"Want to eat now, them''
    "Let's see." He lifted a foot out of the dishpan and
   watched it drip. "Not yet. Me feet lin't done yet."
    He was content. He looked fondly at IZjS wife. She was
   teasing a lock of hair; making it frizzy by holding one hair
   and pushing the others up on it in a tangled ball.
    He was proud of her. >Jo matter how hard she worked
   in the house or taking care of their son, she always
   dressed up for his homecoming. She got into her corsets
   and tied on a bustle pad (not that she needed one) and
   pinned the lace ruffles to her corset cover (not that she
   needed them either). The bustle and ruffles filled her out
   more and Big Red liked a well-filled-out woman.
    Her dusty blond hair was in dips and waves and the rat
   made her pompadour stand up high. That was the way she
   had worn it when he first met her and she hadn't changed
   her hair style a bit in ten ~years.
    Come to think of it, few women changed their hair style
   after they married. You could tell how long a woman had
   been married by looking at her hair style. He recalled
   when he was a rookie cop keeping company with Lottie.
   He and three other rookies had been a quartet going
   around to different precincts and singing:
   And may there be no motlrning of the bar, When I put
   our to sea.
   Over the biers of dead pol cement
     By coincidence, all four of the rookies had married in
   the same year and had been each other's groomsmen and
   ushers. And all of their wives still wore their hair the same
   way.
     Why is this? he pondered. Is it because they try out
   differentt styles to attract a feller acid when they land him
   they hold 07Z to the old hair style because i, worked in the
   first place? Or is it that they don't care no more after they
   got a feller hooked? He realized he was thinking too much
   and he shuddered. I mustn't think so deep, he advised
   himself. Nothing good comes 071t of deep thinking.
   Il~he~` a man thinks deep, he ain't contented MO more.
   And he was a contented man. He loved his wife and his
   SOn
                      1 9 1
                        
   and his job and his home and his fellow cops. He didn't
   love his mother-in-law. A man wasn't supposed to love his
   mother-in-law. That was the tradition. But he loved
   everything else about his work and home. He even loved
   washdays. Their weekly recurrence assured him that life
   was a mighty sure and safe proposition.
    Washday was a weekly ritual. Before Big Red left for
   duty on Monday mornings, Lottie had him lift the
   water-filled, copperhottom washboiler up onto the stove
   for her. Of course she could have put the empty boiler on
   herself and filled it from the teakettle, but she loved little
   attentions like that from her husband. As she wrote to an
   older sister in Weehawken: It keeps HIS sweethearts.
    She shaved half a bar of I;irkman's yellow soap over the
   soaking clothes, put the cover on, let it come to a boil,
   throttled it down to simmer and then set up the boiled
   dinner for supper.
    She filled her iron cook pot half full of water, threw in
   a hunk of corned beef, a whole head of cabbage and six
   unpared potatoes. When that came to a boil, she put on
   a tight cover and got it down to simmering. It cooked all
   day long.
    At noon, the boiled dinner smelled like boiling black
   socks and the laundry smelled like overcooked cabbage.
   At supper, Big Red's plate would be filled with shreds of
   boiled beef that got between his teeth. (That's whv the
   shot glass on the table always held toothpicks.) Next the
   beef would be limp black cabbage and water-logged
   potatoes.
   That was exactly the way Big Red liked it!
    He wouldn't eat that particular dinner cooked any other
   way. Once when Lottie's mother was sick and Lottie had
   to be with her, Big Red had had to eat out. He had
   ordered a corned-beefand-cabbage dinner. The beef came
   in a smooth unshredded slice, the cabbage was in tender
   and still-green leaves and the potatoes mealy. Big Red
   told the waiter to take it all back; that it wasn't fit for a
   clog to eat.
    At half-hour intervals, Lottie turned the cooking boiled
   dinner upside down in the pot with a wooden spoon and
   stirred the clothes around in the boiler with a sawed-off
   broomstick.
   Lottie was funny for broomsticks sawed off. She must
   have
                      1 101
                        
