“Wealthy,” said Eyebright,
“I want to tell you something.”
Wealthy was kneading bread, her arms
rising and falling with a strong, regular motion,
like the piston of a steam-engine. She did not
even turn her head, but dusting a little flour on
to the dough, went straight on saying briefly,
“Well, what?”
“I’ve been thinking,”
continued Eyebright, “that when papa and I get
to the Island, perhaps some days there won’t
be anybody to do the cooking but me, and it would
be so nice if you would teach me a few things, not
hard ones, you know, little easy things.
I know how to toast now, and how to boil eggs, and
make shortcake, and stew rhubarb, but papa would get
tired of those if he didn’t have any thing else,
I am afraid.”
“You and your Pa’ll go
pretty hungry, I guess, if there’s no one but
you to do the cooking,” muttered Wealthy.
“Well, what would you like to learn?”
“Is bread easy to make? I’d like
to learn that.”
“You ain’t hardly strong
enough,” said Wealthy, with a sigh, but she
set her bowl on a chair as she spoke, and proceeded
to give Eyebright a kneading lesson on the spot.
It was much more fatiguing than Eyebright had supposed
it would be. Her back and arms ached for a long
time afterward, but Wealthy said she “got the
hang of it wonderfully for a beginner,” and
this praise encouraged her to try again. Every
Wednesday and Saturday, after that, she made the bread,
from the sifting of the flour to the final wrap of
the hot loaf in a brown towel, Wealthy only helping
a very little, and each time the task seemed to grow
easier, so that, before they went away, Eyebright felt
that she had that lesson at her fingers’ ends.
Wealthy taught her other things also, to
broil a beefsteak, and poach an egg, to make gingerbread
and minute biscuit, fry Indian pudding, and prepare
and flavor the “dip” for soft toast.
All these lessons were good for her, and in more senses
than one. Many a heart-ache flew up the chimney
and forgot to come down again, as she leaned over
her saucepans, stirring, tasting, and seasoning.
Many a hard thought about the girls and their not
caring as they ought about her going, slipped away,
and came back brightened into good-humor, in the excitement
of watching the biscuits rise, or moulding them into
exact form and size. And how pleasant it was
if Wealthy praised her, or papa asked for a second
helping of something and said it was good.
Meanwhile, the business of breaking
up was going on. Wealthy, whose ideas were of
the systematic old-fashioned kind, began at the very
top of the house and came slowly down, clearing the
rooms out in regular order, scrubbing, sweeping, and
leaving bare, chill cleanness behind her. Part
of the furniture was packed to go to the Island, but
by far the greater part was brought down to the lower
floor, and stacked in the best parlor, ready for an
auction, which was to take place on the last day but
one. It was truly wonderful how many things the
house seemed to contain, and what queer articles made
their appearance out of obscure holes and corners,
in the course of Wealthy’s rummagings.
There were old fire-irons, old crockery, bundles of
herbs, dried so long ago that all taste and smell
had departed, and no one now could guess which was
sage and which catnip; scrap-bundles, which made Eyebright
sigh and exclaim, “Oh dear, what lots of dresses
I would have made for Genevieve, if only I had known
we had these!” There were boxes full of useless
things, screws without heads, and nails without points,
stopples which stopped nothing, bottles of medicine
which had lost their labels, and labels which had
lost their bottles. Some former inhabitant of
the house had evidently been afflicted with mice,
for six mouse-traps were discovered, all of different
patterns, all rusty, and all calculated to discourage
any mouse who ever nibbled cheese. There were
also three old bird-cages, in which, since the memory
of man, no bird had ever lived; a couple of fire-buckets
of ancient black leather, which Eyebright had seen
hanging from a rafter all her life without suspecting
their use, and a gun of Revolutionary pattern which
had lost its lock. All these were to be sold,
and so was the hay in the barn, as also were the chickens
and chicken-coops; even Brindle and old Charley.
The day before the auction, a man
came and pasted labels with numbers on them upon all
the things. Eyebright found “24” stuck
on the side of her own special little stool, which
papa had said she might take to the Island, but which
had been forgotten. She tore off the label, and
hid the stool in a closet, but it made her feel as
if every thing in the house was going to be sold whether
or no, and she half turned and looked over her shoulder
at her own back, as if she feared to find a number
there also. Wealthy, who was piling the chairs
together by twos, laughed.
