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Felix O’Day
Chapter 11
Francis Hopkinson Smith
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       _ Chapter XI
       The discovery of her lodger's title made but little difference to
       Kitty, nor did it raise him a whit in her estimation. At best, it only
       confirmed her first impression of his being a gentleman--every inch of
       him. She may have studied the more closely her lodger's habits, noting
       his constant care of his person, the way in which he used his knife and
       fork, the softness and cleanliness of his hands--all object-lessons to
       her, for she broke out on her husband the day after her talk with the
       Englishman in the hansom cab with:
       "I want to tell ye that ye'll have to stop spatterin' yer soup around
       after this, John, dear. I'm going to have a clean table-cloth on every
       day, and a clean napkin for him, and as I'm doin' the washing myself
       ye've got to help an' not muss things. First thing ye know he'll sour
       on what we are giving him and be goin' off worse than ever, trampin' the
       streets till all hours of the night." At which John had stretched
       his big frame and with a prolonged yawn, his arms over his head, had
       remarked: "All right, Kitty, you're boss. Sir or no sir, he's got no
       frills about him--just plain man like the rest of us."
       Neither would his title, had they known it, have made the slightest
       difference to any one of the habitues who gathered in Tim Kelsey's
       book-shop.
       Who Felix was, or what he had done, or what he was about to do, were
       questions never considered, either by Kelsey or by his friends. That
       he was part of the driftwood left stranded and unrecognized on the
       intellectual shore was enough. All that any of them asked for was
       brains, and Felix, even before the first evening had ended, had
       uncovered a stock so varied, and of such unusual proportions, and of
       so brilliant a character that he was always accorded the right of way
       whenever he took charge of the talk.
       And a queer lot they were who listened, and a queer lot they had to be,
       to enjoy Kelsey's confidence. "Men are like books," he would often say
       to Felix. "It is their insides I care for, no matter how badly they
       are bound. The half-calf or all-morocco sort never appeal to me. Shelf
       fellows seldom handled, I call them, and a man who is not handled and
       rubbed up against, with a corner worn off here and there, is like a book
       kept under glass. Nobody cares anything about it except as an ornament,
       and I have no room for ornaments."
       That is why the door was kept shut at night, when some half-calf rapped
       and Tim would get a look at his binding through the shutter and tiptoe
       back, closing the door of the inner room behind him.
       Among Kelsey's collection was old Silas Murford, the custom-house
       clerk--a fat, stupid-looking old fellow whose chin rested on his
       shirt-front and whose middle rested on his knees, the whole of him, when
       seated, filling Tim's biggest chair. Tim prized this volume most, for
       when Silas began to talk, the sheepish look would fade out of his placid
       face, his little pig eyes would vanish, and the listener would discover
       to his astonishment that not only was this lethargic lump of flesh a
       delightful conversationalist but that he had spent every hour he
       could spare from his custom-house in a study of the American system
       of immigration--and had at his tongue's end a mass of statistics about
       which few men knew anything.
       Crackburn, an authority on the earlier printers, then in charge of the
       prints in the Astor Library, and who, for diversion, ground lenses on
       the sly, was another prize document. And so was Lockwood, the lapidary,
       famous as a designer of medals and seals; and many more such oddities.
       "Fine old copies," Kelsey would say of them, "hand-printed, all of them;
       one or two, like old Silas, extremely rare."
       That he considered Felix entitled to a place in his private collection
       had been decided at their first meeting. "Met a mask with a man behind
       it," he had announced to his intimates that same night. "Got a fine nose
       for what's worth having. Located that chant book as soon as he laid his
       hands on it. I didn't get any farther than the skin of his face and you
       won't, either. He has promised to come over, and when you have rubbed up
       against him for half an hour, as I did this morning, you will think as I
       do."
       Since that time, Felix had spent many comforting hours in Kelsey's
       little back room. Sometimes he would drop in about nine and remain until
       half past ten; at other times, it would be nearer midnight before he
       would turn the knob.
       As for the shop itself, nothing up and down "The Avenue" was quite as
       odd, quite as ramshackly, or quite as picturesque. What the public saw,
       on either side of the down-two-steps entrance, was a bench with slanting
       shelves, holding a double row of books and two patched glass windows,
       protecting disordered heaps of prints, stained engravings, and old
       etchings, the whole embedded in dust.
