come into Mike's fortune. The reform party won the next
   election, and, true to its platform, the new administration
   started the Big Cleanup. The bright, new District Attorney
   polished up his armor, buckled himself into it and went
   out after the grafters crying, "Corruption! Corruption! " all
   the way. Little grafters ran for their holes. Medium-sized
   grafters, like Moriarity, couldn't find holes tc, hide in.
    The Big Cheese saved his rind, that is, his skin, by
   turning state's evidence. Officious men came to Mike
   Moriarity's house and shook rattling papers in his face and
   attached everything he had: his house and furniture and
   stable and horses and carriage and even Mary's piano.
   Too late, Mike wished he had let Mary take it with her.
    The men busted open the locked door of his desk and
   attached deeds, notes, stocks and bonds. They even
   attached a couple of bankbooks stamped Accost Canceled.
   One reformer, a plainclothes man, found Mike's last
   withdrawal in an old sock under Mike's mattress. The sock
   held two thousand dollars in small bills. The reformer
   pocketed the money and neglected to give Mike a receipt.
   Probably he neglected to turn in the money, too.
    The only things they couldn't touch were the house that
   Mike had deeded over to Mary and Patsy, and a paid-up
   life-insurance policy in The Missus' name.
    Moriarity, along with a dozen others, was indicted. It
   was in all the papers.
    Patsy, commenting on the indictment to Mary, said: "So
   I was never good enough for your father. So he always
   looked down on me. But I'm the one what's looking down
   on him, now. The thief!"
    "Oh, Patrick," she said, tears coming to her eyes, "don't
   call him that."
                     [ 7S ]
                        
    He felt ashamed. Wl~y do I say things like that to her,
   he thought. I get no satisfactioiZ alit of it. It Flakes me feel
   like Jack the Ripper, or somebody.
    "There now, Mary," he said. "Who am I to talk? Did not
   one of me own relations steal a pig in Ireland? Yes."
    She smiled through her tears and looked up at him with
   her hands clasped appealingly on her breast. "Did he,
   Patrick? Did he? "
   "Sure," he said. "But be was a relation by marriage only."
    So Mike was indicted for graft and corruption. But he
   never stood trial. Just before the trial. he had a stroke and
   his "ticker" gave out.
    It was nearly night when they got home from the
   funeral. Mary sat in the dark kitchen. Her face was pale
   and drawn. Patsy tried to find something ~ omforting to
   say to her.
   "After all, he was your father," he said.
   "Yes."
   "And he was good to you."
     "Not always, Patrick I remember 1 must have been
   about ten years old when I thought I didn't like him. I
   thought he wasn't nice to my mother and it seemed that
   he was always punishing me or scolding me.
     "One night, I suppose he got free tickets somewhere, he
   took me over to Manhattan to hear a singer. I remember
   it was snowing and everything looked so beautiful. I had
   a little white muff and tippet with ermine tails. There was
   an old woman selling violets on the street. I remember the
   cold, sweet smell. He bought a bunch and pinned them to
   my muff. He gave the old woman a bill and he wouldn't
   take his change.
     "He had a friend who had a high-class saloon. We sat in
   the ladies' back parlor, of course. My father introduced
   me to the man as though I were a grown-up lady. The
   man bowed as he shook my hand. He served me a big
   glass of lemonade on a silver tray. There was a tablespoon
   of claret in the lemonade to make it pink and a cherry on
   top. I thought it was wonderful. Papa and the man had a
   brandy together and talked about old times in Ireland.
                      1-6 1
                        
