Complete Works of Hall Caine, page 541
One of her chums in the office who used to go out with her every night to the music-halls got into trouble a year or two ago. As a consequence she had to marry. And what was the result? Never had her nose out of the wash-tub now!
The story was crude enough, yet it touched me closely.
“But couldn’t she have put her baby out to nurse and get another situation somewhere?” I asked.
“Matter o’ luck,” said the girl. “Some can. Some can’t. That’s their look out. Firms don’t like it. If they find you’ve got a child they gen’r’lly chuck you.”
In spite of myself I was a little down when I started on my journey again. I thought the parcel was cutting my wrist and I felt my feet growing heavier at every step.
Was Maggie Jones’s story the universal one?
If a child were born beyond the legal limits, was it a thing to hide away and be ashamed of?
And could it be possible that man’s law was stronger than God’s law after all?
NINETY-THIRD CHAPTER
I had walked so slowly and stopped so often that it was two o’clock in the afternoon when I passed through Aldgate.
I was then faint for want of food, so I looked out for a tea-shop or restaurant.
I passed several such places before I found the modest house I wanted. Then I stepped into it rather nervously and took the seat nearest the door.
It was an oblong room with red plush seats along the walls behind a line of marble-topped tables. The customers were all men, chiefly clerks and warehousemen, I thought, and the attendants were girls in black frocks and white aprons.
There seemed to be a constant fire of free-and-easy flirtation going on between them. At one table a man in a cloth cap was saying to the girl who had served him:
“What’s the damage, dearie?”
“One roast, one veg, two breads— ‘levenpence, and no liberties, mister.”
“Sunday off, Em’ly?” said a youth in a red tie at another table, and being told it was, he said:
“Then what do you say to ‘oppin’ up to ‘Endon and ‘aving a day in a boat?”
I had to wait some time before anybody came to attend to me, but at length a girl from the other end of the room, who had taken no part in these amatory exchanges, stepped up and asked what I wanted.
I ordered a glass of cold milk and a scone for myself and a pint of hot milk to replenish baby’s bottle.
The girl served me immediately, and after rinsing and refilling the feeding-bottle she stood near while the baby used it.
She had quiet eyes and that indefinable expression of yearning tenderness which we sometimes see in the eyes of a dear old maid who has missed her motherhood.
The shop had been clearing rapidly; and as soon as the men were gone, and while the other girls were sitting in corners to read penny novelettes, my waitress leaned over and asked me if I did not wish to go into the private room to attend to baby.
A moment afterwards I followed her into a small apartment at the end of the shop, and there a curious thing occurred.
She closed the door behind us and asked me in an eager whisper to allow her to see to baby.
I tried to excuse myself, but she whispered:
“Hush! I have a baby of my own, though they know nothing about it here, so you can safely trust me.”
I did so, and it was beautiful to see the joy she had in doing what was wanted, saying all sorts of sweet and gentle things to my baby (though I knew they were meant for her own), as if the starved mother-heart in her were stealing a moment of maternal tenderness.
“There!” she said, “She’ll be comfortable now, bless her!”
I asked about her own child, and, coming close and speaking in a whisper, she told me all about it.
It was a girl and it would be a year old at Christmas. At first she had put it out to nurse in town, where she could see it every evening, but the foster-mother had neglected it, and the inspector had complained, so she had been compelled to take it away. Now it was in a Home in the country, ten miles from Liverpool Street, and it was as bonny as a peach and as happy as the day is long.
“See,” she whispered, taking a card from her breast, after a furtive glance towards the door. “I sent two shillings to have her photograph taken and the Matron has just sent it.”
It was the picture of a beautiful baby girl, and I found it easy to praise her.
“I suppose you see her constantly, don’t you?” I said.
The girl’s face dropped.
“Only on visiting days, once a month, and not always that,” she answered.
“But how can you live without seeing her oftener?” I asked.
“Matter o’ means,” she said sadly. “I pay five shillings a week for her board, and the train is one-and-eight return, so I have to be careful, you see, and if I lost my place what would happen to baby?”
I was very low and tired and down when I resumed my walk. But when I thought for a moment of taking omnibuses for the rest of my journey I remembered the waitress’s story and told myself that the little I had belonged to my child, and so I struggled on.
But what a weary march it was during the next two hours! I was in the East End now, and remembering the splendour of the West, I could scarcely believe I was still in London.
Long, mean, monotonous streets, running off to right and left, miles on miles of them without form or feature, or any trace of nature except the blue strips of sky overhead.
Such multitudes of people, often badly dressed and generally with set and anxious faces, hasting to and fro, hustling, elbowing, jostling each other along, as if driven by some invisible power that was swinging an unseen scourge.
No gracious courtesy here! A woman with a child in her arms was no longer a queen. Children were cheap, and sometimes it was as much as I could do to save myself from being pushed off the pavement.
The air seemed to smell of nothing but ale and coarse tobacco. And then the noise! The ceaseless clatter of carts, the clang of electric cars, the piercing shrieks of the Underground Railway coming at intervals out of the bowels of the earth like explosions out of a volcano, and, above all, the raucous, rasping, high-pitched voices of the people, often foul-mouthed, sometimes profane, too frequently obscene.
