Hours that were all-too-few
and all-too-short.
The girls heard their mother’s
happy scream and rushed out, dish towels in hand.
They at once realized what had happened, piped up their
joyous altos, and precipitated themselves upon Si.
The good old Deacon came trotting down the walk, fidgeting
with his spectacles, but so enveloped was his son
with skirts and women’s arms and happy, teary
faces that he could not get within arm’s length
of him. So he turned to Shorty:
“Great day, Shorty, but I’m
glad to see you! Come right up on the steps and
set down. How’d you happen to come home.
Either of you sick or wounded?”
“Nope,” answered Shorty
sententiously. “Both sound as nuts and healthy
as mules.”
“Well, come right up on the
porch and set down. You must be awful tired.
Le’me carry your gun and things for you.”
He took hold of the gun with such
a desire to do something that Shorty was fain to yield
it, saying:
“Deacon, you are the first man
in about a million betwixt here and the Tennessee
River that I’d let tech that gun. I don’t
know now of another man in the United States that
I’d trust it with. That ’ere gun is
loaded plum full of other folks’s money.”
“Goodness, is that so?”
said the Deacon, handling the musket with increased
respect. “I’ve heard o’ a bar’l
o’ money, but never supposed that it was a gun
bar’l.”
“And more’n that,”
continued Shorty, “there’s a full-grown
cartridge below that might shoot a war widow’s
new dress and shoes for the children off into the
moon.”
“Goodness gracious!” ejaculated
the Deacon, holding out the gun as he did Si the first
time that interesting infant was placed in his hands,
“handlin’ other people’s money’s
always ticklish business, but this’s a leetle
the ticklishest I ever heard of.”
“That’s what bin wearin’
me down to the bone,” responded Shorty soberly,
and as they reached the porch he explained the situation
to the Deacon, who took the gun in the house, and
laid it carefully on a bed in the “spare room.”
“Girls, you’re smotherin’
me! Let up, won’t you? Mandy, you dabbed
that wet dishcloth right in my eye then. Maria,
I can’t talk or even breathe with your arm over
my windpipe. You, dear mother, I’ll pick
you up and carry you into the house, if you’ll
let me,” Si was trying to say. “I
can’t answer all your questions at once, ‘specially
when you’re shuttin’ off my breath an’
dinnin’ my ears till I can’t hear myself
think.”
“Le’s carry your things
up, Si,” said Maria, after Si had gotten them
calmed down a little. “You must be awful
tired.”
Si saw that this would be the best
way to keep the girls off, while he devoted his attention
to his mother. He handed his gun and belt to
Maria, who marched on ahead, triumphantly waving her
dish-towel as a gonfalon of victory, while she cheered
for the Union in her sweet contralto. Mandy took
possession of his blanket roll and haversack, while
Si almost carried his tearful mother on to the porch.
There her housewifely instinct at once asserted it
self.
“I know you and your friend
there must jest be starvin’,” she said,
gathering herself up. “I never knowed when
you wasn’t, if you’d bin an hour from
the table.”
“Shorty’s worse’n
me,” said Si with a grin. “But I haven’t
interduced him yit. Mother, girls, this is Shorty,
my pardner, and the best pardner a feller ever had.”
“Glad to know you, Mr. Shorty,”
said they, shaking his hand. “We’ve
heard so much of you that we feel that we’ve
knowed you all along.”
“Drop the Mister, then,”
said Shorty. “I’m plain Shorty to
everybody until I’m out o’ the army.
I’ve heard so much of you that I feel, too,
that I’ve bin acquainted with you all my life.”
“Girls,” commanded the
mother, “come on and let’s git the boys
something to eat.”
“No, mother,” pleaded
Si, holding fast to her hand. “Let the girls
do it. I want you to sit here and talk to me.”
“No, Si,” answered the
mother, kissing him again, and releasing her hand,
“I must do it myself. I must cook your supper
for you. The girls won’t do it half well
enough.”
She hustled away to the kitchen, and
Si and Shorty explained to the Deacon the circumstances
of their visit, and that they must leave by the next
train going east, in order to keep their promise to
Lieut. Bowersox. The Deacon immediately
started Abraham Lincoln and the boy on saddle horses
to bring in the neighbors to see the boys, and get
the money that had been sent them. They went
into an inner room, carefully blinded the windows,
and began to draw out the money from various pockets,
cartridge-boxes, and other receptacles about their
persons.
All drew a long breath of relief when,
counting that in Shorty’s gun, every dollar
was found to be safe.
