A COLD wet drizzling rain was
beginning to fall when Pinky Swett emerged from the
house. Twilight was gathering drearily. She
drew her thin shawl closely, and shivered as the east
wind struck her with a chill.
At hurried walk of five or ten minutes
brought her to a part of the town as little known
to its citizens generally as if it were in the centre
of Africa—a part of the town where vice,
crime, drunkenness and beggary herd together in the
closest and most shameless contact; where men and
women, living in all foulness, and more like wild
beasts than human beings, prey greedily upon each other,
hurting, depraving and marring God’s image in
all over whom they can get power or influenced—a
very hell upon the earth!—at part of
the town where theft and robbery and murder are plotted,
and from which prisons and almshouses draw their chief
population.
That such a herding together, almost
in the centre of a great Christian city, of the utterly
vicious and degraded, should be permitted, when every
day’s police and criminal records give warning
of its cost and danger, is a marvel and a reproach.
Almost every other house, in portions of this locality,
is a dram-shop, where the vilest liquors are sold.
Policy-offices, doing business in direct violation
of law, are in every street and block, their work of
plunder and demoralization going on with open doors
and under the very eyes of the police. Every
one of them is known to these officers. But arrest
is useless. A hidden and malign influence, more
potent than justice, has power to protect the traffic
and hold the guilty offenders harmless. Conviction
is rarely, if ever, reached.
The poor wretches, depraved and plundered
through drink and policy-gambling, are driven into
crime. They rob and steal and debase themselves
for money with which to buy rum and policies, and
sooner or later the prison or death removes the greater
number of them from their vile companions. But
drifting toward this fatal locality under the attraction
of affinity, or lured thither by harpies in search
of new supplies of human victims to repair the frightful
waste perpetually made, the region keeps up its dense
population, and the work of destroying human souls
goes on. It is an awful thing to contemplate.
Thousands of men and women, boys and girls, once innocent
as the babes upon whom Christ laid his hand in blessing,
are drawn into this whirlpool of evil every year, and
few come out except by the way of prison or death.
It was toward this locality that Pinky
Swett directed her feet, after parting with Mrs. Bray.
Darkness was beginning to settle down as she turned
off from one of the most populous streets, crowded
at the time by citizens on their way to quiet and
comfortable homes, few if any of whom had ever turned
aside to look upon and get knowledge of the world
or crime and wretchedness so near at hand, but girdled
in and concealed from common observation.
Down a narrow street she turned from
the great thoroughfare, walking with quick steps,
and shivering a little as the penetrating east wind
sent a chill of dampness through the thin shawl she
drew closer and closer about her shoulders. Nothing
could be in stronger contrast than the rows of handsome
dwellings and stores that lined the streets through
which she had just passed, and the forlorn, rickety,
unsightly and tumble-down houses amid which she now
found herself.
Pinky had gone only a little way when
the sharp cries of a child cut the air suddenly, the
shrill, angry voice of a woman and the rapid fall
of lashes mingled with the cries. The child begged
for mercy in tones of agony, but the loud voice, uttering
curses and imprecations, and the cruel blows, ceased
not. Pinky stopped and shivered. She felt
the pain of these blows, in her quickly-aroused sympathy,
almost as much as if they had been falling on her own
person. Opposite to where she had paused was a
one-story frame house, or enclosed shed, as unsightly
without as a pig-pen, and almost as filthy within.
It contained two small rooms with very low ceilings.
The only things in these rooms that could be called
furniture were an old bench, two chairs from which
the backs had been broken, a tin cup black with smoke
and dirt, two or three tin pans in the same condition,
some broken crockery and an iron skillet. Pinky
stood still for a moment, shivering, as we have said.
She knew what the blows and the curses and the cries
of pain meant; she had heard them before. A depraved
and drunken woman and a child ten years old, who might
or might not be her daughter, lived there. The
child was sent out every day to beg or steal, and if
she failed to bring home a certain sum of money, was
cruelly beaten by the woman. Almost every day
the poor child was cut with lashes, often on the bare
flesh; almost every day her shrieks rang out from the
miserable hovel. But there was no one to interfere,
no one to save her from the smarting blows, no one
to care what she suffered.
Pinky Swett could stand it no longer.
She had often noticed the ragged child, with her pale,
starved face and large, wistful eyes, passing in and
out of this miserable woman’s den, sometimes
going to the liquor-shops and sometimes to the nearest
policy-office to spend for her mother, if such the
woman really was, the money she had gained by begging.
With a sudden impulse, as a deep wail
and a more piteous cry for mercy smote upon her ears,
Pinky sprang across the street and into the hovel.
