“Children and fools speak the truth.”
I
“What’s that sigh for,
Polly dear?” “I’m tired, mother,
tired of working and waiting. If I’m ever
going to have any fun, I want it now while
I can enjoy it.”
“You shouldn’t wait another
hour if I could have my way; but you know how helpless
I am;” and poor Mrs. Snow sighed dolefully, as
she glanced about the dingy room and pretty Mary turning
her faded gown for the second time.
“If Aunt Kipp would give us
the money she is always talking about, instead of
waiting till she dies, we should be so comfortable.
She is a dreadful bore, for she lives in such terror
of dropping dead with her heart-complaint that she
doesn’t take any pleasure in life herself or
let any one else; so the sooner she goes the better
for all of us,” said Polly, in a desperate tone;
for things looked very black to her just then.
“My dear, don’t say that,”
began her mother, mildly shocked; but a bluff little
voice broke in with the forcible remark, —
“She’s everlastingly telling
me never to put off till to-morrow what can be done
to-day; next time she comes I’ll remind her of
that, and ask her, if she is going to die, why she
doesn’t do it?”
“Toady! you’re a wicked,
disrespectful boy; never let me hear you say such
a thing again about your dear Aunt Kipp.”
“She isn’t dear!
You know we all hate her, and you are more afraid of
her than you are of spiders, — so now.”
The young personage whose proper name
had been corrupted into Toady, was a small boy of
ten or eleven, apple-cheeked, round-eyed, and curly-headed;
arrayed in well-worn, gray knickerbockers, profusely
adorned with paint, glue, and shreds of cotton.
Perched on a high stool, at an isolated table in a
state of chaos, he was absorbed in making a boat,
entirely oblivious of the racking tooth-ache which
had been his excuse for staying from school.
As cool, saucy, hard-handed, and soft-hearted a little
specimen of young America was Toady as you would care
to see; a tyrant at home, a rebel at school, a sworn
foe to law, order, and Aunt Kipp. This young
person was regarded as a reprobate by all but his
mother, sister, and sister’s sweetheart, Van
Bahr Lamb. Having been, through much anguish of
flesh and spirit, taught that lying was a deadly sin,
Toady rushed to the other extreme, and bolted out
the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth,
at all times and places, with a startling abruptness
that brought wrath and dismay upon his friends and
relatives.
“It’s wicked to fib; you’ve
whipped that into me and you can’t rub it out,”
he was wont to say, with vivid recollection of the
past tingling in the chubby portions of his frame.
“Mind your chips, Toady, and
take care what you say to Aunt Kipp, or you’ll
be as poor as a little rat all the days of your life,”
said Polly, warningly.
“I don’t want her old
money, and I’ll tell her so if she bothers me
about it. I shall go into business with Van and
take care of the whole lot; so don’t you preach,
Polly,” returned Toady, with as much dignity
as was compatible with a great dab of glue on the end
of his snub nose.
“Mother, did aunt say anything
about coming this week?” asked Polly, after
a pause of intense thought over a breadth with three
darns, two spots, and a burn.
“Yes; she wrote that she was
too feeble to come at present, as she had such dreadful
palpitations she didn’t dare stir from her
room. So we are quite safe for the next week
at least, and — bless my soul, there she
is now!”
Mrs. Snow clasped her hands with a
gesture of dismay, and sat as if transfixed by the
spectacle of a ponderous lady, in an awe-inspiring
bonnet, who came walking slowly down the street.
Polly gave a groan, and pulled a bright ribbon from
her hair. Toady muttered, “Oh, bother!”
and vainly attempted to polish up his countenance with
a fragmentary pocket-handkerchief.
“Nothing but salt fish for dinner,”
wailed Mrs. Snow, as the shadow of the coming event
fell upon her.
“Van will make a fool of himself,
and ruin everything,” sighed Polly, glancing
at the ring on her finger.
“I know she’ll kiss me;
she never will let a fellow alone,” growled
Toady, scowling darkly.
The garden gate clashed, dust flew
from the door-mat, a heavy step echoed in the hall,
an imperious voice called “Sophy!” and
Aunt Kipp entered with a flourish of trumpets, for
Toady blew a blast through his fingers which made
the bows totter on her bonnet.
“My dear aunt, I’m very
glad to see you,” murmured Mrs. Snow, advancing
with a smile of welcome; for though as weak as water
gruel, she was as kind-hearted a little woman as ever
lived.
“What a fib that was!” said Toady, sotto
voce.
“We were just saying we were
afraid you wouldn’t” — began Mary,
when a warning, “Mind now, Polly,” caused
her to stop short and busy herself with the newcomer’s
bag and umbrella.
“I changed my mind. Theodore,
come and kiss me,” answered Aunt Kipp, briefly.
“Yes’m,” was the
plaintive reply, and, closing his eyes, Toady awaited
his fate with fortitude.
But the dreaded salute did not come,
for Aunt Kipp exclaimed in alarm, —
“Mercy on us! has the boy got the plague?”
“No’m, it’s paint,
and dirt, and glue, and it won’t come
off,” said Toady, stroking his variegated countenance
with grateful admiration for the stains that saved
him.
