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<h2> II </h2>
<p>The purchase of Evelina's clock had been a more important event in the
life of Ann Eliza Bunner than her younger sister could divine. In the
first place, there had been the demoralizing satisfaction of finding
herself in possession of a sum of money which she need not put into the
common fund, but could spend as she chose, without consulting Evelina, and
then the excitement of her stealthy trips abroad, undertaken on the rare
occasions when she could trump up a pretext for leaving the shop; since,
as a rule, it was Evelina who took the bundles to the dyer's, and
delivered the purchases of those among their customers who were too
genteel to be seen carrying home a bonnet or a bundle of pinking—so
that, had it not been for the excuse of having to see Mrs. Hawkins's
teething baby, Ann Eliza would hardly have known what motive to allege for
deserting her usual seat behind the counter.</p>
<p>The infrequency of her walks made them the chief events of her life. The
mere act of going out from the monastic quiet of the shop into the tumult
of the streets filled her with a subdued excitement which grew too intense
for pleasure as she was swallowed by the engulfing roar of Broadway or
Third Avenue, and began to do timid battle with their incessant
cross-currents of humanity. After a glance or two into the great
show-windows she usually allowed herself to be swept back into the shelter
of a side-street, and finally regained her own roof in a state of
breathless bewilderment and fatigue; but gradually, as her nerves were
soothed by the familiar quiet of the little shop, and the click of
Evelina's pinking-machine, certain sights and sounds would detach
themselves from the torrent along which she had been swept, and she would
devote the rest of the day to a mental reconstruction of the different
episodes of her walk, till finally it took shape in her thought as a
consecutive and highly-coloured experience, from which, for weeks
afterwards, she would detach some fragmentary recollection in the course
of her long dialogues with her sister.</p>
<p>But when, to the unwonted excitement of going out, was added the intenser
interest of looking for a present for Evelina, Ann Eliza's agitation,
sharpened by concealment, actually preyed upon her rest; and it was not
till the present had been given, and she had unbosomed herself of the
experiences connected with its purchase, that she could look back with
anything like composure to that stirring moment of her life. From that day
forward, however, she began to take a certain tranquil pleasure in
thinking of Mr. Ramy's small shop, not unlike her own in its countrified
obscurity, though the layer of dust which covered its counter and shelves
made the comparison only superficially acceptable. Still, she did not
judge the state of the shop severely, for Mr. Ramy had told her that he
was alone in the world, and lone men, she was aware, did not know how to
deal with dust. It gave her a good deal of occupation to wonder why he had
never married, or if, on the other hand, he were a widower, and had lost
all his dear little children; and she scarcely knew which alternative
seemed to make him the more interesting. In either case, his life was
assuredly a sad one; and she passed many hours in speculating on the
manner in which he probably spent his evenings. She knew he lived at the
back of his shop, for she had caught, on entering, a glimpse of a dingy
room with a tumbled bed; and the pervading smell of cold fry suggested
that he probably did his own cooking. She wondered if he did not often
make his tea with water that had not boiled, and asked herself, almost
jealously, who looked after the shop while he went to market. Then it
occurred to her as likely that he bought his provisions at the same market
as Evelina; and she was fascinated by the thought that he and her sister
might constantly be meeting in total unconsciousness of the link between
them. Whenever she reached this stage in her reflexions she lifted a
furtive glance to the clock, whose loud staccato tick was becoming a part
of her inmost being.</p>
<p>The seed sown by these long hours of meditation germinated at last in the
secret wish to go to market some morning in Evelina's stead. As this
purpose rose to the surface of Ann Eliza's thoughts she shrank back shyly
from its contemplation. A plan so steeped in duplicity had never before
taken shape in her crystalline soul. How was it possible for her to
consider such a step? And, besides, (she did not possess sufficient logic
to mark the downward trend of this "besides"), what excuse could she make
that would not excite her sister's curiosity? From this second query it
was an easy descent to the third: how soon could she manage to go?</p>
<p>It was Evelina herself, who furnished the necessary pretext by awaking
with a sore throat on the day when she usually went to market. It was a
Saturday, and as they always had their bit of steak on Sunday the
expedition could not be postponed, and it seemed natural that Ann Eliza,
as she tied an old stocking around Evelina's throat, should announce her
intention of stepping round to the butcher's.</p>
<p>"Oh, Ann Eliza, they'll cheat you so," her sister wailed.</p>
<p>Ann Eliza brushed aside the imputation with a smile, and a few minutes
later, having set the room to rights, and cast a last glance at the shop,
she was tying on her bonnet with fumbling haste.</p>
<p>The morning was damp and cold, with a sky full of sulky clouds that would
not make room for the sun, but as yet dropped only an occasional
snow-flake. In the early light the street looked its meanest and most
neglected; but to Ann Eliza, never greatly troubled by any untidiness for
which she was not responsible, it seemed to wear a singularly friendly
aspect.</p>
<p>A few minutes' walk brought her to the market where Evelina made her
purchases, and where, if he had any sense of topographical fitness, Mr.
