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Tom And Maggie Tulliver
by
As for Lucy, she was just as pretty and neat as she had been yesterday, and she looked with wondering pity at Maggie pouting and writhing under the tucker. While waiting for the time to set out, they were allowed to build card-houses, as a suitable amusement for boys and girls in their best clothes.
Tom could build splendid houses, but Maggie’s would never bear the laying on of the roof. It was always so with the things that Maggie made, and Tom said that no girls could ever make anything.
But it happened that Lucy was very clever at building; she handled the cards so lightly, and moved so gently, that Tom admired her houses as well as his own–the more readily because she had asked him to teach her. Maggie, too, would have admired Lucy’s houses if Tom had not laughed when her houses fell, and told her that she was “a stupid.”
“Don’t laugh at me, Tom!” she burst out angrily. “I’m not a stupid. I know a great many things you don’t.”
“Oh, I dare say, Miss Spitfire! I’d never be such a cross thing as you–making faces like that. Lucy doesn’t do so. I like Lucy better than you. I wish Lucy was my sister.”
“Then it’s wicked and cruel of you to wish so,” said Maggie, starting up from her place on the floor and upsetting Tom’s wonderful pagoda. She really did not mean it, but appearances were against her, and Tom turned white with anger, but said nothing. He would have struck her, only he knew it was cowardly to strike a girl.
Maggie stood in dismay and terror while Tom got up from the floor and walked away. Lucy looked on mutely, like a kitten pausing from its lapping.
“O Tom,” said Maggie at last, going half-way towards him, “I didn’t mean to knock it down–indeed, indeed, I didn’t.”
Tom took no notice of her, but took, instead, two or three hard peas out of his pocket, and shot them with his thumbnail against the window, with the object of hitting a bluebottle which was sporting in the spring sunshine.
Thus the morning had been very sad to Maggie, and when at last they set out Tom’s coldness to her all through their walk spoiled the fresh air and sunshine for her. He called Lucy to look at the half-built bird’s nest without caring to show it to Maggie, and peeled a willow switch for Lucy and himself without offering one to Maggie. Lucy had said, “Maggie, shouldn’t you like one?” but Tom was deaf.
Still, the sight of the peacock spreading his tail on the stackyard wall, just as they reached the aunt’s house, was enough to turn the mind from sadness. And this was only the beginning of beautiful sights at Garum Firs.
All the farmyard life was wonderful there–bantams, speckled and top-knotted; Friesland hens, with their feathers all turned the wrong way; Guinea-fowls that flew and screamed, and dropped their pretty-spotted feathers; pouter pigeons, and a tame magpie; nay, a goat, and a wonderful dog, half mastiff, half bull-dog, as large as a lion!
Uncle Pullet had seen the party from the window, and made haste to unbar and unchain the front door. Aunt Pullet, too, appeared at the doorway, and as soon as her sister was within hearing said, “Stop the children, Bessy; don’t let ’em come up the doorsteps. Sally’s bringing the old mat and the duster to rub their shoes.”
“You must come with me into the best room,” she went on as soon as her guests had passed the portal.
“May the children come too, sister?” inquired Mrs. Tulliver, who saw that Maggie and Lucy were looking rather eager.
“Well,” said Aunt Pullet, “it’ll perhaps be safer for the girls to come; they’ll be touching something if we leave ’em behind.”