“Go and wash this moment, sir.
Thank Heaven, I’ve got no boys,”
cried Aunt Kipp. as if boys were some virulent disease
which she had narrowly escaped.
With a hasty peck at the lips of her
two elder relatives, the old lady seated herself,
and slowly removed the awful bonnet, which in shape
and hue much resembled a hearse hung with black crape.
“I’m glad you are better,”
said Mary, reverently receiving the funereal head-gear.
“I’m not better,”
cut in Aunt Kipp. “I’m worse, much
worse; my days are numbered; I stand on the brink
of the tomb, and may drop at any moment.”
Toady’s face was a study, as
he glanced up at the old lady’s florid countenance,
down at the floor, as if in search of the above-mentioned
“brink,” and looked unaffectedly anxious
to see her drop. “Why don’t you,
then?” was on his lips; but a frown from Polly
restrained him, and he sat himself down on the rug
to contemplate the corpulent victim.
“Have a cup of tea, aunt?” said Mrs. Snow.
“I will.”
“Lie down and rest a little,” suggested
Polly.
“I won’t.”
“Can we do anything for you?” said both.
“Take my things away, and have dinner early.”
Both departed to perform these behests,
and, leaning back in her chair, Aunt Kipp reposed.
“I say, what’s a bore?”
asked Toady from the rug, where he sat rocking meditatively
to and fro, holding on by his shoe-strings.
“It’s a kind of a pig,
very fierce, and folks are afraid of ’em,”
said Aunt Kipp, whose knowledge of Natural History
was limited.
“Good for Polly! so you are!”
sung out the boy, with the hearty child’s laugh
so pleasant to most ears.
“What do you mean, sir?”
demanded the old lady, irefully poking at him with
her umbrella.
“Why, Polly said you were a
bore,” explained Toady, with artless frankness.
“You are fat, you know, and fierce sometimes,
and folks are afraid of you. Good, wasn’t
it?”
“Very! Mary is a nice,
grateful, respectful, loving niece, and I shan’t
forget her, she may depend on that,” and Aunt
Kipp laughed grimly.
“May she? well, that’s
jolly now. She was afraid you wouldn’t give
her the money; so I’ll tell her it’s all
right;” and innocent Toady nodded approvingly.
“Oh, she expects some of my money, does she?”
“Course she does; ain’t
you always saying you’ll remember us in your
will, because father was your favorite nephew, and
all that? I’ll tell you a secret, if you
won’t let Polly know I spoke first. You’ll
find it out to-night, for you ’d see Van and
she were sweethearts in a minute.”
“Sweethearts?” cried Aunt Kipp, turning
red in the face.
“Yes’m. Van settled
it last week, and Polly’s been so happy ever
since. Mother likes it, and I like it,
for I’m fond of Van, though I do call him Baa-baa,
because he looks like a sheep. We all like it,
and we ’d all say so, if we were not afraid of
you. Mother and Polly, I mean; of course we men
don’t mind, but we don’t want a fuss.
You won’t make one, will you, now?”
Anything more expressive of brotherly
good-will, persuasive frankness, and a placid consciousness
of having “fixed it,” than Toady’s
dirty little face, it would be hard to find.
Aunt Kipp eyed him so fiercely that even before she
spoke a dim suspicion that something was wrong began
to dawn on his too-confiding soul.
“I don’t like it,
and I’ll put a stop to it. I won’t
have any ridiculous baa-baas in my family. If
Mary counts on my money to begin housekeeping with,
she’ll find herself mistaken; for not one penny
shall she have, married or single, and you may tell
her so.”
Toady was so taken aback by this explosion
that he let go his shoe-strings, fell over with a
crash, and lay flat, with shovel and tongs spread
upon him like a pall. In rushed Mrs. Snow and
Polly, to find the boy’s spirits quite quenched,
for once, and Aunt Kipp in a towering passion.
It all came out in one overwhelming flood of words,
and Toady fled from the storm to wander round the house,
a prey to the deepest remorse. The meekness of
that boy at dinner-time was so angelic that Mrs. Snow
would have feared speedy translation for him, if she
had not been very angry. Polly’s red eyes,
and Aunt Kipp’s griffinesque expression of countenance,
weighed upon his soul so heavily, that even roly-poly
pudding failed to assuage his trouble, and, taking
his mother into the china-closet, he anxiously inquired
“if it was all up with Polly?”
“I’m afraid so, for aunt
vows she will make a new will to-morrow, and leave
every penny to the Charitable Rag-bag Society,”
sighed Mrs. Snow.
“I didn’t mean to do it,
I truly didn’t! I thought I’d just
’give her a hint,’ as you say. She
looked all right, and laughed when I told her about
being a bore, and I thought she liked it. If she
was a man, I’d thrash her for making Polly cry;”
and Toady shook his fist at Aunt Kipp’s umbrella,
which was an immense relief to his perturbed spirit.
“Bless the boy! I do believe
he would!” cried Mrs. Snow, watching the little
turkey-cock with maternal pride. “You can’t
do that: so just be careful and not make any
more mischief, dear.”
“I’ll try, mother; but
I’m always getting into scrapes with Aunt Kipp.
