The sun was not yet up, but the sky
was brightening in lovely pale tints, pearl and opal
and rose, when Mary Sands opened the shed door and
tripped lightly down the path to the barn. She
unbarred the great doors, and entering the dim, fragrant
place, was greeted by a five-fold whinny from the
stalls, and a trampling of twenty friendly hoofs.
“Good morning, hossies!”
she said cheerily. “I expect you’re
surprised to see me. I’ve got to get breakfast
for all hands this mornin’, and I’m goin’
to begin with you. Mornin’, colty! mornin’,
marey! mornin’, John! mornin’, old hoss!
Oh! you naughty old hoss, who ever would have thought
of your actin’ that way at your time of life!
I was surprised my goodness! who’s
this in the box-stall? Calvin Parks’s Hossy?
What upon earth! Why, you darlin’, where’s
your master?”
Hossy’s explanations, though
fervid, and accompanied by agreeable rubbings of a
soft brown nose on her shoulder, were not lucid, and
Mary gazed about her in bewilderment.
“You never run away, hossy?”
she asked; “you wouldn’t do that!
Then where is he?”
Just then a golden finger of sunshine
slanted through the dusty window and fell on the harness-room
door, which stood slightly ajar. Mary Sands ran
to the door and peeped in. There, in the one chair
tilted back, his feet on the stove, his head against
the farther wall, sat Calvin Parks, sound asleep.
“Oh! you blessed creatur’!”
cried Mary under her breath. She stood looking
at him, taking swift note of his appearance.
“He’s sick!” she
said; “or he’s been through the wars somehow.
He looks completely tuckered out. There! he is
not fit to be round alone, and that’s the livin’
truth. Oh dear! ’tis cold as a stone here;
he’ll get his death. Calvin! Mr. Parks!
Wake up, won’t you? Wake up!”
Now Calvin Parks had been dreaming,
a thing that seldom occurred in the simple organism
of his brain. He dreamed that he was on a lonely
road, with high, rocky banks on either side; and that
he was pursued by two black hooded snakes with glittering
eyes, that reared and hissed on either side of him,
and darted at him as he sped along. He tried to
cry out, but found no voice. As he panted on
in terror and anguish, thinking every moment to feel
the venomed fangs in his flesh, suddenly a bird came
flying down, a blue bird with a white breast, and took
the evil creatures one after the other and flung them
far from his path. And as he looked, still panting
and breathless, the bird turned into Mary Sands in
her blue dress and white apron, and she cried “Wake
up, Calvin Parks! wake up!”
He opened his eyes, dim and bewildered
with sleep. The vision was still before him,
the trim blue and white figure, the pretty brown hair,
the hazel eyes full of anxious tenderness. Still
bewildered, still only half awake, he opened his arms
and gathered the little figure into them. “My
woman!” he said. “My woman, before
God and while I live.”
“Oh! yes, Calvin!” said
Mary Sands; and she hid her head on his broad breast
and sobbed, a little happy sob.
So they stood for a moment, heaven
as near to their middle-aged hearts as to any boy
and girl lovers under the sun; then suddenly Calvin
put her from him with a quick movement, and stepped
back.
“I forgot!” he cried.
“Mary, I forgot. I I spoke too
soon.”
“Too soon!” echoed Mary Sands.
“I’ve no right to you
yet!” he cried. “I thought I had;
I forgot last night. Mary, I won’t ask
for you till I have a right to. Yesterday I had
the right, or thought I had; to-day I haven’t.
You you’d better forget what I said no!
don’t forget one word of it, but but
put it away till some day ”
his voice broke, and he turned away with something
like a sob.
Mary Sands eyed him keenly; then she
spoke in her usual quiet cheerful tone.
“Mr. Parks, would you just as
lives light a fire in the stove? It’s perishin’
cold here.”
Calvin started, and flung himself
furiously at the pile of kindlings in the corner.
“That shows!” he muttered,
as he stuffed them into the stove with a reckless
hand. “That shows the kind I am, lettin’
you freeze while I talk foolishness. Here!”
He took off his coat, and would have wrapped it round
her, but she put it back quietly and decidedly.
“You put that coat on again,
Mr. Parks. I’ll wrap this robe round me;
there! now I’m warm as toast, and I should be
pleased if you would sit down on that bucket and tell
me what’s happened; why you come here in the
dead of night, and and all about it.”
Calvin sat down on the bucket and
looked at her helplessly.
“Mary,” he said, “you
know I’ve marked you for mine this long while
back.”
“Yes!” said Mary simply. “I
know that, Calvin.”
