The old man held the picture up before him and surveyed it with
admiring but disapproving eye. "No one that comes along this way'll
have the price for it," he grumbled. "It'll just set here 'till
doomsday."
It did seem that the picture failed to fit in with the rest of the
shop. A persuasive young fellow who claimed he was closing out his
stock let the old man have it for what he called a song. It was only
a little out-of-the-way store which subsisted chiefly on the framing
of pictures. The old man looked around at his views of the city, his
pictures of cats and dogs and gorgeous young women, his flaming bits
of landscape. "Don't belong in here," he fumed, "any more 'an I
belong in Congress."
And yet the old man was secretly proud of his acquisition. He seemed
all at once to be lifted from his realm of petty tradesman to that
of patron of art. There was a hidden dignity in his scowling as he
shuffled about pondering the least ridiculous place for the picture.
It is not fair to the picture to try repainting it in words, for
words reduce it to a lithograph. It was a bit of a pine forest,
through which there exuberantly rushed an unspoiled little mountain
stream. Chromos and works of art may deal with kindred subjects.
There is just that one difference of dealing with them differently.
"It ain't what you see, so much as what you can guess is
there," was the thought it brought to the old man who was dusting
it. "Now this frame ain't three feet long, but it wouldn't surprise
me a bit if that timber kept right on for a hundred miles. I kind of
suspect it's on a mountain--looks cool enough in there to be on a
mountain. Wish I was there. Bet they never see no such days as we do
in Chicago. Looks as though a man might call his soul his own--out
there."
He began removing some views of Lincoln Park and some corpulent
Cupids in order to make room in the window for the new picture. When
he went outside to look at it he shook his head severely and
hastened in to take away some ardent young men and women, some fruit
and flowers and fish which he had left thinking they might "set it
off." It was evident that the new picture did not need to be "set
off." "And anyway," he told himself, in vindication of entrusting
all his goods to one bottom, "I might as well take them out, for the
new one makes them look so kind of sick that no one would have them,
anyhow." Then he went back to mounting views with the serenity of
one who stands for the finer things.
His clamorous little clock pointed to a quarter of six when he
finally came back to the front of the store. It was time to begin
closing up for the night, but for the minute he stood there watching
the crowd of workers coming from the business district not far away
over to the boarding-house region, a little to the west. He watched
them as they came by in twos and threes and fours: noisy people and
worn-out people, people hilarious and people sullen, the gaiety and
the weariness, the acceptance and the rebellion of humanity--he saw
it pass. "As if any of them could buy it," he pronounced
severely, adding, contemptuously, "or wanted to."
The girl was coming along by herself. He watched her as she crossed
to his side of the street, thinking it was too bad for a poor girl
to be as tired as that. She was dressed like many of the rest of
them, and yet she looked different--like the picture and the chromo.
She turned an indifferent glance toward the window, and then
suddenly she stood there very still, and everything about her seemed
to change. "For all the world," he told himself afterward, "as if
she'd found a long-lost friend, and was 'fraid to speak for fear it
was too good to be true."
She did seem afraid to speak--afraid to believe. For a minute she
stood there right in the middle of the sidewalk, staring at the
picture. And when she came toward the window it was less as if
coming than as if drawn. What she really seemed to want to do was to
edge away; yet she came closer, as close as she could, her eyes
never leaving the picture, and then fear, or awe, or whatever it was
made her look so queer gave way to wonder--that wondering which is
ready to open the door to delight. She looked up and down the street
as one rubbing one's eyes to make sure of a thing, and then it all
gave way to a joy which lighted her pale little face like--"Well,
like nothing I ever saw before," was all the old man could say of
it. "Why, she'd never know if the whole fire department was to run
right up here on the sidewalk," he gloated. Just then she drew
herself up for a long breath. "See?" he chuckled, delightedly. "She
knows it has a smell!" She looked toward the door, but shook her
head. "Knows she can't pay the price," he interpreted her. Then, she
stepped back and looked at the number above the door. "Coming
again," he made of that; "ain't going to run no chances of losing
the place." And then for a long time she stood there before the
picture, so deeply and so strangely quiet that he could not
translate her. "I can't just get the run of it," was his bewildered
conclusion. "I don't see why it should make anybody act like that."
