Part 19 (2/2)
”But it is not infectious,” she protested in her best German. ”It is only in the family.”
”So I perceive,” dryly replied America's Guardian Angel, who was now examining the obvious sister clinging to Leah's skirts. And in Biela, heavy-eyed with sickness and want of sleep, his suspicious vision easily discovered a reddish rim of eyelid that lent itself to the same fatal diagnosis, and sent her to join Leah in the dock of the rejected. The fresh-faced Tsirrele and the wizen-faced mother of Srul pa.s.sed unscrutinized, and even the dread clerk at the desk who asked questions was content with their oath that the wealthy Srul would support them. Srul was, indeed, sent for at once, as Tsirrele was too pretty to be let out under the mere protection of a Polish crone.
When the full truth that neither she nor Biela was to set foot in New York burst through the daze in Leah's brain, her protest grew frantic.
”But my sister has nothing the matter with her--nothing. O _gnadiger Herr_, have pity. The Konigsberg doctor--the great doctor--told me I had no disease, no disease at all. And even if I have, my sister's eyes are pure as the suns.h.i.+ne. Look, _mein Herr_, look again. See,”
and she held up Biela's eyelids and pa.s.sionately kissed the wet bewildered eyes. ”She is to be married, my lamb--her bridegroom awaits her on the wharf. Send _me_ back, _gnadiger Herr_; I ought not to have come. But for G.o.d's sake, don't keep Biela out, don't.” She wrung her hands. But the marriage card had been played too often in that hall of despairing dodges. ”Oh, _Herr Doktor_,” and she kissed the coat-tail of the s.h.i.+p's doctor, ”plead for us; speak a word for her.”
The s.h.i.+p's doctor spoke a word on his own behalf. It was he who had endorsed the two girls' health-certificates at Hamburg, and he would be blamed by the Steams.h.i.+p Company, which would have to s.h.i.+p the sisters back free, and even defray their expenses while in quarantine at the depot. He ridiculed the idea that the girls were suffering from anything contagious. But the native doctor frowned, immovable.
Leah grew hysteric. It was the first time in her life she had lost her sane standpoint. ”Your own eye is affected,” she shrieked, her dark pock-marked face almost black with desperate anger, ”if you cannot see that it is only because my sister has been weeping, because she is ill from the voyage. But she carries no infection--she is healthy as an ox, and her eye is the eye of an eagle!” She was ordered to be silent, but she shrieked angrily, ”The German doctors know, but the Americans have no _Bildung_.”
”Oh, don't, Leah,” moaned Biela, throwing her arms round the panting breast. ”What's the use?” But the irrepressible Leah got an S.I.
ticket of Special Inquiry, forced a hearing in the Commissioners'
Court.
”Let her in, kind gentlemen, and send back the other one. Tsirrele will go back with me. It does not matter about the little one.”
The kind gentlemen on the bench were really kind, but America must be protected.
”You can take the young one and the old one both back with you,” the interpreter told her. ”But they are the only ones we can let in.”
Leah and Biela were driven back among the d.a.m.ned. The favoured twain stood helplessly in their happier compartment. Even Tsirrele, the squirrel, was dazed. Presently the spruce Srul arrived--to find the expected raptures replaced by funereal misery. He wormed his way dizzily into the cage of the rejected. It was not the etiquette of the Pale to kiss one's betrothed bride, but Srul stared dully at Biela without even touching her hand, as if the Atlantic already rolled again between them. Here was a pretty climax to the dreams of years!
”My poor Srul, we must go back to Hamburg to be married,” faltered Biela.
”And give up my store?” Srul wailed. ”Here the dollar spins round. We have now what one names a boom. There is no land on earth like ours.”
The forlornness of the others stung Leah to her senses.
”Listen, Srul,” she said hurriedly. ”It is all my fault, because I wanted to share in the happiness. I ought not to have come. If we had not been together they never would have suspected Biela's eyes--who would notice the little touch of inflammation which is the most she has ever suffered from? She shall come again in another s.h.i.+p, all alone--for she knows now how to travel. Is it not so, Biela, my lamb?
I will see you on board, and Srul will meet you here, although not till you have pa.s.sed the doctor, so that no one will have a chance of remembering you. It will cost a heap, alas! but I can get some work in Hamburg, and the Jews there have hearts of gold. Eh, Biela, my poor lamb?”
”Yes, yes, Leah, you can always give yourself a counsel,” and Biela put her wet face to her sister's, and kissed the pock-marked cheek.
Srul acquiesced eagerly. No one remembered for the moment that Leah would be left alone in the Old World. The problem of effecting the bride's entry blocked all the horizon.
”Yes, yes,” said Srul. ”The mother will look after Tsirrele, and in less than three weeks Biela will slip in.”
”No, three weeks is too soon,” said Leah. ”We must wait a little longer till the doctor forgets.”
”Oh, but I have already waited so long!” whimpered Srul.
Leah's eyes filled with sympathetic tears. ”I ought not to have made so much fuss. Now she will stick in the doctor's mind. Forgive me, dear Srul, I will do my best and try to make amends.”
Leah and Biela were taken away to the hospital, where they remained isolated from the world till the steamer sailed back to Hamburg.
Herein, generously lodged, they had ample leisure to review the situation. Biela discovered that the new plan would leave Leah deserted, Leah remembered that she would be deserting little Tsirrele.
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