   had a dozen in the closet. Why, a broom was no more
   than half used when she had Big Red saw it down for a
   wasUstick. As she wrote to another sister who lived in
   Flatbush: Jimmy likes to make wasksticks for 7;7le. Things
   like that keep us sweethearts.
     She sang lustily as she stirred the simmering socks and
   shirts and food.
                 l lIe ice Illan
   1 a nice man....
     At noon, Widdy, the son, came home from school for
   lunch. They shared a pick-up lunch of ham bologna,
   potato salad, coffee, hard poppyseed rolls and charlotte
   7~u.sse from the baker's. It was hardly a pick-up lunch
   but Lottie called it that because, like the boiled dinner, a
   pic17~-up lunch was traditional for washdays.
     About Widdy: He was the pride of his father's heart.
   Big Red was sure they broke the mold when Widdy fell
   out of it.
     "My kid," he'd brag to his fellow cops, "is a plain,
   ordinary, everyday kid. Nothing fancy. No A's on his
   report card. No sir! He makes straight C's. Oh, maybe a
   D once in a while in deportment," said Big Red modestly,
   not liking to brag. "That's the way he is and I wouldn't
   want him no different."
     If it were possible for Big Red to have a fly in his
   ointment, his son's name would be it. The kid's full name
   was De Witt Xavier Shawn. He had been named for a
   ferryboat.
     It was the time Lottie and Tirn had been going steady
   for a couple of years. One summer's day, he took her on
   a policemen's picnic up the Hudson. They drifted away
   from the other couples and stood alone on the bank. She
   wore a floppy leghorn hat with a big pink rose on it and
   black velvet streamers.
   "Somebody looks mighty pretty today," he said.
   "Oh, go on," she said. "I bet you say that to all the girls."
   "That I do. So why shouldn't I say it to me best girl?"
     "Timmy," she said out of the blue, "the time is come
   when we got to get married."
     His eyes rolled wildly It the suddenness of it. He was
   crazy about her and had always s intended to marry her
   but he felt trapped all the same.
                      ~ 711
                        
    "I been intending to ask you meself someday. Now you
   spoiled the surprise."
   "When was you going to ask me, Timmy?"
					     					 			 />    "Oh, when I got to be a sergeant or a lieutenant on the
   force." (He was a rookie at the time.)
   "Well, I went and asked you. Now what do you say?"
   "I accept you," he said in a deep voice.
    He felt relief. Now it was done. Now they would be
   married and he wouldn't have to go through the Purgatory
   of making up his mind.
   "Oh, Timmy," she said, her eyes full of happy tears.
    He took her in his arms and gave her a kiss that
   knocked the leghorn hat off her head. A steamboat came
   by. The captain, seeing the couple in a locked embrace,
   blew the whistle in salute. The passengers waved, and
   hollered and whistled and yelled things like: "Does your
   mother know you're out?" and, "Oh, you kid!" Big Red
   released Lottie and turned away, embarrassed. Lottie
   picked up her hat and waved it at the steamboat,
   screaming:
   "We're gonna get married!"
    "AI1 your troubles should be little ones," yelled the
   captain through his megaphone.
    As the boat steamed out of sight, or before, Lottie
   caught the name painted on the side: The De Witt Clinton.
    "If the first's a boy," she said, "we'll call him De Witt in
   remembrance of the boat."
    So the kid was baptised De Witt Xavier; the Xavier
   because it was a Catholic name and because Lottie said
   that parents owed it to children to give them an interesting
   middle initial.
    As a baby, they called him De Witt. When he started to
   walk, they called him Witty because he wouldn't respond
   to De Witt. When he started school, he told his teacher
   his name was Widdy. (He couldn't articulate the t sound.)
   Lottie thought it was cute, and from that time on he was
   called Widdy.
    Often Big Red wished he had not been so beguiled at
   the time and had insisted that the kid be named Mike or
   Pete or even Tim.
   He sat in his parlor, then, contented, soaking his feet and
   trying
                      1 121
                        