       What the owner's intimates saw, once they got inside and continued
       to the end of the building, was a low-ceiled room warmed by an
       old-fashioned Franklin stove and lighted by a drop covered by a green
       shade. All about were easy chairs, a table or two, a sideboard, some
       long shelves loaded down with books, and an iron safe which held some
       precious manuscripts and one or two early editions.
       When the room was shut the shop was open, and when the shop was shut,
       the shutters fastened, and the two benches with their books lifted
       bodily and brought inside, the little back room, smoke-dried as an old
       ham, and as savory and inviting, once you got its flavor, was ready for
       his guests.
       On one of these rare nights when the room was full, it happened that
       the same fifteenth-century chant book, which had brought Tim and Felix
       together, was lying on the table. The discussion which followed easily
       drifted into the influence of the Roman Catholic church on the art of
       the period; Felix maintaining that but for the impetus it gave, neither
       the art of illumination nor any of the other arts would at the time have
       reached the heights they attained.
       "This missal is but an example of it," he continued, drawing the
       battered, yellow-stained book toward him. "Whatever these old monks,
       with their religious fervor, touched they enriched and glorified,
       whether it were an initial letter, as you see here, or an altar-piece;
       and more than that, many of them painted wonderfully well."
       "And a narrow-minded, bigoted lot they were," broke in Crackburn. "If
       they'd had their way there would not have been a printing-press in
       existence. If you are going to canonize anybody, begin with Aldus
       Minutius."
       "Only a difference in patrons," chimed in Lockwood, "the difference
       between a pope and a doge."
       "And it's the same to-day," echoed Kelsey, taking the book from O'Day's
       hand, to keep the leaves from buckling. "Only it's neither pope nor
       doge, but the money king who's the patron. We should all starve to death
       but for him. I've been waiting for Mr. O'Day to hunt one down and make
       him buy this," he added, closing the book carefully. "Nobody else around
       here appreciates its rarity or would give a five-dollar bill for it."
       "Go slow," puffed old Silas, hunched up in his chair. "Money kings are
       good in their way, and so perhaps were popes and doges, but give me a
       plain priest every time. You wonder, Mr. O'Day, what those great masters
       in art could have done without the protection of the church. I wonder
       what the poor of to-day would do without their priests. Go up to 28th
       Street and look in at St. Barnabas's. Its doors are open from before
       sunrise until near midnight. When you are in trouble, either hungry or
       hunted, and most of the poor are both, walk in and see what will happen.
       You'll find that a priest in New York is everything from a policeman to
       a hospital nurse, and he is always on his job. When nobody else listens,
       he listens; when nobody else helps, he holds out a hand. I haven't lived
       here sixty years for nothing."
       "When you say 'listen,'" asked Felix, whose attention to the
       conversation had never wavered, "do you refer to the confessional?"
       "I do not. That's the least part of it. So are the mass and the candles
       and choir-boys and the rest of the outfit, all very well in their way,
       for Sundays and fast-days, but just so much stage scenery to me, though
       its heaven to the poor devils who get color and music and restful quiet
       in contrast to their barren homes. But praying before the altar is only
       one-quarter of what these priests are doing every hour of the day and
       night. It's part of my business to follow them around, and I know. Hand
       me a light, Tim, my pipe's out."
       Felix, being nearest the box, struck a match and held it close to
       Silas's bowl, a cloud of smoke rising between them. When it had cleared,
       O'Day remarked quietly: "Don't stop, Mr. Murford; go on, I am listening.
       You have, as you said, only told us one-quarter of what these priests
       are doing. Where do the other three-quarters come in?"
       Silas rapped the bowl against the arm of his chair to clear it the
       better, and, twisting his great bulk toward O'Day, said slowly: "If I
       tell you, will you listen and keep on listening until I get through?"
       Felix bowed his head in acquiescence. The others, knowing what a story
       from Silas meant, craned their necks in his direction.
       "Well! One night last winter--over on Avenue A, snow on the ground,
       mind you, and cold as Greenland--a row broke out on the third floor of a
       tenement house. In the snow on the sidewalk shivered a half-naked girl.
       She was sobbing. Her father had come in from his night shift at the gas
       house, crazy drunk, a piece of lead pipe in his hand.
