Miss Letitia Lamson sat by the open
fire, at a point where she could easily reach the
tongs for the adjusting of any vagabond stick, and
Cap’n Oliver Drown, in the opposite angle, held
dominion over the poker. No one else would Miss
Letitia have admitted to partnership in the managing
of her fire; but Cap’n Oliver wielded an undisputed
privilege. The poker suited him because he had
a way, in the heat of friendly dissension, of smashing
a stick much before it was ready to drop apart of
its own charring; and that Miss Letitia never resented.
She herself was gentle and persuasive with a fire;
but the cap’n’s more impetuous method
seemed to belong to him, and she understood, without
much thinking about it, that when he blustered a little,
even over a hard-working blaze, it was because he
must. He was a tempestuously organized creature,
of a martial front and a baby heart, most fortunate
in his breadth of shoulder, his height, and the readiness
of the choleric blood to come into his cheeks, the
eagerness of his husky voice to bluster.
These outward tokens of an untrammeled
spirit helped him to hold his own among his kind,
though his oldest friend, Miss Letty, prized him for
different reasons. In her soul she had always
regarded him as “real cunning,” and had
even, when she passed to bring up the dish of apples
from the cellar, or a mug of cider, longed to touch
the queer lock that would straggle down from his sparsely
covered poll in absurd travesty of a baby’s
tended curl.
Probably no one, and certainly not
the captain himself, knew exactly how Miss Letty regarded
him. Miss Letty had been forty-seven years old
the last November that ever was, as she had just told
him, in talking over her forthcoming departure from
the house where she had lived all the forty-seven
years; and he knew, she added, just how she felt about
the place and all that was in it. The cap’n
nodded gravely, thinking, if it paid to say so, that
he knew how the town looked upon her. She was
good as gold, the neighbors said, and at that moment
she especially looked it, in a still, serious way.
She was a wholesome woman, with nothing showy to commend
her and little to remark except the extreme earnestness
of her upward glance. From her unconscious humility
she seemed to be always gazing up at people, even
when their eyes were on a level with hers. It
might have indicated a habit of mind.
It was only to-night that the rumor
of her going had reached Cap’n Oliver, and he
had come in to talk it over. Miss Letty’s
heart quieted as she saw him take her father’s
capacious armchair and settle on the applique cushion,
so sacred to him that whenever the cat stole a nap
out of it, stray hairs had to be brushed scrupulously
off, lest Cap’n Oliver should appear for an
evening’s gossip.
Miss Letty’s house was at the
end of a narrow way, bordered by cinnamon-roses and
stragglers from old gardens; and some of the neighbors
said it would make them as nervous as a witch to be
so far from the road. But it did not make Miss
Letty nervous. For some reason, perhaps because
of long usage, it helped her feel secure.
“Well,” she was saying
mildly to Cap’n Oliver, “I’m gettin’
along in years. What’s the use of denyin’
it? That’s what Ellery said in his letter.
’You’re ‘most fifty, Aunt Letty,’
says he. ‘Time to quit livin’ alone
an’ come out here an’ let us take care
o’ you.’”
Cap’n Oliver scowled at the
fire as if he found the freshly burning sticks too
strong to be smashed, and resented it.
“Well,” said he, “I’m fifty-four.
Let ’em come to me.”
“Now, be you really?”
asked Miss Letty, in a pretty surprise, though she
knew all the calendar of his life from the day she
went to school for the first time and heard him, in
the second reader, profusely interpreting a martial
declaration to the Romans. “Well, who’d
have thought it!”
“I don’t know,”
said Cap’n Oliver, staring into the fire, “as
I’m any less of a man because I’m fifty-four
years old. S’pose anybody should come to
me an’ say: ’Now you’re fifty-four,
cap’n. You better shut up shop an’
go an’ live in Washington Territory.’”
“It ain’t Washington Territory,”
said Miss Letty, setting him right with a becoming
air of humility. “It’s Chicago they
live to, Ellery an’ Mary.”
