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Chapter IX
“Now, Henry,” said Mrs. Daggett, as she smilingly set a plate of perfectly browned pancakes before her husband, which he proceeded to deluge with butter and maple syrup, “are you sure that's so, about the furniture? 'Cause if it is, we've got two or three o' them things right in this house: that chair you're settin' in, for one, an' upstairs there's that ol' fashioned brown bureau, where I keep the sheets 'n' pillow slips. You don't s'pose she'd want that, do you?”

Mrs. Daggett sank down in a chair opposite her husband, her large pink and white face damp with moisture. Above her forehead a mist of airy curls fluttered in the warm breeze from the open window.

“My, ain't it hot!” she sighed. “I got all het up a-bakin' them cakes. Shall I fry you another griddleful, papa?”

“They cer'nly do taste kind o' moreish, Abby,” conceded Mr. Daggett thickly. “You do beat the Dutch, Abby, when it comes t' pancakes. Mebbe I could manage a few more of 'em.”

Mrs. Daggett beamed sincerest satisfaction.

“Oh, I don't know,” she deprecated happily. “Ann Whittle says I don't mix batter the way she does. But if you like 'em, Henry—”

“Couldn't be beat, Abby,” affirmed Mr. Daggett sturdily, as he reached for his third cup of coffee.

The cook stove was only a few steps away, so the sizzle of the batter as it expanded into generous disks on the smoking griddle did not interrupt the conversation. Mrs. Daggett, in her blue and white striped gingham, a pancake turner in one plump hand, smiled through the odorous blue haze like a tutelary goddess. Mr. Daggett, in his shirt-sleeves, his scant locks brushed carefully over his bald spot, gazed at her with placid satisfaction. He was thoroughly accustomed to having Abby wait upon his appetite.

“I got to get down to the store kind of early this morning, Abby,” he observed, frowning slightly at his empty plate.

“I'll have 'em for you in two shakes of a lamb's tail, papa,” soothed Mrs. Daggett, to whom the above remark had come to signify not merely a statement of fact, but a gentle reprimand. “I know you like 'em good and hot; and cold buckwheat cakes certainly is about th' meanest vict'als.... There!”

And she transferred a neat pile of the delicate, crisp rounds from the griddle to her husband's plate with a skill born of long practice.

“About that furnitur',” remarked Mr. Daggett, gazing thoughtfully at the golden stream of sweetness, stolen from leaf and branch of the big sugar maples behind the house to supply the pewter syrup-jug he suspended above his cakes, “I guess it's a fact she wants it, all right.”

“I should think she'd rather have new furniture; Henry, they do say the house is going to be handsome. But you say she wants the old stuff? Ain't that queer, for anybody with means.”

“Well, that Orr girl beats me,” Mr. Daggett acknowledged handsomely. “She seems kind of soft an' easy, when you talk to her; but she's got ideas of her own; an' you can't no more talk 'em out of her—”

“Why should you try to talk 'em out of her, papa?” inquired Mrs. Daggett mildly. “Mebbe her ideas is all right; and anyhow, s'long as she's paying out good money—”

“Oh, she'll pay! she'll pay!” said Mr. Daggett, with a large gesture. “Ain't no doubt about her paying for what she wants.”

He shoved his plate aside, and tipped back in his chair with a heavy yawn.

“She's asked me to see about the wall paper, Abby,” he continued, bringing down his chair with a resounding thump of its sturdy legs. “And she's got the most outlandish notions about it; asked me could I match up what was on the walls.”

“Match it up? Why, ain't th' paper all moldered away, Henry, with the damp an' all?”

