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Title: Salome Shepard, Reformer
Author: Winslow, Helen M. (Helen Maria)
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Salome Shepard, Reformer" ***
REFORMER ***


[Illustration: Sincerely Yours Helen M Winslow]



                       SALOME SHEPARD, REFORMER.


                                   BY

                           HELEN M. WINSLOW.

[Illustration: ART FOR TRUTH....]

                             BOSTON, MASS.:

                      =Arena Publishing Company,=

                             COPLEY SQUARE,

                                 1893.



                            Copyright 1893,
                                   BY
                           HELEN M. WINSLOW.

                          ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


                              ARENA PRESS.



                        “Pardon, gentles all,
              The flat, unraised spirit that hath dared
              On this unworthy scaffold to bring forth
                        So great an object.”
                                              SHAKESPEARE.



                       SALOME SHEPARD, REFORMER.



                                   I.


Salome Shepard gazed wonderingly at the crowd of people in the street,
as she guided her pony-phaeton through the factory precincts.

“What can be the matter with these people?” she thought. “I’m sure they
ought to have gone to their work before this.”

It was a wet October day. The narrow street was slippery with the muddy
water that oozed along to the gutters. The factory boardinghouses loomed
up on either side, dingy and desolate. Even the mills looked larger and
coarser, in the gloomy air of the morning.

As she drove by them, the fair owner listened in vain for the rumble of
machinery. Inside, the great, well-lighted rooms looked dreary and
barn-like in the gray mist that struggled through the windows.

One hour before, the machinery, shrieking and groaning, had voiced the
protest of the “hands” against their fancied and their real wrongs. One
hour before, every employe had been in his or her place. But the gloom
of the atmosphere could not obscure the suppressed excitement of the
morning. Shortsighted and blind to their best interest, they might have
been; but there was not a man among them who did not feel a tremendous
underlying principle at stake.

And so, at precisely ten o’clock, the machinery had suddenly and
mysteriously stopped, and every man, woman and child, without a word,
had left the mills.

All this had happened while Salome Shepard was calling on an elderly
friend of her mother’s at the other end of the town. It had been a
delightfully cosy morning in spite of the rain; and, after a gossipy
fashion, they had passed it in discussing, as women will, the newest
pattern of crochet, the last society-novel, the coming concerts in town.

Salome’s mood was the comfortable one conduced by such soothing
intellectual food, as she set forth on her homeward drive. The rain had
ceased, and only along the river did the mists hover, suggesting to her
idle fancy the thick smoke which hangs over a smouldering fire.

But the fire which had been creeping under the life of the Shawsheen
Mills had but just burst into flames, which mounted higher and higher as
the day wore on.

All through the factory precincts the unwonted excitement was manifest.
Groups of employes were everywhere—on the street-corners, in front of
tenements and boardinghouses, in the middle of the street;—and all were
engaged in absorbing discussion of one exciting theme—the strike.

Men without coats or hats; women with shawls thrown loosely over their
heads; girls, bonnetless and neglectful of dress; unkempt old women, who
were perhaps the home-makers for these hard-worked and ill-paid people;
all were indifferent save to one subject.

Even the quick passage, through their midst, of the pony-phaeton and its
mistress failed to attract attention beyond an occasional surly glance
from the men or an envious one from the women. Unmindful of the long
days in store, when there would be ample time to discuss their wrongs,
they remained huddled in excited groups in the wet October air, talking
over the strike,—the famous strike of the Shawsheen Mills.

“I declare!” muttered the young woman who was hurrying the pony out of
these disagreeable surroundings; “it must be a strike! Nothing else
would crowd them into the street so. I wonder what they want? Dear me!
what nuisances these work-people are. Why can’t they be sensible, and
when they are earning a living, be content? Dear me! if I had the making
over of this world I would make everybody comfortably off, and nobody
rich—unless it were myself,” she added, laughing; for absolute
truthfulness was a necessity of Salome Shepard’s nature, and she knew
perfectly well that she could not do without the luxuries to which she
had always been accustomed.

“If I had the making over of the world!”

The words repeated themselves in her mind. If any human being has the
power of making over the world in any smallest degree, something
whispered, that person must be a young, attractive woman, with a vast
property and absolute control of several hundred people, besides two
millions of dollars in her own right.

“Dear me!” she said aloud, as she drove up the graveled road under the
dripping yellow beeches. “How positively dreadful it must be to be a
reformer! How would I look in a bloomer costume and black bombazine
bonnet? No. Let things alone, keep to your sphere, young woman,—the
proper, well-regulated, protected and chaperoned sphere of a delicate
young lady, and let the world right its own wrongs.”

She jumped lightly from the phaeton, tossing the reins to James, and
showing her fine, well-turned figure to excellent advantage as she ran
up the broad steps.

The massive doors turned noiselessly at her approach. She passed through
the fine old hall and went directly up the broad oak staircase to her
room.

“How comfortable this is,” she said to herself, as the blazing wood-fire
threw flickering shadows over the dainty hangings, the warm rugs and the
choice pictures.

But even as she drew a long sigh of contentment with her lot, a picture
of wet and muddy streets, thickset with groups of brawny men and
bedraggled, unkempt women, intruded itself, and the sigh changed its
tenor.

“If I only had the making over of the world!” she said again aloud; and
added resolutely, “but I haven’t.”



                                  II.


The Shawsheen Mills had been established many years before the opening
of this story by Salome’s grandfather, Newbern Shepard. They constituted
one of the chief manufacturing concerns of Shepardtown. They made more
cloth, and that of a better quality, than any other mill outside the
“City of Spindles.” They employed a much larger force of operatives than
any other factory in the place, and had always held a controlling
interest in town affairs.

When the Shawsheen Mills were first started, blooming girls from all
parts of Massachusetts came swarming to them, glad of a new and
respectable employment,—came with earnest purpose to make this new life
and its outcomes subservient to a better future. The conscientious New
England girl of those days took as much pride in making a perfect web of
cloth as though it were for her own wearing. Aware that her employers
took an interest in her welfare, aside from the fact that she was a part
of the motive power of the mill, she rewarded them with a full
performance of her duty. A mutual goodfellowship had existed, then,
between employer and employed in the years when old Newbern Shepard was
at the head of his mills.

All this had changed. Newbern Shepard had died after a long and
successful career, leaving the business to his son, Floyd Shepard. The
latter, educated at Harvard, with five years of study afterward in
Germany, had developed little taste for an active business life such as
his father had led. He had, consequently, placed the entire business in
the hands of Otis Greenough, a friend of his college-days and a
hard-headed business man. Floyd Shepard had idled the greater part of
his time before reaching the age of fifty in various parts of the world.

Then he came home, married a Baltimore belle, and passed his old age in
his native place.

Even then, he gave little thought to the details of business. He added
to and improved the home of his forefathers, until his house and grounds
were acknowledged to be the finest in the state. After four years of
married life, his young wife died, leaving him one child—a babe of three
days. Then he retired into his study, and lived only among his books.

“Don’t trouble me with the business,” he would say to Otis Greenough, on
the rare occasions when it seemed necessary to consult the owner of the
mills. “I care nothing as to how you manage the works, and know less how
it should be done. Suit yourself as to details, and keep the mills
paying a good profit. I shall be satisfied.”

Upon this principle the mills had been run for thirty years. The agent
and his superintendents had devoted themselves to the problem of getting
out more goods and making more money than their competitors, while
keeping the standard of their wares up to its old mark. They had no time
for the problem of human life involved. The first and principal question
had required a severe struggle, with active brains and sharp wits. What
wonder, then, that the increasing mass of operatives had come to be
considered, every year, less as human beings in need of help and
encouragement, and more as mechanical attachments of the mills?

Only such operatives as had been brought up in the mills realized the
difference. The employes were mostly of the unwashed population,
expecting nothing but a place to earn their living and but scanty pay
for it.

Having, at the outset, no confidence in their employers, and no feeling
of goodwill towards them, they had no conscientious motive behind their
work. On the contrary, they stood on the defensive, watching for
oppression and tyranny, and ready to take arms against them.

This was the state of things when the first regularly organized strike
occurred at the Shawsheen Mills.

Otis Greenough, although an old man, was still at the head of the mills.
Floyd Shepard’s death three years before had made no difference with the
vast business interests in his name. In willing everything he owned to
his daughter, who was already heiress to a large fortune from her
mother’s family, he had provided that Otis Greenough should be chief
agent during the remainder of his life; and that the mills should
continue on the same plan by which they had been run for the past
quarter of a century.

Otis Greenough was an arbitrary man, with that enormous strength of will
which a man must have who is to control and manage two thousand people
and an increasing business.

If, in the march of economic progress, he chose to make changes in the
machinery of the mills, he consulted no one, and cared nothing for the
black looks or surly mutterings of the operative who might fancy himself
injured thereby. Had it been hinted to him that his operatives might be
trained to take a personal interest in the success or failure of new
experiments or, indeed, that they had any right to his brotherly
consideration, he would have flouted the idea.

It was his boast that he never wasted words on the operatives. In short,
he was as indifferent to the rights of Labor as his Lancashire spinners
were to the interests of Capital. Hence the strike.

At noon of the day that Salome Shepard had driven through the factory
street, Otis Greenough sat in his private office with his two
superintendents, the treasurer and cashier of the mills, and one or two
subordinates. As the bell struck for twelve, five men from the various
departments filed in and presented a written document. They were the
committee appointed by the new Labor Union.

Mr. Greenough took the paper with an air that showed him to be in
anything but a conciliatory mood. Without opening it, he burst forth
angrily:

“What, in the name of common sense, is this farce anyhow? What do you
mean by leaving your work and presuming to come here, dictating terms to
_me_?”

“The paper will explain everything, sir,” replied the foremost of the
committee. “We have our rights—or should have them. The time has come
when we propose to get them. Will you read the petition, sir?”

“No,” thundered the choleric old man. “Not in your presence. Villard,
treat with them.” Mr. Greenough was too angry to say more.

Mr. Villard, the younger superintendent, stepped forward.

“I think,” he said, “that you had better leave us for a time. We shall
need to consider your proposals, whatever they may be. Go now, and come
again later—say at four o’clock.” Agreeing to this proposition, the five
men turned and left the office. Mr. Villard sat down again, waiting for
the agent to speak.

“The confounded whelps!” ejaculated Mr. Greenough, as soon as he could
find breath. “Open that paper, Villard—the impudent puppies!”

Without answering, John Villard tore open the envelope, and read the
document aloud:

  _Whereas_, we, the undersigned, believing that our interests demand an
  organization which shall promote and protect affairs relating to us as
  laboring men; and

  _Whereas_, we have already organized and maintained such a society; it
  is now unanimously agreed that we insist upon the recognition of such
  a body by our employers, and upon their making certain concessions for
  the benefit of that body.

  _Whereas_, there is a ten-hour system established in this state by
  law; we hereby _resolve_ that we will refuse to work ten and a half or
  eleven hours a day as has been demanded of us.

  _Whereas_, we believe the introduction of the new frames are
  detrimental to the interests of the mule-spinners; we _resolve_ that
  they must be taken out, and the old mules replaced, with a written
  agreement that no more of the obnoxious machinery shall be added for,
  at least, five years.

  _Whereas_, there has been an attempt made to reduce our wages,
  especially in the weaving department; we hereby _resolve_ that we will
  submit to no curtailment of wages, and to demand payment of all wages
  weekly, as is the custom in certain other mills in this state.

  Trusting that these our petitions may be granted, our rights
  respected, and that harmonious relations will soon be established
  between us, we take pleasure in signing ourselves

                                 “MEMBERS OF THE SHAWSHEEN LABOR UNION.”

Before John Villard had finished reading the paper, Mr. Greenough had
risen and was pacing the floor excitedly.

“Shocking!” he exclaimed, as Mr. Villard folded the paper and returned
it to its envelope. “Preposterous! Do they think they can impose upon me
with such a jumble of unreasoning nonsense as that? Labor Union, indeed!
Why, the rascals act as if there were no interests but those of labor.
And a beautiful time they’ve taken to strike—when orders are pouring in
faster than we can possibly keep up with them. A fine time, indeed!”

“I suppose,” said John Villard, fearlessly, “there seems a slight
injustice to them, in cutting down their wages at such a time.”

“What right have they to dictate, I should like to inquire?” answered
the irate agent. “If they were not a bigoted, unreasoning set, they’d
know they never can serve the interests of labor in such a way. They’d
realize that they are only biting off their own noses! They have
probably been worked upon by some crank of an agitator. If they were not
ignorant dogs, they’d know that they could best serve the interests of
labor by being faithful to those of capital. Why,” he concluded, his
face growing redder in his wrath, “is this America? Is this our boasted
New England? Is this a free country? By Jove! I’ve heard of this sort of
thing in England, but in this republican land, this boasted region of
freedom—Great Scott! What are we coming to?”

“It’s this accursed trades-unionism creeping in among us,” put in the
treasurer’s mild voice, as Otis Greenough paused for breath. “I’ve been
expecting it.”

“Blast it, why didn’t you mention it then?” returned Mr. Greenough. But
the treasurer retired in confusion behind his books and did not answer.

“Well, Villard,” continued the agent, “I hope now you will give up the
Utopian schemes you’ve been nursing for the elevation of the laboring
classes. You see just what a foolish, unthinking, unreliable set of men
we have to deal with.”

“On the contrary, sir,” returned the second superintendent, firmly, “I
sympathize, to a degree, with them. I agree that they have taken an
inopportune time to enforce their views, and regret that they could not
have seen fit to keep at work while their petition was being considered;
and I would advise——”

“I want no man’s advice until I ask it,” interrupted the elder man.
“This is our first strike, and it shall be the last so long as I have
authority here. Humph! They think they can intimidate me! They have
chosen this time because they think I _must_ yield now. They little know
me. Otis Greenough has not run the Shawsheen Mills successfully thirty
years, to be brow-beaten and conquered in the end by a pack of ignorant
laborers.”

“But how is this to end?” asked the first superintendent, speaking for
the first time.

“It can end whenever these men will take back their impudent paper and
go to work. Villard, when they show up again—four o’clock did you
say?—you will tell them so. Offer them a chance to go to work to-morrow
morning on the old terms. You needn’t give in to them one inch. Do you
hear? Not a jot or tittle.”

“And what if they do not accept?” asked Villard.

“Why, advertise. Advertise far and near. Get new help. We’ll open the
mills and run them, too, right in their very teeth. I’ll show them that
he who has been master here for thirty years is master until he dies.”



                                  III.


The choleric agent’s blood was fairly up, and he now set himself to plan
for the coming warfare. When the committee from the labor union made its
appearance at four o’clock, the agent refused to treat directly with
them. He retired to his inner office, whence issued a moment later an
“open letter to the employes of the Shawsheen Mills.” The circular was
composed and written entirely by himself, and was quite characteristic
of his high-handed authority. It stated that “as the control of an owner
over his property was guaranteed by the law of the land, and was of such
unquestionable character as ought not to be meddled with by any other
individual or combination of individuals, the agent of the Shawsheen
Mills, acting for their owner, would brook no such interference as had
been attempted.” But, in bombastic language, he went on to say that, on
account of the pressure of work, he offered to take back into the mills
such operatives as, after a day’s idleness and a night’s calm
reflection, might decide to come back peacefully, and accept the old
conditions. The circular closed by adding that all returning operatives
must renounce their connection with the new Labor Union, and stating
that the Shawsheen Mills would be immediately re-opened.

This letter, as might have been expected, only served to fan the
smouldering embers of discord. It was taken at once to the quarters of
the new Union, and angrily discussed. A stormy meeting was held that
evening, and scores of new members were added to the organization, all
unanimously agreeing, not only to keep away from the mills themselves,
but to prevent other operatives from entering them. The trouble which
might have been met at the outset and subdued by candid discussion and a
fair acknowledgment on each side of the claims of the other, was changed
into a barricade of danger between labor and capital over which a battle
was to be fought, involving money and credit and losses on one side, and
daily bread for two thousand people on the other.

“Come,” said Otis Greenough, emerging from his “den” after the committee
had left the office. “I want you, Villard, and you, too, Burnham,” he
added, turning to the other superintendent, “to go with me this evening,
to the owner of these mills, and lay before her the proceedings of the
day, and our reasons for taking a firm stand. Although, precious little
difference it will make with her, I imagine, how many strikes we have,
until her income is affected! Will you be so good as to state, Villard,
what you are smiling at.”

“I was thinking, sir, that it is a queer state of affairs, when a person
owning large and influential mills like these, need not know of the
strike or be consulted with regard to it, until it is half over,”
answered Villard. He had no fear of the agent, with whom he was a
favorite, in spite of his seeming harshness. “It seems to me, if I were
a young woman, with unlimited leisure and wealth, I should care to know
something of so tremendous an interest as the Shawsheen Mills
represent—that is, if I owned them.”

“Ha, ha!” laughed the agent, “that shows how much of a ladies’ man you
are, John. Much you know about the things that interest and amuse the
young ladies. By Jove! I should laugh to see the daughter of Floyd
Shepard meddling with the details of the great business he left her. She
could discuss French and Italian literature, or the different schools of
music and art, by the hour, and fairly inundate you with a flood of
learning; but when it comes to mills—why, she don’t know a loom from a
spinning-jenny—and don’t want to. I’m only going up there as a matter of
form. As for advice, she knows I wouldn’t take it, even if she has any
to offer. But courtesy—proper courtesy,” and Otis Greenough drew himself
up to his fullest height, “and the respect we owe her as the owner of
this property, demand that we go there this evening. I will call for you
in my carriage at half-past seven.”

And, so saying, he left the office.

“I reckon the old man is about right,” said Burnham, when they were
alone. “Miss Shepard knows no more about the practical affairs of her
mill, than that little white kitten over there does. She’ll meet us with
a listless, half-bored air, pretending to listen to the statements of
our chief, and all the time be wishing us at the antipodes.”

“Do you know,” interrupted John Villard, locking the door to the office
as they left it together, “I’ve very little patience with women of that
sort. Think, with her youth and health and money, what a directing,
reforming force in bringing together the conflicting interests of labor
and capital she might be! Great Heavens! I wish I had her opportunity.
I’d make something of it.”

“Oh, you are too Utopian,” replied Burnham. “It is fortunate she isn’t
that kind. We should be overwhelmed with Schemes for the Amelioration of
the Condition of This, That, and The Other Thing, until there would be
nothing left but bankruptcy for all of us. No. I want no reformers in
petticoats at the head of the Shawsheen Mills. But here I am at my
street. Good-bye, till evening.”

Salome Shepard passed a dull afternoon. Although a young woman of
resources she found herself in no mood to enjoy any of them after lunch.
The newest volume of essays seemed insufferably dull, and she turned for
relief to the latest novel; but, in spite of the fact that this book was
talked about throughout the country, she soon threw it aside with a
wearied air and sat gazing into the blazing hickory fire.

Strange! but the red-hot coals formed themselves into a group against
the dull back-log like the groups of miserable, excited men and women of
the morning against a background of rain and fog and muddy streets. It
was an uncomfortable picture, and she rose suddenly, and, going into the
music-room, seated herself at the piano. Chopin’s Nocturnes stood open
on the rack, but she tossed them aside and began some stormy Liszt
music, breaking off when half done and going to the window.

The rain had begun to fall again and the fog had settled like a pall
over everything farther off than the arched gateway. She wondered if all
those people were still standing in the mud and rain.

An elderly lady, with soft white hair and exquisite laces, came in.

Salome ran forward, pushed her aunt’s favorite chair into the position
she liked best, and put her into it.

“Why did you stop playing? And why did you attempt that brilliant
thing?” said Mrs. Soule. “You are so dreadfully out of practice, you
know.”

“It wasn’t that,” answered the younger woman; “I’m not in the mood for
playing anything. I doubt if I could get through with ‘Bounding Billows’
or the ‘Fifteenth Amusement’ to-day. Did you know, aunty, there is a
strike down at the mills?”

“A strike! Mercy, who has struck?” responded the elder in shocked tones.

“Why, the operatives, of course. I don’t know why, or anything about it.
I have never shown any interest in the mills,” she went on eagerly and
half-apologetically, “but I should like to know what it is all about—why
they did it—what they want, and all that. I should think Mr. Greenough
would come up here.”

“He will come as soon as he deems it proper.” Mrs. Soule’s voice was
calmness and precision itself. “It is not nice for young ladies to mix
themselves up in such common things.”

“But, aunty,” laughed Salome, “strikes are not common things here. We
never had one before. And I am not so very young a lady as to need the
same careful guardianship I had when I was sixteen. I am twenty-seven
years old.”

“There is no need of saying so upon all occasions, if you are,” replied
her aunt with some asperity. “A strike, like all things connected with,
or originated by the ignorant laboring class, is common in the sense of
being vulgar. Any woman, young or old, brought up as delicately and
carefully as you have been, demeans herself by connection with such
things. You have an agent—a manly and capable one; leave the settlement
of such things to him.”

“Oh, I’m not going to meddle with the strike. The very suggestion that I
would wish to have anything to do with settling the difficulty makes me
laugh.”

Salome rose and began to pace the room. “But sometimes, lately, aunty,
it has occurred to me that a young woman of average talent, with a great
business on her hands which employs two thousand people, may have
something to do in life more than to seek her own selfish enjoyment—a
pursuit which, after all, is not elevating and leaves but a restless,
unsatisfied spirit in its wake. I came across some of grandfather’s
manuscripts two or three weeks ago and have been reading them. He wasn’t
like papa. The mills were a part of his very self. The operatives were
almost like so many children to him. I’ve read in his, and in other
books, about the mill-girls of his day. Girls whose working days began
at daylight in winter and ended at half-past seven in the evening; who
had only two dresses to their backs, and those of Merrimack print; whose
profits for a week, after their board was paid, were only two dollars.
But girls who could discuss Shakespeare, Dante, and Milton at their
looms; who read Locke and Abercrombie and Pollock and Young (something I
can’t do!); who sent petitions to Congress for the abolition of slavery;
who helped build churches from their pitiful savings; who wrote essays
and poems and stories, even while running their looms; who spent their
evenings in the study of German and French and botany; and who went out,
at last, to become teachers and mothers and missionaries, and, above
all, noble, self-sacrificing, helpful women. And I tell you that, with
all my money and my polished education, I envy them.”

“Salome, really, you surprise me,” exclaimed the excellent lady who was
listening to her. “Calm yourself, my dear.”

“Look at the girls in this mill—in my grandfather’s mill to-day—in my
mill,” she went on. “Beings of bangs and bangles and cheap jewelry, of
low aspirations, and correspondingly low morals! They are not to blame
for their penny-dreadful lives, because they know no better. They dream
of nothing higher than their looms and their face-powder, and their
cheap satins and false hair—why should they? They see rich and educated
women like us wrapped entirely in ourselves, each anxious to outshine
the rest, and all seemingly lost in the mad race after fashionable
attire. They do not know, poor things, that we ever think or talk of
higher subjects. I tell you, I feel that I am, somehow, responsible for
them. And yet, I don’t know how to help them. My grandfather could, but
I can’t.”

“I know nothing of such things,” coldly replied her aunt. “It is not
ladylike to fly into a passion over the fancied wrongs of a lower order
of beings. I beg that you will recollect that you are the daughter of
Cora Le Bourdillon and Floyd Shepard.”

“And more than that,” Salome whispered to herself as she sought the
quiet of her own room, “I am afraid I am the grand-daughter of Newbern
Shepard.”



                                  IV.


It was nearly eight o’clock when carriage-wheels were heard coming up
the graveled drive-way, and Otis Greenough and his associates were
announced. Salome and her aunt were sitting in the music-room, and came
forward at once; the former with an unmistakable air of eagerness.

“Tell me about the strike, Mr. Greenough,” she asked, before he had
fairly seated himself.

“Oh, then, you’d heard of it, eh?” he asked.

“I saw something of it this morning, driving through the town. I could
not help knowing what it was. But why did they do it? What do they
want?”

“They did it,” and Otis Greenough sat up with a judicial air, “because
they are rascally dogs, and do not know when they are well off. And they
want?—well,—the earth—more pay, shorter hours, and the Lord knows what
besides.”

“Well, and why shouldn’t they have it?”

The question fell like a bomb upon her surprised audience.

“To be sure, I know very little of these things, practically, although I
have taken the prescribed doses of social economy in my readings under
Professor Townsend,” she went on; “but it has occurred to me, within a
few days, that the laboring classes have very little control over their
own lives, and are not much more than slaves to us who hold the reins of
power.”

“Bless me!” thought Otis Greenough, staring at her. If his office-door
had suddenly spoken, offering him officious counsel as to his method of
conducting the mills, he could hardly have been more surprised. “Bless
me! No Floyd Shepard about her.”

“If the operatives are poorly paid, and we are making more money than
ever before (I think I understood you so the other day?),” the young
woman was saying, “why shouldn’t their wages be raised? It seems but
fair, to me.”

“Much you know about it, little girl,” Mr. Greenough found voice to say,
addressing her as he used to in by-gone days, when she occasionally
strayed into the mills and teased to be taken through them. “Much any
young lady of the world can know of such matters. We would not have you
turn from being your own charming self, and become a learned
blue-stocking, or bloomered reformer; but there are many, many reasons
which come between the questions of profit and loss, and the petty
details of operatives’ wages, which cannot be explained to you here and
now. They were contented enough until some rascal or other, having
become imbued with the spirit of these labor unions starting up all over
the country, must needs organize one here. By Jove! I’ll employ
detectives and hunt out the disturbing elements and shut them up. I have
offered every mother’s son a chance to go back to work to-morrow
morning, on condition that he drops this union business; but I am told
to-night that not one of them will accept. Ignorant creatures! I’ll show
’em what it means to fight a rich and strong concern like this, in the
vain hope of bringing us to their terms.”

“Meanwhile,” it was Villard who spoke, “we are to go on resisting their
combined ignorance and impatience, and perhaps worse elements, losing
thousands of dollars in the warfare, are we?”

“Yes, rather than give in one inch to them,” answered Mr. Greenough.
“This is the first organized strike and must be made a warning to future
disturbers. It’s those confounded Englishmen trying to transplant their
foreign ideas to American soil. If we give in to them now, we establish
a bad precedent.”

