CHAPTER VII.
THE GOAL IN SIGHT.
At 6 o’clock on Sunday morning, Sept. 25, the nurses
pulled the covering from my bed. “Come, it’s time for
you to get out of bed,” they said, and opened the window
and let in the cold breeze. My clothing was then returned
to me. After dressing I was shown to a washstand,
where all the other patients were trying to rid
their faces of all traces of sleep. At 7 o’clock we were
given some horrible mess, which Mary told us was
chicken broth. The cold, from which we had suffered
enough the day previous, was bitter, and when I complained
to the nurse she said it was one of the rules of
the institution not to turn the heat on until October, and
so we would have to endure it, as the steam-pipes had not
even been put in order. The night nurses then, arming
themselves with scissors, began to play manicure on the
patients. They cut my nails to the quick, as they did
those of several of the other patients. Shortly after this
a handsome young doctor made his appearance and I was
conducted into the sitting-room.
“Who are you?” he asked.
“Nellie Moreno,” I replied.
44“Then why did you give the name of Brown?” he
asked. “What is wrong with you?”
“Nothing. I did not want to come here, but they
brought me. I want to go away. Won’t you let me
out?”
“If I take you out will you stay with me? Won’t you
run away from me when you get on the street?”
“I can’t promise that I will not,” I answered, with a
smile and a sigh, for he was handsome.
He asked me many other questions. Did I ever see
faces on the wall? Did I ever hear voices around? I answered
him to the best of my ability.
“Do you ever hear voices at night?” he asked.
“Yes, there is so much talking I cannot sleep.”
“I thought so,” he said to himself. Then turning to
me, he asked: “What do these voices say?”
“Well, I do not listen to them always. But sometimes,
very often, they talk about Nellie Brown, and then
on other subjects that do not interest me half so much,”
I answered, truthfully.
“That will do,” he said to Miss Scott, who was just on
the outside.
“Can I go away?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said, with a satisfied laugh, “we’ll soon
send you away.”
“It is so very cold here, I want to go out,” I said.
“That’s true,” he said to Miss Scott. “The cold is
almost unbearable in here, and you will have some cases
of pneumonia if you are not careful.”
With this I was led away and another patient was taken
in. I sat right outside the door and waited to hear how
he would test the sanity of the other patients. With
little variation the examination was exactly the same as
mine. All the patients were asked if they saw faces on
the wall, heard voices, and what they said. I might also
add each patient denied any such peculiar freaks of sight
45and hearing. At 10 o’clock we were given a cup of unsalted
beef tea; at noon a bit of cold meat and a potatoe,
at 3 o’clock a cup of oatmeal gruel and at 5.30 a cup of
tea and a slice of unbuttered bread. We were all cold
and hungry. After the physician left we were given
shawls and told to walk up and down the halls in order
to get warm. During the day the pavilion was visited
by a number of people who were curious to see the crazy
girl from Cuba. I kept my head covered, on the plea of
being cold, for fear some of the reporters would recognize
me. Some of the visitors were apparently in search of
a missing girl, for I was made to take down the shawl repeatedly,
and after they looked at me they would say, “I
don’t know her,” or “she is not the one,” for which I
was secretly thankful. Warden O’Rourke visited me,
and tried his arts on an examination. Then he brought
some well-dressed women and some gentlemen at different
times to have a glance at the mysterious Nellie
Brown.
The reporters were the most troublesome. Such a
number of them! And they were all so bright and clever
that I was terribly frightened lest they should see that I
was sane. They were very kind and nice to me, and
very gentle in all their questionings. My late visitor the
night previous came to the window while some reporters
were interviewing me in the sitting-room, and told the
nurse to allow them to see me, as they would be of assistance
in finding some clew as to my identity.
In the afternoon Dr. Field came and examined me.
He asked me only a few questions, and ones that had no
bearing on such a case. The chief question was of my
home and friends, and if I had any lovers or had ever
been married. Then he made me stretch out my arms
and move my fingers, which I did without the least hesitation,
yet I heard him say my case was hopeless. The
other patients were asked the same questions.
46As the doctor was about to leave the pavilion Miss Tillie
Mayard discovered that she was in an insane ward.
She went to Dr. Field and asked him why she had been
sent there.
“Have you just found out you are in an insane asylum?”
asked the doctor.