“Be that as it may,” said
the cap’n, “I’ve eat off my own plates
an’ drinked out o’ my own cups a good
many year, an’ if anybody should try to give
me a home, I’ll bet ye, Letty, I’d be as
mad as a hornet. I wisht you’d be mad,
too. I’d think more of ye if ye was.”
“You’ve been blest in
a good housekeeper,” said Miss Letty, in a gentle
recall. “It ain’t many men left alone
as you be that’s got anybody strong an’
willin’ like Sarah Ann Douglas to heft the burden
an’ lug it right along.”
“It ain’t Sarah Ann Douglas,”
said the cap’n. “Sarah Ann’s
a good girl, worth her weight in gold, an’ growin’
more valuable every day, but it ain’t she that’s
kep’ a roof over my head. I’ve kep’
it myself because I would have it. So there ye
be.”
“Well, I dunno how ’tis,”
said Miss Letty. She was staring placidly into
the fire. “But I don’t seem to have
so much spirit as you have, Oliver. Seems to
me, if Ellery an’ Mary are goin’ to feel
worried havin’ me livin’ on here alone,
mebbe I’d better sell off an’ go back with
’em. That’s the way I look at it.”
“You never had any way of your own,” said
the cap’n.
Miss Letty put out a firm, plump hand and presented
him with the poker.
“That stick’s ’most
fell apart,” she said pacifically. “Mebbe
you better give it a kind of a knock.”
The cap’n did it absently and
was soothed by the process. Then Miss Letty laid
the shortened pieces together in a workmanlike way,
and they blazed afresh.
“What you goin’ to do
with your things?” asked the cap’n, pointing
a broad and expressive thumb about the place.
“Sell ’em off. That’s
what Ellery wrote. He says I could have an auction
mebbe a week ‘fore Thanksgivin’, - that’s
about now, - an’ then when he an’
Mary come we could all go over to cousin Liza’s
to stay, an’ start for Chicago from there.
Seems if ’twas all complete.”
The cap’n was staring at her.
“You ain’t goin’
to sell off your things without ay or no?” he
inquired. “Don’t ye prize ’em - the
table you’ve eat off of an’ chairs you’ve
set in sence you were little?”
Miss Letty winced, and then recovered herself.
“Yes,” she said, “I do prize ’em.
But it seems if they’d got to go.”
“Why don’t ye take ’em with ye?”
“I couldn’t do that, Oliver.
Ellery has got his home furnished all complete - oak
chamber sets an’ I dunno what all. There
wouldn’t be no room for my old sticks.”
The cap’n meditated.
“Letty,” said he at length,
“if there was anybody you ever set by after
your own father an’ mother, ’twas my wife
Mary.”
“Yes,” said Letty, with
one of her warmly earnest looks. “Mary an’
I was always a good deal to one another.”
“Well, do you know what she
said to me once? ’Twas in her last sickness.
She was tracin’ back over old times, that year
you an’ I was together so much, goin’
to singin’-school an’ all. You had
a good voice, Letty - voice like a bird.
You recollect that year, don’t ye?”
“Yes,” said Letty.
Her voice trembled a little. “I recollect.”
“That was the spring Mary kinder
broke down an’ went into a decline, an’
you journeyed off to Dill River, an’ made that
long visit. An’ when you come back, Mary
an’ I was engaged. Well, I’m gettin’
ahead of my story. What Mary said was, ‘Oliver,’
says she, ’you don’t know half how good
Letty is. Nobody knows but me. It’s
her own fault,’ says she. ’She gives
up too much, an’ it makes the rest of us selfish.’”
“Did she say that?” asked
Letty. She was awakened to a vivid recognition
of something beyond the outer significance of the words.
Then she seemed to lay her momentary emotion aside,
as if it were something she could cover out of sight.
She laughed a little. “Well,” she
said, “I guess I don’t give up much nowadays.
I ain’t got so very much to give.”
