<h2>CHAPTER X<br/> <small>THE INDIAN GENTLEMAN</small></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">But</span> it was a perilous thing for Ermengarde and
Lottie to make pilgrimages to the attic. They could
never be quite sure when Sara would be there, and
they could scarcely ever be certain that Miss Amelia would
not make a tour of inspection through the bedrooms after
the pupils were supposed to be asleep. So their visits were
rare ones, and Sara lived a strange and lonely life. It was
a lonelier life when she was down-stairs than when she was
in her attic. She had no one to talk to; and when she was
sent out on errands and walked through the streets, a forlorn
little figure carrying a basket or a parcel, trying to
hold her hat on when the wind was blowing, and feeling
the water soak through her shoes when it was raining, she
felt as if the crowds hurrying past her made her loneliness
greater. When she had been the Princess Sara, driving
through the streets in her brougham, or walking, attended
by Mariette, the sight of her bright, eager little face and
picturesque coats and hats had often caused people to look
after her. A happy, beautifully cared for little girl naturally
attracts attention. Shabby, poorly dressed children
are not rare enough and pretty enough to make people turn<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span>
around to look at them and smile. No one looked at Sara
in these days, and no one seemed to see her as she hurried
along the crowded pavements. She had begun to grow
very fast, and, as she was dressed only in such clothes as the
plainer remnants of her wardrobe would supply, she knew
she looked very queer, indeed. All her valuable garments
had been disposed of, and such as had been left for her use
she was expected to wear so long as she could put them on
at all. Sometimes, when she passed a shop window with
a mirror in it, she almost laughed outright on catching a
glimpse of herself, and sometimes her face went red and
she bit her lip and turned away.</p>
<p>In the evening, when she passed houses whose windows
were lighted up, she used to look into the warm rooms and
amuse herself by imagining things about the people she
saw sitting before the fires or about the tables. It always
interested her to catch glimpses of rooms before the shutters
were closed. There were several families in the
square in which Miss Minchin lived, with which she had
become quite familiar in a way of her own. The one she
liked best she called the Large Family. She called it the
Large Family not because the members of it were big,—for,
indeed, most of them were little,—but because there
were so many of them. There were eight children in the
Large Family, and a stout, rosy mother, and a stout, rosy
father, and a stout, rosy grandmother, and any number of
servants. The eight children were always either being
taken out to walk or to ride in perambulators by comfortable
nurses, or they were going to drive with their mamma,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
or they were flying to the door in the evening to meet their
papa and kiss him and dance around him and drag off
his overcoat and look in the pockets for packages, or they
were crowding about the nursery windows and looking out
and pushing each other and laughing—in fact, they were
always doing something enjoyable and suited to the tastes
of a large family. Sara was quite fond of them, and had
given them names out of books—quite romantic names.
She called them the Montmorencys when she did not call
them the Large Family. The fat, fair baby with the lace
cap was Ethelberta Beauchamp Montmorency; the next
baby was Violet Cholmondeley Montmorency; the little
boy who could just stagger and who had such round
legs was Sydney Cecil Vivian Montmorency; and then
came Lilian Evangeline Maud Marion, Rosalind Gladys,
Guy Clarence, Veronica Eustacia, and Claude Harold
Hector.</p>
<p>One evening a very funny thing happened—though,
perhaps, in one sense it was not a funny thing at all.</p>
<p>Several of the Montmorencys were evidently going to
a children’s party, and just as Sara was about to pass the
door they were crossing the pavement to get into the carriage
which was waiting for them. Veronica Eustacia and
Rosalind Gladys, in white-lace frocks and lovely sashes,
had just got in, and Guy Clarence, aged five, was following
them. He was such a pretty fellow and had such rosy
cheeks and blue eyes, and such a darling little round head
covered with curls, that Sara forgot her basket and shabby
cloak altogether—in fact, forgot everything but that she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
wanted to look at him for a moment. So she paused and
looked.</p>
<p>It was Christmas time, and the Large Family had been
hearing many stories about children who were poor and
had no mammas and papas to fill their stockings and
take them to the pantomime—children who were, in fact,
cold and thinly clad and hungry. In the stories, kind
people—sometimes little boys and girls with tender hearts—invariably
saw the poor children and gave them money
or rich gifts, or took them home to beautiful dinners. Guy
Clarence had been affected to tears that very afternoon
by the reading of such a story, and he had burned with a
desire to find such a poor child and give her a certain sixpence
he possessed, and thus provide for her for life. An
entire sixpence, he was sure, would mean affluence for evermore.