       "Two or three people had stopped, gazed at the girl, and passed her
       by. Tenement-house rows are too common in some districts to be bothered
       over. A policeman crossed the street, peered up the stairway, listened
       to the screams inside, looked the sobbing girl over, and kept on his
       way, swinging his club. A priest came along--one I know, a well-set-up
       man, who can take care of himself, no matter where. He touched the
       girl's arm and drew her inside the doorway, his head bent to hear her
       story. Then he went up--in jumps--two steps at a time--stumbling in the
       dark, picking himself up again, catching at the rail to help him mount
       the quicker, the screams overhead increasing at every step. When he
       reached the door, it was bolted on the inside. He let drive with his
       shoulder and in it went. The girl's mother was crouching in the far
       corner of the room, behind a heavy sofa. The drunken husband stood over
       her, trying to get at her skull with the piece of lead pipe.
       "At the bursting in of the door the brute wheeled and, with an oath,
       made straight for the priest, the weapon in his fist.
       "The priest stepped clear of the door-jamb, moved under the single
       gas-jet, drew out his crucifix, and held it up.
       "The drunkard stood staring.
       "The priest advanced step by step. The brute cowered, staggered back,
       and fell in a heap on the floor."
       "Magnificent," broke out Lockwood. "Superb! And well told. You would
       make a great actor, Murford."
       "Perhaps," answered Silas with a reproving look, "but don't forget that
       it HAPPENED."
       "I haven't a doubt of it," exclaimed Felix quietly, "but please go on,
       Mr. Murford. To me your story has only begun. What happened next?"
       Silas's eyes glistened. Lockwood's criticism had gone over his head; he
       was accustomed to that sort of thing. What pleased him was the interest
       O'Day had shown in his pet subject--the sufferings of the poor being one
       of his lifelong topics of thought and conversation.
       "The confessional happened next," replied Silas. "Then a sober husband,
       a sober wife, and a girl at work--and they are still at it--for I got
       the man a job as night-watchman in the custom-house, at Father Cruse's
       request."
       Felix started forward. "You surely don't mean Father Cruse of St.
       Barnabas's?" he exclaimed eagerly.
       "Exactly."
       "Was it he who burst in that door?"
       "It was, and there isn't a tramp or a stranded girl within half a mile
       of where we sit that he doesn't know and take care of. So I say you can
       have your money kings and your popes and your doges; as for me, I'll
       take Father Cruse every time, and there's dozens just like him."
       Felix pushed back his chair, reached for his hat, said good night in his
       usual civil tone, and left the shop, Murford merely nodding at him over
       the bowl of his pipe, the others taking no notice of his departure. It
       was the way they did things at Kelsey's. There were no great welcomings
       when they arrived and no good-bys when they parted. They would meet
       again the next night, perhaps the next morning--and more extended
       courtesies were considered unnecessary.
       All the way back to Kitty's the erect figure of Father Cruse, holding
       the emblem of his faith in that dimly lighted room stood out clear. He
       wondered why he had not seen more of the man whose courage and faith he
       himself had dimly recognized at their first meeting, and determined to
       cultivate his acquaintance at once. Long ago he had promised Kitty to
       do so. He would keep that promise by timing his visit so as to reach St.
       Barnabas's when the service was over. The balance of the evening could
       then be spent with the father.
       He glanced at his watch and a glow of satisfaction spread over his
       face as he noted the hour. Kitty would be up, and he would have the
       opportunity of delighting her with the details of the tribute Murford
       had paid her beloved priest. The more he pictured the effect upon her,
       the lighter grew his heart.
       He began before the knob of the sitting-room had left his hand and had
       gone as far as: "Oh I heard something about a friend of yours who--"
       when she checked him by rising to her feet and exclaiming:
       "Hold on a minute and listen to me first. I have something that belongs
       to ye. I found it after ye'd gone out, and ran after ye. I thought ye'd
       miss it and come back. I wonder ye didn't. Ye see I was tidyin' up yer
       room, and yer brush dropped down behind the bureau; and when I pushed it
       out from the wall I found this under the edge of the carpet. Ye better
       keep these little things in the drawer." Her hand was in the capacious
       pocket of her apron as she spoke, her plump fingers feeling about its
       depths. "Oh, here it is," she cried. "I was gettin' nigh scared ter
       death fer fear I'd lost it. Here, give me your cuff and I'll put it in
       fer ye."