And yet he must have understood more than he knew, for suddenly he
was seeing her through a blur of tears.
As he began shutting up for the night he was so excited about the
way she looked when she finally turned away that it never occurred
to him to be depressed about her inability to pay the price.
He kept thinking of her, wondering about her, during the next day.
At a little before six he took up his station near the front window.
Once more the current of workers flowed by. "I'm an old fool," he
told himself, irritated at the wait; "as if it makes any difference
whether she comes or not--when she can't buy it, anyhow. She's just
as big a fool as I am--liking it when she can't have it, only I'm
the biggest fool of all--caring whether she likes it or not." But
just then the girl passed quickly by a crowd of girls who were ahead
of her and came hurrying across the street. She was walking fast,
and looked excited and anxious. "Afraid it might be gone," he
said--adding, grimly: "Needn't worry much about that."
She came up to the picture as some people would enter a church. And
yet the joy which flooded her face is not well known to churches.
"I'll tell you what it's like"--the old man's thoughts stumbling
right into the heart of it--"it's like someone that's been wandering
round in a desert country all of a sudden coming on a spring. She's
thirsty--she's drinking it in--she can't get enough of it.
It's--it's the water of life to her!" And then, ashamed of saying a
thing that sounded as if it were out of a poem, he shook his
shoulders roughly as if to shake off a piece of sentiment unbecoming
his age and sex.
He went to the door and watched her as she passed away. "I'll bet
she'd never tip the scale to one hundred pounds," he decided. "Looks
like a good wind could blow her away." She stooped a little and just
as she passed from sight he saw that she was coughing.
Then the old man made what he prided himself was a great deduction.
"She's been there, and she wants to go back. This kind of takes her
back for a minute, and when she gets the breath of it she ain't so
homesick."
All through those July days he watched each night for the
frail-looking little girl who liked the picture of the pines. She
would always come hurrying across the street in the same eager way,
an eagerness close to the feverish. But the tenseness would always
relax as she saw the picture. "She never looks quite so wilted down
when she goes away as she does when she comes," the old man saw.
"Upon my soul, I believe she really goes there. It's--oh,
Lord"--irritated at getting beyond his depth--"I don't know!"
He never called it anything now but "Her Picture." One day at just
ten minutes of six he took it out of the window. "Seems kind of
mean," he admitted, "but I just want to find out how much she does
think of it."
And when he found out he told himself that of all the mean men God
had ever let live, he was the meanest. The girl came along in the
usual hurried, anxious fashion. And when she saw the empty window he
thought for a minute she was going to sink right down there on the
sidewalk. Everything about her seemed to give way--as if something
from which she had been drawing had been taken from her. The
luminousness gone from her face, there were cruel revelations.
"Blast my soul!" the old man muttered angrily, not far from
tearfully. She looked up and down the noisy, dirty, parched street,
then back to the empty window. For a minute she just stood
there--that was the worst minute of all. And then--accepting--she
turned and walked slowly away, walked as the too-weary and the
too-often disappointed walk.
It was with not wholly steady hand that the old man hastened to
replace the picture, all the while telling himself what he thought
of himself: more low-down than the cat who plays with the mouse,
meaner than the man who'd take the bone from the dog, less to be
loved than the man who would kick over the child's play-house, only
to be compared with the brute who would snatch the cup of water from
the dying--such were the verdicts he pronounced. He thought perhaps
she would come back, and stayed there until almost seven, waiting
for her, though pretending it was necessary that he take down and
then put up again the front curtains. All the next day he was
restless and irritable. As if to make up to the girl for the
contemptible trick he had played he spent a whole hour that
afternoon arranging a tapestry background for the picture. "She'll
think," he told himself, "that this was why it was out, and won't be
worried about its being gone again. This will just be a little sign
to her that it's here to stay."
He began his watch that night at half-past five. After fifteen
minutes the thought came to him that she might be so disheartened
she would go home by another street. He became so gloomily certain
she would do this that he was jubilant when he finally saw her
coming along on the other side--coming purposelessly, shorn of that
eagerness which had always been able, for the moment, to vanquish
the tiredness. But when she came to the place where she always
crossed the street she only stood there an instant and then, a
little more slowly, a little more droopingly, walked on. She had
given up! She was not coming over!
