<h2 id="id02702" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER XXXI.</h2>
<h5 id="id02703">
<i>MAJOR STREET</i>.</h5>
<p id="id02704" style="margin-top: 2em">According to the conclusion thus arrived at, Christopher took the
opportunity of speaking to Esther the very next time he was driving her
in from school. Esther immediately pricked up her ears, and demanded to
know where the house was situated. Christopher told her. It was a
street she was not acquainted with.</p>
<p id="id02705">'Do you know how to find the place, Christopher?'</p>
<p id="id02706">'Oh, yes, Miss Esther; I can find the place, to be sure; but I'm afraid
my little woman has made a mistake.'</p>
<p id="id02707">'What is the rent?'</p>
<p id="id02708">Christopher named the rent. It was less than what they were paying for
the house they at present occupied; and Esther at once ordered
Christopher to turn about and drive her to the spot.</p>
<p id="id02709">It was certainly not a fashionable quarter, not even near Broadway or
State Street; nevertheless it was respectable, inhabited by decent
people. The house itself was a small wooden one. Now it is true that at
that day New York was a very different place from what it is at
present; and a wooden house, and even a small wooden house, did not
mean then what it means now; an abode of Irish washerwomen, or of
something still less distinguished. Yet Esther startled a little at the
thought of bringing her father and herself to inhabit it. Christopher
had the key; and he fastened Buonaparte, and let Esther in, and went
all over the house with her. It was in order, truly, as its owner had
said; even clean; and nothing was off the hinges or wanting paint or
needing plaster. 'Right and tight' it was, and susceptible of being
made an abode of comfort; yet it was a very humble dwelling,
comparatively, and in an insignificant neighbourhood; and Esther
hesitated. Was it pride? she asked herself. Why did she hesitate? Yet
she lingered over the place, doubting and questioning and almost
deciding it would not do. Then Christopher, I cannot tell whether
consciously or otherwise, threw in a makeweight that fell in the scale
that was threatening to rise.</p>
<p id="id02710">'If you please, Miss Esther, would you speak to the master about the
blacksmith's bill? I don't hardly never see the colonel, these days.'</p>
<p id="id02711">Esther faced round upon him. The word 'bill' always came to her now
like a sort of stab. She repeated his words. 'The blacksmith's bill?'</p>
<p id="id02712">'Yes, mum; that is, Creasy, the blacksmith; just on the edge o' the
town. It's been runnin' along, 'cause I never could get sight o' the
colonel to speak to him about it.'</p>
<p id="id02713">'Bill for what?'</p>
<p id="id02714">'Shoes, mum.'</p>
<p id="id02715">'<i>Shoes?</i>' repeated Esther. 'The blacksmith? What do you mean?'</p>
<p id="id02716">'Shoes for Buonaparty, mum. He does kick off his shoes as fast as any
horse ever I see; and they does wear, mum, on the stones.'</p>
<p id="id02717">'How much is the bill?'</p>
<p id="id02718">'Well, mum,' said Christopher uneasily, 'it's been runnin' along—and
it's astonishin' how things does mount up. It's quite a good bit, mum;
it's nigh on to fifty dollars.'</p>
<p id="id02719">It took away Esther's breath. She turned away, that Christopher might
not see her face, and began to look at the house as if a sudden new
light had fallen upon it. Small and mean, and unfit for Colonel
Gainsborough and his daughter,—that had been her judgment concerning
it five minutes before; but now it suddenly presented itself as a
refuge from distress. If they took it, the relief to their finances
would be immediate and effectual. There was a little bit of struggle in
Esther's mind; to give up their present home for this would involve a
loss of all the prettiness in which she had found such refreshment;
there would be here no river and no opposite shore, and no pleasant
country around with grass and trees and a flower garden. There would be
no garden at all, and no view, except of a very humdrum little street,
built up and inhabited by mechanics and tradespeople of a humble grade.
But then—no debt! And Esther remembered that in her daily prayer for
daily bread she had also asked to be enabled to 'owe no man anything.'
Was here the answer? And if this were the Lord's way for supplying her
necessities, should she refuse to accept it and to be thankful for it?</p>
<p id="id02720">'It is getting late,' was Esther's conclusion as she turned away. 'We
had better get home, Christopher; but I think we will take the house. I
must speak to papa; but I think we will take it. You may tell Mrs.