She’s worse than measles, any day, — such
an old aggrawater! Van’s coming this afternoon,
won’t he make her pleasant again?”
“Oh, dear, no! He will
probably make things ten times worse, he’s so
bashful and queer. I’m afraid our last chance
is gone, deary, and we must rub along as we have done.”
One sniff of emotion burst from Toady,
and for a moment he laid his head in the knife-tray,
overcome with disappointment and regret. But
scorning to yield to unmanly tears, he was soon himself
again. Thrusting his beloved jackknife, with
three blades and a file, into Polly’s hand,
he whispered, brokenly, —
“Keep it forever ‘n’
ever; I’m awful sorry!” Then, feeling that
the magnitude of this sacrifice atoned for everything,
he went to watch for Van, — the forlorn hope
to which he now clung.
II
“Sophy, I’m surprised
at your want of judgment. Do you really mean
to let your girl marry this Lamb? Why, the man’s
a fool!” began Aunt Kipp, after dinner, by way
of opening a pleasant conversation with her relatives.
“Dear me, aunt! how can you
know that, when you never saw him?” mildly returned
Mrs. Snow.
“I’ve heard of him, and
that’s enough for me. I’ve a deal
of penetration in judging character, and I tell you
Van Bahr Lamb is a fool.”
The amiable old lady thought this
would rouse Polly, against whom her anger still burned
hotly. But Polly also possessed penetration;
and, well knowing that contradiction would delight
Aunt Kipp, she completely took the wind out of her
sails, by coolly remarking, —
“I like fools.”
“Bless my heart! what does the girl mean?”
ejaculated Aunt Kipp.
“Just what I say. If Van
is a fool, I prefer simpletons to wiseacres.
I know he is shy and awkward, and does absurd things
now and then. But I also know that he has the
kindest heart that ever was; is unselfish, faithful
and loving; that he took good care of his old parents
till they died, and never thought of himself while
they needed him. He loves me dearly; will wait
for me a dozen years, if I say so, and work all his
days to make me happy. He’s a help and comfort
to mother, a good friend to Toady, and I love and
respect and am proud of him, though you do say he
is a fool,” cried Polly heartily.
“And you insist on marrying him?” demanded
Aunt Kipp.
“Yes, I do.”
“Then I wish a carriage immediately,”
was the somewhat irrelevant reply.
“Why, aunt, you don’t
mean to go so soon?” cried Mrs. Snow, with a
reproachful glance at the rebellious Polly.
“Far from it. I wish to
see Judge Banks about altering my will,” was
the awful answer.
Polly’s face fell; her mother
gave a despairing sigh; Toady, who had hovered about
the door, uttered a suppressed whistle of dismay; and
Mrs. Kipp looked about her with vengeful satisfaction.
“Get the big carryall and old
Bob, so the boy can drive, and all of you come; the
trip will do you good.”
It was like Aunt Kipp to invite her
poor relations to go and “nip their own noses
off,” as she elegantly expressed it. It
was a party of pleasure that just suited her, for
all the fun was on her side. She grew affable
at once, was quite pressing in her invitation, regretted
that Sophy was too busy to go, praised Polly’s
hat; and professed herself quite satisfied with “that
dear boy” for a driver. The “dear
boy” distorted his young countenance frightfully
behind her back, but found a balm for every wound
in the delight of being commander of the expedition.
The big carryall appeared, and, with
much creaking and swaying Mrs. Kipp was got into the
back seat, where the big bonnet gloomed like a thunder-cloud.
Polly, in a high state of indignation, which only made
her look ten times prettier, sat in front with Toady,
who was a sight to see as he drove off with his short
legs planted against the boot, his elbows squared,
and the big whip scientifically cracking now and then.
Away they went, leaving poor Mrs. Snow to bewail herself
dismally after she had smiled and nodded them out of
sight.
“Don’t go over any bridges
or railroad crossings or by any saw-mills,”
said the old lady, as if the town could be suddenly
remodelled to suit her taste.
“Yes’m,” returned
Toady, with a crack which would have done honor to
a French postilion.
It was a fine day, and the young people
would have enjoyed the ride in spite of the breakers
ahead, if Aunt Kipp hadn’t entertained the girl
with a glowing account of the splendors of her own
wedding, and aggravated the boy by frequent pokes
and directions in the art of driving, of which she
was of course, profoundly ignorant. Polly couldn’t
restrain a tear or two, in thinking of her own poor
little prospects, and Toady was goaded to desperation.
“I’ll give her a regular
shaking up; it’ll make her hold her tongue and
do her good,” he said to himself, as a stony
hill sloped temptingly before him.
A sly chuck, and some mysterious manoeuvre
with the reins, and Bob started off at a brisk trot,
as if he objected to the old lady as much as her mischievous
little nephew.
“Hold him in! Keep a taut
rein! Lord ’a mercy, he’s running
away!” shrieked Aunt Kipp, or tried to shriek,
for the bouncing and bumping jerked the words out
of her mouth with ludicrous incoherency.
“I am holding him, but he will
go,” said Toady, with a wicked triumph in his
eye as he glanced back at Polly.
