The brown horse had a dull day of
it. No cheery remarks, no snatches of song, no
cracking of the whip about his responsive ears.
He whinnied remonstrance and inquiry now and then,
but received no reply. Calvin Parks drove moodily
along, his shoulders up to his ears, his head sunk
between them, his eyes staring straight ahead.
He could hardly even bring his mind to trade, and
Mrs. Weazel got five cents off the price of her marshmallows,
and was straightway consumed with anguish because she
had not tried for ten.
“What’s wrong with you,
Cal?” asked Si Slocum at the Corners. “Didn’t
the Pie-fillene set good?”
“That’s all right!” said Calvin
briefly.
“I was clearin’ out a
lot of old samples,” Si went on, “and Phrony
come meechin’ and beseechin’, the way
she does, and I give her the whole bunch. I mistrusted
she’d try ’em on you. Come in, won’t
ye?”
“I’m in a hurry!”
replied Calvin. “Here’s the goods
you ordered; all right, be they?”
“Look so!” said Si; “and
taste so!” he added, attacking a cinnamon stick.
“Ah! what’s your hurry, Cal? Come
in and set a bit! It’s New Year’s
Day, you know, and a holiday by rights.”
“I know; and I wish you a happy
New Year!” said Calvin soberly; “but I
must be moseyin’ along. Gitty up, hossy!”
“He looks bad!” said the
storekeeper, shaking his head as he watched Calvin’s
retreating figure. “Well, I should think
he would, if all they say is true about him and Phrony
Marlin. I was bound I’d get in a hint about
her and her ways; he’s too good a sort to be
grabbed by them cattle; but he shut me right up.”
It was night when Calvin reached the
Marlin gate. Silently he came, for some hundred
yards back he had got out and taken the sleigh-bells
from Hossy’s neck, to the great astonishment
of the worthy animal. The snow was soft and deep,
and there was no sound as Calvin drove past the house.
At the barn door he paused, and seemed to reflect;
started to drive in, then checked the horse and got
out of the sleigh. Hastily bringing an armful
of straw, he cast it down on the barn floor, spreading
it thick and soft where the iron-shod hoofs must tread.
Then, without a sound, he led the good beast in, rubbed
him down, washed his feet, and gave him his supper.
All the while, though he spoke no
word aloud, one phrase was saying itself over and
over in his mind; the same phrase that old Ivory Cheeseman
had spoken as he looked after him in the morning.
“Where did she get the money?”
The stairs which led to his attic
room went up from the shed. Coming in silently,
his foot was on the lowest step when he heard voices
in the kitchen, one of them speaking his own name.
Involuntarily he paused.
“S’pose the Cap’n
should find it out!” said the old woman’s
creaking voice.
“He won’t find it out!”
barked her daughter. “It’s all wopsed
up in a bunch, I tell you, and stuffed into the wallet
anyhow. He don’t know how much he’s
got. Hark! was that the sleigh-bells?”
“Dust and ashes!” creaked
the old woman. “I never thought a child
of mine would be a thief, but I don’t know as
it matters. Hell-fire lights easy!”
“I ain’t a thief!”
said Phrony fiercely. “I’m only takin’
what’s my own, or will be when we’re man
and wife.”
“Jesus’ll kerry me through!”
Mrs. Marlin piped. “Who knows you ever will
be, darlin’? He’s no fool, the Cap’n
ain’t, for all his easy ways. You may go
too fur. Jordan’s rollin’ past, rollin’
past!”
“Let it roll!” cried the
other woman savagely. “If you’ll only
hold your tongue, mother, I can fix it all right.
Do you want the mortgage foreclosed, and us both on
the town? You leave this to me! Mebbe he
ain’t a fool, but he’s as good as one for
soft-heartedness. If I can’t get round
that man hark! was that the bells?”
Calvin Parks stole noiselessly up
the stairs. Slipping off his shoes, he crept
across the garret room to the cupboard; groped with
trembling hands for the wallet, found it, and brought
it out; lighted the lamp and hastily counted the money
it contained. One hundred dollars two
hundred three hundred! He counted again
and again; there was no mistake. He thrust the
money into his bosom and stood up; his face showed
white under the tan.
“She has taken two hundred dollars!”
He said. “Poor miserable creatur’!”
He stood perfectly still for some
minutes, thinking rapidly. Then, creeping swiftly
about the room, light and noiseless as a cat for all
his great height, he gathered together his few belongings;
the daguerreotype of his mother (saved from the burning
house at the risk of his boyish life), the Testament
she gave him, Longfellow’s poems, and his few
clothes; and packed them all hastily but neatly in
his old valise. When all was done he paused again;
then finding a scrap of paper, he sat down and wrote
hurriedly;
“I shall not do anything about
the money unless you try to follow me; mebbe you
need it more than I do; but you had best take back
the bunnet, for you will never need that.
Wishin’ you well and more wisdom, from
“C. Parks.
“P. S. You be good
to the old woman, or I will tell.”
Put out the light now, Calvin! creep
softly, softly, down the rickety stairs, testing each
board as you go, lest it creak. Out to the barn,
where the good brown horse is dozing peacefully.
He has had a good supper and a good rest; he is fit
for the ten miles that lie between you and safety.
Stow the bells under the seat, muffling them carefully
in the horse-blanket lest any faintest jingle betray
you. Now softly, softly, out over the snow, out
past the silent house where the two women are watching
for you behind closed shutters; out to the open road,
and away!