Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Maggie Now

    Prev Next

    that must have weighed a hundred pounds. She was not

      above falling down in pretended exhaustion and death to

      give reality to her game.

      She bounced back into the classroom, windblown, rosy

      and glowing. Although Sister Veronica frowned when she

      left, she always smiled when she re urned.

      She told Sister Mary Jos'ph: "She brings the smell of the

      wind back into the room with her." She pronounced

      ~ui7~d to rhyme with kind.

      19/1

     

      "A pity you gave up writing poetry, Sister, when you

      took holy orders," said Sister Mary Joseph.

      The rules of the order forbade any nun to walk abroad

      alone. She had to go with another nun or a lay person.

      The nuns liked children to go shopping with them.

      Maggie-Now vitas much in demand as an escort. When

      she turned up at the convent on a Saturday morning, the

      sisters pretended to quarrel over w ho'd get Maggie-Now.

      This thrilled the girl.

      Sister Veronica needed new shoes. Maggie-Nov went to

      the shoe store with her. She knelt down and helped the

      nun try on the shoes. She kneaded the leather over the

      toes and asked anxiously: "Are you sure they fit? Have you

      got room for all your toes? "

      "You'll wear them out, child, before I have a chance to

      ovally in them."

      Sister Mary Joseph wore a wedding ring, as did the

      other nuns, because she was the bride of Christ. Through

      the years, the ring had become too tight. Maggie-Now

      escorted her to the jeweler's to have it sawed off.

      Maggie-Now liked Sister Mary Joseph but was afraid of

      her because she said unexpec ted things. When

      Maggie-Now escorted Sister Veronica, she held the nun's

      hand and skipped along and chattered. With Sister Mary

      Joseph, she walked sedately no hand holding, no

      skippin,, no chatter. Maggie-Now had to stretch her legs

      to match the mln's long stride. They had been walking

      three blocks in complete silence when Sister said in an

      ordinary, conversational tone:

      "What's your horse's name?"

      The girl quivered and wondered how Sister knew. She

      gave her a quick look. The nun was staring straight ahead.

      "What horse?" hedged Maggie-Now.

      "The one you keep in the schoolyard."

      "His name is Drummer." The nun nodded.

      Does that mean, thought Maggie-Now, that it's a nice

      rzame? Or does it mean that she caught me?

      They walked another block in silence. Then Sister Mary

      Joseph said with her usual bluntness: "I used to play

      basketball when I was in high school."

      1 Hi

     

      "You never did!" said Maggie-Now in instinctive

      disbelief. "I mean," she gulped, "did you?"

      "Why not?" said the nun crossly.

      "I mean, I thought Sisters prayed all the time."

      "Oh, we take a day off now and then to have a

      toothache or something. Just like other people."

      "Nobody ever told me," said Maggie-Now.

      "Margaret, are you afraid of me?"

      "Not so much as I used to be." Maggie-Now smiled up at

      her.

      When Mr. Freedman, the jeweler, began to saw on the

      ring, Maggie-Now threw her al ms around the nun and

      buried her face in her habit.

      "What's the matter, Margaret?"

      "It goes all through me,' shuddered the child.

      "The finger, I wild nor take off," promised Mr.

      Freedman. "Only the ring."

      "Take deep breaths, Margaret, and be brave," said Sister

      Marv Joseph, "and it wails be out r before you know it."

      ~ CHAP PER t 1t TEEN ~

      `LMA.fA, why don t eve hat e relations like other

      peoples"

      "We do."

      "Where? "

      "Oh, Ireland. .nd y OL: have HI gralldlllOther in

      BostOtl, yoLl know."

      "But why don't I have sisters and brothers and aunts and

      uncles and lots and lots of cousin`. Iike other girls do?"

      "Maybe you will have a sister or brother someday. And

      we might go to Boston and trv and find some cousins for

      you."

      "When are we going to Boston?"

      "Summer vacation, maybe. if you pass your catechism

      and make your first communion, and if yOtl do your

      homework and get promoted.''

      I 9,, 1

     

      "Chee! Other kids have relations without passing

      everything first."

      "Don't say, 'Gee,' and I've told you that a kid is a baby

      goat and not a child."

