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"What does your father give you a week?"
"Sometimes a dollar. Sometimes a dollar and a half. Sometimes nothin'."
"What does your father say about putting Isaac in the asylum?"
"My father!" answered Abraham, his eyes flashing. "_He_ don't want him.
Isaac won't work. He's an _American_ boy. He's only eight. He just hangs around the house and musses things up and won't do nothin' they tell him. My father would be glad to get rid of him."
"Well, if he makes all this trouble, why do you want to keep him?" I asked.
"Because I love him!" responded Abraham with a sob. "He's all I've got--that little feller. I want him to grow up a good boy. If they don't want to take care of him, _I will_. I'll earn the money. I'll send him to school, maybe, by and by, and make a _lawyer_ of him." Abraham spoke eagerly. "The old folks, my father and mother, they ain't like me and you, they ain't real Americans, they don't understand these things.
All they think about is work and the synagogue. I'm up against it, I know. I've got to work. But the little feller--I want that little feller to come out on top and have a chance."
"McCarthy," said I to the county detective a.s.signed to the office, "kindly step into the next room. I want to speak to this boy alone.
"Abraham, you are up against it, I guess. Don't you think you can go without the little feller for a year? I'll do what I can, but even if he goes up they won't keep him longer than that at the asylum, and probably when he comes out he'll be more of a help to your father and mother."
The big tears stood in his eyes and he twisted his hands together as he answered:
"I guess--maybe--maybe, I could give up going down to Coney for a year, if it was going to do him any good. Don't you think the asylum's so bad?"
"No, indeed," said I. "It's fine. He can learn to play in the band.
He'll have a good time. Let him go."
For an instant I thought my words had made an impression. Then the two tears welled over.
"You don't know--" the voice was low and pa.s.sionate--"you don't know what it is to have nothin' but a little feller like that. And way off there--he would wake up in the night maybe--all alone--a little feller----"
"Abraham!" I exclaimed, "the Juvenile be hanged! I'll see the judge and do my best to have the little fellow remanded in the custody of his brother. And Abraham----"
"Yes, sir."
"Where is the little feller? Out on bail?"
"Yessir."
I fumbled in my pocket for a dollar bill.
"Will you be paid for to-day?" I asked.
"No, there's nothin' doin' to-day," he answered.
"Had any work this week?"
"Nothin' much this week. There ain't much doin' at the shop. I won't get paid this week."
"Well," I continued, "the little feller is free till Monday, anyhow.
Take him down to Coney to-morrow. And see here, Abraham, just _spend_ that dollar. Be a good sport." He grinned. "Take the little feller along and sit on the sand, and if there is anything you want to see, no matter if it costs five cents or ten cents, you go in and see it. Have a real good time. Something for the little fellow to remember."
He smiled out of his eyes a heaven-born smile.
"Thank you."
"Never mind that, just do as I say. And Monday you go to court with him.
I'll see what I can do."
"You bet I will. I'll take the little feller down there to-morrow. You ought to see him, Mister. Some time I'll bring him in here."
He shook hands and turned to open the door. As it closed behind him, there echoed faintly through the transom:
"Just wait till you see that little feller!"
RANDOLPH, '64
"For the good and the great, in their beautiful prime, Through thy precincts have musingly trod--"
The roll of the national anthem died away and the veterans stood with bowed heads while the chaplain p.r.o.nounced the benediction. Then the color bearer elevated the regimental flags, the drums tapped, and the gray-haired soldier boys, in straggling twos, marched slowly out of Saunders's Theater, through the flower-bedecked transept, and into the broad sunshine of Memorial Day. Ralph and I lingered in our seats until the crowd had thinned. In the flag-draped balcony above the platform the members of the band were hurriedly departing with their impedimenta; here and there little old ladies dressed in gray, were making their way with tardy steps toward the side exit; while all around the theater the open windows poured in a battery of mote-filled sunshine upon the deserted benches. The air was heavy with the soft fragrance of the elms outside, the faint odor of starched linen, of pine dust, and of flowers.
