Martha’s Mother
It was nine feet long.
It was eight feet high.
It was six feet wide.
There was a closet, actually!—a closet one foot deep—that was why she took this room. There was the bed, and the trunk, and just room to open the closet door part way—that accounted for the length. There was the bed and the bureau and the chair—that accounted for the width. Between the bedside and the bureau and chair side was a strip extending the whole nine feet. There was room to turn around by the window. There was room to turn round by the door. Martha was thin.
One, two, three, four—turn.
One, two, three, four—turn.
She managed it nicely.
"It is a stateroom," she always said to herself. "It is a luxurious, large, well-furnished stateroom with a real window. It is a cell."
Martha had a vigorous constructive imagination. Sometimes it was the joy of her life, her magic carpet, her Aladdin’s lamp. Sometimes it frightened her—frightened her horribly, it was so strong.
The cell idea had come to her one gloomy day, and she had foolishly allowed it to enter—played with it a little while. Since then she had to keep a special bar on that particular intruder, so she had arranged a stateroom "set," and forcibly kept it on hand.
Martha was a stenographer and typewriter in a real estate office. She got $12 a week, and was thankful for it. It was steady pay, and enough to live on. Seven dollars she paid for board and lodging, ninety cents for her six lunches, ten a day for carfare, including Sundays; seventy-five for laundry; one for her mother—that left one dollar and sixty-five cents for clothes, shoes, gloves, everything. She had tried cheaper board, but made up the cost in doctor’s bills; and lost a good place by being ill.
"Stone walls do not a prison make, nor hall bedrooms a cage," said she determinedly. "Now then—here is another evening—what shall I do? Library? No. My eyes are tired. Besides, three times a week is enough. ’Tisn’t club night. Will sit in the parlor. Too wet to walk. Can’t sew, worse’n reading—O good I’m almost ready to go with Basset!"
She shook herself and paced up and down again.
Prisoners form the habit of talking to themselves—this was the suggestion that floated through her mind—that cell idea again.
"I’ve got to get out of this!" said Martha, stopping short. "It’s enough to drive a girl crazy!"
The driving process was stayed by a knock at the door. "Excuse me for coming up," said a voice. "It’s Mrs. MacAvelly."
Martha knew this lady well. She was a friend of Miss Podder at the Girls’ Trade Union Association. "Come in. I’m glad to see you!" she said hospitably. "Have the chair—or the bed’s really more comfortable!"
"I was with Miss Podder this evening and she was anxious to know whether your union has gained any since the last meeting—I told her I’d find out—I had nothing else to do. Am I intruding?"
"Intruding!" Martha, gave a short laugh. "Why, it’s a godsend, Mrs. MacAvelly! If you knew how dull the evenings are to us girls!"
"Don’t you—go out much? To—to theaters—or parks?" The lady’s tone was sympathetic and not inquisitive.
"Not very much," said Martha, rather sardonically. "Theaters—two girls, two dollars, and twenty cents carfare. Parks, twenty cents—walk your feet off, or sit on the benches and be stared at. Museums—not open evenings."
"But don’t you have visitors—in the parlor here?"
"Did you see it?" asked Martha.
Mrs. MacAvelly had seen it. It was cold and also stuffy. It was ugly and shabby and stiff. Three tired girls sat there, two trying to read by a strangled gaslight overhead; one trying to entertain a caller in a social fiction of privacy at the other end of the room.
"Yes, we have visitors—but mostly they ask us out. And some of us don’t go," said Martha darkly.
"I see, I see!" said Mrs. MacAvelly, with a pleasant smile; and Martha wondered whether she did see, or was just being civil.
"For instance, there’s Mr. Basset," the girl pursued, somewhat recklessly; meaning that her visitor should understand her.
"Mr. Basset?"
"Yes, ’Pond & Basset’—one of my employers."
Mrs. MacAvelly looked pained. "Couldn’t you—er—avoid it?" she suggested.
"You mean shake him?" asked Martha. "Why, yes—I could. Might lose my job. Get another place—another Basset, probably."
"I see!" said Mrs. MacAvelly again. "Like the Fox and the Swarm of Flies! There ought to be a more comfortable way of living for all you girls! And how about the union—I have to be going back to Miss Podder."
Martha gave her the information she wanted, and started to accompany her downstairs. They heard the thin jangle of the door-bell, down through the echoing halls, and the dragging feet of the servant coming up. A kinky black head was thrust in at the door.
"Mr. Basset, callin’ on Miss Joyce," was announced formally.
Martha stiffened. "Please tell Mr. Basset I am not feeling well to-night—and beg to be excused.