      "Sometimes you talk like Sister Veronica, Mama."

      Mary sighed and smiled. "I suppose I do. Once a

      schoolteacher, always a schoolteacher."

      "Well, it ain't every kid . . . girl . . . has a schoolteacher

      for a mama."

      Maggie-Now waited patiently to be corrected on the

      "ain't." To her surprise, her mother didn't correct her, but

      hugged her instead.

      Mary took ten dollar; from the bank and to her surprise

      Patsy gave her ten dollars more for the Boston trip.

      "Maybe you can talk your old lady into coming back to

      live with us."

      "It's nice that you like my mother, Patrick," she said,

      "but it seems odd. It's not your way."

      "She's never been against me.''

      "No one's against you, Patrick."

      "Oh, no?" he said with a crooked smile.

      "You are against yourself."

      He raised two fingers in the air. "May I leave the room,

      teacher?" he said sarcastically.

      They rode the day coach to Boston. To Maggie-Now it

      was like a trip to the moon. As they walked through the

      Boston streets, she said, surprised: "Why, they speak

      English!"

      "What did you think they spoke?"

      "Oh, Italian, Jewish, Latin."

      "No. English is the language of America."

      "Brooklyn's America. But Anastasia's father and mother

      speak Italian, there."

      "Many old people speak foreign languages because they

      came from foreign countries and never did learn English."

      "What does Grandma speak?"

      "English, of course."

      "But you said she came from Ireland."

      "They speak English there."

      "Why don't they speak Irish?"

      [ Y4 ]

     

      "Some do. They call it Gaelic. But most of them speak

      English with an Irish accent."

      "What's a . . . an . . . accent?"

      "The way people fix the words together when they speak

      and the different way they make the words sound."

      "Mama, I guess you're the smartest lady in the whole

      world."

      The Missus was a great disappointment to Maggie-Now.

      The girl's idea of a grandmother was a woman with a high

      stomach and a gingham apron tied about her waist, grey

      hair parted in the middle and steel-rimmed spectacles. She

      had this idea from a colored lithograph illustrating the

      poem "Over the river and through the woods, to

      grandmother's house we go." But Grandmother Moriarity


      wasn't like that at all. She was little and skinny and wore

      a black sateen dress and her hair was coal black and she

      wore it in curls on top of her head.

      Henrietta was Grandmother's sister and Mother's aunt.

      MaggieNow was instructed to call her "Aunt Henrietta."

      She didn't look like an aunt. A girl on Maggie-Now's

      block in Brooklyn had an aunt who was young and blonde

      and laughed a lot and smelled like sweet, sticky candy

      Aunt Henrietta, now, was old and withered and smelled

      like a plant that was dead but still standing in the dirt of

      the flower pot.

      She heard talk of Cousin Robbie, who was coming over

      that night. Robbie was Henrietta's son. Maggie-Now had

      seen a cousin in Brooklyn; he'd had shiny blond hair and

      wore a Norfolk suit with buckled knickerbockers, Buster

      Brown collar, Windsor tie, long black ribbed stockings and

      button shoes.

      She'd been disillusioned about her grandmother and her

      aunt. She didn't expect Cousin Robbie to be wearing a

      Buster Brown collar. But did he have to show up

      baldheaded and fat and making jokes about his big

      stomach which he called a bay window?

      He kissed Maggie-Now on the cheek. The kiss was like

      an exploded soap bubble. He handed her a square of

      blotting paper.

      "I always give out blotting paper with my wet kisses," he

      said. He waited. No one laughed. "Oh, well," he sighed.

      "I'd do my rabbit trick for you if I had a rabbit."

      Maggie-Now giggled. He gave her a quarter and ignored

      her for the rest of the evening.

      The three women and Robbie settled down to an

      evening of genealogy. "Let me see nor," said l'lary. "Pete

      married Liza . . .'

      ~ ~ 1

     

      "No," said Robbie. "Pete when he was three years old."

      "I'm sorry."

      "That's all right. That was thirty years ago. Adam

      married Liza. Let's see, Aunt Molly," he said to The

      Missus. "You married a Moriarity? Mikes" The Missus

      nodded. "I understand he died."

      "Yes," agreed The Missus. "That was some time ago,

      God rest his soul."

