Part 28 (2/2)
The Doctor stood looking at his wife questioningly--waiting for some approving response. She kept on sewing. ”Oh you Satterthwaites with hearts of marble,” he cried as he patted the cast iron waves of her hair and went chuckling into the house.
Mrs. Nesbit was aroused from her reverie by the rattle of the Adams buggy. When it drew up to the curb Laura and Grant climbed out and came up the walk. Laura wore a simple summer dress that brought out all the exquisite coloring of her skin, and made her light hair s.h.i.+ne in a kind of haloed glory. It had been months since the mother had seen in her daughter's face such a smile as the daughter gave to the man beside her--red-faced, angular, hard muscled, in his dingy blue carpenter's working clothes with his measuring rule and pencil sticking from his ap.r.o.n pocket, and with his crippled arm tipped by its steel tool-holder.
”Grant is going to take that box of Lila's toys down to the kindergarten, mother,” she explained.
When they had disappeared up the stairs Mrs. Nesbit could hear them on the floor above and soon the heavy feet of the man carrying a burden were on the stairs and in another minute the young woman was saying:
”Leave them by the teacher's desk, Grant,” and as he untied the horse, she called, ”Now you will get that door in to-night without fail--won't you? I'll be down and we'll put in the south part.i.tion in the morning.”
As she turned from the door she greeted her mother with a smile and dropped wearily into a chair.
”Oh mother,” she cried, ”it's going to be so fine. Grant has the room nearly finished and he's interesting the wives of the union men in South Harvey and George Brotherton is going to give us every month all the magazines and periodicals that are not returnable and George brought down a lot of Christmas numbers of ill.u.s.trated papers, and we're cutting the bright pictures out and pinning them on the wall and George himself worked with us all afternoon. George says he is going to make every one of his lodges contribute monthly to the kindergarten--he belongs to everything but the Ladies of the G. A. R.--” she smiled and her mother smiled with her,--”and Grant says the unions are going to pay half of the salary of the extra teacher. That makes it easier.”
”Well, Laura, don't you think--”
But her daughter interrupted her. ”Now, mother,” she went on, ”don't you stop me till I'm done--for this is the best yet. Morty Sands came down to-day to help--” Laura laughed a little at her mother's surprised glance, ”and Morty promised to give us $200 for the kindergarten just as soon as he can worm it out of his father for expense money.” She drew in a deep, tired breath, ”There,” she sighed, ”that's all.”
Her own child came up and the mother caught the little girl and began playing with her, tying her hair ribbon, smoothing out her skirts, rubbing a dirt speck from her nose, and cuddling the little one rapturously in her arms. When the two women were alone, Laura sat on the veranda steps with her head resting upon her mother's knee. The mother touched the soft hair and said: ”Laura, you are very tired.”
”Yes, mother,” the daughter answered. ”The mothers are so hungry for help down there in South Harvey, and,” she added a little drearily--”so am I; so we are speaking a common language.”
She nestled her head in the lap above her. ”And I'm going to find something worth doing--something fine and good.”
She watched the lazy clouds, ”You know I'm glad about Morty Sands. Grant thinks Morty sincerely wants to amount to something real--to help and be more than a money grubber! If the old spider would just let him out of the web!” The mother stared at her daughter a second.
”Well, Laura, about the only money grubbing Morty seems to be doing is grubbing money out of his father to maintain his race horse.”
The daughter smiled and the mother went on with her work. ”Mother, did you know that little Ruth Morton is going to begin taking vocal lessons this summer?” The mother shook her head. ”Grant says Mr. Brotherton's paying for it. He thinks she has a wonderful voice.”
”Voice--” cut in Mrs. Nesbit, ”why Laura, the child's only fourteen--voice--!”
Laura answered, ”Yes, mother, but you've never heard her sing; she has a beautiful, deep, contralto voice, but the treble above 'C' is a trifle squeaky, and Mr. Brotherton says he's 'going to have it oiled'; so she's to 'take vocal' regularly.”
On matters musical Mrs. Nesbit believed she had a right to know the whole truth, so she asked: ”Where does Mr. Brotherton come in, Laura?”
”Oh, mother, he's always been a kind of G.o.d-father to those girls. You know as well as I that Emma's been playing with that funeral choir of yours and Mr. Brotherton's all these years, only because he got her into it, and Grant says he's kept Mrs. Herd.i.c.ker from discharging Martha for two years, just by sheer nerve. Of course Grant gets it from Mr.
Brotherton but Grant says Martha is so pretty she's such a trial to Mrs.
Herd.i.c.ker! I like Martha, but, mother, she just thinks she should be carried round on a chip because of her brown eyes and red hair and dear little snubby nose. Grant says Mr. Brotherton is trying to get the money someway to float the Captain's stock company and put his Household Horse on the market. I think Mr. Brotherton is a fine man, mother--he's always doing things to help people.”
Mrs. Nesbit folded up her work, and began to rise. ”George Brotherton, Laura,” said her mother as she stood at full length looking down upon her child, ”has a voice of an angel, and perhaps the heart of a G.o.d, but he will eat onions and during the twenty years I've been singing with him I've never known him to speak a correct sentence. Common, Laura--common as dishwater.”
As Laura Van Dorn talked the currents of life eddying about her were reflected in what she said. But she could not know the spirit that was moving the currents; for with a neighborly shyness those who were gathering about her were careful to seem casual in their kindness, and she could not know how deeply they were moved to help her. Kindergartens were hardly in George Brotherton's line; yet he untied old bundles of papers, ransacked his shop and brought a great heap of old posters and picture papers to her. Captain Morton brought a beloved picture of his army Colonel to adorn the room, and deaf John Kollander, who had a low opinion of the ignorant foreigners and the riff-raff and sc.u.m of society, which Laura was trying to help, wished none the less to help her, and came down one day with a flag for the schoolroom and insisted upon making a speech to the tots about patriotism. He made nothing clear to them but he made it quite clear to himself that they were getting the flag as a charity, which they little deserved, and never would return.
And to Laura he conveyed the impression that he considered her mission a madness, but for her and the sorrow which she was fighting, he had appreciative tenderness. He must have impressed his emotions upon his wife for she came down and talked elaborately about starting a cooking school in the building, and after planning it all out, went away and forgot it. The respectable iron gray side-whiskers of Ahab Wright once relieved the dingy school room, when Ahab looked in and the next day Kyle Perry on behalf of the firm of Wright & Perry came trudging into the kindergarten with a huge box which he said contained a p-p-p-p-p-pat-a-p-p-p-pppat-pat--here he swallowed and started all over and finally said p-p-patent, and then started out on a long struggle with the word swing, but he never finished it, and until Laura opened the box she thought Mr. Perry had brought her a soda fountain.
But Nathan Perry, his son, who came wandering down to the place one afternoon with Anne Sands, put up the swing, and suggested a half dozen practical devices for the teacher to save time and labor in her work, while Anne Sands in her teens looked on as one who observes a major G.o.d completing a bungling job of the angels on a newly contrived world.
Sometimes coming home from his day's work Amos Adams would drop in for a chat with the tired teacher, and he refreshed her curiously with his quiet manner and his unsure otherworldliness, and his tough, unyielding optimism. He had no lectures for the children. He would watch them at their games, try to play with them himself in a pathetic, old-fas.h.i.+oned way, telling them fairy stories of an elder and a grimmer day than ours.
Sometimes Doctor Nesbit, coming for Laura in his buggy, would find Amos in the school room, and they would fall to their everlasting debate upon the reality of time and s.p.a.ce with the Doctor enjoying hugely his impious attempt to couch the terminology of abstract philosophy in his Indiana vernacular.
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