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<h2> CHAPTER XXIV. — “FOR YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT MAY COME.” </h2>
<p>This was the thought: Suppose Dirk Colson should want to take his sister.
Sallie did not believe it in the least probable; she had not that amount
of faith in Dirk Colson; but suppose he should, Mart could not go, for the
reason that she would have nothing to wear.</p>
<p>And here was Sallie's pretty cape, which would cover the worst of her
dress, and her pretty bonnet, which she knew would make a picture of Mart;
but if she lent them it meant staying at home to Sallie. <i>Could</i> she
do it? Could she bear to think of such a thing? What would Mark say? What
would he do with his other ticket?</p>
<p>Would she be likely ever to have another chance to go to that wonderful
hall, and be like other folks?</p>
<p>But <i>Mart</i> had never been anywhere in her life.</p>
<p>“And I,” said poor Sallie, catching her breath with a sob, “have been
often for a walk on the brightest streets, and looked in at the shop
windows, and everything. I 'most know I will help her to go if I can.”</p>
<p>Young Ried had no conception of the sacrifice for which he had asked.</p>
<p>It is little wonder, surely, that Sallie's voice faltered that same
evening, as she explained to Mart, who had slipped in for a bit of talk,
that if ever she wanted to go anywhere very bad, she was to let Sallie
know, and she should have her cape and bonnet to wear. Then she had
anxiously planned for her a way to mend her dress, so that it would look
quite well under the cape, and she had even urged:—</p>
<p>“Now do, Mart, if anybody should want you to go don't say you won't; but
take your chance, for you don't know what may come.”</p>
<p>Also she bore with patience Mart's scornful laugh, and emphatic statement
that no chances ever came to her, and nobody ever wanted her to go
anywhere. As she talked she grew interested and eloquent; urged earnestly
that Mart should embrace the first opportunity to go somewhere, and wear
her new cape and bonnet. At the same time she was silent about the
lecture. Suppose no chance should come? Then it would be doubly hard to
Mart to have had the possibility suggested. The same delicate reasoning
had held her from dwelling on her own prospects. Some people would have
been very much astonished over the amount of delicate consideration for
the feelings of others which could be found in that little room.</p>
<p>Dirk loitered strangely over his meagre dinner the next afternoon. It was
late, for he had secured a position at last in one of the printing
offices, and was apt to take his meals at any hour when it happened to be
convenient to do without him at the office. He had only been three days at
work, and Mart had taken little notice of the new departure, except to
remark grimly that it would not last; but to Sallie she had boasted that
Dirk had gone to work as hard as anybody. If somebody could only have told
Dirk that his sister ever boasted of him it might have helped him much
during these days.</p>
<p>“What are you hanging around for? You've got all there will be to eat in
this house to-day, and it is time you were off.” This was the ungracious
manner in which the sister took note of his lingering. She was painfully
afraid that he had already grown weary of regular employment, and the fear
made her voice gruffer than usual.</p>
<p>His reply amazed her; in fact, it amazed himself:—</p>
<p>“Mart, I've got tickets to a show,—a nice place,—and I want
you to go along.”</p>
<p>“Humph!” said Mart, “that is a likely story!”</p>
<p>Then he grew earnest, displayed his treasures, and urged her acceptance—quite
astonished with himself the while. <i>Did</i> he really want her to go, he
wondered, or did he want to please Mrs. Roberts?</p>
<p>You would have been interested, an hour later, to have seen Mart skip up
the rickety stairs leading to the Calkins abode. You would probably have
thought that she endangered life or limb by her rapid movements; but Mart
was used to such staircases, and the news she had to communicate required
haste.</p>
<p>“There's a chance!” she said, breathless with speed and eagerness; “Sallie
Calkins, there's a chance, and you'd never guess how. Dirk he wants me to
go to a show with him this very night! He's got tickets. It is a big show,—where
all the grand folks go. It is in the very biggest hall in this city, and
Dirk he says I am to go. Sallie Calkins, do you mean it, truly, that I am
to wear your lovely new bonnet and cape? Do you suppose I can really go
anywhere? I don't known why Dirk wants me to so bad, but he coaxed and
coaxed.”</p>
<p>Poor Sallie! She stooped quickly to pick up a pin from the floor, so that
Mart might not get a glimpse of her eyes with the sudden tears in them.
Yet, as she stooped, she made her final, grand sacrifice—Mart should
go!</p>
<p>Then she entered with entire abandon into the preparations. Not only her
bonnet and cape, but her shoes—new ones that Mark had bought her
with his first earnings after his illness—were to attend the
lecture.</p>
<p>She rejoiced over the excellent fit of the shoes. She did more than this.