Bounder so, with my thanks.'</p>
<p id="id02721">It cost a little trouble, yet not much, to talk the colonel over. He
did not go to see the house, and Esther did not press that he should;
he took her report of it, which was an unvarnished one, and submitted
himself to what seemed the inevitable. But his daughter knew that her
task would have been harder if the colonel's imagination had had the
assistance of his eyesight. She was sure that the move must be made,
and if it were once effected she was almost sure she could make her
father comfortable. To combat his objections beforehand might have been
a more difficult matter. Esther found Mrs. Barker's dismay quite enough
to deal with. Indeed, the good woman was at first overwhelmed; and sat
down, the first time she was taken to the house, in a sort of despair,
with a face wan in its anxiety.</p>
<p id="id02722">'What's the matter, Barker?' Esther said cheerily. 'You and I will soon
put this in nice order, with Christopher's help; and then, when we have
got it fitted up, we shall be as comfortable as ever; you will see.'</p>
<p id="id02723">'Oh dear Miss Esther!' the housekeeper ejaculated; 'that ever I should
see this day! The like of you and my master!'</p>
<p id="id02724">'What then?' said Esther, smiling. 'Barker, shall we not take what the<br/>
Lord gives us, and be thankful? I am.'<br/></p>
<p id="id02725">'There ain't no use for Christopher here, as I see,' Mrs. Barker went
on.</p>
<p id="id02726">'No, and he will not be here. Do you see now how happy it is that he
has got a home of his own?—which you were disposed to think so
unfortunate.'</p>
<p id="id02727">'I haven't changed my mind, mum,' said the housekeeper. 'How's your
horse goin' to be kep', without Christopher?'</p>
<p id="id02728">'I am not going to keep the horse. Here I shall not need him.'</p>
<p id="id02729">'The drives you took was very good for you, mum.'</p>
<p id="id02730">'I will take walks instead. Don't you be troubled. Dear Barker, do you
not think our dear Lord knows what is good for us? and do you not think
what He chooses is the best? I do.'</p>
<p id="id02731">Esther's face was very unshadowed, but the housekeeper's, on the
contrary, seemed to darken more and more. She stood in the middle of
the floor, in one of the small rooms, and surveyed the prospect,
alternately within and without the windows.</p>
<p id="id02732">'Miss Esther, dear,' she began again, as if irrepressibly, 'you're
young, and you don't know how queer the world is. There's many folks
that won't believe you are what you be, if they see you are livin' in a
place like this.'</p>
<p id="id02733">Did not Esther know that? and was it not one of the whispers in her
mind which she found it hardest to combat? She had begun already to
touch the world on that side on which Barker declared it was 'queer.'
She went, it is true, hardly at all into society; scarce ever left the
narrow track of her school routine; yet even there once or twice a
chance encounter had obliged her to recognise the fact that in taking
the post of a teacher she had stepped off the level of her former
associates. It had hurt her a little and disappointed her. Nobody,
indeed, had tried to be patronizing; that was nearly impossible towards
anybody whose head was set on her shoulders in the manner of Miss
Gainsborough's; but she felt the slighting regard in which low-bred
people held her on account of her work and position. And so large a
portion of the world is deficient in breeding, that to a young person
at least the desire of self-assertion comes as a very natural and
tolerably strong temptation. Esther had felt it, and trodden it under
foot, and yet Mrs. Barker's words made her wince. How could anybody
reasonably suppose that a gentleman would choose such a house and such
a street to live in?</p>
<p id="id02734">'Never mind, Barker,' she said cheerfully, after a pause. 'What we have
to do is the right thing; and then let all the rest go.'</p>
<p id="id02735">'Has the colonel seen it, Miss Esther?'</p>
<p id="id02736">'No, and I do not mean he shall, till we have got it so nice for him
that he will feel comfortable.'</p>
<p id="id02737">The work of moving and getting settled began without delay. Mrs. Barker
spent all the afternoons at the new house; and thither came Esther also
every day as soon as school was out at three o'clock. The girl worked
very hard in these times; for after her long morning in school she gave
the rest of the daylight hours to arranging and establishing furniture,
hanging draperies, putting up hooks, and the like; and after that she
went home to make her father's tea, and give him as much cheery talk as
she could command. In the business of moving, however, she found
unexpected assistance.</p>
<p id="id02738">When Christopher told his wife of the decision about the house, the
answering remark, made approvingly, was, 'That's a spunky little girl!'</p>
<p id="id02739">'What do you mean?' said Christopher, not approving such an irreverent
expression.</p>
<p id="id02740">'She's got stuff in her. I like that sort.'</p>
