Restless, shifting, fugacious
as time itself is a certain
vast bulk
of the population of the red
brick district of the lower
West Side.
Homeless, they have a hundred
homes.
They flit from furnished room
to furnished room,
transients forever - transients
in abode, transients in heart
and mind.
They sing "Home, Sweet
Home" in ragtime;
they carry their lares et
penates in a bandbox;
their vine is entwined about
a picture hat; a rubber plant
is their fig tree.
Hence the houses of this district,
having had a thousand dwellers,
should have a thousand tales
to tell, mostly dull ones, no
doubt; but
it would be strange if there
could not be found a ghost or
two in the
wake of all these vagrant guests.
One evening after dark a young
man prowled among these crumbling
red mansions, ringing their
bells. At the twelfth he rested
his lean
hand-baggage upon the step and
wiped the dust from his hatband
and
forehead. The bell sounded faint
and far away in some remote,
hollow
depths.
To the door of this, the twelfth
house whose bell he had rung,
came
a housekeeper who made him think
of an unwholesome, surfeited
worm
that had eaten its nut to a
hollow shell and now sought
to fill the
vacancy with edible lodgers.
He asked if there was a room
to let.
"Come in," said the
housekeeper. Her voice came
from her throat; her
throat seemed lined with fur.
"I have the third floor
back, vacant
since a week back. Should you
wish to look at it?"
The young man followed her up
the stairs. A faint light from
no
particular source mitigated
the shadows of the halls. They
trod
noiselessly upon a stair carpet
that its own loom would have
forsworn. It seemed to have
become vegetable; to have degenerated
in
that rank, sunless air to lush
lichen or spreading moss that
grew in
patches to the staircase and
was viscid under the foot like
organic
matter. At each turn of the
stairs were vacant niches in
the wall.
Perhaps plants had once been
set within them. If so they
had died in
that foul and tainted air. It
may be that statues of the saints
had
stood there, but it was not
difficult to conceive that imps
and
devils had dragged them forth
in the darkness and down to
the unholy
depths of some furnished pit
below.
"This is the room,"
said the housekeeper, from her
furry throat.
"It's a nice room. It ain't
often vacant. I had some most
elegant
people in it last summer--no
trouble at all, and paid in
advance to
the minute. The water's at the
end of the hall. Sprowls and
Mooney
kept it three months. They done
a vaudeville sketch. Miss B'retta
Sprowls--you may have heard
of her--Oh, that was just the
stage names
--right there over the dresser
is where the marriage certificate
hung, framed. The gas is here,
and you see there is plenty
of closet
room. It's a room everybody
likes. It never stays idle long."
"Do you have many theatrical
people rooming here?" asked
the young
man.
"They comes and goes. A
good proportion of my lodgers
is connected
with the theatres. Yes sir,
this is the theatrical district.
Actor people
never stays long anywhere. I
get my share. Yes, they come
and they goes."
He engaged the room, paying
for a week in advance. He was
tired, he
said, and would take possession
at once. He counted out the
money.
The room had been made ready,
she said, even to towels and
water. As
the housekeeper moved away he
put, for the thousandth time,
the
question that he carried at
the end of his tongue.
"A young girl--Miss Vashner--Miss
Eloise Vashner--do you remember
such a one among your lodgers?
She would be singing on the
stage,
most likely. A fair girl, of
medium height and slender, with
reddish, gold hair and a dark
mole near her left eyebrow."
"No, I don't remember the
name. Them stage people has
names they
change as often as their rooms.
They comes and they goes. No,
I
don't call that one to mind."
No. Always no. Five months of
ceaseless interrogation and
the
inevitable negative. So much
time spent by day in questioning
managers, agents, schools and
choruses; by night among the
audiences
of theatres from all-star casts
down to music halls so low that
he
dreaded to find what he most
hoped for. He who had loved
her best
had tried to find her. He was
sure that since her disappearance
from
home this great, water-girt
city held her somewhere, but
it was like
a monstrous quicksand, shifting
its particles constantly, with
no
foundation, its upper granules
of to-day buried to-morrow in
ooze and
slime.
The furnished room received
its latest guest with a first
glow of
pseudo-hospitality, a hectic,
haggard, perfunctory welcome
like the
specious smile of a demirep.
The sophistical comfort came
in
reflected gleams from the decayed
furniture, the raggcd brocade
upholstery of a couch and two
chairs, a footwide cheap pier
glass
between the two windows, from
one or two gilt picture frames
and a
brass bedstead in a corner.