As he crossed the strip of red carpet laid across
the pavement from the door to the carriage, he had this
very sixpence in the pocket of his very short man-o’-war
trousers. And just as Rosalind Gladys got into the vehicle
and jumped on to the seat in order to feel the cushions
spring under her, he saw Sara standing on the wet pavement
in her shabby frock and hat, with her old basket on
her arm, looking at him hungrily.</p>
<p>He thought that her eyes looked hungry because she
had perhaps had nothing to eat for a long time. He did
not know that they looked so because she was hungry for
the warm, merry life his home held and his rosy face spoke
of, and that she had a hungry wish to snatch him in her
arms and kiss him. He only knew that she had big eyes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
and a thin face and thin legs and a common basket and poor
clothes. So he put his hand in his pocket and found his
sixpence and walked up to her benignly.</p>
<p>“Here, poor little girl,” he said. “Here is a sixpence.
I will give it to you.”</p>
<p>Sara started, and all at once realized that she looked exactly
like poor children she had seen, in her better days,
waiting on the pavement to watch her as she got out of her
brougham. And she had given them pennies many a time.
Her face went red and then it went pale, and for a second
she felt as if she could not take the dear little sixpence.</p>
<p>“Oh, no!” she said. “Oh, no, thank you; I mustn’t
take it, indeed!”</p>
<p>Her voice was so unlike an ordinary street child’s voice
and her manner was so like the manner of a well-bred little
person that Veronica Eustacia (whose real name was
Janet) and Rosalind Gladys (who was really called Nora)
leaned forward to listen.</p>
<p>But Guy Clarence was not to be thwarted in his benevolence.
He thrust the sixpence into her hand.</p>
<p>“Yes, you must take it, poor little girl!” he insisted
stoutly. “You can buy things to eat with it. It is a whole
sixpence!”</p>
<p>There was something so honest and kind in his face, and
he looked so likely to be heartbrokenly disappointed if she
did not take it, that Sara knew she must not refuse him.
To be as proud as that would be a cruel thing. So she
actually put her pride in her pocket, though it must be
admitted her cheeks burned.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Thank you,” she said. “You are a kind, kind little
darling thing.” And as he scrambled joyfully into the
carriage she went away, trying to smile, though she caught
her breath quickly and her eyes were shining through a
mist. She had known that she looked odd and shabby,
but until now she had not known that she might be taken
for a beggar.</p>
<p>As the Large Family’s carriage drove away, the children
inside it were talking with interested excitement.</p>
<p>“Oh, Donald” (this was Guy Clarence’s name), Janet
exclaimed alarmedly, “why did you offer that little
girl your sixpence? I’m sure she is not a beggar!”</p>
<p>“She didn’t speak like a beggar!” cried Nora; “and
her face didn’t really look like a beggar’s face!”</p>
<p>“Besides, she didn’t beg,” said Janet. “I was so afraid
she might be angry with you. You know, it makes people
angry to be taken for beggars when they are not beggars.”</p>
<p>“She wasn’t angry,” said Donald, a trifle dismayed, but
still firm. “She laughed a little, and she said I was a kind,
kind little darling thing. And I was!”—stoutly. “It was
my whole sixpence.”</p>
<p>Janet and Nora exchanged glances.</p>
<p>“A beggar girl would never have said that,” decided
Janet. “She would have said, ‘Thank yer kindly, little
gentleman—thank yer, sir’; and perhaps she would have
bobbed a courtesy.”</p>
<p>Sara knew nothing about the fact, but from that time
the Large Family was as profoundly interested in her as
she was in it. Faces used to appear at the nursery windows<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span>
when she passed, and many discussions concerning her
were held round the fire.</p>
<p>“She is a kind of servant at the seminary,” Janet said.
