I
Little Jim was, for the time,
engine Number 36, and he was making the run between Syracuse and
Rochester. He was fourteen minutes behind time, and the throttle
was wide open. In consequence, when he swung around the curve at
the flower-bed, a wheel of his cart destroyed a peony. Number
36
slowed down at once and looked
guiltily at his father, who was mowing the lawn. The doctor had his
back to this accident, and he continued to pace slowly to and fro,
pushing the mower.
Jim dropped the tongue of the
cart. He looked at his father and at the broken flower. Finally he
went to the peony and tried to stand it on its pins, resuscitated,
but the spine of it was hurt, and it would only hang limply from
his hand. Jim could do no reparation. He looked again towards his
father.
He went on to the lawn, very
slowly, and kicking wretchedly at the turf. Presently his father
came along with the whirring machine, while the sweet, new grass
blades spun from the knives. In a low voice, Jim said, “Pa!”
The doctor was shaving this lawn
as if it were a priest’s chin. All during the season he had worked
at it in the coolness and peace of the evenings after supper. Even
in the shadow of the cherry-trees the grass was strong and healthy.
Jim raised his voice a trifle. “Pa!”
The doctor paused, and with the
howl of the machine no longer occupying the sense, one could hear
the robins in the cherry-trees arranging their affairs. Jim’s hands
were behind his back, and sometimes his fingers clasped and
unclasped. Again he said, “Pa!” The child’s fresh and rosy lip was
lowered.
The doctor stared down at his
son, thrusting his head forward and frowning attentively. “What is
it, Jimmie?”
“Pa!” repeated the child at
length. Then he raised his finger and pointed at the flowerbed.
“There!”
“What?” said the doctor, frowning
more. “What is it, Jim?”
After a period of silence, during
which the child may have undergone a severe mental tumult, he
raised his finger and repeated his former word—“There!” The father
had respected this silence with perfect courtesy. Afterwards his
glance carefully followed the direction indicated by the child’s
finger, but he could see nothing which explained to him. “I don’t
understand what you mean, Jimmie,” he said.
It seemed that the importance of
the whole thing had taken away the boy’s vocabulary, He could only
reiterate, “There!”
The doctor mused upon the
situation, but he could make nothing of it. At last he said, “Come,
show me.”
Together they crossed the lawn
towards the flower-bed. At some yards from the broken peony Jimmie
began to lag. “There!” The word came almost breathlessly.
“Where?” said the doctor.
Jimmie kicked at the grass.
“There!” he replied.
The doctor was obliged to go
forward alone. After some trouble he found the subject of the
incident, the broken flower. Turning then, he saw the child lurking
at the rear and scanning his countenance.
The father reflected. After a
time he said, “Jimmie, come here.” With an infinite modesty of
demeanor the child came forward. “Jimmie, how did this
happen?”
The child answered, “Now—I was
playin’ train—and—now— I runned over it.”
“You were doing what?” “I was
playin’ train.”
The father reflected again.
“Well, Jimmie,” he said, slowly, “I guess you had better not play
train any more to-day. Do you think you had better?”
“No, sir,” said Jimmie.
During the delivery of the
judgment the child had not faced his father, and afterwards he went
away, with his head lowered, shuffling his feet.
II
It was apparent from Jimmie’s
manner that he felt some kind of desire to efface himself. He went
down to the stable. Henry Johnson, the negro who cared for the
doctor’s horses, was sponging the buggy. He grinned fraternally
when he saw Jimmie coming. These two were pals. In regard to almost
everything in life they seemed to have minds precisely alike. Of
course there were points of emphatic divergence. For instance, it
was plain from Henry’s talk that he was a very handsome negro, and
he was known to be a light, a weight, and an eminence in the suburb
of the town, where lived the larger number of the negroes, and
obviously this glory was over Jimmie’s horizon; but he vaguely
appreciated it and paid deference to Henry for it mainly because
Henry appreciated it and deferred to himself. However, on all
points of conduct as related to the doctor, who was the moon, they
were in complete but unexpressed understanding. Whenever Jimmie
became the victim of an eclipse he went to the stable to solace
himself with Henry’s crimes. Henry, with the elasticity of his
race, could usually provide a sin to place himself on a
footing
with the disgraced one. Perhaps
he would remember that he had forgotten to put the hitching-strap
in the back of the buggy on some recent occasion, and had been
reprimanded by the doctor. Then these two would commune subtly and
without words concerning their moon, holding themselves
sympathetically as people who had committed similar treasons. On
the other hand, Henry would sometimes choose to absolutely
repudiate this idea, and when Jimmie appeared in his shame would
bully him most virtuously, preaching with assurance the precepts of
the doctor’s creed, and pointing out to Jimmie all his
abominations. Jimmie did not discover that this was odious in his
comrade. He accepted it and lived in its shadow with humility,
merely trying to conciliate the saintly Henry with acts of
deference. Won by this attitude, Henry would sometimes allow the
child to enjoy the felicity of squeezing the sponge over a
buggy-wheel, even when Jimmie was still gory from unspeakable
deeds.