She looked rather defiantly at her guest, as Lucy clattered down the long stairs; then stole to the railing and peered down the narrow well. She heard the message given with pompous accuracy, and then heard the clear, firm tones of Mr. Basset:
"Tell Miss Joyce that I will wait."
Martha returned to her room in three long steps, slipped off her shoes and calmly got into bed. "Good-night, Mrs. MacAvelly," she said. "I’m so sorry, but my head aches and I’ve gone to bed! Would you be so very good as to tell Lucy so as you’re going down."
Mrs. MacAvelly said she would, and departed, and Martha lay conscientiously quiet till she heard the door shut far below.
She was quiet, but she was not contented.
*
Yet the discontent of Martha was as nothing to the discontent of Mrs. Joyce, her mother, in her rural home. Here was a woman of fifty-three, alert, vigorous, nervously active; but an automobile-agitated horse had danced upon her, and her usefulness, as she understood it, was over. She could not get about without crutches, nor use her hands for needlework, though still able to write after a fashion. Writing was not her however, at the best of times.
She lived with a widowed sister in a little, lean dusty farmhouse by the side of the road; a hill road that went nowhere in particular, and was too steep for those who were going there.
Brisk on her crutches, Mrs. Joyce hopped about the little house, there was nowhere else to hop to. She had talked her sister out long since—Mary never had never much to say. Occasionally they quarreled and then Mrs. Joyce hopped only in her room, a limited process.
She sat at the window one day, staring greedily out at the lumpy rock-ribbed road; silent, perforce, and tapping the arms of her chair with nervous intensity. Suddenly she called out, "Mary! Mary Ames! Come here quick! There’s somebody coming up the road!"
Mary came in, as fast as she could with eggs in her apron. "It’s Mrs. Holmes!" she said. "And a boarder, I guess."
"No, it ain’t," said Mrs. Joyce, eagerly. "It’s that woman that’s visiting the Holmes—she was in church last week, Myra Slater told me about her. Her name’s MacDowell, or something."
"It ain’t MacDowell," said her sister. "I remember; it’s MacAvelly."
This theory was borne out by Mrs. Holmes’ entrance and introduction of her friend.
"Have you any eggs for us, Mrs. Ames?" she said.
"Set down—set down," said Mrs. Ames cordially. "I was just getting in my eggs—but here’s only about eight yet. How many was you wantin’?"
"I want all you can find," said Mrs. Holmes. "Two dozen, three dozen—all I can carry."
"There’s two hens layin’ out—I’ll go and look them up. And I ain’t been in the woodshed chamber yet. I’ll go’n hunt. You set right here with my sister." And Mrs. Ames bustled off.
"Pleasant view you have here," said Mrs. MacAvelly politely, while Mrs. Holmes rocked and fanned herself.
"Pleasant! Glad you think so, ma’am. Maybe you city folks wouldn’t think so much of views if you had nothing else to look at!"
"What would you like to look at?"
"Folks!" said Mrs. Joyce briefly. "Lots of folks! Somethin’ doin’."
"You’d like to Iive in the city?"
"Yes, ma’am—I would so! I worked in the city once when I was a girl. Waitress. In a big restaurant. I got to be cashier—in two years! I like the business!"
"And then you married a farmer?" suggested Mrs. Holmes.
"Yes, I did. And I never was sorry, Mrs. Holmes. David Joyce was a mighty good man. We was engaged before I left home—I was workin’ to help earn, so ’t we could marry."
"There’s plenty of work on a farm, isn’t there?" Mrs. MacAvelly inquired.
Mrs. Joyce’s eager eyes kindled. "There is " she agreed. "Lots to do. And lots to manage! We kept help then, and the farm hands, and the children growin’ up. And some seasons we took boarders."
"Did you like that?"
"I did. I liked it first rate. I like lots of people, and to do for ’em. The best time I ever had was one summer I ran a hotel."
"Ran a hotel! How interesting!"
"Yes’m—it was interesting! I had a cousin who kept a summer hotel up here in the mountains a piece—and he was short-handed that summer and got me to go up and help him out. Then he was taken sick, and I had the whole thing on my shoulders! I just enjoyed it! And the place cleared more that summer’n it ever did! He said ’twas owin’ to his advantageous buyin’. Maybe ’twas! But I could ’a bought more advantageous than he did—I could a’ told him that. Point o’ fact, I did tell him that—and he wouldn’t have me again."
"That was a pity!" said Mrs. Holmes. "And I suppose if it wasn’t for your foot you would do that now—and enjoy it!"