“I must confess,” said Villard, “that I do not see it. I have seen
several strikes, and know that generally both sides lose sight of
reason, and determine to fight it out regardless of cost. I am afraid,
with the course you propose to adopt, sir, that we shall go on until the
losses on our side or the suffering and privation on theirs will become
unbearable; and then one side or the other will be forced to yield. If
it should be they, a smouldering resentment will be left, ready to break
out anew at the first convenient season. If we, they will feel
encouraged to try still more arbitrary measures in the future. Or if a
compromise be effected, it will be one that might as well be made
to-morrow.”

“You talk well for a young man,” admitted Mr. Greenough. “How did you
come by your exceedingly humane and sympathetic views?”

“I began as an employe myself,” answered Villard, “and I know how they
feel to some extent. I know what it is to work at the lowest drudgery of
a mill, and can imagine how it must seem to have no hope of ever rising
to a higher position. Hard, unremitting toil, long hours with endless
years of hopeless work in prospect, the lowest possible wages, a large
and rapidly increasing family, with perhaps an aged parent or invalid
wife to support—I tell you lots of those fellows have all that to bear,
knowing the utter impossibility of ever saving anything, or of raising
their own condition. I say, sir, looking at life from their standpoint,
it’s mighty hard.”

“Well, well,” put in Mr. Greenough, testily, “a great many of them want
nothing better. They would not know what to do with a better chance for
life, as you call it, if they had it.”

“Simply put yourself in their place, sir,” said Villard. “What if you
were forty years younger than you are, and condemned to a life of toil
at the looms, for instance, would you not claim the right to combine
with others of like occupation and interests and ask for a better
chance? These men of ours have taken an unreasonable way of asserting
themselves, but I think they are entitled to our respect, and should be
dealt with as men. An open, fair discussion of the wage question or the
ten-hour law can result in nothing but good for both sides.”

“You are young,” Mr. Greenough replied, “and believe everything in this
world can be made to run exactly as you want it. When you are older,
you’ll realize better the indifference and general mulishness of the
world, and of operatives in particular. I do not believe in meeting and
deferring to them as equals. They are not worth our efforts, and so long
as they are under the influence of hot-headed devils who pose as labor
reformers, just so long we are going to see trouble.”

“If we were to make a fair compromise with them,” Mr. Burnham was
speaking for the first time, “and let them see that we, as humane
employers, have a greater desire for their interest than any foreigner
can have, wouldn’t it work a reaction in our favor? From a strictly
business point of view, perhaps it would be money in our pockets.”

“Yes,” urged Villard, “if we were to show ourselves willing to consider
an intimate knowledge of their needs and thus prove ourselves their best
friends, it would be only a case of practical philanthropy, and one
which would raise our profits every year, I believe. It is only the
first step that costs, you know.”

“I don’t believe it,” stoutly maintained the agent. “In my day there has
been very little talk of managers and owners deferring to their help. I
hire my own operatives and reserve the right to raise, or lower, their
wages as I please.”

“But, Mr. Greenough,” broke in Salome eagerly, “don’t you consider their
circumstances at all? Don’t you, for instance, in a driving time, pay
them any higher wages than in dull times? I think there would be nothing
but fairness in that.”

“My dear young lady,” was the answer in patronizing tones, “don’t bother
your brains with such things. You cannot understand them. Why try?”

“Imagine our Salome posing as a philanthropist or a social economist,”
interrupted Mrs. Soule’s mellifluous tones. “We had a great laugh over
the idea this afternoon.”

Salome bit her lip and said nothing.

“I think,” continued her aunt in the same smooth accents, “that we have
talked business long enough. I am sure, Mr. Greenough, that Salome is,
and will be perfectly satisfied with any course you may see fit to adopt
with regard to the strikers. Women, you know, ladies at least, have no
heads for business, and we, certainly,” with an indescribable turn of
voice on the “we”—“we, certainly, have had no training to fit us for
reformers. And now shall we not have some music? Salome, dear, will you
play that delightful little suite of Moscowzki’s that I like so well?”

The young woman rose and, going to the piano, did as she was bid,
although somewhat mechanically. Then Mr. Greenough proposed a song from
Mr. Burnham, who possessed a fine baritone voice, and the evening wore
away with music and light conversation.

When the three men went home, the elder was in fine spirits, in spite of
having been shocked and discomfited to an unusual degree, by the
unexpected disclosure of views which he termed “strong-minded” on the
part of the fair owner of the Shawsheen Mills.

“If there should come to be hard times and perhaps destitution among the
operatives before this difficulty is settled,” Salome said to John
Villard as he was preparing to go, “such destitution as we read of in
foreign countries in times of labor disturbances, I hope you will let me
do something to relieve it. Strange as it may seem, I have a much better
idea of such a state of affairs there than here—among my own mills.”

“There will be no such state of affairs, I trust,” was his reply, “as is
pictured in English novels.”

“You have guessed accurately as to the sources of my information,” she
laughed.

He smiled too, and continued,

“Meanwhile, if we pursue the policy proposed,” and he glanced at Mr.
Greenough, who was making gallant speeches to Mrs. Soule, “you might
keep a watchful eye on the help. You could tell, you know, by the women,
if they came to absolute distress. Of course, there is no knowing how
long this thing may last.”

“Me! You look to me for such a thing,” and it was hard to tell whether
her tone was amused or sarcastic only. “Why, Mr. Villard, I do not know
one of the operatives in the mills—not even by sight. If I were to meet
them on the main thoroughfare to-morrow I should not know them from
other women of their class.”

John Villard raised his eyebrows and turned to put on his coat without
another word. The situation was incomprehensible to him.

Salome saw this, and winced under it. She made no further attempt at
conversation, but said good-night graciously to Mr. Greenough and the
older superintendent, recognizing Villard’s parting nod at the door.

“There,” said her aunt, as they went back into the firelight, “I hope
they won’t feel it necessary to come here and consult with us again so
long as the strike is on. As though you knew or cared anything for it,
my dear! But, of course, they had to come as a matter of form. Any way,
I’m glad it is over. Play something.”

Salome complied, playing the first thing which came to her mind—the
opening bars of the _Sonata Pathetique_.

“I wish,” she said to herself as she disrobed for the night, “that I
were a capable woman of affairs—and that John Villard were my agent.”



                                   V.


Not for a week could enough new help be hired to even make a show of
opening the Shawsheen Mills. Labor Unions were a comparatively new thing
in this country, and were not so thoroughly organized as now; and a few
of the old operatives, rather than starve, were glad to go back into the
mills on any condition. But the great majority refused with indignation
to give up their claims, and proceeded to “make things hot,” as they
expressed it, for the “scabs” and “mudsills.”

Work was attempted in the mills, although many looms stood silent and
the spinning-mules were entirely deserted. Thread for warp was procured
from a neighboring city at no small expense and the mills were run at a
loss, to prove the agent’s assertion that “he would show them who was
manager of the Shawsheen Mills.”

This sort of thing was kept up four days. On the fifth morning, the
operatives went as usual to the mill, but the machinery, after a few
insufficient groans, gave up in despair and settled into utter quiet.

What was the matter?

There was a great hurrying to and fro, and a close examination of belts
and machinery. Word was soon brought up from the basement. The engines
had been tampered with; on each of them the belts had been cut. The
jocularly inclined said the “engines had joined the Union;”—while
everybody wondered what effect this stroke would have on the agent.

The premises were examined and the night-watchman questioned. Evidently
the deed had been done by some one familiar with the place, but there
was not the slightest clue. He had done well his work, and the mills
were stopped for repairs.

Otis Greenough blustered about and cursed the whole business; but he was
farther than ever from a compromise, declaring that he would yet beat
them with their own weapons.

The night-watch was doubled and the mills were opened again the next
day. But the employers were fighting a desperate party and little
calculated their strength. The man who had succeeded so well in his
first attempt to stop the mills risked himself again; and on the second
morning the machinery again refused to start. This time a small wheel
had been removed from each engine and carried away. The water-wheel had
long been in partial disuse and could not be trusted without the
engines. Hence, there was nothing to be done but to stop again for
repairs. This time it was a week before the engines were in running
order. And yet, not a word passed between the agent and the strikers.

The night-watch were discharged and new ones engaged. A special police
was secured to patrol the mill-yard, and when the mills were again
opened, it was with the avowed determination to keep them going in spite
of every earthly power.

The next morning, notwithstanding the positive assertions of police and
night-watch that no one had been near the mills, every band connecting
the looms to the machinery above was cut in half a dozen places. Then
the superstitious operatives whispered among themselves that unseen
agencies were linked with the Union, and that the strikers must succeed
in the end; and many of the fainthearted went over to the new labor
party.

“It is of no use trying to run the mills in this way,” said Mr. Burnham.
“We have already lost several thousand dollars. We must compromise.”

“Never,” said Mr. Greenough. “The terms of Floyd Shepard’s will grant me
absolute power here, and so long as I live, it shall never be said that
an educated, trained and levelheaded business man was overcome by a lot
of ignorant bullies and agitators. These Labor Unions all over the State
need an example. There is money enough in the mill treasury to fight
them until they starve themselves out. No other mill or corporation
about here will hire them, and it is only a matter of weeks or months
when absolute poverty forces them to yield. Not one inch will I give in
to them. They shall come back as beggars, glad to accept work at even
lower wages than they have ever had. I’ll teach them a lesson.”

Geoffrey Burnham turned away full of anger that a flourishing business
should be destroyed by one man’s obstinacy. John Villard went back to
the silent looms, full of righteous indignation, not only at the total
disregard of practical business interests, but at the want of humanity
and philanthropy and Christian charity, which by his subordinate
position he must seem to countenance.

Weeks lengthened themselves into months, and still the Shawsheen Mills
were closed.

Salome Shepard, after spending the holiday season with friends in New
York, came home, satiated with social success, and a little tired of the
endless pursuit of pleasure. Still the mills lay idle and Otis Greenough
refused to talk any more with her on the subject of the strike. And the
terms of her father’s will held her powerless, even had she chosen to
exercise her authority.

But she chafed under the knowledge that two thousand people, who were in
a sense dependent upon her for their daily bread, were out of work in
the midst of a hard winter.

One day she went to walk down among the people who were suffering, now,
for a principle.

She was amazed at the gaunt, hungry look of the old men; and
self-accused at the pinched and wan faces of the few children who played
in the narrow streets. Unthinking, she had put on a seal-skin cloak. It
was a cold day, and furs, to her, were only a natural accompaniment to
the frosts of winter.

But going down the uncared-for side-walk, she rebuked herself, noting
the single shawl and calico dress of an old woman who was wearily making
her way a few paces in front of her. Presently the woman stopped, seized
with a paroxysm of coughing.

Salome came up with her, and looked into the white face, which told of
hard times.

“Madam,” she said, respectfully, “can I be of any assistance to you?
Shall I not help you home?”

Her tone and manner were exactly the same she would have used to any of
her aunt’s friends. It did not occur to her to be patronizing or
condescending.

The old woman stared at her. She was not used to being addressed as
“Madam.”

“Yes’m,” she said, presently. “I live up to the other end of the street.
If the cough wasn’t so bad, an’ my side didn’t ketch me so! But if I can
git back to my own chair ag’in——”

Another fit of coughing seized her, and interrupted the “garrulousness
of uncultured old age.” Salome waited until she got breath again and
then took her by the arm, accommodating her steps to the feebler ones.

Here and there a surprised face peered curiously at her through a dirty
window, knowing who she was, and wondering that she condescended to walk
with old Granny Lancaster. Everywhere a general air of poverty, perhaps
of actual hunger, impressed this woman, who had inherited the
tumble-down tenement houses on each side.

“I beg your pardon,” she said, “but do you eat nourishing food enough?
Good beef-steak and roast-beef would help your cough more than
medicine.”

The old woman laughed, a grating, cackling laugh.

“Beef-steak and roast-beef ain’t for the likes o’ me,” she said. “Meat
of any kind ain’t for us in times o’ strikes. May the Lord above send us
oatmeal enough to keep us through till the mills open ag’in is all I
ask. Here’s my house. Much ’bleeged, lady.”

Salome wanted to go inside the rickety old door and follow the woman up
the dirty stairway, but she did not say so, and the old woman hobbled up
the steps without asking her in.

Salome felt impulsively in her pocket, and drawing out her
porte-monnaie, emptied its contents into the dirty, emaciated palm of
Granny Lancaster. Then she turned and walked rapidly back home.

The next day Otis Greenough called on her.

“My dear,” he said, after an hour or two passed in desultory
conversation, “may I beg that you will keep away from the operatives?
Impulsive and injudicious charity does them more harm than anything
else. No doubt the part of Lady Bountiful seems a pleasant and desirable
one, but, just now, you are not fitted for it.”

“What do you mean, sir?” asked she in a puzzled tone.

“For instance,” he went on, “the money you gave a certain old woman on
the corporation yesterday was taken by her son-in-law last night, and
furnished him an opportunity for a glorious old drunk. I beg your pardon
for using their phraseology. He was arrested before morning for
drunkenness and disorderly conduct.”

“I do not comprehend,” she stammered. “The woman said they had no meat.
She was actually suffering for nourishing food. I gave the money,
impulsively it is true, but that they need not go hungry.”

“Now, you see, my dear,” he answered, “just how much encouragement one
gets in trying to do anything for the laboring classes. They turn upon
you and use the goodness of your heart and your generous motives to drag
themselves down to a lower depth of degradation. Good-day, my dear, and
don’t be led away by your feelings.”

Salome stood looking after him, heart-sick and discouraged. The
world—her part of it, at least—was all wrong, and she, with plenty of
money and an awakening desire to help, was powerless. She ordered the
pony phaeton again and started for a drive. She obeyed a sudden impulse
to go through the factory precincts. There were evidences of a
suppressed excitement. Knots of desperate-looking men stood about. But
they hushed their voices as she drew near, and stood in sullen silence
as she passed.

“There is evidently something in the wind,” she thought, urging the pony
to quicken his pace.

She did not know that the committee from the Labor Union had that
morning made a third attempt to treat with her agent and failed.

“No compromise,” was still his watchword.

“I’ll send for Marion Shaw,” she said to herself, on her way home an
hour later. “She is a practical, sensible, business-like woman. Perhaps
she will know of some way to help me to help others. And she needs
rest.”

This idea so inspired her that she arrived home quite elated, and stated
her plan to Mrs. Soule at dinner-time with much animation.

But later in the evening, the groups of men she had seen on “the
corporation” came back to her mind and caused her a certain feeling of
uneasiness. What had they been talking about so excitedly as she drew
near?

It was one of those suddenly warm nights in January that succeed, in our
fickle climate, a bitter cold day, and Salome felt an unaccountable
desire to be in the open air. She threw on a warm wrap and hood, and
saying nothing, went out on the piazza, and crossed the lawn to a
favorite walk of hers in summer—a path under a long group of fir-trees
down by the street at the back of the house.

After a few turns, she heard a peculiar whistle which was answered by
another.

She withdrew still more into the shadow and waited. Presently two men
met.

“Well, what’s the news?” eagerly asked one.

“Sh—sh! not so loud,” replied the other. “It’s all right, and better
than we expected.”

“Why—how better?” asked the first.

They spoke lower, so that Salome could scarcely catch the tones.

“Because,” the first was saying, “the old man himself has gone down to
the mill.”

“Whe—e—w!”

“Yes. What on earth possessed him? But then that’s none of our affairs.
If he wants to run the risk of losing his life—that’s his business, not
mine.”

“Well, but,” and the first voice had a timid note, “that’s going too
far—we were only to blow up the mill—not to kill anybody.”

“Can’t help that. Fifteen minutes more, if everything works well, and
old man Greenough’s day is over. Jim’s just about lighting the fuse, I
reckon, now. It’s an awful long one, but the fire’ll creep round there
in time.”

“What about the police?”

“He’s all right. We’ve fixed him.”

The voices grew fainter and ceased altogether, only the dull sound of
the men’s footsteps reaching her as they passed down the hill away from
the grounds.

Salome stood an instant, rooted to the spot. What was this horrible
thing she had heard?

The factory to be blown up?

She must go for help.

And Mr. Greenough down there, risking his life?

No. There was no time to get help.

“Fifteen minutes more, if everything works well, and old man Greenough’s
day is over.”

The whole plot flashed across her bewildered brain. She dashed through
the back-gate and down the deserted street towards the mills. It was a
ten minutes’ walk across that way, but she ran,—flew,—tore down the
lonely road in less than half that time.

Otis Greenough might be an unreasonable, hot-headed, obstinate agent,
but he was her father’s friend and had loved and petted her when she was
a motherless child.

What could she do? Raise an alarm? Call for help? Rouse everybody?

But the fuse was already lighted.

Where was it?

Under the office window most likely, since they knew that the old agent
was in there.

She came in sight of that window. There was a dim light there. All else
was dark. The south wind moaned dismally.

She hurried faster and came nearer the office window. Under it was
another window with a broken pane, from which hung something she
instantly divined as the fuse.

Yes. A fiery spark crept closer and closer to the wall.

By the time she reached the window it was out of her reach.

Oh, God! could she do nothing?

She had been sewing on some dainty trifle earlier in the evening, and a
pair of small scissors still hung at her waist.

Closer drew the spark of fire to the broken window pane, whence it would
disappear to work its fearful errand. It seemed to twinkle and mock at
her in fiendish delight. She grasped the jutting window-frame and jumped
upon the broad sill.

Thank God, she had it at last. One snip of her scissors, and the spark
of fire dropped harmlessly to the ground. She turned slightly to step
off the window-ledge. Her foot slipped and she fell, a white, faint heap
upon the ground.



                                  VI.


When she opened her eyes again, not only Otis Greenough but John Villard
and an office-boy were bending anxiously over her.

“My dear girl,” the agent was saying, “bless me, my dear, what is it?
How came you here and who has harmed you?”

“Don’t be alarmed, sir,” was her reply, as she got on her feet; and
then, somewhat excitedly, she told the events of the last fifteen or
twenty minutes, interrupted, every other sentence, by such ejaculations
as, “Great Scott,” “Bless me,” “The rascals,” “Confound them,” from the
elderly man, while the younger one listened in silent amazement.

Rapid search was made and the night-watch was found sleeping, in a
stupor which was evidently the work of a drug; while the police were, as
usual, nowhere to be found.

Salome was taken into the office—not without inward trembling, as she
feared further evidences of the miscreants.

Mr. Villard soon reported two kegs of gunpowder and a small dynamite
bomb in the room below, at the same time congratulating, most heartily,
the young woman who had saved their lives as well as the mills.

But her courage was now at a low ebb, and, woman-like, she shivered at
the close proximity of gunpowder, and begged to be taken home.

Mr. Greenough, who had come to realize the danger to himself and to the
mills which his obstinacy had provoked, was also anxious to leave the
premises and glad to accompany Salome home.

John Villard, meanwhile, attended to the duty of finding new watchmen
who should be reliable,—a difficult task. Against his will, he promised
Salome not to sleep at the mills, as he had been doing since the
machinery had been tampered with.

Salome was nearly prostrated when she reached home, and had but little
strength left with which to importune the agent to consent to any terms
for a settlement; but as the old man was, for once, thoroughly
frightened, it was not difficult to exact a promise that he would
consider a compromise.

Mrs. Soule, when she learned of Salome’s intrepidity,—set forth as it
was by Mr. Greenough’s gratitude and gallant appreciation,—was greatly
concerned for her niece and put her straightway to bed, where, in fact,
she had supposed her to be for the past hour, and where she wept over
and caressed her as she had not done since the girl had left home for
boarding-school. And then, what was far more to the purpose, she gave
her a bath of alcohol and olive oil, and soothed her to sleep.

Early the next morning the agent of the Shawsheen Mills sent a messenger
over to the dingy room which served as headquarters for the Labor Union,
begging for an interview.

As this was the first overture of peace from his side, it was natural
that it should be hailed with glee by the officers of the Union. And
although, the day before, the leaders of the strike had been closeted
together in a serious debate as to how much they should yield to
Capital, they now unanimously agreed not to “weaken” in the smallest
degree.

As for the agent, he had been persuaded to yield every point demanded by
the strikers, insisting only upon the one condition, that the Labor
Union should be disbanded.

The question of ten hours he granted without a murmur. He quibbled a
long time over the wage question, and the subject of weekly payments,
and only on seeing the dogged determination of the laborers did he come
to terms on that. But he very properly, and too peremptorily, refused to
remove the spinning frames which had formed one subject of contention.
And then he proceeded to overthrow the good effects of what concessions
he had made, by violently denouncing all labor unions, and vigorously
insisting that the one known as the Shawsheen Labor Union be immediately
and forever disbanded.

“Never,” said the foremost of the committee, “will we submit to so
arbitrary a demand. We have a perfect right to organize our forces and
assert our claims. How can we—a band of day-laborers,—dependent on
capital for a bare living, win a single cause for ourselves without
combinations of this kind? There are scores of questions which involve
not our welfare in one way alone, but our health, our wages, our morals,
our manhood, which we, as single individuals, can never cope with, but
which, as a united force, we can adjust. Besides, in all departments of
labor, the women and children equal or exceed the men. There are to-day
one hundred and seventy-five thousand more women working in mills than
there were ten years ago; and what are they but the weakest and most
dependent of employes? They have no strength to agitate; they have no
power to change any existing order of things. All they can do is to toil
and submit. We owe it to them as men, as husbands, brothers, and sons,
to lighten their burdens. As free American citizens we owe it to
ourselves, to settle the conditions of our own lives, so far as may be.
This can only be done by combinations of the laboring classes strong
enough to compel manufacturers to concede us our rights.”

“You are right to a degree,” answered Villard, before Mr. Greenough
could swallow his surprise at hearing such sentiments from one of his
operatives; “I believe there are some rights which you can only secure
by a combination of your forces as working-men. But when you let reason
lose its sway, and passion take its place; when you are influenced by
unworthy demagogues and unbalanced cranks, and seek to effect by strikes
and such arbitrary measures what might be better secured by a more
conciliatory course, you must not be surprised if you do not succeed in
bull-dozing a rich concern like this into obedience, and——”

“And when, by your —— labour unions, you sink so low as to countenance
incendiarism and murder—yes, sirs—that is what you attempted last night,
sirs,—you can’t expect this mill is going to countenance them. I’ll see
you all starve and rot first,” and Otis Greenough’s face was purple with
anger.

“We have already disclaimed all knowledge in our Union, sir,” said one
of the committee, “of last night’s outrage.”

“Blast it, what do I care for that?” roared the agent, as usual, out of
temper. “Whether you knew it or not, it was done under cover of your
strike, and your Union, and was one of the precious outgrowths of it.
Give up the —— thing, I say—or there is no compromise with these mills.”

“There is little use in prolonging this interview, I am afraid,” said
the first of the committee, taking up his hat.

“Impudent dogs!” said Mr. Greenough, as Villard tried to speak, anxious
to put things on a more satisfactory basis before the meeting closed.
“Let them go. They’ll find hard hoeing before they reach the end of
their row.”

“And, sir,” retorted a fiery-looking man who had not spoken before, “if
it comes to open war you’ll find us tough customers. We shall fight it
out like men, even if we starve like beasts.”

And with these words the committee departed, leaving matters worse than
ever before in the affairs of the Shawsheen Mills.

In vain did the two superintendents plead and argue and threaten the
choleric old agent. His blood was up and he was a veritable charger on
the eve of battle. There was no state board of arbitration then, and
therefore no available way of settling their difficulties except among
themselves. And as discussion only made matters worse, the subject which
was always uppermost in these three men’s minds was tacitly dropped.
Every precaution was taken to insure the mills from the danger it had
escaped the night before, and a detective was obtained from Boston to
hunt out the criminals who had perpetrated the dastardly act.

At noon, they were all surprised by a note from Miss Shepard. It ran as
follows:

  “DEAR MR. GREENOUGH,

  “As the owner of the Shawsheen Mill property, I hereby appoint a
  meeting of all its officers at my house, to-night. Please have them
  here at eight o’clock.

  “Pardon me for the liberty I have seemed to take, and believe me ever
  a loving and respectful friend,

                                                       “SALOME SHEPARD.”

“Well, you hear that, boys,” said Mr. Greenough, after reading it aloud.
“Be on hand. Tell the treasurer and cashier and head book-keeper. We’ll
all be there. The Lord only knows what she is up to; but if that young
woman hasn’t got a level head on her shoulders, then I don’t know who
has.”

“I reckon you’re right, sir,” echoed Mr. Burnham, while John Villard
laughed in his sleeve at the young woman who evidently dreamed of
settling a prolonged strike. “Why,” he said to himself, “she has never
known enough of the practical side of mill-life to recognize one of her
operatives, and hardly knows the different brands of cloth manufactured
by them.”

                  *       *       *       *       *

Salome Shepard had waked at an early hour that morning and found herself
unable to sleep again. Her mind was alive with gratitude for the part
she had been able to play the night before, with apprehension for the
future, and with increasing self-accusation for the state of things in
the Shawsheen Mills, both past and present.

“Pshaw!” she said to herself while dressing, true to her habit of
communing with her own conscience in default of a visible mentor, “how
can I be blamed for the state of things here? The entire business of the
mills was put out of my hands by my father’s will. I could have done no
differently.”

“You could,” replied that sternest of modern inquisitors—a New England
conscience. “It was in your power to see that the moral and physical
condition of these people was improved and cultivated. It was in your
power to give them better homes and more privileges. It was in your
power to raise their standards of life and to create new ones. But you
have ignored their very existence, and let them live a mean and sordid
life of unremitting toil, in order to furnish you with money to live a
selfish life of luxurious ease.”

Salome tied the blue ribbons to her wrapper, and giving her crimps a
last touch went down to breakfast.

Knowing she would be opposed, she said nothing of her plans for the
morning to her aunt, but simply announced, after they had left the
table, that she was going for a long walk.

Then she went upstairs and put on the plainest costume she owned (which,
by the way, was a tailor-made gown that had cost her one hundred and
fifty dollars), and started for the tenement houses where her operatives
lived.

It did not occur to her to feel any fear; nor that the miscreants who
had planned the explosion for the previous night might be watching her
footsteps. She felt it incumbent upon her to see for herself exactly how
these people lived, and what they were bearing and suffering in
consequence of the strike.

In the bright glare of the morning sun, the tenement houses had never
looked so dingy and mean. They were built in Newbern Shepard’s day, and
had received but very few repairs since that time. Although it was cold
January weather, Salome counted a dozen panes of glass gone from the
first house, and noticed that the lower hinge to the front door was
broken. It was a two-story wooden building with four tenements of four
rooms each.

