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PAGE 15

The Flat-Iron Lot
by [?]

It was in vain for the doctor to declare that this was a colloquialism which might mean much or little, as you chose to take it. The minister, justly hurt, remarked that, when a man was in a tight place, he needed the support of his friends, if he had any; and the doctor went whistling drearily away, conscious that he could have said much worse about the address, without doing it justice.

The only earthly circumstance which seemed to be fulfilling its duty toward Tiverton was the weather. That shone seraphically bright. The air was never so soft, the skies were never so clear and far, and they were looking down indulgently on all this earthly turmoil when, something before midnight, on the fateful eve, Nicholas Oldfield went up the path to his side-door, and stumbled over despairing Mary on the step.

“What under the heavens”–he began; but Mary precipitated herself upon him, and held him with both hands. The moral tension, which had held her hopeless and rigid, gave way. She was sobbing wildly.

“O gran’ther!” she moaned, over and over again. “O gran’ther!”

Nicholas managed somehow to get the door open and walk in, hampered as he was by the clinging arms of his tall girl. Then he sat down in the big chair, taking Mary there too, and stroked her cheek. Perhaps he could hardly have done it in the light, but at that moment it seemed very natural. For a long time neither of them spoke. Mary had no words, and it may be that Nicholas could not seek for them. At last she began, catching her breath tremulously:–

“They’ve hunted everywhere, gran’ther. They’ve rode all over the county; and after the celebration, they’re going to–dr–drag the pond!”

“Well; I guess I can go out o’ the county if I want to,” responded Nicholas calmly. “I come across a sheet in them rec’ids that told about a pewter communion set over to Rocky Ridge, an’ I’ve found part on ‘t in a tavern there. Who put ’em up to all this work? Your father?”

“No,” sobbed Mary. “The minister.”

“The minister? What’s he want?”

“He’s got to write an address, and he wants you to tell him what to say.”

Then, in the darkness of the room, a slow smile stole over Nicholas Oldfield’s face, but his voice remained quite grave.

“Does, does he?” he remarked. “Well, he ain’t the fust pa’son that’s needed a lift; but he’s the fust one ever I knew to ask for it. I’ve got nothin’ for ’em, Mary. I come home to wind up the clocks; but I ain’t goin’ to stand by a town that’ll swaller a Memory-o’-Me timekeeper an’ murder the old bell. You can say I was here, an’ they needn’t go to muddyin’ up the ponds; but as to their doin’s, they can carry ’em out as they may. I’ve no part nor lot in ’em.”.

Mary, in the weakness of her kind, was wiser than she knew. She drew her arms about his neck, and clung to him the closer. All this talk of plots and counter-plots seemed very trivial now that she had him back; and being only a child, wearied with care and watching, she went fast asleep on his shoulder. Nicholas felt tired too; but he thought he had only dozed a little when he opened his eyes on a gleam of morning, and saw the doctor come striding into the yard.

“Your door’s open!” called the doctor. “You must be at home to callers. Morning, Mary! Either of you sick?”

Mary, abashed, drew herself away, and slipped into the sitting-room, a hand upon her tumbled hair; the doctor, wise in his honesty, slashed at the situation without delay.

“See here, Mr. Oldfield,” said he, “whether you’ve slept or not, you’ve got to come right over to parson’s with me, and straighten him out. He’s all balled up. You are as bad as the rest of us. You think we don’t know enough to refuse a clock like a comic valentine, and you think we don’t prize that old bell. How are we going to prize things if nobody tells us anything about them? And here’s the town going to pieces over a celebration it hasn’t sense enough to plan, just because you’re so obstinate. Oh, come along! Hear that! The boys are beginning to toot, and fire off their crackers, and Tiverton’s going to the dogs, and Sudleigh’ll be glad of it! Come, Mr. Oldfield, come along!”