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Jimmie Moore of Bucktown.
by Melvin Earnest Trotter.
CHAPTER I
_The Invasion Begun_
"Please kin yer tell me where is der boss of dis Mishun?"
The superintendent turned sharply about and beheld a boy of singularly striking appearance. His stature was that of a child of ten or twelve years and his face that of a worn-out, heart-broken, disappointed old man. His eyes, set far back in his head under heavy eyebrows, indicated an almost abnormal development of the perceptive faculties. In other respects the contour of the head was not remarkable; but the face was one, once seen, never to be forgotten. The nose was pointed and pinched, the cheeks hollow, and the glance of his eye at once appealing and defiant.
There could be no doubt that this boy was a bread winner, and that the burdens he carried were altogether too heavy for such young shoulders.
From the ragged cap which he turned nervously in his hands to the large pair of sharp-pointed ladies' shoes on his feet, every garment was a misfit. The loss of a b.u.t.ton from the neckband of his blouse-waist permitted it to gap wide open and disclosed the fact that he wore no underclothing. The day was bitterly cold; and the boy's s.h.i.+very look showed how greatly he suffered.
As the superintendent took in all these facts he realized that, despite his unseemly attire and generally distracted appearance, the boy was by no means an ordinary character. Down deep in the dark gray eyes that never wavered under his steady gaze he saw the making of a man mighty for good or evil.
"I guess I'm the man you want," said Morton, kindly. "Come into my office."
Leading the way, he was followed by the boy into a small private office at the back end of the big mission hall. Offering the lad a seat, he turned to his desk, on which stood two telephones.
In an instant that boy was again upon his feet. Looking with wide-open eyes, he inquired, "Be yer goin' ter call der bull?
I ain't as't yer fur nuthin'. Me Pa said yer was a good guy and wouldn't squeal. I mus' go."
Morton intercepted the boy at the door. But it was some time before he could persuade him that it was not his intention to turn him over to the police, "the bull," for begging.
"I want to help you," he said. "I'll be your friend, and I won't squeal on you either."
"Well, be yer Mister Morton?" asked the boy.
"Yes, that's my name," replied the superintendent. "And now I want you to tell me all about your trouble. Who sent you to me?"
"Me Pa. He heard your talk on der gospel wagon down at der square.
He don't talk about nuthin' else and he wants yer ter come an'
see him."
"Is he sick?"
"Sure he's sick. He's been in bed ever since Wednesday. Ma says he's outer his head. Tuesday night he didn't come home home from work, and Ma says, 'I guess he's drunk ag'in.' We waited fur him till eleven o'clock and den I couldn't stay awake no longer. 'Sides, der wood was all burnt up and we had ter go ter bed ter keep warm. At five in der mornin' Mike Hardy, der bar-keep' at f.a.gin's, saw Pa layin' in Rice's wagon box, out in front of der market. It snowed on Pa, and he was near frozed.
Mike calls Bill Cook and dey brings Pa home. Bill and Pa is chums; an' Bill gets drunk, too. Ma says dey bot' works fur f.a.gin. When dey gits paid dey take all der money straight to f.a.gin's and spends it for booze."
"Well, what's your name and where do you live?" interrupted Morton.
"Me name's Jimmie Moore, and we live down in Bucktown near der market."
"Go on with your story, sonny," said Morton.
"After dey got him in der house Ma and Bill gits his clothes off and Bill goes and gets some wood and built a fire. I carried me mornin' papers, and when I gits back I stayed wit' Pa while Ma went ter Ransome's house up on der Avenue to do deir was.h.i.+n'.
Pa he slept all day till four in the afternoon, and den he raised up straight in bed and, lookin' at somethin' in der corner of der room, said, 'Can't yer see me hand? I raised it twice. Why don't yer come and git me?' I couldn't see nuthin', but he keeps on talkin' dat way fur a long time. Den he laid down again and cried and said he wanted der mishun man ter come and see him.
When Ma gits back she sent me to der barber shop to git Fred Hanks ter telerphone ter Dr. Possum. He's der city doctor. He looked at Pa and said he had ammonia. Den Ma she cried, 'cause she had no money ter git supper for us kids and fer the doctor's paper, too."