"Of course I could!" protested Mrs. Joyce. "Do it better ’n ever, city or country! But here I am, tied by the leg! And dependent on my sister and children! It galls me terribly!"
Mrs. Holmes nodded sympathetically. "You are very brave, Mrs. Joyce," she said. "I admire your courage, and—" she couldn’t say patience, so she said, "cheerfulness."
Mrs. Ames came in with more eggs. "Not enough, but some," she said, and the visitors departed therewith.
Toward the end of the summer, Miss Podder at the Girls’ Trade Union Association, sweltering in the little office, was pleased to receive a call from her friend, Mrs. MacAvelly.
"I’d no idea you were in town," she said.
"I’m not, officially," answered her visitor, "just stopping over between visits. It’s hotter than I thought it would be, even on the upper west side."
"Think what it is on the lower east side!" answered Miss Podder, eagerly. "Hot all day—and hot at night! My girls do suffer so! They are so crowded!"
"How do the clubs get on?" asked Mrs. MacAvelly. "Have your girls any residence clubs yet?"
"No—nothing worth while. It takes somebody to run it right, you know. The girls can’t; the people who work for money can’t meet our wants—and the people who work for love, don’t work well as a rule."
Mrs. McAvelly smiled sympathetically. "You’re quite right about that," she said. "But really—some of those ’Homes’ are better than others, aren’t they?"
"The girls hate them," answered Miss Podder. "They’d rather board—even two or three in a room. They like their independence. You remember Martha Joyce?"
Mrs. MacAvelly remembered. "Yes," she said, "I do—I met her mother this summer."
"She’s a cripple, isn’t she?" asked Miss Podder. "Martha’s told me about her."
"Why, not exactly. She’s what a Westerner might call ’crippled up some,’ but she’s livelier than most well persons." And she amused her friend with a vivid rehearsal of Mrs. Joyce’s love of the city and her former triumphs in restaurant and hotel.
"She’d be a fine one to run such a house for the girls, wouldn’t she?" suddenly cried Miss Podder.
"Why—if she could," Mrs. MacAvelly admitted slowly.
" Why not? You say she gets about easily enough. All she’s have to do is you see. She could order by ’phone and keep the servants running!"
"I’m sure she’d like it," said Mrs. MacAvelly. "But don’t such things require capital?"
Miss Podder was somewhat daunted. "Yes—some; but I guess we could raise it. If we could find the right house!"
"Let’s look in the paper," suggested her visitor. "I’ve got a "
"There’s one that reads all right," Miss Podder presently proclaimed. "The location’s good, and it’s got a lot of rooms—furnished. I suppose it would cost too much."
Mrs. MacAvelly agreed, rather ruefully.
"Come," she said, "it’s time to close here, surely. Let’s go and look at that house, anyway. It’s not far."
They got their permit and were in the house very shortly. "I remember this place," said Miss Podder. "It was for sale earlier in the summer."
It was one of those once spacious houses, not of "old," but at least of "middle-aged" New York; with large rooms arbitrarily divided into smaller ones.
"It’s been a boarding-house, that’s clear," said Mrs. MacAvelly.
"Why, of course," Miss Podder answered, eagerly plunging about and examining everything. "Anybody could see that! But it’s been done over—most thoroughly. The cellar’s all whitewashed, and there’s a new furnace, and new range, and look at this icebox!" It was an ice-closet, as a matter of fact, of large capacity, and a most sanitary aspect.
"Isn’t it too big?" Mrs. MacAvelly inquired.
"Not for a boarding-house, my dear," Miss Podder enthusiastically replied. "Why, they could buy a side of beef with that ice-box! And look at the extra ovens! Did you ever see a place better furnished—for what we want? It looks as if it had been done on purpose!"
"It does, doesn’t it?" said Mrs. MacAvelley.
Miss Podder, eager and determined, let no grass grow under her feet. The rent of the place was within reason.
"If they had twenty boarders—and some "mealers," I believe it could be done! she said. "It’s a miracle—this house. Seems as if somebody had done it just for us!"
*
Armed with a list of girls who would agree to come, for six and seven dollars a week, Miss Podder made a trip to Willettville and laid the matter before Martha’s mother.
"What an outrageous rent!" said that lady.
"Yes—New York rents rather inconsiderate," Miss Podder admitted. "But see, here’s a guaranteed income if the girls stay—and I’m sure they will; and if the cooking’s good you could easily get table boarders besides."
Mrs. Joyce hopped to the bureau and brought out a hard, sharp-pointed pencil, and a lined writing tablet.
"Let’s figger it out," said she. "You say that house rents furnished at $3,200. It would take a cook and a chambermaid!"