She ascended the rickety steps and rapped on the door. One of the women
saw her from a front window and came to the door, holding it open only
so far as to permit her to see the strange caller.

“Good-morning,” said Salome in pleasant tones.

“Good-morning, miss.” The politeness of Salome’s manner thawed the other
woman, and the door opened a little wider. “Will you walk in?”

That was precisely what she had come for, and Salome stepped inside with
alacrity. She found herself in the sitting-room and living-room of the
family. It was a meager home. The remnant of a faded oil-cloth was on
the floor. The walls were unpapered and devoid of any attempts at
ornament, except one unframed, dilapidated old lithograph of “The Queen
of the West,”—a buxom young woman with disproportionately large black
eyes, a dress of bright scarlet cut extremely _décolleté_, and cheeks of
a yet more vivid hue. A pine table covered with a stamped red cloth was
littered with cheap, trashy story-papers and pamphlets addressed “To the
Laboring Men of America.” An old lounge, with broken springs, and six
common wooden chairs constituted the other furnishings of the room.

Salome’s first thought as she looked about her was:

“I don’t wonder these people get discontented and clamor for something
which seems to them better.”

But she found, before the forenoon was over, many houses that were not
so pleasant as this. For, once inside these rooms, everything was neat
and clean, and the woman who answered her questions was civil if not
talkative.

She found that five people lived in these four small rooms: this woman,
her two daughters, a son-in-law, and a grandchild. She also found that
the other tenements contained five, six, and seven people, making
twenty-three in all. There were absolutely no sanitary arrangements, and
she discovered that the sanitation of this tenement house district
consisted only of surface drainage. According to the statements of her
hostess, there was nearly always somebody “ailing” in these houses.

The first house she went into was a fair sample of the remainder. A few
were slightly better, but more were in a worse condition. In most
instances she was respectfully received, although at three houses she
was met by ungracious people, and received gruff replies to her
kindly-put inquiries.

Everywhere, strong, able-bodied men were lounging about in enforced
idleness; and one of them, resenting, with true American independence,
this intrusion into the sacred precincts of his miserable home, plainly
intimated that “they was well enough off now, and didn’t want no rich
folks as was livin’ on money _they_ earned, to come pryin’ round their
houses.” Finally, at the last of the tenement houses she was met by a
surly, burly mule-spinner, who gruffly refused her admittance.

Nothing daunted, however, she sought out a boarding-house for the young
women of the mills. The landlady, recognizing her, invited her in and
willingly told her all about the life of mill-girls, offering, at last,
to show her their rooms.

Salome gladly accepted and followed the woman up bare, unpainted stairs
to the rooms on the second and third floors. These were small and
perfectly bare of comforts, almost of necessities. The floors were
uncarpeted and guiltless of paint, or even of a very recent application
of soap and water. They had no closets. A common pine bedstead—sometimes
two of them—in each room, two chairs, in one of which stood a tin basin,
while beside it on the floor stood a bucket of water, and a small
bureau, made up the sum total of the furniture. In only one room did
Salome see any evidences of a literary taste, and that, if she had known
it, was a cheap paper, the worst of the sensational class.

Salome’s heart sank within her. She no longer wondered that the
mill-girls of to-day were a discontented, ignorant set, nor that many of
them sank into lives of degradation.

“The rooms are good enough for the girls,” said the woman, noticing the
look of disgust on Salome’s tell-tale face. “They seem poor enough to
elegant ladies like you. But these girls know no better. And they are
good enough to sleep off a drunk in,” she added, roughly.

“You don’t mean to say,” asked her guest, “that any of your girls get
intoxicated?”

“Intoxicated? I don’t know what else you’d call it, when they have to be
helped in at eleven o’clock Saturday night, and put to bed, and don’t
get up again until Monday morning.”

Salome was sick with pity and shame for her sex. She no longer
questioned whether she had a mission toward these, her people.

She went home and wrote the note to Mr. Greenough, given in an earlier
part of this chapter.



                                  VII.


Promptly, at the hour named, Otis Greenough, accompanied by the other
officers of the mill, appeared at the mansion of the Shepard family.

Tall, beautiful, and always impressive in her bearing, Salome was at her
best to-night. The fire of a new-born purpose was in her face, and a new
force, born of spiritual struggles, stamped upon her brow.

There are people who can look calmly upon a sunset, and see nothing but
a glare of red and yellow light. There are others who see in it a
glorious picture with matchless tints and shadows. There are yet others,
fewer, indeed, than the rest, but who hold the secret of God’s holy
purpose written more or less plainly in their souls; who see not only
the glare of red and yellow light, whose brilliant tints and deep tones
make an unrivaled picture, but who read something of the deeper meanings
of the Great Artist; who receive into their own hearts some part of the
glowing light which strengthens purpose, and crystallizes hopes and
ideals hitherto dreamy and undefined.

Salome Shepard had stood at a western window at sunset. In the hush and
stillness of the hour, the poet-quality of her soul had interpreted to
her the meaning of life and the great fact of human brotherhood. And
when she finally drew the curtains on the deepening night, she felt that
a sudden revelation had come to her—that, at last, her life purpose, in
the shape of a sternly defined duty, stood revealed.

“Well,” said Mr. Greenough, after a few moments of aimless conversation,
for nobody seemed desirous of taking the initiative, “what are you going
to do with us all to-night, little girl? Don’t you think you rather
usurp the privileges of an old man in calling together a meeting to
discuss business, of which he is the legal head? Come, give an account
of yourself and your quixotic actions.”

“Oh, I beg that none of you will think that.” And Salome looked around
the room appealingly. “I simply wished that we might have a fair and
honest talk. I want every one here to express his views. And I want to
express mine—for at last, thank heaven, I have some.”

“Getting strong-minded, eh?” retorted Mr. Greenough. “Well, go on. I
suppose you want to practice on us before taking a larger field. Going
to take the suffrage platform? or build school-houses for the niggers?
Or do you aspire to the bureau of Indian Affairs? Which is it?”

“None of them,” responded Salome, inwardly resenting the untimely jest,
but determined not to show her impatience. “None of them. I propose to
begin nearer home. I propose to go to work, earnestly, and I hope
practically, to raise the condition, morally, mentally and physically,
of my own factory-people.”

“Bravo!” exclaimed Villard and the head book-keeper.

“And I have called you here,” pursued Salome, “to ask each and every one
of you to be my assistant and coadjutor. I have not been thinking of
nothing, during the last three months. I am a woman, comparatively
young, and with absolutely no knowledge of the practical side of a
working-man’s life. But I have been thinking, and my conclusions are
these: that a strike is a much more serious matter for the
working-people than it is for us. We act as if they go out on a strike
either to annoy us or to have a good time. I have been down among
them—sought the by-ways and hedges, as it were—and I tell you they are
having anything but a good time. This strike is the outcome of want and
privation, and it has brought the people to still greater want and
privation. I believe they are not a set of noisy malcontents on the
lookout for an opportunity to create a disturbance. On the contrary,
they see in this course the only chance of bringing before the public
questions of vital importance to them. They earn their bread by the
sweat of their brow—and not always good bread either,—while we, as
capitalists, are hoarding up money. At the most, they get very little of
what their work really yields. I desire, above all things, sir, that you
grant their desires and no longer require them to give up their Labor
Union. Capitalists have their Board of Trade, which virtually amounts to
the same thing. Let the workmen have their one chance to assert
themselves by a combination of their forces. And let each side show to
the other that tolerance and Christian charity which each demands from
the other.”

“What about the tolerance and Christian charity of the outrage they
tried to perpetrate last night?” asked Mr. Greenough.

“I do not believe the Labor Union is responsible for that,” replied
Salome, with a far-seeing sympathy in her eyes. “Unfortunately it was an
outgrowth of their opinions, passions and prejudices. But you must
confess, sir, that had you met them with the tolerance which the growing
spirit of the age demands, there is little likelihood that matters would
ever have reached the point where such an action could have been
planned. I want this strike ended on any terms. I want to see the
operatives, every one of them, at work again at fair wages. And then,
God helping me, I propose to do something for their elevation—something
to help them live better, cleaner, manly and womanly lives—something
which shall carry out my grandfather’s noble plans, and help make the
factory system of New England one of her grandest achievements.”

“Miss Shepard is right,” said Mr. Burnham: “our factory, like many
another, has been run too long on the system of _laissez-faire_. I have
come to believe in a political economy which insists upon the liveliest
activity on the part of capitalists, to put their employes upon the best
possible footing as to the material surroundings of life; that they have
all the advantage as to health, morals and happiness which comes from
sanitary regulation and practical education. I believe that only when we
adopt such a political economy as this shall we draw the largest
possible dividends from the products of a community comparatively free
from crime, intemperance, poverty and vice of every kind.”

“Yes,” urged Villard, “each one of us, laborer or capitalist, has duties
to perform which cannot be shirked or shifted to the shoulders of
Fate—another name for the theory of _laissez-faire_. The new political
economy will demand that every one who, in his or her public or private
capacity, can do anything to relieve misery, to combat evil, to redress
wrong, to assert the right, shall do so with heart and soul.”

“You see,” said Salome, delighted that two strong, thinking men thus
endorsed and voiced her sentiments, “we have been acting on the Quaker’s
advice to his son: ‘Make money—honestly if you can; but make money.’ We
have forgotten that Christianity says: ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself,’ ‘Do unto others as ye would that men should do unto you,’
‘Bear one another’s burdens,’ and ‘Love one another.’ But we have
practically said: ‘Love thyself; seek thine own advantage; promote thine
own welfare; put money in thy purse; the welfare of others is not thy
business.’”

“I must confess,” answered Otis Greenough, speaking slowly and huskily,
“that I cannot, after a life-long devotion to old-fashioned ideas, take
any stock in these new-fangled, impracticable ones. I cannot, at my time
of life, change my ideas; and neither can I endorse your proposition to
make a public spectacle of ourselves in the future. Mills are run to
make money. So long as I hold the position imposed upon me by the late
Floyd Shepard, so long shall I refuse to countenance extravagance and
quixotism. But I am an old man. No one cares any longer what I think. It
is the young people with no experience whose opinions count nowadays. I
am an old man who has had his day——”

“Don’t, I beg of you, sir, talk like that,” interrupted Salome. “We do
value your opinion; we do intend to refer to your judgment; we——”

“What is that?” cried Mrs. Soule in alarm, from her seat near the
window.

“It is some one throwing gravel against the panes,” said the cashier as
a second shower came rattling against the window. He parted the curtains
and looked out.

“The grounds are full of men. We are mobbed, by George!”

The old agent’s blood was up in a moment, and regardless of the presence
of ladies he swore in good, set terms, that the rascals should be
arrested and imprisoned for this.

Then, unconscious of danger, in spite of the attempts of Villard and the
rest to hold him back, he marched, like an old hero, boldly out on to
the veranda which faced a crowd of excited workmen.

They had held a stormy meeting at the Labor Union, and the worst element
among them had become desperate, and swore to “bring the old man to
terms.” They had gone in a body to the mills, where they hoped to find
some of their employers in consultation. There they had found that the
whole force of their opponents had gone to the great Shepard Mansion.
Nothing daunted, they turned their steps thither, and at every street
corner were joined by the element of hoodlumism which is always
scattered about over the streets of a large and poorly-governed town.

Hence the mob that confronted the officers of the Shawsheen Mills held
all the elements of danger and disturbance.

When Otis Greenough’s bald head appeared before them, the crowd set up a
yell of mingled derision and defiance.

“Give us our rights, old Baldy” shouted one voice.

“Give us fair play and fair wages,” called another, while worse epithets
were hurled at him, from the roughs in the rear.

Otis Greenough’s face was purple.

“This is outrageous!” he exclaimed in hot haste. “What right have you to
come here and defile an honest citizen’s premises with your wretched,
polluting presence?”

“Stop that, now!” shouted one of the leaders. “Fair play all round. If
you won’t come to us, we’ll come to you, and compel you to make terms,
and decent ones, with us. We want——”

But the crowd of street idlers who had come in search of excitement, and
not argument, grew restless, and broke in noisily; and when Otis
Greenough opened his mouth to speak again, he was struck squarely in the
face by a handful of gravel and mud.

Then a sudden hush fell over the mob.

For what was this unexpected white form which appeared in the doorway,
and advanced to meet them?

Salome was dressed in a clinging, white, soft serge, with falls of fine
lace at the neck and wrists, and under the dim light of the piazza-lamp,
she seemed like an angel of retribution, her eyes flaming reproach, and
her hands raised in deprecation.

“Aren’t you ashamed of yourselves?” she burst forth, in ringing tones.
“You, who call yourselves honest men, and loyal citizens! You who come
here with a claim for fair play, you who come here to assert the right
of every American to be treated with respect by every other; to insult
and maltreat an old man with white hair—a man whom, as a long associate
in your work, you should honor? Do you come to my house to call forth a
man who was even now listening to plans for the improvement of your
homes and lives and prospects, simply that you may turn yourselves into
a pack of dogs to bark at him? Go home. Lay aside your prejudices and
your low, unworthy passions, and think whether we be entirely in the
wrong. Think whether you are showing yourselves worthy of being trusted?
Go home and weigh calmly your conduct against that of these officers,
and decide for yourselves whether you deserve to be met half-way. And I
give you my word of honor as owner of the Shawsheen Mills, that when you
decide to behave like men and not like beasts, you shall be treated as
men. You shall have good places with good pay. You shall find that we
are willing to do as much as—yes, more, than you are willing to do for
us, and that we will meet you half-way in the open, fair discussion of
all points connected with the labor question.”

“Three cheers for the lady!” shouted a hoodlum, who cared not which side
he was on, provided he could make a noise.

But the cheers were stayed, and further demonstration was choked in
utterance. For Otis Greenough fell suddenly at the feet of the woman who
stood there boldly championing him and her sense of right.

The superintendent carried him quickly within and put him on a sofa; a
physician was hastily summoned, and in a few words Villard dismissed the
mob, now hushed and awe-stricken.

But Otis Greenough in one moment had passed beyond the disturbances of
howling malcontents, beyond the petty smallness of his old-fashioned and
cramped ideas, out into that world where there is no fear of anarchy and
socialism, no disgrace in being a philanthropist, no bounds to the heart
of love for all mankind, and no limits to the horizon of a larger,
diviner life.



                                 VIII.


Death is never fully realized until he is an actual presence; and Otis
Greenough’s sudden demise before their eyes and almost under, if not by,
their own hands, solemnized and terrified the mob, and brought the
strikers to a sense of the desperate pass to which they had come.

The members of the Labor Union laid their grievances aside for the time,
and paid every mark of respect to the old agent now that he had passed
beyond the recognition of it. A sudden fit of apoplexy had blotted out
his choleric and intolerant behavior, and left only the remembrance that
he had been their head for many years.

But when he had been laid away in the new cemetery on Shepard Hill, the
smouldering embers of discord began again to break forth into hot flames
of prejudice and passion.

Geoffrey Burnham and John Villard were consulting together in the mill
office the day after the funeral, when the door opened and the owner of
the mills walked in.

“I have come,” she said, in answer to their ill-concealed surprise, “to
talk over the situation of the strike. I want the mills re-opened.”

“We shall be only too happy to comply with your wishes, Miss Shepard,”
said Burnham, placing a chair in a comfortable light for her. “Upon what
terms do you propose it?”

“I want to compromise,” she answered, “and give them a better chance
than they have ever had. It may take us some time to decide on the exact
terms. Would it be better, do you think,”—she unconsciously turned to
Villard—“to take them back on the old terms, re-instate them precisely
as they were, and then go on and make our changes?”

“That would hardly do,” he replied. “Experience has proved them very
jealous of new methods, and unwilling to consent to untried theories. If
we yield everything they demand now, we shall establish a bad precedent;
eh, Burnham?”

“Decidedly, and we shall meet with opposition if we undertake any
changes. If there is to be a remodeling of the old system, it had better
come now.”

“There must be a remodeling, it seems to me,” urged Salome. “Dear Mr.
Greenough acted wisely, so far as he could, no doubt; but I feel that
the time is come to make decided changes here. Perhaps I am not very
clear in regard to them, even in my own mind. But I have some idea of
what I want, and I shall be glad to have you both state your convictions
and objections, if you have them, relating to everything I propose.”

“It will be no light matter,” said Burnham, “to select a plan and
perfect it at once. It must be a work of time and much thought. Still,
what is your idea?”

“I want to put the relations between us and the employes,” Salome went
on, “on a better footing—an ethical basis, if you like the term. We must
combine the question ‘Will it pay?’ with a higher one, ‘Is it right?’”

The two men looked at each other. Burnham bit his lip.

“I do not propose to promise the people an era of absolute prosperity
and uninterrupted progress, and let them take it as a blind destiny
without exertion or sacrifice or patriotism on their part. I want to
teach them to be healthy, intelligent, and virtuous citizens, and to
expect from us the treatment such citizens deserve. I believe that such
a course is for the pecuniary interests of the mill, as well as for
theirs. I have heard enough of the conflicting interests of labor and
capital; and on the other hand I do not believe in the twaddle that
proclaims them one. I believe they are reciprocal, and that we must take
that idea as fundamental.”

“You propose a radical change, I fear.” Geoffrey Burnham’s tone held a
new respect for this woman whom he had believed wrapped up in the toils
of worldly and shallow aims.

“Yes, I may as well own it; I do,” assented Salome. “Among my
grandfather’s manuscripts, I came across, the other day, these
sentences: ‘I would like to prove my luminous ideal of what a
superintendent may be among his people. I would like to live long enough
to show the world that the spirit of the Crucified may rule in a
cotton-mill as fully as in the life of a saint.’ That sentence,
gentlemen, must speak for me. In those words lies the germ of my plan of
action.”

Silence followed her. Geoffrey Burnham told himself that a new era must
be dawning,—the era foreshadowing the millennium, since she who held the
power could so bravely avow her intentions to make the Shawsheen Mills
an experiment in what he called Christian socialism. But John Villard,
after a moment, rose and extended his hand to Salome.

“I pledge my hearty co-operation,” he said, “and thank God for the
opportunity to prove what a cotton-mill may become by the new Christian
political economy.”

“Thank you,” said Salome. “And now let us see just what the strikers
demand, and how far we can grant their wishes.”

John Villard produced the paper which had been presented on the first
day of the strike, and placed it in Salome’s hands. It was the first
time she had seen it. She read it through very carefully.

“It seems to me there was no need of these long months of idleness,” she
commented, when she had finished the paper. “Now, let us see. First,
they demand recognition, as the Shawsheen Labor Union. I think we may
yield that point, safely enough.”

“Without modification?” inquired Geoffrey Burnham.

“Why not?”

“They will take advantage of us. They will dictate and become arbitrary.
The Labor Union grows by what it feeds on. It will become an elephant on
our hands.”

“Not if they have something better to take its place,” said Salome. “I
am fully persuaded that they will meet us half-way, if we give them a
union that is better than theirs. Let their union alone for the
present.”

“I am with you there,” said Villard. “It devolves upon us to change its
character into something that shall be, at least, as helpful as they
_want_ to make this one.”

“Next, the ten-hour system,” pursued Salome, who was not yet ready to
discuss the improved union. “Certainly there can be no possible
objection against granting this clause?”

“Certainly not,” said Burnham, feeling himself appealed to.

“‘The new frames must be taken out and the mules replaced, with a
written agreement that no more of the obnoxious machinery shall be added
for five years.’ That seems rather arbitrary. How is it, Mr. Villard?”

“It is arbitrary,” he responded. “The frames must be retained. We must
be allowed to adopt improved machines and methods, or where shall we be
in this age of competition? But I think there will be little trouble
with the men, if I am allowed to approach them in the right way. Anyhow,
I will try.”

“Do so,” was the reply. “Make them see that improved methods are for
their interest as much as for ours. As to the wage-section—were their
wages actually cut down?”

“Yes,” replied both men.

“That must not be allowed,” said Salome. “The mills were paying a
handsome profit when this was done, weren’t they?”

“They were,” said Villard. “Better than for a year before.”

“Give them their old pay, with the understanding that wages will be
increased when work is heavier. I propose to myself a wild scheme of
profit-sharing, or a sliding scale of wages, in the future.”

“Good,” cried Villard. “The very thing I’ve been wanting to try. I
believe in it heartily. But where did you get the idea of it?”

“Oh, I’ve been reading all the practical articles I could find on
political economy, as applied to mills and factories, for some months,”
Salome replied, “and I have evolved some queer theories, I fear; but I
propose to give them a fair trial, unless you pronounce them too
visionary. I am glad you approve of profit-sharing. And you, Mr.
Burnham?”

“I approve of making the experiment,” said the more cautious
superintendent. “I do not jump at conclusions. Nevertheless, the idea,
though new, looks practicable, and I should like to see it tried.”

“They have already tried it in one or two places where it is proving a
great success, I believe,” said Salome. “You know the experiment was
tried as long ago as 1831, when Mr. John S. Vandeleur put it into effect
successfully in County Clare, Ireland. The Paris and Orleans Railway
Company began to share profit with its employes in 1844, and the Maison
Leclaire, I think, two years before, both of which have proved very
successful. I do not see why we cannot adopt it.”

“We can,” asserted Villard, confidently. “It is already being tried on a
small scale by several firms in this country. Why should not we join the
procession?”

“What are you going to do about the demand for weekly wages?” asked
Burnham.

“What objections are there?” Salome asked.

“It will entail extra expense for clerks and book-keepers,” responded
Burnham. “That seems unnecessary.”

“The men claim that they have to depend in great measure on the credit
system at the stores,” explained Villard. “Their wages coming only once
a month, they get short of money. If sickness or other additional
expense comes upon them, they are often seriously inconvenienced by lack
of their rightful wages. Again, if they are able to put a little money
in the savings-bank, why should they not have the benefit of the
interest that accrues through the month, rather than we? The money is
theirs.”

“On the other hand,” interrupted Burnham, “those men whose first duty,
on being paid off, seems to lie in getting gloriously drunk, would have
the opportunity just four times as often.”

“We have a work to do in that direction,” said Salome in a pained voice.
“In a sense we are our brother’s keepers. I half believe that the
solution of the temperance question is largely in the control of the
employers of labor; and that the secondary, and often the primary,
causes of intemperance are bad and unwholesome food, which create a
craving for drink; bad company, which tempts it; squalid houses, which
drive men forth for cheerfulness; and the want of more comfortable
places of resort which leaves them no refuge but the saloons. It is in
our power to remedy all these evils. Give them good sanitation,
well-ventilated houses, comfortable homes, and reading-rooms, and
coffee-parlors, and only the most depraved will be tempted by the low
saloons.”

“But, Miss Shepard, surely you do not propose all these things?” and
Geoffrey Burnham looked his astonishment.

“Why not?” was the terse reply.

“Where will your profits come in? You cannot afford it.”

Salome smiled. Her money was her own. Why should she not use it as she
pleased?

“No. For the first year or two I shall not pocket an immense profit;
that is true,” she assented. “But I am not likely to come to want. And
Newbern Shepard’s mills must be put on the basis where he desired, above
all things, to see them during his lifetime. He planned a noble scheme.
It is my birthright and my duty to carry it into effect. It will cost me
something to get the mills where they must be; but it will pay in the
end. Of that I feel sure.”

“You are quite right,” said John Villard. “What may we not hope for when
the condition of the working-people shall receive that concentrated
attention which has hitherto been devoted to the more favored ranks?
When charity, which has, for ages past, done so much mischief, shall
learn to do good? When the countless pulpits of our country, which have
always been so active in preaching Catholicism or Anglicism, Calvinism
or Armenianism, and all other isms, shall preach pure and simple
Christianity? When, by a healthy environment of the toiling masses, and
the exercise of hygienic sense and science, mankind shall be healthy and
free from questionable instincts and morbidly exaggerated appetites? I
tell you, we cannot even approach an estimate of the extent to which
every improvement, social, moral or material, reacts on the nation’s
ethical and intellectual progress, and the prosperity of her
industries.”

“But you are taking us entirely away from the question in hand,” said
Geoffrey Burnham, “which was, shall we grant the demand for weekly
wages?”

“Not so far away as you seem to think,” retorted Villard. “The questions
of sanitation and morality affect them, and us too, as well as the
question of weekly wages. As for the latter, I am in favor of trying it
on.”

“So am I,” said Salome. “I am in favor of trying every new method until
we can know positively which are the best ones.”

“With modifications,” said Burnham, smiling at her vehemence. “I don’t
exactly approve of the weekly system, but the majority are against me,
and I may as well cast my vote with yours. Shall we send for their
committee, then, and offer them all concessions, except those relating
to the spinning frames?”

“Yes, I should do so,” said Salome, “and prepare to open the mills at
once, provided they decide to accept our terms.”

“That is practically decided already,” laughed Burnham, “by our
accepting theirs. Villard, you may negotiate with them about the frames.
They are inclined to listen to you better than to me, for some reason.”

“They know I’ve been in their place,” said Villard. “That makes all the
difference in the world to them. They think I understand their side of
the question; that is all.”

“Then you will confer with them immediately?” said Salome, rising to go.
“And will you make all necessary preparations to open the mills? And
then will you confer with me?”

“Most certainly, Miss Shepard.” Geoffrey Burnham spoke for both of them.
“But—I beg your pardon, you have not spoken of a new agent. We must have
one, you know. I trust you have made some wise selection?”

“I am prepared to surprise you,” Salome replied, buttoning her glove.
“You two men will oblige me by transacting all necessary business for
the present, in your positions of first and second superintendents, and
by looking closely after the thousand details which I do not yet
understand. Meanwhile, I shall come to the office every day and, with
your co-operation and kind help, shall learn the business. I have too
many schemes for the general improvement of the Shawsheen Mills and its
operatives, to trust the mills in the hands of a stranger. I propose to
be my own agent. Good-morning.”

Salome Shepard never looked handsomer, or smiled more sweetly, than she
did when she uttered the last sentence, and closed the door behind her,
leaving her two completely astonished hearers standing in the middle of
the office.

“Whe-e-w!” ejaculated Geoffrey Burnham, after a little. “How does that
strike you? The Shawsheen Mills run by a ‘female woman,’ as A. Ward
would put it! And, by George! we are expected to stay and work,—under a
woman!”

John Villard broke into a peal of laughter. “It’s awfully funny at
first,” he said, calming down again. “But, after all, why not? She isn’t
the empty-headed, aimless creature we thought her. She’s read and
studied, and has some very sound notions.”