Ramy must also deal.</p>
<p>Ann Eliza, making her way through the outskirts of potato-barrels and
flabby fish, found no one in the shop but the gory-aproned butcher who
stood in the background cutting chops.</p>
<p>As she approached him across the tesselation of fish-scales, blood and
saw-dust, he laid aside his cleaver and not unsympathetically asked:
"Sister sick?"</p>
<p>"Oh, not very—jest a cold," she answered, as guiltily as if
Evelina's illness had been feigned. "We want a steak as usual, please—and
my sister said you was to be sure to give me jest as good a cut as if it
was her," she added with child-like candour.</p>
<p>"Oh, that's all right." The butcher picked up his weapon with a grin.
"Your sister knows a cut as well as any of us," he remarked.</p>
<p>In another moment, Ann Eliza reflected, the steak would be cut and wrapped
up, and no choice left her but to turn her disappointed steps toward home.
She was too shy to try to delay the butcher by such conversational arts as
she possessed, but the approach of a deaf old lady in an antiquated bonnet
and mantle gave her her opportunity.</p>
<p>"Wait on her first, please," Ann Eliza whispered. "I ain't in any hurry."</p>
<p>The butcher advanced to his new customer, and Ann Eliza, palpitating in
the back of the shop, saw that the old lady's hesitations between liver
and pork chops were likely to be indefinitely prolonged. They were still
unresolved when she was interrupted by the entrance of a blowsy Irish girl
with a basket on her arm. The newcomer caused a momentary diversion, and
when she had departed the old lady, who was evidently as intolerant of
interruption as a professional story-teller, insisted on returning to the
beginning of her complicated order, and weighing anew, with an anxious
appeal to the butcher's arbitration, the relative advantages of pork and
liver. But even her hesitations, and the intrusion on them of two or three
other customers, were of no avail, for Mr. Ramy was not among those who
entered the shop; and at last Ann Eliza, ashamed of staying longer,
reluctantly claimed her steak, and walked home through the thickening
snow.</p>
<p>Even to her simple judgment the vanity of her hopes was plain, and in the
clear light that disappointment turns upon our actions she wondered how
she could have been foolish enough to suppose that, even if Mr. Ramy DID
go to that particular market, he would hit on the same day and hour as
herself.</p>
<p>There followed a colourless week unmarked by farther incident. The old
stocking cured Evelina's throat, and Mrs. Hawkins dropped in once or twice
to talk of her baby's teeth; some new orders for pinking were received,
and Evelina sold a bonnet to the lady with puffed sleeves. The lady with
puffed sleeves—a resident of "the Square," whose name they had never
learned, because she always carried her own parcels home—was the
most distinguished and interesting figure on their horizon. She was
youngish, she was elegant (as the title they had given her implied), and
she had a sweet sad smile about which they had woven many histories; but
even the news of her return to town—it was her first apparition that
year—failed to arouse Ann Eliza's interest. All the small daily
happenings which had once sufficed to fill the hours now appeared to her
in their deadly insignificance; and for the first time in her long years
of drudgery she rebelled at the dullness of her life. With Evelina such
fits of discontent were habitual and openly proclaimed, and Ann Eliza
still excused them as one of the prerogatives of youth. Besides, Evelina
had not been intended by Providence to pine in such a narrow life: in the
original plan of things, she had been meant to marry and have a baby, to
wear silk on Sundays, and take a leading part in a Church circle. Hitherto
opportunity had played her false; and for all her superior aspirations and
carefully crimped hair she had remained as obscure and unsought as Ann
Eliza. But the elder sister, who had long since accepted her own fate, had
never accepted Evelina's. Once a pleasant young man who taught in
Sunday-school had paid the younger Miss Bunner a few shy visits. That was
years since, and he had speedily vanished from their view. Whether he had