"And a furnace man," said Miss Podder. "They come to about fifty a year. The cook would be thirty a month, the maid twenty-five, if you got first-class help, and you’d need it."
"That amounts to $710 altogether," stated Mrs. Joyce.
"Fuel and light and such things would be $200," Miss Podder estimated, "and I think you ought to allow $200 more for breakage and extras generally."
"That’s $4,310 already," said Mrs. Joyce.
Then there’s the food," Miss Podder went on. "How much do you think it would cost to feed twenty girls, two meals a day, and three Sundays?"
"And three more," Mrs. Joyce added, "with me, and the help, twenty-three. I could do it for $2.00 a week apiece."
"Oh!" said Miss Podder. " you? At New York prices?"
"See me do it!" said Mrs. Joyce.
"That makes a total expense of $6,710 a year. Now, what’s the income, ma’am?"
The income was clear—if they could get it. Ten girls at $6.00 and ten at $7.00 made $130.00 a week—$6,700.00 a year.
"There you are!" said Mrs. Joyce triumphantly. "And the ’mealers’—if my griddle-cakes don’t fetch ’em I’m mistaken! If I have ten—at $5.00 a week and clear $3.00 off ’em—that’ll be another bit—$1,560.00 more. Total income $8,320.00. More’n one thousand clear! Maybe I can feed ’em a little higher—or charge less!"
The two women worked together for an hour or so; Mrs. Ames drawn in later with demands as to butter, eggs, and "eatin’ chickens."
"There’s an ice-box as big as a closet," said Miss Podder.
Mrs. Joyce smiled triumphantly. "Good!" she said. "I can buy my critters of Judson here and have him freight ’em down. I can get apples here and potatoes, and lots of stuff."
"You’ll need, probably, a little capital to start with," suggested Miss Podder. "I think the Association could—"
"It don’t have to, thank you just the same," said Mrs. Joyce. "I’ve got enough in my stocking to take me to New York and get some fuel. Besides, all my boarders is goin’ to pay in advance—that’s the one sure way. The mealers can buy tickets!"
Her eyes danced. She fairly coursed about the room on her nimble crutches.
"My!" she said, "it will seem good to have my girl to feed again."
*
The house opened in September, full of eager girls with large appetites long unsatisfied. The place was new-smelling, fresh-painted, beautifully clean. The furnishing was cheap, but fresh, tasteful, with minor conveniences dear to the hearts of women.
The smallest rooms were larger than hall bedrooms, the big ones were shared by friends. Martha and her mother had a chamber with two beds and space to spare!
The dining-room was very large, and at night the tables were turned into "settles" by the wall and the girls could dance to the sound of a hired pianola. So could the "mealers," when invited; and there was soon a waiting list of both sexes.
"I guess I can make a livin’," said Mrs. Joyce, "allowin’ for bad years."
"I don’t understand how you feed us so well—for so little," said Miss Podder, who was one of the boarders.
"’Sh!" said Mrs. Joyce, privately. "Your breakfast don’t really cost more’n ten cents—nor your dinner fifteen—not the way I order! Things taste good ’cause they’re good—that’s all!"
"And you have no troubles with your help?"
"’Sh!" said Mrs. Joyce again, more privately. "I work ’em hard—and pay ’em a bonus—a dollar a week extra, as long as they give satisfaction. It reduces my profits some—but it’s worth it!"
"It’s worth it to us, I’m sure!" said Miss Podder.
Mrs. MacAvelly called one evening in the first week, with warm interest and approval. The tired girls were sitting about in comfortable rockers and lounges, under comfortable lights, reading and sewing. The untired ones were dancing in the dining-room, to the industrious pianola, or having games of cards in the parlor.
"Do you think it’ll be a success?" she asked her friend.
"It a success!" Miss Podder triumphantly replied. "I’m immensely proud of it!"
"I should think you would be," aid Mrs. MacAvelly.
The doorbell rang sharply.
Mrs. Joyce was hopping through the hall at the moment, and promptly opened it.
"Does Miss Martha Joyce board here?" inquired a gentleman.
"She does."
"I should like to see her," said he, handing in his card.
Mrs. Joyce read the card and looked at the man, her face setting in hard lines. She had heard that name before.
"Miss Joyce is engaged," she replied curtly, still holding the door.
He could see past her into the bright, pleasant rooms. He heard the music below, the swing of dancing feet, Martha’s gay laugh from the parlor.
The little lady on crutches blocked his path.
"Are you the housekeeper of this place?" he asked sharply.
"I’m more’n that!" she answered. "I’m Martha’s mother."
Mr. Basset concluded he would not wait.