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Dawn O’Hara, The Girl Who Laughed
CHAPTER XIV - BENNIE AND THE CHARMING OLD MAID
Edna Ferber
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       _ There followed a blessed week of work--a "human warious"
       week, with something piquant lurking at every turn. A
       week so busy, so kaleidoscopic in its quick succession of
       events that my own troubles and grievances were pushed
       into a neglected corner of my mind and made to languish
       there, unfed by tears or sighs.
       News comes in cycles. There are weeks when a city
       editor tears his hair in vain as he bellows for a
       first-page story. There follow days so bristling with
       real, live copy that perfectly good stuff which, in the
       ordinary course of events might be used to grace the
       front sheet, is sandwiched away between the marine
       intelligence and the Elgin butter reports.
       Such a week was this. I interviewed everything from
       a red-handed murderer to an incubator baby. The town
       seemed to be running over with celebrities. Norberg, the
       city editor, adores celebrities. He never allows one to
       escape uninterviewed. On Friday there fell to my lot a
       world-famous prima donna, an infamous prize-fighter, and
       a charming old maid. Norberg cared not whether the
       celebrity in question was noted for a magnificent high C,
       or a left half-scissors hook, so long as the interview
       was dished up hot and juicy, with plenty of quotation
       marks, a liberal sprinkling of adjectives and adverbs,
       and a cut of the victim gracing the top of the column.
       It was long past the lunch hour when the prima donna
       and the prize-fighter, properly embellished, were snapped
       on the copy hook. The prima donna had chattered in
       French; the prize-fighter had jabbered in slang; but the
       charming old maid, who spoke Milwaukee English, was to
       make better copy than a whole chorus of prima donnas, or
       a ring full of fighters. Copy! It was such wonderful
       stuff that I couldn't use it.
       It was with the charming old maid in mind that
       Norberg summoned me.
       "Another special story for you," he cheerfully
       announced.
       No answering cheer appeared upon my lunchless
       features. "A prize-fighter at ten-thirty, and a prima
       donna at twelve. What's the next choice morsel? An
       aeronaut with another successful airship? or a cash girl
       who has inherited a million?"
       Norberg's plump cheeks dimpled. "Neither. This time
       it is a nice German old maid."
       "Eloped with the coachman, no doubt?"
       "I said a nice old maid. And she hasn't done
       anything yet. You are to find out how she'll feel when
       she does it."
       "Charmingly lucid," commented I, made savage by the
       pangs of hunger.
       Norberg proceeded to outline the story with
       characteristic vigor, a cigarette waggling from the
       corner of his mouth.
       "Name and address on this slip. Take a Greenfield
       car. Nice old maid has lived in nice old cottage all her
       life. Grandfather built it himself about a hundred
       years ago. Whole family was born in it, and married in
       it, and died in it, see? It's crammed full of
       spinning-wheels and mahogany and stuff that'll make your
       eyes stick out. See? Well, there's no one left now but
       the nice old maid, all alone. She had a sister who ran
       away with a scamp some years ago. Nice old maid has
       never heard of her since, but she leaves the gate ajar or
       the latch-string open, or a lamp in the window, or
       something, so that if ever she wanders back to the old
       home she'll know she's welcome, see?"
       "Sounds like a moving picture play," I remarked.
       "Wait a minute. Here's the point. The city wants to
       build a branch library or something on her property, and
       the nice old party is so pinched for money that she'll
       have to take their offer. So the time has come when
       she'll have to leave that old cottage, with its romance,
       and its memories, and its lamp in the window, and go to
       live in a cheap little flat, see? Where the old
       four-poster will choke up the bedroom--"
       "And the parlor will be done in red and green," I put
       in, eagerly, "and where there will be an ingrowing
       sideboard in the dining-room that won't fit in with the
       quaint old dinner-set at all, and a kitchenette just off
       that, in which the great iron pots and kettles that used
       to hold the family dinners will be monstrously out of
       place--"
       "You're on," said Norberg.
       Half an hour later I stood before the cottage, set
       primly in the center of a great lot that extended for
       half a square on all sides. A winter-sodden, bare enough
       sight it was in the gray of that March day. But it was
       not long before Alma Pflugel, standing in the midst of it,
       the March winds flapping her neat skirts about her ankles,
       filled it with a blaze of color. As she talked, a row of
       stately hollyhocks, pink, and scarlet, and saffron,
       reared their heads against the cottage sides. The chill
       March air became sweet with the scent of heliotrope, and
       Sweet William, and pansies, and bridal wreath. The naked
       twigs of the rose bushes flowered into wondrous bloom so
       that they bent to the ground with their weight of crimson
       and yellow glory. The bare brick paths were overrun with
       the green of growing things. Gray mounds of dirt grew
       vivid with the fire of poppies. Even the rain-soaked
       wood of the pea-frames miraculously was hidden in a hedge
       of green, over which ran riot the butterfly beauty of the
       lavender, and pink, and cerise blossoms. Oh, she did
       marvelous things that dull March day, did plain German
       Alma Pflugel! And still more marvelous were the things
       that were to come.
