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<h2> CHAPTER VII. — “WHAT A LITTLE SCHEMER IT IS.” </h2>
<p>A riot! Not among men, which is sufficiently terrifying; nor yet among
women, which is worse; but that most awful of all sights and sounds of
sin,—a riot among the children. Swearing, spitting at one another,
tearing one another's hair, scratching like tigers, growling like wild
beasts, throwing garbage at one another! This was the sort of crowd upon
which Mrs. Roberts, in her black silk walking-suit, with her velvet hat
and seal furs, presently came. She grasped at Dick's arm in horror, but a
feeling that was more than terror was taking her strength away.</p>
<p>“Oh!” she said, and the agony in her voice really suggested more than
terror to the young fellow beside her. “And they are little children! They
cannot be more than seven or eight! Oh, what can I do?”</p>
<p>“You needn't be scared, mum!” There was a little hint of something like
pity in Dick's voice. She clung to him so that he could not help feeling
himself her protector. “It ain't an uncommon row at all; they mostly act
like this; most likely one of 'em's found a bone and t' other one wants
it, and then they're gone in for a row, and all the young ones crowd
around and fight, on one side or t' other.”</p>
<p>Did this fearful explanation make the situation less terrible?</p>
<p>There was a lull, however, in the quarrel. The elegantly-dressed lady was
seen approaching,—an unusual sight in that alley,—and both
parties paused to get a view. Paused in their attentions to each other,
that is; but at Mrs. Roberts they hooted and jeered, and one threw a
handful of mud.</p>
<p>Then did Nimble Dick rise to his position as protector.</p>
<p>“Shut up, there! Stand aside, Pluck, and let us pass! Look out there, you
Smirchy! Don't you throw that over here unless you want your head broke
for you when I get back!”</p>
<p>This threat was thrown at a wretched little girl, who had dived her hand
deeply into a box or cask of garbage, and brought it forth reeking with
rotten apples, pork fat, and any liquid horror which the name suggests to
you. She had her hand uplifted ready to throw, and was evidently intending
to give the strange lady the benefit of what she had prepared for one of
the rioters.</p>
<p>The assured tone in which Nimble Dick spoke had its effect; the combatants
were all small, and he was large, and was evidently recognized as a power.
There were some defiant glances thrown at him, but the motley crowd gave
way, and allowed him to pass uninjured. Still he kept an alert watch of
them until quite out of reach, and was not sparing of his admonitions.</p>
<p>“Hold on there, Bill,—I see that! Look out, Sally! You'll be sorry
if you throw anything,—mind you that!”</p>
<p>And at last they were through the crowd. Not out of danger, it seemed; for
there, directly in their narrow path, was a drunken man, swaying from side
to side in the way which is so terrible to one unused to such sights. Dick
felt the hold on his arm tighten, and was astonished at the sound of his
own voice as he said, soothingly:—</p>
<p>“You needn't be scared at him, mum; that's only old Jock; he's as ugly as
old Nick himself, but he knows better than to be very ugly to me. I can
throw him in the gutter as easy as I could them young ones, and he knows
it. That's Dirk's father, that is! Ain't he a beauty?”</p>
<p>And again Mrs. Roberts uttered an exclamation of dismay, and part of her
terror went out in sorrow over the wrongs of a boy who had such a home and
such a father. What ought to be expected of him?</p>
<p>That interminable alley was conquered at last, and they emerged into
respectability on the broad avenue. Mrs. Roberts released her hold of her
protector's arm, and his new character vanished on the instant.</p>
<p>“You're here, mum,” he said, with a saucy twinkle in his eye and a saucy
leer on his face. “Can you get yourself home from this spot, or shall I
borrow a wheelbarrow and tote you there?”</p>
<p>Much shaken with various emotions though she was, Mrs. Roberts forced
herself to laugh. She would not frown on his fun when it was not
positively sinful; he might not be aware that it was disrespectful; he
might never have heard the word.</p>
<p>“I know the way now, thank you; at least I think I do. Can you tell me
whether I take a green car or a yellow one to get to East Fifty-fifth
Street?”</p>
<p>“You take a green one,” he said, quietly, his character of protector
having returned to him with the question, which still showed her
dependence on him.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” she said again, with great heartiness. “I shall never forget
your care of me.” Her hand was in her pocket, and a bright coin was
between her fingers. She longed to give it to Nimble Dick; he had saved
her from so much this morning. And he was so miserably clad, surely he
needed help. A moment's reflection, and she resolutely withdrew her hand.