“I guess they won’t put
you up to ‘vandoo,’” she said; “or,
if they do, I’ll be the first to bid. There,
that’s the last! I never did see such a
heap of rubbish as come out of that garret; your Ma,
and your Grandma, too, I reckon, never throwed away
any thing in all their days. Often and often
I used to propose to clean out and kind of sort over
the things, but your Ma, she wouldn’t ever let
me. They was sure to come in useful some day,
she said; but that day never come, and
there they be, moth-and-rust-corrupted, sure enough!
Well, ’tain’t no use layin’ up treasures
upon earth. We all find that out when we come
to clear up after fifty years’ savin’.”
Next morning proved fine and sunny,
and great numbers of people came to the auction.
Some of them brought their dinners in pails, and stayed
all day, for auctions do not occur very often in the
country, and are great events when they do. Eyebright,
who did not know exactly how to dispose of herself,
sat on the stairs, high up, where no one could see
her, and listened to the auctioneer’s loud voice
calling off the numbers and bids. “N, one clock, who bids two dollars for
the clock? N, lounge covered with calliker.
I am offered seven-fifty for the lounge covered with
calliker. I am offered seven-fifty for the lounge
covered with calliker. Who bids eight? Thank
you, Mr. Brown going at eight gone.”
And N was the kitchen clock, which had told her
the hour so many, many times; the lounge covered with
“calliker” was mother’s lounge, on
which she had so often lain. It seemed very sad,
somehow, that they should be “going gone.”
Later in the day she saw, from the
window, people driving away in their wagons with their
bargains piled in behind them, or set between their
knees, papa’s shaving-glass, Wealthy’s
wash-tubs, the bedstead from the best room. She
could hardly keep from crying. It seemed as if
the pleasant past life in the old house were all broken
up into little bits, and going off in different directions
in those wagons.
She was still at the window when Wealthy
came up to search for her. Eyebright’s
face was very sober, and there were traces of tears
on her cheeks.
“Eyebright, where are you?
Don’t stay mopin’ up here, ’tain’t
no use. Come down and help me get tea. I’ve
made a good fire in the sittin’-room, and we’ll
all be the better for supper, I reckon. Auctions
is wearin’ things, and always will be to the
end of time. Your Pa looks clean tuckered out.”
“Are all the people gone?” asked Eyebright.
“Yes, they have, and good riddance
to them. It made me madder than hops to hear
’em a-boastin’ of the bargains they’d
got. Mrs. Doolittle, up to the corner, bid in
that bureau from the keepin’-room chamber for
seven dollars. It was worth fifteen; the auction-man
said so himself. But to kind of match that, her
daughter-in-law, she giv’ thirty cents a yard
for that rag-carpet in your room, and it didn’t
cost but fifty when it was new, and that was twelve
years ago next November! So I guess we come out
pretty even with the Doolittle family, after all!”
added Wealthy, with a dry chuckle.
Eyebright followed downstairs.
The rooms looked bare and unhomelike with only the
few pieces of furniture left which Wealthy had bid
in for her private use; for Wealthy did not mean to
live out any more, but have a small house of her own,
and support herself by “tailorin’.”
She had bought a couple of beds, a table, a few chairs,
and some cooking things, so it was possible, though
not very comfortable, to spend one night more in the
house. Eyebright peeped into the empty parlor
and shut the door.
“Don’t let’s open
it again,” she said. “We’ll
make believe that every thing is there still, just
as it used to be, and then it won’t seem so
dismal.”
But in spite of “make-believes,”
it would have been dismal enough had they not been
too busy to think how altered and forlorn the house
looked. One more day of hard work, and all was
cleared out and made clean. Wealthy followed
with her broom and actually “swept herself out,”
as Eyebright said, brushing the last shreds and straws
through the door on to the steps, where the others
stood waiting. Mr. Bright locked the door.
The key turned in the rusty lock with a sound like
a groan. Mr. Bright stood a moment without speaking;
then he handed the key to Wealthy, shook hands with
her, and walked quickly away in the direction of Mr.
Bury’s house, where he and Eyebright were to
spend the night.
Wealthy was feeling badly over the
loss of her old home; and emotion, with her, always
took the form of gruffness.