Cap’n Oliver rose and carefully
arranged the fire as if there would be no one to do
it after he was gone. Miss Letty loved that little
custom. It seemed a kind of special service,
and often, after he had done it and taken his leave,
she went to bed earlier than she had intended because,
when his fire had burned out, she could not bear to
rearrange it.
“Well,” said he, “you
bear it in mind, what Mary said. Sometimes you
give up too much. You’ve gi’n up all
your life, an’ now you’re goin’ to
give up to Ellery an’ Mary. You think twice,
Letty, that’s all I say. Think twice.”
He shook hands with her gravely, according
to their habit, and she heard his steps along the
frozen lane. Then she opened the door softly a
crack - this was old custom, too - that
she might hear them farther. This time she was
sure she actually knew when he turned into the road.
She went back to the room and stood for a moment,
her hand resting on the table, looking at the orderly
fire and then at the chair which seemed to belong
more to him than to her father. The cat got up
from the lounge where, as she knew perfectly well,
she had to content herself when Cap’n Oliver
came, stretched, and walked over to the chair as if
to assert her ownership. She was gathering her
muscles for the easy leap when Miss Letty pounced
upon her, gently yet with an involuntary decision.
“Don’t you get up there,
puss,” she said jealously. “Do you
think you’ve got to have a share in everything
that’s goin’?”
Then she laughed at herself in a gentle
shame, lifted puss into the seat of desire, and stroked
her ruffled dignity, and still laughing, in that indulgent
way, sat down to see the fire out before she went to
bed.
The next day Miss Letty set about
cleaning her house, the actual first step toward leaving
it; and suddenly, as she worked, at a moment she could
never identify, it came over her that things which
had been hers by such long usage that they were as
unconsidered as her hand that wrought upon them, were
to be hers no more. Then, as she dusted and rubbed,
she stopped from time to time, to regard the rooms
and their furnishings musingly and wonder if she should
remember every smallest touch of their homely charm.
She hoped she should at least remember.
All the week she did not see Cap’n
Oliver. He was over at the Pinelands, she understood,
making his married sister a little visit, as he always
did in the fall of the year. If she thought it
a little hard that he should be away the last week
her home was to wear its accustomed face, she did
not say so, even to herself. It seemed to her
a poor habit to wish for what was obviously not to
be, and all by herself she set upon the day for the
sale of her goods and sent for the auctioneer to come.
An auction was a great event throughout
the countryside. It ordinarily happened in the
spring, as if people had taken all winter to get used
to parting with their possessions; and then wagons
of every sort came from whatever region the county
paper had reached, and families brought their lunches
in butter-boxes and went about scrutinizing the household
gear that was to come under the hammer, glad at last
to know what the house walls had really held; or they
visited with their neighbors in little groups.
But this was a day of fall sunshine and drifting leaves.
Miss Letty, standing at an upper window looking out
on her pear tree, the leaves leathery brown, felt
a twitching of the lips. She gazed farther over
her domain, and it seemed to her that it had never
been so pleasant before, so mellowed and softened
by the last light of the year. She knew there
were neighbors in the yard below, and could not bring
herself to glance at them. A line of horses stood
there, and, she was sure, all the way up the lane,
and she remembered that was the way they had stood
when her mother was buried.
Then some one laughed out, in a way
she knew, and she looked down and saw Cap’n
Oliver. He was staring up at her window, as he
answered a neighbor’s greeting, and he gave
a little oblique nod at her, and stumped along up
the path. At once she recalled herself to the
day, and went downstairs to meet him. It seemed
very simple and plain now he had come.
The neighbors standing in the entry
stood aside to let her pass, but she could scarcely
notice them. It began to seem as if she must reach
Cap’n Oliver, and then all would be well.
The cap’n was in vigorous condition. His
face looked ruddier, and he was shaking her hand and
saying, as if she had endowed him with her state of
mind: -
“Soon be over, Letty, soon be
over. Don’t you give it a thought.”
