HENRY RANDOLPH shook
his white head in an impatient gesture of dissent, and continued the
discussions with a tenderly exasperated disregard of his cousin's scruples.
"No, no, Alice, dear, this is no time to split hairs on what it's proper
to speak about. It's infamous, I know, that I should be talking to you about it
-- nobody but a woman should; but, my dear child, how can I go and leave you
so? And there's nobody else to speak. You might as well have no brother at all
as one in the navy."
Mrs. Smithers's
resigned, though unpeaceful, drooping attitude changed at this to a sudden
nervous tension. She clasped and unclasped her thin hands, and spoke with a
little rush of eagerness. "Ah! that's it, Cousin Henry. If I could only
see my brother oftener, he might be able to do something." She relapsed
again into listless despondency and continued dully: "But I don't suppose
he would ever see anything at all the matter. My husband would be so different
with him -- you know how Will is to outsiders."
Randolph struck one
hand into the other fiercely. "I do! I do! But what's the use of knowing
him now, when you've been married ten years? Oh, if I'd only been here instead
of on the other side of the globe when he first went to Washington and met you!
Why, in Heaven's name, your parents ----" He checked himself abruptly.
"No, I can't blame them -- poor, simple souls! They never had any worldly
discernment. You're just like them."
Mrs. Smithers spoke in
a naively solemn and hesitant way. "I hope it's not wicked, Cousin Henry,
but I'm some- times glad they died so soon after my marriage -- and that Tom is
always away on his vessel. They couldn't help any, and I'm glad they don't have
to suffer with me. I'm sorry it makes you so sad, cousin, on your first visit
home in so many years. I'm afraid I've not been able to make you very
happy."
At this Randolph roared
out in indignant tenderness: "Good Heavens, Alice, don't be such a
perfectly angelic idiot! If you endure it day after day, and have for ten
years, and will as long as he or you live, don't you suppose a great hulking
brute of a man like me can bear just to hear about it?"
The woman stirred
uneasily in her chair. "Oh, please, dear cousin, don't speak so. I know
I've done very wrong to let you know it all, but, seeing somebody who belongs
to me after all this long, lonely life in New York -- I'm afraid I haven't been
very brave. I may not have so much more to bear than other women. Will, you
know, is never brutally unkind, as so many husbands are -- he has never struck
me -- we live in this expensive apartment; the children go to the best schools;
I always have plenty of money to spend ----"
She ended, quavering
off into silence before the gathering wrath in the old man's eyes. He caught
her up grimly: "Yes, you have plenty of money to spend, but I notice you
do your own work most of the time. Your husband makes the apartment such a hell
on earth with his devilish ingenuity that you couldn't keep a maid for a week
-- not for any price."
Alice interrupted him
eagerly: "But, no -- I have old Belle, the scrubwoman, you know. She's
been with me almost ever since I was married -- ever since we came to this
house to live. She cleans the halls and stairways of this building, and so
she's always on hand to come in and help me out. She does all the rough work,
and she won't let me do anything she can manage to prevent. She's so faithful
and strong, and so kind to me, I forget all about her dreadful looks and
profanity; and you couldn't drive her away. She never seems even to hear the
things Will says to her."
The man's voice was
bitter as he answered gloomily: "Actually the best friend -- the only
friend you are allowed to have is that frightful old harridan I see around
here. I wonder you allow her to be with the children. I've never heard her
speak without an oath, and little Jack is so ----"
The mention of the
child was like an electric shock to the mother. She sprang to her feet, and
running to the tall old man, she caught one of his hands in hers with a gesture
of distraction. "Oh, Cousin Henry, every time I hear Jack's name it makes
me remember Will's threat to send him away. It's only because of that I spoke
to you at all. I could not bear to have him go from me to a strange school. It
would kill him."