The guest reclined, inert, upon
a chair, while the room, confused
in
speech as though it were an
apartment in Babel, tried to
discourse to
him of its divers tenantry.
A polychromatic rug like some
brilliant-flowered rectangular,
tropical islet lay surrounded
by a billowy sea of soiled matting.
Upon the gay-papered wall were
those pictures that pursue the
homeless one from house to house--The
Huguenot Lovers, The First
Quarrel, The Wedding Breakfast,
Psyche at the Fountain. The
mantel's
chastely severe outline was
ingloriously veiled behind some
pert
drapery drawn rakishly askew
like the sashes of the Amazonian
ballet.
Upon it was some desolate flotsam
cast aside by the room's marooned
when a lucky sail had borne
them to a fresh port--a trifling
vase or
two, pictures of actresses,
a medicine bottle, some stray
cards out
of a deck.
One by one, as the characters
of a cryptograph become explicit,
the
little signs left by the furnished
room's procession of guests
developed a significance. The
threadbare space in the rug
in front
of the dresser told that lovely
woman had marched in the throng.
Tiny finger prints on the wall
spoke of little prisoners trying
to
feel their way to sun and air.
A splattered stain, raying like
the
shadow of a bursting bomb, witnessed
where a hurled glass or bottle
had splintered with its contents
against the wall. Across the
pier
glass had been scrawled with
a diamond in staggering letters
the name
"Marie." It seemed
that the succession of dwellers
in the furnished
room had turned in fury--perhaps
tempted beyond forbearance by
its
garish coldness--and wreaked
upon it their passions. The
furniture
was chipped and bruised; the
couch, distorted by bursting
springs,
seemed a horrible monster that
had been slain during the stress
of
some grotesque convulsion. Some
more potent upheaval had cloven
a
great slice from the marble
mantel. Each plank in the floor
owned
its particular cant and shriek
as from a separate and individual
agony. It seemed incredible
that all this malice and injury
had been
wrought upon the room by those
who had called it for a time
their
home; and yet it may have been
the cheated home instinct surviving
blindly, the resentful rage
at false household gods that
had kindled
their wrath. A hut that is our
own we can sweep and adorn and
cherish.
The young tenant in the chair
allowed these thoughts to file,
soft-
shod, through his mind, while
there drifted into the room
furnished
sounds and furnished scents.
He heard in one room a tittering
and
incontinent, slack laughter;
in others the monologue of a
scold, the
rattling of dice, a lullaby,
and one crying dully; above
him a banjo
tinkled with spirit. Doors banged
somewhere; the elevated trains
roared intermittently; a cat
yowled miserably upon a back
fence. And
he breathed the breath of the
house--a dank savour rather
than a smell
--a cold, musty effluvium as
from underground vaults mingled
with the
reeking exhalations of linoleum
and mildewed and rotten woodwork.
Then, suddenly, as he rested
there, the room was filled with
the
strong, sweet odour of mignonette.
It came as upon a single buffet
of wind with such sureness and
fragrance and emphasis that
it almost
seemed a living visitant. And
the man cried aloud: "What,
dear?" as
if he had been called, and sprang
up and faced about. The rich
odour
clung to him and wrapped him
around. He reached out his arms
for it,
all his senses for the time
confused and commingled. How
could one
be peremptorily called by an
odour? Surely it must have been
a
sound. But, was it not the sound
that had touched, that had caressed
him?
"She has been in this room,"
he cried, and he sprang to wrest
from it
a token, for he knew he would
recognize the smallest thing
that had
belonged to her or that she
had touched. This enveloping
scent of
mignonette, the odour that she
had loved and made her own--whence
came it?
The room had been but carelessly
set in order. Scattered upon
the
flimsy dresser scarf were half
a dozen hairpins--those discreet,
indistinguishable friends of
womankind, feminine of gender,
infinite
of mood and uncommunicative
of tense. These he ignored,
conscious of
their triumphant lack of identity.
Ransacking the drawers of the
dresser he came upon a discarded,
tiny, ragged handkerchief. He
pressed it to his face. It was
racy and insolent with heliotrope;
he
hurled it to the floor.
In another drawer he found odd
buttons, a
theatre programme, a pawnbroker's
card, two lost marshmallows,
a book
on the divination of dreams.
In the last was a woman's black
satin
hair bow, which halted him,
poised between ice and fire.
