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Mis’ Wadleigh’s Guest
by
Mrs. Wadleigh sat putting her thimble off and on.
“I know all about that,” she interposed, “but who’s in there now? That’s what I want to find out.”
“I’m comin’ to that. I don’t want to git ahead o’ my story. An’ so’t went on till it come two weeks ago Friday, an’ Cyrus went over jest the same as ever. An’ when he hitched to the gate, he see smoke comin’ out o’ the chimbly, an’ there was a man’s face at one square o’ glass.” She paused, enjoying her climax.
“Well? Why don’t you go ahead? Mirandy Jane Pendleton, I could shake you! You can talk fast enough when somebody else wants the floor! How’d he git in? What’d he say for himself?”
“Why, he never said anything! Cyrus didn’t see him.”
“Didn’t see him? I thought he see him lookin’ out the winder!”
“Why, yes! so he did, but he didn’t see him to speak to. He jest nailed up the door, an’ come away.”
Mrs. Wadleigh turned squarely upon the delinquent Cyrus, who stood, half-shaven, absently honing his razor.
“Cyrus,” said she, with an alarming decision, “will you open your head, an’ tell me what you nailed up that door for? an’ where you got your nails? I s’pose you don’t carry ’em round with you, ready for any door’t happens to need nailin’ up?”
This fine sarcasm was not lost on Cyrus. He perceived that he had become the victim of a harsh and ruthless dealing.
“I had the key to the front door with me, an’ I thought I’d jest step round an’ nail up t’other one,” he said, in the tone of one conscious of right. “There was some nails in the wood-shed. Then I heard somebody steppin’ round inside, an’ I come away.”
“You come away!” repeated Mrs. Wadleigh, rising in noble wrath. “You nailed up the’ door an’ come away! Well, if you! ain’t a weak sister! Mirandy, you hand me down that key, out o’ the clock, while I git my things!”
She walked sturdily across to the bedroom, and Mirandy followed her, wringing her hands in futile entreaty.
“My soul, Marthy! you ain’t goin’ over there! You’ll be killed, as sure as you step foot into the yard. Don’t you remember how that hired man down to Sudleigh toled the whole fam’ly out into the barn, one arter another, an’ chopped their heads off–“
“You gi’ me t’other end o’ my cloud,” commanded Mrs. Wadleigh. “I’m glad I’ve got on stockin’-feet. Where’s t’other mittin? Oh! there ’tis, down by the sto’-leg. Cyrus, if you knew how you looked with your face plastered over o’ lather, you’d wipe it off, an’ hand me down that key. Can’t you move? Well, I guess I can reach it myself.”
She dropped the house key carefully into her pocket, and opened the outer door; both Cyrus and his wife knew they were powerless to stop her.
“O Marthy, do come back!” wailed Mrs. Pendleton after her. You ‘ain’t had a mite o’ dinner, an’ you’ll never git out o’ that house alive!”
“I’d rather by half hitch up myself,” began Cyrus; but his wife turned upon him, at the word, bundled him into the kitchen, and shut the door upon him. Then she went back to her post in the doorway, and peered after Mrs. Wadleigh’s square figure on the dazzling road, with a melancholy determination to stand by her to the last. Only when it occurred to her that it was unlucky to watch a departing friend out of sight, did she shut the door hastily, and go in to reproach Cyrus and prepare his dinner.
Mrs. Wadleigh plodded steadily onward. Her face had lost its robustness of scorn, and expressed only a cheerful determination. Once or twice her mouth relaxed, in retrospective enjoyment of the scene behind her, and she gave vent to a scornful ejaculation.
“A man in my house!” she said once, aloud. “I guess we’ll see!”
She turned into the cross-road, where stood her dear and lonely dwelling, with no neighbors on either side for half a mile, and stopped a moment to gaze about her. The road was almost untravelled, and the snow lay encrusted over the wide fields, sparkling on the heights and blue in the hollows. The brown bushes by a hidden stone-wall broke the sheen entrancingly; here and there a dry leaf fluttered, but only enough to show how still such winter stillness can be, and a flock of little brown birds rose, with a soft whirr, and settled further on. Mrs. Wadleigh pressed her lips together in a voiceless content, and her eyes took on a new brightness. She had lived quite long enough in the town. Rounding a sweeping bend, and ploughing sturdily along, though it was difficult here to find the roadway, she kept her eyes fixed on a patch of sky, over a low elm, where the chimney would first come into view. But just before it stepped forward to meet her, as she had seen it a thousand times, a telltale token forestalled it; a delicate blue haze crept out, in spiral rings, and tinged the sky.