The funeral of Jane McPherson was
a trying affair for her son. He thought that
his sister Kate, with the babe in her arms, had become
coarsened—she looked frumpish and, while
they were in the house, had an air of having quarrelled
with her husband when they came out of their bedroom
in the morning. During the funeral service Sam
sat in the parlour, astonished and irritated by the
endless number of women that crowded into the house.
They were everywhere, in the kitchen, the sleeping
room back of the parlour; and in the parlour, where
the dead woman lay in her coffin, they were massed.
When the thin-lipped minister, holding a book in his
hand, held forth upon the virtues of the dead woman,
they wept. Sam looked at the floor and thought
that thus they would have wept over the body of the
dead Windy, had his fingers but tightened a trifle.
He wondered if the minister would have talked in the
same way—blatantly and without knowledge—of
the virtues of the dead. In a chair at the side
of the coffin the bereaved husband, in new black clothes,
wept audibly. The baldheaded, officious undertaker
kept moving nervously about, intent upon the ritual
of his trade.
During the service, a man sitting
behind him dropped a note on the floor at Sam’s
feet. Sam picked it up and read it, glad of something
to distract his attention from the voice of the minister,
and the faces of the weeping women, none of whom had
before been in the house and all of whom he thought
strikingly lacking in a sense of the sacredness of
privacy. The note was from John Telfer.
“I will not come to your mother’s
funeral,” he wrote. “I respected your
mother while she lived and I will leave you alone with
her now that she is dead. In her memory I will
hold a ceremony in my heart. If I am in Wildman’s,
I may ask the man to quit selling soap and tobacco
for the moment and to close and lock the door.
If I am at Valmore’s shop, I will go up into
his loft and listen to him pounding on the anvil below.
If he or Freedom Smith go to your house, I warn them
I will cut their friendship. When I see the carriages
going through the street and know that the thing is
right well done and over, I will buy flowers and take
them to Mary Underwood as an appreciation of the living
in the name of the dead.”
The note cheered and comforted Sam.
It gave him back a grip of something that had slipped
from him.
“It is good sense, after all,”
he thought, and realised that even in the days when
he was being made to suffer horrors, and in the face
of the fact that Jane McPherson’s long, hard
role was just being played out to the end, the farmer
in the field was sowing his corn, Valmore was beating
upon his anvil, and John Telfer was writing notes
with a flourish. He arose, interrupting the minister’s
discourse. Mary Underwood had come in just as
the minister began talking and had dropped into an
obscure corner near the door leading into the street.
Sam crowded past the women who stared and the minister
who frowned and the baldheaded undertaker who wrung
his hands and, dropping the note into her lap, said,
oblivious of the people looking and listening with
breathless curiosity, “It is from John Telfer.
Read it. Even he, hating women as he did, is
now bringing flowers to your door.”
In the room a wind of whispered comments
sprang up. Women, putting their heads together
and their hands before their faces, nodded toward the
school teacher, and the boy, unconscious of the sensation
he had created, went back to his chair and looked
again at the floor, waiting until the talk and the
singing of songs and the parading through the streets
should be ended. Again the minister began reading
from the book.
“I have become older than all
of these people here,” thought the youth.
“They play at life and death, and I have felt
it between the fingers of my hand.”
Mary Underwood, lacking Sam’s
unconsciousness of the people, looked about with burning
cheeks. Seeing the women whispering and putting
their heads together, a chill of fear ran through
her. Into the room had been thrust the face of
an old enemy to her—the scandal of a small
town. Picking up the note she slipped out at
the door and stole away along the street. The
old maternal love for Sam had returned strengthened
and ennobled by the terror through which she had passed
with him that night in the rain. Going to her
house she whistled the collie dog and set out along
a country road. At the edge of a grove of trees
she stopped, sat down on a log, and read Telfer’s
note. From the soft ground into which her feet
sank there came the warm pungent smell of the new
growth. Tears came into her eyes. She thought
that in a few days much had come to her. She had
got a boy upon whom she could pour out the mother
love in her heart, and she had made a friend of Telfer,
whom she had long regarded with fear and doubt.
For a month Sam lingered in Caxton.
It seemed to him there was something that wanted doing
there. He sat with the men at the back of Wildman’s,
and walked aimlessly through the streets and out of
the town along the country roads, where men worked
all day in the fields behind sweating horses, ploughing
the land. The thrill of spring was in the air,
and in the evening a song sparrow sang in the apple
tree below his bedroom window. Sam walked and
loitered in silence, looking at the ground. In
his mind was the dread of people. The talk of
the men in the store wearied him and when he went
alone into the country he found himself accompanied
by the voices of all of those he had come out of town
to escape. On the street corner the thin-lipped,
brown-bearded minister stopped him and talked of the
future life as he had stopped and talked to a bare-legged
newsboy.
