“I DON’T SEE WHY”
The “little red” was at
the door of the Green Cottage. Frank Scherman
had got the refusal of it the night before, and early
in the morning Madam Routh’s compliments had
come to Mrs. Linceford, with the request, in all the
form that mountain usage demanded, that she and the
young ladies would make part of the expedition for
the day.
Captain Jotham Green, host and proprietor,
himself stood at the horses’ heads. The
Green Cottage, you perceive, had double right to its
appellation. It was both baptismal and hereditary,
surname and given name,given with a coat
of fresh, pale, pea-green paint that had been laid
on it within the year, and had communicated a certain
tender, newly-sprouted, May-morning expression to
the old centre and its outshoots.
Mrs. Green, within, was generously
busy with biscuits, cold chicken, doughnuts fried
since sunrise, and coffee richly compounded with cream
and sugar, which a great tin can stood waiting to receive
and convey, and which was at length to serve as cooking
utensil in reheating upon the fire of coals the picnickers
would make up under the very tassel of Feather-Cap.
The great wagons were drawn up also
before the piazza of the hotel; and between the two
houses flitted the excursionists, full of the bright
enthusiasm of the setting off, which is the best part
of a jaunt, invariably.
Leslie Goldthwaite, in the hamadryad
costume, just awarewhich it was impossible
for her to helpof its exceeding prettiness,
and of glances that recognized it, pleased with a
mixture of pleasures, was on the surface of things
once more, taking the delight of the moment with a
young girl’s innocent abandonment. It was
nice to be received so among all these new companions;
to be evidently, though tacitly, voted nice,
in the way girls have of doing it; to be launched at
once into the beginning of apparently exhaustless
delights,all this was superadded to the
first and underlying joy of merely being alive and
breathing, this superb summer morning, among these
forests and hills.
Sin Saxon, whatever new feeling of
half sympathy and respect had been touched in her
toward Miss Craydocke the night before, in her morning
mood was all alive again to mischief. The small,
spare figure of the lady appeared at the side-door,
coming out briskly toward them along the passage,
just as the second wagon filled up and was ready to
move.
I did not describe Miss Craydocke
herself when I gave you the glimpse into her room.
There was not much to describe; and I forgot it in
dwelling upon her surroundings and occupations.
In fact, she extended herself into these, and made
you take them involuntarily and largely into the account
in your apprehension of her. Some people seem
to have given them at the outset a mere germ of personality
like this, which must needs widen itself out in like
fashion to be felt at all. Her mosses and minerals,
her pressed leaves and flowers, her odds and ends
of art and science and prettiness which she gathered
about her, her industries and benevolences,these
were herself. Out of these she was only a little
elderly thread-paper of a woman, of no apparent account
among crowds of other people, and with scarcely enough
of bodily bulk or presence to take any positive foothold
anywhere.
What she might have seemed, in the
days when her hair was golden, and her little figure
plump, and the very unclassical features rounded and
rosy with the bloom and grace of youth, was perhaps
another thing; but now, with her undeniable “front,”
and cheeks straightened into lines that gave you the
idea of her having slept all night upon both of them,
and got them into longitudinal wrinkles that all day
was never able to wear out; above all, with her curious
little nose (that was the exact expression of it),
sharply and suddenly thrusting itself among things
in general from the middle plane of her face with
slight preparatory hint of its intention,you
would scarcely charge her, upon suspicion, with any
embezzlement or making away of charms intrusted to
her keeping in the time gone by.
This morning, moreover, she had somehow
given herself a scratch upon the tip of this odd,
investigating member; and it blushed for its inquisitiveness
under a scrap of thin pink adhesive plaster.
Sin Saxon caught sight of her as she
came. “Little Miss Netticoat!” she
cried, just under her breath, “with a
fresh petticoat, and a red nose! Then, changing her tone with her
quotation,
“’Wee, modest,
crimson-tipped flower,
Thou’st met me
in a luckless hour!’
Thou always dost! What hast
thou gone and got thyself up so for, just as I was almost persuaded to be good?
