The Portion of Labor Part 49
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"Then put him on another," Robert said, coloring. It was not quite like setting his rival in the front of the battle; still, he felt ashamed of himself. Quicker than lightning it had flashed through his mind that young Joy could thus be sent into a separate room from Ellen Brewster.
"I think he had better take one of the heel-shaving machines below,"
said Flynn, "and let that big Swede, that's as strong as an ox, and never jumped at anything in his life, take his place here."
"All right," said Lloyd, a.s.suming a nonchalant air. "Make the change if you think it advisable, Flynn."
While such benevolence towards a possible rival had its suspicious points, yet there was, after all, some reason for it. Granville Joy, who was delicately organized as to his nerves, was running a machine for cutting linings, and this came down with sharp thuds which shook the factory, and it was fairly torture to him. Every time the knife fell he cringed as if at a cannon report. He had never grown accustomed to it. His face had acquired a fixed expression of being screwed to meet a shock of sound. He was manifestly unfit for his job, but he received the order to leave with dismay.
"Hasn't my work been satisfactory?" he asked Flynn.
"Satisfactory enough," replied the foreman, genially, "but it's too hard for you, man."
"I 'ain't complained," said Joy, with a flash of his eyes. He thought he knew why this solicitude was shown him.
"I know you 'ain't," said Flynn, "but you 'ain't got the muscle and nerve for it. That's plain enough to see."
"I 'ain't complained, and I'd rather stay where I be," said Joy, angrily.
"You'll go where you are sent in this factory, or be d.a.m.ned," cried Flynn, walking off.
Joy looked after him with an expression which transformed his face.
But the next morning the stolid Swede, who would not have started at a bomb, was at his place, and he was below, where he could not see Ellen.
Robert never spoke to Ellen in the factory, and had never called upon her since she entered. Now and then he met her on the street and raised his hat, that was all. Still, he began to wonder more and more if his aunt had not been mistaken in her view of the girl's motive for giving up college and going to work. Then, later on, he learned from Lyman Risley that a small mortgage had been put on the Brewster house some time before. In fact, Andrew, not knowing to whom to go, and remembering his kindness when Ellen was a child, had applied to him for advice concerning it. "He had to do it to keep his wife's sister in the asylum," he told Robert; "and that poor girl went to work because she was forced into it, not because she preferred it, you may be sure of that."
The two men were walking down the street one wind-swept day in December, when the pavement showed ridges of dust as from a mighty broom, and travellers walked bending before it with backward-flying garments.
"You may be right," said Robert; "still, as Aunt Cynthia says, so many girls have that idea of earning money instead of going to school."
"I know the pitiful need of money has tainted many poor girls with a monstrous and morbid overvalue of it," said Risley, "and for that I cannot see they are to blame; but in this case I am sure it was not so. That poor child gave up Va.s.sar College and went to work because she was fairly forced into it by circ.u.mstances. The aunt's husband ran away with another woman, and left her dest.i.tute, so that the support of her and her child came upon the Brewsters; and Brewster has been out of work a long time now, I know. He told me so. That mortgage had to be raised, and the girl had to go to work; there was no other way out of it."
"Why didn't she tell Aunt Cynthia so?" asked Robert.
"Because she is Ellen Brewster, the outgrowth of the child who would not--" Risley checked himself abruptly.
"I know," said Robert, shortly.
The other man started. "How long have you known--she did not tell?"
Robert laughed a little. "Oh no," he replied. "n.o.body told. I went there to call, and saw my own old doll sitting in a little chair in a corner of the parlor. She did not tell, but she knew that I knew.
That child was a trump."
"Well, what can you expect of a girl who was a child like that?"
said Risley. "Mind you, in a way I don't like it. This power for secretiveness and this rigidity of pride in a girl of that age strike me rather unpleasantly. Of course she was too proud to tell Cynthia the true reason, and very likely thought they would blame her father, or Cynthia might feel that she was in a measure hinting to her to do more."
"It would have looked like that," said Robert, reflecting.
"Without any doubt that was what she thought; still, I don't like this strength in so young a girl. She will make a more harmonious woman than girl, for she has not yet grown up to her own character.
But depend upon it, that girl never went to work of her own free choice."
"You say the father is out of work?" Robert said.
"Yes, he has not had work for six months. He said, with the most dejected dignity and appeal that I ever saw in my life, that they begin to think him too old, that the younger men are preferred."
"I wonder," Robert began, then he stopped confusedly. It had been on his tongue to say that he wondered if he could not get some employment for him at Lloyd's; then he remembered his uncle, and stopped. Robert had begun to understand the older man's methods, and also to understand that they were not to be cavilled at or disputed, even by a nephew for whom he had undoubtedly considerable affection.
"It is nonsense, of course," said Risley. "The man is not by any means old or past his usefulness, although I must admit he has that look. He cannot be any older than your uncle. Speaking of your uncle, how is Mrs. Lloyd?"
"I fear Aunt Lizzie is very far from well," replied Robert, "but she tries to keep it from Uncle Norman."
"I don't see how she can. She looked ghastly when I met her the other day."
"That was when Uncle Norman was in New York," said Robert. "It is different when he is at home." As he spoke, an expression of intensest pity came over the young man's face. "I wonder what a woman who loves her husband will not do to s.h.i.+eld him from any annoyance or suffering," he said.
"I believe some women are born fixed to a sort of spiritual rack for the sake of love, and remain there through life," said Risley. "But I have always liked Mrs. Lloyd. She ought to have good advice. What is it, has she told you?"
"Yes," said Robert.
"It will be quite safe with me."
Robert whispered one word in his ear.
"My G.o.d!" said Risley, "that? And do you mean to say that she has had no advice except Dr. Story?"
"Yes, I took her to New York to a specialist some time ago. Uncle Norman never knew it."
"And nothing can be done?"
"She could have an operation, but the success would be very doubtful."
"And that she will not consent to?"
"She has not yet."
"How long?"
"Oh, she may live for years, but she suffers horribly, and she will suffer more."
"And you say he does not know?"
"No."
"Why, look here, Robert, dare you a.s.sume the responsibility? What will he say when he finds out that you have kept it from him?"
"I don't care," said Robert. "I will not break an oath exacted by a woman in such straits as that, and I don't see what good it could do to tell him."
"He might persuade her to have the operation."
"His mere existence is persuasion enough, if she is to be persuaded.
The Portion of Labor Part 49
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The Portion of Labor Part 49 summary
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