“Patty,” said Miss Cordelia
one morning, “have you noticed Josiah lately?”
“Yes,” nodded Miss Patricia,
her eyes a little brighter than they should have been.
“Do you know,” continued
the other, her voice dropping to a whisper, “I’m
afraid if he keeps on the way
he is
“Oh, no, Cordelia! You
know as well as I do there has never been
anything like that in our family.”
Nevertheless the two sisters looked
at each other with awe-stricken eyes, and then their
arms went around each other and they eased their hearts
in the immemorial manner.
“You know, he worries because
we are the last of the Spencers,” said Cordelia,
“and the family dies with us. Even if you
or I had children, I don’t think he would take
it so hard
A wistful look passed over their faces,
such as you might expect to see on those who had repented
too late and stood looking through St. Peter’s
gate at scenes in which they knew they could never
take a part.
“But I am forty-eight,” sighed Cordelia.
“And I I am fifty
The two sisters had been writing when
this conversation started. They were busy on
a new generation of the Spencer-Spicer genealogy, and
if you have ever engaged on a task like that, you
will know the correspondence it requires. But
now for a time their pens were forgotten and they sat
looking at each other over the gatelegged table which
served as desk. They were still both remarkably
good-looking, though marked with that delicacy of
material and workmanship reminiscent of
old china which seems to indicate the perfect
type of spinster-hood. Here and there in their
hair gleamed touches of silver, and their cheeks might
have reminded you of tinted apples which had lightly
been kissed with the frost.
And so they sat looking at each other,
intently, almost breathlessly, each suddenly moved
by the same question and each wishing that the other
would speak.
For the second time it was Cordelia
who broke the silence.
“Patty !”
“Yes, dear?” breathed Patty, and left
her lips slightly parted.
“I wonder if Josiah is
too old to marry again! Of course,”
she hurriedly added, “he is fifty-two but
it seems to me that one of the Spicers I
think it was Captain Abner Spicer had children
until he was sixty although by a younger
wife, of course.”
They looked it up and in so doing
they came across an Ezra Babcock, father-in-law of
the Third Josiah Spencer, who had had a son proudly
born to him in his sixty-fourth year.
They gazed at each other then, those
two maiden sisters, like two conspirators in their
precious innocence.
“If we could find Josiah a young
wife ” said the elder at last.
“Oh, Cordelia!” breathed
Patty, “if, indeed, we only could!”
Which was really how it started.
As I think you will realize, it would
be a story in itself to describe the progress of that
gentle intrigue the consultations, the gradual
eliminations, the search, the abandonment of the search (which
came immediately after learning of two elderly gentlemen
with young wives but no children!) the
almost immediate resumption of the quest because of
Josiah’s failing health and finally
then the reward of patience, the pious nudge one Sunday
morning in church, the whispered “Look, Cordelia,
that strange girl with the Pearsons no,
the one with the red cheeks yes, that one!” the
exchange of significant glances, the introduction,
the invitation and last, but least, the verification
of the fruitfulness of the vine.
The girl’s name was Martha Berger
and her home was in California. She had come
east to attend the wedding of her brother and was now
staying with the Pearsons a few weeks before returning
west. Her age was twenty-six. She had no
parents, very little money, and taught French, English
and Science in the high school back home.
“Have you any brothers or sisters!”
asked Miss Cordelia, with a side glance toward Miss
Patty.
“Only five brothers and five sisters,”
laughed Martha.
For a moment it might be said that Miss Cordelia purred.
“Any of them married?” she continued.
“All but me.”
“My dear! ... You don’t
mean to say that they have made you an aunt already?”
Martha paused with that inward look
which generally accompanies mental arithmetic.
“Only about seventeen times,” she finally
laughed again.
When their guest had gone, the two
sisters fairly danced around each other.
“Oh, Patty!” exulted Miss Cordelia, “I’m
sure she’s a fruitful vine!”