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Restless, shifting,
fugacious as time itself is a certain vast bulk of the population of the
red brick district of the lower West Side. Homeless, they have a hundred
homes. They flit from furnished room to furnished room, transients forever-transients
in abode, transients in heart and mind. They sing "Home, Sweet Home"
in ragtime; they carry their lares et penates in a bandbox; their vine
is entwined about a picture hat; a rubber plant is their fig tree.
Hence the houses
of this district, having had a thousand dwellers, should have a thousand
tales to tell, mostly dull ones, no doubt; but it would be strange if
there could not be found a ghost or two in the wake of all these vagrant
guests.
One evening after
dark a young man prowled among these crumbling red mansions, ringing their
bells. At the twelfth he rested his lean band-baggage upon the step and
wiped the dust from his hatband and forehead. The bell sounded faint and
fat away in some remote, hollow depths.
To the door of this,
the twelfth house whose bell he had rung, came a housekeeper who made
him think of an unwholesome, surfeited worm that had eaten its nut to
a hollow shell and now sought to fill the vacancy with edible lodgers.
He asked if there
was a room to let.
"Come in,"
said the housekeeper. Her voice came from her throat; her throat seemed
lined with fur. "I have the third-floor back, vacant since a week
back. Should you wish to look at it?"
The young man followed
her up the stairs. A faint light from no particular source mitigated the
shadows of the halls. They trod noiselessly upon a Stair carpet that its
own loom would have forsworn. It seemed to have become vegetable; to have
degenerated in that rank, sunless air to lush lichen or spreading moss
that grew in patches to the stair-case and was viscid under the foot like
organic matter. At each turn of the stairs were vacant niches in the wall.
Perhaps plants had once been set within them. If so they had died in that
foul and tainted air. It may be that Statues of the saints had stood there,
but it was not difficult to conceive that imps and devils had dragged
them forth in the darkness and down to the unholy depths of some furnished
pit below.
"This is the
room," said the housekeeper, from her furry throat. "It's a
nice room. It ain't often vacant. I had some most elegant people in it
last summer- no trouble at all, and paid in advance to the minute. Tile
water's at the end of the hall. Sprawls and Mooney kept it three months.
They done a vaudeville sketch. Miss B'retta Sprawls - you may have heard
of her- Oh, that was just the stage names - right there over the dresser
is where the marriage certificate hung, framed. The gas is here, and you
see there is plenty of closet room. It's a room everybody likes. It never
stays idle long."
"Do you have
many theatrical people rooming here?" asked the young man.
"They comes
and goes. A good proportion of my lodgers is connected with the theatres.
Yes, sir, this is the theatrical district. Actor people never stays long
anywhere. I get my share. Yes, they comes and they goes."
He engaged the room,
paying for a week in advance. He was tired, he said, and would take possession
at once. He counted out the money. The loom had been made ready, she said,
even to towels and water. As the housekeeper moved away he put, for the
thousandth time, the question that he carried at the end of his tongue.
"A young girl
- Miss Vashner, Miss Eloise Vashner - do you remember such a one among
your lodgers? She would be singing on the stage, most likely. A fair girl,
of medium height and slender, with reddish, gold hair and dark mole near
her left eyebrow."
"No, I don't
remember the name. Them stage people has names they change as often as
their rooms. They comes and they goes. No, I don't call that one to mind?'
No. Always no. Five
months of ceaseless interrogation and the inevitable negative. So much
time Spent by day in questioning managers, agents, schools and choruses;
by night among the audiences of theatres from all-star casts down to music
halls so low that he dreaded to find what he most hoped for. He who had
loved her best had tried to find her. He was sure that since her disappearance
from home this great, watergirt city held her somewhere, but it was like
a monstrous quicksand, shifting its particles constantly, with no foundation,
its upper granules of today buried tomorrow in ooze and slime.
The furnished room
received its latest guest with a first glow of pseudo-hospitality, a hectic,
haggard, perfunctory welcome like the specious smile of a demirep. The
sophistical comfort came in reflected gleams from the decayed furniture,
the ragged brocade upholstery of a couch and two chairs, a foot-wide cheap
pier glass between the two windows, from one or two gilt picture frames
and a brass bedstead in a corner.
