<h3><SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>Chapter XV</h3>
<p>Now about this time the law firm with whom Michael worked became deeply
interested in their new “boy.” He studied hard, and seemed to know
what he was about all day. They saw signs of extraordinary talent in him. Once
or twice, thinking to make life pleasant for him, they had invited him to their
club, or to some evening’s entertainment, and always Michael had
courteously declined, saying that he had an engagement for the evening. They
casually questioned Will French, the other student, who was a happy-go-lucky;
in the office because his father wished him to study something and not because
he wanted to. Will said that Michael went out every evening and came in late.
Mrs. Semple had remarked that she often didn’t know whether he came in at
all until she saw him come down to breakfast.</p>
<p>This report and a certain look of weariness about the eyes some mornings led
the senior member of the firm to look into Michael’s affairs. The natural
inference was that Michael was getting into social life too deeply, perhaps
wasting the hours in late revelry when he should have been sleeping. Mr. Holt
liked Michael, and dreaded to see the signs of dissipation appear on that fine
face. He asked Will French to make friends with him and find out if he could
where he spent his evenings. Will readily agreed, and at once entered on his
mission with a zeal which was beyond all baffling.</p>
<p>“Hello, Endicott!” called Will as Michael reached the front door on
his way to his mission that same evening. “Where’re you going?
Wait, can’t you, and I’ll walk along with you? I was going to ask
you if you wouldn’t go to a show with me this evening. I haven’t
anything on for tonight and it’s slow.”</p>
<p>As he spoke he seized his coat and hat which he had purposely left in the hall
near at hand, and put them on.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said Michael, as they went out together,
“I’d be glad to go with you but I have something that can’t
be put off.”</p>
<p>“Well, go tomorrow night with me, will you? I like you and I think we
ought to be friends.”</p>
<p>Will’s idea was that they would get to talking at a “show”
and he could find out a good deal in that way. He thought it must be a girl. He
had told the senior Holt that it was a girl of course and he wouldn’t
take long to spot her. It must be either a girl or revelry to take the fellow
out every night in the week so late.</p>
<p>“Well, I’m sorry,” said Michael again, “but I’m
afraid I have an engagement every night. It’s rather a permanent job
I’m engaged in. What do you do with your evenings?”</p>
<p>Will launched into a gay description of parties and entertainments to which he
had been bidden, and nice girls he knew, hinting that he might introduce
Michael if he was so inclined, and Michael talked on leading his unsuspecting
companion further and further from the subject of his own evenings. Finally
they came to a corner and Michael halted.</p>
<p>“I turn here,” he said; “which way do you go?”</p>
<p>“Why, I turn too,” laughed French. “That is, if you
don’t object. I’m out for a walk and I don’t care much what I
do. If I’m not welcome just tell me and I’ll clear out.”</p>
<p>“Of course you’re quite welcome,” said Michael;
“I’m glad to have company, but the quarter I’m walking to is
not a pleasant one for a walk, and indeed you mightn’t like to return
alone even so early in the evening if you walk far. I had an unpleasant
encounter myself once, but I know the ways of the place now and it’s
different.”</p>
<p>Will eyed him curiously.</p>
<p>“Is it allowable to ask where we’re going?” he asked in a
comical tone.</p>
<p>Michael laughed.</p>
<p>“Certainly. If you’re bound to go I’ll have to tell you all
about it, but I strongly advise you to turn back now, for it isn’t a very
savory neighborhood, and I don’t believe you’ll care for it.”</p>
<p>“Where thou goest I will go,” mocked Will. “My curiosity is
aroused. I shall certainly go. If it’s safe for you, it is for me. My
good looks are not nearly so valuable as yours, nor so noticeable. As I have no
valuables in the world, I can’t be knocked down for booty.”</p>
<p>“You see they all know me,” explained Michael.</p>
<p>“Oh, they do! And can’t you introduce me? Or don’t you like
to?”</p>
<p>“I suppose I can,” laughed Michael, “if you really want me
to, but I’m afraid you’ll turn and run when you see them. You see
they’re not very—handsome. They’re not what you’re used
to. You wouldn’t want to know them.”</p>
<p>“But you do.”</p>
<p>“I had to,” said Michael desperately. “They needed something
and I had to help them!”</p>
<p>Up to this point Will French had been sure that Michael had fallen into the
hands of a set of sharpers, but something in his companion’s tone made
him turn and look, and he saw Michael’s face uplifted in the light of the
street lamp, glowing with, a kind of intent earnestness that surprised and awed
him.</p>
<p>“Look here, man,” he said. “Tell me who they are, and what
you are doing, anyway.”</p>
<p>Michael told him in a few words, saying little about himself, or his reason for
being interested in the alley in the first place. There were a few neglected
newsboys, mere kids. He was trying to teach them a few things, reading and
figures and a little manual training. Something to make life more than a round
of suffering and sin.</p>
<p>“Is it settlement work?” asked French. He was puzzled and
interested.</p>
<p>“No,” explained Michael, “there’s a settlement, but
it’s too far away and got too big a district to reach this alley.
