<hr /><h2><SPAN name="XV" name="XV"></SPAN>XV.</h2><h2>"DEAR, DAMNED, DELIGHTFUL TOWN"</h2>
<p>When Joe was taken, there was no spirit or feeling left in him. He moved
mechanically, as if without sense or volition. The first impression he
gave was that of a man over-acting insanity. But this was soon removed
by the very indifference with which he met everything concerned with his
crime. From the very first he made no effort to exonerate or to
vindicate himself. He talked little and only in a dry, stupefied way. He
was as one whose soul is dead, and perhaps it was; for all the little
soul of him had been wrapped up in the body of this one woman, and the
stroke that took her life had killed him too.</p>
<p>The men who examined him were irritated beyond measure. There was
nothing for them to exercise their ingenuity upon. He left them nothing
to search for. Their most damning question he answered with an apathy
that showed absolutely no interest in the matter. It was as if some one
whom he did not care about had committed a crime and he had been called
to testify. The only thing which he noticed or seemed to have any
affection for was a little pet dog which had been hers and which they
sometimes allowed to be with him after the life sentence had been passed
upon him and when he was awaiting removal. He would sit for hours with
the little animal in his lap, caressing it dumbly. There was a mute
sorrow in the eyes of both man and dog, and they seemed to take comfort
in each other's presence. There was no need of any sign between them.
They had both loved her, had they not? So they understood.</p>
<p>Sadness saw him and came back to the Banner, torn and unnerved by the
sight. "I saw him," he said with a shudder, "and it 'll take more
whiskey than Jack can give me in a year to wash the memory of him out of
me. Why, man, it shocked me all through. It 's a pity they did n't send
him to the chair. It could n't have done him much harm and would have
been a real mercy."</p>
<p>And so Sadness and all the club, with a muttered "Poor devil!" dismissed
him. He was gone. Why should they worry? Only one more who had got into
the whirlpool, enjoyed the sensation for a moment, and then swept
dizzily down. There were, indeed, some who for an earnest hour
sermonised about it and said, "Here is another example of the pernicious
influence of the city on untrained negroes. Oh, is there no way to keep
these people from rushing away from the small villages and country
districts of the South up to the cities, where they cannot battle with
the terrible force of a strange and unusual environment? Is there no way
to prove to them that woollen-shirted, brown-jeaned simplicity is
infinitely better than broad-clothed degradation?" They wanted to
preach to these people that good agriculture is better than bad
art,--that it was better and nobler for them to sing to God across the
Southern fields than to dance for rowdies in the Northern halls. They
wanted to dare to say that the South has its faults--no one condones
them--and its disadvantages, but that even what they suffered from these
was better than what awaited them in the great alleys of New York. Down
there, the bodies were restrained, and they chafed; but here the soul
would fester, and they would be content.</p>
<p>This was but for an hour, for even while they exclaimed they knew that
there was no way, and that the stream of young negro life would continue
to flow up from the South, dashing itself against the hard necessities
of the city and breaking like waves against a rock,--that, until the
gods grew tired of their cruel sport, there must still be sacrifices to
false ideals and unreal ambitions.</p>
<p>There was one heart, though, that neither dismissed Joe with gratuitous
pity nor sermonised about him. The mother heart had only room for grief
and pain. Already it had borne its share. It had known sorrow for a lost
husband, tears at the neglect and brutality of a new companion, shame
for a daughter's sake, and it had seemed already filled to overflowing.
And yet the fates had put in this one other burden until it seemed it
must burst with the weight of it.</p>
<p>To Fannie Hamilton's mind now all her boy's shortcomings became as
naught. He was not her wayward, erring, criminal son. She only
remembered that he was her son, and wept for him as such. She forgot his
curses, while her memory went back to the sweetness of his baby prattle
and the soft words of his tenderer youth. Until the last she clung to
him, holding him guiltless, and to her thought they took to prison, not
Joe Hamilton, a convicted criminal, but Joey, Joey, her boy, her
firstborn,--a martyr.</p>
<p>The pretty Miss Kitty Hamilton was less deeply impressed. The arrest
and subsequent conviction of her brother was quite a blow. She felt the
shame of it keenly, and some of the grief. To her, coming as it did just
at a time when the company was being strengthened and she more
importantly featured than ever, it was decidedly inopportune, for no one
could help connecting her name with the affair.</p>
<p>For a long time she and her brother had scarcely been upon speaking
terms. During Joe's frequent lapses from industry he had been prone to
"touch" his sister for the wherewithal to supply his various wants.
When, finally, she grew tired and refused to be "touched," he rebuked
her for withholding that which, save for his help, she would never have
been able to make. This went on until they were almost entirely
estranged. He was wont to say that "now his sister was up in the world,
she had got the big head," and she to retort that her brother "wanted to
use her for a 'soft thing.'"</p>
<p>From the time that she went on the stage she had begun to live her own
life, a life in which the chief aim was the possession of good clothes
and the ability to attract the attention which she had learned to crave.
The greatest sign of interest she showed in her brother's affair was, at
first, to offer her mother money to secure a lawyer. But when Joe
confessed all, she consoled herself with the reflection that perhaps it
was for the best, and kept her money in her pocket with a sense of
satisfaction. She was getting to be so very much more Joe's sister. She
did not go to see her brother. She was afraid it might make her nervous
while she was in the city, and she went on the road with her company
before he was taken away.</p>
<p>Miss Kitty Hamilton had to be very careful about her nerves and her
health. She had had experiences, and her voice was not as good as it
used to be, and her beauty had to be aided by cosmetics. So she went
away from New York, and only read of all that happened when some one
called her attention to it in the papers.</p>
<p>Berry Hamilton in his Southern prison knew nothing of all this, for no
letters had passed between him and his family for more than two years.
The very cruelty of destiny defeated itself in this and was kind.</p>
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