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Chapter 11
The red paint-pot, and a blue one from the same quarter, together with a yellow one from the neighbours on the other side, a white one from an old lighterman in the house behind, and a suitable collection of brushes subscribed by all three, were Johnny’s constant companions till the end of that weary week.  The shop-shutters grew to be red, with a blue border.  The window-frames were yellow, the wall beneath was white, so was the cornice above; and the door and the door-posts were red altogether, because the red paint went farthest, and the red pot had been fullest to begin with.  Not only did the length of the job work off Johnny’s first enthusiasm, but its publicity embarrassed him.  Perched conspicuously on a step-ladder, painting a shop in such stirring colours as these, he was the cynosure of all wayfaring folk, the target of whatever jibes their wits might compass.  Three out of four warned him that the paint was laid on wrong side out.  Some, in unkindly allusion to certain chance splashes, reminded him that he hadn’t half painted the window-panes; and facetious boys, in piteous pantomime, affected to be reduced to instant p. 99blindness by sudden knowledge of Johnny’s brilliant performance.  But he was most discomforted by those who merely stood and stared, invisible behind him.  If only he could have seen them it would not have been so bad; the oppressive consciousness that some contemptuous grown man behind and below—possibly a painter by trade—was narrowly observing every stroke of the brush, shook his nerve and enfeebled his execution.  Most of these earnest spectators seemed to have no pressing business of their own, and their inspections were prolonged.  One critic found speech to remark, as he turned to go his way: “Well, you are makin’ a bloomin’ mess up there!”  But most, as if at a loss for words by mere amazement, sheered off with: “Well, blimy!”  It was discouraging to find that all these people could have done it so much better, and, long before the job was finished, Johnny was sore depressed and very humble, as well as tired.  Only one of all his witnesses offered help, and he was a surprising person: very tall, very thin, and very sooty from work; with splay feet, sloping shoulders, a long face of exceeding diffidence, and long arms, which seemed to swing and flap irresponsibly with the skirts of his long overcoat, and to be a subject of mute apology.  He saw Johnny tip-toeing at the very top of the steps, making a bad shift to reach the cornice.  He stopped, looked about him, and then went on a step or two; stopped again, and came back, with a timorous p. 100glance at the shop window; and when Johnny turned and looked, he said, in a voice scarce above a whisper: “Can’tcher reach it?”

“Not very well.”

“Let’s come.”  And when Johnny descended, the long man, with one more glance about the street, went up three steps at a time and laid the paint on rapidly, many feet at a sweep.  He came down and shifted the steps very easily with one hand—and they were heavy steps—went up again, and in three minutes carried the paint to the very end of the cornice.  Then he came down, with a sheepish smile at Johnny’s thanks, and shambled as far as next door, where he let himself in with a latch-key.  And on Friday, at dinner-time, perceiving Johnny’s progress from his window on the upper floor—he was a lodger, it seemed—he came stealthily down and gave the cornice another coat.
 

On Saturday morning the shop was opened in form, though Johnny’s painting was not finished till dusk.  Very little happened.  A few children stopped on their way, and stared in at the door.  The first customer was a boy from among these, who came in to beg a piece of string; and infested Harbour Lane for the rest of the day, swinging a dead rat on the end of it.  Hours passed, and Nan May’s spirits fell steadily.  A few pounds, a very few—they could scarce be made to last p. 101three weeks—was all her reserve, and most of her scanty stock was perishable.  If it spoiled it could never be replaced, and unless people bought it, spoil it must.  What more could she do?  Industry, determination, and all the rest were well enough, but when all was said and done, nothing could make people come and buy.

Near noon the second customer came—a little girl this time.  She wanted a bottle of ink for a halfpenny.  There were half-a dozen little bottles of ink in a row in the window; but the price was a penny, so the little girl went away.  It was a dull dinner that day.  Bessy invented ingenious conjectures to account for the lack of trade, and prophesied a change in the afternoon, or the evening, or perhaps next week, or at latest the week after.  Her mother could not understand.  Customers came to other shops; why not to this one?

She had seen nothing of Uncle Isaac since she had come to Harbour Lane, though he knew where to find her.  She had hoped he would lend a hand with the painting, or with the display of the stock; but no doubt he had been too busy.  True, Johnny thought he had seen him once from the steps, some way down the street, but that must have been a mistake; for Uncle Isaac would not have come so near them without calling, nor would he have bolted instantly round the nearest p. 102corner at sight of the boy and his work, as Johnny had fancied he had.

The afternoon began no better than the morning.  Nobody came but a child, who asked for sixpenn’orth of coppers, till about four.  Then a hurried woman demanded a penn’orth of mixed pickles in a saucer, and grumbled at the quantity.  She wouldn’t come into the shop again, at anyrate; a threat so discomposing (for was not the woman the first paying customer?) that for hours Nan May could not forgive herself for her illiberality; though indeed she gained but a weak fraction of a farthing by the transaction.

Half an hour more went, and then there came a truly noble customer.  He looked like a bricklayer, and he was far from sober: so far, indeed, that Johnny, on the steps, spying the mazy sinuosity of his approach, got a step lower and made ready to jump, in case of accidents.  But the bricklayer, conscious of the presence of many ladders, steered wide into the roadway, and there stopped, fascinated by the brilliancy before him.  Some swaying moments of consideration resolved him that this was a shop: and after many steps up the curb, and as many back in the gutter, he picked a labyrinthine path among the myriad ladders, narrowly missing the real one as he went, shouldered against the wet door-post, and stumbled toward the counter.  Here he regarded a p. 103bladder of lard with thoughtful severity, till Nan May timorously asked w............
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