PAGE 16
The Flag-Raising
by
“Is it likely to be fair to-morrow?”
“Guess so; clear as a bell. What’s on foot; a picnic?”
“No; we’re to have a grand flag-raising!” (“That is,” she thought, “if we have any flag to raise!”)
“That so? Where?”
“The three villages are to club together and have a rally, and raise the flag at the Centre. There’ll be a brass band, and speakers, and the Mayor of Portland, and the man that will be governor if he’s elected, and a dinner in the Grange Hall, and we girls are chosen to raise the flag.”
“I want to know! That’ll be grand, won’t it?” (Still not a sign of consciousness on the part of Abner.)
“I hope Mrs. Fogg will take Clara Belle, for it will be splendid to look at! Mr. Cobb is going to be Uncle Sam and drive us on the stage. Miss Dearborn–Clara Belle’s old teacher, you know is going to be Columbia; the girls will be the States of the Union, and oh, Mr. Simpson, I am the one to be the State of Maine!” Mr. Simpson flourished the whipstock and gave a loud, hearty laugh. Then he turned in his seat and regarded Rebecca curiously.
“You’re kind o’ small, ain’t ye, for so big a state as this one?” he asked.
“Any of us would be too small,” replied Rebecca with dignity, “but the committee asked me, and I am going to try hard to do well.”
The tragic thought that there might be no occasion for anybody to do anything, well or ill, suddenly overcame her here, and putting her hand on Mr. Simpson’s sleeve, she attacked the subject practically and courageously.
“Oh, Mr. Simpson, dear Mr. Simpson, it’s such a mortifying subject I can’t bear to say anything about it, but please give us back our flag! Don’t, don’t take it over to Acreville, Mr. Simpson! We’ve worked so long to make it, and it was so hard getting the money for the bunting! Wait a minute, please; don’t be angry, and don’t say no just yet, till I explain more. It’ll be so dreadful for everybody to get there to-morrow morning and find no flag to raise, and the band and the mayor all disappointed, and the children crying, with their muslin dresses all bought for nothing! Oh, dear Mr. Simpson, please don’t take our flag away from us!”
The apparently astonished Abner pulled his mustaches and exclaimed: “But I don’t know what you’re drivin’ at! Who’s got yer flag? I hain’t!”
Could duplicity, deceit, and infamy go any further, Rebecca wondered, and her soul filling with righteous wrath, she cast discretion to the winds and spoke a little more plainly, bending her great swimming eyes on the now embarrassed Abner, who looked like an angle-worm wriggling on a pin.
“Mr. Simpson, how can you say that, when I saw the flag in the back of your wagon myself, when you stopped to water the horse? It’s wicked of you to take it, and I cannot bear it!” Her voice broke now, for a doubt of Mr. Simpson’s yielding suddenly darkened her mind. “If you keep it, you’ll have to keep me, for I won’t be parted from it! I can’t fight like the boys, but I can pinch and scratch, and I will scratch, just like a panther–I’ll lie right down on my star and not move, if I starve to death!” “Look here, hold your hosses ‘n’ don’t cry till you git something to cry for!” grumbled the outraged Abner, to whom a clue had just come; and leaning over the wagon-back he caught hold of a corner of white sheet and dragged up the bundle, scooping off Rebecca’s hat in the process, and almost burying her in bunting.
She caught the treasure passionately to her heart and stifled her sobs in it, while Abner exclaimed “I declare to man, if that hain’t a flag! Well, in that case you’re good ‘n’ welcome to it! Land! I seen that bundle lyin’ in the middle o’ the road and I says to myself, that’s somebody’s washin’ and I’d better pick it up and leave it at the post-office to be claimed; ‘n’ all the time it was a flag!”