<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER II.</h2>
<p class="p2">Polly Ducksacre was sitting in state behind
the little counter, and opposite the gas–jet, upon
her throne—a bushel basket set upside down on
another. It was the evening of Boxing Day, and
Polly was arrayed with a splendour that challenged
the strictest appraisement; so gorgeous were her
gilt earrings, cornelian necklace, sham cameo brooch—Cupid
stealing the sword of Mars—and German–silver
bracelets. The children who came in
for “haʼporths of specked” forgot their errand
and hopes of prigging, and, sucking their lips with
wild admiration, cried “Lor now! Ainʼt she
stunnin?” “Spexs her sweetheart in a coach and
four,” exclaimed one little girl of great penetration;
“oh give us a ride, miss, when he comes.”</p>
<p>That little girl was right, to a limited extent.
Polly did expect her sweetheart; not in a coach
and four, however, but in a smallish tax–cart,
chestnut–coloured, picked out with white; on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
panel whereof was painted, as the Act directs,
“Robert Clinkers, Junior, Coal–merchant, Hammersmith.”
Mr. Clinkers, whose first visit had
been paid simply from pity for Cradock, and to
acquit himself of all complicity in Hearty Wibrahamʼs
swindle, had called again to make kind inquiries,
after finding how ill the poor fellow was,
and that his landlady sold coals. Nor was it long
before he ventured to propose an arrangement,
mutually beneficial, under which the Ducksacre
firm should receive their supply from him. Two
or three councils were held, but the ladies were
obliged to surrender at last, because he was so
complimentary, and had such nice white teeth, and
spoke in such a feeling manner of his dear departed
angel. On the other hand, their old wharfinger
would come blustering about his sacks, loud
enough to make the potatoes jump, and he kept
such impudent men, and bit his nails without any
manners, and called them both “Mrs. Acreducks.”</p>
<p>During this Clinkerian diplomacy, Polly showed
such shrewdness, and such a nice foot and ancle,
and had such a manner of rolling her eyes—blacker
and brighter than best Wallsend—that
the coals of love were laid, the match struck, the
fire kindled, and drawing well up the hearth–place,
before Robert Clinkers knew what he was at.
And now he came every evening, bringing two
sacks of coal with him, and sat on a bag of Barcelonas,
and cracked, and gazed at Polly.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Miss Ducksacre, you should sell lemonade,’”
he had said only Saturday last, which was Christmas
Eve, “it is such a genteel drink, you know,
when a chap is consumed with internal fires, as
the great poet says—him as wrote the operas, or
the copperas, bless me, I never know which it is;
likely you can tell, miss?”</p>
<p>“Lor, Mr. Clinkers, why, the proper name is
hopperas; we shows the boards, and we gets a
ticket, when nobody else wonʼt go.”</p>
<p>“Oh now! Do you, though? Ah, I was there,
afore ever I knew what life was. A tricksome
thing is life, Miss Polly, especially for a ‘andsome
female, and no young fellow to be trusted with it.
Valuable cargo on green wood. Sure to come to
shipwreck.”</p>
<p>“Lor, Mr. Clinkers, you donʼt mean <i>me</i>! I am
sure I am not at all handsome.”</p>
<p>“Then there isnʼt one in London, miss. Coals
is coals, and fire is fire—oh, I should like some
lemonade, with a drop of rum in it. Would you
join me in it now, if I just pop round the corner?