The man suddenly gave a
deep sob of pity, and gathered the frail, weeping woman into his arms. The
silence which followed was broken by the entrance from the dining-room of a
small woman of uncertain age, in dingy attire, carrying a pail of water in one
bony hand and a large cleaning-cloth in the other. Without noticing the silent
couple by the window, she dropped heavily to her knees and began to wipe up the
edge of bare floor showing about the carpet. Randolph spoke, and she turned,
startled, showing a face blurred and battered by hardship, but instantly alive
in the keenest interest in the conversation.
"Alice, dear,
unless you'll simply drop everything and come away with me to my home, I don't
see any way out."
Mrs. Smithers recoiled
at this and spoke with a passionate denial: "Why, how can you think of my
doing that! How could I leave the children? They're all I live for -- all that
keeps me from going crazy!"
"You could bring
the children along. They'd do well in Buenos Ayres."
"He'd come and
take them from me. I've been all over that so many times with myself. And I've
read that the children are never allowed to stay with the mother if she has run
away. If I could only just snatch them up and hide from him -- all of us; but
he's so clever and I'm so stupid he'd find us out right away, and then I --
he'd never let me see them again."
The old man drew a long
breath, in an evident attempt to control himself, but vainly, for he broke out
so fiercely that the scrubwoman sat up on her heels electrified.
"Damnation! I beg your pardon, Allie, dear, but it just tears me in pieces
to see you so. Confound the fellow! Why doesn't he just once go a step too far
and give some ground for divorce? The hellish cunning of him! -- to care so
well for your outward wants and to murder inch by inch your self-respect, your
love for your children, your pride -- your very soul!"
He stopped her feeble
gesture of protest with a furious torrent of words. "No, don't talk to me.
I've seen it, and I know. Tom may be fooled by his smooth ways, but I've seen
Mexican half-breeds before now. Sometimes I think it a mistake, his having had
an American father -- he's all greaser, every inch of him! I heard stories
about him as a boy when I was in Bocas del Toro. When he was ten years old he
was caught burning a cat over a slow fire -- half-breed Injun and Spaniard,
just like his mother. No, he gets his business sense from old Smithers, all
right. And, good Lord! he gets those cold, pale eyes from him!"
He shuddered at the
picture and went on in a mounting fury: "Allie, unless you give up the
children or divide them, there's nothing anybody can do to help. It's
incredible there should be such a situation in a civilized country, but it's
so. The mere fact that you are tortured day by day in a thousand subtle ways no
decent man could even think of is as nothing, because he doesn't strike you. A
jury or judge would take no more cognizance of your mental agony than -- your
old scrubwoman!"
At this mention of her
the woman started guiltily from her position of strained and intent
eavesdropping and let her cloth fall into the pail with a splash. The two
turned, and, seeing her, lowered their voices, Mrs. Smithers trying in vain to
repress her sobbing.
Randolph went over to
her and laid one hand tenderly on her shoulder. Oh, I know you won't think of
leaving the children. You couldn't, of course. But, Allie, do this for me, at
least: promise me that the next time you see Tom -- and may it be soon, or you
won't keep your reason -- tell him! Tell him what your married life is. He's
your big brother, and I feel that he'll be able to help you somehow. Promise me
that! Don't send me away quite hopeless over your future."
In a confused murmur of
sobs and broken sentences the promise came: "Yes, yes, I promise. I
somehow feel, too, that if he really knows -- he can help -- but there's so
much even he can't know. Oh, I wish I had a mother! If my mother had only
lived!"
INTO this atmosphere of
quivering agitation dropped suddenly the quiet, silvery tinkle of the
door-bell. It shocked them all into attitudes of expectation. Mrs. Smithers
stopped her sobbing with a convulsive effort and sat up straight, shivering
uncontrollably and motioning the scrubwoman to hurry. "Oh, that must be
Will! He mustn't see me so upset. Belle, hurry! Do hurry and open for him; he
can't bear to be kept waiting. I'd go myself, but he doesn't like to see me do
it. Oh, Belle, please, please hurry!"