But she did come. After she had gone a few steps she hesitated again
and this time started across the street. "That's right," approved
the old man, "never give up the ship!"
She passed the store as if she were not going to look in; she seemed
trying not to look, but her head turned--and she saw the picture.
First her body seemed to stiffen, and then something--he couldn't
make out whether or not it was a sob--shook her, and as she came
toward the picture on her white, tired face were the tears.
"Don't you worry," he murmured affectionately to her retreating
form, "it won't never be gone again."
The very next week he was put to the test. The kind of lady who did
not often pass along that street entered the shop and asked to see
the picture in the window. He looked at her suspiciously. Then he
frowned at her, as he stood there, fumbling. Her picture!
What would she think? What would she do? Then a crafty smile stole
over his face and he walked to the window and got the picture. "The
price of this picture, madame," he said, haughtily, "is forty
dollars,"--adding to himself, "That'll fix her."
But the lady made no comment, and stood there holding the picture up
before her. "I will take it," she said, quietly.
He stared at her stupidly. Forty dollars! Then it must be that the
picture was better than the young man had known. "Will you wrap it,
please?" she asked. "I will take it with me."
He turned to the back of the store. Forty dollars!--he kept
repeating it in dazed fashion. And they had raised the rent on him,
and the papers said coal would be high that winter--those facts
seemed to have something to do with forty dollars. _Forty
dollars!_--it was hammering at him, overwhelmed him, too big a
sum to contend with. With long, grim stroke he tore off the wrapping
paper; stoically he began folding it. But something was the matter.
The paper would not go on right. Three times he took it off, and
each time he could not help looking down at the picture of the
pines. And each time the forest seemed to open a little farther;
each time it seemed bigger--bigger even than forty dollars; it
seemed as if it knew things--things more important than even
coal and rent. And then the strangest thing of all happened: the
forest faded away into its own shadowy distances, and in its place
was a noisy, crowded, sun-baked street, and across the street was
eagerly hurrying an anxious little girl, a frail little wisp of a
girl who probably should not be crossing hot, noisy streets at
all--then a light in tired eyes, a smile upon a worn face, relief as
from a cooling breeze--and anyway, suddenly furious at the
lady, furious at himself--"he'd be gol-darned if it wasn't
her picture!"
"I forgot at first," he said, brusquely, "that this picture belongs
to someone else."
The lady looked at him in astonishment. "I do not understand," she
said.
"There's nothing to understand," he fairly shouted, "except that it
belongs to someone else!"
She turned away, but came back to him. "I will give you fifty
dollars for it," she said, in her quiet way.
"Madame," he thundered at her, "you can stand there and offer me
five hundred dollars, and I'm here to tell you that this picture is
not for sale. Do you hear?"
"I certainly do," replied the lady, and walked from the store.
He was a long time in cooling off. "I tell you," he stormed to a
very blue Lake Michigan he was putting into a frame, "it's
hers--it's hern--and anybody that comes along here with any
nonsense is just going to hear from me!"
In the days which followed he often thought to go out and speak to
her, but perhaps the old man had a restraining sense of values. He
planned some day to go out and tell her the picture was hers, but
that seemed a silly thing to tell her, for surely she knew it
anyway. He worried a good deal about her cough, which seemed to be
getting worse, and he had it all figured out that when cold weather
came he would have her come in where it was warm, and take her look
in there. He felt that he knew all about her, and though he did not
know her name, though he had never heard her speak one word, in some
ways he felt closer to her than to any one else in the world.
Yet if the old man had known just how it was with the girl it is
altogether unlikely that he would have understood. It would have
mystified and disappointed him had he known that she had never seen
a pine forest or a mountain in her life. Indeed there was a great
deal about the little girl which the old man, together with almost
all the rest of the world, would not have understood.
Not that the surface facts about her were either incomprehensible or
interesting. The tale of her existence would sound much like that of
a hundred other girls in the same city. Inquiry about her would have
developed the facts that she did typewriting for a land company,
that she did not seem to have any people, and lived at a big
boarding-house. At the boarding-house they would have told you that
she was a nice little thing, quiet as a mouse, and that it was too
bad she had to work, for she seemed more than half sick. There the
story would have rested, and the real things about her would not
have been touched.
