登陆注册
15445700000010

第10章 CHAPTER 3(1)

Once every two months Maria Macapa set the entire flat in commotion. She roamed the building from garret to cellar, searching each corner, ferreting through every old box and trunk and barrel, groping about on the top shelves of closets, peering into rag-bags, exasperating the lodgers with her persistence and importunity. She was collecting junks, bits of iron, stone jugs, glass bottles, old sacks, and cast-off garments. It was one of her perquisites. She sold the junk to Zerkow, the rags-bottles-sacks man, who lived in a filthy den in the alley just back of the flat, and who sometimes paid her as much as three cents a pound.

The stone jugs, however, were worth a nickel. The money that Zerkow paid her, Maria spent on shirt waists and dotted blue neckties, trying to dress like the girls who tended the soda-water fountain in the candy store on the corner. She was sick with envy of these young women. They were in the world, they were elegant, they were debonair, they had their "young men."

On this occasion she presented herself at the door of Old Grannis's room late in the afternoon. His door stood a little open. That of Miss Baker was ajar a few inches. The two old people were "keeping company" after their fashion.

"Got any junk, Mister Grannis?" inquired Maria, standing in the door, a very dirty, half-filled pillowcase over one arm.

"No, nothing--nothing that I can think of, Maria," replied Old Grannis, terribly vexed at the interruption, yet not wishing to be unkind. "Nothing I think of. Yet, however-- perhaps--if you wish to look."

He sat in the middle of the room before a small pine table.

His little binding apparatus was before him. In his fingers was a huge upholsterer's needle threaded with twine, a brad- awl lay at his elbow, on the floor beside him was a great pile of pamphlets, the pages uncut. Old Grannis bought the "Nation" and the "Breeder and Sportsman." In the latter he occasionally found articles on dogs which interested him.

The former he seldom read. He could not afford to subscribe regularly to either of the publications, but purchased their back numbers by the score, almost solely for the pleasure he took in binding them.

"What you alus sewing up them books for, Mister Grannis?" asked Maria, as she began rummaging about in Old Grannis's closet shelves. "There's just hundreds of 'em in here on yer shelves; they ain't no good to you."

"Well, well," answered Old Grannis, timidly, rubbing his chin, "I--I'm sure I can't quite say; a little habit, you know; a diversion, a--a--it occupies one, you know. I don't smoke; it takes the place of a pipe, perhaps."

"Here's this old yellow pitcher," said Maria, coming out of the closet with it in her hand. "The handle's cracked; you don't want it; better give me it."

Old Grannis did want the pitcher; true, he never used it now, but he had kept it a long time, and somehow he held to it as old people hold to trivial, worthless things that they have had for many years.

"Oh, that pitcher--well, Maria, I--I don't know. I'm afraid--you see, that pitcher----"

"Ah, go 'long," interrupted Maria Macapa, "what's the good of it?"

"If you insist, Maria, but I would much rather--" he rubbed his chin, perplexed and annoyed, hating to refuse, and wishing that Maria were gone.

"Why, what's the good of it?" persisted Maria. He could give no sufficient answer. "That's all right," she asserted, carrying the pitcher out.

"Ah--Maria--I say, you--you might leave the door--ah, don't quite shut it--it's a bit close in here at times." Maria grinned, and swung the door wide. Old Grannis was horribly embarrassed; positively, Maria was becoming unbearable.

"Got any junk?" cried Maria at Miss Baker's door. The little old lady was sitting close to the wall in her rocking-chair; her hands resting idly in her lap.

"Now, Maria," she said plaintively, "you are always after junk; you know I never have anything laying 'round like that."

It was true. The retired dressmaker's tiny room was a marvel of neatness, from the little red table, with its three Gorham spoons laid in exact parallels, to the decorous geraniums and mignonettes growing in the starch box at the window, underneath the fish globe with its one venerable gold fish. That day Miss Baker had been doing a bit of washing; two pocket handkerchiefs, still moist, adhered to the window panes, drying in the sun.

"Oh, I guess you got something you don't want," Maria went on, peering into the corners of the room. "Look-a-here what Mister Grannis gi' me," and she held out the yellow pitcher.

Instantly Miss Baker was in a quiver of confusion. Every word spoken aloud could be perfectly heard in the next room.

What a stupid drab was this Maria! Could anything be more trying than this position?

"Ain't that right, Mister Grannis?" called Maria; "didn't you gi' me this pitcher?" Old Grannis affected not to hear; perspiration stood on his forehead; his timidity overcame him as if he were a ten-year-old schoolboy. He half rose from his chair, his fingers dancing nervously upon his chin.

