<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></SPAN></span> <SPAN name="viii" id="viii"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<p class="cap">HAVING once admitted hopelessness, it was humanly natural that they
should again hope that they hoped. For perhaps two weeks after the
Carters’ visit they pretended that the tea-room was open, and they did
have six or seven customers. But late in September Father got his
courage up, took out the family pen and bottle of ink, the tablet of
ruled stationery and a stamped-envelope, and wrote to Mr. J. Pilkings
that he wanted his shoe-store job back.</p>
<p>When he had mailed the letter he told Mother. She sighed and said, “Yes,
that is better, after all.”</p>
<p>An Indian summer of happiness came over them. They were going back to
security. Again Father played the mouth-organ a little, and they talked
of the familiar city places they would see. They would enjoy the
movies—weeks since they had seen a movie! And they would have, Father
chucklingly declared, “a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></SPAN></span> bang-up dinner at Bomberghof Terrace, with
music, and yes, by Jiminy! and cocktails!”</p>
<p>For a week he awaited an answer, waited anxiously, though he kept
reassuring himself that old Pilkings had promised to keep the job open
for him. He received a reply. But it was from Pilkings’s son. It
informed him that Pilkings, <em>père</em>, was rather ill, with grippe, and
that until he recovered “no action can be taken regarding your valued
proposition in letter of recent date.”</p>
<p>Bewildered, incredulous, Father had a flash of understanding that he,
who felt himself so young and fit, was already discarded.</p>
<p>Mother sat across the kitchen table from him, pretending to read the
<em>Grimsby Recorder</em>, but really watching him.</p>
<p>He held his forehead, looked dizzy, and let the letter slip from his
fingers. “I—uh—” he groaned. “I— Is there anything I can do for you
around the house?”</p>
<p>“Tell me—what did the letter say?”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mother, Mother, maybe I won’t get my job back at all! I honestly
don’t know what we can do.”</p>
<p>Running to her, he hid his face in her lap—he, the head of the family,
the imperturbable adventurer,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></SPAN></span> changed to a child. And Mother, she who
had always looked to him for inspiration, was indeed the mother now. She
stroked his cheek, she cried, “Never mind—’course you’ll get it back,
or a better one!” She made fun of his tousled hair till she had him
ruefully smiling. Her voice had a crisp briskness which it had lacked in
the days when she had brooded in the flat and waited for her man.</p>
<p>Father could not face another indefinite period of such inactivity as
had been sapping him all summer. He longed for the dusty drudgery of
Pilkings & Son’s; longed to be busy all day, and to bring home news—and
money—to Mother at night.</p>
<p>Aside from his personal desires, what were they going to do? They had
left, in actual money, less than fifty dollars.</p>
<p>Father did not become querulous, but day by day he became more dependent
on Mother’s cheer as October opened, as chilly rains began to shut them
in the house. When she was not busy, and he was not cutting wood or
forlornly pecking away at useless cleanings of the cold and empty
tea-room, they talked of what they would do. Father had wild plans of
dashing down to New York, of seeing young Pilkings,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></SPAN></span> of getting work in
some other shoe-store. But he knew very little about other stores. He
was not so much a shoe-clerk as a Pilkings clerk. It had been as
important a part of his duties, these many years, to know what to say to
Mr. Pilkings as to know what to show to customers. Surely when Pilkings,
senior, was well he would remember his offer to keep the job open.</p>
<p>Mother cautiously began to suggest her plan. She spoke fondly of their
daughter Lulu, of their grandson Harry, of how estimable and upright a
citizen was their son-in-law, Mr. Harris Hartwig of Saserkopee, New
York. As Father knew none of these suggestions to have any factual basis
whatever his clear little mind was bored by them. Then, after a stormy
evening when the fire was warm and they had cheered up enough to play
cribbage, Mother suddenly plumped out her plan—to go to Saserkopee and
live with daughter till something turned up.</p>
<p>Father shrank. He crouched in his chair, a wizened, frightened, unhappy,
oldish man. “No, no, no, no!” he cried. “She is a good girl, but she
would badger us to death. She wouldn’t let us do one single thing our
way. She always<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></SPAN></span> acts as though she wanted to make you all over, and I
love you the way you are. I’d rather get a job cooking on a fishing
schooner than do that.”</p>
<p>But he knew Mother’s way of sticking to an idea, and he began to
persuade himself that Saserkopee was a haven of refuge. Whenever they
seemed to be having a peaceful discussion of Lulu Hartwig’s
canary-yellow sweater, they were hearing her voice, wondering if they
could tolerate its twangy comments the rest of their lives.</p>
<p>If the weather was clear they sat out in the rose-arbor as though they
were soon to lose it. The roses were dead, now, but a bank of purple
asters glowed by the laurel-bushes, and in the garden plucky pansies
withstood the chill. They tried to keep up a pretense of happiness, but
always they were listening—listening.</p>
<p>There were two or three October days when the sea was blue and silver,
sharply and brightly outlined against the far skyline where the deep