       "What is it? A cuff button?" he asked, controlling his disappointment
       but biding his time.
       "Yes, and a good one."
       "I'm sorry, Mistress Kitty, but it cannot be mine," he returned with a
       smile. "I have but one pair, and both buttons are in place, as you can
       see," and he held out his cuffs.
       "Well, then, who can this one belong to? Take a look at it. It's got
       arms on one button and two letters mixed up together on the other," and
       she dropped it into his hand.
       Felix held the sleeve-links to the light, smothered a cry and, with a
       quick movement of his hands, steadied himself by the table.
       "Where did you get this?" he breathed rather than spoke.
       "I just told ye. Down behind the bureau where ye dropped it, along with
       your hair-brush."
       Felix tightened his fingers, straining the muscles of his arms, striving
       with all his might to keep his body from shaking. He had his back to
       her, his face toward the lamp, and had thus escaped her scrutiny. "I
       haven't lost it," he faltered, prolonging the examination to gain time
       and speaking with great deliberation.
       "Ye haven't! Oh, I am that disappointed! And ye didn't drop it? Well,
       then, who did drop it?" she cried, looking over his shoulder. She had
       been thinking all the evening how pleased he would be when she returned
       it, and in her chagrin had not noticed the mental storm he was trying to
       master.
       "And ye're sure ye didn't drop it?" she reiterated.
       "Quite sure," he answered slowly, his face still in the shadow, the link
       still in his hand.
       "Well, that's the strangest thing I ever heard! We don't have nobody--we
       ain't never had nobody up in that room with things on 'em like that. The
       fellow that John and I fired didn't have no sleeve-buttons."
       "Perhaps somebody else may have dropped it," he answered, sinking into
       a chair. He was devouring her face, trying to read behind her eyes,
       praying she would go on, yet fearing to prolong the inquiry lest she
       should discover his agitation.
       "No, there ain't nobody," she said at last, "and if there was there
       wouldn't--Stop! Hold on a minute, I got it! You've bin here six months
       or more, ain't ye?"
       Felix nodded, his eyes still fastened on her own. A nod was better than
       the spoken word until his voice obeyed him the better.
       "An' ye ain't had a soul in that room but yerself since ye've been here?
       Is that true?"
       Again Felix nodded.
       "Of course it's true, whether ye say it or not. What a fool I was to ask
       ye! I got it now. That sleeve-link belongs to a poor creature who slept
       in that room three or four days before ye come and skipped the next
       morning."
       Felix's fingers tightened on the arm of the chair. For the moment it
       seemed to him as if he were swaying with the room. "Some one you were
       kind to, I suppose," he said, lifting a hand to shade his face, the
       words coming one at a time, every muscle in his body taut.
       "What else could we do? Leave the poor thing out in the cold and wet?"
       "It was, then, some one you picked up, was it not?" The room had stopped
       swaying and he was beginning to breathe evenly again. He saw that he had
       not betrayed himself. Her calm proved it; and so did the infinite pity
       that crept into her tones as she related the incident.
       "No, some one Tom McGinniss picked up on his beat, or would have picked
       up hadn't John and I come along. And that wet she was, and everything
       streamin' puddles, an' she, poor dear, draggled like a dog in the
       gutter."
       Felix's sheltering hand sagged suddenly, exposing for a moment his
       strained face and wide-open eyes.
       "I didn't understand it was a woman," he stammered, turning his head
       still farther from the light of the lamp.
       "Yes, of course, it was a woman, and a lady, too. That's what I've been
       a-tellin' ye. Here, take my seat if that light gets into your eyes. I
       see it's botherin' ye. It's that red shade that does it. It sets John
       half crazy sometimes. I'll turn it down. Well, that's better. Yes, a
       lady. An' she wet as a rat an' all the heart out of her. An' that link
       ye got in yer hand is hers and nobody else's. John and I had been to
       evening service at St. Barnabas's, an' we hung on behind till everybody
       had gone so as to have a word with Father Cruse, after he had taken off
       his vestments. We bid him good night, come out of the 29th Street door,
       and kept on toward Lexington Avenue. We hadn't gone but a little way
       from the church, when John, who was walking ahead, come up agin Tom
       McGinniss. He was stooping over a woman huddled up on them big front
       steps before you get to the corner.
