The child s.n.a.t.c.hed up her basket and gave a hurried glance around, seeking for some means of egress from the wharf; but while she was occupied by the steamer, a crowd had gathered down to the water"s edge, and she shrunk from attempting a pa.s.sage through the ma.s.s of carts, carriages and people that blocked up her way to the city.
"Poh! there"s nothing to be afeared of!" said the good-natured tar, observing her terrified look; "only take care of your traps, and it"s worth while waiting."
By this time the steamer was opposite Governor"s Island. She made a bold curve around the Battery, and came up to her berth with a slow and measured beat of the engine, blowing off steam at intervals, like a racer drawing breath after sweeping his course.
The deck of the steamer was alive with pa.s.sengers, an eager crowd full of cheerfulness and expectation. Most of them were evidently from the higher cla.s.ses of society; for their rich attire and a certain air of refined indifference was manifest, even in the excitement of an arrival.
Among the rest, Julia saw two persons that fascinated her attention in a most singular degree, drawing it from the whole scene, till she heeded nothing else.
One of these was a woman somewhat above the common size, and of superb proportions, who leaned against the railing of the steamer with a heavy, drooping bend, as if occupied with some deep and painful feeling. One glove was off, and her eager grasp upon the black wood-work seemed to start the blue veins up to the snowy surface of a hand, whose symmetry was visible, even from the sh.o.r.e. Julia could not remove her eyes from the strange and beautiful face of this woman. Deep, but subdued agony was at work in every lineament. There was wildness in her very motion, as she lifted her superb form from the railing, and drew the folds of a cashmere shawl over her bosom, pressing her hand hard upon the rich fabric, as if to relieve some painful feeling that it covered.
The steamer now lay close in her berth. A sort of movable staircase was flung from the side of the wharf, and down this staircase came the pa.s.sengers, eager to touch the firm earth once more. Among the foremost was the woman who had so riveted the attention of Julia Warren; and, behind her, bearing a silver dressing-case and a small embroidered satchel, came a tall and singular looking man. Though his form was upright enough in itself, he bent forward in his walk; and his arms, long and awkward, seemed like the members of some other body, that had, by mistake, been given up to his ungainly use. His dress was fine in material, but carelessly put on, ill-fitting and badly arranged in all its tints. A hat of fine beaver and foreign make, seemed flung on the back of his head, and settled tightly there by a blow on the crown; his great hands were gloveless; and his boots appeared at least a size too large for the feet they encased.
This man would now and then cast a glance from his small, gray eyes on the superb woman who preceded him; and it was easy to see by his countenance, that he observed, and after his fashion shared the anguish visible in her features. His own face deepened in its expression of awkward sadness with every glance; and he hugged the dressing case to his side with unconscious violence, which threatened to crush the delicate frost-work that enriched it.
With a wild and dry brightness in her large, blue eyes, the lady descended to the wharf, a few paces from the spot occupied by the strawberry girl. As her foot touched the earth, Julia saw that the white hand dropped from its hold on the shawl, and the costly garment half fell from her shoulders, trailing the dirty wharf with its embroidery.
In the whole crowd there was no object but this woman to the girl. With a pale cheek and suspended breath she watched every look and motion.
There was something almost supernatural in the concentration of her whole being on this one person. An intense desire to address the stranger--to meet the glance of her eyes--to hear her voice, seized upon the child. She sprang forward, obeying this strange impulse, and lifting the soiled drapery of the shawl, held it up grasped in her trembling hands.
"Lady, your shawl!"
The child could utter no more. Those large, blue eyes were bent upon her face. Her own seemed fascinated by the gaze. Slowly, sadly they filled with tears, drop by drop, and the eyes of that strange, beautiful woman filled also. Still she gazed upon the child--her clean, poverty-stricken dress--her meek face, and the basket of fruit and flowers upon her arm; and as she gazed, a faint smile crept around her mouth.
"This sweet voice--the flowers--is it not a beautiful welcome?" she said, glancing through her tears upon the man who stood close by her side; but the uncouth friend, or servant, whatever he might be, did not answer. His eyes were riveted on the child, and some strange feeling seemed to possess him.
"Give me," said the lady, pa.s.sing her hand over Julia"s head with a caressing motion--"give me some of these roses; it is a long time since I have touched a flower grown in home soil!"
Julia selected her freshest bouquet and held it up. The lady"s hand trembled as she drew forth her purse, and dropping a bright coin into the basket, received the flowers.
"Take a few of the strawberries, lady, they are so ripe and cool!" said the little girl, lifting one of the baskets from its leafy nest.
Again the lady smiled through her tears, and taking the little basket, poured a few of the strawberries into her ungloved hand.
"Would not he like some?" questioned the child, offering the basket with its scarcely diminished contents to the man, who still kept his eyes fixed on her face.
"No, not them--but give me a bunch of the blue flowers--they grew around the rock-spring at the old homestead, thousands and thousands on "em!"
cried the man, with a strong Down East p.r.o.nunciation, and securing a tuft of the violets he turned aside, as if ashamed of the emotion he had betrayed.
The lady turned away. Something in his words seemed to have disturbed her greatly. She gathered the shawl about her, and moved towards a carriage that had drawn close up to the wharf.
