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"Do you mean to say that we pay the machinery of the law to put these cases through the courts, over and over again, and then provide no place to harbour the derelicts?"
"That's about the case," she replied.
"How can we live and endure such things?" Jarvis demanded pa.s.sionately.
"I used to feel that way about it. I used to be sick through and through with it, but I have grown to see that there is improvement, that there is a new social sense growing among us. Uptown women of leisure come to our night courts, take part in our working-girls' strikes, and women, mind you, are always slowest to feel and react to new forces. Don't be discouraged," she smiled at him, stopping at the door.
"May I come and see you, some time? Are you ever free, or would that be asking too much?"
"No. Come! Come in Sunday afternoon if you like."
She held out her hand, and he grasped it warmly.
"You're great," he said boyishly, at which she laughed.
"We need you young enthusiasts," she said.
As he walked uptown to his lodgings Jarvis faced the fact that up to this present moment he had been on the wrong track. He had tried to pull from the top. That was all right, if only he also tried to push from the bottom. The world needed idealists, but not the old brand, blind to the actual, teaching out of a great ignorance. This probation officer woman, she was the modern idealist, as modern as Jesus Christ, who worked in the same spirit.
He would finish his vision-plays, as he called them, because he believed in them. But, in the meantime, he would learn something of the real issues of men and women as they live in great cities, so that he could write a play which would be so true, so vital, that it would be like watching the beating of the hot heart of life. That night was the beginning of a new era for Jarvis.
XVII
Bambina Parkhurst was a young woman not much given to wrath, but as she read the two letters from New York she grew thoroughly enraged at Jarvis. Evidently, he had been exceedingly rude to Mr. Strong, and evidently Mr. Strong had been exceedingly annoyed. She was so furious at him that when she sat down to her desk to write her daily chapters no ideas came. Her mind just went over and over the situation of kind Mr.
Strong putting himself out to be polite for her sake--Jarvis, stiff and ill-mannered, repulsing him. She determined to omit the daily letter to the offender until she cooled off. She gave up work for the morning and descended upon Ardelia.
"Ardelia, I am so mad I can't think of anything to do but put up fruit."
"Law, Miss Bambi, you ain't mad wif me, is you?"
"No. I'm mad with man."
"Man! Wat's the Perfessor bin doin'? Has he don' forgot somfin'?"
"It isn't the Professor. It's the s.e.x."
"Well, don' you go meddlin' round wid fruit and gettin' yo' hands stained up, jus' caus' yo's mad wid de s.e.x."
"I have got to do something violent, Ardelia. I am going to jerk the stems off of berries, chop the pits out of cherries, and skin peaches."
"Laws a-ma.s.sy, you suttinly is fierce this mohnin'. All right, go ahead, but der ain't no need of it. I mos' generally always has put up the fruit for the fam'ly wifout no help."
"I know you don't need me, Ardelia, but I need you."
"Well, chile, heah's de fust few bushels ob cherries."
"Bushels? Mercy on us! Are you going to do all those?"
"Ya.s.sum. And den some more. Dat's the Perfessor's favourite fruit."
Bambi was promptly enveloped in a huge ap.r.o.n and settled on the back piazza, surrounded with pans and baskets. Ardelia stood by, and handed her things, until she got started.
"Hurry up, and come out, Ardelia. I want you to talk to me and take my mind off of things."
"I'll be 'long, by and by."
[Ill.u.s.tration "I HAVE GOT TO DO SOMETHING VIOLENT, ARDELIA. I AM GOING TO JERK THE STEMS OFF OF BERRIES, CHOP THE PITS OUT OF CHERRIES, AND SKIN PEACHES."]
Bambi held up a bright-red cherry, named it Jarvis, pulled out its stem, cut out its heart, and finally plumped it into her mouth and chewed it viciously. Then she felt better. There was a cool morning breeze lifting the leaves of the big elms, and nodding the hollyhocks' heads. The sound of late summer buzzing and humming, and bird songs, made the back porch a pleasant, placid spot--no place in which to keep rage hot.
Ardelia lumbered out, after a while, to sit near by, her slow movements and her beaming smile far from conducive to a state of excitement.
"Mighty purty out here, ain't it?"
"Yes."
"I reckon Ma.s.sa Jarvis be mighty glad to be home, a-sittin' here a-seedin' cherries 'longside ob you?"
"Jarvis never did anything so useful. As for being alongside of me, that doesn't interest him at all."
"Yo're suttinly the onlovingest bride and groom I've eber seen. You ain't neber lovin' nor kissin' nor nottin', when I come aroun'."
"Mercy no, Ardelia!"
"I 'low if I was married to such a han'som' man, like Ma.s.sa Jarvis, I'd be a lovin' ob him all the time."
"Suppose he wouldn't let you?"
"Can't tell me der's a man libin' who wouldn't be crazy fur yo' to lub him, Miss Bambi. Look at dat Mister Strong keeps a-comin' here."
"What about him?" asked Bambi in surprise.
"I see him lookin' at you. I see him."
"Nonsense! He has to look at me to talk with me."
"He don' need to do no talkin', wid his eyes a-workin' like dat."
"You old romancer!"
"Look a-heah, chile, dose cherries fo' to preserve. Dey ain't fo'
eatin'. You're eatin' two and puttin' one in de pan."
Bambi made a face at her.
"What is your opinion of men, Ardelia?"