"OH WILL—EE!"
Thus a shrill voice, to his ears hideously different from that
other, interrupted and dispersed his visions. Little Jane, his
ten-year-old sister, stood upon the front porch, the door open
behind her, and in her hand she held a large slab of
bread-and-butter covered with apple sauce and powdered sugar.
Evidence that she had sampled this compound was upon her cheeks,
and to her brother she was a repulsive sight.
"Will-ee!" she shrilled. "Look! GOOD!" And to emphasize the
adjective she indelicately patted the region of her body in which
she believed her stomach to be located. "There's a slice for you on
the dining-room table," she informed him, joyously.
Outraged, he entered the house without a word to her, and,
proceeding to the dining-room, laid hands upon the slice she had
mentioned, but declined to eat it in Jane's company. He was in an
exalted mood, and though in no condition of mind or body would he
refuse food of almost any kind, Jane was an intrusion he could not
suffer at this time.
He carried the refection to his own room and, locking the door,
sat down to eat, while, even as he ate, the spell that was upon him
deepened in intensity.
"Oh, eyes!" he whispered, softly, in that cool privacy and
shelter from the world. "Oh, eyes of blue!"
The mirror of a dressing-table sent him the reflection of his
own eyes, which also were blue; and he gazed upon them and upon the
rest of his image the while he ate his bread-and-butter and apple
sauce and sugar. Thus, watching himself eat, he continued to stare
dreamily at the mirror until the bread-and-butter and apple sauce
and sugar had disappeared, whereupon he rose and approached the
dressing-table to study himself at greater advantage.
He assumed as repulsive an expression as he could command, at
the same time making the kingly gesture of one who repels unwelcome
attentions; and it is beyond doubt that he was thus acting a little
scene of indifference. Other symbolic dramas followed, though an
invisible observer might have been puzzled for a key to some of
them. One, however, would have proved easily intelligible: his
expression having altered to a look of pity and contrition, he
turned from the mirror, and, walking slowly to a chair across the
room, used his right hand in a peculiar manner, seeming to stroke
the air at a point about ten inches above the back of the chair.
"There, there, little girl," he said in a low, gentle voice. "I
didn't know you cared!"
Then, with a rather abrupt dismissal of this theme, he returned
to the mirror and, after a questioning scrutiny, nodded solemnly,
forming with his lips the words, "The real thing—the real thing at
last!" He meant that, after many imitations had imposed upon him,
Love—the real thing—had come to him in the end. And as he turned
away he murmured, "And even her name—unknown!"
This evidently was a thought that continued to occupy him, for
he walked up and down the room, frowning; but suddenly his brow
cleared and his eye lit with purpose. Seating himself at a small
writing-table by the window, he proceeded to express his
personality—though with considerable labor—in something which he
did not doubt to be a poem.
Three-quarters of an hour having sufficed for its completion,
including "rewriting and polish," he solemnly signed it, and then
read it several times in a state of hushed astonishment. He had
never dreamed that he could do anything like this.
MILADY
I do not know her name
Though it would be the same
Where roses bloom at twilight
And the lark takes his flight
It would be the same anywhere
Where music sounds in air
I was never introduced to the lady
So I could not call her Lass or Sadie
So I will call her Milady
By the sands of the sea
She always will be
Just M'lady to me.
—WILLIAM SYLVANUS BAXTER, Esq., July 14
It is impossible to say how many times he might have read the
poem over, always with increasing amazement at his new-found
powers, had he not been interrupted by the odious voice of
Jane.
"Will—ee!"
To William, in his high and lonely mood, this piercing summons
brought an actual shudder, and the very thought of Jane (with
tokens of apple sauce and sugar still upon her cheek, probably)
seemed a kind of sacrilege. He fiercely swore his favorite oath,
acquired from the hero of a work of fiction he admired, "Ye gods!"
and concealed his poem in the drawer of the writing-table, for
Jane's footsteps were approaching his door.
