Winter had come. Early December
though it was, the snow lay deep and smooth over meadow
and hill, and hung in fluffy masses on the branches
of pine and fir. Calvin Parks had got rid of the
wheels that never ceased to incommode him, and jingled
along merrily on runners, both he and Hossy enjoying
the change.
It had become a matter of course that
he should turn in at the Sills’ gateway whenever
he passed along their road, and he managed to pass
once or twice a week. So on this crystal morning
he found himself driving into the stable yard almost
unconsciously. The brown horse whinnied as he
clattered into the stable, and an answering whinny
came from the furthest stall in the corner.
“That’s old John sayin’
good mornin’, hossy!” said Calvin.
“How are you, John? Who else is to home?”
He looked along the row of stalls.
“Here’s the old hoss of all, and here’s
the mare. The young colt is out; presume likely
Sam is gone to market, hossy. What say to gettin’
a bite in his stall? He won’t be back till
dinner time.”
Hossy approving, Calvin unharnessed
him, and he stepped into the stall without further
invitation.
“Now you be real friendly with
old John and the mare!” said Calvin, “and
I’ll come for you sooner than you’re ready.”
The brown horse flung him a brief
snort of assurance, and plunged his head into the
manger; and Calvin fastened the door and made his way
slowly toward the house.
The back view of the Sill farmhouse
was hardly less pleasant than the front, especially
when, as now, the morning sun lay full on the warm
yellow of the house, the bright green of the door,
and the reddish granite of the well-scoured steps.
A screen of dark evergreens set off all these cheerful
tints; and to make the picture still gayer Mary Sands,
a scarlet “sontag” tied trimly over her
blue dress, was sitting on the cellar door, picking
over tomatoes.
Calvin Parks was conscious of missing
Hossy. He wanted some one to appeal to.
“Do you see that?” he
murmured, addressing the landscape. “Do
you call that handsome? because if you don’t,
you are a calf’s-head, whatever else you may
be.”
Mary Sands looked up, and her bright
face grew brighter at sight of him.
“Oh, Mr. Parks!” she cried.
“I am glad to see you. I’ve been wishin’
all the week you’d come by and stop in a bit.
Now this is a pleasure, surely! Come right in!”
“Hold on, Miss Hands!”
said Calvin, as she moved toward the door. “Hold
on just a minute. How about the tomaytoes?”
“Oh, they can wait!” said
Mary. “I was just turning ’em so they’d
get the sun on all sides.”
“Ain’t it remarkable late
for tomaytoes?” asked Calvin. “I dono
as ever I see ripe ones at this season. I expect
you can do what you like with gardin truck, Miss Hands,
same as with most things.”
Mary blushed and twinkled.
“Oh, I don’t know!”
she answered. “I’ve always had good
luck with late vegetables. I do suppose I’ve
kept these tomaytoes on later than common, though;
I confess I’m rather proud of them, Mr. Parks.
Cousins say I tend ’em like young chickens,
and I don’t know but I do. I put ’em
out mornings, when ’tis bright and warm like
this, and take ’em in before sundown, fear they’ll
get chilled. Anything ripens so much better in
the sun.”
“I don’t believe you’ve
turned ’em all,” said Calvin. “I
should admire to set here a spell, if ’tis warm
enough for you. I ripen better in the sun, too;”
he twinkled at her. “Is it warm enough
for you?” he added anxiously.
“My, yes!” said Mary Sands.
“Why, ’tis like summer in this bright sun,
and this cellar door is warm as a stove. Well,
if you’re really a mind to help, Mr. Parks, I’m
sure you’re more than kind.”
There was plenty of room on the cellar
door for them and the tomatoes. Calvin curled
up his long legs under him, and gave his attention
for several minutes to the Crimson Cushions and Ponderosas,
turning them with careful nicety.
“Pretty, ain’t they?” he said; “some
of ’em, that is.”
“Real pretty!” said Mary
Sands. “I do enjoy them, Mr. Parks; ’tis
a kind of play with me, tending my tomaytoes.
I expect I’m foolish about growin’ things.”
“I expect if there was more
had your kind of foolishness,” replied Calvin,
“the world would be a better place than it is.”
“See this one!” Mary went
on; “for all the world like a red satin pincushion
my grandmother used to have in her basket. ’Tis
well named, the Crimson Cushion is.”
“Look at this feller,”
said Calvin, “all green and yeller, and squinnied
up like his co’t was too tight for him.
It looks like the boys; honest now, don’t it,
Miss Hands?”
Mary tinkled a reproachful laugh.
“Now Mr. Parks, I wonder at you. Poor Cousins!”
“I ain’t takin’
up no collection for the boys!” said Calvin coolly.
“Where’s Sam? I see the young colt
is out.”
“He’s gone to market;
and Cousin Sims’ in a dreadful takin’,
for fear he’ll get run away with, or hove out,
or something.”
Calvin stared. “Why, the
colt is ten year old if he is a day!” he said.
“I told him that; but he said
it didn’t make no odds, he’d never found
out he was grown up, and acted accordin’.
He werries terrible about Cousin Sam every time he
goes out, and Cousin Sam werries about him. I
notice it growin’ on the two of ’em.