The guest reclined,
inert, upon a chair, while the room, confused in speech as though it were
an apartment in Babel, tried to discourse to him of its diverse tenantry.
A polychromatic rug
like some brilliant-flowered, rectangular, tropical islet lay surrounded
by a billowy sea of soiled matting. Upon the gay-papered wall were those
pictures that pursue the homeless one from house to house - The Huguenot
Lovers, The First Quarrel, The Wedding Breakfast, Psyche at the Fountain.
Tile mantel's chastely severe outline was ingloriously veiled be-hind
some pert drapery drawn rakishly askew like the sashes of the Amazonian
ballet. Upon it was Some desolate flotsam cast aside by the room's marooned
when a lucky Sail had borne them to a fresh port - a trifling vase or
two, pictures of actresses, a medicine bottle, some stray cards out of
a deck.
One by one, as the
characters of a cryptograph became explicit, the little signs left by
the furnished rooms' procession of guests developed a significance. The
threadbare space in the rug in front of the dresser told that lovely woman
had marched in the throng. Tile tiny fingerprints on the wall spoke of
little prisoners trying to feel their way to sun and air. A splattered
stain, raying like the shadow of a bursting bomb, witnessed where a hurled
glass or bottle had splintered with its contents against the wall. Across
the pier glass had been scrawled with a diamond in staggering letters
the name "Marie." It seemed that the succession of dwellers
in the furnished room had turned in fury - perhaps tempted beyond forbearance
by its garish coldness - and wreaked upon it their passions. Tile furniture
was chipped and bruised; the couch, distorted by bursting springs, seemed
a horrible monster that had been slain during the stress of some grotesque
convulsion. Some more potent upheaval had cloven a great slice from the
marble mantel. Each plank in the floor owned its particular cant and shriek
as from a separate arid individual agony. It seemed incredible that all
this malice and injury had been wrought upon the room by those who had
called it for a time their home; and yet it may have been the cheated
home instinct surviving blindly, the resentful rage at false household
gods that had kindled their wrath. A hut that is our own we can Sweep
and adorn and cherish.
Tile young tenant
in the chair allowed these thoughts to file, soft-shod, through his mind,
while there drifted into the room furnished sounds and furnished scents.
He heard in one room a tittering and incontinent, slack laughter; in others
the monologue of a scold, the rattling of dice, a lullaby, and one crying
dully; above him a banjo tinkled with Spirit. Doors banged somewhere;
the elevated trains roared intermittently; a cat yowled miserably upon
a back fence. And he breathed the breath of the house - a dank savor rather
than a smell - a cold, musty effluvium as from underground vaults mingled
with the reeking exalations of linoleum and mildewed and rotten woodwork.
Then suddenly, as
he tested there, the room was filled with the strong, sweet odor of mignonette.
It came as upon a single buffet of wind with such sureness and fragrance
and emphasis that it almost seemed a living visitant. And the man cried
aloud:
"What, dear?"
as if he had been called, and sprang up and faced about. The rich odor
clung to him and wrapped him around. He reached out his arms for it, all
his senses for the time confused and commingled. How could one be peremptorily
called by an odor? Surely it must have been a sound. But, was it not the
sound that had touched, that had caressed him?
"She has been
in this room," he cried, and he sprang to wrest from it a token,
for he knew he would recognize the smallest thing that had belonged to
her or that she had touched. This enveloping scent of mignonette, the
odor that she had loved and made her own - whence came it?
The room had been
but carelessly set in order. Scattered upon the flimsy dresser scarf were
half a dozen hairpin--those discreet, indistinguishable friends of womankind,
feminine of gender, in-finite mood and uncommunicative of tense. These
he ignored, conscious of their triumphant lack of identity. Ransacking
the drawers of the dresser he came upon a discarded, tiny, ragged handkerchief.
He pressed it to his face. It was racy and insolent with heliotrope; he
hurled it to the floor. In another drawer he found odd buttons, a theatre
programme, a pawnbroker's card, two lost marshmallows, a book on the divination
of dreams. In the last was a woman's black satin hair bow, which halted
him, poised between ice and fire. But the black satin bow also is femininity's
demure, impersonal common ornament and tells no tales.