“'Course it is, Abby; but she says she wants to restore the house—fix it up just as 'twas. She says that's th' correct thing to do. ‘Why, shucks!’ I sez, ‘the wall papers they're gettin' out now is a lot handsomer than them old style papers. You don't want no old stuff like that,’ I sez. But, I swan! you can't tell that girl nothing, for all she seems so mild and meachin'. I was wonderin' if you couldn't shove some sense into her, Abby. Now, I'd like th' job of furnishin' up that house with new stuff. ‘I don't carry a very big stock of furniture,’ I sez to her; but—”

“Why, Hen-ery Daggett!” reproved his wife, “an' you a reg'lar professing member of the church! You ain't never carried no stock of furniture in the store, and you know it.”

“That ain't no sign I ain't never goin' to, Abby,” retorted Mr. Daggett with spirit. “We been stuck right down in the mud here in Brookville since that dratted bank failed. Nobody's moved, except to the graveyard. And here comes along a young woman with money ... I'd like mighty well to know just how much she's got an' where it come from. I asked the Judge, and he says, blamed if he knows.... But this 'ere young female spells op-per-tunity, Abby. We got to take advantage of the situation, Abby, same as you do in blackberrying season: pick 'em when they're ripe; if you don't, the birds and the bugs'll get 'em.”

“It don't sound right to me, papa,” murmured his wife, her kind face full of soft distress: “Taking advantage of a poor young thing, like her, an' all in mourning, too, fer a near friend. She told Lois so ... Dear, dear!”

Mr. Daggett had filled his morning pipe and was puffing energetically in his efforts to make it draw.

“I didn't say take advantage of her,” he objected. “That's somethin' I never done yet in my business, Abby. Th' Lord knows I don't sand my sugar nor water my vinegar, the way some storekeepers do. I'm all for ‘live an' let live.’ What I says was—... Now, you pay attention to me, Abby, and quit sniffling. You're a good woman; but you're about as soft as that there butter! ...”

The article in question had melted to a yellow pool under the heat. Mrs. Daggett gazed at it with wide blue eyes, like those of a child.

“Why, Henry,” she protested, “I never heerd you talk so before.”

“And likely you won't again. Now you listen, Abby; all I want, is to do what honest business I can with this young woman. She's bound to spend her money, and she's kind of took to me; comes into th' store after her mail, and hangs around and buys the greatest lot o' stuff— ‘Land!’ I says to her: ‘a body'd think you was getting ready to get married.’”

“Well, now I shouldn't wonder—” began Mrs. Daggett eagerly.

“Don't you get excited, Abby. She says she ain't; real pointed, too. But about this wall paper; I don't know as I can match up them stripes and figures. I wisht you'd go an' see her, Abby. She'll tell you all about it. An' her scheme about collecting all the old Bolton furniture is perfectly ridiculous. 'Twouldn't be worth shucks after kickin' 'round folk's houses here in Brookville for the last fifteen years or so.”

“But you can't never find her at home, Henry,” said Mrs. Daggett. “I been to see her lots of times; but Mis' Solomon Black says she don't stay in the house hardly long enough to eat her victuals.”

“Why don't you take the buggy, Abby, and drive out to the old place?” suggested Mr. Daggett. “Likely you'll find her there. She appears to take an interest in every nail that's drove. I can spare the horse this afternoon just as well as not.”

“'Twould be pleasant,” purred Mrs. Daggett. “But, I suppose, by rights, I ought to take Lois along.”

“Nope,” disagreed her husband, shaking his head. “Don't you take Lois; she wouldn't talk confiding to Lois, the way she would to you. You've got a way with you, Abby. I'll bet you could coax a bird off a bush as easy as pie, if you was a mind to.”

Mrs. Daggett's big body shook with soft laughter. She beamed rosily on her husband.

“How you do go on, Henry!” she protested. “But I ain't going to coax Lydia Orr off no bush she's set her heart on. She's got the sweetest face, papa; an' I know, without anybody telling me, whatever she does or wants to do is all right.”

Mr. Daggett had by now invested his portly person in a clean linen coat, bearing on its front the shining mark of Mrs. Daggett's careful iron.

“Same here, Abby,” he said kindly: “whatever you do, Abby, suits me all right.”