“No,” said Miss Letty,
choking, “I won’t. I won’t give
it a thought.”
But at that moment Hiram Jackson,
who knew everything and was fervidly anxious to be
the earliest herald, came stammering out his eagerness
to tell.
“Say, Miss Letty. Say!
you can’t have no auction. You won’t
have no auctioneer. Old Blaisdell’s wife’s
sister’s dead, down to East Branch, an’
he’s gone.”
Miss Letty, breathless, looked at
the cap’n. “Well, there!” she
said. It was in her mind that now she might not
need to have the auction at all; and again she wondered,
since she must have it, how she could ever make up
her mind to it again.
“Oh, dear!” she breathed. “I’m
sorry.”
The cap’n was frowning at her,
only because he was so deep in thought. He threw
up his head a little, then, bluffly, as if he had reached
a clearer decision he meant to follow out.
“Not a word, Letty,” said
he. “Now don’t you speak a word.
I’m goin’ to auction ’em off myself.”
She stared at him, her lips apart, in protest.
“Why, Oliver,” she said, “you ain’t
an auctioneer.”
“Well, I shall be after this
bout. Now you come straight into the sittin’-room
an’ set down in the corner underneath the ostrich
egg, where I can see you good an’ plain.
An’ if I come to anything you want to bid in,
you hold up your finger, an’ I’ll knock
it down to you. You understand, don’t ye,
Letty?”
It was hard to realize that she did,
she looked so like a frightened little animal, turning
her head this way and that, as if she longed for leaves
to cover her.
“You understand, Letty, don’t
ye?” the cap’n was asking with great gentleness;
and because she saw at last some sign of distress in
his face also, she quieted, in a dutiful fashion,
and nodded at him.
“Yes,” she said, “I’ll
be where you can see me. But I sha’n’t
bid nothin’ in. I don’t prize ’em
’specially more’n I prize everything together.
If I can give up an’ go out West, I guess I can
get along without my furniture. Shouldn’t
you think so?”
She went hurrying away across the
hall and into the sitting-room, and Cap’n Oliver,
his head bent a little, stroked his chin and watched
her. Then he followed, making his way through
the friendly crowd in hall and sitting-room, and mounted
the dry-goods box prepared for the auctioneer.
He looked about him and smiled a little, partly because
people were gazing at him sympathetically, and partly
over his own embarrassing plight. For he was
a shy man. Nobody knew it but himself, and he
was afraid that after to-day everybody would know.
“Well, neighbors,” said
he, “I feel as if I was runnin’ for President
or hog-reeve or somethin’, or goin’ to
speak in meetin’. But I ain’t.
I’m goin’ to auction off Letty Lamson’s
things, an’ I ain’t been to an auction
myself sence I was seventeen an’ set on the fence
an’ chewed gum an’ played ’twas
tobacker while old Dan’el Cummings’s farm
was auctioned off down to the last stick o’
timber. Well, I don’t know ’s I could
say how ’twas done, nor how it’s commonly
done now, but I can take a try at it. Now, here’s
some books Miss Letty’s brought down out o’
the attic. I don’t know what they be, but
they look to me as if they might ha’ come out
of her gran’ther’s lib’ry - old
Parson Lamson, ye know.”
“Yes,” said Miss Letty,
from the low rocking-chair a neighbor had insisted
on giving up to her, “they did. Many’s
the time I’ve watched him porin’ over
’em winter nights with two candles.”
“There, you see! they’re
Parson Lamson’s books. Many a good word
he got out of ’em for his sermons, I’ll
bet ye a dollar. Why, ye recollect how much Parson
Lamson done for this town, how he got up sewin’-circles
in war-time an’ set everybody to scrapin’
lint, an’ climbed out of his bed after he couldn’t
hardly stand with rheumatism to say good-by to the
boys when they enlisted, an’ how he wrote to
’em an’ prayed for ’em - why,
them books are wuth their weight in gold. How
much am I offered for Parson Lamson’s books?
