"Did Mrs. Morgan tell you my name."
"No, she has not told me; you told me that a long time ago."
"Me, sir? Do you know me, sir?"
"Yes, better than you do me. You have forgotten the gentleman that stopped you in the street one night with old Peter?"
"Oh, dear me; yes, no, not forgotten, but I did not remember. Oh, oh, how singular that I should come right here to this house, where you live, and this dear good lady lives. Oh, I wish I was good; but I am not a good girl. Oh, sir, has this lady told you how bad I was last night?
But it was not all my fault, sir. If you only know, what a poor unfortunate girl I have been--but sir, upon my word, I have not been what folks call a _bad_ girl."
"We believe you. There, don"t cry, keep yourself quiet to-day, and we hope to see you quite smart this evening."
"Oh, do let me go and find that gentleman, for Mrs. De Vrai. If you only knew what a good lady she is now, now she don"t drink any more. But I am afraid she won"t live very long. She has got a dreadful cough. And she was worse last night, for she saw somebody in the street yesterday--some man--a bad man--I believe they are all bad--no, no, I don"t mean all--but a good many of them."
"I am glad that the sight of bad men in the street, don"t make every lady sick who sees one; if it did we might turn the whole city into a general hospital. But what about that man?"
"I don"t know what, but she was dreadful "fraid of him, and that he would come where she lives."
"So he did, but he will not come again, soon."
"Then you know him, too?"
"Yes. And that is not all I know. I know you left Mrs. De Vrai"s last night about half-past nine o"clock, on your way home; that soon after you started you were overtaken by a stout-built gentleman, with black hair and black whiskers, who said, "Good evening, Miss, how did you leave Mrs. De Vrai, this evening?""
"Mercy on me, his exact words. Did you hear them? I am sure I did not see anybody else near us at the time."
"No, I did not hear him--was not in that part of the city."
"He has told you then. I am sure I never did."
"No, neither have told me."
"What then?"
"What then? why, then you answered, "Oh, sir, are you acquainted with Mrs. De Vrai?""
"So I did; why how strange that you should know it all."
"And then he began to talk to you about the danger of such a pretty girl going home alone--"
"Yes, sir, and then he offered me his arm; and, and, and I thought as he was a friend of Mrs. De Vrai"s I might take it, and he said so many pretty things that----"
"That you were deceived by a villain, and----"
"Oh, sir, for mercy sake don"t tell all before this dear good lady, she who saved my life last night. Don"t tell all."
"Why, Agnes, I cannot tell all. How do you suppose I know all?"
"I don"t know, sir, but I am sure you do. What is it makes you know it; is it what they call animal magnetism, or what is it? Are you a medium?"
"Yes, I hope so; a medium of glad tidings, that will bring great joy to the world. But not a spirit medium, as they are called."
"I don"t know then how you know all about me, but I am sure you do."
"No, I do not; I never saw you but once before, in my life--never heard of you since except to hear your name mentioned once last night, and that you had been at Mrs. De Vrai"s in the evening, and that that man followed you from there, and I guessed his wicked purpose."
"Yes, yes, wicked indeed."
"I know nothing more. I do not ask you either to tell more, yet I believe it would be a relief to you to tell it, and that it will be a burden off of your mind."
"Yes, yes, it will, it will; but I am afraid that you will not believe me, or that you will despise me, or laugh at me for being so simple, to be so deceived by a stranger; but then how could I tell that he was a bad man, and the streets so dark?"
Poor child, could she have told any better if it had been as light as noonday, that the soft-spoken, smiling gentleman, with his sweet words, only used them to cover up a heart full of bitterness and lying deceit?
"And so he told you he was an acquaintance of Mrs. De Vrai"s, a friend, and then he offered you his arm."
"Yes, sir, and I thought I might take it--that it was so kind of him--for he told me that he was just going in to see her when he saw a lady come out, and he thought he would step along and ask her if Mrs. De Vrai was up, and how she was this evening, and if she had gone to bed, he would not disturb her; perhaps too, he might be of service to a friend of hers, by walking home with her. And then he asked me a great many questions about Mrs. De Vrai, how long she had lived there, and who lived with her, and who else lived in the house, and about little Sissee; he asked such a heap of questions--if she was pretty, and how big she was, and where she slept, and where her mother slept, and oh! I cannot tell you how many things; and then he told me how he knew her in Paris, and what a pretty little girl she had--that was Katy, sir,--and then I told him that Katy was dead, and then--but I did not think of it then--he did not seem a bit sorry about it, while I could not help crying, only thinking about it--and that she should die just then too, when her mother was going to be a good mother, and when some good men were just going to begin to be good to her. Oh, sir, it was sad, very sad for her to die then, was it not? But I suppose it is all right--that everything is for the best--Mr. Pease says it is. Do you know Mr.
Pease--has Mr. Pease ever told you about her; has he told you how Mrs.
De Vrai used to live in the Five Points, and how little Katy used to sell hot corn?"
"No, nothing, but never mind that now. You were going to tell us about the stranger you were walking and chatting with so cosily."
"So I will."