The worthy couple parted for the morning: Mr. Daggett for the scene of his activities in the post office and store; Mrs. Daggett to set her house to rights and prepare for the noon meal, when her Henry liked to “eat hearty of good, nourishing victuals,” after his light repast of the morning.

“Guess I'll wear my striped muslin,” said Mrs. Daggett to herself happily. “Ain't it lucky it's all clean an' fresh? 'Twill be so cool to wear out buggy-ridin'.”

Mrs. Daggett was always finding occasion for thus reminding herself of her astonishing good fortune. She had formed the habit of talking aloud to herself as she worked about the house and garden.

“'Tain't near as lonesome, when you can hear the sound of a voice—if it is only your own,” she apologized, when rebuked for the practice by her friend Mrs. Maria Dodge. “Mebbe it does sound kind of crazy— You say lunatics does it constant—but, I don't know, Maria, I've a kind of a notion there's them that hears, even if you can't see 'em. And mebbe they answer, too—in your thought-ear.”

“You want to be careful, Abby,” warned Mrs. Dodge, shaking her head. “It makes the chills go up and down my back to hear you talk like that; and they don't allow no such doctrines in the church.”

“The Apostle Paul allowed 'em,” Mrs. Daggett pointed out, “so did the Psalmist. You read your Bible, Maria, with that in mind, and you'll see.”

In the spacious, sunlighted chamber of her soul, devoted to the memory of her two daughters who had died in early childhood, Mrs. Daggett sometimes permitted herself to picture Nellie and Minnie, grown to angelic girlhood, and keeping her company about her lonely household tasks in the intervals not necessarily devoted to harp playing in the Celestial City. She laughed softly to herself as she filled two pies with sliced sour apples and dusted them plentifully with spice and sugar.

“I'd admire to see papa argufying with that sweet girl,” she observed to the surrounding silence. “Papa certainly is set on having his own way. Guess bin' alone here with me so constant, he's got kind of willful. But it don't bother me any; ain't that lucky?”

She hurried her completed pies into the oven with a swiftness of movement she had never lost, her sweet, thin soprano soaring high in the words of a winding old hymn tune:

    Lord, how we grovel here below,
    Fond of these trifling toys;
    Our souls can neither rise nor go
    To taste supernal joys! ...

It was nearly two o'clock before the big brown horse, indignant at the unwonted invasion of his afternoon leisure, stepped slowly out from the Daggett barn. On the seat of the old-fashioned vehicle, to which he had been attached by Mrs. Daggett's skillful hands, that lady herself sat placidly erect, arrayed in her blue and white striped muslin. Mrs. Daggett conscientiously wore stripes at all seasons of the year: she had read somewhere that stripes impart to the most rotund of figures an appearance of slimness totally at variance with the facts. As for blue and white, her favorite combination of stripes, any fabric in those colors looked cool and clean; and there was a vague strain of poetry in Mrs. Daggett's nature which made her lift her eyes to a blue sky filled with floating white clouds with a sense of rapturous satisfaction wholly unrelated to the state of the weather.

“G'long, Dolly!” she bade the reluctant animal, with a gentle slap of leathern reins over a rotund back. “Git-ap!”

“Dolly,” who might have been called C?sar, both by reason of his sex and a stubbornly dominant nature, now fortunately subdued by years of chastening experience, strode slowly forward, his eyes rolling, his large hoofs stirring up heavy clouds of dust. There were sweet-smelling meadows stacked with newly-cured hay on either side of the road, and tufts of red clover blossoms exhaling delicious odors of honey almost under his saturnine nose; but he trotted ponderously on, sullenly aware of the gentle hand on the reins and the mild, persistent voice which bade him “Git-ap, Dolly!”

Miss Lois Daggett, carrying a black silk bag, which contained a prospectus of the invaluable work which she was striving to introduce to an unappreciative public, halted the vehicle before it had reached the outskirts of the village.

“Where you going, Abby?” she demanded, in the privileged tone of authority a wife should expect from her husband's female relatives.

