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So Alexina went with Emily to school. King William was there, but he hardly noticed her, seeming gloomy and given to taking his slate off into corners.
"He don't want to come," explained Emily; "he's the only boy."
"Then what does he come for?" queried the practical Alexina.
"His mother won't let him go to a public school."
There was more to be learned about William. He fought the boys who went to the public school, because they jeered him in his ignominy.
Alexina saw it happening up the alley but, strangely enough, when William appeared at school, he seemed cheered up, though something of a wreck.
Out of school, Alexina often went over to Emily's house to play. There were no servants there, but her mamma beat up things in crocks, and her great-aunty, a brisk little old woman with sharp eyes, made yeast cakes and dried them out under the arbour and milked the cow, too, and Emily's little brother, Oliver, carried milk to the neighbours. Once in the spotless, s.h.i.+ning kitchen, Alexina was allowed to wield a mop in a dish-pan and, still again, to stir at batter in a bowl.
In the room which would have been the parlour in another house, Emily's grandfather Pryor sat at a table with books around him, and wrote on big sheets of paper in close writing. He was a stern old man and his hair stood out fine and white about his head. Once, as he pa.s.sed across the front porch, he looked at Emily, then stopped, pointing to the chain about her neck. It was Alexina's little gold necklace which Emily had begged to wear.
"Take it off," he said.
Emily obeyed, but her checks were flaming, and when he had gone she threw her head back. "When I'm grown, I mean to have them of my own, and wear them, too," she said.
She seemed happier away from home. "Let's go over to your house," she always said. She liked grown people, too, and Uncle Austen once patted her head, and after she had gone said to Aunt Harriet: "A handsome child, an unusually pleasing child."
But while Alexina played thus with Emily, more often she trudged across to King William's.
The nature of engrossment was different over there. Often as not it was theology, though this, to be sure, was the Captain's word for it, not his son's.
w.i.l.l.y's mother, like Aunt Harriet, was a Presbyterian. "If I had been a better one," she lamented to her husband one evening, "I would know how to meet his questions now. You don't take one bit of the responsibility of his religious training, Captain Leroy."
The creed of King William's mamma, when she came to formulate it, seemed a stern one, and it lost nothing in its setting forth by reason of her determination to do her duty by her son.
"Thank Heaven I had to sit under these things when I was a child, however I hated it then, or I could not do my part by him now," she told the Captain. "I want him," fervently, "to be everything I am not."
"Which might," suggested the Captain, "be a prig, you know."
But King William, listening, drank in these things. He had a garden patch in the back yard and knew the nature and habits of every vegetable in it, and being strictly a utilitarian, he weeded out sickly plants and unknown cotyledons with a ruthless hand.
Alexina expostulated. "Maybe it hurts 'em," she feared.
"Maybe it does," said the inexorable William; "but they are like the souls born to be d.a.m.ned. Put 'em on the brush pile there, and after a while we'll burn 'em."
At other times the yard was a sea-girt coral reef and they the stranded mariners. Generally Alexina accepted everything. The stories were new to her. But when she did have knowledge of a thing she stood firm; for instance, about the ocean, that you could not land every few moments of your progress and throw out gang-planks.
"For I've been there," she insisted, "and you couldn't, you know."
At times they adjourned to the commons behind the stable, which, in reality, were plains frequented by Indians, or, if the yard palled or rain drove them in, there was fat, black, plausible Aunt Rose in the bas.e.m.e.nt kitchen to talk to, and if Aunt Rose proved fractious and drove them out, together with her own brood generally skulking around, before a threatening dish-rag or broom, there was Charlotte to be beguiled from more serious occupation into doing her son's bidding.
Charlotte was always busy. The cottage and all in it had come to her from her father's aunt. She had been accustomed to seeing the windows, the furniture, the mirrors, the silver door k.n.o.bs s.h.i.+ning; therefore, she knew such things ought to s.h.i.+ne, and since there was no one in these days but herself to do it, she cleaned, polished, rubbed, and went to bed limp.
One afternoon in the late fall, when the children sought her, she was pasting papers over gla.s.ses of jelly. "We went over the river to see the boat yesterday," King William was saying to Alexina as they came in. "Tell her about it, mother; about the gold star at the bow."
The papers did not want to stick. "He's a bad boy, little Mab,"
Charlotte informed her. "He made me take him over before he'd promise to go to the party he's asked to. He wants to be a little boor who won't know how to act when he grows up."
"I'm never goin' to parties when I'm grown up, so what's the use learning how to act at 'em now?" argued her son.
Charlotte dropped a mucilaged paper. "But you promised," she reminded him anxiously; "you promised--"
"Oh, well--" admitted her son.
Charlotte kept a fire in her parlour. Coal was at a fabulous price in the South that winter, but she had never known a parlour without a fire, and here she and the children sat in the afternoons, the Captain often returning early and joining them.
"Georges," said Charlotte upon one of these occasions, "we are poor."
The Captain smoked in silence. Perhaps he had realized it before. His keen eyes, however, were regarding her.
"But," said Charlotte, "we go on acting as though we were rich."
"Just so," said the Captain.
"When your trousers get shabby, you order more like them. Did you ever ask your tailor if he has anything cheaper?"
Now, trousers of that pearl tint peculiar to the finest fabrics were as characteristic a part of the Captain's garb as were the black coat, the low-cut vest, the linen cambric handkerchiefs like small tablecloths for size, the tall silk hat, and the Henry Clay collar above the black silk stock.
"Did you ever ask him if he had anything cheaper, Georges?"
"I can't say," admitted Georges, "that I ever did." For the Captain had never asked his tailor a price in his life. When the bill came he paid it. But it takes income to meet eccentricities of this sort, while now--
Did the Captain, glancing from his wife to the boy on the floor, seem to age, to shrink in his chair? For Charlotte was thirty-two and the boy was ten and the Captain was nearing sixty.
"And when your s.h.i.+rts and w.i.l.l.y's things and mine give out, I've been going right on to the sisters ordering more. Convent prices are high, Georges."
The Captain had nothing to say.
"Adele has been telling me that she cuts down her eldest boy's things for the little one." Adele was the widow of a Confederate general. "So I borrowed her patterns. Listening to Adele talk, I realized, Georges, that you and w.i.l.l.y and I have to learn how to be poor."
It was at this point that Charlotte brought forth from the chair behind her a voluminous broadcloth cape, such as men then wore for outer wrap, and spread it on the mahogany centre-table.
"It's perfectly good, if you did discard it, and I'm going to cut it into something for w.i.l.l.y; I didn't tell Adele I never had tried, she is so capable, but I borrowed her patterns." And Charlotte brought forth a paper roll.
The Captain, in the arm-chair, sat and watched. Alexina, from his knee, where he had a way of lifting her, watched too. w.i.l.l.y, from a perch on the arm of the sofa, offered suggestions.
This was early in the afternoon. At six o'clock the Captain, lighting another of an uninterrupted series of cigars, was still watching silently. On the sofa sat Charlotte, in tears. On the table, tailor fas.h.i.+on, sat King William, sorting patterns, while Nelly, who had come for Alexina, stood by and directed.
"How does he know?" Mrs. Leroy, watching her son a little anxiously, asked the Captain. "I wouldn't like him to develop such a bent. He doesn't get it from you--or from me."
"I look at my legs," said William, "and then I build it that way."
Another afternoon the Captain looked up from his smoking and spoke to Charlotte. The children were on the floor turning the pages of a picture paper.
"We have succeeded in securing the loan on a mortgage on the boat.