“No need to set about kissing
to-night,” she said, as Eyebright held up her
face, “I’m a-comin’ round to see
you off to-morrow.”
Then she, too, stalked away.
Eyebright looked after her for a little while, then
very slowly she opened the garden-gate, and went the
round of the place once more, saying good-by with
her eyes to each well-known object. The periwinkle
bed was blue with flowers, the daffodils were just
opening their bright cups. “Old maids,”
Wealthy had been used to call them, because their
ruffled edges were so neatly trimmed and pinked.
There was the apple-tree crotch, where, every summer
since she could remember, her swing had hung.
There was her own little garden, bare now and brown
with the dead stalks of last year. How easy it
would be to make it pretty again if only they were
going to stay! The “cave” had fallen
in, to be sure, and was only a hole in the ground,
but a cave is soon made. She could have another
in no time if only here Eyebright checked
herself, recollecting that “if only” did
not help the matter a bit, and, like a sensible child,
she walked bravely away from the garden and through
the gateway. She paused one moment to look at
the sun, which was setting in a sky of clear yellow,
over which little crimson clouds drifted like a fleet
of fairy boats. The orchards and hedges were
budding fast. Here and there a cherry-tree had
already tied on its white hood. The air was full
of sweet prophetic smells. Altogether, Tunxet
was at its very prettiest and pleasantest, and, for
all her good resolutions, Eyebright gave way, and
wept one little weep at the thought that to-morrow
she and papa must leave it all.
She dried her eyes soon, for she did
not want papa to know she had been crying, and followed
to Mrs. Bury’s, where Kitty and the children
were impatiently looking out for her, and every one
gave her a hearty welcome.
But in spite of their kindness, and
the fun of sleeping with Kitty for the first time,
it seemed grave and lonesome to be anywhere except
in the old place where she had always been, and Eyebright
began to be glad that she and papa were to go away
so soon. The home feeling had vanished from Tunxet,
and the quicker they were off, the better, she thought.
The next morning, they left, starting
before six o’clock, for the railroad was five
miles away. Early as it was, several people were
there to say good-by, Bessie Mather, Laura
Wheelwright, who hadn’t taken time
even to wash her face, Wealthy, very gray
and grim and silent, and dear Miss Fitch, to whom
Eyebright clung till the very end. The last bag
was put in, Mr. Bury kissed Eyebright and lifted her
into the wagon, where papa and Ben were already seated.
Good-bys were exchanged. Bessie, drowned in tears,
climbed on the wheel for a last hug, and was pulled
down by some one. Ben gave a chirrup, the horses
began to move, and that was the end of dear old Tunxet.
The last thing Eyebright saw, as she turned for a
final look, was Wealthy’s grim, sad face, poor
Wealthy, who had lost most and felt sorriest of all,
though she said so little about it.
It was a mile or two before Eyebright
could see any thing distinctly. She sat with
her head turned away, that papa might not notice her
wet eyes. But perhaps his own were a little misty,
for he, too, turned his head, and it was a long time
before he spoke. The beautiful morning and the
rapid motion were helps to cheerfulness, however, and
before they reached the railroad station Mr. Bright
had begun to talk to Ben, and Eyebright to smile.
She had never travelled on a railroad
before, and you can easily imagine how surprising
it all seemed to her. At first it frightened
her to go so fast, but that soon wore off, and all
the rest was enjoyment. Little things, which
people used to railroads hardly notice, struck her
as strange and pleasant. When the magazine-boy
chucked “Ballou’s Dollar Monthly”
into her lap, she jumped, and said, “Oh, thank
you!” and she was quite overcome by the successive
gifts, as she supposed, of a paper of pop-corn, a
paper of lozenges, and a “prize package,”
containing six envelopes, six sheets of note-paper,
six pens, a wooden pen-handle and a “piece of
jewelry,” all for twenty-five cents!
“Did he really give them to
me?” she asked papa, quite gasping at the idea
of such generosity.
Then the ice-water boy came along,
with his frame of tumblers; she had a delicious cold
drink, and told papa “she did think the railroad
was so kind,” which made him laugh; and, as
seeing him laugh brightened her spirits, they journeyed
on very cheerfully.
