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CHAPTER XXIII. TEDDY LOSES AND FINDS HIS HOME.
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Page 196

23. CHAPTER XXIII.
TEDDY LOSES AND FINDS HIS HOME.

An hour later, Teddy, leaving behind him the books,
papers, pictures, every thing that Mr. Burroughs had given
him, and taking only the few articles of his clothing which
happened to be at the office, crept out of the door and
down the stairs with the look of a veritable thief.

Choosing the least-frequented streets, and avoiding the
recognition of such of his acquaintance as chanced to meet
him, he slunk homeward, feeling a little less wretched, but
infinitely more degraded, than he had done before his confession.

Mr. Burroughs knew, his mother knew, the police-officials
knew, — how could he tell who did not know? — of his
shame and guilt. Every pair of eyes seemed to accuse
him; every step seemed to pursue him; every distant voice
seemed to summon him to receive the punishment of his
misdoing; and it was as to a refuge that he at last hurried
in at the door and up the stairs of the tenement-house.


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At the upper landing, however, he paused. His mother!
— oh the sorrow and the shame that he had brought upon
her in payment for all her love and effort, and the constant
sacrifices she had made, ever since he could remember, to
enable him to rise above his natural station, and to appear
as well as his future associates! It came back to him now,
— not a new thought, but one intensified by the more immediate
suffering of the last two hours. He leaned for a
moment against the wall, and wiped his clammy brow,
feeling that any sudden death, any strange chance that
could befall him, would be welcome, so that it swallowed
up the coming moment, and spared him the sight of the
misery he had wrought.

Only a moment. Then the desperate courage that had
carried him through his confession to his master gave him
strength to open the door and enter.

The ironing-table was spread, and upon a half-finished
shirt lay a little pile of money. Teddy knew that it was
the wages owing him since the last payment, and turned
away his eyes with loathing.

Mrs. Ginniss was lying upon the bed, her face buried in
the pillow, sobbing heavily and wearily, as if exhausted by
excessive emotion.


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Teddy closed the door softly, and stood looking at her,
uncertain whether she had heard him enter. In the room
below, the little child of the new tenants sung, at her play,
an air that Cherry had often sung.

Teddy listened, and, when the little song was done, cried
out, —

“O mother! haven't you a word for me? I believe I'll
go mad next.”

“Don't be spakin' to me, you bowld, bad b'y! It's niver
a word I have for yees, or wants from yees!” sobbed Mrs.
Ginniss.

Teddy looked at her drearily for a moment; then softly
seated himself, his hands folded listlessly in his lap, his eyes
wandering idly about the familiar room, and his mind journeying
on and on in the weary, mechanical manner of a
mind over-wrought and stunned by long-continued or excessive
suffering.

From the street below rose the hum and bustle of city
life; from the room that had been Giovanni's, the voice of
the child, still singing at her play. In at the open window
streamed the thick yellow sunshine of the August afternoon,
and a great droning blue fly buzzed upon the pane.

Teddy noted every sound; watched the motes dancing in


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the sunshine, the fly bouncing up and down the little window,
the movements of the cat, who, rising from her nap, stretched
every limb separately, yawned, lazily lapped at her saucer
of milk, and then, seating herself in the patch of lurid sunshine,
with her tail curled round her fore-paws, blinked
drowsily for a few minutes, and then dozed off again.

But, whether he listened or whether he looked, it was but
ear and eye that noted these familiar and homely sounds or
sights. The mind still journeyed on and on in that weary
journey without beginning or end; that dull, heavy tramp
through black night, with no hope of ever reaching morning;
that vain flight from a pain not for one moment to be forgotten
or left behind; that numb consciousness of an evil, that,
wait as we will, must sooner or later be met and recognized.

A long hour passed, and Mrs. Ginniss suddenly arose
and confronted her son.

“If iver I larnt ye any thin', ye black-hearted b'y,
what wor it?”

Teddy raised his heavy eyes to his mother's face, but
made no answer.