A dollar-seventy - Why, bless you, Tim Fry,
there ain’t a book there but’s wuth a dollar-seventy
taken by itself! Why, I’ll start it myself
at thirteen - ”
“Oh, don’t you do it,
Cap’n, don’t you do it!” called Miss
Letty piercingly. “I don’t want ’em
to bid on gran’ther’s books. I want
them books myself, if I have to work my fingers to
the bone.”
The cap’n took out his beautiful
colored handkerchief with Joseph and his brethren
on it, and wiped his face.
“Gone!” said he, “to
Miss Letty Lamson. Now, ladies an’ gentlemen,
here’s a little chair. I know that chair,
an’ so do you. It’s the chair little
Letty Lamson used to set in when she wa’n’t
more’n three year old, an’ her mother
used to keep her out under the sweet-bough tree in
that little rocker whilst she was washin’ or
churnin’! What?”
He paused, for Miss Letty had waved
a frantic hand. The tears were running down her
cheeks. The others had before them the picture
of little Letty Lamson swaying and singing to herself,
but she saw the brown apple-stems over her head and
smelled the bitter-sweetness of the blooms. She
saw her mother’s plump bare arms as they went
up and down with the churn-dasher or in and out of
the suds, and felt again the pang of love that used
to tell her that mother was the most beautiful creature
in the world.
“Why,” said she, regardless
of her listeners, “I wouldn’t part with
that chair for a hundred dollars. How ever come
you to think I’d part with my little chair?”
The cap’n was looking at her in a frank perplexity.
“The chair,” said he,
“remains the property of our friend and neighbor,
Miss Letty Lamson. Now, ladies an’ gentlemen,
here’s a fire-set - tongs, shovel,
an’ andirons. That fire-set has been in
this very settin’-room as long as I can remember.
Summer-times the andirons have been trimmed up with
sparrergrass an’ the like o’ that, an’
winter-times they’ve been shined up complete
an’ the fire snappin’ behind ’em.
What am I offered - ”
Miss Letty was standing.
“Oh,” she cried, “I
never meant to put that fire-set in. Why, don’t
you remember - ”
She was facing the cap’n, and
the appeal of her voice and look ran straight to him
over the heads of the others, like a message.
It bade him recall how he and she had sat together
and talked of sad things and happy ones, night after
night, for many years. The talks had been mostly
cheerful, for the cap’n would have it so, and
whenever she felt poorly she had taken pains to put
on a lively front, because she reasoned that menfolks
hated squally weather. Now, with the passing of
the andirons and all they stood for, it looked to
her as if a door had shut on that pleasant seclusion
where they two had communed together, and there would
be no more laughter in the world. “Oliver!”
she said, and stopped, because the coming words had
choked her.
The cap’n was looking at her
over his glasses with extreme benevolence.
“Letty,” said he, “I
guess you better go upstairs an’ sort out some
o’ the bed-linen an’ coverlets. I
understood they wa’n’t quite ready, an’
we shall get to ’em before long. If I come
to anything down here I think you set by particularly
an’ that you can pack up as well as not, I’ll
bid it in for ye.”
The neighbors were nodding in a kindly
confirmation, and Miss Letty also understood it to
be for the best. She made her way through the
friendly aisle cleared for her, and Cap’n Oliver
waited until he heard her on the stairs above.
He drew a heavy breath.
“Now,” said he, “I
guess we can poke along. It ain’t to be
wondered at anybody should want to bid in their own
things, but it’s kind of distressin’ to
an auctioneer that wants to earn his money. Now
here’s this high-boy. I’ll rattle
it off before Miss Letty gets time to have a change
of heart an’ come down again. What am I
offered for old Parson Lamson’s high-boy, bonnet-top
an’ old brasses all complete?”
Timothy Fry, a bright-eyed youth in
the background, started it at fifteen dollars.
Timothy had hitherto, in his twenty years, shown no
sign of enthusiasm more sophisticated than that of
shooting birds in their season and roaming the woods
in a happy vagabondage while the law was on.
