Spring had really come at last.
There were leaves on the ailanthus-tree that Evelina
could see from her bed, gentle clouds floated over
it in the blue, and now and then the cry of a flower-seller
sounded from the street.
One day there was a shy knock on the
back-room door, and Johnny Hawkins came in with two
yellow jonquils in his fist. He was getting
bigger and squarer, and his round freckled face was
growing into a smaller copy of his father’s.
He walked up to Evelina and held out the flowers.
“They blew off the cart and
the fellow said I could keep ’em. But
you can have ’em,” he announced.
Ann Eliza rose from her seat at the
sewing-machine and tried to take the flowers from
him.
“They ain’t for you; they’re
for her,” he sturdily objected; and Evelina
held out her hand for the jonquils.
After Johnny had gone she lay and
looked at them without speaking. Ann Eliza,
who had gone back to the machine, bent her head over
the seam she was stitching; the click, click, click
of the machine sounded in her ear like the tick of
Ramy’s clock, and it seemed to her that life
had gone backward, and that Evelina, radiant and foolish,
had just come into the room with the yellow flowers
in her hand.
When at last she ventured to look
up, she saw that her sister’s head had drooped
against the pillow, and that she was sleeping quietly.
Her relaxed hand still held the jonquils, but it
was evident that they had awakened no memories; she
had dozed off almost as soon as Johnny had given them
to her. The discovery gave Ann Eliza a startled
sense of the ruins that must be piled upon her past.
“I don’t believe I could have forgotten
that day, though,” she said to herself.
But she was glad that Evelina had forgotten.
Evelina’s disease moved on along
the usual course, now lifting her on a brief wave
of elation, now sinking her to new depths of weakness.
There was little to be done, and the doctor came only
at lengthening intervals. On his way out he
always repeated his first friendly suggestion about
sending Evelina to the hospital; and Ann Eliza always
answered: “I guess we can manage.”
The hours passed for her with the
fierce rapidity that great joy or anguish lends them.
She went through the days with a sternly smiling
precision, but she hardly knew what was happening,
and when night-fall released her from the shop, and
she could carry her work to Evelina’s bedside,
the same sense of unreality accompanied her, and she
still seemed to be accomplishing a task whose object
had escaped her memory.
Once, when Evelina felt better, she
expressed a desire to make some artificial flowers,
and Ann Eliza, deluded by this awakening interest,
got out the faded bundles of stems and petals and the
little tools and spools of wire. But after a
few minutes the work dropped from Evelina’s
hands and she said: “I’ll wait until
to-morrow.”
She never again spoke of the flower-making,
but one day, after watching Ann Eliza’s laboured
attempt to trim a spring hat for Mrs. Hawkins, she
demanded impatiently that the hat should be brought
to her, and in a trice had galvanized the lifeless
bow and given the brim the twist it needed.
These were rare gleams; and more frequent
were the days of speechless lassitude, when she lay
for hours silently staring at the window, shaken only
by the hard incessant cough that sounded to Ann Eliza
like the hammering of nails into a coffin.
At length one morning Ann Eliza, starting
up from the mattress at the foot of the bed, hastily
called Miss Mellins down, and ran through the smoky
dawn for the doctor. He came back with her and
did what he could to give Evelina momentary relief;
then he went away, promising to look in again before
night. Miss Mellins, her head still covered
with curl-papers, disappeared in his wake, and when
the sisters were alone Evelina beckoned to Ann Eliza.
“You promised,” she whispered,
grasping her sister’s arm; and Ann Eliza understood.
She had not yet dared to tell Miss Mellins of Evelina’s
change of faith; it had seemed even more difficult
than borrowing the money; but now it had to be done.
She ran upstairs after the dress-maker and detained
her on the landing.
“Miss Mellins, can you tell
me where to send for a priest—a Roman Catholic
priest?”
“A priest, Miss Bunner?”
“Yes. My sister became
a Roman Catholic while she was away. They were
kind to her in her sickness—and now she
wants a priest.” Ann Eliza faced Miss
Mellins with unflinching eyes.
“My aunt Dugan’ll know.
I’ll run right round to her the minute I get
my papers off,” the dress-maker promised; and
Ann Eliza thanked her.
An hour or two later the priest appeared.
Ann Eliza, who was watching, saw him coming down
the steps to the shop-door and went to meet him.
His expression was kind, but she shrank from his
peculiar dress, and from his pale face with its bluish
chin and enigmatic smile. Ann Eliza remained
in the shop. Miss Mellins’s girl had mixed
the buttons again and she set herself to sort them.
The priest stayed a long time with Evelina.
When he again carried his enigmatic smile past the
counter, and Ann Eliza rejoined her sister, Evelina
was smiling with something of the same mystery; but
she did not tell her secret.
After that it seemed to Ann Eliza
that the shop and the back room no longer belonged
to her. It was as though she were there on sufferance,
indulgently tolerated by the unseen power which hovered
over Evelina even in the absence of its minister.
The priest came almost daily; and at last a day arrived
when he was called to administer some rite of which
Ann Eliza but dimly grasped the sacramental meaning.
All she knew was that it meant that Evelina was going,
and going, under this alien guidance, even farther
from her than to the dark places of death.
When the priest came, with something
covered in his hands, she crept into the shop, closing
the door of the back room to leave him alone with
Evelina.
