In another column the short but potent line met his eye: "An overflowing and exceedingly fashionable house greeted the Negro Minstrels last night. First-rate talent never goes begging in our city." George sips his coffee and smiles. Wonderfully clever these editors are, he thinks.
They have nice apologies for public taste always on hand; set the country by the ears now and then; and amuse themselves with carrying on the most prudent description of wars.
His own isolated condition, however, is uppermost in his mind. Poverty and wretchedness stare him in the face on one side; chivalry, on the other, has no bows for him while daylight lasts. Instinct whispers in his ear--where one exists the other is sure to be.
To the end that this young man will perform a somewhat important part in the by-ways of this history, some further description of him may be necessary. George Mullholland stands some five feet nine, is wiry-limbed, and slender and erect of person. Of light complexion, his features, are sharp and irregular, his face narrow and freckled, his forehead small and retreating, his hair sandy and short-cropped. Add to these two small, dull, gray eyes, and you have features not easily described. Nevertheless, there are moments when his countenance wears an expression of mildness--one in which the quick eye may read a character more inoffensive than intrusive. A swallow-tail blue coat, of ample skirts, and bra.s.s b.u.t.tons; a bright-colored waistcoat, opening an avalanche of shirt-bosom, blossoming with cheap jewelry; a broad, rolling shirt-collar, tied carelessly with a blue ribbon; a steeple-crowned hat, set on the side of his head with a challenging air; and a pair of broadly-striped and puckered trowsers, reaching well over a small-toed and highly-glazed boot, const.i.tutes his dress. For the exact set of those two last-named articles of his wardrobe he maintains a scrupulous regard. We are compelled to acknowledge George an importation from New York, where he would be the more readily recognized by that vulgar epithet, too frequently used by the self-styled refined--"a swell."
Life with George is a mere drift of uncertainty. As for aims and ends, why he sees the safer thing in having nothing to do with them. Mr. Tom Toddleworth once advised this course, and Tom was esteemed good authority in such matters. Like many others, his character is made up of those yielding qualities which the teachings of good men may elevate to usefulness, or bad men corrupt by their examples. There is a stage in the early youth of such persons when we find their minds singularly susceptible, and ready to give rapid growth to all the vices of depraved men; while they are equally apt in receiving good, if good men but take the trouble to care for them, and inculcate lessons of morality.
Not having a recognized home, we may add, in resuming our story, that George makes Baker"s his accustomed haunt during the day, as do also numerous others of his cla.s.s--a cla.s.s recognized and made use of by men in the higher walks of life only at night.
"Ah! ha, ha! into a tight place this time, George," laughs out Mr.
Soloman, the accommodation man, as he hastens into the room, seats himself in the box with George, and seizes his hand with the earnestness of a true friend. Mr. Soloman can deport himself on all occasions with becoming good nature. "It"s got out, you see."
"What has got out?" interrupts George, maintaining a careless indifference.
"Come now! none of that, old fellow."
"If I understood you--"
"That affair last night," pursues Mr. Soloman, his delicate fingers wandering into his more delicately-combed beard. "It"ll go hard with you. He"s a stubborn old cove, that Sleepyhorn; administers the law as Caesar was wont to. Yesterday he sent seven to the whipping-post; to-day he hangs two "n.i.g.g.e.rs" and a white man. There is a consolation in getting rid of the white. I say this because no one loses a dollar by it."
George, continuing to masticate his bread, says it has nothing to do with him. He may hang the town.
"If I can do you a bit of a good turn, why here"s your man. But you must not talk that way--you must not, George, I a.s.sure you!" Mr. Soloman a.s.sumes great seriousness of countenance, and again, in a friendly way, takes George by the hand. "That poignard, George, was yours. It was picked up by myself when it fell from your hand--"
"My hand! my hand!" George quietly interposes, his countenance paling, and his eyes wandering in excitement.
"Now don"t attempt to disguise the matter, you know! Come out on the square--own up! Jealousy plays the devil with one now and then. I know--I have had a touch of it; had many a little love affair in my time--"
George again interrupts by inquiring to what he is coming.
"To the attempt (the accommodation man a.s.sumes an air of sternness) you made last night on the life of that unhappy girl. It is needless," he adds, "to plead ignorance. The Judge has the poignard; and what"s more, there are four witnesses ready to testify. It"ll go hard with you, my boy." He shakes his head warningly.
"I swear before G.o.d and man I am as innocent as ignorant of the charge.
The poignard I confess is mine; but I had no part in the act of last night, save to carry the prostrate girl--the girl I dearly love--away.
