“Why, Mis’ Cullom, I’m
real glad to see ye. Come right in,” said
Mrs. Bixbee as she drew the widow into the “wing
settin’ room,” and proceeded to relieve
her of her wraps and her bundle. “Set right
here by the fire while I take these things of your’n
into the kitchen to dry ’em out. I’ll
be right back”; and she bustled out of the room.
When she came back Mrs. Cullom was sitting with her
hands in her lap, and there was in her eyes an expression
of smiling peace that was good to see.
Mrs. Bixbee drew up a chair, and seating
herself, said: “Wa’al, I don’t
know when I’ve seen ye to git a chance to speak
to ye, an’ I was real pleased when David said
you was goin’ to be here to dinner. An’
my! how well you’re lookin’ more
like Cynthy Sweetland than I’ve seen ye fer
I don’t know when; an’ yet,” she
added, looking curiously at her guest, “you
’pear somehow as if you’d ben cryin’.”
“You’re real kind, I’m
sure,” responded Mrs. Cullom, replying to the
other’s welcome and remarks seriatim;
“I guess, though, I don’t look much like
Cynthy Sweetland, if I do feel twenty years younger
’n I did a while ago; an’ I have ben
cryin’, I allow, but not fer sorro’,
Polly Harum,” she exclaimed, giving the other
her maiden name. “Your brother Dave comes
putty nigh to bein’ an angel!”
“Wa’al,” replied
Mrs. Bixbee with a twinkle, “I reckon Dave might
hev to be fixed up some afore he come out in that
pertic’ler shape, but,” she added impressively,
“es fur as bein’ a man
goes, he’s ’bout ’s good ’s
they make ’em. I know folks thinks he’s
a hard bargainer, an’ close-fisted, an’
some on ’em that ain’t fit to lick up his
tracks says more’n that. He’s got
his own ways, I’ll allow, but down at bottom,
an’ all through, I know the’ ain’t
no better man livin’. No, ma’am, the’
ain’t, an’ what he’s ben to
me, Cynthy Cullom, nobody knows but me an’ an’ mebbe
the Lord though I hev seen the time,”
she said tentatively, “when it seemed to me
’t I knowed more about my affairs ’n He
did,” and she looked doubtfully at her companion,
who had been following her with affirmative and sympathetic
nods, and now drew her chair a little closer, and
said softly: “Yes, yes, I know. I ben
putty doubtful an’ rebellious myself a good
many times, but seems now as if He had had me in His
mercy all the time.” Here Aunt Polly’s
sense of humor asserted itself. “What’s
Dave ben up to now?” she asked.
And then the widow told her story,
with tears and smiles, and the keen enjoyment which
we all have in talking about ourselves to a sympathetic
listener like Aunt Polly, whose interjections
pointed and illuminated the narrative. When it
was finished she leaned forward and kissed Mrs. Cullom
on the cheek.
“I can’t tell ye how glad
I be for ye,” she said; “but if I’d
known that David held that morgige, I could hev
told ye ye needn’t hev worried yourself a mite.
He wouldn’t never have taken your prop’ty,
more’n he’d rob a hen-roost. But
he done the thing his own way kind o’
fetched it round fer a Merry Chris’mus,
didn’t he?”