“But, Villard—a woman-agent!” gasped Burnham. “We shall be the
laughing-stock of the whole state.”

“Let them laugh,” answered Villard. “They laugh best who laugh last. And
with her notions, her thirst for further knowledge, her enthusiasm, and,
above all, her money, the Shawsheen Mills will be in a position at the
end of a few years to do the laughing, while those who laugh at us now
will set to studying our methods and come to us for advice.”

“But she knows nothing of the practical part of mill-economy,” objected
Burnham. “The mills will go to rack and ruin. Jove! Old Mr. Greenough
would turn over in his grave if he could have heard her as she stopped
in the door and said: ‘I propose to be my own agent.’ A woman!”

“I know,” replied Villard, “that it will seem odd, and perhaps
uncomfortably so, at first, to acknowledge her as head. But, after all,
she does not propose to dictate as to the business itself.”

“She will,” interrupted Burnham. “Women always do. She will jump at
conclusions, mistake her inferences for logical deductions and the
wisdom which comes only with experience, and, after the first month,
will know more than we do. I know women. They are impulsive and
illogical; and they can’t subvert nature and become good business men.”

“No; but they may prove good business women,” was Villard’s answer. “We
do not know, yet, what she can or what she will do. I believe she will
be willing to leave the details of the business to us yet, for a long
time. She is not a conceited woman; and although she has the faculty
common to her sex of making some surprising jumps at conclusions, I do
not believe her to be obstinate about them. She proposes to make a study
of the business, and realizes that this is a work of years. And,
besides, what will save the mills is this: she has an extended plan in
manuscript of her grandfather’s scheme for making this an ideal
institution. If she is willing to leave the business to us for the
present, and is capable of adapting Newbern Shepard’s theories of years
ago to the needs of to-day, we are all right, Jeff; and a new era is
about to begin for the Shawsheen Mills.”

“I only hope we may like it,” assented Burnham doubtfully. “And now for
the conference with the Labor Union.”



                                  IX.


Marion Shaw was one of those women whose lives are a constant giving of
their best, with no thought of return. We have all seen such women. From
the self-sacrificing maiden aunt in the humblest home, up to the
Florence Nightingales and Dorothea Dixes of the world, they are God’s
angels, everywhere, to suffering humanity.

Marion Shaw and Salome Shepard had been in boarding-school together; and
although the former had been left from the start to support herself and
her widowed mother, the friendship between the two girls had never
abated.

Marion’s mother had died a year before, and something material had
dropped out of life for the girl. Grief and the solitude which ensued
after her mother’s death told upon her constitution; and when Salome’s
letter of invitation reached her, it was like a boon from Heaven. She
threw up her situation in Madame Blanc’s private school and went to
Shepardtown, arriving there late in the evening, before Salome’s visit
to the counting-room.

When the latter came home they settled cosily in Salome’s room for an
“old-time talk,” such as they had enjoyed as girls.

“Why didn’t you let me know you were tired to death with that
interminable teaching?” asked Salome. “I should have had you come to me
long ago. You are as pale as a ghost.”

“Oh, I’m all right now,” answered Marion, who never cared to talk of
herself. “Tell me about the strike here. I read of it in a Boston
newspaper, when it came on, and again when Mr. Greenough died. But,
after the fashion of newspapers with regard to anything you care
particularly to follow up, they dropped the subject the minute one’s
interest was roused. And your letter was so meager! Yes, it was. You
only write the barest details, and not too many of them. Is the strike
ended?”

“No, but I hope it will be before night,” Salome replied. “I’ve given
orders this morning that a compromise be made at once. Yes, don’t stare
at me, please. Why shouldn’t I give orders? They’re my mills.”

“I’m not staring. It’s vulgar to stare, and the lady professors at Mme.
Blanc’s fashionable boarding-school do not stare. Why, it would be as
much as their position is worth!” retorted Marion. “Yes, they’re your
mills, I suppose, and a handsome piece of property they are too, in the
eyes of poor me, who own only the clothes on my back. But, pardon me,
dear, it does seem a little odd to hear Salome Shepard, the most
exclusive and the most fashionable girl at school, talk about giving
orders in a cotton-mill. You’re not getting strong-minded, are you,
dear?”

“If to begin to take an active interest in two thousand souls, who are
dependent upon my money and the business interests it represents, is to
become strong-minded, I’m afraid I shall have to plead guilty.” Salome
looked narrowly at her friend. Possibly she had mistaken her, and their
sympathies were farther apart than she had hoped.

“Bless you!” responded Marion heartily, “I’m strong-minded myself; want
to vote and all that. Don’t believe intemperance and lots of other evils
will ever be subdued in this country, until women have something to say,
and say it through the ballot-box. It is not so very dreadful when you
once get on to that platform, is it?”

“Oh, I hadn’t thought of voting particularly,” Salome hastened to
answer. “I don’t really think I want that. But I do want to do something
for my people.”

“And you’ll find,” retorted Marion, “before you’ve gone very far, that
if you had the power of legislation, you could help them ten times as
well.”

“Possibly,” Salome answered, doubtfully. “But, Marion, there are so many
things absolutely necessary to be done for the Shawsheen operatives. If
you could see them and the homes they live in, the temptations to which
they are exposed, the poverty in which they live!”

“And you propose to go to work among them,—to reform them?”

“Yes, God helping me; them and the factory system together. Behold me,”
said Salome, rising to her full height, and putting on a mock-tragic
air: “Behold and see: Salome Shepard, Reformer. That’s my platform.”

“Salome, dear, what do you mean?” Mrs. Soule had just come in. “Don’t
mind her, Marion, she delights in hearing herself talk like a suffrage
leader, lately. I don’t approve of it, as she knows; but I can only wait
for the mood to pass.”

“Which it never will, aunty dear,” Salome hastened to say. “So long as I
live and am in a condition to work for the people who need substantial
and material aid, as these people do, my life will be devoted to their
service. I cannot go on living the aimless, indifferent life which has
been mine ever since I left school. I must have some active interest, or
I shall stagnate, or, worse still, settle into a cold, hard, selfish
woman of the world. Unfortunately I was born with a heart; unfortunately
for your ideal of the proper young lady of the period, I was born with a
conscience, and this conscience tells me that my fortune was given me
only in trust. It is not mine for selfish enjoyment alone; it is mine to
make the world better and happier and purer.”

“And you are going to work among those miserable drunken operatives,”
said her aunt coldly, “whose sordid lives, and ungrateful hearts, the
whole of them, are not worth the effort of even one month of your life,
even if you were at all a capable woman of affairs, a woman of judgment
and discretion, a woman of sound business sense,—which you are not.”

“Yes, ‘among the drunken miserable operatives,’” replied Salome,
ignoring the latter part of her aunt’s speech. “Among those sordid lives
and ungrateful hearts, that were worth the Christ’s dying, and for whom
He worked, living.”

“You don’t think of joining the Salvation Army, I hope?” exclaimed her
aunt, quite beside herself at this new development of her niece’s
purposes.

Salome laughed.

“I shall hardly have the time, aunty. I’ve accepted a position at the
Shawsheen Mills.”

“A position?” gasped Mrs. Soule. “Oh, Salome! Who offered you—who
_dared_ offer you a _position_?”

“The fair owner of the mills offered it,” answered Salome, enjoying the
situation to its fullest extent. “And I accepted, aunty. Marion, in me
you see the agent of the Shawsheen Mills!”

Marion Shaw rose and clasped her friend closely to her bosom. She
admired her splendid courage and avowed principles, and honored this
woman, with money and leisure at her command, who was willing and
anxious to devote her life to service for others. But not so Mrs. Soule.

She applied a delicate mull and lace handkerchief to her eyes, and wept
to think to what an end had come her years of training; her careful
watch, that Salome should never, by any chance, come in contact with a
lower world; her life-long aim to make of Salome the perfect being
prescribed by her somewhat limited and narrowed rules of ladyhood.

She begged; she pleaded; she argued; she threatened; she resorted to
ridicule; but Salome stood firm, and now laughingly and then earnestly
defended the course she had taken.

“It’s of no use, aunty, as you see, for us to argue the case. I do not
forget all your kindness and love for me; but I must choose for myself,”
she said, finally. “I am old enough to decide questions of right and
wrong. Hereafter we will not argue any more. I must do this; you must
submit; and that is all there is about it. Now, let’s make up and be
friends,” and she bent down and kissed her aunt on both cheeks, as she
used to do when she was a little girl.

“You, a child of Cora de Bourdillon’s!” murmured her aunt, softening a
little.

“Cora de Bourdillon was my mother,” said Salome. “But before and above
all else, Newbern Shepard was my grandfather. I am like him. I must be
like him. And you must submit to the laws of heredity.”

So there was never any more prolonged discussion between them. Salome’s
nature being so much the stronger, kind-hearted, weak Mrs. Soule could
not oppose her further. But many times, in after years, was she heard to
deplore the fact that Cora de Bourdillon’s child was so thorough-going
an epitome of Newbern Shepard.

“A good man,” she would say. “A perfectly honest and well-meaning man;
but not like Us!”



                                   X.


Early that evening Geoffrey Burnham and John Villard were announced.
Mrs. Soule and Salome were alone in the parlors when they came in, but
Marion was sent for.

“And you’ve brought good news?” asked Salome. “They’ve consented to go
to work again?”

“Of course,” Burnham replied. “They were only too glad to meet us on any
sort of terms.”

“Wait till my friend comes down,” said Salome. “She is interested, and
will want to hear the details. Oh, here she is. Miss Shaw, allow me to
present my two confrères (and teachers as well), Mr. Burnham and Mr.
Villard.”

“And so it is really settled?” Salome asked, “and the mills are to be
opened again?”

“Monday morning, if you like,” replied Burnham, “or earlier. But to-day
is Wednesday, and there are many things to be done where the mills have
stood idle for months.”

“I’m so glad,” returned Salome.

“There is hearty rejoicing throughout the corporation,” said Villard. “I
was coming through there to-night and met a couple of little boys with
bundles of groceries in their arms. The smallest looked up and smiled.
‘We’re going to have a good supper of meat and potato to-night,’ he
said. ‘The mills are going to open and pa’s got work.’ I asked him how
long since he had had meat, and he said not since Christmas; and even
then he only had a turkey’s wing that somebody gave him.”

“Poor boy! Tell me about your conference with the Labor Union.”

“It passed off smoothly,” Villard went on. “Burnham told him we came
from you, and were prepared to make terms with them. We only saw the
committee you know, and they are to lay our terms before the Union
to-night; but there is no doubt that they will accept. They are really
very sensible and shrewd, those fellows on the committee, eh, Burnham?”

“Remarkably,” replied the first superintendent. “I didn’t know we had
such intelligent men.”

“But it is our business to know it,” Villard returned, and Salome nodded
her head. “We laid our plans before them, and told them that we would
concede all their wishes, except about the machinery of course. And one
of their own number spoke up promptly and said it was hot-headed bigotry
on their part that had made them stick for the removal of the frames.
And that most of them, even the Lancaster spinners, had come to see that
every improvement to the mills meant an improvement of their condition.
Then the secretary wanted to know if they were to be allowed to exist as
a Union. Burnham told them that you were taking a great interest in the
management of the mills; and that we all believe that no harm can come
of their organizing themselves into an association, provided they were
willing to be reasonable, and to confer with us before taking extreme
measures again. He begged them to believe that you are their friend, and
want them all to have a fair chance. And he ended by assuring them that
we, as superintendents, fully concurred with you; and that he hoped they
would be willing to start on a new basis, and to consider our interests
as they expect and desire us to remember theirs. Burnham did himself
proud, Miss Shepard, and I could see they were a good deal affected by
his conduct.”

“I am covered with blushes,” declared Burnham. “Spare my modesty.”

“Blushing must be a novel sensation to you,” retorted Villard. “The
leaders shook hands with us when we came away and thanked us for what we
had said, assuring us that they would be ready to enter the mills again
at once. And a different spirit is evident to-night, all through the
corporation.”

“Don’t be too sanguine,” interrupted Burnham. “We’re not through the
woods yet. And there are several ends to be achieved before the
millennium dawns.”

“I should like,” said Salome, “if it will not bore you too much, to
outline the general plan I have formed for raising the condition of
things at the mills.”

“Nothing would give us greater pleasure than such a proof of your
confidence,” replied Burnham.

“And we can assure you beforehand,” said Villard, “of our hearty
co-operation.”

No one but Salome noticed that her aunt had quietly slipped away when
she spoke of her plan. Mrs. Soule did not care to hear Salome “talk
shop.”

“In the first place,” Salome began, “are the mills all they should be?
Are they well lighted, aired and drained? Is the machinery such as to
benefit both the operators and the business interests of the mills?”

“No, they are not quite up to modern standards,” Villard replied,
promptly.

“I don’t know,” pursued Burnham, “but they are quite as good as the
average. There are many worse mills than the Shawsheen.”

“That isn’t the point,” Salome replied. “Are there any better? Or are
they capable of improvement?”

“Well, yes, if you don’t consider expense,” assented Burnham.

“Are they well-lighted? Are their sanitary conditions good?”

“They are very well-lighted indeed,” said Villard; “your grandfather
built much in advance of his time, and the mills are all light and
strong. But they need better ventilation in cold weather; and, as you
know, sanitary science in Newbern Shepard’s day was hardly up to modern
demands.”

“I propose putting in the best drainage system we can find. I propose
bath-rooms, wash-rooms and elevators.”

“Good!” said both her superintendents.

“As for machinery, you will know what is needed there. We want the
latest improved methods of doing our work. It will not do for us to be
behind the times, or the world will laugh at our philanthropic efforts.
The standard of the mills must be as high now as it was in my
grandfather’s day. Nothing but the best of goods, made after the most
approved modern methods, must go out from us. Otherwise the world will
say we are visionary and lack good business sense.”

“That is true,” assented Burnham. “The business must not suffer.”

“At the same time, I want the mills made so pleasant and comfortable
that our operatives will prefer them to any other, knowing that we
propose to consult their interests and happiness in little things, as we
desire that they shall consult ours in great. Then their homes. Those
old rickety tenement houses must be abolished from the face of the
earth.”

“Hear, hear,” cried Villard, “they have long been an eyesore to me.”

“They are a disgrace to us,” was Salome’s emphatic answer.

“But you can’t do that all at once,” said Burnham. “That is something
that will take time.”

“It is April now,” said Salome. “I propose to begin at once on new
houses for the operatives. They will have to stay where they are for the
summer, but by cold weather I mean that every one of them shall be in
new quarters.”

“Whew!” said Burnham; “you _are_ a woman of business, Miss Shepard. But
you will have your hands full this year to build new houses for two
thousand people.”

“It can be done though,” Villard replied. “There are plenty of
carpenters and builders to be had. What kind of tenements do you
propose?”

“I have not fully decided. At first I thought of having single cottages
for every family, with a tiny plot of land for each. But sometimes I
wonder if some of the plans for model tenement houses would not be more
feasible. What do you think?”

“There are advantages in both,” said Burnham. “It is doubtful if many of
the operatives would appreciate a whole house, or take good care of one.
On the other hand, the best tenement house system in the world has its
drawbacks.”

“In a country-place where there is room enough, as there is here,”
advised Villard, “it seems to me that the single cottage system is the
better. Each family can then have a certain privacy, impossible to the
tenement house system. They can soon be educated up to caring for their
places, and, I think, will soon come to take pride in them. They may not
pay, at first; but they will serve a higher purpose. I have thought it
would be a fine thing,—in the Utopia of which I have often dreamed,—if,
connected with such a factory as this, could be built some substantial,
inexpensive cottages which could be sold to the working-men with
families, on very easy terms. Let them occupy them as tenants, for
instance, until their rentals amount to a certain sum—say two hundred
dollars,—unless they have been fortunate enough to have saved that
amount, which they can pay down, and then let them take a deed of the
place and give us a mortgage. Pardon me, Miss Shepard, I am only
supposing a case.”

“And quite a supposable one,” said Salome, her eyes glowing. “Why can’t
it be done?”

“Doubtful if any of them would burden themselves with a debt like that,”
demurred Burnham.

“I think they would,” Villard responded. “The desire for a home of one’s
own is an instinct which is implanted in every human breast. If the
steadier, more sensible men of the mills could be induced to try it, it
would soon become the ambition of all the younger ones to own their
homes. I am sure the overseers, at least, would like to try it. So many
of our operatives live in a hand-to-mouth fashion, never saving
anything. Let them see that what they pay for rent will be credited to
them; that they are actually saving that money, and they will, for the
most part, gladly fall in with the scheme. And when a man begins to save
up money, and to feel that he is worth something, his self-respect
increases and ambition makes a man of him. I tell you, I believe the
thing could be done here, and the condition of our working-men be vastly
improved by it.”

“We will, at least, make the experiment,” said Salome earnestly. “At
first a wild dream came to me of building model tenement houses and
practically giving them the rent. But I soon came to see that it would
be better for them to pay what they could afford for improved
conditions.”

“That would be far wiser,” said Villard. “To make them objects of
charity would be to lower their condition in the long run.”

“Then I have a plan for the girls,” Salome went on. “So many of them
live in those dreadful boardinghouses. I’ve been into one, and I wonder
how any girl can keep her self-respect and live there. I am going to
build a large building, which shall have plenty of light, airy bedrooms,
prettily and inexpensively furnished; so that a girl may feel that she
has a cosy little spot somewhere on earth of her very own. I am going to
have model bath-rooms and a large, cheerful dining-room. There will be a
matron to the establishment who will be like a mother to the girls; not
one who will care nothing whether her girls are sober and respectable,
or miserable and besotted, so long as they pay. This woman will win the
confidence of the girls, and lead them into habits of personal
cleanliness and common sense; she will take an interest in their little
personal affairs, and advise them kindly and judiciously. In short, she
will make a home for them in the truest sense of the word.”

“You will have to have her made to order, Salome,” interrupted Marion
from the sofa where she had been an interested listener. “Such paragons
do not exist.”

“And would scarcely be appreciated by the average factory girl if they
did,” added Burnham, smiling at Marion.

“I shall have a large and pleasant parlor with a piano and a comfortable
reading-room,” Salome continued, as though not hearing; “I don’t suppose
the girls, judging from what I hear and see of them, will care much for
reading at first; but if I put plenty of light, healthful literature in
their way, with illustrated books and good pictures on the walls, they
will gradually come to like them. And then, there must be weekly
entertainments, and perhaps a hall.”

“And what about the young men?” inquired Villard. “Are you going to
leave our sex out in the cold?”

“Yes, if you educate the girls so much above them, what are the young
fellows to do?”

“They shall have such a boarding-house too,” said Salome, “only we’ll
call them Unions. I hate the name boarding-house, and I should think
they would; and then, by and by, there are still other schemes in my
mind. There are children, plenty of them, on the corporation. They are
poor, sickly, unkempt, uncared-for. All this must be changed.”

“That will come, I think,” said Burnham, “with their improved conditions
and surroundings. It is unhealthful where they now are. Shall you build
the new houses there?”

“Oh, no, I forgot to say,” answered Salome, “that we must put up their
new quarters on the hill, the other side of the mills. It is much
pleasanter up there, and a far more healthful locality. Work on them can
begin right away. Will you find me the proper man to undertake the
building of the houses, Mr. Villard?”

John Villard’s heart fairly burned with enthusiasm. This was a project
he had long cherished, although he had been entirely without means or
prospect of ever being able to carry it out.

“You may be sure I will do my best,” he answered.

“And we will reserve the power of directing and planning the buildings
ourselves,” she added.

“I’m glad you’re going to do something for the children,” said Marion.
“If you don’t succeed in improving things in this generation much, you
will in the next, if you educate the children.”

“That is what I propose to do,” said Salome. “They must have better
schools than they ever had.”

“And be compelled to attend them,” interposed Burnham.

“Oh, there are so many things to be done. It will take years to get
everything in working order.”

“You have laid out a beautiful scheme, Miss Shepard,” remarked Geoffrey
Burnham, “and in most respects a practical one. But you must not be too
sanguine. These people are ignorant,—fairly steeped in ignorance. They
are jealous, too, and doubtless will mistrust your motives, and believe
you have some selfish reason behind all your endeavor.”

“I have,” laughed Salome. “I want my mills to be models, and my people
to be the best, most skilled, most intelligent, and most progressive
community in America.”

“Bravo!” said Villard. “So do I.”

“I am not so sanguine as you may think,” Salome went on. “I know they
are ignorant. How should they be anything else? All their lives they’ve
been used as we use the machines in the factory,—to make good cloth, and
plenty of money. Nobody has thought of their welfare, or cared what they
did, or thought, or became, when working-hours were over. How do we know
what sort of men they are, or what capabilities they possess? I read
somewhere, only the other day, that there may still be Fichtes tending
geese, and Robert Burns’ toiling on the farm; that there may be, yet,
successors of William Dean Howells at the type-forms, of T. B. Aldrich
at the book-keeper’s desk, of Mark Twain at the pilot-wheel. We have no
right to keep them back. But this writer went on to say, that the world
has less need of them, even, than of those who cannot aspire to thrive
outside the shop, and who go to their daily toil knowing that their
highest hope must be not to get ‘out of a job’ and not to have their
wages cut. I don’t suppose they will, at once, appreciate our efforts to
better their condition. Possibly they will oppose us at first; but we
can have no better task to perform than to make them prosperous,
contented and joyous in their work. And by making a man of the
operative, I fully believe we shall bring material prosperity to the
mills.”

“But the expense,” urged Burnham. “Have you calculated that? I doubt if
the mills could stand so heavy a burden all at once.”

“I have calculated the expense,” Salome answered him. “And what cannot
be done from the yearly profits of the mills, I will do myself.”

“We shall be eagerly watched by the whole manufacturing world,” said
Burnham.

“So much the better,” added Villard. “It is time somebody set the
example. If we succeed in carrying out all these plans, and keep the
mills on a paying basis as well, it will be the beginning of a mighty
reform in the working-man’s world. I believe we can succeed.”

“You will be called quixotic and all sorts of pleasant things, Salome,”
said her friend Marion.

“The beginner in any reform is always called a crank, if nothing worse,”
replied Salome. “If I chose to build a million-dollar castle to live in
myself; if I preferred to dress in cloth of gold and silver; if I
insisted upon eating off solid gold dishes; or even if I were to endow a
church or a female college, the world would admire and praise me, and
say these things are a rich woman’s prerogative. If I choose instead to
spend my fortune on the Shawsheen Mills, and elevate by its judicious
expenditure two thousand operatives for whom I ought to feel morally and
socially responsible, the world will probably wonder and call me
quixotic. Christ Himself was called a fanatic. Most people to-day, if
they voiced their real sentiments, would wonder that He could be so
democratic as to die for the whole world, ignorant, uncultivated,
detestable sinners, and all.”

One of those silences fell upon the room, that always follows the
mention of Christ’s name in a conversation not strictly “religious” in
character. Marion was admiring the courage of her friend; Burnham was
rather taken aback at this fearless reference to a Being whom he seldom
heard mentioned outside the churches; and Villard was surprised and
delighted with this unworldly woman of the world, and her avowal of
principles and hopes and wishes which he had cherished for years. He was
the first to speak.

“You must have done some hard thinking,—and a good deal of reading, in
the past six months.”

“Yes,” answered Salome. “I have. I have read everything I could think or
hear of, on subjects bearing on this case; and I have lain awake many a
night, since it was really borne in upon me that I have something to do
here, planning my work. But the greater part of the credit, if there is
any, in my plans, lies with my grandfather. He thought out many of these
things, years ago; I have simply adapted his theories to our modern
times and conditions.”



                                  XI.


And so the great strike ended.

Had Salome realized the burden of care which she was taking upon
herself, it is doubtful whether she would have assumed it as cheerfully
as she did. But as weeks rolled into months, and responsibilities
multiplied and cares increased until she became as hard a worker as any
in the mills, she did not flinch. She had put her hand to the plough,
and it did not once occur to her to turn back.

She went to the office of the mills the day they were opened, and began
to study, thoroughly, the details of the business. Villard and Burnham
were her teachers, and both were often astonished at her business
keenness and cool judgment. She had pressed Marion into service
immediately, and always took her to the counting-room, where the two
staid throughout the entire morning, going home to lunch at two, and
usually remaining there the rest of the day. But always, whether she was
in the house, or out driving, or overseeing the new houses, which were
progressing rapidly, Salome’s one thought was the improvement of
conditions at the Shawsheen Mills.

When Marion had been with her a week, Salome said to her:

“Marion, I want you to stay with me all the time.”

“I should be so glad,” replied her friend, “but I can’t afford it. I
shall have to go out into the world again, before long, to earn my
living, dear; but I will stay here as long as I can.”

“You good girl!” was Salome’s answer. “Why not stay here and earn your
living? I want a companion, shall very soon need a secretary, and as
soon as I get things in running order, ought to have a woman like you to
help draw in my people. You need a congenial place at a comfortable
salary. Now, why not stay? I will pay you a thousand dollars a year.”

Marion drew a breath of astonishment.

“It isn’t worth that,” she said; “Madame Blanc only paid me seven
hundred.”

“Madame Blanc is not fixing a scale of wages for me,” said Salome; “as
to your ‘worth,’ my dear, I must judge of that. When we get fairly at
work, I shall give you enough to do, and you will find yourself a very
busy woman. Besides, if I had a young man to do what I want you to do
for me, he would ask a thousand dollars, wouldn’t he? And why shouldn’t
you have it? Because you are a woman?”

Marion was not demonstrative. On the contrary, she had a great deal of
the true New England reserve; but she got up and went over to her
friend, put both arms around her neck and then——cried.

“If you could know what a chance this is for me!” she said at last. “If
you had known what a dreary thing existence had become, and what a
hopeless prospect I had in the future! And now, to live here and work
with you,—in your grand scheme,—Oh, Salome!” And she wept again.

“Then I will put the care of the cottages into your hands first of all,”
said Salome, patting her cheek. “You’ve kept house and know what one
ought to be like for an ordinary family,—what things are necessary for
the comfort of the household and convenience of the housewife. I don’t.
I should be as apt to build expensive music-rooms and leave out the
pantries, as any way. Go ahead, and get up as nice houses as you can, at
$1,500, $2,000 and $2,500 a piece. Mr. Villard thinks none of the
employes will care to buy anything more expensive. Here is the
architect’s address,” and she handed Marion a card.