carried with him any of Evelina's illusions, Ann Eliza had never
discovered; but his attentions had clad her sister in a halo of exquisite
possibilities.</p>
<p>Ann Eliza, in those days, had never dreamed of allowing herself the luxury
of self-pity: it seemed as much a personal right of Evelina's as her
elaborately crinkled hair. But now she began to transfer to herself a
portion of the sympathy she had so long bestowed on Evelina. She had at
last recognized her right to set up some lost opportunities of her own;
and once that dangerous precedent established, they began to crowd upon
her memory.</p>
<p>It was at this stage of Ann Eliza's transformation that Evelina, looking
up one evening from her work, said suddenly: "My! She's stopped."</p>
<p>Ann Eliza, raising her eyes from a brown merino seam, followed her
sister's glance across the room. It was a Monday, and they always wound
the clock on Sundays.</p>
<p>"Are you sure you wound her yesterday, Evelina?"</p>
<p>"Jest as sure as I live. She must be broke. I'll go and see."</p>
<p>Evelina laid down the hat she was trimming, and took the clock from its
shelf.</p>
<p>"There—I knew it! She's wound jest as TIGHT—what you suppose's
happened to her, Ann Eliza?"</p>
<p>"I dunno, I'm sure," said the elder sister, wiping her spectacles before
proceeding to a close examination of the clock.</p>
<p>With anxiously bent heads the two women shook and turned it, as though
they were trying to revive a living thing; but it remained unresponsive to
their touch, and at length Evelina laid it down with a sigh.</p>
<p>"Seems like somethin' DEAD, don't it, Ann Eliza? How still the room is!"</p>
<p>"Yes, ain't it?"</p>
<p>"Well, I'll put her back where she belongs," Evelina continued, in the
tone of one about to perform the last offices for the departed. "And I
guess," she added, "you'll have to step round to Mr. Ramy's to-morrow, and
see if he can fix her."</p>
<p>Ann Eliza's face burned. "I—yes, I guess I'll have to," she
stammered, stooping to pick up a spool of cotton which had rolled to the
floor. A sudden heart-throb stretched the seams of her flat alpaca bosom,
and a pulse leapt to life in each of her temples.</p>
<p>That night, long after Evelina slept, Ann Eliza lay awake in the
unfamiliar silence, more acutely conscious of the nearness of the crippled
clock than when it had volubly told out the minutes. The next morning she
woke from a troubled dream of having carried it to Mr. Ramy's, and found
that he and his shop had vanished; and all through the day's occupations
the memory of this dream oppressed her.</p>
<p>It had been agreed that Ann Eliza should take the clock to be repaired as
soon as they had dined; but while they were still at table a weak-eyed
little girl in a black apron stabbed with innumerable pins burst in on
them with the cry: "Oh, Miss Bunner, for mercy's sake! Miss Mellins has
been took again."</p>
<p>Miss Mellins was the dress-maker upstairs, and the weak-eyed child one of
her youthful apprentices.</p>
<p>Ann Eliza started from her seat. "I'll come at once. Quick, Evelina, the
cordial!"</p>
<p>By this euphemistic name the sisters designated a bottle of cherry brandy,
the last of a dozen inherited from their grandmother, which they kept
locked in their cupboard against such emergencies. A moment later, cordial
in hand, Ann Eliza was hurrying upstairs behind the weak-eyed child.</p>
<p>Miss Mellins' "turn" was sufficiently serious to detain Ann Eliza for
nearly two hours, and dusk had fallen when she took up the depleted bottle
of cordial and descended again to the shop. It was empty, as usual, and
Evelina sat at her pinking-machine in the back room. Ann Eliza was still
agitated by her efforts to restore the dress-maker, but in spite of her
preoccupation she was struck, as soon as she entered, by the loud tick of
the clock, which still stood on the shelf where she had left it.</p>
<p>"Why, she's going!" she gasped, before Evelina could question her about
Miss Mellins. "Did she start up again by herself?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no; but I couldn't stand not knowing what time it was, I've got so
accustomed to having her round; and just after you went upstairs Mrs.
