Doctor Morrison declared that it was
due to Betty’s skill in nursing more than to
his drugs, but it is certain that, once started, the
aunts gained steadily. In two or three days from
the time they first sat up he pronounced it safe for
them to be dressed, and while they were still a bit
shaky, they took great delight in walking about the
house.
Bob was introduced to them off-handedly
one morning by the doctor, and though both old ladies
started at his name, they said nothing. After
the physician’s car had gone, Miss Hope came
out on to the back porch where Betty was peeling potatoes
and Bob mending a loose floor-board.
“My sister and I ”
stammered Miss Hope, “we were wondering if you
were a neighbor’s boy. We’ve seen
so little of our neighbors these last few years, that
we haven’t kept track of the new families who
have moved into the neighborhood. I don’t
recollect any Hendersons about here, do you, Sister?”
Miss Charity, who had followed her, shook her head.
Bob looked at Betty, and Betty looked
helplessly at Bob. Now that the time had come
they were afraid of the effect the news might have
on the sisters. Bob, as he said afterward, “didn’t
know how to begin,” and Betty wished fervently
that her uncle could be there to help them out.
“A long time ago,” said
Miss Hope dreamily, “we knew a man named Henderson,
David Henderson. He married our younger sister.”
Caution deserted Bob, and, without
intending to, he made his announcement.
“David Henderson was my father,” he stated.
Miss Hope turned so white that Betty
thought she would faint, and Miss Charity’s
mouth opened in speechless amazement.
“Then you are Faith’s
son,” said Miss Hope slowly, clinging to the
door for support. “Ever since Doctor Morrison
introduced you, I wanted to stare at you, you looked
so like the Saunders. Faith didn’t she
was more like the Dixons, our mother’s people.
But you are Saunders through and through; isn’t
he, Charity?”
“He looks so much like you,”
quavered Miss Charity, “that I’d know in
a minute he was related to us. But Faith your
mother is she, did she ?”
“She died the night I was born,”
said Bob simply. “Almost fifteen years
ago.”
The sisters must have expected this;
indeed, hope that their sister lived had probably
deserted them years ago; and yet the confirmation
was naturally something of a shock. They clung
to each other for a moment, and then Miss Hope, rather
to Bob’s embarrassment, walked over to him and
solemnly kissed him.
“My dear, dear nephew!” she murmured.
Then Miss Charity, more timidly, kissed
him too, and presently they were all sitting down
quietly on the porch, checking up the long years.
When Bob’s tin box was finally
opened, and the marriage certificate of his parents,
the picture of his mother in her wedding gown, and
a yellowed letter or two examined and cried over softly
by the aunts, Miss Hope began to piece together the
story of their lives since Bob’s mother had
left them. Bob and Betty had found Faith’s
photograph in the family album, but Miss Hope brought
out the old Bible and showed them where her mother
had made the entry of the marriage of his mother and
father.
“They went away for a week for
their wedding trip, and then came back to get a few
things for housekeeping,” said the old lady,
patting Betty’s hand where it lay in her lap.
Bob was still looking over the Bible. “Then
they said they were going to Chicago, and they drove
away one bright morning, eighteen years ago. And
not one word did we ever hear from Faith, or from
David, not one word. It killed father and mother,
the anxiety and the suspense. They died within
a week of each other and less than a year after Faith
went. Charity and I always wanted to go to Chicago
and hunt for ’em, but there was the expense.
We had only this farm, and the interest took every
cent we could rake together. How on earth we’ll
pay it this year is more than I can see.”
“What do you think was the reason
they didn’t write?” urged Miss Charity,
in her gentle old voice. “There were almost
three years ’fore you came along. Why couldn’t
they write? I know David was good to Faith he
worshiped her. So that couldn’t have been
the reason. Bob, is your father dead, too?”
“I’ll tell you, though
perhaps I shouldn’t,” said Bob slowly.
“If I give you pain, remember it is better to
hear it from me than from a stranger, as you otherwise
might. Aunt Hope and Aunt Charity I
was born in the Gladden county poorhouse, in the East.”
There was a gasp from Miss Hope, but
Bob hurried on, pretending not to hear.
