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<h2> Eleventh Chronicle. ABIJAH THE BRAVE AND THE FAIR EMMAJANE </h2>
<p>I</p>
<p>"A warrior so bold and a maiden so bright<br/>
Conversed as they sat on the green.<br/>
They gazed at each other in tender delight.<br/>
Alonzo the brave was the name of the knight,<br/>
And the maid was the fair Imogene.<br/>
<br/>
"Alas!' said the youth, 'since tomorrow I go<br/>
To fight in a far distant land,<br/>
Your tears for my absence soon ceasing to flow,<br/>
Some other will court you, and you will bestow<br/>
On a wealthier suitor your hand.'<br/>
<br/>
'Oh, hush these suspicions!' Fair Imogene said,<br/>
"So hurtful to love and to me!<br/>
For if you be living, or if you be dead,<br/>
I swear by the Virgin that none in your stead<br/>
Shall the husband of Imogene be!'<br/></p>
<p>Ever since she was eight years old Rebecca had wished to be eighteen, but
now that she was within a month of that awe-inspiring and long-desired age
she wondered if, after all, it was destined to be a turning point in her
quiet existence. Her eleventh year, for instance, had been a real
turning-point, since it was then that she had left Sunnybrook Farm and
come to her maiden aunts in Riverboro. Aurelia Randall may have been
doubtful as to the effect upon her spinster sisters of the irrepressible
child, but she was hopeful from the first that the larger opportunities of
Riverboro would be the "making" of Rebecca herself.</p>
<p>The next turning-point was her fourteenth year, when she left the district
school for the Wareham Female Seminary, then in the hey-day of its local
fame. Graduation (next to marriage, perhaps, the most thrilling episode in
the life of a little country girl) happened at seventeen, and not long
afterward her Aunt Miranda's death, sudden and unexpected, changed not
only all the outward activities and conditions of her life, but played its
own part in her development.</p>
<p>The brick house looked very homelike and pleasant on a June morning
nowadays with children's faces smiling at the windows and youthful
footsteps sounding through the halls; and the brass knocker on the
red-painted front door might have remembered Rebecca's prayer of a year
before, when she leaned against its sun-warmed brightness and whispered:
"God bless Aunt Miranda; God bless the brick house that was; God bless the
brick house that's going to be!"</p>
<p>All the doors and blinds were open to the sun and air as they had never
been in Miss Miranda Sawyer's time. The hollyhock bed that had been her
chief pride was never neglected, and Rebecca liked to hear the neighbors
say that there was no such row of beautiful plants and no such variety of
beautiful colors in Riverboro as those that climbed up and peeped in at
the kitchen windows where old Miss Miranda used to sit.</p>
<p>Now that the place was her very own Rebecca felt a passion of pride in its
smoothly mown fields, its carefully thinned-out woods, its blooming garden
spots, and its well-weeded vegetable patch; felt, too whenever she looked
at any part of it, a passion of gratitude to the stern old aunt who had
looked upon her as the future head of the family, as well as a passion of
desire to be worthy of that trust.</p>
<p>It had been a very difficult year for a girl fresh from school: the death
of her aunt, the nursing of Miss Jane, prematurely enfeebled by the shock,
the removal of her own invalid mother and the rest of the little family
from Sunnybrook Farm. But all had gone smoothly; and when once the Randall
fortunes had taken an upward turn nothing seemed able to stop their
intrepid ascent.</p>
<p>Aurelia Randall renewed her youth in the companionship of her sister Jane
and the comforts by which her children were surrounded; the mortgage was
no longer a daily terror, for Sunnybrook had been sold to the new
railroad; Hannah, now Mrs. Will Melville, was happily situated; John, at
last, was studying medicine; Mark, the boisterous and unlucky brother, had
broken no bones for several months; while Jenny and Fanny were doing well
at the district school under Miss Libby Moses, Miss Dearborn's successor.</p>
<p>"I don't feel very safe," thought Rebecca, remembering all these
unaccustomed mercies as she sat on the front doorsteps, with her tatting
shuttle flying in and out of the fine cotton like a hummingbird. "It's
just like one of those too beautiful July days that winds up with a
thundershower before night! Still, when you remember that the Randalls
never had anything but thunder and lightning, rain, snow, and hail, in
their family history for twelve or fifteen years, perhaps it is only
natural that they should enjoy a little spell of settled weather. If it