The next minute the words were quite
true; for, as he spoke, two or three distracted hens
flew squalling over the wall and scattered about,
under, over, and before the horse, as only distracted
hens could do. It was too much for Bob’s
nerves; and, taking matters into his own hands, or
feet, rather, he broke into a run, and rattled the
old lady over the stones with a velocity which left
her speechless.
Polly laughed, and Toady chuckled,
as they caught glimpses of the awful bonnet vibrating
wildly in the background, and felt the frantic clutchings
of the old lady’s hands. But both grew sober
as a shrill car-whistle sounded not far off; and Bob,
as if possessed by an evil spirit, turned suddenly
into the road that led to the railroad crossing.
“That will do, Toady; now pull
up, for we can’t get over in time,” said
Polly, glancing anxiously toward the rapidly approaching
puffs of white smoke.
“I can’t, Polly, — I
really can’t,” cried the boy, tugging with
all his might, and beginning to look scared.
Polly lent her aid; but Bob scarcely
seemed to feel it, for he had been a racer once, and
when his blood was up he was hard to handle.
His own good sense might have checked him, if Aunt
Kipp hadn’t unfortunately recovered her voice
at this crisis, and uttered a succession of the shrillest
screams that ever saluted mortal ears. With a
snort and a bound Bob dashed straight on toward the
crossing, as the train appeared round the bend.
“Let me out! Let me out!
Jump! Jump!” shrieked Aunt Kipp, thrusting
her head out of the window, while she fumbled madly
for the door-handle.
“O Toady, save us! save us!”
gasped Polly, losing her presence of mind, and dropping
the reins to cling to her brother, with a woman’s
instinctive faith in the stronger sex.
But Toady held on manfully, though
his arms were nearly pulled off, for “Never
say die,” was his motto, and the plucky little
lad wouldn’t show fear before the women.
“Don’t howl; we’ll
do it! Hi, Bob!” and with a savage slash
of the whip, an exciting cry, a terrible reeling and
rattling, they did do it; for Bob cleared the
track at a breakneck pace, just in time for the train
to sweep swiftly by behind them.
Aunt Kipp dropped in a heap, Polly
looked up at her brother, with a look which he never
forgot; and Toady tried to say, stoutly, “It’s
all right!” with lips that were white and dry
in spite of himself.
“We shall smash up at the bridge,”
he muttered, as they tore through the town, where
every one obligingly shouted, waved their hats, and
danced about on the sidewalks, doing nothing but add
to Bob’s fright and the party’s danger.
But Toady was wrong, — they did not smash
up at the bridge; for, before they reached the perilous
spot, one man had the sense to fly straight at the
horse’s head and hold on till the momentary
check enabled others to lend a hand.
The instant they were safe, Polly,
like a regular heroine, threw herself into the arms
of her dishevelled preserver, who of course was Van,
and would have refreshed herself with hysterics if
the sight of Toady hadn’t steadied her.
The boy sat as stiff and rigid as a wooden figure
till they took the reins from him; then all the strength
seemed to go out of him, and he leaned against his
sister, as white and trembling as she, whispering
with an irrepressible sob, —
“O Polly, wasn’t it horrid?
Tell mother I stood by you like a man. Do tell
her that!”
If any one had had time or heart to
laugh, they certainly would have done it when, after
much groping, heaving, and hoisting. Mrs. Kipp
was extricated and restored to consciousness; for a
more ludicrously deplorable spectacle was seldom seen.
Quite unhurt, though much shaken, the old lady insisted
on believing herself to be dying, and kept the town
in a ferment till three doctors had pronounced her
perfectly well able to go home. Then the perversity
of her nature induced her to comply, that she might
have the satisfaction of dying on the way, and proving
herself in the right.
Unfortunately she did not expire,
but, having safely arrived, went to bed in high dudgeon,
and led Polly and her mother a sad life of it for
two weary days. Having heard of Toady’s
gallant behavior, she solemnly ordered him up to receive
her blessing. But the sight of Aunt Kipp’s
rubicund visage, surrounded by the stiff frills of
an immense nightcap, caused the irreverent boy to
explode with laughter in his handkerchief, and to
be hustled away by his mother before Aunt Kipp discovered
the true cause of his convulsed appearance.
“Ah! poor dear, his feelings
are too much for him. He sees my doom in my face,
and is overcome by what you refuse to believe.
I shan’t forget that boy’s devotion.
Now leave me to the meditations befitting these solemn
hours.”
Mrs. Snow retired, and Aunt Kipp tried
to sleep; but the murmur of voices, and the sound
of stifled laughter in the next room disturbed her
repose.
“They are rejoicing over my
approaching end, knowing that I haven’t changed
my will. Mercenary creatures, don’t exult
too soon! there’s time yet,” she muttered;
and presently, unable to control her curiosity, she
crept out of bed to listen and peep through the keyhole.