"Pretty soon Mrs. Cook, that's Bill's missus, comes in and she said she'd help take care of Pa. The neighbors done all dey could, but we ain't got no money, er no wood, and der rent ain't paid. We ain't had no fire since yisterday, and dis' mornin'
Ma sits down and cries 'cause der's nothin' for der kids ter eat. Her and me don't mind, but we got four girl kids that's hungry all der time. Pa set up in bed and said, 'Go to der mishun man and tell him I mus' see him.' Ma sent me up ter see if yer won't come down ter see Pa."
Finding a knitted scarf for the boy to tie about his neck, the superintendent and Jimmie started for the sick man's bedside.
The section of the city where the Moore family lived, locally known as Bucktown, contained the only real slums to be found in the busy and rapidly growing metropolis. It was located on a low tract of ground between the city market and the river, and was inhabited chiefly by negroes and very poor white people.
On the way Jimmie continued his story, and the superintendent tried to tell him about the Father above who loves the poor and who sent His Son to die that all the world might live and have access to the unsearchable riches of G.o.d. "The only help that is sure and lasting," he said, "comes from G.o.d. He can find a way out of your trouble for you."
"I don't see how He kin help us," replied the boy. "They won't give us no help at der city hall, 'cause we ain't been here long enough. We ain't no city case er nothin' else, I guess.
The man said he would put us kids in der Children's Home and Pa in der poorhouse, er send us all back ter Dalton. Ma said she'd die widout us kids."
When the boy stopped talking Morton took him by the hand and told him about the Jesus who loves little boys and their fathers and mothers, and how He would do all things for them. "If you believe in Him," said the superintendent, "you can ask for anything in His name and get it."
"Where is Jesus?" asked Jimmie.
"He's right here now," replied Morton. "You can't see Him, but He's always with us to watch over us and care for us."
This was a stunner for Jimmie. For a full minute he looked straight ahead of him, as if in deep thought, and then raising his eyes until they met Morton's, said: "Watcher givin' us, Cully? Do yer tink I am bug-house?"
"No, I don't think you're crazy, but what I have said is true, Jimmie. You can't see the wind, but you know there is wind because you feel it. I cannot see Jesus with my natural eye, but I know He is here, just as well as you know that the wind is blowing.
I trust Him for everything, and He supplies all my needs. I have loved Him and He has kept me for seven years. I never help any one myself; I do it for Him. He gives me the love and the money, and if I help you, you must thank Him and not me."
"Maybe He loves good boys; but I'm no good, ner never was. He can't love no kid like me, kin he?"
"Yes, my boy, just as much as He does me."
"Den He don't know me, for everybody dat knows me says I'm bad.
Me Ma, even she says so. I guess He don't love no one in Bucktown."
"Yes, He loves every one in Bucktown, and He will care for you all if you will trust Him and ask Him for what you need."
"Kin I ask Him fur somethin' ter eat."
"Yes, you can, and you'll get it too. But you must love Him and thank Him for what you get."
Jimmie looked up to see if Morton really meant what he was saying.
When he saw the look of intense earnestness on the superintendent's face he knew that he was not deceiving him.
"I hope He'll help Pa," said Jimmie thoughtfully. "I guess he needs it mor'n der rest of us do."
"If your Pa will tell G.o.d what a sinner he has been and will ask Him for forgiveness, He will help him. G.o.d is a friend of sinners, Jimmie."
"This is where we live," said the boy, turning to go into a miserable shack.
The house was one of the most disreputable looking places in the neighborhood. It consisted of a lean-to portion of a house from which the original building had been moved away. There was no wall beneath; the building stood on four posts, one at each corner, and open on all sides, the wind having a clean sweep beneath the floor in every direction. Within there were two rooms. In the front one was a bed upon which the sick man lay, an old table, two chairs and a box to sit on. In the next room an old wood-burning cook-stove, a big box for table and cupboard combined, and a broken mirror const.i.tuted its complete furnis.h.i.+ng. The roof leaked, and most of the s.p.a.ces in the window sashes were filled with rags and paper instead of gla.s.s.