PAGE 2
His Native Heath
by
The poorhouse property was valuable, too, specially for a summer cottage, being out on the end of Robbin’s Point, away from the town, and having a fine view right across the bay. Zoeth Tiddit was a committee of one with power from the town to sell the place, but he hadn’t found a customer yet. And if he did sell it, what to do with Debby was more or less of a question. She’d kept poorhouse for years, and had no other home nor no relations to go to. Everybody liked her, too–that is, everybody but Cap’n Benijah. He was down on her ’cause she was a Spiritualist and believed in fortune tellers and such. The cap’n, bein’ a deacon of the Come- Outer persuasion, was naturally down on folks who wasn’t broad- minded enough to see that his partic’lar crack in the roof was the only way to crawl through to glory.
Well, we voted to send Asaph to the poorhouse, and then I was appointed a delegate to see him and tell him he’d got to go. I wasn’t enthusiastic over the job, but everybody said I was exactly the feller for the place.
“To tell you the truth,” drawls Darius, “you, being a stranger, are the only one that Ase couldn’t talk over. He’s got a tongue that’s buttered on both sides and runs on ball bearings. If I should see him he’d work on my sympathies till I’d lend him the last two-cent piece in my baby’s bank.”
So, as there wa’n’t no way out of it, I drove down to Asaph’s that afternoon. He lived off on a side road by the shore, in a little, run-down shanty that was as no account as he was. When I moored my horse to the “heavenly-wood” tree by what was left of the fence, I would have bet my sou’wester that I caught a glimpse of Brother Blueworthy, peeking round the corner of the house. But when I turned that corner there was nobody in sight, although the bu’sted wash-bench, with a cranberry crate propping up its lame end, was shaking a little, as if some one had set on it recent.
I knocked on the door, but nobody answered. After knocking three or four times, I tried kicking, and the second kick raised, from somewheres inside, a groan that was as lonesome a sound as ever I heard. No human noise in my experience come within a mile of it for dead, downright misery–unless, maybe, it’s Cap’n Jonadab trying to sing in meeting Sundays.
“Who’s that?” wails Ase from ‘tother side of the door. “Did anybody knock?”
“Knock!” says I. “I all but kicked your everlasting derelict out of water. It’s me, Wingate–one of the selectmen. Tumble up, there! I want to talk to you.”
Blueworthy didn’t exactly tumble, so’s to speak, but the door opened, and he comes shuffling and groaning into sight. His face was twisted up and he had one hand spread-fingered on the small of his back.
“Dear, dear!” says he. “I’m dreadful sorry to have kept you waiting, Mr. Wingate. I’ve been wrastling with this turrible lumbago, and I’m ‘fraid it’s affecting my hearing. I’ll tell you–“
“Yes–well, you needn’t mind,” I says; “‘cordin’ to common tell, you was born with that same kind of lumbago, and it’s been getting no better fast ever since. Jest drag your sufferings out onto this bench and come to anchor. I’ve got considerable to say, and I’m in a hurry.”
Well, he grunted, and groaned, and scuffled along. When he’d got planted on the bench he didn’t let up any–kept on with the misery.
“Look here,” says I, losing patience, “when you get through with the Job business I’ll heave ahead and talk. Don’t let me interrupt the lamentations on no account. Finished? All right. Now, you listen to me.”