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Blessing of a Good Deed
by
“John,” said Mr. Everett, turning suddenly to the boy, and encountering his large, earnest eyes, “take this note around to Mr. Legrand.”
John sprang to do his bidding; received the note and was off with unusual fleetness. But the door which closed upon his form did not shut out the expression of his sober face and humid glance from the vision of Mr. Everett. In fact, from some cause, tears had sprung to the eyes of the musing boy at the very moment he was called upon to render a service; and, quicker than usual though his motions were, he had failed to conceal them.
A new train of thought now entered the broker’s mind. This child of his old friend had been taken into his office from a kind of charitable feeling–though of very low vitality. He paid him a couple of dollars a week, and thought little more, about him or his widowed mother. He had too many important interests of his own at stake, to have his mind turned aside for a trifling matter like this. But now, as the image of that sad face–for it was unusually sad at the moment when Mr. Everett looked suddenly toward the boy–lingered in his mind, growing every moment more distinct, and more touchingly beautiful, many considerations of duty and humanity were excited. He remembered his old friend, and the pleasant hours they had spent together in years long since passed, ere generous feelings had hardened into ice, or given place to all-pervading selfishness. He remembered, too, the beautiful girl his friend had married, and how proudly that friend presented her to their little world as his bride. The lad had her large, dark, spiritual eyes–only the light of joy had faded therefrom, giving place to a strange sadness.
All this was now present to the mind of Mr. Everett, and though he tried once or twice during the boy’s absence to obliterate these recollections, he was unable to do so.
“How is your mother, John?” kindly asked the broker, when the lad returned from his errand.
The question was so unexpected, that it confused him.
“She’s well–thank you, sir. No–not very well, either–thank you, sir.”
And the boy’s face flushed, and his eyes suffused.
“Not very well, you say?” Mr. Everett spoke with kindness, and in a tone of interest. “Not sick, I hope?”
“No, sir; not very sick. But”—-
“But what, John,” said Mr., Everett, encouragingly.
“She’s in trouble,” half stammered the boy, while the colour deepened on his face.
“Ah, indeed? I’m sorry for that. What is the trouble, John?”
The tears which John had been vainly striving to repress now gushed over his face, and, with a boyish shame for the weakness, he turned away and struggled for a time with his overmastering feelings. Mr. Everett was no little moved by so unexpected an exhibition. He waited with a new-born consideration for the boy, not unmingled with respect, until a measure of calmness was restored.
“John,” he then said, “if your mother is in trouble, it may be in my power to relieve her.”
“O sir!” exclaimed the lad eagerly, coming up to Mr. Everett, and, in the forgetfulness of the moment, laying his small hand upon that of his employer, “if you will, you can.”
Hard indeed would have been the heart that could have withstood the appealing, eyes lifted by John Levering to the face of Mr. Everett. But Mr. Everett had not a hard heart. Love of self and the world had encrusted it with indifference toward others, but the crust was now broken through.
“Speak freely, my good lad,” said he, kindly. “Tell me of your mother. What is her trouble?”
“We are very poor, sir.” Tremulous and mournful was the boy’s voice. “And mother isn’t well. She does all she can; and my wages help a little. But there are three of us children; and I am the oldest. None of the rest can earn any thing. Mother couldn’t help getting behind with the rent, sir, because she hadn’t the money to pay it with. This morning, the man who owns the house where we live came for some money, and when mother told him that she had none, he got, oh, so angry! and frightened us all. He said, if the rent wasn’t paid by to-morrow, he’d turn us all into the street. Poor mother! She went to bed sick.”