Leonard Jasper would have been less
than human had he borne such an assault upon his feelings
without emotion; less than human had his heart instantly
and spontaneously rejected the dying mother’s
wildly eloquent appeal. He was bewildered, startled,
even deeply moved.
The moment he could, with propriety
and a decent regard for appearances, get away from
the house where he had witnessed so painful a scene,
he returned to his place of business in a sobered,
thoughtful state of mind. He had not anticipated
so direct a guardianship of Ruben Elder’s child
as it was evident would now devolve upon him, in consequence
of the mother’s death. Here was to be trouble
for him—this was his feeling so soon as
there was a little time for reaction—and
trouble without profit. He would have to take
upon himself the direct charge of the little girl,
and duly provide for her maintenance and education.
“If there is property enough
for this, well and good,” he muttered to himself;
he had not yet become acquainted with the real state
of affairs. “If not,” he added, firmly,
“the loss will be hers; that is all. I
shall have sufficient trouble and annoyance, without
being put to expense.”
For some time after his return to
his store, Jasper refrained from entering upon any
business. During at least fifteen or twenty minutes,
he sat at his desk, completely absorbed in thought.
At length he called to Edward Claire, his principal
clerk, and said that he wished to speak a few words
with him. The young man came back from the counter
to where he was sitting, wondering what had produced
the very apparent change in his employer’s state
of mind.
“Edward,” said Mr. Jasper,
in a low, serious voice, “there is a little
matter that I must get you to attend to for me.
It is not very pleasant, it is true; though nothing
more than people are required to do every day.
You remember Mr. Elder, Ruben Elder, who formerly kept
store in Second street?”
“Very well.”
“He died last week.”
“I noticed his death in the papers.”
“He has appointed me his executor.”
“Ah?”
“Yes; and I wish to my heart
he had appointed somebody else. I’ve too
much business of my own to attend to.”
“Of course,” said Claire,
“you will receive your regular commissions for
attending to the settlement of his estate.”
“Poor picking there,”
replied Jasper, shrugging his shoulders. “I’d
very cheerfully give up the profit to be rid of the
trouble. But that doesn’t signify now.
Elder has left his affairs in my hands, and I must
give them at least some attention. I’m not
coming to the point, however. A little while
ago I witnessed the most painful scene that ever fell
under my eyes.”
“Ah!”
“Yes, truly. Ugh!
It makes the chills creep over me as I think of it.
Last evening I received regular notification of my
appointment as executor to Elder’s estate, and
to-day thought it only right to call upon the widow,
and see if any present service were needed by the
family. Such a scene as I encountered! Mrs.
Elder was just at the point of death, and expired
a few moments after my entrance. Besides a single
domestic and a child, I was the only witness of her
last extremity.”
“Shocking!”
“You may well say shocking,
Edward, unprepared as I was for such an occurrence.
My nerves are quivering yet.”
“Then the widow is dead also?”
“Yes; both have gone to their long home.”
“How many children are left?”
“Only one—a little
girl, not, I should think, above four years of age.”
“Some near relative will, I presume, take charge
of her.”
“In dying, the mother declared
that she had no friend to whom she could leave the
child. On me, therefore, devolves the care of
seeing to its maintenance.”
“No friend. Poor child! and of so tender
an age!”
“She is young, certainly, to be left alone in
the world.”
Jasper uttered these words, but felt
nothing of the sad meaning they involved.
“What disposition will you make of her?”
asked Claire.
“I’ve had no time to think
of that yet. Other matters are first to be regarded.
So let me come to the point. Mrs. Elder is dead;
and, as far as I could see, there is no living soul,
beyond a frightened servant, to do any thing.
Whether she will have the presence of mind to call
in the neighbours, is more than I can say. I
left in the bewilderment of the moment; and now remember
me that something is to be done for the dead.
Will you go to the house, and see what is needed?
In the next block is an undertaker; you had better
call, on your way, and ask him to go with you.
All arrangements necessary for the funeral can be left
in his hands. Just take this whole matter off
of me, Edward, and I will be greatly obliged to you.
I have a good many things on my mind, that must receive
close attention.”
The young man offered no objection,
although the service was far from being agreeable.
On his return, after the absence of an hour, Jasper
had, of course, many inquiries to make. Claire
appeared serious. The fact was, he had seen enough
to touch his feelings deeply. The grief of the
orphaned child, as he was a witness thereto, had brought
tears upon his cheeks, in spite of every manly effort
to restrain them. Her extreme beauty struck him
at the first glance, even obscured as it was under
a vail of sorrow and weeping.
“There were several persons
in, you say?” remarked Jasper, after Claire
had related a number of particulars.
“Yes, three or four.”
“Ladies, of course?”
“Yes.”
“Did any of them propose to take the child home
with them?”
“Not directly. One woman
asked me a number of questions about the little girl.”
“Of what nature?”
“As to whether there were any
relatives or particular friends who would take charge
of her?”
“And you told her there were none?”
“Yes; none of whom I had any knowledge.”
“Well? What had she to say to that?”
“She wanted to know if there
would be any thing for the child’s support.
I said that there would, in all probability.”