“I said I wouldn’t ask
you to take no such rollin’ stone as I’ve
been, until I had something laid by. I put a
figger to it. I thought if I had five hundred
dollars in the bank and the route doin’ well,
as it has been right along lately, I could ask you
to believe that that I’d stopped
rollin’ and rovin’, and you might regard
me as a stiddy character, and one that was not
worthy of you, not by a long chalk but
aimin’ so to be, and with a beginnin’ made
that way. Mary, yesterday mornin’ I had
that five hundred dollars, and I was the happiest man
in the State of Maine. I was comin’ to
you to-day, after puttin’ it in the bank, and well,
no need to tell you what I was goin’ to say.”
“I thought you had said it!”
said Mary meekly; and there was a twinkle in her voice,
though she kept her eyes resolutely cast down.
Calvin groaned. “Don’t!”
he said. “Don’t rub it in, Mary!
Last night I lost pretty near the half
of it. Don’t ask me how; it’s gone,
and I’ve got to airn it over again. Now ”
he spoke rapidly, stumbling over his words, his eyes
fixed imploringly on her. “I’ve got
to get away, Mary. I can’t stay round here
just yet awhile. I made up my mind last night,
drivin’ over here from that that place.
I’m goin’ a-rollin’ and a-rovin’
once more, till I get that money back.”
“Is that so?” asked Mary
quietly. “Where was you thinkin’ of
goin’, Calvin?”
“I’m goin’ back
to the Mary Sands!” he said. “She’s
in port, loadin’ up with lumber for Floridy,
and the skipper wants to make a change. I I’ll
be glad to see the Mary again, and I expect they’ll
take me on; what say?”
“I expect they will!” said Mary dryly.
Then, all in a moment, she was laughing and crying
on his shoulder.
“Calvin!” she cried.
“Calvin, you foolish creatur’! you don’t
need to go to Bath to find the Mary Sands. I’m
Mary Sands!”
“You!” said Calvin Parks.
She glanced up at him, and broke down again in laughter
and tears.
“You needn’t look like
a stone image!” she cried. “’Tis
so! I’ve been Mary Sands right along.
It sounded so comical your callin’ me Hands,
I wouldn’t let Cousins tell you. If I’ve
stopped them once I have twenty times. Besides,
you was so mad at a woman’s bein’ owner
of your schooner, I couldn’t help but laugh
every time I thought of it. I s’pose I’ve
been foolish about it, but it’s been a kind of
play to me all this time. Calvin, you make me
act real forth-puttin’, but if you
won’t speak for yourself there!
will you be master of the Mary Sands, afloat and shore?”
She held out her hands with a pretty
gesture. Calvin grasped them so hard that she
cried out, and his face, white again under its brown,
set in dogged lines of gentle obstinacy, the most
hopeless kind.
“I can’t!” he said.
“Mary, all the more I can’t because you
are a rich woman. You see that, don’t you?
I’m sure you must see that, Mary. Soon
as ever I’ve aimed that money again ”
“Oh! plague take the money,”
cried Mary, her patience giving way. “Give
it to the cat; she’s fitter to take care of it
than you are, Calvin Parks. There! you do try
me. You ain’t fit to live alone, no more
than and my goodness gracious me!”
she cried, her voice changing suddenly; “if
I hadn’t clean forgotten Cousins! Calvin,
you’ve got to stay by us, you’ve
just plain and simple got to! Hush! hold your
obstinate tongue and listen to me. Cousin Sam
had an accident yesterday. He was out with the
old hoss of all, and they met the snow-plough, and
if that old creatur’ didn’t leap over the
stone wall and smash the sleigh to kindlin’
wood! Cousin Sam’s all stove up inside,
he thinks, but I’m in hopes not. There’s
no bones broke, and I guess all he got was a good
shakin’ up; but anyway, he’s in bed, and
can’t move hand or foot. And I can’t
take care of him and Cousin Sim, and keep house, and
see to the stock and poultry too, Calvin Parks; now
I can’t! I’ve got to have
help!”
At this moment a jingling of bells
was heard outside; Mary stepped to the window.
“Who on earth comes here?” she exclaimed.
“Of all the queer-lookin’ turnouts do
look here, Calvin!”
Calvin looked. In an old-fashioned
high-backed sleigh, drawn by an ancient white horse,
sat a little old man so wrapped in furs that only
the tip of a frosty nose could be seen. He was
waving whip and reins wildly, and shouting “Somebody
come! somebody come!”
“Gosh!” said Calvin Parks.
He ran out, and Mary Sands followed him wondering.
“Mr. Cheeseman, I want to know if this is you!”
“I got it!” gasped the old man.
“You got it!” repeated
Calvin. “You’ve got your everlastin’,
I expect, out this time o’ day at your age.
You come in to the fire, sir!”
Without more ado, he lifted the old
man in his arms, carried him bodily into the little
room, and set him down in the chair. Mr. Cheeseman
was still breathless with frost and excitement, and
gasped painfully, his eyes starting from his head.
“I got it!” he repeated. “I
got it, Calvin!”