       But of these things we knew nothing as the door was
       opened and Alma Pflugel and I gazed curiously at one
       another. Surprise was writ large on her honest face as
       I disclosed my errand. It was plain that the ways of
       newspaper reporters were foreign to the life of this
       plain German woman, but she bade me enter with a sweet
       graciousness of manner.
       Wondering, but silent, she led the way down the dim
       narrow hallway to the sitting-room beyond. And there I
       saw that Norberg had known whereof he spoke.
       A stout, red-faced stove glowed cheerfully in one
       corner of the room. Back of the stove a sleepy cat
       opened one indolent eye, yawned shamelessly, and rose to
       investigate, as is the way of cats. The windows were
       aglow with the sturdy potted plants that flower-loving
       German women coax into bloom. The low-ceilinged room
       twinkled and shone as the polished surfaces of tables and
       chairs reflected the rosy glow from the plethoric stove.
       I sank into the depths of a huge rocker that must have
       been built for Grosspapa Pflugel's generous curves. Alma
       Pflugel, in a chair opposite, politely waited for this
       new process of interviewing to begin, but relaxed in the
       embrace of that great armchair I suddenly realized that
       I was very tired and hungry, and talk-weary, and that
       here; was a great peace. The prima donna, with her
       French, and her paint, and her pearls, and the
       prizefighter with his slang, and his cauliflower ear, and
       his diamonds, seemed creatures of another planet. My
       eyes closed. A delicious sensation of warmth and drowsy
       contentment stole over me.
       "Do listen to the purring of that cat!" I murmured.
       "Oh, newspapers have no place in this. This is peace and
       rest."
       Alma Pflugel leaned forward in her chair. "You--you
       like it?"
       "Like it! This is home. I feel as though my mother
       were here in this room, seated in one of those deep
       chairs, with a bit of sewing in her hand; so near that I
       could touch her cheek with my fingers."
       Alma Pflugel rose from her chair and came over to
       me. She timidly placed her hand on my arm. "Ah, I am so
       glad you are like that. You do not laugh at the low
       ceilings, and the sunken floors, and the old-fashioned
       rooms. You do not raise your eyes in horror and say:
       `No conveniences! And why don't you try striped wall
       paper? It would make those dreadful ceilings seem
       higher.' How nice you are to understand like that!"
       My hand crept over to cover her own that lay on my
       arm. "Indeed, indeed I do understand," I whispered.
       Which, as the veriest cub reporter can testify, is no way
       to begin an interview.
       A hundred happy memories filled the little
       low room as Alma Pflugel showed me her treasures. The
       cat purred in great content, and the stove cast a rosy
       glow over the scene as the simple woman told the story of
       each precious relic, from the battered candle-dipper on
       the shelf, to the great mahogany folding table, and
       sewing stand, and carved bed. Then there was the old
       horn lantern that Jacob Pflugel had used a century
       before, and in one corner of the sitting-room stood
       Grossmutter Pflugel's spinning-wheel. Behind cupboard
       doors were ranged the carefully preserved blue-and-white
       china dishes, and on the shelf below stood the clumsy
       earthen set that Grosspapa Pflugel himself had modeled
       for his young bride in those days of long ago. In the
       linen chest there still lay, in neat, fragrant folds,
       piles of the linen that had been spun on that
       time-yellowed spinning-wheel. And because of the tragedy
       in the honest face bent over these dear treasures, and
       because she tried so bravely to hide her tears, I knew in
       my heart that this could never be a newspaper story.
       "So," said Alma Pflugel at last, and rose and walked
       slowly to the window and stood looking out at the
       wind-swept garden. That window, with its many tiny panes,
       once had looked out across a wilderness, with an Indian
       camp not far away. Grossmutter Pflugel had sat at that
       window many a bitter winter night, with her baby in her
       arms, watching and waiting for the young husband who was
       urging his ox-team across the ice of Lake Michigan in the
       teeth of a raging blizzard.
       The little, low-ceilinged room was very still. I
       looked at Alma Pflugel standing there at the window in
       her neat blue gown, and something about the face and
       figure--or was it the pose of the sorrowful head?--seemed
       strangely familiar. Somewhere in my mind the resemblance
       haunted me. Resemblance to--what? Whom?
       "Would you like to see my garden?" asked Alma
       Pflugel, turning from the window. For a moment I stared
       in wonderment. But the honest, kindly face was
       unsmiling. "These things that I have shown you, I can
       take with me when I--go. But there," and she pointed
       out over the bare, wind-swept lot, "there is something
       that I cannot take. My flowers! You see that mound over
       there, covered so snug and warm with burlap and sacking?