As Mart watched the process of buttoning them, and remarked complacently
that she shouldn't wonder if Dirk would buy her a pair some day, when he
earned money enough, she kept her lip from curling with an incredulous
sneer. You will remember that she had not the slightest faith in Dirk.</p>
<p>Neither must I forget that there was another thing to lend—her comb,
in order that Mart's wonderful yellow hair might be for once reduced to
something like order. And at the risk of leading you to think that Sallie
was altogether too “aesthetic” for her position in life, I shall have to
confess that this was her hardest bit of sacrifice; her comb was so new
and so pretty!</p>
<p>However, it did its duty on Mart's tawny locks, and the transforming
effect was marvellous. In fact, when all was ready, the cape adjusted, the
hat which Mrs. Roberts had shown her how to wear set on the yellow head,
Sallie said not a word, but went to the packing-box in the corner which
served as a treasure cupboard, and drew forth the one possession about
which she had been utterly silent—a little hand-glass which Mark had
brought her one winter evening just before he was hurt. A cheap, little,
ugly glass, which you would have turned from in disgust, saying that it
made your nose awry, and your chin protrude and your eyes squint, and was
altogether horrid; but, held before Mart's glowing face, what a secret did
it reveal! Mart looked, and was silent, too; and went home in a hushed
frame of mind to wait for Dirk. Home was deserted. The mother had dragged
her wearied body out for a day of “light” work. The time had gone by when
she was able to do any that people called heavy. Where the father was,
none of the family knew, and their chief hope concerning him was that he
would stay away as long as possible.</p>
<p>I find myself longing to give you an idea of what that elegant,
brilliantly lighted hall, with its brilliant audience, was to this girl,
and being unable to do it.</p>
<p>When people live so far below us that our every-day experiences are to
them like a day at the World's Fair, it is very hard indeed to describe
how our special treats affect them.</p>
<p>It is a treat to everybody to hear Gough. How then can I tell you what it
was to this girl and her brother? Dirk listened; he must have listened
well, for long afterward he was able to repeat entire paragraphs, and to
imitate the manner of the great orator with remarkable skill;—yet at
the time he would have seemed to a close watcher to have been absorbed in
another way. He looked at Mart somewhat as he had on that Sabbath when his
acquaintance with Mrs. Roberts began. But the thought which had dimly
haunted him that day blossomed on this evening. Certainly Mart looked like
Mrs. Roberts! It might be folly to think so; doubtless the fellows would
make no end of fun of him if he should ever tell them so, which he meant
to take excellent care not to do; but the fact remained, that in Sallie's
bonnet and cape, and, above all, with the waves of hair floating about
her, there was a look which instantly and strongly reminded him of that
lady.</p>
<p>There was another listener at the lecture who was unexpectedly present.
Part of poor Sallie's trial had been to tell her brother, who had been
radiant for a week over the prospect of taking her, that she had with her
own hand put away the blessing. How would Mark take it? Dirk's
forlorn-looking sister was no favorite of his. I think it would have been
very difficult to have convinced him that there was a trace of Mrs.
Roberts in her face.</p>
<p>But such curious creatures are we that it actually hurt Sallie to see how
quietly he took the great sad news of her sacrifice. After the first start
of surprise, he seemed preoccupied, and she could almost have thought that
he did not hear her explanation. She had much ado to keep back the tears,
but she had made a special little feast for him that evening, with a white
cloth on the table, and a cup of actual tea, and the cup set in a saucer.
She was not going to spoil the scene with tears; so after a little she
said, cheerily:—</p>
<p>“Now you have a chance to do something nice for somebody. Who will you
take on your ticket?”</p>
<p>“I was thinking,” he answered, slowly. “You know it is a temperance
lecture, and it is by a wonderful man. The fellows in the shop have been
talking about him all day, and they say you just can't help <i>thinking</i>
when he gets agoing; and I was just thinking, What if we could get <i>him</i>
to go, and he would listen, and get to thinking.”</p>
<p>There are no italics that will give you an idea of the peculiar emphasis
which the boy put on the pronouns. Sallie understood; that “he” could mean
but one person in the world. But her brother must have answered the look
on her face, for she spoke no word.</p>
<p>“Sometimes they <i>do</i>, Sallie. There was old Pete, you know.”</p>
<p>Oh, yes, Sallie knew old Pete; every body in that alley knew him; a
notorious drunkard once, of the sort which people, even good Christian
people, are apt to pronounce hopeless; yet now he wore a neat suit of
clothes every day, and brought home twenty pounds of flour at one time in
a sack, and bought his coal by the barrel. Wonderful things occasionally
happened in that alley.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Sally, “that is true; and old Pete wasn't much like him.”</p>
<p>The tone spoke volumes. It would have almost angered her, even now, to
have had it hinted that old Pete was superior to that father, though
hardly a person acquainted with the two but would have said that there was
more hope for old Pete, even in his miserable past, than for this one.</p>
<p>How they managed it, those two: the difficult task of getting him
persuaded to go, find then the more difficult task of keeping him
sufficiently sober to get there, would make a story in itself. I fancy
there are many such stories in real life which will never get told. The
probabilities are, if they were, some wise critic would pronounce them
unnatural and sensational.</p>
<p>Suffice it to say that the task was accomplished, and among the most
attentive listeners to the great speaker that evening was Sallie's father,
while she sat at home and mended a badly torn jacket, and cried now and
then, and was glad and sorry and proud and frightened and hopeful by turns
all that long evening.</p>
<p>I am not sure but it was better for her that she sat at home. I don't know
just what she might have done had she been in the hall to see her father,
at the close of the meeting, shamble forward with the crowd, and sign his
name to the total abstinence pledge.</p>
<p>She might have screamed out in her excitement, or she might have fainted;
for although there were those who said—some with a sneer, and some
with a sigh—that “signing the pledge would not amount to anything;
the miserable fellow could not keep a pledge to save his life!” Sally
would have thought nothing of the kind. She had faith in her father's
word.</p>
<p>It is a wonderful stimulus to have some one who believes in us.</p>
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