Cousin Tryphena slammed the door in his face.
He turned to me with a bewilderment almost pathetic so tremendous was it--"Did you hear that ... what sort of logic do you call--"
"Jombatiste," I counseled him, "if you take my advice you"ll leave Miss Tryphena alone after this."
Cousin Tryphena started off on her crack-brained expedition, the very next morning, on the six-thirty train. I happened to be looking out sleepily and saw her trudging wearily past our house in the bleak gray of our mountain dawn, the inadequate little, yellow flame of her old fashioned lantern like a glowworm at her side. It seemed somehow symbolical of something, I did not know what.
It was a full week before we heard from her, and we had begun really to fear that we would never see her again, thinking that perhaps, while she was among strangers, her unsettled mind might have taken some new fancy which would be her destruction.
That week Jombatiste shut the door to his house. The children reported that he would not even let them in, and that they could see him through the window st.i.tching away in ominous silence, muttering to himself.
Eight days after Cousin Tryphena had gone away, I had a telegram from her, which read, "Build fires in both my stoves to-morrow afternoon."
The dark comes early in the mountains, and so, although I dare say there was not a house in the village without a face at the pane after the late evening train came up, none of us saw anything but our usual impenetrable December darkness. That, too, seemed, to my perhaps overwrought consciousness of the problem, highly suggestive of the usual course of our lives. At least, I told myself, Cousin Tryphena had taken her absurd little lantern and gone forth.
The next morning, soon after breakfast, I set off for the other end of the street. Cousin Tryphena saw me coming and opened the door. She did not smile, and she was still very pale, but I saw that she had regained her self-control, "Come right in," she said, in rather a tense voice, and, as I entered she added, in our rustic phrase for introduction, "Make you "quainted with my friend, Mrs. Lindstrom. She"s come up from the city to stay with me. And this is her little boy, Sigurd, and this is the baby."
Blinking somewhat, I shook hands with a small, stoop-shouldered woman, in a new, ready-made dress, with abundant yellow hair drawn back from the thinnest, palest, saddest little face I had ever seen. She was holding an immaculately clean baby, asleep, its long golden lashes lying on cheeks as white and sunken as her own. A st.u.r.dily built boy of about six scrambled up from where he lay on the floor, playing with the cat, and gave me a hand shyly, hanging down his head. His mother had glanced up at me with a quick, shrinking look of fright, the tears starting to her eyes.
Cousin Tryphena was evidently afraid that I would not take her cue and sound the right note, for she went on hastily, "Mrs. Lindstrom has been real sick and kind o" worried over the baby, so"s she"s some nervous. I tell her Hillsboro air is thought very good for people"s nerves. Lots of city folks come here in summer time, just for that. Don"t you think Sigurd is a real big boy for only six and a half? He knows his letters too! He"s goin" to school as soon as we get settled down. I want you should bring over those alphabet blocks that your Peggy doesn"t use any more--"
The other woman was openly crying now, clinging to her benefactress" hand and holding it against her cheek as she sobbed.
My heroic old cousin patted her hair awkwardly, but kept on talking in her matter-of-fact manner, looking at me sternly as though defying me to show, by look or word, any consciousness of anything unusual in the situation; and we fell at once, she and I, into a commonplace conversation about the incidents of the trip up.
When I came away, half an hour later, Cousin Tryphena slipped a shawl over her head and came down the walk with me to the gate. I was much affected by what seemed to me the dramatically fitting outcome of my old kinswoman"s Quixotism. I saw Cousin Tryphena picturesquely as the Happy Fool of old folk-lore, the character who, through his very lack of worldly wisdom, attains without effort all that self-seeking folks try for in vain. The happy ending of her adventure filled me with a cheerful wonder at the ways of Providence, which I tried to pa.s.s on to her in the exclamation, "Why, Cousin Tryphena, it"s like a story-book? You"re going to _enjoy_ having those people. The woman is as nice as she can be, and that"s the brightest little boy! He"s as smart as a whip!"
I was aware that the oddness of Cousin Tryphena"s manner still persisted even now that we were alone. She sighed heavily and said, "I don"t sleep much better nights now I"ve done it!" Then facing me, "I hadn"t ought to have brought them up here! I just did it to please myself! Once I saw "em ... I wanted "em!"
This seemed to me the wildest possible perversion of the Puritan instinct for self-condemnation and, half-vexed, I attempted some expostulation.
She stopped me with a look and gesture Dante might have had, "You ain"t seen what I"ve seen."
I was half-frightened by her expression but tried to speak coolly. "Why, was it as bad as that paper said?" I asked.
She laid her hand on my arm, "Child, it was nothing like what the paper said...it was so much worse!"
"Oh ..." I commented inadequately.
"I was five days looking for her...they"d moved from the address the paper give. And, in those five days, I saw so many others..._so many others_..."
her face twitched. She put one lean old hand before her eyes. Then, quite unexpectedly, she cast out at me an exclamation which made my notion of the pretty picturesqueness of her adventure seem cheap and trivial and superficial. "Jombatiste is right!" she cried to me with a bitter fierceness: "Everything is wrong! Everything is wrong! If I can do anything, I"d ought to do it to help them as want to smash everything up and start over! What good does it do for me to bring up here just these three out of all I saw ..." Her voice broke into pitiful, self-excusing quavers, "but when I saw them ...the baby was so sick ... and little Sigurd is so cunning ... he took to me right away, came to me the first thing ... this morning he wouldn"t pick up his new rubbers off the floor for his mother, but, when I asked him, he did, right off ... you ought to have seen what he had on ... such rags ... such dirt ... and "twan"t her fault either! She"s ... why she"s like anybody ... like a person"s cousin they never happened to see before ...why, they were all _folks_!" she cried out, her tired old mind wandering fitfully from one thing to another.