“I don’t believe she belongs to anybody. I believe she is
an orphan. But she is not a beggar, however shabby she
looks.”</p>
<p>And afterward she was called by all of them, “The-little-girl-who-is-not-a-beggar,”
which was, of course,
rather a long name, and sounded very funny sometimes
when the youngest ones said it in a hurry.</p>
<p>Sara managed to bore a hole in the sixpence and hung
it on an old bit of narrow ribbon round her neck. Her
affection for the Large Family increased—as, indeed, her
affection for everything she could love increased. She
grew fonder and fonder of Becky, and she used to look
forward to the two mornings a week when she went into
the school-room to give the little ones their French lesson.
Her small pupils loved her, and strove with each other for
the privilege of standing close to her and insinuating their
small hands into hers. It fed her hungry heart to feel them
nestling up to her. She made such friends with the sparrows
that when she stood upon the table, put her head and
shoulders out of the attic window, and chirped, she heard
almost immediately a flutter of wings and answering twitters,
and a little flock of dingy town birds appeared and
alighted on the slates to talk to her and make much of the
crumbs she scattered. With Melchisedec she had become
so intimate that he actually brought Mrs. Melchisedec with
him sometimes, and now and then one or two of his children.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span>
She used to talk to him, and, somehow, he looked
quite as if he understood.</p>
<p>There had grown in her mind rather a strange feeling
about Emily, who always sat and looked on at everything.
It arose in one of her moments of great desolateness. She
would have liked to believe or pretend to believe that Emily
understood and sympathized with her. She did not like to
own to herself that her only companion could feel and hear
nothing. She used to put her in a chair sometimes and
sit opposite to her on the old red footstool, and stare and
pretend about her until her own eyes would grow large
with something which was almost like fear—particularly
at night when everything was so still, when the only
sound in the attic was the occasional sudden scurry and
squeak of Melchisedec’s family in the wall. One of her
“pretends” was that Emily was a kind of good witch who
could protect her. Sometimes, after she had stared at her
until she was wrought up to the highest pitch of fancifulness,
she would ask her questions and find herself <em>almost</em>
feeling as if she would presently answer. But she never
did.</p>
<p>“As to answering, though,” said Sara, trying to console
herself, “I don’t answer very often. I never answer when
I can help it. When people are insulting you, there is
nothing so good for them as not to say a word—just to
look at them and <em>think</em>. Miss Minchin turns pale with
rage when I do it, Miss Amelia looks frightened, and so
do the girls. When you will not fly into a passion people
know you are stronger than they are, because you are<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span>
strong enough to hold in your rage, and they are not, and
they say stupid things they wish they hadn’t said afterward.
There’s nothing so strong as rage, except what
makes you hold it in—that’s stronger. It’s a good thing
not to answer your enemies. I scarcely ever do. Perhaps
Emily is more like me than I am like myself. Perhaps she
would rather not answer her friends, even. She keeps it all
in her heart.”</p>
<p>But though she tried to satisfy herself with these arguments,
she did not find it easy. When, after a long, hard
day, in which she had been sent here and there, sometimes
on long errands through wind and cold and rain, she came
in wet and hungry, and was sent out again because nobody
chose to remember that she was only a child, and that
her slim legs might be tired and her small body might
be chilled; when she had been given only harsh words and
cold, slighting looks for thanks; when the cook had been
vulgar and insolent; when Miss Minchin had been in her
worst mood, and when she had seen the girls sneering
among themselves at her shabbiness—then she was not
always able to comfort her sore, proud, desolate heart with
fancies when Emily merely sat upright in her old chair
and stared.</p>
<p>One of these nights, when she came up to the attic cold
and hungry, with a tempest raging in her young breast,
Emily’s stare seemed so vacant, her sawdust legs and arms
so inexpressive, that Sara lost all control over herself.