Whenever Henry dwelt for a time
in sackcloth, Jimmie did not patronize him at all. This was a
justice of his age, his condition. He did not know. Besides, Henry
could drive a horse, and Jimmie had a full sense of this sublimity.
Henry personally conducted the moon during the splendid journeys
through the country roads, where farms spread on all sides, with
sheep, cows, and other marvels abounding.
“Hello, Jim!” said Henry, poising
his sponge. Water was dripping from the buggy. Sometimes the horses
in the stalls stamped thunderingly on the pine floor. There was an
atmosphere of hay and of harness.
For a minute Jimmie refused to
take an interest in anything. He was very downcast. He could not
even feel the wonders of wagon washing. Henry, while at his work,
narrowly observed him.
“Your pop done wallop yer, didn’t
he?” he said at last. “No,” said Jimmie, defensively; “he
didn’t.”
After this casual remark Henry
continued his labor, with a scowl of occupation. Presently he said:
“I done tol’ yer many’s th’ time not to go a-foolin’ an’
a-projjeckin’ with them
flowers. Yer pop don’ like it
nohow.” As a matter of fact, Henry had never mentioned flowers to
the boy.
Jimmie preserved a gloomy
silence, so Henry began to use seductive wiles in this affair of
washing a wagon. It was not until he began to spin a wheel on the
tree, and the sprinkling water flew everywhere, that the boy was
visibly moved. He had been seated on the sill of the carriage-house
door, but at the beginning of this ceremony he arose and circled
towards the buggy, with an interest that slowly consumed the
remembrance of a late disgrace.
Johnson could then display all
the dignity of a man whose duty it was to protect Jimmie from a
splashing. “Look out, boy! look out! You done gwi’ spile yer pants.
I raikon your mommer don’t ‘low this foolishness, she know it. I
ain’t gwi’ have you round yere spilin’ yer pants, an’ have Mis’
Trescott light on me pressen’ly. ‘Deed I ain’t.” He spoke with an
air of great irritation, but he was not annoyed at all. This tone
was merely a part of his importance. In reality he was always
delighted to have the child there to witness the business of the
stable. For one thing, Jimmie was invariably overcome with
reverence when he was told how beautifully a harness was polished
or a horse groomed. Henry explained each detail of this kind with
unction, procuring great joy from the child’s admiration.
III
After Johnson had taken his
supper in the kitchen, he went to his loft in the carriage house
and dressed himself with much care. No belle of a court circle
could bestow more mind on a toilet than did Johnson. On second
thought, he was more like a priest arraying himself for some parade
of the church. As he emerged from his room and sauntered down the
carriage-drive,
no one would have suspected him
of ever having washed a buggy.
It was not altogether a matter of
the lavender trousers, nor yet the straw hat with its bright silk
band. The change was somewhere, far in the interior of Henry. But
there was no cake-walk hyperbole in it. He was simply a quiet,
well-bred gentleman of position, wealth, and other necessary
achievements out for an evening
stroll, and he had never washed a wagon in his life.
In the morning, when in his
working-clothes, he had met a friend—“Hello, Pete!” “Hello, Henry!”
Now, in his effulgence, he encountered this same friend. His bow
was not at all haughty. If it expressed anything, it expressed
consummate generosity—“Good-evenin’, Misteh Washington.” Pete, who
was very dirty, being at work in a potato-patch, responded in a
mixture of abasement and appreciation—Good-evenin’, Misteh
Johnsing.”
The shimmering blue of the
electric arc lamps was strong in the main street of the town. At
numerous points it was conquered by the orange glare of the
outnumbering gaslights in the windows of shops. Through this
radiant lane moved a crowd, which culminated in a throng before the
post-office, awaiting the distribution of the evening mails.