really turns out to BE settled, now that Aunt Jane and mother are strong
again I must be looking up one of what Mr. Aladdin calls my cast-off
careers."—"There comes Emma Jane Perkins through her front gate; she
will be here in a minute, and I'll tease her!" and Rebecca ran in the door
and seated herself at the old piano that stood between the open windows in
the parlor.</p>
<p>Peeping from behind the muslin curtains, she waited until Emma Jane was on
the very threshold and then began singing her version of an old ballad,
made that morning while she was dressing. The ballad was a great favorite
of hers, and she counted on doing telling execution with it in the present
instance by the simple subterfuge of removing the original hero and
heroine, Alonzo and Imogene, and substituting Abijah the Brave and the
Fair Emmajane, leaving the circumstances in the first three verses
unaltered, because in truth they seemed to require no alteration.</p>
<p>Her high, clear voice, quivering with merriment, floated through the
windows into the still summer air:</p>
<p>"'A warrior so bold and a maiden so bright<br/>
Conversed as they sat on the green.<br/>
They gazed at each other in tender delight.<br/>
Abijah the Brave was the name of the knight,<br/>
And the maid was the Fair Emmajane.'"<br/></p>
<p>"Rebecca Randall, stop! Somebody'll hear you!"</p>
<p>"No, they won't—they're making jelly in the kitchen, miles away."</p>
<p>"'Alas!' said the youth, since tomorrow I go<br/>
To fight in a far distant land,<br/>
Your tears for my absence soon ceasing to flow,<br/>
Some other will court you, and you will bestow<br/>
On a wealthier suitor your hand.'"<br/></p>
<p>"Rebecca, you can't THINK how your voice carries! I believe mother can
hear it over to my house!"</p>
<p>"Then, if she can, I must sing the third verse, just to clear your
reputation from the cloud cast upon it in the second," laughed her
tormentor, going on with the song:</p>
<p>"'Oh, hush these suspicions!' Fair Emmajane said, 'So hurtful to love and
to me! For if you be living, or if you be dead, I swear, my Abijah, that
none in your stead, Shall the husband of Emmajane be!'"</p>
<p>After ending the third verse Rebecca wheeled around on the piano stool and
confronted her friend, who was carefully closing the parlor windows:—</p>
<p>"Emma Jane Perkins, it is an ordinary Thursday afternoon at four o'clock
and you have on your new blue barege, although there is not even a church
sociable in prospect this evening. What does this mean? Is Abijah the
Brave coming at last?"</p>
<p>"I don't know certainly, but it will be some time this week."</p>
<p>"And of course you'd rather be dressed up and not seen, than seen when not
dressed up. Right, my Fair Emmajane; so would I. Not that it makes any
difference to poor me, wearing my fourth best black and white calico and
expecting nobody.</p>
<p>"Oh, well, YOU! There's something inside of you that does instead of
pretty dresses," cried Emma Jane, whose adoration of her friend had never
altered nor lessened since they met at the age of eleven. "You know you
are as different from anybody else in Riverboro as a princess in a fairy
story. Libby Moses says they would notice you in Lowell, Massachusetts!"</p>
<p>"Would they? I wonder," speculated Rebecca, rendered almost speechless by
this tribute to her charms. "Well, if Lowell, Massachusetts, could see me,
or if you could see me, in my new lavender muslin with the violet sash, it
would die of envy, and so would you!"</p>
<p>"If I had been going to be envious of you, Rebecca, I should have died
years ago. Come, let's go out on the steps where it's shady and cool."</p>
<p>"And where we can see the Perkins front gate and the road running both
ways," teased Rebecca, and then, softening her tone, she said: "How is it
getting on, Emmy? Tell me what's happened since I've been in Brunswick."</p>
<p>"Nothing much," confessed Emma Jane. "He writes to me, but I don't write
to him, you know. I don't dare to, till he comes to the house."</p>
<p>"Are his letters still in Latin?" asked Rebecca, with a twinkling eye.</p>
<p>"Oh, no! Not now, because—well, because there are things you can't
seem to write in Latin. I saw him at the Masonic picnic in the grove, but
he won't say anything REAL to me till he gets more pay and dares to speak
to mother and father. He IS brave in all other ways, but I ain't sure
he'll ever have the courage for that, he's so afraid of them and always
has been. Just remember what's in his mind all the time, Rebecca, that my
folks know all about what his mother was, and how he was born on the
poor-farm. Not that I care; look how he's educated and worked himself up!
