During the months that followed, Mr.
Ramy visited the sisters with increasing frequency.
It became his habit to call on them every Sunday
evening, and occasionally during the week he would
find an excuse for dropping in unannounced as they
were settling down to their work beside the lamp.
Ann Eliza noticed that Evelina now took the precaution
of putting on her crimson bow every evening before
supper, and that she had refurbished with a bit of
carefully washed lace the black silk which they still
called new because it had been bought a year after
Ann Eliza’s.
Mr. Ramy, as he grew more intimate,
became less conversational, and after the sisters
had blushingly accorded him the privilege of a pipe
he began to permit himself long stretches of meditative
silence that were not without charm to his hostesses.
There was something at once fortifying and pacific
in the sense of that tranquil male presence in an
atmosphere which had so long quivered with little
feminine doubts and distresses; and the sisters fell
into the habit of saying to each other, in moments
of uncertainty: “We’ll ask Mr. Ramy
when he comes,” and of accepting his verdict,
whatever it might be, with a fatalistic readiness that
relieved them of all responsibility.
When Mr. Ramy drew the pipe from his
mouth and became, in his turn, confidential, the acuteness
of their sympathy grew almost painful to the sisters.
With passionate participation they listened to the
story of his early struggles in Germany, and of the
long illness which had been the cause of his recent
misfortunes. The name of the Mrs. Hochmuller
(an old comrade’s widow) who had nursed him
through his fever was greeted with reverential sighs
and an inward pang of envy whenever it recurred in
his biographical monologues, and once when the sisters
were alone Evelina called a responsive flush to Ann
Eliza’s brow by saying suddenly, without the
mention of any name: “I wonder what she’s
like?”
One day toward spring Mr. Ramy, who
had by this time become as much a part of their lives
as the letter-carrier or the milkman, ventured the
suggestion that the ladies should accompany him to
an exhibition of stereopticon views which was to take
place at Chickering Hall on the following evening.
After their first breathless “Oh!”
of pleasure there was a silence of mutual consultation,
which Ann Eliza at last broke by saying: “You
better go with Mr. Ramy, Evelina. I guess we
don’t both want to leave the store at night.”
Evelina, with such protests as politeness
demanded, acquiesced in this opinion, and spent the
next day in trimming a white chip bonnet with forget-me-nots
of her own making. Ann Eliza brought out her
mosaic brooch, a cashmere scarf of their mother’s
was taken from its linen cerements, and thus adorned
Evelina blushingly departed with Mr. Ramy, while the
elder sister sat down in her place at the pinking-machine.
It seemed to Ann Eliza that she was
alone for hours, and she was surprised, when she heard
Evelina tap on the door, to find that the clock marked
only half-past ten.
“It must have gone wrong again,”
she reflected as she rose to let her sister in.
The evening had been brilliantly interesting,
and several striking stereopticon views of Berlin
had afforded Mr. Ramy the opportunity of enlarging
on the marvels of his native city.
“He said he’d love to
show it all to me!” Evelina declared as Ann
Eliza conned her glowing face. “Did you
ever hear anything so silly? I didn’t
know which way to look.”
Ann Eliza received this confidence
with a sympathetic murmur.
“My bonnet is becoming,
isn’t it?” Evelina went on irrelevantly,
smiling at her reflection in the cracked glass above
the chest of drawers.
“You’re jest lovely,” said Ann Eliza.
Spring was making itself unmistakably
known to the distrustful New Yorker by an increased
harshness of wind and prevalence of dust, when one
day Evelina entered the back room at supper-time with
a cluster of jonquils in her hand.
“I was just that foolish,”
she answered Ann Eliza’s wondering glance, “I
couldn’t help buyin’ ’em. I
felt as if I must have something pretty to look at
right away.”
“Oh, sister,” said Ann
Eliza, in trembling sympathy. She felt that
special indulgence must be conceded to those in Evelina’s
state since she had had her own fleeting vision of
such mysterious longings as the words betrayed.
Evelina, meanwhile, had taken the
bundle of dried grasses out of the broken china vase,
and was putting the jonquils in their place with touches
that lingered down their smooth stems and blade-like
leaves.
“Ain’t they pretty?”
she kept repeating as she gathered the flowers into
a starry circle. “Seems as if spring was
really here, don’t it?”
Ann Eliza remembered that it was Mr. Ramy’s
evening.
When he came, the Teutonic eye for
anything that blooms made him turn at once to the
jonquils.
“Ain’t dey pretty?”
he said. “Seems like as if de spring was
really here.”
“Don’t it?” Evelina
exclaimed, thrilled by the coincidence of their thought.
“It’s just what I was saying to my sister.”
Ann Eliza got up suddenly and moved
away; she remembered that she had not wound the clock
the day before. Evelina was sitting at the table;
the jonquils rose slenderly between herself and Mr.
Ramy.