“Well?”
“Then she gave me to understand,
that if no one took the child, she might be induced
to board her for a while, until other arrangements
were made.”
“Did you give her to understand that this was
practicable?”
“No, sir.”
“Why not? She will have to be boarded,
you know.”
“I neither liked the woman’s face, manner,
nor appearance.”
“Why not?”
“Oh, she was a vulgar, coarse, hard-looking
creature to my eyes.”
“Kind hearts often lie concealed under unpromising
externals.”
“True; but they lie not concealed
under that exterior, be well assured, Mr. Jasper.
No, no. The child who has met with so sad a loss
as that of a mother, needs the tenderest guardianship.
At best, the case is hard enough.”
Jasper did not respond to this humane
sentiment, for there was no pity in him. The
waves of feeling, stirred so suddenly a few hours before,
had all subsided, and the surface of his heart bore
no ripple of emotion. He thought not of the child
as an object claiming his regard, but as a trouble
and a hinderance thrown in his way, to be disposed
of as summarily as possible.
“I’m obliged to you, Edward,
for the trouble you have taken in my stead,”
he remarked, after a slight pause. “To-morrow,
I may wish you to call there again. Of course,
the neighbours will give needful attention until the
funeral takes place. By that time, perhaps, the
child will have made a friend of some one of them,
and secure, through this means, a home for the present.
It is, for us, a troublesome business at best, though
it will soon be over.”
A person coming in at the moment,
Claire left his employer to attend at the counter.
The new customer, it was quickly perceived by the
clerk, was one who might readily be deceived into buying
the articles for which she inquired, at a rate far
in advance of their real value; and he felt instantly
tempted to ask her a very high price. Readily,
for it was but acting from habit, did he yield to this
temptation. His success was equal to his wishes.
The woman, altogether unsuspicious of the cheat practised
upon her, paid for her purchases the sum of ten dollars
above their true value. She lingered a short time
after settling her bill, and made some observation
upon a current topic of the day. One or two casually-uttered
sentiments did not fall like refreshing dew upon the
feelings of Claire, but rather stung him like words
of sharp rebuke, and made him half regret the wrong
he had done to her. He felt relieved when she
retired.
It so happened that, while this customer
was in, Jasper left the store. Soon after, a
clerk went to dinner. Only a lad remained with
Claire, and he was sent up-stairs to arrange some goods.
The hour of temptation had again come,
and the young man’s mind was overshadowed by
the powers of darkness.
“Ten dollars clear gain on that
transaction,” said he to himself, as he drew
open the money-drawer in which he had deposited the
cash paid to him by his late customer.
For some time his thoughts were busy,
while his fingers toyed with the gold and bills in
the drawer. Two five-dollar pieces were included
in the payment just received.
“Jasper, surely, ought to be
satisfied with one of these.” Thus he began
to argue with himself. “I drove the bargain;
am I not entitled to a fair proportion of the profit?
It strikes me so. What wrong will it be to him?
Wrong? Humph! Wrong? The wrong has been
done already; but it falls not on his head.
“If I am to do this kind of
work for him,”—the feelings of Claire
now commenced running in a more disturbed channel;
there were deep contractions on his forehead, and
his lips were shut firmly,—“this
kind of work, I must have a share of the benefit.
If I am to sell my soul, Leonard Jasper shall not
have the whole price.”
Deliberately, as he spoke this within
himself, did Claire take from the drawer a five-dollar
gold piece, and thrust it into his pocket.
“Mine, not his,” were
the words with which he approved the act. At
the same instant Jasper entered. The young man’s
heart gave a sudden bound, and there was guilt in
his face, but Jasper did not read its true expression.
“Well, Edward,” said he,
cheerfully, “what luck did you have with the
old lady? Did she make a pretty fair bill?”
“So-so,” returned Claire,
with affected indifference; “about thirty dollars.”
“Ah! so much?”
“Yes; and, what is better, I
made her pay pretty strong. She was from the
country.”
“That’ll do.”
And Jasper rubbed his hands together energetically.
“How much over and above a fair percentage did
you get?”
“About five dollars.”
“Good, again! You’re a trump, Edward.”
If Edward Claire was relieved to find
that no suspicion had been awakened in the thoughts
of Jasper, he did not feel very strongly flattered
by his approving words. The truth was, at the
very moment he was relating what he had done, there
came into his mind, with a most startling distinctness,
the dream of his wife, and the painful feelings it
had occasioned.
“What folly! What madness! Whither
am I going?”
These were his thoughts now, born of a quick revulsion
of feeling.
“It is your dinner-time, Edward.
Get back as soon as possible. I want to be home
a little earlier than usual to-day.”
Thus spoke Mr. Jasper; and the young
man, taking up his hat, left the store. He had
never felt so strangely in his life. The first
step in crime had been taken; he had fairly entered
the downward road to ruin. Where was it all to
end? Placing his fingers, almost without thought,
in his pocket, they came in contact with the gold-piece
obtained by a double crime—the robbery
both of a customer and his employer. Quickly,
as if he had touched a living coal, was the hand of
Claire withdrawn, while a low chill crept along his
nerves. It required some resolution for the young
man to meet his pure-hearted, clear-minded wife, whose
quick intuitions of good or evil in others he had over
and over again been led to remark. Once, as he
moved along, he thrust his hand into his pocket, with
the suddenly-formed purpose of casting the piece of
money from him, and thus cancelling his guilt.
