Read The Complete Short Stories and Sketches of Stephen Crane Page 102


  “Martha, aged four, replied solemnly, ‘His hair was all yed, and his hand was white—all white.’

  “ ‘That’s the man I saw up the road,’ said Jones to Freddy.

  “ ‘Yes, sir, it seems like it must have been him,’ said the boy, his brain now completely muddled.

  “Again Jones allowed the subject of his wife’s murder to lapse. The children did not know that it was a murder, of course. Adults were always performing in a way to make children’s heads swim. For instance, what could be more incomprehensible than that a man with two horses, dragging a queer thing, should walk all day, making the grass turn down and the earth turn up? And why did they cut the long grass and put it in a barn? And what was a cow for? Did the water in the well like to be there? All these actions and things were grand, because they were associated with the high estate of grown-up people, but they were deeply mysterious. If, then, a man with red hair, big white teeth, and white hands should hit their mother on the nape of the neck with an axe, it was merely a phenomenon of grown-up life. Little Henry, the baby, when he had a want, howled and pounded the table with his spoon. That was all of life to him. He was not concerned with the fact that his mother had been murdered.

  “One day Jones said to his children suddenly, ‘Look here: I wonder if you could have made a mistake. Are you absolutely sure that the man you saw had red hair, big white teeth, and white hands?’

  “The children were indignant with their father. ‘Why, of course, pa, we ain’t made no mistake. We saw him as plain as day.’

  “Later young Freddy’s mind began to work like ketchup. His nights were haunted with terrible memories of the man with the red hair, big white teeth, and white hands, and the prolonged absence of his mother made him wonder and wonder. Presently he quite gratuitously developed the theory that his mother was dead. He knew about death. He had once seen a dead dog; also dead chickens, rabbits, and mice. One day he asked his father, ‘Pa, is ma ever coming back?’

  “Jones said: ‘Well, no; I don’t think she is.’ This answer confirmed the boy in this theory. He knew that dead people did not come back.

  “The attitude of Jones toward this descriptive legend of the man with the axe was very peculiar. He came to be in opposition to it. He protested against the convictions of the children, but he could not move them. It was the one thing in their lives of which they were stonily and absolutely positive.

  “Now that really ends the story. But I will continue for your amusement. The jury hung Jones as high as they could, and they were quite right: because Jones confessed before he died. Freddy is now a highly respected driver of a grocery wagon in Ogdensburg. When I was up there a good many years afterwards people told me that when he ever spoke of the tragedy at all he was certain to denounce the alleged confession as a lie. He considered his father a victim to the stupidity of juries, and some day he hopes to meet the man with the red hair, big white teeth, and white hands, whose image still remains so distinct in his memory that he could pick him out in a crowd of ten thousand.”

  May 20, 1900

  [New York World, supplement, p. 2.]

  THE FIGHT*

  I

  The child life of the neighborhood was sometimes moved in its deeps at the sight of wagonloads of furniture arriving in front of some house which, with closed blinds and barred doors, had been for a time a mystery, or even a fear. The boys often expressed this fear by stamping bravely and noisily on the porch of the house, and then suddenly darting away with screams of nervous laughter, as if they expected to be pursued by something uncanny. There was a group who held that the cellar of a vacant house was certainly the abode of robbers, smugglers, assassins, mysterious masked men in council about the dim rays of a candle, and possessing skulls, emblematic bloody daggers, and owls. Then, near the first of April, would come along a wagonload of furniture, and children would assemble on the walk by the gate and make serious examination of everything that passed into the house, and taking no thought whatever of masked men.

  One day it was announced in the neighborhood that a family was actually moving into the Hannigan house, next door to Dr. Trescott’s. Jimmie was one of the first to be informed, and by the time some of his friends came dashing up he was versed in much.

  “Any boys?” they demanded, eagerly.

  “Yes,” answered Jimmie, proudly. “One’s a little feller, and one’s most as big as me. I saw ’em, I did.”