I think he's perfectly elegant, and I shouldn't mind if he had been born
in the bulrushes, like Moses."</p>
<p>Emma Jane's every-day vocabulary was pretty much what it had been before
she went to the expensive Wareham Female Seminary. She had acquired a
certain amount of information concerning the art of speech, but in moments
of strong feeling she lapsed into the vernacular. She grew slowly in all
directions, did Emma Jane, and, to use Rebecca's favorite nautilus figure,
she had left comparatively few outgrown shells on the shores of "life's
unresting sea."</p>
<p>"Moses wasn't born in the bulrushes, Emmy dear," corrected Rebecca
laughingly. "Pharaoh's daughter found him there. It wasn't quite as
romantic a scene—Squire Bean's wife taking little Abijah Flagg from
the poorhouse when his girl-mother died, but, oh, I think Abijah's
splendid! Mr. Ladd says Riverboro'll be proud of him yet, and I shouldn't
wonder, Emmy dear, if you had a three-story house with a cupola on it,
some day; and sitting down at your mahogany desk inlaid with garnets, you
will write notes stating that Mrs. Abijah Flagg requests the pleasure of
Miss Rebecca Randall's company to tea, and that the Hon. Abijah Flagg,
M.C., will call for her on his way from the station with a span of horses
and the turquoise carryall!"</p>
<p>Emma Jane laughed at the ridiculous prophecy, and answered: "If I ever
write the invitation I shan't be addressing it to Miss Randall, I'm sure
of that; it'll be to Mrs.——-"</p>
<p>"Don't!" cried Rebecca impetuously, changing color and putting her hand
over Emma Jane's lips. "If you won't I'll stop teasing. I couldn't bear a
name put to anything, I couldn't, Emmy dear! I wouldn't tease you, either,
if it weren't something we've both known ever so long—something that
you have always consulted me about of your own accord, and Abijah too."</p>
<p>"Don't get excited," replied Emma Jane, "I was only going to say you were
sure to be Mrs. Somebody in course of time."</p>
<p>"Oh," said Rebecca with a relieved sigh, her color coming back; "if that's
all you meant, just nonsense; but I thought, I thought—I don't
really know just what I thought!"</p>
<p>"I think you thought something you didn't want me to think you thought,"
said Emma Jane with unusual felicity.</p>
<p>"No, it's not that; but somehow, today, I have been remembering things.
Perhaps it was because at breakfast Aunt Jane and mother reminded me of my
coming birthday and said that Squire Bean would give me the deed of the
brick house. That made me feel very old and responsible; and when I came
out on the steps this afternoon it was just as if pictures of the old
years were moving up and down the road. Everything is so beautiful today!