“Yes; my friends said they were sending me to a convalescent
ward to be treated for nervous debility, from
which I am suffering since my illness. I want to get out
of this place immediately.”
“Well, you won’t get out in a hurry,” he said, with a
quick laugh.
“If you know anything at all,” she responded, “you
should be able to tell that I am perfectly sane. Why
don’t you test me?”
“We know all we want to on that score,” said the
doctor, and he left the poor girl condemned to an insane
asylum, probably for life, without giving her one feeble
chance to prove her sanity.
Sunday night was but a repetition of Saturday. All
night long we were kept awake by the talk of the nurses
and their heavy walking through the uncarpeted halls.
On Monday morning we were told that we should be taken
away at 1.30. The nurses questioned me unceasingly
about my home, and all seemed to have an idea that I had
a lover who had cast me forth on the world and wrecked
my brain. The morning brought many reporters. How
untiring they are in their efforts to get something new.
Miss Scott refused to allow me to be seen, however, and
for this I was thankful. Had they been given free access
to me, I should probably not have been a mystery long,
for many of them knew me by sight. Warden O’Rourke
came for a final visit and had a short conversation with
me. He wrote his name in my notebook, saying to the
nurse that I would forget all about it in an hour. I
smiled and thought I wasn’t sure of that. Other people
47called to see me, but none knew me or could give any information
about me.
Noon came. I grew nervous as the time approached
to leave for the Island. I dreaded every new arrival,
fearful that my secret would be discovered at the last
moment. Then I was given a shawl and my hat and
gloves. I could hardly put them on, my nerves were so
unstrung. At last the attendant arrived, and I bade
good-bye to Mary as I slipped “a few pennies” into her
hand. “God bless you,” she said; “I shall pray for you.
Cheer up, dearie. You are young, and will get over
this.” I told her I hoped so, and then I said good-bye to
Miss Scott in Spanish. The rough-looking attendant
twisted his arms around mine, and half-led, half-dragged
me to an ambulance. A crowd of the students had assembled,
and they watched us curiously. I put the
shawl over my face, and sank thankfully into the wagon.
Miss Neville, Miss Mayard, Mrs. Fox, and Mrs. Schanz
were all put in after me, one at a time. A man got in
with us, the doors were locked, and we were driven out
of the gates in great style on toward the Insane Asylum
and victory! The patients made no move to escape. The
odor of the male attendant’s breath was enough to make
one’s head swim.
When we reached the wharf such a mob of people
crowded around the wagon that the police were called to
put them away, so that we could reach the boat. I was
the last of the procession. I was escorted down the
plank, the fresh breeze blowing the attendants’ whisky
breath into my face until I staggered. I was taken into
a dirty cabin, where I found my companions seated on a
narrow bench. The small windows were closed, and,
with the smell of the filthy room, the air was stifling.
At one end of the cabin was a small bunk in such a condition
that I had to hold my nose when I went near it.
A sick girl was put on it. An old woman, with an
48enormous bonnet and a dirty basket filled with chunks
of bread and bits of scrap meat, completed our company.
The door was guarded by two female attendants. One
was clad in a dress made of bed-ticking and the other
was dressed with some attempt at style. They were
coarse, massive women, and expectorated tobacco juice
about on the floor in a manner more skillful than charming.
One of these fearful creatures seemed to have much
faith in the power of the glance on insane people, for,
when any one of us would move or go to look out of the
high window she would say “Sit down,” and would
lower her brows and glare in a way that was simply terrifying.
While guarding the door they talked with some
men on the outside. They discussed the number of patients
and then their own affairs in a manner neither
edifying nor refined.
ON BOARD THE ISLAND BOAT.
The boat stopped and the old woman and the sick girl
were taken off. The rest of us were told to sit still. At
the next stop my companions were taken off, one at a
time. I was last, and it seemed to require a man and a
49woman to lead me up the plank to reach the shore. An
ambulance was standing there, and in it were the four
other patients.
“What is this place?” I asked of the man, who had his
fingers sunk into the flesh of my arm.
“Blackwell’s Island, an insane place, where you’ll
never get out of.”
With this I was shoved into the ambulance, the springboard
was put up, an officer and a mail-carrier jumped
on behind, and I was swiftly driven to the Insane Asylum
on Blackwell’s Island.