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PAGE 7

Ann Mary – Her Two Thanksgivings
by [?]

“I dunno what you mean, child,” said she.

Mr. Little had helped the man with the sleigh to start, and had now come in. He was pulling off his boots.

“Don’t you remember, mother,” said he, “how you run back in the house, an’ said you was goin’ to set that turkey an’ plum-pudding away, for you was afraid to leave ’em settin’ right out in plain sight on the table, for fear that somebody might come in?”

“Yes; I do remember,” said Mrs. Little. “I thought they looked ‘most too temptin’. I set ’em in the pantry. I thought Ann Mary could get ’em when she came in.”

“They ain’t in the pantry,” said Ann Mary.

Her grandmother arose and went into the pantry with a masterful air. “Ain’t in the pantry?” she repeated. “I don’t s’pose you more’n gave one look.”

Ann Mary followed her grandmother. She fairly expected to see the turkey and pudding before her eyes on the shelf and to admit that she had been mistaken. Mr. Little also followed, and they all stood in the pantry and looked about.

“I guess they ain’t here, mother,” said Mr. Little. “Can’t you think where you set ’em?”

The old woman took up the lamp and stepped out of the pantry with dignity. “I’ve set ’em somewhere,” said she, in a curt voice, “an’ I’ll find ’em in the mornin’. You don’t want any turkey or plum-puddin’ to-night, neither of you!”

But Mrs. Little did not find the turkey and the plum-pudding in the morning. Some days went by, and their whereabouts was as much a mystery as ever. Mrs. Little could not remember where she had put them; but it had been in some secure hiding-place, since her own wit which had placed them there could not find it out. She was so mortified and worried over it that she was nearly ill. She tried to propound the theory, and believe in it herself, that she had really set the turkey and the pudding in the pantry, and that they had been stolen; but she was too honest. “I’ve heerd of folks puttin’ things in such safe places that they couldn’t find ’em, before now,” said she; “but I never heerd of losin’ a turkey an’ a plum-puddin’ that way. I dunno but I’m losin’ what little wits I ever did have.” She went about with a humble and resentful air. She promised Ann Mary that she would cook another turkey and pudding the first of the week, if the missing ones were not found.

Sunday came and they were not discovered. It was a pleasant day, and the Littles went to the village church. Ann Mary looked over across the church after they were seated and saw Loretta, with the pretty brown frizzes over her forehead, sitting between her father and mother, and she wondered when Loretta had come home.

The choir sang and the minister prayed. Suddenly Ann Mary saw him, standing there in the pulpit, unfold a paper. Then the minister began to read the Thanksgiving Proclamation. Ann Mary cast one queer glance at her grandmother, who returned it with one of inexpressible dignity and severity.

As soon as meeting was done, her grandmother clutched her by the arm. “Don’t you say a word about it to anybody,” she whispered. “You mind!”

When they were in the sleigh going home she charged her husband. “You mind, you keep still, father,” said she. “It’ll be town-talk if you don’t.”

The old man chuckled. “Don’t you know, I said once that I had kind of an idee that Thanksgivin’ weren’t quite so early, and you shut me up, mother,” he remarked. He looked good-naturedly malicious.

“Well, I dunno as it’s anything so very queer,” said Mrs. Little. “It comes a whole week later than it did last year, and I s’posed we’d missed hearin’ the proclamation.”

The next day a letter arrived saying that Lucy and her father and mother were coming to spend Thanksgiving. “I feel jest about beat,” Mrs. Little said, when she read the letter.