Van Bahr Lamb did look rather like
a sheep. He had a blond curly head, a long face,
pale, mild eyes, a plaintive voice, and a general
expression of innocent timidity strongly suggestive
of animated mutton. But Baa-baa was a “trump,”
as Toady emphatically declared, and though every one
laughed at him, every one liked him, and that is more
than can be said of many saints and sages. He
adored Polly, was dutifully kind to her mother, and
had stood by T. Snow, Jr., in many an hour of tribulation
with fraternal fidelity. Though he had long blushed,
sighed, and cast sheep’s eyes at the idol of
his affections, only till lately had he dared to bleat
forth his passion. Polly loved him because she
couldn’t help it; but she was proud, and wouldn’t
marry till Aunt Kipp’s money was hers, or at
least a sure prospect of it; and now even the prospect
of a prospect was destroyed by that irrepressible
Toady. They were talking of this as the old lady
suspected, and of course the following conversation
afforded her intense satisfaction.
“It’s a shame to torment
us as she does, knowing how poor we are and how happy
a little of her money would make us. I’m
tired of being a slave to a cruel old woman just because
she’s rich. If it was not for mother, I
declare I’d wash my hands of her entirely, and
do the best I could for myself.”
“Hooray for Polly! I always
said let her money go and be jolly without it,”
cried Toady, who, in his character of wounded hero,
reposed with a lordly air on the sofa, enjoying the
fragrance of the opodeldoc with which his strained
wrists were bandaged.
“It’s on your account,
children, that I bear with aunt’s temper as I
do. I don’t want anything for myself, but
I really think she owes it to your dear father, who
was devoted to her while he lived, to provide for
his children when he couldn’t;” after which
remarkably spirited speech for her, Mrs. Snow dropped
a tear, and stitched away on a small trouser-leg which
was suffering from a complicated compound fracture.
“Don’t you worry about
me, mother; I’ll take care of myself and you
too,” remarked Toady, with the cheery belief
in impossibilities which makes youth so charming.
“Now, Van, tell us what to do,
for things have come to such a pass that we must either
break away altogether or be galley-slaves as long
as Aunt Kipp lives,” said Polly, who was a good
deal excited about the matter.
“Well, really, my dear, I don’t
know,” hesitated Van, who did know what he
wanted, but thought it might be selfish to urge it.
“Have you tried to soften your aunt’s
heart?” he asked, after a moment’s meditation.
“Good gracious, Van, she hasn’t
got any,” cried Polly, who firmly believed it.
“It’s hossified,”
thoughtfully remarked Toady, quite unconscious of
any approach to a joke till every one giggled.
“You’ve had hossification
enough for one while, my lad,” laughed Van.
“Well, Polly, if the old lady has no heart you’d
better let her go, for people without hearts are not
worth much.”
“That’s a beautiful remark,
Van, and a wise one. I just wish she could hear
you make it, for she called you a fool,” said
Polly, irefully.
“Did she? Well, I don’t
mind, I’m used to it,” returned Van, placidly;
and so he was, for Polly called him a goose every day
of her life, and he enjoyed it immensely.
“Then you think, dear, if we
stopped worrying about aunt and her money, and worked
instead of waiting, that we shouldn’t be any
poorer and might be a great deal happier than we are
now?” asked Polly, making a pretty little tableau
as she put her hand through Van’s arm and looked
up at him with as much love, respect, and reliance
as if he had been six feet tall, with the face of
an Apollo and the manners of a Chesterfield.
“Yes, my dear, I do, for it
has troubled me a good deal to see you so badgered
by that very uncomfortable old lady. Independence
is a very nice thing, and poverty isn’t half
as bad as this sort of slavery. But you are not
going to be poor, nor worry about anything. We’ll
just be married and take mother and Toady home and
be as jolly as grigs, and never think of Mrs. K. again, — unless
she loses her fortune, or gets sick, or comes to grief
in any way. We’d lend her a hand then,
wouldn’t we, Polly?” and Van’s mild
face was pleasant to behold as he made the kindly
proposition.
“Well, we’d think of it,”
said Polly, trying not to relent, but feeling that
she was going very fast.
“Let’s do it!” cried
Toady, fired with the thought of privy conspiracy
and rebellion. “Mother would be so comfortable
with Polly, and I’d help Van in the store, when
I’ve learned that confounded multiplication
table,” he added with a groan; “and if
Aunt Kipp comes a visiting, we’ll just say ‘Not
at home,’ and let her trot off again.”
“It sounds very nice, but aunt
will be dreadfully offended and I don’t wish
to be ungrateful,” said Mrs. Snow, brightening
visibly.
“There’s no ingratitude
about it,” cried Van. “She might have
done everything to make you love, and respect, and
admire her, and been a happy, useful, motherly, old
soul; but she didn’t choose to, and now she
must take the consequences. No one cares for her,
because she cares for nobody; her money’s the
plague of her life, and not a single heart will ache
when she dies.”
“Poor Aunt Kipp!” said Polly, softly.
Mrs. Snow echoed the words, and for
a moment all thought pitifully of the woman whose
life had given so little happiness, whose age had won
so little reverence, and whose death would cause so
little regret. Even Toady had a kind thought
for her, as he broke the silence, saying soberly, —
“You’d better put tails
on my jackets, mother; then the next time we get run
away with, Aunt Kipp will have something to hold on
by.”