Doesn't the sky look as if it had been dyed blue and the fields painted
pink and green and yellow this very minute?"</p>
<p>"It's a perfectly elegant day!" responded Emma Jane with a sigh. "If only
my mind was at rest! That's the difference between being young and
grown-up. We never used to think and worry."</p>
<p>"Indeed we didn't! Look, Emmy, there's the very spot where Uncle Jerry
Cobb stopped the stage and I stepped out with my pink parasol and my
bouquet of purple lilacs, and you were watching me from your bedroom
window and wondering what I had in mother's little hair trunk strapped on
behind. Poor Aunt Miranda didn't love me at first sight, and oh, how cross
she was the first two years! But now every hard thought I ever had comes
back to me and cuts like a knife!"</p>
<p>"She was dreadful hard to get along with, and I used to hate her like
poison," confessed Emma Jane; "but I am sorry now. She was kinder toward
the last, anyway, and then, you see children know so little! We never
suspected she was sick or that she was worrying over that lost interest
money."</p>
<p>"That's the trouble. People seem hard and unreasonable and unjust, and we
can't help being hurt at the time, but if they die we forget everything
but our own angry speeches; somehow we never remember theirs. And oh, Emma
Jane, there's another such a sweet little picture out there in the road.
The next day after I came to Riverboro, do you remember, I stole out of
the brick house crying, and leaned against the front gate. You pushed your
little fat pink-and-white face through the pickets and said: Don't cry!
I'll kiss you if you will me!'"</p>
<p>Lumps rose suddenly in Emma Jane's throat, and she put her arm around
Rebecca's waist as they sat together side by side.</p>
<p>"Oh, I do remember," she said in a choking voice. "And I can see the two
of us driving over to North Riverboro and selling soap to Mr. Adam Ladd;
and lighting up the premium banquet lamp at the Simpson party; and laying
the daisies round Jacky Winslow's mother when she was dead in the cabin;
and trundling Jacky up and down the street in our old baby carriage!"</p>
<p>"And I remember you," continued Rebecca, "being chased down the hill by
Jacob Moody, when we were being Daughters of Zion and you had been chosen
to convert him!"</p>
<p>"And I remember you, getting the flag back from Mr. Simpson; and how you
looked when you spoke your verses at the flag-raising."</p>
<p>"And have you forgotten the week I refused to speak to Abijah Flagg
because he fished my turban with the porcupine quills out of the river
when I hoped at last that I had lost it! Oh, Emma Jane, we had dear good
times together in the little harbor.'"</p>
<p>"I always thought that was an elegant composition of yours—that
farewell to the class," said Emma Jane.</p>
<p>"The strong tide bears us on, out of the little harbor of childhood into
the unknown seas," recalled Rebecca. "It is bearing you almost out of my
sight, Emmy, these last days, when you put on a new dress in the afternoon
and look out of the window instead of coming across the street. Abijah
Flagg never used to be in the little harbor with the rest of us; when did
he first sail in, Emmy?"</p>
<p>Emma Jane grew a deeper pink and her button-hole of a mouth quivered with
delicious excitement.</p>
<p>"It was last year at the seminary, when he wrote me his first Latin letter
from Limerick Academy," she said in a half whisper.</p>
<p>"I remember," laughed Rebecca. "You suddenly began the study of the dead
languages, and the Latin dictionary took the place of the crochet needle
in your affections. It was cruel of you never to show me that letter,
Emmy!"</p>
<p>"I know every word of it by heart," said the blushing Emma Jane, "and I
think I really ought to say it to you, because it's the only way you will
ever know how perfectly elegant Abijah is. Look the other way, Rebecca.
Shall I have to translate it for you, do you think, because it seems to me
I could not bear to do that!"</p>
<p>"It depends upon Abijah's Latin and your pronunciation," teased Rebecca.