But the building of the model boarding-house was a project too dear to
Salome’s heart for her to easily relinquish to others. Her plan, as she
had presented it to Villard and Burnham, grew and magnified itself until
her co-laborers had to resort to all sorts of arguments to keep her from
wild extravagance.

She had begun by planning for the factory girls a house which should be
really a home; but as she went about among the operatives, and began to
get an inkling of what the young men of the mills really were, of the
bare, desolate dens which gave them shelter, she did not wonder that
they resorted to the streets for comfort and amusement. She began to see
how the young men and girls who entered the mills could scarcely help
drifting into low and unworthy lives; and she grew more determined to do
something to raise them to a higher plane of living.

Her grandfather’s manuscripts did not help her much here. In Newbern
Shepard’s day, the factory-hand had not sunk to such ignorance or even
degradation, as he has, in some instances, in later times; and in those
more democratic times, it had not been so hard for him to rise above the
level of his kind. In that day, too, it had been possible for him to
find a home, in the true sense of the word, with families of a certain
degree of refinement. But in Salome’s more modern times, she saw, and
grieved, that the factory boarding-places were of the sort that dragged
the operatives down and kept them on a lower plane, even, than the
Shawsheen tenement system.

She consulted much with the superintendents and with Marion. She visited
the large cities and thoroughly examined the young men’s and young
women’s various houses and unions. She got ideas from all, but a
perfected plan from none. Finally, she collaborated with her architect,
Robert Fales, and soon had her model boarding-house on paper. After that
it was only a work of days to begin on the foundations of the
institution.

The operatives at the Shawsheen Mills gazed on all these changes with
curious interest, which, however, they carefully suppressed when any of
their superiors were about. The average independent American citizen, as
he exists among working-men, does not care to pose as an object of even
partial charity. He delights in crying out against Capital, and
clamoring for a share of the Profits; but when it comes to actual taking
of what he does not feel he has earned, he is more backward.

The Shawsheen operatives, in spite of the promises which had been made,
had gone to work again with little hope that the state of affairs for
them would be any better in future than in the past. As days went by,
and they saw Salome Shepard come to the mills every morning, and knew
that she was personally interested in them as her people, they were
skeptical of any results for good. And when they began to hear it
whispered that she, a woman, was the actual head of the Shawsheen Mills,
some of them talked earnestly of leaving. What! they—strong,
able-bodied, skilled mechanics—work under a woman?

But they didn’t go. A dull season was upon them, and work scarce. Other
mills were shutting down and sending their operatives into two months of
enforced idleness. The Shawsheen hands were forced to stay where they
were and be thankful for a chance to work.

Then, as the story that they were to be furnished with new and better
homes gained credence among them, their first real interest dawned. Many
did not believe their conditions would be bettered; many, even, did not
care; and most of them grumbled because their rents would probably be
high, and said the new buildings were only a means to grind the poor and
extort more money from them, to put into a rich woman’s pocket. Such is
the thankless task of the philanthropist.

Salome heard something of this, but did not allow the knowledge to
disquiet her.

“A few months will convince them,” she said, quietly. “No wonder they
are on the lookout for oppression and extortion. As near as I can judge,
this factory has long been run on a plan to warrant them in such a
belief.” And this was all she ever said against Otis Greenough’s method
of administering affairs at the mills.

As the summer went by, Salome’s friends in the town began to wonder at
her extravagant outlay, as they called it. They prophesied that she
would soon tire of her new amusement, and leave the houses unfinished,
when her projects would fall flat. Some of them came to her and
remonstrated, on the ground that her inexperience in financial affairs
was cause enough for her leaving the Shawsheen Mills and the employes as
they had been. But invariably she replied, that if she had chosen to
build herself a million-dollar castle, they would have approved of her;
but because she proposed to spend a half-million on the mill property,
all of which she felt sure would return to her some day with interest,
she was called extravagant and foolish.

“But if you had built the million-dollar house,” said Mrs. Greenough,
“it would have been a great thing for the place. Think what an ornament
to Shepardtown it would be!”

“And think what an improvement—what a great thing for Shepardtown—it
will be to tear away those miserable, tumble-down tenements on Shawsheen
alley, and to add a hundred neat and cosy houses to the hill,” she
retorted. “And, besides, you haven’t seen my—well, my Institution (I
haven’t named it yet). Think what an ornament that will be to the
place.”

But as nobody realized what the “Institution” of her dreams was to be,
Salome got no sympathy from her friends. Curiosity increased on all
hands, as the summer waned and an immense brick structure grew apace on
the hill. It had a square, dome-like center, with huge wings on each
side. But the workmen were sworn to secrecy, and nobody was allowed to
go inside from the time the building was far enough advanced to allow of
its entrances being fastened up.



                                  XII.


It was finished at last. The plasterers and painters and plumbers had
done their last stroke of work and departed, leaving the keys with
Salome, as she had requested. On the same afternoon, she sent for Robert
Fales, and together they showed Burnham and Villard, with Marion Shaw
and Mrs. Soule—who was as anxious as any of them to see the place,
although she would not own it—over the new building.

A broad flight of stone steps led up to the main entrance. The wooden
framework, which had concealed the façade, had been taken down, and
there, over the massive doorway, was the name of Salome’s “Institution,”
carved in red sandstone—“NEWBERN SHEPARD HALL.”

“Why not simply Shepard Hall?” said Burnham, as they stood looking up at
it.

“Or Salome Shepard Hall?” put in Mrs. Soule’s voice, for she felt that
it would be like the rest of her niece’s folly to have her name carved
in stone up there.

“Auntie!” exclaimed Salome reprovingly; then, turning to Geoffrey
Burnham—“Shepard Hall might have meant me, or it might have meant my
father, or the whole race of us in general. This building is a memorial
to Newbern Shepard, not to his family. How do you like the design of the
façade?”

The building was of red brick, with massive trimmings of red sandstone,
and was substantial and useful in general appearance, rather than
ornate.

“Ten times as expensive as you needed,” was her aunt’s comment.

“Yes,” answered Burnham, to whom the remark was directed. “A cheap,
wooden building would have answered the purpose, I should say.”

“Perhaps,” laughed Salome; “but I am not putting up wooden monuments to
my grandfather’s memory. Besides, you don’t know my purpose, yet.”

“Something quixotic and unnecessary, I’m afraid, my dear,” answered Mrs.
Soule.

Salome did not answer but led the way up the stairway, and unlocked the
heavy doors These opened into a vestibule leading into a large room
fitted up with bookcases and tables.

“This is the library,” said she. “Now, see the two reading-rooms, one on
each side. One is for the girls, and one for the young men.”

They passed out into the one designed for the girls,—a pleasant airy
room with plenty of light and space. The walls were tinted and the
woodwork was in the natural finish. Nothing in the way of furnishing
had, of course, been done. Beyond the reading-room was another large
class-room, and opening from it were several smaller ones. These all
occupied one wing of the new building.

“What do you propose to have done with all these rooms?” asked some one.

Salome looked over to John Villard and smiled.

“I’ve read and studied ‘All Sorts and Conditions of Men’ to some
purpose,” she said; “I propose, as time goes on, to have various
practical and useful things taught the girls here. Dressmaking for
instance, and millinery and domestic science. The conveniences for that,
though, are in the basement.”

She led the way by a flight of stairs that led from a side-entrance, at
the end of the wing, to the basement. There was a spacious hall with
rows of hooks to hang garments on. From this, opened a large and
pleasant dining-room. Under the main portion of the building was a great
kitchen with ranges and all the modern appliances of a hotel kitchen,
though on a smaller scale.

“Isn’t this rather elaborate for a factory boarding-house?” asked
Burnham; “for, I take it, that is one of your objects, at least, if not
the primary one.”

“I approve of this,” said Mrs. Soule judicially. “It’s poor policy to
fit out a kitchen with cheap stuff. Give servants the best of everything
to do with, and teach them how to take care of them.”

“Miss Shepard has gone over the subject very carefully,” said Mr. Fales,
“and, I must say, has shown most excellent judgment in everything. As
you say, madam, it’s only money wasted to put cheap stuff into a
building like this.”

“Now, look through the pantries and larder and laundry,” Salome
interrupted; “I think, for a woman who knows absolutely nothing of the
details of housekeeping, I’ve excelled myself.” She spoke boastfully and
shook her head at Marion, at the close of her speech.

“How much of it did Miss Shaw plan?” slyly asked Geoffrey Burnham.

“Every bit of it, below the main floor,” responded Salome. “Since you
seem incapable of believing that I did it, I may as well own that Marion
and Mr. Fales planned the whole of the basement, and that I, in my
ignorance, could only look on and admire. But they did so well that now
I am inclined to take all the glory to myself.”

They passed through the basement, coming up at the other end of the
building, and found themselves in the young men’s wing. Here, besides
the reading-rooms and class-room, was another fitted with two or three
workbenches.

“I propose to give them a chance to take an industrial education,” said
Salome, “if they should want it.”

“I declare!” ejaculated Mrs. Soule. “To give skilled mechanics a chance
to take lessons at the work-bench! You are out of your mind, child.”

“I didn’t plan it for skilled mechanics, auntie,” said Salome gently,
“although they may come if they want to. But you know, or ought to, that
the majority of our men can only perform one kind of work. They may be
nearly perfect in their special branch, but are almost helpless when it
comes to handling the hammer and saw and chisel. If they learn the
proper use of these things, it will not only increase their knowledge in
that direction, it will broaden them in other ways.”

“I don’t see how,” persisted her aunt.

“Besides,” put in John Villard, “if it does no other good, if the
experiment keeps a few of our fellows off the street at night and
develops a new taste, it will be worth while.”

“Well, perhaps you are right,” said Mrs. Soule, “but no such philosophy
or philanthropy was taught in my day.”

“‘The world do move,’ auntie,” laughed Salome. “Now, shall we go
upstairs?”

A broad flight of steps from the hallway at the end of the wing led up
to the second floor, which was just like the one on the girls’ wing.
Upstairs, the broad corridor ran through the middle of the wing, with
bedrooms opening from either side. In the main body of the building,
under the dome, was a large hall, fitted up with movable seats, and
having a raised platform at the front.

“This is the pride of my heart,” Salome announced, as she ushered her
friends into it. “If any one dares to criticise it, woe be unto him! Mr.
Burnham, what fault can you find with this?”

They all laughed at her inconsistency.

“I should not dare make it known, if I had any,” he said. “But may I ask
what it is for?”

“Why, to hold meetings in, and lectures and things,” she answered,
quickly; “what did you suppose?”

“Oh! And for the Labor Unions to congregate in and plan how they may
overthrow and destroy you, I suppose,” scoffed Burnham. “And it is a
capital place to breed the next strike.”

“There will be no ‘next strike,’” was the confident answer. “And as for
the rest, wait and see. I had the seats all movable because once in a
while there will be a party, and they will want the floor for dancing.”

“Salome! Not dancing?” cried her aunt.

“Why not? The floor is an excellent one for dancing. I saw to that
myself,” said she, purposely misunderstanding her relative.

“You are not going to let them have their low dances here?” Mrs. Soule’s
tone showed how much the idea horrified her.

“Low dances? Certainly not,” said her niece. “But we are going to show
them how to have something better. We are going to lift them above
wanting a low entertainment of any kind, and teach them how such things
are carried on by better people,—by us, for example.”

“Salome, you don’t mean me to understand that you are going to come and
dance here, yourself?”

“Perhaps, though I had not thought of it. But why not?” continued the
perverse niece. “Mr. Villard, will you lead the first figure with me, on
our opening night?”

“With the greatest pleasure in the world,” said he, with a thrill at his
heart which he did not recognize.

Mrs. Soule sat down on a convenient window-seat.

“What would your father say?” she murmured.

“I never knew my father well enough to judge.” Salome answered, with a
slight tinge of bitterness in her tone. “But I know what my grandfather
would say. I am going to put a piano in here,—or would you have an
organ?—and I intend that this hall shall be the rallying place of the
young people. I’m also going to give a course of entertainments here
during the winter, twice a week; I’m not going to begin with lectures
and heavy ‘intellectual treats;’ but I will gradually lead up to them
with concerts and even a minstrel show or two.”

“Salome,” gasped her aunt feebly from the window-sill.

“You see, if we begin by shooting over their heads, they won’t come at
all,” said Salome. “But if we begin with something light and amusing,
and not too far above their level, and gradually raise the tone of the
entertainments, they’ll find themselves attending lectures and other
sugar-coated forms of intellectual betterment, and like them; and never
mistrust that I am working out a mission on their unsuspecting heads.”

“I’m glad you realize something of their present intellectual
condition,” said John Villard, who had been unusually silent and grave
while looking over the new building; “and realize that it’s only
gradually that we can bring them, as a class, up to a higher grade as
intelligent young people.”

“Oh, I do,” said Salome, “I’ve seen too much of them, myself, this
summer. At first, I was appalled by the absolute lack of common
knowledge among the average girls. But there are a few, I know, who have
already improved the slight advantages they’ve had; and these few I
shall rely on to help me by their influence in raising the rest; the
‘little leaven,’ you know. It seems to me, that only by raising the
intellectual condition, and the educational aspiration, can we hope to
accomplish anything of permanent value to the mills.”

“That is the only way,” was Villard’s response. “And, Miss Shepard,” he
said, hurriedly, for the others had already scattered through the girls’
wing, leaving them alone, “I want to say that, as I believe you have
found the only true solution to the main questions of the labor problem,
I pledge myself to heartily sustain you in every way. You have only to
command me, and I am ready.”

Why did Salome turn away to hide the vivid blush that suddenly swept
over her face?

“I am sure of that,” she said, presently, with an effort, “I have
counted on you from the first. I shall try, by my own personal efforts,
to help the factory girls. But I shall depend on you, and you alone, to
manage the young men.”

“I shall not fail you,” was all he said, as Salome locked the door of
the hall behind them, and they went over the girl’s wing to find the
others.

The bedrooms on this wing were like those on the other side. There were
ample closets and plenty of light and air and window space. The rooms
were not spacious, but they were complete in every respect, and a vast
improvement on anything the Shawsheen mill-girls had ever seen.

“I did not want large rooms,” said Salome; “I think it is better to put
not more than two girls in a room. I shall put two single beds in each,
and fit up the rooms with everything necessary for comfort; then I shall
insist that the girls keep their own rooms in the best of order. Oh,
you’ll see what a disciplinarian I shall be!”

The third floor was entirely given up to bedrooms, the two wings being
entirely separated from each other by the upper portion of the hall
which extended to the top of the dome. Every part of the building was
beautifully finished, well-lighted, and planned for general, practical
convenience.

“There, if I never do anything else,” said Salome, after they had come
out of the place, and stood looking back at it, “I shall feel that I
have raised a suitable monument to old Newbern Shepard. I believe, if he
could have lived until now, that he would have done the same thing
himself—only better.”

“He couldn’t, Miss Shepard,” said Villard. “It is absolutely perfect.”

“Yes,” admitted Burnham, “it is. But do you realize, Miss Shepard, what
an elephant you’ve got on your hands? It’s going to be a fearful tax on
your mind and strength to keep it up, and to carry out half you’ve
planned.”

“Well, what were health and strength given me for?” Salome asked, with
the abruptness which sometimes characterized her.

“Most young women find a solution to that question without running an
eleemosynary institution,” was Burnham’s mental comment; but he said
nothing.

“I expect to see my happiest days while I have the care of this
establishment. I’m sure I never was so happy as I’ve been for the past
six months. Now, I must finish this great house. I shall need all the
suggestions and practical aid you can each give me, especially about the
libraries and reading-rooms. As to the selection of books, I’m going to
begin with a comparative few. Will you two gentlemen come up to the
house to-morrow night, prepared to help make out a suitable list?”

“You forget that I have to go to New York to-morrow,” said Burnham. “But
Villard can go; and I can help afterwards, you know.”

“As soon as we get everything in readiness,” pursued Salome, “we will
have a formal opening. We’ll have music and something good to eat, and a
little talking, and perhaps a dance to close with.” Salome looked
wickedly at her aunt, but the latter paid no heed. “Remember your
promise, Mr. Villard.”

“I shall not be the one to forget it,” he answered.

They separated very soon, Salome and her aunt and Marion taking the
architect home with them, and Burnham and Villard going back to the
mills.

But all through the afternoon, and all through the watches of the night,
one sentence repeated itself to John Villard’s heart, comforting and
helping him, strangely: “I have counted on you from the first.”



                                 XIII.


It was Halloween when the new building was formally opened. Up to that
time, only a few privileged persons were allowed to enter its sacred
portals; but every one connected with the Shawsheen Mills was invited to
be present at the opening.

On the hill, back of the mills, stood one hundred new cottages, each
costing from fifteen to twenty-five hundred dollars, and all ready for
occupancy; but as yet none of the mill-hands had seen the inside of one
of them.

It had been a work of no small magnitude to find a suitable matron for
the Newbern Shepard Hall. But, finally, the widow of a former physician
in Shepardtown, a woman of excellent character and judgment, and with
some experience as matron of a young ladies’ school, was secured and
duly installed in the two pleasant rooms set apart for her in the girls’
wing.

John Villard had relieved Salome’s mind of another perplexity, by
offering to take up permanent quarters for himself in the young men’s
side; for, although she had felt the necessity of such an arrangement,
she had not liked to ask him to give up what she rightly guessed were
more congenial apartments in a quiet corner of the town. But he felt
that his influence would be needed at the Hall, and that he could do the
work which he hoped to do much better, if he were in the midst of the
young men whom he wished to interest in many ways. And before Halloween,
he was comfortably settled in two rooms at the Hall.

The evening came, clear and cold; such an evening as only the last of
October can give. The building was brilliantly lighted from top to
bottom, and decorated with flags and evergreen. Outside, Chinese
lanterns and bunting lined both sides of the walk up to the main
entrance, and helped to give it a holiday air. A band of
street-musicians, who happened to be in town, had been engaged and were
stationed in front of the building, where their tolerably harmonious
strains gave just as much pleasure to the not over-critical audience
that was fast assembling, as Thomas’ or Seidl’s men could have afforded
them.

Inside, Salome waited impatiently. Without any premeditated plan,
Villard and Burnham placed her and Marion, with Mrs. Soule in the
background—for she “declined to be introduced to these persons”—in the
center of the library; and forming themselves into a reception
committee, they drafted into service a few of the best-appearing young
men, who presented every comer to the owner of the mills and her friend.
After giving each one a cordial welcome and hand-shake, Salome told them
they were free to inspect the new building as they pleased; and,
consequently, every mill-hand, accompanied by every other member of his
or her family, went critically over the wonderful new building, which
seemed to their unaccustomed eyes a structure of unwonted magnificence,
and furnished in a most luxurious style.

It had been fitted up inexpensively, but with the utmost good taste. No
carpets were on the floors, but American rugs abounded wherever they had
seemed necessary. The library furniture was of plain, substantial oak,
like the heavy woodwork of the room. Throughout the rest of the house,
bedrooms, dining-rooms, and class-rooms were furnished with strong,
neat, ash furniture. There were a few good engravings on the walls of
the principal rooms, and the bookcases were about half-filled with
literature of a harmless and interesting, if light quality. They had all
agreed it would not be best to fill the shelves at first, but to watch
the popular taste and to “leave room for improvement,” as Marion said.

The operatives were simply astonished at what they saw. Some were even
yet incredulous, and whispered that they would not be willing nor able
to live in such a place; but many of the girls’ eyes brightened as they
inspected their new quarters, and showed a determination, on the part of
their owners, to come in for some of the good times they saw in store.
It is doubtful if even the lowest ones there did not feel a new
self-respect creeping up in their hearts. Dress may not make the man,
but surroundings often do the woman.

By half-past eight the stream of people stopped pouring through the big
front doors. Everybody had come in, shaken hands with Salome and Marion,
and passed along, scattering themselves over the building.

“Now let’s get every one into the hall, above,” said Salome, “and have a
little talking and some music.”

It was some little time before the crowd of visitors could be gathered
in one place, but after a while the hall was well filled, and the
musicians installed in their place. The sound of the band, indoors,
proved an effectual summons for the stragglers. For the first time,
Salome, on the platform, faced a surging, eager crowd of her own people
in Newbern Shepard Hall.

She had wanted one of her two “faithful henchmen” to take the lead
to-night; but they had each refused, saying she was better fitted than
they; that it was eminently her own affair and not theirs, and that the
success of the opening depended on her alone. The last argument was
enough, and, much to Mrs. Soule’s horror at seeing “Cora de Bourdillon’s
daughter” in such a plight, Salome presided over her first
meeting,—“exactly as if she were one of those ‘woman’s rights women.’”

When the musicians had finished, Salome stepped forward, and not without
some inward quaking, made her first speech.

It was an occasion the Shawsheen Mill hands never forgot. Salome, always
well and appropriately dressed, had not slighted them by refusing to
appear at her best. She wore a white China silk costume, rightly
thinking her young people would be readily reached by the gospel of good
clothes. Her gown was simply made, but fitted exquisitely her
well-proportioned figure. Neck and wrists were finished with beautiful
old point lace, and she did not scorn to wear her grandmother’s
diamonds.

Her attractive appearance, her cordial and interested manner, and her
winning voice had pleaded her cause with the critical operatives before
she had uttered a half-dozen sentences. Her sincerity and earnestness
went straight to their sensibilities, and, before she had suspected it,
every heart in the room was hers.

“My dear friends,” she began, “I never made a speech in my life, and
cannot now. I never stood on a platform before; and only my interest in
every one of you brings me here to-night. I only want to say that this
building, which you see now for the first time, and which I hope will
prove a happy home for many of you, is built to my grandfather’s memory.
Some who are present to-night remember him and love him still, I hope.”

Here several gray-haired men in the audience nodded their heads, and one
was heard to mutter, “Ay, ay, we do.”

“If he had lived, I think everything in the factory would have been
different. Your lives would have been different; and mine, too, perhaps.
For one thing, I don’t believe you and I would have grown up strangers
to each other. You know, by this time, I am sure, that I have a glorious
plan for making the Shawsheen Mills the best on earth.

“Not by tearing down mills and building new and more elegant ones; not
alone by making costly improvements; but by having—and mind, this is the
only way it can be done,—by having the best and most conscientious and
intelligent class of operatives in this country,—and that will mean, of
course, in the world. Now, you all know I cannot do this alone; every
one of you has a part in carrying out this plan of mine. And unless you
all agree to help, it will fail. Don’t think I want you to do any
impossible thing. I only want every one of you to be the best and do the
best you possibly can. You and I are going to have some splendid times
in the future. We’re going to get better acquainted with each other. We
are going to become real friends. On your part, you are going to deserve
my good opinion and my honest friendship; on my part, I’m going to
deserve your confidence and trust and love; and between us we are going
to show the people of Massachusetts that a cotton-factory can become
something more than a great machine to grind out yards and yards of
unbleached sheeting; and that its operatives can become something better
and greater than so many smaller wheels in the machinery. We will show
that a factory community may be, and is, a prosperous, happy, contented
and intelligent people.”

Some of the young men could contain themselves no longer, and broke into
enthusiastic applause as Salome uttered the last sentiment. Villard
chuckled secretly as he observed that the leaders in it were the heads
of the committees in the recent strike.

“I’m so glad you agree with me,” said Salome heartily, when the noise
had subsided. “Now, I want to tell you about this house. The rooms are
all ready for occupancy. I think there are accommodations for all who
care to come. You are to leave the old boardinghouses on the
corporation, and I shall have them taken down at once. The price of
board will remain the same as at the old houses. The reading-rooms are
ready, the library is yours, and we shall soon find means of
entertainment and work, which will keep us all contented, I hope. Mr.
Villard will occupy rooms on this floor, and the matron, whom I will
shortly present to you, will be on the girls’ wing. There will be but
few rules, and those, I trust, not irksome. I cannot imagine that any
one will not be willing to obey them. The new houses on the hill are all
ready for the families on the corporation to move into. A few of the
larger and better houses are to be let at an increased rental; but most
of them will be let at the old rates. We have a plan, by which any one
who wants to, may, after a little, buy a house and pay for it by monthly
installments, just the same as you pay rent. But I will not go into
details. Mr. Fales will be at the first cottage on the hill, and you can
all make arrangements with him at any time after to-morrow morning. Now
I have talked too long, I know, and am going to stop. I want to have you
hear what Mr. Burnham and Mr. Villard have to say; but first we must
have some music.”

If Salome could have read the trembling waves of sympathy and reverence
which were already vibrating from the hearts of the young people whom
she had addressed, she would not have sat down with the feeling of
self-distrust and failure which followed her speech. The experience, the
very atmosphere, was unique in the history of industrial experiments.

The two superintendents followed the band with speeches that were
characteristic of each. Burnham’s, witty and tinged with sarcasm, but
friendly and cordial enough; and Villard’s, strong with earnest purpose
and full of brotherly love. The matron, Mrs. French, was presented,
also, and her few remarks won a friendly recognition among the young
folks; and then Salome announced that the meeting would adjourn to the
dining-rooms in the basement.

More refined audiences than hers have not been slow to exchange an
atmosphere of sentiment and intellectuality for one of prosaic salads
and cold meats, and more fanciful ices and coffee; and the Shawsheen
operatives were soon encountering a more æsthetic collation, it is
probable, than had ever been served them before. But as it was a
bountiful one, they acted well their part and found no fault.

The crowning delight of the evening came afterward. The young men were
asked to lend a hand, and soon the floor was cleared in the large hall,
and word was circulated through the house that the evening’s
entertainment would close with dancing. Nothing could have gone so far
toward convincing the mill-hands that Salome had meant what she said,
than this concession to their social rights, unless it was the fact that
she, herself,—the haughty, aristocratic daughter of Floyd Shepard, whom
they had looked upon with envy not unmixed with hatred,—that she should
lead the dance with the younger superintendent. An orchestra of three
pieces was selected from the band of musicians, and Marion and Salome,
by turns, furnished the piano accompaniment. Salome claimed her promise
from Villard and danced merrily, not only the first figure but several
others. Mrs. Soule was too much overcome by all she had seen and heard
to endure this, and was taken home; but the others staid until the
midnight hour tolled, and the dancers had all bidden good-night to their
newly-developed friends and gone home enthusiastic in their praise of
the new order of things in the mill _régime_, and, especially, of the
woman who was opening to them the wider doors of opportunity.



                                  XIV.


John Villard passed a wakeful night in his new rooms at Newbern Shepard
Hall. A strange and unwonted feeling had taken possession of him; one
which he was slow to recognize, but which cried loudly to him of his
folly and presumption, even while it refused to be put off.

