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<h2> CHAPTER XXVIII. — “MAY SHE GO WITH ME?” </h2>
<p>Of course she went. And, of course, now that the truth was known, much was
done. Dr. Everett was summoned. The wretched bed, with its distressing
rags, were turned out together, and a comfortable one took its place.
Broths and teas and jellies and physical comfort of every kind were
furnished, and the doctor did his best to battle with the disease that
long years of want and misery had fastened upon their victim. It was all
too late, of course. It was true, what Mr. Roberts sadly said, that half
of the effort, expended years or even months before, might have saved the
poor, tortured life; but now!</p>
<p>How awful those “too lates” are! Isn't it a wonder that we ever take the
risk of having one ring in our ears forever? There was one thing over
which some of these Christian workers shed tears of joy.</p>
<p>“<i>I</i> am too late,” said Dr. Everett, “but my Master has as much power
to-day as ever. He can save her.”</p>
<p>And He did. The poor, tired woman, who years before had remembered an old
story well enough to name her one daughter “Martha,” in memory of the one
who “loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus,” roused her dull heart at
the mention of His name, and listened while the wonderful story was told
her that He loved not only Martha and her sister, but her own poor,
sinful, wrecked self; loved her enough to reach after her, and call and
wait, and prepare for her a home in His glory.</p>
<p>Dear! Why has not some one come with the news before? Surely she would
have listened during these long, sad years. Well, they made the way plain.
Neither was it a difficult thing to do. The woman was weary and
travel-stained and afraid, and longed for nothing so much as a place of
refuge. She knew that she was a sinner; she knew that she was, and had
been for many a year, powerless to help herself. Why should she not hail
with joy the story of a great and willing Helper?</p>
<p>“Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden.” She opened her eyes
with a gleam of eagerness to hear the words. “Weary?”' Yes, indeed! “Heavy
laden?” Who more so? If the call was not for her, whom <i>could</i> it
mean? What else? Why, what, but the glorious old story, “I will give you
rest?” What wonder that she closed her eyes and smiled! What wonder that
the first words after that were: “I'll come; show me how.” And He showed
her how.</p>
<p>“Dirk,” the sister said, when the mother had gone the last and only
restful journey of her life, “Dirk, <i>she</i> went to heaven; and I'm
going. I've been wanting to tell you for more than a week, but I didn't
know how. <i>He</i> asked me to, and I'm going. Now <i>you</i> must.
'Cause we never had a good time here, and she'll kind of expect it in
heaven, and be looking out for you; she always looked out for you, Dirk.”</p>
<p>Then did Dirk lose his half-sullen self-control, and great tears rolled
down his dark cheeks.</p>
<p>But the sister shed no tears. She had serious business to attend to. Dirk
must go to heaven now without fail.</p>
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<p>One day there was an unusual scene in the alley. It was no uncommon thing
to see a coffin carried out from there, but on this day there was a
hearse, and a minister in Dr. Everett's carriage, and Dirk and his sister,
in neat apparel, came out together and were seated in Mr. Roberts'
carriage; and all the boys of the Monday-evening Class walked arm in arm
after the slow-moving carriages; and the children of the alley stopped
their placing and their fighting, and the women stood silent in doorways,
and took, most of them, their very first lesson in the proprieties of
life.</p>
<p>“She's got a ride in a carriage at last, poor soul!” said one, thinking of
the worn-out body in the coffin; and another said: “I wonder what poor old
Jock would think of all this?”</p>
<p>But the scene made its impression, and left its lesson. I think the voices
of some of them were lower during the rest of the day because of it.</p>
<p>What next? It was the question that filled Mrs. Roberts' thoughts.
