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The Dickey Boy
by
“What boy is that, Hiram?” asked Mrs. Rose. Miss Elvira peered around the door. Mr. Fairbanks was tall and stiff-looking. He had a sunburned, sober face. “His name is Dickey,” he replied.
“One of those Dickeys?” Mrs. Rose said “Dickeys,” as if it were a synonym for “outcasts” or “rascals.”
Mr. Fairbanks nodded. He glanced at the boy in his wake, then at Willy. “Willy, s’pose you take this little boy ’round and show him your rabbits,” he said, in an embarrassed voice.
“Willy Rose!” cried his mother, “you haven’t changed those muddy shoes! Go right in this minute, ’round by the kitchen door, and take this boy ’round with you; he can sit down on the door-step and help you clean your sassafras-root.”
Willy disappeared lingeringly around the house, and the other boy, on being further bidden by Mr. Fairbanks, followed him. “Willy,” his mother cried after him, “mind you sit down on the door-step and tie your shoes! I ain’t goin’ to have that Dickey boy left alone; his folks are nothin’ but a pack of thieves,” she remarked in a lower tone. “What are you doing with him, Hiram?”
Hiram hesitated. “Well, ‘Mandy, you was sayin’ the other day that you wished you had a boy to run errands, and split up kindlin’s, and be kind of company for Willy.”
“You ain’t brought that Dickey boy?”
“Now, look here, ‘Mandy–“
“I ain’t going to have him in the house.”
“Jest look here a minute, ‘Mandy, till I tell you how it happened, and then you can do jest as you’re a mind to about it. I was up by the Ruggles’s this afternoon, and Mis’ Ruggles, she come out to the gate, and hailed me. She wanted to know if I didn’t want a boy. Seems the Dickey woman died last week; you know the father died two year ago. Well, there was six children, and the oldest boy’s skipped, nobody knows where, and the oldest girl has just got married, and this boy is the oldest of the four that’s left. They took the three little ones to the poorhouse, and Mis’ Ruggles she took this boy in, and she wanted to keep him, but her own boy is big enough to do all the chores, and she didn’t feel as if she could afford to. She says he’s a real nice little fellow, and his mother wa’n’t a bad woman; she was jest kind of sickly and shiftless. I guess old Dickey wa’n’t much, but he’s dead. Mis’ Ruggles says this little chap hates awful to go to the poorhouse, and it ain’t no kind of risk to take him, and she’d ought to know. She’s lived right there next door to the Dickeys ever since she was married. I knew you wanted a boy to do chores ’round, long as Willy wasn’t strong enough, so I thought I’d fetch him along. But you can do jest as you’re a mind to.”
“Now, Hiram Fairbanks, you know the name those Dickeys have always had. S’pose I took that boy, and he stole?”
“Mis’ Ruggles says she’d trust him with anything.”
“She ain’t got so much as I have to lose. There I’ve got two dozen solid silver teaspoons, and four table-spoons, and my mother’s silver creamer, and Willy’s silver napkin-ring. Elviry’s got her gold watch, too.”
“I’ve got other things I wouldn’t lose for anything,” chimed in Miss Elvira.
“Well, of course, I don’t want you to lose anything,” said Mr. Fairbanks, helplessly, “but Mis’ Ruggles, she said he was perfectly safe.”
“I s’pose I could lock up the silver spoons and use the old pewter ones, and Elviry could keep her watch out of sight for a while,” ruminated Mrs. Rose.
“Yes, I could,” assented Miss Elvira, “and my breastpin.”
“I s’pose he could draw the water, and split up the kindlin’-wood, and weed the flower-garden,” said Mrs. Rose. “I set Willy to weedin’ this morning, and it gave him the headache. I tell you one thing, Hiram Fairbanks, if I do take this boy, you’ve got to stand ready to take him back again the first minute I see anything out of the way with him.”