he came from a realm of thought,
+seeking service in an empire of matter.
+
+There is a street in New Orleans called Triton _Walk_. That is what all
+the ways of commerce and finance and daily bread-getting were to
+Richling. He was a merman--ashore. It was the feeling rather than the
+knowledge of this that prompted him to this daily, aimless trudging
+after mere employment. He had a proper pride; once in a while a little
+too much; nor did he clearly see his deficiencies; and yet the
+unrecognized consciousness that he had not the commercial instinct made
+him willing--as Number Three would have said--to "cut bait" for any
+fisherman who would let him do it.
+
+He turned without any distinct motive and, retracing his steps to the
+corner, passed up across Poydras street. A little way above it he paused
+to look at some machinery in motion. He liked machinery,--for itself
+rather than for its results. He would have gone in and examined the
+workings of this apparatus had it not been for the sign above his head,
+"No Admittance." Those words always seemed painted for him. A slight
+modification in Richling's character might have made him an inventor.
+Some other faint difference, and he might have been a writer, a
+historian, an essayist, or even--there is no telling--a well-fed poet.
+With the question of food, raiment, and shelter permanently settled,
+he might have become one of those resplendent flash lights that at
+intervals dart their beams across the dark waters of the world's
+ignorance, hardly from new continents, but from the observatory, the
+study, the laboratory. But he was none of these. There had been a crime
+committed somewhere in his bringing up, and as a result he stood in the
+thick of life's battle, weaponless. He gazed upon machinery with
+childlike wonder; but when he looked around and saw on every hand
+men,--good fellows who ate in their shirt-sleeves at restaurants, told
+broad jokes, spread their mouths and smote their sides when they
+laughed, and whose best wit was to bombard one another with bread-crusts
+and hide behind the sugar-bowl; men whom he could have taught in every
+kind of knowledge that they were capable of grasping, except the
+knowledge of how to get money,--when he saw these men, as it seemed to
+him, grow rich daily by simply flipping beans into each other's faces,
+or slapping each other on the back, the wonder of machinery was
+eclipsed. Do as they did? He? He could no more reach a conviction as to
+what the price of corn would be to-morrow than he could remember what
+the price of sugar was yesterday.
+
+He called himself an accountant, gulping down his secret pride with an
+amiable glow that commanded, instantly, an amused esteem. And, to judge
+by his evident familiarity with Tonti's beautiful scheme of mercantile
+records, he certainly--those guessed whose books he had extricated
+from confusion--had handled money and money values in days before his
+unexplained coming to New Orleans. Yet a close observer would have
+noticed that he grasped these tasks only as problems, treated them in
+their mathematical and enigmatical aspect, and solved them without any
+appreciation of their concrete values. When they were done he felt less
+personal interest in them than in the architectural beauty of the
+store-front, whose window-shutters he had never helped to close without
+a little heart-leap of pleasure.
+
+But, standing thus, and looking in at the machinery, a man touched him
+on the shoulder.
+
+"Good-morning," said the man. He wore a pleasant air. It seemed to say,
+"I'm nothing much, but you'll recognize me in a moment; I'll wait." He
+was short, square, solid, beardless; in years, twenty-five or six. His
+skin was dark, his hair almost black, his eyebrows strong. In his mild
+black eyes you could see the whole Mediterranean. His dress was coarse,
+but clean; his linen soft and badly laundered. But under all the rough
+garb and careless, laughing manner was visibly written again and again
+the name of the race that once held the world under its feet.
+
+"You don't remember me?" he added, after a moment.
+
+"No," said Richling, pleasantly, but with embarrassment. The man waited
+another moment, and suddenly Richling recalled their earlier meeting.
+The man, representing a wholesale confectioner in one of the smaller
+cities up the river, had bought some cordials and syrups of the house
+whose books Richling had last put in order.
+
+"Why, yes I do, too!" said Richling. "You left your pocket-book in my
+care for two or three days; your own private money, you said."
+
+"Yes." The man laughed softly. "Lost that money. Sent it to the boss.
+Boss died--store seized--everything gone." His English was well
+pronounced, but did not escape a pretty Italian accent, too delicate for
+the printer's art.
+
+"Oh! that was too bad!" Richling laid his hand upon an awning-post and
+twined an arm and leg around it as though he were a vine. "I--I forget
+your name."
+
+"Ristofalo. Raphael Ristofalo. Yours is Richling. Yes, knocked me flat.
+Not got cent in world." The Italian's low, mellow laugh claimed
+Richling's admiration.
+
+"Why, when did that happen?" he asked.
+
+"Yes'day," replied the other, still laughing.
+
+"And how are you going to provide for the future?" Richling asked,
+smiling down into the face of the shorter man. The Italian tossed the
+future away with the back of his hand.
+
+"I got nothin' do with that." His words were low, but very distinct.
+
+Thereupon Richling laughed, leaning his cheek against the post.
+
+"Must provide for the present," said Raphael Ristofalo. Richling dropped
+his eyes in thought. The present! He had never been able to see that it
+was the present which must be provided against, until, while he was
+training his guns upon the future, the most primitive wants of the
+present burst upon him right and left like whooping savages.
+
+"Can you lend me dollar?" asked the Italian. "Give you back dollar an'
+quarter to-morrow."
+
+Richling gave a start and let go the post. "Why, Mr. Risto--falo,
+I--I--, the fact is, I"--he shook his head--"I haven't much money."
+
+"Dollar will start me," said the Italian, whose feet had not moved an
+inch since he touched Richling's shoulder. "Be aw righ' to-morrow."
+
+"You can't invest one dollar by itself," said the incredulous Richling.
+
+"Yes. Return her to-morrow."
+
+Richling swung his head from side to side as an expression of disrelish.
+"I haven't been employed for some time."
+
+"I goin' t'employ myself," said Ristofalo.
+
+Richling laughed again. There was a faint betrayal of distress in his
+voice as it fell upon the cunning ear of the Italian; but he laughed
+too, very gently and innocently, and stood in his tracks.
+
+"I wouldn't like to refuse a dollar to a man who needs it," said
+Richling. He took his hat off and ran his fingers through his hair.
+"I've seen the time when it was much easier to lend than it is just
+now." He thrust his hand down into his pocket and stood gazing at the
+sidewalk.
+
+The Italian glanced at Richling askance, and with one sweep of the eye
+from the softened crown of his hat to the slender, white bursted slit in
+the outer side of either well-polished shoe, took in the beauty of his
+face and a full understanding of his condition. His hair, somewhat dry,
+had fallen upon his forehead. His fine, smooth skin was darkened by the
+exposure of his daily wanderings. His cheek-bones, a trifle high,
+asserted their place above the softly concave cheeks. His mouth was
+closed and the lips were slightly compressed; the chin small, gracefully
+turned, not weak,--not strong. His eyes were abstracted, deep, pensive.
+His dress told much. The fine plaits of his shirt had sprung apart and
+been neatly sewed together again. His coat was a little faulty in the
+set of the collar, as if the person who had taken the garment apart and
+turned the goods had not put it together again with practised skill. It
+was without spot and the buttons were new. The edges of his shirt-cuffs
+had been trimmed with the scissors. Face and vesture alike revealed to
+the sharp eye of the Italian the woe underneath. "He has a wife,"
+thought Ristofalo.
+
+Richling looked up with a smile. "How can you be so sure you will make,
+and not lose?"
+
+"I never fail." There was not the least shade of boasting in the man's
+manner. Richling handed out his dollar. It was given without patronage
+and taken with simple thanks.
+
+"Where goin' to meet to-morrow morning?" asked Ristofalo. "Here?"
+
+"Oh! I forgot," said Richling. "Yes, I suppose so; and then you'll tell
+me how you invested it, will you?"
+
+"Yes, but you couldn't do it."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+Raphael Ristofalo laughed. "Oh! fifty reason'."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+HOW HE DID IT.
+
+
+Ristofalo and Richling had hardly separated, when it occurred to the
+latter that the Italian had first touched him from behind. Had Ristofalo
+recognized him with his back turned, or had he seen him earlier and
+followed him? The facts were these: about an hour before the time when
+Richling omitted to apply for employment in the ill-smelling store in
+Tchoupitoulas street, Mr. Raphael Ristofalo halted in front of the same
+place,--which appeared small and slovenly among its more pretentious
+neighbors,--and stepped just inside the door to where stood a single
+barrel of apples,--a fruit only the earliest varieties of which were
+beginning to appear in market. These were very small, round, and smooth,
+and with a rather wan blush confessed to more than one of the senses
+that they had seen better days. He began to pick them up and throw them
+down--one, two, three, four, seven, ten; about half of them were
+entirely sound.
+
+"How many barrel' like this?"
+
+"No got-a no more; dass all," said the dealer. He was a Sicilian. "Lame
+duck," he added. "Oael de rest gone."
+
+"How much?" asked Ristofalo, still handling the fruit.
+
+The Sicilian came to the barrel, looked in, and said, with a gesture of
+indifference:--
+
+"'M--doll' an' 'alf."
+
+Ristofalo offered to take them at a dollar if he might wash and sort
+them under the dealer's hydrant, which could be heard running in the
+back yard. The offer would have been rejected with rude scorn but for
+one thing: it was spoken in Italian. The man looked at him with pleased
+surprise, and made the concession. The porter of the store, in a red
+worsted cap, had drawn near. Ristofalo bade him roll the barrel on its
+chine to the rear and stand it by the hydrant.
+
+"I will come back pretty soon," he said, in Italian, and went away.
+
+By and by he returned, bringing with him two swarthy, heavy-set, little
+Sicilian lads, each with his inevitable basket and some clean rags. A
+smile and gesture to the store-keeper, a word to the boys, and in a
+moment the barrel was upturned, and the pair were washing, wiping, and
+sorting the sound and unsound apples at the hydrant.
+
+Ristofalo stood a moment in the entrance of the store. The question now
+was where to get a dollar. Richling passed, looked in, seemed to
+hesitate, went on, turned, and passed again, the other way. Ristofalo
+saw him all the time and recognized him at once, but appeared not to
+observe him.
+
+"He will do," thought the Italian. "Be back few minute'," he said,
+glancing behind him.
+
+"Or-r righ'," said the store-keeper, with a hand-wave of good-natured
+confidence. He recognized Mr. Raphael Ristofalo's species.
+
+The Italian walked up across Poydras street, saw Richling stop and look
+at the machinery, approached, and touched him on the shoulder.
+
+On parting with him he did not return to the store where he had left the
+apples. He walked up Tchoupitoulas street about a mile, and where St.
+Thomas street branches acutely from it, in a squalid district full of
+the poorest Irish, stopped at a dirty fruit-stand and spoke in Spanish
+to its Catalan proprietor. Half an hour later twenty-five cents had
+changed hands, the Catalan's fruit shelves were bright with small
+pyramids--sound side foremost--of Ristofalo's second grade of apples,
+the Sicilian had Richling's dollar, and the Italian was gone with his
+boys and his better grade of fruit. Also, a grocer had sold some sugar,
+and a druggist a little paper of some harmless confectioner's dye.
+
+Down behind the French market, in a short, obscure street that runs from
+Ursulines to Barracks street, and is named in honor of Albert Gallatin,
+are some old buildings of three or four stories' height, rented, in John
+Richling's day, to a class of persons who got their livelihood by
+sub-letting the rooms, and parts of rooms, to the wretchedest poor of
+New Orleans,--organ-grinders, chimney-sweeps, professional beggars,
+street musicians, lemon-peddlers, rag-pickers, with all the yet dirtier
+herd that live by hook and crook in the streets or under the wharves; a
+room with a bed and stove, a room without, a half-room with or without
+ditto, a quarter-room with or without a blanket or quilt, and with only
+a chalk-mark on the floor instead of a partition. Into one of these went
+Mr. Raphael Ristofalo, the two boys, and the apples. Whose assistance or
+indulgence, if any, he secured in there is not recorded; but when, late
+in the afternoon, the Italian issued thence--the boys, meanwhile,
+had been coming and going--an unusual luxury had been offered the
+roustabouts and idlers of the steam-boat landings, and many had
+bought and eaten freely of the very small, round, shiny, sugary, and
+artificially crimson roasted apples, with neatly whittled white-pine
+stems to poise them on as they were lifted to the consumer's watering
+teeth. When, the next morning Richling laughed at the story, the Italian
+drew out two dollars and a half, and began to take from it a dollar.
+
+"But you have last night's lodging and so forth yet to pay for."
+
+"No. Made friends with Sicilian luggerman. Slept in his lugger." He
+showed his brow and cheeks speckled with mosquito-bites. "Ate little
+hard-tack and coffee with him this morning. Don't want much." He offered
+the dollar with a quarter added. Richling declined the bonus.
+
+"But why not?"
+
+"Oh, I just couldn't do it," laughed Richling; "that's all."
+
+"Well," said the Italian, "lend me that dollar one day more, I return
+you dollar and half in its place to-morrow."
+
+The lender had to laugh again. "You can't find an odd barrel of damaged
+apples every day."
+
+"No. No apples to-day. But there's regiment soldiers at lower landing;
+whole steam-boat load; going to sail this evenin' to Florida. They'll
+eat whole barrel hard-boil' eggs."--And they did. When they sailed, the
+Italian's pocket was stuffed with small silver.
+
+Richling received his dollar and fifty cents. As he did so, "I would
+give, if I had it, a hundred dollars for half your art," he said,
+laughing unevenly. He was beaten, surpassed, humbled. Still he said,
+"Come, don't you want this again? You needn't pay me for the use of it."
+
+But the Italian refused. He had outgrown his patron. A week afterward
+Richling saw him at the Picayune Tier, superintending the unloading of a
+small schooner-load of bananas. He had bought the cargo, and was
+reselling to small fruiterers.
+
+"Make fifty dolla' to-day," said the Italian, marking his tally-board
+with a piece of chalk.
+
+Richling clapped him joyfully on the shoulder, but turned around with
+inward distress and hurried away. He had not found work.
+
+Events followed of which we have already taken knowledge. Mary, we have
+seen, fell sick and was taken to the hospital.
+
+"I shall go mad!" Richling would moan, with his dishevelled brows
+between his hands, and then start to his feet, exclaiming, "I must not!
+I must not! I must keep my senses!" And so to the commercial regions or
+to the hospital.
+
+Dr. Sevier, as we know, left word that Richling should call and see him;
+but when he called, a servant--very curtly, it seemed to him--said the
+Doctor was not well and didn't want to see anybody. This was enough for
+a young man who _hadn't_ his senses. The more he needed a helping hand
+the more unreasonably shy he became of those who might help him.
+
+"Will nobody come and find us?" Yet he would not cry "Whoop!" and how,
+then, was anybody to come?
+
+Mary returned to the house again (ah! what joys there are in the vale of
+tribulation!), and grew strong,--stronger, she averred, than ever she
+had been.
+
+"And now you'll _not_ be cast down, _will_ you?" she said, sliding into
+her husband's lap. She was in an uncommonly playful mood.
+
+"Not a bit of it," said John. "Every dog has his day. I'll come to the
+top. You'll see."
+
+"Don't I know that?" she responded, "Look here, now," she exclaimed,
+starting to her feet and facing him, "_I'll_ recommend you to anybody.
+_I've_ got confidence in you!" Richling thought she had never looked
+quite so pretty as at that moment. He leaped from his chair with a
+laughing ejaculation, caught and swung her an instant from her feet, and
+landed her again before she could cry out. If, in retort, she smote him
+so sturdily that she had to retreat backward to rearrange her shaken
+coil of hair, it need not go down on the record; such things will
+happen. The scuffle and suppressed laughter were detected even in Mrs.
+Riley's room.
+
+"Ah!" sighed the widow to herself, "wasn't it Kate Riley that used to
+get the sweet, haird knocks!" Her grief was mellowing.
+
+Richling went out on the old search, which the advancing summer made
+more nearly futile each day than the day before.
+
+Stop. What sound was that?
+
+"Richling! Richling!"
+
+Richling, walking in a commercial street, turned. A member of the firm
+that had last employed him beckoned him to halt.
+
+"What are you doing now, Richling? Still acting deputy assistant city
+surveyor _pro tem._?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, see here! Why haven't you been in the store to see us lately? Did
+I seem a little preoccupied the last time you called?"
+
+"I"--Richling dropped his eyes with an embarrassed smile--"_I was_
+afraid I was in the way--or should be."
+
+"Well and suppose you were? A man that's looking for work must put
+himself in the way. But come with me. I think I may be able to give you
+a lift."
+
+"How's that?" asked Richling, as they started off abreast.
+
+"There's a house around the corner here that will give you some
+work,--temporary anyhow, and may be permanent."
+
+So Richling was at work again, hidden away from Dr. Sevier between
+journal and ledger. His employers asked for references. Richling looked
+dismayed for a moment, then said, "I'll bring somebody to recommend me,"
+went away, and came back with Mary.
+
+"All the recommendation I've got," said he, with timid elation. There
+was a laugh all round.
+
+"Well, madam, if you say he's all right, we don't doubt he is!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ANOTHER PATIENT.
+
+
+"Doctah Seveeah," said Narcisse, suddenly, as he finished sticking with
+great fervor the postage-stamps on some letters the Doctor had written,
+and having studied with much care the phraseology of what he had to say,
+and screwed up his courage to the pitch of utterance, "I saw yo' notiz
+on the noozpapeh this mornin'."
+
+The unresponding Doctor closed his eyes in unutterable weariness of the
+innocent young gentleman's prepared speeches.
+
+"Yesseh. 'Tis a beaucheouz notiz. I fine that w'itten with the gweatez
+ac_cu_'acy of diction, in fact. I made a twanslation of that faw my
+hant. Thaz a thing I am fon' of, twanslation. I dunno 'ow 'tis, Doctah,"
+he continued, preparing to go out,--"I dunno 'ow 'tis, but I thing, you
+goin' to fine that Mistoo Itchlin ad the en'. I dunno 'ow 'tis. Well,
+I'm goin' ad the"--
+
+The Doctor looked up fiercely.
+
+"Bank," said Narcisse, getting near the door.
+
+"All right!" grumbled the Doctor, more politely.
+
+"Yesseh--befo' I go ad the poss-office."
+
+A great many other persons had seen the advertisement. There were many
+among them who wondered if Mr. John Richling could be such a fool as to
+fall into that trap. There were others--some of them women, alas!--who
+wondered how it was that nobody advertised for information concerning
+them, and who wished, yes, "wished to God," that such a one, or such a
+one, who had had his money-bags locked up long enough, would die, and
+then you'd see who'd be advertised for. Some idlers looked in vain into
+the city directory to see if Mr. John Richling were mentioned there.
+But Richling himself did not see the paper. His employers, or some
+fellow-clerk, might have pointed it out to him, but--we shall see in a
+moment.
+
+Time passed. It always does. At length, one morning, as Dr. Sevier lay
+on his office lounge, fatigued after his attentions to callers, and much
+enervated by the prolonged summer heat, there entered a small female
+form, closely veiled. He rose to a sitting posture.
+
+"Good-morning, Doctor," said a voice, hurriedly, behind the veil.
+"Doctor," it continued, choking,--"Doctor"--
+
+"Why, Mrs. Richling!"
+
+He sprang and gave her a chair. She sank into it.
+
+"Doctor,--O Doctor! John is in the Charity Hospital!"
+
+She buried her face in her handkerchief and sobbed aloud. The Doctor was
+silent a moment, and then asked:--
+
+"What's the matter with him?"
+
+"Chills."
+
+It seemed as though she must break down again, but the Doctor stopped
+her savagely.
+
+"Well, my dear madam, don't cry! Come, now, you're making too much of a
+small matter. Why, what are chills? We'll break them in forty-eight
+hours. He'll have the best of care. You needn't cry! Certainly this
+isn't as bad as when you were there."
+
+She was still, but shook her head. She couldn't agree to that.
+
+"Doctor, will you attend him?"
+
+"Mine is a female ward."
+
+"I know; but"--
+
+"Oh--if you wish it--certainly; of course I will. But now, where have
+you moved, Mrs. Richling? I sent"-- He looked up over his desk toward
+that of Narcisse.
+
+The Creole had been neither deaf nor idle. Hospital? Then those children
+in Prieur street had told him right. He softly changed his coat and
+shoes. As the physician looked over the top of the desk Narcisse's
+silent form, just here at the left, but out of the range of vision,
+passed through the door and went downstairs with the noiselessness of a
+moonbeam.
+
+Mary explained the location and arrangement of her residence.
+
+"Yes," she said, "that's the way your clerk must have overlooked us. We
+live behind--down the alleyway."
+
+"Well, at any rate, madam," said the Doctor, "you are here now, and
+before you go I want to"-- He drew out his pocket-book.
+
+There was a quick gesture of remonstrance and a look of pleading.
+
+"No, no, Doctor, please don't! please don't! Give my poor husband one
+more chance; don't make me take that. I don't refuse it for pride's
+sake!"
+
+"I don't know about that," he replied; "why do you do it?"
+
+"For his sake, Doctor. I know just as well what he'd say--we've no right
+to take it anyhow. We don't know when we could pay it back." Her head
+sank. She wiped a tear from her hand.
+
+"Why, I don't care if you never pay it back!" The Doctor reddened
+angrily.
+
+Mary raised her veil.
+
+"Doctor,"--a smile played on her lips,--"I want to say one thing." She
+was a little care-worn and grief-worn; and yet, Narcisse, you should
+have seen her; you would not have slipped out.
+
+"Say on, madam," responded the Doctor.
+
+"If we have to ask anybody, Doctor, it will be you. John had another
+situation, but lost it by his chills. He'll get another. I'm sure he
+will." A long, broken sigh caught her unawares. Dr. Sevier thrust his
+pocket-book back into its place, compressing his lips and giving his
+head an unpersuaded jerk. And yet, was she not right, according to all
+his preaching? He asked himself that. "Why didn't your husband come to
+see me, as I requested him to do, Mrs. Richling?"
+
+She explained John's being turned away from the door during the Doctor's
+illness. "But anyhow, Doctor, John has always been a little afraid of
+you."
+
+The Doctor's face did not respond to her smile.
+
+"Why, you are not," he said.
+
+"No." Her eyes sparkled, but their softer light quickly returned. She
+smiled and said:--
+
+"I will ask a favor of you now, Doctor."
+
+They had risen, and she stood leaning sidewise against his low desk and
+looking up into his face.
+
+"Can you get me some sewing? John says I may take some."
+
+The Doctor was about to order two dozen shirts instanter, but common
+sense checked him, and he only said:--
+
+"I will. I will find you some. And I shall see your husband within an
+hour. Good-by." She reached the door. "God bless you!" he added.
+
+"What, sir?" she asked, looking back.
+
+But the Doctor was reading.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+ALICE.
+
+
+A little medicine skilfully prescribed, the proper nourishment, two or
+three days' confinement in bed, and the Doctor said, as he sat on the
+edge of Richling's couch:--
+
+"No, you'd better stay where you are to-day; but to-morrow, if the
+weather is good, you may sit up."
+
+Then Richling, with the unreasonableness of a convalescent, wanted to
+know why he couldn't just as well go home. But the Doctor said again,
+no.
+
+"Don't be impatient; you'll have to go anyhow before I would prefer to
+send you. It would be invaluable to you to pass your entire
+convalescence here, and go home only when you are completely recovered.
+But I can't arrange it very well. The Charity Hospital is for sick
+people."
+
+"And where is the place for convalescents?"
+
+"There is none," replied the physician.
+
+"I shouldn't want to go to it, myself," said Richling, lolling
+pleasantly on his pillow; "all I should ask is strength to get home,
+and I'd be off."
+
+The Doctor looked another way.
+
+"The sick are not the wise," he said, abstractedly. "However, in your
+case, I should let you go to your wife as soon as you safely could." At
+that he fell into so long a reverie that Richling studied every line of
+his face again and again.
+
+A very pleasant thought was in the convalescent's mind the while. The
+last three days had made it plain to him that the Doctor was not only
+his friend, but was willing that Richling should be his.
+
+At length the physician spoke:--
+
+"Mary is wonderfully like Alice, Richling."
+
+"Yes?" responded Richling, rather timidly. And the Doctor continued:--
+
+"The same age, the same stature, the same features. Alice was a shade
+paler in her style of beauty, just a shade. Her hair was darker; but
+otherwise her whole effect was a trifle quieter, even, than Mary's. She
+was beautiful,--outside and in. Like Mary, she had a certain richness of
+character--but of a different sort. I suppose I would not notice the
+difference if they were not so much alike. She didn't stay with me
+long."
+
+"Did you lose her--here?" asked Richling, hardly knowing how to break
+the silence that fell, and yet lead the speaker on.
+
+"No. In Virginia." The Doctor was quiet a moment, and then resumed:--
+
+"I looked at your wife when she was last in my office, Richling; she
+had a little timid, beseeching light in her eyes that is not usual with
+her--and a moisture, too; and--it seemed to me as though Alice had come
+back. For my wife lived by my moods. Her spirits rose or fell just as my
+whim, conscious or unconscious, gave out light or took on shadow." The
+Doctor was still again, and Richling only indicated his wish to hear
+more by shifting himself on his elbow.
+
+"Do you remember, Richling, when the girl you had been bowing down to
+and worshipping, all at once, in a single wedding day, was transformed
+into your adorer?"
+
+"Yes, indeed," responded the convalescent, with beaming face. "Wasn't
+it wonderful? I couldn't credit my senses. But how did you--was it the
+same"--
+
+"It's the same, Richling, with every man who has really secured a
+woman's heart with her hand. It was very strange and sweet to me. Alice
+would have been a spoiled child if her parents could have spoiled her;
+and when I was courting her she was the veriest little empress that ever
+walked over a man."
+
+"I can hardly imagine," said Richling, with subdued amusement, looking
+at the long, slender form before him. The Doctor smiled very sweetly.
+
+"Yes." Then, after another meditative pause: "But from the moment I
+became her husband she lived in continual trepidation. She so magnified
+me in her timid fancy that she was always looking tremulously to me to
+see what should be her feeling. She even couldn't help being afraid of
+me. I hate for any one to be afraid of me."
+
+"Do you, Doctor?" said Richling, with surprise and evident
+introspection.
+
+"Yes."
+
+Richling felt his own fear changing to love.
+
+"When I married," continued Dr. Sevier, "I had thought Alice was one
+that would go with me hand in hand through life, dividing its cares and
+doubling its joys, as they say; I guiding her and she guiding me. But if
+I had let her, she would have fallen into me as a planet might fall into
+the sun. I didn't want to be the sun to her. I didn't want her to shine
+only when I shone on her, and be dark when I was dark. No man ought to
+want such a thing. Yet she made life a delight to me; only she wanted
+that development which a better training, or even a harder training,
+might have given her; that subserving of the emotions to the"--he waved
+his hand--"I can't philosophize about her. We loved one another with
+our might, and she's in heaven."
+
+Richling felt an inward start. The Doctor interrupted his intended
+speech.
+
+"Our short experience together, Richling, is the one great light place
+in my life; and to me, to-day, sere as I am, the sweet--the sweetest
+sound--on God's green earth"--the corners of his mouth quivered--"is the
+name of Alice. Take care of Mary, Richling; she's a priceless treasure.
+Don't leave the making and sustaining of the home sunshine all to her,
+any more than you'd like her to leave it all to you."
+
+"I'll not, Doctor; I'll not." Richling pressed the Doctor's hand
+fervently; but the Doctor drew it away with a certain energy, and rose,
+saying:--
+
+"Yes, you can sit up to-morrow."
+
+The day that Richling went back to his malarious home in Prieur street
+Dr. Sevier happened to meet him just beyond the hospital gate. Richling
+waved his hand. He looked weak and tremulous. "Homeward bound," he said,
+gayly.
+
+The physician reached forward in his carriage and bade his driver stop.
+"Well, be careful of yourself; I'm coming to see you in a day or two."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE SUN AT MIDNIGHT.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier was daily overtasked. His campaigns against the evils of our
+disordered flesh had even kept him from what his fellow-citizens thought
+was only his share of attention to public affairs.
+
+"Why," he cried to a committee that came soliciting his cooeperation,
+"here's one little unprofessional call that I've been trying every day
+for two weeks to make--and ought to have made--and must make; and I
+haven't got a step toward it yet. Oh, no, gentlemen!" He waved their
+request away.
+
+He was very tired. The afternoon was growing late. He dismissed his
+jaded horse toward home, walked down to Canal street, and took that
+yellow Bayou-Road omnibus whose big blue star painted on its corpulent
+side showed that quadroons, etc., were allowed a share of its
+accommodation, and went rumbling and tumbling over the cobble-stones
+of the French quarter.
+
+By and by he got out, walked a little way southward in the hot, luminous
+shade of low-roofed tenement cottages that closed their window-shutters
+noiselessly, in sensitive-plant fashion, at his slow, meditative
+approach, and slightly and as noiselessly reopened them behind him,
+showing a pair of wary eyes within. Presently he recognized just ahead
+of him, standing out on the sidewalk, the little house that had been
+described to him by Mary.
+
+In a door-way that opened upon two low wooden sidewalk steps stood Mrs.
+Riley, clad in a crisp black and white calico, a heavy, fat babe poised
+easily in one arm. The Doctor turned directly toward the narrow alley,
+merely touching his hat to her as he pushed its small green door inward,
+and disappeared, while she lifted her chin at the silent liberty and
+dropped her eyelids.
+
+Dr. Sevier went down the cramped, ill-paved passage very slowly and
+softly. Regarding himself objectively, he would have said the deep shade
+of his thoughts was due partly, at least, to his fatigue. But that would
+hardly have accounted for a certain faint glow of indignation that came
+into them. In truth, he began distinctly to resent this state of affairs
+in the life of John and Mary Richling. An ill-defined anger beat about
+in his brain in search of some tangible shortcoming of theirs upon which
+to thrust the blame of their helplessness. "Criminal helplessness," he
+called it, mutteringly. He tried to define the idea--or the idea tried
+to define itself--that they had somehow been recreant to their social
+caste, by getting down into the condition and estate of what one may
+call the alien poor. Carondelet street had in some way specially vexed
+him to-day, and now here was this. It was bad enough, he thought, for
+men to slip into riches through dark back windows; but here was a brace
+of youngsters who had glided into poverty, and taken a place to which
+they had no right to stoop. Treachery,--that was the name for it. And
+now he must be expected,--the Doctor quite forgot that nobody had asked
+him to do it,--he must be expected to come fishing them out of their
+hole, like a rag-picker at a trash barrel.
+
+--"Bringing me into this wretched alley!" he silently thought. His foot
+slipped on a mossy brick. Oh, no doubt they thought they were punishing
+some negligent friend or friends by letting themselves down into this
+sort of thing. Never mind! He recalled the tender, confiding, friendly
+way in which he had talked to John, sitting on the edge of his hospital
+bed. He wished, now, he had every word back he had uttered. They might
+hide away to the full content of their poverty-pride. Poverty-pride: he
+had invented the term; it was the opposite pole to purse-pride--and just
+as mean,--no, meaner. There! Must he yet slip down? He muttered an angry
+word. Well, well, this was making himself a little the cheapest he had
+ever let himself be made. And probably this was what they wanted!
+Misery's revenge. Umhum! They sit down in sour darkness, eh! and make
+relief seek them. It wouldn't be the first time he had caught the poor
+taking savage comfort in the blush which their poverty was supposed to
+bring to the cheek of better-kept kinsfolk. True, he didn't know this
+was the case with the Richlings. But wasn't it? Wasn't it? And have they
+a dog, that will presently hurl himself down this alley at one's legs?
+He hopes so. He would so like to kick him clean over the twelve-foot
+close plank fence that crowded his right shoulder. Never mind! His anger
+became solemn.
+
+The alley opened into a small, narrow yard, paved with ashes from the
+gas-works. At the bottom of the yard a rough shed spanned its breadth,
+and a woman was there, busily bending over a row of wash-tubs.
+
+The Doctor knocked on a door near at hand, then waited a moment, and,
+getting no response, turned away toward the shed and the deep, wet,
+burring sound of a wash-board. The woman bending over it did not hear
+his footfall. Presently he stopped. She had just straightened up,
+lifting a piece of the washing to the height of her head, and letting it
+down with a swash and slap upon the board. It was a woman's garment,
+but certainly not hers. For she was small and slight. Her hair was
+hidden under a towel. Her skirts were shortened to a pair of dainty
+ankles by an extra under-fold at the neat, round waist. Her feet were
+thrust into a pair of sabots. She paused a moment in her work, and,
+lifting with both smoothly rounded arms, bared nearly to the shoulder, a
+large apron from her waist, wiped the perspiration from her forehead. It
+was Mary.
+
+The red blood came up into the Doctor's pale, thin face. This was too
+outrageous. This was insult! He stirred as if to move forward. He would
+confront her. Yes, just as she was. He would speak. He would speak
+bluntly. He would chide sternly. He had the right. The only friend in
+the world from whom she had not escaped beyond reach,--he would speak
+the friendly, angry word that would stop this shocking--
+
+But, truly, deeply incensed as he was, and felt it his right to be,
+hurt, wrung, exasperated, he did not advance. She had reached down and
+taken from the wash-bench the lump of yellow soap that lay there, and
+was soaping the garment on the board before her, turning it this way and
+that. As she did this she began, all to herself and for her own ear,
+softly, with unconscious richness and tenderness of voice, to sing. And
+what was her song?
+
+ "Oh, don't you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?"
+
+Down drooped the listener's head. Remember? Ah, memory!--The old,
+heart-rending memory! Sweet Alice!
+
+ "Sweet Alice, whose hair was so brown?"
+
+Yes, yes; so brown!--so brown!
+
+ "She wept with delight when you gave her a smile,
+ And trembled with fear at your frown."
+
+Ah! but the frown is gone! There is a look of supplication now. Sing no
+more! Oh, sing no more! Yes, surely, she will stop there!
+
+No. The voice rises gently--just a little--into the higher key, soft and
+clear as the note of a distant bird, and all unaware of a listener. Oh!
+in mercy's name--
+
+ "In the old church-yard in the valley, Ben Bolt,
+ In a corner obscure and alone,
+ They have fitted a slab of granite so gray,
+ And sweet Alice lies under the stone."
+
+The little toiling figure bent once more across the wash-board and began
+to rub. He turned, the first dew of many a long year welling from each
+eye, and stole away, out of the little yard and down the dark, slippery
+alley, to the street.
+
+Mrs. Riley still stood on the door-sill, holding the child.
+
+"Good-evening, madam!"
+
+"Sur, to you." She bowed with dignity.
+
+"Is Mrs. Richling in?"
+
+There was a shadow of triumph in her faint smile.
+
+"She is."
+
+"I should like to see her."
+
+Mrs. Riley hoisted her chin. "I dunno if she's a-seein' comp'ny to-day."
+The voice was amiably important. "Wont ye walk in? Take a seat and sit
+down, sur, and I'll go and infarm the laydie."
+
+"Thank you," said the Doctor, but continued to stand.
+
+Mrs. Riley started and stopped again.
+
+"Ye forgot to give me yer kyaird, sur." She drew her chin in again
+austerely.
+
+"Just say Dr. Sevier."
+
+"Certainly, sur; yes, that'll be sufficiend. And dispinse with the
+kyaird." She went majestically.
+
+The Doctor, left alone, cast his uninterested glance around the smart
+little bare-floored parlor, upon its new, jig-sawed, gray hair-cloth
+furniture, and up upon a picture of the Pope. When Mrs. Riley, in a
+moment, returned he stood looking out the door.
+
+"Mrs. Richling consints to see ye, sur. She'll be in turreckly. Take a
+seat and sit down." She readjusted the infant on her arm and lifted and
+swung a hair-cloth arm-chair toward him without visible exertion.
+"There's no use o' having chayers if ye don't sit on um," she added
+affably.
+
+The Doctor sat down, and Mrs. Riley occupied the exact centre of the
+small, wide-eared, brittle-looking sofa, where she filled in the silent
+moments that followed by pulling down the skirts of the infant's
+apparel, oppressed with the necessity of keeping up a conversation and
+with the want of subject-matter. The child stared at the Doctor, and
+suddenly plunged toward him with a loud and very watery coo.
+
+"Ah-h!" said Mrs. Riley, in ostentatious rebuke. "Mike!" she cried,
+laughingly, as the action was repeated. "Ye rowdy, air ye go-un to fight
+the gintleman?"
+
+She laughed sincerely, and the Doctor could but notice how neat and
+good-looking she was. He condescended to crook his finger at the babe.
+This seemed to exasperate the so-called rowdy. He planted his pink feet
+on his mother's thigh and gave a mighty lunge and whoop.
+
+"He's go-un to be a wicked bruiser," said proud Mrs. Riley. "He"--the
+pronoun stood, this time, for her husband--"he never sah the child. He
+was kilt with an explosion before the child was barn."
+
+She held the infant on her strong arm as he struggled to throw himself,
+with wide-stretched jaws, upon her bosom; and might have been devoured
+by the wicked bruiser had not his attention been diverted by the
+entrance of Mary, who came in at last, all in fragrant white, with
+apologies for keeping the Doctor waiting.
+
+He looked down into her uplifted eyes. What a riddle is woman! Had he
+not just seen this one in sabots? Did she not certainly know, through
+Mrs. Riley, that he must have seen her so? Were not her skirts but just
+now hitched up with an under-tuck, and fastened with a string? Had she
+not just laid off, in hot haste, a suds-bespattered apron and the
+garments of toil beneath it? Had not a towel been but now unbound from
+the hair shining here under his glance in luxuriant brown coils? This
+brightness of eye, that seemed all exhilaration, was it not trepidation
+instead? And this rosiness, so like redundant vigor, was it not the
+flush of her hot task? He fancied he saw--in truth he may have seen--a
+defiance in the eyes as he glanced upon, and tardily dropped, the little
+water-soaked hand with a bow.
+
+Mary turned to present Mrs. Riley, who bowed and said, trying to hold
+herself with majesty while Mike drew her head into his mouth: "Sur,"
+then turned with great ceremony to Mary, and adding, "I'll withdrah,"
+withdrew with the head and step of a duchess.
+
+"How is your husband, madam?"
+
+"John?--is not well at all, Doctor; though he would say he was if he
+were here. He doesn't shake off his chills. He is out, though, looking
+for work. He'd go as long as he could stand."
+
+She smiled; she almost laughed; but half an eye could see it was only to
+avoid the other thing.
+
+"Where does he go?"
+
+"Everywhere!" She laughed this time audibly.
+
+"If he went everywhere I should see him," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+"Ah! naturally," responded Mary, playfully. "But he does go wherever he
+thinks there's work to be found. He doesn't wander clear out among the
+plantations, of course, where everybody has slaves, and there's no work
+but slaves' work. And he says it's useless to think of a clerkship this
+time of year. It must be, isn't it?"
+
+The Doctor made no answer.
+
+There was a footstep in the alley.
+
+"He's coming now," said Mary,--"that's he. He must have got work to-day.
+He has an acquaintance, an Italian, who promised to have something for
+him to do very soon. Doctor,"--she began to put together the split
+fractions of a palm-leaf fan, smiling diffidently at it the while,--"I
+can't see how it is any discredit to a man not to have a _knack_ for
+making money?"
+
+She lifted her peculiar look of radiant inquiry.
+
+"It is not, madam."
+
+Mary laughed for joy. The light of her face seemed to spread clear into
+her locks.
+
+"Well, I knew you'd say so! John blames himself; he can make money, you
+know, Doctor, but he blames himself because he hasn't that natural gift
+for it that Mr. Ristofalo has. Why, Mr. Ristofalo is simply wonderful!"
+She smiled upon her fan in amused reminiscence. "John is always wishing
+he had his gift."
+
+"My dear madam, don't covet it! At least don't exchange it for anything
+else."
+
+The Doctor was still in this mood of disapprobation when John entered.
+The radiancy of the young husband's greeting hid for a moment, but only
+so long, the marks of illness and adversity. Mary followed him with her
+smiling eyes as the two men shook hands, and John drew a chair near to
+her and sat down with a sigh of mingled pleasure and fatigue.
+
+She told him of whom she and their visitor had just been speaking.
+
+"Raphael Ristofalo!" said John, kindling afresh. "Yes; I've been with
+him all day. It humiliates me to think of him."
+
+Dr. Sevier responded quietly:--
+
+"You've no right to let it humiliate you, sir."
+
+Mary turned to John with dancing eyes, but he passed the utterance as a
+mere compliment, and said, through his smiles:--
+
+"Just see how it is to-day. I have been overseeing the unloading of a
+little schooner from Ruatan island loaded with bananas, cocoanuts, and
+pine-apples. I've made two dollars; he has made a hundred."
+
+Richling went on eagerly to tell about the plain, lustreless man whose
+one homely gift had fascinated him. The Doctor was entertained. The
+narrator sparkled and glowed as he told of Ristofalo's appearance, and
+reproduced his speeches and manner.
+
+"Tell about the apples and eggs," said the delighted Mary.
+
+He did so, sitting on the front edge of his chair-seat, and sprawling
+his legs now in front and now behind him as he swung now around to his
+wife and now to the Doctor. Mary laughed softly at every period, and
+watched the Doctor, to see his slight smile at each detail of the story.
+Richling enjoyed telling it; he had worked; his earnings were in his
+pocket; gladness was easy.
+
+"Why, I'm learning more from Raphael Ristofalo than I ever learned from
+my school-masters: I'm learning the art of livelihood."
+
+He ran on from Ristofalo to the men among whom he had been mingling all
+day. He mimicked the strange, long swing of their Sicilian speech; told
+of their swarthy faces and black beards, their rich instinct for color
+in costume; their fierce conversation and violent gestures; the energy
+of their movements when they worked, and the profoundness of their
+repose when they rested; the picturesqueness and grotesqueness of the
+negroes, too; the huge, flat, round baskets of fruit which the black men
+carried on their heads, and which the Sicilians bore on their shoulders
+or the nape of the neck. The "captain" of the schooner was a central
+figure.
+
+"Doctor," asked Richling, suddenly, "do you know anything about the
+island of Cozumel?"
+
+"Aha!" thought Mary. So there was something besides the day's earning
+that elated him.
+
+She had suspected it. She looked at her husband with an expression of
+the most alert pleasure. The Doctor noticed it.
+
+"No," he said, in reply to Richling's question.
+
+"It stands out in the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Yucatan," began
+Richling.
+
+"Yes, I know that."
+
+"Well, Mary, I've almost promised the schooner captain that we'll go
+there. He wants to get up a colony."
+
+Mary started.
+
+"Why, John!" She betrayed a look of dismay, glanced at their visitor,
+tried to say "Have you?" approvingly, and blushed.
+
+The Doctor made no kind of response.
+
+"Now, don't conclude," said John to Mary, coloring too, but smiling. He
+turned to the physician. "It's a wonderful spot, Doctor."
+
+But the Doctor was still silent, and Richling turned.
+
+"Just to think, Mary, of a place where you can raise all the products of
+two zones; where health is almost perfect; where the yellow fever has
+never been; and where there is such beauty as can be only in the tropics
+and a tropical sea. Why, Doctor, I can't understand why Europeans or
+Americans haven't settled it long ago."
+
+"I suppose we can find out before we go, can't we?" said Mary, looking
+timorously back and forth between John and the Doctor.
+
+"The reason is," replied John, "it's so little known. Just one island
+away out by itself. Three crops of fruit a year. One acre planted in
+bananas feeds fifty men. All the capital a man need have is an axe to
+cut down the finest cabinet and dye-woods in the world. The thermometer
+never goes above ninety nor below forty. You can hire all the labor you
+want at a few cents a day."
+
+Mary's diligent eye detected a cloud on the Doctor's face. But John,
+though nettled, pushed on the more rapidly.
+
+"A man can make--easily!--a thousand dollars the first year, and live on
+two hundred and fifty. It's the place for a poor man."
+
+He looked a little defiant.
+
+"Of course," said Mary, "I know you wouldn't come to an opinion"--she
+smiled with the same restless glance--"until you had made all the
+inquiries necessary. It mu--must--be a delightful place. Doctor?"
+
+Her eyes shone blue as the sky.
+
+"I wouldn't send a convict to such a place," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+Richling flamed up.
+
+"Don't you think," he began to say with visible restraint and a faint,
+ugly twist of the head,--"don't you think it's a better place for a poor
+man than a great, heartless town?"
+
+"This isn't a heartless town," said the Doctor.
+
+"He doesn't mean it as you do, Doctor," interposed Mary, with alarm.
+"John, you ought to explain."
+
+"Than a great town," said Richling, "where a man of honest intentions
+and real desire to live and be useful and independent; who wants to earn
+his daily bread at any honorable cost, and who can't do it because the
+town doesn't want his services, and will not have them--can
+go"-- He ceased, with his sentence all tangled.
+
+"No!" the Doctor was saying meanwhile. "No! No! No!"
+
+"Here I go, day after day," persisted Richling, extending his arm and
+pointing indefinitely through the window.
+
+"No, no, you don't, John," cried Mary, with an effort at gayety; "you
+don't go by the window, John; you go by the door." She pulled his arm
+down tenderly.
+
+"I go by the alley," said John. Silence followed. The young pair
+contrived to force a little laugh, and John made an apologetic move.
+
+"Doctor," he exclaimed, with an air of pleasantry, "the whole town's
+asleep!--sound asleep, like a negro in the sunshine! There isn't work
+for one man in fifty!" He ended tremulously. Mary looked at him with
+dropped face but lifted eyes, handling the fan, whose rent she had made
+worse.
+
+"Richling, my friend,"--the Doctor had never used that term
+before,--"what does your Italian money-maker say to the idea?"
+
+Richling gave an Italian shrug and his own pained laugh.
+
+"Exactly! Why, Mr. Richling, you're on an island now,--an island in
+mid-ocean. Both of you!" He waved his hands toward the two without
+lifting his head from the back of the easy-chair, where he had dropped
+it.
+
+"What do you mean, Doctor?"
+
+"Mean? Isn't my meaning plain enough? I mean you're too independent.
+You know very well, Richling, that you've started out in life with some
+fanciful feud against the 'world.' What it is I don't know, but I'm sure
+it's not the sort that religion requires. You've told this world--you
+remember you said it to me once--that if it will go one road you'll
+go another. You've forgotten that, mean and stupid and bad as your
+fellow-creatures are, they're your brothers and sisters, and that
+they have claims on you as such, and that you have claims on them as
+such.--Cozumel! You're there now! Has a friend no rights? I don't know
+your immediate relatives, and I say nothing about them"--
+
+John gave a slight start, and Mary looked at him suddenly.
+
+"But here am I," continued the speaker. "Is it just to me for you to
+hide away here in want that forces you and your wife--I beg your pardon,
+madam--into mortifying occupations, when one word to me--a trivial
+obligation, not worthy to be called an obligation, contracted with
+me--would remove that necessity, and tide you over the emergency of the
+hour?"
+
+Richling was already answering, not by words only, but by his confident
+smile:--
+
+"Yes, sir; yes, it is just: ask Mary."
+
+"Yes, Doctor," interposed the wife. "We went over"--
+
+"We went over it together," said John. "We weighed it well. It _is_
+just,--not to ask aid as long as there's hope without it."
+
+The Doctor responded with the quiet air of one who is sure of his
+position:--
+
+"Yes, I see. But, of course--I know without asking--you left the
+question of health out of your reckoning. Now, Richling, put the whole
+world, if you choose, in a selfish attitude"--
+
+"No, no," said Richling and his wife. "Ah, no!" But the Doctor
+persisted.
+
+"--a purely selfish attitude. Wouldn't it, nevertheless, rather help a
+well man or woman than a sick one? Wouldn't it pay better?"
+
+"Yes, but"--
+
+"Yes," said the Doctor. "But you're taking the most desperate risks
+against health and life." He leaned forward in his chair, jerked in his
+legs, and threw out his long white hands. "You're committing slow
+suicide."
+
+"Doctor," began Mary; but her husband had the floor.
+
+"Doctor," he said, "can you put yourself in our place? Wouldn't you
+rather die than beg? _Wouldn't_ you?"
+
+The Doctor rose to his feet as straight as a lance.
+
+"It isn't what you'd rather, sir! You haven't your choice! You haven't
+your choice at all, sir! When God gets ready for you to die he'll let
+you know, sir! And you've no right to trifle with his mercy in the
+meanwhile. I'm not a man to teach men to whine after each other for aid;
+but every principle has its limitations, Mr. Richling. You say you went
+over the whole subject. Yes; well, didn't you strike the fact that
+suicide is an affront to civilization and humanity?"
+
+"Why, Doctor!" cried the other two, rising also. "We're not going to
+commit suicide."
+
+"No," retorted he, "you're not. That's what I came here to tell you. I'm
+here to prevent it."
+
+"Doctor," exclaimed Mary, the big tears standing in her eyes, and the
+Doctor melting before them like wax, "it's not so bad as it looks. I
+wash--some--because it pays so much better than sewing. I find I'm
+stronger than any one would believe. I'm stronger than I ever was before
+in my life. I am, indeed. I _don't_ wash _much_. And it's only for the
+present. We'll all be laughing at this, some time, together." She began
+a small part of the laugh then and there.
+
+"You'll do it no more," the Doctor replied. He drew out his pocket-book.
+"Mr. Richling, will you please send me through the mail, or bring me,
+your note for fifty dollars,--at your leisure, you know,--payable on
+demand?" He rummaged an instant in the pocket-book, and extended his
+hand with a folded bank-note between his thumb and finger. But Richling
+compressed his lips and shook his head, and the two men stood silently
+confronting each other. Mary laid her hand upon her husband's shoulder
+and leaned against him, with her eyes on the Doctor's face.
+
+"Come, Richling,"--the Doctor smiled,--"your friend Ristofalo did not
+treat you in this way."
+
+"I never treated Ristofalo so," replied Richling, with a smile tinged
+with bitterness. It was against himself that he felt bitter; but the
+Doctor took it differently, and Richling, seeing this, hurried to
+correct the impression.
+
+"I mean I lent him no such amount as that."
+
+"It was just one-fiftieth of that," said Mary.
+
+"But you gave liberally, without upbraiding," said the Doctor.
+
+"Oh, no, Doctor! no!" exclaimed she, lifting the hand that lay on her
+husband's near shoulder and reaching it over to the farther one. "Oh! a
+thousand times no! John never meant that. Did you, John?"
+
+"How could I?" said John. "No!" Yet there was confession in his look. He
+had not meant it, but he had felt it.
+
+Dr. Sevier sat down, motioned them into their seats, drew the arm-chair
+close to theirs. Then he spoke. He spoke long, and as he had not spoken
+anywhere but at the bedside scarce ever in his life before. The young
+husband and wife forgot that he had ever said a grating word. A soft
+love-warmth began to fill them through and through. They seemed to
+listen to the gentle voice of an older and wiser brother. A hand of Mary
+sank unconsciously upon a hand of John. They smiled and assented, and
+smiled, and assented, and Mary's eyes brimmed up with tears, and John
+could hardly keep his down. The Doctor made the whole case so plain and
+his propositions so irresistibly logical that the pair looked from his
+eyes to each other's and laughed. "Cozumel!" They did not utter the
+name; they only thought of it both at one moment. It never passed their
+lips again. Their visitor brought them to an arrangement. The fifty
+dollars were to be placed to John's credit on the books kept by
+Narcisse, as a deposit from Richling, and to be drawn against by him in
+such littles as necessity might demand. It was to be "secured"--they all
+three smiled at that word--by Richling's note payable on demand. The
+Doctor left a prescription for the refractory chills.
+
+As he crossed Canal street, walking in slow meditation homeward at the
+hour of dusk, a tall man standing against a wall, tin cup in hand,--a
+full-fledged mendicant of the steam-boiler explosion, tin-proclamation
+type,--asked his alms. He passed by, but faltered, stopped, let his hand
+down into his pocket, and looked around to see if his pernicious example
+was observed. None saw him. He felt--he saw himself--a drivelling
+sentimentalist. But weak, and dazed, sore wounded of the archers, he
+turned and dropped a dime into the beggar's cup.
+
+Richling was too restless with the joy of relief to sit or stand. He
+trumped up an errand around the corner, and hardly got back before he
+contrived another. He went out to the bakery for some crackers--fresh
+baked--for Mary; listened to a long story across the baker's counter,
+and when he got back to his door found he had left the crackers at the
+bakery. He went back for them and returned, the blood about his heart
+still running and leaping and praising God.
+
+"The sun at midnight!" he exclaimed, knitting Mary's hands in his.
+"You're very tired. Go to bed. Me? I can't yet. I'm too restless."
+
+He spent more than an hour chatting with Mrs. Riley, and had never found
+her so "nice" a person before; so easy comes human fellowship when we
+have had a stroke of fortune. When he went again to his room there was
+Mary kneeling by the bedside, with her head slipped under the snowy
+mosquito net, all in fine linen, white as the moonlight, frilled and
+broidered, a remnant of her wedding glory gleaming through the long,
+heavy wefts of her unbound hair.
+
+"Why, Mary"--
+
+There was no answer.
+
+"Mary?" he said again, laying his hand upon her head.
+
+The head was slowly lifted. She smiled an infant's smile, and dropped
+her cheek again upon the bedside. She had fallen asleep at the foot of
+the Throne.
+
+At that same hour, in an upper chamber of a large, distant house, there
+knelt another form, with bared, bowed head, but in the garb in which it
+had come in from the street. Praying? This white thing overtaken by
+sleep here was not more silent. Yet--yes, praying. But, all the while,
+the prayer kept running to a little tune, and the words repeating
+themselves again and again; "Oh, don't you remember sweet Alice--with
+hair so brown--so brown--so brown? Sweet Alice, with hair so brown?" And
+God bent his ear and listened.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+BORROWER TURNED LENDER.
+
+
+It was only a day or two later that the Richlings, one afternoon, having
+been out for a sunset walk, were just reaching Mrs. Riley's door-step
+again, when they were aware of a young man approaching from the opposite
+direction with the intention of accosting them. They brought their
+conversation to a murmurous close.
+
+For it was not what a mere acquaintance could have joined them in,
+albeit its subject was the old one of meat and raiment. Their talk had
+been light enough on their starting out, notwithstanding John had earned
+nothing that day. But it had toned down, or, we might say up, to a
+sober, though not a sombre, quality. John had in some way evolved the
+assertion that even the life of the body alone is much more than food
+and clothing and shelter; so much more, that only a divine provision can
+sustain it; so much more, that the fact is, when it fails, it generally
+fails with meat and raiment within easy reach.
+
+Mary devoured his words. His spiritual vision had been a little clouded
+of late, and now, to see it clear-- She closed her eyes for bliss.
+
+"Why, John," she said, "you make it plainer than any preacher I ever
+heard."
+
+This, very naturally, silenced John. And Mary, hoping to start him
+again, said:--
+
+"Heaven provides. And yet I'm sure you're right in seeking our food and
+raiment?" She looked up inquiringly.
+
+"Yes; like the fowls, the provision is made _for_ us through us. The
+mistake is in making those things the _end_ of our search."
+
+"Why, certainly!" exclaimed Mary, softly. She took fresh hold in her
+husband's arm; the young man was drawing near.
+
+"It's Narcisse!" murmured John. The Creole pressed suddenly forward with
+a joyous smile, seized Richling's hand, and, lifting his hat to Mary as
+John presented him, brought his heels together and bowed from the hips.
+
+"I wuz juz coming at yo' 'ouse, Mistoo Itchlin. Yesseh. I wuz juz
+sitting in my 'oom afteh dinneh, envelop' in my _'obe de chambre_, when
+all at once I says to myseff, 'Faw distwaction I will go and see Mistoo
+Itchlin!'"
+
+"Will you walk in?" said the pair.
+
+Mrs. Riley, standing in the door of her parlor, made way by descending
+to the sidewalk. Her calico was white, with a small purple figure, and
+was highly starched and beautifully ironed. Purple ribbons were at her
+waist and throat. As she reached the ground Mary introduced Narcisse.
+She smiled winningly, and when she said, with a courtesy: "Proud to know
+ye, sur," Narcisse was struck with the sweetness of her tone. But she
+swept away with a dramatic tread.
+
+"Will you walk in?" Mary repeated; and Narcisse responded:--
+
+"If you will pummit me yo' attention a few moment'." He bowed again and
+made way for Mary to precede him.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," he continued, going in, "in fact you don't give Misses
+Witchlin my last name with absolute co'ectness."
+
+"Did I not? Why, I hope you'll pardon"--
+
+"Oh, I'm glad of it. I don' feel lak a pusson is my fwen' whilst they
+don't call me Nahcisse." He directed his remark particularly to Mary.
+
+"Indeed?" responded she. "But, at the same time, Mr. Richling would
+have"-- She had turned to John, who sat waiting to catch her eye with
+such intense amusement betrayed in his own that she saved herself
+from laughter and disgrace only by instant silence.
+
+"Yesseh," said Narcisse to Richling, "'tis the tooth."
+
+He cast his eye around upon the prevailing hair-cloth and varnish.
+
+"Misses Witchlin, I muz tell you I like yo' tas'e in that pawlah."
+
+"It's Mrs. Riley's taste," said Mary.
+
+"'Tis a beaucheouz tas'e," insisted the Creole, contemplatively, gazing
+at the Pope's vestments tricked out with blue, scarlet, and gilt
+spangles. "Well, Mistoo Itchlin, since some time I've been stipulating
+me to do myseff that honoh, seh, to come at yo' 'ouse; well, ad the end
+I am yeh. I think you fine yoseff not ve'y well those days. Is that nod
+the case, Mistoo Itchlin?"
+
+"Oh, I'm well enough!" Richling ended with a laugh, somewhat
+explosively. Mary looked at him with forced gravity as he suppressed it.
+He had to draw his nose slowly through his thumb and two fingers before
+he could quite command himself. Mary relieved him by responding:--
+
+"No, Mr. Richling hasn't been well for some time."
+
+Narcisse responded triumphantly:--
+
+"It stwuck me--so soon I pe'ceive you--that you 'ave the ai' of a
+valedictudina'y. Thass a ve'y fawtunate that you ah 'esiding in a
+'ealthsome pawt of the city, in fact."
+
+Both John and Mary laughed and demurred.
+
+"You don't think?" asked the smiling visitor. "Me, I dunno,--I fine one
+thing. If a man don't die fum one thing, yet, still, he'll die fum
+something. I 'ave study that out, Mistoo Itchlin. 'To be, aw to not be,
+thaz the queztion,' in fact. I don't ca'e if you live one place aw if
+you live anotheh place, 'tis all the same,--you've got to pay to live!"
+
+The Richlings laughed again, and would have been glad to laugh more; but
+each, without knowing it of the other, was reflecting with some
+mortification upon the fact that, had they been talking French, Narcisse
+would have bitten his tongue off before any of his laughter should have
+been at their expense.
+
+"Indeed you have got to pay to live," said John, stepping to the window
+and drawing up its painted paper shade. "Yes, and"--
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Mary, with gentle disapprobation. She met her husband's
+eye with a smile of protest. "John," she said, "Mr. ----" she couldn't
+think of the name.
+
+"Nahcisse," said the Creole.
+
+"Will think," she continued, her amusement climbing into her eyes in
+spite of her, "you're in earnest."
+
+"Well, I am, partly. Narcisse knows, as well as we do that there are two
+sides to the question." He resumed his seat. "I reckon"--
+
+"Yes," said Narcisse, "and what you muz look out faw, 'tis to git on the
+soff side."
+
+They all laughed.
+
+"I was going to say," said Richling, "the world takes us as we come,
+'sight-unseen.' Some of us pay expenses, some don't."
+
+"Ah!" rejoined Narcisse, looking up at the whitewashed ceiling,
+"those egspenze'!" He raised his hand and dropped it. "I _fine_ it so
+_diffycul'_ to defeat those egspenze'! In fact, Mistoo Itchlin, such ah
+the state of my financial emba'assment that I do not go out at all. I
+stay in, in fact. I stay at my 'ouse--to light' those egspenze'!"
+
+They were all agreed that expenses could be lightened thus.
+
+"And by making believe you don't want things," said Mary.
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Narcisse, "I nevvah kin do that!" and Richling gave a
+laugh that was not without sympathy. "But I muz tell you, Mistoo
+Itchlin, I am aztonizh at _you_."
+
+An instant apprehension seized John and Mary. They _knew_ their
+ill-concealed amusement would betray them, and now they were to be
+called to account. But no.
+
+"Yesseh," continued Narcisse, "you 'ave the gweatez o'casion to be the
+subjec' of congwatulation, Mistoo Itchlin, to 'ave the poweh to
+_ac_cum'late money in those hawd time' like the pwesen'!"
+
+The Richlings cried out with relief and amused surprise.
+
+"Why, you couldn't make a greater mistake!"
+
+"Mistaken! Hah! W'en I ged that memo'andum f'om Dr. Seveeah to paz that
+fifty dollah at yo' cwedit, it burz f'om me, that egs_clam_ation!
+'Acchilly! 'ow that Mistoo Itchlin deserve the 'espect to save a lill
+quantity of money like that!"
+
+The laughter of John and Mary did not impede his rhapsody, nor their
+protestations shake his convictions.
+
+"Why," said Richling, lolling back, "the Doctor has simply omitted to
+have you make the entry of"--
+
+But he had no right to interfere with the Doctor's accounts. However,
+Narcisse was not listening.
+
+"You' compel' to be witch some day, Mistoo Itchlin, ad that wate of
+p'ogwess; I am convince of that. I can deteg that indis_pu_tably in yo'
+physio'nomie. Me--I _can't_ save a cent! Mistoo Itchlin, you would be
+aztonizh to know 'ow bad I want some money, in fact; exceb that I am
+_too_ pwoud to dizclose you that state of my condition!"
+
+He paused and looked from John to Mary, and from Mary to John again.
+
+"Why, I'll declare," said Richling, sincerely, dropping forward with his
+chin on his hand, "I'm sorry to hear"--
+
+But Narcisse interrupted.
+
+"Diffyculty with me--I am not willing to baw'."
+
+Mary drew a long breath and glanced at her husband. He changed his
+attitude and, looking upon the floor, said, "Yes, yes." He slowly marked
+the bare floor with the edge of his shoe-sole. "And yet there are times
+when duty actually"--
+
+"I believe you, Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, quickly forestalling
+Mary's attempt to speak. "Ah, Mistoo Itchlin! _if_ I had baw'd money
+ligue the huncle of my hant!" He waved his hand to the ceiling and
+looked up through that obstruction, as it were, to the witnessing sky.