Occasionally there came into it a shrill electric street-car, the
motor singing like a cageful of grasshoppers, and possessing a
great gong that clanged forth both warnings and simple noise. At
the little theatre, which was a varnish and red plush miniature of
one of the famous New York theatres, a company of strollers was to
play “East Lynne.” The young men of the town were mainly gathered
at the corners, in distinctive groups, which expressed various
shades and lines of chumship, and had little to do with any social
gradations. There they discussed everything with critical insight,
passing the whole town in review as it swarmed in the street. When
the gongs of the electric cars ceased for a moment to harry the
ears, there could be heard the sound of the feet of the leisurely
crowd on the bluestone pavement, and it was like the peaceful
evening lashing at the shore of a lake. At the foot of the hill,
where two lines of maples sentinelled the way, an electric lamp
glowed high among the embowering branches, and made most wonderful
shadow-etchings on the road below it.
When Johnson appeared amid the
throng a member of one of the profane groups at a corner instantly
telegraphed news of this extraordinary arrival to his companions.
They hailed him. “Hello, Henry! Going to walk for a cake
to-night?”
“Ain’t he smooth?”
“Why, you’ve got that cake right
in your pocket, Henry!” “Throw out your chest a little more.”
Henry was not ruffled in any way
by these quiet admonitions and compliments. In reply he laughed a
supremely good- natured, chuckling laugh, which nevertheless
expressed an underground complacency of superior metal.
Young Griscom, the lawyer, was
just emerging from Reifsnyder’s barber shop, rubbing his chin
contentedly. On the steps he dropped his hand and looked with wide
eyes into the crowd. Suddenly he bolted back into the shop. “Wow!”
he cried to the parliament; “you ought to see the coon that’s
coming!”
Reifsnyder and his assistant
instantly poised their razors high and turned towards the window.
Two belathered heads reared from the chairs. The electric shine in
the street caused an effect like water to them who looked through
the glass from the yellow glamour of Reifsnyder’s shop. In fact,
the people without resembled the inhabitants of a great aquarium
that here had a square pane in it. Presently into this frame swam
the graceful form of Henry Johnson.
“Chee!” said Reifsnyder. He and
his assistant with one accord threw their obligations to the winds,
and leaving their lathered victims helpless, advanced to the
window. “Ain’t he a taisy?” said Reifsnyder, marvelling.
But the man in the first chair,
with a grievance in his mind, had found a weapon. “Why, that’s only
Henry Johnson, you blamed idiots! Come on now, Reif, and shave me.
What do you think I am—a mummy?”
Reifsnyder turned, in a great
excitement. “I bait you any money that vas not Henry Johnson! Henry
Johnson! Rats!” The scorn put into this last word made it an
explosion. “That man was a Pullman-car porter or someding. How
could that be Henry Johnson?” he demanded, turbulently. “You vas
crazy.”
The man in the first chair faced
the barber in a storm of indignation. “Didn’t I give him those
lavender trousers?” he
roared.
And young Griscom, who had
remained attentively at the window, said: “Yes, I guess that was
Henry. It looked like him.”
“Oh, vell,” said Reifsnyder,
returning to his business, “if you think so! Oh, vell!” He implied
that he was submitting for the sake of amiability.
Finally the man in the second
chair, mumbling from a mouth made timid by adjacent lather, said:
“That was Henry Johnson all right. Why, he always dresses like that
when he wants to make a front! He’s the biggest dude in
town—anybody knows that.”
“Chinger!” said Reifsnyder.
Henry was not at all oblivious of
the wake of wondering ejaculation that streamed out behind him. On
other occasions he had reaped this same joy, and he always had an
eye for the
demonstration. With a face
beaming with happiness he turned away from the scene of his
victories into a narrow side street, where the electric light still
hung high, but only to exhibit a row of tumble-down houses leaning
together like paralytics.
The saffron Miss Bella Farragut,
in a calico frock, had been crouched on the front stoop, gossiping
at long range, but she espied her approaching caller at a distance.
She dashed around the corner of the house, galloping like a horse.
Henry saw it all, but he preserved the polite demeanor of a guest
when a waiter spills claret down his cuff. In this awkward
situation he was simply perfect.
The duty of receiving Mr. Johnson
fell upon Mrs. Farragut, because Bella, in another room, was
scrambling wildly into her best gown. The fat old woman met him
with a great ivory smile, sweeping back with the door, and bowing
low. “Walk in, Misteh Johnson, walk in. How is you dis ebenin’,
Misteh Johnson—how is you?”
Henry’s face showed like a
reflector as he bowed and bowed, bending almost from his head to
his ankles, “Good-evenin’, Mis’ Fa’gut; good-evenin’. How is you
dis evenin’? Is all you’ folks well, Mis’ Fa’gut?”
After a great deal of kowtow,
they were planted in two chairs opposite each other in the
living-room. Here they exchanged the most tremendous civilities,
until Miss Bella swept into the room, when there was more kowtow on
all sides, and a smiling show of teeth that was like an
illumination.