But the
black satin hairbow also is
femininity's demure, impersonal,
common
ornament, and tells no tales.
And then he traversed the room
like a hound on the scent, skimming
the walls, considering the corners
of the bulging matting on his
hands and knees, rummaging mantel
and tables, the curtains and
hangngs, the drunken cabinet
in the corner, for a visible
sign,
unable to perceive that she
was there beside, around, against,
within, above him, clinging
to him, wooing him, calling
him so
poignantly through the finer
senses that even his grosser
ones became
cognisant of the call.
Once again he answered loudly:
"Yes, dear!"
and turned, wild-eyed, to gaze
on vacancy, for he could not
yet
discern form and colour and
love and outstretched arms in
the odour
of mignonette. Oh, God! whence
that odour, and since when have
odours had a voice to call?
Thus he groped.
He burrowed in crevices and
corners, and found corks and
cigarettes.
These he passed in passive contempt.
But once he found in a fold
of
the matting a half-smoked cigar,
and this he ground beneath his
heel
with a green and trenchant oath.
He sifted the room from end
to end.
He found dreary and ignoble
small records of many a peripatetic
tenant; but of her whom he sought,
and who may have lodged there,
and
whose spirit seemed to hover
there, he found no trace.
And then he thought of the housekeeper.
He ran from the haunted room
downstairs and to a door that
showed a
crack of light. She came out
to his knock. He smothered his
excitement as best he could.
"Will you tell me, madam,"
he besought her, "who occupied
the room I
have before I came?"
"Yes, sir. I can tell you
again. 'Twas Sprowls and Mooney,
as I
said. Miss B'retta Sprowls it
was in the theatres, but Missis
Mooney
she was. My house is well known
for respectability. The marriage
certificate hung, framed, on
a nail over--"
"What kind of a lady was
Miss Sprowls--in looks, I mean?"
Why, black-haired, sir, short,
and stout, with a comical face.
They
left a week ago Tuesday."
"And before they occupied
it?"
"Why, there was a single
gentleman connected with the
draying
business. He left owing me a
week. Before him was Missis
Crowder
and her two children, that stayed
four months; and back of them
was
old Mr. Doyle, whose sons paid
for him. He kept the room six
months.
That goes back a year, sir,
and further I do not remember."
He thanked her and crept back
to his room. The room was dead.
The
essence that had vivified it
was gone. The perfume of mignonette
had
departed. In its place was the
old, stale odour of mouldy house
furniture, of atmosphere in
storage.
The ebbing of his hope drained
his faith. He sat staring at
the
yellow, singing gaslight. Soon
he walked to the bed and began
to
tear the sheets into strips.
With the blade of his knife
he drove
them tightly into every crevice
around windows and door. When
all
was snug and taut he turned
out the light, turned the gas
full on
again and laid himself gratefully
upon the bed.
It was Mrs. McCool's night to
go with the can for beer. So
she
fetched it and sat with Mrs.
Purdy in one of those subterranean
retreats where house-keepers
foregather and the worm dieth
seldom.
"I rented out my third
floor, back, this evening,"
said Mrs. Purdy,
across a fine circle of foam.
"A young man took it. He
went up to
bed two hours ago."
"Now, did ye, Mrs. Purdy,
ma'am?" said Mrs. McCool,
with intense
admiration. "You do be
a wonder for rentin' rooms of
that kind. And
did ye tell him, then?"
she concluded in a husky whisper,
laden with
mystery.
"Rooms," said Mrs.
Purdy, in her furriest tones,
"are furnished for
to rent. I did not tell him,
Mrs. McCool."
"'Tis right ye are, ma'am;
'tis by renting rooms we kape
alive. Ye
have the rale sense for business,
ma'am. There be many people
will
rayjict the rentin' of a room
if they be tould a suicide has
been
after dyin' in the bed of it."
"As you say, we has our
living to be making," remarked
Mrs. Purdy.
"Yis, ma'am; 'tis true.
'Tis just one wake ago this
day I helped ye
lay out the third floor, back.
A pretty slip of a colleen she
was to
be killin' herself wid the gas--a
swate little face she had, Mrs.
Purdy, ma'am."
"She'd a-been called handsome,
as you say," said Mrs.
Purdy,
assenting but critical, "but
for that mole she had a-growin'
by her
left eyebrow. Do fill up your
glass again, Mrs. McCool."
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