"Go on; I will turn my eyes toward the orchard."</p>
<p>The Fair Emmajane, looking none too old still for the "little harbor," but
almost too young for the "unknown seas," gathered up her courage and
recited like a tremulous parrot the boyish love letter that had so fired
her youthful imagination.</p>
<p>"Vale, carissima, carissima puella!" repeated Rebecca in her musical
voice. "Oh, how beautiful it sounds! I don't wonder it altered your
feeling for Abijah! Upon my word, Emma Jane," she cried with a sudden
change of tone, "if I had suspected for an instant that Abijah the Brave
had that Latin letter in him I should have tried to get him to write it to
me; and then it would be I who would sit down at my mahogany desk and ask
Miss Perkins to come to tea with Mrs. Flagg."</p>
<p>Emma Jane paled and shuddered openly. "I speak as a church member,
Rebecca," she said, "when I tell you I've always thanked the Lord that you
never looked at Abijah Flagg and he never looked at you. If either of you
ever had, there never would have been a chance for me, and I've always
known it!"</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>The romance alluded to in the foregoing chapter had been going on, so far
as Abijah Flagg's part of it was concerned, for many years, his affection
dating back in his own mind to the first moment that he saw Emma Jane
Perkins at the age of nine.</p>
<p>Emma Jane had shown no sign of reciprocating his attachment until the last
three years, when the evolution of the chore-boy into the budding scholar
and man of affairs had inflamed even her somewhat dull imagination.</p>
<p>Squire Bean's wife had taken Abijah away from the poorhouse, thinking that
she could make him of some little use in her home. Abbie Flagg, the
mother, was neither wise nor beautiful; it is to be feared that she was
not even good, and her lack of all these desirable qualities, particularly
the last one, had been impressed upon the child ever since he could
remember. People seemed to blame him for being in the world at all; this
world that had not expected him nor desired him, nor made any provision
for him. The great battle-axe of poorhouse opinion was forever leveled at
the mere little atom of innocent transgression, until he grew sad and shy,
clumsy, stiff, and self-conscious. He had an indomitable craving for love
in his heart and had never received a caress in his life.</p>
<p>He was more contented when he came to Squire Bean's house. The first year
he could only pick up chips, carry pine wood into the kitchen, go to the
post-office, run errands, drive the cows, and feed the hens, but every day
he grew more and more useful.</p>
<p>His only friend was little Jim Watson, the storekeeper's son, and they
were inseparable companions whenever Abijah had time for play.</p>
<p>One never-to-be-forgotten July day a new family moved into the white
cottage between Squire Bean's house and the Sawyers'. Mr. Perkins had sold
his farm beyond North Riverboro and had established a blacksmith's shop in
the village, at the Edgewood end of the bridge. This fact was of no
special interest to the nine-year-old Abijah, but what really was of
importance, was the appearance of a pretty little girl of seven in the
front yard; a pretty little fat doll of a girl, with bright fuzzy hair,
pink cheeks, blue eyes, and a smile of almost bewildering continuity.
Another might have criticised it as having the air of being glued on, but
Abijah was already in the toils and never wished it to move.</p>
<p>The next day being the glorious Fourth and a holiday, Jimmy Watson came
over like David, to visit his favorite Jonathan. His Jonathan met him at
the top of the hill, pleaded a pressing engagement, curtly sent him home,
and then went back to play with his new idol, with whom he had already
scraped acquaintance, her parents being exceedingly busy settling the new
house.</p>
<p>After the noon dinner Jimmy again yearned to resume friendly relations,
and, forgetting his rebuff, again toiled up the hill and appeared
unexpectedly at no great distance from the Perkins premises, wearing the
broad and beaming smile of one who is confident of welcome.</p>
<p>His morning call had been officious and unpleasant and unsolicited, but
his afternoon visit could only be regarded as impudent, audacious, and
positively dangerous; for Abijah and Emma Jane were cosily playing house,