About noon, they changed cars, and
presently after that Eyebright became aware of a change
in the air, a cool freshness and odor of salt and
weeds, which she had never smelt before, and liked
amazingly. She was just going to ask papa about
it when the train made a sudden curve and swept alongside
a yellow beach, beyond which lay a great shining expanse, gray
and silvery and blue, over which dappled
foamy waves played and leaped, and large white birds
were skimming and diving. She drew a long breath
of delight, and said, half to herself and half to
papa, “That is the sea!”
“How did you know?” asked he, smiling.
“Oh, papa, it couldn’t be any thing else.
I knew it in a minute.”
After that, they were close to the
sea almost all the way. Eyebright felt as if
she could never be tired of watching the waves rise
and fall, or of breathing the air, which seemed to
fill and satisfy her like food though it made her
hungry, too, and she was glad of the nice luncheon
which Mr. Bury had packed up for them. But even
pleasant things have a tiring side to them, and as
night drew on, Eyebright began to think she should
be as glad of bed as she had been of dinner.
Her heavy head had been nodding for
some time, and had finally dropped upon papa’s
shoulder, when he roused her with a shake and said,
“Wake up, Eyebright, wake up! Here we are.”
“At the Island?” she asked, drowsily.
“No, not at the Island yet. This is the
steamboat.”
To see a steamboat had always been
one of Eyebright’s chief wishes, but she was
too sleepy at that moment to realize that it was granted.
Her feet stumbled as papa guided her down the stair;
she could not keep her eyes open at all. The
stewardess a colored woman laughed
when she saw the half-awake little passenger; but she
was very good-natured, whipped off Eyebright’s
boots, hat, and jacket, in a twinkling, and tucked
her into a little berth, where in three minutes she
was napping like a dormouse. There was a great
deal of whistling and screeching and ringing of bells
when the boat left her dock, heavy feet trampled over
the deck just above the berth, the water lapped and
hissed; but not one of these things did Eyebright hear,
nor was she conscious of the rock-ing motion of the
waves. Straight through them all she slept; and
when at last she waked, the boat was no longer at
sea, and there was hardly any motion to be felt.
It was not yet six o’clock.
The shut-up cabin was dark and close, except for one
ray of yellow sun, which straggled through a crack,
and lay across the carpet like a long finger.
It flickered, and seemed to beckon, as if it wanted
to say, “Get up, Eyebright, it is morning at
last; get up, and come out with me.” She
felt so rested and fresh that the invitation was irresistible;
and slipping from the berth, she put on dress and
boots, which were laid on a chair near by, tied the
hat over her unbrushed hair, and with her warm jacket
in hand, stole out of the cabin and ran lightly upstairs
to the deck.
Then she gave a great start, and said,
“Oh!” with mingled wonder and surprise;
for, instead of the ocean which she had expected to
see, the boat was steaming gently up a broad river.
On either side was a bold, wooded shore. The
trees were leafless still, for this was much farther
north than Tunxet, but the rising sap had tinted their
boughs with lovely shades of yellow, soft red, and
pink-brown, and there were quantities of evergreens
beside, so that the woods did not look cold or bare.
Every half mile or so the river made a bend and curved
away in a new direction. It was never possible
to see far ahead, and, as the steamer swept through
the clear green and silver water, it continually seemed
that, a little farther on, the river came to end,
and there was no way out except to turn back.
But always when the boat reached the place where the
end seemed to be, behold, a new reach of water, with
new banks and tree-crowned headlands, appeared, so
that their progress was a succession of surprises.
Here and there were dots of islands too, just big
enough to afford standing-room to a dozen pines and
hemlocks, so closely crowded together that the trees
next the edge almost seemed to be holding fast by
their companions while they leaned over to look at
their own faces in the water.
These tiny islets enchanted Eyebright.
With each one they passed she thought, “Oh,
I hope ours is just like that!” never reflecting
that these were rather play islands than real ones,
and that Genevieve was the only member of the family
likely to be comfortable in such limited space as
they afforded. She had the deck and the river
to herself for nearly an hour before any of the passengers
appeared; when they did, she remembered, with a blush,
that her hair was still unbrushed, and ran back to
the cabin, when the stewardess made it tidy, and gave
her a basin of fresh water for her face and hands.
She came back just in time to meet papa, who was astonished
at the color in her cheek and the appetite she displayed
at breakfast, which was served in a stuffy cabin smelling
of kerosene oil and bed-clothes, and calculated to
discourage any appetite not sharpened by early morning
air.
