PAGE 4
A Bent Twig
by
Isidore had been making no such attempt, and he repudiated the idea with scorn. He was accustomed to vehement paternal outbreaks, for Mr. Cohen was a popular orator in his social club, and he often rehearsed his eloquence in the home circle. Not often, however, did Isidore understand or remember the fervid periods. This attack upon Miss Bailey he did remember, though he did not understand. To him a machine was a sewing-machine, and his father, though he evidently meant something, could not have meant to associate her with that most useful member of the family.
“Just like all the rest of them,” his father had said. “A grafter,” and now that Miss Blake had fallen from honesty, what proof was there that Miss Bailey was not equally approachable?
And certainly Miss Blake played the game with the promptness and surety of an old understanding. Influence or income are the counters in the game, and she dealt both cheerily. Three days after the presentation of the purse the post of Monitor of Supplies in Room 17 fell vacant, and Hymie Solomon received it. That was the influence, he was “holding down a job.” Two days later he discovered a market for surplus textbooks and other school supplies. Thus was the income assured. No one could doubt Miss Blake was familiar with the rules.
“You’d never believe,” said she to her neighbor in fond and unfounded pride, “what a little responsibility will do for an almost incorrigible boy. You wouldn’t know Hymie. He stays behind almost every afternoon when I go home, getting things straightened out.”
“They all have their good points,” said Constance Bailey. “I am thinking of doing something of the same kind about Isidore Cohen. We must hold their interest, you know.”
It was about a week later. Miss Bailey and her monitors were putting Room 18 to rights after the stress and storm of the day. Gold-fish, window-boxes, canaries, and pencil points were all being ministered to by their respective supervisors, and the door opened and Gertie Armusheffsky appeared. Such a distracted, tear-stained, white-lipped Gertie that Miss Bailey swept her monitors into their weird wrappings and dismissed them with all speed.
“I can’t go home,” cried Gertie in desperation. “Honest, Miss Bailey, he’d kill me if I did.”
And after listening to the girl’s story, Miss Bailey congratulated herself that she had no other charges old enough to be caught in trouble as difficult.
Old Mr. Armusheffsky had read of a fire in a Brooklyn glove factory: hundreds of pairs of damaged gloves were spoken of. Now Mr. Armusheffsky kept his store very dark, and only the most fatal damages could be detected in its dim light. Catastrophes such as this of the glove factory were his opportunities. He always–he never left the store–sent Gertie to negotiate with the bereaved manufacturers, the insurance agents, or whoever chanced to be in authority over the debris. Upon this day there chanced to be no debris: the fire and the firemen had done their work. There was no one even to interview. And Gertie, somewhat apprehensive as to her grandfather’s displeasure and disappointment, set out for home. She enlivened her homeward way by a visit to a big department store, where she envied the be-pompadoured damsels behind the counters; plunged into the squirming crowd around a bargain table and secured a jabot of real German Mechlin lace for thirteen cents. After this transaction she had in her purse the twelve cents left of her quarter dollar, and the jabot, the check showing its cost and the date, an unused trolley transfer, and the five dollars deposit which she was to have paid on the purchase of gloves. The purse was of the hand-bag variety, showy yet strong. It had been given to her as a reward and an encouragement by Miss Bailey.
“An’ when I got off the car at the ‘loop’,” she ended, “an’ changed into the Second Avenue cable, somebody in the crowd swiped me bag. I didn’t have even a transfer left, an’ I had to walk here. I was pushing along in the crowd lookin’ at the signs ‘Beware of pickpockets’, an’ thinkin’ it was good I had no pockets to pick, when it come over me that my bag was gone. Just that easy! Me what ought to have known better. Say, you know it would be just as good as suicide to go an’ give that ‘pipe’ to Grandpa. So I was thinking maybe you’d go round and sort of break the news. He’s got a lot of respect for you. An’ honest, I ain’t kiddin’. He’d kill me for that five dollars.” Then with sudden fury she ended, “I’d kill him for five cents.”