Maria opened Miss Baker's closet unconcernedly. "What's the matter with these old shoes?" she exclaimed, turning about with a pair of half-worn silk gaiters in her hand. They were by no means old enough to throw away, but Miss Baker was almost beside herself. There was no telling what might happen next. Her only thought was to be rid of Maria.

"Yes, yes, anything. You can have them; but go, go. There's nothing else, not a thing."

Maria went out into the hall, leaving Miss Baker's door wide open, as if maliciously. She had left the dirty pillow-case on the floor in the hall, and she stood outside, between the two open doors, stowing away the old pitcher and the half- worn silk shoes. She made remarks at the top of her voice, calling now to Miss Baker, now to Old Grannis. In a way she brought the two old people face to face. Each time they were forced to answer her questions it was as if they were talking directly to each other.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 修妄

    修妄

    心有妄,则为修。但凡修者,无不有一颗妄心。或是追求力量,或是渴望长生,或是探寻大道……总有一种执着支撑前行。而故事的主人公恰恰人如其名,吴望,无妄。原本无欲无求,却偏偏连遭厄运。在命运的驱使下,他又会成为怎样的强者?(原创故事,全然虚构;如有雷同,实属巧合)
  • 九域风云录

    九域风云录

    仙道已衰,武道正兴,一场场的生离死别,一场场的爱恨情仇,十里妖莲、燃夜之花、凝梦永殇。有人以武证道,妄图成仙;有人心系苍生,黯然伤情;有人天地浮萍,何处可依?
  • 匆匆锦年

    匆匆锦年

    【完结】时光匆匆,总有一些记忆刻苦铭心,总有那么一二个朋友陪你疯,总有那么个人舍不得忘记。比如林诗琪有熹微和赵可昕这么二个好朋友陪伴她读完G大,又比如林诗琪有个在远在美国的男朋友,只是异地恋坚持了三年,突然有天就看见他和别人订婚了。之后诗琪决定从世杰的世界里消失。毕业后随暗恋诗琪多年的邓鑫到Z城,在那里顺利找到一份不错的工作。在一次参加朋友的婚礼上遇见宋世杰,打破了诗琪维持了几年的平静生活,世杰再一次展开对诗琪的追求,可是,还能回到过去吗。//本文是《只想离你近一点》的续集,这个系列文橙子构思了几年,去年才开始从电脑上敲出来,心中的故事,说给想听的你。这是一个很任性的故事,你不点开来看就不会知道有多精彩。//封面by夏阿花
  • 趁我喜欢你,请别错过我

    趁我喜欢你,请别错过我

    自从八年前父母去世,我的人生就只剩两件事。一是,撕破温睿伪善的嘴脸;二是,折腾的他全家鸡犬不宁。我砸过他的车;烧过他的别墅;驱逐过他的女朋友;还在他的食物里加过料,害他险些丧命…他却轻拍我的小脑袋,宠溺的说:“你开心就好!”我们相依为命,他宠我入骨,我恨他至髓。本以为日子会这么一直的纠缠下去,未曾想有一天,命运的轨迹,竟朝着不可预知的方向发展……
  • 玄屋战记

    玄屋战记

    直骜的都市少年遭遇萌哒哒的外星少女,竟然擦出匪夷所思的别样火花!
  • 源天神隐

    源天神隐

    孤身一人的少年,背井离乡,寻找故乡被灭之凶手,想不到自己竟发现了更大的秘密…………
  • 群友修真记

    群友修真记

    意外的穿越让孙智这个小人物来到二十年前.且看孙智游戏人间,修真,异界,还有什么是自己没有碰到的。
  • 创业实战

    创业实战

    本书紧密围绕创业过程中的关键问题编写,包括:激发创业头脑、提升创业能力、确定创业战略、掌握创业管理、运用创业模式、创业模拟训练、实施创业实战等,内容丰富,知识性强,具有以下三个特点:第一,结构简练,条理清晰;第二,深入浅出,通俗易懂;第三,实战性强,便于操作。既可作为全国高等院校管理类本科生以及非管理类学生的创业管理教材,也可作为企业创业培训的教材,还可作为社会各方研究者、创业者的自学参考书。
  • 邪神尊

    邪神尊

    上古时期有尊邪神天生骄傲,直到一天生命到了终点,为了可以不让自己永远的消失,他选择了转世天生骄傲的邪神重生必定会有前所未有的浩劫除非~~~~~
  • EXO之姐姐

    EXO之姐姐

    一岁那年,莫清被养父母收养,随了养母的姓氏姓安,从此有了一个家。那时候,莫清关于孤儿院的记忆,几乎没有。一岁半,养母生了个弟弟,难产而亡,弟弟随了养父的姓氏,叫朴灿烈。养父希望他的生命能够灿烂,热烈。安莫清守着小小的婴儿,心里发誓,要对弟弟好。