When he made his bid there was a great turning of heads.
Some looked at him, but others fixed the cap’n
with a challenging glance, because he and the cap’n
were great cronies, and it had been jocosely said
they were thick as thieves, and if one lied t’other
would swear to it. But Timothy, in his Sunday
suit, with a blue tie and an elaborate scarf-pin,
looked the picture of innocence, and it was concluded
that, although no one had suspected it, he was thinking
of setting up housekeeping for himself. The cap’n’s
face had an earnest absorption. He was evidently
occupied only in being auctioneer.
“Pshaw!” he said, with
a conversational ruthlessness. “Fifteen
dollars! Why, I’d give that myself an’
set it up out there at the cross-roads for autos to
bid on while they run. Its wuth - well,
I wouldn’t say what ‘twas wuth. Maybe
you’d laugh, an’ I ain’t goin’
to be laughed at, if I be an auctioneer.”
“Twenty-five,” piped up
Deacon Eli King, won by the lure of city rivalry.
“Twenty-six,” Timothy offered quietly.
“Twenty-eight,” trembled
Hannah Bond, who lived alone and braided mats for
the city trade. She had always wanted a high-boy,
but the sound of her own voice made it seem as if
bidding might be almost too steep a price to pay for
one.
“Twenty-nine,” said Timothy.
After that there was very little competition.
Nobody wanted a high-boy except for commercial possibilities,
and about the time the bidding reached thirty-five
dollars a foreshadowing timidity began to overspread
the assembly. An autumn wind came up and set the
bare woodbine sprays to beating on the window, to
the tune of nearing snow. Summer buyers seemed
far away. When one considered the drifted leaves
and the cold sky, it looked as if full purses and
credulous minds were a midsummer dream, never to come
again. So the high-boy, in this moment of commercial
panic, was knocked down to Timothy Fry. Five or
six chairs followed, and these also became his.
Then the crowd pressed into the west
sitting-room, where there was richer treasure.
Here, too, Timothy’s unmoved voice beat steadily
on, raising every bid, and here, too, he came out
victor. In the next room also he swept the field,
and now at last the crowd murmurously compared certainties,
one woman darkly prophesying he never’d pay for
them, because he hadn’t a cent - not
a cent - laid up, and a man returning that
nobody need worry. ’Twas only a joke of
Tim’s; but Miss Letty’d be the one to
suffer. Timothy’s eyes and ears were closed
to comment. His commercial onslaught continued,
and when, in the early dusk, horses were unhitched
and there was time for comment at the gate, it was
clearly understood that, save for what Miss Letty
had bid in at the start, Timothy Fry was the possessor
of every stick of furniture, every cup and bowl even,
and all the ornaments and articles of common usage
in the house. Timothy himself had gone.
The men had looked about for him, to rally him on
his approaching nuptials, the women for the ruthless
cross-questioning his madness had invited; but he had
slipped away softly, like the wood-creatures he hunted.
Even Cap’n Oliver, who might be supposed to
know his inner mind, had betaken himself to the porch,
and stood there, hat in hand, wiping his heated brow.
“Don’t ask me,”
he returned to queries and conclusions in the mass.
“I’m nothin’ in the world but an
auctioneer. Now I’ve learned the road, I
dunno but I shall go right along auctionin’ off
everything I come acrost. You better be gettin’
along home. Mebbe I’ll sell your teams
right off under your noses, if the fit comes over me.”
“Timothy ain’t goin’
to be married, is he?” inquired aunt Belinda
Soule, who sent items to the “County Star.”
“S’pose so, sometime,”
concurred the cap’n jovially. “It’s
the end o’ mortals here below. Dunno but
I shall be married myself, if it comes to that.”
“When’s he goin’
to take his furniture away?” continued aunt Belinda,
with the persistence of her kind.
“Don’t know. Mebbe
he ain’t goin’ to take it. Mebbe he’s
goin’ to marry Letty. ‘Pears to me
I heard a kind of a rumor she was goin’ to marry
’fore long.”