This I can prove by her own lips."
Mr. Soloman, with an air of legal profundity, says: "This is all very well in its way, George, but it won"t stand in law. The law is what you have got to get at. And when you have got at it, you must get round it; and then you must twist it and work it every which way--only be careful not to turn its points against yourself; that, you know, is the way we lawyers do the thing. You"ll think we"re a sharp lot; and we have to be sharp, as times are."
"It is not surprising," replies George, as if waking from a fit of abstraction, "that she should have sought revenge of one who so basely betrayed her at the St. Cecilia--"
"There, there!" Mr. Soloman interrupts, changing entirely the expression of his countenance, "the whole thing is out! I said there was an unexplained mystery somewhere. It was not the Judge, but me who betrayed her to the a.s.sembly. Bless you, (he smiles, and crooking his finger, beckons a servant, whom he orders to bring a julep,) I was bound to do it, being the guardian of the Society"s dignity, which office I have held for years. But you don"t mean to have it that the girl attempted--(he suddenly corrects himself)--Ah, that won"t do, George.
Present my compliments to Anna--I wouldn"t for the world do aught to hurt her feelings, you know that--and say I am ready to get on my knees to her to confess myself a penitent for having injured her feelings.
Yes, I am ready to do anything that will procure her forgiveness. I plead guilty. But she must in return forgive the Judge. He is hard in law matters--that is, we of the law consider him so--now and then; but laying that aside, he is one of the best old fellows in the world, loves Anna to distraction; nor has he the worst opinion in the world of you, George. Fact is, I have several times heard him refer to you in terms of praise. As I said before, being the man to do you a bit of a good turn, take my advice as a friend. The Judge has got you in his grasp, according to every established principle of law; and having four good and competent witnesses, (You have no voice in law, and Anna"s won"t stand before a jury,) will send you up for a twelve-months" residence in Mount Rascal."
It will be almost needless here to add, that Mr. Soloman had, in an interview with the Judge, arranged, in consideration of a goodly fee, to a.s.sume the responsibility of the betrayal at the St. Cecilia; and also to bring about a reconciliation between him and the girl he so pa.s.sionately sought.
Keep out of the way a few days, and everything will blow over and come right. I will procure you the Judge"s friendship--yes, his money, if you want. More than that, I will acknowledge my guilt to Anna; and being as generous of heart as she is beautiful, she will, having discovered the mistake, forgive me and make amends to the Judge for her foolish act.
It is almost superfluous to add, that the apparent sincerity with which the accommodation man pleaded, had its effect on the weak-minded man. He loved dearly the girl, but poverty hung like a leaden cloud over him.
Poverty stripped him of the means of gratifying her ambition; poverty held him fast locked in its blighting chains; poverty forbid his rescuing her from the condition necessity had imposed upon her; poverty was goading him into crime; and through crime only did he see the means of securing to himself the cherished object of his love.
"I am not dead to your friendship, but I am too sad at heart to make any pledge that involves Anna, at this moment. We met in wretchedness, came up in neglect and crime, sealed our love with the hard seal of suffering. Oh! what a history of misery my heart could unfold, if it had but a tongue!" George replies, in subdued accents, as a tear courses down his cheek.
Extending his hand, with an air of encouragement, Mr. Soloman says nothing in the world would so much interest him as a history of the relations existing between George and Anna. Their tastes, aims, and very natures, are different. To him their connection is clothed in mystery.
CHAPTER IX.
IN WHICH A GLEAM OF LIGHT IS SHED ON THE HISTORY OF ANNA BONARD.
A bottle of wine, and the mild, persuasive manner of Mr. Snivel, so completely won over George"s confidence, that, like one of that cla.s.s always too ready to give out their heart-achings at the touch of sympathy, and too easily betrayed through misplaced confidence, he commences relating his history. That of Anna is identified with it. "We will together proceed to New York, for it is there, among haunts of vice and depravity--"
"In depth of degradation they have no counterpart on our globe," Mr.
Soloman interrupts, filling his gla.s.s.
"We came up together--knew each other, but not ourselves. That was our dark age." George pauses for a moment.
