by Sarah Orne Jewett
One morning Dr. Leslie remembered an old patient whom he liked to go to see now and then, perhaps more from the courtesy and friendliness of the thing than from any hope of giving professional assistance. The old sailor, Captain Finch, had long before been condemned as unseaworthy, having suffered for many years from the effects of a bad fall on shipboard. He was a cheerful and wise person, and the doctor was much attached to him, besides knowing that he had borne his imprisonment with great patience, for his life on one of the most secluded farms of the region, surrounded by his wife’s kinsfolk, who were all landsmen, could hardly be called anything else. The doctor had once made a voyage to Fayal and from thence to England in a sailing-vessel, having been somewhat delicate in health in his younger days, and this made him a more intelligent listener to the captain’s stories than was often available.
Dr. Leslie had brought his case of medicines from mere force of habit, but by way of special prescription he had taken also a generous handful of his best cigars, and wrapped them somewhat clumsily in one of the large sheets of letter-paper which lay on his study table near by. Also he had stopped before the old sideboard in the carefully darkened dining-room, and taken a bottle of wine from one of its cupboards. “This will do him more good than anything, poor old fellow,” he told himself, with a sudden warmth in his own heart and a feeling of grateful pleasure because he had thought of doing the kindness.
Marilla called eagerly from the kitchen window to ask where he was going, putting her hand out hastily to part the morning-glory vines, which had climbed their strings and twisted their stems together until they shut out the world from their planter’s sight. But the doctor only answered that he should be back at dinner time, and settled himself comfortably in his carriage, smiling as he thought of Marilla’s displeasure. She seldom allowed a secret to escape her, if she were once fairly on the scent of it, though she grumbled now, and told herself that she only cared to know for the sake of the people who might come, or to provide against the accident of his being among the missing in case of sudden need. She found life more interesting when there was even a small mystery to be puzzled over. It was impossible for Dr. Leslie to resist teasing his faithful hand-maiden once in a while, but he did it with proper gravity and respect, and their friendship was cemented by these sober jokes rather than torn apart.
The horse knew as well as his master that nothing of particular importance was in hand, and however well he always caught the spirit of the occasion when there was need for hurry, he now jogged along the road, going slowly where the trees cast a pleasant shade, and paying more attention to the flies than to anything else. The doctor seemed to be in deep thought, and old Major understood that no notice was to be taken of constant slight touches of the whip which his master held carelessly. It had been hot, dusty weather until the day and night before, when heavy showers had fallen; the country was looking fresh, and the fields and trees were washed clean at last from the white dust that had powdered them and given the farms a barren and discouraged look.
They had come in sight of Mrs. Thacher’s house on its high hillside, and were just passing the abode of Mrs. Meeker, which was close by the roadside in the low land. This was a small, weather-beaten dwelling, and the pink and red hollyhocks showed themselves in fine array against its gray walls. Its mistress’s prosaic nature had one most redeeming quality in her love for flowers and her gift in making them grow, and the doctor forgave her many things for the sake of the bright little garden in the midst of the sandy lands which surrounded her garden with their unshaded barrenness. The road that crossed these was hot in summer and swept by bitter winds in winter. It was like a bit of desert dropped by mistake among the green farms and spring-fed forests that covered the rest of the river uplands.
No sentinel was ever more steadfast to his duty in time of war and disorder than Mrs. Meeker, as she sat by the front window, from which she could see some distance either way along the crooked road. She was often absent from her own house to render assistance of one sort or another among her neighbors, but if she were at home it was impossible for man, woman, or child to go by without her challenge or careful inspection. She made couriers of her neighbors, and sent these errand men and women along the country roads or to the village almost daily. She was well posted in the news from both the village and the country side, and however much her acquaintances scolded about her, they found it impossible to resist the fascination of her conversation, and few declined to share in the banquet of gossip which she was always ready to spread. She was quick witted, and possessed of many resources and much cleverness of a certain sort; but it must be confessed that she had done mischief in her day, having been the murderer of more than one neighbor’s peace of mind and the assailant of many a reputation. But if she were a dangerous inmate of one’s household, few were so attractive or entertaining for the space of an afternoon visit, and it was usually said, when she was seen approaching, that she would be sure to have something to tell. Out in the country, where so many people can see nothing new from one week’s end to the other, it is, after all, a great pleasure to have the latest particulars brought to one’s door, as a townsman’s newspaper is.
Mrs. Meeker knew better than to stop Dr. Leslie if he were going anywhere in a hurry; she had been taught this lesson years ago; but when she saw him journeying in such a leisurely way some instinct assured her of safety, and she came out of her door like a Jack-in-the-box, while old Major, only too ready for a halt, stood still in spite of a desperate twitch of the reins, which had as much effect as pulling at a fish-hook which has made fast to an anchor. Mrs. Meeker feigned a great excitement.
“I won’t keep you but a moment,” she said, “but I want to hear what you think about Mis’ Thacher’s chances.”