“But how in time you’re
ever goin’ to git that money out o’ that
gun beats me,” said the Deacon, picking up the
musket, and gazing dubiously into the muzzle.
“It was a mighty smart thing to do down at the
front, but what are you going to do now, when you
want to give the money to the people it belongs to?”
“It certainly don’t seem
as smart as it did that night on the banks o’
the Tennessee,” Shorty admitted as he fixed his
bullet screw on the end of his rammer, “but
I’m goin’ to trust to my own smartness
and the Providence that provides for war widows and
orphans to git out every dollar in good shape for
them it was intended for.”
The bullet-screw brought out the first
“wad” easily and all right.
“Well, Providence is lookin’
out for Jim Irvin’s wife and children all right,”
said Shorty, as they smoothed out the bills and found
them intact.
The next attempt was equally successful,
and as Shorty unrolled the bills he remarked:
“Providence is again overlookin’.
There’s Jim Beardslee’s $50 for his widowed
mother.”
“And she needs it, poor woman,”
said the Deacon. “I’ve seen that she
had all the meat and wood she’s needed since
Jim enlisted, and Deacon Flagler keeps her in flour.”
The next offered more difficulty.
The rammings on those above had compacted it pretty
solidly. The bullet screw cut off bits of it,
and when finally it was gotten out the $10 bill was
in pieces.
“That’s Alf Ellerby’s
gift to his lame sister,” said Shorty, as he
ruefully surveyed the fragments. “I’m
afraid Providence wasn’t mindin’ just
then, but I’ll give her a good bill out o’
my own pocket.”
“No, you needn’t,”
said Maria, who had slipped in, fork in hand, to pinch
Si, kiss him, and ask him a question which she did
not want Mandy to hear; “I kin paste that all
together with white of egg so’s it’ll
look as good as ever. I done that with a bill
that Towser snatched out o’ my hand and chawed
before I could git it away from him. The store
keeper took it and said it was just as good as any.
Sophy Ellerby ’d rather have it that way than
a new bill, so long’s it comes direct from Alf.”
Again Shorty sent down the bullet
screw, and again there was more tearing off of bits,
and finally a mangled $20 bill was dragged forth and
laid aside for Mandy to repair. “Ike Englehardt
sent that to his mother to help take his sister through
the Normal School, so’s she kin become a teacher.
She’ll git that all right. But I’ve
broken my bullet screw in that wrastle. It snapped
clean off, and I’ve got the worst job of all
now to get out $100 in two 50’s that Abe Trelawney
sent his mother to meet that mortgage on her little
house. Abe’s bin savin’ it up for
months, and I was more anxious about it than any other,
and so I put it down first. Si, let me have your
bullet-screw.”
“Hain’t got none.
Lost mine weeks ago, while we was on the Tullahomy
march.”
“Great Jehosephat! what am I
goin’ to do?” groaned Shorty, the sweat
starting out on his fore head. “Now’s
the time for Providence to help out, if He’s
goin’ to. I’m at the end o’
my string.”
“Supper’s ready, boys;
come on in,” announced the sweet, motherly voice
of Mrs. Klegg. She seconded her invitation with
her arm around Si and a kiss on his cheek. “Father,
bring Shorty, unless he’d rather walk with the
girls.”
Shorty was altogether too bashful
to take advantage of the direct hint. Si’s
lively sisters filled him with a nervous dread of his
social shortcomings. He grew very red in the
face, hung back from them, and caught hold of the
Deacon’s arm.
“Go slow with him, girls,”
whispered the Deacon to his daughters, after they
were seated at the table. “He’s a
mighty good boy, but he ain’t used to girls.”
“He’s rather good looking,
if he does act sheepish,” returned Mandy.
“Well, he ain’t a mite
sheepish when there’s serious business on hand,”
returned the father. “And next to ourselves,
he’s the best friend your brother has.”
It had been many years since the wandering,
rough-living Shorty had sat down to such an inviting,
well-ordered table. Probably he never had.
No people in the whole world live better than the prosperous
Indiana farmers, and Mrs. Klegg was known far and
wide for her housewifely talents. The snowy table
linen, the spotless dishes, the tastefully-prepared
food would have done credit to a royal banquet.
Hungry as he was, the abashed Shorty fidgeted in his
chair, and watched Si begin before he ventured to
make an attack. The mother and girls were too
busy plying Si with questions and anticipating his
wants to notice Shorty’s embarrassment.