It’s just my own little work.”</p>
<p>“Who pays you for it?”</p>
<p>“Who pays me?”</p>
<p>“Yes, who’s behind the enterprise? Who forks over the funds and
pays you for your job?”</p>
<p>Michael laughed long and loud.</p>
<p>“Well, now, I hadn’t thought about pay, but I guess the kiddies
themselves do. You can’t think how they enjoy it all.”</p>
<p>“H’m!” said French, “I think I’ll go along and
see how you do it. I won’t scare ’em out, will I?”</p>
<p>“Well, now I hadn’t thought of that,” said Michael. “In
fact, I didn’t suppose you’d care to go all the way, but if you
think you do, I guess it will be all right.”</p>
<p>“Not a very warm welcome, I must say,” laughed Will, “but
I’m going just the same. You get me in and I’ll guarantee not to
scare the crowd. Have any time left over from your studies for amusement? If
you do I might come in on that. I can do tricks.”</p>
<p>“Can you?” said Michael looking at his unbidden guest doubtfully.
“Well, we’ll see. I’m afraid you’ll be disappointed.
It’s very informal. Sometimes we don’t get beyond the first step in
a lesson. Sometimes I have to stop and tell stories.”</p>
<p>“Good!” said Will. “I’d like to hear you.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you wouldn’t enjoy it, but there are a few books there. You
might read if you get tired looking around the room.”</p>
<p>And so Michael and his guest entered the yellow and white room together.
Michael lit the gas, and Will looked about blinking in amazement.</p>
<p>Coming through the alley to the room had taken away Will’s exclamatory
powers and exhausted his vocabulary. The room in its white simplicity,
immaculately kept, and constantly in touch with fresh paint to hide any stray
finger marks, stood out in startling contrast with the regions round about it.
Will took it all in, paint, paper, and pictures. The tiny stove glowing warmly,
the improvised seats, the blackboard in the corner, and the bits of life as
manifested in geranium, butterfly cocoons and bird’s nests; then he
looked at Michael, tall and fine and embarrassed, in the centre of it all.</p>
<p>“Great Scott!” he exclaimed. “Is this an enchanted island, or
am I in my right mind?”</p>
<p>But before he could be answered there came the sound of mattering young feet
and a tumult outside the door. Then eager, panting, but decorous, they entered,
some with clean faces, most of them with clean hands, or moderately so, all
with their caps off in homage to their Prince; and Michael welcomed them as if
he stood in a luxurious drawing room on Fifth Avenue and these were his guests.</p>
<p>He introduced them, and Will entered into the spirit of the affair and greeted
them chummily. They stood shyly off from him at first with great eyes of
suspicion, huddled together in a group near Michael, but later when the lesson
on the blackboard was over and Michael was showing a set of pictures, Will sat
down in a corner with a string from his pocket and began showing two of the
boldest of the group some tricks. This took at once, and when he added a little
sleight-of-hand pulling pennies from the hair and pockets and hands of the
astonished youngsters and allowing them to keep them after the game was over,
they were ready to take him into their inner circle at once.</p>
<p>When, however, Sam, who was most unaccountably late that night, sidled in
alone, he looked at the stranger with eyes of belligerence; and when Michael
introduced him as his friend, Sam’s eyes glinted with a jealous light.
Sam did not like Michael to have any friends of that sort. This new man had
shiny boots, fine new clothes, wore his hair nicely brushed, and manipulated a
smooth handkerchief with fingers as white as any gentleman. To be sure Michael
was like that, but then Michael was Michael. He belonged to them, and his
clothes made him no worse. But who was this intruder? A gentleman? All
gentlemen were natural enemies to Sam.</p>
<p>“Come outside,” said Sam to Michael gruffly, ignoring the white
hand Will held out cordially. Michael saw there was something on his mind.</p>
<p>“Will, can you amuse these kids a minute or two while I step out?