the game of all others in which it is particularly desirable to have two
and not three participants.</p>
<p>At that moment the nature of Abijah changed, at once and forever. Without
a pang of conscience he flew over the intervening patch of ground between
himself and his dreaded rival, and seizing small stones and larger ones,
as haste and fury demanded, flung them at Jimmy Watson, and flung and
flung, till the bewildered boy ran down the hill howling. Then he made a
"stickin'" door to the play-house, put the awed Emma Jane inside and
strode up and down in front of the edifice like an Indian brave. At such
an early age does woman become a distracting and disturbing influence in
man's career!</p>
<p>Time went on, and so did the rivalry between the poorhouse boy and the son
of wealth, but Abijah's chances of friendship with Emma Jane grew fewer
and fewer as they both grew older. He did not go to school, so there was
no meeting-ground there, but sometimes, when he saw the knot of boys and
girls returning in the afternoon, he would invite Elijah and Elisha, the
Simpson twins, to visit him, and take pains to be in Squire Bean's front
yard, doing something that might impress his inamorata as she passed the
premises.</p>
<p>As Jimmy Watson was particularly small and fragile, Abijah generally chose
feats of strength and skill for these prearranged performances.</p>
<p>Sometimes he would throw his hat up into the elm trees as far as he could
and, when it came down, catch it on his head. Sometimes he would walk on
his hands, with his legs wriggling in the air, or turn a double
somersault, or jump incredible distances across the extended arms of the
Simpson twins; and his bosom swelled with pride when the girls exclaimed,
"Isn't he splendid!" although he often heard his rival murmur scornfully,
"SMARTY ALECK!"—a scathing allusion of unknown origin.</p>
<p>Squire Bean, although he did not send the boy to school (thinking, as he
was of no possible importance in the universe, it was not worth while
bothering about his education), finally became impressed with his ability,
lent him books, and gave him more time to study. These were all he needed,
books and time, and when there was an especially hard knot to untie,
Rebecca, as the star scholar of the neighborhood, helped him to untie it.</p>
<p>When he was sixteen he longed to go away from Riverboro and be something
better than a chore boy. Squire Bean had been giving him small wages for
three or four years, and when the time of parting came presented him with
a ten-dollar bill and a silver watch.</p>
<p>Many a time had he discussed his future with Rebecca and asked her
opinion.</p>
<p>This was not strange, for there was nothing in human form that she could
not and did not converse with, easily and delightedly. She had ideas on
every conceivable subject, and would have cheerfully advised the minister
if he had asked her. The fishman consulted her when he couldn't endure his
mother-in-law another minute in the house; Uncle Jerry Cobb didn't part
with his river field until he had talked it over with Rebecca; and as for
Aunt Jane, she couldn't decide whether to wear her black merino or her
gray thibet unless Rebecca cast the final vote.</p>
<p>Abijah wanted to go far away from Riverboro, as far as Limerick Academy,
which was at least fifteen miles; but although this seemed extreme,
Rebecca agreed, saying pensively: "There IS a kind of magicness about
going far away and then coming back all changed."</p>
<p>This was precisely Abijah's unspoken thought. Limerick knew nothing of
Abbie Flagg's worthlessness, birth, and training, and the awful stigma of
his poorhouse birth, so that he would start fair. He could have gone to
Wareham and thus remained within daily sight of the beloved Emma Jane; but
no, he was not going to permit her to watch him in the process of
"becoming," but after he had "become" something. He did not propose to
take any risks after all these years of silence and patience. Not he! He
proposed to disappear, like the moon on a dark night, and as he was, at
present, something that Mr. Perkins would by no means have in the family
nor Mrs. Perkins allow in the house, he would neither return to Riverboro
nor ask any favors of them until he had something to offer. Yes, sir. He
was going to be crammed to the eyebrows with learning for one thing,—useless
kinds and all,—going to have good clothes, and a good income.
