
III

JIMMIE AND THE OLD woman listened long in the
hall. Above the muffled roar of conversation, the dismal wailings
of babies at night, the thumping of feet in unseen corridors and
rooms, mingled with the sound of varied hoarse shoutings in the
street and the rattling of wheels over cobbles, they heard the
screams of the child and the roars of the mother die away to a
feeble moaning and a subdued bass muttering.
The old woman was a gnarled and leathery personage
who could don, at will, an expression of great virtue. She
possessed a small music-box capable of one tune, and a collection
of “God bless yehs” pitched in assorted keys of fervency. Each day
she took a position upon the stones of Fifth Avenue, where she
crooked her legs under her and crouched immovable and hideous, like
an idol. She received daily a small sum in pennies. It was
contributed, for the most part, by persons who did not make their
homes in that vicinity.
Once, when a lady had dropped her purse on the
sidewalk, the gnarled woman had grabbed it and smuggled it with
great dexterity beneath her cloak. When she was arrested she had
cursed the lady into a partial swoon, and with her aged limbs,
twisted from rheumatism, had almost kicked the stomach out of a
huge policeman whose conduct upon that occasion she referred to
when she said: “The police, damn ’em.”
“Eh, Jimmie, it’s cursed shame,” she said. “Go,
now, like a dear an’ buy me a can, an’ if yer mudder raises ’ell
all night yehs can sleep here.”
Jimmie took a tendered tin-pail and seven pennies
and departed. He passed into the side door of a saloon and went to
the bar. Straining up on his toes he raised the pail and pennies as
high as his arms would let him. He saw two hands thrust down and
take them. Directly the same hands let down the filled pail and he
left.
In front of the gruesome doorway he met a lurching
figure. It was his father, swaying about on uncertain legs.
“Give me deh can. See?” said the man,
threateningly.
“Ah, come off! I got dis can fer dat ol’ woman an’
it ’ud be dirt teh swipe it. See?” cried Jimmie.
The father wrenched the pail from the urchin. He
grasped it in both hands and lifted it to his mouth. He glued his
lips to the under edge and tilted his head. His hairy throat
swelled until it seemed to grow near his chin. There was a
tremendous gulping movement and the beer was gone.
The man caught his breath and laughed. He hit his
son on the head with the empty pail. As it rolled clanging into the
street, Jimmie began to scream and kicked repeatedly at his
father’s shins.
“Look at deh dirt what yeh done me,” he yelled.
“Deh ol’ woman ’ill be raisin’ hell.”
He retreated to the middle of the street, but the
man did not pursue. He staggered toward the door.
“I’ll club hell outa yeh when I ketch yeh,” he
shouted, and disappeared.
During the evening he had been standing against a
bar drinking whiskies and declaring to all comers, confidentially:
“My home reg‘lar livin’ hell! Damndes’ place! Reg’lar hell! Why do
I come an’ drin’ whisk’ here thish way? ‘Cause home reg’lar livin’
hell!”
Jimmie waited a long time in the street and then
crept warily up through the building. He passed with great caution
the door of the gnarled woman, and finally stopped outside his home
and listened.
He could hear his mother moving heavily about among
the furniture of the room. She was chanting in a mournful voice,
occasionally interjecting bursts of volcanic wrath at the father,
who, Jimmie judged, had sunk down on the floor or in a
corner.
“Why deh blazes don’ chere try teh keep Jim from
fightin’? I’ll break yer jaw,” she suddenly bellowed.
The man mumbled with drunken indifference. “Ah,
wha’ deh hell. W’a’s odds? Wha’ makes kick?”
“Because he tears ’is clothes, yeh damn fool,”
cried the woman in supreme wrath.
The husband seemed to become aroused. “Go teh
hell,” he thundered fiercely in reply. There was a crash against
the door and something broke into clattering fragments. Jimmie
partially suppressed a howl and darted down the stairway. Below he
paused and listened. He heard howls and curses, groans and shrieks,
confusingly in chorus as if a battle were raging. With all was the
crash of splintering furniture. The eyes of the urchin glared in
fear that one of them would discover him.
Curious faces appeared in doorways, and whispered
comments passed to and fro. “Ol’ Johnson’s raisin’ hell
agin.”
Jimmie stood until the noises ceased and the other
inhabitants of the tenement had all yawned and shut their doors.
Then he crawled upstairs with the caution of an invader of a
panther den. Sounds of labored breathing came through the broken
door-panels. He pushed the door open and entered, quaking.
A glow from the fire threw red hues over the bare
floor, the cracked and soiled plastering, and the overturned and
broken furniture.
In the middle of the floor lay his mother asleep.
In one corner of the room his father’s limp body hung across the
seat of a chair.
The urchin stole forward. He began to shiver in
dread of awakening his parents. His mother’s great chest was
heaving painfully. Jimmie paused and looked down at her. Her face
was inflamed and swollen from drinking. Her yellow brows shaded
eyelids that had grown blue. Her tangled hair tossed in waves over
her forehead. Her mouth was set in the same lines of vindictive
hatred that it had, perhaps, borne during the fight. Her bare, red
arms were thrown out above her head in positions of exhaustion,
something, mayhap, like those of a sated villain.
The urchin bended over his mother. He was fearful
lest she should open her eyes, and the dread within him was so
strong, that he could not forbear to stare, but hung as if
fascinated over the woman’s grim face.
Suddenly her eyes opened. The urchin found himself
looking straight into that expression, which, it would seem, had
the power to change his blood to salt. He howled piercingly and
fell backward.
The woman floundered for a moment, tossed her arms
about her head as if in combat, and again began to snore.
Jimmie crawled back in the shadows and waited. A
noise in the next room had followed his cry at the discovery that
his mother was awake. He grovelled in the gloom, the eyes from out
his drawn face riveted upon the intervening door.
He heard it creak, and then the sound of a small
voice came to him. “Jimmie! Jimmie! Are yehs dere?” it whispered.
The urchin started. The thin, white face of his sister looked at
him from the doorway of the other room. She crept to him across the
floor.
The father had not moved, but lay in the same
death-like sleep. The mother writhed in uneasy slumber, her chest
wheezing as if she were in the agonies of strangulation. Out at the
window a florid moon was peering over dark roofs, and in the
distance the waters of a river glimmered pallidly.
The small frame of the ragged girl was quivering.
Her features were haggard from weeping, and her eyes gleamed from
fear. She grasped the urchin’s arm in her little trembling hands
and they huddl ed in a corner. The eyes of both were drawn, by some
force, to stare at the woman’s face, for they thought she need only
to awake and all fiends would come from below.
They crouched until the ghost-mists of dawn
appeared at the window, drawing close to the panes, and looking in
at the prostrate, heaving body of the mother.