   not to think too deep. Lottie was folding towels and
   singing her iceman song under her breath.
   . . . of one thing 1 am sure. There's something about his
   business That affects his temperature.
   "Where's the kid?" he asked.
   "Over to Mama's."
   "Why? "
   "He's eating supper over there."
   "What for?"
    "Well, Mama took him to the butcher's with her and
   they had these rabbits hanging outside a barrel with hair
   on? You know. So Widdy wanted a rabbit- foot for luck
   and the butcher wouldn't sell just a foot so Mama had to
   buy the whole rabbit and she couldn't eat it all by herself
   so he's eating over there."
    She got up, went to him and ran her fingers through the
   few red curls left on his head.
   "Why'n't you tell me before?" he said.
    He gave her a slap on the backside. He felt that, with
   their child out of the house, he could take a liberty. He
   lifted one foot out of the dishpan. It Dolled like a
   mummy's foot.
    "Listen, Jimmy," she said. "Dry your feet and go down
   to Mike's for a pint of beer and we'll eat."
    "Sure." But he looked ill at ease. "But first I got a
   letter today. It came to the station house." He stiffened,
   reached back, and pulled a letter out of iliS hind pocket.
   "Who from?"
   "Me mother."
   "What does she want now?"
   "Now' And 'tis five years since I heard from her last'"
   "What does she say?"
   "I don't know. I saved it to read in front of you."
    "Aw, Timmy, that's all right. You could've read your
   letter in the station house."
   "We share."
   "I know. Tllat's what keeps us sweethearts."
                    ~ ~ ~ 1
                       
    "From Ireland." He turned the letter over and back.
   "County Kilkenny." He dreamed:
    "Ah, I can see it plain, Lottie, the Fedders and all. And
   me mother's sod shanty with the rushes always blowing off
   the roof and the clay hearth and the black pot ever on
   the bob and the skinny cow and the few bony chickens
   and the praties ve scratched out of the ground . . ."
    And, thought Lottie, not bitterly, his mother standing ill
   the doo~r~voy arid holding vat her hand once a month for
   the letter with the ten-dollar hill in it that he sends and his
   mother afar,' sister never writing to say, yes, no, or kiss my
   foot.
    "And," dreamed Timmy, "the village walk and the girls
   with no corsets on and the skirts turned back to show the
   red petticoat and their hair flying in the wind . . ." He
   sighed. "Ah so. And I wouldn't go back there for a million
   dollars."
    "Will you read the Ictter now," she said, a little piqued
   about the girls not wearing corsets, "or will you frame it?"
   He opened the letter and read.
   Estee ned Son: I take my pen in hand to compose this
   sorrowful epistle . . .
   "Me mother can't read or write," he explained.
   "Go on!" she said in disbelief.
    "Bertie, the Broommaker, wrote it for her. I bet vou he's
   still living! Why, he must he seventy . . . no, eighty years
   . . ."
   "Will you read or will you frame?" she asked. He read:
   . . . to convey to you, esteemed son, the sorrowful tidings
   that one who once was with us and who had a loving place
   in our hearts and who was esteemed 'oy all, has heeded
   the call of a Higher Being, and is now in A Fix.
   "Who died, rest his soul?" asked Lottie.
   "Nobody yet. Let me read."
   Oh, better, esteemed son, 'that we two lay sleeping in our
   nest in the churchyard sod," than to endure the grief of
   The Fix she is in.
    Big Red paused to vipe a tear from his eye and to give
   his vife a pleading look.
                     ~ id 1
                        