+"But I _hade_ that--to baw'! I tell you 'ow 'tis with me, Mistoo
+Itchlin; I nevvah would consen' to baw' money on'y if I pay a big
+inte'es' on it. An' I'm compel' to tell you one thing, Mistoo Itchlin,
+in fact: I nevvah would leave money with Doctah Seveeah to invez faw
+me--no!"
+
+Richling gave a little start, and cast his eyes an instant toward his
+wife. She spoke.
+
+"We'd rather you wouldn't say that to us, Mister ----" There was a
+commanding smile at one corner of her lips. "You don't know what a
+friend"--
+
+Narcisse had already apologized by two or three gestures to each of his
+hearers.
+
+"Misses Itchlin--Mistoo Itchlin,"--he shook his head and smiled
+skeptically,--"you think you kin admiah Doctah Seveeah mo' than me? 'Tis
+uzeless to attempt. 'With all 'is fault I love 'im still.'"
+
+Richling and his wife both spoke at once.
+
+"But John and I," exclaimed Mary, electrically, "love him, faults and
+all!"
+
+She looked from husband to visitor, and from visitor to husband, and
+laughed and laughed, pushing her small feet back and forth alternately
+and softly clapping her hands. Narcisse felt her in the centre of his
+heart. He laughed. John laughed.
+
+"What I mean, Mistoo Itchlin," resumed Narcisse, preferring to avoid
+Mary's aroused eye,--"what I mean--Doctah Seveeah don't un'stan' that
+kine of business co'ectly. Still, ad the same time, if I was you I know
+I would 'ate faw my money not to be makin' me some inte'es'. I tell you
+what I would do with you, Mistoo Itchlin, in fact: I kin baw' that fifty
+dollah f'om you myseff."
+
+Richling repressed a smile. "Thank you! But I don't care to invest it."
+
+"Pay you ten pe' cent. a month."
+
+"But we can't spare it," said Richling, smiling toward Mary. "We may
+need part of it ourselves."
+
+"I tell you, 'eally, Mistoo Itchlin, I nevveh baw' money; but it juz
+'appen I kin use that juz at the pwesent."
+
+"Why, John," said Mary, "I think you might as well say plainly that the
+money is borrowed money."
+
+"That's what it is," responded Richling, and rose to spread the
+street-door wider open, for the daylight was fading.
+
+"Well, I 'ope you'll egscuse that libbetty," said Narcisse, rising a
+little more tardily, and slower. "I muz baw' fawty dollah--some place.
+Give you good secu'ty--give you my note, Mistoo Itchlin, in fact; muz
+baw fawty--aw thutty-five."
+
+"Why, I'm very sorry," responded Richling, really ashamed that he could
+not hold his face straight. "I hope you understand"--
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, 'tis baw'd money. If you had a necessity faw it you
+would use it. If a fwend 'ave a necessity--'tis anotheh thing--you don't
+feel that libbetty--you ah 'ight--I honoh you"--
+
+"I _don't_ feel the same liberty."
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, with noble generosity, throwing himself
+a half step forward, "if it was yoze you'd baw' it to me in a minnit!"
+He smiled with benign delight. "Well, madame,--I bid you good evening,
+Misses Itchlin. The bes' of fwen's muz pawt, you know." He turned again
+to Richling with a face all beauty and a form all grace. "I was juz
+sitting--mistfully--all at once I says to myseff, 'Faw distwaction
+I'll go an' see Mistoo Itchlin.' I don't _know_ 'ow I juz
+'appen'!-- Well, _au 'evo'_, Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+Richling followed him out upon the door-step. There Narcisse intimated
+that even twenty dollars for a few days would supply a stern want. And
+when Richling was compelled again to refuse, Narcisse solicited his
+company as far as the next corner. There the Creole covered him with
+shame by forcing him to refuse the loan of ten dollars, and then of
+five.
+
+It was a full hour before Richling rejoined his wife. Mrs. Riley had
+stepped off to some neighbor's door with Mike on her arm. Mary was on
+the sidewalk.
+
+"John," she said, in a low voice, and with a long anxious look.
+
+"What?"
+
+"He _didn't_ take the only dollar of your own in the world?"
+
+"Mary, what could I do? It seemed a crime to give, and a crime not to
+give. He cried like a child; said it was all a sham about his dinner and
+his _robe de chambre_. An aunt, two little cousins, an aged uncle at
+home--and not a cent in the house! What could I do? He says he'll return
+it in three days."
+
+"And"--Mary laughed distressfully--"you believed him?" She looked at him
+with an air of tender, painful admiration, half way between a laugh and
+a cry.
+
+"Come, sit down," he said, sinking upon the little wooden buttress at
+one side of the door-step.
+
+Tears sprang into her eyes. She shook her head.
+
+"Let's go inside." And in there she told him sincerely, "No, no, no; she
+didn't think he had done wrong"--when he knew he had.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+WEAR AND TEAR.
+
+
+The arrangement for Dr. Sevier to place the loan of fifty dollars on his
+own books at Richling's credit naturally brought Narcisse into relation
+with it.
+
+It was a case of love at first sight. From the moment the record of
+Richling's "little quantity" slid from the pen to the page, Narcisse had
+felt himself betrothed to it by destiny, and hourly supplicated the
+awful fates to frown not upon the amorous hopes of him unaugmented.
+Richling descended upon him once or twice and tore away from his embrace
+small fractions of the coveted treasure, choosing, through a diffidence
+which he mistook for a sort of virtue, the time of day when he would not
+see Dr. Sevier; and at the third visitation took the entire golden
+fleece away with him rather than encounter again the always more or less
+successful courtship of the scorner of loans.
+
+A faithful suitor, however, was not thus easily shaken off. Narcisse
+became a frequent visitor at the Richlings', where he never mentioned
+money; that part was left to moments of accidental meeting with Richling
+in the street, which suddenly began to occur at singularly short
+intervals.
+
+Mary labored honestly and arduously to dislike him--to hold a repellent
+attitude toward him. But he was too much for her. It was easy enough
+when he was absent; but one look at his handsome face, so rife with
+animal innocence, and despite herself she was ready to reward his
+displays of sentiment and erudition with laughter that, mean what it
+might, always pleased and flattered him.
+
+"Can you help liking him?" she would ask John. "I can't, to save my
+life!"
+
+Had the treasure been earnings, Richling said--and believed--he could
+firmly have repelled Narcisse's importunities. But coldly to withhold an
+occasional modest heave-offering of that which was the free bounty of
+another to him was more than he could do.
+
+"But," said Mary, straightening his cravat, "you intend to pay up, and
+he--you don't think I'm uncharitable, do you?"
+
+"I'd rather give my last cent than think you so," replied John.
+"Still,"--laying the matter before her with both open hands,--"if you
+say plainly not to give him another cent I'll do as you say. The money's
+no more mine than yours."
+
+"Well, you can have all my share," said Mary, pleasantly.
+
+So the weeks passed and the hoard dwindled.
+
+"What has it got down to, now?" asked John, frowningly, on more than one
+morning as he was preparing to go out. And Mary, who had been made
+treasurer, could count it at a glance without taking it out of her
+purse.
+
+One evening, when Narcisse called, he found no one at home but Mrs.
+Riley. The infant Mike had been stuffed with rice and milk and laid away
+to slumber. The Richlings would hardly be back in less than an hour.
+
+"I'm so'y," said Narcisse, with a baffled frown, as he sat down and Mrs.
+Riley took her seat opposite. "I came to 'epay 'em some moneys which he
+made me the loan--juz in a fwenly way. And I came to 'epay 'im. The
+sum-total, in fact--I suppose he nevva mentioned you about that, eh?"
+
+"No, sir; but, still, if"--
+
+"No, and so I can't pay it to you. I'm so'y. Because I know he woon like
+it, I know, if he fine that you know he's been bawing money to me. Well,
+Misses Wiley, in fact, thass a _ve'y_ fine gen'leman and lady--that
+Mistoo and Misses Itchlin, in fact?"
+
+"Well, now, Mr. Narcisse, ye'r about right? She's just too good to
+live--and he's not much better--ha! ha!" She checked her jesting mood.
+"Yes, sur, they're very peaceable, quiet people. They're just simply
+ferst tlass."
+
+"'Tis t'ue," rejoined the Creole, fanning himself with his straw hat and
+looking at the Pope. "And they handsome and genial, as the lite'ati say
+on the noozpapeh. Seem like they almoze wedded to each otheh."
+
+"Well, now, sir, that's the trooth!" She threw her open hand down with
+emphasis.
+
+"And isn't that as man and wife should be?"
+
+"Yo' mighty co'ect, Misses Wiley!" Narcisse gave his pretty head a
+little shake from side to side as he spoke.
+
+"Ah! Mr. Narcisse,"--she pointed at herself,--"haven't I been a wife?
+The husband and wife--they'd aht to jist be each other's guairdjian
+angels! Hairt to hairt sur; sperit to sperit. All the rist is nawthing,
+Mister Narcisse." She waved her hands. "Min is different from women,
+sur." She looked about on the ceiling. Her foot noiselessly patted the
+floor.
+
+"Yes," said Narcisse, "and thass the cause that they dwess them dif'ent.
+To show the dif'ence, you know."
+
+"Ah! no. It's not the mortial frame, sur; it's the sperit. The sperit of
+man is not the sperit of woman. The sperit of woman is not the sperit of
+man. Each one needs the other, sur. They needs each other, sur, to
+purify and strinthen and enlairge each other's speritu'l life. Ah, sur!
+Doo not I feel those things, sur?" She touched her heart with one
+backward-pointed finger, "_I_ doo. It isn't good for min to be
+alone--much liss for women. Do not misunderstand me, sur; I speak as a
+widder, sur--and who always will be--ah! yes, I will--ha! ha! ha!" She
+hushed her laugh as if this were going too far, tossed her head, and
+continued smiling.
+
+So they talked on. Narcisse did not stay an hour, but there was
+little of the hour left when he rose to go. They had passed a pleasant
+time. The Creole, it is true, tried and failed to take the helm of
+conversation. Mrs. Riley held it. But she steered well. She was still
+expatiating on the "strinthenin'" spiritual value of the marriage
+relation when she, too, stood up.
+
+"And that's what Mr. and Madam Richlin's a-doin' all the time. And they
+do ut to perfiction, sur--jist to perfiction!"
+
+"I doubt it not, Misses Wiley. Well, Misses Wiley, I bid you _au
+'evoi'_. I dunno if you'll pummit me, but I am compel to tell you,
+Misses Wiley, I nevva yeh anybody in my life with such a educated and
+talented conve'sation like yo'seff. Misses Wiley, at what univussity did
+you gwaduate?"
+
+"Well, reely, Mister--eh"--she fanned herself with broad sweeps of her
+purple bordered palm-leaf--"reely, sur, if I don't furgit the name
+I--I--I'll be switched! Ha! ha! ha!"
+
+Narcisse joined in the laugh.
+
+"Thaz the way, sometime," he said, and then with sudden gravity: "And,
+by-the-by, Misses Wiley, speakin' of Mistoo Itchlin,--if you could baw'
+me two dollahs an' a 'alf juz till tomaw mawnin--till I kin sen' it you
+fum the office-- Because that money I've got faw Mistoo Itchlin is
+in the shape of a check, and anyhow I'm c'owding me a little to pay that
+whole sum-total to Mistoo Itchlin. I kin sen' it you firs' thing my bank
+open tomaw mawnin."
+
+Do you think he didn't get it?
+
+ * * *
+
+"What has it got down to now?" John asked again, a few mornings after
+Narcisse's last visit. Mary told him. He stepped a little way aside,
+averting his face, dropped his forehead into his hand, and returned.
+
+"I don't see--I don't see, Mary--I"--
+
+"Darling," she replied, reaching and capturing both his hands, "who does
+see? The rich _think_ they see; but do they, John? Now, _do_ they?"
+
+The frown did not go quite off his face, but he took her head between
+his hands and kissed her temple.
+
+"You're always trying to lift me," he said.
+
+"Don't you lift me?" she replied, looking up between his hands and
+smiling.
+
+"Do I?"
+
+"You know you do. Don't you remember the day we took that walk, and you
+said that after all it never is we who provide?" She looked at the
+button of his coat, which she twirled in her fingers. "That word lifted
+me."
+
+"But suppose I can't practice the trust I preach?" he said.
+
+"You do trust, though. You have trusted."
+
+"Past tense," said John. He lifted her hands slowly away from him, and
+moved toward the door of their chamber. He could not help looking back
+at the eyes that followed him, and then he could not bear their look.
+"I--I suppose a man mustn't trust too much," he said.
+
+"Can he?" asked Mary, leaning against a table.
+
+"Oh, yes, he can," replied John; but his tone lacked conviction.
+
+"If it's the right kind?"
+
+Her eyes were full of tears.
+
+"I'm afraid mine's not the right kind, then," said John, and passed out
+into and down the street.
+
+But what a mind he took with him--what torture of questions! Was he
+being lifted or pulled down? His tastes,--were they rising or sinking?
+Were little negligences of dress and bearing and in-door attitude
+creeping into his habits? Was he losing his discriminative sense of
+quantity, time, distance? Did he talk of small achievements, small
+gains, and small truths, as though they were great? Had he learned to
+carp at the rich, and to make honesty the excuse for all penury? Had he
+these various poverty-marks? He looked at himself outside and inside,
+and feared to answer. One thing he knew,--that he was having great
+wrestlings.
+
+He turned his thoughts to Ristofalo. This was a common habit with him.
+Not only in thought, but in person, he hovered with a positive
+infatuation about this man of perpetual success.
+
+Lately the Italian had gone out of town, into the country of La
+Fourche, to buy standing crops of oranges. Richling fed his hope on the
+possibilities that might follow Ristofalo's return. His friend would
+want him to superintend the gathering and shipment of those crops--when
+they should be ripe--away yonder in November. Frantic thought! A man and
+his wife could starve to death twenty times before then.
+
+Mrs. Riley's high esteem for John and Mary had risen from the date of
+the Doctor's visit, and the good woman thought it but right somewhat to
+increase the figures of their room-rent to others more in keeping with
+such high gentility. How fast the little hoard melted away!
+
+And the summer continued on,--the long, beautiful, glaring, implacable
+summer; its heat quaking on the low roofs; its fig-trees dropping their
+shrivelled and blackened leaves and writhing their weird, bare branches
+under the scorching sun; the long-drawn, frying note of its cicada
+throbbing through the mid-day heat from the depths of the becalmed oak;
+its universal pall of dust on the myriad red, sleep-heavy blossoms of
+the oleander and the white tulips of the lofty magnolia; its twinkling
+pomegranates hanging their apples of scarlet and gold over the garden
+wall; its little chameleons darting along the hot fence-tops; its
+far-stretching, empty streets; its wide hush of idleness; its solitary
+vultures sailing in the upper blue; its grateful clouds; its hot north
+winds, its cool south winds; its gasping twilight calms; its gorgeous
+nights,--the long, long summer lingered on into September.
+
+One evening, as the sun was sinking below the broad, flat land, its
+burning disk reddened by a low golden haze of suspended dust, Richling
+passed slowly toward his home, coming from a lower part of the town by
+way of the quadroon quarter. He was paying little notice, or none, to
+his whereabouts, wending his way mechanically, in the dejected reverie
+of weary disappointment, and with voiceless inward screamings and
+groanings under the weight of those thoughts which had lately taken up
+their stay in his dismayed mind. But all at once his attention was
+challenged by a strange, offensive odor. He looked up and around, saw
+nothing, turned a corner, and found himself at the intersection of Treme
+and St. Anne streets, just behind the great central prison of New
+Orleans.
+
+The "Parish Prison" was then only about twenty-five years old; but it
+had made haste to become offensive to every sense and sentiment of
+reasonable man. It had been built in the Spanish style,--a massive,
+dark, grim, huge, four-sided block, the fissure-like windows of its
+cells looking down into the four public streets which ran immediately
+under its walls. Dilapidation had followed hard behind ill-building
+contractors. Down its frowning masonry ran grimy streaks of leakage over
+peeling stucco and mould-covered brick. Weeds bloomed high aloft in the
+broken gutters under the scant and ragged eaves. Here and there the
+pale, debauched face of a prisoner peered shamelessly down through
+shattered glass or rusted grating; and everywhere in the still
+atmosphere floated the stifling smell of the unseen loathsomeness
+within.
+
+Richling paused. As he looked up he noticed a bat dart out from a long
+crevice under the eaves. Two others followed. Then three--a dozen--a
+hundred--a thousand--millions. All along the two sides of the prison in
+view they poured forth in a horrid black torrent,--myriads upon myriads.
+They filled the air. They came and came. Richling stood and gazed; and
+still they streamed out in gibbering waves, until the wonder was that
+anything but a witch's dream could contain them.
+
+The approach of another passer roused him, and he started on. The step
+gained upon him--closed up with him; and at the moment when he expected
+to see the person go by, a hand was laid gently on his shoulder.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, I 'ope you well, seh!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+BROUGHT TO BAY.
+
+
+One may take his choice between the two, but there is no escaping both
+in this life: the creditor--the borrower. Either, but never neither.
+Narcisse caught step with Richling, and they walked side by side.
+
+"How I learned to mawch, I billong with a fiah comp'ny," said the
+Creole. "We mawch eve'y yeah on the fou'th of Mawch." He laughed
+heartily. "Thass a 'ime!--Mawch on the fou'th of Mawch! Thass poetwy, in
+fact, as you may _say_ in a jesting _way_--ha! ha! ha!"
+
+"Yes, and it's truth, besides," responded the drearier man.
+
+"Yes!" exclaimed Narcisse, delighted at the unusual coincidence, "at the
+same time 'tis the tooth! In fact, why should I tell a lie about such a
+thing like _that_? 'Twould be useless. Pe'haps you may 'ave notiz,
+Mistoo Itchlin, thad the noozpapehs opine us fiahmen to be the gau'dians
+of the city."
+
+"Yes," responded Richling. "I think Dr. Sevier calls you the Mamelukes,
+doesn't he? But that's much the same, I suppose."
+
+"Same thing," replied the Creole. "We combad the fiah fiend. You fine
+that building ve'y pitto'esque, Mistoo Itchlin?" He jerked his thumb
+toward the prison, that was still pouring forth its clouds of impish
+wings. "Yes? 'Tis the same with me. But I tell you one thing, Mistoo
+Itchlin, I assu' you, and you will believe me, I would 'atheh be lock'
+_out_side of that building than to be lock' _in_side of the same.
+'Cause--you know why? 'Tis ve'y 'umid in that building. An thass a thing
+w'at I believe, Mistoo Itchlin; I believe w'en a building is v'ey 'umid
+it is not ve'y 'ealthsome. What is yo' opinion consunning that, Mistoo
+Itchlin?"
+
+"My opinion?" said Richling, with a smile. "My opinion is that the
+Parish Prison would not be a good place to raise a family."
+
+Narcisse laughed.
+
+"I thing yo' _o_pinion is co'ect," he said, flatteringly; then growing
+instantly serious, he added, "Yesseh, I think you' about a-'ight, Mistoo
+Itchlin; faw even if 'twas not too 'umid, 'twould be too confining, in
+fact,--speshly faw child'en. I dunno; but thass my opinion. If you ah
+p'oceeding at yo' residence, Mistoo Itchlin, I'll juz _con_tinue my
+p'omenade in yo' society--if not intooding"--
+
+Richling smiled candidly. "Your company's worth all it costs, Narcisse.
+Excuse me; I always forget your last name--and your first is so
+appropriate." It _was_ worth all it cost, though Richling could ill
+afford the purchase. The young Latin's sweet, abysmal ignorance, his
+infantile amiability, his artless ambition, and heathenish innocence
+started the natural gladness of Richling's blood to effervescing anew
+every time they met, and, through the sheer impossibility of confiding
+any of his troubles to the Creole, made him think them smaller and
+lighter than they had just before appeared. The very light of Narcisse's
+countenance and beauty of his form--his smooth, low forehead, his thick,
+abundant locks, his faintly up-tipped nose and expanded nostrils, his
+sweet, weak mouth with its impending smile, his beautiful chin and
+bird's throat, his almond eyes, his full, round arm, and strong
+thigh--had their emphatic value.
+
+So now, Richling, a moment earlier borne down by the dreadful shadow of
+the Parish Prison, left it behind him as he walked and laughed and
+chatted with his borrower. He felt very free with Narcisse, for the
+reason that would have made a wiser person constrained,--lack of respect
+for him.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, you know," said the Creole, "I like you to call me
+Nahcisse. But at the same time my las' name is Savillot." He pronounced
+it Sav-_veel_-yo. "Thass a somewot Spanish name. That double l got a
+twist in it."
+
+"Oh, call it Papilio!" laughed Richling.
+
+"Papillon!" exclaimed Narcisse, with delight. "The buttehfly! All
+a-'ight; you kin juz style me that! 'Cause thass my natu'e, Mistoo
+Itchlin; I gatheh honey eve'y day fum eve'y opening floweh, as the bahd
+of A-von wemawk."
+
+So they went on.
+
+_Ad infinitum?_ Ah, no! The end was just as plainly in view to both from
+the beginning as it was when, at length, the two stepping across the
+street gutter at the last corner between Richling and home, Narcisse
+laid his open hand in his companion's elbow, and stopped, saying, as
+Richling turned and halted with a sudden frown of unwillingness:--
+
+"I tell you 'ow 'tis with me, Mistoo Itchlin, I've p'oject that manneh
+myseff; in weading a book--w'en I see a beaucheouz idee, I juz take a
+pencil"--he drew one from his pocket--"check! I check it. So w'en I wead
+the same book again, then I take notiz I've check that idee and I look
+to see what I check it faw. 'Ow you like that invention, eh?"
+
+"Very simple," said Richling, with an unpleasant look of expectancy.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," resumed the other, "do you not fine me impooving in my
+p'onouncement of yo' lang-widge? I fine I don't use such bad land-widge
+like biffo. I am shue you muz' 'ave notiz since some time I always soun'
+that awer in yo' name. Mistoo Itchlin, will you 'ave that kin'ness to
+baw me two-an-a-'alf till the lass of that month?"
+
+Richling looked at him a moment in silence, and then broke into a short,
+grim laugh.
+
+"It's all gone. There's no more honey in this flower." He set his jaw as
+he ceased speaking. There was a warm red place on either cheek.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, with sudden, quavering fervor, "you kin
+len' me two dollahs! I gi'e you my honah the moze sacwed of a gen'leman,
+Mistoo Itchlin, I nevvah hass you ag'in so long I live!" He extended a
+pacifying hand. "One moment, Mistoo Itchlin,--one moment,--I implo' you,
+seh! I assu' you, Mistoo Itchlin, I pay you eve'y cent in the worl' on
+the laz of that month? Mistoo Itchlin, I am in indignan' circumstan's.
+Mistoo Itchlin, if you know the distwess--Mistoo Itchlin, if you
+know--'ow bad I 'ate to baw!" The tears stood in his eyes. "It nea'ly
+_kill_ me to b--" Utterance failed him.
+
+"My friend," began Richling.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," exclaimed Narcisse, dashing away the tears and
+striking his hand on his heart, "I _am_ yo' fwend, seh!"
+
+Richling smiled scornfully. "Well, my good friend, if you had ever kept
+a single promise made to me I need not have gone since yesterday without
+a morsel of food."
+
+Narcisse tried to respond.
+
+"Hush!" said Richling, and Narcisse bowed while Richling spoke on. "I
+haven't a cent to buy bread with to carry home. And whose fault is it?
+Is it my fault--or is it yours?"
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, seh"--
+
+"Hush!" cried Richling, again; "if you try to speak before I finish I'll
+thrash you right here in the street!"
+
+Narcisse folded his arms. Richling flushed and flashed with the
+mortifying knowledge that his companion's behavior was better than his
+own.
+
+"If you want to borrow more money of me find me a chance to earn it!" He
+glanced so suddenly at two or three street lads, who were the only
+on-lookers, that they shrank back a step.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," began Narcisse, once more, in a tone of polite dismay,
+"you aztonizh me. I assu' you, Mistoo Itchlin"--
+
+Richling lifted his finger and shook it. "Don't you tell me that, sir! I
+will not be an object of astonishment to you! Not to you, sir! Not to
+you!" He paused, trembling, his anger and his shame rising together.
+
+Narcisse stood for a moment, silent, undaunted, the picture of amazed
+friendship and injured dignity, then raised his hat with the solemnity
+of affronted patience and said:--
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, seein' as 'tis you, a puffic gen'leman, 'oo is not
+goin' to 'efuse that satisfagtion w'at a gen'leman, always a-'eady to
+give a gen'leman,--I bid you--faw the pwesen'--good-evenin', seh!" He
+walked away.
+
+Richling stood in his tracks dumfounded, crushed. His eyes followed the
+receding form of the borrower until it disappeared around a distant
+corner, while the eye of his mind looked in upon himself and beheld,
+with a shame that overwhelmed anger, the folly and the puerility of his
+outburst. The nervous strain of twenty-four hours' fast, without which
+he might not have slipped at all, only sharpened his self-condemnation.
+He turned and walked to his house, and all the misery that had oppressed
+him before he had seen the prison, and all that had come with that
+sight, and all this new shame, sank down upon his heart at once. "I am
+not a man! I am not a whole man!" he suddenly moaned to himself.
+"Something is wanting--oh! what is it?"--he lifted his eyes to the
+sky,--"what is it?"--when in truth, there was little wanting just then
+besides food.
+
+He passed in at the narrow gate and up the slippery alley. Nearly at its
+end was the one window of the room he called home. Just under it--it was
+somewhat above his head--he stopped and listened. A step within was
+moving busily here and there, now fainter and now plainer; and a voice,
+the sweetest on earth to him, was singing to itself in its soft,
+habitual way.
+
+He started round to the door with a firmer tread. It stood open. He
+halted on the threshold. There was a small table in the middle of the
+room, and there was food on it. A petty reward of his wife's labor had
+brought it there.
+
+"Mary," he said, holding her off a little, "don't kiss me yet."
+
+She looked at him with consternation. He sat down, drew her upon his
+lap, and told her, in plain, quiet voice, the whole matter.
+
+"Don't look so, Mary."
+
+"How?" she asked, in a husky voice and with flashing eye.
+
+"Don't breathe so short and set your lips. I never saw you look so,
+Mary, darling!"
+
+She tried to smile, but her eyes filled.
+
+"If you had been with me," said John, musingly, "it wouldn't have
+happened."
+
+"If--if"-- Mary sat up as straight as a dart, the corners of her
+mouth twitching so that she could scarcely shape a word,--"if--if I'd
+been there, I'd have made you _whip_ him!" She flouted her handkerchief
+out of her pocket, buried her face in his neck, and sobbed like a child.
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed the tearful John, holding her away by both shoulders,
+tossing back his hair and laughing as she laughed,--"Oh! you women!
+You're all of a sort! You want us men to carry your hymn-books and your
+iniquities, too!"
+
+She laughed again.
+
+"Well, of course!"
+
+And they rose and drew up to the board.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+THE DOCTOR DINES OUT.
+
+
+On the third day after these incidents, again at the sunset hour, but in
+a very different part of the town, Dr. Sevier sat down, a guest, at
+dinner. There were flowers; there was painted and monogrammed china;
+there was Bohemian glass; there was silver of cunning work with linings
+of gold, and damasked linen, and oak of fantastic carving. There were
+ladies in summer silks and elaborate coiffures; the hostess, small,
+slender, gentle, alert; another, dark, flashing, Roman, tall; another,
+ripe but not drooping, who had been beautiful, now, for thirty years;
+and one or two others. There were jewels; there were sweet odors. And
+there were, also, some good masculine heads: Dr. Sevier's, for instance;
+and the chief guest's,--an iron-gray, with hard lines in the face, and a
+scar on the near cheek,--a colonel of the regular army passing through
+from Florida; and one crown, bald, pink, and shining, encircled by a
+silken fringe of very white hair: it was the banker who lived in St.
+Mary street. His wife was opposite. And there was much high-bred grace.
+There were tall windows thrown wide to make the blaze of gas bearable,
+and two tall mulattoes in the middle distance bringing in and bearing
+out viands too sumptuous for any but a French nomenclature.
+
+It was what you would call a quiet affair; quite out of season, and
+difficult to furnish with even this little handful of guests; but it was
+a proper and necessary attention to the colonel; conversation not too
+dull, nor yet too bright for ease, but passing gracefully from one
+agreeable topic to another without earnestness, a restless virtue, or
+frivolity, which also goes against serenity. Now it touched upon the
+prospects of young A. B. in the demise of his uncle; now upon the
+probable seriousness of C. D. in his attentions to E. F.; now upon G.'s
+amusing mishaps during a late tour in Switzerland, which had--"how
+unfortunately!"--got into the papers. Now it was concerning the
+admirable pulpit manners and easily pardoned vocal defects of a certain
+new rector. Now it turned upon Stephen A. Douglas's last speech; passed
+to the questionable merits of a new-fangled punch; and now, assuming a
+slightly explanatory form from the gentlemen to the ladies, showed why
+there was no need whatever to fear a financial crisis--which came soon
+afterward.
+
+The colonel inquired after an old gentleman whom he had known in earlier
+days in Kentucky.
+
+"It's many a year since I met him," he said. "The proudest man I ever
+saw. I understand he was down here last season."
+
+"He was," replied the host, in a voice of native kindness, and with a
+smile on his high-fed face. "He was; but only for a short time. He went
+back to his estate. That is his world. He's there now."
+
+"It used to be considered one of the finest places in the State," said
+the colonel.
+
+"It is still," rejoined the host. "Doctor, you know him?"
+
+"I think not," said Dr. Sevier; but somehow he recalled the old
+gentleman in button gaiters, who had called on him one evening to
+consult him about his sick wife.
+
+"A good man," said the colonel, looking amused; "and a superb
+gentleman. Is he as great a partisan of the church as he used to be?"
+
+"Greater! Favors an established church of America."
+
+The ladies were much amused. The host's son, a young fellow with
+sprouting side-whiskers, said he thought he could be quite happy with
+one of the finest plantations in Kentucky, and let the church go its own
+gait.
+
+"Humph!" said the father; "I doubt if there's ever a happy breath drawn
+on the place."
+
+"Why, how is that?" asked the colonel, in a cautious tone.
+
+"Hadn't he heard?" The host was surprised, but spoke low. "Hadn't he
+heard about the trouble with their only son? Why, he went abroad and
+never came back!"
+
+Every one listened.
+
+"It's a terrible thing," said the hostess to the ladies nearest her; "no
+one ever dares ask the family what the trouble is,--they have such odd,
+exclusive ideas about their matters being nobody's business. All that
+can be known is that they look upon him as worse than dead and gone
+forever."
+
+"And who will get the estate?" asked the banker.
+
+"The two girls. They're both married."
+
+"They're very much like their father," said the hostess, smiling with
+gentle significance.
+
+"Very much," echoed the host, with less delicacy. "Their mother is one
+of those women who stand in terror of their husband's will. Now, if he
+were to die and leave her with a will of her own she would hardly know
+what to do with it--I mean with her will--or the property either."
+
+The hostess protested softly against so harsh a speech, and the son,
+after one or two failures, got in his remark:--
+
+"Maybe the prodigal would come back and be taken in."
+
+But nobody gave this conjecture much attention. The host was still
+talking of the lady without a will.
+
+"Isn't she an invalid?" Dr. Sevier had asked.
+
+"Yes; the trip down here last season was on her account,--for change of
+scene. Her health is wretched."
+
+"I'm distressed that I didn't call on her," said the hostess; "but they
+went away suddenly. My dear, I wonder if they really did encounter the
+young man here?"
+
+"Pshaw!" said the husband, softly, smiling and shaking his head, and
+turned the conversation.
+
+In time it settled down with something like earnestness for a few
+minutes upon a subject which the rich find it easy to discuss without
+the least risk of undue warmth. It was about the time when one of the
+graciously murmuring mulattoes was replenishing the glasses, that remark
+in some way found utterance to this effect,--that the company present
+could congratulate themselves on living in a community where there was
+no poor class.
+
+"Poverty, of course, we see; but there is no misery, or nearly none,"
+said the ambitious son of the host.
+
+Dr. Sevier differed with him. That was one of the Doctor's blemishes as
+a table guest: he would differ with people.
+
+"There is misery," he said; "maybe not the gaunt squalor and starvation
+of London or Paris or New York; the climate does not tolerate
+that,--stamps it out before it can assume dimensions; but there is at
+least misery of that sort that needs recognition and aid from the
+well-fed."
+
+The lady who had been beautiful so many years had somewhat to say; the
+physician gave attention, and she spoke:--
+
+"If sister Jane were here, she would be perfectly triumphant to hear you
+speak so, Doctor." She turned to the hostess, and continued: "Jane is
+quite an enthusiast, you know; a sort of Dorcas, as husband says,
+modified and readapted. Yes, she is for helping everybody."
+
+"Whether help is good for them or not," said the lady's husband, a very
+straight and wiry man with a garrote collar.
+
+"It's all one," laughed the lady. "Our new rector told her plainly, the
+other day, that she was making a great mistake; that she ought to
+consider whether assistance assists. It was really amusing. Out of the
+pulpit and off his guard, you know, he lisps a little; and he said she
+ought to consider whether 'aththithtanth aththithtth.'"
+
+There was a gay laugh at this, and the lady was called a perfect and
+cruel mimic.
+
+"'Aththithtanth aththithtth!'" said two or three to their neighbors, and
+laughed again.
+
+"What did your sister say to that?" asked the banker, bending forward
+his white, tonsured head, and smiling down the board.
+
+"She said she didn't care; that it kept her own heart tender, anyhow.
+'My dear madam,' said he, 'your heart wants strengthening more than
+softening.' He told her a pound of inner resource was more true help to
+any poor person than a ton of assistance."
+
+The banker commended the rector. The hostess, very sweetly, offered her
+guarantee that Jane took the rebuke in good part.
+
+"She did," replied the time-honored beauty; "she tried to profit by it.
+But husband, here, has offered her a wager of a bonnet against a hat
+that the rector will upset her new schemes. Her idea now is to make work
+for those whom nobody will employ."
+
+"Jane," said the kind-faced host, "really wants to do good for its own
+sake."
+
+"I think she's even a little Romish in her notions," said Jane's wiry
+brother-in-law. "I talked to her as plainly as the rector. I told her,
+'Jane, my dear, all this making of work for the helpless poor is not
+worth one-fiftieth part of the same amount of effort spent in teaching
+and training those same poor to make their labor intrinsically
+marketable.'"
+
+"Yes," said the hostess; "but while we are philosophizing and offering
+advice so wisely, Jane is at work--doing the best she knows how. We
+can't claim the honor even of making her mistakes."
+
+"'Tisn't a question of honors to us, madam," said Dr. Sevier; "it's a
+question of results to the poor."
+
+The brother-in-law had not finished. He turned to the Doctor.
+
+"Poverty, Doctor, is an inner condition"--
+
+"Sometimes," interposed the Doctor.
+
+"Yes, generally," continued the brother-in-law, with some emphasis. "And
+to give help you must, first of all, 'inquire within'--within your
+beneficiary."
+
+"Not always, sir," replied the Doctor; "not if they're sick, for
+instance." The ladies bowed briskly and applauded with their eyes. "And
+not always if they're well," he added. His last words softened off
+almost into soliloquy.
+
+The banker spoke forcibly:--
+
+"Yes, there are two quite distinct kinds of poverty. One is an accident
+of the moment; the other is an inner condition of the individual"--
+
+"Of course it is," said sister Jane's brother-in-law, who felt it a
+little to have been contradicted on the side of kindness by the
+hard-spoken Doctor. "Certainly! it's a deficiency of inner resources
+or character, and what to do with it is no simple question."
+
+"That's what I was about to say," resumed the banker; "at least, when
+the poverty is of that sort. And what discourages kind people is that
+that's the sort we commonly see. It's a relief to meet the other,
+Doctor, just as it's a relief to a physician to encounter a case of
+simple surgery."
+
+"And--and," said the brother-in-law, "what is your rule about plain
+almsgiving to the difficult sort?"
+
+"My rule," replied the banker, "is, don't do it. Debt is slavery, and
+there is an ugly kink in human nature that disposes it to be content
+with slavery. No, sir; gift-making and gift-taking are twins of a bad
+blood." The speaker turned to Dr. Sevier for approval; but, though the
+Doctor could not gainsay the fraction of a point, he was silent. A lady
+near the hostess stirred softly both under and above the board. In her
+private chamber she would have yawned. Yet the banker spoke again:--
+
+"Help the old, I say. You are pretty safe there. Help the sick. But as
+for the young and strong,--now, no man could be any poorer than I was at
+twenty-one,--I say be cautious how you smooth that hard road which is
+the finest discipline the young can possibly get."
+
+"If it isn't _too_ hard," chirped the son of the host.
+
+"Too hard? Well, yes, if it isn't too hard. Still I say, hands off; you
+needn't turn your back, however." Here the speaker again singled out Dr.
+Sevier. "Watch the young man out of one corner of your eye; but make him
+swim!"
+
+"Ah-h!" said the ladies.
+
+"No, no," continued the banker; "I don't say let him drown; but I take
+it, Doctor, that your alms, for instance, are no alms if they put the
+poor fellow into your debt and at your back."
+
+"To whom do you refer?" asked Dr. Sevier. Whereat there was a burst of
+laughter, which was renewed when the banker charged the physician with
+helping so many persons, "on the sly," that he couldn't tell which one
+was alluded to unless the name were given.
+
+"Doctor," said the hostess, seeing it was high time the conversation
+should take a new direction, "they tell me you have closed your house
+and taken rooms at the St. Charles."
+
+"For the summer," said the physician.
+
+As, later, he walked toward that hotel, he went resolving to look up the
+Richlings again without delay. The banker's words rang in his ears like
+an overdose of quinine: "Watch the young man out of one corner of your
+eye. Make him swim. I don't say let him drown."
+
+"Well, I do watch him," thought the Doctor. "I've only lost sight of him
+once in a while." But the thought seemed to find an echo against his
+conscience, and when it floated back it was: "I've only _caught_ sight
+of him once in a while." The banker's words came up again: "Don't put
+the poor fellow into your debt and at your back." "Just what you've
+done," said conscience. "How do you know he isn't drowned?" He would see
+to it.
+
+While he was still on his way to the hotel he fell in with an
+acquaintance, a Judge Somebody or other, lately from Washington City.
+He, also, lodged at the St. Charles. They went together. As they
+approached the majestic porch of the edifice they noticed some confusion
+at the bottom of the stairs that led up to the rotunda; cabmen and boys
+were running to a common point, where, in the midst of a small, compact
+crowd, two or three pairs of arms were being alternately thrown aloft
+and brought down. Presently the mass took a rapid movement up St.
+Charles street.
+
+The judge gave his conjecture: "Some poor devil resisting arrest."
+
+Before he and the Doctor parted for the night they went to the clerk's
+counter.
+
+"No letters for you, Judge; mail failed. Here is a card for you,
+Doctor."
+
+The Doctor received it. It had been furnished, blank, by the clerk to
+its writer.
+
+ [Illustration: JOHN RICHLING.]
+
+At the door of his own room, with one hand on the unturned knob and one
+holding the card, the Doctor stopped and reflected. The card gave no
+indication of urgency. Did it? It was hard to tell. He didn't want to
+look foolish; morning would be time enough; he would go early next
+morning.
+
+But at daybreak he was summoned post-haste to the bedside of a lady who
+had stayed all summer in New Orleans so as not to be out of this good
+doctor's reach at this juncture. She counted him a dear friend, and in
+similar trials had always required close and continual attention. It was
+the same now.
+
+Dr. Sevier scrawled and sent to the Richlings a line, saying that, if
+either of them was sick, he would come at their call. When the messenger
+returned with word from Mrs. Riley that both of them were out, the
+Doctor's mind was much relieved. So a day and a night passed in which he
+did not close his eyes.
+
+The next morning, as he stood in his office, hat in hand, and a finger
+pointing to a prescription on his desk, which he was directing Narcisse
+to give to some one who would call for it, there came a sudden hurried
+pounding of feminine feet on the stairs, a whiff of robes in the
+corridor, and Mary Richling rushed into his presence all tears and
+cries.
+
+"O Doctor!--O Doctor! O God, my husband! my husband! O Doctor, my
+husband is in the Parish Prison!" She sank to the floor.
+
+The Doctor raised her up. Narcisse hurried forward with his hands full
+of restoratives.
+
+"Take away those things," said the Doctor, resentfully. "Here!--Mrs.
+Richling, take Narcisse's arm and go down and get into my carriage. I
+must write a short note, excusing myself from an appointment, and then I
+will join you."
+
+Mary stood alone, turned, and passed out of the office beside the young
+Creole, but without taking his proffered arm. Did she suspect him of
+having something to do with this dreadful affair?
+
+"Missez Witchlin," said he, as soon as they were out in the corridor,
+"I dunno if you goin' to billiv me, but I boun' to tell you that
+nodwithstanning that yo' 'uzban' is displease' with me, an'
+nodwithstanning 'e's in that calaboose, I h'always fine 'im a puffic
+gen'leman--that Mistoo Itchlin,--an' I'll sweah 'e _is_ a gen'leman!"
+
+She lifted her anguished eyes and looked into his beautiful face. Could
+she trust him? His little forehead was as hard as a goat's, but his eyes
+were brimming with tears, and his chin quivered. As they reached the
+head of the stairs he again offered his arm, and she took it, moaning
+softly, as they descended:--
+
+"O John! O John! O my husband, my husband!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+THE TROUGH OF THE SEA.
+
+
+Narcisse, on receiving his scolding from Richling, had gone to his home
+in Casa Calvo street, a much greater sufferer than he had appeared to
+be. While he was confronting his abaser there had been a momentary
+comfort in the contrast between Richling's ill-behavior and his own
+self-control. It had stayed his spirit and turned the edge of Richling's
+sharp denunciations. But, as he moved off the field, he found himself,
+at every step, more deeply wounded than even he had supposed. He began
+to suffocate with chagrin, and hurried his steps in sheer distress. He
+did not experience that dull, vacant acceptance of universal scorn which
+an unresentful coward feels. His pangs were all the more poignant
+because he knew his own courage.
+
+In his home he went so straight up to the withered little old lady, in
+the dingiest of flimsy black, who was his aunt, and kissed her so
+passionately, that she asked at once what was the matter. He recounted
+the facts, shedding tears of mortification. Her feeling, by the time
+he had finished the account, was a more unmixed wrath than his, and,
+harmless as she was, and wrapped up in her dear, pretty nephew as she
+was, she yet demanded to know why such a man shouldn't be called out
+upon the field of honor.
+
+"Ah!" cried Narcisse, shrinkingly. She had touched the core of the
+tumor. One gets a public tongue-lashing from a man concerning money
+borrowed; well, how is one going to challenge him without first handing
+back the borrowed money? It was a scalding thought! The rotten joists
+beneath the bare scrubbed-to-death floor quaked under Narcisse's
+to-and-fro stride.
+
+"--And then, anyhow!"--he stopped and extended both hands, speaking, of
+course, in French,--"anyhow, he is the favored friend of Dr. Sevier. If
+I hurt him--I lose my situation! If he hurts me--I lose my situation!"
+
+He dried his eyes. His aunt saw the insurmountability of the difficulty,
+and they drowned feeling in an affectionate glass of green-orangeade.
+
+"But never mind!" Narcisse set his glass down and drew out his tobacco.
+He laughed spasmodically as he rolled his cigarette. "You shall see. The
+game is not finished yet."
+
+Yet Richling passed the next day and night without assassination, and
+on the second morning afterward, as on the first, went out in quest of
+employment. He and Mary had eaten bread, and it had gone into their life
+without a remainder either in larder or purse. Richling was all aimless.
+
+"I do wish I had the _art_ of finding work," said he. He smiled. "I'll
+get it," he added, breaking their last crust in two. "I have the science
+already. Why, look you, Mary, the quiet, amiable, imperturbable,
+dignified, diurnal, inexorable haunting of men of influence will get you
+whatever you want."
+
+"Well, why don't you do it, dear? Is there any harm in it? I don't see
+any harm in it. Why don't you do that very thing?"
+
+"I'm telling you the truth," answered he, ignoring her question.
+"Nothing else short of overtowering merit will get you what you want
+half so surely."
+
+"Well, why not do it? Why not?" A fresh, glad courage sparkled in the
+wife's eyes.
+
+"Why, Mary," said John, "I never in my life tried so hard to do anything
+else as I've tried to do that! It sounds easy; but try it! You can't
+conceive how hard it is till you try it. I can't _do_ it! I _can't_ do
+it!"
+
+"_I'd_ do it!" cried Mary. Her face shone. "_I'd_ do it! You'd see if I
+didn't! Why, John"--
+
+"All right!" exclaimed he; "you sha'n't talk that way to me for nothing.
+I'll try it again! I'll begin to-day!"
+
+"Good-by," he said. He reached an arm over one of her shoulders and
+around under the other and drew her up on tiptoe. She threw both hers
+about his neck. A long kiss--then a short one.
+
+"John, something tells me we're near the end of our troubles."
+
+John laughed grimly. "Ristofalo was to get back to the city to-day:
+maybe he's going to put us out of our misery. There are two ways for
+troubles to end." He walked away as he spoke. As he passed under the
+window in the alley, its sash was thrown up and Mary leaned out on her
+elbows.
+
+"John!"
+
+"Well?"
+
+They looked into each other's eyes with the quiet pleasure of tried
+lovers, and were silent a moment. She leaned a little farther down, and
+said, softly:--
+
+"You mustn't mind what I said just now."
+
+"Why, what did you say?"
+
+"That if it were I, I'd do it. I know you can do anything I can do, and
+a hundred better things besides."
+
+He lifted his hand to her cheek. "We'll see," he whispered. She drew in,
+and he moved on.
+
+Morning passed. Noon came. From horizon to horizon the sky was one
+unbroken blue. The sun spread its bright, hot rays down upon the town
+and far beyond, ripening the distant, countless fields of the great
+delta, which by and by were to empty their abundance into the city's lap
+for the employment, the nourishing, the clothing of thousands. But in
+the dusty streets, along the ill-kept fences and shadowless walls of the
+quiet districts, and on the glaring facades and heated pavements of the
+commercial quarters, it seemed only as though the slowly retreating
+summer struck with the fury of a wounded Amazon. Richling was soon
+dust-covered and weary. He had gone his round. There were not many men
+whom he could even propose to haunt. He had been to all of them. Dr.
+Sevier was not one. "Not to-day," said Richling.
+
+"It all depends on the way it's done," he said to himself; "it needn't
+degrade a man if it's done the right way." It was only by such
+philosophy he had done it at all. Ristofalo he could have haunted
+without effort; but Ristofalo was not to be found. Richling tramped in
+vain. It may be that all plans were of equal merit just then. The
+summers of New Orleans in those times were, as to commerce, an utter
+torpor, and the autumn reawakening was very tardy. It was still too
+early for the stirrings of general mercantile life. The movement of the
+cotton crop was just beginning to be perceptible; but otherwise almost
+the only sounds were from the hammers of craftsmen making the town
+larger and preparing it for the activities of days to come.
+
+The afternoon wore along. Not a cent yet to carry home! Men began to
+shut their idle shops and go to meet their wives and children about
+their comfortable dinner-tables. The sun dipped low. Hammers and saws
+were dropped into tool-boxes, and painters pulled themselves out of
+their overalls. The mechanic's rank, hot supper began to smoke on its
+bare board; but there was one board that was still altogether bare and
+to which no one hastened. Another day and another chance of life were
+gone.
+
+Some men at a warehouse door, the only opening in the building left
+unclosed, were hurrying in a few bags of shelled corn. Night was
+falling. At an earlier hour Richling had offered the labor of his hands
+at this very door and had been rejected. Now, as they rolled in the last
+truck-load, they began to ask for rest with all the gladness he would
+have felt to be offered toil, singing,--
+
+ "To blow, to blow, some time for to blow."
+
+They swung the great leaves of the door together as they finished their
+chorus, stood grouped outside a moment while the warehouseman turned the
+resounding lock, and then went away. Richling, who had moved on, watched
+them over his shoulder, and as they left turned back. He was about to do
+what he had never done before. He went back to the door where the bags
+of grain had stood. A drunken sailor came swinging along. He stood still
+and let him pass; there must be no witnesses. The sailor turned the next
+corner. Neither up nor down nor across the street, nor at dust-begrimed,
+cobwebbed window, was there any sound or motion. Richling dropped
+quickly on one knee and gathered hastily into his pocket a little pile
+of shelled corn that had leaked from one of the bags.
+
+That was all. No harm to a living soul; no theft; no wrong; but ah! as
+he rose he felt a sudden inward lesion. Something broke. It was like a
+ship, in a dream, noiselessly striking a rock where no rock is. It
+seemed as though the very next thing was to begin going to pieces. He
+walked off in the dark shadow of the warehouse, half lifted from his
+feet by a vague, wide dismay. And yet he felt no greatness of emotion,
+but rather a painful want of it, as if he were here and emotion were
+yonder, down-street, or up-street, or around the corner. The ground
+seemed slipping from under him. He appeared to have all at once melted
+away to nothing. He stopped. He even turned to go back. He felt that if
+he should go and put that corn down where he had found it he should feel
+himself once more a living thing of substance and emotions. Then it
+occurred to him--no, he would keep it, he would take it to Mary; but
+himself--he would not touch it; and so he went home.
+
+Mary parched the corn, ground it fine in the coffee-mill and salted and
+served it close beside the candle. "It's good white corn," she said,
+laughing. "Many a time when I was a child I used to eat this in my
+playhouse and thought it delicious. Didn't you? What! not going to eat?"
+
+Richling had told her how he got the corn. Now he told his sensations.
+"You eat it, Mary," he said at the end; "you needn't feel so about it;
+but if I should eat it I should feel myself a vagabond. It may be
+foolish, but I wouldn't touch it for a hundred dollars." A hundred
+dollars had come to be his synonyme for infinity.
+
+Mary gazed at him a moment tearfully, and rose, with the dish in her
+hand, saying, with a smile, "I'd look pretty, wouldn't I!"
+
+She set it aside, and came and kissed his forehead. By and by she
+asked:--
+
+"And so you saw no work, anywhere?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" he replied, in a tone almost free from dejection. "I saw any
+amount of work--preparations for a big season. I think I certainly
+shall pick up something to-morrow--enough, anyhow, to buy something to
+eat with. If we can only hold out a little longer--just a little--I am
+sure there'll be plenty to do--for everybody." Then he began to show
+distress again. "I could have got work to-day if I had been a carpenter,
+or if I'd been a joiner, or a slater, or a bricklayer, or a plasterer,
+or a painter, or a hod-carrier. Didn't I try that, and was refused?"
+
+"I'm glad of it," said Mary.
+
+"'Show me your hands,' said the man to me. I showed them. 'You won't
+do,' said he."
+
+"I'm glad of it!" said Mary, again.
+
+"No," continued Richling; "or if I'd been a glazier, or a whitewasher,
+or a wood-sawyer, or"--he began to smile in a hard, unpleasant way,--"or
+if I'd been anything but an American gentleman. But I wasn't, and I
+didn't get the work!"
+
+Mary sank into his lap, with her very best smile.
+
+"John, if you hadn't been an American gentleman"--
+
+"We should never have met," said John. "That's true; that's true." They
+looked at each other, rejoicing in mutual ownership.
+
+"But," said John, "I needn't have been the typical American
+gentleman,--completely unfitted for prosperity and totally unequipped
+for adversity."
+
+"That's not your fault," said Mary.
+
+"No, not entirely; but it's your calamity, Mary. O Mary! I little
+thought"--
+
+She put her hand quickly upon his mouth. His eye flashed and he frowned.
+
+"Don't do so!" he exclaimed, putting the hand away; then blushed for
+shame, and kissed her.
+
+They went to bed. Bread would have put them to sleep. But after a long
+time--
+
+"John," said one voice in the darkness, "do you remember what Dr. Sevier
+told us?"
+
+"Yes, he said we had no right to commit suicide by starvation."
+
+"If you don't get work to-morrow, are you going to see him?"
+
+"I am."
+
+In the morning they rose early.
+
+During these hard days Mary was now and then conscious of one feeling
+which she never expressed, and was always a little more ashamed of than
+probably she need have been, but which, stifle it as she would, kept
+recurring in moments of stress. Mrs. Riley--such was the thought--need
+not be quite so blind. It came to her as John once more took his
+good-by, the long kiss and the short one, and went breakfastless away.
+But was Mrs. Riley as blind as she seemed? She had vision enough to
+observe that the Richlings had bought no bread the day before, though
+she did overlook the fact that emptiness would set them astir before
+their usual hour of rising. She knocked at Mary's inner door. As it
+opened a quick glance showed the little table that occupied the centre
+of the room standing clean and idle.
+
+"Why, Mrs. Riley!" cried Mary; for on one of Mrs. Riley's large hands
+there rested a blue-edged soup-plate, heaping full of the food that goes
+nearest to the Creole heart--_jambolaya_. There it was, steaming and
+smelling,--a delicious confusion of rice and red pepper, chicken legs,
+ham, and tomatoes. Mike, on her opposite arm, was struggling to lave his
+socks in it.
+
+"Ah!" said Mrs. Riley, with a disappointed lift of the head, "ye're
+after eating breakfast already! And the plates all tleared off. Well, ye
+air smairt! I knowed Mr. Richlin's taste for jumbalie"--
+
+Mary smote her hands together. "And he's just this instant gone! John!
+John! Why, he's hardly"-- She vanished through the door, glided down
+the alley, leaned out the gate, looking this way and that, tripped
+down to this corner and looked--"Oh! oh!"--no John there--back and up to
+the other corner--"Oh! which way did John go?" There was none to answer.
+
+Hours passed; the shadows shortened and shrunk under their objects,
+crawled around stealthily behind them as the sun swung through the
+south, and presently began to steal away eastward, long and slender.
+This was the day that Dr. Sevier dined out, as hereinbefore set forth.
+
+The sun set. Carondelet street was deserted. You could hear your own
+footstep on its flags. In St. Charles street the drinking-saloons and
+gamblers' drawing-rooms, and the barber-shops, and the show-cases full
+of shirt-bosoms and walking-canes, were lighted up. The smell of lemons
+and mint grew finer than ever. Wide Canal street, out under the darkling
+crimson sky, was resplendent with countless many-colored lamps. From the
+river the air came softly, cool and sweet. The telescope man set up his
+skyward-pointing cylinder hard by the dark statue of Henry Clay; the
+confectioneries were ablaze and full of beautiful life, and every little
+while a great, empty cotton-dray or two went thundering homeward over
+the stony pavements until the earth shook, and speech for the moment was
+drowned. The St. Charles, such a glittering mass in winter nights, stood
+out high and dark under the summer stars, with no glow except just in
+its midst, in the rotunda; and even the rotunda was well-nigh deserted
+The clerk at his counter saw a young man enter the great door opposite,
+and quietly marked him as he drew near.
+
+Let us not draw the stranger's portrait. If that were a pleasant task
+the clerk would not have watched him. What caught and kept that
+functionary's eye was that, whatever else might be revealed by the
+stranger's aspect,--weariness, sickness, hardship, pain,--the confession
+was written all over him, on his face, on his garb, from his hat's crown
+to his shoe's sole, Penniless! Penniless! Only when he had come quite up
+to the counter the clerk did not see him at all.
+
+"Is Dr. Sevier in?"
+
+"Gone out to dine," said the clerk, looking over the inquirer's head as
+if occupied with all the world's affairs except the subject in hand.
+
+"Do you know when he will be back?"
+
+"Ten o'clock."
+
+The visitor repeated the hour murmurously and looked something dismayed.
+He tarried.
+
+"Hem!--I will leave my card, if you please."
+
+The clerk shoved a little box of cards toward him, from which a pencil
+dangled by a string. The penniless wrote his name and handed it in. Then
+he moved away, went down the tortuous granite stair, and waited in the
+obscurity of the dimly lighted porch below. The card was to meet the
+contingency of the Doctor's coming in by some other entrance. He would
+watch for him here.
+
+By and by--he was very weary--he sat down on the stairs. But a porter,
+with a huge trunk on his back, told him very distinctly that he was in
+the way there, and he rose and stood aside. Soon he looked for another
+resting-place. He must get off of his feet somewhere, if only for a few
+moments. He moved back into the deep gloom of the stair-way shadow, and
+sank down upon the pavement. In a moment he was fast asleep.
+
+He dreamed that he, too, was dining out. Laughter and merry-making were
+on every side. The dishes of steaming viands were grotesque in bulk.
+There were mountains of fruit and torrents of wine. Strange people of no
+identity spoke in senseless vaporings that passed for side-splitting
+wit, and friends whom he had not seen since childhood appeared in
+ludicrously altered forms and announced impossible events. Every one ate
+like a Cossack. One of the party, champing like a boar, pushed him
+angrily, and when he, eating like the rest, would have turned fiercely
+on the aggressor, he awoke.
+
+A man standing over him struck him smartly with his foot.
+
+"Get up out o' this! Get up! get up!"
+
+The sleeper bounded to his feet. The man who had waked him grasped him
+by the lapel of his coat.
+
+"What do you mean?" exclaimed the awakened man, throwing the other off
+violently.
+
+"I'll show you!" replied the other, returning with a rush; but he was
+thrown off again, this time with a blow of the fist.
+
+"You scoundrel!" cried the penniless man, in a rage; "if you touch me
+again I'll kill you!"
+
+They leaped together. The one who had proposed to show what he meant was
+knocked flat upon the stones. The crowd that had run into the porch made
+room for him to fall. A leather helmet rolled from his head, and the
+silver crescent of the police flashed on his breast. The police were not
+uniformed in those days.
+
+But he is up in an instant and his adversary is down--backward, on his
+elbows. Then the penniless man is up again; they close and struggle,
+the night-watchman's club falls across his enemy's head blow upon blow,
+while the sufferer grasps him desperately, with both hands, by the
+throat. They tug, they snuffle, they reel to and fro in the yielding
+crowd; the blows grow fainter, fainter; the grip is terrible; when
+suddenly there is a violent rupture of the crowd, it closes again, and
+then there are two against one, and up sparkling St. Charles street, the
+street of all streets for flagrant, unmolested, well-dressed crime,
+moves a sight so exhilarating that a score of street lads follow behind
+and a dozen trip along in front with frequent backward glances: two
+officers of justice walking in grim silence abreast, and between them
+a limp, torn, hatless, bloody figure, partly walking, partly lifted,
+partly dragged, past the theatres, past the lawyers' rookeries of
+Commercial place, the tenpin alleys, the chop-houses, the bunko shows,
+and shooting-galleries, on, across Poydras street into the dim openness
+beyond, where glimmer the lamps of Lafayette square and the white marble
+of the municipal hall, and just on the farther side of this, with a
+sudden wheel to the right into Hevia street, a few strides there, a turn
+to the left, stumbling across a stone step and wooden sill into a
+narrow, lighted hall, and turning and entering an apartment here again
+at the right. The door is shut; the name is written down; the charge is
+made: Vagrancy, assaulting an officer, resisting arrest. An inner door
+is opened.
+
+"What have you got in number nine?" asks the captain in charge.
+
+"Chuck full," replies the turnkey.
+
+"Well, number seven?" These were the numbers of cells.
+
+"The rats'll eat him up in number seven."
+
+"How about number ten?"
+
+"Two drunk-and-disorderlies, one petty larceny, and one embezzlement and
+breach of trust."
+
+"Put him in there."
+
+ * * *
+
+And this explains what the watchman in Marais street could not
+understand,--why Mary Richling's window shone all night long.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+OUT OF THE FRYING-PAN.
+
+
+Round goes the wheel forever. Another sun rose up, not a moment hurried
+or belated by the myriads of life-and-death issues that cover the earth
+and wait in ecstasies of hope or dread the passage of time. Punctually
+at ten Justice-in-the-rough takes its seat in the Recorder's Court,
+and a moment of silent preparation at the desks follows the loud
+announcement that its session has begun. The perky clerks and smirking
+pettifoggers move apart on tiptoe, those to their respective stations,
+these to their privileged seats facing the high dais. The lounging
+police slip down from their reclining attitudes on the heel-scraped and
+whittled window-sills. The hum of voices among the forlorn humanity that
+half fills the gradually rising, greasy benches behind, allotted to
+witnesses and prisoners' friends, is hushed. In a little square, railed
+space, here at the left, the reporters tip their chairs against the
+hair-greased wall, and sharpen their pencils. A few tardy visitors,
+familiar with the place, tiptoe in through the grimy doors, ducking
+and winking, and softly lifting and placing their chairs, with a
+mock-timorous upward glance toward the long, ungainly personage who,
+under a faded and tattered crimson canopy, fills the august bench of
+magistracy with its high oaken back. On the right, behind a rude wooden
+paling that rises from the floor to the smoke-stained ceiling, are the
+peering, bloated faces of the night's prisoners.
+
+The recorder utters a name. The clerk down in front of him calls it
+aloud. A door in the palings opens, and one of the captives comes
+forth and stands before the rail. The arresting officer mounts to the
+witness-stand and confronts him. The oath is rattled and turned out like
+dice from a box, and the accusing testimony is heard. It may be that
+counsel rises and cross-examines, if there are witnesses for the
+defence. Strange and far-fetched questions, from beginners at the law
+or from old blunderers, provoke now laughter, and now the peremptory
+protestations of the court against the waste of time. Yet, in general,
+a few minutes suffices for the whole trial of a case.
+
+"You are sure she picked the handsaw up by the handle, are you?" says
+the questioner, frowning with the importance of the point.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And that she coughed as she did so?"
+
+"Well, you see, she kind o'"--
+
+"Yes, or no!"
+
+"No."
+
+"That's all." He waves the prisoner down with an air of mighty
+triumph, turns to the recorder, "trusts it is not necessary to,"
+etc., and the accused passes this way or that, according to the fate
+decreed,--discharged, sentenced to fine and imprisonment, or committed
+for trial before the courts of the State.
+
+"Order in court!" There is too much talking. Another comes and stands
+before the rail, and goes his way. Another, and another; now a ragged
+boy, now a half-sobered crone, now a battered ruffian, and now a painted
+girl of the street, and at length one who starts when his name is
+called, as though something had exploded.
+
+"John Richling!"
+
+He came.
+
+"Stand there!"
+
+Some one is in the witness-stand, speaking. The prisoner partly hears,
+but does not see. He stands and holds the rail, with his eyes fixed
+vacantly on the clerk, who bends over his desk under the seat of
+justice, writing. The lawyers notice him. His dress has been laboriously
+genteel, but is torn and soiled. A detective, with small eyes set close
+together, and a nose like a yacht's rudder, whisperingly calls the
+notice of one of these spectators who can see the prisoner's face to the
+fact that, for all its thinness and bruises, it is not a bad one. All
+can see that the man's hair is fine and waving where it is not matted
+with blood.