<p id="id02741">'But that house ain't really a place for her, you know.'</p>
<p id="id02742">'That's what I'm lookin' at,' returned Mrs. Bounder, with a broad smile
at him. 'She ain't scared by no nonsense from duin' what she's got to
du. Don't you be scared neither; houses don't make the folks that live
in 'em. But what I'm thinkin' of is, they'll want lots o' help to git
along with their movin'. Christopher, do you know there's a big box
waggin in the barn?'</p>
<p id="id02743">'I know it.'</p>
<p id="id02744">'Wall, that'll carry their things fust-rate, ef you kin tackle up your
fine-steppin' French emperor there with our Dolly. Will he draw in
double harness?'</p>
<p id="id02745">'Will he! Well, I'll try to persuade him.'</p>
<p id="id02746">'An' you needn't to let on anything about it. They ain't obleeged to
know where the waggin comes from.'</p>
<p id="id02747">'You're as clever a woman as any I know!' said Mr. Bounder, with a
smile of complacency. 'Sally up there can't beat you; and <i>she's</i> a
smart woman, too.'</p>
<p id="id02748">A few minutes were given to the business of the supper table, and then<br/>
Mrs. Bounder asked,—<br/></p>
<p id="id02749">'What are they goin' to du with the French emperor?'</p>
<p id="id02750">'Buonaparte?' (Christopher called it 'Buonaparty.') 'Well, they'll have
to get rid of him somehow. I suppose that job'll come on me.'</p>
<p id="id02751">'I was thinkin'. Our Dolly's gittin' old'—</p>
<p id="id02752">'Buonaparty was old some time ago,' returned Christopher, with a sly
twinkle of his eyes as he looked at his wife.</p>
<p id="id02753">'There's work in him yet, ain't there?'</p>
<p id="id02754">'Lots!'</p>
<p id="id02755">'Then two old ones would be as good as one young one, and better, for
they'd draw the double waggin. What'll they ask for him?'</p>
<p id="id02756">'It'll be what I can get, I'm thinking.'</p>
<p id="id02757">'What did you pay for him?'</p>
<p id="id02758">Christopher named the sum the colonel had given. It was not a high
figure; however, he knew, and she knew, that a common draught horse for
their garden work could be had for something less. Mrs. Bounder
meditated a little, and finally concluded,—</p>
<p id="id02759">'It won't break us.'</p>
<p id="id02760">'Save me lots o' trouble,' said Christopher; 'if you don't mind paying
so much.'</p>
<p id="id02761">'If <i>you</i> don't mind, Christopher,' his wife returned, with a grin.<br/>
'I've got the money here in the house; you might hand it over to Miss<br/>
Esther to-morrow; I'll bet you she'll know what to du with it.'<br/></p>
<p id="id02762">Christopher nodded. 'She'll be uncommon glad of it, to be sure! There
ain't much cash come into her hands for a good bit. And I see sometimes
she's been real worrited.'</p>
<p id="id02763">So Esther's path was smoothed in more ways than one, and even in more
ways than I have indicated. For Mrs. Bounder went over and insinuated
herself (with some difficulty) so far into Mrs. Barker's good graces
that she was allowed to give her help in the multifarious business and
cares of the moving. She was capital help. Mrs. Barker soon found that
any packing intrusted to her was sure to be safely done; and the little
woman's wits were of the first order, always at hand, cool, keen, and
comprehensive. She followed, or rather went with the waggon to the
house in Major Street; helped unpack, helped put down carpets, helped
clear away litter and arrange things in order; and further still, she
constantly brought something with her for the bodily refreshment and
comfort of Esther and the housekeeper. Her delicious rye bread came,
loaf after loaf, sweet butter, eggs, and at last some golden honey.
There was no hindering her; and her presence and ministry grew to be a
great assistance and pleasure also to Esther. Esther tried to tell her
something of this. 'You cannot think how your kindness has helped me,'
she said, with a look which told more than her words.</p>
<p id="id02764">'Don't!' said Mrs. Bounder, when this had happened a second time. 'I
was readin' in the Bible the other day—you set me readin' the Bible,
Miss Esther—where it says somethin' about a good woman "ministerin' to
the saints." I ain't no saint myself, and I guess it'll never be said
of me; but I suppose the next thing to <i>bein'</i> a saint is ministerin'
to the saints, and I'd like to du that anyhow, ef I only knowed how.'</p>
<p id="id02765">'You have been kind ever since I knew you,' said Esther. 'I am glad to
know our Christopher has got such a good wife.'</p>
<p id="id02766">Mrs. Bounder laughed a little slyly, as she retorted, 'Ain't there
nothin' to be glad of on my side tu?'</p>
<p id="id02767">'Indeed, yes!' answered Esther. 'Christopher is as true and faithful as
it is possible to be; and as to business— But you do not need that I
should tell you what Christopher is,' she broke off, laughing.</p>
<p id="id02768">There was a pleasant look in the little woman's eyes as she stood up
for a moment and faced Esther.</p>
<p id="id02769">'I guess I took him most of all because he be longed to you!' she said.</p>
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