“Your mother,” he said,
“has but gone before. It is for you to get
into the narrow path and follow her. God has
sent this sorrow as a warning to you. He wants
you also to get into the way of life and in the end
to join her. Begin coming to our church.
Join in the work of the Christ. Find truth.”
Sam, who had listened without hearing,
shook his head and went on. The minister’s
talk seemed no more than a meaningless jumble of words
out of which he got but one thought.
“Find truth,” he repeated
to himself after the minister, and let his mind play
with the idea. “The best men are all trying
to do that. They spend their lives at the task.
They are all trying to find truth.”
He went along the street, pleased
with himself because of the interpretation he had
put upon the minister’s words. The terrible
moments in the kitchen followed by his mother’s
death had put a new look of seriousness into his face
and he felt within him a new sense of responsibility
to the dead woman and to himself. Men stopped
him on the street and wished him well in the city.
News of his leaving had become public. Things
in which Freedom Smith was concerned were always public
affairs.
“He would take a drum with him
to make love to a neighbour’s wife,” said
John Telfer.
Sam felt that in a way he was a child
of Caxton. Early it had taken him to its bosom;
it had made of him a semi-public character; it had
encouraged him in his money-making, humiliated him
through his father, and patronised him lovingly because
of his toiling mother. When he was a boy, scurrying
between the legs of the drunkards in Piety Hollow of
a Saturday night, there was always some one to speak
a word to him of his morals and to shout at him a
cheering word of advice. Had he elected to remain
there, with the thirty-five hundred dollars already
in the Savings Bank—built to that during
his years with Freedom Smith—he might soon
become one of the town’s solid men.
He did not want to stay. He felt
that his call was in another place and that he would
go there gladly. He wondered why he did not get
on the train and be off.
One night when he had been late on
the road, loitering by fences, hearing the lonely
barking of dogs at distant farmhouses, getting the
smell of the new-ploughed ground into his nostrils,
he came into town and sat down on a low iron fence
that ran along by the platform of the railroad station,
to wait for the midnight train north. Trains
had taken on a new meaning to him since any day might
see him on such a train bound into his new life.
A man, with two bags in his hands,
came on the station platform followed by two women.
“Here, watch these,” he
said to the women, setting the bags upon the platform;
“I will go for the tickets,” and disappeared
into the darkness.
The two women resumed their interrupted talk.
“Ed’s wife has been poorly
these ten years,” said one of them. “It
will be better for her and for Ed now that she is
dead, but I dread the long ride. I wish she had
died when I was in Ohio two years ago. I am sure
to be train-sick.”
Sam, sitting in the darkness, was
thinking of a part of one of John Telfer’s old
talks with him.
“They are good people but they
are not your people. You will go away from here.
You will be a big man of dollars, it is plain.”
He began listening idly to the two
women. The man had a shop for mending shoes on
a side street back of Geiger’s drug store and
the two women, one short and round, one long and thin,
kept a small, dingy millinery shop and were Eleanor
Telfer’s only competitors.
“Well, the town knows her now
for what she is,” said the tall woman.
“Milly Peters says she won’t rest until
she has put that stuck-up Mary Underwood in her place.
Her mother worked in the McPherson house and it was
her told Milly. I never heard such a story.
To think of Jane McPherson working all these years
and then having such goings-on in her house when she
lay dying, Milly says that Sam went away early in the
evening and came home late with that Underwood thing,
half dressed, hanging on his arm. Milly’s
mother looked out of the window and saw them.
Then she ran out by the kitchen stove and pretended
to be asleep. She wanted to see what was up.
And the bold hussy came right into the house with Sam.
Then she went away, and after a while back she came
with that John Telfer. Milly is going to see
that Eleanor Telfer finds it out. I guess it will
bring her down, too. And there is no telling
how many other men in this town Mary Underwood is
running with. Milly says——”
The two women turned as out of the
darkness came a tall figure roaring and swearing.
Two hands flashed out and sank into their hair.
“Stop it!” growled Sam,
beating the two heads together, “stop your dirty
lies!—you ugly she-beasts!”
Hearing the two women screaming the
man who had gone for the railroad tickets came running
down the station platform followed by Jerry Donlin.
Springing forward Sam knocked the shoemaker over the
iron fence into a newly spaded flower bed and then
turned to the baggage man.