The significance of her
terror-stricken disquiet pierced the old man with a savage thrust of pity and
sympathy, but the scrubwoman did not lift a heavy finger the quicker for it.
She finished wiping up a spot on the floor, wrung her cloth out deliberately,
and hung it over the pail before she rose to her feet and went down the long,
narrow hall with the ungainly walk of women who have long worked beyond their
strength. Randolph and his cousin waited and together caught a sudden breath
when from the recesses of the hall came a smooth, penetrating voice saying with
an indescribably insulting accent: "Out of my way, you hag!"
Rapid steps came down
the hall, and a tall man with a very black beard and pale-blue eyes entered the
room, bringing with him the lowering atmosphere of a thunder-storm. As he
caught sight of Randolph his face smoothed itself into a cordial smile, and
advancing, he insisted on taking the older man's hand in a hearty gasp. When he
spoke, his voice had a warm intonation of pleased surprise. "Why, Cousin
Henry, this is a welcome sight. I understood that you were to be off to-day,
and that we were once more a desolate family, without a relative to our
names."
He took off his coat
and hat as he spoke and gave them to the scrubwoman, who stood with the
apprehensive, repellent gaze of an ill-treated ash-cat. She turned to go out
with them, and as she disappeared down the hall Randolph noticed, with a qualm
of disgust, as another detail in the nightmare which surrounded him, that she
spat fiercely on the hat. He roused himself and said to the newcomer stiffly:
"There was some accident to the engines, and the boat won't sail until
to-night, so I came back to ----"
Smithers interrupted
him with a cheery laugh as he began opening some letters on the table and
glancing over them. "It's an ill wind, et cetera. I dare say little Allie
was no end glad to see you again. She's not much company for herself at any
time, and when the children are still in the country and she's been spoiled by
so much of your delightful companionship, I fancy my little child-wife got
pretty dull."
He looked them both
full in the face as he delivered this speech, and smiled at their wincing under
his accent. The scrubwoman, moving the furniture about, suddenly set a chair
down with so furious an energy that they all started.
"Oblige me, Belle,
by being a little quieter," said Smithers mildly, and laughed aloud as he
caught Randolph's eye. Still smiling, he went rattling on, as he read a letter:
"Do you know, my
dear Cousin Henry, you're the only relative who's been to see us since the very
first years of our married life? Alice doesn't know her other forty-second
cousins very well, and, to tell the truth, they don't seem to enjoy our simple
life. Too bad, eh, Allie?"
His voice dropped into
an absent murmur, and he lost himself in the letter. Randolph crossed the room
to the window where his cousin stood and drew her to him. "I'm going now,
dear child," he said in a low tone, "but it's like tearing a piece of
my heart out to leave you so. It seems to me, sometimes, I must go distracted
thinking of you. But it's one ray of light in my darkness that you've promised
to speak to Tom and appeal to him to help you. And remember, let me know if I
can ever help and ----"
Smithers laid down his
letter and turned toward them with so openly black a look of suspicion that the
old man answered as though he had been questioned.
"I'm telling
Alice, William," he said defiantly, "that if she ever needs me I'll
come from the ends of the earth."
The younger man smiled
again, so that his wife caught her breath and clung convulsively to her cousin.
He waved his hand genially. "Ah, very good of you -- very kind, I'm sure.
Alice will, of course, let you know at any time if there is something you can
do for her." He added dryly: "I'll see that she does myself."
Randolph turned his back on him and kissed Alice on the forehead.
"Good-by, little girl. Heaven bless you!" he said, in an unsteady
voice.
The scrubwoman stood up
to show him the door, drying her distorted hands on her torn apron. She made a
furtive wipe at her eyes, and sniffed loudly with a grotesque contortion of her
face. Smithers turned on her suddenly, so that she dodged and lifted an arm in
guard. He spoke with the most careful gentleness:
"Don't bother to
show Mr. Randolph the door, Belle. I'll go myself. No, don't protest, my dear
cousin. It's the last time. I'm not going to let a servant's face be the last
one you see in my house -- and such a face!" The two disappeared down the
hall, Smithers ahead, talking animatedly.