It was impossible to help laughing
at the recollection of the old lady clutching at the
boy till he had hardly a button left, and at the paternal
air with which he now proposed a much-desired change
of costume, as if intent on Aunt Kipp’s future
accommodation.
Under cover of the laugh, the old
lady stole back to bed, wide awake, and with subjects
enough to meditate upon now. The shaking up had
certainly done her good, for somehow the few virtues
she possessed came to the surface, and the mental
shower-bath just received had produced a salutary
change. Polly wouldn’t have doubted her
aunt’s possession of a heart, if she could have
known the pain and loneliness that made it ache, as
the old woman crept away; and Toady wouldn’t
have laughed if he had seen the tears on the face,
between the big frills, as Aunt Kipp laid it on the
pillow, muttering, drearily, —
“I might have been a happy,
useful woman, but I didn’t choose to, and now
it’s too late.”
It was too late to be all she
might have been, for the work of seventy selfish years
couldn’t be undone in a minute. But with
regret, rose the sincere wish to earn a little love
before the end came, and the old perversity gave a
relish to the reformation, for even while she resolved
to do the just and generous thing, she said to herself, —
“They say I’ve got no
heart; I’ll show ’em that I have:
they don’t want my money; I’ll make
’em take it: they turn their backs on me;
I’ll just render myself so useful and agreeable
that they can’t do without me.”
III
Aunt Kipp sat bolt upright in the
parlor, hemming a small handkerchief, adorned with
a red ship, surrounded by a border of green monkeys.
Toady suspected that this elegant article of dress
was intended for him, and yearned to possess it; so,
taking advantage of his mother’s and Polly’s
absence, he strolled into the room, and, seating himself
on a high, hard chair, folded his hands, crossed his
legs, and asked for a story with the thirsting-for-knowledge
air which little boys wear in the moral story-books.
Now Aunt Kipp had one soft place in
her heart, though it was partially ossified,
as she very truly declared, and Toady was enshrined
therein. She thought there never was such a child,
and loved him as she had done his father before him,
though the rack wouldn’t have forced her to
confess it. She scolded, snubbed, and predicted
he’d come to a bad end in public; but she forgave
his naughtiest pranks, always brought him something
when she came, and privately intended to make his
future comfortable with half of her fortune.
There was a dash and daring, a generosity and integrity,
about the little fellow, that charmed her. Sophy
was weak and low-spirited, Polly pretty and headstrong,
and Aunt Kipp didn’t think much of either of
them; but Toady defied, distracted, and delighted her,
and to Toady she clung, as the one sunshiny thing
in her sour, selfish old age.
When he made his demure request, she
looked at him, and her eyes began to twinkle, for
the child’s purpose was plainly seen in the loving
glances cast upon the pictorial pocket-handkerchief.
“A story? Yes, I’ll
tell you one about a little boy who had a kind old — ahem! — grandma.
She was rich, and hadn’t made up her mind who
she’d leave her money to. She was fond
of the boy, — a deal fonder than he deserved, — for
he was as mischievous a monkey as any that ever lived
in a tree, with a curly tail. He put pepper in
her snuff-box,” — here Toady turned
scarlett, — “he cut up her bestt frisette
to make a mane for his rocking-horse,” — Toady
opened his mouth impulsively, but shut it again without
betraying himself — “he repeated rude
things to her, and called her ‘an old aggrewater,’” — here
Toady wriggled in his chair, and gave a little gasp.
“If you are tired I won’t
go on,” observed Aunt Kipp, mildly.
“I’m not tired, ’m;
it’s a very interesting story,” replied
Toady, with a gravity that nearly upset the old lady.
“Well, in spite of all this,
that kind, good, forgiving grandma left that bad boy
twenty thousand dollars when she died. What do
you think of that?” asked Aunt Kipp, pausing
suddenly with her sharp eye on him.
“I — I think she was
a regular dear,” cried Toady, holding on to the
chair with both hands, as if that climax rather took
him off his legs.
“And what did the boy do about
it?” continued Aunt Kipp, curiously.
“He bought a velocipede, and
gave his sister half, and paid his mother’s
rent, and put a splendid marble cherakin over the old
lady, and had a jolly good time, and — ”
“What in the world is a cherakin?”
laughed Aunt Kipp, as Toady paused for breath.
“Why, don’t you know?
It’s a angel crying, or pointing up, or flapping
his wings. They have them over graves; and I’ll
give you the biggest one I can find when you die.
But I’m not in a very great hurry to
have you.”
“Thankee, dear; I’m in
no hurry, myself. But, Toady, the boy did wrong
in giving his sister half; she didn’t deserve
any; and the grandma left word she wasn’t
to have a penny of it.”
“Really?” cried the boy, with a troubled
face.
“Yes, really. If he gave
her any he lost it all; the old lady said so.
Now what do you think?” asked Aunt Kipp, who
found it impossible to pardon Polly, — perhaps
because she was young, and pretty, and much beloved.
Toady’s eyes kindled, and his
red cheeks grew redder still, as he cried out defiantly, —
“I think she was a selfish pig, — don’t
you?”
“No, I don’t, sir; and
I’m sure that little boy wasn’t such a
fool as to lose the money. He minded his grandma’s
wishes, and kept it all.”
