The man started and looked up. With an air of surprise he glanced round the dingy room, at his wife, at the whimpering children, at the dispassionate baby enthroned in his high chair, and at the majestic profile of Darrow. “It’s the rottenness of the whole blooming show,” he said doggedly. “It ain’t just the hole I’m in. I could put up with that if it wasn’t for the rottenness of it all.”
“I know,” replied Stephen quietly. “There are times when the show does look rotten, but we’re all in it together.”
Then, because he felt that he could stand it no longer, he turned abruptly, and went out into the dusk of the area. In a few minutes Darrow joined him, and in silence the two men felt their way up the brick steps to the bare ground of the front yard.
“I don’t know what I ought to do, but I’ve got to do something,” said Stephen, when he had opened the gate and passed through to the pavement where the car waited. Lifting his sensitive young face, he stared up at the row of decaying tenements. “What places for homes!”
For a moment Darrow looked at him without speaking; and then he answered in a voice which sounded as impersonal as the distant rumble of street cars. “I thought you might be interested because these houses, these and the other rows on the next block or two, are part of the Culpeper estate.”
“The Culpeper estate?” repeated Stephen in an expressionless tone; and raising his eyes again he looked up at the bleak houses. In that instant, it seemed to him that he was seeing, not the sharp projection of the roofs against the ashen sky, but a long line of pleasant and prosperous generations. Beyond him stood his father, beyond his father stood his grandfather, beyond the tranquil succession of his grandfathers stood—what? Civilization? Humanity?
“Do you mean,” he asked quietly, “that we—our family—own these houses?”
“The whole block, and the next, and the next. It is the Culpeper estate. You’ve never seen ’em before, I reckon. I doubt even if your father has ever seen ’em. The agent attends to all this, and if the agent didn’t see that the rents were as high as people would pay, or were paying in the next places, he would be soon out of a job. I’m not blaming him, you know. I’ve got a son-in-law who is a real estate agent. It’s just one of the cases where it’s nobody’s fault, and everybody’s.”
Without replying, Stephen turned away and got into the car. He felt bruised and sick, and he wanted to be alone, to think things out by himself in the darkness. “This is only one instance,” he thought, as they started down the dim street toward the white blaze of the business quarter in the distance. “Only one out of millions! In every city. All over the world it is the same. Wherever there is wealth it casts its shadow of poverty.”