+
+The testifying officer had moved as if to leave the witness-stand, when
+the recorder restrained him by a gesture, and, leaning forward and
+looking down upon the prisoner, asked:--
+
+"Have you anything to say to this?"
+
+The prisoner lifted his eyes, bowed affirmatively, and spoke in a low,
+timid tone. "May I say a few words to you privately?"
+
+"No."
+
+He dropped his eyes, fumbled with the rail, and, looking up suddenly,
+said in a stronger voice, "I want somebody to go to my wife--in Prieur
+street. She is starving. This is the third day"--
+
+"We're not talking about that," said the recorder. "Have you anything to
+say against this witness's statement?"
+
+The prisoner looked upon the floor and slowly shook his head. "I never
+meant to break the law. I never expected to stand here. It's like an
+awful dream. Yesterday, at this time, I had no more idea of this--I
+didn't think I was so near it. It's like getting caught in machinery."
+He looked up at the recorder again. "I'm so confused"--he frowned and
+drew his hand slowly across his brow--"I can hardly--put my words
+together. I was hunting for work. There is no man in this city who
+wants to earn an honest living more than I do."
+
+"What's your trade?"
+
+"I have none."
+
+"I supposed not. But you profess to have some occupation, I dare say.
+What's your occupation?"
+
+"Accountant."
+
+"Hum! you're all accountants. How long have you been out of employment?"
+
+"Six months."
+
+"Why did you go to sleep under those steps?"
+
+"I didn't intend to go to sleep. I was waiting for a friend to come in
+who boards at the St. Charles."
+
+A sudden laugh ran through the room. "Silence in court!" cried a deputy.
+
+"Who is your friend?" asked the recorder.
+
+The prisoner was silent.
+
+"What is your friend's name?"
+
+Still the prisoner did not reply. One of the group of pettifoggers
+sitting behind him leaned forward, touched him on the shoulder, and
+murmured: "You'd better tell his name. It won't hurt him, and it may
+help you." The prisoner looked back at the man and shook his head.
+
+"Did you strike this officer?" asked the recorder, touching the witness,
+who was resting on both elbows in the light arm-chair on the right.
+
+The prisoner made a low response.
+
+"I don't hear you," said the recorder.
+
+"I struck him," replied the prisoner; "I knocked him down." The court
+officers below the dais smiled. "I woke and found him spurning me with
+his foot, and I resented it. I never expected to be a law-breaker.
+I"-- He pressed his temples between his hands and was silent. The
+men of the law at his back exchanged glances of approval. The case was,
+to some extent, interesting.
+
+"May it please the court," said the man who had before addressed the
+prisoner over his shoulder, stepping out on the right and speaking very
+softly and graciously, "I ask that this man be discharged. His fault
+seems so much more to be accident than intention, and his suffering so
+much more than his fault"--
+
+The recorder interrupted by a wave of the hand and a preconceived smile:
+"Why, according to the evidence, the prisoner was noisy and troublesome
+in his cell all night."
+
+"O sir," exclaimed the prisoner, "I was thrown in with thieves and
+drunkards! It was unbearable in that hole. We were right on the damp
+and slimy bricks. The smell was dreadful. A woman in the cell opposite
+screamed the whole night. One of the men in the cell tried to take my
+coat from me, and I beat him!"
+
+"It seems to me, your honor," said the volunteer advocate, "the prisoner
+is still more sinned against than sinning. This is evidently his first
+offence, and"--
+
+"Do you know even that?" asked the recorder.
+
+"I do not believe his name can be found on any criminal record. I"--
+
+The recorder interrupted once more. He leaned toward the prisoner.
+
+"Did you ever go by any other name?"
+
+The prisoner was dumb.
+
+"Isn't John Richling the only name you have ever gone by?" said his new
+friend: but the prisoner silently blushed to the roots of his hair and
+remained motionless.
+
+"I think I shall have to send you to prison," said the recorder,
+preparing to write. A low groan was the prisoner's only response.
+
+"May it please your honor," began the lawyer, taking a step forward; but
+the recorder waved his pen impatiently.
+
+"Why, the more is said the worse his case gets; he's guilty of the
+offence charged, by his own confession."
+
+"I am guilty and not guilty," said the prisoner slowly. "I never
+intended to be a criminal. I intended to be a good and useful member of
+society; but I've somehow got under its wheels. I've missed the whole
+secret of living." He dropped his face into his hands. "O Mary, Mary!
+why are you my wife?" He beckoned to his counsel. "Come here; come
+here." His manner was wild and nervous. "I want you--I want you to go
+to Prieur street, to my wife. You know--you know the place, don't you?
+Prieur street. Ask for Mrs. Riley"--
+
+"Richling," said the lawyer.
+
+"No, no! you ask for Mrs. Riley? Ask her--ask her--oh! where are my
+senses gone? Ask"--
+
+"May it please the court," said the lawyer, turning once more to the
+magistrate and drawing a limp handkerchief from the skirt of his dingy
+alpaca, with a reviving confidence, "I ask that the accused be
+discharged; he's evidently insane."
+
+The prisoner looked rapidly from counsel to magistrate, and back again,
+saying, in a low voice, "Oh, no! not that! Oh, no! not that! not that!"
+
+The recorder dropped his eyes upon a paper on the desk before him, and,
+beginning to write, said without looking up:--
+
+"Parish Prison--to be examined for insanity."
+
+A cry of remonstrance broke so sharply from the prisoner that even the
+reporters in their corner checked their energetic streams of lead-pencil
+rhetoric and looked up.
+
+"You cannot do that!" he exclaimed. "I am not insane! I'm not even
+confused now! It was only for a minute! I'm not even confused!"
+
+An officer of the court laid his hand quickly and sternly upon his arm;
+but the recorder leaned forward and motioned him off. The prisoner
+darted a single flash of anger at the officer, and then met the eye of
+the justice.
+
+"If I am a vagrant commit me for vagrancy! I expect no mercy here! I
+expect no justice! You punish me first, and try me afterward, and now
+you can punish me again; but you can't do that!"
+
+"Order in court! Sit down in those benches!" cried the deputies. The
+lawyers nodded darkly or blandly, each to each. The one who had
+volunteered his counsel wiped his bald Gothic brow. On the recorder's
+lips an austere satire played as he said to the panting prisoner:--
+
+"You are showing not only your sanity, but your contempt of court also."
+
+The prisoner's eyes shot back a fierce light as he retorted:--
+
+"I have no object in concealing either."
+
+The recorder answered with a quick, angry look; but, instantly
+restraining himself, dropped his glance upon his desk as before, began
+again to write, and said, with his eyes following his pen:--
+
+"Parish Prison, for thirty days."
+
+The officer grasped the prisoner again and pointed him to the door in
+the palings whence he had come, and whither he now returned, without a
+word or note of distress.
+
+Half an hour later the dark omnibus without windows, that went by the
+facetious name of the "Black Maria" received the convicted ones from the
+same street door by which they had been brought in out of the world the
+night before. The waifs and vagabonds of the town gleefully formed a
+line across the sidewalk from the station-house to the van, and counted
+with zest the abundant number of passengers that were ushered into it
+one by one. Heigh ho! In they went: all ages and sorts; both sexes;
+tried and untried, drunk and sober, new faces and old acquaintances; a
+man who had been counterfeiting, his wife who had been helping him, and
+their little girl of twelve, who had done nothing. Ho, ho! Bridget Fury!
+Ha, ha! Howling Lou! In they go: the passive, the violent, all kinds;
+filling the two benches against the sides, and then the standing room;
+crowding and packing, until the officer can shut the door only by
+throwing his weight against it.
+
+"Officer," said one, whose volunteer counsel had persuaded the reporters
+not to mention him by name in their thrilling account,--"officer," said
+this one, trying to pause an instant before the door of the vehicle, "is
+there no other possible way to"--
+
+"Get in! get in!"
+
+Two hands spread against his back did the rest; the door clapped to like
+the lid of a bursting trunk, the padlock rattled: away they went!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+"OH, WHERE IS MY LOVE?"
+
+
+At the prison the scene is repeated in reverse, and the Black Maria
+presently rumbles away empty. In that building, whose exterior Narcisse
+found so picturesque, the vagrant at length finds food. In that question
+of food, by the way, another question arose, not as to any degree of
+criminality past or present, nor as to age, or sex, or race, or station;
+but as to the having or lacking fifty cents. "Four bits" a day was the
+open sesame to a department where one could have bedstead and ragged
+bedding and dirty mosquito-bar, a cell whose window looked down into the
+front street, food in variety, and a seat at table with the officers of
+the prison. But those who could not pay were conducted past all these
+delights, along one of several dark galleries, the turnkeys of which
+were themselves convicts, who, by a process of reasoning best understood
+among the harvesters of perquisites, were assumed to be undergoing
+sentence.
+
+The vagrant stood at length before a grated iron gate while its bolts
+were thrown back and it growled on its hinges. What he saw within needs
+no minute description; it may be seen there still, any day: a large,
+flagged court, surrounded on three sides by two stories of cells with
+heavy, black, square doors all a-row and mostly open; about a hundred
+men sitting, lying, or lounging about in scanty rags,--some gaunt and
+feeble, some burly and alert, some scarred and maimed, some sallow, some
+red, some grizzled, some mere lads, some old and bowed,--the sentenced,
+the untried, men there for the first time, men who were oftener in than
+out,--burglars, smugglers, house-burners, highwaymen, wife-beaters,
+wharf-rats, common "drunks," pickpockets, shop-lifters, stealers of
+bread, garroters, murderers,--in common equality and fraternity. In this
+resting and refreshing place for vice, this caucus for the projection of
+future crime, this ghastly burlesque of justice and the protection of
+society, there was a man who had been convicted of a dreadful murder a
+year or two before, and sentenced to twenty-one years' labor in the
+State penitentiary. He had got his sentence commuted to confinement in
+this prison for twenty-one years of idleness. The captain of the prison
+had made him "captain of the yard." Strength, ferocity, and a terrific
+record were the qualifications for this honorary office.
+
+The gate opened. A howl of welcome came from those within, and the new
+batch, the vagrant among them, entered the yard. He passed, in his turn,
+to a tank of muddy water in this yard, washed away the soil and blood of
+the night, and so to the cell assigned him. He was lying face downward
+on its pavement, when a man with a cudgel ordered him to rise. The
+vagrant sprang to his feet and confronted the captain of the yard, a
+giant in breadth and stature, with no clothing but a ragged undershirt
+and pantaloons.
+
+"Get a bucket and rag and scrub out this cell!"
+
+He flourished his cudgel. The vagrant cast a quick glance at him, and
+answered quietly, but with burning face:--
+
+"I'll die first."
+
+A blow with the cudgel, a cry of rage, a clash together, a push, a
+sledge-hammer fist in the side, another on the head, a fall out into
+the yard, and the vagrant lay senseless on the flags.
+
+When he opened his eyes again, and struggled to his feet, a gentle grasp
+was on his arm. Somebody was steadying him. He turned his eyes. Ah! who
+is this? A short, heavy, close-shaven man, with a woollen jacket thrown
+over one shoulder and its sleeves tied together in a knot under the
+other. He speaks in a low, kind tone:--
+
+"Steady, Mr. Richling!"
+
+Richling supported himself by a hand on the man's arm, gazed in
+bewilderment at the gentle eyes that met his, and with a slow gesture of
+astonishment murmured, "Ristofalo!" and dropped his head.
+
+The Italian had just entered the prison from another station-house. With
+his hand still on Richling's shoulder, and Richling's on his, he caught
+the eye of the captain of the yard, who was striding quietly up and down
+near by, and gave him a nod to indicate that he would soon adjust
+everything to that autocrat's satisfaction. Richling, dazed and
+trembling, kept his eyes still on the ground, while Ristofalo moved with
+him slowly away from the squalid group that gazed after them. They went
+toward the Italian's cell.
+
+"Why are you in prison?" asked the vagrant, feebly.
+
+"Oh, nothin' much--witness in shootin' scrape--talk 'bout aft' while."
+
+"O Ristofalo," groaned Richling, as they entered, "my wife! my wife!
+Send some bread to my wife!"
+
+"Lie down," said the Italian, pressing softly on his shoulders; but
+Richling as quietly resisted.
+
+"She is near here, Ristofalo. You can send with the greatest ease! You
+can do anything, Ristofalo,--if you only choose!"
+
+"Lay down," said the Italian again, and pressed more heavily. The
+vagrant sank limply to the pavement, his companion quickly untying the
+jacket sleeves from under his own arms and wadding the garment under
+Richling's head.
+
+"Do you know what I'm in here for, Ristofalo?" moaned Richling.
+
+"Don't know, don't care. Yo' wife know you here?" Richling shook his
+head on the jacket. The Italian asked her address, and Richling gave it.
+
+"Goin' tell her come and see you," said the Italian. "Now, you lay still
+little while; I be back t'rectly." He went out into the yard again,
+pushing the heavy door after him till it stood only slightly ajar,
+sauntered easily around till he caught sight of the captain of the yard,
+and was presently standing before him in the same immovable way in which
+he had stood before Richling in Tchoupitoulas street, on the day he had
+borrowed the dollar. Those who idly drew around could not hear his
+words, but the "captain's" answers were intentionally audible. He
+shook his head in rejection of a proposal. "No, nobody but the prisoner
+himself should scrub out the cell. No, the Italian should not do it for
+him. The prisoner's refusal and resistance had settled that question.
+No, the knocking down had not balanced accounts at all. There was more
+scrubbing to be done. It was scrubbing day. Others might scrub the yard
+and the galleries, but he should scrub out the tank. And there were
+other things, and worse,--menial services of the lowest kind. He should
+do them when the time came, and the Italian would have to help him too.
+Never mind about the law or the terms of his sentence. Those counted for
+nothing there." Such was the sense of the decrees; the words were such
+as may be guessed or left unguessed. The scrubbing of the cell must
+commence at once. The vagrant must make up his mind to suffer. "He had
+served on jury!" said the man in the undershirt, with a final flourish
+of his stick. "He's got to pay dear for it."
+
+When Ristofalo returned to his cell, its inmate, after many upstartings
+from terrible dreams, that seemed to guard the threshold of slumber, had
+fallen asleep. The Italian touched him gently, but he roused with a wild
+start and stare.
+
+"Ristofalo," he said, and fell a-staring again.
+
+"You had some sleep," said the Italian.
+
+"It's worse than being awake," said Richling. He passed his hands across
+his face. "Has my wife been here?"
+
+"No. Haven't sent yet. Must watch good chance. Git captain yard in
+good-humor first, or else do on sly." The cunning Italian saw that
+anything looking like early extrication would bring new fury upon
+Richling. He knew _all_ the values of time. "Come," he added, "must
+scrub out cell now." He ignored the heat that kindled in Richling's
+eyes, and added, smiling, "You don't do it, I got to do it."
+
+With a little more of the like kindly guile, and some wise and simple
+reasoning, the Italian prevailed. Together, without objection from the
+captain of the yard, with many unavailing protests from Richling, who
+would now do it alone, and with Ristofalo smiling like a Chinaman at the
+obscene ribaldry of the spectators in the yard, they scrubbed the cell.
+Then came the tank. They had to stand in it with the water up to their
+knees, and rub its sides with brickbats. Richling fell down twice in the
+water, to the uproarious delight of the yard; but his companion helped
+him up, and they both agreed it was the sliminess of the tank's bottom
+that was to blame.
+
+"Soon we get through we goin' to buy drink o' whisky from jailer," said
+Ristofalo; "he keep it for sale. Then, after that, kin hire somebody to
+go to your house; captain yard think we gittin' mo' whisky."
+
+"Hire?" said Richling. "I haven't a cent in the world."
+
+"I got a little--few dimes," rejoined the other.
+
+"Then why are you here? Why are you in this part of the prison?"
+
+"Oh, 'fraid to spend it. On'y got few dimes. Broke ag'in."
+
+Richling stopped still with astonishment, brickbat in hand. The Italian
+met his gaze with an illuminated smile. "Yes," he said, "took all I had
+with me to bayou La Fourche. Coming back, slept with some men in boat.
+One git up in night-time and steal everything. Then was a big fight.
+Think that what fight was about--about dividing the money. Don't know
+sure. One man git killed. Rest run into the swamp and prairie. Officer
+arrest me for witness. Couldn't trust me to stay in the city."
+
+"Do you think the one who was killed was the thief?"
+
+"Don't know sure," said the Italian, with the same sweet face, and
+falling to again with his brickbat,--"hope so!"
+
+"Strange place to confine a witness!" said Richling, holding his hand to
+his bruised side and slowly straightening his back.
+
+"Oh, yes, good place," replied the other, scrubbing away; "git him, in
+short time, so he swear to anything."
+
+It was far on in the afternoon before the wary Ristofalo ventured to
+offer all he had in his pocket to a hanger-on of the prison office, to
+go first to Richling's house, and then to an acquaintance of his own,
+with messages looking to the procuring of their release. The messenger
+chose to go first to Ristofalo's friend, and afterward to Mrs. Riley's.
+It was growing dark when he reached the latter place. Mary was out in
+the city somewhere, wandering about, aimless and distracted, in search
+of Richling. The messenger left word with Mrs. Riley. Richling had all
+along hoped that that good friend, doubtless acquainted with the most
+approved methods of finding a missing man, would direct Mary to the
+police station at the earliest practicable hour. But time had shown
+that she had not done so. No, indeed! Mrs. Riley counted herself too
+benevolently shrewd for that. While she had made Mary's suspense of
+the night less frightful than it might have been, by surmises that
+Mr. Richling had found some form of night-work,--watching some pile
+of freight or some unfinished building,--she had come, secretly, to a
+different conviction, predicated on her own married experiences; and if
+Mr. Richling had, in a moment of gloom, tipped the bowl a little too
+high, as her dear lost husband, the best man that ever walked, had often
+done, and had been locked up at night to be let out in the morning, why,
+give him a chance! Let him invent his own little fault-hiding romance
+and come home with it. Mary was frantic. She could not be kept in; but
+Mrs. Riley, by prolonged effort, convinced her it was best not to call
+upon Dr. Sevier until she could be sure some disaster had actually
+occurred, and sent her among the fruiterers and oystermen in vain search
+for Raphael Ristofalo. Thus it was that the Doctor's morning messenger
+to the Richlings, bearing word that if any one were sick he would call
+without delay, was met by Mrs. Riley only, and by the reassuring
+statement that both of them were out. The later messenger, from the two
+men in prison, brought back word of Mary's absence from the house, of
+her physical welfare, and Mrs. Riley's promise that Mary should visit
+the prison at the earliest hour possible. This would not be till the
+next morning.
+
+While Mrs. Riley was sending this message, Mary, a great distance away,
+was emerging from the darkening and silent streets of the river front
+and moving with timid haste across the broad levee toward the edge of
+the water at the steam-boat landing. In this season of depleted streams
+and idle waiting, only an occasional boat lifted its lofty, black,
+double funnels against the sky here and there, leaving wide stretches of
+unoccupied wharf-front between. Mary hurried on, clear out to the great
+wharf's edge, and looked forth upon the broad, softly moving harbor. The
+low waters spread out and away, to and around the opposite point, in
+wide surfaces of glassy purples and wrinkled bronze. Beauty, that joy
+forever, is sometimes a terror. Was the end of her search somewhere
+underneath that fearful glory? She clasped her hands, bent down with
+dry, staring eyes, then turned again and fled homeward. She swerved once
+toward Dr. Sevier's quarters, but soon decided to see first if there
+were any tidings with Mrs. Riley, and so resumed her course. Night
+overtook her in streets where every footstep before or behind her made
+her tremble; but at length she crossed the threshold of Mrs. Riley's
+little parlor. Mrs. Riley was standing in the door, and retreated a step
+or two backward as Mary entered with a look of wild inquiry.
+
+"Not come?" cried the wife.
+
+"Mrs. Richlin'," said the widow, hurriedly, "yer husband's alive and
+found."
+
+Mary seized her frantically by the shoulders, crying with high-pitched
+voice:--
+
+"Where is he?--where is he?"
+
+"Ya can't see um till marning, Mrs. Richlin'."
+
+"Where is he?" cried Mary, louder than before.
+
+"Me dear," said Mrs. Riley, "ye kin easy git him out in the marning."
+
+"Mrs. Riley," said Mary, holding her with her eye, "is my husband in
+prison?--O Lord God! O God! my God!"
+
+Mrs. Riley wept. She clasped the moaning, sobbing wife to her bosom, and
+with streaming eyes said:--
+
+"Mrs. Richlin', me dear, Mrs. Richlin', me dear, what wad I give to have
+my husband this night where your husband is!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+RELEASE.--NARCISSE.
+
+
+As some children were playing in the street before the Parish Prison
+next morning, they suddenly started and scampered toward the prison's
+black entrance. A physician's carriage had driven briskly up to it,
+ground its wheels against the curb-stone, and halted. If any fresh
+crumbs of horror were about to be dropped, the children must be there to
+feast on them. Dr. Sevier stepped out, gave Mary his hand and then his
+arm, and went in with her. A question or two in the prison office, a
+reference to the rolls, and a turnkey led the way through a dark gallery
+lighted with dimly burning gas. The stench was suffocating. They stopped
+at the inner gate.
+
+"Why didn't you bring him to us?" asked the Doctor, scowling resentfully
+at the facetious drawings and legends on the walls, where the dampness
+glistened in the sickly light.
+
+The keeper made a low reply as he shot the bolts.
+
+"What?" quickly asked Mary.
+
+"He's not well," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+The gate swung open. They stepped into the yard and across it. The
+prisoners paused in a game of ball. Others, who were playing cards,
+merely glanced up and went on. The jailer pointed with his bunch of keys
+to a cell before him. Mary glided away from the Doctor and darted in.
+There was a cry and a wail.
+
+The Doctor followed quickly. Ristofalo passed out as he entered.
+Richling lay on a rough gray blanket spread on the pavement with the
+Italian's jacket under his head. Mary had thrown herself down beside him
+upon her knees, and their arms were around each other's neck.
+
+"Let me see, Mrs. Richling," said the physician, touching her on the
+shoulder. She drew back. Richling lifted a hand in welcome. The Doctor
+pressed it.
+
+"Mrs. Richling," he said, as they faced each other, he on one knee, she
+on both. He gave her a few laconic directions for the sick man's better
+comfort. "You must stay here, madam," he said at length; "this man
+Ristofalo will be ample protection for you; and I will go at once and
+get your husband's discharge." He went out.
+
+In the office he asked for a seat at a desk. As he finished using it he
+turned to the keeper and asked, with severe face:--
+
+"What do you do with sick prisoners here, anyway?"
+
+The keeper smiled.
+
+"Why, if they gits right sick, the hospital wagon comes and takes 'em to
+the Charity Hospital."
+
+"Umhum!" replied the Doctor, unpleasantly,--"in the same wagon they use
+for a case of scarlet fever or small-pox, eh?"
+
+The keeper, with a little resentment in his laugh, stated that he would
+be eternally lost if he knew.
+
+"_I_ know," remarked the Doctor. "But when a man is only a little
+sick,--according to your judgment,--like that one in there now, he is
+treated here, eh?"
+
+The keeper swelled with a little official pride. His tone was boastful.
+
+"We has a complete dispenisary in the prison," he said.
+
+"Yes? Who's your druggist?" Dr. Sevier was in his worst inquisitorial
+mood.
+
+"One of the prisoners," said the keeper.
+
+The Doctor looked at him steadily. The man, in the blackness of his
+ignorance, was visibly proud of this bit of economy and convenience.
+
+"How long has he held this position?" asked the physician.
+
+"Oh, a right smart while. He was sentenced for murder, but he's waiting
+for a new trial."
+
+"And he has full charge of all the drugs?" asked the Doctor, with a
+cheerful smile.
+
+"Yes, sir." The keeper was flattered.
+
+"Poisons and all, I suppose, eh?" pursued the Doctor.
+
+"Everything."
+
+The Doctor looked steadily and silently upon the officer, and tore and
+folded and tore again into small bits the prescription he had written. A
+moment later the door of his carriage shut with a smart clap and its
+wheels rattled away. There was a general laugh in the office, heavily
+spiced with maledictions.
+
+"I say, Cap', what d'you reckon he'd 'a' said if he'd 'a' seen the
+women's department?"
+
+ * * *
+
+In those days recorders had the power to release prisoners sentenced by
+them when in their judgment new information justified such action. Yet
+Dr. Sevier had a hard day's work to procure Richling's liberty. The sun
+was declining once more when a hack drove up to Mrs. Riley's door with
+John and Mary in it, and Mrs. Riley was restrained from laughing and
+crying only by the presence of the great Dr. Sevier and a romantic
+Italian stranger by the captivating name of Ristofalo. Richling, with
+repeated avowals of his ability to walk alone, was helped into the house
+between these two illustrious visitors, Mary hurrying in ahead, and Mrs.
+Riley shutting the street door with some resentment of manner toward
+the staring children who gathered without. Was there anything surprising
+in the fact that eminent persons should call at her house?
+
+When there was time for greetings she gave her hand to Dr. Sevier and
+asked him how he found himself. To Ristofalo she bowed majestically. She
+noticed that he was handsome and muscular.
+
+At different hours the next day the same two visitors called. Also the
+second day after. And the third. And frequently afterward.
+
+ * * *
+
+Ristofalo regained his financial feet almost, as one might say, at a
+single hand-spring. He amused Mary and John and Mrs. Riley almost beyond
+limit with his simple story of how he did it.
+
+"Ye'd better hurry and be getting up out o' that sick bed, Mr.
+Richlin'," said the widow, in Ristofalo's absence, "or that I-talian
+rascal'll be making himself entirely too agree'ble to yer lady here. Ha!
+ha! It's _she_ that he's a-comin' here to see."
+
+Mrs. Riley laughed again, and pointed at Mary and tossed her head, not
+knowing that Mary went through it all over again as soon as Mrs. Riley
+was out of the room, to the immense delight of John.
+
+"And now, madam," said Dr. Sevier to Mary, by and by, "let it be
+understood once more that even independence may be carried to a vicious
+extreme, and that"--he turned to Richling, by whose bed he stood--"you
+and your wife will not do it again. You've had a narrow escape. Is it
+understood?"
+
+"We'll try to be moderate," replied the invalid, playfully.
+
+"I don't believe you," said the Doctor.
+
+And his scepticism was wise. He continued to watch them, and at length
+enjoyed the sight of John up and out again with color in his cheeks and
+the old courage--nay, a new and a better courage--in his eyes.
+
+Said the Doctor on his last visit, "Take good care of your husband, my
+child." He held the little wife's hand a moment, and gazed out of Mrs.
+Riley's front door upon the western sky. Then he transferred his gaze to
+John, who stood, with his knee in a chair, just behind her. He looked at
+the convalescent with solemn steadfastness. The husband smiled broadly.
+
+"I know what you mean. I'll try to deserve her."
+
+The Doctor looked again into the west.
+
+"Good-by."
+
+Mary tried playfully to retort, but John restrained her, and when she
+contrived to utter something absurdly complimentary of her husband he
+was her only hearer.
+
+They went back into the house, talking of other matters. Something
+turned the conversation upon Mrs. Riley, and from that subject it seemed
+to pass naturally to Ristofalo. Mary, laughing and talking softly as
+they entered their room, called to John's recollection the Italian's
+account of how he had once bought a tarpaulin hat and a cottonade shirt
+of the pattern called a "jumper," and had worked as a deck-hand in
+loading and unloading steam-boats. It was so amusingly sensible to put
+on the proper badge for the kind of work sought. Richling mused. Many a
+dollar he might have earned the past summer, had he been as ingeniously
+wise, he thought.
+
+"Ristofalo is coming here this evening," said he, taking a seat in the
+alley window.
+
+Mary looked at him with sidelong merriment. The Italian was coming to
+see Mrs. Riley.
+
+"Why, John," whispered Mary, standing beside him, "she's nearly ten
+years older than he is!"
+
+But John quoted the old saying about a man's age being what he feels,
+and a woman's what she looks.
+
+"Why,--but--dear, it is scarcely a fortnight since she declared nothing
+could ever induce"--
+
+"Let her alone," said John, indulgently. "Hasn't she said half-a-dozen
+times that it isn't good for woman to be alone? A widow's a woman--and
+you never disputed it."
+
+"O John," laughed Mary, "for shame! You know I didn't mean that. You
+know I never could mean that."
+
+And when John would have maintained his ground she besought him not to
+jest in that direction, with eyes so ready for tears that he desisted.
+
+"I only meant to be generous to Mrs. Riley," he said.
+
+"I know it," said Mary, caressingly; "you're always on the generous side
+of everything."
+
+She rested her hand fondly on his arm, and he took it into his own.
+
+One evening the pair were out for that sunset walk which their young
+blood so relished, and which often led them, as it did this time, across
+the wide, open commons behind the town, where the unsettled streets were
+turf-grown, and toppling wooden lamp-posts threatened to fall into the
+wide, cattle-trodden ditches.
+
+"Fall is coming," said Mary.
+
+"Let it come!" exclaimed John; "it's hung back long enough."
+
+He looked about with pleasure. On every hand the advancing season was
+giving promise of heightened activity. The dark, plumy foliage of the
+china trees was getting a golden edge. The burnished green of the great
+magnolias was spotted brilliantly with hundreds of bursting cones, red
+with their pendent seeds. Here and there, as the sauntering pair came
+again into the region of brick sidewalks, a falling cone would now and
+then scatter its polished coral over the pavement, to be gathered by
+little girls for necklaces, or bruised under foot, staining the walk
+with its fragrant oil. The ligustrums bent low under the dragging weight
+of their small clustered berries. The oranges were turning. In the wet,
+choked ditches along the interruptions of pavement, where John followed
+Mary on narrow plank footways, bloomed thousands of little unrenowned
+asteroid flowers, blue and yellow, and the small, pink spikes of the
+water pepper. It wasn't the fashionable habit in those days, but Mary
+had John gather big bunches of this pretty floral mob, and filled her
+room with them--not Mrs. Riley's parlor--whoop, no! Weeds? Not if Mrs.
+Riley knew herself.
+
+So ran time apace. The morning skies were gray monotones, and the
+evening gorgeous reds. The birds had finished their summer singing.
+Sometimes the alert chirp of the cardinal suddenly smote the ear from
+some neighboring tree; but he would pass, a flash of crimson, from one
+garden to the next, and with another chirp or two be gone for days. The
+nervy, unmusical waking cry of the mocking-bird was often the first
+daybreak sound. At times a myriad downy seed floated everywhere, now
+softly upward, now gently downward, and the mellow rays of sunset turned
+it into a warm, golden snow-fall. By night a soft glow from distant
+burning prairies showed the hunters were afield; the call of unseen wild
+fowl was heard overhead, and--finer to the waiting poor man's ear than
+all other sounds--came at regular intervals, now from this quarter and
+now from that, the heavy, rushing blast of the cotton compress, telling
+that the flood tide of commerce was setting in.
+
+Narcisse surprised the Richlings one evening with a call. They tried
+very hard to be reserved, but they were too young for that task to be
+easy. The Creole had evidently come with his mind made up to take
+unresentfully and override all the unfriendliness they might choose to
+show. His conversation never ceased, but flitted from subject to subject
+with the swift waywardness of a humming-bird. It was remarked by Mary,
+leaning back in one end of Mrs. Riley's little sofa, that "summer
+dresses were disappearing, but that the girls looked just as sweet in
+their darker colors as they had appeared in midsummer white. Had
+Narcisse noticed? Probably he didn't care for"--
+
+"Ho! I notiz them an' they notiz me! An' thass one thing I 'ave notiz
+about young ladies: they ah juz like those bird'; in summeh lookin'
+cool, in winteh waum. I 'ave notiz that. An' I've notiz anotheh thing
+which make them juz like those bird'. They halways know if a man is
+lookin', an' they halways make like they don't see 'im! I would like to
+'ite an i'ony about that--a lill i'ony--in the he'oic measuh. You like
+that he'oic measuh, Mizzez Witchlin'?"
+
+As he rose to go he rolled a cigarette, and folded the end in with the
+long nail of his little finger.
+
+"Mizzez Witchlin', if you will allow me to light my ciga'ette fum yo'
+lamp--I can't use my sun-glass at night, because the sun is nod theh.
+But, the sun shining, I use it. I 'ave adop' that method since lately."
+
+"You borrow the sun's rays," said Mary, with wicked sweetness.
+
+"Yes; 'tis cheapeh than matches in the longue 'un."
+
+"You have discovered that, I suppose," remarked John.
+
+"Me? The sun-glass? No. I believe Ahchimides invend that, in fact. An'
+yet, out of ten thousan' who use the sun-glass only a few can account
+'ow tis done. 'Ow did you think that that's my invention, Mistoo
+Itchlin? Did you know that I am something of a chimist? I can tu'n
+litmus papeh 'ed by juz dipping it in SO_3HO. Yesseh."
+
+"Yes," said Richling, "that's one thing that I have noticed, that you're
+very fertile in devices."
+
+"Yes," echoed Mary, "I noticed that, the first time you ever came to see
+us. I only wish Mr. Richling was half as much so."
+
+She beamed upon her husband. Narcisse laughed with pure pleasure.
+
+"Well, I am compel' to say you ah co'ect. I am continually makin' some
+discove'ies. 'Necessity's the motheh of inventions.' Now thass anotheh
+thing I 'ave notiz--about that month of Octobeh: it always come befo'
+you think it's comin'. I 'ave notiz that about eve'y month. Now, to-day
+we ah the twennieth Octobeh! Is it not so?" He lighted his cigarette.
+"You ah compel' to co'obo'ate me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+LIGHTING SHIP.
+
+
+Yes, the tide was coming in. The Richlings' bark was still on the sands,
+but every now and then a wave of promise glided under her. She might
+float, now, any day. Meantime, as has no doubt been guessed, she was
+held on an even keel by loans from the Doctor.
+
+"Why you don't advertise in papers?" asked Ristofalo.
+
+"Advertise? Oh, I didn't think it would be of any use. I advertised a
+whole week, last summer."
+
+"You put advertisement in wrong time and keep it out wrong time," said
+the Italian.
+
+"I have a place in prospect, now, without advertising," said Richling,
+with an elated look.
+
+It was just here that a new mistake of Richling's emerged. He had come
+into contact with two or three men of that wretched sort that indulge
+the strange vanity of keeping others waiting upon them by promises of
+employment. He believed them, liked them heartily because they said
+nothing about references, and gratefully distended himself with their
+husks, until Ristofalo opened his eyes by saying, when one of these men
+had disappointed Richling the third time:--
+
+"Business man don't promise but once."
+
+"You lookin' for book-keeper's place?" asked the Italian at another
+time. "Why don't dress like a book-keeper?"
+
+"On borrowed money?" asked Richling, evidently looking upon that
+question as a poser.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Oh, no," said Richling, with a smile of superiority; but the other one
+smiled too, and shook his head.
+
+"Borrow mo', if you don't."
+
+Richling's heart flinched at the word. He had thought he was giving his
+true reason; but he was not. A foolish notion had floated, like a grain
+of dust, into the over-delicate wheels of his thought,--that men would
+employ him the more readily if he looked needy. His hat was unbrushed,
+his shoes unpolished; he had let his beard come out, thin and untrimmed;
+his necktie was faded. He looked battered. When the Italian's gentle
+warning showed him this additional mistake on top of all his others he
+was dismayed at himself; and when he sat down in his room and counted
+the cost of an accountant's uniform, so to speak, the remains of Dr.
+Sevier's last loan to him was too small for it. Thereupon he committed
+one error more,--but it was the last. He sunk his standard, and began
+again to look for service among industries that could offer employment
+only to manual labor. He crossed the river and stirred about among the
+dry-docks and ship-carpenters' yards of the suburb Algiers. But he could
+neither hew spars, nor paint, nor splice ropes. He watched a man half a
+day calking a boat; then he offered himself for the same work, did it
+fairly, and earned half a day's wages. But then the boat was done, and
+there was no other calking at the moment along the whole harbor front,
+except some that was being done on a ship by her own sailors.
+
+"John," said Mary, dropping into her lap the sewing that hardly paid for
+her candle, "isn't it hard to realize that it isn't twelve months since
+your hardships commenced? They _can't_ last much longer, darling."
+
+"I know that," said John. "And I know I'll find a place presently, and
+then we'll wake up to the fact that this was actually less than a year
+of trouble in a lifetime of love."
+
+"Yes," rejoined Mary, "I know your patience will be rewarded."
+
+"But what I want is work now, Mary. The bread of idleness is getting
+_too_ bitter. But never mind; I'm going to work to-morrow;--never mind
+where. It's all right. You'll see."
+
+She smiled, and looked into his eyes again with a confession of
+unreserved trust. The next day he reached the--what shall we say?--big
+end of his last mistake. What it was came out a few mornings after, when
+he called at Number 5 Carondelet street.
+
+"The Doctah is not in pwesently," said Narcisse. "He ve'y hawdly comes
+in so soon as that. He's living home again, once mo', now. He's ve'y
+un'estless. I tole 'im yistiddy, 'Doctah, I know juz 'ow you feel, seh;
+'tis the same way with myseff. You ought to git ma'ied!'"
+
+"Did he say he would?" asked Richling.
+
+"Well, you know, Mistoo Itchlin, so the povvub says, 'Silent give
+consense.' He juz look at me--nevvah said a word--ha! he couldn'! You
+not lookin' ve'y well, Mistoo Itchlin. I suppose 'tis that waum
+weatheh."
+
+"I suppose it is; at least, partly," said Richling, and added nothing
+more, but looked along and across the ceiling, and down at a skeleton in
+a corner, that was offering to shake hands with him. He was at a loss
+how to talk to Narcisse. Both Mary and he had grown a little ashamed of
+their covert sarcasms, and yet to leave them out was bread without
+yeast, meat without salt, as far as their own powers of speech were
+concerned.
+
+"I thought, the other day," he began again, with an effort, "when it
+blew up cool, that the warm weather was over."
+
+"It seem to be finishin' ad the end, I think," responded the Creole. "I
+think, like you, that we 'ave 'ad too waum weatheh. Me, I like that
+weatheh to be cole, me. I halways weigh the mose in cole weatheh. I gain
+flesh, in fact. But so soon 'tis summeh somethin' become of it. I dunno
+if 'tis the fault of my close, but I reduct in summeh. Speakin' of
+close, Mistoo Itchlin,--egscuse me if 'tis a fair question,--w'at was
+yo' objec' in buyin' that tawpaulin hat an' jacket lass week ad that
+sto' on the levee? You din know I saw you, but I juz 'appen to see you,
+in fact." (The color rose in Richling's face, and Narcisse pressed on
+without allowing an answer.) "Well, thass none o' my biziness, of
+co'se, but I think you lookin' ve'y bad, Mistoo Itchlin"-- He stopped
+very short and stepped with dignified alacrity to his desk, for Dr.
+Sevier's step was on the stair.
+
+The Doctor shook hands with Richling and sank into the chair at his
+desk. "Anything turned up yet, Richling?"
+
+"Doctor," began Richling, drawing his chair near and speaking low.
+
+"Good-mawnin', Doctah," said Narcisse, showing himself with a graceful
+flourish.
+
+The Doctor nodded, then turned again to Richling. "You were saying"--
+
+"I 'ope you well, seh," insisted the Creole, and as the Doctor glanced
+toward him impatiently, repeated the sentiment, "'Ope you well, seh."
+
+The Doctor said he was, and turned once more to Richling. Narcisse
+bowed away backward and went to his desk, filled to the eyes with fierce
+satisfaction. He had made himself felt. Richling drew his chair nearer
+and spoke low:--
+
+"If I don't get work within a day or two I shall have to come to you for
+money."
+
+"That's all right, Richling." The Doctor spoke aloud; Richling answered
+low.
+
+"Oh, no, Doctor, it's all wrong! Indeed, I can't do it any more unless
+you will let me earn the money."
+
+"My dear sir, I would most gladly do it; but I have nothing that you
+can do."
+
+"Yes, you have, Doctor."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Why, it's this: you have a slave boy driving your carriage."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Give him some other work, and let me do that."
+
+Dr. Sevier started in his seat. "Richling, I can't do that. I should
+ruin you. If you drive my carriage"--
+
+"Just for a time, Doctor, till I find something else."
+
+"No! no! If you drive my carriage in New Orleans you'll never do
+anything else."
+
+"Why, Doctor, there are men standing in the front ranks to-day, who"--
+
+"Yes, yes," replied the Doctor, impatiently, "I know,--who began with
+menial labor; but--I can't explain it to you, Richling, but you're not
+of the same sort; that's all. I say it without praise or blame; you must
+have work adapted to your abilities."
+
+"My abilities!" softly echoed Richling. Tears sprang to his eyes. He
+held out his open palms,--"Doctor, look there." They were lacerated. He
+started to rise, but the Doctor prevented him.
+
+"Let me go," said Richling, pleadingly, and with averted face. "Let me
+go. I'm sorry I showed them. It was mean and foolish and weak. Let me
+go."
+
+But Dr. Sevier kept a hand on him, and he did not resist. The Doctor
+took one of the hands and examined it. "Why, Richling, you've been
+handling freight!"
+
+"There was nothing else."
+
+"Oh, bah!"
+
+"Let me go," whispered Richling. But the Doctor held him.
+
+"You didn't do this on the steam-boat landing, did you, Richling?"
+
+The young man nodded. The Doctor dropped the hand and looked upon its
+owner with set lips and steady severity. When he spoke he said:--
+
+"Among the negro and green Irish deck-hands, and under the oaths and
+blows of steam-boat mates! Why, Richling!" He turned half away in his
+rotary chair with an air of patience worn out.
+
+"You thought I had more sense," said Richling.
+
+The Doctor put his elbows upon his desk and slowly drew his face upward
+through his hands. "Mr. Richling, what is the matter with you?" They
+gazed at each other a long moment, and then Dr. Sevier continued: "Your
+trouble isn't want of sense. I know that very well, Richling." His voice
+was low and became kind. "But you don't get the use of the sense you
+have. It isn't available." He bent forward: "Some men, Richling, carry
+their folly on the surface and their good sense at the bottom,"--he
+jerked his thumb backward toward the distant Narcisse, and added, with a
+stealthy frown,--"like that little fool in yonder. He's got plenty of
+sense, but he doesn't load any of it on deck. Some men carry their sense
+on top and their folly down below"--
+
+Richling smiled broadly through his dejection, and touched his own
+chest. "Like this big fool here," he said.
+
+"Exactly," said Dr. Sevier. "Now you've developed a defect of the
+memory. Your few merchantable qualities have been so long out of the
+market, and you've suffered such humiliation under the pressure of
+adversity, that you've--you've done a very bad thing."
+
+"Say a dozen," responded Richling, with bitter humor. But the Doctor
+swung his head in resentment of the levity.
+
+"One's enough. You've allowed yourself to forget your true value."
+
+"I'm worth whatever I'll bring."
+
+The Doctor tossed his head in impatient disdain.
+
+"Pshaw! You'll never bring what you're worth any more than some men are
+worth what they bring. You don't know how. You never will know."
+
+"Well, Doctor, I do know that I'm worth more than I ever was before.
+I've learned a thousand things in the last twelvemonth. If I can only
+get a chance to prove it!" Richling turned red and struck his knee with
+his fist.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Dr. Sevier; "that's your sense, on top. And then you
+go--in a fit of the merest impatience, as I do suspect--and offer
+yourself as a deck-hand and as a carriage-driver. That's your folly, at
+the bottom. What ought to be done to such a man?" He gave a low, harsh
+laugh. Richling dropped his eyes. A silence followed.
+
+"You say all you want is a chance," resumed the Doctor.
+
+"Yes," quickly answered Richling, looking up.
+
+"I'm going to give it to you." They looked into each other's eyes. The
+Doctor nodded. "Yes, sir." He nodded again.
+
+"Where did you come from, Richling,--when you came to New Orleans,--you
+and your wife? Milwaukee?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do your relatives know of your present condition?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Is your wife's mother comfortably situated?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then I'll tell you what you must do."
+
+"The only thing I can't do," said Richling.
+
+"Yes, you can. You must. You must send Mrs. Richling back to her
+mother."
+
+Richling shook his head.
+
+"Well," said the Doctor, warmly, "I say you must. I will lend you the
+passage-money."
+
+Richling's eye kindled an instant at the Doctor's compulsory tone, but
+he said, gently:--
+
+"Why, Doctor, Mary will never consent to leave me."
+
+"Of course she will not. But you must make her do it! That's what
+you must do. And when that's done then you must start out and go
+systematically from door to door,--of business houses, I mean,--offering
+yourself for work befitting your station--ahem!--station, I say--and
+qualifications. I will lend you money to live on until you find
+permanent employment. Now, now, don't get alarmed! I'm not going to help
+you any more than I absolutely must!"
+
+"But, Doctor, how can you expect"-- But the Doctor interrupted.
+
+"Come, now, none of that! You and your wife are brave; I must say that
+for you. She has the courage of a gladiator. You can do this if you
+will."
+
+"Doctor," said Richling, "you are the best of friends; but, you know,
+the fact is, Mary and I--well, we're still lovers."
+
+"Oh!" The Doctor turned away his head with fresh impatience. Richling
+bit his lip, but went on:--
+
+"We can bear anything on earth together; but we have sworn to stay
+together through better and worse"--
+
+"Oh, pf-f-f-f!" said the doctor, closing his eyes and swinging his head
+away again.
+
+"--And we're going to do it," concluded Richling.
+
+"But you can't do it!" cried the Doctor, so loudly that Narcisse stood
+up on the rungs of his stool and peered.
+
+"We can't separate."
+
+Dr. Sevier smote the desk and sprang to his feet:--
+
+"Sir, you've got to do it! If you continue in this way, you'll die.
+You'll die, Mr. Richling--both of you! You'll die! Are you going to let
+Mary die just because she's brave enough to do it?" He sat down again
+and busied himself, nervously placing pens on the pen-rack, the stopper
+in the inkstand, and the like.
+
+Many thoughts ran through Richling's mind in the ensuing silence.
+His eyes were on the floor. Visions of parting; of the great
+emptiness that would be left behind; the pangs and yearnings that
+must follow,--crowded one upon another. One torturing realization
+kept ever in the front,--that the Doctor had a well-earned right to
+advise, and that, if his advice was to be rejected, one must show good
+and sufficient cause for rejecting it, both in present resources and
+in expectations. The truth leaped upon him and bore him down as it never
+had done before,--the truth which he had heard this very Dr. Sevier
+proclaim,--that debt is bondage. For a moment he rebelled against it;
+but shame soon displaced mutiny, and he accepted this part, also, of
+his lot. At length he rose.
+
+"Well?" said Dr. Sevier.
+
+"May I ask Mary?"
+
+"You will do what you please, Mr. Richling." And then, in a kinder
+voice, the Doctor added, "Yes; ask her."
+
+They moved together to the office door. The Doctor opened it, and they
+said good-by, Richling trying to drop a word of gratitude, and the
+Doctor hurriedly ignoring it.
+
+The next half hour or more was spent by the physician in receiving,
+hearing, and dismissing patients and their messengers. By and by no
+others came. The only audible sound was that of the Doctor's paper-knife
+as it parted the leaves of a pamphlet. He was thinking over the late
+interview with Richling, and knew that, if this silence were not soon
+interrupted from without, he would have to encounter his book-keeper,
+who had not spoken since Richling had left. Presently the issue came.
+
+"Dr. Seveeah,"--Narcisse came forward, hat in hand,--"I dunno 'ow 'tis,
+but Mistoo Itchlin always wemine me of that povvub, 'Ully to bed, ully
+to 'ise, make a pusson to be 'ealthy an' wealthy an' wise.'"
+
+"I don't know how it is, either," grumbled the Doctor.
+
+"I believe thass not the povvub I was thinking. I am acquainting myseff
+with those povvubs; but I'm somewhat gween in that light, in fact. Well,
+Doctah, I'm goin' ad the--shoemakeh. I burs' my shoe yistiddy. I was
+juz"--
+
+"Very well, go."
+
+"Yesseh; and from the shoemakeh I'll go"--
+
+The Doctor glanced darkly over the top of the pamphlet.
+
+"--Ad the bank; yesseh," said Narcisse, and went.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+AT LAST.
+
+
+Mary, cooking supper, uttered a soft exclamation of pleasure and relief
+as she heard John's step under the alley window and then at the door.
+She turned, with an iron spoon in one hand and a candlestick in the
+other, from the little old stove with two pot-holes, where she had been
+stirring some mess in a tin pan.
+
+"Why, you're"--she reached for a kiss--"real late!"
+
+"I could not come any sooner." He dropped into a chair at the table.
+
+"Busy?"
+
+"No; no work to-day."
+
+Mary lifted the pan from the stove, whisked it to the table, and blew
+her fingers.
+
+"Same subject continued," she said laughingly, pointing with her spoon
+to the warmed-over food.
+
+Richling smiled and nodded, and then flattened his elbows out on the
+table and hid his face in them.
+
+This was the first time he had ever lingered away from his wife when he
+need not have done so. It was the Doctor's proposition that had kept him
+back. All day long it had filled his thoughts. He felt its wisdom. Its
+sheer practical value had pierced remorselessly into the deepest
+convictions of his mind. But his heart could not receive it.
+
+"Well," said Mary, brightly, as she sat down at the table, "maybe
+you'll have better luck to-morrow. Don't you think you may?"
+
+"I don't know," said John, straightening up and tossing back his hair.
+He pushed a plate up to the pan, supplied and passed it. Then he helped
+himself and fell to eating.
+
+"Have you seen Dr. Sevier to-day?" asked Mary, cautiously, seeing her
+husband pause and fall into distraction.
+
+He pushed his plate away and rose. She met him in the middle of the
+room. He extended both hands, took hers, and gazed upon her. How could
+he tell? Would she cry and lament, and spurn the proposition, and fall
+upon him with a hundred kisses? Ah, if she would! But he saw that Doctor
+Sevier, at least, was confident she would not; that she would have,
+instead, what the wife so often has in such cases, the strongest love,
+it may be, but also the strongest wisdom for that particular sort of
+issue. Which would she do? Would she go, or would she not?
+
+He tried to withdraw his hands, but she looked beseechingly into his
+eyes and knit her fingers into his. The question stuck upon his lips and
+would not be uttered. And why should it be? Was it not cowardice to
+leave the decision to her? Should not he decide? Oh! if she would only
+rebel! But would she? Would not her utmost be to give good reasons in
+her gentle, inquiring way why he should not require her to leave him?
+And were there any such? No! no! He had racked his brain to find so much
+as one, all day long.
+
+"John," said Mary, "Dr. Sevier's been talking to you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And he wants you to send me back home for a while?"
+
+"How do you know?" asked John, with a start.
+
+"I can read it in your face." She loosed one hand and laid it upon his
+brow.
+
+"What--what do you think about it, Mary?"
+
+Mary, looking into his eyes with the face of one who pleads for mercy,
+whispered, "He's right," then buried her face in his bosom and wept like
+a babe.
+
+"I felt it six months ago," she said later, sitting on her husband's
+knee and holding his folded hands tightly in hers.
+
+"Why didn't you say so?" asked John.
+
+"I was too selfish," was her reply.
+
+When, on the second day afterward, they entered the Doctor's office
+Richling was bright with that new hope which always rises up beside a
+new experiment, and Mary looked well and happy. The Doctor wrote them a
+letter of introduction to the steam-boat agent.
+
+"You're taking a very sensible course," he said, smoothing the
+blotting-paper heavily over the letter. "Of course, you think it's hard.
+It is hard. But distance needn't separate you."
+
+"It can't," said Richling.
+
+"Time," continued the Doctor,--"maybe a few months,--will bring you
+together again, prepared for a long life of secure union; and then, when
+you look back upon this, you'll be proud of your courage and good sense.
+And you'll be"-- He enclosed the note, directed the envelope, and,
+pausing with it still in his hand, turned toward the pair. They rose up.
+His rare, sick-room smile hovered about his mouth, and he said:--
+
+"You'll be all the happier--all three of you."
+
+The husband smiled. Mary colored down to the throat and looked up on the
+wall, where Harvey was explaining to his king the circulation of the
+blood. There was quite a pause, neither side caring to utter the first
+adieu.
+
+"If a physician could call any hour his own," presently said the Doctor,
+"I should say I would come down to the boat and see you off. But I might
+fail in that. Good-by!"
+
+"Good-by, Doctor!"--a little tremor in the voice,--"take care of John."
+
+The tall man looked down into the upturned blue eyes.
+
+"Good-by!" He stooped toward her forehead, but she lifted her lips and
+he kissed them. So they parted.
+
+The farewell with Mrs. Riley was mainly characterized by a generous and
+sincere exchange of compliments and promises of remembrance. Some tears
+rose up; a few ran over.
+
+At the steam-boat wharf there were only the pair themselves to cling one
+moment to each other and then wave that mute farewell that looks through
+watery eyes and sticks in the choking throat. Who ever knows what
+good-by means?
+
+ * * *
+
+"Doctor," said Richling, when he came to accept those terms in the
+Doctor's proposition which applied more exclusively to himself,--"no,
+Doctor, not that way, please." He put aside the money proffered him.
+"This is what I want to do: I will come to your house every morning and
+get enough to eat to sustain me through the day, and will continue to do
+so till I find work."
+
+"Very well," said the Doctor.
+
+The arrangement went into effect. They never met at dinner; but almost
+every morning the Doctor, going into the breakfast-room, met Richling
+just risen from his earlier and hastier meal.
+
+"Well? Anything yet?"
+
+"Nothing yet."
+
+And, unless there was some word from Mary, nothing more would be said.
+So went the month of November.
+
+But at length, one day toward the close of the Doctor's office hours, he
+noticed the sound of an agile foot springing up his stairs three steps
+at a stride, and Richling entered, panting and radiant.
+
+"Doctor, at last! At last!"
+
+"At last, what?"
+
+"I've found employment! I have, indeed! One line from you, and the place
+is mine! A good place, Doctor, and one that I can fill. The very thing
+for me! Adapted to my abilities!" He laughed so that he coughed, was
+still, and laughed again. "Just a line, if you please, Doctor."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+A RISING STAR.
+
+
+It had been many a day since Dr. Sevier had felt such pleasure as
+thrilled him when Richling, half beside himself with delight, ran in
+upon him with the news that he had found employment. Narcisse, too, was
+glad. He slipped down from his stool and came near enough to contribute
+his congratulatory smiles, though he did not venture to speak. Richling
+nodded him a happy how-d'ye-do, and the Creole replied by a wave of the
+hand.
+
+In the Doctor's manner, on the other hand, there was a decided lack of
+response that made Richling check his spirits and resume more slowly,--
+
+"Do you know a man named Reisen?"
+
+"No," said the Doctor.
+
+"Why, he says he knows you."
+
+"That may be."
+
+"He says you treated his wife one night when she was very ill"--
+
+"What name?"
+
+"Reisen."
+
+The Doctor reflected a moment.
+
+"I believe I recollect him. Is he away up on Benjamin street, close to
+the river, among the cotton-presses?"
+
+"Yes. Thalia street they call it now. He says"--
+
+"Does he keep a large bakery?" interrupted the Doctor.
+
+"The 'Star Bakery,'" said Richling, brightening again. "He says
+he knows you, and that, if you will give me just one line of
+recommendation, he will put me in charge of his accounts and give me a
+trial. And a trial's all I want, Doctor. I'm not the least fearful of
+the result."
+
+"Richling," said Dr. Sevier, slowly picking up his paper-folder and
+shaking it argumentatively, "where are the letters I advised you to send
+for?"
+
+Richling sat perfectly still, taking a long, slow breath through his
+nostrils, his eyes fixed emptily on his questioner. He was thinking,
+away down at the bottom of his heart,--and the Doctor knew it,--that
+this was the unkindest question, and the most cold-blooded, that he had
+ever heard. The Doctor shook his paper-folder again.
+
+"You see, now, as to the bare fact, I don't know you."
+
+Richling's jaw dropped with astonishment. His eye lighted up
+resentfully. But the speaker went on:--
+
+"I esteem you highly. I believe in you. I would trust you,
+Richling,"--his listener remembered how the speaker _had_ trusted him,
+and was melted,--"but as to recommending you, why, that is like going
+upon the witness-stand, as it were, and I cannot say that I know
+anything."
+
+Richling's face suddenly flashed full of light. He touched the Doctor's
+hand.
+
+"That's it! That's the very thing, sir! Write that!"
+
+The Doctor hesitated. Richling sat gazing at him, afraid to move an eye
+lest he should lose an advantage. The Doctor turned to his desk and
+wrote.
+
+ * * *
+
+On the next morning Richling did not come for his breakfast; and, not
+many days after, Dr. Sevier received through the mail the following
+letter:--
+
+ NEW ORLEANS, December 2, 1857.
+
+ DEAR DOCTOR,--I've got the place. I'm Reisen's book-keeper. I'm
+ earning my living. And I like the work. Bread, the word bread,
+ that has so long been terrible to me, is now the sweetest word
+ in the language. For eighteen months it was a prayer; now it's
+ a proclamation.
+
+ I've not only got the place, but I'm going to keep it. I find I
+ have new powers; and the first and best of them is the power to
+ throw myself into my work and make it _me_. It's not a task;
+ it's a mission. Its being bread, I suppose, makes it easier to
+ seem so; but it should be so if it was pork and garlic, or rags
+ and raw-hides.
+
+ My maxim a year ago, though I didn't know it then, was to do
+ what I liked. Now it's to like what I do. I understand it now.
+ And I understand now, too, that a man who expects to retain
+ employment must yield a profit. He must be worth more than he
+ costs. I thank God for the discipline of the last year and a
+ half. I thank him that I did not fall where, in my cowardice, I
+ so often prayed to fall, into the hands of foolish benefactors.
+ You wouldn't believe this of me, I know; but it's true. I have
+ been taught what life is; I never would have learned it any
+ other way.
+
+ And still another thing: I have been taught to know what the
+ poor suffer. I know their feelings, their temptations, their
+ hardships, their sad mistakes, and the frightful mistakes and
+ oversights the rich make concerning them, and the ways to give
+ them true and helpful help. And now, if God ever gives me
+ competency, whether he gives me abundance or not, I know what
+ he intends me to do. I was once, in fact and in sentiment, a
+ brother to the rich; but I know that now he has trained me to
+ be a brother to the poor. Don't think I am going to be foolish.
+ I remember that I'm brother to the rich too; but I'll be the
+ other as well. How wisely has God--what am I saying? Poor fools
+ that we humans are! We can hardly venture to praise God's
+ wisdom to-day when we think we see it, lest it turn out to be
+ only our own folly to-morrow.
+
+ But I find I'm only writing to myself, Doctor, not to you; so I
+ stop. Mary is well, and sends you much love.
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+ JOHN RICHLING.
+
+"Very little about Mary," murmured Dr. Sevier. Yet he was rather pleased
+than otherwise with the letter. He thrust it into his breast-pocket. In
+the evening, at his fireside, he drew it out again and re-read it.
+
+"Talks as if he had got into an impregnable castle," thought the Doctor,
+as he gazed into the fire. "Book-keeper to a baker," he muttered, slowly
+folding the sheet again. It somehow vexed him to see Richling so happy
+in so low a station. But--"It's the joy of what he has escaped _from_,
+not _to_," he presently remembered.
+
+A fortnight or more elapsed. A distant relative of Dr. Sevier, a man of
+his own years and profession, was his guest for two nights and a day as
+he passed through the city, eastward, from an all-summer's study of
+fevers in Mexico. They were sitting at evening on opposite sides of the
+library fire, conversing in the leisurely ease of those to whom life is
+not a novelty.
+
+"And so you think of having Laura and Bess come out from Charleston, and
+keep house for you this winter? Their mother wrote me to that effect."
+
+"Yes," said Dr. Sevier. "Society here will be a great delight to them.
+They will shine. And time will be less monotonous for me. It may suit
+me, or it may not."
+
+"I dare say it may," responded the kinsman, whereas in truth he was very
+doubtful about it.
+
+He added something, a moment later, about retiring for the night,
+and his host had just said, "Eh?" when a slave, in a five-year-old
+dress-coat, brought in the card of a person whose name was as well known
+in New Orleans in those days as St. Patrick's steeple or the statue of
+Jackson in the old Place d'Armes. Dr. Sevier turned it over and looked
+for a moment ponderingly upon the domestic.
+
+The relative rose.
+
+"You needn't go," said Dr. Sevier; but he said "he had intended," etc.,
+and went to his chamber.
+
+The visitor entered. He was a dark, slender, iron gray man, of finely
+cut, regular features, and seeming to be much more deeply wrinkled than
+on scrutiny he proved to be. One quickly saw that he was full of
+reposing energy. He gave the feeling of your being very near some
+weapon, of dreadful efficiency, ready for instant use whenever needed.
+His clothing fitted him neatly; his long, gray mustache was the only
+thing that hung loosely about him; his boots were fine. If he had told a
+child that all his muscles and sinews were wrapped with fine steel wire
+the child would have believed him, and continued to sit on his knee all
+the same. It is said, by those who still survive him, that in dreadful
+places and moments the flash of his fist was as quick, as irresistible,
+and as all-sufficient, as lightning, yet that years would sometimes pass
+without its ever being lifted.
+
+Dr. Sevier lifted his slender length out of his easy-chair, and bowed
+with severe gravity.
+
+"Good-evening, sir," he said, and silently thought, "Now, what can Smith
+Izard possibly want with me?"
+
+It may have been perfectly natural that this man's presence shed off all
+idea of medical consultation; but why should it instantly bring to the
+Doctor's mind, as an answer to his question, another man as different
+from this one as water from fire?
+
+The detective returned the Doctor's salutation, and they became seated.
+Then the visitor craved permission to ask a confidential question or two
+for information which he was seeking in his official capacity. His
+manners were a little old-fashioned, but perfect of their kind. The
+Doctor consented. The man put his hand into his breast-pocket, and drew
+out a daguerreotype case, touched its spring, and as it opened in
+his palm extended it to the Doctor. The Doctor took it with evident
+reluctance. It contained the picture of a youth who was just reaching
+manhood. The detective spoke:--
+
+"They say he ought to look older than that now."
+
+"He does," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+"Do you know his name?" inquired the detective.
+
+"No."
+
+"What name do you know him by?"
+
+"John Richling."
