PAGE 9
The Taxidermist
by
The street was filling with people. A row of cottages across the way was being emptied. The crackling flames were but half a square from Manouvrier’s house. I called him once more to come. He waved his hand kindly to imply that he knew what I had done. He and his wife were in the Sisters’ front garden walk conversing eagerly with the Mother Superior. They neared the gate. Suddenly the Mother Superior went back, the lay-sister guarding the gate let the pair out and the three of us hurried off together.
We found ourselves now in the uproar and vortex of the struggle. Only at intervals could we take our attention from the turmoil that impeded or threatened us, to glance forward at the white gable or back–as Manouvrier persisted in doing–to the Sisters’ cottage. Once I looked behind and noticed, what I was loath to tell, that the firemen on its roof had grown busy; but as I was about to risk the truth, the husband and wife, glancing at their own roof, in one breath groaned aloud. Its gleaming gable had begun to smoke.
“Ah! that good God have pity on uz!” cried the wife, in tears, but as she started to run forward I caught her arm and bade her look again. A strong, white stream of water was falling on the smoking spot and it smoked no more.
The next minute, with scores of others, choking and blinded with the smoke, we were flying from the fire. The wind had turned.
“It is only a gust,” I cried, “it will swing round again. We must turn the next corner and reach the house from the far side.” I glanced back to see why my companions lagged and lo! they had vanished.
IX
I reached the house just in time to save its front grounds from the invasion of the rabble. The wind had not turned back again. The brother-in law’s widow was offering prayers of thanksgiving. The cisterns were empty and the garden stood glistening in the afternoon sun like a May queen drenched in tears; but the lovely spot was saved.
I left its custodian at an upper window, looking out upon the fire, and started once more to find my friends. Half-way round to the Sisters’ cottage I met them. With many others I stepped aside to make a clear way for the procession they headed. The sweet, clean wife bore in her arms an infant; the tattered, sooty, bloody-headed husband bore two; and after them, by pairs and hand in hand, with one gray sister in the rear, came a score or more of pink-frocked, motherless little girls. An amused rabble of children and lads hovered about the diminutive column, with leers and jests and happy antics, and the wife smiled foolishly and burned red with her embarrassment; but in the taxidermist’s face shone an exaltation of soul greater than any I had ever seen. I felt too petty for such a moment and hoped he would go by without seeing me; but he smiled an altogether new smile and said,
“My fran’, God A’mighty, he know a good bargain well as anybody!”
I ran ahead with no more shame of the crowd than Zaccheus of old. I threw open the gate, bounded up the steps and spread wide the door. In the hall, the widow, knowing naught of this, met me with wet eyes crying,
“Ah! ah! de ‘ouse of de orphelin’ is juz blaze’ up h-all over h-at once!” and hushed in amazement as the procession entered the gate.
P.T.B. Manouvrier, Taxidermist!
When the fire was out the owner of that sign went back to his shop and to his work, and his wife sat by him sewing as before. But the orphans stayed in their new and better home. Two or three years ago the Sisters–the brother-in-law’s widow is one of them–built a large addition behind; but the house itself stands in the beauty in which it stood on that day of destruction, and my friend always leaves his work on balmy afternoons in time to go with his wife and see that pink procession, four times as long now as it was that day, march out the gate and down the street for its daily walk.
“Ah! Pastropbon, we got ba-bee’ enough presently, en’t it?”
“Ole woman, nobody else ever strock dat lott’ree for such a prize like dat.”