Mr. Parks, I believe that down in their hearts them
two are missin’ each other more than tongue can
tell, and neither one of them knows what’s the
matter with him.”
“You don’t say!”
said Calvin. “Why don’t they make
up, then? Ridic’lous old lobsters!”
“They don’t know how!”
said Mary. “Even if they mistrust what ails
’em, and I don’t believe they do as yet.”
She was silent a moment, and then
added: “Mr. Parks, I feel I can speak out
to you, that have been their friend right along.
I wish’t one of Cousins would marry; there!
I do so!”
Calvin Parks’s face, which had
been radiant with cheerfulness, turned to brown wood.
He looked straight before him, with no more expression
than the green tomato he held in his hand.
“That so!” he said slowly.
“Which which one of ’em would
you consider best suited to matrimony, Miss Hands,
if ’tisn’t too much to ask?”
“I don’t know as I care
which it is,” cried Mary, earnestly, Calvin
winced, and dropped the tomato, which rolled slowly
down the cellar door and plumped into the snow, “so
long as it’s one of ’em. They ought
to have a woman belongin’ to them, Mr.
Parks, as would take an interest in things because
they was hers, you understand, and care for whichever
one she’d marry and the other one too. They’d
never ought to have been let act so foolish.
You see, they’d always had a woman to do for
’em, and think for ’em, and live
for ’em; and the minute she was gone they fell
to pieces, kind of; ’tis often so with men folks,”
she said simply. “They ain’t calc’lated
to be alone. But even now, if there was a woman
belongin’ to ’em, that had the right to
say how things should be, I believe she could bring
’em together in no time.”
There was a long silence, Mary turning
tomatoes, Calvin staring straight ahead of him with
the same wooden countenance. At length he cleared
his throat and spoke slowly and laboriously.
“There’s something in
what you say, Miss Hands, and I’m bound to confess
that that I’ve had thoughts of something
of the kind before you spoke. But well,
we’ll put it this way. Which of them two
old of them two individuals, we’ll
call ’em for this once would a woman
be likely to fancy? I I should be
pleased to have your opinion on that p’int.”
Mary considered, turning the Crimson
Cushions meanwhile with a careful hand. Calvin,
misunderstanding her silence, went on.
“What I mean is if
a woman was thinkin’ of matrimony ”
he winced again, seeming to hear Mr. Sam’s voice
squeaking out the word, “if a woman
was thinkin’ of matrimony, and one of them two
should take her fancy more than the other why a
person as was friendly to all concerned might try
his hand in the way of helpin’ to bring it about.”
Mary glanced up quickly at him, but
no friendly twinkle responded to her glance.
Calvin’s brown eyes were still dark with trouble,
and he still stared moodily away from her.
“’Tis hard to say!”
she replied after a pause. “Cousin Sim needs
the most care.”
“He does so!” said Calvin
Parks. “Sim certinly needs care. And he’s
a home-lovin’ man, Simeon is, and sober, and
honest. There’s things you could find in
Sim that’s no worse than what you’d find
in some others, I make no doubt; and and
any one would have a first-rate home, and every comfort.”
“Oh! Mr. Parks, but do
you think any woman could make up her mind to
marry Cousin Sim?” said Mary.
Calvin gave her a bewildered look,
and went on, still slowly and laboriously.
“Not bein’ a woman myself,
ma’am, nor had any special dealin’s with
the sex since I growed up, it ain’t easy for
me to form an opinion. But since you ask me honest well maybe
not! This brings us to Sam’l. Now
Sam’l is a man that has his faculties, such as
they are. He has his health, and he’s smart
and capable. A good farmer Sam has always been,
and a good manager. Careful and savin’;
and there’d be the house, same as in Simeon’s
case. Anybody would have them a good home, and ”
“Oh! my goodness!”
cried Mary Sands. Calvin looked up with a start,
and saw her face on fire.
“What is it?” he asked, helplessly.
“Oh! don’t you see?”
she cried. “I was thinkin’ about them,
poor old things, and wishin’ they might find
some one; but you’ve shown me the other side.
Mr. Parks, they never, never, never could find
any woman to marry them!”
Calvin Parks’s face was a study of bewilderment.
“I I don’t
understand!” he faltered. “Do you
mean that you wouldn’t couldn’t fancy
either one of the boys, Miss Hands?”
“Me!” cried Mary Sands; “me
fancy one of them!”
Involuntarily she rose to her feet;
Calvin rose too, looking anxiously down at her.
There was a moment of tense silence. “Do do
you want me to marry one of them, Mr. Parks?”
asked Mary, in a small shaking voice.
“Want you to?” cried Calvin Parks. “Want
you to?”
At this moment Mr. Sam came round
the corner. Mary Sands fled, and as she ran into
the house there floated back from the closing door was
it a sound of laughter or of tears?
“What in the name of hemlock
is goin’ on here?” asked Mr. Sam.
“Calvin Parks, what are you about, treadin’
of them tomaytoes under foot? You’ve creshed
as much as a dozen of ’em under them great hoofs
of your’n.”
“That you, Sam?” said
Calvin Parks. “How are you? I’d
shut my mouth if I was you. You look handsomer
that way than what you do with it open.”