  “Where are they?” asked Willie Dalzel, as if under the circumstances he could not take Jimmie’s word, but must have the evidence of his senses.

  “Oh, they’re in there,” said Jimmie, carelessly. It was evident he owned these new boys.

  Willie Dalzel resented Jimmie’s proprietary way. “Ho!” he cried, scornfully. “Why don’t they come out, then? Why don’t they come out?”

  “How d’ I know?” said Jimmie.

  “Well,” retorted Willie Dalzel, “you seemed to know so thundering much about ’em.”

  At the moment a boy came strolling down the gravel walk which led from the front door to the gate. He was about the height and age of Jimmie Trescott, but he was thick through the chest and had fat legs. His face was round and rosy and plump, but his hair was curly black, and his brows were naturally darkling, so that he resembled both a pudding and a young bull.

  He approached slowly the group of older inhabitants, and they had grown profoundly silent. They looked him over; he looked them over. They might have been savages observing the first white man, or white men observing the first savage. The silence held steady.

  As he neared the gate the strange boy wandered off to the left in a definite way, which proved his instinct to make a circular voyage when in doubt. The motionless group stared at him. In time this unsmiling scrutiny worked upon him somewhat, and he leaned against the fence and fastidiously examined one shoe.

  In the end Willie Dalzel authoritatively broke the stillness. “What’s your name?” said he, gruffly.

  “Johnnie Hedge ’tis,” answered the new boy. Then came another great silence while Whilomville pondered this intelligence.

  Again came the voice of authority—“Where’d you live b’fore?”

  “Jersey City.”

  These two sentences completed the first section of the formal code. The second section concerned itself with the establishment of the newcomer’s exact position in the neighborhood.

  “I kin lick you,” announced Willie Dalzel, and awaited the answer.

  The Hedge boy had stared at Willie Dalzel, but he stared at him again. After a pause he said, “I know you kin.”

  “Well,” demanded Willie, “kin he lick you?” And he indicated Jimmie Trescott with a sweep which announced plainly that Jimmie was the next in prowess.

  Whereupon the new boy looked at Jimmie respectfully but carefully, and at length said, “I dun’no.”

  This was the signal for an outburst of shrill screaming, and everybody pushed Jimmie forward. He knew what he had to say, and, as befitted the occasion, he said it fiercely: “Kin you lick me?”

  The new boy also understood what he had to say, and, despite his unhappy and lonely state, he said it bravely: “Yes.”

  “Well,” retorted Jimmie, bluntly, “come out and do it, then! Jest come out and do it!” And these words were greeted with cheers. These little rascals yelled that there should be a fight at once. They were in bliss over the prospect. “Go on, Jim! Make ’im come out. He said he could lick you. Aw-aw-aw! He said he could lick you!” There probably never was a fight among this class in Whilomville which was not the result of the goading and guying of two proud lads by a populace of urchins who simply wished to see a show.

  Willie Dalzel was very busy. He turned first to the one and then to the other. “You said you could lick him. Well, why don’t you come out and do it, then? You said you could lick him, didn’t you?”

  “Yes,” answered the new boy, dogged and dubious.

  Willie tried to drag Jimmie by the arm. “Aw, go on, Ji
mmie! You ain’t afraid, are you?”

  “No,” said Jimmie.

  The two victims opened wide eyes at each other. The fence separated them, and so it was impossible for them to immediately engage; but they seemed to understand that they were ultimately to be sacrificed to the ferocious aspirations of the other boys, and each scanned the other to learn something of his spirit. They were not angry at all. They were merely two little gladiators who were being clamorously told to hurt each other. Each displayed hesitation and doubt without displaying fear. They did not exactly understand what were their feelings, and they moodily kicked the ground and made low and sullen answers to Willie Dalzel, who worked like a circus manager.