Everything that was in his power should be right, because there would
always be lurking in the background the things he never could help—the
mother and the poorhouse.</p>
<p>So he went away, and, although at Squire Bean's invitation he came back
the first year for two brief visits at Christmas and Easter, he was little
seen in Riverboro, for Mr. Ladd finally found him a place where he could
make his vacations profitable and learn bookkeeping at the same time.</p>
<p>The visits in Riverboro were tantalizing rather than pleasant. He was
invited to two parties, but he was all the time conscious of his
shirt-collar, and he was sure that his "pants" were not the proper thing,
for by this time his ideals of dress had attained an almost unrealizable
height. As for his shoes, he felt that he walked on carpets as if they
were furrows and he were propelling a plow or a harrow before him. They
played Drop the Handkerchief and Copenhagen at the parties, but he had not
had the audacity to kiss Emma Jane, which was bad enough, but Jimmy had
and did, which was infinitely worse! The sight of James Watson's unworthy
and over-ambitious lips on Emma Jane's pink cheek almost destroyed his
faith in an overruling Providence.</p>
<p>After the parties were over he went back to his old room in Squire Bean's
shed chamber. As he lay in bed his thoughts fluttered about Emma Jane as
swallows circle around the eaves. The terrible sickness of hopeless
handicapped love kept him awake. Once he crawled out of bed in the night,
lighted the lamp, and looked for his mustache, remembering that he had
seen a suspicion of down on his rival's upper lip. He rose again half an
hour later, again lighted the lamp, put a few drops of oil on his hair,
and brushed it violently for several minutes. Then he went back to bed,
and after making up his mind that he would buy a dulcimer and learn to
play on it so that he would be more attractive at parties, and outshine
his rival in society as he had aforetime in athletics, he finally sank
into a troubled slumber.</p>
<p>Those days, so full of hope and doubt and torture, seemed mercifully
unreal now, they lay so far back in the past—six or eight years, in
fact, which is a lifetime to the lad of twenty—and meantime he had
conquered many of the adverse circumstances that had threatened to cloud
his career.</p>
<p>Abijah Flagg was a true child of his native State. Something of the same
timber that Maine puts into her forests, something of the same strength
and resisting power that she works into her rocks, goes into her sons and
daughters; and at twenty Abijah was going to take his fate in his hand and
ask Mr. Perkins, the rich blacksmith, if, after a suitable period of
probation (during which he would further prepare himself for his exalted
destiny), he might marry the fair Emma Jane, sole heiress of the Perkins
house and fortunes.</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>This was boy and girl love, calf love, perhaps, though even that may
develop into something larger, truer, and finer; but not so far away were
other and very different hearts growing and budding, each in its own way.
There was little Miss Dearborn, the pretty school teacher, drifting into a
foolish alliance because she did not agree with her stepmother at home;
there was Herbert Dunn, valedictorian of his class, dazzled by Huldah
Meserve, who like a glowworm "shone afar off bright, but looked at near,
had neither heat nor light."</p>
<p>There was sweet Emily Maxwell, less than thirty still, with most of her
heart bestowed in the wrong quarter. She was toiling on at the Wareham
school, living as unselfish a life as a nun in a convent; lavishing the
mind and soul of her, the heart and body of her, on her chosen work. How
many women give themselves thus, consciously and unconsciously; and,
though they themselves miss the joys and compensations of mothering their
own little twos and threes, God must be grateful to them for their
mothering of the hundreds which make them so precious in His regenerating
purposes.</p>
<p>Then there was Adam Ladd, waiting at thirty-five for a girl to grow a
little older, simply because he could not find one already grown who
suited his somewhat fastidious and exacting tastes.</p>
<p>"I'll not call Rebecca perfection," he quoted once, in a letter to Emily
Maxwell,—"I'll not call her perfection, for that's a post, afraid to
move. But she's a dancing sprig of the tree next it."</p>
<p>When first she appeared on his aunt's piazza in North Riverboro and
insisted on selling him a large quantity of very inferior soap in order
that her friends, the Simpsons, might possess a premium in the shape of a
greatly needed banquet lamp, she had riveted his attention. He thought all
the time that he enjoyed talking with her more than with any woman alive,
and he had never changed his opinion. She always caught what he said as if
it were a ball tossed to her, and sometimes her mind, as through it his
thoughts came back to him, seemed like a prism which had dyed them with
deeper colors.</p>
<p>Adam Ladd always called Rebecca in his heart his little Spring. His