“No, he didn’t,”
roared Toady, tumbling off his chair in great excitement.
“He just threw it out a winder, and smashed the
old cherakin all to bits.”
Aunt Kipp dropped her work with a
shrill squeak, for she thought the boy was dangerous,
as he stood before her, sparring away at nothing as
the only vent for his indignation.
“It isn’t an interesting
story,” he cried; “and I won’t hear
any more; and I won’t have your money if I mayn’t
go halves with Polly; and I’ll work to earn
more than that, and we’ll all be jolly together,
and you may give your twenty thousand to the old rag-bags,
and so I tell you, Aunt Kipp.”
“Why, Toady, my boy, what’s
the matter?” cried a mild voice at the door,
as young Lamb came trotting up to the rescue.
“Never you mind, Baa-baa; I
shan’t do it; and it’s a mean shame Polly
can’t have half; then she could marry you and
be so happy,” blubbered Toady, running to try
to hide his tears of disappointment in the coat-skirts
of his friend.
“Mr. Lamb, I suppose you are
that misguided young man?” said Aunt Kipp, as
if it was a personal insult to herself.
“Van Bahr Lamb, ma’am,
if you please. Yes, thank you,” murmured
Baa-Baa, bowing, blushing, and rumpling his curly fleece
in bashful trepidation.
“Don’t thank me,”
cried the old lady. “I’m not going
to give you anything, — far from it.
I object to you altogether. What business have
you to come courting my niece?”
“Because I love her, ma’am,”
returned Van, with unexpected spirit.
“No, you don’t; you want
her money, or rather my money. She depends on
it; but you’ll both be disappointed, for she
won’t have a penny of it,” cried Aunt
Kipp, who, in spite of her good resolutions, found
it impossible to be amiable all at once.
“I’m glad of it!”
burst out Van, indignant at her accusation. “I
didn’t want Polly for the money; I always doubted
if she got it; and I never wished her to make herself
a slave to anybody. I’ve got enough for
all, if we’re careful; and when my share of the
Van Bahr property comes, we shall live in clover.”
“What’s that? What
property are you talking of?” demanded Aunt Kipp,
pricking up her ears.
“The great Van Bahr estate,
ma’am. There has been a long lawsuit about
it, but it’s nearly settled, and there isn’t
much doubt that we shall get it. I am the last
of our branch, and my share will be a large one.”
“Oh, indeed! I wish you
joy,” said Aunt Kipp, with sudden affability;
for she adored wealth, like a few other persons in
the world. “But suppose you don’t
get it, how then?”
“Then I shall try to be contented
with my salary of two thousand, and make Polly as
happy as I can. Money doesn’t always
make people happy or agreeable, I find.”
And Van looked at Aunt Kipp in a way that would have
made her hair stand erect if she had possessed any.
She stared at him a moment, then, obeying one of the
odd whims that made an irascible weathercock of her,
she said, abruptly, —
“If you had capital should you
go into business for yourself, Mr. Lambkin?”
“Yes, ma’am, at once,” replied Van,
promptly.
“Suppose you lost the Van Bahr
money, and some one offered you a tidy little sum
to start with, would you take it?”
“It would depend upon who made
the offer, ma’am,” said Van, looking more
like a sheep than ever, as he stood staring in blank
surprise.
“Suppose it was me, wouldn’t
you take it?” asked Aunt Kipp, blandly, for
the new fancy pleased her.
“No, thank you, ma’am,” said Van,
decidedly.
“And why not, pray?” cried
the old lady, with a shrillness that made him jump,
and Toady back to the door precipitately.
“Because, if you’ll excuse
my speaking plainly, I think you owe anything you
may have to spare to your niece, Mrs. Snow;”
and, having freed his mind, Van joined Toady, ready
to fly if necessary.
“You’re an idiot, sir,”
began Aunt Kipp, in a rage again.
“Thank you, ma’am.”
And Van actually laughed and bowed in return for the
compliment.
“Hold your tongue, sir,”
snapped the old lady. “You’re a fool
and Sophy is another. She’s no strength
of mind, no sense about anything; and would make ducks
and drakes of my money in less than no time if I gave
it to her, as I’ve thought of doing.”
“Mrs. Kipp, you forget who you
are speaking to. Mrs. Snow’s sons love
and respect her if you don’t, and they won’t
hear anything untrue or unkind said of a good woman,
a devoted mother, and an almost friendless widow.”
Van wasn’t a dignified man at
all, but as he said that with a sudden flash of his
mild eyes, there was something in his face and manner
that daunted Aunt Kipp more than the small fist belligerently
shaken at her from behind the sofa. The poor
old soul was cross, and worried, and ashamed of herself,
and being as feeble-minded as Sophy in many respects,
she suddenly burst into tears, and, covering her face
with the gay handkerchief, cried as if bent on floating
the red ship in a sea of salt water without delay.
“I’m a poor, lonely, abused
old woman,” she moaned, with a green monkey
at each eye. “No one loves me, or minds
me, or thanks me when I want to help ’em.
My money’s only a worryment and a burden, and
I don’t know what to do with it, for people
I don’t want to leave it to ought to have it,
and people I do like won’t take it. Oh,
deary me, what shall I do! what shall I do!”