“Oh,” she murmured with
vague eyes, “how I’d love to get away
somewheres into the country this very minute—somewheres
where it was green and quiet. Seems as if I
couldn’t stand the city another day.”
But Ann Eliza noticed that she was looking at Mr.
Ramy, and not at the flowers.
“I guess we might go to Cendral
Park some Sunday,” their visitor suggested.
“Do you ever go there, Miss Evelina?”
“No, we don’t very often;
leastways we ain’t been for a good while.”
She sparkled at the prospect. “It would
be lovely, wouldn’t it, Ann Eliza?”
“Why, yes,” said the elder
sister, coming back to her seat.
“Well, why don’t we go
next Sunday?” Mr. Ramy continued. “And
we’ll invite Miss Mellins too—that’ll
make a gosy little party.”
That night when Evelina undressed
she took a jonquil from the vase and pressed it with
a certain ostentation between the leaves of her prayer-book.
Ann Eliza, covertly observing her, felt that Evelina
was not sorry to be observed, and that her own acute
consciousness of the act was somehow regarded as magnifying
its significance.
The following Sunday broke blue and
warm. The Bunner sisters were habitual church-goers,
but for once they left their prayer-books on the
what-not, and ten o’clock found them, gloved
and bonneted, awaiting Miss Mellins’s knock.
Miss Mellins presently appeared in a glitter of jet
sequins and spangles, with a tale of having seen a
strange man prowling under her windows till he was
called off at dawn by a confederate’s whistle;
and shortly afterward came Mr. Ramy, his hair brushed
with more than usual care, his broad hands encased
in gloves of olive-green kid.
The little party set out for the nearest
street-car, and a flutter of mingled gratification
and embarrassment stirred Ann Eliza’s bosom
when it was found that Mr. Ramy intended to pay their
fares. Nor did he fail to live up to this opening
liberality; for after guiding them through the Mall
and the Ramble he led the way to a rustic restaurant
where, also at his expense, they fared idyllically
on milk and lemon-pie.
After this they resumed their walk,
strolling on with the slowness of unaccustomed holiday-makers
from one path to another— through budding
shrubberies, past grass-banks sprinkled with lilac
crocuses, and under rocks on which the forsythia lay
like sudden sunshine. Everything about her seemed
new and miraculously lovely to Ann Eliza; but she
kept her feelings to herself, leaving it to Evelina
to exclaim at the hepaticas under the shady ledges,
and to Miss Mellins, less interested in the vegetable
than in the human world, to remark significantly on
the probable history of the persons they met.
All the alleys were thronged with promenaders and
obstructed by perambulators; and Miss Mellins’s
running commentary threw a glare of lurid possibilities
over the placid family groups and their romping progeny.
Ann Eliza was in no mood for such
interpretations of life; but, knowing that Miss Mellins
had been invited for the sole purpose of keeping her
company she continued to cling to the dress-maker’s
side, letting Mr. Ramy lead the way with Evelina.
Miss Mellins, stimulated by the excitement of the
occasion, grew more and more discursive, and her ceaseless
talk, and the kaleidoscopic whirl of the crowd, were
unspeakably bewildering to Ann Eliza. Her feet,
accustomed to the slippered ease of the shop, ached
with the unfamiliar effort of walking, and her ears
with the din of the dress-maker’s anecdotes;
but every nerve in her was aware of Evelina’s
enjoyment, and she was determined that no weariness
of hers should curtail it. Yet even her heroism
shrank from the significant glances which Miss Mellins
presently began to cast at the couple in front of
them: Ann Eliza could bear to connive at Evelina’s
bliss, but not to acknowledge it to others.
At length Evelina’s feet also
failed her, and she turned to suggest that they ought
to be going home. Her flushed face had grown
pale with fatigue, but her eyes were radiant.
The return lived in Ann Eliza’s
memory with the persistence of an evil dream.
The horse-cars were packed with the returning throng,
and they had to let a dozen go by before they could
push their way into one that was already crowded.
Ann Eliza had never before felt so tired. Even
Miss Mellins’s flow of narrative ran dry, and
they sat silent, wedged between a negro woman and a
pock-marked man with a bandaged head, while the car
rumbled slowly down a squalid avenue to their corner.
Evelina and Mr. Ramy sat together in the forward
part of the car, and Ann Eliza could catch only an
occasional glimpse of the forget-me-not bonnet and
the clock-maker’s shiny coat-collar; but when
the little party got out at their corner the crowd
swept them together again, and they walked back in
the effortless silence of tired children to the Bunner
sisters’ basement. As Miss Mellins and
Mr. Ramy turned to go their various ways Evelina mustered
a last display of smiles; but Ann Eliza crossed the
threshold in silence, feeling the stillness of the
little shop reach out to her like consoling arms.
That night she could not sleep; but
as she lay cold and rigid at her sister’s side,
she suddenly felt the pressure of Evelina’s
arms, and heard her whisper: “Oh, Ann Eliza,
warn’t it heavenly?”