Nowcan
I help that?” And she dropped her folded hands
in her lap, exhaled a little sigh of vanquished goodness,
and looked round appealingly to her companions.
“It’s only,” said
Miss Craydocke, reaching them a trifle out of breath,
“this little parcel,something I promised
to Prissy Hoskins,and would you
just go round by the Cliff and leave it for me?”
“Oh, I’m afraid of the
Cliff!” cried Florrie Arnall. “Creggin’s
horses backed there the other day. It’s
horribly dangerous.”
“It’s three quarters of
a mile round,” suggested the driver.
“The ‘little red’
might take it. They’ll go faster than we,
or can, if they try,” said Mattie Shannon.
“The ‘little red’
’s just ready,” said Sin Saxon. “You
needn’t laugh. That wasn’t a pun.
But oh, Miss Craydocke!”and her tone
suggested the mischievous apropos“what
can you have been doing to your nose?”
“Oh, yes!”Miss
Craydocke had a way of saying “Oh, yes!”“It
was my knife slipped as I was cutting a bit of cord,
in a silly fashion, up toward my face. It’s
a mercy my nose served, to save my eyes.”
“I suppose that’s partly
what noses are for,” said Sin Saxon gravely.
“Especially when you follow them, and ‘go
it blind.’”
“It was a piece of good luck,
too, after all,” said Miss Craydocke, in her
simple way, never knowing, or choosing to know, that
she was snubbed or quizzed. “Looking for
a bit of plaster, I found my little parcel of tragacanth
that I wanted so the other day. It’s queer
how things turn up.”
“Excessively queer,” said
Sin solemnly, still looking at the injured feature.
“But, as you say, it’s all for the best,
after all. ’There is a divinity
that shapes our ends, rough-hew them how we will.’
Hiram, we might as well drive on. I’ll
take the parcel, Miss Craydocke. We’ll get
it there somehow, going or coming.”
The wagon rolled off, veils and feathers
taking the wind bravely, and making a gay moving picture
against the dark pines and gray ledges as it glanced
along. Sin Saxon tossed Miss Craydocke’s
parcel into the “little red” as they passed
it by, taking the road in advance, giving a saucy
word of command to Jim Holden, which transferred the
charge of its delivery to him, and calling out a hurried
explanation to the ladies over her shoulder that “it
would take them round the Cliff,the most
wonderful point in all Outledge; up and down the whole
length of New Hampshire they could see from there,
if their eyes were good enough!” And so they
were away.
Miss Craydocke turned back into the
house, not a whit discomfited, and with not so much
as a contrasting sigh in her bosom or a rankle in her
heart. On the contrary, a droll twinkle played
among the crow’s-feet at the corners of her
eyes. They could not hurt her, these merry girls,
meaning nothing but the moment’s fun, nor cheat
her of her quiet share of the fun either.
Up above, out of a window over the
piazza roof, looked two others,young girls,
one of them at least,also, upon the scene
of the setting-off.
I cannot help it that a good many
different people will get into my short story.
They get into a short time, in such a summer holiday,
and so why not? At any rate, I must tell you
about these Josselyns.
These two had never in all their lives
been away pleasuring before. They had nobody
but each other to come with now. Susan had been
away a good deal in the last two years, but it had
not been pleasuring. Martha was some five or
six years the younger. She had a pretty face,
yet marked, as it is so sad to see the faces of the
young, with lines and losslines that tell
of cares too early felt, and loss of the first fresh,
redundant bloom that such lines bring.
They sat a great deal at this window
of theirs. It was a sort of instinct and habit
with them, and it made them happier than almost anything
else,sitting at a window together.
It was home to them because at home they lived so:
life and duty were so framed in for them,in
one dear old window-recess. Sometimes they thought
that it would he heaven to them by and by: that
such a seat, and such a quiet, happy outlook, they
should find kept for them together, in the Father’s
mansion, up above.