“Worn't it to sarch iver an' always for the chance to do
a good turn to him as has done all for yees that yer own


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father could, an' more? Worn't that the lesson I've struv to
larn ye this four year back, Teddy Ginniss?”

“Yes, mother,” said the boy in a low voice.

“An' haven't I towld ye, that, so as ye did it, my blessin'
was wid yees, an' so as ye turned yer back on it my cuss
'ud folly yees, an' the cuss uv God an' all his saints and
angels?”

“Yes, mother.”

“An' it's yersilf that's tuck heed uv me words, an' done
yer best to kape 'em; isn't it, me fine lad?” pursued the
mother with bitter irony.

“I did always, mother, till” — began Teddy humbly; but
his mother angrily interrupted him.

“Alluz till ye got the chance to do contrairy, an' plaze
yersilf at his expense. Sure, an' it wor mighty perlite uv
yees to wait that long, an' it's greatly obleeged to yees he
shud be.”

She waited a moment, standing before the boy, who, still
seated droopingly in the chair where he had first fallen, his
heavy eyes looking straight before him, offered neither reply
nor remonstrance; while his mother, setting her hands upon
her hips, looked scornfully at him a moment longer, and
then exclaimed, —


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“An' have ye niver a word to say for yersilf, ye white-livered
coward? Is there niver anudder lie on yer tongue
like thim ye found so handy this twelvemouth back? Git out
uv me sight, ye spalpeen, and out uv me doors! Go find
them as 'll kape yees to stale rich folks' children, an' thin lie
to the mother as bore yees, and the kind masther as tried to
make a gintleman out uv a thafe. Begone, I say, Teddy
Ginniss, and quit pizenin' the air of an honest woman's
room wid yer prisince!”

Teddy rose, and was leaving the room without a word,
but at the door turned back; looked long and wistfully at his
mother, who had turned away, and affected not to see him;
then slowly said, —

“Good-by, mother! It's worse nor you can I'm feeling.
Good-by! If ever I come to any good, I'll let you know;
and, if I don't, you're shut of me for always.”

The mother made no answer; and Teddy, lingering one
moment on the threshold to turn his sad eyes for the last
time upon the familiar objects that had surrounded him
since childhood, went out, and down the stairs.

In the street he paused a moment, looking up and down,
wondering where he should first go, and how food and shelter
for the coming night were to be obtained. The question


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yet unsolved, he was walking slowly on; when a voice far
overhead called, —

“Teddy! — Teddy Ginniss! Come here, I say!”

It was his mother's voice; and, as he looked up, it was
his mother's face and hand summoning him.

In the same forlorn, stunned way that he had come down,
Teddy climbed the stairs again, feeling as if his feet were
shod with lead, or the terrible weight at his heart was too
heavy to be carried a step farther.

He pushed open the door of his mother's room, but never
looked up or spoke, although he knew she stood close behind
it. But, indeed, there could have been no time, had the
boy wished to speak; for already his mother's arms were
around his neck, and her head upon his stout shoulder, while
the passionate tears fell like rain upon his hands.

“Ochone, ochone! An' it's me own an' only b'y yees
are, an' must be, Teddy darlint; an' it's mesilf that 'ud be
worse nor a haythin to turn yees inter the strate, so long as
it's a roof an' a bit I have left for yees. An' sure, if ye've
gone asthray, it's the heart uv yees that's bruck wid frettin'
afther it; an' there's a many as has done wuss, and niver a
hape it harmed 'em here nor hereafter. An', if Michael
wor here the day, it's himself 'ud say to pass it by; an' it


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wor little I should be plazin' his blissid sowl to turn yees
off for one fault. Kiss yer owld mother, honey, an' be her
own b'y agin!”

“Thank you, mother,” said Teddy, still in the strange,
low voice he had used before; and, putting his arms round
her neck, he met and returned her hearty kiss, and then,
without another word, went and shut himself into the little
loft he called his own, and was seen no more that night.