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His Native Heath
by
He asked Mabel if she was prepared to hear something that would shock her turrible, something that would undermine her confidence in human natur’. She was a good deal upset, and no wonder, but she braced up and let on that she guessed she could stand it. So then he told her that her dad and her had been deceived, that that house wa’n’t his nor Mrs. Badger’s; ’twas the Wellmouth poor farm, and he was a pauper.
She was shocked, all right enough, but afore she had a chance to ask a question, he begun to tell her the story of his life. ‘Twas a fine chance for him to spread himself, and I cal’late he done it to the skipper’s taste. He told her how him and his sister had lived in their little home, their own little nest, over there by the shore, for years and years. He led her out to where she could see the roof of his old shanty over the sand hills, and he wiped his eyes and raved over it. You’d think that tumble-down shack was a hunk out of paradise; Adam and Eve’s place in the Garden was a short lobster ‘longside of it. Then, he said, he was took down with an incurable disease. He tried and tried to get along, but ’twas no go. He mortgaged the shanty to a grasping money lender– meanin’ Poundberry–and that money was spent. Then his sister passed away and his heart broke; so they took him to the poorhouse.
“Miss Lamont,” says he, “good-by. Sometimes in the midst of your fashionable career, in your gayety and so forth, pause,” he says, “and give a thought to the broken-hearted pauper who has told you his life tragedy.”
Well, now, you take a green girl, right fresh from novels and music lessons, and spring that on her–what can you expect? Mabel, she cried and took on dreadful.
“Oh, Mr. Blueworthy!” says she, grabbing his hand. “I’m SO glad you told me. I’m SO glad! Cheer up,” she says. “I respect you more than ever, and my father and I will–“
Just then the colonel comes puffing up the hill. He looked as if he’d heard news.
“My child,” he says in a kind of horrified whisper, “can you realize that we have actually passed the night in the–in the ALMSHOUSE?”
Mabel held up her hand. “Hush, papa,” she says. “Hush. I know all about it. Come away, quick; I’ve got something very important to say to you.”
And she took her dad’s arm and went off down the hill, mopping her pretty eyes with her handkerchief and smiling back, every once in a while, through her tears, at Asaph.
Now, it happened that there was a selectmen’s meeting that afternoon at four o’clock. I was on hand, and so was Zoeth Tiddit and most of the others. Cap’n Poundberry and Darius Gott were late. Zoeth was as happy as a clam at high water; he’d sold the poorhouse property that very day to a Colonel Lamont, from Harniss, who wanted it for a summer place.
“And I got the price we set on it, too,” says Zoeth. “But that wa’n’t the funniest part of it. Seems’s old man Lamont and his daughter was very much upset because Debby Badger and Ase Blueworthy would be turned out of house and home ‘count of the place being sold. The colonel was hot foot for giving ’em a check for five hundred dollars to square things; said his daughter’d made him promise he would. Says I: ‘You can give it to Debby, if you want to, but don’t lay a copper on that Blueworthy fraud.’ Then I told him the truth about Ase. He couldn’t hardly believe it, but I finally convinced him, and he made out the check to Debby. I took it down to her myself just after dinner. Ase was there, and his eyes pretty nigh popped out of his head.