The sight that met her eyes left no hesitation in her
mind. Holding up with one strong arm the naked
body of the poor child—she had drawn the
clothes over her head—the infuriated woman
was raining down blows from a short piece of rattan
upon the quivering flesh, already covered with welts
and bruises.
“Devil!” cried Pinky as
she rushed upon this fiend in human shape and snatched
the little girl from her arm. “Do you want
to kill the child?”
She might almost as well have assaulted a tigress.
The woman was larger, stronger, more
desperate and more thoroughly given over to evil passions
than she. To thwart her in anything was to rouse
her into a fury. A moment she stood in surprise
and bewilderment; in the next, and ere Pinky had time
to put herself on guard, she had sprung upon her with
a passionate cry that sounded more like that of a
wild beast than anything human. Clutching her
by the throat with one hand, and with the other tearing
the child from her grasp, she threw the frightened
little thing across the room.
“Devil, ha!” screamed
the woman; “devil!” and she tightened her
grasp on Pinky’s throat, at the same time striking
her in the face with her clenched fist.
Like a war-horse that snuffs the battle
afar off and rushes to the conflict, so rushed the
inhabitants of that foul neighborhood to the spot
from whence had come to their ears the familiar and
not unwelcome sound of strife. Even before Pinky
had time to shake off her assailant, the door of the
hovel was darkened by a screen of eager faces.
And such faces! How little of God’s image
remained in them to tell of their divine origination!—bloated
and scarred, ashen pale and wasted, hollow-eyed and
red-eyed, disease looking out from all, yet all lighted
up with the keenest interest and expectancy.
Outside, the crowd swelled with a
marvelous rapidity. Every cellar and room and
garret, every little alley and hidden rookery, “hawk’s
nest” and “wren’s nest,” poured
out its unseemly denizens, white and black, old and
young, male and female, the child of three years old,
keen, alert and self-protective, running to see the
“row” side by side with the toothless
crone of seventy; or most likely passing her on the
way. Thieves, beggars, pick-pockets, vile women,
rag-pickers and the like, with the harpies who prey
upon them, all were there to enjoy the show.
Within, a desperate fight was going
on between Pinky Swett and the woman from whose hands
she had attempted to rescue the child—a
fight in which Pinky was getting the worst of it.
One garment after another was torn from her person,
until little more than a single one remained.
“Here’s the police! look
out!” was cried at this juncture.
“Who cares for the police?
Let ’em come,” boldly retorted the woman.
“I haven’t done nothing; it’s her
that’s come in drunk and got up a row.”
Pushing the crowd aside, a policeman
entered the hovel.
“Here she is!” cried the
woman, pointing toward Pinky, from whom she had sprung
back the moment she heard the word police. “She
came in here drunk and got up a row. I’m
a decent woman, as don’t meddle with nobody.
But she’s awful when she gets drunk. Just
look at her—been tearing her clothes off!”
At this there was a shout of merriment
from the crowd who had witnessed the fight.
“Good for old Sal! she’s
one of ’em! Can’t get ahead of old
Sal, drunk or sober!” and like expressions were
shouted by one and another.
Poor Pinky, nearly stripped of her
clothing, and with a great bruise swelling under one
of her eyes, bewildered and frightened at the aspect
of things around her, could make no acceptable defence.
“She ran over and pitched into
Sal, so she did! I saw her! She made the
fight, she did!” testified one of the crowd;
and acting on this testimony and his own judgment
of the case, the policeman said roughly, as he laid
his hand on Pinky.
“Pick up your duds and come along.”
Pinky lifted her torn garments from
the dirty floor and gathered them about her person
as best she could, the crowd jeering all the time.
A pin here and there, furnished by some of the women,
enabled her to get them into a sort of shape and adjustment.
Then she tried to explain the affair to the policeman,
but he would not listen.
“Come!” he said, sternly.
“What are you going to do with
me?” she asked, not moving from where she stood.
“Lock you up,” replied the policeman.
“So come along.”
“What’s the matter here?”
demanded a tall, strongly-built woman, pressing forward.
She spoke with a foreign accent, and in a tone of
command. The motley crowd, above whom she towered,
gave way for her as she approached. Everything
about the woman showed her to be superior in mind
and moral force to the unsightly wretches about her.
She had the fair skin, blue eyes and light hair of
her nation. Her features were strong, but not
masculine. You saw in them no trace of coarse
sensuality or vicious indulgence.
“Here’s Norah! here’s
the queen!” shouted a voice from the crowd.