     "The man had left the door leading into the saloon open
   and I saw it all. The bar was beautiful! All the shining
   cut-glass decanters on the shelves with silver stoppers and
   glasses as thin as bubbles and that big mirror over the bar
   with a filigreed brass frame and oh, the chandelier with
   cut-glass crystals, or do they call them prisms? It was so
   beautiful with the gas lights in ruby bowls here and
   there....
     "Then we went to the concert. I don't remember now
   what the lady sang, except her encore song, 'The Last
   Rose of Summer.' I saw Papa take out his handkerchief
   and wipe his eyes.
     "After the concert we were walking down to the cab
   stand and there was this little store still open. They sold
   trinkets and things. Papa took me in and told me to pick
   out a little bracelet or a locket. But there was a pair of
   side combs in the showcase. They were tortoiseshell and
   all full of rhinestones. I couldn't stop looking at them.
     "Papa said, 'You know you're too little to wear them
   and they'll be out of style by the time you grow up. Now
   here's a nice little locket. It opens. . . ' But I couldn't take
   my eyes off the combs.
     "Then Papa said: 'You krlow you can't wear them. What
   do you want them fort' I said I didn't know. Then he said:
   'You want them just to have them, don't you?' I said, yes,
   and he told the lady to wrap them up
     "I loved my father that night. I loved him so much I
   didn't know what to do.
     "That was the only time he ever took me out. Well,
   there came times after that night when I felt I didn't like
   him very much. When I got that feeling, I'd go and take
   the combs out of the tissue paper and hold them and I'd
   feel the same love I felt that night when he took me to the
   concert."
     After the funeral, The Missus took her insurance money
   and went to Boston to live cut her days there with
   Henrietta, her widowed sister. Patsy W1S sorry to see her
   go. This contrary man really loved his mother-in-law.
     "She's like me own mother was," Patsy told his wife.
   "She sees no fault in me."
                     ~ 7~ ]
                        
    Well, after the reform administration cleaned out all the
   Tammany grafters, they put in their own grafters. Once
   more, tithes were collected from the brothels. Once again,
   small storekeepers paid "insurance" against plate-glass
   windows being broken. Again, the poor Jewish merchants
   whose pushcarts lined both side of the curbs on Moore,
   Siegal and McKibben Streets, paid protection "rent"
   against their pushcarts being overturned and the
   merchandise trampled in the dirty gutters. The rent was
   fifty cents a week but often the grafters settled for a
   quarter.
    The citizens didn't like the new administration. They
   stood around on corners and in the saloons and sat on
   where grass should have been in the public parks and
   knocked the reformers.
   
					     					 			;  "It stands to reason Where there is politics, there's graft.
   Right? "
   "Right."
   "So we expect graft Rio matter what party's in. Right?"
   "Right. '
    "But when TammanN collected graft we got something
   back `'ut of its'
   "That's right."
   "Yeah. Like they ran block parties for us and paid the
   band."
    "And they ran free excursions up the Hudson and
   everything on the house."
   "Sure."
     'Take me: The time I was laid Up with my broken leg.
   Why, they sent over a basket of groceries every week."
     "Take this guy: I forgot his name. They paid to bury
   him when he died with no insurance and his wife divas
   afraid she'd have to plant him in Potter's Field."
     "Why sure! Many's the ton of coal they gave me that
   hard vinter when I couldn't get work."
     "Well, this here party what's in noNv takes graft but
   what do we get out of it?"
   "Nothing. Just plain nothing.'
     So when the time came, these complaining citizens went
   to the polls and voted out the reform parts and got the
   old ticket bac
   in again. And some of them were so anxious to get
   Tammany back in again that they voted two or three times
   the way they had been taught to do by the Machine.
                     L~? 1
                       