"You didn"t find the little boy in the asylum?" I asked.
"He was dead before I got there," she answered.
"Oh ... !" I said again, shocked, and then tentatively, "Had he ...?"
"I don"t know whether he had or not," said Cousin Tryphena, "I didn"t ask.
I didn"t want to know. I know too much now!" She looked up fixedly at the mountain line, high and keen against the winter sky. "Jombatiste is right," she said again unsparingly, "I hadn"t ought to be enjoying them ... their father ought to be alive and with them. He was willing to work all he could, and yet he ... here I"ve lived for fifty-five years and never airned my salt a single day. What was I livin" on? The stuff these folks ought to ha" had to eat ... them and the Lord only knows how many more besides! Jombatiste is right ... what I"m doin" now is only a drop in the bucket!"
She started from her somber reverie at the sound of a childish wail from the house. ... "That"s Sigurd ...I _knew_ that cat would scratch him!" she told me with instant, breathless agitation, as though the skies were falling, and darted back. After a moment"s hesitation I too, went back and watched her bind up with stiff, unaccustomed old fingers the little scratched hand, watched the frightened little boy sob himself quiet on her old knees that had never before known a child"s soft weight saw the expression in her eyes as she looked down at the sleeping baby and gazed about the untidy room so full of mire, which had always been so orderly and so empty.
She lifted the little boy up higher so that his tousled yellow hair rested against her bosom. He put an arm around her neck and she flushed with pleasure like a girl; but, although she held him close to her with a sudden wistful tenderness, there was in her eyes a gloomy austerity which forbade me to sentimentalize over the picture she made.
"But, Cousin Tryphena," I urged, "it _is_ a drop in the bucket, you know, and that"s something!"
She looked down at the child on her knee, she laid her cheek against his bright hair, but she told me with harsh, self-accusing rigor, "Tain"t right for me to be here alive enjoying that dead man"s little boy."
That was eighteen months ago. Mrs. Lindstrom is dead of consumption; but the two children are rosy and hearty and not to be distinguished from the other little Yankees of the village. They are devotedly attached to their Aunt Tryphena and rule her despotically.
And so we live along, like a symbol of the great world, bewildered Cousin Tryphena toiling lovingly for her adopted children, with the memory of her descent into h.e.l.l still darkening and confusing her kind eyes; Jomatiste clothing his old body in rags and his soul in flaming indignation as he batters hopefully at the ramparts of intrenched unrighteousness ... and the rest of us doing nothing at all.
THE GOLDEN TONGUE OF IRELAND
Tongue of spice and salt and wine and honey, Magic, mystic, sweet, intemperate tongue!
Flower of lavish love and lyric fury, Mixed on lips forever rash and young, Wildly droll and quaintly tender;--
Hark, the hidden melodies of Elfland In the under, in the over tone; Clear faint wailing of the far-heard banshee, Out of lands where never the sun shone, Calling doom on chieftains dying....
PIPER TIM
I
When Moira O"Donnell was born, Timothy Moran was thirty-three years old, a faery number, as he often told himself afterward. When he was forty and she was seven, another mystic number, he dedicated his life to her and she gave him back his lost kingdom of enchantment. It was on the evening of her seventh birthday that she led him to the Land of Heart"s Desire he thought he had left forever in green and desolate Donegal, and her birthday fell on the seventh of October, and October is the month when the little people are busiest. He never forgot what she did for him that evening, although her part in it was so brief.
His own birthday was on the thirteenth of the month, and he often laid his sorrows to that unchancy date. On the seventh he sat on the old Round Stone, his pipes lying silent beside him, and brooded on his heavy ill.
Father Delancey had just left him and had told him flatly that he had no ills at all. Hence he sat, his heart heavier than ever, drooping, under the great maple tree, the road white before him, leading away into the empty, half-translucent shadows of starlight. Father Delancey had said it was only the faery nonsense in his head that made him miserable, and had marshaled before him the irrefutable blessings of his life. Had he not been cared for from the first minute of his landing from Ireland, a penniless piper of nineteen, as though the holy saints themselves were about him? Had he not gone direct to Father Delancey, sent by the priest in Donegal, and had not Father Delancey at once placed him in the Wilc.o.x family, kindliest, heartiest, and most stirring of New England farmers?
And had he not lived in prosperity with them ever since?
Timothy started at the faery number. "Twinty-one years? So "tis, Father--an" more! "Tis twinty-one years to-day since I came, aven and true--the seventh day of October. Sure, somethin" ought to happen on such a day--oughtn"t it?"
"Happen?" queried Father Delancey.
"The seventh day of October, the twinty-first year and October bein" the month for thim," said Timothy, elucidating confidently.
Father Delancey frowned and broke into an angry exclamation, ""Tis simple mad ye are, Timothy Moran, with your faery foolishness, and I"ve a half a mind to take your pipes away from you as a penance for your ignorant superst.i.tion!"