"Oh, it"s the painter, grandpa! We thought it might be the doctor."
He was sitting in an armchair by the fire, wrapped in a blanket. Holding out his hand, he motioned to a chair and said feebly:--
"How did you hear?"
"The brakeman told me."
"Yes, Dan knows. He comes over Sundays."
He was greatly changed,--his skin drawn and shrunken,--his grizzled beard, once so great a contrast to his ruddy skin, only added to the pallor of his face. He had had a slight "stroke," he thought. It had pa.s.sed off, but left him very weak.
I sat down and, to change the current of his thoughts, told him of the river outside, and the shelving ice, of my life since I had seen him, and whatever I thought would interest him. He made no reply, except in monosyllables, his head buried in his hands. Soon the afternoon light faded, and I rose to go. Then he roused himself, threw the blanket from his shoulders and said in something of his old voice:--
"Don"t leave me. Do you hear? Don"t leave me!" this was with an authoritative gesture. Then, his voice faltering and with almost a tender tone, "Please help me through this. My strength is almost gone."
Later, when the night closed in, he called Emily to him, pushed her hair back and, kissing her forehead, said:--
"Now go to bed, little Frowsy-head. The painter will stay with me."
I filled his pipe, threw some dry driftwood in the stove, and drew my chair nearer. He tried to smoke for a moment, but laid his pipe down. For some minutes he kept his eyes on the crackling wood; then, reaching his hand out, laid it on my arm and said slowly:--
"If it were not for the child, I would be glad that the end was near."
"Has she no one to care for her?" I asked.
"Only her mother. When I am gone, she will come."
"Her mother? Why, Brockway! I did not know Emily"s mother was alive. Why not send for her now," I said, looking into his shrunken face. "You need a woman"s care at once."
His grasp tightened on my arm as he half rose from the chair, his eyes blazing as I had seen them that morning when he cursed the boat"s crew.
"But not that woman! Never, while I live!" and he bent down his eyes on mine. "Look at me. Men sometimes cut you to the quick, and now and then a woman can leave a scar that never heals; but your own child,--do you hear?--your little girl, the only one you ever had, the one you laid store by and loved and dreamed dreams of,--_she can tear your heart out_. That"s what Emily"s mother did for me. Oh, a fine gentleman, with his yachts, and boats, and horses,--a fine young aristocrat! He was a thief, I tell you, a blackguard, a beast, to steal my girl. d.a.m.n him! d.a.m.n him! d.a.m.n him!" and he fell back in his chair exhausted.
"Where is she now?" I asked cautiously, trying to change his thoughts. I was afraid of the result if the outburst continued.
"G.o.d knows! Somewhere in the city. She comes here every now and then," in a weaker voice. "Emily meets her and they go off together when I am out raking my beds. Not long ago I met her outside on the foot-bridge; she did not look up; her hair is gray now, and her face is thin and old, and so sad,--not as it once was. G.o.d forgive me,--not as it once was!" He leaned forward, his face buried in his hands.
Then he staggered to his feet, took the lamp from the table, and brought me the picture I had seen in Emily"s room the night of the storm.
"You can see what she was like. It was taken the year before his death and came with Emily"s clothes. She found it in her box."
I held it to the light. The large, dreamy eyes seemed even more pleading than when I first had seen the picture; and the smooth hair pushed back from the high forehead, I now saw, marked all the more clearly the lines of anxious care which were then beginning to creep over the sweet young face. It seemed to speak to me in an earnest, pleading way, as if for help.
"She is your daughter, Brockway, don"t forget that."
He made no reply. After a pause, I went on, "And a girl"s heart is not her own. Was it all her fault?"
He pushed his chair back and stood erect, one hand raised above the other, clutching the blanket around his throat, the end trailing on the floor. By the flickering light of the dying fire he looked like some gaunt spectre towering above me, the blackness of the shadows only intensifying the whiteness of his face.
"Go on, go on. I know what you would say. You would have me wipe out the past and forget. Forget the home she ruined and the dead mother"s heart she broke. Forget the weary months abroad, the tramping of London"s streets looking into every woman"s face, afraid it was she. Forget these years of exile and poverty, living here in this hulk like a dog, my very name unknown. When I am dead, they will say I have been cruel to her. G.o.d knows, perhaps I have; listen!" Then, glancing cautiously towards Emily"s room and lowering his voice, he stooped down, his white sunken face close to mine, his eyes burning, gazed long and steadily into my face as if reading my very thoughts, and then, gathering himself up, said slowly: "No, no. I will not Let it all be buried with me. I cannot,--cannot!" and sank into his chair.
After a while he raised his head, picked up the portrait from the table and looked into its eyes eagerly, holding it in both hands; and muttering to himself, crossed the room, and threw himself on his bed. I stirred the fire, wrapped my coat about me and fell asleep on the lounge. Later, I awoke and crept into his room. He was lying on his back, the picture still clasped in his hands.
A week later, I reached the landing opposite the Hulk. There I met Dan"s wife. Dan himself had been away for several days. She told me that two nights before she had been roused by a woman who had come up on the night express and wanted to be rowed over to the Hulk at once. She was in great distress, and did not mind the danger. Dan was against taking her, the ice being heavy and the night dark; but she begged so hard he had not the heart to refuse her. She seemed to be expected, for Emily was waiting with a lantern on the bridge and put her arms around her and led her into the Hulk.
Dan being away, I found another boatman, and we pushed out into the river.
I stood up in the boat and looked over the waste of ice and snow. Under the leaden sky lay the lifeless Hulk. About the entrance and on the bridge were black dots of figures, standing out in clear relief like crows on the unbroken snow.
As I drew nearer, the dots increased in size and fell into line, the procession slowly creeping along the tottering bridge, crunching the snow under foot. Then I made out little Emily and a neatly-dressed woman heavily veiled.
When the sh.o.r.e was reached, I joined some fishermen who stood about on the beach, uncovering their heads as the coffin pa.s.sed. An open wagon waited near the propped-up foot-bridge of the Hulk, the horse covered with a black blanket. Two men, carrying the body, crouched down and pushed the box into the wagon. The blanket was then taken from the horse and wrapped over the pine casket.
The woman drew nearer and tenderly smoothed its folds. Then she turned, lifted her veil, and in a low voice thanked the few bystanders for their kindness.
It was the same face I had seen with Emily in the woods,--the same that lay upon his heart the last night I saw him alive.