It was a warm afternoon in May, and
the crooked ailanthus-tree rooted in a fissure of
the opposite pavement was a fountain of tender green.
Women in light dresses passed with the languid step
of spring; and presently there came a man with a hand-cart
full of pansy and geranium plants who stopped outside
the window, signalling to Ann Eliza to buy.
An hour went by before the door of
the back room opened and the priest reappeared with
that mysterious covered something in his hands.
Ann Eliza had risen, drawing back as he passed.
He had doubtless divined her antipathy, for he had
hitherto only bowed in going in and out; but to day
he paused and looked at her compassionately.
“I have left your sister in
a very beautiful state of mind,” he said in
a low voice like a woman’s. “She
is full of spiritual consolation.”
Ann Eliza was silent, and he bowed
and went out. She hastened back to Evelina’s
bed, and knelt down beside it. Evelina’s
eyes were very large and bright; she turned them on
Ann Eliza with a look of inner illumination.
“I shall see the baby,”
she said; then her eyelids fell and she dozed.
The doctor came again at nightfall,
administering some last palliatives; and after he
had gone Ann Eliza, refusing to have her vigil shared
by Miss Mellins or Mrs. Hawkins, sat down to keep
watch alone.
It was a very quiet night. Evelina
never spoke or opened her eyes, but in the still hour
before dawn Ann Eliza saw that the restless hand outside
the bed-clothes had stopped its twitching. She
stooped over and felt no breath on her sister’s
lips.
The funeral took place three days
later. Evelina was buried in Calvary Cemetery,
the priest assuming the whole care of the necessary
arrangements, while Ann Eliza, a passive spectator,
beheld with stony indifference this last negation of
her past.
A week afterward she stood in her
bonnet and mantle in the doorway of the little shop.
Its whole aspect had changed. Counter and shelves
were bare, the window was stripped of its familiar
miscellany of artificial flowers, note-paper, wire
hat-frames, and limp garments from the dyer’s;
and against the glass pane of the doorway hung a sign:
“This store to let.”
Ann Eliza turned her eyes from the
sign as she went out and locked the door behind her.
Evelina’s funeral had been very expensive,
and Ann Eliza, having sold her stock-in-trade and the
few articles of furniture that remained to her, was
leaving the shop for the last time. She had
not been able to buy any mourning, but Miss Mellins
had sewed some crape on her old black mantle and bonnet,
and having no gloves she slipped her bare hands under
the folds of the mantle.
It was a beautiful morning, and the
air was full of a warm sunshine that had coaxed open
nearly every window in the street, and summoned to
the window-sills the sickly plants nurtured indoors
in winter. Ann Eliza’s way lay westward,
toward Broadway; but at the corner she paused and
looked back down the familiar length of the street.
Her eyes rested a moment on the blotched “Bunner
Sisters” above the empty window of the shop;
then they travelled on to the overflowing foliage
of the Square, above which was the church tower with
the dial that had marked the hours for the sisters
before Ann Eliza had bought the nickel clock.
She looked at it all as though it had been the scene
of some unknown life, of which the vague report had
reached her: she felt for herself the only remote
pity that busy people accord to the misfortunes which
come to them by hearsay.
She walked to Broadway and down to
the office of the house-agent to whom she had entrusted
the sub-letting of the shop. She left the key
with one of his clerks, who took it from her as if
it had been any one of a thousand others, and remarked
that the weather looked as if spring was really coming;
then she turned and began to move up the great thoroughfare,
which was just beginning to wake to its multitudinous
activities.
She walked less rapidly now, studying
each shop window as she passed, but not with the desultory
eye of enjoyment: the watchful fixity of her
gaze overlooked everything but the object of its quest.
At length she stopped before a small window wedged
between two mammoth buildings, and displaying, behind
its shining plate-glass festooned with muslin, a
varied assortment of sofa-cushions, tea-cloths, pen-wipers,
painted calendars and other specimens of feminine
industry. In a corner of the window she had read,
on a slip of paper pasted against the pane: “Wanted,
a Saleslady,” and after studying the display
of fancy articles beneath it, she gave her mantle
a twitch, straightened her shoulders and went in.
Behind a counter crowded with pin-cushions,
watch-holders and other needlework trifles, a plump
young woman with smooth hair sat sewing bows of ribbon
on a scrap basket. The little shop was about
the size of the one on which Ann Eliza had just closed
the door; and it looked as fresh and gay and thriving
as she and Evelina had once dreamed of making Bunner
Sisters. The friendly air of the place made
her pluck up courage to speak.
“Saleslady? Yes, we do
want one. Have you any one to recommend?”
the young woman asked, not unkindly.
Ann Eliza hesitated, disconcerted
by the unexpected question; and the other, cocking
her head on one side to study the effect of the bow
she had just sewed on the basket, continued: “We
can’t afford more than thirty dollars a month,
but the work is light. She would be expected
to do a little fancy sewing between times. We
want a bright girl: stylish, and pleasant manners.
You know what I mean. Not over thirty, anyhow;
and nice-looking. Will you write down the name?”
Ann Eliza looked at her confusedly.
She opened her lips to explain, and then, without
speaking, turned toward the crisply-curtained door.
“Ain’t you going to leave
the ad-dress?” the young woman called out
after her. Ann Eliza went out into the thronged
street. The great city, under the fair spring
sky, seemed to throb with the stir of innumerable
beginnings. She walked on, looking for another
shop window with a sign in it.
The end.