Little did Eyebright care for the
stuffy cabin. She found the boat and all its
appointments delightful; and when, after breakfast,
the old captain took her down to the engine-room and
showed her the machinery, she fairly skipped with
pleasure. It was a sort of noisy fairy-land to
her imagination; all those wonderful cogs and wheels,
and shining rods and shafts, moving and working together
so smoothly and so powerfully. She was sorry
enough when, at eleven o’clock, they left the
boat, and landed at a small hamlet, which seemed to
have no name as yet, perhaps because it was so very
young. Eyebright asked a boy what they called
the town, but all he said in reply was, “’Tain’t
a teown” and something about a “Teownship,”
which she didn’t at all understand.
Here they had some dinner, and Mr.
Bright hired a wagon to take them “’cross
country” to Scrapplehead, which was the village
nearest to “Causey Island,” as Eyebright
now learned that their future home was called.
“Cosy,” papa pronounced it. The name
pleased her greatly, and she said to herself, for
perhaps the five-hundredth time, “I know
it is going to be nice.”
It was twenty-two miles from the nameless
village to Scrapplehead, but it took all the afternoon
to make the journey, for the roads were rough and
hilly, and fast going was impossible. Eyebright
did not care how slowly they went. Every step
of the way was interesting to her, full of fresh sights
and sounds and smells. She had never seen such
woods as those which they passed through. They
looked as if they might have been planted about the
time of the Deluge, so dense and massive were their
growths. Many of the trees were old and of immense
size. Some very large ones had fallen, and their
trunks were thickly crusted with fungi and long hair-like
tresses of gray moss. Here and there were cushions
of green moss, so rich and luxuriant as to be the
softest sitting-places imaginable. Eyebright longed
to get out and roll on them; the moss seemed at least
a yard deep. Once they passed an oddly shaped
broad track by the road-side, which the driver told
them was the foot-mark of a bear. This was exciting.
And a little farther on, at the fording of a shallow
brook, he showed them where a deer had stopped to
drink the night before, and left the impression of
his slender hoofs in the wet clay.
It was as interesting as a story to
be there, so near the haunts of these wild creatures.
Then, leaving the woods, they would come to wide vistas
of country, with pine-clad hills and slopes and beautiful
gleaming lakes. And twice from the top of an ascent
they caught the outlines of a bold mountain-range.
A delicious air blew down from these mountains, cool,
crystal clear, and spiced with the balsamic smell
of hemlocks and firs and a hundred lovely wood-odors
beside.
“Oh, isn’t Maine beautiful!”
cried Eyebright, in a rapture. She felt a sort
of resentment against Wealthy for having called it
a “God-forsaken” place. “But
Wealthy didn’t know: she never was here,”
was her final conclusion. “If she ever had
been here, she couldn’t have been so silly.”
It was too dark to see much of Scrapplehead
when at last they got there. It was a small place,
nestled in an angle of the hills. The misty gray
ocean lay beyond. Its voice came to their ears
as they descended the last steep pitch, a hushed low
voice with a droning tone, as though it were sleepy-time
with the great sea. There was no tavern in the
village, and they applied at several houses before
finding any one willing to accommodate them. By
this time, Eyebright was very tired, and could hardly
keep from crying as they drove away from the third
place.
“What shall we do if nobody
will take us in?” she asked papa dolefully.
“Shall we have to sit in the wagon all night?”
“Guess ’t won’t
come to that,” said the cheery driver. “Downs’ll
take you. I’ll bet a cookie he will.”
When he came to “Downs’s,” he jumped
out and ran in. “They’re real clever
folks,” he told Mrs. Downs; “and the little
gal is so tired, it’s a pity to see.”
So Mrs. Downs consented to lodge them;
and their troubles were over for that day. Half
blind with sleep and fatigue, Eyebright ate her bread
and milk, fried eggs, and doughnuts, fell asleep while
she undressed, gave her head a knock against the bedpost,
laughed, hurried into bed, and in three minutes was
lost in dreamless slumber. The wind blew softly
up the bay, the waves sang their droning lullaby, a
half-grown moon came out, twinkled, and flashed in
the flashing water, and sent one long beam in to peep
at the little sleeper in bed. The new life was
begun, and begun pleasantly.