Men, Women, and Ghosts Part 8
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She climbed into bed about one o'clock, having decided, in a dull way, to give d.i.c.k up to-morrow.
But when to-morrow came he was up with a bright face, and built the kitchen fire for her, and brought in all the water, and helped her fry the potatoes, and whistled a little about the house, and worried at her paleness, and so she said nothing about it.
"I'll wait till night," she planned, making ready for the mill.
"O, I can't!" she cried at night. So other mornings came, and other nights.
I am quite aware that, according to all romantic precedents, this conduct was preposterous in Asenath, Floracita, in the novel, never so far forgets the whole duty of a heroine as to struggle, waver, doubt, delay. It is proud and proper to free the young fellow; proudly and properly she frees him; "suffers in silence"--till she marries another man; and (having had a convenient opportunity to refuse the original lover) overwhelms the reflective reader with a sense of poetic justice and the eternal fitness of things.
But I am not writing a novel, and, as the biographer of this simple factory girl, am offered few advantages.
Asenath was no heroine, you see. Such heroic elements as were in her--none could tell exactly what they were, or whether there were any: she was one of those people in whom it is easy to be quite mistaken;--her life had not been one to develop. She might have a certain pride of her own, under given circ.u.mstances; but plants grown in a cellar will turn to the sun at any cost; how could she go back into her dark?
As for the other man to marry, he was out of the question. Then, none love with the tenacity of the unhappy; no life is so lavish of itself as the denied life: to him that hath not shall be given,--and Asenath loved this Richard Cross.
It might be altogether the grand and suitable thing to say to him, "I will not be your wife." It might be that she would thus regain a strong shade of lost self-respect. It might be that she would make him happy, and give pleasure to Del. It might be that the two young people would be her "friends," and love her in a way.
But all this meant that d.i.c.k must go out of her life. Practically, she must make up her mind to build the fires, and pump the water, and mend the windows alone. In dreary fact, he would not listen when she sung; would not say, "You are tired, Sene"; would never kiss away an undried tear. There would be n.o.body to notice the crimson cape, n.o.body to make blue neck-ties for; none for whom to save the Bonnes de Jersey, or to take sweet, tired steps, or make dear, dreamy plans. To be sure, there was her father; but fathers do not count for much in a time like this on which Sene had fallen.
That Del Ivy was--Del Ivory, added intricacies to the question. It was a very unpoetic but undoubted fact that Asenath could in no way so insure d.i.c.k's unhappiness as to pave the way to his marriage with the woman whom he loved. There would be a few merry months, then slow worry and disappointment; pretty Del accepted at last, not as the crown of his young life, but as its silent burden and misery. Poor d.i.c.k! good d.i.c.k!
Who deserved more wealth of wifely sacrifice? Asenath, thinking this, crimsoned with pain and shame. A streak of good common sense in the girl told her--though she half scorned herself for the conviction--that even a crippled woman who should bear all things and hope all things for his sake might blot out the memory of this rounded Del; that, no matter what the motive with which he married her, he would end by loving his wife like other people.
She watched him sometimes in the evenings, as he turned his kind eyes after her over the library book which he was reading.
"I know I could make him happy! I _know_ I could!" she muttered fiercely to herself.
November blew into December, December congealed into January, while she kept her silence. d.i.c.k, in his honorable heart, seeing that she suffered, wearied himself with plans to make her eyes s.h.i.+ne; brought her two pails of water instead of one, never forgot the fire, helped her home from the mill. She saw him meet Del Ivory once upon Ess.e.x Street with a grave and silent bow; he never spoke with her now. He meant to pay the debt he owed her down to the uttermost farthing; that grew plain. Did she try to speak her wretched secret, he suffocated her with kindness, struck her dumb with tender words.
She used to a.n.a.lyze her life in those days, considering what it would be without him. To be up by half past five o'clock in the chill of all the winter mornings, to build the fire and cook the breakfast and sweep the floor, to hurry away, faint and weak, over the raw, slippery streets, to climb at half past six the endless stairs and stand at the endless loom, and hear the endless wheels go buzzing round, to sicken in the oily smells, and deafen at the remorseless noise, and weary of the rough girl swearing at the other end of the pa.s.s; to eat her cold dinner from a little cold tin pail out on the stairs in the three-quarters-of-an-hour recess; to come exhausted home at half past six at night, and get the supper, and brush up about the shoemaker's bench, and be too weak to eat; to sit with aching shoulders and make the b.u.t.ton-holes of her best dress, or darn her father's stockings, till nine o'clock; to hear no bounding step or cheery whistle about the house; to creep into bed and lie there trying not to think, and wis.h.i.+ng that so she might creep into her grave,--this not for one winter, but for all the winters,--how should _you_ like it, you young girls, with whom time runs like a story?
The very fact that her employers dealt honorably by her; that she was fairly paid, and promptly, for her wearing toil; that the limit of endurance was consulted in the temperature of the room, and her need of rest in an occasional holiday,--perhaps, after all, in the mood she was in, did not make this factory life more easy. She would have found it rather a relief to have somebody to complain of,--wherein she was like the rest of us, I fancy.
