Annie Kilburn - Page 83/183

Lyra interrupted them. "Well, I think now that Annie is here, we'd better

not let her get away without showing her the Works."

"Oh--oh--decidedly! I'll go with you, with great pleasure. Ah!" He bustled

about, putting the things together on his table, and then reaching for

the Panama hat on a hook behind it. There was something pathetic in his

eagerness to do what Lyra bade him, and Annie fancied in him the uneasy

consciousness which an elderly husband might feel in the presence of those

who met him for the first time with his young wife. At the outer office

door they encountered Jack Wilmington.

"I'll show them through," he said to his uncle; and the old man assented

with, "Well, perhaps you'd better, Jack," and went back to his room.

The Wilmington Stocking-Mills spun their own threads, and the first room

was like what Annie had seen before in cotton factories, with a faint

smell of oil from the machinery, and a fine snow of fluff in the air, and

catching to the white-washed walls and the foul window sashes. The tireless

machines marched back and forth across the floor, and the men who watched

them with suicidal intensity ran after them barefooted when they made

off with a broken thread, spliced it, and then escaped from them to

their stations again. In other rooms, where there was a stunning whir of

spindles, girls and women were at work; they looked after Lyra and her

nephew from under cotton-frowsed bangs; they all seemed to know her, and

returned her easy, kindly greetings with an effect of liking. From time to

time, at Lyra's bidding, the young fellow explained to Annie some curious

feature of the processes; in the room where the stockings were knitted she

tried to understand the machinery that wrought and seemed to live before

her eyes. But her mind wandered to the men and women who were operating it,

and who seemed no more a voluntary part of it than all the rest, except

when Jack Wilmington curtly ordered them to do this or that in illustration

of some point he was explaining. She wearied herself, as people do in such

places, in expressing her wonder at the ingenuity of the machinery; it was

a relief to get away from it all into the room, cool and quiet, where half

a dozen neat girls were counting and stamping the stockings with different

numbers. "Here's where _I_ used to work," said Lyra, "and here's

where I first met Mr. Wilmington. The place is _full_ of romantic

associations. The stockings are all one _size_, Annie; but people like

to wear different numbers, and so we try to gratify them. Which number do

_you_ wear? Or don't you wear the Wilmington machine-knit? _I_

don't. Well, they're not _dreams_ exactly, Annie, when all's said and

done for them."