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<h2> IV. </h2>
<p>Miss Kilburn found that the house had been well aired for her coming, but
an old earthy and mouldy smell, which it took days and nights of open
doors and windows to drive out, stole back again with the first turn of
rainy weather. She had fires built on the hearths and in the stoves, and
after opening her trunks and scattering her dresses on beds and chairs,
she spent most of the first week outside of the house, wandering about the
fields and orchards to adjust herself anew to the estranged features of
the place. The house she found lower-ceiled and smaller than she
remembered it. The Boltons had kept it up very well, and in spite of the
earthy and mouldy smell, it was conscientiously clean. There was not a
speck of dust anywhere; the old yellowish-white paint was spotless; the
windows shone. But there was a sort of frigidity in the perfect order and
repair which repelled her, and she left her things tossed about, as if to
break the ice of this propriety. In several places, within and without,
she found marks of the faithful hand of Bolton in economical patches of
the woodwork; but she was not sure that they had not been there eleven
years before; and there were darnings in the carpets and curtains, which
affected her with the same mixture of novelty and familiarity. Certain
stale smells about the place (minor smells as compared with the prevalent
odour) confused her; she could not decide whether she remembered them of
old, or was reminded of the odours she used to catch in passing the pantry
on the steamer.</p>
<p>Her father had never been sure that he would not return any next year or
month, and the house had always been ready to receive them. In his study
everything was as he left it. His daughter looked for signs of Mr. Peck's
occupation, but there were none; Mrs. Bolton explained that she had put
him in a table from her own sitting-room to write at. The Judge's desk was
untouched, and his heavy wooden arm-chair stood pulled up to it as if he
were in it. The ranks of law-books, in their yellow sheepskin, with their
red titles above and their black titles below, were in the order he had
taught Mrs. Bolton to replace them in after dusting; the stuffed owl on a
shelf above the mantel looked down with a clear solemnity in its gum-copal
eyes, and Mrs. Bolton took it from its perch to show Miss Kilburn that
there was not a moth on it, nor the sign of a moth.</p>
<p>Miss Kilburn experienced here that refusal of the old associations to take
the form of welcome which she had already felt in the earth and sky and
air outside; in everything there was a sense of impassable separation. Her
dead father was no nearer in his wonted place than the trees of the
orchard, or the outline of the well-known hills, or the pink of the
familiar sunsets. In her rummaging about the house she pulled open a chest
of drawers which used to stand in the room where she slept when a child.
It was full of her own childish clothing, a little girl's linen and
muslin; and she thought with a throe of despair that she could as well
hope to get back into these outgrown garments, which the helpless piety of
Mrs. Bolton had kept from the rag-bag, as to think of re-entering the
relations of the life so long left off.</p>
<p>It surprised her to find how cold the Boltons were; she had remembered
them as always very kind and willing; but she was so used now to the ways
of the Italians and their showy affection, it was hard for her to realise
that people could be both kind and cold. The Boltons seemed ashamed of
their feelings, and hid them; it was the same in some degree with all the
villagers when she began to meet them, and the fact slowly worked back
into her consciousness, wounding its way in. People did not come to see
her at once. They waited, as they told her, till she got settled, before
they called, and then they did not appear very glad to have her back.</p>
<p>But this was not altogether the effect of their temperament. The Kilburns
had made a long summer always in Hatboro', and they had always talked of
it as home; but they had never passed a whole year there since Judge
Kilburn first went to Congress, and they were not regarded as full
neighbours or permanent citizens. Miss Kilburn, however, kept up her
childhood friendships, and she and some of the ladies called one another
by their Christian names, but they believed that she met people in
Washington whom she liked better; the winters she spent there certainly
weakened the ties between them, and when it came to those eleven years in
Rome, the letters they exchanged grew rarer and rarer, till they stopped
altogether. Some of the girls went away; some died; others became dead and
absent to her in their marriages and household cares.</p>
<p>After waiting for one another, three of them came together to see her one
day. They all kissed her, after a questioning glance at her face and
dress, as if they wanted to see whether she had grown proud or too
fashionable. But they were themselves apparently much better dressed, and
certainly more richly dressed. In a place like Hatboro', where there is no
dinner-giving, and evening parties are few, the best dress is a street
costume, which may be worn for calls and shopping, and for church and all
public entertainments. The well-to-do ladies make an effect of outdoor
fashion, in which the poorest shop hand has her part; and in their turn
they share her indoor simplicity. These old friends of Annie's wore
bonnets and frocks of the latest style and costly material.</p>
<p>They let her make the advances, receiving them with blank passivity, or
repelling them with irony, according to the several needs of their
self-respect, and talking to one another across her. One of them asked her
when her hair had begun to turn, and they each told her how thin she was,
but promised her that Hatboro' air would bring her up. At the same time
they feigned humility in regard to everything about Hatboro' but the air;
they laughed when she said she intended now to make it her home the whole
year round, and said they guessed she would be tired of it long before
fall; there were plenty of summer folks that passed the winter as long as
the June weather lasted. As they grew more secure of themselves, or less
afraid of one another in her presence, their voices rose; they laughed
loudly at nothing, and they yelled in a nervous chorus at times, each
trying to make herself heard above the others.</p>
<p>She asked them about the social life in the village, and they told her
that a good many new people had really settled there, but they did not
know whether she would like them; they were not the old Hatboro' style.