“They were telling lies about
Mary Underwood,” he shouted. “She
tried to save me from killing my father and now they
are telling lies about her.”
The two women picked up the bags and
ran whimpering away along the station platform.
Jerry Donlin climbed over the iron fence and confronted
the surprised and frightened shoemaker.
“What the Hell are you doing in my flower bed?”
he growled.
* * * *
Hurrying through the streets Sam’s
mind was in a ferment. Like the Roman emperor
he wished that all the world had but one head that
he might cut it off with a slash. The town that
had seemed so paternal, so cheery, so intent upon
wishing him well, now seemed horrible. He thought
of it as a great, crawling, slimy thing lying in wait
amid the cornfields.
“To be saying that of her, of
that white soul!” he exclaimed aloud in the
empty street, all of his boyish loyalty and devotion
to the woman who had put out a hand to him in his
hour of trouble aroused and burning in him.
He wished that he might meet another
man and could hit him also a swinging blow on the
nose as he had hit the amazed shoemaker. He went
to his own house and, leaning on the gate, stood looking
at it and swearing meaninglessly. Then, turning,
he went again through the deserted streets past the
railroad station where, the midnight train having come
and gone and Jerry Donlin having gone home for the
night, all was dark and quiet. He was filled
with horror of what Mary Underwood had seen at Jane
McPherson’s funeral.
“It is better to be utterly
bad than to speak ill of another,” he thought.
For the first time he realised another
side of village life. In fancy he saw going past
him on the dark road a long file of women, women with
coarse unlighted faces and dead eyes. Many of
the faces he knew. They were the faces of Caxton
wives at whose houses he had delivered papers.
He remembered how eagerly they had run out of their
houses to get the papers and how they hung day after
day over the details of sensational murder cases.
Once, when a Chicago girl had been murdered in a dive
and the details were unusually revolting, two women,
unable to restrain their curiosity, had come to the
station to wait for the train bringing the newspapers
and Sam had heard them rolling the horrid mess over
and over on their tongues.
In every city and in every village
there is a class of women, the thought of whom paralyses
the mind. They live their lives in small, unaired,
unsanitary houses, and go on year after year washing
dishes and clothes— only their fingers
occupied. They read no good books, think no clean
thoughts, are made love to as John Telfer had said,
with kisses in a darkened room by a shame-faced yokel
and, after marrying some such a yokel, live lives
of unspeakable blankness. Into the houses of these
women come the husbands at evening, tired and uncommunicative,
to eat hurriedly and then go again into the streets
or, the blessing of utter physical exhaustion having
come to them, to sit for an hour in stockinged feet
before crawling away to sleep and oblivion.
In these women is no light, no vision.
They have instead certain fixed ideas to which they
cling with a persistency touching heroism. To
the man they have snatched from society they cling
also with a tenacity to be measured only by their
love of a roof over their heads and the craving for
food to put into their stomachs. Being mothers,
they are the despair of reformers, the shadow on the
vision of dreamers and they put the black dread upon
the heart of the poet who cries, “The female
of the species is more deadly than the male.”
At their worst they are to be seen drunk with emotion
amid the lurid horrors of a French Revolution or immersed
in the secret whispering, creeping terror of a religious
persecution. At their best they are mothers of
half mankind. Wealth coming to them, they throw
themselves into garish display of it and flash upon
the sight of Newport or Palm Beach. In their
native lair in the close little houses, they sleep
in the bed of the man who has put clothes upon their
backs and food into their mouths because that is the
usage of their kind and give him of their bodies grudgingly
or willingly as the laws of their physical needs direct.
They do not love, they sell, instead, their bodies
in the market place and cry out that man shall witness
their virtue because they had had the joy of finding
one buyer instead of the many of the red sisterhood.
A fierce animalism in them makes them cling to the
babe at their breast and in the days of its softness
and loveliness they close their eyes and try to catch
again an old fleeting dream of their girlhood, a something
vague, shadowy, no longer a part of them, brought
with the babe out of the infinite. Having passed
beyond the land of dreams, they dwell in the land of
emotions and weep over the bodies of unknown dead or
sit under the eloquence of evangelists, shouting of
heaven and of hell—the call to the one
being brother to the call of the other—crying
upon the troubled air of hot little churches, where
hope is fighting in the jaws of vulgarity, “The
weight of my sins is heavy on my soul.”
Along streets they go lifting heavy eyes to peer into
the lives of others and to get a morsel to roll upon
their heavy tongues. Having fallen upon a side
light in the life of a Mary Underwood they return
to it again and again as a dog to its offal.