Hawkins dropped in, so I asked her to tend the store for a minute, and I
clapped on my things and ran right round to Mr. Ramy's. It turned out
there wasn't anything the matter with her—nothin' on'y a speck of
dust in the works—and he fixed her for me in a minute and I brought
her right back. Ain't it lovely to hear her going again? But tell me about
Miss Mellins, quick!"</p>
<p>For a moment Ann Eliza found no words. Not till she learned that she had
missed her chance did she understand how many hopes had hung upon it. Even
now she did not know why she had wanted so much to see the clock-maker
again.</p>
<p>"I s'pose it's because nothing's ever happened to me," she thought, with a
twinge of envy for the fate which gave Evelina every opportunity that came
their way. "She had the Sunday-school teacher too," Ann Eliza murmured to
herself; but she was well-trained in the arts of renunciation, and after a
scarcely perceptible pause she plunged into a detailed description of the
dress-maker's "turn."</p>
<p>Evelina, when her curiosity was roused, was an insatiable questioner, and
it was supper-time before she had come to the end of her enquiries about
Miss Mellins; but when the two sisters had seated themselves at their
evening meal Ann Eliza at last found a chance to say: "So she on'y had a
speck of dust in her."</p>
<p>Evelina understood at once that the reference was not to Miss Mellins.
"Yes—at least he thinks so," she answered, helping herself as a
matter of course to the first cup of tea.</p>
<p>"On'y to think!" murmured Ann Eliza.</p>
<p>"But he isn't SURE," Evelina continued, absently pushing the teapot toward
her sister. "It may be something wrong with the—I forget what he
called it. Anyhow, he said he'd call round and see, day after to-morrow,
after supper."</p>
<p>"Who said?" gasped Ann Eliza.</p>
<p>"Why, Mr. Ramy, of course. I think he's real nice, Ann Eliza. And I don't
believe he's forty; but he DOES look sick. I guess he's pretty lonesome,
all by himself in that store. He as much as told me so, and somehow"—Evelina
paused and bridled—"I kinder thought that maybe his saying he'd call
round about the clock was on'y just an excuse. He said it just as I was
going out of the store. What you think, Ann Eliza?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't har'ly know." To save herself, Ann Eliza could produce
nothing warmer.</p>
<p>"Well, I don't pretend to be smarter than other folks," said Evelina,
putting a conscious hand to her hair, "but I guess Mr. Herman Ramy
wouldn't be sorry to pass an evening here, 'stead of spending it all alone
in that poky little place of his."</p>
<p>Her self-consciousness irritated Ann Eliza.</p>
<p>"I guess he's got plenty of friends of his own," she said, almost harshly.</p>
<p>"No, he ain't, either. He's got hardly any."</p>
<p>"Did he tell you that too?" Even to her own ears there was a faint sneer
in the interrogation.</p>
<p>"Yes, he did," said Evelina, dropping her lids with a smile. "He seemed to
be just crazy to talk to somebody—somebody agreeable, I mean. I
think the man's unhappy, Ann Eliza."</p>
<p>"So do I," broke from the elder sister.</p>
<p>"He seems such an educated man, too. He was reading the paper when I went
in. Ain't it sad to think of his being reduced to that little store, after
being years at Tiff'ny's, and one of the head men in their
clock-department?"</p>
<p>"He told you all that?"</p>
<p>"Why, yes. I think he'd a' told me everything ever happened to him if I'd
had the time to stay and listen. I tell you he's dead lonely, Ann Eliza."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Ann Eliza.</p>
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