      "Whatever became of Roddy? Your wife's brother?"

      asked Mary.

      "Oh, him," sniffed Robbie. "He married a girl, name of

      Katie Fogarty. I remember the name well because it was

      the same name he had. He was a Fogarty, too.

      Understand, they were not relations. They just had the

      same name. Well, sir, when they got the license, the clerk

      didn't want to give it to them. He said it was insects or

      something."

      "What's that?" asked The Missus.

      "Oh, the baby might be born funny," explained Robbie.

      "How was the baby?" asked Aunt Henrietta.

      "They never had one," said Robbie.

      "What finally happened to Roddy?" asked Mary.

      "He moved to Brooklyn, where people is more

      broadminded, and, for all I know, he might be dead or

      still living."

      The saga of Roddy seemed dull to Maggie-Now. Lulled

      by the rise and fall of Robbie's voice, comforted by the

      warmth of the room and feeling safe surrounded by her

      mother, grandmother and aunt, she went into a half sleep.

      The conversation droned on. A word came up. A sharp

      word. A name. It kept piercing her drowsiness.

      "Sheila! "

      "No good," said Aunt Henrietta. Her voice was whippy

      and sharp, like a fly swatter coming down on a fly.

      "It was just that she had hard luck," said Robbie.

      "No good from the beginning, even if she was my grand-

      daughter," swatted Aunt Henrietta. "Took after her

      mother." (Swat!) "Aggie was no good."

      "Let the dead rest in peace," said Mary.

      "She was pretty, so pretty," said Robbie. "The youngest,

      the prettiest of all my daughters."

      1~ sac ]

     

      Maggie-Now was awake but she feigned sleep, knowing

      that the growm~ps would talk in a way she couldn't

      understand if they knew she was listening.

      "The way she was pretty was the ruin of her," said

      Robbie. "The boys were after her like bees after a honey

      flower by the time she was twelve." lie sounded the way

      people sounded at funerals.

      "She had a baby when she was fifteen," swatted Aunt

      Henrietta.

      "She was married at the time," said Robbie with dignity.

      "Seven months married," swatted back Aunt Henrietta.

      "It was a premature baby."

      "Like fun! Premature babies don't have fingernails. Rose

      did. Don't tell me!"

      "In Brooklyn," said The Missus, "an awful lot of first

      babies are premature. The trolled cars shakes the houses

      and makes them nervous."

      "Humpf!'' said Aunt I ienrietta.

      "I remember," said Mary, "when Aggie brought Sheila to

      visit us in Brooklyn, once. I guess Sheila was six or seven.

      And my, visas she pretty! Beautiful! I'd like to see her

      again."

      "No, you wouldn't, Mary," said Robbie. "She looks bad

      and lives poor. Where her man is no one knows. He shows

      up from time to time, though. She dives in a slum. And

      believe me, a Boston slum is something. She takes in

      washing and Lord knows how many children she has."

      "I'll go to see her before we leave Boston," said lYlary.

      "Not while you're staying in my house," said Aunt

      Henrietta.

      "It's half my house," said The Missus, "and don't tell

      Mary what not to do or she'll do it, the way she got

      married when her father told her not to."

      "Maybe it would be a good idea if she did go," said Aunt

      Henrietta. "Yes, go, Mary, and take your daughter so she

      sees what happens to a girl when she lets the fellers chase

      her. Not that you got to worry about that, Mary, the way

      she's so plain."

      "She is not plain," said 1 lary. She put her arm around

      the child. "She's not pretty the way Sheila was with blond

      curls and dimples and pink cheeks. She's handsome! Look

      at those wide cheekbones and the way her chin comes to

      sort of a point. Why, she has a face like a heart."

      ~ Y7 1

     

      Maggie-Now opened her eyes wide and stared hard into

      Aunt Henrietta's eyes, mutely daring her to contradict her

      mother.

      "She's got tan eyes," said Aunt Henrietta.

      "She has not!" said Mary. "She has golden eyes."

      "Tan!" insisted the old woman.

      "Now, Henrietta," said The Missus, "they're the same

      color y ours were when you w ere young."

      "She has golden eyes," conceded the old woman.

