‘I suppose you’ll be wanting
some finery, little girl,’ said Mr Harding the
next morning as he pushed away his chair from the breakfast
table. ‘Dress is the first consideration,
isn’t it, with women?’
‘I don’t know about the
finery, father,’ and Pauline laughed a little.
‘I expect I shall be satisfied with the essentials.’
Mr Harding crossed the room to an
old-fashioned secretary which stood in one corner.
Coming back, he held out to her a ten-dollar bill.
’Will this answer? Money is terrible tight
just now, and the mortgage falls due next week.
It’s hard work keeping the wolf away these dull
times.’
Pauline forced her lips to form a
‘Thank you,’ as she put the bank-note
in her pocket, and then began silently to clear the
table, her thoughts in a tumultuous whirl. Ten
dollars! Her father’s hired man received
a dollar a day. She had been working hard for
years, and had received nothing but the barest necessaries
in the way of clothing, purchased under Mrs Harding’s
economical eye. When Martha Spriggs came to take
her place she would have her regular wages. Were
hired helpers the only ones whose labour was deemed
worthy of reward? Dresses and hats and boots and
gloves. Absolute essentials with a vengeance,
and ten dollars to cover the whole!
’You can have Abraham Lincoln
and the spring waggon this afternoon, if you want
to go to the village for your gewgaws.’
‘Very well, father.’
’I don’t suppose you’ll
rest easy till you’ve made the dollars fly.
That’s the way with girls, eh? As long as
they can have a lot of flimsy laces and ribbons and
flowers they’re as happy as birds. Well,
well, young folks must have their fling, I suppose.
I hope you’ll enjoy your shopping, my dear,’
and Mr Harding started for the barn, serene in the
consciousness that he had made his daughter happy in
the ability to purchase an unlimited supply of the
unnecessary things which girls delight in.
‘You are a grateful piece, I
must say!’ remarked her step-mother, as she
administered some catnip tea to the whining Polly.
’I haven’t seen the colour of a ten-dollar
bill in as many years, and you put it in your pocket
as cool as a cucumber, and go about looking as glum
as a herring. Who’s going to do the clothes,
I’d like to know? I can’t lay this
child out of my arms for a minute. I believe she’s
sickening for a fever, and then perhaps your fine
relations won’t be so anxious to see you coming.
For my part, I wouldn’t be in such a hurry to
knuckle to people who waited seventeen years to find
whether I was in the land of the living before they
said, “How d’ye do.” But then
I always was proud-spirited. I despise meachin’
folks.’
’I guess I can get most of the
ironing done this morning, if you’ll see to
the dinner,’ said Pauline, as she put the irons
on the stove and went into another room for the heavy
basket of folded clothes.
Dresses and hats and boots and gloves!
The words kept recurring to her inner consciousness
with a persistent regularity. She wondered what
girls felt like who could buy what they did not need.
She thought it must be like Heaven, but not Deacon
Croaker’s kind; that looked less attractive
than ever this morning.
As she passed Mrs Harding’s
chair Polly put up her hands to be taken, but her
mother caught her back.
’No, no, Pawliney hasn’t
got any more use for plain folks, Polly. She’s
going to do herself proud shoppin’, so she can
go to Boston and strut about like a frilled peacock.
You’ll have to be satisfied with your mother,
Polly; Pawliney doesn’t care anything about you
now.’
Pauline laughed bitterly to herself.
‘A frilled peacock, with a ten-dollar outfit!’
She began the interminable pinafores.
The sun swept up the horizon and laughed at her so
broadly through the open window that her cheeks grew
flushed and uncomfortable.
Lemuel burst into the room in riotous
distress with a bruised knee, the result of his attempt
to imitate the Prodigal Son, which had ended in an
ignominious head-over-heels tumble into the midst of
his swinish friends. This caused a delay, for
he had to be hurried out to the back stoop and divested
of garments as odorous, if not as ragged, as those
of his prototype. Then he must be immersed in
a hot bath, his knee bound up, reclothed in a fresh
suit, and comforted with bread and molasses.
She toiled wearily on. The room
grew almost unbearable as her step-mother made up
the fire preparatory to cooking the noontide meal,
and Polly wailed dismally from her cot. The youthful
Prodigal appeared again in the doorway, his ready
tears had made miniature deltas over his molasses-begrimed
countenance, his lower lip hung down in an impotent
despair.
‘What’s the matter now, Lemuel?’
‘I want my best shoes, an’
a wing on my finger, an’ the axe to kill the
fatted calf.’
Would the basket never be empty?
Her head began to throb, and she felt as if her body
were an ache personified. The mingled odours of
corned beef and cabbage issued from one of the pots
and permeated the freshly ironed clothes. She
drew a long, deep breath of disgust. At least
in Boston she would be free from the horrors of ‘boiled
dinner.’
Her scanty wardrobe was finished at
last, and she stood waiting for Abraham Lincoln and
the spring waggon to carry her to the station.
A strange tenderness towards her old environment came
over her, as she stood on the threshold of the great
unknown. She looked lovingly at the cows, lazily
chewing their cud in the sunshine; she felt sorry for
her step-mother, as she strove to woo slumber to Polly’s
wakeful eyes with the same lullaby which had done
duty for the whole six; she even found it in her heart
to kiss Lemuel, who, with his ready talent for the
unusual, was busily cramming mud paste into the seams
of the little trunk which held her worldly all.
She looked at it with contemptuous pity.
’You poor old thing! You’ll
feel as small as I shall among the saratogas and the
style. Well, I’ll be honest from the start
and tell them that the only thing we’re rich
in is mortgages. I guess they’ll know without
the telling. I wonder if they’ll be ashamed
of me?’
Her father came and lifted the trunk
into the back of the waggon, and they started along
the grass-bordered road to the station. He began
recalling the city as he remembered it.
’You’ll have to go to
Bunker Hill, of course, and the Common, and be sure
and look out for the statues, they’re everywhere.
Lincoln freeing the slaves that’s
the best one to my thinking, and that’s down
in Cornhill, if I remember right. My, but that’s
a place! Mind you hold tight to your cousins.
The streets, and the horses, and the people whirl
round so, it’s enough to make you lose your head.
Well, well, I wouldn’t mind going along with
you to see the sights.’
He bought her ticket, and secured
her a comfortable seat, then he said, ‘God bless
you,’ and went away.
Pauline looked after him wonderingly.
He had never said it to her before. Perhaps it
was a figure of speech which people reserved for travelling.
She supposed there was always the danger of a possible
accident. Ah! if they could only have started
off together, as he said, and never gone back to Sleepy
Hollow any more!