“Mrs. Thacher’s?” repeated the doctor, wonderingly.
“She’s doing well, isn’t she? I don’t suppose that she will ever be a young woman again.”
“I don’t know why, but I took it for granted that you was goin’ there,” explained Mrs. Meeker, humbly. “She has seemed to me as if she was failing all summer. I was up there last night, and I never said so to her, but she had aged dreadfully. I wonder if it’s likely she’s had a light shock? Sometimes the fust one’s kind o’ hidden; comes by night or somethin’, and folks don’t know till they begins to feel the damage of it.”
“She hasn’t looked very well of late,” said the doctor. For once in his life he was willing to have a friendly talk, Mrs. Meeker thought, and she proceeded to make the most of her opportunity.
“I think the care of that girl of Ad’line’s has been too much for her all along,” she announced, “she’s wild as a hawk, and a perfect torment. One day she’ll come strollin’ in and beseechin’ me for a bunch o’ flowers, and the next she’ll be here after dark scarin’ me out o’ my seven senses. She rigged a tick-tack here the other night against the window, and my heart was in my mouth. I thought ‘twas a warnin’ much as ever I thought anything in my life; the night before my mother died ‘twas in that same room and against that same winder there came two or three raps, and my sister Drew and me we looked at each other, and turned cold all over, and mother set right up in bed the next night and looked at that winder and then laid back dead. I was all sole alone the other evenin’,—Wednesday it was,—and when I heard them raps I mustered up, and went and put my head out o’ the door, and I couldn’t see nothing, and when I went back, knock—knock, it begun again, and I went to the door and harked. I hoped I should hear somebody or ‘nother comin’ along the road, and then I heard somethin’ a rus’lin’ amongst the sunflowers and hollyhocks, and then there was a titterin’, and come to find out ‘twas that young one. I chased her up the road till my wind give out, and I had to go and set on the stone wall, and come to. She won’t go to bed till she’s a mind to. One night I was up there this spring, and she never come in until after nine o’clock, a dark night, too; and the pore old lady was in distress, and thought she’d got into the river. I says to myself there wa’n’t no such good news. She told how she’d be’n up into Jake an’ Martin’s oaks, trying to catch a little screech owl. She belongs with wild creatur’s, I do believe,—just the same natur’. She’d better be kept to school, ‘stead o’ growin’ up this way; but she keeps the rest o’ the young ones all in a brile, and this last teacher wouldn’t have her there at all. She’d toll off half the school into the pasture at recess time, and none of ‘em would get back for half an hour.”
“What’s a tick-tack? I don’t remember,” asked the doctor, who had been smiling now and then at this complaint.
“They tie a nail to the end of a string, and run it over a bent pin stuck in the sash, and then they get out o’ sight and pull, and it clacks against the winder, don’t ye see? Ain’t it surprisin’ how them devil’s tricks gets handed down from gineration to gineration, while so much that’s good is forgot,” lamented Mrs. Meeker, but the doctor looked much amused.
“She’s a bright child,” he said, “and not over strong. I don’t believe in keeping young folks shut up in the schoolhouses all summer long.”
Mrs. Meeker sniffed disapprovingly. “She’s tougher than ellum roots. I believe you can’t kill them peakèd-looking young ones. She’ll run like a fox all day long and live to see us all buried. I can put up with her pranks; ‘t is of pore old Mis’ Thacher I’m thinkin’. She’s had trouble enough without adding on this young ‘scape-gallows. You had better fetch her up to be a doctor,” Mrs. Meeker smilingly continued, “I was up there yisterday, and one of the young turkeys had come hoppin’ and quawkin’ round the doorsteps with its leg broke, and she’d caught it and fixed it off with a splint before you could say Jack Robi’son. She told how it was the way you’d done to Jim Finch that fell from the hay-rigging and broke his arm over to Jake an’ Martin’s, haying time.”
“I remember she was standing close by, watching everything I did,” said the doctor, his face shining with interest and pleasure. “I shall have to carry her about for clerk. Her father studied medicine you know. It is the most amazing thing how people inherit”—but he did not finish his sentence and pulled the reins so quickly that the wise horse knew there was no excuse for not moving forward.
Mrs. Meeker had hoped for a longer interview. “Stop as you come back, won’t you?” she asked. “I’m goin’ to pick you some of the handsomest poppies I ever raised. I got the seed from my sister-in-law’s cousin, she that was ‘Miry Gregg, and they do beat everything. They wilt so that it ain’t no use to pick ‘em now, unless you was calc’latin’ to come home by the other road. There’s nobody sick about here, is there?” to which the doctor returned a shake of the head and the information that he should be returning that way about noon. As he drove up the hill he assured himself with great satisfaction that he believed he hadn’t told anything that morning which would be repeated all over town before night, while his hostess returned to her house quite dissatisfied with the interview, though she hoped for better fortune on Dr. Leslie’s return.