      "I promised I'd find cousins for you, Maggie-Now, and

      I will,' said Mary. "So be patient. Let me see." She

      consulted Robbie's directions on a slip of paper. "Turn

      right, go one block, no, three . . ." She lifted her veil

      because the chenille dots before her eyes made threes out

      of twos. "That's better. Two more blocks . . ."

      They climbed up four flights of stairs.
    Ilarv knocked

      quietly on the door. It was flung open with a bang.

      "Come in! Come in!" said a big woman.

      Her strong arms were bare to the shoulders. The front

      of her apron was wet. Her tousled hair was half blond,

      half brown. Her face shone with sweat.

      The room seemed to be boiling with life. A whole mob

      of children ran for cover when the visitors entered. They

      hid behind bundles of dirty wash standing on the floor

      and the smallest one burrowed into a loose pile of soiled

      clothes, half sorted, on the floor.

      The window shades ~ ere up and the sun, full of dusty

      motes which seemed to quiver with life, poured in through

      the open windows. A network of filled clotheslines

      obscured the sky outside the windows. A breeze was

      blowing and the drying clothes billowed and collapsed and

      writhed and gyrated. The clothes seemed alive. There

      were bundles of dirty wash on the floor. The chairs were

      filled with clothes waiting to be ironed. A clothesline

      strung across the kitchen had freshly ironed shirts on it,

      and a bubbling boiler stood on the gas stove with the

      dirtiest of the wash boiling in it.

      "Mary! " cried the big woman. She threw her arms

      around Mary and lifted her off the floor and swung her

      around. "Oh, Mary, I recognized you right away. You

      didn't change. You still

      ! 9~1

     

      look so sweet and so refined with your veil and gloves and

      all." Then she noticed Maggie-Now. "This yours?" she

      asked.

      "Mine," said Mary. "We call her Maggie-Now."

      "She's beautiful!" The big woman knelt down and put

      her arms around the child.

      "This is your cousin Sheila," said Mary.

      Sheila!

      Maggie-Now quivered in the woman's arms. Words she

      had heard when half asleep cane back to her. "No good!"

      "No good from the beginning!" "No good like her mother

      before her!" Maggie-Now was confused. How could

      someone who was "no good" be Sf, nice? Maybe this was

      another Sheila. But no. She heard her mother say:

      "This is Cousin Robbie's girl. Aunt Henrietta is her

      grandmother. The mother of Aunt Henrietta and of my

      mother is her great grandmother and yours, too. That

      makes you cousins. There! "

      "Do I have little cousins, too?" asked Maggie-Now.

      "You certainly do," said Sheila. She called gently: "Come

      out, come out, wherever you are!" No response. Then she

      hollered: "Come out or I'll give it to you! Good!"

      They came out of the dirty wash. There were four of

      them all girls. The youngest was two, the next four, the

      third six and the oldest ten. Sheila lined them up, pulling

      a dirty sock out of the four-year-old's hair.

      "Kids, this is your cousin Maggie-Now what came all the

      way from Brooklyn to see yoga."

      The four girls and Maggie-Now stared solemnly at each

      other. The four-year-old was wearing a thumb guard. She

      pulled it off, took two good sucks on her thumb and

      replaced the guard.

      All of the girls had tangled golden curls, heavenly blue

      eyes, dirty pink cheeks and dimples that went in and out

      like the first stars of night. They wore odds and ends of

      clothing which made them look like the illustrations of the

      children who had followed the Pied Piper of Hamelin.

      "Oh, Sheila," said Mary, "they're pretty. So pretty the

      way you were.... I mean, there you stand, Sheila, four

      times over."

      "Oh, go on, Mary, I v. as never as pretty as my kids.

      Anyhow. this is Rose, the oldest, this one is Violet, the

      thumb sucker is

      1 99 1

     

      Daisy and Lily's the baby. She's two."

      "What pretty names."

      "I call them my bow-key," said Sheila.

      "Why, they've all got fingernails," said Maggie-Now clearly.

      "Oh, Maggie-Now," noaned Mary.

      "Oh, my sainted grandmother," laughed Sheila. "Will she

      ever let up on me? She told my father . . ."

      To change the subject, Mary asked: "what are you going

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026