It would make you feel so nice now.”</p>
<p>“Do I ever feel anything else but nice?” Oh,
Polly, what a <i>leading</i> question!</p>
<p>“I wishes it was in my province now, with the
deepest respect, to try!” Here Polly flashed away,
though nobody was pursuing her, got behind some
Penzance broccoli, and seized a half–pottle to defend
herself. Mr. Clinkers, knowing what he was
about, appealed to a bunch of mistletoe, under<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
which, in distracting distraction, the young lady
had taken refuge.</p>
<p>“Now nobody else in all this London,” said the
coal–merchant to the berries, “in all this mighty
Baal, as the poet beautifully expresses it, especially
if a young man, not over five–and–thirty, not so
very bad–looking but experienced in life, and with
great veneration for females, and a business, you
may say, of three hundred a year clear of income–tax
and increasing yearly, and a contract with the
company, without no encumbrances, would ever
go to think of letting that beautiful young lady
enjoy the sweets of retirement in that most initing
position, without plucking some of the pearls
off, and no harm done or taken. And nothing at
all pervents me, no consideration of the brockolo—could
pay for it to–morrow morning—but my
deepest respects, not having my best togs on,
through a cruel haxident. Please pigs theyʼll come
home to–morrow morning, and Iʼll do it on Monday,
and lock up yard at four oʼclock, if tailor has made
a job of it. Look nice indeed, and feel nice? I
should like to know how she could help it!”</p>
<p>This explains why, when the wheels at the door
proved to be not of the sprightly tax–cart, but a
lumbering cab, Polly was disappointed. Neither
was her displeasure removed when she saw a very
pretty girl get out, and glide into the shop, with
the loveliest damask spreading over the softest and
clearest cheeks. Though Polly had made up her
mind about Cradock as now a bad speculation, it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
was not likely that she should love yet any one
who meant to have him.</p>
<p>Amy shrunk back as her nice clean skirt swept
the grimy threshold. She was not by any means
fidgety, but had a nervous dislike of dirt, as most
upright natures have. Then she felt ashamed of
herself, and coloured yet more deeply to think that
a place good enough for Cradock should seem
too sordid for her, indeed! And then her tears
glanced in the gas–light, that Cradock should ever
have come to this, and partly, no doubt, for her
sake, though she never could tell how.</p>
<p>The little shop was afforested with Christmas–trees
of all sorts and of every pattern, as large as
ever could be squeezed, with a knuckle of root to
keep them steady, into pots No. 32. The costermongers
repudiate larger pots, because they take
too much room on a truck, and involve the necessity
of hiring a boy to push.</p>
<p>Aucuba, Irish yew, Portugal laurel, arbor vitæ,
and bay–tree, but most of all—and for the purpose
by far the most convenient, because of the hat–peg
order—the stiff, self–confident, argumentative
spruce. All these, when they have done their
spiriting, and yielded long–remembered fun, will
be fondly tended by gentle–hearted girls on some
suburban balcony; they will be watered enough to
kill lignum vitæ; patent compost will be bought at
about the price of sugar; learned consultations
will be held between Sylvia and Lucilla; and then,
as the leaves grow daily more yellow, and papa is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
so provoking that he will only shake his head (too
sagaciously to commit himself), an earnest appeal
will be addressed to some of the gardening papers.
Or perhaps the tree will be planted, with no little
ceremony, in the centre of some grass–plot nearly
as large as a counterpane; while the elder members
of the family, though bland enough to drink
its health, regard the measure as very unwise, because
the house will be darkened so in a few short
years.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the editorʼs reply arrives—“Possibly
Sylviaʼs tree has no roots.” He is laughed to scorn
for his ignorance, until little Charley falls to work
with his Ramsgate spade unbidden. <i>Factura nepotibus
umbram!</i> It has been chopped all round the
bole with a hatchet, and is as likely to grow as
a lucifer–match.</p>
<p>Through that Christmas Tabraca John Rosedew
led his daughter, begging her at every step to be
careful of the trees, whose claims upon her attention
she postponed to those of her frock.</p>
<p>“Lor bless me, sir, is that you now, and your
good lady along of you! How glad I am, to be
sure!”</p>
<p>“Miss Ducksacre, this is my daughter, Miss
Amy Rosedew, of whom you have heard me
speak;” here John executed a flourish of great
complacency with his hat; “my only child, but as
good to me as any dozen could be. Will you allow
her to stop here a minute, while I go up–stairs?”</p>
<p>Amy was trembling now, more and more every<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
moment, and John would not ask how Cradock
was, for fear of frightening his daughter.</p>
<p>“To be sure she can stay here,” said Polly, not
over graciously; for if Mr. Clinkers should come
in the while, it might alter his ideal.</p>
<p>“Ah, so very sad; so very sad, miss, ainʼt it
now?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Amy, having no desire to pursue
the subject with Polly. But Pollyʼs tongue could
no more keep still than a frond of maiden–hair fern
in the draught of a river archway.</p>
<p>“Ah, so very sad! To think of him go, quite
young as he is, to one of them moonstruck
smilems, where they makes rope–mats and tiger
rugs! As ‘andsome a young man, miss, as ever I
see off a hengine; and of course he must be such,
being as he is your brother.”</p>
<p>Before poor Amy could answer, Mrs. Ducksacre
came to fetch her, and frowned very hard at Polly,
who began to look out of the window. In spite of
all her faith and hope, the child could scarcely get
up the stairs, till her father came to meet her.</p>
<p>“There is no one with him now, dear; Mrs.
Jupp is in the sitting–room, so very kindly lent us
by the good landlady. Only two more pairs of
stairs, and there our Cradock lies, not a bit worse
than he was; if anything, a little better; and his
faithful little Wena with him: she wonʼt leave
him, night or day, dear. Give me your hand, Amy.