+
+"Wasn't he sent down by Recorder Munroe, last summer, for assault,
+etc.?"
+
+"Yes. I got him out the next day. He never should have been put in."
+
+To the Doctor's surprise the detective rose to go.
+
+"I'm much obliged to you, Doctor."
+
+"Is that all you wanted to ask me?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Mr. Izard, who is this young man? What has he done?"
+
+"I don't know, sir. I have a letter from a lawyer in Kentucky who says
+he represents this young man's two sisters living there,--half-sisters,
+rather,--stating that his father and mother are both dead,--died within
+three days of each other."
+
+"What name?"
+
+"He didn't give the name. He sent this daguerreotype, with instructions
+to trace up the young man, if possible. He said there was reason to
+believe he was in New Orleans. He said, if I found him, just to see him
+privately, tell him the news, and invite him to come back home. But he
+said if the young fellow had got into any kind of trouble that might
+somehow reflect on the family, you know, like getting arrested for
+something or other, you know, or some such thing, then I was just to
+drop the thing quietly, and say nothing about it to him or anybody
+else."
+
+"And doesn't that seem a strange way to manage a matter like that,--to
+put it into the hands of a detective?"
+
+"Well, I don't know," said Mr. Izard. "We're used to strange things, and
+this isn't so very strange. No, it's very common. I suppose he knew that
+if he gave it to me it would be attended to in a quiet and innocent sort
+o' way. Some people hate mighty bad to get talked about. Nobody's seen
+that picture but you and one 'aid,' and just as soon as he saw it he
+said, 'Why, that's the chap that Dr. Sevier took out of the Parish
+Prison last September.' And there won't anybody else see it."
+
+"Don't you intend to see Richling?" asked the Doctor, following the
+detective toward the door.
+
+"I don't see as it would be any use," said the detective, "seeing he's
+been sent down, and so on. I'll write to the lawyer and state the facts,
+and wait for orders."
+
+"But do you know how slight the blame was that got him into trouble
+here?"
+
+"Yes. The 'aid' who saw the picture told me all about that. It was a
+shame. I'll say so. I'll give all the particulars. But I tell you, I
+just guess--they'll drop him."
+
+"I dare say," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+"Well, Doctor," said Mr. Izard, "hope I haven't annoyed you."
+
+"No," replied the Doctor.
+
+But he had; and the annoyance had not ceased to be felt when, a few
+mornings afterward, Narcisse suddenly doubled--trebled it by saying:--
+
+"Doctah Seveeah,"--it was a cold day and the young Creole stood a
+moment with his back to the office fire, to which he had just given an
+energetic and prolonged poking,--"a man was yeh, to see you, name'
+Bison. 'F want' to see you about Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+The Doctor looked up with a start, and Narcisse continued:--
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin is wuckin' in 'is employment. I think 'e's please' with
+'im."
+
+"Then why does he come to see me about him?" asked the Doctor, so
+sharply that Narcisse shrugged as he replied:--
+
+"Reely, I cann' tell you; but thass one thing, Doctah, I dunno if you
+'ave notiz: the worl' halways take a gweat deal of welfa'e in a man w'en
+'e's 'ising. I do that myseff. Some'ow I cann' 'e'p it." This bold
+speech was too much for him. He looked down at his symmetrical legs and
+went back to his desk.
+
+The Doctor was far from reassured. After a silence he called out:--
+
+"Did he say he would come back?" A knock at the door arrested the
+answer, and a huge, wide, broad-faced German entered diffidently. The
+Doctor recognized Reisen. The visitor took off his flour-dusted hat and
+bowed with great deference.
+
+"Toc-tor," he softly drawled, "I yoost taught I trop in on you to say a
+verte to you apowt teh chung yentleman vot you hef rickomendet to me."
+
+"I didn't recommend him to you, sir. I wrote you distinctly that I did
+not feel at liberty to recommend him."
+
+"Tat iss teh troot, Toctor Tseweer; tat iss teh ectsectly troot.
+Shtill I taught I'll yoost trop in on you to say a verte to
+you,--Toctor,--apowt Mister"-- He hung his large head at one side
+to remember.
+
+"Richling," said the Doctor, impatiently.
+
+"Yes, sir. Apowt Mister Richlun. I heff a tifficuldy to rigolict naymps.
+I yoost taught I voot trop in und trop a verte to you apowt Mr. Richlun,
+vot maypy you titn't herr udt before, yet."
+
+"Yes," said the Doctor, with ill-concealed contempt. "Well, speak it
+out, Mr. Reisen; time is precious."
+
+The German smiled and made a silly gesture of assent.
+
+"Yes, udt is brecious. Shtill I taught I voot take enough time to
+yoost trop in undt say to you tat I heffent het Mr. Richlun in my
+etsteplitchmendt a veek undtil I finte owdt someting apowt him, tot, uf
+you het a-knowdt ud, voot hef mate your letter maypy a little tifferendt
+written, yet."
+
+Now, at length, Dr. Sevier's annoyance was turned to dismay. He waited
+in silence for Reisen to unfold his enigma, but already his resentment
+against Richling was gathering itself for a spring. To the baker,
+however, he betrayed only a cold hostility.
+
+"I kept a copy of my letter to you, Mr. Reisen, and there isn't a word
+in it which need have misled you, sir."
+
+The baker waved his hand amicably.
+
+"Sure, Tocter Tseweer, I toandt hef nutting to gomblain akinst teh
+vertes of tat letter. You voss mighty puttickly. Ovver, shtill, I hef
+sumpting to tell you vot ef you het a-knowdt udt pefore you writed tose
+vertes, alreatty, t'ey voot a little tifferendt pin."
+
+"Well, sir, why don't you tell it?"
+
+Reisen smiled. "Tat iss teh ectsectly vot I am coing to too. I yoost
+taught I'll trop in undt tell you, Toctor, tat I heffent het Mr. Richlun
+in my etsteplitchmendt a veek undtil I findte owdt tat he's
+a--berfect--tressure."
+
+Doctor Sevier started half up from his chair, dropped into it again,
+wheeled half away, and back again with the blood surging into his face
+and exclaimed:--
+
+"Why, what do you mean by such drivelling nonsense, sir? You've given me
+a positive fright!" He frowned the blacker as the baker smiled from ear
+to ear.
+
+"Vy, Toctor, I hope you ugscooce me! I yoost taught you voot like to
+herr udt. Undt Missis Reisen sayce, 'Reisen, you yoost co undt tell um.'
+I taught udt voot pe blessant to you to know tatt you hett sendt me teh
+fynust pissness mayn I effer het apowdt me. Undt uff he iss onnust he
+iss a berfect tressure, undt uff he aint a berfect tressure,"--he smiled
+anew and tendered his capacious hat to his listener,--"you yoost kin
+take tiss, Toctor, undt kip udt undt vare udt! Toctor, I vish you a
+merrah Chris'mus!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+BEES, WASPS, AND BUTTERFLIES.
+
+
+The merry day went by. The new year, 1858, set in. Everything gathered
+momentum. There was a panic and a crash. The brother-in-law of sister
+Jane--he whom Dr. Sevier met at that quiet dinner-party--struck an
+impediment, stumbled, staggered, fell under the feet of the racers, and
+crawled away minus not money and credit only, but all his philosophy
+about helping the poor, maimed in spirit, his pride swollen with
+bruises, his heart and his speech soured beyond all sweetening.
+
+Many were the wrecks. But over their debris, Mercury and Venus--the busy
+season and the gay season--ran lightly, hand in hand. Men getting money
+and women squandering it. Whole nights in the ball-room. Gold pouring in
+at the hopper and out at the spout,--Carondelet street emptying like a
+yellow river into Canal street. Thousands for vanity; thousands for
+pride; thousands for influence and for station; thousands for hidden
+sins; a slender fraction for the wants of the body; a slenderer for the
+cravings of the soul. Lazarus paid to stay away from the gate. John the
+Baptist, in raiment of broadcloth, a circlet of white linen about his
+neck, and his meat strawberries and ice-cream. The lower classes
+mentioned mincingly; awkward silences or visible wincings at allusions
+to death, and converse on eternal things banished as if it were the
+smell of cabbage. So looked the gay world, at least, to Dr. Sevier.
+
+He saw more of it than had been his wont for many seasons. The two
+young-lady cousins whom he had brought and installed in his home
+thirsted for that gorgeous, nocturnal moth life in which no thirst is
+truly slaked, and dragged him with them into the iridescent, gas-lighted
+spider-web of society.
+
+"Now, you know you like it!" they said.
+
+"A little of it, yes. But I don't see how you can like it, who virtually
+live in it and upon it. Why, I would as soon try to live upon cake and
+candy!"
+
+"Well, we can live very nicely upon cake and candy," retorted they.
+
+"Why, girls, it's no more life than spice is food. What lofty
+motive--what earnest, worthy object"--
+
+But they drowned his homily in a carol, and ran away arm in arm to dress
+for another ball. One of them stopped in the door with an air of mock
+bravado:--
+
+"What do we care for lofty motives or worthy objects?"
+
+A smile escaped from him as she vanished. His condemnation was flavored
+with charity. "It's their mating season," he silently thought, and, not
+knowing he did it, sighed.
+
+"There come Dr. Sevier and his two pretty cousins," was the ball-room
+whisper. "Beautiful girls--rich widower without children--great catch!
+_Passe_, how? Well, maybe so; not as much as he makes himself out,
+though." "_Passe_, yes," said a merciless belle to a blade of her own
+years; "a man of strong sense is _passe_ at any age." Sister Jane's name
+was mentioned in the same connection, but that illusion quickly passed.
+The cousins denied indignantly that he had any matrimonial intention.
+Somebody dissipated the rumor by a syllogism: "A man hunting a second
+wife always looks like a fool; the Doctor doesn't look a bit like a
+fool, ergo"--
+
+He grew very weary of the giddy rout, standing in it like a rock in a
+whirlpool. He did rejoice in the Carnival, but only because it was the
+end.
+
+"Pretty? yes, as pretty as a bonfire," he said. "I can't enjoy much
+fiddling while Rome is burning."
+
+"But Rome isn't always burning," said the cousins.
+
+"Yes, it is! Yes, it is!"
+
+The wickeder of the two cousins breathed a penitential sigh, dropped her
+bare, jewelled arms out of her cloak, and said:--
+
+"Now tell us once more about Mary Richling." He had bored them to death
+with Mary.
+
+Lent was a relief to all three. One day, as the Doctor was walking along
+the street, a large hand grasped his elbow and gently arrested his
+steps. He turned.
+
+"Well, Reisen, is that you?"
+
+The baker answered with his wide smile. "Yes, Toctor, tat iss me, sure.
+You titn't tink udt iss Mr. Richlun, tit you?"
+
+"No. How is Richling?"
+
+"Vell, Mr. Richlun kitten along so-o-o-so-o-o. He iss not ferra shtrong;
+ovver he vurks like a shteam-inchyine."
+
+"I haven't seen him for many a day," said Dr. Sevier.
+
+The baker distended his eyes, bent his enormous digestive apparatus
+forward, raised his eyebrows, and hung his arms free from his sides. "He
+toandt kit a minudt to shpare in teh tswendy-four hourss. Sumptimes he
+sayss, 'Mr. Reisen, I can't shtop to talk mit you.' Sindts Mr. Richlun
+pin py my etsteplitchmendt, I tell you teh troot, Toctor Tseweer, I am
+yoost meckin' monneh haynd ofer fist!" He swung his chest forward again,
+drew in his lower regions, revolved his fists around each other for a
+moment, and then let them fall open at his sides, with the added
+assurance, "Now you kott teh ectsectly troot."
+
+The Doctor started away, but the baker detained him by a touch:--
+
+"You toandt kott enna verte to sendt to Mr. Richlun, Toctor!"
+
+"Yes. Tell him to come and pass an hour with me some evening in my
+library."
+
+The German lifted his hand in delight.
+
+"Vy, tot's yoost teh dting! Mr. Richlun alvayss pin sayin', 'I vish he
+aysk me come undt see um;' undt I sayss, 'You holdt shtill, yet, Mr.
+Richlun; teh next time I see um I make um aysk you.' Vell, now, titn't I
+tunned udt?" He was happy.
+
+"Well, ask him," said the Doctor, and got away.
+
+"No fool is an utter fool," pondered the Doctor, as he went. Two friends
+had been kept long apart by the fear of each, lest he should seem to be
+setting up claims based on the past. It required a simpleton to bring
+them together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+TOWARD THE ZENITH.
+
+
+"Richling, I am glad to see you!"
+
+Dr. Sevier had risen from his luxurious chair beside a table, the soft
+downward beams of whose lamp partly showed, and partly hid, the rich
+appointments of his library. He grasped Richling's hand, and with an
+extensive stride drew forward another chair on its smooth-running
+casters.
+
+Then inquiries were exchanged as to the health of one and the other. The
+Doctor, with his professional eye, noticed, as the light fell full upon
+his visitor's buoyant face, how thin and pale he had grown. He rose
+again, and stepping beyond Richling with a remark, in part complimentary
+and in part critical, upon the balmy April evening, let down the sash of
+a window where the smell of honeysuckles was floating in.
+
+"Have you heard from your wife lately?" he asked, as he resumed his
+seat.
+
+"Yesterday," said Richling. "Yes, she's very well, been well ever since
+she left us. She always sends love to you."
+
+"Hum," responded the physician. He fixed his eyes on the mantel and
+asked abstractedly, "How do you bear the separation?"
+
+"Oh!" Richling laughed, "not very heroically. It's a great strain on a
+man's philosophy."
+
+"Work is the only antidote," said the Doctor, not moving his eyes.
+
+"Yes, so I find it," answered the other. "It's bearable enough while one
+is working like mad; but sooner or later one must sit down to meals, or
+lie down to rest, you know"--
+
+"Then it hurts," said the Doctor.
+
+"It's a lively discipline," mused Richling.
+
+"Do you think you learn anything by it?" asked the other, turning his
+eyes slowly upon him. "That's what it means, you notice."
+
+"Yes, I do," replied Richling, smiling; "I learn the very thing I
+suppose you're thinking of,--that separation isn't disruption, and that
+no pair of true lovers are quite fitted out for marriage until they can
+bear separation if they must."
+
+"Yes," responded the physician; "if they can muster the good sense to
+see that they'll not be so apt to marry prematurely. I needn't tell you
+I believe in marrying for love; but these needs-must marriages are so
+ineffably silly. You 'must' and you 'will' marry, and 'nobody shall
+hinder you!' And you do it! And in three or four or six months"--he drew
+in his long legs energetically from the hearth-pan--"_death_ separates
+you!--death, sometimes, resulting directly from the turn your haste has
+given to events! Now, where is your 'must' and 'will'?" He stretched his
+legs out again, and laid his head on his cushioned chair-back.
+
+"I have made a narrow escape," said Richling.
+
+"I wasn't so fortunate," responded the Doctor, turning solemnly toward
+his young friend. "Richling, just seven months after I married Alice I
+buried her. I'm not going into particulars--of course; but the sickness
+that carried her off was distinctly connected with the haste of our
+marriage. Your Bible, Richling, that you lay such store by, is right; we
+should want things as if we didn't want them. That isn't the quotation,
+exactly, but it's the idea. I swore I couldn't and wouldn't live without
+her; but, you see, this is the fifteenth year that I have had to do it."
+
+"I should think it would have unmanned you for life," said Richling.
+
+"It made a man of me! I've never felt young a day since, and yet I've
+never seemed to grow a day older. It brought me all at once to my full
+manhood. I have never consciously disputed God's arrangements since. The
+man who does is only a wayward child."
+
+"It's true," said Richling, with an air of confession, "it's true;" and
+they fell into silence.
+
+Presently Richling looked around the room. His eyes brightened rapidly
+as he beheld the ranks and tiers of good books. He breathed an audible
+delight. The multitude of volumes rose in the old-fashioned way, in
+ornate cases of dark wood from floor to ceiling, on this hand, on that,
+before him, behind; some in gay covers,--green, blue, crimson,--with
+gilding and embossing; some in the sumptuous leathers of France, Russia,
+Morocco, Turkey; others in worn attire, battered and venerable, dingy
+but precious,--the gray heads of the council.
+
+The two men rose and moved about among those silent wits and
+philosophers, and, from the very embarrassment of the inner riches, fell
+to talking of letter-press and bindings, with maybe some effort on the
+part of each to seem the better acquainted with Caxton, the Elzevirs,
+and other like immortals. They easily passed to a competitive
+enumeration of the rare books they had seen or not seen here and there
+in other towns and countries. Richling admitted he had travelled, and
+the conversation turned upon noted buildings and famous old nooks in
+distant cities where both had been. So they moved slowly back to their
+chairs, and stood by them, still contemplating the books. But as they
+sank again into their seats the one thought which had fastened itself in
+the minds of both found fresh expression.
+
+Richling began, smilingly, as if the subject had not been dropped at
+all,--"I oughtn't to speak as if I didn't realize my good fortune, for I
+do."
+
+"I believe you do," said the Doctor, reaching toward the fire-irons.
+
+"Yes. Still, I lose patience with myself to find myself taking Mary's
+absence so hard."
+
+"All hardships are comparative," said the Doctor.
+
+"Certainly they are," replied Richling. "I lie sometimes and think of
+men who have been political prisoners, shut away from wife and children,
+with war raging outside and no news coming in."
+
+"Think of the common poor," exclaimed Dr. Sevier,--"the thousands of
+sailors' wives and soldiers' wives. Where does that thought carry you?"
+
+"It carries me," responded the other, with a low laugh, "to where I'm
+always a little ashamed of myself."
+
+"I didn't mean it to do that," said the Doctor; "I can imagine how you
+miss your wife. I miss her myself."
+
+"Oh! but she's here on this earth. She's alive and well. Any burden is
+light when I think of that--pardon me, Doctor!"
+
+"Go on, go on. Anything you please about her, Richling." The Doctor half
+sat, half lay in his chair, his eyes partly closed. "Go on," he
+repeated.
+
+"I was only going to say that long before Mary went away, many a time
+when she and I were fighting starvation at close quarters, I have
+looked at her and said to myself, 'What if I were in Dr. Sevier's
+place?' and it gave me strength to rise up and go on."
+
+"You were right."
+
+"I know I was. I often wake now at night and turn and find the place by
+my side empty, and I can hardly keep from calling her aloud. It wrenches
+me, but before long I think she's no such great distance away, since
+we're both on the same earth together, and by and by she'll be here at
+my side; and so it becomes easy to me once more." Richling, in the
+self-occupation of a lover, forgot what pains he might be inflicting.
+But the Doctor did not wince.
+
+"Yes," said the physician, "of course you wouldn't want the separation
+to be painless; and it promises a reward, you know."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed Richling, with an exultant smile and motion of the head,
+and then dropped his eyes in meditation. The Doctor looked at him
+steadily.
+
+"Richling, you've gathered some terribly hard experiences. But hard
+experiences are often the foundation-stones of a successful life. You
+can make them all profitable. You can make them draw you along, so to
+speak. But you must hold them well in hand, as you would a dangerous
+team, you know,--coolly and alertly, firmly and patiently,--and never
+let the reins slack till you've driven through the last gate."
+
+Richling replied, with a pleasant nod, "I believe I shall do it. Did you
+notice what I wrote you in my letter? I have got the notion strongly
+that the troubles we have gone through--Mary and I--were only our
+necessary preparation--not so necessary for her as for me"--
+
+"No," said Dr. Sevier, and Richling continued, with a smile:--
+
+"To fit us for a long and useful life, and especially a life that will
+be full of kind and valuable services to the poor. If that isn't what
+they were sent for"--he dropped into a tone of reflection--"then I don't
+understand them."
+
+"And suppose you don't understand," said the Doctor, with his cold, grim
+look.
+
+"Oh!" rejoined Richling, in amiable protest; "but a man would like to
+understand."
+
+"Like to--yes," replied the Doctor; "but be careful. The spirit that
+_must_ understand is the spirit that can't trust." He paused. Presently
+he said, "Richling!"
+
+Richling answered by an inquiring glance.
+
+"Take better care of your health," said the physician.
+
+Richling smiled--a young man's answer--and rose to say good-night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+TO SIGH, YET FEEL NO PAIN.
+
+
+Mrs. Riley missed the Richlings, she said, more than tongue could tell.
+She had easily rented the rooms they left vacant; that was not the
+trouble. The new tenant was a sallow, gaunt, wind-dried seamstress of
+sixty, who paid her rent punctually, but who was--
+
+"Mighty poor comp'ny to thim as's been used to the upper tin, Mr.
+Ristofalo."
+
+Still she was a protection. Mrs. Riley had not regarded this as a
+necessity in former days, but now, somehow, matters seemed different.
+This seamstress had, moreover, a son of eighteen years, principally
+skin and bone, who was hoping to be appointed assistant hostler at the
+fire-engine house of "Volunteer One," and who meantime hung about Mrs.
+Riley's dwelling and loved to relieve her of the care of little Mike.
+This also was something to be appreciated. Still there was a void.
+
+"Well, Mr. Richlin'!" cried Mrs. Riley, as she opened her parlor door in
+response to a knock. "Well, I'll be switched! ha! ha! I didn't think it
+was you at all. Take a seat and sit down!"
+
+It was good to see how she enjoyed the visit. Whenever she listened to
+Richling's words she rocked in her rocking-chair vigorously, and when
+she spoke stopped its motion and rested her elbows on its arms.
+
+"And how _is_ Mrs. Richlin'? And so she sent her love to me, did she,
+now? The blessed angel! Now, ye're not just a-makin' that up? No, I
+know ye wouldn't do sich a thing as that, Mr. Richlin'. Well, you must
+give her mine back again. I've nobody else on e'rth to give ud to, and
+never will have." She lifted her nose with amiable stateliness, as if to
+imply that Richling might not believe this, but that it was true,
+nevertheless.
+
+"You may change your mind, Mrs. Riley, some day," returned Richling, a
+little archly.
+
+"Ha! ha!" She tossed her head and laughed with good-natured scorn.
+"Nivver a fear o' that, Mr. Richlin'!" Her brogue was apt to broaden
+when pleasure pulled down her dignity. "And, if I did, it wuddent be for
+the likes of no I-talian Dago, if id's him ye're a-dthrivin' at,--not
+intinding anny disrespect to your friend, Mr. Richlin', and indeed I
+don't deny he's a perfect gintleman,--but, indeed, Mr. Richlin', I'm
+just after thinkin' that you and yer lady wouldn't have no self-respect
+for Kate Riley if she should be changing her name."
+
+"Still you were thinking about it," said Richling, with a twinkle.
+
+"Ah! ha! ha! Indeed I wasn', an' ye needn' be t'rowin' anny o' yer
+slyness on me. Ye know ye'd have no self-respect fur me. No; now ye know
+ye wuddent,--wud ye?"
+
+"Why, Mrs. Riley, of course we would. Why--why not?" He stood in the
+door-way, about to take his leave. "You may be sure we'll always be glad
+of anything that will make you the happier." Mrs. Riley looked so grave
+that he checked his humor.
+
+"But in the nixt life, Mr. Richlin', how about that?"
+
+"There? I suppose we shall simply each love all in absolute perfection.
+We'll"--
+
+"We'll never know the differ," interposed Mrs. Riley.
+
+"That's it," said Richling, smiling again. "And so I say,--and I've
+always said,--if a person _feels_ like marrying again, let him do it."
+
+"Have ye, now? Well, ye're just that good, Mr. Richlin'."
+
+"Yes," he responded, trying to be grave, "that's about my measure."
+
+"Would _you_ do ut?"
+
+"No, I wouldn't. I couldn't. But I should like--in good earnest, Mrs.
+Riley, I should like, now, the comfort of knowing that you were not to
+pass all the rest of your days in widowhood."
+
+"Ah! ged out, Mr. Richlin'!" She failed in her effort to laugh. "Ah!
+ye're sly!" She changed her attitude and drew a breath.
+
+"No," said Richling, "no, honestly. I should feel that you deserved
+better at this world's hands than that, and that the world deserved
+better of you. I find two people don't make a world, Mrs. Riley, though
+often they think they do. They certainly don't when one is gone."
+
+"Mr. Richlin'," exclaimed Mrs. Riley, drawing back and waving her hand
+sweetly, "stop yer flattery! Stop ud! Ah! ye're a-feeling yer oats, Mr.
+Richlin'. An' ye're a-showin' em too, ye air. Why, I hered ye was
+lookin' terrible, and here ye're lookin' just splendud!"
+
+"Who told you that?" asked Richling.
+
+"Never mind! Never mind who he was--ha, ha, ha!" She checked herself
+suddenly. "Ah, me! It's a shame for the likes o' me to be behavin' that
+foolish!" She put on additional dignity. "I will always be the Widow
+Riley." Then relaxing again into sweetness: "Marridge is a lottery, Mr.
+Richlin'; indeed an' it is; and ye know mighty well that he ye're after
+joking me about is no more nor a fri'nd." She looked sweet enough for
+somebody to kiss.
+
+"I don't know so certainly about that," said her visitor, stepping down
+upon the sidewalk and putting on his hat. "If I may judge by"-- He
+paused and glanced at the window.
+
+"Ah, now, Mr. Richlin', na-na-now, Mr. Richlin', ye daurn't say ud! Ye
+daurn't!" She smiled and blushed and arched her neck and rose and sank
+upon herself with sweet delight.
+
+"I say if I may judge by what he has said to me," insisted Richling.
+
+Mrs. Riley glided down across the door-step, and, with all the
+insinuation of her sex and nation, demanded:--
+
+"What'd he tell ye? Ah! he didn't tell ye nawthing! Ha, ha! there wasn'
+nawthing to tell!" But Richling slipped away.
+
+Mrs. Riley shook her finger: "Ah, ye're a wicket joker, Mr. Richlin'. I
+didn't think that o' the likes of a gintleman like you, anyhow!" She
+shook her finger again as she withdrew into the house, smiling broadly
+all the way in to the cradle, where she kissed and kissed again her
+ruddy, chubby, sleeping boy.
+
+ * * *
+
+Ristofalo came often. He was a man of simple words, and of few thoughts
+of the kind that were available in conversation; but his personal
+adventures had begun almost with infancy, and followed one another in
+close and strange succession over lands and seas ever since. He could
+therefore talk best about himself, though he talked modestly. "These
+things to hear would Desdemona seriously incline," and there came times
+when even a tear was not wanting to gem the poetry of the situation.
+
+"And ye might have saved yerself from all that," was sometimes her note
+of sympathy. But when he asked how she silently dried her eyes.
+
+Sometimes his experiences had been intensely ludicrous, and Mrs. Riley
+would laugh until in pure self-oblivion she smote her thigh with her
+palm, or laid her hand so smartly against his shoulder as to tip him
+half off his seat.
+
+"Ye didn't!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ah! Get out wid ye, Raphael Ristofalo,--to be telling me that for the
+trooth!"
+
+At one such time she was about to give him a second push, but he took
+the hand in his, and quietly kept it to the end of his story.
+
+He lingered late that evening, but at length took his hat from under his
+chair, rose, and extended his hand.
+
+"Man alive!" she cried, "that's my _hand_, sur, I'd have ye to know.
+Begahn wid ye! Lookut heere! What's the reason ye make it so long atween
+yer visits, eh? Tell me that. Ah--ah--ye've no need fur to tell me, Mr.
+Ristofalo! Ah--now don't tell a lie!"
+
+"Too busy. Come all time--wasn't too busy."
+
+"Ha, ha! Yes, yes; ye're too busy. Of coorse ye're too busy. Oh, yes! ye
+_air_ too busy--a-courtin' thim I-talian froot gerls around the Frinch
+Mairket. Ah! I'll bet two bits ye're a bouncer! Ah, don't tell me. I
+know ye, ye villain! Some o' thim's a-waitin' fur ye now, ha, ha! Go!
+And don't ye nivver come back heere anny more. D'ye mind?"
+
+"Aw righ'." The Italian took her hand for the third time and held it,
+standing in his simple square way before her and wearing his gentle
+smile as he looked her in the eye. "Good-by, Kate."
+
+Her eye quailed. Her hand pulled a little helplessly and in a meek voice
+she said:--
+
+"That's not right for you to do me that a-way, Mr. Ristofalo. I've got a
+handle to my name, sur."
+
+She threw some gentle rebuke into her glance, and turned it upon him. He
+met it with that same amiable absence of emotion that was always in his
+look.
+
+"Kate too short by itself?" he asked. "Aw righ'; make it Kate
+Ristofalo."
+
+"No," said Mrs. Riley, averting and drooping her face.
+
+"Take good care of you," said the Italian; "you and Mike. Always be
+kind. Good care."
+
+Mrs. Riley turned with sudden fervor.
+
+"Good cayre!--Mr. Ristofalo," she exclaimed, lifting her free hand and
+touching her bosom with the points of her fingers, "ye don't know the
+hairt of a woman, surr! No-o-o, surr! It's _love_ we wants! 'The hairt
+as has trooly loved nivver furgits, but as trooly loves ahn to the
+tlose!'"
+
+"Yes," said the Italian; "yes," nodding and ever smiling, "dass aw
+righ'."
+
+But she:--
+
+"Ah! it's no use fur you to be a-talkin' an' a-pallaverin' to Kate Riley
+when ye don't be lovin' her, Mr. Ristofalo, an' ye know ye don't."
+
+A tear glistened in her eye.
+
+"Yes, love you," said the Italian; "course, love you."
+
+He did not move a foot or change the expression of a feature.
+
+"H-yes!" said the widow. "H-yes!" she panted. "H-yes, a little! A
+little, Mr. Ristofalo! But I want"--she pressed her hand hard upon her
+bosom, and raised her eyes aloft--"I want to be--h--h--h-adaured above
+all the e'rth!"
+
+"Aw righ'," said Ristofalo; "das aw righ'; yes--door above all you
+worth."
+
+"Raphael Ristofalo," she said, "ye're a-deceivin' me! Ye came heere whin
+nobody axed ye,--an' that ye know is a fact, surr,--an' made yerself
+agree'ble to a poor, unsuspectin' widdah, an' [_tears_] rabbed me o' mie
+hairt, ye did; whin I nivver intinded to git married ag'in."
+
+"Don't cry, Kate--Kate Ristofalo," quietly observed the Italian, getting
+an arm around her waist, and laying a hand on the farther cheek. "Kate
+Ristofalo."
+
+"Shut!" she exclaimed, turning with playful fierceness, and proudly
+drawing back her head; "shut! Hah! It's Kate Ristofalo, is it? Ah, ye
+think so? Hah-h! It'll be ad least two weeks yet before the priest will
+be after giving you the right to call me that!"
+
+And, in fact, an entire fortnight did pass before they were married.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+WHAT NAME?
+
+
+Richling in Dr. Sevier's library, one evening in early May, gave him
+great amusement by an account of the Ristofalo-Riley wedding. He had
+attended it only the night before. The Doctor had received an
+invitation, but had pleaded previous engagements.
+
+"But I am glad you went," he said to Richling; "however, go on with your
+account."
+
+"Oh! I was glad to go. And I'm certainly glad I went."
+
+Richling proceeded with the recital. The Doctor smiled. It was very
+droll,--the description of persons and costumes. Richling was quite
+another than his usual restrained self this evening. Oddly enough, too,
+for this was but his second visit; the confinement of his work was
+almost like an imprisonment, it was so constant. The Doctor had never
+seen him in just such a glow. He even mimicked the brogue of two or
+three Irish gentlemen, and the soft, outlandish swing in the English of
+one or two Sicilians. He did it all so well that, when he gave an
+instance of some of the broad Hibernian repartee he had heard, the
+Doctor actually laughed audibly. One of his young-lady cousins on some
+pretext opened a door, and stole a glance within to see what could have
+produced a thing so extraordinary.
+
+"Come in, Laura; come in! Tell Bess to come in."
+
+The Doctor introduced Richling with due ceremony Richling could not, of
+course, after this accession of numbers, go on being funny. The mistake
+was trivial, but all saw it. Still the meeting was pleasant. The girls
+were very intelligent and vivacious. Richling found a certain
+refreshment in their graceful manners, like what we sometimes feel in
+catching the scent of some long-forgotten perfume. They had not been
+told all his history, but had heard enough to make them curious to see
+and speak to him. They were evidently pleased with him, and Dr. Sevier,
+observing this, betrayed an air that was much like triumph. But after a
+while they went as they had come.
+
+"Doctor," said Richling, smiling until Dr. Sevier wondered silently what
+possessed the fellow, "excuse me for bringing this here. But I find it
+so impossible to get to your office"-- He moved nearer the Doctor's table
+and put his hand into his bosom.
+
+"What's that?" asked the Doctor, frowning heavily. Richling smiled still
+broader than before.
+
+"This is a statement," he said.
+
+"Of what?"
+
+"Of the various loans you have made me, with interest to date."
+
+"Yes?" said the Doctor, frigidly.
+
+"And here," persisted the happy man, straightening out a leg as he had
+done the first time they ever met, and drawing a roll of notes from his
+pocket, "is the total amount."
+
+"Yes?" The Doctor regarded them with cold contempt. "That's all very
+pleasant for you, I suppose, Richling,--shows you're the right kind of
+man, I suppose, and so on. I know that already, however. Now just put
+all that back into your pocket; the sight of it isn't pleasant. You
+certainly don't imagine I'm going to take it, do you?"
+
+"You promised to take it when you lent it."
+
+"Humph! Well, I didn't say when."
+
+"As soon as I could pay it," said Richling.
+
+"I don't remember," replied the Doctor, picking up a newspaper. "I
+release myself from that promise."
+
+"I don't release you," persisted Richling; "neither does Mary."
+
+The Doctor was quiet awhile before he answered. He crossed his knees, a
+moment after folded his arms, and presently said:--
+
+"Foolish pride, Richling."
+
+"We know that," replied Richling; "we don't deny that that feeling
+creeps in. But we'd never do anything that's right if we waited for an
+unmixed motive, would we?"
+
+"Then you think my motive--in refusing it--is mixed, probably."
+
+"Ho-o-oh!" laughed Richling. The gladness within him would break
+through. "Why, Doctor, nothing could be more different. It doesn't seem
+to me as though you ever had a mixed motive."
+
+The Doctor did not answer. He seemed to think the same thing.
+
+"We know very well, Doctor, that if we should accept this kindness we
+might do it in a spirit of proper and commendable--a--humble-mindedness.
+But it isn't mere pride that makes us insist."
+
+"No?" asked the Doctor, cruelly. "What is it else?"
+
+"Why, I hardly know what to call it, except that it's a conviction
+that--well, that to pay is best; that it's the nearest to justice we can
+get, and that"--he spoke faster--"that it's simply duty to choose
+justice when we can and mercy when we must. There, I've hit it out!" He
+laughed again. "Don't you see, Doctor? Justice when we may--mercy when
+we must! It's your own principles!"
+
+The Doctor looked straight at the mantel-piece as he asked:--
+
+"Where did you get that idea?"
+
+"I don't know; partly from nowhere, and"--
+
+"Partly from Mary," interrupted the Doctor. He put out his long white
+palm. "It's all right. Give me the money." Richling counted it into his
+hand. He rolled it up and stuffed it into his portemonnaie.
+
+"You like to part with your hard earnings, do you, Richling?"
+
+"Earnings can't be hard," was the reply; "it's borrowings that are
+hard."
+
+The Doctor assented.
+
+"And, of course," said Richling, "I enjoy paying old debts." He stood
+and leaned his head in his hand with his elbow on the mantel. "But, even
+aside from that, I'm happy."
+
+"I see you are!" remarked the physician, emphatically, catching the arms
+of his chair and drawing his feet closer in. "You've been smiling worse
+than a boy with a love-letter."
+
+"I've been hoping you'd ask me what's the matter."
+
+"Well, then, Richling, what is the matter?"
+
+"Mary has a daughter."
+
+"What!" cried the Doctor, springing up with a radiant face, and grasping
+Richling's hand in both his own.
+
+Richling laughed aloud, nodded, laughed again, and gave either eye a
+quick, energetic wipe with all his fingers.
+
+"Doctor," he said, as the physician sank back into his chair, "we want
+to name"--he hesitated, stood on one foot and leaned again against the
+shelf--"we want to call her by the name of--if we may"--
+
+The Doctor looked up as if with alarm, and John said, timidly,--"Alice!"
+
+Dr. Sevier's eyes--what was the matter? His mouth quivered. He nodded
+and whispered huskily:--
+
+"All right."
+
+After a long pause Richling expressed the opinion that he had better be
+going, and the Doctor did not indicate any difference of conviction. At
+the door the Doctor asked:--
+
+"If the fever should break out this summer, Richling, will you go away?"
+
+"No."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+PESTILENCE.
+
+
+On the twentieth of June, 1858, an incident occurred in New Orleans
+which challenged special attention from the medical profession. Before
+the month closed there was a second, similar to the first. The press
+did not give such matters to the public in those days; it would only
+make the public--the advertising public--angry. Times have changed
+since--faced clear about: but at that period Dr. Sevier, who hated a
+secret only less than a falsehood, was right in speaking as he did.
+
+"Now you'll see," he said, pointing downward aslant, "the whole
+community stick its head in the sand!" He sent for Richling.
+
+"I give you fair warning," he said. "It's coming."
+
+"Don't cases occur sometimes in an isolated way without--anything
+further?" asked Richling, with a promptness which showed he had already
+been considering the matter.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And might not this"--
+
+"Richling, I give you fair warning."
+
+"Have you sent your cousins away, Doctor?"
+
+"They go to-morrow." After a silence the Doctor added: "I tell you now,
+because this is the time to decide what you will do. If you are not
+prepared to take all the risks and stay them through, you had better go
+at once."
+
+"What proportion of those who are taken sick of it die?" asked Richling.
+
+"The proportion varies in different seasons; say about one in seven or
+eight. But your chances would be hardly so good, for you're not strong,
+Richling, nor well either."
+
+Richling stood and swung his hat against his knee.
+
+"I really don't see, Doctor, that I have any choice at all. I couldn't
+go to Mary--when she has but just come through a mother's pains and
+dangers--and say, 'I've thrown away seven good chances of life to run
+away from one bad one.' Why, to say nothing else, Reisen can't spare
+me." He smiled with boyish vanity.
+
+"O Richling, that's silly!"
+
+"I--I know it," exclaimed the other, quickly; "I see it is. If he could
+spare me, of course he wouldn't be paying me a salary." But the Doctor
+silenced him by a gesture.
+
+"The question is not whether he can spare you, at all. It's simply, can
+you spare him?"
+
+"Without violating any pledge, you mean," added Richling.
+
+"Of course," assented the physician.
+
+"Well, I can't spare him, Doctor. He has given me a hold on life, and no
+one chance in seven, or six, or five is going to shake me loose. Why, I
+tell you I couldn't look Mary in the face!"
+
+"Have your own way," responded the Doctor. "There are some things in
+your favor. You frail fellows often pull through easier than the big,
+full-blooded ones."
+
+"Oh, it's Mary's way too, I feel certain!" retorted Richling, gayly,
+"and I venture to say"--he coughed and smiled again--"it's yours."
+
+"I didn't say it wasn't," replied the unsmiling Doctor, reaching for a
+pen and writing a prescription. "Here; get that and take it according to
+direction. It's for that cold."
+
+"If I should take the fever," said Richling, coming out of a revery,
+"Mary will want to come to me."
+
+"Well, she mustn't come a step!" exclaimed the Doctor.
+
+"You'll forbid it, will you not, Doctor? Pledge me!"
+
+"I do better, sir; I pledge myself."
+
+So the July suns rose up and moved across the beautiful blue sky; the
+moon went through all her majestic changes; on thirty-one successive
+midnights the Star Bakery sent abroad its grateful odors of bread, and
+as the last night passed into the first twinkling hour of morning the
+month chronicled one hundred and thirty-one deaths from yellow fever.
+The city shuddered because it knew, and because it did not know, what
+was in store. People began to fly by hundreds, and then by thousands.
+Many were overtaken and stricken down as they fled. Still men plied
+their vocations, children played in the streets, and the days came and
+went, fair, blue tremulous with sunshine, or cool and gray and sweet
+with summer rain. How strange it was for nature to be so beautiful and
+so unmoved! By and by one could not look down a street, on this hand or
+on that, but he saw a funeral. Doctors' gigs began to be hailed on the
+streets and to refuse to stop, and houses were pointed out that had just
+become the scenes of strange and harrowing episodes.
+
+"Do you see that bakery,--the 'Star Bakery'? Five funerals from that
+place--and another goes this afternoon."
+
+Before this was said August had completed its record of eleven hundred
+deaths, and September had begun the long list that was to add
+twenty-two hundred more. Reisen had been the first one ill in the
+establishment. He had been losing friends,--one every few days; and he
+thought it only plain duty, let fear or prudence say what they might,
+to visit them at their bedsides and follow them to their tombs. It
+was not only the outer man of Reisen, but the heart as well, that was
+elephantine. He had at length come home from one of these funerals with
+pains in his back and limbs, and the various familiar accompaniments.
+
+"I feel right clumsy," he said, as he lifted his great feet and lowered
+them into the mustard foot-bath.
+
+"Doctor Sevier," said Richling, as he and the physician paused half way
+between the sick-chambers of Reisen and his wife, "I hope you'll not
+think it foolhardy for me to expose myself by nursing these people"--
+
+"No," replied the veteran, in a tone of indifference, and passed on; the
+tincture of self-approval that had "mixed" with Richling's motives went
+away to nothing.
+
+Both Reisen and his wife recovered. But an apple-cheeked brother of the
+baker, still in a green cap and coat that he had come in from Germany,
+was struck from the first with that mortal terror which is so often an
+evil symptom of the disease, and died, on the fifth day after his
+attack, in raging delirium. Ten of the workmen, bakers and others,
+followed him. Richling alone, of all in the establishment, while the
+sick lay scattered through the town on uncounted thousands of beds, and
+the month of October passed by, bringing death to eleven hundred more,
+escaped untouched of the scourge.
+
+"I can't understand it," he said.
+
+"Demand an immediate explanation," said Dr. Sevier, with sombre irony.
+
+How did others fare? Ristofalo had, time and again, sailed with the
+fever, nursed it, slept with it. It passed him by again. Little Mike
+took it, lay two or three days very still in his mother's strong arms,
+and recovered. Madame Ristofalo had had it in "fifty-three." She became
+a heroic nurse to many, and saved life after life among the poor.
+
+The trials of those days enriched John Richling in the acquaintanceship
+and esteem of Sister Jane's little lisping rector. And, by the way, none
+of those with whom Dr. Sevier dined on that darkest night of Richling's
+life became victims. The rector had never encountered the disease
+before, but when Sister Jane and the banker, and the banker's family and
+friends, and thousands of others, fled, he ran toward it, David-like,
+swordless and armorless. He and Richling were nearly of equal age. Three
+times, four times, and again, they met at dying-beds. They became fond
+of each other.
+
+Another brave nurse was Narcisse. Dr. Sevier, it is true, could not get
+rid of the conviction for years afterward that one victim would have
+lived had not Narcisse talked him to death. But in general, where
+there was some one near to prevent his telling all his discoveries and
+inventions, he did good service, and accompanied it with very chivalric
+emotions.
+
+"Yesseh," he said, with a strutting attitude that somehow retained a
+sort of modesty, "I 'ad the gweatess success. Hah! a nuss is a nuss
+those time'. Only some time' 'e's not. 'Tis accawding to the
+povvub,--what is that povvub, now, ag'in?" The proverb did not answer
+his call, and he waved it away. "Yesseh, eve'ybody wanting me at
+once--couldn' supply the deman'."
+
+Richling listened to him with new pleasure and rising esteem.
+
+"You make me envy you," he exclaimed, honestly.
+
+"Well, I s'pose you may say so, Mistoo Itchlin, faw I nevva nuss
+a sing-le one w'at din paid me ten dollahs a night. Of co'se!
+'Consistency, thou awt a jew'l.' It's juz as the povvub says, 'All
+work an' no pay keep Jack a small boy.' An' yet," he hurriedly added,
+remembering his indebtedness to his auditor, "'tis aztonizhin' 'ow 'tis
+expensive to live. I haven' got a picayune of that money pwesently! I'm
+aztonizh' myseff!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+"I MUST BE CRUEL ONLY TO BE KIND."
+
+
+The plague grew sated and feeble. One morning frost sent a flight of icy
+arrows into the town, and it vanished. The swarthy girls and lads that
+sauntered homeward behind their mothers' cows across the wide suburban
+stretches of marshy commons heard again the deep, unbroken, cataract
+roar of the reawakened city.
+
+We call the sea cruel, seeing its waters dimple and smile where
+yesterday they dashed in pieces the ship that was black with men, women,
+and children. But what shall we say of those billows of human life, of
+which we are ourselves a part, that surge over the graves of its own
+dead with dances and laughter and many a coquetry, with panting chase
+for gain and preference, and pious regrets and tender condolences for
+the thousands that died yesterday--and need not have died?
+
+Such were the questions Dr. Sevier asked himself as he laid down the
+newspaper full of congratulations upon the return of trade's and
+fashion's boisterous flow, and praises of the deeds of benevolence and
+mercy that had abounded throughout the days of anguish.
+
+Certain currents in these human rapids had driven Richling and the
+Doctor wide apart. But at last, one day, Richling entered the office
+with a cheerfulness of countenance something overdone, and indicative to
+the Doctor's eye of inward trepidation.
+
+"Doctor," he said hurriedly, "preparing to leave the office? It was the
+only moment I could command"--
+
+"Good-morning, Richling."
+
+"I've been trying every day for a week to get down here," said Richling,
+drawing out a paper. "Doctor"--with his eyes on the paper, which he had
+begun to unfold.
+
+"Richling"-- It was the Doctor's hardest voice. Richling looked up
+at him as a child looks at a thundercloud. The Doctor pointed to the
+document:--
+
+"Is that a subscription paper?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You needn't unfold it, Richling." The Doctor made a little pushing
+motion at it with his open hand. "From whom does it come?"
+
+Richling gave a name. He had not changed color when the Doctor looked
+black, but now he did; for Dr. Sevier smiled. It was terrible.
+
+"Not the little preacher that lisps?" asked the physician.
+
+"He lisps sometimes," said Richling, with resentful subsidence of tone
+and with dropped eyes, preparing to return the paper to his pocket.
+
+"Wait," said the Doctor, more gravely, arresting the movement with his
+index finger. "What is it for?"
+
+"It's for the aid of an asylum overcrowded with orphans in consequence
+of the late epidemic." There was still a tightness in Richling's throat,
+a faint bitterness in his tone, a spark of indignation in his eye. But
+these the Doctor ignored. He reached out his hand, took the folded paper
+gently from Richling, crossed his knees, and, resting his elbows on them
+and shaking the paper in a prefatory way, spoke:--
+
+"Richling, in old times we used to go into monasteries; now we subscribe
+to orphan asylums. Nine months ago I warned this community that if it
+didn't take the necessary precautions against the foul contagion that
+has since swept over us it would pay for its wicked folly in the lives
+of thousands and the increase of fatherless and helpless children. I
+didn't know it would come this year, but I knew it might come any year.
+Richling, we deserved it!"
+
+Richling had never seen his friend in so forbidding an aspect. He had
+come to him boyishly elated with the fancied excellence and goodness and
+beauty of the task he had assumed, and a perfect confidence that his
+noble benefactor would look upon him with pride and upon the scheme with
+generous favor. When he had offered to present the paper to Dr. Sevier
+he had not understood the little rector's marked alacrity in accepting
+his service. Now it was plain enough. He was well-nigh dumfounded. The
+responses that came from him came mechanically, and in the manner of one
+who wards off unmerited buffetings from one whose unkindness may not be
+resented.
+
+"You can't think that only those died who were to blame?" he asked,
+helplessly; and the Doctor's answer came back instantly:--
+
+"Ho, no! look at the hundreds of little graves! No, sir. If only those
+who were to blame had been stricken, I should think the Judgment wasn't
+far off. Talk of God's mercy in times of health! There's no greater
+evidence of it than to see him, in these awful visitations, refusing
+still to discriminate between the innocent and the guilty! Richling,
+only Infinite Mercy joined to Infinite Power, with infinite command of
+the future, could so forbear!"
+
+Richling could not answer. The Doctor unfolded the paper and began to
+read: "'God, in his mysterious providence'--O sir!"
+
+"What!" demanded Richling.
+
+"O sir, what a foul, false charge! There's nothing mysterious about it.
+We've trampled the book of Nature's laws in the mire of our streets, and
+dragged her penalties down upon our heads! Why, Richling,"--he shifted
+his attitude, and laid the edge of one hand upon the paper that lay in
+the other, with the air of commencing a demonstration,--"you're a Bible
+man, eh? Well, yes, I think you are; but I want you never to forget that
+the book of Nature has its commandments, too; and the man who sins
+against _them_ is a sinner. There's no dispensation of mercy in that
+Scripture to Jew or Gentile, though the God of Mercy wrote it with his
+own finger. A community has got to know those laws and keep them, or
+take the consequences--and take them here and now--on this
+globe--_presently_!"
+
+"You mean, then," said Richling, extending his hand for the return of
+the paper, "that those whose negligence filled the asylums should be the
+ones to subscribe."
+
+"Yes," replied the Doctor, "yes!" drew back his hand with the paper
+still in it, turned to his desk, opened the list, and wrote. Richling's
+eyes followed the pen; his heart came slowly up into his throat.
+
+"Why, Doc--Doctor, that's more than any one else has"--
+
+"They have probably made some mistake," said Dr. Sevier, rubbing the
+blotting-paper with his finger. "Richling, do you think it's your
+mission to be a philanthropist?"
+
+"Isn't it everybody's mission?" replied Richling.
+
+"That's not what I asked you."
+
+"But you ask a question," said Richling, smiling down upon the
+subscription-paper as he folded it, "that nobody would like to answer."
+
+"Very well, then, you needn't answer. But, Richling,"--he pointed
+his long finger to the pocket of Richling's coat, where the
+subscription-list had disappeared,--"this sort of work--whether you
+distinctly propose to be a philanthropist or not--is right, of course.
+It's good. But it's the mere alphabet of beneficence. Richling, whenever
+philanthropy takes the _guise_ of philanthropy, look out. Confine your
+philanthropy--you can't do it entirely, but as much as you can--confine
+your philanthropy to the _motive_. It's the temptation of
+philanthropists to set aside the natural constitution of society
+wherever it seems out of order, and substitute some philanthropic
+machinery in its place. It's all wrong, Richling. Do as a good doctor
+would. Help nature."
+
+Richling looked down askance, pushed his fingers through his hair
+perplexedly, drew a deep breath, lifted his eyes to the Doctor's again,
+smiled incredulously, and rubbed his brow.
+
+"You don't see it?" asked the physician, in a tone of surprise.
+
+"O Doctor,"--throwing up a despairing hand,--"we're miles apart. I don't
+see how any work could be nobler. It looks to me"-- But Dr. Sevier
+interrupted.
+
+"--From an emotional stand-point, Richling. Richling,"--he changed his
+attitude again,--"if you _want_ to be a philanthropist, be
+cold-blooded."
+
+Richling laughed outright, but not heartily.
+
+"Well!" said his friend, with a shrug, as if he dismissed the whole
+matter. But when Richling moved, as if to rise, he restrained him.
+"Stop! I know you're in a hurry, but you may tell Reisen to blame me."
+
+"It's not Reisen so much as it's the work," replied Richling, but
+settled down again in his seat.
+
+"Richling, human benevolence--public benevolence--in its beginning was
+a mere nun on the battle-field, binding up wounds and wiping the damp
+from dying brows. But since then it has had time and opportunity to
+become strong, bold, masculine, potential. Once it had only the
+knowledge and power to alleviate evil consequences; now it has both the
+knowledge and the power to deal with evil causes. Now, I say to you,
+leave this emotional A B C of human charity to nuns and mite societies.
+It's a good work; let them do it. Give them money, if you can."
+
+"I see what you mean--I think," said Richling, slowly, and with a
+pondering eye.
+
+"I'm glad if you do," rejoined the Doctor, visibly relieved.
+
+"But that only throws a heavier responsibility upon strong men, if I
+understand it," said Richling, half interrogatively.
+
+"Certainly! Upon strong spirits, male or female. Upon spirits that can
+drive the axe low down into the causes of things, again and again and
+again, steadily, patiently, until at last some great evil towering above
+them totters and falls crashing to the earth, to be cut to pieces and
+burned in the fire. Richling, gather fagots for pastime if you like,
+though it's poor fun; but don't think that's your mission! _Don't_ be a
+fagot-gatherer! What are you smiling at?"
+
+"Your good opinion of me," answered Richling. "Doctor, I don't believe
+I'm fit for anything but a fagot-gatherer. But I'm willing to try."
+
+"Oh, bah!" The Doctor admired such humility as little as it deserved.
+"Richling, reduce the number of helpless orphans! Dig out the old roots
+of calamity! A spoon is not what you want; you want a _mattock_. Reduce
+crime and vice! Reduce squalor! Reduce the poor man's death-rate!
+Improve his tenements! Improve his hospitals! Carry sanitation into his
+workshops! Teach the trades! Prepare the poor for possible riches, and
+the rich for possible poverty! Ah--ah--Richling, I preach well enough, I
+think, but in practice I have missed it myself! Don't repeat my error!"
+
+"Oh, but you haven't missed it!" cried Richling.
+
+"Yes, but I have," said the Doctor. "Here I am, telling you to let your
+philanthropy be cold-blooded; why, I've always been hot-blooded."
+
+"I like the hot best," said Richling, quickly.
+
+"You ought to hate it," replied his friend. "It's been the root of all
+your troubles. Richling, God Almighty is unimpassioned. If he wasn't
+he'd be weak. You remember Young's line: 'A God all mercy is a God
+unjust.' The time has come when beneficence, to be real, must operate
+scientifically, not emotionally. Emotion is good; but it must follow,
+not guide. Here! I'll give you a single instance. Emotion never sells
+where it can give: that is an old-fashioned, effete benevolence. The
+new, the cold-blooded, is incomparably better: it never--to individual
+or to community--gives where it can sell. Your instincts have applied
+the rule to yourself; apply it to your fellow-man."
+
+"Ah!" said Richling, promptly, "that's another thing. It's not my
+business to apply it to them."
+
+"It _is_ your business to apply it to them. You have no right to do
+less."
+
+"And what will men say of me? At least--not that, but"--
+
+The Doctor pointed upward. "They will say, 'I know thee, that thou art
+an hard man.'" His voice trembled. "But, Richling," he resumed with
+fresh firmness, "if you want to lead a long and useful life,--you say
+you do,--you must take my advice; you must deny yourself for a while;
+you must shelve these fine notions for a time. I tell you once more, you
+must endeavor to reestablish your health as it was before--before they
+locked you up, you know. When that is done you can commence right there
+if you choose; I wish you would. Give the public--sell would be better,
+but it will hardly buy--a prison system less atrocious, less destructive
+of justice, and less promotive of crime and vice, than the one it has.
+By-the-by, I suppose you know that Raphael Ristofalo went to prison last
+night again?"
+
+Richling sprang to his feet. "For what? He hasn't"--
+
+"Yes, sir; he has discovered the man who robbed him, and has killed
+him."
+
+Richling started away, but halted as the Doctor spoke again, rising from
+his seat and shaking out his legs.
+
+"He's not suffering any hardship. He's shrewd, you know,--has made
+arrangements with the keeper by which he secures very comfortable
+quarters. The star-chamber, I think they call the room he is in. He'll
+suffer very little restraint. Good-day!"
+
+He turned, as Richling left, to get his own hat and gloves. "Yes," he
+thought, as he passed slowly downstairs to his carriage, "I have erred."
+He was not only teaching, he was learning. To fight evil was not enough.
+People who wanted help for orphans did not come to him--they sent. They
+drew back from him as a child shrinks from a soldier. Even Alice, his
+buried Alice, had wept with delight when he gave her a smile, and
+trembled with fear at his frown. To fight evil is not enough. Everybody
+seemed to feel as though that were a war against himself. Oh for some
+one always to understand--never to fear--the frowning good intention of
+the lonely man!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+"PETTENT PRATE."
+
+
+It was about the time, in January, when clerks and correspondents were
+beginning to write '59 without first getting it '58, that Dr. Sevier, as
+one morning he approached his office, noticed with some grim amusement,
+standing among the brokers and speculators of Carondelet street, the
+baker, Reisen. He was earnestly conversing with and bending over a
+small, alert fellow, in a rakish beaver and very smart coat, with the
+blue flowers of modesty bunched saucily in one button-hole.
+
+Almost at the same moment Reisen saw the Doctor. He called his name
+aloud, and for all his ungainly bulk would have run directly to the
+carriage in the middle of the street, only that the Doctor made believe
+not to see, and in a moment was out of reach. But when, two or three
+hours later, the same vehicle came, tipping somewhat sidewise against
+the sidewalk at the Charity Hospital gate, and the Doctor stepped from
+it, there stood Reisen in waiting.
+
+"Toctor," he said, approaching and touching his hat, "I like to see you
+a minudt, uff you bleace, shtrict prifut."
+
+They moved slowly down the unfrequented sidewalk, along the garden wall.
+
+"Before you begin, Reisen, I want to ask you a question. I've noticed
+for a month past that Mr. Richling rides in your bread-carts alongside
+the drivers on their rounds. Don't you know you ought not to require
+such a thing as that from a person like Mr. Richling? Mr. Richling's a
+gentleman, Reisen, and you make him mount up in those bread-carts, and
+jump out every few minutes to deliver bread!"
+
+The Doctor's blood was not cold.
+
+"Vell, now!" drawled the baker, as the corners of his mouth retreated
+toward the back of his neck, "end't tat teh funn'est ting, ennahow! Vhy,
+tat iss yoost teh ferra ting fot I comin' to shpeak mit you apowdt udt!"
+He halted and looked at the Doctor to see how this coincidence struck
+him; but the Doctor merely moved on. "_I_ toant make him too udt," he
+continued, starting again; "he cumps to me sindts apowdt two-o-o mundts
+aco--ven I shtill feelin' a liddle veak, yet, fun teh yalla-feewa--undt
+yoost paygs me to let um too udt. 'Mr. Richlun,' sayss I to him, 'I
+toandt kin untershtayndt for vot you vawndts to too sich a ritickliss,
+Mr. Richlun!' Ovver he sayss, 'Mr. Reisen,'--he alvays callss me
+'Mister,' undt tat iss one dting in puttickly vot I alvays tit li-i-iked
+apowdt Mr. Richlun,--'Mr. Reisen,' he sayss, 'toandt you aysk me te
+reason, ovver yoost let me co abate undt too udt!' Undt I voss a coin'
+to kiff udt up, alretty; ovver ten cumps in _Missess_ Reisen,--who iss a
+heap shmarter mayn as fot Reisen iss, I yoost tell you te ectsectly
+troot,--and she sayss, 'Reisen, you yoost tell Mr. Richlun, Mr. Richlun,
+you toadnt coin' to too sich a ritickliss!'"
+
+The speaker paused for effect.
+
+"Undt ten Mr. Richlun, he talks!--Schweedt?--Oh yendlemuns, toandt say
+nutting!" The baker lifted up his palm and swung it down against his
+thigh with a blow that sent the flour out in a little cloud. "I tell
+you, Toctor Tseweer, ven tat mayn vawndts to too udt, he kin yoost talk
+te mo-ust like a Christun fun enna mayn I neffa he-ut in mine li-i-fe!
+'Missess Reisen,' he sayss, 'I vawndts to too udt pecause I vawndts to
+too udt.' Vell, how you coin' to arg-y ennating eagval mit Mr. Richlun?
+So teh upshodt iss he coes owdt in teh prate-cawts tistripputin' te
+prate!" Reisen threw his arms far behind him, and bowed low to his
+listener.
+
+Dr. Sevier had learned him well enough to beware of interrupting him,
+lest when he resumed it would be at the beginning again. He made no
+answer, and Reisen went on:--
+
+"Bressently"-- He stopped his slow walk, brought forward both
+palms, shrugged, dropped them, bowed, clasped them behind him, brought
+the left one forward, dropped it, then the right one, dropped it also,
+frowned, smiled, and said:--
+
+"Bressently"--then a long silence--"effrapotty in my
+etsteplitchmendt"--another long pause--"hef yoost teh same ettechmendt
+to Mr. Richlun,"--another interval,--"tey hef yoost tso much effection
+fur _him_"--another silence--"ass tey hef"--another, with a smile this
+time--"fur--te teffle himpselluf!" An oven opened in the baker's face,
+and emitted a softly rattling expiration like that of a bursted bellows.
+The Doctor neither smiled nor spoke. Reisen resumed:--
+
+"I seen udt. I seen udt. Ovver I toandt coult untershtayndt udt. Ovver
+one tay cumps in mine little poy in to me fen te pakers voss all
+ashleep, 'Pap-a, Mr. Richlun sayss you shouldt come into teh offuss.' I
+kumpt in. Mr. Richlun voss tare, shtayndting yoost so--yoost so--py teh
+shtofe; undt, Toctor Tseweer, I yoost tell you te ectsectly troot, he
+toaldt in fife minudts--six minudts--seven minudts, udt may pe--undt
+shoadt me how effrapotty, high undt low, little undt pick, Tom, Tick,
+undt Harra, pin ropping me sindts more ass fife years!"
+
+The longest pause of all followed this disclosure. The baker had
+gradually backed the Doctor up against the wall, spreading out the whole
+matter with his great palms turned now upward and now downward, the
+bulky contents of his high-waisted, barn-door trowsers now bulged
+out and now withdrawn, to be protruded yet more a moment later. He
+recommenced by holding out his down-turned hand some distance above
+the ground.
+
+"I yoompt tot hoigh!" He blew his cheeks out, and rose a half-inch off
+his heels in recollection of the mighty leap. "Ovver Mr. Richlun
+sayss,--he sayss, 'Kip shtill, Mr. Reisen;' undt I kibt shtill."
+
+The baker's auditor was gradually drawing him back toward the hospital
+gate; but he continued speaking:--
+
+"Py undt py, vun tay, I kot someting to say to Mr. _Richlun_, yet. Undt
+I sendts vert to Mr. _Richlun_ tat _he_ shouldt come into teh offuss. He
+cumps in. 'Mr. Richlun,' I sayss, sayss I to him, 'Mr. Richlun, I kot
+udt!'" The baker shook his finger in Dr. Sevier's face. "'I kot udt, udt
+layst, Mr. Richlun! I yoost het a _suspish'n_ sindts teh first tay fot I
+employedt you, ovver now I _know_ I kot udt!' Vell, sir, he yoost turnun
+so rate ass a flennen shirt!--'Mr. Reisen,' sayss he to me, 'fot iss udt
+fot you kot?' Undt sayss I to him, 'Mr. Richlun, udt iss you! Udt is
+_you_ fot I kot!'"