For his part, he drove on slowly past the Thacher farmhouse, looking carefully about him, and sending a special glance up the lane in search of the invalid turkey. “I should like to see how she managed it,” he told himself half aloud. “If she shows a gift for such things I’ll take pains to teach her a lesson or two by and by when she is older…. Come Major, don’t go to sleep on the road!” and in a few minutes the wagon was out of sight, if the reader had stood in the Thacher lane, instead of following the good man farther on his errand of mercy and good fellowship.
At that time in the morning most housekeepers were busy in their kitchens, but Mrs. Thacher came to stand in her doorway, and shaded her forehead and eyes with her hand from the bright sunlight, as she looked intently across the pastures toward the river. She seemed anxious and glanced to and fro across the fields, and presently she turned quickly at the sound of a footstep, and saw her young grand-daughter coming from the other direction round the corner of the house. The child was wet and a little pale, though she evidently had been running.
“What have you been doin’ now?” asked the old lady fretfully. “I won’t have you gettin’ up in the mornin’ before I am awake and stealin’ out of the house. I think you are drowned in the river or have broken your neck fallin’ out of a tree. Here it is after ten o’clock. I’ve a mind to send you to bed, Nanny; who got you out of the water, for in it you’ve been sure enough?”
“I got out myself,” said the little girl. “It was deep, though,” and she began to cry, and when she tried to cover her eyes with her already well-soaked little apron, she felt quite broken-hearted and unnerved, and sat down dismally on the doorstep.
“Come in, and put on a dry dress,” said her grandmother, not unkindly; “that is, if there’s anything but your Sunday one fit to be seen. I’ve told you often enough not to go playin’ in the river, and I’ve wanted you more than common to go out to Jake and Martin’s to borrow me a little cinnamon. You’re a real trial this summer. I believe the bigger you are the worse you are. Now just say what you’ve been about. I declare I shall have to go and have a talk with the doctor, and he’ll scold you well. I’m gettin’ old and I can’t keep after you; you ought to consider me some. You’ll think of it when you see me laying dead, what a misery you’ve be’n. No schoolin’ worth namin’;” grumbled Mrs. Thacher, as she stepped heavily to and fro in the kitchen, and the little girl disappeared within the bed-room. In a few minutes, however, her unusual depression was driven away by the comfort of dry garments, and she announced triumphantly that she had found a whole flock of young wild ducks, and that she had made a raft and chased them about up and down the river, until the raft had proved unseaworthy, and she had fallen through into the water. Later in the day somebody came from the Jake and Martin homesteads to say that there must be no more pulling down of the ends of the pasture fences. The nails had easily let go their hold of the old boards, and a stone had served our heroine for a useful shipwright’s hammer, but the young cattle had strayed through these broken barriers and might have done great damage if they had been discovered a little later,—having quickly hied themselves to a piece of carefully cultivated land. The Jake and Martin families regarded Nan with a mixture of dread and affection. She was bringing a new element into their prosaic lives, and her pranks afforded them a bit of news almost daily. Her imagination was apt to busy itself in inventing tales of her unknown aunt, with which she entertained a grandchild of Martin Dyer, a little girl of nearly her own age. It seemed possible to Nan that any day a carriage drawn by a pair of prancing black horses might be seen turning up the lane, and that a lovely lady might alight and claim her as her only niece. Why this event had not already taken place the child never troubled herself to think, but ever since Marilla had spoken of this aunt’s existence, the dreams of her had been growing longer and more charming, until she seemed fit for a queen, and her unseen house a palace. Nan’s playmate took pleasure in repeating these glowing accounts to her family, and many were the head-shakings and evil forebodings over the untruthfulness of the heroine of this story. Little Susan Dyer’s only aunt, who was well known to her, lived as other people did in a comparatively plain and humble house, and it was not to be wondered at that she objected to hearing continually of an aunt of such splendid fashion. And yet Nan tried over and over again to be in some degree worthy of the relationship. She must not be too unfit to enter upon more brilliant surroundings whenever the time should come,—she took care that her pet chickens and her one doll should have high-sounding names, such as would seem proper to the aunt, and, more than this, she took a careful survey of the house whenever she was coming home from school or from play, lest she might come upon her distinguished relative unawares. She had asked her grandmother more than once to tell her about this mysterious kinswoman, but Mrs. Thacher proved strangely uncommunicative, fearing if she answered one easy question it might involve others that were more difficult.
The good woman grew more and more anxious to fulfil her duty to this troublesome young housemate; the child was strangely dear and companionable in spite of her frequent naughtiness. It seemed, too, as if she could do whatever she undertook, and as if she had a power which made her able to use and unite the best traits of her ancestors, the strong capabilities which had been illy balanced or allowed to run to waste in others. It might be said that the materials for a fine specimen of humanity accumulate through several generations, until a child appears who is the heir of all the family wit and attractiveness and common sense, just as one person may inherit the worldly wealth of his ancestry.