Julia"s heart beat quick; she could not bear to see that strange, beautiful woman depart without speaking to her again.
"Lady, will you take this one little bunch?--some people love violets better than anything!"
"No, no, I cannot--I----" The lady paused, tears seemed choking her. She drew down the folds of a rich blonde veil over her face, and moved on.
Julia laid the violets back into her basket with a sigh. Feelings of vague disappointment were saddening her heart. When she looked up again, the lady had taken her seat in the carriage, and leaning out was beckoning to her.
"I will take the violets!" she said, reaching forth her hand, that trembled as the simple blossoms were placed in it.--"Heaven forbid that I should cast the sweet omen from me. Thank you child--thank you."
The lady drew back into the carriage. Her face was clouded by the veil, but tears trembled in her voice, and that voice lingered upon Julia Warren"s ear many a long month afterward. It had unlocked the deepest well-spring of her life.
The strawberry girl stood upon the wharf motionless and lost in thought minutes after the carriage drove away. She had forgotten the basket on her arm, everything in the strange regret that lay upon her young heart.
Never, never would she meet that beautiful woman again. The thought filled her soul with unutterable loneliness. She was unconscious that another carriage had driven up, and that a Southern vessel, arrived that morning, was pouring forth luggage and pa.s.sengers on the opposite side of the pier. She took no heed of anything that was pa.s.sing around her, till a sweet, low voice close by, exclaimed--
"Oh! see those flowers--those beautiful, beautiful moss rose-buds!"
Julia looked up. A young girl with soft, dark eyes, and lips dewy and red as the buds she coveted, stood a few paces off, with her hand grasped by a tall and stately looking man, approaching middle age, if not a year or two on the other side, who seemed anxious to hurry his companion into the carriage.
"Step in, Florence, the girl can come to us!" said the man, restraining the eager girl, who had withdrawn her foot from the carriage steps.
"Come, come, lady-bird, this is no place for us: see, half the crowd are looking this way."
The young lady blushed and entered the carriage, followed by her impatient companion, who beckoned Julia towards him.
"Here," he said, tossing a silver coin into her basket, "give me those buds, quick, and then get out of the way, or you will be trampled down."
Julia held up her basket, half terrified by the impatience that broke from the dark eyes bent upon her.
"There, sweet one, these might have ripened on your own smile: kiss them for my sake!" said the man, gently bending with his fragrant gift toward his lovely companion.
His voice, soft, sweet and harmonious, fell upon the child"s heart also; and while the tones melted into her memory, she shuddered as the flower may be supposed to shrink when a serpent creeps by.
CHAPTER II.
THE OLD COUPLE.
There is no spot so dark on earth, But love can shed bright glimmers there, Nor anguish known, of human birth, That yieldeth not to faith and prayer.
In the bas.e.m.e.nt of a rear building in one of those cross streets that grow more and more squalid as they stretch down to the water"s edge, sat an aged couple, at nightfall, on the day when our humble heroine was presented to the reader. The room was damp, low and dark; a couple of rude chairs, a deal table, and a long wooden chest were all the furniture it contained. A rough shelf ran over the mantel-piece, on which were arranged a half dozen unmatched cups and saucers, and a broken plate or two, and a teapot, minus half its spout, all scrupulously washed, and piled together with some appearance of ostentation.
A brown platter, which stood on the table, contained the only approach to food that the humble dwelling afforded. A bone of bacon thrice picked, and preserved probably from a wretched desire to possess something in the shape of food, though that something was but a mockery, this and a fragment of bread lay upon the platter, covered with a neat crash towel.
A straw bed made up on one corner of the floor partook of the general neatness everywhere visible in the wretched dwelling; the sheets were of homespun linen, such as our Down East house-wives loved to manufacture years ago, and the covering a patch-work quilt, formed of rich, old-fashioned chintz, was neatly turned under the edges. One might have known how more than precious was that fine old quilt, by the great care taken to preserve it. The whole apartment bespoke extreme poverty in its most respectable form. Perfect dest.i.tution and scrupulous neatness were so blended, that it made the heart ache with compa.s.sion.
The old couple drew their seats closer together on the hearth-stone, and looked wistfully in each other"s faces as the darkness of coming night gathered around them. The bright morning had been succeeded by a chill, uncomfortable rain, and this increased tenfold the gloomy and dark atmosphere of the bas.e.m.e.nt. Thus they sat gazing at each other, and listening moodily to the rain as it beat heavier and heavier upon the sidewalks.
"Come, come!" said the old woman, with a smile that she intended to be cheerful, but which was only a wan reflection of what she wished. "This is all very wrong; once to-day the Lord has sent us food, and here we are desponding again. Julia will be cold and wet, poor thing; don"t let her find us looking so hungry when she comes in."
"I was thinking of her," muttered the old man, in a sad voice. "Yes, the poor thing will be cold and wet and wretched enough, but that is nothing to the disappointment; she had built up such hopes this morning."
"Well, who knows after all; something may have happened!" said the old woman, with an effort at hopefulness.
"No, no," replied the man, in a voice of touching despondency, "if she had done anything, the child would have been home long ago. She has no heart to come back."