After that first dance, Salome had paused by an open window and he had
stood idly watching her. Suddenly a tremendous desire to clasp her in
his arms, to hold her close, to demand her full surrender, swept over
him. So sudden and strong was the passion, that it was with difficulty
that he kept from seizing the soft hand which lay dangerously near on
the window-sill. So over-mastering was it, that he dared not stay or
even speak. He turned on his heel and went out under the quiet stars,
alone.

In the days when she had held aloof from the mill, and the
superintendents scarcely ever saw her, Geoffrey Burnham had regarded her
as “something too bright and good for human nature’s daily food,”
looking upon her as immensely above him, socially speaking. But now that
she had become familiarly associated with them in the daily affairs and
interests of the mill, Burnham thought of her as having entered the
field of good comradeship, and felt that friendly, if not exactly equal,
terms existed between them.

With John Villard it was different. He had begun by looking with a
certain degree of scorn upon a woman who held tremendous interests so
lightly as she had done in the old days. He had felt for her all the
contempt a man who does not know them—a man with serious purposes—may
feel for the irresponsible butterflies he imagines society-girls to be.
With her deeper interest in the side of life which interested him, and
her efforts to raise the standard of the mills, her realization of what
to him was a sacred object in life and her devotion to it, his thought
of her had changed.

With him, familiar every-day contact had not made of her a comrade, in
the ordinary sense of the word. Her beauty and refinement, together with
the consciousness which never left his sensitive soul, that it was her
wealth and her generosity which made the new conditions possible,—these
things only served to raise her to a pedestal where she stood, forever
apart from the rest of the universe,—a woman to be revered and
worshiped; not a woman to be aspired to.

Suddenly, he found himself in love with her. The tide of feeling which
swept over him was one that no man could mistake. It was not enough that
he might worship her on her pedestal, with a devotion silent and
unknown. He wanted to hold her in his arms. He wanted her eyes to droop
before his glance—not to look at him in the steady fashion he knew so
well. He wanted to feel her heart beating against his. He wanted to kiss
her.

“Poor fool!” he told himself, a hundred times that night. “As if she
would even look at me—a poor factory-boy, self-educated, self-trained,
and—yes, self-conceited!”

He remembered his youth; how poor he had been; how he had studied by
moonlight to save the expense of a candle; how he had worked all through
his boyhood in a cotton-mill, that he might help his older sister to
support their mother; how, after his mother had died and his sister
married, he had remained poor and alone and almost friendless; how
little he had seen and known of women; how utterly lacking he was in all
the graces of society and the refinements that he supposed to come from
outward polish only; in short, how utterly at variance with her tastes
and interests and aims his life had been.

He remembered her life of luxury, of travel, of careful training, and
the indulgence of cultivated, æsthetic tastes. What was he, that he
should dare to even think of her? What but a presumptuous fool, that he
should dream of touching even her frail, white hand? And yet, her eyes
had drooped when they met his that day, when they all went over the Hall
together. Stay—what did it mean? Did she?—could she feel?—but, no. He
was a presumptuous idiot to think of it.

He paced the floor for an hour. Then he lit a cigar and, under its
peaceful influences, he tried again to fix his mind on the mills, on the
changed condition of things, on anything,—but her. Still, constantly,
over and over, her tall, white-robed figure took shape in the curling
wreaths of vapor, and he fell to dreaming what it would be like to have
a happy home of his own, with her as its center and joy.

Again, he was exasperated with himself and called himself hard names. He
threw away the half-smoked weed and resolutely prepared for bed; but
only to toss wearily about, combating himself on the old grounds until
the dawn, pushing its way through the crevices of his blinds, told him
to rise and set his face again toward the workaday world. It was the
first time that hard-working, earnest, practical John Villard had ever
passed a sleepless night.

He had hardly seen how he was to bear the daily contact with Salome,
after that. He was too modest and too honest with himself to dream that
there might be any hope for him. He had, at one time during the night,
thought of leaving the mills, and going away to try a new and easier
life than this promised to be. Then he called himself a coward and
remembered her words:

“I have depended on you from the first,” and he determined to stay, cost
what it might. Besides, all his hopes and interests were with the
Shawsheen workers. No: he could not leave them, he could not leave her
now.

So he went forth in the morning, unchanged in outward appearance, and
yet, stronger and better for this first grand fight with himself. And he
met her with his usual deferential bow and smile when, by and by, she
came to the office for her usual morning’s study of business affairs.

It was unanimously agreed that the opening of the Hall had been a grand
success. The mill-hands, themselves, seemed to feel the new attitude
into which they had suddenly stepped, and were already brighter and more
hopeful.

On her way to the mills, Salome had met a young overseer, who was
hurrying in to town for something. She greeted him pleasantly, calling
him by name, when, to her surprise, he stopped.

“I’d like to thank you, Miss Shepard,” the burly young fellow began,
“for what you are doing for us. If all the employers took the interest
in their operatives as you do in us, we’d want no more Unions, and
there’d be no more strikes. I’m thinking you’ve got ahead of the rest of
us on the labor question, and found the right answer to it.”

“I’m very glad to hear you say that,” Salome answered, with a glow at
her heart which no speech from a man of the world had ever produced. “I
want to find it, if I haven’t yet. But, you know it doesn’t depend on me
alone. I may try, as hard as I can, but if you people don’t co-operate
with me, I’m helpless. I want to depend on you, Mr. Brady.”

“And you can that, miss,” was the hearty answer. “You’ve got us all on
your side now, sure. I went up this morning to see the houses. They are
fine ones, too.”

“And did you pick out one for yourself, Mr. Brady? You are married, I
believe?”

“I am that; and I’ve got as good a wife as ever the saints sent to bless
a man. Yes, I picked out the one I liked best; but the woman’ll have to
see it first, you know. And then, do you know, I think I’ll buy it. The
terms are so easy, and I’ve a little money laid by, that I’d like to
use; and I’m thinking Carrie’d be happier in a home of our own.”

“Now, that’s sensible of you,” said Salome, delighted that her houses
were in such good prospect of pleasing. “If you do it, I’ve no doubt a
good many others will. And, by and by, we shall have quite a community
of property owners.”

Brady straightened himself up unconsciously at the word, touched his hat
and passed on, his heart warmed and gratified by the kindly notice;
while Salome entered the office in unusually good spirits.

“It seems to me,” she began, addressing herself to Burnham, “that
everything is swinging round into the circle of my plans far better than
I had dared hope. I expected opposition, or at least indifference, on
the part of the operatives. On the contrary, they are all as delighted
with the state of affairs as I am.”

“Why shouldn’t they be?” was Burnham’s comment. “They’d be ungrateful
wretches if they weren’t. They’ve far more to gain than you have to
lose, remember.”

“But you’ve been trying to make me believe,” pursued Salome, “that they
didn’t want their condition improved; that they were satisfied to be let
alone; and that they’d resist every improvement I offered.”

“Wait a little and see;” Burnham tried to make his tone impartial, if
not skeptical; “you’ve only begun yet. Don’t expect the habits of months
and years, the loose customs and low tastes, are going to be overthrown
in a single night. The affair of last night, for instance, was doubtless
the most orderly entertainment and the quietest dance they ever had. But
it don’t follow that they will all of them be satisfied to drop entirely
the old order of low dances when they had plenty to drink, even if they
didn’t have salads and coffee, or ice-cream and cake. There’s no telling
how many of them will be stealing off to those places before winter is
over.”

“Then we must get up some form of entertainment that will hold them to
us,” said Salome firmly. “They sha’n’t fall back, if anything we can
compass can save them.”

Villard looked across his big ledger at her, as if she had been an angel
sent from Heaven direct, to preach a higher political economy to the
cotton factories of earth. She caught his look and smiled back at him;
but she said no more.

She did not speak to him until just as she was ready to go home.

“How do you like your new quarters, Mr. Villard?” she said, then. “I
hope you rested well last night?”

Villard remembered his sleepless hours vaguely, as in a dream. She
looked so bright and untroubled herself.

“You deserted me after that first dance. Did I dance so badly that you
feared or dreaded to be caught by me again? If it hadn’t been for Mr.
Burnham and Mr. Fales I should have felt quite a wall-flower.”

“You never could be that, Miss Shepard,” poor Villard managed to say.

“Well, as soon as the young people get moved in we must start some
classes. I know a good dressmaker whom I can get, and Marion will teach
them some other things, if they want it.”

She lingered some minutes, talking over the Hall and her plans, and left
him with a confused image of herself mixing up with the figures of the
ledger in a most incongruous way. Alas! John Villard was to have many a
hard fight with himself before he could drive away that image at will.

The young operatives—and all that dwelt within the corporation
boarding-house walls—began that very night to pick up their effects, and
make ready to move into their new quarters. Mrs. French had all she
could attend to in preparing for her large family, assigning rooms, and
attending to the thousand details of opening the Hall. But before the
week was closed, every old boarding-house was closed and the new home
full.

Marion Shaw found her time altogether occupied. Her work was to lie
directly among the girls, as Villard’s influence was to save the boys
and young men. Marion had a gentle and pleasing manner that made friends
everywhere she went. She had had a good deal of experience in managing
boarding-school girls, and although they are a widely different class
from factory girls, human nature—girl-nature, is the same everywhere.
Before the week was over, Marion had made friends with many of the
girls, and had already interested them in keeping their rooms tidy, in
forming a girls’ club, which should embrace all sorts of good ends, and
in rousing in them what was of infinite value in the work she had laid
out,—a desire to become as near like her and Salome as it was possible
for them to be.

“We shall have to endure the cross of having them cut all their dresses
like ours, wear ribbons like ours, do up their hair like ours, and get
up the most astonishing hats purporting to be like ours,” said she to
Salome one night; “but if it all comes of their wanting to be like
us,—you understand me, dear,—I mean of their wanting to reach a higher
ideal of course,—we can bear it.”

“We shall have to,” was the answer. “The truth of it is, they will be
trying to copy our habits and manners and characters, too.”

“Then we shall have to be all the more careful,” said Marion seriously.

Life to Marion Shaw was a serious thing. Although she was but
twenty-seven years old, she had come to realize that life may not be for
any what the fancy of youth pictures it; and even to realize that the
highest good which life can hold is not to be happy. Already she knew
that happiness is but a relative term, and that only by ceasing to
search and plan for it, can any of us find it even in small degree.

Just now, she walked dangerously near to happiness. On the opening
night, Geoffrey Burnham had kept closely at her side all the evening,
and after the affair was over, he had walked home with her, while Robert
Fales had gone ahead with Salome.

At the door, the two had paused a little, looking at the exquisite,
moonlit October night. Suddenly the extraordinary interest Burnham had
felt in this young woman had culminated. He seized both her hands in
his, and pressed them close to his breast.

“Why have you not come to me before?” he murmured, passionately. “Why
have you waited all these years?”

“I was waiting for you,” she answered, with a smile.



                                  XV.


One evening in January, Salome and Marion went over early to Newbern
Shepard Hall. Marion’s duties called her there every evening, and she
was seldom unaccompanied by her friend.

The success of Salome’s schemes for the interest of the working-girls
seemed already assured. Although the Hall had been open but little more
than two months, classes in dressmaking and millinery and in domestic
science were already established, and were well attended. Some girls
there were, it is true, who felt that, after working all day, they were
entitled to an idle evening, or to the right of amusing themselves after
their own fashion. But plenty of young women had been found to open the
classes, and the number was steadily increasing. No strong measures had
been taken to induce these girls to join. Marion had talked with some of
them individually, at first, and found a few who, half skeptically, had
consented to try the dressmaking class, as an experiment. Then the
announcement was made that a class would be opened on a certain night,
and twenty-six girls were present. Instruction in sewing, cutting and
fitting was given free to any woman connected with the Shawsheen Mills.
As the girls had been paying exorbitant prices for having cheap material
poorly made up, and as Salome had provided instructors from the best
dressmaking establishment Shepardtown afforded, the girls were not slow
to see the benefit that would come to them.

The young wives of operatives, too, women with houses and children to
care for, then began to avail themselves of the privileges which the
class afforded. So that, on this January evening, there were over a
hundred and fifty women in the classes, and another room had been opened
to them on the ground floor.

It was the same with other classes. At first, the young women had joined
with the older ones in “pooh-poohing” the cooking and housekeeping
lectures and demonstrations. The idea that they and their mothers did
not know how to cook, and that Salome, who knew absolutely nothing of
such matters, essayed to teach them, was a most distasteful one. But
when they found that a celebrated teacher was to come out twice a week
from Boston, and give demonstrations in the model class-rooms below, and
that a graduate of the Boston Cooking School had been engaged to take
charge of the lessons every evening, they, the young married women from
the cottages, especially, dropped in from curiosity; and although they
had come to scoff, they remained to cook. In short, they had become
deeply interested in the new ways of housekeeping, and were surprised
and delighted to find a way of making their few dollars go farther and
procure a better and more healthful living. Consequently, these classes,
too, were full, although the older matrons did not yet give up their
prejudices.

Among the girls who had not yet joined the classes, there were many who
sat quietly in their own rooms or in the large reading-rooms, and
enjoyed the current magazines and papers, or gossiped quietly and
harmlessly about the fashions and each other—not altogether unlike women
of higher pretensions. It was astonishing, even to Salome, who had, from
the first, believed in her girls, how few of them went out on the
streets at night.

“It is not astonishing to me,” said Marion, that January evening, in
reply to a remark from her friend to this effect. “The girls are tired
at night and are only too glad to have a pleasant, light and
steam-heated place to stay in. Their rooms at the old boardinghouses
were cold, barren and dismal. In winter weather they could not sit in
them, and the so-called parlor was not much better. When I was at Mme.
Blanc’s one of her servant girls went wrong. I shall never forget
something she said. When Madame heard of it, she sent for the girl and
asked her, bitterly, what had made her bring such a scandalous thing
upon a select house like hers. I was in her room at the time. The poor
girl looked up at Mme. Blanc and said, ‘O, ma’am, you’re awful
particular about where your young ladies spend their evenings,—girls
that you’re paid for looking after. But us servant girls—how did you
look after us? You didn’t allow us a light in our own rooms, or to speak
above a whisper in the kitchen, or seem to think we was human beings at
all. What else could we do, but go out on the street when we wanted a
bit of freedom? And once, on the street, ma’am, girls like us ain’t
never safe. If you’d looked out for me, ma’am, and treated me as well as
you treat your own dog or cat, it would never have happened.’ Poor
Madame was overcome entirely, and the girl left her white with rage. But
she looked after her servants more closely afterward, and kept them in
at night in warm rooms. I don’t believe our girls want to do
wrong,—especially if we make it comfortable for them to do right.”

On the young men’s side, things had gone equally well. There was a class
of them who, like their fathers before them, were sturdy, honest and
faithful. It was a small class, but upon these John Villard depended to
counteract the influence of the lower foreign element that had crept in;
and to the pride of these he appealed, both directly and indirectly, in
his efforts to establish a better social atmosphere among the
operatives.

With a few of these to begin with, he had opened an evening school on
the other wing of the Hall; and, as in the case of the women’s classes,
it had increased in numbers and interest from the start. The overseers,
almost to a man, gladly availed themselves of its opportunities for the
education that the true American always feels the need for; and they,
with the better class of men from the looms and mules, set the example
for others to follow.

No better man for the work could have been chosen than John Villard. He
had come up under much the same conditions that governed them. He had
begun on the lowest round, and worked up to the position he now
occupied, by hard work and the closest application to business. This
fact, together with his attitude toward them during the strike, had made
him a favorite with nearly every man on the works. They felt that they
could place the utmost confidence in Villard; and in the Shawsheen
Mills, as everywhere, a rugged sincerity and honesty of purpose carried
a weight that even the most unstable felt.

The lecture-hall was usually packed at the weekly entertainment which
Salome provided, and a new feeling of content and self-respect had begun
to permeate the mills. Make a man who has been looked upon as a mere
machine feel that he is estimated at something near the worth which
every human being feels in his heart that he is entitled to, and you
have done much to raise him to a higher social standard. For the first
time since old Newbern Shepard’s day, the mill-hands began to feel a
just pride in being individual American citizens. Unconsciously, both
men and women were setting their faces toward the higher standards which
Villard by his life, and Salome by her newly awakened energy, had set
for them.

At the mills, affairs were on a most flourishing basis. The Shawsheen
brand of cloth was too well known to allow of a few months shutdown of
the mills making any difference in the law of demand. Orders had
increased, even while the mills were closed, and they had been worked to
their utmost capacity ever since they had opened. Never had the
Shawsheen Mills been more prosperous than at the beginning of January,
or their future looked brighter.

When Villard had opened his evening school he invited Burnham to
co-operate with him; but the latter had put him off without a definite
reply, and not until the afternoon of the day referred to in the
beginning of this chapter had Villard asked him whether or not he might
count on his assistance. Burnham occasionally looked in at the Hall of
an evening, but Villard had begun to suspect that this was principally
for the purpose of seeing Marion Shaw.

“Well, to tell the truth,” Burnham finally admitted, “I’ve no taste for
this sort of thing. Oh, yes; it’s a good scheme, and seems to be working
first-rate; but I’m not the right fellow for the place. I don’t like
philanthropic work, never did, never shall. I work hard enough during
the day. I need rest and freedom at night.”

Villard smiled.

“And I suppose I don’t do anything day-times and need this sort of thing
as recreation and intellectual stimulus?” His tone was sarcastic, for he
had little patience with selfishness in any form.

“No, not that,” said Burnham. “You work hard enough—too hard, in fact.
But all this is more in your line. You’re like Miss Shepard; you’re both
of you happier working yourselves to death for others. Now, I’m not
built on that plan. I’ve no faculty for teaching, and I’m sure that my
well-meant efforts to meet the men half-way are looked upon by them as
condescension on my part.”

He waited an instant for Villard to speak, but no answer came.

“I can’t help it. I wasn’t born to the manor, so to speak. I didn’t come
up from the ranks, as you know. I suppose they’d believe in me more, if
I had. But you know that my father put me under Mr. Greenough to learn
the business, only after I had graduated from college and fooled away a
year in Europe. I sometimes doubt if I’m not out of place in this mill
as it is run nowadays.”

“Oh, no, not that,” put in Villard hastily. “You’re too good a business
man. We couldn’t spare you.”

“I can see how it’s all coming out,” Burnham continued, as if he had not
heard Villard. “You two” (Villard’s heart jumped at the words) “will go
on and make a model institution of the Shawsheen Mills. I should doubt
if you made a profitable one, only that I know you’ve got a mighty good
business head on your shoulders; and, I say, the way Miss Shepard is
developing is a caution to us men. I’d no idea she’d take such a
practical turn, or learn the details so readily. Oh, I can see where
it’s going to end. She’ll be the recognized head and you’ll be her first
assistant. As for me, I sha’n’t be in it. I shall have resigned.”

“Jeff!” It was only occasionally that these two called each other by
their boyhood names.

“Yes, I don’t think I should care to have it known that I worked under a
woman, much as I admire and respect Miss Shepard. There’d be no other
way, unless I married her!”

Villard turned pale with sudden, inward rage, but he said nothing.

“Don’t think I’d have much chance there, though,” Burnham went on
lightly. “You’re more her style. And you’re both so much wrapped up in
good works that you’ve no time for faith in each other, beyond what you
waste in philanthropic effort. Miss Shepard don’t seem to be the
marrying kind. I don’t believe she ever thinks of a man unless he has
the merit of being an operative in the mills.”

“And since you’re bent on discussing matrimonial matters,” observed
Villard, with sarcasm, “how about Miss Shaw? And when are the
wedding-cards to be issued?”

Burnham shook the ashes from his cigar and looked at his watch
critically.

“Marion Shaw is a fine girl,” he said. “She’s the right kind of woman to
tie to; but”—and Burnham took up his hat to go out—“I’m not the marrying
kind either.”

So Villard had come to understand that he must take care of his evening
school as best he could alone.

Robert Fales had settled in Shepardtown. There were to be more cottages
built in the spring, and to him Salome had alone confided her plan of
erecting a new church which should be named for her grandfather. When
the evening school began to grow, he went to Villard and offered his
services as assistant, and had proved a most valuable one.

This evening Salome looked in upon them, and asked Villard if he could
give her a few moments after the class.

“I shall be very glad,” he replied. “I have been working up the idea you
spoke about the other day, and wanted to talk with you about it.”

“The profit-sharing scheme?” asked Salome. “That’s just what I wanted to
speak of. It seems to me we ought, now, at the beginning of the year, to
get it into manageable shape, and tell the men, so that they may know
what to expect. I will be in the reception-room when your class is
through.”

Much as Villard was interested in his work the remaining hour dragged a
little. The prospect of a quiet _tête-à-tête_ with Salome, even on so
unromantic a subject as profit-sharing, was too alluring.

But, at last, he found himself face to face with her, and for a few
moments forgot all else in the pleasure of listening to her voice and
watching the curve of her chin and mobile lips, as she talked of
immaterial things.

“And now, what kind of a plan have you formulated as to the
profit-sharing?” she asked, after a little.

“Profits—oh, yes,” said Villard, suddenly brought to himself. “I have
examined all the accounts of such experiments in foreign countries, and
tried to remember the differing conditions and better wages here. I have
prepared a rough draft of a circular which I thought perhaps you might
like to send out among the hands. Do you want to see it?”

“Of course,” was the answer.

“I don’t pretend it is complete, you know,” he went on, drawing a folded
paper from his inner pocket. “It is only an abstract, but—here it is.”

“Read it to me, please,” said Salome.

He would rather have had her read it, while he watched her face; but he
complied.

“For some time past,” the circular read, “the subject of co-operation in
some form has been considered by the Shawsheen Mills. Believing that
capital and labor are interdependent and their interests identical, it
has been decided to adopt some plan by which the laborer may obtain a
share of the product in proportion to the profits of the scheme, at the
same time guaranteeing his wages against the time of loss.

“It is now proposed, therefore, to divide a sum among the Shawsheen
employes, each year in which there are surplus profits, over and above
wages earned.

“Understand, that before anything can be set apart for this purpose,
wages must be paid, interest must be paid, and a fair profit on capital
must be paid. In addition to this, an additional amount must be set
aside to make good the wear and tear of buildings and machinery, and to
strengthen reserve funds against a time of depression.

“Ordinarily, the sum above all these amounts must be small, and must
differ, of course, with the fluctuations of the market, the depression
of trade, and the wear of machinery from year to year. It will be
readily seen, also, that the sum to be divided will be enlarged by extra
care and attention on the part of employes. Every weaver who makes a
mis-pick, every burler who slights her work, every spinner who makes a
needless knot; in short, every person who makes an unnecessary waste of
any kind, makes the amount to be divided smaller, by making a loss to
the concern; and, on the other hand, if every person in the mill attends
to the little savings, the wool-washers saving every scrap of wool, the
spinners making less waste, the weavers weaving up the whole bobbin, and
so on through all the branches, a great saving can be made which will
effectually increase the sum to be divided; and it will be for the
direct interest of every employe to exercise such increased care and
diligence.

“The mode of distributing this bonus will be by making a dividend of so
much per cent. upon the wages earned by each person. If, after all
contingencies are provided for, there is not enough left to make a
dividend of one per cent., no dividend will be made for that year. In
case of a dividend it will be paid on and after the first day of May in
each year to all employes who have been in employ at the Shawsheen Mills
for at least seven months during the year, and shall not have been
discharged for drunken or disorderly conduct. The amount of wages earned
during the year preceding the first of April shall be the amount upon
which the bonus for each individual shall be computed.

“The profit for the present year, if there be a dividend, will be paid
on or after the first day of May. Let every person connected with the
mills work so faithfully, making every effort toward a wise economy,
that the first dividend shall be an encouraging one.”

John Villard stopped reading the circular and looked across at Salome.
She was regarding him with a fixed look of admiration and reverence,
such as a good woman feels for but one man in a lifetime. For an instant
his pulses leaped; but he was too modest a man to believe in his own
good fortune.

“Well, what do you think of it?” he asked.

His words brought her to herself. Her expression faded to one of mere
brightness, and became less frankly honest.

“I think it capital,” she said. “I do not see how it can be improved.
Will you let me take it home and consider it?”

“Of course,” he assented. “You know I do not pretend it is perfect. But
it seems to me we risk nothing in trying it.”

Salome rose to go and reached out her hand for the manuscript. Some
pieces had fallen on the table and in gathering them up, their hands
brushed against each other.

An electric thrill shot through the frame of each. Salome stood,
blushing and sweet, suddenly conscious that a crucial moment in her life
had come. Had Villard but spoken, had he but clasped the hand that still
remained near his!

But, ever depreciating himself and knowing absolutely nothing of the
heart of woman, he turned abruptly away, bringing Salome back to herself
with a hasty “good-evening.” And then he strode away to the outer air,
asking himself, savagely, why he was so weak and boyish because a pretty
woman happened to touch his hand.



                                  XVI.


All through the winter months, Geoffrey Burnham and Marion Shaw were
constantly meeting. As Burnham had intimated to Villard, he had taken
only a superficial interest in the philanthropic or ethical side of
mill-economy. But he was often at the Hall of an evening; and upon
pleasant nights, when the ladies walked over from the Shepard mansion,
he accompanied them home after the evening’s engagement. If it were
early, as on ordinary occasions, he went in and sat chatting with them
for an hour or two. Mrs. Soule always welcomed him, and although she
never went to the Hall, she found ample opportunities of telling him how
many lonely hours it caused her.

“I often wish Salome cared half as much,” she used plaintively to say on
these occasions, “for a living aunt as for a dead grandfather.”

Often, Burnham sang to Salome’s accompaniment, his rich tenor voice
lending pathos, and his ardent glances a meaning, for Marion in the
love-songs he sang so well. The latter sat silent at such times, a quiet
content wrapping her round, forgetting the past, ignoring the future.

“A blind man’s paradise,” she told herself it was, as the weeks rolled
by, and the glamour of a scarcely hinted but very evident passion waited
in vain for more than the vaguest expression.

Sometimes the two were left alone for a while, when the conversation
took a fitful tone, as if uncertain whether to be light and frivolous,
or tender and deep. Several times Burnham had seized Marion’s
unresisting hand and kissed it passionately; and, finally, one evening
when they were alone, he had put his arm about her waist and drawn her
close to him.