She worked for the Chicago branch of a big Northwestern land
company. They dealt in the lands of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and
Washington. The things she sat at her typewriter and wrote were of
the wonders of that great country: the great timber lands, the
valleys and hills, towering mountain peaks and rushing rivers. She
typewrote "literature" telling how there was a chance for every man
out there, how the big, exhaustless land was eager to yield of its
store to all who would come and seek. Day after day she wrote those
things telling how the sick were made well and the poor were made
rich, how it was a land of indescribable wonders which the feeble
pen could not hope to portray.
And the girl with whom almost everything in life had gone wrong came
to think of Out There as the place where everything was right. It
was the far country where there was no weariness nor loneliness, the
land where one did not grow tired, where one never woke up in the
morning too tired to get up, where no one went to bed at night too
tired to go to sleep. The street-cars did not ring their gongs so
loud Out There, the newsboys had pleasant voices, and there were no
elevated trains. It was a pure, high land which knew no smoke nor
dirt, a land where great silences drew one to the heart of peace,
where the people in the next room did not come in and bang things
around late at night. Out There was a wide land where buildings were
far apart and streets were not crowded. Even the horses did not grow
tired Out There. Oh, it was a land where dreams came true--a
beautiful land where no one ate prunes, where the gravy was never
greasy and the potatoes never burned. It was a land of flowers and
birds and lovely people--a land of wealth and health and many
smiles.
Her imagination made use of it all. She knew how men were reclaiming
the desert of Idaho, of the tremendous undeveloped wealth of what
had been an almost undiscovered State. She thrilled to the poetry of
irrigation. Often when hot and tired and dusty her fancy would follow
the little mountain stream from its birth way up in the clouds, her
imagination rushing with it through sweetening forest and tumbling
with it down cooling rocks until finally strong, bold, wise men guided
it to the desert which had yearned for it through all the years, and
the grateful desert smiled rich smiles of grain and flowers. She could
make it more like a story than any story in any book. And she could
always breathe better in thinking of the pine forests of Oregon. There
was something liberating--expanding--in just the thought of them. She
dreamed cooling dreams about them, dreams of their reaching farther
than one's fancy could reach, big widening dreams of their standing
there serene in the consciousness of their own immensity. They stood
to her for a beautiful idea: the idea of space, of room--room for
everybody, and then much more room! Even one's understanding grew
big as one turned to them.
And she loved to listen for the Pacific Ocean, coming from
incomprehensible distances and unknowable countries, now rushing
with passion to the wild coast of Oregon, again stealing into the
Washington harbours. She loved to address the letters to Portland,
Seattle, Spokane, Tacoma--all those pulsing, vivid cities of a
country of big chances and big beauty. She loved to picture Seattle,
a city builded upon many hills--how wonderful that a city should be
builded upon hills!--in Chicago there was nothing that could
possibly be thought of as a hill. And she loved to shut her eyes and
let the great mountain peak grow in the distance, as one could see
it from Portland--how noble a thing to see a mountain peak from a
city! Sometimes she trembled before that consciousness of a
mountain. Often when so tired she scarcely knew what she was doing
she found she was saying her prayers to a mountain. Indeed, Out
There seemed the place to send one's prayers--for was it not a place
where prayers were answered?
During that summer when the West was overrun with tourists who
grumbled about everything from the crowded trains to the way in
which sea-foods were served, this little girl sat in one of the hot
office buildings of Chicago and across the stretch of miles drew to
herself the spirit of that country of coming days. Thousands rode in
Pullman cars along the banks of the Columbia--saw, and felt not; she
sat before her typewriter in a close, noisy room and heard the
cooling rush of waters and got the freeing message of the pines. In
some rare moments when she rose from the things about her to the
things of which she dreamed she possessed the whole great land, and
as the sultry days sapped of her meagre strength, and the bending
over the typewriter cramped an already too cramped chest she clung
with a more and more passionate tenacity to the bigness and the
beauty and rightness of things Out There. And it was so kind to
her--that land of deep breaths and restoring breezes. It never shut
her out. It always kept itself bigger and more wonderful than one
could ever hope to fancy it.