He should be paid by a simple hearty, “Thank you!” this morning, for
kindness rendered. He might not consider it a current coin, but possibly
it would be his first lesson in the courtesies of life.</p>
<p>Later in the day, when Mrs. Roberts was somewhat rested from her morning's
campaign, young Ried received a little note:—</p>
<p>Dear Mr. Ried,—I know the names of all the boys, and inclose you a
list. It is possible that you may fall in with some one during the day who
can impart knowledge concerning them. Anyway, I thought you would like to
know their names. Keep me posted, please, as to your success in making
their acquaintance. We are allies, remember.</p>
<p>Yours for the Master,</p>
<p>Mrs. E.L. Roberts.</p>
<p>Alfred Ried twisted the delicate note-paper thoughtfully in his hand, a
look of perplexity on his face. He felt committed for labor; glad was he,
very, yet perplexed. He did not in the least know where to commence. Well,
neither had this little lady; yet she had accomplished more in her one
day's acquaintance than he after a lapse of weeks. Either she had found
opportunities, or had made them. There must be chances; he would be sure
to keep his eyes open after this.</p>
<p>In the handsome house on East Fifty-fifth Street, where Mr. Roberts had
settled his bride, after a somewhat extended business tour, involving
months of absence, matters were in train for a cosy evening in the
library. That was the name of the beautiful room where the husband and
wife sat down together; but it was quite unlike the conventional library.
Books there were in lavish abundance, but there were also pictures and
flowers and a singing-bird or two, and an utter absence of that severe
attention to business details which characterizes most rooms so named.
Little prettinesses, which Mr. Roberts smilingly admitted did not belong
to a library, were yet established there, with an air of having come to
stay. “We will call it the library for convenience,” the master of the
house said, “and then we will put into it whatever we please. It shall be
a conservatory, and a sewing-room and a lounging-room and anything else
that you and I choose to make it.” And Mrs. Roberts gleefully assented,
and gave free rein to her pretty tastes. Flossy Shipley had been wont to
be much trammelled with the ways in which “they” did everything; but Mrs.
Evan Roberts was learning that, in unimportant matters at least, they had
a right to be a law unto themselves. Perhaps it helped her, to be aware
that a large class of people were all ready to quote “Mrs. Evan Roberts”
as authority on almost any point of taste.</p>
<p>On the evening in question Mr. Roberts, in dressing-gown and slippers, had
drawn his lounging-chair to the drop-light, preparatory to a half-hour of
reading aloud. But it transpired that there was something preparatory to
that, or at least that must take the precedence. Certain business
telegrams followed him home, which required the writing of two or three
business letters.</p>
<p>“It will not take me long,” he explained to his wife, “and they are not
complicated affairs, so I give you leave to talk right on while I dispatch
them.” She laughed at this hint about her fondness for talk, but presently
made use of the privilege.</p>
<p>“Evan, what sort of a young man do you consider Mr. Ried?”</p>
<p>“Ried? Who? Oh, my clerk? The very best sort; a most estimable fellow,—one
of a thousand. By the way, did you tell him how you became interested in
that sister of his?”</p>
<p>“Not yet; I want to get better acquainted. But, Evan, do you know where he
boards?”</p>
<p>“Hardly; on Third Avenue somewhere, I believe; or possibly Second. The
store register would show. Do you want his address!”</p>
<p>“Oh, I know <i>where</i> it is; but I mean what sort of a place is it?”</p>
<p>Mr. Roberts slightly elevated his shapely shoulders.</p>
<p>“It is a boarding-house, where many clerks board; that tells a doleful
story to the initiated, I suspect. Poor fare and dismal surroundings;
still, it is eminently respectable.”</p>
<p>“Where does he spend his Sabbaths?”</p>
<p>The rapidly-moving pen executed nearly two lines of handsome writing
before Mr. Roberts was ready to respond to this question.</p>
<p>“Why, at church, principally, I fancy. He is very regular in his
attendance at morning service, and the South End Mission absorbs his
afternoons. I suppose he goes to church in the evening; but since we have
been giving our attention to that evening mission I have not seen him.”</p>
<p>“Ah, but, Evan, I mean the rest of the time; those little bits of Sabbath
time that are sacred to home. The twilight, for instance, or for an hour
in the morning. Do you know what sort of a place he has for those times?”</p>
<p>Nearly three more lines added to the paper; then Mr. Roberts raised his
head:—</p>
<p>“No, my dear, I don't. Now that you bring me face to face with the
question, it seems a surprising thing to say that I should not know where
a young man who has been for more than a year in our employ spends his
choice bits of time, but I don't.”</p>
<p>“Then I want to tell you something about it. He has a dingy, fourth-story
back room; small, I fancy, from the way in which he spoke of it, and not a
speck of fire over! In such weather as this, how can a young man read his
Bible, or even pray, under such circumstances?”</p>
<p>Mr. Roberts laid down his pen and sat erect, regarding his wife with a
thoughtful, far-away air.</p>
<p>“Flossy,” he said at last, “it is an immense question! You open a perfect