“Why have we not had each other all these years?” he asked, looking into
her sweet, confused eyes. “What cruel fate has kept you from me?”

“It does not matter, does it, so long as we have each other now?” Marion
had asked in reply. And then he had bent and kissed the pure white brow
and the clustering rings of hair.

After this, every night, Marion, kneeling by her bedside alone, thanked
God for the love that had come to brighten her bereaved life.

And Burnham? Did he realize what he might be doing when he won this true
and loyal woman’s heart? At first, he, too, was happy in the present.
The past held nothing which he was proud to remember; and into the
future he stubbornly refused to look. He had, for years,—“since his days
of adolescence,” he told himself,—had no interest in women, although he
knew that, in a place like Shepardtown, he was the object of several
fond mammas’ machinations, and the admiration of most of the village
girls. He had never met Marion’s counterpart. She interested and
fascinated him. Simple and childish in many ways, she was grave and
dignified in others. Her life, he could see, would be spent for others.
She was one of those women who are a constant sacrifice to the world
around them; who give openly and always of their best, asking and
expecting little in return. In short-Burnham knew it as well as any one
could—she was a woman whose life and love and utmost service would be
absorbed by a selfish man, only to be as unappreciated as they were
undeserved on his part. And yet, ever since their first meeting, months
before, there had been that subtle consciousness of each other drawing
them on, that wave of feeling on meeting, that positive yearning when
they were separated.

After Villard’s pointed questioning regarding Marion, Burnham began to
question himself seriously. At first, when thoughts of the future had
intruded into his calm moments, he thought of her as his wife; of
himself as settled down in a house of his own; he even expected to be
happy. But he did not put his thoughts into words. When he was with
Marion, he avoided—not so much from intention perhaps as from a
reluctance to break the spell of romance which hung over them—any
mention of different relations in the future.

It was April before he brought himself to face about and look at the
subject, calmly and seriously. Just where was he drifting with Marion?

One day he allowed himself to let fall some remark about her to
Villard,—not in any way implying their peculiar relations, but yet
speaking of her in such a way that Villard drew himself up to his
straightest, and looked him in the eye a full moment. Not a word was
said, but at that instant, Burnham felt the disagreeable consciousness
of being a scoundrel.

He went home that evening and tried to read. Then he tried to smoke.
Then he thought of going over to the Shepard mansion. He finally decided
on sitting down and squarely meeting an issue that should have been
faced six months before.

Geoffrey Burnham was thirty-seven years old. He had considered only his
own taste and desires ever since he was born. When he was a boy, if he
had wanted anything, he had it. If his father did not grant his every
wish his mother would. And she, poor woman, had fostered in him the idea
that all his personal, imperious desires were meant, always, to be
immediately granted. The conquering of Self had been no part of his
early discipline.

His father died when he was in Europe. When he came home, and entered
the mills,—an arrangement the father effected just before his
decease,—his pretty, white-faced mother had come to Shepardtown to be
near her son. For him she lived and would die. Yielding weakly in
everything to him, she avenged her position by setting herself against
all other women. Salome had called upon her, and had invited her to her
house, but in vain. Mrs. Burnham went nowhere, and wanted to see no one.
Her son was all in all to her. And but for the constant fear that he
would marry the handsome Miss Shepard, who, with all her wealth, she
felt sure, would crowd her completely out of her son’s heart and home,
she would have been a comparatively happy woman. Incredible to
larger-hearted women, as it seems, there are women so selfish in their
devotion to an only son, as to wreck his life, so far as its being of
any practical value to himself and others is concerned, by the strength
of their own weak persistence.

Burnham thought of his mother. He remembered the comfortable habits he
had settled into; he wondered if any other woman would ever let him
smoke in the best room in the house, or submit to his will when he
chose, as he often did for days together, to speak only in monosyllables
in his own house. He felt that, should he marry, his habits would all
have to be changed; that the solitude which he prized, when he felt so
inclined, might be absolute no longer. He remembered his mother’s
peculiarities, and said to himself that there would be a devil of a row,
should he undertake to bring a wife home. There might be constant
bickerings, and that he never could abide. No; better let women alone.

Then he thought of Marion and sighed. Her tender eyes, when he parted
from her two nights before, came up before him.

“Hang it,” he asked himself; “just how far have I gone with her,
anyway?”

He felt himself a scoundrel again, to his credit be it written. But
then, there were the habits of a lifetime, and his mother to be
remembered. Could he overthrow all his established convictions?

And yet, just what might Marion be expecting of him? No, he had given
her no definite encouragement in words. Still, one never can tell how a
good, pure woman is going to take these things.

Burnham went out under the April sky and walked up and down the concrete
walk bareheaded, until his mother, from her window, reminded him for the
third time that he would certainly get cold out there; and shouldn’t she
make him a cup of hot negus? Then he came in and renewed the conflict.

“I’ve let the thing run too long,” he said to himself, as he gazed into
the open wood-fire, having refused the decoction his mother had
patiently brought him. “I’ll have a reckoning with myself to-night, and
decide this thing once for all.”

Burnham was a decided man, and, once determined, seldom changed his
mind. He boasted, sometimes, of that quality, forgetting that it is only
an ignorant or an unprogressive soul which will never acknowledge itself
in the wrong, or change its course from the one marked out, perhaps in
obstinacy or error.

Until midnight he argued with himself, although, unconsciously, his mind
had been secretly made up at the start. When the clock struck twelve he
rose and got together his writing materials.

He had fully decided that it would be folly for him to marry Marion
Shaw. She was a rarely devoted, unselfish woman, and a most lovable one;
but he knew himself, he said, and if she married him she would do so
only to be unhappy in the end. She could not be otherwise, living with
him and his mother.

But how was he to withdraw from the delicate situation in which he had
foolishly placed himself? There was, he decided, but one way.

For a year, now, Salome Shepard had been making a deep and practical
study of the mills and their operation. She had proved a wonderfully apt
scholar, her womanly intuition often grasping, in a few minutes, details
which he had been months in learning. He doubted if, should occasion
require it, she could not run the mills alone. With Villard—honest,
faithful soul!—to help her, Burnham felt that there was no longer any
need of his services at the Shawsheen Mills. There was another
superintendency in a mill at Lowell which stood open to him, whenever he
chose to take it. There were some things about it that he would not
like; but he must not remain on dangerous ground. He took great credit
to himself as he reflected that honor required him not to trifle with
Marion’s feelings another day. He virtuously decided to take himself out
of her way. Once gone from her she would cease to feel his attraction
and forget the tender scenes between them. He would resign his
connection with the Shawsheen Mills.

He sat down and wrote the letter of resignation. Then he went to bed and
slept. He, like Villard, had kept awake hours for a woman. But he was
not the man to conquer his selfish nature, or to grow stronger by
fighting himself.

                  *       *       *       *       *

The next morning Salome found Villard alone in the inner office of the
mills. A note lay on her desk. It was Burnham’s resignation.

She uttered an exclamation of surprise, and turned to Villard.

“Did you know about this?” she asked, handing him the note.

Villard looked as astonished as though a dynamite bomb had exploded in
the mill-yard.

“Not a word,” he said. “But stay, he did hint at something, months ago;
but I never gave it a second thought. ‘Decided that he is no longer
needed on the works, and an opportunity having offered to better his
condition.’ H’m! Those are his reasons? Strange he hadn’t mentioned the
matter to me although it _was_ his own business.”

“But what are we going to do? Can’t we get him back?” asked Salome.

“We can try,” was the reply, “but Burnham is a pretty determined fellow
when he fairly makes up his mind. Shall I go over and see him?”

“If you please. Tell him to come back with you; I want to persuade him
to stay if I can.”

Villard went over to Burnham’s house, but he had already gone to Lowell
to complete arrangements to enter the new position. Mrs. Burnham knew
nothing of either this plan or her son’s sudden resignation. Villard
returned to Salome.

“What are we going to do,” she asked, “supposing he refuses to come
back—even at an increased salary?”

“Don’t you think you and I can run the business alone for a while?”
returned Villard, “at least until we can find a good man. Good
superintendents don’t grow on every bush.”

“Do you think I am capable of taking his place—with your help, of
course?” Salome looked earnestly at him.

“I think you are quite capable of doing anything noble and great,” he
answered, fervently.

“With your help,” she said, in a low tone. “Of course I will do
anything, and shall be only too proud,” she hastened to add, “if I have
succeeded in learning enough of the business to be of any use.”

Villard looked again at her averted eyes, and checked an impulse to say
something more. Had he known a tenth as much of women as of cotton
factories, his fortune and happiness had been in his own hands. But he
honestly thought she had turned away her eyes and spoken the last
sentence to turn him away from saying more; while she was saying to
herself as she turned to her desk again:

“Will he never, never speak? It will come, some time, I am sure, but
will he never dare?”



                                 XVII.


Burnham returned to Shepardtown only to tell his mother that he should
go to Lowell immediately. He had accepted the standing offer there, and
expected to begin at once.

In vain Salome offered him an increase of salary. And as he was
evidently bent on going, she would not urge him to remain in her employ.
But both she and Villard could assign but one reason for his sudden
determination. Both felt sure that he had offered himself to Marion and
that she had refused him.

Intimate as Salome and Marion were, no discussion of love-matters ever
entered their conversation. With each, love was too high and sacred a
thing to be bruited about, even in a conversation between friends. In
their younger days, when Marion had shyly announced her engagement to a
young law-student, there had been no silly or sentimental waste of words
between them on the subject. And now, perhaps because both women felt
the stirrings of a deep passion in their inmost heart, no reference to
the subject was ever made.

When Salome went home to lunch, she told Marion of Burnham’s
resignation; but beyond a momentary look of blank astonishment Marion’s
face gave no sign. And Salome’s feeling for her friend was too deep and
too delicate, to ask for what she did not choose to tell voluntarily.

Burnham would have been glad to leave town without risking himself in
Marion’s presence again.

He feared to trust himself with her, in the presence of the strange
attraction she had held for him. But common courtesy demanded that he
should call at the Mansion to leave his good-byes.

Marion heard the news of his resignation with a strange sinking of the
heart. Something told her that this was the end of her foolish, happy
dream. And although she loyally refused to acknowledge her doubts, the
strange presaging which was something more than presentiment lurked in
her heart all day, and kept her uneasy and restless. She half expected
Burnham to come in and by a few words settle the question of their
relations. She even asked herself, how she could best leave Shepardtown
if he insisted upon taking her to Lowell.

But he did not come until evening. Then it happened, as events will in
this strange world, that she was with her classes at the Hall. Salome
was unusually tired that evening and had remained quietly at home.
Burnham dropped in about eight o’clock, sat for half an hour with her
and Mrs. Soule, and then bade them good-bye, leaving his adieu for
Marion. He did not go to the Hall, although she half expected him all
through the long evening. The next morning he took an early train for
Lowell.

When Marion came home she heard in amazement that Burnham had been there
and gone. Salome gave her his word of parting.

“And was that all?” Marion asked, with strained voice and blazing
cheeks.

“That was all. Tell me, dear,” asked Salome, for the first time, “was
there any trouble between you? Had you anything to do with his going?”

“No, nothing,” and Marion was gone to her room.

On the first day of May, the experiment of profit-sharing was put into
effect for the first time at the Shawsheen Mills. In spite of the
strike, and the enforced idleness of several months which had followed,
previous to the year just passed, this had been a successful one, and
when the divisions for capital, machinery and reserve fund had been set
aside, there still remained a surplus which gave a dividend of four and
a half per cent. In some cases, this dividend on wages made a very
considerable sum, and in all cases the operatives felt a new sensation
of direct responsibility and connection with the mills. Besides the
addition of this money to their wages, the feeling of brotherhood and
ownership it engendered was, Villard declared, quite worth the
experiment.

Another circular was sent out, urging the operatives to increased care
in saving and painstaking in order that the dividend might be larger
another year. And the good results of the plan were directly manifest in
the work of nearly every employe.

A little incident which occurred soon after this did much to convince
the men of the changed relations in which they now stood towards their
employers.

An overseer had been tyrannizing over the spinners until they would
endure it no longer. In Mr. Greenough’s day, it is more than probable
that the matter would have culminated in a lock-out or a strike.

But with the new order of things came a greater feeling of confidence in
Villard. Five of the spinners, therefore, with the consent of the
others, went personally to the superintendent.

After hearing their story, Villard promised to settle their grievance,
and quite a discussion of economic questions concerning Capital _versus_
Labor followed.

“You men have labor to sell,” said Villard, “and we buy it. We have the
products of your labor to sell, and the commission merchants and others
buy it. As much courtesy and fair dealing should exist between us, as I
like to have between us and the men to whom we sell. We would not take
insolence from a broker’s clerk; you need not put up with the tyranny of
an overseer.”

These words, repeated to the other employes, were the most powerful
preventive against strikes ever tried in the Shawsheen Mills.

As the summer advanced, other new cottages were built on the hill to
accommodate the growing demand from the operatives. All those built the
previous year were occupied, and many of them had been bought on the
installment plan. Although the community around the Shawsheen factories,
as it now existed, had come suddenly into its new relation, it already
represented almost an ideal one. It was already a practical lesson in
social economics, which many a reformer and many a capitalist would do
well to study. To be a capitalist even in a small way is to learn to
respect capital. The fact that these men owned their small plots of
ground and their cottages (even if they were mortgaged for the greater
part of their value) was already dignifying the laborer by the tangible
proof of his own value.

By this time, Salome had come to know every family who were in the
employ of the mills. Was there trouble coming to any household, was
there sickness, was there affliction among them, they all turned to her
for help and sympathy, encouragement or congratulation. The smallest
events—the birth of a baby, the progress of measles, the love affairs of
the young, the querulous complaints of the old—were all of interest to
her; and they, in return, appreciated her kindness and returned it with
a loyalty of service that did her soul good.

Salome often declared, laughingly, that her relations to them were truly
patriarchal. An atmosphere of content and friendliness prevailed where
there had been jealousy and bickering.

The popular entertainments were kept up during the summer. There were
concerts, at which local talent (often some operative who possessed the
faculty of singing a song) appeared. Salome, herself, often presided at
the piano, and Marion frequently lent her voice; their theory being that
young people who took little or no vacation in summer needed some sort
of recreation in summer as in winter.

Towards the close of the summer, as Salome came out of the Hall one
evening, one of the young men came up to her side, and asked if he might
speak to her alone.

“Certainly,” she said; “Mr. Fales, will you walk ahead with Marion,
while O’Donovan walks home with me?”

She remembered the young fellow perfectly. She had seen him first during
the strike, a handsome young dare-devil who seemed, in fact, to be one
of the ringleaders among the younger men. When the mills had re-opened,
she had taken an uncommon interest in him. He was a faithful and
industrious man, and when, after a few weeks of sneering at the
“new-fangled notions,” he had settled into harmony with the strange
atmosphere, he had tried to improve himself in many ways. When Villard
took charge of the evening school, he had held aloof for a few weeks,
but at last joined one of Fales’ classes. In their entertainments and
dances, he had taken leading parts; and that day, Villard had offered
him the post of overseer in one of the minor departments at the mills.
It was quite a step up for the young man, and Villard had been surprised
at his hesitation in accepting the offer.

Salome knew all this; and as she heartily liked the fellow, she
determined to influence him for his own interest.

O’Donovan was silent for some moments, after they started, doubtless
being unaccustomed to escort ladies of her degree in that friendly way.
But Salome soon put him at his ease by her kind and easy manner.

“And so you’re going to be promoted,” she said, after a little. “I hope
you like that?”

“Miss Shepard,” he blurted out in confused speech, “that’s what I want
to talk about. There’s something—I mean, I want to tell—I _ought_ to
tell you something, Miss Shepard.”

“Very well. It oughtn’t to be very difficult to do that,” and her tone
was cordial and encouraging.

“I don’t think I ought to take the position—unless you say so. But I
expect you’ll put me in irons, if I tell you. Only—well, the other
fellows would say I was a blasted fool—barrin’ your presence, miss.”

“Why, John,” exclaimed Salome wonderingly. For the young man was in a
great state of excitement. “What can it be? Surely, you know you need
not be afraid of me?”

“You remember the night some one tried to blow up the mill—and Mr.
Greenough—and Mr. Villard——” Salome stood still and gazed through the
summer moonlight at her strange escort. He did not look up, but stood
like a culprit before her.

“I don’t know how you managed to find out and save ’em,” he went on.
“Miss Shepard—it was me.”

“You? John O’Donovan!” For an instant there was silence.

“Go on,” she said, when she could command her voice. “Tell me all.”

“It was John Ross that planned it and put me up to it. When he died, I
wondered if he hadn’t told you or Mr. Villard. Ever since then, I’ve
been trying to, but somehow I couldn’t—tell Mr. Villard—nor you
neither.—It was John Ross that planned it. He called me a coward and a
scab—and, finally, well—you know I was a crazy fool then, with the rest
of ’em.—It ain’t no use talkin’, miss, but we all discussed and brooded
over things until we were half out of our heads. If any one of us had
weakened first, we’d all give up, and the strike would have bu’st;
but—well, ’tain’t no use talkin’, I s’pose. I’ve confessed, and you can
have me put in irons, if you want to.”

“How did you come to want to tell me, John?” Salome said softly.

“Oh, miss, when I found how you saved the mill that night, and the lives
of those two men, I went down on my knees with thankfulness. It somehow
seemed to open my eyes to where I’d been standin’. Then, when the mills
opened and you took us back, and when you commenced to take an interest
in us; when you built that beautiful big Hall, and all them cottages;
and, if you’ll pardon me for sayin’ it, when you begun walkin’ thro’ the
mills yourself, speakin’ a pleasant word to us all and smilin’ at us as
if we were all your equals, miss—and you a saint,——it was then I seemed
no better’n a murderer. And when John Ross died, and the detectives gave
up lookin’ for the men, it was bore in on me as how I ought to confess;
and to-day, when Mr. Villard called me into the office and praised my
work, and said I’d been faithful and trustworthy——_trustworthy_,
ma’am!—why, then, I couldn’t stand it no longer.”

The young man stood silent in the moonlight. Salome’s eyes were filled
with tears.

“John,” she said, “you are a noble fellow. It is no more than right that
you should confess this to me, but not all fellows in your place could
do it. You can because you have the making of a man in you.”

The young man looked up.

“And what are you goin’ to do with me?” he asked.

“Will you do just what I say?” returned Salome.

“I will, indeed,” he said.

“Then I want you to go to Mr. Villard to-morrow morning and tell him you
accept the place. Then do your best, and deserve better things in
future.”

“Miss Shepard!” Young O’Donovan fairly gasped.

“John,” she went on, and she seemed to him like the pictures of saints
in the church, as she stood in her white gown in the silvery light, “if
your scheme had succeeded, you would not only have destroyed most
valuable property of mine; you would have killed two of my dearest
friends; but you have turned over a new leaf. I feel sure that nothing
will ever induce you to consent to anything of the kind again.”

“Never, so help me Heaven!” he exclaimed, fervently.

“Now, you have confessed like a man, I will forgive like a woman. You
will accept the new place. You will go on studying and improving
yourself, and some day I shall be proud of you, and you will be proud
that you once had the manliness to come to me and confess a crime. Now,
we will bury the thing forever, and never speak of it again. Only
promise me you will go to Mr. Villard in the morning and do as I ask
you.”

“I promise,” said the young man solemnly. Then he dropped on his knees
and seizing her hand, bent his head reverently upon it.

“If the God in Heaven above is like you,” he said, “He is a God worth
serving.”

“My poor forgiveness resembles His, John, only as a drop of rain
resembles the mighty ocean.”

They walked silently home, and O’Donovan left her with a new purpose in
his heart that has never left it since. He is to-day a thriving
Christian gentleman. Dare any one say it would have been better to
condemn him as a law-breaker?

“Nobody but a woman, I suppose, would have dealt justice so,” said
Salome to herself, as she put out her light an hour later, and turned to
the window—“nobody but John Villard.”



                                 XVIII.


A year rolled by—a year of prosperity to the Shawsheen Mills, and of
growth and improvement in the condition of their operatives. John
Villard had been made first superintendent and a new man had taken his
place. Salome continued to act as her own agent and had developed a keen
love and tact for the business,—a condition of affairs which Mrs. Soule
never ceased to bemoan.

The young people at the Hall were more than ever the dearest objects of
her solicitude. In most cases, their elevation had been steady and
substantial. Young men had become self-respecting and carried themselves
with increased dignity. Young women gradually grew less frivolous and
more earnest. Thrown together under so much better conditions than
formerly, both sexes emulated the politeness which they were quick to
notice between Villard and Salome. They became more quiet and decorous;
they read a better class of books; they began, in their way, to
cultivate higher tastes than had been known in the old factory
boarding-house or among the tumble-down tenement houses. Several
marriages had taken place, at which Salome had acted as the girl’s
guardian, giving away the bride. Young O’Donovan’s was the first of
these. His increased pay as overseer enabled him to marry Kitty Kendall,
to whom he had long been devoted; and the young bridegroom was even
happier than the bride when Salome offered to act in that capacity.
Neither of them would have dared ask it of her, but her evident
willingness to act on this occasion encouraged those who came after,
until Salome said she felt all the responsibilities of a mother with a
large family of daughters.

As Villard saw all this marrying and giving in marriage, he grew, at
times, more restless. There were occasions when he came suddenly upon
Salome, or, perhaps during their rare talks together, when he felt sure
for a moment that she felt for him more than a friendly interest. But,
remembering his comparative poverty, he never spoke the one word which
would have broken down all barriers. And Salome successfully concealed
her feeling for him, not daring, even, to examine it herself. So they
had drifted on, more than friends and less than lovers, through another
year.

There came, at last, the first period of absence from each other since
Mr. Greenough’s death. Daily association, pleasant as it is, cannot
teach lovers how much they love, as can a short separation.

The second dividend of the mills had been declared, each operative
getting three and a half per cent., this time, on their wages. When the
work consequent on this transaction was closed up, it was decided to put
new machinery in the lower mills. There was an improved kind in one of
the Holyoke mills, and it was decided that Villard should go,
personally, to examine its workings, leaving Salome and the second
superintendent alone for a few days.

Villard had made his preparations to start with a strange sinking at the
heart. He was not a man to indulge in silly presentiment, but he could
not feel any enthusiasm about going. He had not taken two days away from
the mills in two years, and was justly entitled to a vacation; but every
time he thought of going to Holyoke, his heart sank within him.

He thought it was because he must leave Salome, and chided himself for
his sentimental fancies. He told himself to be a man; not a silly fool.
And, finally, he refused to think of his premeditated journey, since he
could not do so comfortably.

He was to leave Shepardtown on a seven-thirty express, west. Salome
remained at the office unusually late that afternoon. She made him go
carefully over her various duties, and recount, over and over again,
everything necessary for her to say or do while he was gone.

The other superintendent was called away early, and she was left alone
with Villard in the inner office, the clerks coming in and out and
Marion dropping in once on a trifling errand.

Finally, she said:

“Well, I suppose I must bid you good-bye. I hope you won’t be gone
long.”

She held out her hand and Villard took it. A subtle fire shot from it
straight to Villard’s heart. He looked up. Were her eyes, so soft and
kind, suffused with tears? Was this the strong, self-reliant Salome?

“Miss Shepard, Salome,” he burst out, incoherently, “I——”

“Come right in this way,” said a hearty voice at the other door.
“Villard will tell you what you want to know——”

“Good-bye,” said Salome again, in the most matter-of-fact tone,
releasing her hand just in time, as the other superintendent ushered in
a buyer from the west. “Good-bye and good luck;” and turning, she walked
away with the nonchalant air which a woman knows so well how to assume,
even at the most serious moment of her life.

Poor Villard was both confused and exalted by the sudden dawn of
blessedness, which had as suddenly faded. He turned to the buyer but was
incoherent, and gave wrong prices on the last shipment of cotton, so
that his customer felt obliged to call him back to his senses by a not
over-delicate allusion to the parting he was shrewd enough to guess he
had interrupted.

Salome went home in a strangely depressed mood. She ate but little
dinner, and excusing herself early in the evening on the plea of unusual
weariness, she retired to her room, undressed and donned a silken
night-wrapper, only to lie awake all night, worrying herself with
fruitless questioning. In the watches of the night and under cover of
the dark, she told herself that she had given her heart unsought; that
had Villard loved her as she did him, nothing could have kept him from
saying so; that she had been vain and conceited in fancying that, under
his quiet demeanor, he loved her.

Then she remembered his sudden, yearning look when he had grasped her
hand, and that, from the depths of his great, manly heart, he had called
her “Salome.” And then, woman-like, she shed a few hot tears of
gratitude and impatience.

Marion Shaw, meanwhile, had gone to the Hall alone that evening. Her
work among the mill-girls had grown dearer to her heart with every
month. Most of the girls loved her now, and looked upon her as a
comrade, though walking on much higher ground than they. Many of them
had secret aspirations to reach the standard of her ideals, as they
dimly conceived it, and were the better for trying.

Marion had not had a long fight with herself when weeks had rolled into
months, and she heard no word from Burnham.

She had always been an individual girl—one who thought for herself, who
set high ideals for herself, who believed that one only does one’s duty
by living at one’s highest and noblest.

When she was a mere girl she had become acquainted with a young
college-student, and their friendship ripened into love. When she became
engaged to Ralph Leland, Marion looked upon her betrothal as no less
sacred than a marriage vow. When, after a few years of study and close
confinement in a theological seminary, Leland had shown symptoms of
consumption and been ordered to Colorado, her mother was slowly nearing
her death, with the same disease. It had wrung her heart with anguish to
decide between them, but Leland had said:

“Stay with your mother, Marion. She cannot live long and needs you with
her to the end. I shall live many years, and, I feel confident, may yet
entirely recover. It is hard, but your mother can have but a year or two
at the most. I hope to live for many years. And we could neither of us
be happy if we remembered her here, sorrowing and suffering alone.”

And so Marion had staid to nurse her dying mother, and Ralph Leland had
gone west to seek health and strength. In two months he was seized with
congestion of the lungs and died suddenly, away from all friends and
apart from her.

What Marion suffered at this time, only a woman can understand. What she
endured, only a woman who has gone down into the blackness of despair
can conceive. Her mother failing gradually, her lover gone, what wonder
that, for a time, life seemed a blank?

