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The Bearer Of Burdens
by
IV
The next news that leaked into Natalya’s wizened ear was as startling as Madge’s death. Henry had married again. Doubtless with the same pretext of the children’s needs he had taken unto himself a third wife, and again without the decencies of adequate delay. And this wife was a Jewess, as of yore. Henry had reverted matrimonially to the fold. Was it conscience, was it terror? Nobody knew. But everybody knew that the third Mrs. Elkman was a bouncing beauty of a good orthodox stock, that she brought with her fifty pounds in cash, besides bedding and house-linen accumulated by her parents without prevision that she would marry an old hand, already provided with these household elements.
The old clo’-woman’s emotions were more mingled than ever. She felt vaguely that the Jewish minister should not so unquestioningly have accorded the scamp the privileges of the hymeneal canopy. Some lustral rite seemed necessary to purify him of his Christian conjunction. And the memory of Fanny was still outraged by this burying of her, so to speak, under layers of successive wives. On the other hand, the children would revert to Judaism, and they would have a Jewish mother, not a mamma, to care for them and to love them. The thought consoled her for being shut out of their lives, as she felt she must have been, even had Henry been friendlier. This third wife had alienated her from the household, had made her kinship practically remote. She had sunk to a sort of third cousin, or a mother-in-law twice removed.
The days went on, and again the Elkman household occupied the gossips, and news of it–second-hand, like everything that came to her–was picked up by Natalya on her rounds. Henry’s third wife was, it transpired, a melancholy failure. Her temper was frightful, she beat her step-children, and–worst and rarest sin in the Jewish housewife–she drank. Henry was said to be in despair.
‘Nebbich, the poor little children!’ cried Natalya, horrified. Her brain began plotting how to interfere, but she could find no way.
The weeks passed, with gathering rumours of the iniquities of the third Mrs. Elkman, and then at last came the thunder-clap–Henry had disappeared without leaving a trace. The wicked wife and the innocent brats had the four-roomed home to themselves. The Clothing Emporium knew him no more. Some whispered suicide, others America. Benjamin Beckenstein, the cutter of the Emporium, who favoured the latter hypothesis reported a significant saying: ‘I have lived with two angels; I can’t live with a demon.’
‘Ah, at last he sees my Fanny was an angel,’ said Natalya, neglecting to draw the deduction anent America, and passing over the other angel. And she embroidered the theme. How indeed could a man who had known the blessing of a sober, God-fearing wife endure a drunkard and a child-beater? ‘No wonder he killed himself!’
The gossips pointed out that the saying implied flight rather than suicide.
‘You are right!’ Natalya admitted illogically. ‘Just what a coward and blackguard like that would do–leave the children at the mercy of the woman he couldn’t face himself. How in Heaven’s name will they live?’
‘Oh, her father, the furrier, will have to look after them,’ the gossips assured her. ‘He gave her good money, you know, fifty pounds and the bedding. Ah, trust Elkman for that. He knew he wasn’t leaving the children to starve.’
‘I don’t know so much,’ said the old woman, shaking her bewigged head.
What was to be done? Suppose the furrier refused the burden. But Henry’s flight, she felt, had removed her even farther from the Elkman household. If she went to spy out the land, she would now have to face the virago in possession. But no! on second thoughts it was this other woman whom Henry’s flight had changed to a stranger. What had the wretch to do with the children? She was a mere intruder in the house. Out with her, or at least out with the children.