There was nobody but Emily—no one in the world. And
there she sat.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I shall die presently,” she said at first.</p>
<p>Emily simply stared.</p>
<p>“I can’t bear this,” said the poor child, trembling. “I
know I shall die. I’m cold; I’m wet; I’m starving to
death. I’ve walked a thousand miles to-day, and they
have done nothing but scold me from morning until night.
And because I could not find that last thing the cook sent
me for, they would not give me any supper. Some men
laughed at me because my old shoes made me slip down in
the mud. I’m covered with mud now. And they laughed.
Do you hear?”</p>
<p>She looked at the staring glass eyes and complacent face,
and suddenly a sort of heartbroken rage seized her. She
lifted her little savage hand and knocked Emily off the
chair, bursting into a passion of sobbing,—Sara who never
cried.</p>
<p>“You are nothing but a <em>doll!”</em> she cried; “nothing but
a doll—doll—doll! You care for nothing. You are
stuffed with sawdust. You never had a heart. Nothing
could ever make you feel. You are a <em>doll!”</em></p>
<p>Emily lay on the floor, with her legs ignominiously
doubled up over her head, and a new flat place on the end
of her nose; but she was calm, even dignified. Sara hid
her face in her arms. The rats in the wall began to fight
and bite each other and squeak and scramble. Melchisedec
was chastising some of his family.</p>
<p>Sara’s sobs gradually quieted themselves. It was so unlike
her to break down that she was surprised at herself.
After a while she raised her face and looked at Emily,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span>
who seemed to be gazing at her round the side of one angle,
and, somehow, by this time actually with a kind of glassy-eyed
sympathy. Sara bent and picked her up. Remorse
overtook her. She even smiled at herself a very little
smile.</p>
<p>“You can’t help being a doll,” she said with a resigned
sigh, “any more than Lavinia and Jessie can help not having
any sense. We are not all made alike. Perhaps you
do your sawdust best.” And she kissed her and shook
her clothes straight, and put her back upon her chair.</p>
<p>She had wished very much that some one would take the
empty house next door. She wished it because of the
attic window which was so near hers. It seemed as if it
would be so nice to see it propped open some day and a
head and shoulders rising out of the square aperture.</p>
<p>“If it looked a nice head,” she thought, “I might begin
by saying, ‘Good morning,’ and all sorts of things might
happen. But, of course, it’s not really likely that any one
but under servants would sleep there.”</p>
<p>One morning, on turning the corner of the square after
a visit to the grocer’s, the butcher’s, and the baker’s, she saw,
to her great delight, that during her rather prolonged absence,
a van full of furniture had stopped before the next
house, the front doors were thrown open, and men in shirt
sleeves were going in and out carrying heavy packages and
pieces of furniture.</p>
<p>“It’s taken!” she said. “It really <em>is</em> taken! Oh, I do
hope a nice head will look out of the attic window!”</p>
<p>She would almost have liked to join the group of loiterers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
who had stopped on the pavement to watch the
things carried in. She had an idea that if she could see
some of the furniture she could guess something about the
people it belonged to.</p>
<p>“Miss Minchin’s tables and chairs are just like her,” she
thought; “I remember thinking that the first minute I
saw her, even though I was so little. I told papa afterward,
and he laughed and said it was true. I am sure the
Large Family have fat, comfortable arm-chairs and sofas,
and I can see that their red-flowery wall-paper is exactly
like them. It’s warm and cheerful and kind-looking and
happy.”</p>
<p>She was sent out for parsley to the greengrocer’s later
in the day, and when she came up the area steps her heart
gave quite a quick beat of recognition. Several pieces of
furniture had been set out of the van upon the pavement.
There was a beautiful table of elaborately wrought teak-wood,
and some chairs, and a screen covered with rich Oriental
embroidery. The sight of them gave her a weird,
homesick feeling. She had seen things so like them in
India. One of the things Miss Minchin had taken from
her was a carved teak-wood desk her father had sent her.</p>
<p>“They are beautiful things,” she said; “they look as if
they ought to belong to a nice person. All the things look
rather grand. I suppose it is a rich family.”</p>
<p>The vans of furniture came and were unloaded and gave
place to others all the day. Several times it so happened
that Sara had an opportunity of seeing things carried in.