blue heavens modulated to a filmy turquoise. Gulls followed the furrows
of the breakers. Father and Mother paced the edge of the cliff or sat
sun-refreshed in the beloved arbor.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></SPAN></span> Then a day of iron sea, cruelly
steel-bright on one side and sullenly black on the other, with broken
rolling clouds, and sand whisking along the dunes in shallow eddies;
rain coming and the breakers pounding in with a terrifying roar and the
menace of illimitable power. Father gathered piles of pine-knots for the
fire, whistling as he hacked at them with a dull hatchet—trimming them,
not because it was necessary, but because it gave him something
energetic to do. Whenever he came into the kitchen with an armful of
them he found Mother standing at the window, anxiously watching the
flurries of sand and rain.</p>
<p>“Be a fine night to sit by the fire,” he chirruped. “Guess we’ll get out
the old mouth-organ and have a little band-concert, admission five
bucks, eh?” Something of the old command was in his voice. Mother
actually needed his comfort against the black hours of storm!</p>
<p>Though they used a very prosaic stove for cooking, the old farm-house
fireplace still filled half the back of the kitchen, and this had become
the center of their house. Neither of them could abide the echoing
emptiness and shabby grandeur of the tea-room. Before the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></SPAN></span> fireplace
they sat, after a supper at which Father had made much of enjoying fish
chowder, though they had had it four times in eight days. Cheaper. And
very nourishing.</p>
<p>The shutters banged, sand crashed against the panes, rain leaked in a
steady drip down one corner of the room, and the sea smashed
unceasingly. But Father played “My Gal’s a High-born Lady” and “Any
Little Girl That’s a Nice Little Girl Is the Right Little Girl for Me,”
and other silly, cheerful melodies which even the hand-organs had
forgotten.</p>
<p>There was a sense of glaring mounting light through the window which
gave on the cliff.</p>
<p>“I wonder what that is,” Mother shuddered. “It’s like a big fire. I
declare it seems as though the whole world was coming to an end
to-night.” She turned from the window and shivered over the embers, in
her golden-oak rocker which Father had filled with cushions.</p>
<p>He kissed her boyishly and trotted over to the window. The fact that
they were alone against the elements, with no apartment-house full of
people to share the tumultuous night, weakened her, but delighted him.
He cried out, with a feeling of dramatic joy.</p>
<p>There was a fire below, on the beach, where<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></SPAN></span> there should be nothing but
sand and the terror of the storm. The outer edge of the cliff was
outlined by the light.</p>
<p>“It’s a wreck!” he whooped. “It’s the life-savers! Mother, I’m going
down. Maybe there’s something I can do. I want to do something again!
Maybe some poor devil coming ashore in the breeches buoy—help him
ashore— Don’t suppose I could row—”</p>
<p>He darted at the closet and yanked out his ineffectual city raincoat and
rubbers, and the dreary wreck of what had once been his pert new
vacation traveling-cap.</p>
<p>“No, no, don’t, please don’t!” Mother begged. “You couldn’t do anything,
and I don’t dast to go out—and I’m afraid to stay here alone.”</p>
<p>But Father was putting on his raincoat. “I’ll just run down and see—be
right back.”</p>
<p>“Don’t go a step farther than the top of the cliff,” she wailed.</p>
<p>He hesitated. He wanted, more than anything else in the world, to be in
the midst of heroic effort. The gods had set the stage for epic action
that night, and his spirit was big with desire for bigness. It was very
hard to promise to put goloshes upon his winged feet.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></SPAN></span>
But Mother held out her hands. “Oh, I need you, Seth. You’ll stay near
me, won’t you?”</p>
<p>There may have been lordly deeds in the surf that night—men gambling
their lives to save strangers and aliens. One deed there certainly
was—though the movies, which are our modern minstrelsy, will never
portray it. While he strained with longing to go down and show himself a
man—not just a scullion in an unsuccessful tea-room—Father stood on
the edge of the cliff and watched the life-savers launch the boat, saw
them disappear from the radius of the calcium carbide beach-light into
the spume of surf. He didn’t even wait to see them return. Mother needed
him, and he trotted back to tell her all about it.</p>
<p>They went happily to bed, and she slept with her head cuddled on his
left shoulder, his left arm protectingly about her.</p>
<p>It was still raining when they awoke, a weary, whining drizzle. And
Father was still virile with desire of heroism. He scampered out to see
what he could of the wreck.</p>
<p>He returned, suddenly. His voice was low and unhappy as he demanded,
“Oh, Mother, it’s— Come and see.”</p>
<p>He led her to the kitchen door and round the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></SPAN></span> corner of the house. The
beloved rose-arbor had been wrecked by the storm. The lattice-work was
smashed. The gray bare stems of the crimson ramblers drooped drearily
into a sullen puddle. The green settee was smeared with splashed mud.</p>
<p>“They couldn’t even leave us that,” Father wailed, in the voice of a man
broken. “Oh yes, yes, yes, I’ll go to Lulu’s with you. But we won’t
stay. Will we! I will fight again. I did have a little gumption left
last night, didn’t I? Didn’t I? But—but we’ll go there for a while.”</p>
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