“Shall I tell you, ma’am?”
asked Van, gently, for, though she was a very provoking
old lady, he pitied and wished to help her.
A nod and a gurgle seemed to give
consent, and, boldly advancing, Van said, with blush
and a stammer, but a very hearty voice, —
“I think, ma’am, if you’d
do the right thing with your money you’d be
at ease and find it saved a deal of worry all round.
Give it to Mrs. Snow; she deserves it, poor lady,
for she’s had a hard time, and done her duty
faithfully. Don’t wait till you are — that
is, till you — well, till you in point of
fact die, ma’am. Give it now, and enjoy
the happiness it will make. Give it kindly, let
them see you’re glad to do it, and I am sure
you’ll find them grateful; I’m sure you
won’t be lonely any more, or feel that you are
not loved and thanked. Try it, ma’am, just
try it,” cried Van, getting excited by the picture
he drew. “And I give you my word I’ll
do my best to respect and love you like a son, ma’am.”
He knew that he was promising a great
deal, but for Polly’s sake he felt that he could
make even that Herculean effort. Aunt Kipp was
surprised and touched; but the contrary old lady couldn’t
make up her mind to yield so soon, and wouldn’t
have done it if Toady hadn’t taken her by storm.
Having a truly masculine horror of tears, a very tender
heart under his tailless jacket, and being much “tumbled
up and down in his own mind” by the events of
the week, the poor little lad felt nerved to attempt
any novel enterprise, even that of voluntarily embracing
Aunt Kipp. First a grimy little hand came on her
shoulder, as she sat sniffing behind the handkerchief;
then, peeping out, she saw an apple-cheeked face very
near her own, with eyes full of pity, penitence, and
affection; and then she heard a choky little voice
say earnestly, —
“Don’t cry, aunty; I’m
sorry I was rude. Please be good to Mother and
Polly, and I’ll love and take care of you, and
stand by you all my life. Yes, I’ll — I’ll
kiss you, I will, by George!” And with
one promiscuous plunge the Spartan boy cast himself
into her arms.
That finished Aunt Kipp; she hugged
him dose, and cried out with a salute that went off
like a pistol-shot, —
“Oh, my dear, my dear! this
is better than a dozen cherakins!”
When Toady emerged, somewhat flushed
and tumbled, Mrs. Snow, Polly, and Van were looking
on with faces full of wonder, doubt, and satisfaction.
To be an object of interest was agreeable to Aunt
Kipp; and, as her old heart was really softened, she
met them with a gracious smile, and extended the olive-branch
generally.
“Sophy, I shall give my money
to you at once and entirely, only asking that
you’ll let me stay with you when Polly’s
gone. I’ll do my best to be agreeable,
and you’ll bear with me because I’m a cranky,
solitary old woman, and I loved your husband.”
Mrs. Snow hugged her on the spot,
and gushed, of course, murmuring thanks, welcomes,
and promises in one grateful burst.
“Polly, I forgive you; I consent
to your marriage, and will provide your wedding finery.
Mr. Lamb, you are not a fool, but a very excellent
young man. I thank you for saving my life, and
I wish you well with all my heart. You needn’t
say anything. I’m far from strong, and
all this agitation is shortening my life.”
Polly and Van shook her hand heartily,
and beamed upon each other like a pair of infatuated
turtle-doves with good prospects.
“Toady, you are as near an angel
as a boy can be. Put a name to whatever you most
wish for in the world, and it’s yours,”
said Aunt Kipp, dramatically waving the rest away.
With his short legs wide apart, his
hands behind him, and his rosy face as round and radiant
as a rising sun, Toady stood before the fire surveying
the scene with the air of a man who has successfully
carried through a difficult and dangerous undertaking,
and wasn’t proud. His face brightened,
then fell, as he heaved a sigh, and answered, with
a shake of his curly head, —
“You can’t give me what
I want most. There are three things, and I’ve
got to wait for them all.”
“Gracious me, what are they?”
cried the old lady, good-naturedly, for she felt better
already.
“A mustache, a beaver, and
a sweetheart,” answered Toady, with his eyes
fixed wistfully on Baa-baa, who possessed all these
blessings, and was particularly enjoying the latter
at that moment.
How Aunt Kipp did laugh at this early
budding of romance in her pet! And all the rest
joined her, for Toady’s sentimental air was
irresistible.
“You precocious chick!
I dare say you will have them all before we know where
we are. Never mind, deary; you shall have my little
watch, and the silver-headed cane with a boar’s
head on it,” answered the old lady, in high
good-humor. “You needn’t blush, dear;
I don’t bear malice; so let’s forget and
forgive. I shall settle things to-morrow, and
have a free mind. You are welcome to my money,
and I hope I shall live to see you all enjoy it.”
So she did; for she lived to see Sophy
plump, cheery, and care-free; Polly surrounded by
a flock of Lambkins; Van in possession of a generous
slice of the Van Bahr fortune; Toady revelling in the
objects of his desire; and, best of all, she lived
to find that it is never too late to make oneself
useful, happy, and beloved.