+
+Dr. Sevier stood sphinx-like, and once more Reisen went on.
+
+"'Yes, Mr. Richlun,'" still addressing the Doctor as though he were his
+book-keeper, "'I yoost layin, on my pett effra nighdt--effra nighdt,
+vi-i-ite ava-a-ake! undt in apowdt a veek I make udt owdt ut layst tot
+you, Mr. Richlun,'--I lookt um shtraight in te eye, undt he lookt me
+shtraight te same,--'tot, Mr. Richlun, _you_,' sayss I, 'not dtose
+fellehs fot pin py mo sindts more ass fife yearss, put _you_, Mr.
+Richlun, iss teh mayn!--teh mayn fot I--kin _trust_!'" The baker's
+middle parts bent out and his arms were drawn akimbo. Thus for ten
+seconds.
+
+"'Undt now, Mr. Richlun, do you kot teh shtrengdt for to shtart a noo
+pissness?'--Pecause, Toctor, udt pin seem to me Mr. Richlun kitten more
+undt more shecklun, undt toandt take tot meticine fot you kif um (ovver
+he sayss he toos). So ten he sayss to me, 'Mister Reisen, I am yoost so
+sollut undt shtrong like a pilly-coat! Fot is teh noo pissness?'--'Mr.
+Richlun,' sayss I, 've goin' to make pettent prate!'"
+
+"What?" asked the Doctor, frowning with impatience and venturing to
+interrupt at last.
+
+"_Pet-tent prate!_"
+
+The listener frowned heavier and shook his head.
+
+"_Pettent prate!_"
+
+"Oh! patent bread; yes. Well?"
+
+"Yes," said Reisen, "prate mate mit a mutcheen; mit copponic-essut kass
+into udt ploat pefore udt is paked. I pought teh pettent tiss mawning
+fun a yendleman in Garontelet shtreedt, alretty, naympt Kknox."
+
+"And what have I to do with all this?" asked the Doctor, consulting his
+watch, as he had already done twice before.
+
+"Vell," said Reisen, spreading his arms abroad, "I yoost taught you like
+to herr udt."
+
+"But what do you want to see me for? What have you kept me all this time
+to tell me--or ask me?"
+
+"Toctor,--you ugscooce me--ovver"--the baker held the Doctor by the
+elbow as he began to turn away--"Toctor Tseweer,"--the great face
+lighted up with a smile, the large body doubled partly together, and the
+broad left hand was held ready to smite the thigh,--"you shouldt see Mr.
+Richlun ven he fowndt owdt udt is goin' to lower teh price of prate! I
+taught he iss goin' to kiss Mississ Reisen!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+SWEET BELLS JANGLED.
+
+
+Those who knew New Orleans just before the civil war, even though they
+saw it only along its riverfront from the deck of some steam-boat, may
+easily recall a large sign painted high up on the side of the old
+"Triangle Building," which came to view through the dark web of masts
+and cordage as one drew near St. Mary's Market. "Steam Bakery" it read.
+And such as were New Orleans householders, or by any other chance
+enjoyed the experience of making their way in the early morning among
+the hundreds of baskets that on hundreds of elbows moved up and down
+along and across the quaint gas-lit arcades of any of the market-houses,
+must remember how, about this time or a little earlier, there began
+to appear on one of the tidiest of bread-stalls in each of these
+market-houses a new kind of bread. It was a small, densely compacted
+loaf of the size and shape of a badly distorted brick. When broken,
+it divided into layers, each of which showed--"teh bprindt of teh
+kkneading-mutcheen," said Reisen to Narcisse; "yoost like a tsoda
+crecker!"
+
+These two persons had met by chance at a coffee-stand one beautiful
+summer dawn in one of the markets,--the Treine, most likely,--where,
+perched on high stools at a zinc-covered counter, with the smell of
+fresh blood on the right and of stale fish on the left, they had
+finished half their cup of _cafe au lait_ before they awoke to the
+exhilarating knowledge of each other's presence.
+
+"Yesseh," said Narcisse, "now since you 'ave wemawk the mention of it, I
+think I have saw that va'iety of bwead."
+
+"Oh, surely you poundt to a-seedt udt. A uckly little prown dting"--
+
+"But cook well," said Narcisse.
+
+"Yayss," drawled the baker. It was a fact that he had to admit.
+
+"An' good flou'," persisted the Creole.
+
+"Yayss," said the smiling manufacturer. He could not deny that either.
+
+"An' honness weight!" said Narcisse, planting his empty cup in his
+saucer, with the energy of his asservation; "an', Mr. Bison, thass a
+ve'y seldom thing."
+
+"Yayss," assented Reisen, "ovver tat prate is mighdy dtry, undt
+shtickin' in ten dtroat."
+
+"No, seh!" said the flatterer, with a generous smile. "Egscuse me--I
+diffeh fum you. 'Tis a beaucheouz bwead. Yesseh. And eve'y loaf got the
+name beaucheouzly pwint on the top, with 'Patent'--sich an' sich a time.
+'Tis the tooth, Mr. Bison, I'm boun' to congwatu_late_ you on that
+bwead."
+
+"O-o-oh! tat iss not _mine_ prate," exclaimed the baker. "Tat iss not
+fun mine etsteplitchmendt. Oh, no! Tatt iss te prate--I'm yoost dtellin'
+you--tat iss te prate fun tat fellah py teh Sunk-Mary's Morrikit-house!
+Tat's teh 'shteam prate'. I to-undt know for vot effrapotty puys tat
+prate annahow! Ovver you yoost vait dtill you see _mine_ prate!"
+
+"Mr. Bison," said Narcisse, "Mr. Bison,"--he had been trying to stop
+him and get in a word of his own, but could not,--"I don't know if
+you--Mr.--Mr. Bison, in fact, you din unde'stood me. Can that be
+poss'ble that you din notiz that I was speaking in my i'ony about that
+bwead? Why, of co'se! Thass juz my i'onious cuztom, Mr. Bison. Thass one
+thing I dunno if you 'ave notiz about that 'steam bwead,' Mr. Bison, but
+with me that bwead always stick in my th'oat; an' yet I kin swallow mose
+anything, in fact. No, Mr. Bison, yo' bwead is deztyned to be the bwead;
+and I tell you how 'tis with me, I juz gladly eat yo' bwead eve'y time I
+kin git it! Mr. Bison, in fact you don't know me ve'y in_tim_itly, but
+you will oblige me ve'y much indeed to baw me five dollahs till
+tomaw--save me fum d'awing a check!"
+
+The German thrust his hand slowly and deeply into his pocket. "I alvayss
+like to oplyche a yendleman,"--he smiled benignly, drew out a toothpick,
+and added,--"ovver I nivveh bporrah or lend to ennabodda."
+
+"An' then," said Narcisse, promptly, "'tis imposs'ble faw anybody to be
+offended. Thass the bess way, Mr. Bison."
+
+"Yayss," said the baker, "I tink udt iss." As they were parting, he
+added: "Ovver you vait dtill you see _mine_ prate!"
+
+"I'll do it, seh!-- And, Mr. Bison, you muzn't think anything
+about that, my not bawing that five dollars fum you, Mr. Bison, because
+that don't make a bit o' dif'ence; an' thass one thing I like about you,
+Mr. Bison, you don't baw yo' money to eve'y Dick, Tom, an' Hawwy, do
+you?"
+
+"No, I dtoandt. Ovver, you yoost vait"--
+
+And certainly, after many vexations, difficulties, and delays, that
+took many a pound of flesh from Reisen's form, the pretty, pale-brown,
+fragrant white loaves of "aerated bread" that issued from the Star
+Bakery in Benjamin street were something pleasant to see, though they
+did not lower the price.
+
+Richling's old liking for mechanical apparatus came into play. He only,
+in the establishment, thoroughly understood the new process, and could
+be certain of daily, or rather nightly, uniform results. He even made
+one or two slight improvements in it, which he contemplated with
+ecstatic pride, and long accounts of which he wrote to Mary.
+
+In a generous and innocent way Reisen grew a little jealous of his
+accountant, and threw himself into his business as he had not done
+before since he was young, and in the ardor of his emulation ignored
+utterly a state of health that was no better because of his great length
+and breadth.
+
+"Toctor Tseweer!" he said, as the physician appeared one day in his
+office. "Vell, now, I yoost pet finfty tawllars tat iss Mississ Reisen
+sendts for you tat I'm sick! Ven udt iss not such a dting!" He laughed
+immoderately. "Ovver I'm gladt you come, Toctor, ennahow, for you pin
+yoost in time to see ever'ting runnin'. I vish you yoost come undt see
+udt!" He grinned in his old, broad way; but his face was anxious, and
+his bared arms were lean. He laid his hand on the Doctor's arm, and then
+jerked it away, and tried to blow off the floury print of his fingers.
+"Come!" He beckoned. "Come; I show you somedting putiful. Toctor, I
+_vizh_ you come!"
+
+The Doctor yielded. Richling had to be called upon at last to explain
+the hidden parts and processes.
+
+"It's yoost like putt'n' te shpirudt into teh potty," said the laughing
+German. "Now, tat prate kot life in udt yoost teh same like your own
+selluf, Toctor. Tot prate kot yoost so much sense ass Reisen kot.
+Ovver, Toctor--Toctor"--the Doctor was giving his attention to
+Richling, who was explaining something--"Toctor, toandt you come here
+uxpectin' to see nopoty sick, less-n udt iss Mr. Richlun." He caught
+Richling's face roughly between his hands, and then gave his back a
+caressing thwack. "Toctor, vot you dtink? Ve goin' teh run prate-cawts
+mit copponic-essut kass. Tispense mit hawses!" He laughed long but
+softly, and smote Richling again as the three walked across the bakery
+yard abreast.
+
+"Well?" said Dr. Sevier to Richling, in a low tone, "always working
+toward the one happy end."
+
+Richling had only time to answer with his eyes, when the baker, always
+clinging close to them, said, "Yes; if I toandt look oudt yet, he pe
+rich pefore Reisen."
+
+The Doctor looked steadily at Richling, stood still, and said, "Don't
+hurry."
+
+But Richling swung playfully half around on his heel, dropped his
+glance, and jerked his head sidewise, as one who neither resented the
+advice nor took it. A minute later he drew from his breast-pocket a
+small, thick letter stripped of its envelope, and handed it to the
+Doctor, who put it into his pocket, neither of them speaking. The action
+showed practice. Reisen winked one eye laboriously at the Doctor and
+chuckled.
+
+"See here, Reisen," said the Doctor, "I want you to pack your trunk,
+take the late boat, and go to Biloxi or Pascagoula, and spend a month
+fishing and sailing."
+
+The baker pushed his fingers up under his hat, scratched his head,
+smiled widely, and pointed at Richling.
+
+"Sendt him."
+
+The Doctor went and sat down with Reisen, and used every form of
+inducement that could be brought to bear; but the German had but one
+answer: Richling, Richling, not he. The Doctor left a prescription,
+which the baker took until he found it was making him sleep while
+Richling was at work, whereupon he amiably threw it out of his window.
+
+It was no surprise to Dr. Sevier that Richling came to him a few days
+later with a face all trouble.
+
+"How are you, Richling? How's Reisen?"
+
+"Doctor," said Richling, "I'm afraid Mr. Reisen is"--Their eyes met.
+
+"Insane," said the Doctor.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Does his wife know whether he has ever had such symptoms before--in his
+life?"
+
+"She says he hasn't."
+
+"I suppose you know his pecuniary condition perfectly; has he money?"
+
+"Plenty."
+
+"He'll not consent to go away anywhere, I suppose, will he?"
+
+"Not an inch."
+
+"There's but one sensible and proper course, Richling; he must be taken
+at once, by force if necessary, to a first-class insane hospital."
+
+"Why, Doctor, why? Can't we treat him better at home?"
+
+The Doctor gave his head its well-known swing of impatience. "If you
+want to be _criminally_ in error try that!"
+
+"I don't want to be in error at all," retorted Richling.
+
+"Then don't lose twelve hours that you can save, but send him off as
+soon as process of court will let you."
+
+"Will you come at once and see him?" asked Richling, rising up.
+
+"Yes, I'll be there nearly as soon as you will. Stop; you had better
+ride with me; I have something special to say." As the carriage started
+off, the Doctor leaned back in its cushions, folded his arms, and took a
+long, meditative breath. Richling glanced at him and said:--
+
+"We're both thinking of the same person."
+
+"Yes," replied the Doctor; "and the same day, too, I suppose: the first
+day I ever saw her; the only other time that we ever got into this
+carriage together. Hmm! hmm! With what a fearful speed time flies!"
+
+"Sometimes," said the yearning husband, and apologized by a laugh. The
+Doctor grunted, looked out of the carriage window, and, suddenly
+turning, asked:--
+
+"Do you know that Reisen instructed his wife about six months ago, in
+the event of his death or disability, to place all her interests in your
+hands, and to be guided by your advice in everything?"
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed Richling, "he can't do that! He should have asked my
+consent."
+
+"I suppose he knew he wouldn't get it. He's a cunning simpleton."
+
+"But, Doctor, if you knew this"--Richling ceased.
+
+"Six months ago. Why didn't I tell you?" said the physician. "I thought
+I would, Richling, though Reisen bade me not, when he told me; I made no
+promise. But time, that you think goes slow, was too fast for me."
+
+"I shall refuse to serve," said Richling, soliloquizing aloud. "Don't
+you see, Doctor, the delicacy of the position?"
+
+"Yes, I do; but you don't. Don't you see it would be just as delicate a
+matter for you to refuse?"
+
+Richling pondered, and presently said, quite slowly:--
+
+"It will look like coming down out of the tree to catch the apples as
+they fall," he said. "Why," he added with impatience, "it lays me wide
+open to suspicion and slander."
+
+"Does it?" asked the Doctor, heartlessly. "There's nothing remarkable in
+that. Did any one ever occupy a responsible position without those
+conditions?"
+
+"But, you know, I have made some unscrupulous enemies by defending
+Reisen's interests."
+
+"Um-hmm; what did you defend them for?"
+
+Richling was about to make a reply; but the Doctor wanted none.
+"Richling," he said, "the most of men have burrows. They never let
+anything decoy them so far from those burrows but they can pop into them
+at a moment's notice. Do you take my meaning?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Richling, pleasantly; "no trouble to understand you this
+time. I'll not run into any burrow just now. I'll face my duty and think
+of Mary."
+
+He laughed.
+
+"Excellent pastime," responded Dr. Sevier.
+
+They rode on in silence.
+
+"As to"--began Richling again,--"as to such matters as these, once a man
+confronts the question candidly, there is really no room, that I can
+see, for a man to choose: a man, at least, who is always guided by
+conscience."
+
+"If there were such a man," responded the Doctor.
+
+"True," said John.
+
+"But for common stuff, such as you and I are made of, it must sometimes
+be terrible."
+
+"I dare say," said Richling. "It sometimes requires cold blood to choose
+aright."
+
+"As cold as granite," replied the other.
+
+They arrived at the bakery.
+
+"O Doctor," said Mrs. Reisen, proffering her hand as he entered the
+house, "my poor hussband iss crazy!" She dropped into a chair and burst
+into tears. She was a large woman, with a round, red face and triple
+chin, but with a more intelligent look and a better command of English
+than Reisen. "Doctor, I want you to cure him ass quick ass possible."
+
+"Well, madam, of course; but will you do what I say?"
+
+"I will, certain shure. I do it yust like you tellin' me."
+
+The Doctor gave her such good advice as became a courageous physician.
+
+A look of dismay came upon her. Her mouth dropped open. "Oh, no,
+Doctor!" She began to shake her head. "I'll never do tha-at; oh, no;
+I'll never send my poor hussband to the crazy-house! Oh, no, sir; I'll
+do not such a thing!" There was some resentment in her emotion. Her
+nether lip went up like a crying babe's, and she breathed through her
+nostrils audibly.
+
+"Oh, yes, I know!" said the poor creature, turning her face away from
+the Doctor's kind attempts to explain, and lifting it incredulously as
+she talked to the wall,--"I know all about it. I'm not a-goin' to put no
+sich a disgrace on my poor hussband; no, indeed!" She faced around
+suddenly and threw out her hand to Richling, who leaned against a door
+twisting a bit of string between his thumbs. "Why, he wouldn't go,
+nohow, even if I gave my consents. You caynt coax him out of his room
+yet. Oh, no, Doctor! It's my duty to keep him wid me an' try to cure him
+first a little while here at home. That aint no trouble to me; I don't
+never mind no trouble if I can be any help to my hussband." She
+addressed the wall again.
+
+"Well, madam," replied the physician, with unusual tenderness of tone,
+and looking at Richling while he spoke, "of course you'll do as you
+think best."
+
+"Oh! my poor Reisen!" exclaimed the wife, wringing her hands.
+
+"Yes," said the physician, rising and looking out of the window, "I am
+afraid it will be ruin to Reisen."
+
+"No, it won't be such a thing," said Mrs. Reisen, turning this way and
+that in her chair as the physician moved from place to place. "Mr.
+Richlin',"--turning to him,--"Mr. Richlin' and me kin run the business
+yust so good as Reisen." She shifted her distressed gaze back and forth
+from Richling to the Doctor. The latter turned to Richling:--
+
+"I'll have to leave this matter to you."
+
+Richling nodded.
+
+"Where is Reisen?" asked the Doctor. "In his own room, upstairs?" The
+three passed through an inner door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+MIRAGE.
+
+
+"This spoils some of your arrangements, doesn't it?" asked Dr. Sevier of
+Richling, stepping again into his carriage. He had already said the kind
+things, concerning Reisen, that physicians commonly say when they have
+little hope. "Were you not counting on an early visit to Milwaukee?"
+
+Richling laughed.
+
+"That illusion has been just a little beyond reach for months." He
+helped the Doctor shut his carriage-door.
+
+"But now, of course--" said the physician.
+
+"Of course it's out of the question," replied Richling; and the Doctor
+drove away, with the young man's face in his mind bearing an expression
+of simple emphasis that pleased him much.
+
+Late at night Richling, in his dingy little office, unlocked a
+drawer, drew out a plump package of letters, and began to read their
+pages,--transcripts of his wife's heart, pages upon pages, hundreds of
+precious lines, dates crowding closely one upon another. Often he smiled
+as his eyes ran to and fro, or drew a soft sigh as he turned the page,
+and looked behind to see if any one had stolen in and was reading over
+his shoulder. Sometimes his smile broadened; he lifted his glance from
+the sheet and fixed it in pleasant revery on the blank wall before
+him. Often the lines were entirely taken up with mere utterances of
+affection. Now and then they were all about little Alice, who had
+fretted all the night before, her gums being swollen and tender on the
+upper left side near the front; or who had fallen violently in love with
+the house-dog, by whom, in turn, the sentiment was reciprocated; or
+whose eyes were really getting bluer and bluer, and her cheeks fatter
+and fatter, and who seemed to fear nothing that had existence. And the
+reader of the lines would rest one elbow on the desk, shut his eyes in
+one hand, and see the fair young head of the mother drooping tenderly
+over that smaller head in her bosom. Sometimes the tone of the lines
+was hopefully grave, discussing in the old tentative, interrogative
+key the future and its possibilities. Some pages were given to
+reminiscences,--recollections of all the droll things and all the good
+and glad things of the rugged past. Every here and there, but especially
+where the lines drew toward the signature, the words of longing
+multiplied, but always full of sunshine; and just at the end of each
+letter love spurned its restraints, and rose and overflowed with sweet
+confessions.
+
+Sometimes these re-read letters did Richling good; not always. Maybe he
+read them too often. It was only the very next time that the Doctor's
+carriage stood before the bakery that the departing physician turned
+before he reentered the vehicle, and--whatever Richling had been saying
+to him--said abruptly:--
+
+"Richling, are you falling out of love with your work?"
+
+"Why do you ask me that?" asked the young man, coloring.
+
+"Because I no longer see that joy of deliverance with which you entered
+upon this humble calling. It seems to have passed like a lost perfume,
+Richling. Have you let your toil become a task once more?"
+
+Richling dropped his eyes and pushed the ground with the toe of his
+boot.
+
+"I didn't want you to find that out, Doctor."
+
+"I was afraid, from the first, it would be so," said the physician.
+
+"I don't see why you were."
+
+"Well, I saw that the zeal with which you first laid hold of your work
+was not entirely natural. It was good, but it was partly
+artificial,--the more credit to you on that account. But I saw that by
+and by you would have to keep it up mainly by your sense of necessity
+and duty. 'That'll be the pinch,' I said; and now I see it's come. For a
+long time you idealized the work; but at last its real dulness has begun
+to overcome you, and you're discontented--and with a discontentment that
+you can't justify, can you?"
+
+"But I feel myself growing smaller again."
+
+"No wonder. Why, Richling, it's the discontent makes that."
+
+"Oh, no! The discontent makes me long to expand. I never had so much
+ambition before. But what can I do here? Why, Doctor, I ought to be--I
+might be"--
+
+The physician laid a hand on the young man's shoulder.
+
+"Stop, Richling. Drop those phrases and give us a healthy 'I am,' and 'I
+must,' and 'I will.' Don't--_don't_ be like so many! You're not of the
+many. Richling, in the first illness in which I ever attended your wife,
+she watched her chance and asked me privately--implored me--not to let
+her die, for your sake. I don't suppose that tortures could have wrung
+from her, even if she realized it,--which I doubt,--the true reason. But
+don't you feel it? It was because your moral nature needs her so badly.
+Stop--let me finish. You need Mary back here now to hold you square to
+your course by the tremendous power of her timid little 'Don't you
+think?' and 'Doesn't it seem?'"
+
+"Doctor," replied Richling, with a smile of expostulation, "you touch
+one's pride."
+
+"Certainly I do. You're willing enough to say that you love her and long
+for her, but not that your moral manhood needs her. And yet isn't it
+true?"
+
+"It sha'n't be true," said Richling, swinging a playful fist.
+"'Forewarned is forearmed;' I'll not allow it. I'm man enough for that."
+He laughed, with a touch of pique.
+
+"Richling,"--the Doctor laid a finger against his companion's shoulder,
+preparing at the same time to leave him,--"don't be misled. A man who
+doesn't need a wife isn't fit to have one."
+
+"Why, Doctor," replied Richling, with sincere amiability, "you're the
+man of all men I should have picked out to prove the contrary."
+
+"No, Richling, no. I wasn't fit, and God took her."
+
+In accordance with Dr. Sevier's request Richling essayed to lift the
+mind of the baker's wife, in the matter of her husband's affliction, to
+that plane of conviction where facts, and not feelings, should become
+her motive; and when he had talked until his head reeled, as though
+he had been blowing a fire, and she would not blaze for all his
+blowing--would be governed only by a stupid sentimentality; and when
+at length she suddenly flashed up in silly anger and accused him of
+interested motives; and when he had demanded instant retraction or
+release from her employment; and when she humbly and affectionately
+apologized, and was still as deep as ever in hopeless, clinging
+sentimentalisms, repeating the dictums of her simple and ignorant German
+neighbors and intimates, and calling them in to argue with him, the
+feeling that the Doctor's exhortation had for the moment driven away
+came back with more force than ever, and he could only turn again to
+his ovens and account-books with a feeling of annihilation.
+
+"Where am I? What am I?" Silence was the only answer. The separation
+that had once been so sharp a pain had ceased to cut, and was bearing
+down upon him now with that dull, grinding weight that does the damage
+in us.
+
+Presently came another development: the lack of money, that did no harm
+while it was merely kept in the mind, settled down upon the heart.
+
+"It may be a bad thing to love, but it's a good thing to have," he said,
+one day, to the little rector, as this friend stood by him at a corner
+of the high desk where Richling was posting his ledger.
+
+"But not to seek," said the rector.
+
+Richling posted an item and shook his head doubtingly.
+
+"That depends, I should say, on how much one seeks it, and how much of
+it he seeks."
+
+"No," insisted the clergyman. Richling bent a look of inquiry upon him,
+and he added:--
+
+"The principle is bad, and you know it, Richling. 'Seek ye first'--you
+know the text, and the assurance that follows with it--'all these things
+shall be added'"--
+
+"Oh, yes; but still"--
+
+"'But still!'" exclaimed the little preacher; "why must everybody say
+'but still'? Don't you see that that 'but still' is the refusal of
+Christians to practise Christianity?"
+
+Richling looked, but said nothing; and his friend hoped the word had
+taken effect. But Richling was too deeply bitten to be cured by one or
+two good sayings. After a moment he said:--
+
+"I used to wonder to see nearly everybody struggling to be rich, but I
+don't now. I don't justify it, but I understand it. It's flight from
+oblivion. It's the natural longing to be seen and felt."
+
+"Why isn't it enough to be felt?" asked the other. "Here, you make bread
+and sell it. A thousand people eat it from your hand every day. Isn't
+that something?"
+
+"Yes; but it's all the bread. The bread's everything; I'm nothing. I'm
+not asked to do or to be. I may exist or not; there will be bread all
+the same. I see my remark pains you, but I can't help it. You've never
+tried the thing. You've never encountered the mild contempt that people
+in ease pay to those who pursue the 'industries.' You've never suffered
+the condescension of rank to the ranks. You don't know the smart of
+being only an arithmetical quantity in a world of achievements and
+possessions."
+
+"No," said the preacher, "maybe I haven't. But I should say you are just
+the sort of man that ought to come through all that unsoured and unhurt.
+Richling,"--he put on a lighter mood,--"you've got a moral indigestion.
+You've accustomed yourself to the highest motives, and now these new
+notions are not the highest, and you know and feel it. They don't
+nourish you. They don't make you happy. Where are your old sentiments?
+What's become of them?"
+
+"Ah!" said Richling, "I got them from my wife. And the supply's nearly
+run out."
+
+"Get it renewed!" said the little man, quickly, putting on his hat and
+extending a farewell hand. "Excuse me for saying so. I didn't intend it;
+I dropped in to ask you again the name of that Italian whom you visit at
+the prison,--the man I promised you I'd go and talk to. Yes--Ristofalo;
+that's it. Good-by."
+
+That night Richling wrote to his wife. What he wrote goes not down here;
+but he felt as he wrote that his mood was not the right one, and when
+Mary got the letter she answered by first mail:--
+
+ "Will you not let me come to you? Is it not surely best? Say
+ but the word, and I'll come. It will be the steamer to Chicago,
+ railroad to Cairo, and a St. Louis boat to New Orleans. Alice
+ will be both company and protection, and no burden at all. O my
+ beloved husband! I am just ungracious enough to think, some
+ days, that these times of separation are the hardest of all.
+ When we were suffering sickness and hunger together--well, we
+ were _together_. Darling, if you'll just say come, I'll come in
+ an _instant_. Oh, how gladly! Surely, with what you tell me
+ you've saved, and with your place so secure to you, can't we
+ venture to begin again? Alice and I can live with you in the
+ bakery. O my husband! if you but say the word, a little time--a
+ few days will bring us into your arms. And yet, do not yield to
+ my impatience; I trust your wisdom, and know that what you
+ decide will be best. Mother has been very feeble lately, as I
+ have told you; but she seems to be improving, and now I see
+ what I've half suspected for a long time, and ought to have
+ seen sooner, that my husband--my dear, dear husband--needs me
+ most; and I'm coming--I'm _coming_, John, if you'll only say
+ come.
+
+ Your loving
+ MARY."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+RISTOFALO AND THE RECTOR.
+
+
+Be Richling's feelings what they might, the Star Bakery shone in the
+retail firmament of the commercial heavens with new and growing
+brilliancy. There was scarcely time to talk even with the tough little
+rector who hovers on the borders of this history, and he might have
+become quite an alien had not Richling's earnest request made him one
+day a visitor, as we have seen him express his intention of being, in
+the foul corridors of the parish prison, and presently the occupant of a
+broken chair in the apartment apportioned to Raphael Ristofalo and two
+other prisoners. "Easy little tasks you cut out for your friends," said
+the rector to Richling when next they met. "I got preached _to_--not to
+say edified. I'll share my edification with you!" He told his
+experience.
+
+It was a sinister place, the prison apartment. The hand of Kate
+Ristofalo had removed some of its unsightly conditions and disguised
+others; but the bounds of the room, walls, ceiling, windows, floor,
+still displayed, with official unconcern, the grime and decay that is
+commonly thought good enough for men charged, rightly or wrongly, with
+crime.
+
+The clergyman's chair was in the centre of the floor. Ristofalo sat
+facing him a little way off on the right. A youth of nineteen sat tipped
+against the wall on the left, and a long-limbed, big-boned, red-shirted
+young Irishman occupied a poplar table, hanging one of his legs across
+a corner of it and letting the other down to the floor. Ristofalo
+remarked, in the form of polite acknowledgment, that the rector had
+preached to the assembled inmates of the prison on the Sunday previous.
+
+"Did I say anything that you thought was true?" asked the minister.
+
+The Italian smiled in the gentle manner that never failed him.
+
+"Didn't listen much," he said. He drew from a pocket of his black
+velveteen pantaloons a small crumpled tract. It may have been a favorite
+one with the clergyman, for the youth against the wall produced its
+counterpart, and the man on the edge of the table lay back on his elbow,
+and, with an indolent stretch of the opposite arm and both legs, drew a
+third one from a tin cup that rested on a greasy shelf behind him. The
+Irishman held his between his fingers and smirked a little toward the
+floor. Ristofalo extended his toward the visitor, and touched the
+caption with one finger: "Mercy offered."
+
+"Well," asked the rector, pleasantly, "what's the matter with that?"
+
+"Is no use yeh. Wrong place--this prison."
+
+"Um-hm," said the tract-distributor, glancing down at the leaf and
+smoothing it on his knee while he took time to think. "Well, why
+shouldn't mercy be offered here?"
+
+"No," replied Ristofalo, still smiling; "ought offer justice first."
+
+"Mr. Preacher," asked the young Irishman, bringing both legs to the
+front, and swinging them under the table, "d'ye vote?"
+
+"Yes; I vote."
+
+"D'ye call yerself a cidizen--with a cidizen's rights an' djuties?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"That's right." There was a deep sea of insolence in the smooth-faced,
+red-eyed smile that accompanied the commendation. "And how manny times
+have ye bean in this prison?"
+
+"I don't know; eight or ten times. That rather beats you, doesn't it?"
+
+Ristofalo smiled, the youth uttered a high rasping cackle, and the
+Irishman laughed the heartiest of all.
+
+"A little," he said; "a little. But nivver mind. Ye say ye've bin here
+eight or tin times; yes. Well, now, will I tell ye what I'd do afore and
+iver I'd kim back here ag'in,--if I was you now? Will I tell ye?"
+
+"Well, yes," replied the visitor, amiably; "I'd like to know."
+
+"Well, surr, I'd go to the mair of this city and to the judge of
+the criminal coort, and to the gov'ner of the Sta-ate, and to the
+ligislatur, if needs be, and I'd say, 'Gintlemin, I can't go back to
+that prison! There is more crimes a-being committed by the people
+outside ag'in the fellies in theyre than--than--than the--the fellies in
+theyre has committed ag'in the people! I'm ashamed to preach theyre! I'm
+afeered to do ud!'" The speaker slipped off the table, upon his feet.
+"'There's murrder a-goun' on in theyre! There's more murrder a-bein'
+done in theyre nor there is outside! Justice is a-bein' murdered theyre
+ivery hour of day and night!'"
+
+He brandished his fist with the last words, but dropped it at a glance
+from Ristofalo, and began to pace the floor along his side of the room,
+looking with a heavy-browed smile back and forth from one fellow-captive
+to the other. He waited till the visitor was about to speak, and then
+interrupted, pointing at him suddenly:--
+
+"Ye're a Prodez'n preacher! I'll bet ye fifty dollars ye have a rich
+cherch! Full of leadin' cidizens!"
+
+"You're correct."
+
+"Well, I'd go an'--an'--an' I'd say, 'Dawn't ye nivver ax me to go into
+that place ag'in a-pallaverin' about mercy, until ye gid ud chaynged
+from the hell on earth it is to a house of justice, wheyre min gits the
+sintences that the coorts decrees!' _I_ don't complain in here. _He_
+don't complain," pointing to Ristofalo; "ye'll nivver hear a complaint
+from him. But go look in that yaird!" He threw up both hands with a
+grimace of disgust--"Aw!"--and ceased again, but continued his walk,
+looked at his fellows, and resumed:--
+
+"_I_ listened to yer sermon. I heerd ye talkin' about the souls of uz.
+Do ye think ye kin make anny of thim min believe ye cayre for the souls
+of us whin ye do nahthing for the _bodies_ that's before yer eyes
+tlothed in rrags and stairved, and made to sleep on beds of brick and
+stone, and to receive a hundred abuses a day that was nivver intended to
+be a pairt of _anny_body's sintince--and manny of'm not tried yit, an'
+nivver a-goun' to have annythin' proved ag'in 'm? How _can_ ye come
+offerin' uz merrcy? For ye don't come out o' the tloister, like a poor
+Cat'lic priest or Sister. Ye come rright out o' the hairt o' the
+community that's a-committin' more crimes ag'in uz in here than all of
+us together has iver committed outside. Aw!--Bring us a better airticle
+of yer own justice ferst--I doan't cayre how _crool_ it is, so ut's
+_justice_--an' _thin_ preach about God's mercy. I'll listen to ye."
+
+Ristofalo had kept his eyes for the most of the time on the floor,
+smiling sometimes more and sometimes less. Now, however, he raised them
+and nodded to the clergyman. He approved all that had been said. The
+Irishman went and sat again on the table and swung his legs. The
+visitor was not allowed to answer before, and must answer now. He would
+have been more comfortable at the rectory.
+
+"My friend," he began, "suppose, now, I should say that you are pretty
+nearly correct in everything you've said?"
+
+The prisoner, who, with hands grasping the table's edge on either side
+of him, was looking down at his swinging brogans, simply lifted his
+lurid eyes without raising his head, and nodded. "It would be right," he
+seemed to intimate, "but nothing great."
+
+"And suppose I should say that I'm glad I've heard it, and that I even
+intend to make good use of it?"
+
+His hearer lifted his head, better pleased, but not without some
+betrayal of the distrust which a lower nature feels toward the
+condescensions of a higher. The preacher went on:--
+
+"Would you try to believe what I have to add to that?"
+
+"Yes, I'd try," replied the Irishman, looking facetiously from the youth
+to Ristofalo. But this time the Italian was grave, and turned his glance
+expectantly upon the minister, who presently replied:--
+
+"Well, neither my church nor the community has sent me here at all."
+
+The Irishman broke into a laugh.
+
+"Did God send ye?" He looked again to his comrades, with an expanded
+grin. The youth giggled. The clergyman met the attack with serenity,
+waited a moment and then responded:--
+
+"Well, in one sense, I don't mind saying--yes."
+
+"Well," said the Irishman, still full of mirth, and swinging his legs
+with fresh vigor, "he'd aht to 'a' sint ye to the ligislatur."
+
+"I'm in hopes he will," said the little rector; "but"--checking the
+Irishman's renewed laughter--"tell me why should other men's injustice
+in here stop me from preaching God's mercy?"
+
+"Because it's pairt _your_ injustice! Ye _do_ come from yer cherch, an'
+ye _do_ come from the community, an' ye can't deny ud, an' ye'd ahtn't
+to be comin' in here with yer sweet tahk and yer eyes tight shut to the
+crimes that's bein' committed ag'in uz for want of an outcry against 'em
+by you preachers an' prayers an' thract-disthributors." The speaker
+ceased and nodded fiercely. Then a new thought occurred to him, and he
+began again abruptly:--
+
+"Look ut here! Ye said in yer serrmon that as to Him"--he pointed
+through the broken ceiling--"we're all criminals alike, didn't ye?"
+
+"I did," responded the preacher, in a low tone.
+
+"Yes," said Ristofalo; and the boy echoed the same word.
+
+"Well, thin, what rights has some to be out an' some to be in?"
+
+"Only one right that I know of," responded the little man; "still that
+is a good one."
+
+"And that is--?" prompted the Irishman.
+
+"Society's right to protect itself."
+
+"Yes," said the prisoner, "to protect itself. Thin what right has it to
+keep a prison like this, where every man an' woman as goes out of ud
+goes out a blacker devil, and cunninger devil, and a more dangerous
+devil, nor when he came in? Is that anny protection? Why shouldn't such
+a prison tumble down upon the heads of thim as built it? Say."
+
+"I expect you'll have to ask somebody else," said the rector. He rose.
+
+"Ye're not a-goun'!" exclaimed the Irishman, in broad affectation of
+surprise.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ah! come, now! Ye're not goun' to be beat that a-way by a wild Mick o'
+the woods?" He held himself ready for a laugh.
+
+"No, I'm coming back," said the smiling clergyman, and the laugh came.
+
+"That's right! But"--as if the thought was a sudden one--"I'll be dead
+by thin, willn't I? Of coorse I will."
+
+"Yes?" rejoined the clergyman. "How's that?"
+
+The Irishman turned to the Italian.
+
+"Mr. Ristofalo, we're a-goin to the pinitintiary, aint we?"
+
+Ristofalo nodded.
+
+"Of coorse we air! Ah! Mr. Preechur, that's the place!"
+
+"Worse than this?"
+
+"Worse? Oh, no! It's better. This is slow death, but that's quick and
+short--and sure. If it don't git ye in five year', ye're an allygatur.
+This place? It's heaven to ud!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+SHALL SHE COME OR STAY?
+
+
+Richling read Mary's letter through three times without a smile. The
+feeling that he had prompted the missive--that it was partly his--stood
+between him and a tumult of gladness. And yet when he closed his eyes he
+could see Mary, all buoyancy and laughter, spurning his claim to each
+and every stroke of the pen. It was all hers, all!
+
+As he was slowly folding the sheet Mrs. Reisen came in upon him. It was
+one of those excessively warm spring evenings that sometimes make New
+Orleans fear it will have no May. The baker's wife stood with her
+immense red hands thrust into the pockets of an expansive pinafore, and
+her three double chins glistening with perspiration. She bade her
+manager a pleasant good-evening.
+
+Richling inquired how she had left her husband.
+
+"Kviet, Mr. Richlin', kviet. Mr. Richlin', I pelief Reisen kittin
+petter. If he don't gittin' better, how come he'ss every day a little
+more kvieter, and sit' still and don't say nutting to nobody?"
+
+"Mrs. Reisen, my wife is asking me to send for her"--Richling gave the
+folded letter a little shake as he held it by one corner--"to come down
+here and live again."
+
+"Now, Mr. Richlin'?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, I will shwear!" She dropped into a seat. "Right in de bekinning
+o' summer time! Vell, vell, vell! And you told me Mrs. Richling is a
+sentsible voman! Vell, I don't belief dat I efer see a young voman w'at
+aint de pickest kind o' fool apowt her hussbandt. Vell, vell!--And she
+comin' down heah 'n' choost kittin' all your money shpent, 'n' den her
+mudter kittin' vorse 'n' she got 'o go pack akin!"
+
+"Why, Mrs. Reisen," exclaimed Richling, warmly. "you speak as if you
+didn't want her to come." He contrived to smile as he finished.
+
+"Vell,--of--course! _You_ don't vant her to come, do you?"
+
+Richling forced a laugh.
+
+"Seems to me 'twould be natural if I did, Mrs. Reisen. Didn't the
+preacher say, when we were married, 'Let no man put asunder'?"
+
+"Oh, now, Mr. Richlin', dere aindt nopotty a-koin' to put you
+under!--'less-n it's your vife. Vot she want to come down for? Don't I
+takin' koot care you?" There was a tear in her eye as she went out.
+
+An hour or so later the little rector dropped in.
+
+"Richling, I came to see if I did any damage the last time I was here.
+My own words worried me."
+
+"You were afraid," responded Richling, "that I would understand you to
+recommend me to send for my wife."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I didn't understand you so."
+
+"Well, my mind's relieved."
+
+"Mine isn't," said Richling. He laid down his pen and gathered his
+fingers around one knee. "Why shouldn't I send for her?"
+
+"You will, some day."
+
+"But I mean now."
+
+The clergyman shook his head pleasantly.
+
+"I don't think that's what you mean."
+
+"Well, let that pass. I know what I do mean. I mean to get out of this
+business. I've lived long enough with these savages." A wave of his hand
+indicated the whole _personnel_ of the bread business.
+
+"I would try not to mind their savageness, Richling," said the little
+preacher, slowly. "The best of us are only savages hid under a harness.
+If we're not, we've somehow made a loss." Richling looked at him with
+amused astonishment, but he persisted. "I'm in earnest! We've had
+something refined out of us that we shouldn't have parted with. Now,
+there's Mrs. Reisen. I like her. She's a good woman. If the savage can
+stand you, why can't you stand the savage?"
+
+"Yes, true enough. Yet--well, I must get out of this, anyway."
+
+The little man clapped him on the shoulder.
+
+"_Climb_ out. See here, you Milwaukee man,"--he pushed Richling
+playfully,--"what are _you_ doing with these Southern notions of ours
+about the 'yoke of menial service,' anyhow?"
+
+"I was not born in Milwaukee," said Richling.
+
+"And you'll not die with these notions, either," retorted the other.
+"Look here, I am going. Good-by. You've got to get rid of them, you
+know, before your wife comes. I'm glad you are not going to send for her
+now."
+
+"I didn't say I wasn't."
+
+"I wouldn't."
+
+"Oh, you don't know what you'd do," said Richling.
+
+The little preacher eyed him steadily for a moment, and then slowly
+returned to where he still sat holding his knee.
+
+They had a long talk in very quiet tones. At the end the rector
+asked:--
+
+"Didn't you once meet Dr. Sevier's two nieces--at his house?"
+
+"Yes," said Richling.
+
+"Do you remember the one named Laura?--the dark, flashing one?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well,--oh, pshaw! I could tell you something funny, but I don't care to
+do it."
+
+What he did not care to tell was, that she had promised him five years
+before to be his wife any day when he should say the word. In all that
+time, and this very night, one letter, one line almost, and he could
+have ended his waiting; but he was not seeking his own happiness.
+
+They smiled together. "Well, good-by again. Don't think I'm always going
+to persecute you with my solicitude."
+
+"I'm not worth it," said Richling, slipping slowly down from his high
+stool and letting the little man out into the street.
+
+A little way down the street some one coming out of a dark alley just in
+time to confront the clergyman extended a hand in salutation.
+
+"Good-evenin', Mr. Blank."
+
+He took the hand. It belonged to a girl of eighteen, bareheaded and
+barefooted, holding in the other hand a small oil-can. Her eyes looked
+steadily into his.
+
+"You don't know me," she said, pleasantly.
+
+"Why, yes, now I remember you. You're Maggie."
+
+"Yes," replied the girl. "Don't you recollect--in the mission-school?
+Don't you recollect you married me and Larry? That's two years ago." She
+almost laughed out with pleasure.
+
+"And where's Larry?"
+
+"Why, don't you recollect? He's on the sloop-o'-war _Preble_." Then she
+added more gravely: "I aint seen him in twenty months. But I know he's
+all right. I aint a-scared about _that_--only if he's alive and well;
+yes, sir. Well, good-evenin', sir. Yes, sir; I think I'll come to the
+mission nex' Sunday--and I'll bring the baby, will I? All right, sir.
+Well, so long, sir. Take care of yourself, sir."
+
+What a word that was! It echoed in his ear all the way home: "Take care
+of _yourself_." What boast is there for the civilization that refines
+away the unconscious heroism of the unfriended poor?
+
+He was glad he had not told Richling all his little secret. But Richling
+found it out later from Dr. Sevier.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV.
+
+WHAT WOULD YOU DO?
+
+
+Three days Mary's letter lay unanswered. About dusk of the third, as
+Richling was hurrying across the yard of the bakery on some errand
+connected with the establishment, a light touch was laid upon his
+shoulder; a peculiar touch, which he recognized in an instant. He turned
+in the gloom and exclaimed, in a whisper:--
+
+"Why, Ristofalo!"
+
+"Howdy?" said Raphael, in his usual voice.
+
+"Why, how did you get out?" asked Richling. "Have you escaped?"
+
+"No. Just come out for little air. Captain of the prison and me. Not
+captain, exactly; one of the keepers. Goin' back some time to-night." He
+stood there in his old-fashioned way, gently smiling, and looking as
+immovable as a piece of granite. "Have you heard from wife lately?"
+
+"Yes," said Richling. "But--why--I don't understand. You and the jailer
+out together?"
+
+"Yes, takin' a little stroll 'round. He's out there in the street. You
+can see him on door-step 'cross yonder. Pretty drunk, eh?" The Italian's
+smile broadened for a moment, then came back to its usual self again. "I
+jus' lef' Kate at home. Thought I'd come see you a little while."
+
+"Return calls?" suggested Richling.
+
+"Yes, return call. Your wife well?"
+
+"Yes. But--why, this is the drollest"-- He stopped short, for the
+Italian's gravity indicated his opinion that there had been enough
+amusement shown. "Yes, she's well, thank you. By-the-by, what do you
+think of my letting her come out here now and begin life over again?
+Doesn't it seem to you it's high time, if we're ever going to do it at
+all?"
+
+"What you think?" asked Ristofalo.
+
+"Well, now, you answer my question first."
+
+"No, you answer me first."
+
+"I can't. I haven't decided. I've been three days thinking about it. It
+may seem like a small matter to hesitate so long over"--Richling paused
+for his hearer to dissent.
+
+"Yes," said Ristofalo, "pretty small." His smile remained the same. "She
+ask you? Reckon you put her up to it, eh?"
+
+"I don't see why you should reckon that," said Richling, with resentful
+coldness.
+
+"I dunno," said the Italian; "thought so--that's the way fellows do
+sometimes." There was a pause. Then he resumed: "I wouldn't let her come
+yet. Wait."
+
+"For what?"
+
+"See which way the cat goin' to jump."
+
+Richling laughed unpleasantly.
+
+"What do you mean by that?" he inquired.
+
+"We goin' to have war," said Raphael Ristofalo.
+
+"Ho! ho! ho! Why, Ristofalo, you were never more mistaken in your life!"
+
+"I dunno," replied the Italian, sticking in his tracks, "think it pretty
+certain. I read all the papers every day; nothin' else to do in parish
+prison. Think we see war nex' winter."
+
+"Ristofalo, a man of your sort can hardly conceive the amount of
+bluster this country can stand without coming to blows. We Americans are
+not like you Italians."
+
+"No," responded Ristofalo, "not much like." His smile changed
+peculiarly. "Wasn't for Kate, I go to Italia now."
+
+"Kate and the parish prison," said Richling.
+
+"Oh!"--the old smile returned,--"I get out that place any time I want."
+
+"And you'd join Garibaldi, I suppose?" The news had just come of
+Garibaldi in Sicily.
+
+"Yes," responded the Italian. There was a twinkle deep in his eyes as he
+added: "I know Garibaldi."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Yes. Sailed under him when he was ship-cap'n. He knows me."
+
+"And I dare say he'd remember you," said Richling, with enthusiasm.
+
+"He remember me," said the quieter man. "Well,--must go. Good-e'nin'.
+Better tell yo' wife wait a while."
+
+"I--don't know. I'll see. Ristofalo"--
+
+"What?"
+
+"I want to quit this business."
+
+"Better not quit. Stick to one thing."
+
+"But you never did that. You never did one thing twice in succession."
+
+"There's heap o' diff'ence."
+
+"I don't see it. What is it?"
+
+But the Italian only smiled and shrugged, and began to move away. In a
+moment he said:--
+
+"You see, Mr. Richlin', you sen' for yo' wife, you can't risk change o'
+business. You change business, you can't risk sen' for yo' wife. Well,
+good-night."
+
+Richling was left to his thoughts. Naturally they were of the man whom
+he still saw, in his imagination, picking his jailer up off the
+door-step and going back to prison. Who could say that this man might
+not any day make just such a lion's leap into the world's arena as
+Garibaldi had made, and startle the nations as Garibaldi had done? What
+was that red-shirted scourge of tyrants that this man might not be?
+Sailor, soldier, hero, patriot, prisoner! See Garibaldi: despising the
+restraints of law; careless of the simplest conventionalities that go to
+make up an honest gentleman; doing both right and wrong--like a lion;
+everything in him leonine. All this was in Ristofalo's reach. It was all
+beyond Richling's. Which was best, the capability or the incapability?
+It was a question he would have liked to ask Mary.
+
+Well, at any rate, he had strength now for one thing--"one pretty small
+thing." He would answer her letter. He answered it, and wrote: "Don't
+come; wait a little while." He put aside all those sweet lovers'
+pictures that had been floating before his eyes by night and day, and
+bade her stay until the summer, with its risks to health, should have
+passed, and she could leave her mother well and strong.
+
+It was only a day or two afterward that he fell sick. It was provoking
+to have such a cold and not know how he caught it, and to have it in
+such fine weather. He was in bed some days, and was robbed of much sleep
+by a cough. Mrs. Reisen found occasion to tell Dr. Sevier of Mary's
+desire, as communicated to her by "Mr. Richlin'," and of the advice she
+had given him.
+
+"And he didn't send for her, I suppose."
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Well, Mrs. Reisen, I wish you had kept your advice to yourself." The
+Doctor went to Richling's bedside.
+
+"Richling, why don't you send for your wife?"
+
+The patient floundered in the bed and drew himself up on his pillow.
+
+"O Doctor, just listen!" He smiled incredulously. "Bring that little
+woman and her baby down here just as the hot season is beginning?" He
+thought a moment, and then continued: "I'm afraid, Doctor, you're
+prescribing for homesickness. Pray don't tell me that's my ailment."
+
+"No, it's not. You have a bad cough, that you must take care of; but
+still, the other is one of the counts in your case, and you know how
+quickly Mary and--the little girl would cure it."
+
+Richling smiled again.
+
+"I can't do that, Doctor; when I go to Mary, or send for her, on account
+of homesickness, it must be hers, not mine."
+
+"Well, Mrs. Reisen," said the Doctor, outside the street door, "I hope
+you'll remember my request."
+
+"I'll tdo udt, Dtoctor," was the reply, so humbly spoken that he
+repented half his harshness.
+
+"I suppose you've often heard that 'you can't make a silk purse of a
+sow's ear,' haven't you?" he asked.
+
+"Yes; I pin right often heeard udt." She spoke as though she was not
+wedded to any inflexible opinion concerning the proposition.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Reisen, as a man once said to me, 'neither can you make a
+sow's ear out of a silk purse.'"
+
+"Vell, to be cettaintly!" said the poor woman, drawing not the shadow of
+an inference; "how kin you?"
+
+"Mr. Richling tells me he will write to Mrs. Richling to prepare to come
+down in the fall."
+
+"Vell," exclaimed the delighted Mrs. Reisen, in her husband's best
+manner, "t'at's te etsectly I atwised him!" And, as the Doctor drove
+away, she rubbed her mighty hands around each other in restored
+complacency. Two or three days later she had the additional pleasure of
+seeing Richling up and about his work again. It was upon her motherly
+urging that he indulged himself, one calm, warm afternoon, in a walk in
+the upper part of the city.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV.
+
+NARCISSE WITH NEWS.
+
+
+It was very beautiful to see the summer set in. Trees everywhere. You
+looked down a street, and, unless it were one of the two broad avenues
+where the only street-cars ran, it was pretty sure to be so overarched
+with boughs that, down in the distance, there was left but a narrow
+streak of vivid blue sky in the middle. Well-nigh every house had its
+garden, as every garden its countless flowers. The dark orange began to
+show its growing weight of fruitfulness, and was hiding in its thorny
+interior the nestlings of yonder mocking-bird, silently foraging down in
+the sunny grass. The yielding branches of the privet were bowed down
+with their plumy panicles, and swayed heavily from side to side, drunk
+with gladness and plenty. Here the peach was beginning to droop over a
+wall. There, and yonder again, beyond, ranks of fig-trees, that had so
+muffled themselves in their foliage that not the nakedness of a twig
+showed through, had yet more figs than leaves. The crisp, cool masses of
+the pomegranate were dotted with scarlet flowers. The cape jasmine wore
+hundreds of her own white favors, whose fragrance forerun the sight.
+Every breath of air was a new perfume. Roses, an innumerable host, ran a
+fairy riot about all grounds, and clambered from the lowest door-step to
+the highest roof. The oleander, wrapped in one great garment of red
+blossoms, nodded in the sun, and stirred and winked in the faint
+stirrings of the air The pale banana slowly fanned herself with her own
+broad leaf. High up against the intense sky, its hard, burnished foliage
+glittering in the sunlight, the magnolia spread its dark boughs, adorned
+with their queenly white flowers. Not a bird nor an insect seemed
+unmated. The little wren stood and sung to his sitting wife his loud,
+ecstatic song, made all of her own name,--Matilda, Urilda, Lucinda,
+Belinda, Adaline, Madaline, Caroline, or Melinda, as the case might
+be,--singing as though every bone of his tiny body were a golden flute.
+The hummingbirds hung on invisible wings, and twittered with delight as
+they feasted on woodbine and honeysuckle. The pigeon on the roof-tree
+cooed and wheeled about his mate, and swelled his throat, and
+tremulously bowed and walked with a smiting step, and arched his
+purpling neck, and wheeled and bowed and wheeled again. Pairs of
+butterflies rose in straight upward flight, fluttered about each other
+in amorous strife, and drifted away in the upper air. And out of every
+garden came the voices of little children at play,--the blessedest sound
+on earth.
+
+"O Mary, Mary! why should two lovers live apart on this beautiful earth?
+Autumn is no time for mating. Who can tell what autumn will bring?"
+
+The revery was interrupted.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, 'ow you enjoyin' yo' 'ealth in that beaucheouz weatheh
+juz at the pwesent? Me, I'm well. Yes, I'm always well, in fact. At the
+same time nevvatheless, I fine myseff slightly sad. I s'pose 'tis
+natu'al--a man what love the 'itings of Lawd By'on as much as me. You
+know, of co'se, the melancholic intelligens?"
+
+"No," said Richling; "has any one"--
+
+"Lady By'on, seh. Yesseh. 'In the mids' of life'--you know where we ah,
+Mistoo Itchlin, I su-pose?"
+
+"Is Lady Byron dead?"
+
+"Yesseh." Narcisse bowed solemnly. "Gone, Mistoo Itchlin. Since the
+seventeenth of last; yesseh. 'Kig the bucket,' as the povvub say." He
+showed an extra band of black drawn neatly around his new straw hat. "I
+thought it but p'opeh to put some moaning--as a species of twibute." He
+restored the hat to his head. "You like the tas'e of that, Mistoo
+Itchlin?"
+
+Richling could but confess the whole thing was delicious.
+
+"Yo humble servan', seh," responded the smiling Creole, with a flattered
+bow. Then, assuming a gravity becoming the historian, he said:--
+
+"In fact, 'tis a gweat mistake, that statement that Lawd By'on evva
+qua'led with his lady, Mistoo Itchlin. But I s'pose you know 'tis but a
+slandeh of the pwess. Yesseh. As, faw instance, thass anotheh slandeh of
+the pwess that the delegates qua'led ad the Chawleston convention.
+They only pwetend to qua'l; so, by that way, to mizguide those
+A_bol_ish-nists. Mistoo Itchlin, I am p'ojecting to 'ite some obitua'
+'emawks about that Lady By'on, but I scass know w'etheh to 'ite them in
+the poetic style aw in the p'osaic. Which would you conclude, Mistoo
+Itchlin?"
+
+Richling reflected with downcast eyes.
+
+"It seems to me," he said, when he had passed his hand across his mouth
+in apparent meditation and looked up,--"seems to me I'd conclude both,
+without delay."
+
+"Yes? But accawding to what fawmule, Mistoo Itchlin? 'Ay, 'tis theh is
+the 'ub,' in fact, as Lawd By'on say. Is it to migs the two style' that
+you advise?"
+
+"That's the favorite method," replied Richling.
+
+"Well, I dunno 'ow 'tis, Mistoo Itchlin, but I fine the moze facil'ty in
+the poetic. 'Tis t'ue, in the poetic you got to look out concehning the
+_'ime_. You got to keep the eye skin' faw it, in fact. But in the
+p'osaic, on the cont'a-ay, 'tis juz the opposite; you got to keep
+the eye skin' faw the _sense_. Yesseh. Now, if you migs the two
+style'--well--'ow's that, Mistoo Itchlin, if you migs them? Seem' to
+me I dunno."
+
+"Why, don't you see?" asked Richling. "If you mix them, you avoid both
+necessities. You sail triumphantly between Scylla and Charybdis without
+so much as skinning your eye."
+
+Narcisse looked at him a moment with a slightly searching glance,
+dropped his eyes upon his own beautiful feet, and said, in a meditative
+tone:--
+
+"I believe you co'ect." But his smile was gone, and Richling saw he had
+ventured too far.
+
+"I wish my wife were here," said Richling; "she might give you better
+advice than I."
+
+"Yes," replied Narcisse, "I believe you co'ect ag'in, Mistoo Itchlin.
+'Tis but since yeste'd'y that I jus appen to hea' Dr. Seveeah d'op a
+saying 'esembling to that. Yesseh, she's a v'ey 'emawkable, Mistoo
+Itchlin."
+
+"Is that what Dr. Sevier said?" Richling began to fear an ambush.
+
+"No, seh. What the Doctah say--'twas me'ly to 'emawk in his jocose
+way--you know the Doctah's lill callous, jocose way, Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+He waved either hand outward gladsomely.
+
+"Yes," said Richling, "I've seen specimens of it."
+
+"Yesseh. He was ve'y complimenta'y, in fact, the Doctah. 'Tis the
+trooth. He says, 'She'll make a man of Witchlin if anythin' can.' Juz in
+his jocose way, you know."
+
+The Creole's smile had returned in concentrated sweetness. He stood
+silent, his face beaming with what seemed his confidence that Richling
+would be delighted. Richling recalled the physician's saying concerning
+this very same little tale-bearer,--that he carried his nonsense on top
+and his good sense underneath.
+
+"Dr. Sevier said that, did he?" asked Richling, after a time.
+
+"'Tis the vehbatim, seh. Convussing to yo' 'eve'end fwend. You can ask
+him; he will co'obo'ate me in fact. Well, Mistoo Itchlin, it supp'ise me
+you not tickle at that. Me, I may say, I wish _I_ had a wife to make a
+man out of _me_."
+
+"I wish you had," said Richling. But Narcisse smiled on.
+
+"Well, _au 'evoi'_." He paused an instant with an earnest face.
+"Pehchance I'll meet you this evening, Mistoo Itchlin? Faw doubtless,
+like myseff, you will assist at the gweat a-ally faw the Union, the
+Const'ution, and the enfo'cemen' of the law. Dr. Seveeah will addwess."
+
+"I don't know that I care to hear him," replied Richling.
+
+"Goin' to be a gwan' out-po'-ing, Mistoo Itchlin. Citizens of Noo 'Leans
+without the leas' 'espec' faw fawmeh polly-tickle diff'ence. Also
+fiah-works. 'Come one, come all,' as says the gweat Scott--includin'
+yo'seff, Mistoo Itchlin. No? Well, _au 'evoi'_, Mistoo Itchlin."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI.
+
+A PRISON MEMENTO.
+
+
+The political pot began to seethe. Many yet will remember how its smoke
+went up. The summer--summer of 1860--grew fervent. Its breath became hot
+and dry. All observation--all thought--turned upon the fierce campaign.
+Discussion dropped as to whether Heenan would ever get that champion's
+belt, which even the little rector believed he had fairly won in the
+international prize-ring. The news brought by each succeeding European
+steamer of Garibaldi's splendid triumphs in the cause of a new Italy,
+the fierce rattle of partisan warfare in Mexico, that seemed almost
+within hearing, so nearly was New Orleans concerned in some of its
+movements,--all things became secondary and trivial beside the
+developments of a political canvass in which the long-foreseen,
+long-dreaded issues between two parts of the nation were at length to be
+made final. The conventions had met, the nominations were complete, and
+the clans of four parties and fractions of parties were "meeting," and
+"rallying," and "uprising," and "outpouring."
+
+All life was strung to one high pitch. This contest was
+everything,--nay, everybody,--men, women, and children. They were all
+for the Constitution; they were all for the Union; and each, even
+Richling, for the enforcement of--his own ideas. On every bosom, "no
+matteh the sex," and no matter the age, hung one of those little round,
+ribbanded medals, with a presidential candidate on one side and his
+vice-presidential man Friday on the other. Needless to say that
+Ristofalo's Kate, instructed by her husband, imported the earliest and
+many a later invoice of them, and distributing her peddlers at choice
+thronging-places, "everlastin'ly," as she laughingly and confidentially
+informed Dr. Sevier, "raked in the sponjewlicks." They were exposed for
+sale on little stalls on populous sidewalks and places of much entry and
+exit.
+
+The post-office in those days was still on Royal street, in the old
+Merchants' Exchange. The small hand-holes of the box-delivery were in
+the wide tessellated passage that still runs through the building from
+Royal street to Exchange alley. A keeper of one of these little stalls
+established himself against a pillar just where men turned into and out
+of Royal street, out of or into this passage. One day, in this place,
+just as Richling turned from a delivery window to tear the envelope of a
+letter bearing the Milwaukee stamp, his attention was arrested by a man
+running by him toward Exchange alley, pale as death, and followed by a
+crowd that suddenly broke into a cry, a howl, a roar: "Hang him! Hang
+him!"
+
+"Come!" said a small, strong man, seizing Richling's arm and turning him
+in the common direction. If the word was lost on Richling's defective
+hearing, not so the touch; for the speaker was Ristofalo. The two
+friends ran with all their speed through the passage and out into the
+alley. A few rods away the chased wretch had been overtaken, and was
+made to face his pursuers. When Richling and Ristofalo reached him there
+was already a rope about his neck.
+
+The Italian's leap, as he closed in upon the group around the victim,
+was like a tiger's. The men he touched did not fall; they were rather
+hurled, driving backward those whom they were hurled against. A man
+levelled a revolver at him; Richling struck it a blow that sent it over
+twenty men's heads. A long knife flashed in Ristofalo's right hand. He
+stood holding the rope in his left, stooping slightly forward, and
+darting his eyes about as if selecting a victim for his weapon. A
+stranger touched Richling from behind, spoke a hurried word in Italian,
+and handed him a huge dirk. But in that same moment the affair was over.
+There stood Ristofalo, gentle, self-contained, with just a perceptible
+smile turned upon the crowd, no knife in his hand, and beside him the
+slender, sinewy, form, and keen gray eye of Smith Izard.
