
XV

A FORLORN WOMAN WENT along a lighted avenue. The
street was filled with people desperately bound on missions. An
endless crowd darted at the elevated station stairs and the horse
cars were thronged with owners of bundles.
The pace of the forlorn woman was slow. She was
apparently searching for some one. She loitered near the doors of
saloons and watched men emerge from them. She scanned furtively the
faces in the rushing stream of pedestrians. Hurrying men, bent on
catching some boat or train, jostled her elbows, failing to notice
her, their thoughts fixed on distant dinners.
The forlorn woman had a peculiar face. Her smile
was no smile. But when in repose her features had a shadowy look
that was like a sardonic grin, as if some one had sketched with
cruel forefinger indelible lines about her mouth.
Jimmie came strolling up the avenue. The woman
encountered him with an aggrieved air.
“Oh, Jimmie, I’ve been lookin’ all over fer yehs—,”
she began.
Jimmie made an impatient gesture and quickened his
pace.
“Ah, don’t bodder me! Good Gawd!” he said, with the
savageness of a man whose life is pestered.
The woman followed him along the sidewalk in
somewhat the manner of a suppliant.
“But, Jimmie,” she said, “yehs told me ye’d—”
Jimmie turned upon her fiercely as if resolved to
make a last stand for comfort and peace.
“Say, fer Gawd’s sake, Hattie, don’ foller me from
one end of deh city teh deh odder. Let up, will yehs! Give me a
minute’s res’. can’t yehs? Yehs makes me tired, allus taggin’ me.
See? Ain’ yehs got no sense? Do yehs want people teh get onto me?
Go chase yerself, fer Gawd’s sake.”
The woman stepped closer and laid her fingers on
his arm. “But, look-a here—”
Jimmie snarled. “Oh, go teh hell.”
He darted into the front door of a convenient
saloon and a moment later came out into the shadows that surrounded
the side door. On the brilliantly lighted avenue he perceived the
forlorn woman dodging about like a scout. Jimmie laughed with an
air of relief and went away.
When he arrived home he found his mother clamoring.
Maggie had returned. She stood shivering beneath the torrent of her
mother’s wrath.
“Well, I’m damned,” said Jimmie in greeting.
His mother, tottering about the room, pointed a
quivering forefinger.
“Lookut her, Jimmie, lookut her. Dere’s yer sister,
boy. Dere’s yer sister. Lookut her! Lookut her!”
She screamed in scoffing laughter.
The girl stood in the middle of the room. She edged
about as if unable to find a place on the floor to put her
feet.
“Ha, ha, ha,” bellowed the mother. “Dere she
stands! Ain’ she purty? Lookut her! Ain’ she sweet, deh beast?
Lookut her! Ha, ha, lookut her!”
She lurched forward and put her red and seamed
hands upon her daughter’s face. She bent down and peered keenly up
into the eyes of the girl.
“Oh, she’s jes’ dessame as she ever was, ain’ she?
She’s her mudder’s purty darlin’ yit, ain’ she? Lookut her, Jimmie!
Come here, fer Gawd’s sake, and lookut her.”
The loud, tremendous sneering of the mother brought
the denizens of the Rum Alley tenement to their doors. Women came
in the hallways. Children scurried to and fro.
“What’s up? Dat Johnson party on anudder
tear?”
“Naw! Young Mag’s come home!”
“Deh hell yeh say?”
Through the open doors curious eyes stared in at
Maggie. Children ventured into the room and ogled her, as if they
formed the front row at a theatre. Women, without, bended toward
each other and whispered, nodding their heads with airs of profound
philosophy. A baby, overcome with curiosity concerning this object
at which all were looking, sidled forward and touched her dress,
cautiously, as if investigating a red-hot stove. Its mother’s voice
rang out like a warning trumpet. She rushed forward and grabbed her
child, casting a terrible look of indignation at the girl.
Maggie’s mother paced to and fro, addressing the
doorful of eyes, expounding like a glib showman at a museum. Her
voice rang through the building.
“Dere she stands,” she cried, wheeling suddenly and
pointing with dramatic finger. “Dere she stands! Lookut her! Ain’
she a dindy? An’ she was so good as to come home teh her mudder,
she was! Ain’ she a beaut’? Ain’ she a dindy? Fer Gawd’s
sake!”
The jeering cries ended in another burst of shrill
laughter.
The girl seemed to awaken. “Jimmie—”
He drew hastily back from her.
“Well, now, yer a hell of a t’ing, ain’ yeh?” he
said, his lips curling in scorn. Radiant virtue sat upon his brow
and his repelling hands expressed horror of contamination.
Maggie turned and went.
The crowd at the door fell back precipitately. A
baby falling down in front of the door, wrenched a scream like a
wounded animal from its mother. Another woman sprang forward and
picked it up, with a chivalrous air, as if rescuing a human being
from an oncoming express train.
As the girl passed down through the hall, she went
before open doors framing more eyes strangely microscopic, and
sending broad beams of inquisitive light into the darkness of her
path. On the second floor she met the gnarled old woman who
possessed the music box.
“So,” she cried, “‘ere yehs are back again, are
yehs? An’ dey’ve kicked yehs out? Well, come in an’ stay wid me
teh-night. I ain’ got no moral standin’ .”
From above came an unceasing babble of tongues,
over all of which rang the mother’s derisive laughter.