Something must be done for Dirk and Mart. That fearful alley was no place
for human beings; certainly not for these two. But what to do with them
was a question not easily answered.</p>
<p>Various plans were proposed. Sallie Calkins' two rooms were much better
than the cellar in which the Colson family had lived; and there was a
chance to rent a room next to Sallie's, with a closet opening from it for
Dirk. How would it do to have them board with Sallie? The suggestion came
first from Gracie Dennis, and sounded reasonable. Mrs. Roberts was almost
ashamed to dislike it as much as she did. Sallie's neat rooms were <i>home</i>
now. The father, for this length of time at least, held to his pledge; and
son and daughter were radiant over him. He had gone to work, and already
the two rooms were taking on an air of greater comfort because of the
little things that he proudly brought home.</p>
<p>Sallie was doing her part wisely. The table was regularly laid now, with a
white cloth and knives and forks; and two new cups and plates had been
added to the dishes. Would it be wise to invade this home just at this
juncture and introduce boarders? Mrs. Roberts did not believe that it
would. It was not as though the father had an established character, and
stood ready to shield his children; they were still acting the protective,
and he had but too recently risen from the depths where Dirk and Mart had
laughed and jeered at him. Besides, the rooms were located in that
dreadful alley; and, do what she would, Mrs. Roberts could not feel that
that dangerously-beautiful face could find a safe abiding-place in that
alley. Some other way must be thought of.</p>
<p>Their immediate future was arranged through the intervention of a house
agent; for even that dreary and desolate cellar had its agent, who was
eager to secure his rent. He was unwise enough to undertake to interview
Mrs. Roberts as she descended from her carriage, not long after it had
followed Mart's mother to the grave.</p>
<p>He considered this effort of his a special stroke of business energy. He
wanted to be patient with the poor, he said; there wasn't an agent in the
city who waited for them oftener than he did; but business was business,
and it stood to reason that he could not depend on a fellow like Dirk. It
had been bad enough when the mother was there, but he couldn't think of
such a thing as risking it now. What was he to understand? Did she mean to
rent the room for them, and for how long? Because it was his duty to look
out for the future.</p>
<p>What would be more natural than for Mrs. Roberts, with those two young
things looking on, to say that of course she would be responsible for the
rent as long as they lived in the room? Thus reasoned the house agent.</p>
<p>Instead of which, Mrs. Roberts turned toward Dirk, her face flushed over
the hardness of a man who could stop a boy and girl on such business on
their way from their mother's grave, and said:—</p>
<p>“If I were in your place, Mr. Colson, I should not rent these rooms at
all. They are not suited to your sister's needs. I am sure you can do
better.”</p>
<p>The agent was disgusted. “<i>Mr.</i> Colson,” indeed! The disreputable
young scamp whom nobody trusted. He would show this silly woman a fact or
two.</p>
<p>“Business is business” he repeated, doggedly. “Either they must take the
room, and pay the rent in advance, or else they must hustle out this very
night.” He had waited now three days after time for decency's sake, and
more than that he couldn't and wouldn't do.</p>
<p>Dirk stood looking from one to the other; the red coming and going on his
swarthy face. Here was responsibility! He had not thought of it before.
The mother was not there to count out the hoarded rent with trembling
fingers, and save the wretched home to them for another month. She would
never be there again. He had nothing with which to pay rent; he had
nowhere to move. Yet <i>she</i> had called him Mr. Colson, and seemed to
expect him to act for himself and Mart.</p>
<p>It was she who answered the agent, but she spoke to Dirk.</p>
<p>“Very well; I suppose you are quite as willing to leave here to-night as
at any time? If I were you, I would leave immediately. Let your sister
come home with me for the night, and until you have time to make other
arrangements.”</p>
<p>Mr. Roberts had been summoned to a bank meeting, and had sent Ried to
attend his wife. He came forward now, from the carriage where he had stood
waiting, and laid a hand on Dirk's arm.</p>
<p>“And you come home with me to-night, Colson,” he said in a cordial tone,
such as he might have used with any young friend; “then we shall have a
chance to talk things over and make plans.”</p>
<p>“That is nice,” Mrs. Roberts said, quickly, rejoicing in her heart over
Ried's promptness to act. “Then you can get away from this wretched place
at once. Mr. Roberts will see to the removal of your goods, whatever you
need, and the agent can call on him in the morning. That will be the
simplest way to settle it all. May she go with me?”</p>
<p>A slight, caressing movement of a gloved hand on the girl's arm
accompanied this question.</p>
<p>Mart was silent with bewilderment. When had Dirk ever before been asked
what <i>she</i> might do, or might not do? At first she was half inclined
to scorn the suggestion. Then, suddenly, it came to her with a sense of
relief and protection: she was not alone; it was Dirk's business to think
of and care for her. Would he do it?</p>
<p>As for Dirk, no wonder that his face was deeply flushed. New thoughts were
