For four days after their Sunday in
the Park the Bunner sisters had no news of Mr. Ramy.
At first neither one betrayed her disappointment
and anxiety to the other; but on the fifth morning
Evelina, always the first to yield to her feelings,
said, as she turned from her untasted tea: “I
thought you’d oughter take that money out by
now, Ann Eliza.”
Ann Eliza understood and reddened.
The winter had been a fairly prosperous one for the
sisters, and their slowly accumulated savings had
now reached the handsome sum of two hundred dollars;
but the satisfaction they might have felt in this unwonted
opulence had been clouded by a suggestion of Miss Mellins’s
that there were dark rumours concerning the savings
bank in which their funds were deposited. They
knew Miss Mellins was given to vain alarms; but her
words, by the sheer force of repetition, had so shaken
Ann Eliza’s peace that after long hours of midnight
counsel the sisters had decided to advise with Mr.
Ramy; and on Ann Eliza, as the head of the house,
this duty had devolved. Mr. Ramy, when consulted,
had not only confirmed the dress-maker’s report,
but had offered to find some safe investment which
should give the sisters a higher rate of interest
than the suspected savings bank; and Ann Eliza knew
that Evelina alluded to the suggested transfer.
“Why, yes, to be sure,”
she agreed. “Mr. Ramy said if he was us
he wouldn’t want to leave his money there any
longer’n he could help.”
“It was over a week ago he said
it,” Evelina reminded her.
“I know; but he told me to wait
till he’d found out for sure about that other
investment; and we ain’t seen him since then.”
Ann Eliza’s words released their
secret fear. “I wonder what’s happened
to him,” Evelina said. “You don’t
suppose he could be sick?”
“I was wondering too,”
Ann Eliza rejoined; and the sisters looked down at
their plates.
“I should think you’d
oughter do something about that money pretty soon,”
Evelina began again.
“Well, I know I’d oughter.
What would you do if you was me?”
“If I was you,” said
her sister, with perceptible emphasis and a rising
blush, “I’d go right round and see if Mr.
Ramy was sick. You could.”
The words pierced Ann Eliza like a
blade. “Yes, that’s so,” she
said.
“It would only seem friendly,
if he really is sick. If I was you I’d
go to-day,” Evelina continued; and after dinner
Ann Eliza went.
On the way she had to leave a parcel
at the dyer’s, and having performed that errand
she turned toward Mr. Ramy’s shop. Never
before had she felt so old, so hopeless and humble.
She knew she was bound on a love-errand of Evelina’s,
and the knowledge seemed to dry the last drop of young
blood in her veins. It took from her, too, all
her faded virginal shyness; and with a brisk composure
she turned the handle of the clock-maker’s door.
But as she entered her heart began
to tremble, for she saw Mr. Ramy, his face hidden
in his hands, sitting behind the counter in an attitude
of strange dejection. At the click of the latch
he looked up slowly, fixing a lustreless stare on
Ann Eliza. For a moment she thought he did not
know her.
“Oh, you’re sick!”
she exclaimed; and the sound of her voice seemed to
recall his wandering senses.
“Why, if it ain’t Miss
Bunner!” he said, in a low thick tone; but he
made no attempt to move, and she noticed that his face
was the colour of yellow ashes.
“You are sick,” she
persisted, emboldened by his evident need of help.
“Mr. Ramy, it was real unfriendly of you not
to let us know.”
He continued to look at her with dull
eyes. “I ain’t been sick,”
he said. “Leastways not very: only
one of my old turns.” He spoke in a slow
laboured way, as if he had difficulty in getting his
words together.
“Rheumatism?” she ventured,
seeing how unwillingly he seemed to move.
“Well—somethin’
like, maybe. I couldn’t hardly put a name
to it.”
“If it was anything like
rheumatism, my grandmother used to make a tea—”
Ann Eliza began: she had forgotten, in the warmth
of the moment, that she had only come as Evelina’s
messenger.
At the mention of tea an expression
of uncontrollable repugnance passed over Mr. Ramy’s
face. “Oh, I guess I’m getting on
all right. I’ve just got a headache to-day.”
Ann Eliza’s courage dropped
at the note of refusal in his voice.
“I’m sorry,” she
said gently. “My sister and me’d
have been glad to do anything we could for you.”
“Thank you kindly,” said
Mr. Ramy wearily; then, as she turned to the door,
he added with an effort: “Maybe I’ll
step round to-morrow.”
“We’ll be real glad,”
Ann Eliza repeated. Her eyes were fixed on a
dusty bronze clock in the window. She was unaware
of looking at it at the time, but long afterward she
remembered that it represented a Newfoundland dog
with his paw on an open book.
When she reached home there was a
purchaser in the shop, turning over hooks and eyes
under Evelina’s absent-minded supervision.
Ann Eliza passed hastily into the back room, but in
an instant she heard her sister at her side.
“Quick! I told her I was
goin’ to look for some smaller hooks—how
is he?” Evelina gasped.
“He ain’t been very well,”
said Ann Eliza slowly, her eyes on Evelina’s
eager face; “but he says he’ll be sure
to be round to-morrow night.”
“He will? Are you telling me the truth?”
“Why, Evelina Bunner!”
“Oh, I don’t care!”
cried the younger recklessly, rushing back into the
shop.
Ann Eliza stood burning with the shame
of Evelina’s self-exposure. She was shocked
that, even to her, Evelina should lay bare the nakedness
of her emotion; and she tried to turn her thoughts
from it as though its recollection made her a sharer
in her sister’s debasement.
The next evening, Mr. Ramy reappeared,
still somewhat sallow and red-lidded, but otherwise
his usual self. Ann Eliza consulted him about
the investment he had recommended, and after it had
been settled that he should attend to the matter for
her he took up the illustrated volume of Longfellow—for,
as the sisters had learned, his culture soared beyond
the newspapers—and read aloud, with a fine
confusion of consonants, the poem on “Maidenhood.”
Evelina lowered her lids while he read. It
was a very beautiful evening, and Ann Eliza thought
afterward how different life might have been with
a companion who read poetry like Mr. Ramy.