Something touching the lives of such as walk in the
clean air, dream dreams, and have the audacity to
be beautiful beyond the beauty of animal youth, maddens
them, and they cry out, running from kitchen door to
kitchen door and tearing at the prize like a starved
beast who has found a carcass. Let but earnest
women found a movement and crowd it forward to the
day when it smacks of success and gives promise of
the fine emotion of achievement, and they fall upon
it with a cry, having hysteria rather than reason
as their guiding impulse. In them is all of femininity—and
none of it. For the most part they live and die
unseen, unknown, eating rank food, sleeping overmuch,
and sitting through summer afternoons rocking in chairs
and looking at people passing in the street. In
the end they die full of faith, hoping for a life
to come.
Sam stood upon the road fearing the
attacks these women were now making on Mary Underwood.
The moon coming up, threw its light on the fields that
lay beside the road and brought out their early spring
nakedness and he thought them dreary and hideous,
like the faces of the women that had been marching
through his mind. He drew his overcoat about him
and shivered as he went on, the mud splashing him
and the raw night air aggravating the dreariness of
his thoughts. He tried to revert to the assurance
of the days before his mother’s illness and
to get again the strong belief in his own destiny
that had kept him at the money making and saving and
had urged him to the efforts to rise above the level
of the man who bred him. He didn’t succeed.
The feeling of age that had settled upon him in the
midst of the people mourning over the body of his
mother came back, and, turning, he went along the
road toward the town, saying to himself: “I
will go and talk to Mary Underwood.”
While he waited on the veranda for
Mary to open the door, he decided that after all a
marriage with her might lead to happiness. The
half spiritual, half physical love of woman that is
the glory and mystery of youth was gone from him.
He thought that if he could only drive from her presence
the fear of the faces that had been coming and going
in his own mind he would, for his own part, be content
to live his life as a worker and money maker, one
without dreams.
Mary Underwood came to the door wearing
the same heavy long coat she had worn on that other
night and taking her by the hand Sam led her to the
edge of the veranda. He looked with content at
the pine trees before the house, thinking that some
benign influence must have guided the hand that planted
them there to stand clothed and decent amid the barrenness
of the land at the end of winter.
“What is it, boy?” asked
the woman, and her voice was filled with anxiety.
The maternal passion again glowing in her had for days
coloured all her thoughts, and with all the ardour
of an intense nature she had thrown herself into her
love of Sam. Thinking of him, she felt in fancy
the pangs of birth, and in her bed at night relived
with him his boyhood in the town and built again her
plans for his future. In the day time she laughed
at herself and said tenderly, “You are an old
fool.”
Brutally and frankly Sam told her
of the thing he had heard on the station platform,
looking past her at the pine trees and gripping the
veranda rail. From the dead land there came again
the smell of the new growth as it had come to him
on the road before the revelation at the railroad
station.
“Something kept telling me not
to go away,” he said. “It must have
been in the air—this thing. Already
these evil crawling things were at work. Oh,
if only all the world, like you and Telfer and some
of the others here, had an appreciation of the sense
of privacy.”
Mary Underwood laughed quietly.
“I was more than half right
when, in the old days, I dreamed of making you a man
at work upon the things of the mind,” she said.
“The sense of privacy indeed! What a fellow
you have become! John Telfer’s method was
better than my own. He has given you the knack
of saying things with a flourish.”
Sam shook his head.
“Here is something that cannot
be faced down with a laugh,” he said stoutly.
“Here is something at you—it is tearing
at you—it has got to be met. Even
now women are waking up in bed and turning the matter
over in their minds. To-morrow they will be at
you again. There is but one way and we must take
it. You and I will have to marry.”
Mary looked at the serious new lines of his face.
“What a proposal!” she cried.
On an impulse she began singing, her
voice fine and strong running through the quiet night.
“He rode and he thought of her red,
red lips,”
she sang, and laughed again.
“You should come like that,”
she said, and then, “you poor muddled boy.
Don’t you know that I am your new mother?”
she added, taking hold of his two arms and turning
him about facing her. “Don’t be absurd.
I don’t want a husband or a lover. I want
a son of my own and I have found him. I adopted
you here in this house that night when you came to
me sick and covered with mud. As for these women—away
with them—I’ll face them down —I
did it once before and I’ll do it again.
Go to your city and make your fight. Here in
Caxton it is a woman’s fight.”
“It is horrible. You don’t understand,”
Sam protested.
A grey, tired look came into Mary Underwood’s
face.
“I understand,” she said.