  “Aw, go on, Jim! What’s the matter with you? You ain’t afraid, are you? Well, then, say something.” This sentiment received more cheering from the abandoned little wretches who wished to be entertained, and in this cheering there could be heard notes of derision of Jimmie Trescott. The latter had a position to sustain; he was well known; he often bragged of his willingness and ability to thrash other boys; well, then, here was a boy of his size who said that he could not thrash him. What was he going to do about it? The crowd made these arguments very clear, and repeated them again and again.

  Finally Jimmie, driven to aggression, walked close to the fence and said to the new boy, “The first time I catch you out of your own yard I’ll lam the head off’n you!” This was received with wild plaudits by the Whilomville urchins.

  But the new boy stepped back from the fence. He was awed by Jimmie’s formidable mien. But he managed to get out a semi-defiant sentence. “Maybe you will, and maybe you won’t,” said he.

  However, his short retreat was taken as a practical victory for Jimmie, and the boys hooted him bitterly. He remained inside the fence, swinging one foot and scowling, while Jimmie was escorted off down the street amid acclamations. The new boy turned and walked back toward the house, his face gloomy, lined deep with discouragement, as if he felt that the new environment’s antagonism and palpable cruelty were sure to prove too much for him.

  II

  The mother of Johnnie Hedge was a widow, and the chief theory of her life was that her boy should be in school on the greatest possible number of days. He himself had no sympathy with this ambition, but she detected the truth of his diseases with an unerring eye, and he was required to be really ill before he could win the right to disregard the first bell, morning and noon. The chicken pox and the mumps had given him vacations—vacations of misery, wherein he nearly died between pain and nursing. But bad colds in the head did nothing for him, and he was not able to invent a satisfactory hacking cough. His mother was not consistently a Tartar. In most things he swayed her to his will. He was allowed to have more jam, pickles, and pie than most boys; she respected his profound loathing of Sunday school; on summer evenings he could remain out-of-doors until 8:30; but in this matter of school she was inexorable. This single point in her character was of steel.

  The Hedges arrived in Whilomville on a Saturday, and on the following Monday Johnnie wended his way to school with a note to the principal and his Jersey City school books. He knew perfectly well that he would be told to buy new and different books, but in those days mothers always had an idea that old books would “do,” and they invariably sent boys off to a new school with books which would not meet the selected and unchangeable views of the new administration. The old books never would “do.” Then the boys brought them home to annoyed mothers and asked for ninety cents or sixty cents or eighty-five cents or some number of cents for another outfit. In the garret of every house holding a large family there was a collection of effete school books, with mother rebellious because James could not inherit his books from Paul, who should properly be Peter’s heir, while Peter should be a beneficiary under Henry’s will.

  But the matter of the books was not the measure of Johnnie Hedge’s unhappiness. This whole business of changing schools was a complete torture. Alone he had to go among a new people, a new tribe, and he apprehended his serious time. There were only two fates for him. One meant victory. One meant a kind of serfdom in which he would subscribe to every word of some superior boy and support his every word. It was not anything like an English system of fagging, because boys invariably drifted into the figurative service of other boys whom they devotedly admired, and if they were obliged to subscribe to everything, it is true that they would have done so freely in any case. One means to suggest that Johnnie Hedge had to find his place. Willie Dalzel was a type of the little chieftain, and Willie was a master, but he was not a bully in a special physical sense. He did not drag little boys by the ears until they cried, nor make them tearfully fetch and carry for him. They fetched and carried, but it was because of their worship of his prowess and genius. And so all through the strata of boy life were chieftains and sub-chieftains and assistant sub-chieftains. There was no question of little Hedge being towed about by the nose; it was, as one has said, that he had to find his place in a new school. And this in itself was a problem which awed his boyish heart. He was a stranger cast away upon the moon. None knew him, understood him, felt for him. He would be surrounded for this initiative time by a horde of jackal creatures who might turn out in the end to be little boys like himself, but this last point his philosophy could not understand in its fulness.