    Well before this time, Patrick Dennis Moore put away
   all his dreams and hopes. He hated his job but wouldn't
   dare give it up with no other work to be had. He was
   grudgingly grateful that he was working for the city and
   couldn't be laid off because times were hard. He realized,
   nova, that he would always be a street cleaner. That was
   all he had to look forward to. He would always have to
   live in the shabby house on Ewen Street.
    His last dream had died out when his mother-in-law
   went to live with her sister in Boston- instead of with
   him and Mary and took all her insurance motley with
   her.
               ~ CHAPTER TWELVE >~
   MARY kept the upstairs rented and banked the rent
   money and used it throughout the years to keep the taxes
   and the interest on the mortgage paid up and sometimes
   she was able to pay a little on the principal. She was liked
   and respected on Ewen Street (which, for some reason,
   was now called Manhattan Avenue). The neighbors
   referred to her as "that refined schoolteacher what's
   married to that slob yore know. The street cleaner? "
     Mary became friends with Father Flynn, the priest who
   had performed her marriage ceremony and never criticized
   her and Patsy for having a civil ceremony first. One time
   when his housekeeper took a week off to visit a married
   daughter in Albany, Mary went to the parish house every
   day and cooked the priest's food and laundered his collars
   and mended the torn lace on his alb. Thereafter, she
   visited him once in a while or he came to her home. They
   exchanged opinions on the news of the day and analyzed
   the rapid changes that were taking place that would
   eventually change the once dreamy village of Williamsburg
   into a city slum.
     They had something in common in that both were
   strangers in the neighborhood, she having come from the
   prosperous and fashionable Bushwick set tion, and he
   from the Middle West.
                     ~ ~9 1
                        
    Father Flynn had been born and reared in a small town
   in Minnesota. He had been educated in Midwestern
   schools. At college he had excelled in sports: football,
   baseball, basketball, hockey and especially skiing. He had
   been popular with faculty and classmates.
    The time came, while he was still young, to put aside his
   dearly loved sports and his no less dearly loved
   contemporaries and, as an ordained priest, to take up his
   life and his work in an alien place. His Bishop had said:
   "You'll have your work cut out for you there." It was true.
    It was a swarming neighborhood. Fifty per cent of the
   population were Irish and Gcrman with a few English and
   Scottish families. l here was a neighborhood saying that
   the Irish and the Germans "got along good together."
   Evidently this was so as there was a great deal of
   intermarriage between the Germans and the Irish.
    The Jews and Italian; were called foreigners by the Irish
   and Germans, presumably because they were not Nordic.
   There were some Dutch families left over from the time
   when Brooklyn had been called Breuckelen. They were
   classified with the Germans. Because there vrere some
   similarities in the languages, Germans were called
   Dutchmen. Then there were Poles, Hungarians, Swedes,
   some Chinese who lived among bundles of laundry in
   rooms back of one-windowed stores, sloe-eyed Armenians
   and swarthy Greeks.
    There revere even some Indians. They were of the
   Canarsie tribe and they made their homes in run-down,
   abandoned, onewindowed stores. The ot'Tier nationalities
   looked down on them. No one believed they were Indians
   because they dressed like everyone else and did not wear
   feathers in their hair. They were called gypsies.
    There divas a small colony that was hard to classify.
   They had their own small neighborhood within the larger
   neighborhood. All the men worked in a one-story factory,
   where, stripped to the waist, they stood iTI lurid firelight
   blowing their lives into long tubes with a glob of molten
   glass on the end, to make green beer bottles. They wen
   loosely classified as Bohemians and referred to as
   Bobunks.
   To add to the confusion, the nationalities were split up
   among
                     ~ y  1
                        