“What’s the matter here?”
asked the woman as she gained an entrance to the hovel.
“Going to lock up Pinky Swett,”
said a ragged little girl who had forced her way in.
“What for?” demanded the
woman, speaking with the air of one in authority.
“’Cause she wouldn’t
let old Sal beat Kit half to death,” answered
the child.
“Ho! Sal’s a devil
and Pinky’s a fool to meddle with her.”
Then turning to the policeman, who still had his hand
on the girl, she said,
“What’re you goin’ to do, John?”
“Goin’ to lock her up. She’s
drunk an’ bin a-fightin’.”
“You’re not goin’ to do any such
thing.”
“I’m not drunk, and it’s
a lie if anybody says so,” broke in Pinky.
“I tried to keep this devil from beating the
life out of poor little Kit, and she pitched into
me and tore my clothes off. That’s what’s
the matter.”
The policeman quietly removed his
hand from Pinky’s shoulder, and glanced toward
the woman named Sal, and stood as if waiting orders.
“Better lock her up,”
said the “queen,” as she had been called.
Sal snarled like a fretted wild beast.
“It’s awful, the way she
beats poor Kit,” chimed in the little girl who
had before spoken against her. “If I was
Kit, I’d run away, so I would.”
“I’ll wring your neck
off,” growled Sal, in a fierce undertone, making
a dash toward the girl, and swearing frightfully.
But the child shrank to the side of the policeman.
“If you lay a finger on Kit
to-night,” said the queen, “I’ll
have her taken away, and you locked up into the the
bargain.”
Sal responded with another snarl.
“Come.” The queen
moved toward the door. Pinky followed, the policeman
offering no resistance. A few minutes later, and
the miserable crowd of depraved human beings had been
absorbed again into cellar and garret, hovel and rookery,
to take up the thread of their evil and sensual lives,
and to plot wickedness, and to prey upon and deprave
each other—to dwell as to their inner and
real lives among infernals, to be in hell as to their
spirits, while their bodies yet remained upon the
earth.
Pinky and her rescuer passed down
the street for a short distance until they came to
another that was still narrower. On each side
dim lights shone from the houses, and made some revelation
of what was going on within. Here liquor was
sold, and there policies. Here was a junk-shop,
and there an eating-saloon where for six cents you
could make a meal out of the cullings from beggars’
baskets. Not very tempting to an ordinary appetite
was the display inside, nor agreeable to the nostrils
the odors that filled the atmosphere. But hunger
like the swines’, that was not over-nice, satisfied
itself amid these disgusting conglomerations, and
kept off starvation.
Along this wretched street, with scarcely
an apology for a sidewalk, moved Pinky and the queen,
until they reached a small two-story frame house that
presented a different aspect from the wretched tenements
amid which it stood. It was clean upon the outside,
and had, as contrasted with its neighbors, an air
of superiority. This was the queen’s residence.
Inside, all was plain and homely, but clean and in
order.
The excitement into which Pinky had
been thrown was nearly over by this time.
“You’ve done me a good
turn, Norah,” she said as the door closed upon
them, “and I’ll not soon forget you.”
“Ugh!” ejaculated Norah
as she looked into Pinky’s bruised face; “Sal’s
hit you square in the eye; it’ll be black as
y’r boot by morning. I’ll get some
cold water.”
A basin of cold water was brought,
and Pinky held a wet cloth to the swollen spot for
a long time, hoping thereby not only to reduce the
swelling, but to prevent discoloration.
“Y’r a fool to meddle
with Sal,” said Norah as she set the basin of
water before Pinky.
“Why don’t you meddle
with her? Why do you let her beat poor little
Kit the way she does?” demanded Pinky.
Norah shrugged her shoulders, and
answered with no more feeling in her voice than if
she had been speaking of inanimate things:
“She’s got to keep Kit up to her work.”
“Up to her work!”
“Yes; that’s just it.
Kit’s lazy and cheats—buys cakes and
candies; and Sal has to come down on her; it’s
the way, you know. If Sal didn’t come down
sharp on her all the while, Kit wouldn’t bring
her ten cents a day. They all have to do it—so
much a day or a lickin’; and a little lickin’
isn’t any use—got to ’most kill
some of ’em. We’re used to it in
here. Hark!”
The screams of a child in pain rang
out wildly, the sounds coming from across the narrow
street. Quick, hard strokes of a lash were heard
at the same time. Pinky turned a little pale.
“Only Mother Quig,” said
Norah, with an indifferent air; “she has to
do it ’most every night—no getting
along any other way with Tom. It beats all how
much he can stand.”
