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Old Man Minick
by
“Widow, ma’am?”
“Since I was twenty. Work, work, that’s all I’ve had. And lonesome! I suppose you don’t know what lonesome is.”
“Oh, don’t I!” slipped from him. He had dropped the bastings.
The sewing woman flashed a look at him from the cold hard eye. “Well, maybe you do. I suppose living here like this, with sons and daughters, ain’t so grand, for all your money. Now me, I’ve always managed to keep my own little place that I could call home, to come back to. It’s only two rooms, and nothing to rave about, but it’s home. Evenings I just cook and fuss around. Nobody to fuss for, but I fuss, anyway. Cooking, that’s what I love to do. Plenty of good food, that’s what folks need to keep their strength up.” Nettie’s lunch that day had been rather scant.
She was there a week. In Nettie’s absence she talked against her. He protested, but weakly. Did she give him egg-nogs? Milk? Hot toddy? Soup? Plenty of good rich gravy and meat and puddings? Well! That’s what folks needed when they weren’t so young any more. Not that he looked old. My, no. Sprier than many young boys, and handsomer than his own son if she did say so.
He fed on it, hungrily. The third day she was flashing meaning glances at him across the luncheon table. The fourth she pressed his foot beneath the table. The fifth, during Nettie’s afternoon absence, she got up, ostensibly to look for a bit of cloth which she needed for sewing, and, passing him, laid a caressing hand on his shoulder. Laid it there and pressed his shoulder ever so little. He looked up, startled. The glances across the luncheon had largely passed over his head; the foot beneath the table might have been an accident. But this–this was unmistakable. He stood up, a little shakily. She caught his hand. The hawk-like face was close to his.
“You need somebody to love you,” she said. “Somebody to do for you, and love you.” The hawk face came nearer. He leaned a little toward it. But between it and his face was Ma Minick’s face, plump, patient, quizzical, kindly. His head came back sharply. He threw the woman’s hot hand from him.
“Woman!” he cried. “Jezebel!”
The front door slammed. Nettie. The woman flew to her sewing. Old man Minick, shaking, went into his kitchen bedroom.
“Well,” said Nettie, depositing her bundles on the dining room table, “did you finish that faggoting? Why, you haven’t done so very much, have you!”
“I ain’t feeling so good,” said the woman. “That lunch didn’t agree with me.”
“Why, it was a good plain lunch. I don’t see—-“
“Oh, it was plain enough, all right.”
Next day she did not come to finish her work. Sick, she telephoned. Nettie called it an outrage. She finished the sewing herself, though she hated sewing. Pa Minick said nothing, but there was a light in his eye. Now and then he chuckled, to Nettie’s infinite annoyance, though she said nothing.
“Wanted to marry me!” he said to himself, chuckling. “Wanted to marry me! The old rip!”
At the end of April, Pa Minick discovered Washington Park, and the Club, and his whole life was from that day transformed.
He had taken advantage of the early spring sunshine to take a walk, at Nettie’s suggestion.
“Why don’t you go into the Park, Father? It’s really warm out. And the sun’s lovely. Do you good.”
He had put on his heaviest shirt, and a muffler, and George’s old red sweater with the great white “C” on its front, emblem of George’s athletic prowess at the University of Chicago; and over all, his greatcoat. He had taken warm mittens and his cane with the greyhound’s head handle, carved. So equipped he had ambled uninterestedly over to the Park across the way. And there he had found new life.
New life in old life. For the park was full of old men. Old men like himself, with greyhound’s-head canes, and mufflers and somebody’s sweater worn beneath their greatcoats. They wore arctics, though the weather was fine. The skin of their hands and cheek-bones was glazed and had a tight look though it lay in fine little folds. There were splotches of brown on the backs of their hands, and on the temples and forehead. Their heavy grey or brown socks made comfortable folds above their ankles. From that April morning until winter drew on the Park saw old man Minick daily. Not only daily but by the day. Except for his meals, and a brief hour for his after-luncheon nap, he spent all his time there.