"Bless you," again interrupts Mr. Soloman, tipping his gla.s.s very politely, "I never--that is, when I hear our people who get themselves laced into narrow-stringed Calvinism, and long-founded foreign missions, talk--think much could have come of the dark ages. I speak after the manner of an attorney, when I say this. We hear a deal of the dark ages, the crimes of the dark ages, the dark idolatry of darker Africa. My word for it, and it"s something, if they had anything darker in Sodom; if they had in Babylon a state of degradation more hardened of crime; if in Egypt there existed a benightedness more stubbornly opposed to the laws of G.o.d--than is to be found in that New York; that city of merchant princes with princely palaces; that modern Pompeii into which a mighty commerce teems its mightier gold, where a coa.r.s.e throng revel in coa.r.s.er luxury, where a thousand gaudy churches rear heavenward their gaudier steeples, then I have no pity for Sodom, not a tear to shed over fallen Babylon, and very little love for Egypt." Mr. Snivel concludes, saying--"proceed, young man."
"Of my mother I know nothing. My father (I mean the man I called father, but who they said was not my father, though he was the only one that cared anything for me) was Tom English, who used to live here and there with me about the Points. He was always looking in at Paddy Pie"s, in Orange street, and Paddy Pie got all his money, and then Paddy Pie and him quarrelled, and we were turned out of Paddy Pie"s house. So we used to lodge here and there, in the cellars about the Points, in "Cut Throat Alley," or "Cow Bay," or "Murderer"s Alley," or in "The House of the Nine Nations," or wherever we could get a sixpenny rag to lay down upon.
n.o.body but English seemed to care for me, and English cared for n.o.body but me. And English got thick with Mrs. McCarty and her three daughters--they kept the Rookery in "Cow Bay," which we used to get to up a long pair of stairs outside, and which G.o.d knows I never want to think of again,--where sometimes fourteen or fifteen of us, men and women, used to sleep in a little room Mrs. McCarty paid eight dollars a month for. And Mr. Crown, who always seemed a cross sort of man, and was agent for all the houses on the Points I thought, used to say she had it too cheap. And English got to thinking a good deal of Mrs. McCarty, and Mrs. McCarty"s daughters got to thinking a good deal of him. And Boatswain Bill, who lived at the house of the "Nine Nations"--the house they said had a bottomless pit--and English used to fight a deal about the Miss McCartys, and Bill one night threw English over the high stoop, down upon the pavement, and broke his arms. They said it was a wonder it hadn"t a broken his neck. Fighting Mary (Mary didn"t go by that name then) came up and took English"s part, and whipped Boatswain Bill, and said she"d whip the whole house of the "Nine Nations" if it had s.p.u.n.k enough in it to come on. But no one dare have a set-to with Mary. Mary used to drink a deal of gin, and say--"this gin and the devil"ll get us all one of these days. I wonder if Mr. Crown"ll sell bad gin to his highness when he gets him?" Well, Bill was sent up for six months, so the McCartys had peace in the house, and Mrs. McCarty got him little things, and did for English until his arms got well. Then he got a little money, (I don"t know how he got it,) and Paddy Pie made good friends with him, and got him from the Rookery, and then all his money.
I used to think all the money in the Points found its way either to the house of Paddy Pie, or the Bottomless Pit at the house of the "Nine Nations," and all the clothes to the sign of the "Three Martyrs," which the man with the eagle face kept round the corner.
"English used to say in one of his troubled fits, "I"d like to be a respectable man, and get out of this, if there was a chance, and do something for you, George. There"s no chance, you see." And when we went into Broadway, which we did now and then, and saw what another world it was, and how rich everything looked, English used to shake his head and say, "they don"t know how we live, George."
"Paddy Pie soon quarrelled with English, and being penniless again we had to shift for ourselves. English didn"t like to go back to Mrs.
McCarty, so we used to sleep at Mrs. Sullivan"s cellar in "Cut Throat Alley." And Mrs. Sullivan"s cellar was only about twelve feet by twenty, and high enough to stand up in, and wet enough for anything, and so overrun with rats and vermin that we couldn"t sleep. There were nine rag-beds in the cellar, which as many as twenty-three would sometimes sleep on, or, if they were not too tipsy, try to sleep on. And folks used to come into the cellar at night, and be found dead in the morning.
This made such a fuss in the neighborhood (there was always a fuss when Old Bones, the coroner, was about), and frightened so many, that Mrs.
Sullivan couldn"t get lodgers for weeks. She used to nail no end of horse-shoes over the door to keep out the ghosts of them that died last.