“Fetch your breath, old gentleman,”
said Calvin soothingly. “You ain’t
got that, anyway. What is it you have got? the
rheumatiz?”
“The money!” cried the
old candy-maker. “Your money, friend Calvin,
every cent of it, except what was spent, and that warn’t
much.”
Calvin stood as if turned to stone.
“What do you mean?” he faltered.
“I mistrusted all along!”
cried Mr. Cheeseman. “I kep’ askin’
myself all day yesterday, where did she get that money?
I never slep’ last night for askin’ it.
Suddin, along about four o’clock this mornin’,
by the livin’ Jingo, I see the whole contraption.
I got up that minute of time, hitched up old Major,
and drove straight out there to tell you what I suspicioned.
You warn’t there. They was awake, the two
of ’em, and scared at your bein’ out all
night as they thought, and when I called and knocked
they come down, and a sight they was. Talk of
witches! ‘Where’s Calvin Parks?’
I says; and they made answer you hadn’t come
in, and they’d sat up ’most all night
for you, and was scairt to death, and all the rest
of it. ‘Show me his room!’ I says.
They made objections to that, and I just cleared ’em
to one side and stomped up, and they after me.
When they see your things were gone, Phrony give a
screech fit to wake the dead, and the old woman set
up a gibberin’ about Jordan rollin’ past,
and dust and ashes, and I don’t know what all.
My eye and Phrony’s lit on this paper” he
held out a crumpled scrap “the same
moment, and we run for it together, but I got my claws
in it first, and read it out loud. Then, ‘Miss
Marlin,’ I says, quiet like, ‘I’ll
take that money!’ ‘What money?’
she says, and added language that ain’t fit for
this lady to hear.
“‘You know what money!’
I says. ’I’m a special constable,
and my team is outside. You’ll hand me
that money or see the inside of the lock-up within
half an hour!’ I says. She used awful language
then; gorry! if you’ll excuse the expression,
ma’am, I never heard such language, and I’m
no chicken. But the old woman throws up her hands,
and screeches out, ‘A jidgment, Phrony! a jidgment!
Jesus walkin’ on the waves, and Jordan rollin’
past! Git it out of the bureau drawer!’
“I’m old, ma’am,
but I’m tol’able spry. I got to the
door and into the front room before Phrony did; and
when she see me at the bureau she gave one awful yell
and fell down in some kind of fit. I took the
money. The old woman was kind of clawin’
the air over her, and sayin’ ’Dust and
ashes! dust and ashes! hell fire’s lightin’
up!’ ’Twarn’t no agreeable sight,
and I come away. And and here’s
the money, friend Calvin, and I wish you joy with
it.”
Calvin Parks took the money with a dazed look.
“Mr. Cheeseman,” he said,
“I don’t know what to say to you.
There don’t seem to be anything to say
that’ll express what I feel ”
“You might introduce me to this
lady!” said the old man with a frosty twinkle.
“Darn my hide!” cried
Calvin Parks. “Somebody put me under the
pump, will they? Mr. Ivory Cheeseman, let me
make you acquainted with Mis’ Calvin Parks as
is to be! her present name is Ha Sands!”
“Miss Hassands,” said
Mr. Cheeseman with a magnificent bow, “I am
pleased to meet you, I’m sure!”
Mary became rather hysterical at this,
and it was necessary for Calvin to soothe and quiet
her; Mr. Cheeseman meanwhile inspected the harnesses
critically, and expressed his opinion that they was
a first-rate set out, and no mistake.
While they were thus occupied, the
barn door was suddenly flung open, and a thin, peevish
voice cried, “Cousin! Cousin Mary! where
in time have you got to?”
The trio started and turned.
In the doorway stood Mr. Simeon Sill, in carpet slippers
and overcoat, the latter displaying a valance of flowered
dressing-gown. A woollen shawl was tied over his
head, and from it his eyes peered disconsolately.
“Where have you got to?”
he repeated querulously. “Breakfast time,
and the kittle bilin’ over, and no table set,
and Sam’l waitin’ ”
At this moment he caught sight of
the three conspirators, and stopped open-mouthed,
his eyes goggling in his head.
“Oh! Cousin Sim, you’ll
get cold!” cried Mary Sands, hastily smoothing
her hair. “Do go back to the house!
I’m comin’ right in.”
“Mornin’, Sim!”
said Calvin Parks genially. “Come out to
see the stock, have ye? I call that smart, now!”
“Mr. Simeon Sill, I believe!”
said Mr. Cheeseman with dignity. “Pleased
to make your acquaintance, sir!”
Mr. Sim looked from one to another,
still gaping; and finally his gaze fixed itself sternly
on Mary Sands.
“I don’t know what’s
goin’ on in my barn,” he said, “nor
I don’t know what dum foolishness you folks
is up to; but I give you to understand that my brother
Sam’l is waitin’ for his med’cine!”