"Miss Rose."
"Yes, sir."
The speaker was one of those flowers of girlhood which bloom here and there in the slums. She might have been a princess in exile and disguise. Even her hands and feet were fine and delicate. And if in her expression there was a certain nervousness, there was none of fear.
"Stand up."
She rose in her place; the corners of her mouth trembled a little, but curled steadily upward.
"Stand out where I can see you."
She did so, with a certain defiant grace.
"Turn around, slowly."
She might have been one of those young ladies at a fashionable dressmaker"s upon whom the effect of the latest Parisian models is continually tried. While she slowly gyrated, the legless man, looking up at her, spoke aloud.
"Muck! Muck!" he said. "And yet she"s the pick of the bunch."
The girl kept on turning,
"Stand still."
She did as ordered, but it so happened that her back was squarely turned upon the master.
"No monkey business," he shouted. "Face me! Face me!"
She faced him, still scornful, but white now, and biting her lips.
"The rest of you," he said, "will have the rest of the day off. Get out."
Seventy-six chair-legs squeaked, and Miss Rose"s nineteen companions, with murmurs and occasional nervous giggles, hurried off to the coat-room. A few minutes later the bell of the outer door clanged once--they were going; clanged a second time--they were gone.
[Ill.u.s.tration: She faced him, still scornful, but white now, and biting her lips]
Meanwhile the legless man had not taken his hard, calculating eyes off the girl who remained. Presently he spoke. "We"re alone," he said.
"I"m between you and the door." He spread his great arms, as if to emphasize the impa.s.sability of the barrier which confronted her. "Are you afraid?"
"Yes."
The legless man laughed. "Well said," he remarked, "and truthfully said.
And why are you afraid?"
"Everybody"s afraid of you."
He regarded her for some moments in silence. "You needn"t be. Have I ever hurt you?"
"No."
"How long have you worked for me?"
"Five months."
"And you are the cleverest worker I have. You admit that?"
"I don"t know."
Again he laughed. "Once," he said, "I thought you were the prettiest girl I"d ever seen. But I"ve seen a prettier."
"I believe you."
""But you"ve got a certain spirit. You don"t cringe."
"Don"t I?"
"No!" he bellowed, "you don"t." And when he saw that she didn"t cringe, he laughed once more.
"You live with Minnie Bauer?"
"Yes, sir."
"You have no father--no mother?"
"No, sir."
"Burnt alive in a tenement fire, weren"t they?"
She answered with a great effort, and seemed upon the verge of tears, "Yes, sir."
"You will leave Minnie, and come here to live."
"Why?"
"Because I make it my business to reward the skilful, the laborious, and the deserving."
She shook her head. "That"s not good enough," she said.
"You will keep my house in order," he said; "you will learn to help me with the piano. You will have fine clothes to wear, and the spending of plenty of money."
"Not good enough," she repeated.
"I have read you these five months as if you were a book. You are loyal to your friends. You can keep secrets. I admire you. There are many things that I wish to talk about. But I cannot talk about them except to some one that I can trust. Will you stay?"
She shook her head, but the legless man smiled, as he might have smiled if she had nodded it.
"I am suffering," he said, "the tortures of the d.a.m.ned. I ask you for help and for comfort, and you refuse them."
A look curiously like tenderness swam into the girl"s eyes. The beggar moved sideways upon his crutches.