boyhood had been lonely and unhappy. That was the part of life he had
missed, and although it was the full summer of success and prosperity with
him now, he found his lost youth only in her.</p>
<p>She was to him—how shall I describe it?</p>
<p>Do you remember an early day in May with budding leaf, warm earth,
tremulous air, and changing, willful sky—how new it seemed? How
fresh and joyous beyond all explaining?</p>
<p>Have you lain with half-closed eyes where the flickering of sunlight
through young leaves, the song of birds and brook and the fragrance of
wild flowers combined to charm your senses, and you felt the sweetness and
grace of nature as never before?</p>
<p>Rebecca was springtide to Adam's thirsty heart. She was blithe youth
incarnate; she was music—an Aeolian harp that every passing breeze
woke to some whispering little tune; she was a changing, iridescent
joy-bubble; she was the shadow of a leaf dancing across a dusty floor. No
bough of his thought could be so bare but she somehow built a nest in it
and evoked life where none was before.</p>
<p>And Rebecca herself?</p>
<p>She had been quite unconscious of all this until very lately, and even now
she was but half awakened; searching among her childish instincts and her
girlish dreams for some Ariadne thread that should guide her safely
through the labyrinth of her new sensations.</p>
<p>For the moment she was absorbed, or thought she was, in the little love
story of Abijah and Emma Jane, but in reality, had she realized it, that
love story served chiefly as a basis of comparison for a possible one of
her own, later on.</p>
<p>She liked and respected Abijah Flagg, and loving Emma Jane was a habit
contracted early in life; but everything that they did or said, or thought
or wrote, or hoped or feared, seemed so inadequate, so painfully short of
what might be done or said, or thought or written, or hoped or feared,
under easily conceivable circumstances, that she almost felt a disposition
to smile gently at the fancy of the ignorant young couple that they had
caught a glimpse of the great vision.</p>
<p>She was sitting under the sweet apple tree at twilight. Supper was over;
Mark's restless feet were quiet, Fanny and Jenny were tucked safely in
bed; her aunt and her mother were stemming currants on the side porch.</p>
<p>A blue spot at one of the Perkins windows showed that in one vestal bosom
hope was not dead yet, although it was seven o'clock.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was the sound of a horse's feet coming up the quiet road;
plainly a steed hired from some metropolis like Milltown or Wareham, as
Riverboro horses when through with their day's work never disported
themselves so gayly.</p>
<p>A little open vehicle came in sight, and in it sat Abijah Flagg. The wagon
was so freshly painted and so shiny that Rebecca thought that he must have
alighted at the bridge and given it a last polish. The creases in his
trousers, too, had an air of having been pressed in only a few minutes
before. The whip was new and had a yellow ribbon on it; the gray suit of
clothes was new, and the coat flourished a flower in its button-hole. The
hat was the latest thing in hats, and the intrepid swain wore a seal-ring
on the little finger of his right hand. As Rebecca remembered that she had
guided it in making capital G's in his copy-book, she felt positively
maternal, although she was two years younger than Abijah the Brave.</p>
<p>He drove up to the Perkins gate and was so long about hitching the horse
that Rebecca's heart beat tumultuously at the thought of Emma Jane's heart
waiting under the blue barege. Then he brushed an imaginary speck off his
sleeve, then he drew on a pair of buff kid gloves, then he went up the
path, rapped at the knocker, and went in.</p>
<p>"Not all the heroes go to the wars," thought Rebecca. "Abijah has laid the
ghost of his father and redeemed the memory of his mother, for no one will
dare say again that Abbie Flagg's son could never amount to anything!"</p>
<p>The minutes went by, and more minutes, and more. The tranquil dusk settled
down over the little village street and the young moon came out just
behind the top of the Perkins pine tree.</p>
<p>The Perkins front door opened and Abijah the Brave came out hand in hand
with his Fair Emma Jane.</p>
<p>They walked through the orchard, the eyes of the old couple following them
from the window, and just as they disappeared down the green slope that
led to the riverside the gray coat sleeve encircled the blue barege waist.</p>
<p>Rebecca, quivering with instant sympathy and comprehension, hid her face
in her hands.</p>
<p>"Emmy has sailed away and I am all alone in the little harbor," she
thought.</p>
<p>It was as if childhood, like a thing real and visible, were slipping down
the grassy river banks, after Abijah and Emma Jane, and disappearing like
them into the moon-lit shadows of the summer night.</p>
<p>"I am all alone in the little harbor," she repeated; "and oh, I wonder, I
wonder, shall I be afraid to leave it, if anybody ever comes to carry me
out to sea!"</p>
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