       "'What are you doin', Tom?' says John.
       "'It's a drunk,' he says, 'an I'll run her in an' she'll sleep it off
       and be all the better in the mornin'.'
       "'Let me take a look at her, Tom,' says I; an' I got close to her breath
       and there was no more liquor inside her than there is in me this minute.
       "'You'll do nothin' of the kind, Tom McGinniss,' says I. 'This poor
       thing is beat out with cold and hunger. Give her to me. I'll take her
       home. Get hold of her, John, an' lift her up.'
       "If ye'd 'a' seen her, Mr. O'Day, it would have torn ye all to pieces.
       The life and spirit was all out of her. She was like a child half
       asleep, that would go anywhere you took her. If I'd said, 'Come along,
       I'm goin' to drown ye,' she'd 'a' come just the same. Not one word fell
       out of her mouth. Just went along between us, John an' I helpin' her
       over the curbs and gutters until she got to this kitchen, an' I sat her
       down in that chair, close by the stove, and began to dry her out, for
       her dress was all soaked in the mud and streamin' with water. I got some
       hot coffee into her, an' found a pair of John's old shoes, an' put 'em
       on her feet till I had dried her own, an' when she got so she could
       speak--not drunk, mind ye, nor doped; just dazed like as if she had been
       hunted and had given up all hope. She said like a sick child speakin':
       'You've been very kind, and I'm very grateful. I'll go now.'
       "'No, ye won't,' I says; 'ye'll stay where ye are. Ye don't leave this
       place to-night. Ye'll go up-stairs and git into my bed.' She looked at
       me kind o' scared-like; then she looked at John an' our big man Mike who
       had come in while I was dryin' her out, but I stopped that right away.
       'No, ye needn't worry,' I said, 'an' ye won't. Ye're just as safe here
       as ye would be in your mother's arms. Ye ain't the first one my man John
       an' I have taken care of, an' ye won't be the last. Take another sip o'
       that hot coffee, an' come with me.'
       "Well, we got her up-stairs, an' I helped her undress, an' when I
       unhooked her skirt an' it fell to the floor, I saw what I was up aginst.
       She had the finest pair of silk stockings on her feet ye ever seen
       in your life, and her petticoat was frills up to her knees. She said
       nothin' an' I said nothin'. 'Git in,' I said, an' I turned down the
       cover and come out. The next mornin' the boys had to get over to
       Hoboken, an' I was up before daylight and then back to bed again. At
       seven o'clock I went to her room and pushed in the door. She was gone,
       an' I've never seen her since. That cuff-link's hers. Take it up-stairs
       with ye an' put it in the wash-stand drawer. I'll lose it if I keep it
       down here, an' she's bound to come back for it some day. What time is
       it? Twelve o'clock, if I'm alive! Well, then, I'm goin' to bed, and
       you're goin', too. John's got his key, and there's his coffee, but he
       won't be long now."
       Felix sat still. Only when she had finished busying herself about the
       room making ready to close the place for the night did he rouse himself.
       So still was he, and so absorbed that she thought he had fallen asleep,
       until she became aware of a flash from under the overhanging brows and
       heard him say, as if speaking to himself: "It was very good of you. Yes,
       very good--of you--to do it, and--I suppose she never came back?"
       "She never did," returned Kitty, drawing a chair away from the heat
       of the stove, "and I'm that sorry she didn't. I'll fix the lights when
       ye've gone up. Good night to ye."
       "Good night, Mrs. Cleary," and he left the room.
       In the same absorbed way he mounted the stairs, opened his own door and,
       without turning up the gas, sank heavily into a chair, the link still
       held fast in his hand. A moment later he sprang from his seat, stepped
       quickly to the gas-jet, turned up the light, and held one of the small
       buttons to the flame, as if to reassure himself of the initials; then
       with a smothered cry fell across the narrow bed, his face hidden in the
       quilt.
       For an hour he lay motionless, his mind a seething caldron, above which
       writhed distorted shapes who hid their faces as they mounted upward.
       When these vanished and a certain calm fell upon him, two figures
       detached themselves and stood clear: a woman cowering on a door-step,
       her skirts befouled with the slime of the streets, and a priest with
       hand upraised, his only weapon the symbol of his God. _