“Oh, Norah, won’t she
never stop?” cried Pinky, starting up. “I
can’t bear it a minute longer.”
“Shut y’r ears. You’ve
got to,” answered the woman, with some impatience
in her voice. “Tom has to be kept to his
work as well as the rest of ’em. Half the
fuss he’s making is put on, anyhow; he doesn’t
mind a beating any more than a horse. I know his
hollers. There’s Flanagan’s Nell
getting it now,” added Norah as the cries and
entreaties of another child were heard. She drew
herself up and listened, a slight shade of concern
drifting across her face.
A long, agonizing wail shivered through the air.
“Nell’s Sick, and can’t
do her work.” The woman rose as she spoke.
“I saw her goin’ off to-day, and told Flanagan
she’d better keep her at home.”
Saying this, Norah went out quickly,
Pinky following. With head erect and mouth set
firmly, the queen strode across the street and a little
way down the pavement, to the entrance of a cellar,
from which the cries and sounds of whipping came.
Down the five or six rotten and broken steps she plunged,
Pinky close after her.
“Stop!” shouted Norah, in a tone of command.
Instantly the blows ceased, and the cries were hushed.
“You’ll be hanged for
murder if you don’t take care,” said Norah.
“What’s Nell been doin’?”
“Doin’, the slut!”
ejaculated the woman, a short, bloated, revolting
creature, with scarcely anything human in her face.
“Doin’, did ye say? It’s nothin’
she’s been doin’, the lazy, trapsing huzzy!
Who’s that intrudin’ herself in here?”
she added fiercely, as she saw Pinky, making at the
same time a movement toward the girl. “Get
out o’ here, or I’ll spile y’r pictur’!”
“Keep quiet, will you?”
said Norah, putting her hand on the woman and pushing
her back as easily as if she had been a child.
“Now come here, Nell, and let me look at you.”
Out of the far corner of the cellar
into which Flanagan had thrown her when she heard
Norah’s voice, and into the small circle of light
made by a single tallow candle, there crept slowly
the figure of a child literally clothed in rags.
Norah reached out her hand to her as she came up—there
was a scared look on her pinched face—and
drew her close to the light.
“Gracious! your hand’s
like an ice-ball!” exclaimed Norah.
Pinky looked at the child, and grew
faint at heart. She had large hazel eyes, that
gleamed with a singular lustre out of the suffering,
grimed and wasted little face, so pale and sad and
pitiful that the sight of it was enough to draw tears
from any but the brutal and hardened.
“Are you sick?” asked Norah.
“No, she’s not sick; she’s only
shamming,” growled Flanagan.
“You shut up!” retorted
Norah. “I wasn’t speaking to you.”
Then she repeated her question:
“Are you sick, Nell?”
“Yes.”
“Where?”
“I don’t know.”
Norah laid her hand on the child’s head:
“Does it hurt here?”
“Oh yes! It hurts so I can’t see
good,” answered Nell.
“It’s all a lie! I know her; she’s
shamming.”
“Oh no, Norah!” cried
the child, a sudden hope blending with the fear in
her voice. “I ain’t shamming at all.
I fell down ever so many times in the street, and
’most got run over. Oh dear! oh dear!”
and she clung to the woman with a gesture of despair
piteous to see.
“I don’t believe you are,
Nell,” said Norah, kindly. Then, to the
woman, “Now mind, Flanagan, Nell’s sick;
d’ye hear?”
The woman only uttered a defiant growl.
“She’s not to be licked
again to-night.” Norah spoke as one having
authority.
“I wish ye’d be mindin’
y’r own business, and not come interfarin’
wid me. She’s my gal, and I’ve a right
to lick her if I plaze.”
“Maybe she is and maybe she isn’t,”
retorted Norah.
“Who says she isn’t my
gal?” screamed the woman, firing up at this
and reaching out for Nell, who shrunk closer to Norah.
“Maybe she is and maybe she
isn’t,” said the queen, quietly repeating
her last sentence; “and I think maybe she isn’t.
So take care and mind what I say. Nell isn’t
to be licked any more to-night.”
“Oh, Norah,” sobbed the
child, in a husky, choking voice, “take me,
won’t you? She’ll pinch me, and she’ll
hit my head on the wall, and she’ll choke me
and knock me. Oh, Norah, Norah!”
Pinky could stand this no longer.
Catching up the bundle of rags in her arms, she sprang
out of the cellar and ran across the street to the
queen’s house, Norah and Flanagan coming quickly
after her. At the door, through which Pinky had
passed, Norah paused, and turning to the infuriated
Irish woman, said, sternly,
“Go back! I won’t
have you in here; and if you make a row, I’ll
tell John to lock you up.”