"Yes, so I was. But when I talked about Little Katy"s death, I got off my story. Well, sir, we walked on towards Broadway, and he said we would go through Ca.n.a.l street, it was lighter there, and so it was, a good many shops were open, and all the places where folks go to drink, and the ice cream saloons were open, and there were such crowds of pretty girls walking arm in arm with nice gentlemen, looking so proud and happy with their beaux, and I suppose I looked just so, too, for I could not help thinking how poor I had been, and now how well dressed I was, and that I had a beau, too; and when I saw others going in to get ice cream and good suppers, I almost wished--well, I did feel tempted and I suppose all girls do, who see such things; and I suppose he must have guessed what I was thinking of, for he said, "we won"t go into any of those public places, there is a nice place just round the corner--real genteel--it is the ---- Hotel--we will go there and have some ice cream and good cool ice water--you don"t drink anything else?" said he, sort of inquiringly--"no, sir, not now, I have taken the pledge,"--"so have I," says he--"that is right--all girls ought to take the pledge." So we turned up Broadway, and then I should think just round one corner, but I don"t know certain, it was so light, and so many finely dressed gentlemen round the door, and one of them said, "look there, Jim, what a pretty girl De V. has got; and that made me blush, and feel so confused I did not know which way I went, and so I clung to his arm, for I thought with him I was safe, and the first that I knew, we were standing close behind some ladies and gentlemen going in at a door--I saw "private door" on it, and did not quite like that, but I did not exactly know what it meant, and hung back a little, and then he spoke so sweetly, and said, "don"t be afraid," that I thought it was all right, or else what would so many ladies and gentlemen go there for? So we went in, and the gentleman says to the nice-looking waiter, in his clean white ap.r.o.n, "No. 6, Bill."
""No. 6 is occupied, sir, but I will give you another room--all right.""
"All right." What could it mean? What could it mean that most all the ladies I saw, wore thick, close veils, so that n.o.body could tell who they were, old or young, ugly or pretty? But I had not much time to think, for we walked very fast through the pa.s.sage, between I don"t know how many little private supper rooms, and pretty soon we went into one ourselves. There was a table, four chairs and not much else in the room.
The waiter made the gas light burn bright and then stood a moment for his order.
""What shall it be, Miss--I do not recollect your name."
"How should he? I had never told him, he never knew it. I answered, "Brentnall."
""Oh, yes, Miss Brentnall, what shall we have?""
How easy poor, weak girls are flattered. It was the first time, perhaps, she had been thus addressed. What would she have? She did not know.
"I was hungry, real hungry, and, so I told him, when he insisted upon it, that I was so; and then he said, how fortunate that two hungry persons should happen to meet, and that they had come to such a good place, where they could get everything that the heart could wish. Did I like crabs--soft crabs--then we would have a supper of soft crabs. "And I say, Bill, while they are cooking, bring some ice water, a chicken salad, and, let me see, you drink nothing but water, I drink no liquor, no wine. Are you fond of Heidsick?" I could not tell--I did not know what Heidsick was, only that it was some kind of drink that the fellows used to call for at that house where you saw Peter help me to get away from. I thought it was some kind of soda water, it used to sparkle and foam so, when they poured it out, but I would never taste it then; I wish I had not now. I would not, only that the gentleman said it was like water.
""It is a sweet, pleasant French drink," said he, "not a drop of spirit in it--about like ginger pop, or soda water--you will see how it flies when I draw the cork."
"It did fly and foam and sparkle, as he poured it out, and looked so good. He handed me a gla.s.s with such a smile, how could I refuse? How could I know I should break my pledge by tasting? It tasted so good, how could I help drinking. The salad was very good, and that made the drink taste better still, and so we eat and sipped, and sipped and eat with a silver fork. It was delightful.
"After a while the crabs came, and then we eat them--how good. Was it any wonder that so many come here to eat, and drink "Hiedsick?" And then the rooms were so quiet. Still, the part.i.tions are very thin, for I overheard a woman in the next room say to a gentleman, "now quit that, or I will tell my husband. You had better not do that again." And then I heard a little scuffle, and then she said, "Are you not ashamed of yourself?""
Why was she not ashamed of herself? She would have been "mortified to death" to have her husband know that she was in that room, eating late suppers and drinking wine, at least, once a week. No wonder she wore a thick veil. She was yet a little ashamed, for fashion"s sake, ashamed to be seen going into a private room, at ten o"clock, at night, with a _cavalier servante_. She is on a quick voyage to a shameless harbor, and will soon arrive there--perhaps, just such a harbor as the home of Elsie Morgan, where the rats harbored with her in the same cellar; or the home of little Katy, and her mother in Cow Bay. She would have been ashamed to have her husband know, that under pretence of going to visit a sick friend, she had come with _a friend_ to sup in a "private room," in a "fashionable eating-house." So, too, would that husband have been ashamed to have his wife know, that under pretence of going to call on an old friend at the hotel, he was actually, at that moment, enjoying himself with that friend in the next room, and that that friend was a friend of his wife, too--the fashionable Mrs. Smith, whose husband is in California, toiling to earn money, which he remits to her, which she is using to procure a divorce from him, that she may marry a man she is already playing the harlot with, and whom she will fool in the same way she does her present poor simpleton of a husband. In fact, she is already fooling her paramour, for she is here with another man; and that man is the husband of a lady, whom she addresses as her "dear friend."