struggling in his heart. <i>He</i> was to decide for Mart; he was the head
of the home now. Mrs. Roberts waited anxiously. She longed exceedingly to
rouse in the boy, who was already grown to the stature of a man, a sense
of responsibility.</p>
<p>A moment more, and he had shaken himself free from the spell which seemed
to bind him.</p>
<p>“We'll do as you say.” He spoke with the air of a man who had assumed his
proper place and taken up his duties. “Mart, you go along with her, and
I'll see about things to-morrow.”</p>
<p>And Mart, for the first time in her life, received and obeyed in silence a
direction from her brother.</p>
<p>Possibly Mrs. Roberts may have been mistaken, but she thought that much
had been accomplished that day.</p>
<p>Yet none of them realized whereunto this thing would grow.</p>
<p>Mrs. Roberts, when she ushered Mart that evening into the pink room again,
and showed her how to manage the hot and cold water, and which bell to
ring if she needed anything, and in every imaginable way treated her as a
guest, whom it was pleasant to serve, had really no plans just then—no
hobby to ride—but simply acted out the dictates of her heart. You
will remember that her Christian life had been always unconventional. The
very fact that during her early girlhood she had been painfully trammelled
by what “they” would say or think, seemed to have had its influence over
her later experiences. Since she had been made free, she would be free,
indeed; that is, with the liberty with which Christ makes us free. What
would please <i>Him</i> she resolved should be the one thought to which
she would give careful attention. Now, it is perhaps worthy of mention,
that this closely following disciple did not once stop to determine
whether it would please Him to give such tender care to this stray child
of His, or whether she would be considered doing not just the thing, in <i>His</i>
eyes, if she entertained her in the pink room.</p>
<p>About what He could have her do next, she gave much thought. And it was
not for days, or rather weeks, that she caught the possibility of His
meaning that the pink room should really be the girl's own.</p>
<p>It was just this way. The weeks went by, and no plan for settling Mart
comfortably elsewhere met Mrs. Roberts' approval. There was constantly
some excellent reason why the one mentioned would not do.</p>
<p>Meantime they became, she and Gracie Dennis, more and more deeply
interested in Mart. In her wardrobe first. “Wherever she lives she should
have respectable clothing; thus much is easily settled.” So the matron
decreed, and Gracie did not gainsay it. She became absorbed in preparing
it. Such fascinating work! So many things were needed, and her skin was so
delicate, and her eyes so blue, and Gracie's choice of shades and textures
fitted her so precisely. Then, when dressed, simple though her toilet was,
her remarkable beauty shone out so conspicuously as to alarm Mrs. Roberts
whenever she thought of her in shop or store.</p>
<p>Several times during the weeks, she visited Sallie Calkins, and looked
about her with a thoughtful air, and came away feeling that it would not
do. There was Mark, growing into manhood, a good boy, hard-working,
respectable, proud of his good, homely sister, and of his reformed father.
The two rooms were taking on every sort of homely comfort that Sallie's
skill, helped by Mrs. Roberts' suggestions, could devise. It was growing
into a model little home in its way, but there was not a corner in it
where Mart would fit.</p>
<p>Then, as the days passed, a subtle, fascinating change began to come over
Mart. She slipped quietly into certain household duties. She showed
marvellous skill with her needle; such skill, indeed, that Gracie Dennis
said more than once: “I'll tell you, Flossy, what to do with her: put her
in a good establishment, and let her learn the dressmaking trade. She
could make her fortune in time.” And Mrs. Roberts smiled, and assented to
the statement, but not to the proposition. There was no dressmaking
establishment known to her where she was willing to place so young and
pretty and ignorant a girl. But she was quite willing that Mart should
learn the looping of dresses, and the fitting of sacks and collars and
ruffles; and take many a stitch for her, as well as for Gracie. She was
willing to have her do a dozen little nameless things, the ways of doing
which she had caught up; until at last the touch of her fingers began to
be felt about the rooms, and Mrs. Roberts began to notice that she should
miss Mart when she went away. Still, from the first time she said this,
the thought came afterward with a smile of satisfaction, and it was but a
week afterward that she caught herself phrasing it, that she should miss
her <i>if</i> she went away.</p>
<p>What about Dirk? Young Ried could have told you more of him during these
days than anybody else. He still stayed at the boarding-house. Mrs.
Saunders, the mistress of it, was one whom, if you had known her, you
would feel sure could interest herself heartily in such as he. There was a
bit of a room next to Ried's. To be sure, it had been used for a
clothes-press, and it took the busy housekeeper half a day to plan how she
could get along without it; but she planned, and offered it to Ried for
his <i>protégé</i>.</p>
<p>“Just for the present, you know, until he sees what he can do, poor
fellow,” she said, and Ried accepted the little room joyfully, and helped
fit it up.</p>
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