But at last there came a day--it chanced to be the ninth of January--when Asenath went away alone at noon, and sat where Merrimack sung his songs to her. She hid her face upon her knees, and listened and thought her own thoughts, till they and the slow torment of the winter seemed greater than she could bear. So, pa.s.sing her hands confusedly over her forehead, she said at last aloud, "That's what G.o.d means, Asenath Martyn!" and went back to work with a purpose in her eyes.
She "asked out" a little earlier than usual, and went slowly home. d.i.c.k was there before her; he had been taking a half-holiday. He had made the tea and toasted the bread for a little surprise. He came up and said, "Why, Sene, your hands are cold!" and warmed them for her in his own.
After tea she asked him, would he walk out with her for a little while?
and he in wonder went.
The streets were brightly lighted, and the moon was up. The ice cracked crisp under their feet. Sleighs, with two riders in each, shot merrily by. People were laughing in groups before the shop-windows. In the glare of a jeweller's counter somebody was buying a wedding-ring, and a girl with red cheeks was looking hard the other way.
"Let's get away," said Asenath,--"get away from here!"
They chose by tacit consent that favorite road of hers over the eastern bridge. Their steps had a hollow, lonely ring on the frosted wood; she was glad when the softness of the snow in the road received them. She looked back once at the water, wrinkled into thin ice on the edge for a foot or two, then open and black and still.
"What are you doing?" asked d.i.c.k. She said that she was wondering how cold it was, and d.i.c.k laughed at her.
They strolled on in silence for perhaps a mile of the desolate road.
"Well, this is social!" said d.i.c.k at length; "how much farther do you want to go? I believe you'd walk to Reading if n.o.body stopped you!"
She was taking slow, regular steps like an automaton, and looking straight before her.
"How much farther? Oh!" She stopped and looked about her.
A wide young forest spread away at their feet, to the right and to the left. There was ice on the tiny oaks and miniature pines; it glittered sharply under the moon; the light upon the snow was blue; cold roads wound away through it, deserted; little piles of dead leaves s.h.i.+vered; a fine keen spray ran along the tops of the drifts; inky shadows lurked and dodged about the undergrowth; in the broad s.p.a.ces the snow glared; the lighted mills, a zone of fire, blazed from east to west; the skies were bare, and the wind was up, and Merrimack in the distance chanted solemnly.
"d.i.c.k," said Asenath, "this is a dreadful place! Take me home."
But when he would have turned, she held him back with a sudden cry, and stood still.
"I meant to tell you--I meant to say--d.i.c.k! I was going to say--"
But she did not say it. She opened her lips to speak once and again, but no sound came from them.
"Sene! why, Sene, what ails you?"
He turned, and took her in his arms.
"Poor Sene!"
He kissed her, feeling sorry for her unknown trouble. He wondered why she sobbed. He kissed her again. She broke from him, and away with a great bound upon the snow.
"You make it so hard! You've no right to make it so hard! It ain't as if you loved me, d.i.c.k! I know I'm not like other girls! Go home and let me be!"
But d.i.c.k drew her arm through his, and led her gravely away. "I like you well enough, Asenath," he said, with that motherly pity in his eyes; "I've always liked you. So don't let us have any more of this."
So Asenath said nothing more.
The sleek black river beckoned to her across the snow as they went home.
A thought came to her as she pa.s.sed the bridge,--it is a curious study what wicked thoughts will come to good people!--she found herself considering the advisability of leaping the low brown parapet; and if it would not be like d.i.c.k to go over after her; if there would be a chance for them, even should he swim from the banks; how soon the icy current would paralyze him; how sweet it would be to chill to death there in his arms; how all this wavering and pain would be over; how Del would look when they dragged them out down below the machine-shop!
"Sene, are you cold?" asked puzzled d.i.c.k. She was warmly wrapped in her little squirrel furs; but he felt her quivering upon his arm, like one in an ague, all the way home.
About eleven o'clock that night her father waked from an exciting dream concerning the best method of blacking patent-leather; Sene stood beside his bed with her gray shawl thrown over her night-dress.
"Father, suppose some time there should be only you and me--"
"Well, well, Sene," said the old man sleepily,--"very well."
"I'd try to be a good girl! Could you love me enough to make up?"
He told her indistinctly that she always was a good girl; she never had a whipping from the day her mother died. She turned away impatiently; then cried out and fell upon her knees.
"Father, father! I'm in a great trouble. I haven't got any mother, any friend, anybody. n.o.body helps me! n.o.body knows. I've been thinking such things--O, such wicked things--up in my room! Then I got afraid of myself. You're good. You love me. I want you to put your hand on my head and say, 'G.o.d bless you, child, and show you how.'"
Bewildered, he put his hand upon her unbound hair, and said: "G.o.d bless you, child, and show you how!"
Men, Women, and Ghosts Part 8
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Men, Women, and Ghosts Part 8 summary
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