Aunt Belinda shook her head at him.
“Don’t talk so about a
nice respectable woman,” said she. “An’
she goin’ to move away from us an’ live
nobody knows where. It’s a shame.”
The cap’n burst into a laugh
that aunt Belinda privately thought coarse, and turned
back into the house, while she joined a group of matrons
and went away home, discoursing volubly.
Cap’n Oliver stopped for a minute
at the window in the empty parlor, watching their
departing bulk, and then went into the hall, where
the tread of many invading feet had left the moist
autumn soil, with bits of grass and now and then a
yellowed leaf.
“Letty!” he called roundly.
There was a light step above, and
then Miss Letty’s voice, a very little voice
suited to the dusk and stillness, came down the stairs.
“Be they gone?” she faltered.
“Yes,” said the cap’n, “they’re
gone, every confounded one of ’em.”
“Did they take the things with
’em?” inquired Miss Letty. “I
didn’t dast to look. I knew I couldn’t
help feelin’ it if I see ’em all loaded
up with things I knew.”
“You come down here, Letty,”
said the cap’n. “I want to say a word
to you.”
She did come, wondering, her face
sodden with tears, and a miserable little ball of
a wet handkerchief in her grasp. The cap’n
met her at the foot of the stairs and, without warning,
took her by the shoulders and shook her slightly,
why, he did not know, except perhaps as a warning to
put a prettier face on the matter. Then he drew
her into his arms with a conclusiveness it would have
been difficult to resist, and kissed her soft wet
cheeks. He kissed them a good many times, and
ended by touching her trembling mouth.
“There,” said the cap’n,
“I don’t know ’s I ever kissed you
before, Letty, but I expect to a good many times again,
off ‘n’ on.”
“Oh, yes, you did once,”
said Miss Letty, with unexpected frankness and simplicity.
“’Twas the eighteenth of November, thirty
years ago this very fall.”
The cap’n looked at her and broke into a wondering
laugh.
“Letty,” said he, “you’re
the beateree, an’ I’m a nat’ral-born
fool. You’re goin’ to marry me right
off as soon as I can get the license.”
“An’ live over to your
house an’ not go to Chicago?” inquired
Miss Letty beatifically.
“Course you won’t go to
Chicago, unless we go together some spring or fall
an’ make ’em a visit an’ show ’em
we’ve got suthin’ to live for as well
as they have.”
“Then I needn’t have sold
my furniture,” said she, with a happy turn of
logic.
“Sold your furniture? You
ain’t sold it. I had Tim Fry bid it all
in for me, an’ I was goin’ to have it
crated up an’ tell Ellery, when he come, he’d
got to let me pay it on to Chicago, whether or no.
An’ then when I stood up there like a rooster
on a fence, auctionin’ of it off, it all come
over me ‘twa’n’t the furniture an’
the house I should miss. ’Twas you.
I made up my mind then an’ there I’d keep
ye if I had to hopple ye by the ankle like Tolman’s
jumpin’ steer.”
Miss Letty withdrew from him and took
a timid step to the west-room door, where, though
the dusk was gathering, she could find the familiar
shapes of her beloved possessions.
“I don’t see how in the
world I ever made up my mind I could,” she said,
a happy tremor in her voice.
It sounded to Cap’n Oliver strangely
like a voice out of his past, unquelled by fears and
abnégations. It was the voice that used to
greet him when, in his splendid blue suit and shining
satin tie, he had called for Letty Lamson, some thirty
years ago, to take her in his sleigh to singing-school.
“Could what?” he inquired
hilariously, out of his dream where the present made
the fire on the hearth and the past lent him figures
to sit by it.
“Why, get along without my old things.”
“I s’pose you never so
much as thought you couldn’t get along without
me,” suggested the cap’n, in a kindly rallying.
“Yes,” said Miss Letty
soberly, “I did think that. I knew I couldn’t.”