He told me of a case in which one of the oldest and most successful physicians on the East Side had made a false diagnosis, and where he, Mindels, had made the correct one and saved the patient"s life
"The family wouldn"t hear of another doctor now. They would give their lives for me," he said, with a simper
I took him up to my factory and showed him about. He was lavish in his expressions of surprise at the magnitude of my concern, and when I asked him to have dinner with me that evening he seemed to be more than pleased. Apart from other feelings, he was probably glad to renew acquaintance with a man who could afford to pay a decent doctor"s bill, and through whom he might get in touch with other desirable patrons
Presently he wrinkled his forehead, as though he had suddenly remembered something
"Oh! Let me see!" he said. "Couldn"t we postpone it? I have a confinement this evening. I expect to be called at any moment."
We changed the date, and he departed. I was left somewhat excited by the reminiscences that the meeting had evoked in me. I fell to pacing the floor of my office, ruminating upon the change which the past few years had wrought in his life and in mine. His boastful garrulity was something new in him. Was it the struggle for existence which was forcing it upon him? I wondered whether that confinement story was not a fib invented to flaunt his professional success. Thereupon I gave myself credit for my knowledge of human nature. "That"s one of the secrets of my success," I thought. I complimented myself upon the possession of all sorts of talents, but my keenest ambition was to be recognized as an unerring judge of men
The amusing part of it was that in 1894, for example, I found that in 1893 my judgment of men and things had been immature and puerile. I was convinced that now at last my insight was a thoroughly reliable instrurnent, only a year later to look back upon my opinions of 1894 with contempt. I was everlastingly revising my views of people, including my own self
BOOK XI
MATRIMONY
CHAPTER I
ONE afternoon in January or February I was on a Lexington Avenue car going up-town. At Sixty-seventh Street the car was invaded by a vivacious crowd of young girls, each with a stack of books under one of her arms. It was evident that they were returning home from Normal College, which was on that corner. Some of them preferred to stand, holding on to straps, so as to face and converse with their seated chums
I was watching them as they chattered, laughed, or whispered, bubbling over with the joy of being young and with the consciousness of their budding womanhood, when my attention was attracted to one of their number--a tall, lanky, long-necked la.s.s of fifteen or sixteen. She was hanging on to a strap directly across the car from me. I could not see her face, but the shape of her head and a certain jerk of it, when she laughed, looked strikingly familiar to me. Presently she chanced to turn half-way around, and I recognized her. It was Lucy. I had not seen her for six years. She was completely changed and yet the same. Not yet fully formed, elongated, attenuated, angular, ridiculously too tall for her looks, and not quite so pretty as she had been at nine or ten, but overflowing with color, with light, with blossoming life, she thrilled me almost to tears. I was aching to call out her name, to hear myself say "Lucy" as I had once been wont to do, but I was not sure that it would be advisable to let her father hear of my lingering interest in his family. While I was thus debating with myself whether I should accost her, her glance fell on me. She transferred it to one of the windows, and the next moment she fell to eying me furtively.
"She has recognized me, but she won"t come over to me," I thought. "She seems to be aware of her father"s jealousy." It was a painful moment
Presently her fresh, youthful face brightened up. She bent over to two of her girl friends and whispered something to them, and then these threw glances at me. After some more whispering Lucy faced about boldly and stepped over to me
"I beg your pardon. Aren"t you Mr. Levinsky?" she asked, with sweet, girlish shyness
"Of course I am, Lucy! Lucy dear, how are you? Quite a young lady!"
"I was wondering," she went on without answering. "At first I did not know.
You did seem familiar to me, but I could not locate your face. But then, all at once, don"t you know, I said to myself, "Why, it"s Mr.
Levinsky." Oh, I"m so glad to see you."
She was all flushed and beaming with the surprise of the meeting, with consciousness of the eyes of her cla.s.smates who were watching her, and with something else which seemed to say: "I am Lucy, but not the little girl you used to play with. I am a young woman."
"And I was wondering who that tall, charming young lady was," I said. "Lord! how you have grown, Lucy!"
"Yes, I"m already taller than mother and father," she answered
"Than both together?"
"No, not as bad as all that," she giggled
For children of our immigrants to outgrow their parents, not only intellectually, but physically as well, is a common phenomenon.
Perhaps it is due to their being fed far better than their parents were in their childhood and youth
I asked Lucy to take a seat by my side and she did, cheerfully. ("
Maybe she does not know anything," I wondered.) "How is Danny?" I asked. "Still fat?"
"No, not very," she laughed. "He goes to school. I have a little sister, too," she added, blushing the least bit.
I winced. It was as though I had heard something revoltingly unseemly. Then a thought crossed my mind, and, seized with an odd feeling of curiosity, I asked: "How old is she?"
"Oh, a little less than a year," Lucy replied. "She"s awful cute," she laughed
"And how is papa?" I inquired, to turn the conversation
"He"s all right, thank you," she answered, gravely. "Only he lost a lot of money on account of the hard times. Many of his customers were out of work.
Business is picking up, though."
"And how is Becky? Are you still great friends?"
"Why, she ought to be here!" she replied, gazing around the car.
"Must be in the next car."
"In another car!" I exclaimed, in mock amazement. "Not by your side?" Lucy laughed. "We are in the same cla.s.s," she said
"And, of course, the families still live in the same house?" She nodded affirmatively, adding that they lived at One Hundred and Second Street near Madison Avenue, about a block and a half from the Park
"Come up some time, won"t you?" she gurgled, with childish amiability, yet with apparent awkwardness
I wondered whether she was aware of her father"s jealousy. "If she were she certainly would not invite me to the house," I reflected
I made no answer to her invitation
"Won"t you come up?" she insisted.
I thought: "She doesn"t seem to know anything about it. She has only heard that I had a quarrel with her mother." I shook my head, smiling affectionately
"Why, are you still angry at mother?" she pursued, shaking her head, deprecatingly, as who should say, "You"re a bad boy."
I thought, "Of course she doesn"t know." I smiled again. Then I said: "You"re a sweet girl, all the same. And a big one, too."
"Thank you. Do come. Will you?" I shook my head
"Will you never come?" she asked, playfully. "Never? Never?"
"I have told you you"re a charming girl, haven"t I? What more do you want?"
The American children of the Ghetto are American not only in their language, tastes, and ambitions, but in outward appearance as well. Their bearing, gestures, the play of their features, and something in the very expression of their Semitic faces proclaim the land of their birth. All this was true of Lucy. She was fascinatingly American, and I told her so