I’ll not be long.”</p>
<p>“Sure!” said Will heartily. He hadn’t had such a good time in
months and what a story he would have to tell the senior partner in the
morning.</p>
<p>“Ever try to lift a fellow’s hand off the top of his head? Here,
you kid, sit in that chair and put your right hand flat on the top of your
head. Now, sonnie, you lift it off. Pull with all your might. That’s
it—”</p>
<p>Michael’s eyes shone, and even Sam grinned surreptitiously.</p>
<p>“He’ll do,” he said to Sam as they went out. “He was
lonesome this evening and wanted to come along with me.”</p>
<p>Lonesome! A fellow like that! It gave Sam a new idea to think about. Did people
who had money and education and were used to living in clothes like that get
lonesome? Sam cast a kindlier eye back at Will as he closed the door.</p>
<p>Alone in the dark cold entry where the wind whistled up from the river and
every crack seemed a conductor of a blast, Sam and Michael talked in low tones:</p>
<p>“Say, he’s lit out!” Sam’s tone conveyed dismay as well
as apology.</p>
<p>It was a sign of Michael’s real eagerness that he knew at once who was
meant.</p>
<p>“Buck?”</p>
<p>Sam grunted assent.</p>
<p>“When?”</p>
<p>“Day er so ago, I tuk yer word to ’im but he’d gone.
Lef’ word he had a big deal on, an’ ef it came troo all right
’e’d send fer us. You see it wan’t safe round here no more.
The police was onto his game. Thur wan’t no more hidin’ fer him. He
was powerful sorry not to see you. He’d always thought a heap o’
Mikky!”</p>
<p>“How long had he known I was here?” Michael’s face was grave
in the darkness. Why had Buck not sent him some word? Made some appointment?</p>
<p>“Since you first cum back.”</p>
<p>“Why—oh, Sam, why didn’t he let me come and see him?”</p>
<p>“It warn’t safe,” said Sam earnestly. “Sure thing, it
warn’t! ’Sides—”</p>
<p>“Besides what, Sam?” The question was eager.</p>
<p>“’Sides, he knowed you’d had edicashun, an’ he knowed
how you looked on his way o’ livin’. He didn’t know
but—”</p>
<p>“You mean he didn’t trust me, Sam?” Sam felt the keen eyes
upon him even hi the darkness.</p>
<p>“Naw, he didn’t tink you’d snitch on him ner nothin’,
but he didn’t know but you might tink you had to do some tings what might
kick it all up wid him. You’d b’en out o’ tings fer years,
an’ you didn’t know de ways o’ de city. ’Sides, he
ain’t seed you like I done—”</p>
<p>“I see,” said Michael, “I understand. It’s a long time
and of course he only knows what you have told him, and if there was
danger,—but oh, Sam, I wish he could go down to Old Orchard. Did you ever
tell him about it, and about my plans?”</p>
<p>“Sure ting I did. Tole ’im all you tole me. He said ’twar all
right. Ef he comes out on dis deal he’ll be back in a while, an’
he’ll go down dere ef you want him. He said he’d bring a little wad
back to make things go ef dis deal went troo.”</p>
<p>“Do you know what the deal is, Sam?”</p>
<p>“Sure!”</p>
<p>“Is it dis—is it”—he paused for a word that would
convey his meaning and yet not offend—“is it—dangerous,
Sam?”</p>
<p>“Sure!” admitted Sam solemnly as though it hurt him to pain his
friend.</p>
<p>“Do you mean it will make more hiding for him?”</p>
<p>“Sure!” emphatically grave.</p>
<p>“I wish he hadn’t gone!” There was sharp pain in
Michael’s voice.</p>
<p>“I wisht so too!’” said Sam with a queer little choke to his
voice, “Mebbe ’twon’t come off after all. Mebbe it’ll
git blocked. Mebbe he’ll come back.”</p>
<p>The anxiety in Sam’s tone touched Michael, but another thought had struck
him hard.</p>
<p>“Sam,” said he plucking at the others sleeve in the darkness,
“Sam, tell me, what was Buck doing—before he went away. Was it all
straight? Was he in the same business with you?”</p>
<p>Sam breathed heavily but did not answer. At last with difficulty he answered a
gruff, “Nope!”</p>
<p>“What was it, Sam? Won’t you tell me?”</p>
<p>“It would be snitchin’.”</p>
<p>“Not to me, Sam. You know I belong to you all.”</p>
<p>“But you’ve got new notions.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” admitted Michael, “I can’t help that, but I
don’t go back on you, do I?”</p>
<p>“No, you don’t go back on we’uns, that’s so. But you
don’t like we’s doin’s.”</p>
<p>“Never mind. Tell me, Sam. I think I must know.”</p>
<p>“He kep a gamein’ den—”</p>
<p>“Oh, Sam!” Michael’s voice was stricken, and his great
athletic hand gripped Sam’s hard skinny one, and Sam in the darkness
gripped back.</p>
<p>“I knowed you’d feel thet way,” he mourned as if the fault
were all in his telling. “I wisht I hadn’t ’a tole
yer.”</p>
<p>“Never mind, Sam, you couldn’t help it, and I suppose I
wouldn’t have known the difference myself if I hadn’t gone away. We
mustn’t judge Buck harshly. He’ll see it the other way by and
by.”</p>
<p>Sam straightened perceptibly. There was something in this speech that put him