“Just out in the country a piece, Lois,” replied Mrs. Daggett evasively.

“Well, I guess I'll git in and ride a ways with you,” said Lois Daggett. “Cramp your wheel, Abby,” she added sharply. “I don't want to git my skirt all dust.”

Miss Daggett was wearing a black alpaca skirt and a white shirtwaist, profusely ornamented with what is known as coronation braid. Her hair, very tightly frizzed, projected from beneath the brim of her straw hat on both sides.

“I'm going out to see if I can catch that Orr girl this afternoon,” she explained, as she took a seat beside her sister-in-law. “She ought to want a copy of Famous People—in the best binding, too. I ain't sold a leather-bound yit, not even in Grenoble. They come in red with gold lettering. You'd ought to have one, Abby, now that Henry's gitting more business by the minute. I should think you might afford one, if you ain't too stingy.”

“Mebbe we could, Lois,” said Mrs. Daggett amiably. “I've always thought I'd like to know more about famous people: what they eat for breakfast, and how they do their back hair and—”

“Don't be silly, Abby,” Miss Daggett bade her sharply. “There ain't any such nonsense in Famous People! I wouldn't be canvassing for it, if there was.” And she shifted her pointed nose to one side with a slight, genteel sniff.

“Git-ap, Dolly!” murmured Mrs. Daggett, gently slapping the reins.

Dolly responded by a single swift gesture of his tail which firmly lashed the hated reminder of bondage to his hind quarters. Then wickedly pretending that he was not aware of what had happened he strolled to the side of the road nearest the hay field.

“Now, if he ain't gone and got his tail over the lines!” cried Mrs. Daggett indignantly. “He's got more resistin' strength in that tail of his'n—wonder if I can—”

She leaned over the dashboard and grasped the offending member with both hands.

“You hang onto the lines, Lois, and give 'em a good jerk the minute I loosen up his tail.”

The subsequent failure of this attempt deflected the malicious Dolly still further from the path of duty. A wheel cramped and lifted perilously.

Miss Daggett squealed shrilly:

“He'll tip the buggy over—he'll tip the buggy over! For pity's sake, Abby!”

Mrs. Daggett stepped briskly out of the vehicle and seized the bridle.

“Ain't you ashamed?” she demanded sternly. “You loosen up that there tail o' yourn this minute!”

“I got 'em!” announced Miss Daggett, triumphantly. “He loosened right up.”

She handed the recovered reins to her sister-in-law, and the two ladies resumed their journey and their conversation.

“I never was so scared in all my life,” stated Lois Daggett, straightening her hat which had assumed a rakish angle over one ear. “I should think you'd be afraid to drive such a horse, Abby. What in creation would have happened to you if I hadn't been in the buggy?”

“As like as not he wouldn't have took a notion with his tail, Lois, if I'd been driving him alone,” hazarded Mrs. Daggett mildly. “Dolly's an awful knowing horse.... Git-ap, Dolly!”

“Do you mean to tell me, Abby Daggett, that there horse of Henry's has took a spite against me?” demanded the spinster.... “Mebbe he's a mind-reader,” she added darkly.

“You know I didn't mean nothin' like that, Lois,” her sister-in-law assured her pacifically. “What I meant to say was: I got so interested in what you were saying, Lois, that I handled the reins careless, and he took advantage.... Git-ap, Dolly! Don't you see, Lois, even a horse knows the difference when two ladies is talking.”

“You'd ought to learn to say exactly what you mean, Abby,” commented Miss Daggett.

She glanced suspiciously at the fresh striped muslin, which was further enhanced by a wide crocheted collar and a light blue satin bow.

“Where'd you say you were goin' this afternoon, Abby?”

“I said out in the country a piece, Lois; it's such a nice afternoon.”

“Well, I should think Henry'd be needing the horse for his business. I know I'd never think of asking him for it—and me a blood relation, too, trying to earn my bread and butter tramping around the country with Famous People.”

Mrs. Dagget............
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