And then he traversed
the room like a hound on the scent, skimming the walls, considering the
comers of the bulging matting on his hands and knees, rummaging mantel
and tables, the curtains and hangings, the drunken cabinet in the corner,
for a visible sign, unable to perceive that She was there beside, around,
against, within, above him, clinging to him, wooing him, calling him so
poignantly through the finer senses that even his grosser ones became
cognizant of the call. Once again he answered loudly: "Yes, dear--"
and turned, wild-eyed, to gaze on vacancy, for he could not yet discern
form and color and love and outstretched arms in the odor of mignonette.
Oh, Cod whence that odor, and since when have odors had a voice to call?
Thus he groped.
He burrowed in crevices
and corners, and found corks and cigarettes. These he passed in passive
contempt. But once he found in a fold of the matting a halfsmoked cigar,
and this he ground beneath his heel with a green and trenchant oath. He
sifted the room from end to end. He found dreary and ignoble small records
of many a peripatetic tenant; but of her whom he sought, and who may have
lodged there, and whose spirit seemed to hover there, he found no trace.
And then he thought
of the housekeeper.
He ran from the haunted
room downstairs and to a door that showed a crack of light. She came out
to his knock, He smothered his excitement as best he could.
"Will you tell
me, madam," he besought her, "who occupied the room I have before
I came?"
"Yes, sir. I
can tell you again. 'Twas Sprowls and Mooney, as I said. Miss B'retta
Sprowls it was in the theatres, but Missis Mooney she was. My house is
well known for respectability. The marriage certificate hung, framed,
on a nail over--"
"What kind of
a lady was Miss Sprowls - in looks, I mean?"
"Why, black-haired,
sir, short, and stout, with a comical face. They left a week ago Tuesday."
"And before
they occupied it?"
"Why, there
was a single gentleman connected with the draying business. He left owing
me a week. Before him was Missis Crowder and her two children, that stayed
four months; and back of them was old Mr. Doyle, whose sons paid for him.
He kept the room six months. That goes back a year, sir, and further I
do not remember."
He thanked her and
crept back to his loom. The room was dead. The essence that had vivified
it was gone. The perfume of mignotnette had departed. In its place was
the old, stale odor of moldy house furniture, of atmosphere in storage.
The ebbing of his
hope drained his faith. He sat staring at the yellow, singing gaslight.
Soon he walked to the bed and began to tear the sheets into strips. With
the blade of his knife he drove them tightly into every crevice around
windows and door. When all was snug and taut he turned out the light,
turned the gas full on again and laid himself gratefully upon the bed.
* * *
It was Mrs. McCool's
night to go with the can for beer. So she fetched it and sat with Mrs.
Purdy in one of those subterranean retreats where housekeepers foregather
and the worm dieth seldom.
"I rented out
my third-floor-back this evening," said Mrs. Purdy, across a fine
circle of foam. "A young man took it. He went up to bed two hours
ago.
"Now, did ye,
Mrs. Purdy, ma'am?" said Mrs. McCool, with intense admiration. "You
do be a wonder for rentin' rooms of that kind. And did ye tell him, then?"
she concluded in a husky whisper laden with mystery.
"Rooms,"
said Mrs. Purdy, in her furriest tones, "are furnished for to rent.
I did not tell him, Mrs. McCool."
"'Tis right
ye are, ma'am; 'tis by renting rooms we kape alive. Ye have the rale sense
for business, ma'am. There be many people will rayjict the rentin' of
a room if they be told a suicide has been after dyin' in the bed of it."
"As you say,
we has our living to be making," remarked Mrs. Purdy.
"Yis, ma'am;
'tis true. 'Tis just one wake ago this day I helped ye lay out the third-floor-back.
A pretty slip of a colleen she was to be killin' herself wid the gas,
a swate little face she had, Mrs. Purdy, ma'am."
"Sbe'd a-been
called handsome, as you say," said Mrs. Purdy, assenting but critical,
"but for that mole she bad a-growin' by her left eyebrow. Do fill
up your glass again, Mrs. McCool."
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