“My father, they think, was
killed in a railroad wreck,” he said. “At
least there was a bad wreck several miles from where
they found my mother nearly crazed and with no baggage
beyond this little tin box and the clothes she wore.
Grief and exposure had driven her almost out of her
mind, and in her ravings, they tell me, she talked
continuously about ‘the brakes’ and ‘that
glaring headlight.’ And then, toward the
end, she spoke of her husband and said she couldn’t
wake him up to speak to her. There is small doubt
in my mind but that he died in the wreck. Mother
died the night I was born, and until I was ten I lived
in the poorhouse. Then I was hired out to a farmer,
and the third year on his place I met Betty, who came
to spend the summer there. An old bookman, investigating
a pile of old books and records at the poorhouse,
found that Saunders was my mother’s maiden name
and he traced my relatives for me.”
Bob briefly sketched his trip to Washington
and his experiences there, and during the recital
the aunts learned a great deal about Betty, too.
Their first shock at hearing that their sister had
died in the poorhouse gradually lessened, but they
were still puzzled to account for the three years’
silence that had preceded his birth.
“I’ll tell you how I think
it was,” said Bob. “This is only
conjecture, mind. I think my father wasn’t
successful in a business way, and he must have wanted
to give my mother comforts and luxuries and a pleasant
home. He probably kept thinking that in a few
weeks things would be better, and insensibly he persuaded
her to put off writing till she could ask you to come
to see her. If she had lived after I was born,
I am sure she would have written, whether my father
prospered or not. But I imagine they were both
proud.”
“Faith was,” assented
Miss Hope. “Though dear knows, she needn’t
have hesitated to have written home for a little help.
Father would have been glad to send her money, for
he admired David and liked him. He was a fine
looking young man, Bob, tall and slender and with such
magnificent dark eyes. And Faith was a beautiful
girl.”
All the rest of that day the aunts
kept recalling stories of Bob’s mother, and
in the attic, just as Betty had known there would be,
they opened a trunk that was full of little keepsakes
she had treasured as a girl.
Bob handled the things in the little
square trunk very tenderly and reverently and tried
to picture the young girl who had packed them away
so carefully the week before her wedding.
“They’re yours, Bob,”
said Miss Hope. “Faith was going to send
for that trunk as soon as she was settled. Of
course she never did. The farm will be yours,
too, some day; in fact, a third of it’s yours
now, or will be when you come of age. Father left
it that way in his will to us three daughters
share and share alike, and you’ll have Faith’s
share. Poor Father! He was sure that we’d
hear from Faith, and he thought he’d left us
all quite well off. But we had to put a mortgage
on the farm about ten years ago, and every year it’s
harder and harder to get along. Charity and I
are too old that’s the truth.
And some stock Father left us we traded off for some
paying eight per cent., and that company failed.”
“You see,” explained Miss
Charity in her gentle way, “we don’t know
anything about business. That man wasn’t
honest who sold us the stock, but Hope and I thought
he couldn’t cheat us he was a friend
of Father’s.”
“Well, don’t let any one
swindle you again,” said Bob, a trifle excitedly.
“You don’t have to worry about interest
and taxes, any more, Aunts. You have a fortune
right here in your own dooryard; or if not exactly
out by the pump, then very near it!”
The sisters looked bewildered.
“Yes, yes,” insisted Betty,
as they gazed at her to see if Bob were in earnest.
“The farm is worth thousands of dollars.”
“Oil!” exploded Bob.
“You can lease or sell outright, and there isn’t
the slightest doubt that there’s oil sand on
the place. Betty’s uncle will know.
Uncle Dick is an expert oil man.”
Miss Hope shook her head.
“My dear nephew,” she
urged protestingly, “surely you must be mistaken.
Sister and I have seen no evidences of oil. No
one has ever mentioned the subject or the possibilities
to us. There are no oil wells very near here.
Don’t you speak unadvisedly?”
“I should say not!” Bob
was positive if not as precise as his aunt. “There’s
oil here, or all the wells in the fields are dry.
The farm is a gold mine.”
Betty rose hurriedly and pointed toward
the window in alarm. They had been sitting in
the parlor, and she faced the bar of late afternoon
sunlight that lay on the floor.
“I saw the shadow of some one,”
she whispered in alarm. “It crossed that
patch of sunlight. Bob, I am afraid!”