At home, it was up three flights of
stairs, in a tall, narrow city house, of which the
lower floors overflowed with young, boisterous half
brothers and sisters,the tide not seldom
rising and inundating their own retreat,whose
delicate mother, not more than eight years older than
her eldest step-daughter, was tied hand and foot to
her nursery, with a baby on her lap, and the two or
three next above with hands always to be washed, disputes
and amusements always to be settled, small morals
to be enforced, and clean calico tiers to be incessantly
put on.
And Susan and Martha sat upstairs and made the tiers.
Mr. Josselyn was a book-keeper, with
a salary of eighteen hundred dollars, and these seven
children. And Susan and Martha were girls of
fair culture, and womanly tastes, and social longings.
How does this seem to you, young ladies, and what
do you think of their upstairs life together, you
who calculate, if you calculate at all, whether five
hundred dollars may carry you respectably through your
half-dozen city assemblies, where you shine in silk
and gossamer, of which there will not be “a
dress in the room that cost less than seventy-five
dollars,” and come home, after the dance, “a
perfect rag”?
Two years ago, when you were perhaps
performing in tableaux for the “benefit of the
Sanitary,” these two girls had felt the great
enthusiasm of the time lay hold of them in a larger
way. Susan had a frienda dear old
intimate of school-days, now a staid woman of eight-and-twentywho
was to go out in yet maturer companionship into the
hospitals. And Susan’s heart burned to
go. But there were all the little tiers, and the
ABC’s, and the faces and fingers.
“I can do it for a while,”
said Martha, “without you.” Those
two words held the sacrifice. “Mamma is
so nicely this summer, and by and by Aunt Lucy may
come, perhaps. I can do quite well.”
So Martha sat, for months and months,
in the upstairs window alone. There were martial
marchings in the streets beneath; great guns thundered
out rejoicings; flags filled the air with crimson and
blue, like an aurora; she only sat and made little
frocks and tiers for the brothers and sisters.
God knew how every patient needle thrust was really
also a woman’s blow for her country.
And now, pale and thin with close,
lonely work, the time had come to her at last when
it was right to take a respite; when everybody said
it must be; when Uncle David, just home from Japan,
had put his hand in his pocket and pulled out three
new fifty-dollar bills, and said to them in his rough
way, “There, girls! Take that, and go your
lengths.” The war was over, and among all
the rest here were these two women-soldiers honorably
discharged, and resting after the fight. But nobody
at Outledge knew anything of the story.
There is almost always at every summer
sojourn some party of persons who are to the rest
what the mid-current is to the stream; who gather to
themselves and bear along in their coursein
their plans and pleasures and daily doingsthe
force of all the life of the place. If any expedition
of consequence is afoot, they are the expedition;
others may join in, or hold aloof, or be passed by;
in which last cases, it is only in a feeble, rippling
fashion that they go their ways and seek some separate
pleasure in by-nooks and eddies, while the gay hum
of the main channel goes whirling on. At Outledge
this party was the large and merry schoolgirl company
with Madam Routh.
“I don’t see why,”
said Martha Josselyn, still looking out, as the “little
red” left the door of the Green Cottage,“I
don’t see why those new girls who came last
night should have got into everything in a minute,
and we’ve been here a week and don’t seem
to catch to anything at all. Some people are
like burrs, I think, or drops of quicksilver, that
always bunch or run together. We don’t stick,
Susie. What’s the reason?”
“Some of these young ladies
have been at Madam Routh’s; they were over here
last evening. Sin Saxon knows them very well.”
“You knew Effie Saxon at school, too.”
“Eight years ago. And this is the little
one. That’s nothing.”
“You petted her, and she came
to the house. You’ve told her stories hundreds
of times. And she sees we’re all by ourselves.”
“She don’t see. She doesn’t
think. That’s just the whole of it.”
“People ought to see, then. You would,
Sue, and you know it.”
“I’ve been used to seeingand
thinking.”
“Used! Yes, indeed!
And she’s been used to the other.
Well, it’s queer how the parts are given out.
Shall we go to the pines?”