       There my tulips and hyacinths sleep. In a few weeks,
       when the covering is whisked off--ah, you shall see!
       Then one can be quite sure that the spring is here. Who
       can look at a great bed of red and pink and lavender and
       yellow tulips and hyacinths, and doubt it? Come."
       With a quick gesture she threw a shawl over her head,
       and beckoned me. Together we stepped out into the chill
       of the raw March afternoon. She stood a moment, silent,
       gazing over the sodden earth. Then she flitted swiftly
       down the narrow path, and halted before a queer little
       structure of brick, covered with the skeleton of a
       creeping vine. Stooping, Alma Pflugel pulled open the
       rusty iron door and smiled up at me.
       "This was my grandmother's oven. All her bread she
       baked in this little brick stove. Black bread it was,
       with a great thick crust, and a bitter taste. But it was
       sweet, too. I have never tasted any so good. I like to
       think of Grossmutter, when she was a bride, baking her
       first batch of bread in this oven that Grossvater built
       for her. And because the old oven was so very difficult
       to manage, and because she was such a young thing--only
       sixteen!--I like to think that her first loaves were
       perhaps not so successful, and that Grosspapa joked about
       them, and that the little bride wept, so that the young
       husband had to kiss away the tears."
       She shut the rusty, sagging door very slowly and
       gently. "No doubt the workmen who will come to
       prepare the ground for the new library will laugh and
       joke among themselves when they see the oven, and they
       will kick it with their heels, and wonder what the old
       brick mound could have been."
       There was a little twisted smile on her face as she
       rose--a smile that brought a hot mist of tears to my
       eyes. There was tragedy itself in that spare, homely
       figure standing there in the garden, the wind twining her
       skirts about her.
       "You should but see the children peering over the
       fence to see my flowers in the summer," she said. The
       blue eyes wore a wistful, far-away look. "All the
       children know my garden. It blooms from April to
       October. There I have my sweet peas; and here my roses--
       thousands of them! Some are as red as a drop of blood,
       and some as white as a bridal wreath. When they are
       blossoming it makes the heart ache, it is so beautiful."
       She had quite forgotten me now. For her the garden
       was all abloom once more. It was as though the Spirit of
       the Flowers had touched the naked twigs with fairy
       fingers, waking them into glowing life for her who never
       again was to shower her love and care upon them.
       "These are my poppies. Did you ever come out in the
       morning to find a hundred poppy faces smiling at you, and
       swaying and glistening and rippling in the breeze? There
       they are, scarlet and pink, side by side as only God can
       place them. And near the poppies I planted my pansies,
       because each is a lesson to the other. I call my pansies
       little children with happy faces. See how this great
       purple one winks his yellow eye, and laughs!"
       Her gray shawl had slipped back from her face and lay
       about her shoulders, and the wind had tossed her hair
       into a soft fluff about her head.
       "We used to come out here in the early morning, my
       little Schwester and I, to see which rose had unfolded
       its petals overnight, or whether this great peony that
       had held its white head so high only yesterday, was
       humbled to the ground in a heap of ragged leaves. Oh, in
       the morning she loved it best. And so every summer I
       have made the garden bloom again, so that when she comes
       back she will see flowers greet her.
       "All the way up the path to the door she will walk in
       an aisle of fragrance, and when she turns the handle of
       the old door she will find it unlocked, summer and winter,
       day and night, so that she has only to turn the knob and
       enter."
       She stopped, abruptly. The light died out of her
       face. She glanced at me, half defiantly, half timidly,
       as one who is not quite sure of what she has said. At
       that I went over to her, and took her work-worn hands in
       mine, and smiled down into the faded blue eyes grown dim
       with tears and watching.
       "Perhaps--who knows?--the little sister may come yet.
       I feel it. She will walk up the little path, and try the
       handle of the door, and it will turn beneath her fingers,
       and she will enter."
       With my arm about her we walked down the path toward
       the old-fashioned arbor, bare now except for the tendrils
       that twined about the lattice. The arbor was fitted with
       a wooden floor, and there were rustic chairs, and a
       table. I could picture the sisters sitting there with
       their sewing during the long, peaceful summer afternoons.
       Alma Pflugel would be wearing one of her neat gingham
       gowns, very starched and stiff, with perhaps a snowy
       apron edged with a border of heavy crochet done by the
       wrinkled fingers of Grossmutter Pflugel. On the rustic
       table there would be a bowl of flowers, and a pot of
       delicious Kaffee, and a plate of German Kaffeekuchen,
       and through the leafy doorway the scent of the
       wonderful garden would come stealing.