   themselves. The Jews, although of the same race and
   religion, had the patina of diverse nationalities. There
   were English Jews and German Jews; Russian Jews, Polish
   Jews and Armenian Jews. There were dark-haired,
   dark-eyed nervous Germans and placid, flaxen-haired,
   blue-eyed Germans. Some were Catholic, some were
   Lutherans. There were Protestant Irish and Catholic Irish
   and they were continually breaking each other's heads over
   Irish freedom and religion and opinions of Great Britain.
   Also, there were the much-feared Sicilian Italians, who
   were always making vendettas against other Italians the
   aftermath of some internecine warfare back in Italy's
   history. Many a kid in the neighborhood was kept in line
   by his parents telling him that the Blackhand would get
   him if he didn't watch out.
    There were many churches: Roman and Greek Catholic
   and Russian Orthodox. There was a Polish Catholic
   church where the priest spoke Polish. There was the high
   church of England and the low church. There were
   Methodists, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Baptists, Unitarians
   and many other sects. All scattered over Brooklyn.
    Th 
					     					 			e steamship companies dumped all races, all creeds
   onto Ellis Island. Many of the immigrants went out to the
   Middle West and the West and a few went South. But
   many of them settled in Brooklyn: first because they
   wanted to be among Lands7na7777 who were already
   there, and second because they didn't have the means to
   go any farther.
    Whenever a few people of one sect got together, they
   built a church forthwith. There was a place of worship on
   nearly every block. There were temples or synagogues,
   twin-spired stone churches, modest wooden churches, a
   mosaic-domed church, a religious meeting place in a
   vacant store with a whitewashed cross on the window, a
   gathering in a hall over a beer saloon. For a while, a few
   people gathered in a tent set up on a vacant lot to worship
   in their own shouting way and to roll on the sawdusted
   ground in their religious ecstasy. And there were wan-
   dering evangelists who stood on street confers angrily
   shouting out The Message.
   Brooklyn was truly the city of churches.
    There were so many races; so many creeds and sects all
   huddled together in an area not more than a mile square.
   The people
                      [81 1
                        
   called each other names: Mick, Heinie, Guinea, Hunky,
   Polack, Wop, Sheeny, Squarehead, Bohunk, Chink and
   Greaseball. They called the few Indians, who they believed
   were really gypsies, riggers.
    Mary was of great help to Father Flynn. During her
   years of teaching public school, she'd had pupils of many
   nationalities and faiths. She had a general knowledge of
   the habits, temperaments and customs of various races
   and religions through her contact with her pupils. Father
   Flynn drew on her knowledge. He was grateful to her for
   it. It made his parish work somewhat simpler.
    Although Mary loved her home and loved her husband,
   she wasn't happy in her marriage. She was unhappy
   because Patrick did not love her. He was considerate
   toward her as considerate as a person of his cynical
   nature could be but he simply did not love her and she
   knew he never would. Withdrawn and sad after her
   father's disgrace and death, and lonesome after her
   mother had moved to Boston, she turned more and more
   to her church, where she always found comfort.
    She went to Mass each morning and lit a candle daily to
   the Virgin Mary and prayed for a child.
              ~ CHAP7~ER THIRTEEN ~
   MARY and Patrick had been married nearly three and a
   half years when she gave birth to a daughter. She had a
   very hard time. It was a dry birth and she was in agonising
   labor for two days. Her doctor told her not to have any
   more children. He told her that she wasn't built for
   childbearing.
    His warning meant nothing to Mary at that time. She
   was so quietly and intensely happy. Father Flynn came to
   the nursing home to bless the baby and to pray for the
   mother's speedy recovery. He gave her a small medal of
   the Holy Child to pin to her baby's shirt. She said:
    "I have something all of my own, Father. A child to love
   and to care for . . . a child who will grow to love me."
                     [ 82 ]
                        
   Patsy suggested that Mary name the child after her
   mother. "That's nice of you, Patrick, but I don't want to
   call her Molly even if it is a nickname for Mary."
   "Mary, then," he said. "There is no grander name."
   "No."
    "Me mother's name was Lizzie," he said tentatively.
   "Elizabeth's a good name."
    "Patrick, I'd like to name her after the one who sort of
   brought us together."
   "Biddy?" he asked horrified.
    "Oh, no!" She smiled. "After that girl you liked so . . .
   you know, Margaret Rose? It's such a pretty name. And
   I'm so happy that I have a baby now that I want to give
   her the name as a present to you, sort of."
    She saw his eyes flicker when she mentioned the name.
   She didn't know whether it was from surprise, pleasure,
   anger or memories.
   "You will please yourself," he said brusquely.
    "We'll have to get godparents," she said. "I don't know