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Heman’s Ma
by
“Who is it?” asked Mrs. Cole. “Why, that you, Heman? Anybody sick?”
“Where’s Roxy?” returned Heman, as if he demanded her at the point of the bayonet.
“Why, she’s been abed as much as ten minutes. The Tuckers brought her home.”
“You tell her to come here! I want to see her.”
“What! down there? Law, Heman! you come in the mornin’. She’ll ketch her death o’ cold gittin’ up an’ dressin’, now she’s got all warmed through.”
“What’s he want, mother?” came Roxy’s clear voice from within the room. “That’s Heman Blaisdell’s voice.”
“Roxy, you come down here!” called Heman, masterfully.
There was a pause, during which Mrs. Cole was apparently pulled away from the window. Then Roxy, her head enveloped in a shawl, appeared in her mother’s place.
“Well!” she said, impatiently. “What is it?”
Heman’s voice found a pleading level.
“Roxy, will you marry me?”
“Why, Heman, you ‘re perfectly ridiculous! At this time o’ night, too!”
“You answer me!” cried Heman, desperately. “I want you! Won’t you have me, Roxy? Say?”
“Roxy!” came her mother’s muffled voice from the bed. “You’ll git your death o’ cold. What’s he want? Can’t you give him an answer an’ let him go?”
“Won’t you, Roxy?” called Heman. “Oh, won’t you?”
Roxy began to laugh hysterically. “Yes,” she said, and shut the window.
When Heman had put up the horse, he walked into the kitchen, and straight up to the Widder Poll, who stood awaiting him, clinging to the table by one fat hand.
“Now, look here!” he said, good-naturedly, speaking to her with a direct address he had not been able to use for many a month, “You listen to me. I don’t want any hard feelin’, but to-morrer mornin’ you’ve got to pick up your things an’ go. You can have the house down to the Holler, or you can go out nussin’, but you come here by your own invitation, an’ you’ve got to leave by mine. I’m goin’ to be married as soon as I can git a license.” Then he walked to the bedroom, and shut himself in with his ruined bass-viol and the darkness.
And the Widder Poll did not speak.
* * * * *
There are very few cosey evenings when Heman and Roxy do not smile at each other across the glowing circle of their hearth, and ask, the one or the other, with a perplexity never to be allayed,–
“Do you s’pose she tumbled, or did she put her foot through it a-purpose?”
But Heman is sure to conclude the discussion with a glowing tribute to Brad Freeman, his genius and his kindliness.
“I never shall forgit that o’ Brad,” he announces. “There wa’n’t another man in the State o’ New Hampshire could ha’ mended it as he did. Why, you never’d know there was a brack in it!”