BELLE dropped her cloth
and hastened heavily to where Alice sat. Her hard face was set in lines of grim
resolution. She spoke in a hoarse whisper, looking continually over her
shoulder toward the hall. "Ma'am -- Mrs. Smithers -- don't give up to him
so! Paste him one when he comes back. Git ahead of him and he'd let you alone.
Give him fits before he has a chance to git started."
Alice looked up in
amazement, and spoke with a childish attempt at dignity. "Belle, you
forget yourself!"
Her husband came back
into the room with his rapid, noiseless tread, cast a black look at the two
women, and went again to his mail. There was a silence which was ominous. The
scrubwoman went on stolidly with her work, and Alice waited in trembling suspense
for the first words. Smithers finished a letter and held it up, saying in a
low, measured tone: "If you've quite finished your furtive conversation
with your especial friend, you may care to know that this letter is from Jack.
I believe you preserve the pose of being devoted to your children."
He pocketed the letter
in answer to an imploring gesture for it from his wife, and went on: "No,
there's no need for you to read it. I can tell you all that's necessary for you
to know. He's hurt his foot again."
His wife screamed out
at this, striking her hands together in anguish. "Oh, Will! His lame foot?
How badly?"
The man gathered the
letters together and threw some loose envelopes in the waste-paper basket
before he answered. Then he said sardonically: "It makes me smile to see
the way you carry out your attitude about that. If you care so much about it,
it's a wonder you carefully arranged matters so he would be lame."
The mother quivered as
though under a physical blow. "Oh, Will, how can you?"
Her tormentor went on:
"How could you? It was just pure carelessness on your part letting him
fall -- you, a mother of children! I wonder that you can look at the ugly
little cripple without hating yourself."
He listened impatiently
to her feeble attempt at self-justification. "Why, Will, you know I was
thrown myself, and fell all those steps. The doctor has always said that if I
hadn't held him up he would have been killed, and ----"
"Confound the
doctor! You got around him with your soft ways the same way you did me before I
knew what a fool you were. Besides, it would be better for Jack if he were
dead. It makes me sick to see him hobbling about. Anyhow, the fact remains that
you were supposed to be taking care of him and let him fall. I notice other mothers
seem to be able to avoid those little accidents."
He walked into the
study, kicking viciously at Belle's pail and partly over- turning it, so that
the water ran out on the carpet. As the door slammed the scrubwoman looked
apprehensively at Mrs. Smithers, who returned the look sadly.
"Belle, you know
I've always been good to you."
The workwoman
brightened at the words and answered fervently, in a hoarse, cracked voice:
"Yes, ma'am, Lord knows I know."
Her mistress continued
seriously, as though speaking to a naughty child: "There's one thing,
though, I can't allow. You must not speak to me as you did just now, or I can
never have you here again."
The shapeless body of
the other drooped humbly under the reproof. "Just as you say, ma'am. I
couldn't help myself that time, but I won't never again. I couldn't live if I
had to quit workin' for you. I'm scrubbin' here in the house for less than I
could git somewheres else just so's I can git to see you. Why, ma'am -- Mrs.
Smithers -- I'd go through hell every day to see you!"
She flinched again at
the deprecating hand of her mistress, and hung her head, shamefaced, at the
exhortation: "Oh, Belle, you shouldn't use such language."
The pathos of the
unlovely figure went to Alice's heart. "Never mind this time, Belle. You
do a great deal for me, too. I couldn't have got along without you, a great
many times, and it makes me very happy to think that I'm not so weak that I
can't help somebody a little."