in the same class with Michael. He had never before had any qualms of
conscience concerning gambling, but now he found himself almost unawares
arrayed against it.</p>
<p>“I guess mebbe!” he said comfortingly, and then seeking to change
the subject. “Say, is dat guy in dere goin’ along to de
farm?”</p>
<p>“Who?”</p>
<p>“Why, dat ike you lef’ in de room. Is he goin’ down
’long when wees go?”</p>
<p>“Oh, Will French! No, Sam. He doesn’t know anything about it yet. I
may tell him sometime, but he doesn’t need that. He is studying to be a
lawyer. Perhaps some day if he gets interested he’ll help do what I want
for the alley, and all the other alleys in the city; make better laws and see
that they’re enforced.”</p>
<p>“Laws!” said Sam in a startled voice. “What laws!”</p>
<p>Laws were his natural enemies he thought.</p>
<p>“Laws for better tenement houses, more room and more windows, better air,
cleaner streets, room for grass and flowers, pure milk and meat, and less
crowding and dirt. Understand?”</p>
<p>It was the first time Michael had gone so deep into his plans with Sam, and he
longed now to have his comradeship in this hope too.</p>
<p>“Oh, sure!” said Sam much relieved that Michael had not mentioned
laws about gambling dens and pickpockets. Sam might be willing to reform his
own course in the brilliant wake of Michael but as yet he had not reached the
point where he cared to see vice and dishonesty swept off the globe.</p>
<p>They went slowly back to the white room to find Will French leading a chorus of
small urchins in the latest popular melody while they kept time with an awkward
shuffle of their ill-shod feet.</p>
<p>Sam growled: “Cut it out, kids, you scratch de floor,” and Will
French subsided with apologies.</p>
<p>“I never thought of the floor, Endicott. Say, you ought to have a
gymnasium and a swimming pool here.”</p>
<p>Michael laughed.</p>
<p>“I wish we had,” he declared, “but I’d begin on a
bath-room. We need that first of all.”</p>
<p>“Well, let’s get one,” said Will eagerly. “That
wouldn’t cost so much. We could get some people to contribute a little. I
know a man that has a big plumbing establishment. He’d do a little
something. I mean to tell him about it. Is there any place it could be
put?”</p>
<p>Sam followed them wondering, listening, interested, as they went out into the
hall to see the little dark hole which might with ingenuity be converted into a
bath-room, and while he leaned back against the door-jamb, hands in his
pockets, he studied the face of the newcomer.</p>
<p>“Guess dat guy’s all right,” he reassured Michael as he
helped him turn the lights out a little later, while Will waited on the
doorstep whistling a new tune to his admiring following. Will had caught
“de kids.”</p>
<p>“I say, Endicott,” he said as they walked up the noisy midnight
street and turned into the avenue, “why don’t you get Hester to go
down there and sing sometime? Sunday afternoon. She’d go. Ask her.”</p>
<p>And that night was the beginning of outside help for Michael’s mission.</p>
<p>Hester fell into the habit of going down Sunday afternoons, and soon she had an
eager following of sad-eyed women, and eager little children; and Will French
spent his leisure hours in hunting up tricks and games and puzzles, for
“the kids.”</p>
<p>Meantime, the account he had given to Holt and Holt of the way Michael spent
his evenings, was not without fruit.</p>
<p>About a week after French’s first visit to the alley, the senior Mr. Holt
paused beside Michael’s desk one afternoon just before going out of the
office and laid a bit of paper in his hand.</p>
<p>“French tells me you’re interested in work in the slums,” he
said in the same tone he used to give Michael an order for his daily routine.
“I’d like to help a little if you can use that.” He passed on
out of the office before Michael had fully comprehended what had been said. The
young man looked down at the paper and saw it was a check made out to himself
for one hundred dollars!</p>
<p>With a quick exclamation of gratitude he was on his feet and out into the hall
after his employer.</p>
<p>“That’s all right, Endicott. I don’t get as much time as
I’d like to look after the charities, and when I see a good thing I like
to give it a boost. Call on me if you need money for any special scheme. And
I’ll mention it to some of my clients occasionally,” said the old
lawyer, well pleased with Michael’s gratitude.</p>
<p>He did, and right royally did the clients respond. Every little while a
ten-dollar bill or a five, and now and then a check for fifty would find its
way to Michael’s desk; for Will French, thoroughly interested, kept Holt
and Holt well supplied with information concerning what was needed.</p>
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