A cold, grey, joyless, outcast city, cut off from the rest of London by an invisible barrier more formidable than a wall; a city in which the inhabitants seemed to live cold, grey, joyless lives, all the same that they joked and laughed; a city under perpetual siege, the siege of Poverty, in the constant throes of civil war, the War of Want, the daily and hourly fight for food.
If there were other parts of the East End (and I am sure there must be) where people live simple, natural, human lives, I did not see them that day, for my course was down the principal thoroughfares only.
Those thoroughfares, telescoping each other, one after another, seemed as if they would never come to an end.
How tired I was! Even baby was no longer light, and the parcel on my wrist had become as heavy as lead.
Towards four o’clock I came to a broad parapet which had strips of garden enclosed by railings and iron seats in front of them. Utterly exhausted, my arms aching and my legs limp, I sank into one of these seats, feeling that I could walk no farther.
But after a while I felt better, and then I became aware that another woman was sitting beside me.
When I looked at her first I thought I had never in my life seen anything so repulsive. She was asleep, and having that expressionless look which sleep gives, I found it impossible to know whether she was young or old. She was not merely coarse, she was gross. The womanhood in her seemed to be effaced, and I thought she was utterly brutalised and degraded.
Presently baby, who had also been asleep, awoke and cried, and then the woman opened her eyes and looked at the child, while I hushed her to sleep again.
There must be something in a baby’s face that has a miraculous effect on every woman (as if these sweet angels, fresh from God, make us all young and all beautiful), and it was even so at that moment.
Never shall I forget the transfiguration in the woman’s face when she looked into the face of my baby. The expression of brutality and degradation disappeared, and through the bleared eyes and over the coarsened features there came the light of an almost celestial smile.
After a while the woman spoke to me. She spoke in a husky voice which seemed to be compounded of the effects of rum and raw night air.
“That your’n,” she said.
I answered her.
“Boy or gel?”
I told her.
“‘Ow old?”
I told her that too.
The woman was silent for a moment, and then, with a thickening of the husky voice, she said:
“S’pose you’ll say I’m a bleedin’ liar, but I ‘ad a kid as putty as that onct — puttier. It was a boy. The nobbiest little b —— as you ever come acrost. Your’n is putty, but it ain’t in it with my Billie, not by a long chalk.”
I asked her what had become of her child.
“Lawst ‘im,” she said. “Used to give sixpence a week to the woman what ‘ad ‘alf the ‘ouse with me to look after ‘im while I was workin’ at the fact’ry. But what did the bleedin’ b —— do? Blimey, if she didn’t let ‘im get run over by the dray from the brewery.”
“Killed?” I said, clutching at baby.
The woman nodded without speaking.
I asked her how old her child had been.
“More’n four,” she said. “Just old enough to run a arrand. It was crool. Hit me out, I can tell you. That kid was all I had. Apple o’ my eye, in a manner of speakin’. When it was gone there wasn’t much encouragement, was there? The Favver from the Mission came jawin’ as ‘ow Jesus ‘ad taken ‘im to ‘Imself. Rot! When they put ‘im down in old Bow I didn’t care no more for nothin’. Monse and monse I walked about night and day, and the bleedin’ coppers was allus on to me. They got their own way at last. I took the pneumonier and was laid up at the London. And when I got out I didn’t go back to the fact’ry neither.”
“What did you do?” I asked.
The woman laughed — bitterly, terribly.
“Do? Don’t you know?”
I shook my head. The woman looked hard at me, and then at the child.
“Look here — are you a good gel?” she said.
Hardly knowing what she meant I answered that I hoped so
“‘Ope? Don’t you know that neither?”
Then I caught her meaning, and answered faintly:
“Yes.”
She looked searchingly into my eyes and said:
“I b’lieve you. Some gels is. S’elp me Gawd I don’t know how they done it, though.”
I was shuddering and trembling, for I was catching glimpses, as if by broken lights from hell, of the life behind — the wrecked hope, the shattered faith, the human being hunted like a beast and at last turned into one.
Just at that moment baby awoke and cried again. The woman looked at her with the same look as before — not so much a smile as a sort of haggard radiance.
Then leaning over me she blew puffs of alcoholic breath into baby’s face, and stretching out a coarse fat finger she tickled her under the chin.
Baby ceased to cry and began to smile. Seeing this the woman’s eyes sparkled like sunshine.
“See that,” she cried. “S’elp me Jesus, I b’lieve I could ‘ave been good meself if I’d on’y ‘ad somethink like this to keer for.”
I am not ashamed to say that more than once there had been tears in my eyes while the woman spoke, though her blasphemies had corrupted the air like the gases that rise from a dust-heap. But when she touched my child I shuddered as if something out of the ‘lowest depths had tainted her.
Then a strange thing happened.
I had risen to go, although my limbs could scarcely support me, and was folding my little angel closely in my arms, when the woman rose too and said:
“You wouldn’t let me carry your kiddie a bit, would you?”