After the first, she had not talked about Ralph, but nursed his memory
silently, day and night. For eighteen months, she took sole care of her
mother, seeing her slip away into the “great unknown,” inch by inch.
Never did the mother realize that she was going to die, and she
constantly made plans for the next season when she was going to be “so
much better.” Often Marion, knowing she was soon to be motherless, would
leave her low seat near her mother, and stand behind the invalid’s chair
to hide the tears that welled up, even while she agreed with the
invalid’s plans.

Day by day, the gnawing agony of seeing her mother slowly dying before
her melted into and overshadowed the loss of that love which was to have
shielded and defended her till death. But she never gave way, before
mortal eyes, to her sorrow; and she never failed to minister to the
mother who so needed her care.

By and by she was left alone. Then, for the first time, did the awful
sense of loss overpower her. For days she did not sleep or take any
nourishment. Then she rallied and girded herself for the struggle for
existence which such women must make, and which, in her case, had been
eased by the door which Salome had opened to her.

Through all her trials and discouragement, Ralph Leland had been a
present reality to her. Even since the first blackness of darkness she
had believed that somewhere, somehow, she would meet him as of old, and
they would live again for each other. Then she came to believe that he
loved her still, wherever in God’s great universe he might be.

“When he was in Colorado,” she used to say to herself, “I never had a
doubt that he loved me still. If he had gone to the farthest corner of
the earth I should not have dreamed of his forgetting me. Why should I
now, when he has only gone to a remoter part of the universe?”

This thought was the one, calm, sustaining help to her in all her work.
And in this belief she was strong to take up any burden which might be
laid upon her.

When she came to Shepardtown and met Burnham, she had been struck by the
subtle, strange resemblance to Ralph which she saw in him. It was more
than the mere resemblance of feature. It was the resemblance of
expression, of looks, of the intangible essence of life.

From this point on, so long as she came in daily contact with Burnham,
she was fascinated by this ever-recurring resemblance; sometimes she was
half-persuaded that it was Leland who talked or sang to her, and she sat
watching him in dreamy remembrance of the old days, before her mother or
Ralph had sickened. As she grew gradually to believe that Burnham loved
her, she thanked Heaven that a good man’s love was to brighten her life
once more. When the veil was rent away, and she saw that Burnham was not
the true, white-souled knight she had thought him, and realized that he
was not the ideal she had believed and trusted in, she was surprised to
find that she no longer loved him. And then she thought out the true
solution.

On the night of Villard’s departure, as has been said, Marion had gone
to the work she most delighted in—her work among the girls. There were
classes to be overlooked, and her own special one in singing to be
taught. She was half through the musical hour, when she turned suddenly
towards the door. There stood Geoffrey Burnham.

Afterwards she remembered how little feeling the sight of him caused
her. But then she said pleasantly:

“Oh, won’t you walk in and hear us sing? My girls have made decided
improvement since you heard us last,” and she went on composedly with
the class.

Burnham looked on wonderingly. As he watched this self-possessed young
woman, his old passion flamed up within him. He had never cared for her
as at that moment. When the class was over, she advanced toward him.

“Aren’t you going to shake hands with a fellow?” he said, holding out
his own.

“Certainly,” she said, without the least emotion. He would have retained
his hold upon her hand, but she withdrew it, saying:

“To what accident are we indebted for this unexpected pleasure?”

“I came,” he said, “on business. I must see Villard. But they tell me he
won’t be home for several days. There’s a certain combination of forces
we want to get him into, if possible.”

“You won’t, you know,” laughed Marion, “unless it’s for the good of the
working-men.”

“Well, it is,” answered Burnham. “A society is being planned for Lowell,
which will do for the operatives there something like that which Villard
and Salome and you have been doing here. I said I would come down and
consult with him to-night. Besides, I——can’t you guess any other reason
for my coming?”

“Oh, plenty of them,” replied Marion indifferently. “I suppose you feel
a friendship for all who were once your people, and rather want to see
them once more.”

“Not that, at all,” said he significantly, determined now that she
should hear him out. “Are you going home? May I walk down with you?”

Marion gave her permission and went for her wraps. She half felt what
was coming, but she was strangely apathetic.

When they were out under the stars, the talk began in commonplaces; but
Burnham soon veered it round where he chose.

“Why are you so cold?” he asked, half querulously.

“Cold?” she repeated, purposely misunderstanding him. “I’m not cold.
This wrap I have on is warmer than it looks.”

“And your heart,—is that?” retorted he.

Marion did not answer.

“You know I love you. I—know you once loved me,” he went on, losing his
head, as a consequence of her indifference. “Perhaps you resented my
treating you as I did. Perhaps I didn’t do right, going off that way,
without a word; but I thought it better so. You see—my mother,—and
I,—Marion Shaw!”—he seized her hand, grasping it in both his own—“will
you marry me?”

Marion withdrew her hand.

It was cool, and she felt like a spectator at stage theatricals which
did not concern her.

“Marion, you did love me, you can’t deny it!” he said. “What is the
trouble?”

“I’m sorry you have brought this subject up to-night,” she said, gently.
“It had much better have remained dead and buried.”

“Marion Shaw, you shall not evade me so,” retorted Burnham, led on by
her steady refusal to respond to his passion. “You did love me—I was
sure of it—or else, you are the basest of coquettes, and were playing
with me. And now you are tired of me!”

“As you were of me!” she blazed out, now roused into speech. “Listen,
since you dare address me as you do. I did not love you. You thought I
did. I thought I did. When you found it convenient for some reason, I
neither know nor care what, to leave me without a word, I found, for the
first time, that I was only in love with _being_ in love. No,—wait until
I am through. Ten years ago I became engaged to the bravest and best and
truest man that ever lived.” Marion’s voice broke, but she went on. “He
died and I kept on loving his memory, loving him wherever he might be.
When I met you, the striking resemblance you bore to him smote me like
an electric shock. You seemed good and noble like him, and under the
glamour of your constant presence and evident fancy for me, I allowed
myself to drift into a sentimental feeling for you. I now see what that
feeling was. It was only a love of being in love; and you happened to be
the one man I have met so far, and I hope the only one I shall ever
meet, capable of calling that feeling out. You have compelled me to
speak plainly. I hope you are satisfied. This is our gate. Miss Shepard
has retired, but she will be glad to see you at the office in the
morning. Good-night.” And Marion left him standing rooted to the ground
where she left him.

For a few days Burnham felt himself a badly used man. He had loved and
his love had been trampled on, he said to himself.

He went back to Lowell the next day, promising to write Villard; and a
week after, when he had settled down at home again with his dainty and
querulous mother, he went calmly over the ground of his defeat.

“She never did a more sensible thing in her life,” he declared, as he
lighted his pipe, at last. “It would have been an awful bore to have to
live up to her ideal.”



                                  XIX.


Three days passed at the mills with no special incident. To Salome they
seemed the dullest she had ever known. For the first time, she
discovered that the Shawsheen Mills and the condition of its operatives
was not enough to satisfy the inmost longings of her heart, or to still
its disquietude. Without the presence of John Villard, and the constant
inspiration of his presence, life lost its zest and sparkle.

When the three days were over, Salome went to her pillow at night with a
sense of relief. Until now, she had not realized what her position at
the head of the mills might mean without Villard. She saw that without
him she could have done little, and would have made many mistakes—a fact
which it was good for her to realize. And then she remembered, with
sudden terror, that he might leave her at any moment, as Burnham had
done.

“He will be home in the morning,” she said to her disquieted heart, “and
I will offer him a share in the business. I will make him a partner, and
then I shall never lose him.” And even in the darkness of night and the
privacy of her own room, she resolutely put away from herself any other
contingency.

The morning dawned beautiful, fresh and balmy, as only a spring morning
late in May can dawn in New England. Salome dressed herself with unusual
care. A strange, happy feeling under-ran all her thoughts. She would not
think of him; she would not look forward to his coming; but, for her,
all the gladness of the May morning, all the blossoming of spring
flowers, all the caroling of joyous birds, meant only that Villard had
arrived in Shepardtown on the night express, and that she would see him
in an hour or two. She did not hurry her preparations for
breakfast,—this was such a strange, delightful mood. She looked at her
own reflection in the mirror, thinking unconsciously of making herself
fair for him. She sang snatches of merry song from the last comic opera,
laughing to herself as she recalled how her nurse used to forbid her
singing before the morning meal, and how she used to repeat, in a
lugubrious tone, the old sign:

                     “If you sing before breakfast,
                     You’ll cry before night.”

And, still singing, she stopped at her aunt’s room, only to find that
everybody had gone downstairs before her.

Mrs. Soule and Marion were chatting pleasantly over their hot-house
grapes when she entered the breakfast-room. The morning papers lay
untouched beside Salome’s plate. She took her place and leisurely pared
an orange. Afterwards she remembered the time she wasted in cutting the
peel into fantastic shapes.

“Has nobody looked at the papers?” she asked, after a while. “I declare,
how self-absorbed we are growing. Who knows but the world has, half of
it, come to an end, over night?”

She picked up one of the papers—the one which contained the most
startling head-lines, the most sickening sensations. Opening it, her
eyes became riveted to the front page. Her face paled. She grew whiter,
but no one noticed. When Marion looked up, the paper was falling from
Salome’s hand, and she had fallen back in her chair—faint, speechless
with terror.

With a cry, Marion sprang to her side; but Salome, by a tremendous
effort, recovered herself.

“Read it,” she gasped, “and tell me what to do.”

Marion picked up the paper, and read:

                 HORRIBLE ACCIDENT ON THE ALBANY ROAD.

                  THIRTEEN KILLED AND TWENTY WOUNDED.

                TERRIBLE SLAUGHTER DUE TO CARELESSNESS.

  PROMINENT BUSINESS MEN OF BOSTON AND SHEPARDTOWN AMONG THE INJURED.

Running her eye hastily down the column, Marion gathered that the night
express had been crashed into by a heavy freight; that both trains had
been thrown off the track; that many passengers had been killed,
scalded, mangled or bruised.

She looked quickly over the list of killed. There were no familiar
names; but at the head of the wounded was:

“John Villard of Shepardtown. Fatally injured. Impossible to recover.”

She turned to Salome, who was already leaving the table.

“Help me to get ready,” she said. “I must go to him immediately.” Marion
marveled to see her so calm; but she knew only too well the anguish
concealed in the woman’s heart below.

“What is it? What are you going to do? Why does not some one tell me?”
asked Mrs. Soule.

“Dear auntie,” and Salome bent and kissed the fair, soft cheek, “there
has been a terrible accident to the train that Mr. Villard was coming
home on. I am going to him. He is dying.” Then she left the room.

In less than an hour she was at the railway station, waiting for the
train to Boston. At the last moment, Mrs. Soule, having recovered from
the shock which the news had given her, had tried to dissuade her niece
from going.

It seemed to her that this was the strangest thing her unaccountable
niece had ever done. She really must remonstrate with her on the
impropriety of her conduct. And seeing that Salome would not be
restrained from making this erratic trip, she proposed to go, too, as
chaperon. Only Salome must wait for the noon train, as she could not
possibly get ready for an earlier one.

“The noon train!” exclaimed Salome, buttoning her gloves. “No, auntie,
Mr. Villard may not live until then. I shall go to him at once. You
forget that I am no longer a young girl. I am a business woman, and my
chief assistant lies dying.” She bent over and kissed her aunt, who was
still remonstrating, and ran down the steps to the waiting carriage,
where Marion had already taken her seat.

Marion, too, had offered to go with her; but Salome had only replied:

“No, dear. If you will take my place here, that is all I ask.”

And when the train finally drew out of Shepardtown, and she had left her
friend standing on the platform, she gave an involuntary sigh. Only the
strong heart, which can best bear its grief alone, will understand her
feeling.

The train had never seemed so slow to her. Strained and anxious with
that nervous intensity which makes a woman waste her strength in a
half-conscious physical effort to propel, by her own will-power, the
great, unsympathetic, methodical engine, she sat straight up in her seat
with heart and soul benumbed. Constantly before her, was the picture of
John Villard—mangled, bleeding, dying—perhaps dead. Her brain reeled as
she thought of him lying pale and cold in death.

She remembered how, only three days ago, he had clasped her hand and
looked into her eyes; how he had called her “Salome,” his voice deep and
tender with emotion. Dead? No, it could not be. And still the long,
unfeeling train stopped to take on its horde of passengers, or to let
off a working-man or a school-girl.

The hour’s ride to Boston seemed to her an eternity; and when, at last,
they rolled into the long, covered shed, Salome was first to reach the
steps, and first to touch the platform.

Ordering a carriage, she was soon on her way across the city. But here
again the slowness of her progress drove her nearly frantic. She called
to the driver and told him she would double his fee if he caught the
next train for the scene of the accident. He did not know what time that
would be, but he accepted the offer and drove at such a rate of speed
that an agent of the Humane Society ran after him to catch his
number,—and did not succeed.

When they reached the Albany station, Salome threw him the smallest bill
she had, a two-dollar one,—and without waiting for the change, hastened
to the ticket-office. It was beset with more than the usual crowd of
curious questioners and eager passengers, whose plans the accident had
thrown into confusion. It was some minutes before Salome could reach the
window. She was about to turn away in despair when the agent recognized
her.

“Let that lady pass, there,” he said, authoritatively; and then Salome
learned that a relief train had been sent early in the morning, that
another would be starting in ten minutes, and that regular trains would
be run in the course of an hour or two, “carrying by,” at Jones’s
Crossing, where the accident had occurred.

“And the injured ones, are they still——” her voice failed her.

“They are still living,” answered the agent. “But some of them are so
badly hurt they must die. Stand back there, one minute,” he said to the
crowd. “Well, I don’t know, miss, whether you could go on the relief
train. You might go out and ask, though they’ve shut down on the crowd.”

Salome turned away. For the first time since breakfast a clear thought
came into her brain. She went out to the train-gate.

No, they could not take any one. There were so many wanting to go, and
they only took one car. Oh, a friend of the injured? Well, she must go
to the division superintendent, or the general passenger agent. There
was the “G. P. A.” over there.

Salome walked over to the official designated,—a pleasant gentleman with
kind eyes.

“I am Miss Shepard of Shepardtown,” she said; “my chief superintendent
is among the injured, and is probably dying. He has no friends, and I
must get to him. Can you help me?”

The official took out a little book, wrote her name on a blank pass, and
handed it to her.

“Anything we can do for him or for you, Miss Shepard, we shall be glad
to do. You needn’t hesitate to ask. Your grandfather was once kind to
me, when I was a poor boy.”

The passenger agent hurried away to the engine, giving some last orders,
and Salome did not have a chance to thank him.

“You’ll have to hurry, miss,” a brakeman said who was standing near.
“The train is going.”

A moment later she was on the way for Jones’s Crossing.

This train had the right of way and a clear track for some distance.
They seemed to fly, as they sped out through the suburbs into the
country beyond.

The bloom of the May morning was still on the tender, up-springing grass
and the fresh foliage of the trees. Birds sang cheerfully on, in spite
of the thundering engine on its way to the scene of woe. But there was
no more beauty in the world for Salome.

Three or four physicians sat in the corner of the one baggage-car which
they all occupied together, and, used as they were to scenes of death
and suffering, talked indifferently of politics and the misdoings of
Congress. The brakeman laughed as the conductor passed him with some
trivial remark. To Salome it seemed that she alone, of all the world,
cared because thirteen persons lay dead and twenty more were fatally
injured, a few miles away.

Afterwards, when she saw the tenderness and courageous sympathy of these
people among the suffering, she reversed her judgment.

A small woman in black sat at the opposite end of the car, and was the
only other passenger.

“Who is that?” She stopped the conductor to ask the question, at last
drawn out of her own sorrow by the pathetic attitude of the woman’s
figure.

“That’s the engineer’s mother. He is fatally hurt. He’s the last of her
five boys, and her sole dependence. It’s pretty rough on her; but the
boys won’t let her suffer.”

His words came like a reproach to her. What right had she, with all her
wealth and friends and pleasures, to think of herself as the only
suffering one? What was her sorrow, compared to that of this bereaved
mother?

She felt an impulse to go over to the motionless figure and speak a word
of comfort. And then she felt the train slacking up.

“We’re almost there,” the conductor said, as he passed her again.

When the train stopped, two of the physicians, having heard who she was,
came forward with offers of assistance. The others were kindly aiding
the pathetic old lady in black.

And then Salome found herself face to face with such a scene as she had
never even dreamed of.

The public is, through the “enterprising” journalistic system of the
present day, already too familiar with such scenes of sickening horror.
To Salome, this one came as the vivid realization of things she had
hitherto carefully avoided in the newspapers.

At first, she turned faint and sick at the prospect. Several dead bodies
lay plainly in sight, partially covered with a blanket. The living must
first be cared for; and groans on every side, from those who, even yet,
had not been extricated from the debris, told how much still remained to
be done.

“Tell me,” she said, catching at the arm of a doctor who had been on the
ground since daybreak, “where is Mr. Villard?”

“Villard? Let’s see—tall man? Dark hair and full beard? Yes. He was
removed to the tavern over there an hour ago.” And he passed on to
another sufferer.

Salome looked across the railroad track, in the direction the physician
had pointed. There was a country store, a “tavern,” and three or four
less pretentious buildings.

Hastily she clambered over the torn-up track, down the embankment and
across the narrow, open field. There were no signs of life around the
group of houses. Everybody was at the scene of the accident.

She walked into the tavern. It seemed to be deserted. Through the narrow
hall she could see, at the end of the building, a dining-room; at one
side was the office, where no one was in view. The clerk heard her step,
however, and came hastily from the dining-room.

“Is there a Mr. Villard here?” she began—“a patient, from the accident?”

“There are three men upstairs who were hurt,” the clerk answered.
“There’s no one here to tend office, or I’d show you up.”

“I must find him. Is there no one to show me the way?” she asked,
impatient at this last trivial delay.

“They’re each in different rooms up there,” was the reply. “Walk right
up the stairs. There’s nurses up there. They’ll tell you.”

Salome turned up the narrow, dingy staircase. At the top there was no
one in sight. Groans came from behind a closed door. Inside, she could
hear voices, subdued to an undertone. In the absolute silence, she heard
the word “amputation.” Could this be Villard’s room?

She leaned against the wall, unable to try that latch. While she stood
there, helpless and dazed, she lifted her eyes to the opposite doorway.
It was open.

Inside, there seemed to be no one. Certainly there was no attendant. She
stepped forward and looked in. There, on the white, clean bed, lay the
form of John Villard, his face whiter than the pillow it rested against,
his dark hair contrasting strangely with his paleness.

With the sight, all the repressed love of the last two years swept over
Salome like a resistless impulse. A hand seemed clutching at her heart.
Her limbs seemed paralyzed; but in an instant she was beside the bed,
looking down at the closed eyes. A terrible fear that he was dead swept
over her. With an inarticulate groan, she knelt beside him and laid her
hand against his face.

He opened his eyes and smiled faintly. He thought he had died and
reached Heaven.



                                  XX.


Villard’s convalescence was slow and tedious. When Salome had found him,
his dislocated shoulder had been restored to place, and his broken ankle
set. Then, as there were not nurses enough for the great need, he had
been left alone.

What passed in that first ten minutes after Salome had found him is
still a sacred memory between them. At last, she said, looking at him
through wet eyes, “You must have a nurse.”

“Oh, Salome, do not leave me,” he answered; and his voice, weakened from
his injuries and tender with the passion which, at last, he had not been
afraid to declare, was like music to her heart.

She bent her blushing face upon the pillow beside him. “May I stay and
take care of you?” she asked, softly.

“May you? Oh, Salome!”

Another silence fell between them. Both hearts were too full for words.

“Then we must be married to-day.” Salome had waited a little for him to
say it; but, manlike, he had not been thinking of the proprieties.

“I cannot leave you to hired nurses now,” she murmured. “So, there is
only this one way out of it.”

“And a blessed way it is.”

And so they were married, that bright May morning, amid scenes of
anguish, and while Villard still hovered near the gates of death. And
for weeks they remained at “Jones’s Tavern,” he ill, wretched, racked
with pain; she, bearing the trials and discomforts of the place, vigils
of long night-watches, the dull, dragging anxiety; and yet, there was
never a happier or more blessed honeymoon.

When he was able to be moved on a stretcher, he was taken to
Shepardtown. Their home-coming was a glad one, although it was
necessarily quiet. Every operative in the mills had been at the station,
when the train that bore the two who had done so much for them came
steaming in. Salome nodded to many of them, with moist but happy eyes.
But the family physician, who had met them in Boston, would allow of no
hand-shaking.

“Time enough for that by and by,” he told the men who stood foremost in
the crowd. “Do you want to kill him?”

He could not prevent several of the strongest ones from stepping
forward, however, and taking the stretcher in their own hands, and
bearing Villard very gently to the waiting carriage.

“I never thought to enter this house so,” Villard whispered to Salome,
when he was carefully borne up the stairs in the Shepard mansion and
placed tenderly in bed.

“Thank Heaven, you were permitted to come, even _so_,” she replied, with
a shudder. He had been so near Death’s door, instead!

“I can’t and won’t say I approve of what you’ve done,” said Mrs. Soule
that night. “If you must marry him at all, I could not see why you
should want to do it then and there. You might have waited, I think, and
had such a wedding as befits a daughter of the Bourdillons. Besides, all
this watching and care has pulled you down. You look pale and worn.
You’ll lose your beauty before you are thirty-five.”

Salome did not answer. These matters seemed so trivial.

“I suppose, at least, you’ll give a reception when he gets well enough.
You really owe it to society and your own position. All your father’s,
your mother’s, and your own friends will expect it. You have planned for
that, I suppose? Since you had no wedding gown, you ought to give
Redfern _carte blanche_ for your reception gown. Have you written them?”

“Auntie,” said Salome, “John and I have been, in these past weeks, where
we did not think of party gowns.”

“No, I suppose there was not much at Jones’s Crossing to remind you of
them. But now, you certainly are thinking of one _now_?”

Salome sighed. There was really no use in expecting her little,
exquisite, cameo-cut aunt to understand her.

“I suppose we may give some sort of reception. All my people are waiting
anxiously to see John,” she said.

“Factory-people!” exclaimed Mrs. Soule indignantly; but her niece had
moved away.

It was several weeks later, when Villard was first able to come
downstairs. As soon as possible for him to bear the excitement, the
operatives were invited to the house one evening, and permitted to shake
hands with the man whom they had always considered their friend, and to
whom they had now become closely endeared. The marriage between him and
Salome had, somehow, seemed to draw him closer to them. They were now
his people as well as hers.

“This isn’t going to take you away from us at the Hall?” said one of the
young men during the evening. “Mr. Fales and Mr. Welman are good—but
they are not you.”

“I shall be there every evening,” was Villard’s reply. “I am much more
anxious not to lose you than you can be not to lose me.”

“I don’t know about that,” the younger one said.

When they had all gone away, and Marion had sent them both upstairs for
the night, Salome drew her husband down to her favorite seat in a cosy
bay-window, where the August moon was streaming in through vines and
foliage, making a checkered radiance around them.

“John,” she began, “I have a plan to tell you.”

“What is it, dear?” he asked, drawing her head to his shoulder.

“I am going to retire from active business.” She laughed softly.

“What _can_ you mean?”

“Can’t you see? I’m going to retire. You are now the head of the
Shawsheen Mills.”

Villard said nothing. In spite of the great love between them, he could
not forget that she was wealthy nor that he was poor.

“I have to-day made over the entire mill property to you,” she went on.
“I am not going to have it said that your wife has all the money and all
the power, and that you are only her dependent.”

“Salome! you dear, generous heart,” said Villard brokenly; “I cannot
accept.” He felt that she had divined his sensitiveness, although she
had been too delicate to speak of it. “I am poor, but I am not a
beggar.”

“And I, too, am proud,” she replied, laying her hand on his cheek. “I
will not have people saying that you are tied to a rich wife and are
subject to her whims. Oh, I know how they talk; I have seen and heard
them all my life! Why, they would say you were a fortune-hunter.”

“You do not think so?” he asked, gently.

“Confess, dear,” she answered him. “If it had not been for that,
wouldn’t you have spoken long ago?”

Villard pressed her closer.

“I came very near it, as it was,” he said, presently. “But I could not
bear to be thought that.”

“I had the necessary papers made out this afternoon,” she said after an
eloquent silence, “when I was out. So you see the thing is done whether
you will or not. You need have no hesitation. I still have a large
fortune left, you know, from the Bourdillons.”

“If it were anybody else in the world but my noble, generous wife,” he
began, “I would refuse, even now.”

“If it were any one else but my noble husband,” she replied, “I could
not yield control of the mills, and all the plans I have cherished for
the employes. But I know in whom I trust,” and her eyes shone with
wifely pride and affection.

“There are still so many things to do,” said Villard, a little later. “I
know I can always depend on you to help me.”

“Oh, I am not laying down the work and retiring to the old life of
idleness,” was the reply. “I shall leave the management of the mills to
their new owner. It’s no part of a married woman’s business to manage
her husband’s office. But I shall have all the more leisure left for
doing good. I have no end of schemes to lay before you; and, I have no
doubt, you have wiser plans than mine.”

“I am glad, on the whole,” said Villard thoughtfully, “that you are
going to have more freedom. You are tired and worn with watching and
caring for me,—dear, blessed soul that you are. Your burdens, in the
past two years, have been borne marvelously well. Any other woman would
have given way long ago. But, after all, I am a selfish man.”

“You, John!”

“Yes. I must confess, I want you all to myself, a part of the time.”

“All I have and all I am, dear, is yours. And yet, I cannot help feeling
that we have still a great work to do. Employers, on all sides, are
looking to see us fail in our attempts. As we stand or fall, will
factories outside of Shepardtown be benefited or injured.”

“I remember what you once said, Salome. Your brave words were a
watchword with me many a time when my courage was low.”

“What were they?”

“‘We want to show the world that the spirit of Him crucified may rule in
a cotton-mill as fully as in the life of a saint.’ My darling, nobody
but you would have had the courage to say that. We will take the
sentiment as our rule of life.”

“And act on Rossetti’s beautiful words,” added Salome:

                  “And though age wearies by the way,
                    And hearts break in the furrow,
                  We’ll sow the golden grain to-day,
                    The harvest reap to-morrow!
                  Build up heroic lives, and all
                    Be like the sheathen saber,
                  Ready to flash out at God’s call,
                    Oh, Chivalry of Labor!”

And then they sat silent in the checkered moonlight.


                                THE END.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

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                          TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES


 1. Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in
      spelling.
 2. Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.



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