But it was a long while before her lodgers got courage enough to come back. Then we went to the house of the Blazers, in "Cow Bay," and used to lodge there with Yellow Bill. They said Bill was a thief by profession; but I wasn"t old enough to be a judge. Little Lizza Rock, the nondescript, as people called her, used to live at the Blazers. Poor Lizza had a hard time of it, and used to sigh and say she wished she was dead. n.o.body thought of her, she said, and she was nothing because she was deformed, and a cripple. She was about four feet high, had a face like a bull-dog, and a swollen chest, and a hunchback, a deformed leg, and went with a crutch. She never combed her hair, and what few rags she had on her back hung in filth. What few shillings she got were sure to find their way either into Bill"s pocket, or send her tipsy into the "Bottomless Pit" of the house of the "Nine Nations." There was in the Bottomless Pit a never-ending stream of gin that sent everybody to the Tombs, and from the Tombs to the grave. But Lizza was good to me, and used to take care of me, and steal little things for me from old Dan Sullivan, who begged in Broadway, and let Yellow Bill get his money, by getting him tipsy. And I got to liking Lizza, for we both seemed to have no one in the world who cared for us but English. And there was always some trouble between the Blazers and the people at the house of the "Nine Nations."
"Well, English was hard to do for some time, and through necessity, which he said a deal about, we were driven out of every place we had sought shelter in. And English did something they sent him up for a twelve-month for, and I was left to get on as I could. I was took in by "Hard-Fisted Sall," who always wore a knuckle-duster, and used to knock everybody down she met, and threatened a dozen times to whip Mr.
Fitzgerald, the detective, and used to rob every one she took in tow, and said if she could only knock down and rob the whole pumpkin-headed corporation she should die easy, for then she would know she had done a good thing for the public, whose money they were squandering without once thinking how the condition of such wretches as herself could be bettered.
"English died before he had been up two months. And death reconciled the little difficulty between him and the McCartys; and old Mrs. McCarty"s liking for him came back, and she went crying to the Bellevue and begged them, saying she was his mother, to let her take his body away and bury it. They let her have it, and she brought it away to the rookery, in a red coffin, and got a clean sheet of the Blazers, and hung it up beside the coffin, and set four candles on a table, and a little cross between them, and then borrowed a Bible with a cross on it, and laid it upon the coffin. Then they sent for me. I cried and kissed poor English, for poor English was the only father I knew, and he was good to me. I never shall forget what I saw in that little room that night. I found a dozen friends and the McCartys there, forming a half-circle of curious and demoniacal faces, peering over the body of English, whose face, I thought, formed the only repose in the picture. There were two small pictures--one of the Saviour, and the other of Kossuth--hung at the head and feet of the corpse; and the light shed a lurid paleness over the living and the dead. And detective Fitzgerald and another gentleman looked in.
""Who"s here to-night?" says Fitzgerald, in a friendly sort of way.
""G.o.d love ye, Mr. Fitzgerald, poor English is gone! Indeed, then, it was the will of the Lord, and He"s taken him from us--poor English!"
says Mrs. McCarty. And Fitzgerald, and the gentleman with him, entered the den, and they shuddered and sat down at the sight of the face in the coffin. "Sit down, Mr. Fitzgerald, do!--and may the Lord love ye! There was a deal of good in poor English. He"s gone--so he is!" said Mrs.
McCarty, begging them to sit down, and excuse the disordered state of her few rags. She had a hard struggle to live, G.o.d knows. They took off their hats, and sat a few minutes in solemn silence. The rags moved at the gentleman"s side, which made him move towards the door. "What is there, my good woman?" he inquired. "She"s a blessed child, Mr.
Fitzgerald knows that same:" says Mrs. McCarty, turning down the rags and revealing the wasted features of her youngest girl, a child eleven years old, sinking in death. "G.o.d knows she"ll be better in heaven, and herself won"t be long out of it," Mrs. McCarty twice repeated, maintaining a singular indifference to the hand of death, already upon the child. The gentleman left some money to buy candles for poor English, and with Mr. Fitzgerald took himself away.
"Near midnight, the tall black figure of solemn-faced Father Flaherty stalked in. He was not pleased with the McCartys, but went to the side of the dying child, fondled her little wasted hand in his own, and whispered a prayer for her soul. Never shall I forget how innocently she looked in his face while he parted the little ringlets that curled over her brow, and told her she would soon have a better home in a better world. Then he turned to poor English, and the cross, and the candles, and the pictures, and the living faces that gave such a ghastliness to the picture. Mrs. McCarty brought him a basin of water, over which he muttered, and made it holy. Then he again muttered some unintelligible sentences, and sprinkled the water over the dying child, over the body of poor English, and over the living--warning Mrs. McCarty and her daughters, as he pointed to the coffin. Then he knelt down, and they all knelt down, and he prayed for the soul of poor English, and left. What holy water then was left, Mrs. McCarty placed near the door, to keep the ghosts out.