I tried to excuse myself, saying something, I know not what The woman looked at me again, and after a moment she said:
“S’pose not. On’y I thought it might make me think as ‘ow I was carryin’ Billie.”
That swept down everything.
The one remaining window of the woman’s soul was open and I dared not close it.
I looked down at my child — so pure, so sweet, so stainless; I looked up at the woman — so foul, so gross, so degraded.
There was a moment of awful struggle and then . . . the woman and I were walking side by side.
And the harlot was carrying my baby down the street.
NINETY-FOURTH CHAPTER
At five o’clock I was once more alone.
I was then standing (with baby in my own arms now) under the statue which is at the back of Bow Church.
I thought I could walk no farther, and although every penny I had in my pocket belonged to Isabel (being all that yet stood between her and want) I must borrow a little of it if she was to reach Mrs. Oliver’s that night.
I waited for the first tram that was going in my direction, and when it came up I signalled to it, but it did not stop — it was full.
I waited for a second tram, but that was still more crowded.
I reproached myself for having come so far. I told myself how ill-advised I had been in seeking for a nurse for my child at the farthest end of the city. I reminded myself that I could not hope to visit her every day if my employment was to be in the West, as I had always thought it would be. I asked myself if in all this vast London, with its myriads of homes, there had been no house nearer that could have sheltered my child.
Against all this I had to set something, or I think my very heart would have died there and then. I set the thought of Ilford, on the edge of the country, with its green fields and its flowers. I set the thought of Mrs. Oliver, who would love my child as tenderly as if she were her own little lost one.
I dare say it was all very weak and childish, but it is just when we are done and down, and do not know what we are doing, that Providence seems to be directing us, and it was so with me at that moment.
The trams being full I had concluded that Fate had set itself against my spending any of Isabel’s money, and had made up my mind to make a fierce fight over the last stage of my journey, when I saw that a little ahead of where I was standing the road divided into two branches at an acute angle, one branch going to the right and the other to the left.
Not all Emmerjane’s instructions about keeping “as straight as a’ arrow” sufficed to show me which of the two roads to take and I looked about for somebody to tell me.
It was then that I became aware of a shabby old four-wheeled cab which stood in the triangular space in front of the statue, and of the driver (an old man, in a long coachman’s coat, much worn and discoloured, and a dilapidated tall hat, very shiny in patches) looking at me while he took the nose-bag off his horse — a bony old thing with its head hanging down.
I stepped up to him and asked my way, and he pointed it out to me — to the right, over the bridge and through Stratford Market.
I asked how far it was to Ilford.
“Better nor two mile I call it,” he answered.
After that, being so tired in brain as well as body, I asked a foolish question — how long it would take me to get there.
The old driver looked at me again, and said:
“‘Bout a ‘our and a ‘alf I should say by the looks of you — and you carryin’ the biby.”
I dare say my face dropped sadly as I turned away, feeling very tired, yet determined to struggle through. But hardly had I walked twenty paces when I heard the cab coming up behind and the old driver crying:
“‘Old on, missie.”
I stopped, and to my surprise he drew up by my side, got down from his box, opened the door of his cab and said:
“Ger in.”
I told him I could not afford to ride.
“Ger in,” he said again more loudly, and as if angry with himself for having to say it.
Again I made some demur, and then the old man said, speaking fiercely through his grizzly beard:
“Look ‘ere, missie. I ‘ave a gel o’ my own lost somewheres, and I wouldn’t be ans’rable to my ole woman if I let you walk with a face like that.”
I don’t know what I said to him. I only know that my tears gushed out and that at the next moment I was sitting in the cab.
What happened then I do not remember, except that the dull rumble of the wheels told me we were passing over a bridge, and that I saw through the mist before my eyes a sluggish river, a muddy canal, and patches of marshy fields.
I think my weariness and perhaps my emotion, added to the heavy monotonous trotting of the old horse, must have put me to sleep, for after a while I was conscious of a great deal of noise, and of the old driver twisting about and shouting in a cheerful voice through the open window at the back of his seat:
“Stratford Market.”
After a while we came to a broad road, full of good houses, and then the old driver cried “Ilford,” and asked what part of it I wished to go to.
I reached forward and told him, “10 Lennard’s Row, Lennard’s Green,” and then sat back with a lighter heart.
But after another little while I saw a great many funeral cars passing us, with the hearses empty, as if returning from a cemetery. This made me think of the woman and her story, and I found myself unconsciously clasping my baby closer.
The cortèges became so numerous at last that to shut out painful sights I closed my eyes and tried to think of pleasanter things.
I thought, above all, of Mrs. Oliver’s house, as I had always seen it in my mind’s eye — not a pretentious place at all, only a little humble cottage but very sweet and clean, covered with creepers and perhaps with roses.
I was still occupied with these visions when I felt the cab turn sharply to the left. Then opening my eyes I saw that we were running down a kind of alley-way, with a row of very mean little two-storey houses on the one side, and on the other, a kind of waste ground strewn with broken bottles, broken iron pans, broken earthenware and other refuse, interspersed with tufts of long scraggy grass, which looked the more wretched because the sinking sun was glistening over it.