"Will—ee! Mamma wants you." She tried the handle of the
door.
"G'way!" he said.
"Will—ee!" Jane hammered upon the door with her fist.
"Will—ee!"
"What you want?" he shouted.
Jane explained, certain pauses indicating that her attention was
partially diverted to another slice of bread-and-butter and apple
sauce and sugar. "Will—ee, mamma wants you—wants you to go help
Genesis bring some wash-tubs home and a tin clo'es-boiler—from the
second-hand man's store."
"WHAT!"
Jane repeated the outrageous message, adding, "She wants you to
hurry—and I got some more bread-and-butter and apple sauce and
sugar for comin' to tell you."
William left no doubt in Jane's mind about his attitude in
reference to the whole matter. His refusal was direct and
infuriated, but, in the midst of a multitude of plain statements
which he was making, there was a decisive tapping upon the door at
a point higher than Jane could reach, and his mother's voice
interrupted:
"Hush, Willie! Open the door, please."
He obeyed furiously, and Mrs. Baxter walked in with a
deprecating air, while Jane followed, so profoundly interested
that, until almost the close of the interview, she held her
bread-and-butter and apple sauce and sugar at a sort of way-station
on its journey to her mouth.
"That's a nice thing to ask me to do!" stormed the unfortunate
William. "Ye gods! Do you think Joe Bullitt's mother would dare
to—"
"Wait, dearie!" Mrs. Baxter begged, pacifically. "I just want to
explain—"
"'Explain'! Ye gods!"
"Now, now, just a minute, Willie!" she said. "What I wanted to
explain was why it's necessary for you to go with Genesis for
the—"
"Never!" he shouted. "Never! You expect me to walk through the
public streets with that awful-lookin' old nigger—"
"Genesis isn't old," she managed to interpolate. "He—"
But her frantic son disregarded her. "Second-hand wash-tubs!" he
vociferated. "And tin clothes-boilers! THAT'S what you want your
SON to carry through the public streets in broad daylight! Ye
gods!"
"Well, there isn't anybody else," she said. "Please don't rave
so, Willie, and say 'Ye gods' so much; it really isn't nice. I'm
sure nobody 'll notice you—"
"'Nobody'!" His voice cracked in anguish. "Oh no! Nobody except
the whole town! WHY, when there's anything disgusting has to be
done in this family—why do I always have to be the one?
Why can't Genesis bring the second-hand wash-tubs without ME? Why
can't the second-hand store deliver 'em? Why can't—"
"That's what I want to tell you," she interposed, hurriedly, and
as the youth lifted his arms on high in a gesture of ultimate
despair, and then threw himself miserably into a chair, she
obtained the floor. "The second-hand store doesn't deliver things,"
she said. "I bought them at an auction, and it's going out of
business, and they have to be taken away before half past four this
afternoon. Genesis can't bring them in the wheelbarrow, because, he
says, the wheel is broken, and he says he can't possibly carry two
tubs and a wash-boiler himself; and he can't make two trips because
it's a mile and a half, and I don't like to ask him, anyway; and it
would take too long, because he has to get back and finish cutting
the grass before your papa gets home this evening. Papa said he HAD
to! Now, I don't like to ask you, but it really isn't much. You and
Genesis can just slip up there and—"
"Slip!" moaned William. "'Just SLIP up there'! Ye gods!"
"Genesis is waiting on the back porch," she said. "Really it
isn't worth your making all this fuss about."
"Oh no!" he returned, with plaintive satire. "It's nothing!
Nothing at all!"
"Why, I shouldn't mind it," she said; briskly, "if I
had the time. In fact, I'll have to, if you won't."
"Ye gods!" He clasped his head in his hands, crushed, for he
knew that the curse was upon him and he must go. "Ye gods!"
And then, as he stamped to the door, his tragic eye fell upon
Jane, and he emitted a final cry of pain:
"Can't you EVER wash your face?" he shouted.