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Like A Wolf On The Fold
by
He held out the tissue-paper package and Aggie opened it. Tufik’s gift proved to be a small linen doily, with a Cluny-lace border!
We were gone from that moment–I know it now, looking back. Gone! We were lost the moment Tufik stood in the doorway, smiling and bowing. Tish saw us going; and with the calmness of the lost sat there nibbling cake and watching us through her spectacles–and raised not a hand.
Aggie looked at the doily and Tufik looked at her.
“That’s–that’s really very nice of you,” said Aggie. “I thank you.”
Tufik came over and stood beside her.
“I give with my heart,” he said shyly. “I have had nobody–in all so large this country–nobody! And now–I have you!” Aggie saw–but too late. He bent over and touched his lips to her hands. “The Bible says: ‘To him that overcometh I will give the morning star!’ I have overcometh–ah, so much!–the sea; the cold, wet England; the Ellis Island; the hunger; the aching of one who has no love, no money! And now–I have the morning star!”
He looked at us all three at once–Charlie Sands said this was impossible, until he met Tufik. Aggie was fairly palpitant and Tish was smug, positively smug. As for me, I roused with a start to find myself sugaring my ice cream.
Charlie Sands was delayed that night. He came in about nine o’clock and found Tufik telling us about his home and his people and the shepherds on the hills about Damascus and the olive trees in sunlight. We half-expected Tufik to adopt Charlie Sands as a father; but he contented himself with a low Oriental salute, and shortly after he bowed himself away.
Charlie Sands stood looking after him and smiling to himself. “Pretty smooth boy, that!” he said.
“Smooth nothing!” Tish snapped, getting the bridge score. “He’s a sad-hearted and lonely boy; and we are going to do the kindest thing–we are going to help him to help himself.”
“Oh, he’ll help himself all right!” observed Charlie Sands. “But, since his people are Christians, I wish you’d tell me how he knows so much about the inside of a harem!”
Seeing that comment annoyed us, he ceased, and we fell to our bridge game; but more than once his eye fell on Aggie’s doily, and he muttered something about the Assyrian coming down like a wolf on the fold.
II
The problem of Tufik’s future was a pressing one. Tish called a meeting of the three of us next morning, and we met at her house. We found her reading about Syria in the encyclopaedia, while spread round her on chairs and tables were numbers of silk kimonos, rolls of crocheted lace, shirt-waist patterns, and embroidered linens.
Hannah let us in. She looked surly and had a bandage round her head, a sure sign of trouble–Hannah always referring a pain in her temper to her ear or her head or her teeth. She clutched my arm in the hall and held me back.
“I’m going to poison him!” she said. “Miss Lizzie, that little snake goes or I go!”
“I’m ashamed of you, Hannah!” I replied sternly. “If out of the breadth of her charity Miss Tish wishes to assist a fellow man–“
Hannah reeled back and freed my arm.
“My God!” she whispered. “You too!”
I am very fond of Hannah, who has lived with Tish for many years; but I had small patience with her that morning.
“I cannot see how it concerns you, anyhow, Hannah,” I observed severely.
Hannah put her apron to her eyes and sniffled into it.
“Oh, you can’t, can’t you!” she wailed. “Don’t I give him half his meals, with him soft-soapin’ Miss Tish till she can’t see for suds? Ain’t I fallin’ over him mornin’, noon, and night, and the postman telling all over the block he’s my steady company–that snip that’s not eighteen yet? And don’t I do the washin’? And will you look round the place and count the things I’ve got to do up every week? And don’t he talk to me in that lingo of his, so I don’t know whether he’s askin’ for a cup of coffee or insultin’ me?”