mine of anxiety and doubt. I have hovered around the edges for some time,
but have generally contrived to shut my eyes and refuse to look into it,
because I was afraid of what I might see; and because I did not know—what
to do with my knowledge. I have not been the working member of the firm
very long, you know, and my special field, until lately, has been the
other side of the ocean; but I have been at home long enough to know that
there are several hundred young men in our employ who are away from their
homes; and knowing, as I do, the price of board in respectable houses, and
knowing the salaries which the younger ones receive, it does not require a
great deal of penetration to discover that they must have rather dreary
homes here, to put it mildly. The fact is, Flossy, I haven't wanted to
look into this thing very closely, because I do not see the remedy. Look
at our house, for instance, with its three hundred clerks, we'll say, who
are away from their friends; suppose one-half, or even one-third, of them
are miserably situated, what can I do?”</p>
<p>“Are they not sufficiently well paid to have the ordinary comforts of
life?”</p>
<p>“Doubtful. The truth is, what you and I call the ordinary comforts of life
takes a good deal of money; and in the city, rents are high, and the
boarding-house keepers have hard struggles to make their expenditures meet
their income, and they carry economy to the very verge of meanness,—some
of them fairly over the verge, I presume; and the result is cheap food,
badly cooked,—because well-cooked food means high-priced help,—and
cold rooms and dreariness and discomfort everywhere. Now what can be done
about it? Then our house is only one of hundreds, and in many of these
hundreds they employ more help and give less wages than we; in fact, I
know that some of our clerks are looked upon with envy by a great many
young men. We never have any trouble in supplying vacancies. People swarm
around us, because we have the reputation of being liberal. We are not
liberal, however; sometimes I am inclined to think we are hardly fair, yet
there is nothing I can do. I am a junior partner, with a great deal of the
responsibility, and a third of the voting power, and I can't get salaries
raised. I've been working at that problem at intervals for a year, and
have accomplished very little. Do you wonder that I keep my eyes as
closely shut as I can?”</p>
<p>His wife's face wore a thoughtful, not to say perplexed look; she seemed
to have no answer ready; and, after waiting a moment for it, Mr. Roberts
bent himself again to the task of getting his business letters answered.
Before he had written one more line, her face had cleared. She interrupted
him:—</p>
<p>“Evan, when you talk about four hundred clerks, and multiply that by
hundreds of houses and more hundreds of clerks, I cannot follow you at
all. It is not that I am not impressed with the number,—I am,—it
appalls me; but I don't want to be appalled; I want to be helpful. Perhaps
just now there is nothing that I can do for the hundreds, so I want to
narrow my thoughts down to what, possibly, I can do. What, for instance,
can be done towards getting a good young man, like Alfred Ried, into a
place that will be just a little bit like a home; that will give him a
spot where he can study his Bible in comfort, and invite a friend with
whom he wants to pray, or whom he wants to reach and help in any way? That
isn't a huge problem. Can't it be solved?”</p>
<p>Her husband smiled.</p>
<p>“He is only one of thousands,” he said.</p>
<p>“Yes, I know; but he is <i>one</i> of thousands. Since we cannot reach
thousands, shall we fail to reach one? Evan, I am only one of thousands,
but, but how would you argue about me?”</p>
<p>Mr. Roberts laughed again.</p>
<p>“You are one out of thousands and thousands!” he said, emphatically.</p>
<p>A line more, and he signed the firm name with an unusually fine flourish.</p>
<p>“There! I've accomplished one letter. What do you want to do, Flossy?”</p>
<p>“I want Mr. Ried to have a room where he can invite one of my boys
occasionally, and make him comfortable, and do for him what we cannot with
our rooms; do for him what only a young man can do for a young man. I
don't clearly know what I want further than that, but I see that one thing
as a stepping-stone. Remember, I want all your thousands to have just as
pleasant rooms, and I would like to help to bring it about, but I don't
just now see the way.”</p>
<p>“Do you see the way to this?”</p>
<p>“No, but doesn't it seem as though we ought to be able to accomplish so
much?”</p>
<p>“It does, certainly. What is your desire, Flossy? Do you want him to have
a room in our house?”</p>
<p>She shook her head.</p>
<p>“No, that would not further my plan for those boys. I would like to have
him here, and it would be a good thing for him,—at least I think it
would; but I can see things which he could accomplish for these young men,
set by himself, in a different part of the city. Besides, Evan, I have
other plans for our rooms, entirely different ones, and some of them I am
afraid you will think are very strange.”</p>
<p>He answered the doubt with a smile that said he had no fears of her or her
plans.</p>
<p>“What a little schemer it is!” he said, looking down on her with fond,
proud eyes. “Who would have imagined that she could plot, and plot so
mysteriously? I used to think she was a very open-hearted woman.”</p>
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