<h3 align="center">CHAPTER XII</h3><br/><br/>
<p>Bass was no sooner in Cleveland than the marvel of
that growing city was sufficient to completely
restore his equanimity of soul and to stir up new illusions
as to the possibility of rehabilitation for himself and his
family. "If only they could come here," he thought.
"If only they could all get work and do right." Here
was no evidence of any of their recent troubles, no acquaintances
who could suggest by their mere presence
the troubles of the past. All was business, all activity.
The very turning of the corner seemed to rid one of old
times and crimes. It was as if a new world existed in
every block.</p>
<p>He soon found a place in a cigar store, and, after working
a few weeks, he began to write home the cheering
ideas he had in mind. Jennie ought to come as soon as
she was able, and then, if she found something to do,
the others might follow. There was plenty of work for
girls of her age. She could live in the same house with
him temporarily; or maybe they could take one of the
fifteen-dollar-a-month cottages that were for rent.
There were big general furnishing houses, where one could
buy everything needful for a small house on very easy
monthly terms. His mother could come and keep house
for them. They would be in a clean, new atmosphere,
unknown and untalked about. They could start life all
over again; they could be decent, honorable, prosperous.</p>
<p>Filled with this hope and the glamor which new scenes
and new environment invariably throw over the unsophisticated
mind, he wrote a final letter, in which he
suggested that Jennie should come at once. This was
when the baby was six months old. There were theaters
here, he said, and beautiful streets. Vessels from the
lakes came into the heart of the city. It was a wonderful
city, and growing very fast. It was thus that the new
life appealed to him.</p>
<p>The effect which all this had upon Mrs. Gerhardt,
Jennie, and the rest of the family was phenomenal. Mrs.
Gerhardt, long weighed upon by the misery which Jennie's
error had entailed, was for taking measures for
carrying out this plan at once. So buoyant was her
natural temperament that she was completely carried
away by the glory of Cleveland, and already saw fulfilled
therein not only her own desires for a nice home, but the
prosperous advancement of her children. "Of course
they could get work," she said. Bass was right. She
had always wanted Gerhardt to go to some large city,
but he would not. Now it was necessary, and they
would go and become better off than they ever had been.</p>
<p>And Gerhardt did take this view of the situation. In
answer to his wife's letter he wrote that it was not advisable
for him to leave his place, but if Bass saw a way
for them, it might be a good thing to go. He was the
more ready to acquiesce in the plan for the simple reason
that he was half distracted with the worry of supporting
the family and of paying the debts already outstanding.
Every week he laid by five dollars out of his salary, which
he sent in the form of a postal order to Mrs. Gerhardt.
Three dollars he paid for board, and fifty cents he kept
for spending money, church dues, a little tobacco and
occasionally a glass of beer. Every week he put a dollar
and a half in a little iron bank against a rainy day. His
room was a bare corner in the topmost loft of the mill.
To this he would ascend after sitting alone on the doorstep
of the mill in this lonely, foresaken neighborhood,
until nine o'clock of an evening; and here, amid the
odor of machinery wafted up from the floor below, by the
light of a single tallow candle, he would conclude his
solitary day, reading his German paper, folding his hands
and thinking, kneeling by an open window in the shadow
of the night to say his prayers, and silently stretching
himself to rest. Long were the days, dreary the prospect.
Still he lifted his hands in utmost faith to God,
praying that his sins might be forgiven and that he
might be vouchsafed a few more years of comfort and of
happy family life.</p>
<p>So the momentous question was finally decided. There
was the greatest longing and impatience among the
children, and Mrs. Gerhardt shared their emotions in a
suppressed way. Jennie was to go first, as Bass had
suggested; later on they would all follow.</p>
<p>When the hour came for Jennie's departure there was
great excitement in the household.</p>
<p>"How long you going to be 'fore you send for us?" was
Martha's inquiry, several times repeated.</p>
<p>"Tell Bass to hurry up," said the eager George.</p>
<p>"I want to go to Cleveland, I want to go to Cleveland,"
Veronica was caught singing to herself.</p>
<p>"Listen to her," exclaimed George, sarcastically.</p>
<p>"Aw, you hush up," was her displeased rejoinder.</p>
<p>When the final hour came, however, it required all of
Jennie's strength to go through with the farewells.
Though everything was being done in order to bring
them together again under better conditions, she could
not help feeling depressed. Her little one, now six
months old, was being left behind. The great world
was to her one undiscovered bourne. It frightened
her.</p>
<p>"You mustn't worry, Ma," she found courage enough
to say. "I'll be all right. I'll write you just as soon as
I get there. It won't be so very long."</p>
<p>But when it came to bending over her baby for the
last time her courage went out like a blown lamp.
Stooping over the cradle in which the little one was resting,
she looked into its face with passionate, motherly
yearning.</p>
<p>"Is it going to be a good little girl?" she cooed.</p>
<p>Then she caught it up into her arms, and hugging it
closely to her neck and bosom, she buried her face against
its little body. Mrs. Gerhardt saw that she was trembling.</p>
<p>"Come now," she said, coaxingly, "you mustn't carry
on so. She will be all right with me. I'll take care of
her. If you're going to act this way, you'd better not
try to go at all."</p>
<p>Jennie lifted her head, her blue eyes wet with tears,
and handed the little one to her mother.</p>
<p>"I can't help it," she said, half crying, half smiling.</p>
<p>Quickly she kissed her mother and the children; then
she hurried out.</p>
<p>As she went down the street with George she looked
back and bravely waved her hand. Mrs. Gerhardt
responded, noticing how much more like a woman she
looked. It had been necessary to invest some of her
money in new clothes to wear on the train. She had
selected a neat, ready-made suit of brown, which fitted
her nicely. She wore the skirt of this with a white shirt-waist,
and a sailor hat with a white veil wound around it
in such fashion that it could be easily drawn over her
face. As she went farther and farther away Mrs. Gerhardt
followed her lovingly with her glance; and when
she disappeared from view she said tenderly, through
her own tears:</p>
<p>"I'm glad she looked so nice, anyhow."</p>
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