+
+The detective was addressing the crowd. While he was speaking, half a
+score of police came from as many directions. When he had finished, he
+waved his slender hand at the mass of heads.
+
+"Stand back. Go about your business." And they began to go. He laid a
+hand upon the rescued stranger and addressed the police.
+
+"Take this rope off. Take this man to the station and keep him until
+it's safe to let him go."
+
+The explanation by which he had so quickly pacified the mob was a simple
+one. The rescued man was a seller of campaign medals. That morning, in
+opening a fresh supply of his little stock, he had failed to perceive
+that, among a lot of "Breckenridge and Lane" medals, there had crept
+in one of Lincoln. That was the sum of his offence. The mistake had
+occurred in the Northern factory. Of course, if he did not intend to
+sell Lincoln medals, there was no crime.
+
+"Don't I tell you?" said the Italian to Richling, as they were walking
+away together. "Bound to have war; is already begin-n."
+
+"It began with me the day I got married," said Richling.
+
+Ristofalo waited some time, and then asked:--
+
+"How?"
+
+"I shouldn't have said so," replied Richling; "I can't explain."
+
+"Thass all right," said the other. And, a little later: "Smith Izard
+call' you by name. How he know yo' name?"
+
+"I can't imagine!"
+
+The Italian waved his hand.
+
+"Thass all right, too; nothin' to me." Then, after another pause: "Think
+you saved my life to-day."
+
+"The honors are easy," said Richling.
+
+He went to bed again for two or three days. He liked it little when Dr.
+Sevier attributed the illness to a few moments' violent exertion and
+excitement.
+
+"It was bravely done, at any rate, Richling," said the Doctor.
+
+"_That_ it was!" said Kate Ristofalo, who had happened to call to see
+the sick man at the same hour. "Doctor, ye'r mighty right! Ha!"
+
+Mrs. Reisen expressed a like opinion, and the two kind women met the two
+men's obvious wish by leaving the room.
+
+"Doctor," said Richling at once, "the last time you said it was
+love-sickness; this time you say it's excitement; at the bottom it isn't
+either. Will you please tell me what it really is? What is this thing
+that puts me here on my back this way?"
+
+"Richling," replied the Doctor, slowly, "if I tell you the honest truth,
+it began in that prison."
+
+The patient knit his hands under his head and lay motionless and
+silent.
+
+"Yes," he said, after a time. And by and by again: "Yes; I feared as
+much. And can it be that my _physical_ manhood is going to fail me at
+such a time as this?" He drew a long breath and turned restively in the
+bed.
+
+"We'll try to keep it from doing that," replied the physician. "I've
+told you this, Richling, old fellow to impress upon you the necessity of
+keeping out of all this hubbub,--this night-marching and mass-meeting
+and exciting nonsense."
+
+"And am I always--always to be blown back--blown back this way?" said
+Richling, half to himself, half to his friend.
+
+"There, now," responded the Doctor, "just stop talking entirely. No, no;
+not always blown back. A sick man always thinks the present moment is
+the whole boundless future. Get well. And to that end possess your soul
+in patience. No newspapers. Read your Bible. It will calm you. I've been
+trying it myself." His tone was full of cheer, but it was also so
+motherly and the touch so gentle with which he put back the sick man's
+locks--as if they had been a lad's--that Richling turned away his face
+with chagrin.
+
+"Come!" said the Doctor, more sturdily, laying his hand on the patient's
+shoulder. "You'll not lie here more than a day or two. Before you know
+it summer will be gone, and you'll be sending for Mary."
+
+Richling turned again, put out a parting hand, and smiled with new
+courage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII.
+
+NOW I LAY ME--
+
+
+Time may drag slowly, but it never drags backward. So the summer wore
+on, Richling following his physician's directions; keeping to his work
+only--out of public excitements and all overstrain; and to every day, as
+he bade it good-by, his eager heart, lightened each time by that much,
+said, "When you come around again, next year, Mary and I will meet you
+hand in hand." This was _his_ excitement, and he seemed to flourish on
+it.
+
+But day by day, week by week, the excitements of the times rose. Dr.
+Sevier was deeply stirred, and ever on the alert, looking out upon every
+quarter of the political sky, listening to the rising thunder, watching
+the gathering storm. There could hardly have been any one more
+completely engrossed by it. If there was, it was his book-keeper. It
+wasn't so much the Constitution that enlisted Narcisse's concern; nor
+yet the Union, which seemed to him safe enough; much less did the desire
+to see the enforcement of the laws consume him. Nor was it altogether
+the "'oman candles" and the "'ockets"; but the rhetoric.
+
+Ah, the "'eto'ic"! He bathed, he paddled, dove, splashed, in a surf of
+it.
+
+"Doctah,"--shaking his finely turned shoulders into his coat and lifting
+his hat toward his head,--"I had the honah, and at the same time the
+pleasu', to yeh you make a shawt speech lass evening. I was p'oud to
+yeh yo' bunning eloquence, Doctah,--if you'll allow. Yesseh. Eve'ybody
+said 'twas the moze bilious effo't of the o'-casion."
+
+Dr. Sevier actually looked up and smiled, and thanked the happy young
+man for the compliment.
+
+"Yesseh," continued his admirer, "I nevveh flatteh. I give me'-it where
+the me'-it lies. Well, seh, we juz make the welkin 'ing faw joy when you
+finally stop' at the en'. Pehchance you heard my voice among that sea of
+head'? But I doubt--in 'such a vas' up'ising--so many imposing pageant',
+in fact,--and those 'ocket' exploding in the staw-y heaven', as they
+say. I think I like that exp'ession I saw on the noozpapeh, wheh it
+says: 'Long biffo the appointed owwa, thousan' of flashing tawches and
+tas'eful t'anspa'encies with divuz devices whose blazing effulgence
+turn' day into night.' Thass a ve'y talented style, in fact. Well, _au
+'evoi'_, Doctah. I'm going ad the--an' thass anotheh thing I like--'tis
+faw the ladies to 'ing bells that way on the balconies. Because Mr. Bell
+and Eve'et is name _bell_, and so is the _bells_ name' juz the same way,
+and so they 'ing the _bells_ to signify. I had to elucidate that to my
+hant. Well, _au 'evoi'_, Doctah."
+
+The Doctor raised his eyes from his letter-writing. The young man had
+turned, and was actually going out without another word. What perversity
+moved the physician no one will ever know; but he sternly called:--
+
+"Narcisse?"
+
+The Creole wheeled about on the threshold.
+
+"Yesseh?"
+
+The Doctor held him with a firm, grave eye, and slowly said:--
+
+"I suppose before you return you will go to the post office." He said
+nothing more,--only that, just in his jocose way,--and dropped his eyes
+again upon his pen. Narcisse gave him one long black look, and silently
+went out.
+
+But a sweet complacency could not stay long away from the young man's
+breast. The world was too beautiful; the white, hot sky above was in
+such fine harmony with his puffed lawn shirt-bosom and his white linen
+pantaloons, bulging at the thighs and tapering at the ankles, and at the
+corner of Canal and Royal streets he met so many members of the Yancey
+Guards and Southern Guards and Chalmette Guards and Union Guards and
+Lane Dragoons and Breckenridge Guards and Douglas Rangers and Everett
+Knights, and had the pleasant trouble of stepping aside and yielding the
+pavement to the far-spreading crinoline. Oh, life was one scintillating
+cluster breast-pin of ecstasies! And there was another thing,--General
+William Walker's filibusters! Royal street, St. Charles, the rotunda of
+the St. Charles Hotel, were full of them.
+
+It made Dr. Sevier both sad and fierce to see what hold their lawless
+enterprise took upon the youth of the city. Not that any great number
+were drawn into the movement, least of all Narcisse; but it captivated
+their interest and sympathy, and heightened the general unrest, when
+calmness was what every thoughtful man saw to be the country's greatest
+need.
+
+An incident to illustrate the Doctor's state of mind.
+
+It occurred one evening in the St. Charles rotunda. He saw some
+citizens of high standing preparing to drink at the bar with a group of
+broad-hatted men, whose bronzed foreheads and general out-of-door mien
+hinted rather ostentatiously of Honduras and Ruatan Island. As he passed
+close to them one of the citizens faced him blandly, and unexpectedly
+took his hand, but quickly let it go again. The rest only glanced at
+the Doctor, and drew nearer to the bar.
+
+"I trust you're not unwell, Doctor," said the sociable one, with
+something of a smile, and something of a frown, at the tall physician's
+gloomy brow.
+
+"I am well, sir."
+
+"I--didn't know," said the man again, throwing an aggressive resentment
+into his tone; "you seemed preoccupied."
+
+"I was," replied the Doctor, returning his glance with so keen an eye
+that the man smiled again, appeasingly. "I was thinking how barely
+skin-deep civilization is."
+
+The man ha-ha'd artificially, stepping backward as he said, "That's so!"
+He looked after the departing Doctor an instant and then joined his
+companions.
+
+Richling had a touch of this contagion. He looked from Garibaldi to
+Walker and back again, and could not see any enormous difference between
+them. He said as much to one of the bakery's customers, a restaurateur
+with a well-oiled tongue, who had praised him for his intrepidity in the
+rescue of the medal-peddler, which, it seems, he had witnessed. With
+this praise still upon his lips the caterer walked with Richling to the
+restaurant door, and detained him there to enlarge upon the subject of
+Spanish-American misrule, and the golden rewards that must naturally
+fall to those who should supplant it with stable government. Richling
+listened and replied and replied again and listened; and presently the
+restaurateur startled him with an offer to secure him a captain's
+commission under Walker. He laughed incredulously; but the restaurateur,
+very much in earnest, talked on; and by littles, but rapidly, Richling
+admitted the value of the various considerations urged. Two or three
+months of rapid adventure; complete physical renovation--of
+course--natural sequence; the plaudits of a grateful people; maybe
+fortune also, but at least a certainty of finding the road to it,--all
+this to meet Mary with next fall.
+
+"I'm in a great hurry just now," said Richling; "but I'll talk about
+this thing with you again to-morrow or next day," and so left.
+
+The restaurateur turned to his head-waiter, stuck his tongue in his
+cheek, and pulled down the lower lid of an eye with his forefinger. He
+meant to say he had been lying for the pure fun of it.
+
+When Dr. Sevier came that afternoon to see Reisen--of whom there was now
+but little left, and that little unable to leave the bed--Richling took
+occasion to raise the subject that had entangled his fancy. He was
+careful to say nothing of himself or the restaurateur, or anything,
+indeed, but a timid generality or two. But the Doctor responded with a
+clear, sudden energy that, when he was gone, left Richling feeling
+painfully blank, and yet unable to find anything to resent except the
+Doctor's superfluous--as he thought, quite superfluous--mention of the
+island of Cozumel.
+
+However, and after all, that which for the most part kept the public
+mind heated was, as we have said, the political campaign. Popular
+feeling grew tremulous with it as the landscape did under the burning
+sun. It was a very hot summer. Not a good one for feeble folk; and one
+early dawn poor Reisen suddenly felt all his reason come back to him,
+opened his eyes, and lo! he had crossed the river in the night, and was
+on the other side.
+
+Dr. Sevier's experienced horse halted of his own will to let a
+procession pass. In the carriage at its head the physician saw the
+little rector, sitting beside a man of German ecclesiastical appearance.
+Behind it followed a majestic hearse, drawn by black-plumed and
+caparisoned horses,--four of them. Then came a long line of red-shirted
+firemen; for he in the hearse had been an "exempt." Then a further line
+of big-handed, white-gloved men in beavers and regalias; for he had
+been also a Freemason and an Odd-fellow. Then another column, of
+emotionless-visaged German women, all in bunchy black gowns, walking out
+of time to the solemn roll and pulse of the muffled drums, and the
+brazen peals of the funeral march. A few carriages closed the long
+line. In the first of them the waiting Doctor marked, with a sudden
+understanding of all, the pale face of John Richling, and by his side
+the widow who had been forty years a wife,--weary and red with weeping.
+The Doctor took off his hat.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII.
+
+RISE UP, MY LOVE, MY FAIR ONE.
+
+
+The summer at length was past, and the burning heat was over and gone.
+The days were refreshed with the balm of a waning October. There had
+been no fever. True, the nights were still aglare with torches, and the
+street echoes kept awake by trumpet notes and huzzas, by the tramp of
+feet and the delicate hint of the bell-ringing; and men on the stump and
+off it; in the "wigwams;" along the sidewalks, as they came forth,
+wiping their mouths, from the free-lunch counters, and on the
+curb-stones and "flags" of Carondelet street, were saying things to make
+a patriot's heart ache. But contrariwise, in that same Carondelet
+street, and hence in all the streets of the big, scattered town, the
+most prosperous commercial year--they measure from September to
+September--that had ever risen upon New Orleans had closed its distended
+record, and no one knew or dreamed that, for nearly a quarter of a
+century to come, the proud city would never see the equal of that golden
+year just gone. And so, away yonder among the great lakes on the
+northern border of the anxious but hopeful country, Mary was calling,
+calling, like an unseen bird piping across the fields for its mate, to
+know if she and the one little nestling might not come to hers.
+
+And at length, after two or three unexpected contingencies had caused
+delays of one week after another, all in a silent tremor of joy, John
+wrote the word--"Come!"
+
+He was on his way to put it into the post-office, in Royal street. At
+the newspaper offices, in Camp street, he had to go out into the middle
+of the way to get around the crowd that surrounded the bulletin-boards,
+and that scuffled for copies of the latest issue. The day of days was
+passing; the returns of election were coming in. In front of the
+"Picayune" office he ran square against a small man, who had just pulled
+himself and the most of his clothing out of the press with the last news
+crumpled in the hand that he still held above his head.
+
+"Hello, Richling, this is pretty exciting, isn't it?" It was the little
+clergyman. "Come on, I'll go your way; let's get out of this."
+
+He took Richling's arm, and they went on down the street, the rector
+reading aloud as they walked, and shopkeepers and salesmen at their
+doors catching what they could of his words as the two passed.
+
+"It's dreadful! dreadful!" said the little man, thrusting the paper into
+his pocket in a wad.
+
+"Hi! Mistoo Itchlin," quoth Narcisse, passing them like an arrow, on his
+way to the paper offices.
+
+"He's happy," said Richling.
+
+"Well, then, he's the only happy man I know of in New Orleans to-day,"
+said the little rector, jerking his head and drawing a sigh through his
+teeth.
+
+"No," said Richling, "I'm another. You see this letter." He showed it
+with the direction turned down. "I'm going now to mail it. When my wife
+gets it she starts."
+
+The preacher glanced quickly into his face. Richling met his gaze with
+eyes that danced with suppressed joy. The two friends attracted no
+attention from those whom they passed or who passed them; the newsboys
+were scampering here and there, everybody buying from them, and the
+walls of Common street ringing with their shouted proffers of the "full
+account" of the election.
+
+"Richling, don't do it."
+
+"Why not?" Richling showed only amusement.
+
+"For several reasons," replied the other. "In the first place, look at
+your business!"
+
+"Never so good as to-day."
+
+"True. And it entirely absorbs you. What time would you have at your
+fireside, or even at your family table? None. It's--well you know what
+it is--it's a bakery, you know. You couldn't expect to lodge _your_ wife
+and little girl in a bakery in Benjamin street; you know you couldn't.
+Now, _you_--you don't mind it--or, I mean, you can stand it. Those
+things never need damage a gentleman. But with your wife it would be
+different. You smile, but--why, you know she couldn't go there. And if
+you put her anywhere where a lady ought to be, in New Orleans, she would
+be--well, don't you see she would be about as far away as if she were in
+Milwaukee? Richling, I don't know how it looks to you for me to be so
+meddlesome, and I believe you think I'm making a very poor argument; but
+you see this is only one point and the smallest. Now"--
+
+Richling raised his thin hand, and said pleasantly:--
+
+"It's no use. You can't understand; it wouldn't be possible to explain;
+for you simply don't know Mary."
+
+"But there are some things I do know. Just think; she's with her mother
+where she is. Imagine her falling ill here,--as you've told me she used
+to do,--and you with that bakery on your hands."
+
+Richling looked grave.
+
+"Oh no," continued the little man. "You've been so brave and patient,
+you and your wife, both,--do be so a little bit longer! Live close; save
+your money; go on rising in value in your business; and after a little
+you'll rise clear out of the sphere you're now in. You'll command your
+own time; you'll build your own little home; and life and happiness and
+usefulness will be fairly and broadly open before you." Richling gave
+heed with a troubled face, and let his companion draw him into the
+shadow of that "St. Charles" from the foot of whose stair-way he had
+once been dragged away as a vagrant.
+
+"See, Richling! Every few weeks you may read in some paper of how a
+man on some ferry-boat jumps for the wharf before the boat has touched
+it, falls into the water, and-- Make sure! Be brave a little
+longer--only a little longer! Wait till you're sure!"
+
+"I'm sure enough!"
+
+"Oh, no, you're not! Wait till this political broil is over. They say
+Lincoln is elected. If so, the South is not going to submit to it.
+Nobody can tell what the consequences are to be. Suppose we should have
+war? I don't think we shall, but suppose we should? There would be a
+general upheaval, commercial stagnation, industrial collapse, shrinkage
+everywhere! Wait till it's over. It may not be two weeks hence; it can
+hardly be more than ninety days at the outside. If it should the North
+would be ruined, and you may be sure they are not going to allow _that_.
+Then, when all starts fair again, bring your wife and baby. I'll tell
+you what to do, Richling!"
+
+"Will you?" responded the listener, with an amiable laugh that the
+little man tried to echo.
+
+"Yes. Ask Dr. Sevier! He's right here in the next street. He was on
+your side last time; maybe he'll be so now."
+
+"Done!" said Richling. They went. The rector said he would do an errand
+in Canal street, while Richling should go up and see the physician.
+
+Dr. Sevier was in.
+
+"Why, Richling!" He rose to receive him. "How are you?" He cast his eye
+over his visitor with professional scrutiny. "What brings _you_ here?"
+
+"To tell you that I've written for Mary," said Richling, sinking wearily
+into a chair.
+
+"Have you mailed the letter?"
+
+"I'm taking it to the post-office now."
+
+The Doctor threw one leg energetically over the other, and picked up the
+same paper-knife that he had handled when, two years and a half before,
+he had sat thus, talking to Mary and John on the eve of their
+separation.
+
+"Richling, I'll tell you. I've been thinking about this thing for some
+time, and I've decided to make you a proposal. I look at you and at Mary
+and at the times--the condition of the country--the probable
+future--everything. I know you, physically and mentally, better than
+anybody else does. I can say the same of Mary. So, of course, I don't
+make this proposal impulsively, and I don't want it rejected.
+
+"Richling, I'll lend you two thousand to twenty-five hundred dollars,
+payable at your convenience, if you will just go to your room, pack up,
+go home, and take from six to twelve months' holiday with your wife and
+child."
+
+The listener opened his mouth in blank astonishment.
+
+"Why, Doctor, you're jesting! You can't suppose"--
+
+"I don't suppose anything. I simply want you to do it."
+
+"Well, I simply can't!"
+
+"Did you ever regret taking my advice, Richling?"
+
+"No, never. But this--why, it's utterly impossible! Me leave the results
+of four years' struggle to go holidaying? I can't understand you,
+Doctor."
+
+"'Twould take weeks to explain."
+
+"It's idle to think of it," said Richling, half to himself.
+
+"Go home and think of it twenty-four hours," said the Doctor.
+
+"It is useless, Doctor."
+
+"Very good, then; send for Mary. Mail your letter."
+
+"You don't mean it!" said Richling.
+
+"Yes, I do. Send for Mary; and tell her I advised it." He turned quickly
+away to his desk, for Richling's eyes had filled with tears; but turned
+again and rose as Richling rose. They joined hands.
+
+"Yes, Richling, send for her. It's the right thing to do--if you will
+not do the other. You know I want you to be happy."
+
+"Doctor, one word. In your opinion is there going to be war?"
+
+"I don't know. But if there is it's time for husband and wife and child
+to draw close together. Good-day."
+
+And so the letter went.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+A BUNDLE OF HOPES.
+
+
+Richling insisted, in the face of much scepticism on the part of the
+baker's widow, that he felt better, was better, and would go on getting
+better, now that the weather was cool once more.
+
+"Well, I hope you vill, Mr. Richlin', dtat's a fect. 'Specially ven yo'
+vife comin'. Dough _I_ could a-tooken care ye choost tso koot as vot she
+couldt."
+
+"But maybe you couldn't take care of her as well as I can," said the
+happy Richling.
+
+"Oh, tdat's a tdifferendt. A voman kin tek care herself."
+
+Visiting the French market on one of these glad mornings, as his
+business often required him to do, he fell in with Narcisse, just
+withdrawing from the celebrated coffee-stand of Rose Nicaud. Richling
+stopped in the moving crowd and exchanged salutations very willingly;
+for here was one more chance to hear himself tell the fact of Mary's
+expected coming.
+
+"So'y, Mistoo Itchlin," said Narcisse, whipping away the pastry crumbs
+from his lap with a handkerchief and wiping his mouth, "not to encounteh
+you a lill biffo', to join in pahtaking the cup what cheeahs at the same
+time whilce it invigo'ates; to-wit, the coffee-cup--as the maxim say. I
+dunno by what fawmule she makes that coffee, but 'tis astonishin' how
+'tis good, in fact. I dunno if you'll billieve me, but I feel almost I
+could pahtake anotheh cup--? 'Tis the tooth." He gave Richling time to
+make any handsome offer that might spontaneously suggest itself, but
+seeing that the response was only an over-gay expression of face, he
+added, "But I conclude no. In fact, Mistoo Itchlin, thass a thing I have
+discovud,--that too much coffee millytates ag'inst the chi'og'aphy; and
+thus I abstain. Well, seh, ole Abe is elected."
+
+"Yes," rejoined Richling, "and there's no telling what the result will
+be."
+
+"You co'ect, Mistoo Itchlin." Narcisse tried to look troubled.
+
+"I've got a bit of private news that I don't think you've heard," said
+Richling. And the Creole rejoined promptly:--
+
+"Well, I _thought_ I saw something on yo' thoughts--if you'll excuse my
+tautology. Thass a ve'y diffycult to p'event sometime'. But, Mistoo
+Itchlin, I trus' 'tis not you 'ave allowed somebody to swin'le
+you?--confiding them too indiscweetly, in fact?" He took a pretty
+attitude, his eyes reposing in Richling's.
+
+Richling laughed outright.
+
+"No, nothing of that kind. No, I"--
+
+"Well, I'm ve'y glad," interrupted Narcisse.
+
+"Oh, no, 'tisn't trouble at all! I've sent for Mrs. Richling. We're
+going to resume housekeeping."
+
+Narcisse gave a glad start, took his hat off, passed it to his left
+hand, extended his right, bowed from the middle with princely grace,
+and, with joy breaking all over his face, said:--
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, in fact,--shake!"
+
+They shook.
+
+"Yesseh--an' many 'appy 'eturn! I dunno if you kin billieve that, Mistoo
+Itchlin; but I was juz about to 'ead that in yo' physio'nomie! Yesseh.
+But, Mistoo Itchlin, when shall the happy o'casion take effect?"
+
+"Pretty soon. Not as soon as I thought, for I got a despatch yesterday,
+saying her mother is very ill, and of course I telegraphed her to stay
+till her mother is at least convalescent. But I think that will be soon.
+Her mother has had these attacks before. I have good hopes that before
+long Mrs. Richling will actually be here."
+
+Richling began to move away down the crowded market-house, but Narcisse
+said:--
+
+"Thass yo' di'ection? 'Tis the same, mine. We may accompany togetheh--if
+you'll allow yo' 'umble suvvant?"
+
+"Come along! You do me honor!" Richling laid his hand on Narcisse's
+shoulder and they went at a gait quickened by the happy husband's
+elation. Narcisse was very proud of the touch, and, as they began to
+traverse the vegetable market, took the most populous arcade.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin," he began again, "I muz congwatu_late_ you! You know I
+always admiah yo' lady to excess. But appopo of that news, I might
+infawm you some intelligens consunning myseff."
+
+"Good!" exclaimed Richling. "For it's good news, isn't it?"
+
+"Yesseh,--as you may say,--yes. Faw in fact, Mistoo Itchlin, I 'ave ass
+Dr. Seveeah to haugment me."
+
+"Hurrah!" cried Richling. He coughed and laughed and moved aside to a
+pillar and coughed, until people looked at him, and lifted his eyes,
+tired but smiling, and, paying his compliments to the paroxysm in one or
+two ill-wishes, wiped his eyes at last, and said:--
+
+"And the Doctor augmented you?"
+
+"Well, no, I can't say that--not p'ecisely."
+
+"Why, what did he do?"
+
+"Well, he 'efuse' me, in fact."
+
+"Why--but that isn't good news, then."
+
+Narcisse gave his head a bright, argumentative twitch.
+
+"Yesseh. 'Tis t'ue he 'efuse'; but ad the same time--I dunno--I thing he
+wasn' so mad about it as he make out. An' you know thass one thing,
+Mistoo Itchlin, whilce they got life they got hope; and hence I
+ente'tain the same."
+
+They had reached that flagged area without covering or inclosure, before
+the third of the three old market-houses, where those dealers in the
+entire miscellanies of a housewife's equipment, excepting only stoves
+and furniture, spread their wares and fabrics in the open weather before
+the Bazar market rose to give them refuge. He grew suddenly fierce.
+
+"But any'ow I don't care! I had the spunk to ass 'im, an' he din 'ave
+the spunk to dischawge me! All he can do; 'tis to shake the fis' of
+impatience." He was looking into his companion's face, as they walked,
+with an eye distended with defiance.
+
+"Look out!" exclaimed Richling, reaching a hurried hand to draw him
+aside. Narcisse swerved just in time to avoid stepping into a pile of
+crockery, but in so doing went full into the arms of a stately female
+figure dressed in the crispest French calico and embarrassed with
+numerous small packages of dry goods. The bundles flew hither and yon.
+Narcisse tried to catch the largest as he saw it going, but only sent it
+farther than it would have gone, and as it struck the ground it burst
+like a pomegranate. But the contents were white: little thin,
+square-folded fractions of barred jaconet and white flannel; rolls of
+slender white lutestring ribbon; very narrow papers of tiny white pearl
+buttons, minute white worsted socks, spools of white floss, cards of
+safety-pins, pieces of white castile soap, etc.
+
+"_Mille pardons, madame!_" exclaimed Narcisse; "I make you a thousan'
+poddons, madam!"
+
+He was ill-prepared for the majestic wrath that flashed from the eyes
+and radiated from the whole dilating, and subsiding, and reexpanding,
+and rising, and stiffening form of Kate Ristofalo!
+
+"Officerr," she panted,--for instantly there was a crowd, and a man with
+the silver-crescent badge was switching the assemblage on the legs with
+his cane to make room,--"Officerr," she gasped, levelling her tremulous
+finger at Narcisse, "arrist that man!"
+
+"Mrs. Ristofalo!" exclaimed Richling, "don't do that! It was all an
+accident! Why, don't you see it's Narcisse,--my friend?"
+
+"Yer frind rised his hand to sthrike me, sur, he did! Yer frind rised
+his hand to sthrike me, he did!" And up she went and down she went,
+shortening and lengthening, swelling and decreasing. "Yes, yes, I
+know yer frind; indeed I do! I paid two dollars and a half fur his
+acquaintans nigh upon three years agone, sur. Yer frind!" And still she
+went up and down, enlarging, diminishing, heaving her breath and waving
+her chin around, and saying, in broken utterances,--while a hackman on
+her right held his whip in her auditor's face, crying, "Carriage, sir?
+Carriage, sir?"--
+
+"Why didn'--he rin agin--a man, sur! I--I--oh! I wish Mr. Ristofalah war
+heer!--to teach um how--to walk!--Yer frind, sur--ixposing me!" She
+pointed to Narcisse and the policeman gathering up the scattered lot of
+tiny things. Her eyes filled with tears, but still shot lightning. "If
+he's hurrted me, he's got 'o suffer fur ud, Mr. Richlin'!" And she
+expanded again.
+
+"Carriage, sir, carriage?" continued the man with the whip.
+
+"Yes!" said Richling and Mrs. Ristofalo in a breath. She took his arm,
+the hackman seized the bundles from the policeman, threw open his hack
+door, laid the bundles on the front seat, and let down the folding
+steps. The crowd dwindled away to a few urchins.
+
+"Officerr," said Mrs. Ristofalo, her foot on the step and composure once
+more in her voice, "ye needn't arrist um. I could of done ud, sur," she
+added to Narcisse himself, "but I'm too much of a laydy, sur!" And she
+sank together and stretched herself up once more, entered the vehicle,
+and sat with a perpendicular back, her arms folded on her still heaving
+bosom, and her head high.
+
+As to her ability to have that arrest made, Kate Ristofalo was in error.
+Narcisse smiled to himself; for he was conscious of one advantage that
+overtopped all the sacredness of female helplessness, public right, or
+any other thing whatsoever. It lay in the simple fact that he was
+acquainted with the policeman. He bowed blandly to the officer, stepped
+backward, touching his hat, and walked away, the policeman imitating
+each movement with the promptness and faithfulness of a mirror.
+
+"Aren't ye goin' to get in, Mr. Richlin'?" asked Mrs. Ristofalo. She
+smiled first and then looked alarmed.
+
+"I--I can't very well--if you'll excuse me, ma'am."
+
+"Ah, Mr. Richlin'!"--she pouted girlishly. "Gettin' proud!" She gave her
+head a series of movements, as to say she might be angry if she would,
+but she wouldn't. "Ye won't know uz when Mrs. Richlin' comes."
+
+Richling laughed, but she gave a smiling toss to indicate that it was a
+serious matter.
+
+"Come," she insisted, patting the seat beside her with honeyed
+persuasiveness, "come and tell me all about ud. Mr. Ristofalah nivver
+goes into peticklers, an' so I har'ly know anny more than jist she's
+a-comin'. Come, git in an' tell me about Mrs. Richlin'--that is, if ye
+like the subject--and I don't believe ye do." She lifted her finger,
+shook it roguishly close to her own face, and looked at him sidewise.
+"Ah, nivver mind, sur! that's rright! Furgit yer old frinds--maybe ye
+wudden't do ud if ye knewn everythin'. But that's rright; that's the way
+with min." She suddenly changed to subdued earnestness, turned the catch
+of the door, and, as the door swung open, said: "Come, if ud's only fur
+a bit o' the way--if ud's only fur a ming-ute. I've got somethin' to
+tell ye."
+
+"I must get out at Washington Market," said Richling, as he got in. The
+hack hurried down Old Levee street.
+
+"And now," said she, merriment dancing in her eyes, her folded arms
+tightening upon her bosom, and her lips struggling against their own
+smile, "I'm just a good mind not to tell ye at ahll!"
+
+Her humor was contagious and Richling was ready to catch it. His own eye
+twinkled.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Ristofalo, of course, if you feel any embarrassment"--
+
+"Ye villain!" she cried, with delighted indignation, "I didn't mean
+nawthing about _that_, an' ye knew ud! Here, git out o' this carridge!"
+But she made no effort to eject him.
+
+"Mary and I are interested in all your hopes," said Richling, smiling
+softly upon the damaged bundle which he was making into a tight package
+again on his knee. "You'll tell me your good news if it's only that I
+may tell her, will you not?"
+
+"_I_ will. And it's joost this,--Mr. Richlin',--that if there be's a war
+Mr. Ristofalah's to be lit out o' prison."
+
+"I'm very glad!" cried Richling, but stopped short, for Mrs.
+Ristofalo's growing dignity indicated that there was more to be told.
+
+"I'm sure ye air, Mr. Richlin'; and I'm sure ye'll be glad--a heap
+gladder nor I am--that in that case he's to be Captain Ristofalah."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Yes, sur." The wife laid her palm against her floating ribs and
+breathed a sigh. "I don't like ud, Mr. Richlin'. No, sur. I don't like
+tytles." She got her fan from under her handkerchief and set it a-going.
+"I nivver liked the idee of bein' a tytled man's wife. No, sur." She
+shook her head, elevating it as she shook it. "It creates too much
+invy, Mr. Richlin'. Well, good-by." The carriage was stopping at the
+Washington Market. "Now, don't ye mintion it to a livin' soul, Mr.
+Richlin'!"
+
+Richling said "No."
+
+"No, sur; fur there be's manny a slip 'tuxt the cup an' the lip,
+ye know; an' there may be no war, after all, and we may all be
+disapp'inted. But he's bound to be tleared if he's tried, and don't ye
+see--I--I don't want um to be a captain, anyhow, don't ye see?"
+
+Richling saw, and they parted.
+
+ * * *
+
+Thus everybody hoped. Dr. Sevier, wifeless, childless, had his hopes
+too, nevertheless. Hopes for the hospital and his many patients in it
+and out of it; hopes for his town and his State; hopes for Richling
+and Mary; and hopes with fears, and fears with hopes, for the great
+sisterhood of States. Richling had one hope more. After some weeks had
+passed Dr. Sevier ventured once more to say:--
+
+"Richling, go home. Go to your wife. I must tell you you're no ordinary
+sick man. Your life is in danger."
+
+"Will I be out of danger if I go home?" asked Richling.
+
+Dr. Sevier made no answer.
+
+"Do you still think we may have war?" asked Richling again.
+
+"I know we shall."
+
+"And will the soldiers come back," asked the young man, smilingly, "when
+they find their lives in danger?"
+
+"Now, Richling, that's another thing entirely; that's the battle-field."
+
+"Isn't it all the _same_ thing, Doctor? Isn't it all a battle-field?"
+
+The Doctor turned impatiently, disdaining to reply. But in a moment he
+retorted:--
+
+"We take wounded men off the field."
+
+"They don't take themselves off," said Richling, smiling.
+
+"Well," rejoined the Doctor, rising and striding toward a window, "a
+good general may order a retreat."
+
+"Yes, but--maybe I oughtn't to say what I was thinking"--
+
+"Oh, say it."
+
+"Well, then, he don't let his surgeon order it. Doctor," continued
+Richling, smiling apologetically as his friend confronted him, "you
+know, as you say, better than any one else, all that Mary and I have
+gone through--nearly all--and how we've gone through it. Now, if my life
+should end here shortly, what would the whole thing mean? It would mean
+nothing. Doctor; it would be meaningless. No, sir; this isn't the end.
+Mary and I"--his voice trembled an instant and then was firm again--"are
+designed for a long life. I argue from the simple fitness of
+things,--this is not the end."
+
+Dr. Sevier turned his face quickly toward the window, and so remained.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER L.
+
+FALL IN!
+
+
+There came a sound of drums. Twice on such a day, once the day
+before, thrice the next day, till by and by it was the common thing.
+High-stepping childhood, with laths and broom-handles at shoulder, was
+not fated, as in the insipid days of peace, to find, on running to the
+corner, its high hopes mocked by a wagon of empty barrels rumbling over
+the cobble-stones. No; it was the Washington Artillery, or the Crescent
+Rifles, or the Orleans Battalion, or, best of all, the blue-jacketed,
+white-leggined, red-breeched, and red-fezzed Zouaves; or, better than
+the best, it was all of them together, their captains stepping backward,
+sword in both hands, calling "_Gauche! gauche!_" ("Left! left!") "Guide
+right!"--"_Portez armes!_" and facing around again, throwing their
+shining blades stiffly to belt and epaulette, and glancing askance from
+under their abundant plumes to the crowded balconies above. Yea, and the
+drum-majors before, and the brilliant-petticoated _vivandieres_ behind!
+
+What pomp! what giddy rounds! Pennons, cock-feathers, clattering steeds,
+pealing salvos, banners, columns, ladies' favors, balls, concerts,
+toasts, the Free Gift Lottery--don't you recollect?--and this uniform
+and that uniform, brother a captain, father a colonel, uncle a major,
+the little rector a chaplain, Captain Ristofalo of the Tiger Rifles; the
+levee covered with munitions of war, steam-boats unloading troops,
+troops, troops, from Opelousas, Attakapas, Texas; and a supper to this
+company, a flag to that battalion, farewell sermon to the Washington
+Artillery, tears and a kiss to a spurred and sashed lover, hurried
+weddings,--no end of them,--a sword to such a one, addresses by such and
+such, serenades to Miss and to Mademoiselle.
+
+Soon it will have been a quarter of a century ago!
+
+And yet--do you not hear them now, coming down the broad, granite-paved,
+moonlit street, the light that was made for lovers glancing on bayonet
+and sword soon to be red with brothers' blood, their brave young hearts
+already lifted up with the triumph of battles to come, and the trumpets
+waking the midnight stillness with the gay notes of the Cracovienne?--
+
+ "Again, again, the pealing drum,
+ The clashing horn, they come, they come,
+ And lofty deeds and daring high
+ Blend with their notes of victory."
+
+Ah! the laughter; the music; the bravado; the dancing; the songs!
+"_Voila l'Zouzou!_" "Dixie!" "_Aux armes, vos citoyens!_" "The Bonnie
+Blue Flag!"--it wasn't bonnie very long. Later the maidens at home
+learned to sing a little song,--it is among the missing now,--a part of
+it ran:--
+
+ "Sleeping on grassy couches;
+ Pillowed on hillocks damp;
+ Of martial fame how little we know
+ Till brothers are in the camp."
+
+By and by they began to depart. How many they were! How many, many! We
+had too lightly let them go. And when all were gone, and they of
+Carondelet street and its tributaries, massed in that old gray,
+brittle-shanked regiment, the Confederate Guards, were having their
+daily dress parade in Coliseum place, and only they and the Foreign
+Legion remained; when sister Jane made lint, and flour was high, and
+the sounds of commerce were quite hushed, and in the custom-house
+gun-carriages were a-making, and in the foundries big guns were being
+cast, and the cotton gun-boats and the rams were building, and at the
+rotting wharves the masts of a few empty ships stood like dead trees in
+a blasted wilderness, and poor soldiers' wives crowded around the "Free
+Market," and grass began to spring up in the streets,--they were many
+still, while far away; but some marched no more, and others marched on
+bleeding feet, in rags; and it was very, very hard for some of us to
+hold the voice steady and sing on through the chorus of the little
+song:--
+
+ "Brave boys are they!
+ Gone at their country's call.
+ And yet--and yet--we cannot forget
+ That many brave boys must fall."
+
+Oh! Shiloh, Shiloh!
+
+But before the gloom had settled down upon us it was a gay dream.
+
+"Mistoo Itchlin, in fact 'ow you ligue my uniefawm? You think it suit my
+style? They got about two poun' of gole lace on that uniefawm. Yesseh.
+Me, the h-only thing--I don' ligue those epaulette'. So soon ev'ybody
+see that on me, 'tis 'Lieut'nan'!' in thiz place, an' 'Lieut'nan'!' in
+that place. My de'seh, you'd thing I'm a majo'-gen'l, in fact. Well, of
+co'se, I don' ligue that."
+
+"And so you're a lieutenant?"
+
+"Third! Of the Chasseurs-a-Pied! Coon he'p 't, in fact; the fellehs
+elected me. Goin' at Pensacola tomaw. Dr. Seveeah _con_tinue my sala'y
+whilce I'm gone. no matteh the len'th. Me, I don' care, so long the
+sala'y _con_tinue, if that waugh las' ten yeah! You ah pe'haps goin' ad
+the ball to-nighd, Mistoo Itchlin? I dunno 'ow 'tis--I suppose you'll be
+aztonizh' w'en I infawm you--that ball wemine me of that battle of
+Wattaloo! Did you evva yeh those line' of Lawd By'on,--
+
+ 'Theh was a soun' of wibalwy by night,
+ W'en--'Ush-'ark!--A deep saun' stwike'--?
+
+Thaz by Lawd By'on. Yesseh. Well"--
+
+The Creole lifted his right hand energetically, laid its inner edge
+against the brass buttons of his _kepi_, and then waved it gracefully
+abroad:--
+
+"_Au 'evoi'_, Mistoo Itchlin. I leave you to defen' the city."
+
+"To-morrow," in those days of unreadiness and disconnection, glided just
+beyond reach continually. When at times its realization was at length
+grasped, it was away over on the far side of a fortnight or farther.
+However, the to-morrow for Narcisse came at last.
+
+A quiet order for attention runs down the column. Attention it is.
+Another order follows, higher-keyed, longer drawn out, and with one
+sharp "clack!" the sword-bayoneted rifles go to the shoulders of as fine
+a battalion as any in the land of Dixie.
+
+"_En avant!_"--Narcisse's heart stands still for joy--"_Marche!_"
+
+The bugle rings, the drums beat; "tramp, tramp," in quick succession, go
+the short-stepping, nimble Creole feet, and the old walls of the Rue
+Chartres ring again with the pealing huzza, as they rang in the days of
+Villere and Lafreniere, and in the days of the young Galvez, and in the
+days of Jackson.
+
+The old Ponchartrain cars move off, packed. Down at the "Old Lake End"
+the steamer for Mobile receives the burden. The gong clangs in her
+engine-room, the walking-beam silently stirs, there is a hiss of water
+underneath, the gang-plank is in, the wet hawser-ends whip through the
+hawse-holes,--she moves; clang goes the gong again--she glides--or is it
+the crowded wharf that is gliding?--No.--Snatch the kisses! snatch them!
+Adieu! Adieu! She's off, huzza--she's off!
+
+Now she stands away. See the mass of gay colors--red, gold, blue,
+yellow, with glitter of steel and flutter of flags, a black veil of
+smoke sweeping over. Wave, mothers and daughters, wives, sisters,
+sweethearts--wave, wave; you little know the future!
+
+And now she is a little thing, her white wake following her afar across
+the green waters, the call of the bugle floating softly back. And now
+she is a speck. And now a little smoky stain against the eastern blue is
+all,--and now she is gone. Gone! Gone!
+
+Farewell, soldier boys! Light-hearted, little-forecasting, brave,
+merry boys! God accept you, our offering of first fruits! See that
+mother--that wife--take them away; it is too much. Comfort them, father,
+brother; tell them their tears may be for naught.
+
+ "And yet--and yet--we cannot forget
+ That many brave boys must fall."
+
+Never so glad a day had risen upon the head of Narcisse. For the first
+time in his life he moved beyond the corporate limits of his native
+town.
+
+"'Ezcape fum the aunt, thou sluggud!'" "_Au 'evoi'_" to his aunt and the
+uncle of his aunt. "_Au 'evoi'!_ _Au 'evoi'!_"--desk, pen, book--work,
+care, thought, restraint--all sinking, sinking beneath the receding
+horizon of Lake Ponchartrain, and the wide world and a soldier's life
+before him.
+
+Farewell, Byronic youth! You are not of so frail a stuff as you have
+seemed. You shall thirst by day and hunger by night. You shall keep
+vigil on the sands of the Gulf and on the banks of the Potomac. You
+shall grow brown, but prettier. You shall shiver in loathsome tatters,
+yet keep your grace, your courtesy, your joyousness. You shall ditch and
+lie down in ditches, and shall sing your saucy songs of defiance in the
+face of the foe, so blackened with powder and dust and smoke that your
+mother in heaven would not know her child. And you shall borrow to your
+heart's content chickens, hogs, rails, milk, buttermilk, sweet potatoes,
+what not; and shall learn the American songs, and by the camp-fire of
+Shenandoah valley sing "The years creep slowly by, Lorena" to messmates
+with shaded eyes, and "Her bright smile haunts me still." Ah, boy!
+there's an old woman still living in the Rue Casa Calvo--your bright
+smile haunts her still. And there shall be blood on your sword, and
+blood--twice--thrice--on your brow. Your captain shall die in your arms;
+and you shall lead charge after charge, and shall step up from rank to
+rank; and all at once, one day, just in the final onset, with the cheer
+on your lips, and your red sword waving high, with but one lightning
+stroke of agony, down, down you shall go in the death of your dearest
+choice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LI.
+
+BLUE BONNETS OVER THE BORDER.
+
+
+One morning, about the 1st of June, 1861, in the city of New York, two
+men of the mercantile class came from a cross street into Broadway, near
+what was then the upper region of its wholesale stores. They paused on
+the corner, near the edge of the sidewalk.
+
+"Even when the States were seceding," said one of them, "I couldn't make
+up my mind that they really meant to break up the Union."
+
+He had rosy cheeks, a retreating chin, and amiable, inquiring eyes. The
+other had a narrower face, alert eyes, thin nostrils, and a generally
+aggressive look. He did not reply at once, but, after a quick glance
+down the great thoroughfare and another one up it, said, while his eyes
+still ran here and there:--
+
+"Wonderful street, this Broadway!"
+
+He straightened up to his fullest height and looked again, now down the
+way, now up, his eye kindling with the electric contagion of the scene.
+His senses were all awake. They took in, with a spirit of welcome, all
+the vast movement: the uproar, the feeling of unbounded multitude, the
+commercial splendor, the miles of towering buildings; the long,
+writhing, grinding mass of coming and going vehicles, the rush of
+innumerable feet, and the countless forms and faces hurrying, dancing,
+gliding by, as though all the world's mankind, and womankind, and
+childhood must pass that way before night.
+
+"How many people, do you suppose, go by this corner in a single hour?"
+asked the man with the retreating chin. But again he got no answer. He
+might as well not have yielded the topic of conversation as he had done;
+so he resumed it. "No, I didn't believe it," he said. "Why, look at the
+Southern vote of last November--look at New Orleans. The way it went
+there, I shouldn't have supposed twenty-five per cent. of the people
+would be in favor of secession. Would you?"
+
+But his companion, instead of looking at New Orleans, took note of two
+women who had come to a halt within a yard of them and seemed to be
+waiting, as he and his companion were, for an opportunity to cross the
+street. The two new-comers were very different in appearance, the one
+from the other. The older and larger was much beyond middle life, red,
+fat, and dressed in black stuff, good as to fabric, but uncommonly bad
+as to fit. The other was young and pretty, refined, tastefully dressed,
+and only the more interesting for the look of permanent anxiety that
+asserted itself with distinctness about the corners of her eyes and
+mouth. She held by the hand a rosy, chubby little child, that seemed
+about three years old, and might be a girl or might be a boy, so far as
+could be discerned by masculine eyes. The man did not see this fifth
+member of their group until the elder woman caught it under the arms in
+her large hands, and, lifting it above her shoulder, said, looking far
+up the street:--
+
+"O paypy, paypy, choost look de fla-ags! One, two, dtree,--a tuzzent, a
+hundut, a dtowsant fla-ags!"
+
+Evidently the child did not know her well. The little face remained
+without a smile, the lips sealed, the shoulders drawn up, and the legs
+pointing straight to the spot whence they had been lifted. She set it
+down again.
+
+"We're not going to get by here," said the less talkative man. "They
+must be expecting some troops to pass here. Don't you see the windows
+full of women and children?"
+
+"Let's wait and look at them," responded the other, and his companion
+did not dissent.
+
+"Well, sir," said the more communicative one, after a moment's
+contemplation, "I never expected to see this!" He indicated by a gesture
+the stupendous life of Broadway beginning slowly to roll back upon
+itself like an obstructed river. It was obviously gathering in a general
+pause to concentrate its attention upon something of leading interest
+about to appear to view. "We're in earnest at last, and we can see, now,
+that the South was in the deadest kind of earnest from the word go."
+
+"They can't be any more in earnest than we are, now," said the more
+decided speaker.
+
+"I had great hopes of the peace convention," said the rosier man.
+
+"I never had a bit," responded the other.
+
+"The suspense was awful--waiting to know what Lincoln would do when he
+came in," said he of the poor chin. "My wife was in the South visiting
+her relatives; and we kept putting off her return, hoping for a quieter
+state of affairs--hoping and putting off--till first thing you knew the
+lines closed down and she had the hardest kind of a job to get through."
+
+"I never had a doubt as to what Lincoln would do," said the man with
+sharp eyes; but while he spoke he covertly rubbed his companion's elbow
+with his own, and by his glance toward the younger of the two women gave
+him to understand that, though her face was partly turned away, the very
+pretty ear, with no ear-ring in the hole pierced for it, was listening.
+And the readier speaker rejoined in a suppressed voice:--
+
+"That's the little lady I travelled in the same car with all the way
+from Chicago."
+
+"No times for ladies to be travelling alone," muttered the other.
+
+"She hoped to take a steam-ship for New Orleans, to join her husband
+there."
+
+"Some rebel fellow, I suppose."
+
+"No, a Union man, she says."
+
+"Oh, of course!" said the sharp-eyed one, sceptically. "Well, she's
+missed it. The last steamer's gone and may get back or may not." He
+looked at her again, narrowly, from behind his companion's shoulder. She
+was stooping slightly toward the child, rearranging some tie under its
+lifted chin and answering its questions in what seemed a chastened
+voice. He murmured to his fellow, "How do you know she isn't a spy?"
+
+The other one turned upon him a look of pure amusement, but, seeing the
+set lips and earnest eye of his companion, said softly, with a faint,
+scouting hiss and smile:--
+
+"She's a perfect lady--a perfect one."
+
+"Her friend isn't," said the aggressive man.
+
+"Here they come," observed the other aloud, looking up the street. There
+was a general turning of attention and concentration of the street's
+population toward the edge of either sidewalk. A force of police was
+clearing back into the by-streets a dense tangle of drays, wagons,
+carriages, and white-topped omnibuses, and far up the way could be seen
+the fluttering and tossing of handkerchiefs, and in the midst a solid
+mass of blue with a sheen of bayonets above, and every now and then a
+brazen reflection from in front, where the martial band marched before.
+It was not playing. The ear caught distantly, instead of its notes, the
+warlike thunder of the drum corps.
+
+The sharper man nudged his companion mysteriously.
+
+"Listen," he whispered. Neither they nor the other pair had materially
+changed their relative positions. The older woman was speaking.
+
+"'Twas te fun'est dting! You pe lookin' for te Noo 'Leants shteamer,
+undt me lookin' for te Hambourg shteamer, undt coompt right so togeder
+undt never vouldn't 'a' knowedt udt yet, ovver te mayne exdt me, 'Misses
+Reisen, vot iss your name?' undt you headt udt. Undt te minudt you
+shpeak, udt choost come to me like a flash o' lightenin'--'Udt iss
+Misses Richlin'!'" The speaker's companion gave her such attention as
+one may give in a crowd to words that have been heard two or three times
+already within the hour.
+
+"Yes, Alice," she said, once or twice to the little one, who pulled
+softly at her skirt asking confidential questions. But the baker's widow
+went on with her story, enjoying it for its own sake.
+
+"You know, Mr. Richlin' he told me finfty dtimes, 'Misses Reisen, doant
+kif up te pissness!' Ovver I see te mutcheenery proke undt te foundtries
+all makin' guns undt kennons, undt I choost says, 'I kot plenteh
+moneh--I tdtink I kfit undt go home.' Ovver I sayss to de Doctor, 'Dte
+oneh dting--vot Mr. Richlin' ko-in to tdo?' Undt Dr. Tseweer he sayss,
+'How menneh pa'ls flour you kot shtowed away?' Undt I sayss, 'Tsoo
+hundut finfty.' Undt he sayss, 'Misses Reisen, Mr. Richlin' done made
+you rich; you choost kif um dtat flour; udt be wort' tweny-fife tollahs
+te pa'l, yet.' Undt sayss I, 'Doctor, you' right, undt I dtank you for
+te goodt idea; I kif Mr. Richlin' innahow one pa'l.' Undt I done-d it.
+Ovver I sayss, 'Doctor, dtat's not like a rigler sellery, yet.' Undt
+dten he sayss, 'You know, _mine_ pookkeeper he gone to te vor, undt I
+need'"--
+
+A crash of brazen music burst upon the ear and drowned the voice. The
+throng of the sidewalk pushed hard upon its edge.
+
+"Let me hold the little girl up," ventured the milder man, and set her
+gently upon his shoulder, as amidst a confusion of outcries and flutter
+of hats and handkerchiefs the broad, dense column came on with
+measured tread, its stars and stripes waving in the breeze and its
+backward-slanting thicket of bayoneted arms glittering in the morning
+sun. All at once there arose from the great column, in harmony with the
+pealing music, the hoarse roar of the soldiers' own voices singing in
+time to the rhythm of their tread. And a thrill runs through the people,
+and they answer with mad huzzas and frantic wavings and smiles, half of
+wild ardor and half of wild pain; and the keen-eyed man here by Mary
+lets the tears roll down his cheeks unhindered as he swings his hat and
+cries "Hurrah! hurrah!" while on tramps the mighty column, singing from
+its thousand thirsty throats the song of John Brown's Body.
+
+Yea, so, soldiers of the Union,--though that little mother there
+weeps but does not wave, as the sharp-eyed man notes well through his
+tears,--yet even so, yea, all the more, go--"go marching on," saviors of
+the Union; your cause is just. Lo, now, since nigh twenty-five years
+have passed, we of the South can say it!
+
+ "And yet--and yet, we cannot forget"--
+
+and we would not.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LII.
+
+A PASS THROUGH THE LINES.
+
+
+About the middle of September following the date of the foregoing
+incident, there occurred in a farmhouse head-quarters on the Indiana
+shore of the Ohio river the following conversation:--
+
+"You say you wish me to give you a pass through the lines, ma'am. Why do
+you wish to go through?"
+
+"I want to join my husband in New Orleans."
+
+"Why, ma'am, you'd much better let New Orleans come through the lines.
+We shall have possession of it, most likely, within a month." The
+speaker smiled very pleasantly, for very pleasant and sweet was the
+young face before him, despite its lines of mental distress, and very
+soft and melodious the voice that proceeded from it.
+
+"Do you think so?" replied the applicant, with an unhopeful smile. "My
+friends have been keeping me at home for months on that idea, but the
+fact seems as far off now as ever. I should go straight through without
+stopping, if I had a pass."
+
+"Ho!" exclaimed the man, softly, with pitying amusement. "Certainly, I
+understand you would try to do so. But, my dear madam, you would find
+yourself very much mistaken. Suppose, now, we should let you through our
+lines. You'd be between two fires. You'd still have to get into the
+rebel lines. You don't know what you're undertaking."
+
+She smiled wistfully.
+
+"I'm undertaking to get to my husband."
+
+"Yes, yes," said the officer, pulling his handkerchief from between two
+brass buttons of his double-breasted coat and wiping his brow. She did
+not notice that he made this motion purely as a cover for the searching
+glance which he suddenly gave her from head to foot. "Yes," he
+continued, "but you don't know what it is, ma'am. After you get through
+the _other_ lines, what are you going to do _then_? There's a perfect
+reign of terror over there. I wouldn't let a lady relative of mine take
+such risks for thousands of dollars. I don't think your husband ought to
+thank me for giving you a pass. You say he's a Union man; why don't he
+come to you?"
+
+Tears leaped into the applicant's eyes.
+
+"He's become too sick to travel," she said.
+
+"Lately?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"I thought you said you hadn't heard from him for months." The officer
+looked at her with narrowed eyes.
+
+"I said I hadn't had a letter from him." The speaker blushed to find her
+veracity on trial. She bit her lip, and added, with perceptible tremor:
+"I got one lately from his physician."
+
+"How did you get it?"
+
+"What, sir?"
+
+"Now, madam, you know what I asked you, don't you?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Yes. Well, I'd like you to answer."
+
+"I found it, three mornings ago, under the front door of the house where
+I live with my mother and my little girl."
+
+"Who put it there?"
+
+"I do not know."
+
+The officer looked her steadily in the eyes. They were blue. His own
+dropped.
+
+"You ought to have brought that letter with you, ma'am," he said,
+looking up again; "don't you see how valuable it would be to you?"
+
+"I did bring it," she replied, with alacrity, rummaged a moment in a
+skirt-pocket, and brought it out. The officer received it and read the
+superscription audibly.
+
+"'Mrs. John H----.' Are you Mrs. John H----?"
+
+"That is not the envelope it was in," she replied. "It was not directed
+at all. I put it into that envelope merely to preserve it. That's the
+envelope of a different letter,--a letter from my mother."
+
+"Are you Mrs. John H----?" asked her questioner again. She had turned
+partly aside and was looking across the apartment and out through a
+window. He spoke once more. "Is this your name?"
+
+"What, sir?"
+
+He smiled cynically.
+
+"Please don't do that again, madam."
+
+She blushed down into the collar of her dress.
+
+"That is my name, sir."
+
+The man put the missive to his nose, snuffed it softly, and looked
+amused, yet displeased.
+
+"Mrs. H----, did you notice just a faint smell of--garlic--about
+this--?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Well, I have no less than three or four others with the very same
+odor." He smiled on. "And so, no doubt, we are both of the same private
+opinion that the bearer of this letter was--who, Mrs. H----?"
+
+Mrs. H---- frequently by turns raised her eyes honestly to her
+questioner's and dropped them to where, in her lap, the fingers of one
+hand fumbled with a lone wedding-ring on the other, while she said:--
+
+"Do you think, sir, if you were in my place you would like to give the
+name of the person you thought had risked his life to bring you word
+that your husband--your wife--was very ill, and needed your presence?
+Would you like to do it?"
+
+The officer looked severe.
+
+"Don't you know perfectly well that wasn't his principal errand inside
+our lines?"
+
+"No."
+
+"No!" echoed the man; "and you don't know perfectly well, I suppose,
+that he's been shot at along this line times enough to have turned his
+hair white? Or that he crossed the river for the third time last night,
+loaded down with musket-caps for the rebels?"
+
+"No."
+
+"But you must admit you know a certain person, wherever he may be, or
+whatever he may be doing, named Raphael Ristofalo?"
+
+"I do not."
+
+The officer smiled again.
+
+"Yes, I see. That is to say, you don't _admit_ it. And you don't deny
+it."
+
+The reply came more slowly:--
+
+"I do not."
+
+"Well, now, Mrs. H----, I've given you a pretty long audience. I'll tell
+you what I'll do. But do you please tell me, first, you affirm on your
+word of honor that your name is really Mrs. H----; that you are no spy,
+and have had no voluntary communication with any, and that you are a
+true and sincere Union woman."
+
+"I affirm it all."
+
+"Well, then, come in to-morrow at this hour, and if I am going to give
+you a pass at all I'll give it to you then. Here, here's your letter."
+
+As she received the missive she lifted her eyes, suffused, but full of
+hope, to his, and said:--
+
+"God grant you the heart to do it, sir, and bless you."
+
+The man laughed. Her eyes fell, she blushed, and, saying not a word,
+turned toward the door and had reached the threshold when the officer
+called, with a certain ringing energy:--
+
+"Mrs. Richling!"
+
+She wheeled as if he had struck her, and answered:--
+
+"What, sir!" Then, turning as red as a rose, she said, "O sir, that was
+cruel!" covered her face with her hands, and sobbed aloud. It was only
+as she was in the midst of these last words that she recognized in the
+officer before her the sharper-visaged of those two men who had stood by
+her in Broadway.
+
+"Step back here, Mrs. Richling."
+
+She came.
+
+"Well, madam! I should like to know what we are coming to, when a lady
+like you--a palpable, undoubted lady--can stoop to such deceptions!"
+
+"Sir," said Mary, looking at him steadfastly and then shaking her head
+in solemn asseveration, "all that I have said to you is the truth."
+
+"Then will you explain how it is that you go by one name in one part of
+the country, and by another in another part?"
+
+"No," she said. It was very hard to speak. The twitching of her mouth
+would hardly let her form a word. "No--no--I can't--tell you."
+
+"Very well, ma'am. If you don't start back to Milwaukee by the next
+train, and stay there, I shall"--
+
+"Oh, don't say that, sir! I must go to my husband! Indeed, sir, it's
+nothing but a foolish mistake, made years ago, that's never harmed any
+one but us. I'll take all the blame of it if you'll only give me a
+pass!"
+
+The officer motioned her to be silent.
+
+"You'll have to do as I tell you, ma'am. If not, I shall know it; you
+will be arrested, and I shall give you a sort of pass that you'd be a
+long time asking for." He looked at the face mutely confronting him and
+felt himself relenting. "I dare say this does sound very cruel to you,
+ma'am; but remember, this is a cruel war. I don't judge you. If I did,
+and could harden my heart as I ought to, I'd have you arrested now. But,
+I say, you'd better take my advice. Good-morning! _No, ma'am, I can't
+hear you!_ So, now, that's enough! Good-morning, madam!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIII.
+
+TRY AGAIN.
+
+
+One afternoon in the month of February, 1862, a locomotive engine and a
+single weather-beaten passenger-coach, moving southward at a very
+moderate speed through the middle of Kentucky, stopped in response to a
+handkerchief signal at the southern end of a deep, rocky valley, and, in
+a patch of gray, snow-flecked woods, took on board Mary Richling,
+dressed in deep mourning, and her little Alice. The three or four
+passengers already in the coach saw no sign of human life through the
+closed panes save the roof of one small cabin that sent up its slender
+thread of blue smoke at one corner of a little badly cleared field a
+quarter of a mile away on a huge hill-side. As the scant train crawled
+off again into a deep, ice-hung defile, it passed the silent figure of a
+man in butternut homespun, spattered with dry mud, standing close beside
+the track on a heap of cross-tie cinders and fire-bent railroad iron, a
+gray goat-beard under his chin, and a quilted homespun hat on his head.
+From beneath the limp brim of this covering, as the train moved by him,
+a tender, silly smile beamed upward toward one hastily raised window,
+whence the smile of Mary and the grave, unemotional gaze of the child
+met it for a moment before the train swung round a curve in the narrow
+way, and quickened speed on down grade.
+
+The conductor came and collected her fare. He smelt of tobacco above the
+smell of the coach in general.
+
+"Do you charge anything for the little girl?"
+
+The purse in which the inquirer's finger and thumb tarried was limber
+and flat.
+
+"No, ma'am."
+
+It was not the customary official negative; a tawdry benevolence of face
+went with it, as if to say he did not charge because he would not; and
+when Mary returned a faint beam of appreciation he went out upon the
+rear platform and wiped the plenteous dust from his shoulders and cap.
+Then he returned to his seat at the stove and renewed his conversation
+with a lieutenant in hard-used blue, who said "the rebel lines ought
+never to have been allowed to fall back to Nashville," and who knew "how
+Grant could have taken Fort Donelson a week ago if he had had any
+sense."
+
+There were but few persons, as we have said, in the car. A rough man in
+one corner had a little captive, a tiny, dappled fawn, tied by a short,
+rough bit of rope to the foot of the car-seat. When the conductor by and
+by lifted the little Alice up from the cushion, where she sat with her
+bootees straight in front of her at its edge, and carried her,
+speechless and drawn together like a kitten, and stood her beside the
+captive orphan, she simply turned about and pattered back to her
+mother's side.