It became plain that she had been right in guessing that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span>
new-comers were people of large means. All the furniture
was rich and beautiful, and a great deal of it was Oriental.
Wonderful rugs and draperies and ornaments were taken
from the vans, many pictures, and books enough for a library.
Among other things there was a superb god
Buddha in a splendid shrine.</p>
<p>“Some one in the family <em>must</em> have been in India,” Sara
thought. “They have got used to Indian things and like
them. I <em>am</em> glad. I shall feel as if they were friends, even
if a head never looks out of the attic window.”</p>
<p>When she was taking in the evening’s milk for the cook
(there was really no odd job she was not called upon to
do), she saw something occur which made the situation
more interesting than ever. The handsome, rosy man who
was the father of the Large Family walked across the
square in the most matter-of-fact manner, and ran up the
steps of the next-door house. He ran up them as if he felt
quite at home and expected to run up and down them
many a time in the future. He stayed inside quite a long
time, and several times came out and gave directions to the
workmen, as if he had a right to do so. It was quite certain
that he was in some intimate way connected with the new-comers
and was acting for them.</p>
<p>“If the new people have children,” Sara speculated,
“the Large Family children will be sure to come and play
with them, and they <em>might</em> come up into the attic just for
fun.”</p>
<p>At night, after her work was done, Becky came in to see
her fellow-prisoner and bring her news.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“It’s a’ Nindian gentleman that’s comin’ to live next
door, miss,” she said. “I don’t know whether he’s a black
gentleman or not, but he’s a Nindian one. He’s very rich,
an’ he’s ill, an’ the gentleman of the Large Family is his
lawyer. He’s had a lot of trouble, an’ it’s made him ill an’
low in his mind. He worships idols, miss. He’s an ’eathen
an’ bows down to wood an’ stone. I seen a’ idol bein’ carried
in for him to worship. Somebody had oughter send
him a trac’. You can get a trac’ for a penny.”</p>
<p>Sara laughed a little.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe he worships that idol,” she said; “some
people like to keep them to look at because they are interesting.
My papa had a beautiful one, and he did not
worship it.”</p>
<p>But Becky was rather inclined to prefer to believe that
the new neighbor was “an ’eathen.” It sounded so much
more romantic than that he should merely be the ordinary
kind of gentleman who went to church with a prayer-book.
She sat and talked long that night of what he would be like,
of what his wife would be like if he had one, and of what
his children would be like if they had children. Sara saw
that privately she could not help hoping very much that
they would all be black, and would wear turbans, and,
above all, that—like their parent—they would all be
“’eathens.”</p>
<p>“I never lived next door to no ’eathens, miss,” she said;
“I should like to see what sort o’ ways they’d have.”</p>
<p>It was several weeks before her curiosity was satisfied,
and then it was revealed that the new occupant had neither<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</SPAN></span>
wife nor children. He was a solitary man with no family
at all, and it was evident that he was shattered in health
and unhappy in mind.</p>
<p>A carriage drove up one day and stopped before the
house. When the footman dismounted from the box and
opened the door the gentleman who was the father of the
Large Family got out first. After him there descended
a nurse in uniform, then came down the steps two men-servants.
They came to assist their master, who, when he
was helped out of the carriage, proved to be a man with a
haggard, distressed face, and a skeleton body wrapped in
furs. He was carried up the steps, and the head of the
Large Family went with him, looking very anxious.
Shortly afterward a doctor’s carriage arrived, and the doctor
went in—plainly to take care of him.</p>
<p>“There is such a yellow gentleman next door, Sara,”
Lottie whispered at the French class afterward. “Do you
think he is a Chinee? The geography says the Chinee men
are yellow.”</p>
<p>“No, he is not Chinese,” Sara whispered back; “he is
very ill. Go on with your exercise, Lottie. ‘<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Non, monsieur.
Je n’ai pas le canif de mon oncle.</i>’”</p>
<p>That was the beginning of the story of the Indian gentleman.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span></p>
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