The hard-featured face
of the other suddenly broke into grotesque lines of emotion. She spoke
incoherently, sitting ungracefully on her heels and wiping her eyes with the
cleaning-cloth between her sentences. "Oh, ma'am, it just busts me wide
open to have you say I help you. When a body's had all done for them you've
done for me -- keeping me at all! -- I know how I look and how rough I talk.
There isn't another lady in the world that would have me around, and with the
kids and all! And then to give me kind words and looks, and helpin' me through
with the typhoid, and goin' to that darned hospital to see me! Not if I live to
be a million, which Lord forbid! I couldn't never forget how you looked when
you came in the ward with all them flowers, as though I was anybody, and
standin' by me all that month when they thought I'd swiped the silver. You're
the only livin' soul as ever give me a kind word since I can't remember. I
never did anything but fight anywheres else but here. It's just been hell every
minute. I cud ha' died like a dog and never knowed what it was to have anybody
so much as say -- oh, ma'am, Mrs. Smithers ----"
She paused, breathless,
choked by emotion, unable to express herself, but staring at her mistress, a
look of doglike devotion in her somber eyes.
As Alice smiled sweetly
at her with a wistful look of gratitude, she came to herself, and began her
work again, sniffing unpleasantly and drawing the back of her hand across her
nose from time to time.
She moved a picture
which stood on the floor to another part of the room, looking at it curiously
and at Alice timidly, finally summing up courage to say: "Would it be too
darn much trouble, ma'am, to tell me what this picture's about?"
"That? Oh, that's
a glacier -- ice, you know, on top of a mountain -- and two men are tied
together with a rope. One of them has just slipped into a great, deep hole, and
he's getting out his knife to cut the rope, so he won't drag the other man
after him."
Belle seemed
unconvinced. "But then he'll fall, won't he?"
Alice replied absently,
looking at the picture of a child on the mantel. "Yes, but the other man,
his friend will be saved." She fell into a reverie, from which she was
recalled by the other's insistent questioning: "What do the words
underneath mean, please, ma'am?"
"I forget what
they do call it. What are the words?"
Belle followed the
letters with a gnarled forefinger and read laboriously: "Greater love hath
no man," and listened with a painful face of endeavor to the explanation:
"Oh, that's from the Bible, where it says, 'Greater love hath no man than
this, that a man lay down his life for his friend.' It means, you know, that
----"
THE door from the study
opened, and she started eagerly toward her husband. "Oh, Will, won't you
tell me about Jack's foot now? Did he hurt it badly?"
Smithers looked at her
with a side- wise twist of his mouth and said evenly: "I see your usual
careful house- keeping in that large spot of dirty water on the carpet."
Belle and Alice both
faced him, amazed, and Alice cried impulsively: "Why, Will, you upset the
----"
He cut her off with one
of his blighting looks. "It's curious how I am to blame for everything
that happens. I don't suppose your peerless beauty, there, is capable of
getting me a bottle of beer, is she? As usual, we are without any other
servants. I dare say that I am also to blame for your incapacity to keep any
help in the house. It seems as though, with all the money you have for service,
you might be able to keep somebody besides that harridan. I suppose the fact is
you're jealous of any one who doesn't resemble your old eyesore. Oh, don't
explain. You needn't be afraid I'd ever think you capable of such a live
flesh-and-blood sentiment. Milk and water can't burn." He addressed
himself threateningly to Belle: "Will you get some beer, or won't
you?"
She answered him
sullenly: "The liquor man ain't sent the beer yet."
The man's smoothness
broke into an ugly cold fury. He advanced upon his wife, so that she shrank
into herself in terror. "Alice, your incompetence is simply maddening! You
know the doctor has ordered me to drink beer. You seem actually to plan to
thwart any measures for my good. I'm not surprised that you show no interest in
my health. Indeed, I dare say you would be very glad if ----"
"Oh, no,
Will!" shrieked his wife, in an agony of protest. "Don't! I can't
bear to hear you say such a dreadful thing!"