Why, I declare, it is rather dark, when you get too
far from the windows! Madam, come in with us<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>But Eliza Ducksacre, though little versed in
mintage, and taking pig–rings for halfpence, knew
when her presence had better be absence, as well
as a sleeping partner does at the associationʼs
bankruptcy. So, after showing them up to the
door, she slipped away into the side–cupboard
which Mr. Rosedew had called a “sitting–room.”</p>
<p>Then John took Amyʼs bonnet off (after ruining
the strings), and stroked her pretty hair down, and
took her young cheeks in his hands, and begged
her not to tremble so, because she would quite upset
him. Only she might cry a little, if she thought
it would do her good. But when she put her hand
up, and gave a dry sob only, the father led her
very tenderly into the little chamber.</p>
<p>It was a wretched little room, like a casual
pauperʼs home, when he gets one, only much
lower and smaller. Amy took all of it in at a
glance, for in matters of that sort a womanʼs perception
is, when compared to a manʼs, as forked
lightning compared to a blunt dessert fork.</p>
<p>She even knew why the bed was awry; which
her father could sooner have written ten scolia
than discover. The bed was placed so because
poor Cradock, jumping up all of a sudden in an
early stage of illness, and before his head grew
soft, had knocked a great piece of plaster away
from the projecting hip–beam.</p>
<p>Now Craddy was looking away from them,
sitting up in the sack–cloth bed, and trying with
the sage gravity of fixed hallucination to read some<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
lines which his fancy had written on the glazed
dirt that served for a window. That window perhaps
pronounced itself more by candlelight than
by daylight, and the landlord had forbidden any
attempt at cleaning it, because he knew that the
frame would drop out. Two candles, the residue
of two pounds which Mr. Rosedew had paid for,
only helped to interpret the squalid room more
forcibly.</p>
<p>While Amy stood there, shocked and frightened,
and her father was thinking what to say, the poor
sick fellow turned towards them, and his eyes met
hers. She saw that the tint of her loverʼs eyes
was gone from a beautiful deep grey to the tone
of a withered oak–leaf, the pupils forthstanding
haggardly, the whites dull and chased with blood
veins, the sockets marked with a cloudy blue, and
channeled with storms of sorrow; the countenance
full of long suffering—gaunt, and wan, and weary.</p>
<p>Amy could not weep, but gazed, never thinking
anything, with all the love and pity, devotion and
faith eternal, which are sure to shine in a womanʼs
eyes when trouble strikes its light there. How
different from the shy maidʼs glance which, only a
month or two ago, would have met his youthful
overtures! And how infinitely grander! Something
of the good All–Fatherʼs power and mercy
in it.</p>
<p>She kept her eyes upon him. She had no power
to move them. And they changed exactly as his
did. The pale glance wandering into her gaze,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
with an appealing submissive motion, eager to
settle somewhere, but too faint to ask for sympathy,
began to feel its way and fasten, began to
quiver with vibrant light and sense of resting somewhere,
began to quicken, flush, and deepen—from
what fountain God only knows—then to waver
and suffuse (in feeble consciousness of grief),
retire and return again, fluttering to some remembered
home, as a bird in the dark comes to his
nest; then to thrill, and beam, and sparkle with
the light, the life, the love.</p>
<p>So with a weak but joyful cry, like a shipwrecked
man at his hearth again, he stretched out
both his wasted arms, and Amy was there without
knowing it. She laid his white cheek on her
shoulder, and let her hair flow over it; she held
him up with her own pure breast, till his worn
heart beat on her warm one. Then she sobbed,
and laughed, and sobbed, and called him her world,
and heart, and heaven, and kissed his nestling
forehead, and looked, and asked, oh, where the
love was. All she begged for was one word, just
one little word, if you please, to know who was to
come to comfort him. Oh, he must know her—of
course he must—wouldnʼt she know him, that
was all, though she hadnʼt a breath of life left?
His own, his faith, his truth, his love—his own—let
him say who, and she never would cry again.
Only say it once, his own—</p>
<p>“Amy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>!”</p>
<p>“Yes, your Amy, Amy, Amy. Say it again,
oh! say it again, my poor everlasting love!”</p>
<p>Suddenly the barriers of his frozen grief were
loosened. With a feeble arm staying on her,
although it could not cling to her, he burst into a
flood of tears, from the fountain of great waters
whose source and home is God.</p>
<p>Then John, who had stood at the door all the
time, with his white head bowed on his coat–sleeve,
came forward and took a hand of each, knelt by
the bed, and gave thanks. They wanted not to
talk of it, nor any doctor to tell them. Because
they had an angelʼs voice, that God would be
gracious to them.</p>
<p>“Darlings, didnʼt I tell you,” said Amy, looking
up at them, with her rich curls tear–bespangled,
like a young grape–leaf in the vinery; “donʼt
you know that I was sure our Father would never
forsake us; and that even a simple thing like me
might fetch back my own blessing? Oh, you
never would have loved me so; only God knew
it was good for us.”</p>
<p>While she spoke, Cradock looked at her with a
faint far–off intelligence, not entering into her
arguments. He only cared to hear her voice; to
see her every now and then; and touch her to
make sure of it; then to dream that it was an
angel; then to wake and be very glad that it was
not, but was Amy.</p>
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