  He came to a white meeting house sort of place, in the squat tower of which a great bell was clanging impressively. He passed through an iron gate into a playground worn bare as the bed of a mountain brook by the endless runnings and scufflings of little children. There was still a half-hour before the final clangor in the squat tower, but the playground held a number of frolicsome imps. A loitering boy espied Johnnie Hedge, and he howled: “Oh! oh! Here’s a new feller! Here’s a new feller!” He advanced upon the strange arrival. “What’s your name?” he demanded, belligerently, like a particularly offensive customhouse officer.

  “Johnnie Hedge,” responded the newcomer shyly.

  This name struck the other boy as being very comic. All new names strike boys as being comic. He laughed noisily.

  “Oh, fellers, he says his name is Johnnie Hedge! Haw! haw! haw!”

  The new boy felt that his name was the most disgraceful thing which had ever been attached to a human being.

  “Johnnie Hedge! Haw! haw! What room you in?” said the other lad.

  “I dun’no,” said Johnnie. In the meantime a small flock of interested vultures had gathered about him. The main thing was his absolute strangeness. He even would have welcomed the sight of his tormentors of Saturday; he had seen them before at least. These creatures were only so many incomprehensible problems. He diffidently began to make his way toward the main door of the school, and the other boys followed him. They demanded information.

  “Are you through subtraction yet? We study jogerfre—did you, ever? You live here now? You goin’ to school here now?”

  To many questions he made answer as well as the clamor would permit, and at length he reached the main door and went quaking unto his new kings. As befitted them, the rabble stopped at the door. A teacher strolling along a corridor found a small boy holding in his hand a note. The boy palpably did not know what to do with the note, but the teacher knew, and took it. Thereafter this little boy was in harness.

  A splendid lady in gorgeous robes gave him a seat at a double desk, at the end of which sat a hoodlum with grimy fingernails, who eyed the inauguration with an extreme and personal curiosity. The other desks were gradually occupied by children, who first were told of the new boy, and then turned upon him a speculative and somewhat derisive eye. The school opened; little classes went forward to a position in front of the teacher’s platform and tried to explain that they knew something. The new boy was not requisitioned a great deal; he was allowed to lie dormant until he became used to the scenes and until the teacher found, approximately, his mental position. In the meantime he suffered a shower of stares and whispers and giggles, as if he were a man-a
pe, whereas he was precisely like other children. From time to time he made funny and pathetic little overtures to other boys, but these overtures could not yet be received; he was not known; he was a foreigner. The village school was like a nation. It was tight. Its amiability or friendship must be won in certain ways.

  At recess he hovered in the schoolroom around the weak lights of society and around the teacher, in the hope that somebody might be good to him, but none considered him save as some sort of specimen. The teacher of course had a secondary interest in the fact that he was an additional one to a class of sixty-three.

  At twelve o’clock, when the ordered files of boys and girls marched toward the door, he exhibited—to no eye—the tremblings of a coward in a charge. He exaggerated the lawlessness of the playground and the street.

  But the reality was hard enough. A shout greeted him: “Oh, here’s the new feller! Here’s the new feller!”

  Small and utterly obscure boys teased him. He had a hard time of it to get to the gate. There never was any actual hurt, but everything was competent to smite the lad with shame. It was a curious, groundless shame, but nevertheless it was shame. He was a newcomer, and he definitely felt the disgrace of the fact.

  In the street he was seen and recognized by some lads who had formed part of the group of Saturday. They shouted: “Oh, Jimmie! Jimmie! Here he is! Here’s that new feller!”

  Jimmie Trescott was going virtuously toward his luncheon when he heard these cries behind him. He pretended not to hear, and in this deception he was assisted by the fact that he was engaged at the time in a furious argument with a friend over the relative merits of two Uncle Tom’s Cabin companies. It appeared that one company had only two bloodhounds, while the other had ten. On the other hand, the first company had two Topsys and two Uncle Toms, while the second had only one Topsy and one Uncle Tom.