The sight of her
agitation seemed to restore him to his usual cold control of himself. He eyed
her with a smile. "The extraordinary ease with which your guilty
imagination fills out my sentences is something surprising, even to me -- used
as I am to your affection for your husband. I'm going out to the kitchen myself
to see if I can't find a bottle which your vigilant handmaid has sequestered
for her own use."
In the moment of his
absence the scrubwoman raised her gaunt frame again in exhortation: "Oh,
blame it all, ma'am -- if you would -- just once -- just try it on!"
Alice hushed her, with
a frantic fear of being overheard, and turned to her husband, who entered the
room with a bottle of beer, which he opened with a deft strength and half
emptied into a glass. The two women followed his most trivial actions with a
fascinated gaze. The first draft seemed to relax him, for he leaned back in his
chair, wiping his beard and looking neutrally at his wife. "Have you heard
anything lately from Tom, Alice?" he asked.
Alice flushed up into a
timid desire to please him in this brief interlude of peace. "No, Will,
not for a long time. How kind of you to think of him! I long to hear from him
so. I can't tell you! I think I should almost die of happiness to see him
again."
She drew away in a
drooping submission under her husband's curt "Oh, don't be sickening!
Every time I try to have a little reasonable conversation with you you turn my
stomach. It's enough to drive any man with a nerve in his body mad with
irritation -- your fawning ways. I'm sorry for myself! It's not my fault. Any
woman with a spark of grit in her -- you make me hate myself as well as you
----" He interrupted himself sharply, pointing tensely into a corner of
the room. "A mouse! Alice, have you or have you not used that poison I got
for you?"
"Oh, Will,"
she fluttered protestingly, "I'm so afraid to have it around! I haven't
seen any mice for a long time, and I thought traps -- the children ----"
Smithers struck his
hand heavily on the table, with a loud oath: "Can't a man be safe from
vermin in his own home because he has a fool for a wife?"
He rushed out, and
Belle again approached with her ignorant, vacant look of curiosity. "Why
are you so afraid of that stuff, ma'am?"
Mrs. Smithers
shuddered. "Oh, Belle, it's poison -- deadly poison -- and the least
little drop of it in anything we eat would kill us. And when the children are
here ----"
Their whispered
colloquy was interrupted by Smithers's entrance, bearing a small bottle, which
he placed on the mantelpiece in a complete and significant silence. As he
seated himself he said coldly: "I hope I shall not have to wait until we
are attacked in our beds by the rats before you decide to be reasonable."
He fixed his pale eyes on her. "Alice, this is as good a time as ever to
tell you that I have decided to send Jack to school -- a military school in
Wisconsin."
Belle uttered a loud
exclamation at this, which was lost in the high hysterical wail of Mrs.
Smithers's voice, "Will, I don't want to seem to doubt your judgment, but
I really know more about Jack's health than you can, and I know he can't live
without the most anxious care. A military school -- why, he's lame! And so far
away! And Jack is only nine -- a baby -- a baby!"
She flung herself upon
him, kneeling with imploring hands and awaiting his answer in a breathless
suspense. He waited a long time before speaking, and then finished his glass of
beer and set it down carefully. "Quite what I expected -- just the silly
exhibition of yourself that I am used to. And you expect me to leave my
children to be brought up by an hysterical idiot like that! I had not finally
decided, but I do so now, that the other two would be better in a sane and
reasonable atmosphere, which unfortunately, owing to my choice of a wife, I
cannot give them in my own house. Elsie and Harry, as soon as they come home
from the country, shall go abroad under the charge of a French governess."
His wife's face did not
change at all. She slipped slowly to the floor in an unconscious heap, and her
face did not alter from its expression of stupefied horror.
THE scrubwoman darted
to her mistress and knelt by her in a passion of anxiety. When Smithers put her
roughly on one side and gathered his wife's body into his arms she scratched
and struck at him like a cat, with an incoherent burst of objurgation. The man
paid no attention to her, carrying his wife down the long hall with an easy
strength and disappearing for a moment into a side room.