Si was making a heroic effort to eat
everything in sight, to properly appreciate all the
toothsome things that loving hands were pressing upon
him, and to answer the myriad of questions that were
showered upon him, and to get in a few questions of
his own at the same time. He just found time
to ask Shorty:
“Say, this is great this ‘s like livin’,
ain’t it?”
And Shorty replied with deep feeling:
“Just out o’ sight. How in the world’d
you ever come to enlist and leave all this?”
The neighbors began gathering in fathers,
mothers and sisters of members of Co. Q, all
full of eager questions as to their kindred, and this
relieved Shorty, for he could tell them quite as well
as Si.
The supper ended, the problem of the
money in the gun again loomed up. Everyone had
an opinion as to how to extricate the valuable charge.
The women, of course, suggested hair-pins, but these
were tried without success. A gimlet taken from
its handle and secured to the ramrod, refused to take
hold.
Somebody suggested shooting the gun
across a pond of water, and getting the money that
way, but it was decided that the force of the Springfield
seemed too great for any body of water in the neighborhood.
Then Jabe Clemmons, the “speculative”
genius of the neighborhood, spoke up:
“Gentlemen, I’ve an idée.
Deacon, how much is in that small haystack of your’n?”
“’Bout 10 tons,” answered the Deacon.
“Jest about. Well, I’ll
pay you the regular market price for it, and give
$100 to Miss Trelawney. Now, let this gentleman
stand 50 feet from it and shoot his gun at it.
He mustn’t tell none of us where he aims at.
I’ll sell you, gentlemen, that hay in 40 quarter-ton
lots, commencing at the top, each man to pay $2 besides
the regular price for a quarter ton o’ hay,
an’ we’ll draw numbers as to our turns
in takin’ the fodder.”
“Looks somethin’ like gamblin’,”
demurred the Deacon.
“No more’n church lotteries,”
answered Jabe, “since it’s for a good
purpose. Now, gentlemen, who wants to buy a quarter
ton of Deacon Klegg’s first-class hay?”
At once he had replies enough to take
the whole stack, but while he was writing down the
names Deacon Klegg had another idea.
“I can’t quite git my
mind reconciled to gamblin’, even for a good
purpose,” he said. “And I ain’t
sure about how the two 50’s ’ll strike
the haystack. It’d be a sin if they were
destroyed, as they are likely to be. I’ve
another idée. My well there is 25 foot deep.
Let’s take the bucket out, and let Shorty shoot
his gun straight down into the well. I believe
the money’ll come out all right. If it don’t
I’ll make it up myself, rather than be a party
to a gamble.”
“May blow the bottom o’
your old well out,” muttered Jabe Clemmons, who
dearly loved anything in the shape of a game of hazard.
“I’ll resk that,”
said the Deacon. “I kin dig an other well,
if necessary.”
The Deacon’s proposal was carried.
Shorty, holding the butt of his gun carefully upright,
fired down into the well. A boy was lowered in
the bucket, and soon announced by a joyful cry that
he had gotten the bills. Upon being brought up
and examined they were found to be uninjured, ex cept
by a slight singeing at the edges.
“Providence’s agin managin’
things,” murmured Shorty gratefully; “but
the Deacon’s gumption helped out.”
All the money for those not present
to receive it in person was turned over to the Deacon,
and then for the first time the boys felt relieved
of a great responsibility.
“There are two trains goin’
east,” said the Deacon, in response to their
inquiries as to the facilities for returning.
“The through express passes here at 3:15, and
it’ll git you to Jeffersonville early in the
morning. The accommodation passes about day break,
and it’ll git you there in the evenin’,
if it makes connections, which it often doesn’t.”
“We must go on the through express,”
said Si firmly. There was a loud outcry by the
mother and sisters, but the father recognized the demands
of military discipline.
Si began to fidget to get away from
the crowd of eager inquirers, which Mandy noticing,
she found opportunity to whisper:
“Don’t fret. She’ll be here
presently.”
Si’s face burned. He had
thought his secret well-kept, but here his sisters
read his thoughts like an open book. He had wanted
to go to Annabel, and have a few golden minutes alone
with her. Just what for just what he would say
or do he did not in the least know he could not imagine.
Only he felt that in some way the main interest of
his life depended on seeing her somewhere remote from
curious eyes and listening ears. He wanted to
go to her, not to have her come to him, and meet him
in such a throng as was gathered at his home.
While these thoughts were coursing
through his mind he heard Maria call:
“Si, come here into my room.
I want to show you the purtiest thing you ever saw.”
