"What kind of a room have you? and what kind of a bed?"
"Good enough for a lord."
"Nonsense!"
"No, but I am in earnest, as I will prove to you. I sleep on as fine a bed as ever I saw, laid on a richly carved mahogany bedstead, with beautiful curtains. The floor is covered with a Brussels carpet, nearly new and of a rich pattern. There is in the room a mahogany wardrobe, an elegant piece of furniture--a marble top dressing bureau, and a mahogany wash-stand with a marble slab. Now if you don"t call that a touch above a common boarding house, you"ve been more fortunate than I have been until lately."
"Are there any vacancies there, Tom?"
"There is another bed in my room."
"Well, just tell them, to-night, that I"ll be there to-morrow morning."
"Very well."
"And I know of a couple more that"ll add to the mess, if there is room."
"It"s a large house, and I believe they have room yet to spare."
A week more pa.s.sed away, and the house had its complement, six young men, and the polite gentleman and his wife. This promised an income of thirty-one dollars per week.
As an off-set to this, a careful examination into the weekly expenditure would have shown a statement something like the following: Marketing $12; groceries, flour, &c., $10; rent, $8; servants" hire-cook, chambermaid, and black boy, $4; fuel, and incidental expenses, $6--in all, $40 per week. Besides this, their own clothes, and the schooling of the two boys did not cost less than at the rate of $300 per annum. But neither Mrs. Turner nor Mary ever thought that any such calculation was necessary. They charged what other boarding house keepers charged, and thought, of course, that they must make a good living. But in no boarding house, even where much higher prices were obtained, was so much piled upon the table.
Every thing, in its season, was to be found there, without regard to prices. Of course, the boarders were delighted, and complimented Mrs. Turner upon the excellent fare which they received.
Mr. and Mrs. Cameron continued as affable and interesting as when they first came into the house. But the first quarter pa.s.sed away, and nothing was said about their bill, and Mrs. Turner never thought of giving them a polite hint. Two of her young men were also remiss in this respect, but they were such gentlemanly, polite, attentive individuals, that, of course, nothing could be said.
"I believe I"ve never had your bill, Mrs. Turner, have I?" Mr.
Cameron said to her one evening, when about six months had pa.s.sed.
"No; I have never thought of handing it in. But it"s no difference, I"m not in want of money."
"Yes, but it ought to be paid. I"ll bring you up a check from the counting-room in a few days."
"Suit your own convenience, Mr. Cameron," answered Mrs. Turner, in an indifferent tone.
"O, it"s perfectly convenient at all times. But knowing that you were not in want of it, has made me negligent."
This was all that was said on the subject for another quarter, during which time the two young men alluded to as being in arrears, went off, cheating the widow out of fifty dollars each.
But nothing was said about it to the other boarders, and none of them knew of the wrong that had been sustained. Their places did not fill up, and the promised weekly income was reduced to twenty-four dollars.
At the end of the third quarter, Mr. Cameron again recollected that he had neglected to bring up a check from the counting-room, and blamed himself for his thoughtlessness.
"I am so full of business," said he, "that I sometimes neglect these little things."
"But it"s a downright shame, Mr. Cameron, when it"s so easy for you to draw off a check and put it into your pocket," remarked his wife.
"O, it"s not a particle of difference," Mrs. Turner volunteered to say, smiling--though, to tell the truth, she would much rather have had the money.
"Well, I"ll try and bear it in mind this very night," and Mr.
Cameron hurried away, as business pressed.
The morning after Mr. Cameron"s fourth quarter expired, he walked out, as usual, with his wife before breakfast. But when all a.s.sembled at the table, they had not (something very uncommon for them) returned.
"I wonder what keeps Mr. and Mrs. Cameron?" remarked Mrs. Turner.
"Why, I saw them leave in the steamboat for the South, this morning," said one of the boarders.
"You must be mistaken," Mrs. Turner replied.
"O no, ma"am, not at all. I saw them, and conversed with them before the boat started. They told me that they were going on as far as Washington."
"Very strange!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Mrs. Turner. "They said nothing to me about it."
"I hope they don"t owe you any thing," remarked one of the boarders.
"Indeed, they do."
"Not much, ma"am; I hope."
"Over five hundred dollars."
"O, that is too bad! How could you trust a man like Mr. Cameron to such an amount?"
"Why, surely," said Mrs. Turner, "he is a respectable and a responsible merchant; and I was in no want of the money."
"Indeed, Mrs. Turner, he is no such thing."
"Then what is he?"
"He is one of your gentlemen about town, and lives, I suppose, by gambling. At least such is the reputation he bears. I thought you perfectly understood this."
"How cruelly I have been deceived!" said Mrs. Turner, unable to command her feelings; and rising, she left the table in charge of Mary.
On examining Mr. and Mrs. Cameron"s room, their trunk was found, but it was empty. The owners of it, of course, came not back to claim their property.
The result of this year"s experience in keeping boarders, was an income of just $886 in money, and a loss of $600, set off against an expense of $2380. Thus was Mrs. Turner worse off by $1494 at the end of the year, than she was when she commenced keeping boarders. But she made no estimates, and had not the most remote idea of how the matter stood. Whenever she wanted money, she drew upon the amount placed to her credit in bank by the administrator on her husband"s estate, vainly imagining that it would all come back through the boarders. All that she supposed to be lost of the first year"s business were the $600, out of which she had been cheated. Resolving to be more circ.u.mspect in future, another year was entered upon. But she could not help seeing that Mary was suffering from hard labor and close confinement, and it pained her exceedingly. One day she said to her, a few weeks after they had entered upon the second year--
"I am afraid, Mary, this is too hard for you. You begin to look pale and thin. You must spare yourself more."
"I believe I do need a little rest, mother," said Mary; "but if I don"t look after things, n.o.body will, and then we should soon have our boarders dissatisfied."
"That is too true, Mary."
"But I wouldn"t mind it so much, mother, if I thought we were getting ahead. But I am afraid we are not."
"What makes you think so, child?"