“I want my Nell,” said
the woman, her manner changing. There was a shade
of alarm in her voice.
“You can’t have her to-night;
so that’s settled. And if there’s
any row, you’ll be locked up.” Saying
which, Norah went in and shut the door, leaving Flanagan
on the outside.
The bundle of dirty rags with the
wasted body of a child inside, the body scarcely heavier
than the rags, was laid by Pinky in the corner of
a settee, and the unsightly mass shrunk together like
something inanimate.
“I thought you’d had enough
with old Sal,” said Norah, in a tone of reproof,
as she came in.
“Couldn’t help it,”
replied Pinky. “I’m bad enough, but
I can’t stand to see a child abused like that—no,
not if I die for it.”
Norah crossed to the settee and spoke
to Nell. But there was no answer, nor did the
bundle of rags stir.
“Nell! Nell!” She
called to deaf ears. Then she put her hand on
the child and raised one of the arms. It dropped
away limp as a withered stalk, showing the ashen white
face across which it had lain.
The two women manifested no excitement.
The child had fainted or was dead—which,
they did not know. Norah straightened out the
wasted little form and turned up the face. The
eyes were shut, the mouth closed, the pinched features
rigid, as if still giving expression to pain, but
there was no mistaking the sign that life had gone
out of them. It might be for a brief season,
it might be for ever.
A little water was thrown into the
child’s face. Its only effect was to streak
the grimy skin.
“Poor little thing!” said Pinky.
“I hope she’s dead.”
“They’re tough. They don’t
die easy,” returned Norah.
“She isn’t one of the tough kind.”
“Maybe not. They say Flanagan
stole her when she was a little thing, just toddling.”
“Don’t let’s do anything to try
to bring her to,” said Pinky.
Norah stood for some moment’s
with an irresolute air, then bent over the child and
examined her more carefully. She could feel no
pulse beat, nor any motion of the heart,
“I don’t want the coroner
here,” she said, in a tone of annoyance.
“Take her back to Flanagan; it’s her work,
and she must stand by it.”
“Is she really dead?” asked Pinky.
“Looks like it, and serves Flanagan
right. I’ve told her over and over that
Nell wouldn’t stand it long if she didn’t
ease up a little. Flesh isn’t iron.”
Again she examined the child carefully,
but without the slightest sign of feeling.
“It’s all the same now
who has her,” she said, turning off from the
settee. “Take her back to Flanagan.”
But Pinky would not touch the child,
nor could threat or persuasion lead her to do so.
While they were contending, Flanagan, who had fired
herself up with half a pint of whisky, came storming
through the door in a blind rage and screaming out,
“Where’s my Nell? I want my Nell!”
Catching sight of the child’s
inanimate form lying on the settee, she pounced down
upon it like some foul bird and bore it off, cursing
and striking the senseless clay in her insane fury.
Pinky, horrified at the dreadful sight,
and not sure that the child was really dead, and so
insensible to pain, made a movement to follow, but
Norah caught her arm with a tight grip and held her
back.
“Are you a fool?” said
the queen, sternly. “Let Flanagan alone.
Nell’s out of her reach, and I’m glad of
it.”
“If I was only sure!” exclaimed Pinky.
“You may be. I know death—I’ve
seen it often enough. They’ll have the
coroner over there in the morning. It’s
Flanagan’s concern, not yours or mine, so keep
out of it if you know when you’re well off.”
“I’ll appear against her at the inquest,”
said Pinky.
“You’ll do no such thing.
Keep your tongue behind your teeth. It’s
time enough to show it when it’s pulled out.
Take my advice, and mind your own business. You’ll
have enough to do caring for your own head, without
looking after other people’s.”
“I’m not one of that kind,”
answered Pinky, a little tartly; “and if there’s
any way to keep Flanagan from murdering another child,
I’m going to find it out.”
“You’ll find out something
else first,” said Norah, with a slight curl
of her lip.
“What?”
“The way to prison.”
“Pshaw! I’m not afraid.”
“You’d better be.
If you appear against Flanagan, she’ll have you
caged before to-morrow night.”
“How can she do it?”
“Swear against you before an
alderman, and he’ll send you down if it’s
only to get his fee. She knows her man.”
“Suppose murder is proved against her?”
“Suppose!” Norah gave a little derisive
laugh.
“They don’t look after
things in here as they do outside. Everybody’s
got the screws on, and things must break sometimes,
but it isn’t called murder. The coroner
understands it all. He’s used to seeing
things break.”