And the night she found the picture she knew that it was all really
so. That was why it was so momentous a night. The picture was a
dream visualised--a dreamer vindicated. They had pictures in the
office, of course--some pictures trying to tell of that very kind of
a place. But those were just pictures; this proved it, told
what it meant. It told that she had been right, and there was joy in
knowing that she had known. She clung to the picture as one would to
that which proves as real all one has long held dear, loved it as
the dreamer loves that which secures him in his dreaming.
She came to think of it as her own abiding place. Often when too
tired for long wings of fancy she would just sink down in the deep,
cool shadows of the pines, beside the little river which one knew so
well was the gift of distant snows. It rested her most of all; it
quieted her.
She smiled sometimes to think how no one in the office knew about
it, wondered what they would think if they knew. Often she would
find someone in the office looking at her strangely. She used to
wonder about it a little.
And then one day Mr. Osborne sent for her to come into his office.
He acted so queerly. As she came in and sat down near his desk he
swung his chair around and sat there with his back to her. After
that he got up and walked to the window.
The head stenographer had complained of her cough. She said she did
not think it right either to the girl or to the rest of them for her
to be there. She said she hated to speak of it, but could not stand
it any longer. That had been the week before, and ever since he had
been putting it off. But now he could put it off no longer; the head
stenographer was valuable, and besides he knew that she was right.
And so he told her--this was all he could think of just then--that
they were contemplating some changes in the office, and for a time
would have less desk room. If he sent her machine to her home, would
she be willing to do her work there for a while? Hers was the kind
of work that could be done at home.
She was sorry, for she wondered if she could find a place in her
room for the typewriter, and it did not seem there would be air
enough there to last her all day long. And she had grown fond of the
office, with its "literature" and pictures and maps and the men who
had just come from Out There coming in every once in a while. It was
a bond--a place to touch realities. But of course there was nothing
for her to do but comply, and she made no comment on the
arrangement.
She pushed her chair back and rose to go. "Are you alone in the
world?" he asked abruptly then,
It was too much for him. "How would you like," he asked recklessly,
"to have me get you transportation out West?"
She sank back in her chair. Every particle of colour had left her
face. Her deep eyes had grown almost wild. "Oh," she gasped--"you
can't mean--you don't think--"
She only nodded; but her lips were parted, her eyes glowing. He
wondered why he had never seen before how different looking
and--yes, beautiful, in a strange kind of way--she was.
"I see you have a cold," he said, "and I think you would get along
better out there. I'll see if I can fix up the transportation, and
get something with our people in one of the towns that would be good
for you."
She leaned back in her chair and sat there smiling at him. Something
in the smile made him say, abruptly: "That's all; you may go now,
and I'll send a boy with your machine."
She walked through the streets as one who had already found another
country. More than one turned to look at her. She reached her room
at last and pulling her one little chair up to the window sat
staring out across the alley at the brick wall across from her. But
she was not seeing a narrow alley and a high brick wall. She was
seeing rushing rivers and mighty forests and towering peaks. She
leaned back in her chair--an indulgence less luxurious than it
sounds, as the chair only reached the middle of her back--and looked
out at the high brick wall and saw a snow-clad range of hills. But
she was tired; this tremendous idea was too much for her; the very
wonder of it was exhausting. She lay down on her bed--radiant, but
languid. Soon she heard a rush of waters. At first it was only
someone filling the bath-tub, but after a while it was the little
stream which flowed through her forest. And then she was not lying
on a lumpy bed; she was sinking down under pine trees--all so sweet
and still and cool. But an awful thing was happening!--the forest
was on fire--it was choking and burning her! She awoke to find smoke
from the building opposite pouring into her room; flies were buzzing
about, and her face and hands were hot.
She did little work in the next few days. It was hard to go on with
the same work when waiting for a thing which was to make over one's
whole life. The stress of dreams changing to hopes caused a great
languor to come over her. And her chair was not right for her
typewriter, and the smoke came in all the time. Strangely enough Out
There seemed farther away. Sometimes she could not go there at all;
she supposed it was because she was really going.
At the close of the week she went to the office with her work. She
was weak with excitement as she stepped into the elevator. Would Mr.
Osborne have the transportation for her? Would he tell her when she
was to go?
But she did not see Mr. Osborne at all. When she asked for him the
clerk just replied carelessly that he was not there. She was going
to ask if he had left any message for her, but the telephone rang
then and the man to whom she was talking turned away. Someone was
sitting at her old desk, and they did not seem to be making the
changes they had contemplated; everyone in the office seemed very
busy and uncaring, and because she knew her chin was trembling she
turned away.