But, ere the act was accomplished, he remembered that
in this there would be no restoration, and so refrained.
Edward Claire felt, while in the presence
of his young wife, that she often looked into his
face with more than usual earnestness. This not
only embarrassed but slightly fretted him, and led
him to speak once in a way that brought tears to her
eyes.
Not a minute longer than necessary
did Claire remain at home. The fact that his
employer had desired him to return to the store as
quickly as possible, was an all-sufficient reason
for his unusual hurry to get away.
The moment the door closed upon him,
his wife burst into tears. On her bosom lay a
most oppressive weight, and in her mind was a vague,
troubled sense of approaching evil. She felt that
there was danger in the path of her husband; but of
its nature she could divine little or nothing.
All day her dream had haunted her; and now it reproduced
itself in her imagination with painful distinctness.
Vainly she strove to drive it from her thoughts; it
would not be gone. Slowly the hours wore on for
her, until the deepening twilight brought the period
when her husband was to return again. To this
return her mind looked forward with an anxiety that
could not be repressed.
The dreaded meeting with his wife
over, Claire thought with less repugnance of what
he had done, and was rather inclined to justify than
condemn himself.
“It’s the way of the world,”
so he argued; “and unless I do as the world
does, I must remain where I am—at the bottom
of the ladder. But why should I stay below, while
all around me are struggling upward? As for what
preachers and moralists call strictly fair dealing,
it may be all well enough in theory, pleasant to talk
about, and all that; but it won’t do in practice,
as the world now is. Where each is grasping all
that he can lay his hands on, fair or foul, one must
scramble with the rest, or get nothing. That
is so plain that none can deny the proposition.
So, Edward Claire, if you wish to rise above your present
poor condition, if you wish to get rich, like your
enterprising neighbours, you must do as they do.
If I go in for a lamb, I might as well take a sheep:
the morality of the thing is the same. If I take
a large slice off of a customer, why shall not a portion
of that slice be mine; ay, the whole of it, if I choose
to make the appropriation? All Jasper can fairly
ask, is a reasonable profit: if I, by my address,
get more than this, surely I may keep a part thereof.
Who shall say nay?”
Justifying himself by these and similar
false reasonings, the young man thrust aside the better
suggestions, from which he was at first inclined to
retrace the false step he had taken; and wilfully shutting
his eyes, resolved to go forward in his evil and dangerous
course.
During the afternoon of that day a
larger number of customers than usual were in, and
Claire was very busily occupied. He made three
or four large sales, and was successful in getting
several dollars in excess of fair profit from one
not very well skilled in prices. In making an
entry of this particular transaction in the memorandum
sales-book, the figures recorded were three dollars
less than the actual amount received. So, on
this, the first day of the young man’s lapse
from honesty, he had appropriated the sum of eight
dollars—nearly equal to his entire week’s
salary! For such a recent traveller in this downward
road, how rapid had already become his steps!
Evening found him again alone, musing
and debating with himself, ere locking up the store
and returning home. The excitement of business
being over, his thoughts flowed in a calmer current;
and the stillness of the deserted room gave to his
feelings a hue of sobriety. He was not altogether
satisfied with himself. How could he be?
No man ever was satisfied with himself, when seclusion
and silence found him after his first departure from
the right way. Ah, how little is there in worldly
possessions, be it large or small, to compensate for
a troubled, self-accusing spirit! how little to throw
in the balance against the heavy weight of conscious
villany!
How tenderly, how truly, how devotedly
had Edward Claire loved the young wife of his bosom,
since the hour the pulses of their spirits first beat
in joyful unity! How eager had he ever been to
turn his face homeward when the shadows of evening
began to fall! But now he lingered—lingered,
though all the business of the day was over. The
thought of his wife created no quick impulse to be
away. He felt more like shunning her presence.
He even for a time indulged a motion of anger toward
her for what he mentally termed her morbid sensitiveness
in regard to others’ right—her dreamy
ideal of human perfection.
“We are in the world, and we
must do as it does. We must take it as it is,
not as it should be.”
So he mused with himself, in a self-approving
argument. Yet he could not banish the accusing
spirit; he could not silence the inward voice of warning.
Once there came a strong revulsion.
Good impulses seemed about to gain the mastery.
In this state of mind, he took from his pocket his
ill-gotten gains, and threw them into the money-box,
which had already been placed in the fire-closet.
“What good will that do?”
said he to himself, as the wave of better feelings
began to subside. “All the sales-entries
have been made, and the cash balanced; Jasper made
the balance himself. So the cash will only show
an excess to be accounted for; and from this may come
suspicion. It is always more hazardous to go backward
than forward—(false reasoner!)—to
retrace our steps than to press boldly onward.
No, no. This will not mend the matter.”
And Claire replaced the money in his
pocket. In a little while afterward, he left
the store, and took his way homeward.