"There's a pair for you!" whispered Ralph, as an erect old gentleman accompanied by a white-haired negro came up the aisle. "I wish I knew who they were." He offered to wager large sums, based upon his alleged capacity for divination, that they were an "old grad," a Southerner, probably, and his body servant--"Old Ma.r.s.e" and "Uncle Ned." He instantly saw visions of them as characters in a story he was writing for one of the college papers. He is an imaginative boy.
We followed them out into the transept, and waited in the jog by the entrance while they made the round of the tablets, the white man reading the various inscriptions to his companion, who now and then would nod as if in recollection, and once furtively wiped his eyes with a frayed red-bordered silk handkerchief. The last we saw of them, they were picking their way across the car tracks of Cambridge Street in the direction of the Yard.
All the long spring afternoon, as we lay on the gra.s.s with our backs against the tree trunks, pretending to study, but really only watching the little gray denizens of the Yard intent upon their squirrel business, Ralph was making up stories about "Old Ma.r.s.e" and "Uncle Ned."
I don't believe the chap read a line of his Stubbs on "Mediaeval Architecture," and he was very loath to join me when I dragged him to his feet and said that it was time for supper.
Darkness had fallen when, two hours later, we joined the group of men gathered under the elms around the main entrance of Holworthy, where the Glee Club had a.s.sembled for one of its evening concerts. Everywhere the old buildings gleamed with light, for the examinations were on, and each window had its cl.u.s.ter of coatless occupants, who from time to time vociferously partic.i.p.ated in mournful, lingering calls for "M-o-r-e."
The odor of pipe smoke mingled with the sweet, humid breath of the gra.s.s and the subtle perfume of professors' gardens from distant Quincy Street; in the western sky a crescent moon, just peeping from behind the tower of Ma.s.sachusetts Hall, shyly nestled in the tree tops; while between the great elms we could look, as we lay flat upon our backs, into an infinity of faintly twinkling worlds. Between songs you could hear the creaking of the pump in front of Hollis Hall, and the tinkle of the cup upon its chain as it was tossed heedlessly away by the thirsty wayfarer after he had availed himself of its humble services. Ralph and I, joyously entangled in the anatomy of a dozen cla.s.smates, drank in with rapture the never cloying melodies of "Johnnie Harvard," "The Miller's Daughter," "The Independent Cadets," and "A Health to King Charles," none of which old favorites escaped without a second rendition, and it was well on to nine o'clock when with a last
Here's a health to King Charles, _Fill him up_ to the brim!
the a.s.semblage broke up, in spite of savage disapproval from the windows.
Then only did we surrender to our miserable apprehension of the imminent, deadly "exam." in Fine Arts 4, and with the earnestly avowed purpose of really mastering the difference between a gargoyle and a lintel before we retired to rest, reluctantly mounted the stone steps recently vacated by our musical brethren. Our room was Number 10, the first as you go in on the right, and the flickering gaslight in the hall showed that the door, in accordance with inviolable custom, was still ajar.
"Wait a second while I light the lamp," I remarked to Ralph, and, feeling my way across the room to my desk, stood there fumbling for the matches. As I did so I was startled to hear a voice from the darkness in the direction of the fireplace.
"I beg your pardon," it said. "I'm afraid I have usurped your room, but the door was open and its invitation was too attractive to be refused."
The match flared up and I saw before me Ralph's "Old Ma.r.s.e."
"Oh--of course--certainly," I replied. He had arisen from the armchair in which evidently he had been listening to the singing. Then the wick caught, and by the increased light I saw that the man before me looked older than he had in the morning. His hair was almost white, and his face about the eyes finely wrinkled, but its expression was full of kindly humor, and I felt somehow that this stranger quite belonged there, and that it was I who was the intruder.
"You see," he continued with a smile, "I feel that I have a certain right to be here. This used to be my room. Let me introduce myself.
Curtis is my name--Curtis, '64."