“I have been on that battlefield. It is
to be won only by silence and tireless waiting.
Your very effort to help would make the matter worse.”
The woman and the tall boy, suddenly
become a man, stood in thought. She was thinking
of the end toward which her life was drifting.
How differently she had planned it. She thought
of the college in Massachusetts and of the men and
women walking under the elm trees there.
“But I have got me a son and
I am going to keep him,” she said aloud, putting
her hand on Sam’s arm.
Very serious and troubled, Sam went
down the gravel path toward the road. He felt
there was something cowardly in the part she had given
him to play, but he could see no alternative.
“After all,” he reflected,
“it is sensible—it is a woman’s
battle.”
Half way to the road he stopped and,
running back, caught her in his arms and gave her
a great hug.
“Good-bye, little Mother,”
he cried and kissed her upon the lips.
And she, watching him as he went again
down the gravel path, was overcome with tenderness.
She went to the back of the porch and leaning against
the house put her head upon her arm. Then turning
and smiling through her tears she called after him.
“Did you crack their heads hard, boy?”
she asked.
* * *
*
From Mary’s house Sam went to
his own. On the gravel path an idea had come
to him. He went into the house and, sitting down
at the kitchen table with pen and ink, began writing.
In the sleeping room back of the parlour he could
hear Windy snoring. He wrote carefully, erasing
and writing again. Then, drawing up a chair before
the kitchen fire, he read over and over what he had
written, and putting on his coat went through the dawn
to the house of Tom Comstock, editor of the Caxton
Argus, and roused him out of bed.
“I’ll run it on the front
page, Sam, and it won’t cost you anything,”
Comstock promised. “But why run it?
Let the matter drop.”
“I shall just have time to pack
and get the morning train for Chicago,” Sam
thought.
Early the evening before, Telfer,
Wildman, and Freedom Smith, at Valmore’s suggestion,
had made a visit to Hunter’s jewelry store.
For an hour they bargained, selected, rejected, and
swore at the jeweller. When the choice was made
and the gift lay shining against white cotton in a
box on the counter Telfer made a speech.
“I will talk straight to that
boy,” he declared, laughing. “I am
not going to spend my time training his mind for money
making and then have him fail me. I shall tell
him that if he doesn’t make money in that Chicago
I shall come and take the watch from him.”
Putting the gift into his pocket Telfer
went out of the store and along the street to Eleanor’s
shop. He strutted through the display room and
into the workshop where Eleanor sat with a hat on her
knee.
“What am I going to do, Eleanor?”
he demanded, standing with legs spread apart and frowning
down upon her, “what am I going to do without
Sam?”
A freckle-faced boy opened the shop
door and threw a newspaper on the floor. The
boy had a ringing voice and quick brown eyes.
Telfer went again through the display room, touching
with his cane the posts upon which hung the finished
hats, and whistling. Standing before the shop,
with the cane hooked upon his arm, he rolled a cigarette
and watched the boy running from door to door along
the street.
“I shall have to be adopting a new son,”
he said musingly.
After Sam left, Tom Comstock stood
in his white nightgown and re-read the statement just
given him. He read it over and over, and then,
laying it on the kitchen table, filled and lighted
a corncob pipe. A draft of wind blew into the
room under the kitchen door chilling his thin shanks
so that he drew his bare feet, one after the other,
up behind the protective walls of his nightgown.
“On the night of my mother’s
death,” ran the statement, “I sat in the
kitchen of our house eating my supper when my father
came in and began shouting and talking loudly, disturbing
my mother who was asleep. I put my hand at his
throat and squeezed until I thought he was dead, and
carried him around the house and threw him into the
road. Then I ran to the house of Mary Underwood,
who was once my schoolteacher, and told her what I
had done. She took me home, awoke John Telfer,
and then went to look for the body of my father, who
was not dead after all. John McPherson knows this
is true, if he can be made to tell the truth.”
Tom Comstock shouted to his wife,
a small nervous woman with red cheeks, who set up
type in the shop, did her own housework, and gathered
most of the news and advertising for The Argus.
“Ain’t that a slasher?”
he asked, handing her the statement Sam had written.
“Well, it ought to stop the
mean things they are saying about Mary Underwood,”
she snapped. Then, taking the glasses from her
nose, and looking at Tom, who, while he did not find
time to give her much help with The Argus,
was the best checker player in Caxton and had once
been to a state tournament of experts in that sport,
she added, “Poor Jane McPherson, to have had
a son like Sam and no better father for him than that
liar Windy. Choked him, eh? Well, if the
men of this town had any spunk they would finish the
job.”