+
+"I don't believe she even saw it," said the conductor, standing again by
+Mary.
+
+"Yes, she did," replied Mary, smiling upon the child's head as she
+smoothed its golden curls; "she'll talk about it to-morrow."
+
+The conductor lingered a moment, wanting to put his own hand there, but
+did not venture, perhaps because of the person sitting on the next seat
+behind, who looked at him rather steadily until he began to move away.
+
+This was a man of slender, commanding figure and advanced years. Beside
+him, next the window, sat a decidedly aristocratic woman, evidently his
+wife. She, too, was of fine stature, and so, without leaning forward
+from the back of her seat, or unfolding her arms, she could make kind
+eyes to Alice, as the child with growing frequency stole glances, at
+first over her own little shoulder, and later over her mother's, facing
+backward and kneeling on the cushion. At length a cooky passed between
+them in dead silence, and the child turned and gazed mutely in her
+mother's face, with the cooky just in sight.
+
+"It can't hurt her," said the lady, in a sweet voice, to Mary, leaning
+forward with her hands in her lap. By the time the sun began to set in
+a cool, golden haze across some wide stretches of rolling fallow, a
+conversation had sprung up, and the child was in the lady's lap, her
+little hand against the silken bosom, playing with a costly watch.
+
+The talk began about the care of Alice, passed to the diet, and then
+to the government, of children, all in a light way, a similarity of
+convictions pleasing the two ladies more and more as they found it run
+further and further. Both talked, but the strange lady sustained the
+conversation, although it was plainly both a pastime and a comfort to
+Mary. Whenever it threatened to flag the handsome stranger persisted in
+reviving it.
+
+Her husband only listened and smiled, and with one finger made every now
+and then a soft, slow pass at Alice, who each time shrank as slowly and
+softly back into his wife's fine arm. Presently, however, Mary raised
+her eyebrows a little and smiled, to see her sitting quietly in the
+gentleman's lap; and as she turned away and rested her elbow on the
+window-sill and her cheek on her hand in a manner that betrayed
+weariness, and looked out upon the ever-turning landscape, he murmured
+to his wife, "I haven't a doubt in my mind," and nodded significantly at
+the preoccupied little shape in his arms. His manner with the child was
+imperceptibly adroit, and very soon her prattle began to be heard. Mary
+was just turning to offer a gentle check to this rising volubility, when
+up jumped the little one to a standing posture on the gentleman's knee,
+and, all unsolicited and with silent clapping of hands, plumped out her
+full name:--
+
+"Alice Sevier Witchlin'!"
+
+The husband threw a quick glance toward his wife; but she avoided it
+and called Mary's attention to the sunset as seen through the opposite
+windows. Mary looked and responded with expressions of admiration, but
+was visibly disquieted, and the next moment called her child to her.
+
+"My little girl mustn't talk so loud and fast in the cars," she said,
+with tender pleasantness, standing her upon the seat and brushing back
+the stray golden waves from the baby's temples, and the brown ones, so
+like them, from her own. She turned a look of amused apology to the
+gentleman, and added, "She gets almost boisterous sometimes," then gave
+her regard once more to her offspring, seating the little one beside her
+as in the beginning, and answering her musical small questions with
+composing yeas and nays.
+
+"I suppose," she said, after a pause and a look out through the
+window,--"I suppose we ought soon to be reaching M---- station,
+now, should we not?"
+
+"What, in Tennessee? Oh! no," replied the gentleman. "In ordinary times
+we should; but at this slow rate we cannot nearly do it. We're on a
+road, you see, that was destroyed by the retreating army and made over
+by the Union forces. Besides, there are three trains of troops ahead of
+us, that must stop and unload between here and there, and keep you
+waiting, there's no telling how long."
+
+"Then I'll get there in the night!" exclaimed Mary.
+
+"Yes, probably after midnight."
+
+"Oh, I shouldn't have _thought_ of coming before to-morrow if I had
+known that!" In the extremity of her dismay she rose half from her seat
+and looked around with alarm.
+
+"Have you no friends expecting to receive you there?" asked the lady.
+
+"Not a soul! And the conductor says there's no lodging-place nearer than
+three miles"--
+
+"And that's gone now," said the gentleman.
+
+"You'll have to get out at the same station with us," said the lady, her
+manner kindness itself and at the same time absolute.
+
+"I think you have claims on us, anyhow, that we'd like to pay."
+
+"Oh! impossible," said Mary. "You're certainly mistaking me."
+
+"I think you have," insisted the lady; "that is, if your name is
+Richling."
+
+Mary blushed.
+
+"I don't think you know my husband," she said; "he lives a long way from
+here."
+
+"In New Orleans?" asked the gentleman.
+
+"Yes, sir," said Mary, boldly. She couldn't fear such good faces.
+
+"His first name is John, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes, sir. Do you really know John, sir?" The lines of pleasure and
+distress mingled strangely in Mary's face. The gentleman smiled. He
+tapped little Alice's head with the tips of his fingers.
+
+"I used to hold him on my knee when he was no bigger than this little
+image of him here."
+
+The tears leaped into Mary's eyes.
+
+"Mr. Thornton," she whispered, huskily, and could say no more.
+
+"You must come home with us," said the lady, touching her tenderly on
+the shoulder. "It's a wonder of good fortune that we've met. Mr.
+Thornton has something to say to you,--a matter of business. He's the
+family's lawyer, you know."
+
+"I must get to my husband without delay," said Mary.
+
+"Get to your husband?" asked the lawyer, in astonishment.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Through the lines?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"I told him so," said the lady.
+
+"I don't know how to credit it," said he. "Why, my child, I don't think
+you can possibly know what you are attempting. Your friends ought never
+to have allowed you to conceive such a thing. You must let us dissuade
+you. It will not be taking too much liberty, will it? Has your husband
+never told you what good friends we were?"
+
+Mary nodded and tried to speak.
+
+"Often," said Mrs. Thornton to her husband, interpreting the
+half-articulated reply.
+
+They sat and talked in low tones, under the dismal lamp of the railroad
+coach, for two or three hours. Mr. Thornton came around and took the
+seat in front of Mary, and sat with one leg under him, facing back
+toward her. Mrs. Thornton sat beside her, and Alice slumbered on the
+seat behind, vacated by the lawyer and his wife.
+
+"You needn't tell me John's story," said the gentleman; "I know it. What
+I didn't know before, I got from a man with whom I corresponded in New
+Orleans."
+
+"Dr. Sevier?"
+
+"No, a man who got it from the Doctor."
+
+So they had Mary tell her own story.
+
+"I thought I should start just as soon as my mother's health would
+permit. John wouldn't have me start before that, and, after all, I don't
+see how I could have done it--rightly. But by the time she was well--or
+partly well--every one was in the greatest anxiety and doubt everywhere.
+You know how it was."
+
+"Yes," said Mrs. Thornton.
+
+"And everybody thinking everything would soon be settled," continued
+Mary.
+
+"Yes," said the sympathetic lady, and her husband touched her quietly,
+meaning for her not to interrupt.
+
+"We didn't think the Union _could_ be broken so easily," pursued Mary.
+"And then all at once it was unsafe and improper to travel alone. Still
+I went to New York, to take steamer around by sea. But the last steamer
+had sailed, and I had to go back home; for--the fact is,"--she
+smiled,--"my money was all gone. It was September before I could raise
+enough to start again; but one morning I got a letter from New Orleans,
+telling me that John was very ill, and enclosing money for me to travel
+with."
+
+She went on to tell the story of her efforts to get a pass on the bank
+of the Ohio river, and how she had gone home once more, knowing she was
+watched, not daring for a long time to stir abroad, and feeding on the
+frequent hope that New Orleans was soon to be taken by one or another of
+the many naval expeditions that from time to time were, or were said to
+be, sailing.
+
+"And then suddenly--my mother died."
+
+Mrs. Thornton gave a deep sigh.
+
+"And then," said Mary, with a sudden brightening, but in a low voice, "I
+determined to make one last effort. I sold everything in the world I had
+and took Alice and started. I've come very slowly, a little way at a
+time, feeling along, for I was resolved not to be turned back. I've been
+weeks getting this far, and the lines keep moving south ahead of me. But
+I haven't been turned back," she went on to say, with a smile, "and
+everybody, white and black, everywhere, has been just as kind as kind
+can be." Tears stopped her again.
+
+"Well, never mind, Mrs. Richling," said Mrs. Thornton; then turned to
+her husband, and asked, "May I tell her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, Mrs. Richling,--but do you wish to be called Mrs. Richling?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary, and "Certainly," said Mr. Thornton.
+
+"Well, Mrs. Richling, Mr. Thornton has some money for your husband. Not
+a great deal, but still--some. The younger of the two sisters died a few
+weeks ago. She was married, but she was rich in her own right. She left
+almost everything to her sister; but Mr. Thornton persuaded her to leave
+some money--well, two thousand--'tisn't much, but it's something, you
+know--to--ah to Mr. Richling. Husband has it now at home and will give
+it to you,--at the breakfast-table to-morrow morning; can't you, dear?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Yes, and we'll not try to persuade you to give up your idea of going to
+New Orleans. I know we couldn't do it. We'll watch our chance,--eh,
+husband?--and put you through the lines; and not only that, but give
+you letters to--why, dear," said the lady, turning to her partner in
+good works, "you can give Mrs. Richling a letter to Governor Blank; and
+another to General Um-hm, can't you? and--yes, and one to Judge Youknow.
+Oh, they will take you anywhere! But first you'll stop with us till you
+get well rested--a week or two, or as much longer as you will."
+
+Mary pressed the speaker's hand.
+
+"I can't stay."
+
+"Oh, you know you needn't have the least fear of seeing any of John's
+relatives. They don't live in this part of the State at all; and, even
+if they did, husband has no business with them just now, and being a
+Union man, you know"--
+
+"I want to see my husband," said Mary, not waiting to hear what Union
+sympathies had to do with the matter.
+
+"Yes," said the lady, in a suddenly subdued tone. "Well, we'll get you
+through just as quickly as we can." And soon they all began to put on
+wraps and gather their luggage. Mary went with them to their home, laid
+her tired head beside her child's in sleep, and late next morning rose
+to hear that Fort Donelson was taken, and the Southern forces were
+falling back. A day or two later came word that Columbus, on the
+Mississippi, had been evacuated. It was idle for a woman to try just
+then to perform the task she had set for herself. The Federal lines!
+
+"Why, my dear child, they're trying to find the Confederate lines and
+strike them. You can't lose anything--you may gain much--by remaining
+quiet here awhile. The Mississippi, I don't doubt, will soon be open
+from end to end."
+
+A fortnight seemed scarcely more than a day when it was past, and
+presently two of them had gone. One day comes Mr. Thornton, saying:--
+
+"My dear child, I cannot tell you how I have the news, but you may
+depend upon its correctness. New Orleans is to be attacked by the most
+powerful naval expedition that ever sailed under the United States flag.
+If the place is not in our hands by the first of April I will put you
+through both lines, if I have to go with you myself." When Mary made no
+answer, he added, "Your delays have all been unavoidable, my child!"
+
+"Oh, I don't know; I don't know!" exclaimed Mary, with sudden
+distraction; "it seems to me I _must_ be to blame, or I'd have been
+through long ago. I ought to have _run through_ the lines. I ought to
+have 'run the blockade.'"
+
+"My child," said the lawyer, "you're mad."
+
+"You'll see," replied Mary, almost in soliloquy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIV.
+
+"WHO GOES THERE?"
+
+
+The scene and incident now to be described are without date. As Mary
+recalled them, years afterward, they hung out against the memory a bold,
+clear picture, cast upon it as the magic lantern casts its tableaux upon
+the darkened canvas. She had lost the day of the month, the day of the
+week, all sense of location, and the points of the compass. The most
+that she knew was that she was somewhere near the meeting of the
+boundaries of three States. Either she was just within the southern
+bound of Tennessee, or the extreme north-eastern corner of Mississippi,
+or else the north-western corner of Alabama. She was aware, too, that
+she had crossed the Tennessee river; that the sun had risen on her left
+and had set on her right, and that by and by this beautiful day would
+fade and pass from this unknown land, and the fire-light and lamp-light
+draw around them the home-groups under the roof-trees, here where she
+was a homeless stranger, the same as in the home-lands where she had
+once loved and been beloved.
+
+She was seated in a small, light buggy drawn by one good horse. Beside
+her the reins were held by a rather tall man, of middle age, gray, dark,
+round-shouldered, and dressed in the loose blue flannel so much worn by
+followers of the Federal camp. Under the stiff brim of his soft-crowned
+black hat a pair of clear eyes gave a continuous playful twinkle.
+Between this person and Mary protruded, at the edge of the buggy-seat,
+two small bootees that have already had mention, and from his elbow to
+hers, and back to his, continually swayed drowsily the little golden
+head to which the bootees bore a certain close relation. The dust of the
+highway was on the buggy and the blue flannel and the bootees. It showed
+with special boldness on a black sun-bonnet that covered Mary's head,
+and that somehow lost all its homeliness whenever it rose sufficiently
+in front to show the face within. But the highway itself was not there;
+it had been left behind some hours earlier. The buggy was moving at a
+quiet jog along a "neighborhood road," with unploughed fields on the
+right and a darkling woods pasture on the left. By the feathery softness
+and paleness of the sweet-smelling foliage you might have guessed it was
+not far from the middle of April, one way or another; and, by certain
+allusions to Pittsburg Landing as a place of conspicuous note, you might
+have known that Shiloh had been fought. There was that feeling of
+desolation in the land that remains after armies have passed over, let
+them tread never so lightly.
+
+"D'you know what them rails is put that way fur?" asked the man. He
+pointed down with his buggy-whip just off the roadside, first on one
+hand and then on the other.
+
+"No," said Mary, turning the sun-bonnet's limp front toward the
+questioner and then to the disjointed fence on her nearer side; "that's
+what I've been wondering for days. They've been ordinary worm fences,
+haven't they?"
+
+"Jess so," responded the man, with his accustomed twinkle. "But I think
+I see you oncet or twicet lookin' at 'em and sort o' tryin' to make out
+how come they got into that shape." The long-reiterated W's of the
+rail-fence had been pulled apart into separate V's, and the two sides
+of each of these had been drawn narrowly together, so that what had been
+two parallel lines of fence, with the lane between, was now a long
+double row of wedge-shaped piles of rails, all pointing into the woods
+on the left.
+
+"How did it happen?" asked Mary, with a smile of curiosity.
+
+"Didn't happen at all, 'twas jess _done_ by live men, and in a powerful
+few minutes at that. Sort o' shows what we're approachin' unto, as it
+were, eh? Not but they's plenty behind us done the same way, all the way
+back into Kentuck', as you already done see; but this's been done sence
+the last rain, and it rained night afore last."
+
+"Still I'm not sure what it means," said Mary; "has there been fighting
+here?"
+
+"Go up head," said the man, with a facetious gesture. "See? The fight
+came through these here woods, here. 'Taint been much over twenty-four
+hours, I reckon, since every one o' them-ah sort o' shut-up-fan-shape
+sort o' fish-traps had a gray-jacket in it layin' flat down an' firin'
+through the rails, sort o' random-like, only not much so." His manner of
+speech seemed a sort of harlequin patchwork from the bad English of many
+sections, the outcome of a humorous and eclectic fondness for verbal
+deformities. But his lightness received a sudden check.
+
+"Heigh-h-h!" he gravely and softly exclaimed, gathering the reins
+closer, as the horse swerved and dashed ahead. Two or three buzzards
+started up from the roadside, with their horrid flapping and whiff of
+quills, and circled low overhead. "Heigh-h-h!" he continued soothingly.
+"Ho-o-o-o! somebody lost a good nag there,--a six-pound shot right
+through his head and neck. Whoever made that shot killed two birds with
+one stone, sho!" He was half risen from his seat, looking back. As he
+turned again, and sat down, the drooping black sun-bonnet quite
+concealed the face within. He looked at it a moment. "If you think you
+don't like the risks we can still turn back."
+
+"No," said the voice from out the sun-bonnet; "go on."
+
+"If we don't turn back now we can't turn back at all."
+
+"Go on," said Mary; "I can't turn back."
+
+"You're a good soldier," said the man, playfully again. "You're a better
+one than me, I reckon; I kin turn back frequently, as it were. I've done
+it 'many a time and oft,' as the felleh says."
+
+Mary looked up with feminine surprise. He made a pretence of silent
+laughter, that showed a hundred crows' feet in his twinkling eyes.
+
+"Oh, don't you fret; I'm not goin' to run the wrong way with you in
+charge. Didn't you hear me promise Mr. Thornton? Well, you see, I've got
+a sort o' bad memory, that kind o' won't let me forgit when I make a
+promise;--bothers me that way a heap sometimes." He smirked in a
+self-deprecating way, and pulled his hat-brim down in front. Presently
+he spoke again, looking straight ahead over the horse's ears:--
+
+"Now, that's the mischief about comin' with me--got to run both
+blockades at oncet. Now, if you'd been a good Secesh and could somehow
+or 'nother of got a pass through the Union lines you'd of been all gay.
+But bein' Union, the fu'ther you git along the wuss off you air, 'less-n
+I kin take you and carry you 'way 'long yonder to where you kin jess
+jump onto a south-bound Rebel railroad and light down amongst folks
+that'll never think o' you havin' run through the lines."
+
+"But you can't do that," said Mary, not in the form of a request. "You
+know you agreed with Mr. Thornton that you would simply"--
+
+"Put you down in a safe place," said the man, jocosely; "that's what it
+meant, and don't you get nervous"-- His face suddenly changed; he
+raised his whip and held it up for attention and silence, looking at
+Mary, and smiling while he listened. "Do you hear anything?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary, in a hushed tone. There were some old fields on the
+right-hand now, and a wood on the left. Just within the wood a
+turtle-dove was cooing.
+
+"I don't mean that," said the man, softly.
+
+"No," said Mary, "you mean this, away over here." She pointed across the
+fields, almost straight away in front.
+
+"'Taint so scandalous far 'awa-a-ay' as you talk like," murmured the
+man, jestingly; and just then a fresh breath of the evening breeze
+brought plainer and nearer the soft boom of a bass-drum.
+
+"Are they coming this way?" asked Mary.
+
+"No; they're sort o' dress-paradin' in camp, I reckon." He began to draw
+rein. "We turn off here, anyway," he said, and drove slowly, but point
+blank into the forest.
+
+"I don't see any road," said Mary. It was so dark in the wood that even
+her child, muffled in a shawl and asleep in her arms, was a dim shape.
+
+"Yes," was the reply; "we have to sort o' smell out the way here; but my
+smellers is good, at times, and pretty soon we'll strike a little sort
+o' somepnuther like a road, about a quarter from here."
+
+Pretty soon they did so. It started suddenly from the edge of an old
+field in the forest, and ran gradually down, winding among the trees,
+into a densely wooded bottom, where even Mary's short form often had to
+bend low to avoid the boughs of beech-trees and festoons of grape-vine.
+Under one beech the buggy stood still a moment. The man drew and opened
+a large clasp-knife and cut one of the long, tough withes. He handed it
+to Mary, as they started on again.
+
+"With compliments," he said, "and hoping you won't find no use for it."
+
+"What is it for?"
+
+"Why, you see, later on we'll be in the saddle; and if such a thing
+should jess accidentally happen to happen, which I hope it won't, to be
+sho', that I should happen to sort o' absent-mindedly yell out 'Go!'
+like as if a hornet had stabbed me, you jess come down with that switch,
+and make the critter under you run like a scared dog, as it were."
+
+"Must I?"
+
+"No, I don't say you _must_, but you'd better, I bet you. You needn't if
+you don't want to."
+
+Presently the dim path led them into a clear, rippling creek, and seemed
+to Mary to end; but when the buggy wheels had crunched softly along down
+stream over some fifty or sixty yards of gravelly shallow, the road
+showed itself faintly again on the other bank, and the horse, with a
+plunge or two and a scramble, jerked them safely over the top, and moved
+forward in the direction of the rising moon. They skirted a small field
+full of ghostly dead trees, where corn was beginning to make a show,
+turned its angle, and saw the path under their feet plain to view,
+smooth and hard.
+
+"See that?" said the man, in a tone of playful triumph, as the animal
+started off at a brisk trot, lifted his head and neighed. "'My day's
+work's done,' sezee; 'I done hoed my row.'" A responsive neigh came out
+of the darkness ahead. "That's the trick!" said the man. "Thanks, as the
+felleh says." He looked to Mary for her appreciation of his humor.
+
+"I suppose that means a good deal; does it?" asked she, with a smile.
+
+"Jess so! It means, first of all, fresh hosses. And then it means a
+house what aint been burnt by jayhawkers yit, and a man and woman
+a-waitin' in it, and some bacon and cornpone, and maybe a little coffee;
+and milk, anyhow, till you can't rest, and buttermilk to fare-you-well.
+Now, have you ever learned the trick o' jess sort o' qui'lin'[2] up,
+cloze an' all, dry so, and puttin' half a night's rest into an hour's
+sleep? 'Caze why, in one hour we must be in the saddle. No mo' buggy,
+and powerful few roads. Comes as nigh coonin' it as I reckon you ever
+'lowed you'd like to do, don't it?"
+
+ [2] Coiling.
+
+He smiled, pretending to hold back much laughter, and Mary smiled too.
+At mention of a woman she had removed her bonnet and was smoothing her
+hair with her hand.
+
+"I don't care," she said, "if only you'll bring us through."
+
+The man made a ludicrous gesture of self-abasement.
+
+"Not knowin', can't say, as the felleh says; but what I can tell you--I
+always start out to make a spoon or spoil a horn, and which one I'll do
+I seldom ever promise till it's done. But I have a sneakin' notion, as
+it were, that I'm the clean sand, and no discount, as Mr. Lincoln says,
+and I do my best. Angels can do no more, as the felleh says."
+
+He drew rein. "Whoa!" Mary saw a small log cabin, and a fire-light
+shining under the bottom of the door.
+
+"The woods seem to be on fire just over there in three or four places,
+are they not?" she asked, as she passed the sleeping Alice down to the
+man, who had got out of the buggy.
+
+"Them's the camps," said another man, who had come out of the house and
+was letting the horse out of the shafts.
+
+"If we was on the rise o' the hill yonder we could see the Confedick
+camps, couldn't we, Isaiah?" asked Mary's guide.
+
+"Easy," said that prophet. "I heer 'em to-day two, three times, plain,
+cheerin' at somethin'."
+
+ * * *
+
+About the middle of that night Mary Richling was sitting very still and
+upright on a large dark horse that stood champing his Mexican bit in the
+black shadow of a great oak. Alice rested before her, fast asleep
+against her bosom. Mary held by the bridle another horse, whose naked
+saddle-tree was empty. A few steps in front of her the light of the full
+moon shone almost straight down upon a narrow road that just there
+emerged from the shadow of woods on either side, and divided into a main
+right fork and a much smaller one that curved around to Mary's left. Off
+in the direction of the main fork the sky was all aglow with camp-fires.
+Only just here on the left there was a cool and grateful darkness.
+
+She lifted her head alertly. A twig crackled under a tread, and the next
+moment a man came out of the bushes at the left, and without a word took
+the bridle of the led horse from her fingers and vaulted into the
+saddle. The hand that rested a moment on the cantle as he rose grasped a
+"navy-six." He was dressed in dull homespun but he was the same who had
+been dressed in blue. He turned his horse and led the way down the
+lesser road.
+
+"If we'd of gone three hundred yards further," he whispered, falling
+back and smiling broadly, "we'd 'a' run into the pickets. I went nigh
+enough to see the videttes settin' on their hosses in the main road.
+This here aint no road; it just goes up to a nigger quarters. I've got
+one o' the niggers to show us the way."
+
+"Where is he?" whispered Mary; but, before her companion could answer, a
+tattered form moved from behind a bush a little in advance and started
+ahead in the path, walking and beckoning. Presently they turned into a
+clear, open forest and followed the long, rapid, swinging stride of the
+negro for nearly an hour. Then they halted on the bank of a deep, narrow
+stream. The negro made a motion for them to keep well to the right when
+they should enter the water. The white man softly lifted Alice to his
+arms, directed and assisted Mary to kneel in her saddle, with her skirts
+gathered carefully under her, and so they went down into the cold
+stream, the negro first, with arms outstretched above the flood; then
+Mary, and then the white man,--or, let us say plainly the spy,--with the
+unawakened child on his breast. And so they rose out of it on the
+farther side without a shoe or garment wet save the rags of their dark
+guide.
+
+Again they followed him, along a line of stake-and-rider fence, with the
+woods on one side and the bright moonlight flooding a field of young
+cotton on the other. Now they heard the distant baying of house-dogs,
+now the doleful call of the chuck-will's-widow; and once Mary's blood
+turned, for an instant, to ice, at the unearthly shriek of the hoot-owl
+just above her head. At length they found themselves in a dim, narrow
+road, and the negro stopped.
+
+"Dess keep dish yeh road fo' 'bout half mile an' you strak 'pon the
+broad, main road. Tek de right, an' you go whah yo' fancy tek you."
+
+"Good-by," whispered Mary.
+
+"Good-by, miss," said the negro, in the same low voice; "good-by, boss;
+don't you fo'git you promise tek me thoo to de Yankee' when you come
+back. I 'feered you gwine fo'git it, boss."
+
+The spy said he would not, and they left him. The half-mile was soon
+passed, though it turned out to be a mile and a half, and at length
+Mary's companion looked back, as they rode single file, with Mary in the
+rear, and said softly, "There's the road," pointing at its broad, pale
+line with his six-shooter.
+
+As they entered it and turned to the right, Mary, with Alice again
+in her arms, moved somewhat ahead of her companion, her indifferent
+horsemanship having compelled him to drop back to avoid a prickly bush.
+His horse was just quickening his pace to regain the lost position when
+a man sprang up from the ground on the farther side of the highway,
+snatched a carbine from the earth and cried, "Halt!"
+
+The dark, recumbent forms of six or eight others could be seen,
+enveloped in their blankets, lying about a few red coals. Mary turned a
+frightened look backward and met the eyes of her companion.
+
+"Move a little faster," said he, in a low, clear voice. As she promptly
+did so she heard him answer the challenge. His horse trotted softly
+after hers.
+
+"Don't stop us, my friend; we're taking a sick child to the doctor."
+
+"Halt, you hound!" the cry rang out; and as Mary glanced back three
+or four men were just leaping into the road. But she saw, also, her
+companion, his face suffused with an earnestness that was almost an
+agony, rise in his stirrups, with the stoop of his shoulders all gone,
+and wildly cry:--
+
+"Go!"
+
+She smote the horse and flew. Alice awoke and screamed.
+
+"Hush, my darling!" said the mother, laying on the withe; "mamma's here.
+Hush, darling!--mamma's here. Don't be frightened, darling baby! O God,
+spare my child!" and away she sped.
+
+The report of a carbine rang out and went rolling away in a thousand
+echoes through the wood. Two others followed in sharp succession, and
+there went close by Mary's ear the waspish whine of a minie-ball. At the
+same moment she recognized, once,--twice,--thrice,--just at her back
+where the hoofs of her companion's horse were clattering,--the tart
+rejoinders of his navy-six.
+
+"Go!" he cried again. "Lay low! lay low! cover the child!" But his words
+were needless. With head bowed forward and form crouched over the
+crying, clinging child, with slackened rein and fluttering dress, and
+sun-bonnet and loosened hair blown back upon her shoulders, with lips
+compressed and silent prayers, Mary was riding for life and liberty and
+her husband's bedside.
+
+"O mamma! mamma!" wailed the terrified little one.
+
+"Go on! Go on!" cried the voice behind; "they're saddling--up! Go! go!
+We're goin' to make it. We're goin' to _make_ it! Go-o-o!"
+
+Half an hour later they were again riding abreast, at a moderate gallop.
+Alice's cries had been quieted, but she still clung to her mother in a
+great tremor. Mary and her companion conversed earnestly in the subdued
+tone that had become their habit.
+
+"No, I don't think they followed us fur," said the spy. "Seem like
+they's jess some scouts, most likely a-comin' in to report, feelin'
+pooty safe and sort o' takin' it easy and careless; 'dreamin' the happy
+hours away,' as the felleh says. I reckon they sort o' believed my
+story, too, the little gal yelled so sort o' skilful. We kin slack up
+some more now; we want to get our critters lookin' cool and quiet ag'in
+as quick as we kin, befo' we meet up with somebody." They reined into a
+gentle trot. He drew his revolver, whose emptied chambers he had already
+refilled. "D'd you hear this little felleh sing, 'Listen to the
+mockin'-bird'?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary; "but I hope it didn't hit any of them."
+
+He made no reply.
+
+"Don't you?" she asked.
+
+He grinned.
+
+"D'you want a felleh to wish he was a bad shot?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary, smiling.
+
+"Well, seein' as you're along, I do. For they wouldn't give us up so
+easy if I'd a hit one. Oh,--mine was only sort o' complimentary
+shots,--much as to say, 'Same to you, gents,' as the felleh says."
+
+Mary gave him a pleasant glance by way of courtesy, but was busy calming
+the child. The man let his weapon into its holster under his homespun
+coat and lapsed into silence. He looked long and steadily at the small
+feminine figure of his companion. His eyes passed slowly from the knee
+thrown over the saddle's horn to the gentle forehead slightly bowed, as
+her face sank to meet the uplifted kisses of the trembling child, then
+over the crown and down the heavy, loosened tresses that hid the
+sun-bonnet hanging back from her throat by its strings and flowed on
+down to the saddle-bow. His admiring eyes, grave for once, had made the
+journey twice before he noticed that the child was trying to comfort the
+mother, and that the light of the sinking moon was glistening back from
+Mary's falling tears.
+
+"Better let me have the little one," he said, "and you sort o' fix up a
+little, befo' we happen to meet up with somebody, as I said. It's lucky
+we haven't done it already."
+
+A little coaxing prevailed with Alice, and the transfer was made. Mary
+turned away her wet eyes, smiling for shame of them, and began to coil
+her hair, her companion's eye following.
+
+"Oh, you aint got no business to be ashamed of a few tears. I knowed you
+was a good soldier, befo' ever we started; I see' it in yo' eye. Not as
+I want to be complimentin' of you jess now. 'I come not here to talk,'
+as they used to say in school. D'd you ever hear that piece?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary.
+
+"That's taken from Romans, aint it?"
+
+"No," said Mary again, with a broad smile.
+
+"I didn't know," said the man; "I aint no brag Bible scholar." He put on
+a look of droll modesty. "I used to could say the ten commandments of
+the decalogue, oncet, and I still tries to keep 'em, in ginerally.
+There's another burnt house. That's the third one we done passed inside
+a mile. Raiders was along here about two weeks back. Hear that rooster
+crowin'? When we pass the plantation whar he is and rise the next hill,
+we'll be in sight o' the little town whar we stop for refresh_ments_, as
+the railroad man says. You must begin to feel jess about everlastin'ly
+wore out, don't you?"
+
+"No," said Mary; but he made a movement of the head to indicate that he
+had his belief to the contrary.
+
+At an abrupt angle of the road Mary's heart leaped into her throat to
+find herself and her companion suddenly face to face with two horsemen
+in gray, journeying leisurely toward them on particularly good horses.
+One wore a slouched hat, the other a Federal officer's cap. They were
+the first Confederates she had ever seen eye to eye.
+
+"Ride on a little piece and stop," murmured the spy. The strangers
+lifted their hats respectfully as she passed them.
+
+"Gents," said the spy, "good-morning!" He threw a leg over the pommel of
+his saddle and the three men halted in a group. One of them copied the
+spy's attitude. They returned the greeting in kind.
+
+"What command do you belong to?" asked the lone stranger.
+
+"Simmons's battery," said one. "Whoa!"--to his horse.
+
+"Mississippi?" asked Mary's guardian.
+
+"Rackensack," said the man in the blue cap.
+
+"Arkansas," said the other in the same breath. "What is your command?"
+
+"Signal service," replied the spy. "Reckon I look mighty like a citizen
+jess about now, don't I?" He gave them his little laugh of
+self-depreciation and looked toward Mary, where she had halted and was
+letting her horse nip the new grass of the roadside.
+
+"See any troops along the way you come?" asked the man in the hat.
+
+"No; on'y a squad o' fellehs back yonder who was all unsaddled and fast
+asleep, and jumped up worse scared'n a drove o' wile hogs. We both sort
+o' got a little mad and jess swapped a few shots, you know, kind o' tit
+for tat, as it were. Enemy's loss unknown." He stooped more than ever in
+the shoulders, and laughed. The men were amused. "If you see 'em, I'd
+like you to mention me"-- He paused to exchange smiles again. "And
+tell 'em the next time they see a man hurryin' along with a lady and
+sick child to see the doctor, they better hold their fire till they sho
+he's on'y a citizen." He let his foot down into the stirrup again and
+they all smiled broadly. "Good-morning!" The two parties went their
+ways.
+
+"Jess as leave not of met up with them two buttermilk rangers," said the
+spy, once more at Mary's side; "but seein' as thah we was the oniest
+thing was to put on all the brass I had."
+
+From the top of the next hill the travellers descended into a village
+lying fast asleep, with the morning star blazing over it, the cocks
+calling to each other from their roosts, and here and there a light
+twinkling from a kitchen window, or a lazy axe-stroke smiting the
+logs at a wood-pile. In the middle of the village one lone old man,
+half-dressed, was lazily opening the little wooden "store" that
+monopolized its commerce. The travellers responded to his silent bow,
+rode on through the place, passed over and down another hill, met an
+aged negro, who passed on the roadside, lifting his forlorn hat and
+bowing low; and, as soon as they could be sure they had gone beyond his
+sight and hearing, turned abruptly into a dark wood on the left. Twice
+again they turned to the left, going very warily through the deep
+shadows of the forest, and so returned half around the village, seeing
+no one. Then they stopped and dismounted at a stable-door, on the
+outskirts of the place. The spy opened it with a key from his own
+pocket, went in and came out again with a great armful of hay, which he
+spread for the horses' feet to muffle their tread, led them into the
+stable, removed the hay again, and closed and locked the door.
+
+"Make yourself small," he whispered, "and walk fast." They passed by a
+garden path up to the back porch and door of a small unpainted cottage.
+He knocked, three soft, measured taps.
+
+"Day's breakin'," he whispered again, as he stood with Alice asleep in
+his arms, while somebody was heard stirring within.
+
+"Sam?" said a low, wary voice just within the unopened door.
+
+"Sister," softly responded the spy, and the door swung inward, and
+revealed a tall woman, with an austere but good face, that could just be
+made out by the dim light of a tallow candle shining from the next room.
+The travellers entered and the door was shut.
+
+"Well," said the spy, standing and smiling foolishly, and bending
+playfully in the shoulders, "well, Mrs. Richlin',"--he gave his hand a
+limp wave abroad and smirked,--"'In Dixie's land you take yo' stand.'
+This is it. You're in it!--Mrs. Richlin', my sister; sister, Mrs.
+Richlin'."
+
+"Pleased to know ye," said the woman, without the faintest ray of
+emotion. "Take a seat and sit down." She produced a chair bottomed with
+raw-hide.
+
+"Thank you," was all Mary could think of to reply as she accepted the
+seat, and "Thank you" again when the woman brought a glass of water. The
+spy laid Alice on a bed in sight of Mary in another chamber. He came
+back on tiptoe.
+
+"Now, the next thing is to git you furder south. Wust of it is that,
+seein' as you got sich a weakness fur tellin' the truth, we'll jess have
+to sort o' slide you along fum one Union man to another; sort o' hole
+fass what I give ye, as you used to say yourself, I reckon. But you've
+got one strong holt." His eye went to his sister's, and he started away
+without a word, and was presently heard making a fire, while the woman
+went about spreading a small table with cold meats and corn-bread, milk
+and butter. Her brother came back once more.
+
+"Yes," he said to Mary, "you've got one mighty good card, and that's it
+in yonder on the bed. 'Humph!' folks'll say; 'didn't come fur with that
+there baby, sho!'"
+
+"I wouldn't go far without her," said Mary, brightly.
+
+"_I_ say," responded the hostess, with her back turned, and said no
+more.
+
+"Sister," said the spy, "we'll want the buggy."
+
+"All right," responded the sister.
+
+"I'll go feed the hosses," said he, and went out. In a few minutes he
+returned. "Joe must give 'em a good rubbin' when he comes, sister," he
+said.
+
+"All right," replied the woman, and then turning to Mary, "Come."
+
+"What, ma'm?"
+
+"Eat." She touched the back of a chair. "Sam, bring the baby." She stood
+and waited on the table.
+
+Mary was still eating, when suddenly she rose up, saying:--
+
+"Why, where is Mr. ----, your brother?"
+
+"He's gone to take a sleep outside," said his sister. "It's too resky
+for him to sleep in a house."
+
+She faintly smiled, for the first time, at the end of this long speech.
+
+"But," said Mary, "oh, I haven't uttered a word of thanks. What will he
+think of me?"
+
+She sank into her chair again with an elbow on the table, and looked up
+at the tall standing figure on the other side, with a little laugh of
+mortification.
+
+"You kin thank God," replied the figure. "_He_ aint gone." Another ghost
+of a smile was seen for a moment on the grave face. "Sam aint thinkin'
+about that. You hurry and finish and lay down and sleep, and when you
+wake up he'll be back here ready, to take you along furder. That's a
+healthy little one. She wants some more buttermilk. Give it to her. If
+she don't drink it the pigs'll git it, as the ole woman says.... Now you
+better lay down on the bed in yonder and go to sleep. Jess sort o'
+loosen yo' cloze; don't take off noth'n' but dress and shoes. You
+needn't be afeard to sleep sound; I'm goin' to keep a lookout."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LV.
+
+DIXIE.
+
+
+In her sleep Mary dreamed over again the late rencontre. Again she heard
+the challenging outcry, and again was lashing her horse to his utmost
+speed; but this time her enemy seemed too fleet for her. He overtook--he
+laid his hand upon her. A scream was just at her lips, when she awoke
+with a wild start, to find the tall woman standing over her, and bidding
+her in a whisper rise with all stealth and dress with all speed.
+
+"Where's Alice?" asked Mary. "Where's my little girl?"
+
+"She's there. Never mind her yit, till you're dressed. Here; not them
+cloze; these here homespun things. Make haste, but don't get excited."
+
+"How long have I slept?" asked Mary, hurriedly obeying.
+
+"You couldn't 'a' more'n got to sleep. Sam oughtn't to have shot back at
+'em. They're after 'im, hot; four of 'em jess now passed through on the
+road, right here past my front gate."
+
+"What kept them back so long?" asked Mary, tremblingly attempting to
+button her dress in the back.
+
+"Let me do that," said the woman. "They couldn't come very fast; had to
+kind o' beat the bushes every hundred yards or so. If they'd of been
+more of 'em they'd a-come faster, 'cause they'd a-left one or two behind
+at each turn-out, and come along with the rest. There; now that there
+hat, there, on the table." As Mary took the hat the speaker stepped to a
+window and peeped into the early day. A suppressed exclamation escaped
+her. "O you poor boy!" she murmured. Mary sprang toward her, but the
+stronger woman hurried her away from the spot.
+
+"Come; take up the little one 'thout wakin' her. Three more of 'em's
+a-passin'. The little young feller in the middle reelin' and swayin' in
+his saddle, and t'others givin' him water from his canteen."
+
+"Wounded?" asked Mary, with a terrified look, bringing the sleeping
+child.
+
+"Yes, the last wound he'll ever git, I reckon. Jess take the baby, so.
+Sam's already took her cloze. He's waitin' out in the woods here behind
+the house. He's got the critters down in the hollow. Now, here! This
+here bundle's a ridin'-skirt. It's not mournin', but you mustn't mind.
+It's mighty green and cottony-lookin', but--anyhow, you jess put it on
+when you git into the woods. Now it's good sun-up outside. The way you
+must do--you jess keep on the lef' side o' me, close, so as when I jess
+santer out e-easy todes the back gate you'll be hid from all the other
+houses. Then when we git to the back gate I'll kind o' stand like I was
+lookin' into the pig-pen, and you jess slide away on a line with me into
+the woods, and there'll be Sam. No, no; take your hat off and sort o'
+hide it. Now; you ready?"
+
+Mary threw her arms around the woman's neck and kissed her passionately.
+
+"Oh, don't stop for that!" said the woman, smiling with an awkward
+diffidence. "Come!"
+
+ * * *
+
+"What is the day of the month?" asked Mary of the spy.
+
+They had been riding briskly along a mere cattle-path in the woods for
+half an hour, and had just struck into an old, unused road that promised
+to lead them presently into and through some fields of cotton. Alice,
+slumbering heavily, had been, little by little, dressed, and was now in
+the man's arms. As Mary spoke they slackened pace to a quiet trot, and
+crossed a broad highway nearly at right angles.
+
+"That would 'a' been our road with the buggy," said the man, "if we
+could of took things easy." They were riding almost straight away from
+the sun. His dress had been changed again, and in a suit of new, dark
+brown homespun wool, over a pink calico shirt and white cuffs and
+collar, he presented the best possible picture of spruce gentility that
+the times would justify. "'What day of the month,' did you ask? _I_'ll
+never tell you, but I know it's Friday."
+
+"Then it's the eighteenth," said Mary.
+
+They met an old negro driving three yoke of oxen attached to a single
+empty cart.
+
+"Uncle," said the spy, "I don't reckon the boss will mind our sort o'
+ridin' straight thoo his grove, will he?"
+
+"Not 'tall, boss; on'y dess be so kyine an' shet de gates behine you,
+sah."
+
+They passed those gates and many another, shutting them faithfully, and
+journeying on through miles of fragrant lane and fields of young cotton
+and corn, and stretches of wood where the squirrel scampered before them
+and reaches of fallow grounds still wet with dew, and patches of sedge,
+and old fields grown up with thickets of young trees; now pushing their
+horses to a rapid gallop, where they were confident of escaping notice,
+and now ambling leisurely, where the eyes of men afield, or of women at
+home, followed them with rustic scrutiny; or some straggling
+Confederate soldier on foot or in the saddle met them in the way.
+
+"How far must we go before we can stop?" asked Mary.
+
+"Jess as far's the critters'll take us without showin' distress."
+
+"South is out that way, isn't it?" she asked again, pointing off to the
+left.
+
+"Look here," said the spy, with a look that was humorous, but not only
+humorous.
+
+"What?"
+
+"Two or three times last night, and now ag'in, you gimme a sort o'
+sneakin' notion you don't trust me," said he.
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed she, "I do! Only I'm so anxious to be going south."
+
+"Jess so," said the man. "Well, we're goin' sort o' due west right now.
+You see we dassent take this railroad anywheres about here,"--they were
+even then crossing the track of the Mobile and Ohio Railway--"because
+that's jess where they _sho_ to be on the lookout fur us. And I can't
+take you straight south on the dirt roads, because I don't know the
+country down that way. But this way I know it like your hand knows the
+way to your mouth, as the felleh says. Learned it most all sence the war
+broke out, too. And so the whole thing is we got to jess keep straight
+across the country here till we strike the Mississippi Central."
+
+"What time will that be?"
+
+"Time! You don't mean time o' day, do you?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said Mary, smiling.
+
+"Why, we'll be lucky to make it in two whole days. Won't we, Alice!" The
+child had waked, and was staring into her mother's face. Mary caressed
+her. The spy looked at them silently. The mother looked up, as if to
+speak, but was silent.
+
+"Hello!" said the man, softly; for a tear shone through her smile.
+Whereat she laughed.
+
+"I ought to be ashamed to be so unreasonable," she said.
+
+"Well, now, I'd like to contradict you for once," responds the spy; "but
+the fact is, how kin I, when Noo Orleens is jest about south-west frum
+here, anyhow?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary, pleasantly, "it's between south and south-west."
+
+The spy made a gesture of mock amazement.
+
+"Well, you air partickly what you say. I never hear o' but one party
+that was more partickly than you. I reckon you never hear' tell o' him,
+did you?"
+
+"Who was he?" asked Mary.
+
+"Well, I never got his name, nor his habitation, as the felleh says; but
+he was so conscientious that when a highwayman attackted him onct, he
+wouldn't holla murder nor he wouldn't holla thief, 'cause he wasn't
+certain whether the highwayman wanted to kill him or rob him. He was
+something like George Washington, who couldn't tell a lie. Did you ever
+hear that story about George Washington?"
+
+"About his chopping the cherry-tree with his hatchet?" asked Mary.
+
+"Oh, I see you done heard the story!" said the spy, and left it untold;
+but whether he was making game of his auditor or not she did not know,
+and never found out. But on they went, by many a home; through miles of
+growing crops, and now through miles of lofty pine forests, and by
+log-cabins and unpainted cottages, from within whose open doors came
+often the loud feline growl of the spinning-wheel. So on and on,
+Mary spending the first night in a lone forest cabin of pine poles,
+whose master, a Confederate deserter, fed his ague-shaken wife and
+cotton-headed children oftener with the spoils of his rifle than with
+the products of the field. The spy and the deserter lay down together,
+and together rose again with the dawn, in a deep thicket, a few hundred
+yards away.
+
+The travellers had almost reached the end of this toilsome horseback
+journey, when rains set in, and, for forty-eight hours more, swollen
+floods and broken bridges held them back, though within hearing of the
+locomotive's whistle.
+
+But at length, one morning, Mary stepped aboard the train that had not
+long before started south from the town of Holly Springs, Mississippi,
+assisted with decorous alacrity by the conductor, and followed by the
+station-agent with Alice in his arms, and by the telegraph-operator
+with a home-made satchel or two of luggage and luncheon. It was
+disgusting,--to two thin, tough-necked women, who climbed aboard,
+unassisted, at the other end of the same coach.
+
+"You kin just bet she's a widder, and them fellers knows it," said one
+to the other, taking a seat and spitting expertly through the window.
+
+"If she aint," responded the other, putting a peeled snuff-stick into
+her cheek, "then her husband's got the brass buttons, and they knows
+that. Look at 'er a-smi-i-ilin'!"
+
+"What you reckon makes her look so wore out?" asked the first. And the
+other replied promptly, with unbounded loathing, "Dayncin'," and sent
+her emphasis out of the window in liquid form without disturbing her
+intervening companion.
+
+During the delay caused by the rain Mary had found time to refit her
+borrowed costume. Her dress was a stout, close-fitting homespun of mixed
+cotton and wool, woven in a neat plaid of walnut-brown, oak-red, and the
+pale olive dye of the hickory. Her hat was a simple round thing of woven
+pine straw, with a slightly drooping brim, its native brown gloss
+undisturbed, and the low crown wrapped about with a wreath of wild
+grasses plaited together with a bit of yellow cord. Alice wore a
+much-washed pink calico frock and a hood of the same stuff.
+
+"Some officer's wife," said two very sweet and lady-like persons, of
+unequal age and equal good taste in dress, as their eyes took an
+inventory of her apparel. They wore bonnets that were quite handsome,
+and had real false flowers and silk ribbons on them.
+
+"Yes, she's been to camp somewhere to see him."
+
+"Beautiful child she's got," said one, as Alice began softly to smite
+her mother's shoulder for private attention, and to whisper gravely as
+Mary bent down.
+
+Two or three soldiers took their feet off the seats, and one of them, at
+the amiably murmured request of the conductor, put his shoes on.
+
+"The car in front is your car," said the conductor to another man, in
+especially dirty gray uniform.
+
+"You kin hev it," said the soldier, throwing his palm open with an air
+of happy extravagance, and a group of gray-headed "citizens," just
+behind, exploded a loud country laugh.
+
+"D' I onderstaynd you to lafe at me, saw?" drawled the soldier, turning
+back with a pretence of heavy gloom on his uncombed brow.
+
+"Laughin' at yo' friend yondeh," said one of the citizens, grinning and
+waving his hand after the departing conductor.
+
+"'Caze if you lafe at me again, saw,"--the frown deepened,--"I'll thess
+go 'ight straight out iss caw."[3]
+
+ [3] Out of this car.
+
+The laugh that followed this dreadful threat was loud and general, the
+victims laughing loudest of all, and the soldier smiling about benignly,
+and slowly scratching his elbows. Even the two ladies smiled. Alice's
+face remained impassive. She looked twice into her mother's to see if
+there was no smile there. But the mother smiled at her, took off her
+hood and smoothed back the fine gold, then put the hood on again, and
+tied its strings under the upstretched chin.
+
+Presently Alice pulled softly at the hollow of her mother's elbow.
+
+"Mamma--mamma!" she whispered. Mary bowed her ear. The child gazed
+solemnly across the car at another stranger, then pulled the mother's
+arm again, "That man over there--winked at me."
+
+And thereupon another man, sitting sidewise on the seat in front, and
+looking back at Alice, tittered softly, and said to Mary, with a raw
+drawl:--
+
+"She's a-beginnin' young."
+
+"She means some one on the other side," said Mary, quite pleasantly, and
+the man had sense enough to hush.
+
+The jest and the laugh ran to and fro everywhere. It seemed very strange
+to Mary to find it so. There were two or three convalescent wounded men
+in the car, going home on leave, and they appeared never to weary of the
+threadbare joke of calling their wounds "furloughs." There was one
+little slip of a fellow--he could hardly have been seventeen--wounded in
+the hand, whom they kept teazed to the point of exasperation by urging
+him to confess that he had shot himself for a furlough, and of whom
+they said, later, when he had got off at a flag station, that he was the
+bravest soldier in his company. No one on the train seemed to feel that
+he had got all that was coming to him until the conductor had exchanged
+a jest with him. The land laughed. On the right hand and on the left it
+dimpled and wrinkled in gentle depressions and ridges, and rolled away
+in fields of young corn and cotton. The train skipped and clattered
+along at a happy-go-lucky, twelve-miles-an-hour gait, over trestles
+and stock-pits, through flowery cuts and along slender, rain-washed
+embankments where dewberries were ripening, and whence cattle ran down
+and galloped off across the meadows on this side and that, tails up and
+heads down, throwing their horns about, making light of the screaming
+destruction, in their dumb way, as the people made light of the war. At
+stations where the train stopped--and it stopped on the faintest
+excuse--a long line of heads and gray shoulders was thrust out of the
+windows of the soldiers' car, in front, with all manner of masculine
+head-coverings, even bloody handkerchiefs; and woe to the negro or
+negress or "citizen" who, by any conspicuous demerit or excellence of
+dress, form, stature, speech, or bearing, drew the fire of that line! No
+human power of face or tongue could stand the incessant volley of stale
+quips and mouldy jokes, affirmative, interrogative, and exclamatory,
+that fell about their victim.
+
+At one spot, in a lovely natural grove, where the air was spiced with
+the gentle pungency of the young hickory foliage, the train paused a
+moment to let off a man in fine gray cloth, whose yellow stripes and one
+golden star on the coat-collar indicated a major of cavalry. It seemed
+as though pandemonium had opened. Mules braying, negroes yodling, axes
+ringing, teamsters singing, men shouting and howling, and all at
+nothing; mess-fires smoking all about in the same hap-hazard, but
+roomy, disorder in which the trees of the grove had grown; the railroad
+side lined with a motley crowd of jolly fellows in spurs, and the
+atmosphere between them and the line of heads in the car-windows murky
+with the interchange of compliments that flew back and forth from the
+"web-foots"[4] to the "critter company," and from the "critter company"
+to the "web-foots." As the train moved off, "I say, boys," drawled a
+lank, coatless giant on the roadside, with but one suspender and one
+spur, "tha-at's right! Gen'l Beerygyard told you to strike fo' yo'
+homes, an' I see you' a-doin' it ez fass as you kin git thah." And the
+"citizens" in the rear car-windows giggled even at that; while the
+"web-foots" he-hawed their derision, and the train went on, as one might
+say, with its hands in its pockets, whooping and whistling over the
+fields--after the cows; for the day was declining.
+
+ [4] Infantry.
+
+Mary was awed. As she had been forewarned to do, she tried not to seem
+unaccustomed to, or out of harmony with, all this exuberance. But there
+was something so brave in it, coming from a people who were playing a
+losing game with their lives and fortunes for their stakes; something so
+gallant in it, laughing and gibing in the sight of blood, and smell of
+fire, and shortness of food and raiment, that she feared she had
+betrayed a stranger's wonder and admiration every time the train
+stopped, and the idlers of the station platform lingered about her
+window and silently paid their ungraceful but complimentary tribute of
+simulated casual glances.
+
+For, with all this jest, it was very plain there was but little joy. It
+was not gladness; it was bravery. It was the humor of an invincible
+spirit--the gayety of defiance. She could easily see the grim
+earnestness beneath the jocund temper, and beneath the unrepining smile
+the privation and the apprehension. What joy there was, was a martial
+joy. The people were confident of victory at last,--a victorious end,
+whatever might lie between, and of even what lay between they would
+confess no fear. Richmond was safe, Memphis safer, New Orleans safest.
+Yea, notwithstanding Porter and Farragut were pelting away at Forts
+Jackson and St. Philip. Indeed, if the rumor be true, if Farragut's
+ships had passed those forts, leaving Porter behind, then the Yankee
+sea-serpent was cut in two, and there was an end of him in that
+direction. Ha! ha!
+
+"Is to-day the twenty-sixth?" asked Mary, at last, of one of the ladies
+in real ribbons, leaning over toward her.
+
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+It was the younger one who replied. As she did so she came over and sat
+by Mary.
+
+"I judge, from what I heard your little girl asking you, that you are
+going beyond Jackson."
+
+"I'm going to New Orleans."
+
+"Do you live there?" The lady's interest seemed genuine and kind.
+
+"Yes. I am going to join my husband there."
+
+Mary saw by the reflection in the lady's face that a sudden gladness
+must have overspread her own.
+
+"He'll be mighty glad, I'm sure," said the pleasant stranger, patting
+Alice's cheek, and looking, with a pretty fellow-feeling, first into the
+child's face and then into Mary's.
+
+"Yes, he will," said Mary, looking down upon the curling locks at her
+elbow with a mother's happiness.
+
+"Is he in the army?" asked the lady.
+
+Mary's face fell.
+
+"His health is bad," she replied.
+
+"I know some nice people down in New Orleans," said the lady again.
+
+"We haven't many acquaintances," rejoined Mary, with a timidity that was
+almost trepidation. Her eyes dropped, and she began softly to smooth
+Alice's collar and hair.
+
+"I didn't know," said the lady, "but you might know some of them. For
+instance, there's Dr. Sevier."
+
+Mary gave a start and smiled.
+
+"Why, is he your friend too?" she asked. She looked up into the lady's
+quiet, brown eyes and down again into her own lap, where her hands had
+suddenly knit together, and then again into the lady's face. "We have no
+friend like Dr. Sevier."
+
+"Mother," called the lady softly, and beckoned. The senior lady leaned
+toward her. "Mother, this lady is from New Orleans and is an intimate
+friend of Dr. Sevier."
+
+The mother was pleased.
+
+"What might one call your name?" she asked, taking a seat behind Mary
+and continuing to show her pleasure.
+
+"Richling."
+
+The mother and daughter looked at each other. They had never heard the
+name before.
+
+Yet only a little while later the mother was saying to Mary,--they were
+expecting at any moment to hear the whistle for the terminus of the
+route, the central Mississippi town of Canton:--
+
+"My dear child, no! I couldn't sleep to-night if I thought you was all
+alone in one o' them old hotels in Canton. No, you must come home with
+us. We're barely two mile' from town, and we'll have the carriage ready
+for you bright and early in the morning, and our coachman will put you
+on the cars just as nice--Trouble?" She laughed at the idea. "No; I tell
+you what would trouble me,--that is, if we'd allow it; that'd be for you
+to stop in one o' them hotels all alone, child, and like' as not some
+careless servant not wake you in time for the cars to-morrow." At this
+word she saw capitulation in Mary's eyes. "Come, now, my child, we're
+not going to take no for an answer."
+
+Nor did they.
+
+But what was the result? The next morning, when Mary and Alice stood
+ready for the carriage, and it was high time they were gone, the
+carriage was not ready; the horses had got astray in the night. And
+while the black coachman was on one horse, which he had found and
+caught, and was scouring the neighboring fields and lanes and meadows
+in search of the other, there came out from townward upon the still,
+country air the long whistle of the departing train; and then the
+distant rattle and roar of its far southern journey began, and then
+its warning notes to the scattering colts and cattle.
+
+"Look away!"--it seemed to sing--"Look away!"--the notes fading,
+failing, on the ear,--"away--away--away down south in Dixie,"--the last
+train that left for New Orleans until the war was over.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI.
+
+FIRE AND SWORD.
+
+
+The year the war began dates also, for New Orleans, the advent of two
+better things: street-cars and the fire-alarm telegraph. The frantic
+incoherence of the old alarum gave way to the few solemn, numbered
+strokes that called to duty in the face of hot danger, like the electric
+voice of a calm commander. The same new system also silenced, once for
+all, the old nine-o'clock gun. For there were not only taps to signify
+each new fire-district,--one for the first, two for the second, three,
+four, five, six seven, eight, and nine,--but there was also one lone
+toll at mid-day for the hungry mechanic, and nine at the evening hour
+when the tired workman called his children in from the street and turned
+to his couch, and the slave must show cause in a master's handwriting
+why he or she was not under that master's roof.
+
+And then there was one signal more. Fire is a dreadful thing, and all
+the alarm signals were for fire except this one. Yet the profoundest
+wish of every good man and tender women in New Orleans, when this
+pleasing novelty of electro-magnetic warnings was first published for
+the common edification, was that mid-day or midnight, midsummer or
+midwinter, let come what might of danger or loss or distress, that one
+particular signal might not sound. Twelve taps. Anything but that.
+
+Dr. Sevier and Richling had that wish together. They had many wishes
+that were greatly at variance the one's from the other's. The Doctor
+had struggled for the Union until the very smoke of war began to rise
+into the sky; but then he "went with the South." He was the only one in
+New Orleans who knew--whatever some others may have suspected--that
+Richling's heart was on the other side. Had Richling's bodily strength
+remained, so that he could have been a possible factor, however small,
+in the strife, it is hard to say whether they could have been together
+day by day and night by night, as they came to be when the Doctor took
+the failing man into his own home, and have lived in amity, as they did.
+But there is this to be counted; they were both, though from different
+directions, for peace, and their gentle forbearance toward each other
+taught them a moderation of sentiment concerning the whole great issue.
+And, as I say, they both together held the one longing hope that,
+whatever war should bring of final gladness or lamentation, the steeples
+of New Orleans might never toll--twelve.
+
+But one bright Thursday April morning, as Richling was sitting, half
+dressed, by an open window of his room in Dr. Sevier's house, leaning on
+the arm of his soft chair and looking out at the passers on the street,
+among whom he had begun to notice some singular evidences of excitement,
+there came from a slender Gothic church-spire that was highest of all in
+the city, just beyond a few roofs in front of him, the clear, sudden,
+brazen peal of its one great bell.
+
+"Fire," thought Richling; and yet, he knew not why, wondered where Dr.
+Sevier might be. He had not seen him that morning. A high official had
+sent for him at sunrise and he had not returned.
+
+"Clang," went the bell again, and the softer ding--dang--dong of others,
+struck at the same instant, came floating in from various distances.
+And then it clanged again--and again--and again--the loud one near,
+the soft ones, one by one, after it--six, seven, eight, nine--ah!
+stop there! stop there! But still the alarm pealed on; ten--alas!
+alas!--eleven--oh, oh, the women and children!--twelve! And then the
+fainter, final asseverations of the more distant bells--twelve! twelve!
+twelve!--and a hundred and seventy thousand souls knew by that sign that
+the foe had passed the forts. New Orleans had fallen.
+
+Richling dressed himself hurriedly and went out. Everywhere drums were
+beating to arms. Couriers and aides-de-camp were galloping here and
+there. Men in uniform were hurrying on foot to this and that rendezvous.
+Crowds of the idle and poor were streaming out toward the levee.
+Carriages and cabs rattled frantically from place to place; men ran
+out-of-doors and leaped into them and leaped out of them and sprang up
+stair-ways; hundreds of all manner of vehicles, fit and unfit to carry
+passengers and goods, crowded toward the railroad depots and steam-boat
+landings; women ran into the streets wringing their hands and holding
+their brows; and children stood in the door-ways and gate-ways and
+trembled and called and cried.
+
+Richling took the new Dauphine street-car. Far down in the Third
+district, where there was a silence like that of a village lane, he
+approached a little cottage painted with Venetian red, setting in its
+garden of oranges, pomegranates, and bananas, and marigolds, and
+coxcombs behind its white paling fence and green gate.
+
+The gate was open. In it stood a tall, strong woman, good-looking, rosy,
+and neatly dressed. That she was tall you could prove by the gate, and
+that she was strong, by the graceful muscularity with which she held
+two infants,--pretty, swarthy little fellows, with joyous black eyes,
+and evidently of one age and parentage,--each in the hollow of a fine,
+round arm. There was just a hint of emotional disorder in her shining
+hair and a trace of tears about her eyes. As the visitor drew near, a
+fresh show of distressed exaltation was visible in the slight play of
+her form.
+
+"Ah! Mr. Richlin'," she cried, the moment he came within hearing, "'the
+dispot's heels is on our shores!'" Tears filled her eyes again. Mike,
+the bruiser, in his sixth year, who had been leaning backward against
+her knees and covering his legs with her skirts, ran forward and clasped
+the visitor's lower limbs with the nerve and intention of a wrestler.
+Kate followed with the cherubs. They were Raphael's.
+
+"Yes, it's terrible," said Richling.
+
+"Ah! no, Mr. Richlin'," replied Kate, lifting her head proudly as she
+returned with him toward the gate, "it's outrageouz; but it's not
+terrible. At least it's not for me, Mr. Richlin'. I'm only Mrs. Captain
+Ristofalah; and whin I see the collonels' and gin'r'ls' ladies
+a-prancin' around in their carridges I feel my _humility_; but it's my
+djuty to be _brave_, sur! An' I'll help to _fight_ thim, sur, if the min
+can't do ud. Mr. Richlin', my husband is the intimit frind of Gin'r'l
+Garrybaldy, sur! I'll help to burrin the cittee, sur!--rather nor give
+ud up to thim vandjals! Come in, Mr. Richlin'; come in." She led the way
+up the narrow shell-walk. "Come 'n, sur, it may be the last time ye' do
+ud before the flames is leppin' from the roof! Ah! I knowed ye'd come. I
+was a-lookin' for ye. I knowed _ye'd_ prove yerself that frind in need
+that he's the frind indeed! Take a seat an' sit down." She faced about
+on the vine-covered porch, and dropped into a rocking-chair, her eyes
+still at the point of overflow. "But ah! Mr. Richlin', where's all thim
+flatterers that fawned around uz in the days of tytled prosperity?"