       I thought of the cheap little flat, with the ugly
       sideboard, and the bit of weedy yard in the rear, and the
       alley beyond that, and the red and green wall paper in
       the parlor. The next moment, to my horror, Alma Pflugel
       had dropped to her knees before the table in the damp
       little arbor, her face in her hands, her spare shoulders
       shaking.
       "Ich kann's nicht thun!" she moaned. "Ich kann
       nicht! Ach, kleine Schwester, wo bist du denn! Nachts
       und Morgens bete ich, aber doch kommst du nicht."
       A great dry sob shook her. Her hand went to her
       breast, to her throat, to her lips, with an odd, stifled
       gesture.
       "Do that again!" I cried, and shook Alma Pflugel
       sharply by the shoulder. "Do that again!"
       Her startled blue eyes looked into mine. What do you
       mean?" she asked.
       "That--that gesture. I've seen it--somewhere--that
       trick of pressing the hand to the breast, to the throat,
       to the lips--Oh!"
       Suddenly I knew. I lifted the drooping head and
       rumpled its neat braids, and laughed down into the
       startled face.
       "She's here!" I shouted, and started a dance of
       triumph on the shaky floor of the old arbor. "I know
       her. From the moment I saw you the resemblance haunted
       me." And then as Alma Pflugel continued to stare, while
       the stunned bewilderment grew in her eyes, "Why, I have
       one-fourth interest in your own nephew this very minute.
       And his name is Bennie! "
       Whereupon Alma Pflugel fainted quietly away in the
       chilly little grape arbor, with her head on my shoulder.
       I called myself savage names as I chafed her hands
       and did all the foolish, futile things that distracted
       humans think of at such times, wondering, meanwhile, if
       I had been quite mad to discern a resemblance between
       this simple, clear-eyed gentle German woman, and the
       battered, ragged, swaying figure that had stood at the
       judge's bench.
       Suddenly Alma Pflugel opened her eyes. Recognition
       dawned in them slowly. Then, with a jerk, she sat
       upright, her trembling hands clinging to me.
       "Where is she? Take me to her. Ach, you are sure--
       sure?"
       "Lordy, I hope so! Come, you must let me help you
       into the house. And where is the nearest telephone?
       Never mind; I'll find one."
       When I had succeeded in finding the nearest drug
       store I spent a wild ten minutes telephoning the
       surprised little probation officer, then Frau Nirlanger,
       and finally Blackie, for no particular reason. I
       shrieked my story over the wire in disconnected,
       incoherent sentences. Then I rushed back to the little
       cottage where Alma Pflugel and I waited with what
       patience we could summon.
       Blackie was the first to arrive. He required few
       explanations. That is one of the nicest things about
       Blackie. He understands by leaps and bounds, while
       others crawl to comprehension. But when Frau Nirlanger
       came, with Bennie in tow, there were tears, and
       exclamations, followed by a little stricken silence on
       the part of Frau Nirlanger when she saw Bennie snatched
       to the breast of this weeping woman. So it was that in
       the midst of the confusion we did not hear the approach
       of the probation officer and her charge. They came up
       the path to the door, and there the little sister turned
       the knob, and it yielded under her fingers, and the old
       door swung open; and so she entered the house quite as
       Alma Pflugel had planned she should, except that the
       roses were not blooming along the edge of the sunken
       brick walk.
       She entered the room in silence, and no one could
       have recognized in this pretty, fragile creature the
       pitiful wreck of the juvenile court. And when Alma
       Pflugel saw the face of the little sister--the poor,
       marred, stricken face--her own face became terrible in
       its agony. She put Bennie down very gently, rose, and
       took the shaking little figure in her strong arms, and
       held it as though never to let it go again. There were
       little broken words of love and pity. She called her
       "Lammchen" and "little one," and so Frau Nirlanger and
       Blackie and I stole away, after a whispered consultation
       with the little probation officer.
       Blackie had come in his red runabout, and now he
       tucked us into it, feigning a deep disgust.
       "I'd like to know where I enter into this little
       drayma," he growled. "Ain't I got nothin' t' do but run
       around town unitin' long lost sisters an' orphans!"
       "Now, Blackie, you know you would never have forgiven
       me if I had left you out of this. Besides, you must
       hustle around and see that they need not move out of that
       dear little cottage. Now don't say a word! You'll never
       have a greater chance to act the fairy godmother."
       Frau Nirlanger's hand sought mine and I squeezed it
       in silent sympathy. Poor little Frau Nirlanger, the
       happiness of another had brought her only sorrow. And
       she had kissed Bennie good-by with the knowledge that the
       little blue-painted bed, with its faded red roses, would
       again stand empty in the gloom of the Knapf attic.
       Norberg glanced up quickly as I entered the city
       room. "Get something good on that south side story?" he
       asked.
       "Why, no," I answered. "You were mistaken about
       that. The--the nice old maid is not going to move, after
       all." _