Belle was still on her
knees, a squat figure of hatred, when he emerged again, closed the door after
him, and came back down the hall whistling "The Campbells Are
Coming." At the entrance to the parlor he looked at her in complete
silence till she cringed abjectly. At this he smiled, and said in a tone of
finality: "That will be enough from you, Belle. One more such incident and
I'll have you dismissed from the apartment and the building. Do you
understand?"
She nodded faintly, and
started up in a servile haste to answer the door-bell, bringing back a letter
which she placed on Mrs. Smithers's desk, saying significantly: "It's for
your wife, Mr. Smithers."
He cast her a sidelong
look of contemptuous warning and opened the letter with a swift deftness,
reading it aloud in an inarticulate mumble, which at times rose into a clear
note of scornful emphasis.
"Dear little
sister -- unexpectedly find we're ordered for -- stopping a day in New York --
hope you can get down to the vessel -- you'll need to start as soon as you get
this, for we are to -- hope you can manage it, for it will be the last chance
in two years!"
The last sentence he
read quite distinctly, in a tone of triumph, and gave a short laugh as he tore
the letter in two.
At the sound, the
scrubwoman sprang toward him, her face convulsed. "Don't you dare tear up
that letter from her brother! I'll -- I'll ----" She struggled to wrest it
away in an animal-like frenzy. He struck her from him with a blow so powerful
that she reeled to the other side of the room, but, although the action was
violent, he did not lose his uncanny smoothness, and held her distant from him
and impotently speechless by his cold eye.
"I said, Belle,
that another time I would lose my patience with you. That has happened. When
you finish your work in this room you will leave the apartment, and you will
not come back -- either here or to the building." He cut short her
paroxysm of horror with a gesture so fierce that she cowered like a whipped
dog. "Not a word from you," he said; "I've heard enough. I'm
going into the study now, and when I come out I expect you to be gone. And don't
dare go near your mistress."
He crossed the room
with his graceful, vigorous step, paused at the door, said in his ordinary
tone, "Bring me in the rest of that beer, will you," opened the door,
and closed it with a resolute jerk back of him.
The movement jarred a
picture standing on the floor near the door, and it fell down with a
splintering crash of broken glass, which turned the scrubwoman's eye in that
direction. There was a moment's silence, and then, without rising from her
crouching position, she crept across the floor to where it lay and looked at it
dully, making no movement to set it up.
And then suddenly she
rose staggering to her feet, rushed heavily to the mantel, and seized the
bottle which stood there. With a sort of insane and extravagant haste she
emptied its contents and the beer into a glass at the same moment, and reeled
across the room to the study, knocking on the door with a hand hysterically
shaking. Smithers's hand appeared, took the glass, and the door was again shut.
The scrubwoman leaned against the wall with her eyes closed until the sound of
a heavy fall was heard from the other room. She recoiled from the wall at this
and walked blindly and aimlessly about the room.
A sound of deep groans
came through the closed door. The scrubwoman hastened to the entrance into the
hall and drew over it a heavy portière.
"Help! Help!"
called Smithers's voice faintly. "Help! -- I'm poisoned!"
The scrubwoman began
taking the scraps of the torn letter out of the waste- paper basket and laying
them carefully on Mrs. Smithers's desk.
There was a confused
sound of struggle and the crash of an overturned chair. The scrubwoman lifted
up the broken picture and put it on the table, standing by it and absently
smoothing out a place in the paper torn by the splintered glass.
"Oh, help!"
came in a choking gasp from beyond the closed door, and then in a supreme
effort, "Alice!"
At the sound of the
name the scrubwoman smiled for the first time and stood listening intently.
There was a profound
silence. She waited, and then walked softly across the floor to where Mrs.
Smithers's shawl was lying across a chair. Still smiling, she held this to her
face in a passion of tenderness. "Oh, the poor, dear, good- for-nothing
lady!" she said.