+
+Richling said nothing; he had not seen any throngs of that sort.
+
+"Gone, sur! and it's a relief; it's a relief, Mr. Richlin'!" She
+marshalled the twins on her lap, Carlo commanding the right, Francisco
+the left.
+
+"You mustn't expect too much of them," said Richling, drawing Mike
+between his knees, "in such a time of alarm and confusion as this." And
+Kate responded generously:--
+
+"Well, I suppose you're right, sur."
+
+"I've come down," resumed the visitor, letting Mike count off "Rich man,
+poor man, beggar man, thief," on the buttons of his coat, "to give you
+any help I can in getting ready to leave town. For you mustn't think of
+staying. It isn't possible to be anything short of dreadful to stay in a
+city occupied by hostile troops. It's almost certain the Confederates
+will try to hold the city, and there may be a bombardment. The city may
+be taken and retaken half-a-dozen times before the war is over."
+
+"Mr. Richlin'," said Kate, with a majestic lifting of the hand, "I'll
+nivver rin away from the Yanks."
+
+"No, but you must _go_ away from them. You mustn't put yourself in such
+a position that you can't go to your husband if he needs you, Mrs.
+Ristofalo; don't get separated from him."
+
+"Ah! Mr. Richlin', it's you as has the right to say so; and I'll do as
+you say. Mr. Richlin', my husband"--her voice trembled--"may be wounded
+this hour. I'll go, sur, indeed I will; but, sur, if Captain Raphael
+Ristofalah wor _here_, sur, he'd be ad the _front_, sur, and Kate
+Ristofalah would be at his galliant side!"
+
+"Well, then, I'm glad he's not here," rejoined Richling, "for I'd have
+to take care of the children."
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" laughed Kate. "No, sur! I'd take the lion's whelps with
+me, sur! Why, that little Mike theyre can han'le the dthrum-sticks to
+beat the felley in the big hat!" And she laughed again.
+
+They made arrangements for her and the three children to go "out
+into the confederacy" within two or three days at furthest; as soon
+as she and her feeble helper could hurry a few matters of business to
+completion at and about the Picayune Tier. Richling did not get back to
+the Doctor's house until night had fallen and the sky was set aglare by
+seven miles' length of tortuous harbor front covered with millions'
+worth of burning merchandise. The city was being evacuated.
+
+Dr. Sevier and he had but few words. Richling was dejected from
+weariness, and his friend weary with dejections.
+
+"Where have you been all day?" asked the Doctor, with a touch of
+irritation.
+
+"Getting Kate Ristofalo ready to leave the city."
+
+"You shouldn't have left the house; but it's no use to tell you
+anything. Has she gone?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Well, in the name of common-sense, then, when is she going?"
+
+"In two or three days," replied Richling, almost in retort.
+
+The Doctor laughed with impatience.
+
+"If you feel responsible for her going get her off by to-morrow
+afternoon at the furthest." He dropped his tired head against the back
+of his chair.
+
+"Why," said Richling, "I don't suppose the fleet can fight its way
+through all opposition and get here short of a week."
+
+The Doctor laid his long fingers upon his brow and rolled his head from
+side to side. Then, slowly raising it:--
+
+"Well, Richling!" he said, "there must have been some mistake made when
+you was put upon the earth."
+
+Richling's thin cheek flushed. The Doctor's face confessed the bitterest
+resentment.
+
+"Why, the fleet is only eighteen miles from here now." He ceased, and
+then added, with sudden kindness of tone, "I want you to do something
+for me, will you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, then, go to bed; I'm going. You'll need every grain of strength
+you've got for to-morrow. I'm afraid then it will not be enough. This is
+an awful business, Richling."
+
+They went upstairs together. As they were parting at its top Richling
+said:--
+
+"You told me a few days ago that if the city should fall, which we
+didn't expect"--
+
+"That I'd not leave," said the Doctor. "No; I shall stay. I haven't the
+stamina to take the field, and I can't be a runaway. Anyhow, I couldn't
+take you along. You couldn't bear the travel, and I wouldn't go and
+leave you here, Richling--old fellow!"
+
+He laid his hand gently on the sick man's shoulder, who made no
+response, so afraid was he that another word would mar the perfection of
+the last.
+
+When Richling went out the next morning the whole city was in an ecstasy
+of rage and terror. Thousands had gathered what they could in their
+hands, and were flying by every avenue of escape. Thousands ran hither
+and thither, not knowing where or how to fly. He saw the wife and son
+of the silver-haired banker rattling and bouncing away toward one of the
+railway depots in a butcher's cart. A messenger from Kate by good chance
+met him with word that she would be ready for the afternoon train of the
+Jackson Railroad, and asking anew his earliest attention to her
+interests about the lugger landing.
+
+He hastened to the levee. The huge, writhing river, risen up above the
+town, was full to the levee's top, and, as though the enemy's fleet was
+that much more than it could bear, was silently running over by a
+hundred rills into the streets of the stricken city.
+
+As far as the eye could reach, black smoke, white smoke, brown smoke,
+and red flames rolled and spread, and licked and leaped, from unnumbered
+piles of cotton bales, and wooden wharves, and ships cut adrift, and
+steam-boats that blazed like shavings, floating down the harbor as they
+blazed. He stood for a moment to see a little revenue cutter,--a pretty
+topsail schooner,--lying at the foot of Canal street, sink before his
+eyes into the turbid yellow depths of the river, scuttled. Then he
+hurried on. Huge mobs ran to and fro in the fire and smoke, howling,
+breaking, and stealing. Women and children hurried back and forth like
+swarms of giant ants, with buckets and baskets, and dippers and bags,
+and bonnets, hats, petticoats, anything,--now empty, and now full of
+rice and sugar and meal and corn and syrup,--and robbed each other, and
+cursed and fought, and slipped down in pools of molasses, and threw live
+pigs and coops of chickens into the river, and with one voiceless rush
+left the broad levee a smoking, crackling desert, when some shells
+exploded on a burning gunboat, and presently were back again like a
+flock of evil birds.
+
+It began to rain, but Richling sought no shelter. The men he was in
+search of were not to be found. But the victorious ships, with bare
+black arms stretched wide, boarding nettings up, and the dark muzzles of
+their guns bristling from their sides, came, silently as a nightmare,
+slowly around the bend at Slaughterhouse Point and moved up the middle
+of the harbor. At the French market he found himself, without
+forewarning, witness of a sudden skirmish between some Gascon and
+Sicilian market-men, who had waved a welcome to the fleet, and some
+Texan soldiers who resented the treason. The report of a musket rang
+out, a second and third reechoed it, a pistol cracked, and another,
+and another; there was a rush for cover; another shot, and another,
+resounded in the market-house, and presently in the street beyond. Then,
+in a moment, all was silence and emptiness, into which there ventured
+but a single stooping, peeping Sicilian, glancing this way and that,
+with his finger on trigger, eager to kill, gliding from cover to cover,
+and presently gone again from view, leaving no human life visible nearer
+than the swarming mob that Richling, by mounting a pile of ship's
+ballast, could see still on the steam-boat landing, pillaging in the
+drenching rain, and the long fleet casting anchor before the town in
+line of battle.
+
+Late that afternoon Richling, still wet to the skin, amid pushing and
+yelling and the piping calls of distracted women and children, and
+scuffling and cramming in, got Kate Ristofalo, trunks, baskets, and
+babes, safely off on the cars. And when, one week from that day, the
+sound of drums, that had been hushed for a while, fell upon his ear
+again,--no longer the jaunty rataplan of Dixie's drums, but the heavy,
+monotonous roar of the conqueror's at the head of his dark-blue
+columns,--Richling could not leave his bed.
+
+Dr. Sevier sat by him and bore the sound in silence. As it died away and
+ceased, Richling said:--
+
+"May I write to Mary?"
+
+Then the Doctor had a hard task.
+
+"I wrote for her yesterday," he said. "But, Richling, I--don't think
+she'll get the letter."
+
+"Do you think she has already started?" asked the sick man, with glad
+eagerness.
+
+"Richling, I did the best I knew how"--
+
+"Whatever you did was all right, Doctor."
+
+"I wrote to her months ago, by the hand of Ristofalo. He knows she got
+the letter. I'm afraid she's somewhere in the Confederacy, trying to get
+through. I meant it for the best, my dear boy."
+
+"It's all right, Doctor," said the invalid; but the physician could see
+the cruel fact slowly grind him.
+
+"Doctor, may I ask one favor?"
+
+"One or a hundred, Richling."
+
+"I want you to let Madame Zenobie come and nurse me."
+
+"Why, Richling, can't I nurse you well enough?"
+
+The Doctor was jealous.
+
+"Yes," answered the sick man. "But I'll need a good deal of attention.
+She wants to do it. She was here yesterday, you knew. She wanted to ask
+you, but was afraid."
+
+His wish was granted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVII.
+
+ALMOST IN SIGHT.
+
+
+In St. Tammany Parish, on the northern border of Lake Ponchartrain,
+about thirty miles from New Orleans, in a straight line across the
+waters of the lake, stood in time of the war, and may stand yet, an old
+house, of the Creole colonial fashion, all of cypress from sills to
+shingles, standing on brick pillars ten feet from the ground, a wide
+veranda in front, and a double flight of front steps running up to it
+sidewise and meeting in a balustraded landing at its edge. Scarcely
+anything short of a steamer's roof or a light-house window could have
+offered a finer stand-point from which to sweep a glass round the
+southern semi-circle of water and sky than did this stair-landing; and
+here, a long ship's-glass in her hands, and the accustomed look of care
+on her face, faintly frowning against the glare of noonday, stood Mary
+Richling. She still had on the pine-straw hat, and the skirt--stirring
+softly in a breeze that had to come around from the north side of the
+house before it reached her--was the brown and olive homespun.
+
+"No use," said an old, fat, and sun-tanned man from his willow chair on
+the veranda behind her. There was a slight palsied oscillation in his
+head. He leaned forward somewhat on a staff, and as he spoke his entire
+shapeless and nearly helpless form quaked with the effort. But Mary, for
+all his advice, raised the glass and swung it slowly from east to west.
+
+The house was near the edge of a slightly rising ground, close to the
+margin of a bayou that glided around toward the left from the woods at
+its back, and ran, deep and silent, under the shadows of a few huge,
+wide-spreading, moss-hung live-oaks that stood along its hither shore,
+laving their roots in its waters, and throwing their vast green images
+upon its glassy surface. As the dark stream slipped away from these it
+flashed a little while in the bright open space of a marsh, and, just
+entering the shade of a spectral cypress wood, turned as if to avoid it,
+swung more than half about, and shone sky-blue, silver, and green as it
+swept out into the unbroken sunshine of the prairie.
+
+It was over this flowery savanna, broadening out on either hand, and
+spreading far away until its bright green margin joined, with the
+perfection of a mosaic, the distant blue of the lake, that Mary,
+dallying a moment with hope, passed her long glass. She spoke with it
+still raised and her gaze bent through it:--
+
+"There's a big alligator crossing the bayou down in the bend."
+
+"Yes," said the aged man, moving his flat, carpet-slippered feet a
+laborious inch; "alligator. Alligator not goin' take you 'cross lake. No
+use lookin'. 'Ow Peter goin' come when win' dead ahead? Can't do it."
+
+Yet Mary lifted the glass a little higher, beyond the green, beyond the
+crimpling wavelets of the nearer distance that seemed drawn by the
+magical lens almost into her hand, out to the fine, straight line that
+cut the cool blue below from the boundless blue above. Round swung the
+glass, slowly, waveringly, in her unpractised hand, from the low cypress
+forests of Manchac on the west, to the skies that glittered over the
+unseen marshes of the Rigolets on the farthest east.
+
+"You see sail yondeh?" came the slow inquiry from behind.
+
+"No," said Mary, letting the instrument down, and resting it on the
+balustrade.
+
+"Humph! No! Dawn't I tell you is no use look?"
+
+"He was to have got here three days ago," said Mary, shutting the glass
+and gazing in anxious abstraction across the prairie.
+
+The Spanish Creole grunted.
+
+"When win' change, he goin' start. He dawn't start till win' change.
+Win' keep ligue dat, he dawn't start 't all." He moved his orange-wood
+staff an inch, to suit the previous movement of his feet, and Mary came
+and laid the glass on its brackets in the veranda, near the open door of
+a hall that ran through the dwelling to another veranda in the rear.
+
+In the middle of the hall a small woman, as dry as the peppers that hung
+in strings on the wall behind her, sat in a rush-bottomed rocking-chair
+plaiting a palmetto hat, and with her elbow swinging a tattered manilla
+hammock, in whose bulging middle lay Alice, taking her compulsory
+noonday nap. Mary came, expressed her thanks in sprightly whispers,
+lifted the child out, and carried her to a room. How had Mary got here?
+
+The morning after that on which she had missed the cars at Canton she
+had taken a south-bound train for Camp Moore, the camp of the forces
+that had evacuated New Orleans, situated near the railway station of
+Tangipahoa, some eighty miles north of the captured city. Thence, after
+a day or two of unavoidable delay, and of careful effort to know the
+wisest step, she had taken stage,--a crazy ambulance,--with some others,
+two women, three children, and an old man, and for two days had
+travelled through a beautiful country of red and yellow clays and
+sands below and murmuring pines above,--vast colonnades of towering,
+branchless brown columns holding high their green, translucent roof, and
+opening up their wide, bright, sunshot vistas of gentle, grassy hills
+that undulated far away under the balsamic forest, and melted at length
+into luminous green unity and deer-haunted solitudes. Now she went down
+into richer bottom-lands, where the cotton and corn were growing tall
+and pretty to look upon, like suddenly grown girls, and the sun was
+beginning to shine hot. Now she passed over rustic bridges, under posted
+warnings to drive slow or pay a fine, or through sandy fords across
+purling streams, hearing the monotone of some unseen mill-dam, or
+scaring the tall gray crane from his fishing, or the otter from his
+pranks. Again she went up into leagues of clear pine forest, with stems
+as straight as lances; meeting now a farmer, and now a school-girl or
+two, and once a squad of scouts, ill-mounted, worse clad, and yet more
+sorrily armed; bivouacking with the jolly, tattered fellows, Mary and
+one of the other women singing for them, and the "boys" singing for
+Mary, and each applauding each about the pine-knot fire, and the women
+and children by and by lying down to slumber, in soldier fashion, with
+their feet to the brands, under the pines and the stars, while the
+gray-coats stood guard in the wavering fire-light; but Mary lying broad
+awake staring at the great constellation of the Scorpion, and thinking
+now of him she sought, and now remorsefully of that other scout, that
+poor boy whom the spy had shot far away yonder to the north and
+eastward. Now she rose and journeyed again. Rare hours were those for
+Alice. They came at length into a low, barren land, of dwarfed and
+scrawny pines, with here and there a marshy flat; thence through a
+narrow strip of hickories, oaks, cypresses, and dwarf palmetto, and so
+on into beds of white sand and oyster-shells, and then into one of the
+villages on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain.
+
+Her many little adventures by the way, the sayings and doings and
+seeings of Alice, and all those little adroitnesses by which Mary from
+time to time succeeded in avoiding or turning aside the suspicions
+that hovered about her, and the hundred times in which Alice was her
+strongest and most perfect protection, we cannot pause to tell. But we
+give a few lines to one matter.
+
+Mary had not yet descended from the ambulance at her journey's end;
+she and Alice only were in it; its tired mules were dragging it slowly
+through the sandy street of the village, and the driver was praising
+the milk, eggs, chickens, and genteel seclusion of Mrs. ----'s
+"hotel," at that end of the village toward which he was driving, when a
+man on horseback met them, and, in passing, raised his hat to Mary. The
+act was only the usual courtesy of the highway; yet Mary was startled,
+disconcerted, and had to ask the unobservant, loquacious driver to
+repeat what he had said. Two days afterward Mary was walking at the
+twilight hour, in a narrow, sandy road, that ran from the village out
+into the country to the eastward. Alice walked beside her, plying her
+with questions. At a turn of the path, without warning, she confronted
+this horseman again. He reined up and lifted his hat. An elated look
+brightened his face.
+
+"It's all fixed," he said. But Mary looked distressed, even alarmed.
+
+"You shouldn't have done this," she replied.
+
+The man waved his hand downward repressively, but with a countenance
+full of humor.
+
+"Hold on. It's _still_ my deal. This is the last time, and then I'm
+done. Make a spoon or spoil a horn, you know. When you commence to do a
+thing, do it. Them's the words that's inscribed on my banner, as the
+felleh says; only I, Sam, aint got much banner. And if I sort o' use
+about this low country a little while for my health, as it were, and
+nibble around sort o' _pro bono p[=u]blico_ takin' notes, why you aint
+a-carin', is you? For wherefore shouldest thou?" He put on a yet more
+ludicrous look, and spread his hand off at one side, working his
+outstretched fingers.
+
+"Yes," responded Mary, with severe gravity; "I must care. You did finish
+at Holly Springs. I was to find the rest of the way as best I could.
+That was the understanding. Go away!" She made a commanding gesture,
+though she wore a pleading look. He looked grave; but his habitual
+grimace stole through his gravity and invited her smile. But she
+remained fixed. He gathered the rein and straightened up in the saddle.
+
+"Yes," she insisted, answering his inquiring attitude; "go! I shall be
+grateful to you as long as I live. It wasn't because I mistrusted you that
+I refused your aid at Camp Moore or at----that other place on this side. I
+don't mistrust you. But don't you see--you must see--it's your duty to
+see--that this staying and--and--foll--following--is--is--wrong." She
+stood, holding her skirt in one hand, and Alice's hand in the other, not
+upright, but in a slightly shrinking attitude, and as she added once more,
+"Go! I implore you--go!" her eyes filled.
+
+"I will; I'll go," said the man, with a soft chuckle intended for
+self-abasement. "I go, thou goest, he goes. 'I'll skedaddle,' as the
+felleh says. And yit it do seem to me sorter like,--if my moral sense is
+worthy of any consideration, which is doubtful, may be,--seems to me
+like it's sort o' jumpin' the bounty for you to go and go back on an
+arrangement that's been all fixed up nice and tight, and when it's on'y
+jess to sort o' 'jump into the wagon' that's to call for you to-morrow,
+sun-up, drove by a nigger boy, and ride a few mile' to a house on the
+bayou, and wait there till a man comes with a nice little schooner, and
+take you on bode and sail off, and 'good-by, Sally,' and me never in
+sight from fust to last, 'and no questions axed.'"
+
+"I don't reject the arrangement," replied Mary, with tearful
+pleasantness. "If you'll do as I say, I'll do as you say; and that will
+be final proof to you that I believe you're"--she fell back a step,
+laughingly--"'the clean sand!'" She thought the man would have
+perpetrated some small antic; but he did not. He did not even smile, but
+lifted the rein a little till the horse stepped forward, and, putting
+out his hand, said:--
+
+"Good-by. You don't need no directions. Jess tell the lady where you'
+boardin' that you've sort o' consented to spend a day or two with old
+Adrien Sanchez, and get into the wagon when it comes for you." He let go
+her hand. "Good-by, Alice." The child looked up in silence and pressed
+herself against her mother. "Good-by," said he once more.
+
+"Good-by," replied Mary.
+
+His eyes lingered as she dropped her own.
+
+"Come, Alice," she said, resisting the little one's effort to stoop and
+pick a wild-pea blossom, and the mother and child started slowly back
+the way they had come. The spy turned his horse, and moved still more
+slowly in the opposite direction. But before he had gone many rods he
+turned the animal's head again, rode as slowly back, and, beside the
+spot where Mary had stood, got down, and from the small imprint of her
+shoe in the damp sand took the pea-blossom, which, in turning to
+depart, she had unawares trodden under foot. He looked at the small,
+crushed thing for a moment, and then thrust it into his bosom; but in a
+moment, as if by a counter impulse, drew it forth again, let it flutter
+to the ground, following it with his eyes, shook his head with an amused
+air, half of defiance and half of discomfiture, turned, drew himself
+into the saddle, and with one hand laid upon another on the saddle-bow
+and his eyes resting on them in meditation, passed finally out of sight.
+
+ * * *
+
+Here, then, in this lone old Creole cottage, Mary was tarrying, prisoner
+of hope, coming out all hours of the day, and scanning the wide view,
+first, only her hand to shade her brow, and then with the old
+ship's-glass, Alice often standing by and looking up at this
+extraordinary toy with unspoken wonder. All that Mary could tell her of
+things seeable through it could never persuade the child to risk her own
+eye at either end of it. So Mary would look again and see, out in the
+prairie, in the morning, the reed birds, the marsh hen, the blackbirds,
+the sparrows, the starlings, with their red and yellow epaulets, rising
+and fluttering and sinking again among the lilies and mallows, and the
+white crane, paler than a ghost, wading in the grassy shallows. She saw
+the ravening garfish leap from the bayou, and the mullet in shining
+hundreds spatter away to left and right; and the fisherman and the
+shrimp-catcher in their canoes come gliding up the glassy stream, riding
+down the water-lilies, that rose again behind and shook the drops from
+their crowns, like water-sprites. Here and there, farther out, she saw
+the little cat-boats of the neighboring village crawling along the edge
+of the lake, taking their timid morning cruises. And far away she saw
+the titanic clouds; but on the horizon, no sail.
+
+In the evening she would see mocking-birds coming out of the savanna and
+flying into the live-oaks. A summer duck might dart from the cypresses,
+speed across the wide green level, and become a swerving, vanishing
+speck on the sky. The heron might come round the bayou's bend, and
+suddenly take fright and fly back again. The rattling kingfisher might
+come up the stream, and the blue crane sail silently through the purple
+haze that hung between the swamp and the bayou. She would see the gulls,
+gray and white, on the margin of the lake, the sun setting beyond its
+western end, and the sky and water turning all beautiful tints; and
+every now and then, low down along the cool, wrinkling waters, passed
+across the round eye of the glass the broad, downward-curved wing of the
+pelican. But when she ventured to lift the glass to the horizon, she
+swept it from east to west in vain. No sail.
+
+"Dawn't I tell you no use look? Peter dawn't comin' in day-time, nohow."
+
+But on the fifth morning Mary had hardly made her appearance on the
+veranda, and had not ventured near the spy-glass yet, when the old man
+said:--
+
+"She rain back in swamp las' night; can smell."
+
+"How do you feel this morning?" asked Mary, facing around from her first
+glance across the waters. He did not heed.
+
+"See dat win'?" he asked, lifting one hand a little from the top of his
+staff.
+
+"Yes," responded Mary, eagerly; "why, it's--hasn't it--changed?"
+
+"Yes, change' las' night 'fo' went to bed."
+
+The old man's manner betrayed his contempt for one who could be
+interested in such a change, and yet not know when it took place.
+
+"Why, then," began Mary, and started as if to take down the glass.
+
+"What you doin'?" demanded its owner. "Better let glass 'lone; fool' wid
+him enough."
+
+Mary flushed, and, with a smile of resentful apology, was about to
+reply, when he continued:--
+
+"What you want glass for? Dare Peter' schooner--right dare in bayou.
+What want glass for? Can't see schooner hundred yard' off 'dout glass?"
+And he turned away his poor wabbling head in disgust.
+
+Mary looked an instant at two bare, rakish, yellow poles showing out
+against the clump of cypresses, and the trim little white hull and
+apple-green deck from which they sprang, then clasped her hands and ran
+into the house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVIII.
+
+A GOLDEN SUNSET.
+
+
+Dr. Sevier came to Richling's room one afternoon, and handed him a
+sealed letter. The postmark was blurred, but it was easy still to read
+the abbreviation of the State's name,--Kentucky. It had come by way of
+New York and the sea. The sick man reached out for it with avidity from
+the large bed in which he sat bolstered up. He tore it open with
+unsteady fingers, and sought the signature.
+
+"It's from a lawyer."
+
+"An old acquaintance?" asked the doctor.
+
+"Yes," responded Richling, his eyes glancing eagerly along the lines.
+"Mary's in the Confederate lines!--Mary and Alice!" The hand that held
+the letter dropped to his lap. "It doesn't say a word about how she got
+through!"
+
+"But _where_ did she get through?" asked the physician. "Whereabouts is
+she now?"
+
+"She got through away up to the eastward of Corinth, Mississippi.
+Doctor, she may be within fifty miles of us this very minute! Do you
+think they'll give her a pass to come in?"
+
+"They may, Richling; I hope they will."
+
+"I think I'd get well if she'd come," said the invalid. But his friend
+made no answer.
+
+A day or two afterward--it was drawing to the close of a beautiful
+afternoon in early May--Dr. Sevier came into the room and stood at a
+window looking out. Madame Zenobie sat by the bedside softly fanning the
+patient. Richling, with his eyes, motioned her to retire. She smiled and
+nodded approvingly, as if to say that that was just what she was about
+to propose, and went out, shutting the door with just sound enough to
+announce her departure to Dr. Sevier.
+
+He came from the window to the bedside and sat down. The sick man looked
+at him, with a feeble eye, and said, in little more than a whisper:--
+
+"Mary and Alice"--
+
+"Yes," said the Doctor.
+
+"If they don't come to-night they'll be too late."
+
+"God knows, my dear boy!"
+
+"Doctor"--
+
+"What, Richling?"
+
+"Did you ever try to guess"--
+
+"Guess what, Richling?"
+
+"_His_ use of my life."
+
+"Why, yes, my poor boy, I have tried. But I only make out its use to
+me."
+
+The sick man's eye brightened.
+
+"Has it been?"
+
+The Doctor nodded. He reached out and took the wasted hand in his. It
+tried to answer his pressure. The invalid spoke.
+
+"I'm glad you told me that before--before it was too late."
+
+"Are you, my dear boy? Shall I tell you more?"
+
+"Yes," the sick man huskily replied; "oh, yes."
+
+"Well, Richling,--you know we're great cowards about saying such things;
+it's a part of our poor human weakness and distrust of each other, and
+the emptiness of words,--but--lately--only just here, very lately, I've
+learned to call the meekest, lovingest One that ever trod our earth,
+Master; and it's been your life, my dear fellow, that has taught me." He
+pressed the sick man's hand slowly and tremulously, then let it go, but
+continued to caress it in a tender, absent way, looking on the floor as
+he spoke on.
+
+"Richling, Nature herself appoints some men to poverty and some to
+riches. God throws the poor upon our charge--in mercy to _us_. Couldn't
+he take care of them without us if he wished? Are they not his? It's
+easy for the poor to feel, when they are helped by us, that the rich are
+a godsend to them; but they don't see, and many of their helpers don't
+see, that the poor are a godsend to the rich. They're set over against
+each other to keep pity and mercy and charity in the human heart. If
+every one were entirely able to take care of himself we'd turn to
+stone." The speaker ceased.
+
+"Go on," whispered the listener.
+
+"That will never be," continued the Doctor. "God Almighty will never let
+us find a way to quite abolish poverty. Riches don't always bless the
+man they come to, but they bless the world. And so with poverty; and
+it's no contemptible commission, Richling, to be appointed by God to
+bear that blessing to mankind which keeps its brotherhood universal.
+See, now,"--he looked up with a gentle smile,--"from what a distance he
+brought our two hearts together. Why, Richling, the man that can make
+the rich and poor love each other will make the world happier than it
+has ever been since man fell!"
+
+"Go on," whispered Richling.
+
+"No," said the Doctor.
+
+"Well, now, Doctor--_I_ want to say--something." The invalid spoke with
+a weak and broken utterance, with many breaks and starts that we may set
+aside.
+
+"For a long time," he said, beginning as if half in soliloquy, "I
+couldn't believe I was coming to this early end, simply because I
+didn't see why I should. I know that was foolish. I thought my
+hardships"-- He ceased entirely, and, when his strength would
+allow, resumed:--
+
+"I thought they were sent in order that when I should come to fortune I
+might take part in correcting some evils that are strangely overlooked."
+
+The Doctor nodded, and, after a moment of rest, Richling said again:--
+
+"But now I see--that is not my work. May be it is Mary's. May be it's my
+little girl's."
+
+"Or mine," murmured the Doctor.
+
+"Yes, Doctor, I've been lying here to-day thinking of something I never
+thought of before, though I dare say you have, often. There could be no
+art of healing till the earth was full of graves. It is by shipwreck
+that we learn to build ships. All our safety--all our betterment--is
+secured by our knowledge of others' disasters that need not have
+happened had they only _known_. Will you--finish my mission?" The sick
+man's hand softly grasped the hand that lay upon it. And the Doctor
+responded:--
+
+"How shall I do that, Richling?"
+
+"Tell my story."
+
+"But I don't know it all, Richling."
+
+"I'll tell you all that's behind. You know I'm a native of Kentucky.
+My name is not Richling. I belong to one of the proudest, most
+distinguished families in that State or in all the land. Until I married
+I never knew an ungratified wish. I think my bringing-up, not to be
+wicked, was as bad as could be. It was based upon the idea that I was
+always to be master, and never servant. I was to go through life with
+soft hands. I was educated to know, but not to do. When I left school
+my parents let me travel. They would have let me do anything except
+work. In the West--in Milwaukee--I met Mary. It was by mere chance. She
+was poor, but cultivated and refined; trained--you know--for knowing,
+not doing. I loved her and courted her, and she encouraged my suit,
+under the idea, you know, again,"--he smiled faintly and sadly,--"that
+it was nobody's business but ours. I offered my hand and was accepted.
+But, when I came to announce our engagement to my family, they warned me
+that if I married her they would disinherit and disown me."
+
+"What was their reason, Richling?"
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"But, Richling, they had a reason of some sort."
+
+"Nothing in the world but that Mary was a Northern girl. Simple
+sectional prejudice. I didn't tell Mary. I didn't think they would do
+it; but I knew Mary would refuse to put me to the risk. We married, and
+they carried out their threat."
+
+The Doctor uttered a low exclamation, and both were silent.
+
+"Doctor," began the sick man once more.
+
+"Yes, Richling."
+
+"I suppose you never looked into the case of a man who needed help, but
+you were sure to find that some one thing was the key to all his
+troubles; did you?"
+
+The Doctor was silent again.
+
+"I'll give you the key to mine, Doctor: I took up the gage thrown down
+by my family as though it were thrown down by society at large. I said I
+would match pride with pride. I said I would go among strangers, take a
+new name, and make it as honorable as the old. I saw Mary didn't think
+it wise; but she believed whatever I did was best, and"--he smiled and
+whispered--"I thought so too. I suppose my troubles have more than one
+key; but that's the outside one. Let me rest a little.
+
+"Doctor, I die nameless. I had a name, a good name, and only too proud a
+one. It's mine still. I've never tarnished it--not even in prison. I
+will not stain it now by disclosing it. I carry it with me to God's
+throne."
+
+The whisperer ceased, exhausted. The Doctor rested an elbow on a knee
+and laid his face in his hand. Presently Richling moved, and he raised a
+look of sad inquiry.
+
+"Bury me here in New Orleans, Doctor, will you?"
+
+"Why, Richling?"
+
+"Well--this has been--my--battle-ground. I'd like to be buried on the
+field,--like the other soldiers. Not that I've been a good one; but--I
+want to lie where you can point to me as you tell my story. If it could
+be so, I should like to lie in sight--of that old prison."
+
+The Doctor brushed his eyes with his handkerchief and wiped his brow.
+
+"Doctor," said the invalid again, "will you read me just four verses in
+the Bible?"
+
+"Why, yes, my boy, as many as you wish to hear."
+
+"No, only four." His free hand moved for the book that lay on the bed,
+and presently the Doctor read:--
+
+ "'My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers
+ temptations;
+
+ "'Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience.
+
+ "'But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be
+ perfect and entire, wanting nothing.
+
+ "'If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to
+ all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given
+ him.'"
+
+"There," whispered the sick man, and rested with a peaceful look in all
+his face. "It--doesn't mean wisdom in general, Doctor,--such as Solomon
+asked for."
+
+"Doesn't it?" said the other, meekly.
+
+"No. It means the wisdom necessary to let--patience--have her
+perf-- I was a long time--getting any where near that.
+
+"Doctor--do you remember how fond--Mary was of singing--all kinds
+of--little old songs?"
+
+"Of course I do, my dear boy."
+
+"Did you ever sing--Doctor?"
+
+"O my dear fellow! I never did really sing, and I haven't uttered a note
+since--for twenty years."
+
+"Can't you sing--ever so softly--just a verse--of--'I'm a Pilgrim'?"
+
+"I--I--it's impossible, Richling, old fellow. I don't know either the
+words or the tune. I never sing." He smiled at himself through his
+tears.
+
+"Well, all right," whispered Richling. He lay with closed eyes for a
+moment, and then, as he opened them, breathed faintly through his parted
+lips the words, spoken, not sung, while his hand feebly beat the
+imagined cadence:--
+
+ "'The sun shines bright in my old Kentucky home;
+ 'Tis summer, the darkies are gay;
+ The corn-tops are ripe, and the meadows are in bloom,
+ And the birds make music all the day.'"
+
+The Doctor hid his face in his hands, and all was still.
+
+By and by there came a whisper again. The Doctor raised his head.
+
+"Doctor, there's one thing"--
+
+"Yes, I know there is, Richling."
+
+"Doctor,--I've been a poor stick of a husband."
+
+"I never knew a good one, Richling."
+
+"Doctor, you'll be a friend to Mary?"
+
+The Doctor nodded; his eyes were full.
+
+The sick man drew from his breast a small ambrotype, pressed it to his
+lips, and poised it in his trembling fingers. It was the likeness of the
+little Alice. He turned his eyes to his friend.
+
+"I didn't need Mary's. But this is all I've ever seen of my little girl.
+To-morrow, at daybreak,--it will be just at daybreak,--when you see that
+I've passed, I want you to lay this here on my breast. Then fold my
+hands upon it"--
+
+His speech was arrested. He seemed to hearken an instant.
+
+"Doctor," he said, with excitement in his eye and sudden strength of
+voice, "what is that I hear?"
+
+"I don't know," replied his friend; "one of the servants probably down
+in the hall." But he, too, seemed to have been startled. He lifted his
+head. There was a sound of some one coming up the stairs in haste.
+
+"Doctor." The Doctor was rising from his chair.
+
+"Lie still, Richling."
+
+But the sick man suddenly sat erect.
+
+"Doctor--it's--O Doctor, I"--
+
+The door flew open; there was a low outcry from the threshold, a moan of
+joy from the sick man, a throwing wide of arms, and a rush to the
+bedside, and John and Mary Richling--and the little Alice, too--
+
+Come, Doctor Sevier; come out and close the door.
+
+ * * *
+
+"Strangest thing on earth!" I once heard a physician say,--"the
+mysterious power that the dying so often have to fix the very hour of
+their approaching end!" It was so in John Richling's case. It was as he
+said. Had Mary and Alice not come when they did, they would have been
+too late. He "tarried but a night;" and at the dawn Mary uttered the
+bitter cry of the widow, and Doctor Sevier closed the eyes of the one
+who had committed no fault,--against this world, at least,--save that he
+had been by nature a pilgrim and a stranger in it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIX.
+
+AFTERGLOW.
+
+
+Mary, with Alice holding one hand, flowers in the other, was walking one
+day down the central avenue of the old Girod Cemetery, breaking the
+silence of the place only by the soft grinding of her footsteps on the
+shell-walk, and was just entering a transverse alley, when she stopped.
+
+Just at hand a large, broad woman, very plainly dressed, was drawing
+back a single step from the front of a tomb, and dropping her hands from
+a coarse vase of flowers that she had that moment placed on the narrow
+stone shelf under the tablet. The blossoms touched, without hiding, the
+newly cut name. She had hung a little plaster crucifix against it from
+above. She must have heard the footfall so near by, and marked its
+stoppage; but, with the oblivion common to the practisers of her
+religion, she took no outward notice. She crossed herself, sank upon her
+knees, and with her eyes upon the shrine she had made remained thus. The
+tears ran down Mary's face. It was Madame Zenobie. They went and lived
+together.
+
+The name of the street where their house stood has slipped me, as has
+that of the clean, unfrequented, round-stoned way up which one looked
+from the small cottage's veranda, and which, running down to their old
+arched gate, came there to an end, as if that were a pretty place to
+stop at in the shade until evening. Grass grows now, as it did then,
+between the round stones; and in the towering sycamores of the reddened
+brick sidewalk the long, quavering note of the cicada parts the wide
+summer noonday silence. The stillness yields to little else, save now
+and then the tinkle of a mule-bell, where in the distance the softly
+rumbling street-car invites one to the centre of the town's activities,
+or the voice of some fowl that, having laid an egg, is asserting her
+right to the credit of it. Some forty feet back, within a mossy brick
+wall that stands waist-high, surmounted by a white, open fence, the
+green wooden balls on top of whose posts are full eight feet above the
+sidewalk, the cottage stands high up among a sweet confusion of pale
+purple and pink crape myrtles, oleanders white and red, and the
+bristling leaves and plumes of white bells of the Spanish bayonet,
+all in the shade of lofty magnolias, and one great pecan.
+
+"And this is little Alice," said Doctor Sevier with gentle gravity, as,
+on his first visit to the place, he shook hands with Mary at the top of
+the veranda stairs, and laid his fingers upon the child's forehead. He
+smiled into her uplifted face as her eyes examined his, and stroked the
+little crown as she turned her glance silently upon her mother, as if to
+inquire if this were a trustworthy person. Mary led the way to chairs
+at the veranda's end where the south breeze fanned them, and Alice
+retreated to her mother's side until her silent question should be
+settled.
+
+It was still May. They spoke the praises of the day whose sun was
+just setting. And Mary commended the house, the convenience of its
+construction, its salubrity; and also, and especially, the excellence
+and goodness of Madame Zenobie. What a complete and satisfactory
+arrangement! Was it not? Did not the Doctor think so?
+
+But the Doctor's affirmative responses were unfrequent, and quite
+without enthusiasm; and Mary's face, wearing more cheer than was felt
+within, betrayed, moreover, the feeling of one who, having done the best
+she knew, falls short of commendation.
+
+She was once more in deep black. Her face was pale, and some of its
+lines had yielded up a part of their excellence. The outward curves of
+the rose had given place to the inward curves of the lily--nay, hardly
+all that; for as she had never had the full red queenliness of the one,
+neither had she now the severe sanctitude of the other; that soft glow
+of inquiry, at once so blithe and so self-contained, so modest and so
+courageous, humble, yet free, still played about her saddened eyes and
+in her tones. Through the glistening sadness of those eyes smiled
+resignation; and although the Doctor plainly read care about them and
+about the mouth, it was a care that was forbearing to feed upon itself,
+or to take its seat on her brow. The brow was the old one; that is, the
+young. The joy of life's morning was gone from it forever; but a
+chastened hope was there, and one could see peace hovering just above
+it, as though it might in time alight. Such were the things that divided
+her austere friend's attention as she sat before him, seeking, with
+timid smiles and interrogative argument, for this new beginning of life
+some heartiness of approval from him.
+
+"Doctor," she plucked up courage to say at last, with a geniality that
+scantily hid the inner distress, "you don't seem pleased."
+
+"I can't say I am, Mary. You've provided for things in sight; but I see
+no provision for unseen contingencies. They're sure to come, you know.
+How are you going to meet them?"
+
+"Well," said Mary, with slow, smiling caution, "there's my two thousand
+dollars that you've put at interest for me."
+
+"Why, no; you've already counted the interest on that as part of your
+necessary income."
+
+"Doctor, 'the Lord will provide,' will he not?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Why, Doctor!"--
+
+"No, Mary; you've got to provide. He's not going to set aside the laws
+of nature to cover our improvidence. That would be to break faith with
+all creation for the sake of one or two creatures."
+
+"No; but still, Doctor, without breaking the laws of nature, he will
+provide. It's in his word."
+
+"Yes, and it ought to be in his word--not in ours. It's for him to say
+to us, not for us to say to him. But there's another thing, Mary."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"It's this. But first I'll say plainly you've passed through the fires
+of poverty, and they haven't hurt you. You have one of those
+imperishable natures that fire can't stain or warp."
+
+"O Doctor, how absurd!" said Mary, with bright genuineness, and a tear
+in either eye. She drew Alice closer.
+
+"Well, then, I do see two ill effects," replied the Doctor. "In the
+first place, as I've just tried to show you, you have caught a little of
+the _recklessness_ of the poor."
+
+"I was born with it," exclaimed Mary, with amusement.
+
+"Maybe so," replied her friend; "at any rate you show it." He was
+silent.
+
+"But what is the other?" asked Mary.
+
+"Why, as to that, I may mistake; but--you seem inclined to settle down
+and be satisfied with poverty."
+
+"Having food and raiment," said Mary, smiling with some archness, "to be
+therewith content."
+
+"Yes, but"--the physician shook his head--"that doesn't mean to be
+satisfied. It's one thing to be content with God's providence, and it's
+another to be satisfied with poverty. There's not one in a thousand that
+I'd venture to say it to. He wouldn't understand the fine difference.
+But you will. I'm sure you do."
+
+"Yes, I do."
+
+"I know you do. You know poverty has its temptations, and warping
+influences, and debasing effects, just as truly as riches have. See how
+it narrows our usefulness. Not always, it is true. Sometimes our best
+usefulness keeps us poor. That's poverty with a good excuse. But that's
+not poverty satisfying, Mary"--
+
+"No, of course not," said Mary, exhibiting a degree of distress that the
+Doctor somehow overlooked.
+
+"It's merely," said he, half-extending his open palm,--"it's merely
+poverty accepted, as a good soldier accepts the dust and smut that are a
+necessary part of the battle. Now, here's this little girl."--As his
+open white hand pointed toward Alice she shrank back; but the Doctor
+seemed blind this afternoon and drove on.--"In a few years--it will not
+seem like any time at all--she'll be half grown up; she'll have wants
+that ought to be supplied."
+
+"Oh! don't," exclaimed Mary, and burst into a flood of tears; and the
+Doctor, while she hid them from her child, sat silently loathing his own
+stupidity.
+
+"Please, don't mind it," said Mary, stanching the flow. "You were not so
+badly mistaken. I wasn't satisfied, but I was about to surrender." She
+smiled at herself and her warlike figure of speech.
+
+He looked away, passed his hand across his forehead and must have
+muttered audibly his self-reproach: for Mary looked up again with a
+faint gleam of the old radiance in her face, saying:--
+
+"I'm glad you didn't let me do it. I'll not do it. I'll take up the
+struggle again. Indeed, I had already thought of one thing I could do,
+but I--I--in fact, Doctor, I thought you might not like it."
+
+"What was it?"
+
+"It was teaching in the public schools. They're in the hands of the
+military government, I am told. Are they not?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Still," said Mary, speaking rapidly, "I say I'll keep up the"--
+
+But the Doctor lifted his hand.
+
+"No, no. There's to be no more struggle."
+
+"No?" Mary tried to look pleasantly incredulous.
+
+"No; and you're not going to be put upon anybody's bounty, either. No.
+What I was going to say about this little girl here was this,--her name
+is Alice, is it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The mother dropped an arm around the child, and both she and Alice
+looked timidly at the questioner.
+
+"Well, by that name, Mary, I claim the care of her."
+
+The color mounted to Mary's brows, but the Doctor raised a finger.
+
+"I mean, of course, Mary, only in so far as such care can go without
+molesting your perfect motherhood, and all its offices and pleasures."
+
+Her eyes filled again, and her lips parted; but the Doctor was not going
+to let her reply.
+
+"Don't try to debate it, Mary. You must see you have no case. Nobody's
+going to take her from you, nor do any other of the foolish things, I
+hope, that are so often done in such cases. But you've called her
+Alice, and Alice she must be. I don't propose to take care of her for
+you"--
+
+"Oh, no; of course not," interjected Mary.
+
+"No," said the Doctor; "you'll take care of her for me. I intended it
+from the first. And that brings up another point. You mustn't teach
+school. No. I have something else--something better--to suggest. Mary,
+you and John have been a kind of blessing to me"--
+
+She would have interrupted with expressions of astonishment and dissent,
+but he would not hear them.
+
+"I think I ought to know best about that," he said. "Your husband taught
+me a great deal, I think. I want to put some of it into practice. We had
+a--an understanding, you might say--one day toward the--end--that I
+should do for him some of the things he had so longed and hoped to
+do--for the poor and the unfortunate."
+
+"I know," said Mary, the tears dropping down her face.
+
+"He told you?" asked the Doctor.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Well," resumed the Doctor, "those may not be his words precisely, but
+it's what they meant to me. And I said I'd do it. But I shall need
+assistance. I'm a medical practitioner. I attend the sick. But I see a
+great deal of other sorts of sufferers; and I can't stop for them."
+
+"Certainly not," said Mary, softly.
+
+"No," said he; "I can't make the inquiries and investigations about them
+and study them, and all that kind of thing, as one should if one's help
+is going to be help. I can't turn aside for all that. A man must have
+one direction, you know. But you could look after those things"--
+
+"I?"
+
+"Certainly. You could do it just as I--just as John--would wish to see
+it done. You're just the kind of person to do it right."
+
+"O Doctor, don't say so! I'm not fitted for it at all."
+
+"I'm sure you are, Mary. You're fitted by character and outward
+disposition, and by experience. You're full of cheer"--
+
+She tearfully shook her head. But he insisted.
+
+"You will be--for _his_ sake, as you once said to me. Don't you
+remember?"
+
+She remembered. She recalled all he wished her to: the prayer she had
+made that, whenever death should part her husband and her, he might not
+be the one left behind. Yes, she remembered; and the Doctor spoke
+again:--
+
+"Now, I invite you to make this your principal business. I'll pay you
+for it, regularly and well, what I think it's worth; and it's worth no
+trifle. There's not one in a thousand that I'd trust to do it, woman
+or man; but I know you will do it all, and do it well, without any
+nonsense. And if you want to look at it so, Mary, you can just consider
+that it's John doing it, all the time; for, in fact, that's just what it
+is. It beats sewing, Mary, or teaching school, or making preserves, I
+think."
+
+"Yes," said Mary, looking down on Alice, and stroking her head.
+
+"You can stay right here where you are, with Madame Zenobie, as you had
+planned; but you'll give yourself to this better work. I'll give you a
+_carte blanche_. Only one mistake I charge you not to make; don't go and
+come from day to day on the assumption that only the poor are poor, and
+need counsel and attention."
+
+"I know that would be a mistake," said Mary.
+
+"But I mean more than that," continued the Doctor. "You must keep a
+hold on the rich and comfortable and happy. You want to be a medium
+between the two, identified with both as completely as possible. It's a
+hard task, Mary. It will take all your cunning."
+
+"And more, too," replied she, half-musing.
+
+"You know," said the Doctor, "I'm not to appear in the matter, of
+course; I'm not to be mentioned: that must be one of the conditions."
+
+Mary smiled at him through her welling eyes.
+
+"I'm not fit to do it," she said, folding the wet spots of her
+handkerchief under. "But still, I'd rather not refuse. If I might try
+it, I'd like to do so. If I could do it well, it would be a finer
+monument--to _him_"--
+
+"Than brass or marble," said Dr. Sevier. "Yes, more to his liking."
+
+"Well," said Mary again, "if you think I can do it I'll try it."
+
+"Very well. There's one place you can go to, to begin with, to-morrow
+morning, if you choose. I'll give you the number. It's just across here
+in Casa Calvo street."
+
+"Narcisse's aunt?" asked Mary, with a soft gleam of amusement.
+
+"Yes. Have you been there already?"
+
+She had; but she only said:--
+
+"There's one thing that I'm afraid will go against me, Doctor, almost
+everywhere." She lifted a timid look.
+
+The Doctor looked at her inquiringly, and in his private thought said
+that it was certainly not her face or voice.
+
+"Ah!" he said, as he suddenly recollected. "Yes; I had forgotten. You
+mean your being a Union woman."
+
+"Yes. It seems to me they'll be sure to find it out. Don't you think it
+will interfere?"
+
+The Doctor mused.
+
+"I forgot that," he repeated and mused again. "You can't blame us, Mary;
+we're at white heat"--
+
+"Indeed I don't!" said Mary, with eager earnestness.
+
+He reflected yet again.
+
+"But--I don't know, either. It may be not as great a drawback as you
+think. Here's Madame Zenobie, for instance"--
+
+Madame Zenobie was just coming up the front steps from the garden,
+pulling herself up upon the veranda wearily by the balustrade. She came
+forward, and, with graceful acknowledgment, accepted the physician's
+outstretched hand and courtesied.
+
+"Here's Madame Zenobie, I say; you seem to get along with her."
+
+Mary smiled again, looked up at the standing quadroon, and replied in a
+low voice:--
+
+"Madame Zenobie is for the Union herself."
+
+"Ah! no-o-o!" exclaimed the good woman, with an alarmed face. She lifted
+her shoulders and extended what Narcisse would have called the han' of
+rep-u-diation; then turned away her face, lifted up her underlip with
+disrelish, and asked the surrounding atmosphere,--"What I got to do wid
+Union? Nuttin' do wid Union--nuttin' do wid Confederacie!" She moved
+away, addressing the garden and the house by turns. "Ah! no!" She went
+in by the front door, talking Creole French, until she was beyond
+hearing.
+
+Dr. Sevier reached out toward the child at Mary's knee. Here was one who
+was neither for nor against, nor yet a fear-constrained neutral. Mary
+pushed her persuasively toward the Doctor, and Alice let herself be
+lifted to his lap.
+
+"I used to be for it myself," he said, little dreaming he would one day
+be for it again. As the child sank back into his arm, he noticed a
+miniature of her father hanging from her neck. He took it into his
+fingers, and all were silent while he looked long upon the face.
+
+By and by he asked Mary for an account of her wanderings. She gave it.
+Many of the experiences, that had been hard and dangerous enough when
+she was passing through them, were full of drollery when they came to be
+told, and there was much quiet amusement over them. The sunlight faded
+out, the cicadas hushed their long-drawn, ear-splitting strains, and the
+moon had begun to shine in the shadowy garden when Dr. Sevier at length
+let Alice down and rose to take his lonely homeward way, leaving Mary to
+Alice's prattle, and, when that was hushed in slumber, to gentle tears
+and whispered thanksgivings above the little head.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LX.
+
+"YET SHALL HE LIVE."
+
+
+We need not follow Mary through her ministrations. Her office was no
+sinecure. It took not only much labor, but, as the Doctor had expected,
+it took all her cunning. True, nature and experience had equipped her
+for such work; but for all that there was an art to be learned, and time
+and again there were cases of mental and moral decrepitude or deformity
+that baffled all her skill until her skill grew up to them, which in
+some cases it never did. The greatest tax of all was to seem, and to be,
+unprofessional; to avoid regarding her work in quantity, and to be
+simply, merely, in every case, a personal friend; not to become known as
+a benevolent itinerary, but only a kind and thoughtful neighbor. Blessed
+word! not benefactor--neighbor!
+
+She had no schemes for helping the unfortunate by multitude. Possibly on
+that account her usefulness was less than it might have been. But I am
+not sure; for they say her actual words and deeds were but the seed of
+ultimate harvests; and that others, moreover, seeing her light shine so
+brightly along this seemingly narrow path, and moved to imitate her,
+took that other and broader way, and so both fields were reaped.
+
+But, I say, we need not follow her steps. They would lead deviously
+through ill-smelling military hospitals, and into buildings that had
+once been the counting-rooms of Carondelet-street cotton merchants, but
+were now become the prisons of soldiers in gray. One of these places,
+restored after the war as a cotton factor's counting-room again, had,
+until a few years ago, a queer, clumsy patch in the plastering of one
+wall, near the base-board. Some one had made a rough inscription on it
+with a cotton sampler's marking-brush. It commemorates an incident. Mary
+by some means became aware beforehand that this incident was going to
+occur; and one of the most trying struggles of conscience she ever had
+in her life was that in which she debated with herself one whole night
+whether she ought to give her knowledge to others or keep it to herself.
+She kept it. In fact, she said nothing until the war was all over and
+done, and she never was quite sure whether her silence was right or
+wrong. And when she asked Dr. Sevier if he thought she had done wrong,
+he asked:--
+
+"You knew it was going to take place, and kept silence?"
+
+"Yes," said Mary.
+
+"And you want to know whether you did right?"
+
+"Yes. I'd like to know what you think."
+
+He sat very straight, and said not a word, nor changed a line of his
+face. She got no answer at all.
+
+The inscription was as follows; I used to see it every work-day of the
+week for years--it may be there yet--190 Common street, first flight,
+back office:
+
+ [Illustration:
+ Oct 14 1864
+ 17 Confederate
+ Prisoners escaped
+ Through this hole]
+
+But we move too fast. Let us go back into the war for a moment longer.
+Mary pursued her calling. The most of it she succeeded in doing in a
+very sunshiny way. She carried with her, and left behind her, cheer,
+courage, hope. Yet she had a widow's heart, and whenever she took a
+widow's hand in hers, and oftentimes, alone or against her sleeping
+child's bedside, she had a widow's tears. But this work, or these
+works,--she made each particular ministration seem as if it were the
+only one,--these works, that she might never have had the opportunity to
+perform had her nest-mate never been taken from her, seemed to keep John
+near. Almost, sometimes, he seemed to walk at her side in her errands of
+mercy, or to spread above her the arms of benediction. And so even the
+bitter was sweet, and she came to believe that never before had widow
+such blessed commutation.
+
+One day, a short, slight Confederate prisoner, newly brought in, and
+hobbling about the place where he was confined, with a vile bullet-hole
+in his foot, came up to her and said:--
+
+"Allow me, madam,--did that man call you by your right name, just now?"
+
+Mary looked at him. She had never seen him before.
+
+"Yes, sir," she said.
+
+She could see the gentleman, under much rags and dirt.
+
+"Are you Mrs. John Richling?"
+
+A look of dismay came into his face as he asked the grave question.
+
+"Yes, sir," replied Mary.
+
+His voice dropped, and he asked, with subdued haste:--
+
+"Ith it pothible you're in mourning for him?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+It was the little rector. He had somehow got it into his head that
+preachers ought to fight, and this was one of the results. Mary went
+away quickly, and told Dr. Sevier. The Doctor went to the commanding
+general. It was a great humiliation to do so, he thought. There was none
+worse, those days, in the eyes of the people. He craved and got the
+little man's release on parole. A fortnight later, as Dr. Sevier was
+sitting at the breakfast table, with the little rector at its opposite
+end, he all at once rose to his full attenuated height, with a frown and
+then a smile, and, tumbling the chair backward behind him, exclaimed:--
+
+"Why, Laura!"--for it was that one of his two gay young nieces who stood
+in the door-way. The banker's wife followed in just behind, and was
+presently saying, with the prettiest heartiness, that Dr. Sevier looked
+no older than the day they met the Florida general at dinner years
+before. She had just come in from the Confederacy, smuggling her son of
+eighteen back to the city, to save him from the conscript officers, and
+Laura had come with her. And when the clergyman got his crutches into
+his armpits and stood on one foot, and he and Laura both blushed as they
+shook hands, the Doctor knew that she had come to nurse her wounded
+lover. That she might do this without embarrassment, they got married,
+and were thereupon as vexed with themselves as they could be under the
+circumstances that they had not done it four or five years before. Of
+course there was no parade; but Dr. Sevier gave a neat little dinner.
+Mary and Laura were its designers; Madame Zenobie was the master-builder
+and made the gumbo. One word about the war, whose smoke was over all the
+land, would have spoiled the broth. But no such word was spoken.
+
+It happened that the company was almost the same as that which had sat
+down in brighter days to that other dinner, which the banker's wife
+recalled with so much pleasure. She and her husband and son were guests;
+also that Sister Jane, of whom they had talked, a woman of real goodness
+and rather unrelieved sweetness; also her sister and bankrupted
+brother-in-law. The brother-in-law mentioned several persons who, he
+said, once used to be very cordial to him and his wife, but now did not
+remember them; and his wife chid him, with the air of a fellow-martyr;
+but they could not spoil the tender gladness of the occasion.
+
+"Well, Doctor," said the banker's wife, looking quite the old lady now,
+"I suppose your lonely days are over, now that Laura and her husband are
+to keep house for you."
+
+"Yes," said the Doctor.
+
+But the very thought of it made him more lonely than ever.
+
+"It's a very pleasant and sensible arrangement," said the lady, looking
+very practical and confidential; "Laura has told me all about it. It's
+just the thing for them and for you."
+
+"I think so, ma'am," replied Dr. Sevier, and tried to make his statement
+good.
+
+"I'm sure of it," said the lady, very sweetly and gayly, and made a
+faint time-to-go beckon with a fan to her husband, to whom, in the
+farther drawing-room, Laura and Mary stood talking, each with an arm
+about the other's waist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXI
+
+PEACE.
+
+
+It came with tears. But, ah! it lifted such an awful load from the
+hearts even of those who loved the lost cause. Husbands snatched
+their wives once more to their bosoms, and the dear, brave, swarthy,
+rough-bearded, gray-jacketed boys were caught again in the wild arms
+of mothers and sisters. Everywhere there was glad, tearful kissing.
+Everywhere? Alas for the silent lips that remained unkissed, and the
+arms that remained empty! And alas for those to whom peace came too
+suddenly and too soon! Poor Narcisse!
+
+His salary still continues. So does his aunt.
+
+The Ristofalos came back all together. How delighted Mrs. Colonel
+Ristofalo--I say Mrs. _Colonel_ Ristofalo--was to see Mary! And how
+impossible it was, when they sat down together for a long talk, to avoid
+every moment coming back to the one subject of "him."
+
+"Yes, ye see, there bees thim as is _called_ col-o-nels, whin in fact
+they bees only _liftinent_ col-o-nels. Yes. But it's not so wid him. And
+he's no different from the plain Raphael Ristofalah of eight year
+ago--the same perfict gintleman that he was when he sold b'iled eggs!"
+
+And the colonel's "lady" smiled a gay triumph that gave Mary a new
+affection for her.
+
+Sister Jane bowed to the rod of an inscrutable Providence. She could not
+understand how the Confederacy could fail, and justice still be justice;
+so, without understanding, she left it all to Heaven, and clung to
+her faith. Her brother-in-law never recovered his fortunes nor his
+sweetness. He could not bend his neck to the conqueror's yoke; he went
+in search of liberty to Brazil--or was it Honduras? Little matter which,
+now, for he died there, both he and his wife, just as their faces were
+turning again homeward, and it was dawning upon them once more that
+there is no land like Dixie in all the wide world over.
+
+The little rector--thanks, he says, to the skill of Dr.
+Sevier!--recovered perfectly the use of his mangled foot, so that he
+even loves long walks. I was out walking with him one sunset hour in the
+autumn of--if I remember aright--1870, when whom should we spy but our
+good Kate Ristofalo, out driving in her family carriage? The cherubs
+were beside her,--strong, handsome boys. Mike held the reins; he was but
+thirteen, but he looked full three years better than that, and had
+evidently employed the best tailor in St. Charles street to fit his
+rather noticeable clothes. His mother had changed her mind about his
+being a bruiser, though there isn't a doubt he had a Derringer in one or
+another of his pockets. No, she was proposing to make him a doctor--"a
+surgeon," she said; "and thin, if there bees another war"-- She was
+for making every edge cut.
+
+She did us the honor to stop the carriage, and drive up to the
+curb-stone for a little chat. Her spirits were up, for Colonel Ristofalo
+had just been made a city councilman by a rousing majority.
+
+We expressed our regret not to see Raphael himself in the family group
+enjoying the exquisite air.
+
+"Ha, ha! He ride out for pleasure?"--And then, with sudden
+gravity,--"Aw, naw, sur! He's too busy. Much use ut is to be married to
+a public man! Ah! surs, I'm mighty tired of ut, now I tell ye!" Yet she
+laughed again, without betraying much fatigue. "And how's Dr. Sevier?"
+
+"He's well," said the clergyman.
+
+"And Mrs. Richling?"
+
+"She's well, too."
+
+Kate looked at the little rector out of the corners of her roguish Irish
+eyes, a killing look, and said:--
+
+"Ye're sure the both o' thim bees well?"
+
+"Yes, quite well," replied he, ignoring the inane effort at jest. She
+nodded a blithe good-day, and rolled on toward the lake, happy as the
+harvest weather, and with a kind heart for all the world. We walked on,
+and after the walk I dined with the rector. Dr. Sevier's place was
+vacant, and we talked of him. The prettiest piece of furniture in the
+dining-room was an extremely handsome child's high chair that remained,
+unused, against the wall. It was Alice's, and Alice was an almost daily
+visitor. It had come in almost simultaneously with Laura's marriage, and
+more and more frequently, as time had passed, the waiter had set it up
+to the table, at the Doctor's right hand, and lifted Goldenhair into it,
+until by and by she had totally outgrown it. But she had not grown out
+of the place of favor at the table. In these later days she had become
+quite a school-girl, and the Doctor, in his place at the table, would
+often sit with a faint, continuous smile on his face that no one could
+bring there but her, to hear her prattle about Madame Locquet, and the
+various girls at Madame Locquet's school.
+
+ * * *
+
+"It's actually pathetic," said Laura, as we sat sipping our coffee after
+the meal, "to see how he idolizes that child." Alice had just left the
+room.
+
+"Why don't he idolize the child's"--began her husband, in undertone,
+and did not have to finish to make us understand.
+
+"He does," murmured the smiling wife.
+
+"Then why shouldn't he tell her so?"
+
+"My dear!" objected the wife, very softly and prettily.
+
+"I don't mean to speak lightly," responded the husband, "but--they love
+each other; they suit each other; they complete each other; they don't
+feel their disparity of years; they're both so linked to Alice that it
+would break either heart over again to be separated from her. I don't
+see why"--
+
+Laura shook her head, smiling in the gentle way that only the happy
+wives of good men have.
+
+"It will never be."
+
+ * * *
+
+What changes!
+
+ "The years creep slowly by"--
+
+We seem to hear the old song yet. What changes! Laura has put two more
+leaves into her dining-table. Children fill three seats. Alice has
+another. It is she, now, not her chair, that is tall--and fair. Mary,
+too, has a seat at the same board. This is their home now. Her hair is
+turning all to silver. So early? Yes; but she is--she never was--so
+beautiful! They all see it--feel it; Dr. Sevier--the gentle, kind,
+straight old Doctor--most of all. And oh! when they two, who have never
+joined hands on this earth, go to meet John and Alice,--which God grant
+may be at one and the same time,--what weeping there will be among God's
+poor!
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Dr. Sevier, by George W. Cable
+
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