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Them Notorious Pigs
by
“Mrs. Hayden, those pigs of yours have been in my garden again. I simply can’t put up with this any longer. Why in the name of reason don’t you look after your animals better? If I find them in again I’ll set my dog on them, I give you fair warning.”
A faint colour had crept into Mary Hayden’s soft, milky-white cheeks during this tirade, and her voice trembled as she said, “I’m very sorry, Mr. Harrington. I suppose Bobbles forgot to shut the gate of their pen again this morning. He is so forgetful.”
“I’d lengthen his memory, then, if I were you,” returned Harrington grimly, supposing that Bobbles was the hired man. “I’m not going to have my garden ruined just because he happens to be forgetful. I am speaking my mind plainly, madam. If you can’t keep your stock from being a nuisance to other people you ought not to try to run a farm at all.”
Then did Mrs. Hayden sit down upon the doorstep and burst into tears. Harrington felt, as Sarah King would have expressed it, “every which way at once.” Here was a nice mess! What a nuisance women were–worse than the pigs!
“Oh, don’t cry, Mrs. Hayden,” he said awkwardly. “I didn’t mean–well, I suppose I spoke too strongly. Of course I know you didn’t mean to let the pigs in. There, do stop crying! I beg your pardon if I’ve hurt your feelings.”
“Oh, it isn’t that,” sobbed Mrs. Hayden, wiping away her tears. “It’s only–I’ve tried so hard–and everything seems to go wrong. I make such mistakes. As for your garden, sir. I’ll pay for the damage my pigs have done if you’ll let me know what it comes to.”
She sobbed again and caught her breath like a grieved child. Harrington felt like a brute. He had a queer notion that if he put his arm around her and told her not to worry over things women were not created to attend to he would be expressing his feelings better than in any other way. But of course he couldn’t do that. Instead, he muttered that the damage didn’t amount to much after all, and he hoped she wouldn’t mind what he said, and then he got himself away and strode through the orchard like a man in a desperate hurry.
Mordecai had gone home and the pigs were not to be seen, but a chubby little face peeped at him from between two scrub, bloom-white cherry trees.
“G’way, you bad man!” said Bobbles vindictively. “G’way! You made my mommer cry–I saw you. I’m only Bobbles now, but when I grow up I’ll be Charles Henry Hayden and you won’t dare to make my mommer cry then.”
Harrington smiled grimly. “So you’re the lad who forgets to shut the pigpen gate, are you? Come out here and let me see you. Who is in there with you?”
“Ted is. He’s littler than me. But I won’t come out. I don’t like you. G’way home.”
Harrington obeyed. He went home and to work in his garden. But work as hard as he would, he could not forget Mary Hayden’s grieved face.
“I was a brute!” he thought. “Why couldn’t I have mentioned the matter gently? I daresay she has enough to trouble her. Confound those pigs!”
* * * * *
After that there was a time of calm. Evidently something had been done to Bobbles’ memory or perhaps Mrs. Hayden attended to the gate herself. At all events the pigs were not seen and Harrington’s garden blossomed like the rose. But Harrington himself was in a bad state.
For one thing, wherever he looked he saw the mental picture of his neighbour’s tired, sweet face and the tears in her blue eyes. The original he never saw, which only made matters worse. He wondered what opinion she had of him and decided that she must think him a cross old bear. This worried him. He wished the pigs would break in again so that he might have a chance to show how forbearing he could be.