She had a strange feeling as she left the office: as if standing on
ground which quivered, an impulse to reach out her hand and tell
someone that something must be done right away, a dreadful fear that
she was going to cry out that she could not wait much longer.
All at once she found that she was crossing the street, and saw
ahead the little art store with the wonderful picture which proved
it was all really so. In the same old way, her step quickened. It
would show her again that it was all just as she had thought it was,
and if that were true, then it must be true also that Mr. Osborne
was going to get her the transportation. It would prove that
everything was all right.
But a cruel thing happened. It failed her. It was just as
beautiful--but something a long way off, impossible to reach. Try as
she would, she could not get into it, as she used to. It was
only a picture; a beautiful picture of some pine trees. And they
were very far away, and they had nothing at all to do with her.
Through the window, at the back of the store, she saw the old man
standing with his back to her. She thought of going in and asking to
sit down--she wanted to sit down--but perhaps he would say something
cross to her--he was such a queer looking old man--and she knew she
would cry if anything cross was said to her. That he had watched for
her each night, that he had tried and tried to think of a way of
finding her, that he would have been more glad to see her than to
see anyone in the world, would have been kinder to her than anyone
on earth would have been--those were the things she did not know.
And so--more lonely than she had ever been before--she turned away.
On Monday she felt she could wait no longer. It did not seem that it
would be safe. She got ready to go to see Mr. Osborne, but
the getting ready tired her so that she sat a long time resting,
looking out at the high brick wall beyond which there was nothing at
all. She was counting the blocks, thinking of how many times she
would have to cross the street. But just then it occurred to her
that she could telephone.
When she came back upstairs she crept up on the bed and lay there
very still. The boy had said that Mr. Osborne was away and would be
gone two weeks. No one in the office had heard him say anything
about her transportation.
All through the day she lay there, and what she saw before her was a
narrow alley and a high brick wall. She had lost her mountains and
her forests and her rivers and her lakes. She tried to go out to
them in the same old way--but she could not get beyond the high
brick wall. She was shut in. She tried to draw them to her, but they
could not come across the wall. It shut them out. She tried to pray
to the great mountain which one could see from Portland. But even
prayers could get no farther than the wall.
Late that afternoon, because she was so shut in that she was
choking, because she was consumed with the idea that she must claim
her country now or lose it forever, she got up and started for the
picture. It was a long, long way to go, and dreadful things were in
between--people who would bump against her, hot, uneven streets,
horses that might run over her--but she must make the journey. She
must make it because the things that she lived on were slipping from
her--and she was choking--sinking down--and all alone.
Step by step, never knowing just how her foot was going to make the
next step, sick with the fear that people were going to run into
her--the streets going up and down, the buildings round and round,
she did go; holding to the window casings for the last few
steps--each step a terrible chasm which she was never sure she was
going to be able to cross--she was there at last. And in the window
as she stood there, swayingly, was a dark, blurred thing which might
have been anything at all. She tried to remember why she had come.
What was it--? And then she was sinking down into an abyss.
That the hemorrhage came then, that the old man came out and found
her and tenderly took her in, that he had her taken where she should
have been taken long before, that the doctors said it was too late,
and that soon their verdict was confirmed--those are the facts which
would seem to tell the rest of the story. But deep down beneath
facts rests truth, and the truth is that this is a story with the
happiest kind of a happy ending. What facts would call the breeze
from an electric fan was in truth the gracious breath of the pines.
And when the nurse said "She's going," she was indeed going, but to
a land of great spaces and benign breezes, a land of deep shadows
and rushing waters. For a most wondrous thing had happened. She had
called to the mountain, and the mountain had heard her voice; and
because it was so mighty and so everlasting it drew her to itself,
across high brick walls and past millions of hurrying, noisy
people--oh, a most triumphant flight! And the mountain said--"I give
you this whole great land. It is yours because you have loved it so
well. Hills and valleys and rivers and forests and lakes--it is all
for you." Yes, the nurse was quite right; she was going: going for a
long sweet sleep beneath trees of many shadows, beside clear waters
which had come from distant snows--really going "Out There."