While Mandy was a most correct young
woman, she could not withstand giving a significant
wink to those around, to which they responded with
knowing smiles. These, fortunately, Si did not
see. He arose at once, the people made way, and
he was led by Maria to her room. She opened the
door and said:
“There, now, kiss me for a loving sister.”
It was a fervent kiss that Si rewarded
her with, for, there, rising from her chair as the
door opened, dressed in her best, and her face wreathed
with smiles and blushes, stood Annabel.
“Since you are so mean about
goin’ away so soon, you can only have 10 minutes
together; make the most of it,” laughed Maria,
and she scudded back to the sitting-room.
Si stood for an instant dazed.
How beautiful she was far more so than his recollections
had painted her. She had blossomed out from the
school-girl into the mature woman, and every feature
ripened. Fair as his home seemed in contrast
with the country he had left, she seemed still fairer
in contrast with any woman he had ever seen. Where
were the thousand things that, brooding by the campfire
and lying in his tent, he thought over to say to her
when they met? All forgotten or dismissed as
inappropriate. He simply stood and gazed at her.
She re covered herself first, and said teasingly:
“Well, how do you do? Ain’t
you going to speak? Ain’t you glad to see
me?”
Si could only step forward and take her hand, and
murmur:
“Annabel, how purty you look.
How you’ve growed, and all purtier. I’m
awfully glad to see you. That’s what I most
wanted to come home for.”
Then his face burned with new blushes
to think how much he had said. They sat down,
he still holding her hand, with his eyes fixed upon
her face. Somehow, in the mysterious telegraphy
of first love, they so fully understood one another
that words were unnecessary.
Speechless, but fuller of happiness
than they ever dreamed was possible in the world,
they sat with clasped hands until Maria came back,
calling out:
“Time’s up. The folks
say that they can’t let Annabel have you any
longer. Come into the sitting-room, both of you.
Come along, Si. Come along, Annabel.”
Si rose obediently, but Annabel declined
to go. She did not say why, but Maria, with a
woman’s instincts, knew that she wanted to be
alone to think it all over. Maria therefore hurried
back.
“Good-by, Annabel,” he
said, pressing her hand again. “I’ll
write to you first thing when I git back.”
“Good-by, Si. God keep
you for me, safe through battles and dangers.”
She turned away to hide her bursting tears.
It was astonishing how quick midnight
came. When the clock striking 12 smote the ears
of the family, nobody had said, heard or asked one
tithe of what he or she was burning eager to, yet
the parting was but a little more than two brief hours
away.
With a heart heavier even than when
she parted from her boy for the first time, Mrs. Klegg
arose, and sought to distract her thoughts by collecting
as big a package as they could carry of the choicest
eatables. How often she stopped to cry softly
into her apron not even the girls knew, for she was
resolved to keep up a brave front, especially before
Si, and would carefully wash all traces of tears from
her face, and clear the sobs from her throat before
re-entering the room where he was.
Shorty had at once been taken to the
hearts of everyone, and all the older men urged him
to “come back here as soon as the war’s
over, marry a nice girl, and settle down among us.”
Si received many compliments upon
his development into such a fine, stalwart man.
One after another said:
“Si, what a fine, big man you’ve
growed into. I declare, you’re a credit
to your father and mother and the settlement.
We all expect you to come back a Captain or a Colonel,
and we’ll run you for Sheriff or County Commissioner,
or something as big.”
“O, anything but Treasurer,”
Si would laughingly reply. “I’ve had
enough handling other folks’ money to last me
my life.”
Presently Abraham Lincoln brought
the spring wagon around. Even in the moonlight
Si could see that freedom and the Deacon’s tuition
had developed the ex-slave into a much better man
than the wretched runaway whom his father had protected.
He wanted to know more of him, but there were too
many demands upon his attention. They all mounted
into the wagon, the bundles were piled in, one last
embrace from his mother, and they drove away, reaching
the station just in time to catch the train.
As he kissed Maria good-by she shoved a letter into
his hand, saying:
“This is from Annabel. Read it after you
git on.”
As the train whirled away Si made
an excuse to go away from Shorty, and standing up
under the lamp in the next car he read on a tear-stained
sheet:
“Deer Si:
I wanted so much to tel you, but the words
wooddent come to my
lips, that Ime yours til deth, no matter
what happens, and Ime
shure you feel the saim way. Annabel.”
Coming back with his heart in a tumult
of rapture, he found his partner fast asleep and even
snoring.