    "You read it to yourself, ]~hl~mNr, dear," she said,
   'and tell me after."
    He mumbled through sollle more of the letter and
   suddenly let out a snarling cry and stood upright in the
   dishpan of water.
   "What?" she cried out. "Oh, sweetheart, what?"
     "The blacktard!" he snarled. "The durrrtee black'ard!"
   He stepped out of the dishpan and strode up and down
   the parlor with Lottie following hint w ith a towel. "Oh,
   me baby sister. Me baby sister," he moaned.
     She tried to comfort him. "NVe all got to go someday,
   TinllllN darling."
   "She's not dead. But 'twas better if she vas."
   "Oh, why-, my sweetheart?'
     "Because a black'ard by the nallle of . . ." he consulted
   the letter, ". . . ]2. D. Moore, l squire, scandalized her
   name and now he won't marry her." He sobbed in big
   gulps.
     "Sit here," said Lottie gently, "and I'll dr!r NrOur poor
   tired feet. "
     She knelt before him and patted his puckered feet dry.
   He wept until his feet w ere wt ll dried. Then he made a
   fist a 
					     					 			nd shoals it at the ceiling.
     "I'm going to Ireland a ld beat the be-Jesus out of him,
   God willing," he said.
   "Sure, sure," she soothed. "But where will you find the
   money?"
     "Let me think," he said. He sat there and thought deep
   while she put his socks and shoes on his feet.
     "I could ask the boys to run a benefit dance for me like
   the! did for Connie Clancy ~ he time his mother passed
   away in Chicago and he needing money to go there for
   the funeral. I could say me mother's at deatil's door, God
   forgive me, and ask for a month's sick leave. . ."
     Her heart was in a panic. 11 he left me to co to Ireland,
   she thought, would he eater cr,me hack?
   "No, I can't go."
   "Why? "
     "Me examination for sergcallt: It comes Up in two
   weeks. If I take it, I'd have a hard rime trying to pass it.
   If I don't take it, I won't pass a-tall."
   1 I, 1
     "I wouldn't care," she said. "I got stuck on you when you
   vitas just a plain rookie. Remember?"
     "I'd care. But not for meself. Did I not take the same
   examination four limes already and not pass and not care
   a damn except for you? That's why I keep on trying. If I
   die a sergeant, sure, you'd get a bigger widder's pension."
     What have I done in my life to deserve this good man, she
   thought.
     She remembered the night when he had been two hours
   late coming home from worl;. One of the horses pulling
   the car he was in had dropped dead and held up traffic.
   Not knowing about the horse, Lottie was sure that Tim
   had been beaten to death by the Hudson Dusters or
   hatcheted by one of the Chinese tongs. She had spent the
   two waiting hours on her knees in prayer.
     Please, Holy Mother, let him be alive. Let him be drunk or
   with another woman just so he's alive. Oh, Holy Mother,
   intercede for me!
   Hail, Mary, full of grace . . .
     I'll give him everything . . . everything I've got to give. I'll
   never nag him again. I'll give him everything he asks for....
     Now he was asking to go to his mother and sister. But
   how could she bear to let him go? She couldn't. But
   because she loved him so, she made it easy for him to go.
     "Take the examination next year. Skip this year. It's only
   . . . well, it's only a year. And you'll only be gone a few
   weeks and what's a few weeks in al] the rest of the life we
   will have together?"
     He doesn't really want to go, she thought. I know it. He
   wouldn't leave me.
     "I'll buy you a new dress for the benefit dance. You'll be
   the belle of the ball."
     "I don't want a new dress. I want only you. Old, Timmy,
   you won't stop loving me while you're gone?"
   "Absence makes the heart grow fonder," he said.
     Out of sight, out of mind, she thought. Will he come
   back? He always says he hates County Kilkenny. But an
   Irishman loves the land he came from. All the songs they
   love prove it. She ran over some of the songs in her mind.
   "I'll take you home again, Kathleen." And, "Where my
   heart is,
                      [ 161
                        
   I am going," and, "Ireland must be heaven for my mother
   came from there." And . . .
     "Lottie," he said, putting his hand on her head, and
   flattening her pompadour down to the rat. "Lottie, tell me
   not to go and I'll stay and not hold it against you."
     There were nine of us girls, she thought, and times was
   hard. Annie died and Jeanie and Katie went in the convent.
   Eileen and Martha went living out. Girly and Maudie and
   Wily got married. I was the last one left and getting nearly
   thirty. I never had a feller until I met Timmy. If it hadn't-a
   been for him, I'd be a old maid; old Aunt Lottie living with
   one of my married sisters; a servant girl without pay and
   bringing up her kids instead of my own.
     And Timmy's good to ?Ifama the five dollars he gives her
   every week. And I'm homely but he thinks I'm beautiful. He
   loves my cooking and I can't cook worth a nickel. I'm older