Annie showed them some of the things she had brought home, especially
Roman views, and they said now she ought to give an evening in the church
parlour with them.</p>
<p>“You'll have to come to our church, Annie,” said Mrs. Putney. “The
Unitarian doesn't have preaching once in a month, and Mr. Peck is very
liberal.”</p>
<p>“He's 'most <i>too</i> liberal for some,” said Emmeline Gerrish. Of the
three she had grown the stoutest, and from being a slight, light-minded
girl, she had become a heavy matron, habitually censorious in her speech.
She did not mean any more by it, however, than she did by her girlish
frivolity, and if she was not supported in her severity, she was apt to
break down and disown it with a giggle, as she now did.</p>
<p>“Well, I don't know about his being <i>too</i> liberal,” said Mrs.
Wilmington, a large red-haired blonde, with a lazy laugh. “He makes you
feel that you're a pretty miserable sinner.” She made a grimace of
humorous disgust.</p>
<p>“Mr. Gerrish says that's just the trouble,” Mrs. Gerrish broke in. “Mr.
Peck don't put stress enough on the promises. That's what Mr. Gerrish
says. You must have been surprised, Annie,” she added, “to find that he'd
been staying in your house.”</p>
<p>“I was glad Mrs. Bolton invited him,” answered Annie sincerely, but not
instantly.</p>
<p>The ladies waited, with an exchange of glances, for her reply, as if they
had talked the matter over beforehand, and had agreed to find out just how
Annie Kilburn felt about it.</p>
<p>“Oh, I guess he paid his board,” said Mrs. Wilmington, jocosely rejecting
the implication that he had been the guest of the Boltons.</p>
<p>“I don't see what he expects to do with that little girl of his, without
any mother, that way,” said Mrs. Gerrish. “He ought to get married.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps he will, when he's waited a proper time,” suggested Mrs. Putney
demurely.</p>
<p>“Well, his wife's been the same as dead ever since the child was born. I
don't know what you call a proper time, Ellen,” argued Mrs. Gerrish.</p>
<p>“I presume a minister feels differently about such things,” Mrs.
Wilmington remarked indolently.</p>
<p>“I don't see why a minister should feel any different from anybody else,”
said Mrs. Gerrish. “It's his duty to do it on his child's account. I don't
see why he don't have the remains brought to Hatboro', anyway.”</p>
<p>They debated this point at some length, and they seemed to forget Annie.
She listened with more interest than her concern in the last resting-place
of the minister's dead wife really inspired. These old friends of hers
seemed to have lost the sensitiveness of their girlhood without having
gained tenderness in its place. They treated the affair with a nakedness
that shocked her. In the country and in small towns people come face to
face with life, especially women. It means marrying, child-bearing,
household cares and burdens, neighbourhood gossip, sickness, death,
burial, and whether the corpse appeared natural. But ever so much kindness
goes with their disillusion; they are blunted, but not embittered.</p>
<p>They ended by recalling Annie to mind, and Mrs. Putney said: “I suppose
you haven't been to the cemetery yet? They've got it all fixed up since
you went away—drives laid out, and paths cut through, and
everything. A good many have put up family tombs, and they've taken away
the old iron fences round the lots, and put granite curbing. They mow the
grass all the time. It's a perfect garden.” Mrs. Putney was a small woman,
already beginning to wrinkle. She had married a man whom Annie remembered
as a mischievous little boy, with a sharp tongue and a nervous
temperament; her father had always liked him when he came about the house,
but Annie had lost sight of him in the years that make small boys and
girls large ones, and he was at college when she went abroad. She had an
impression of something unhappy in her friend's marriage.</p>
<p>“I think it's <i>too</i> much fixed up myself,” said Mrs. Gerrish. She
turned suddenly to Annie: “You going to have your father fetched home?”</p>
<p>The other ladies started a little at the question and looked at Annie; it
was not that they were shocked, but they wanted to see whether she would
not be so.</p>
<p>“No,” she said briefly. She added, helplessly, “It wasn't his wish.”</p>
<p>“I should have thought he would have liked to be buried alongside of your
mother,” said Mrs. Gerrish. “But the Judge always <i>was</i> a little
peculiar. I presume you can have the name and the date put on the monument
just the same.”</p>
<p>Annie flushed at this intimate comment and suggestion from a woman whom as
a girl she had never admitted to familiarity with her, but had tolerated
her because she was such a harmless simpleton, and hung upon other girls
whom she liked better. The word monument cowed her, however. She was
afraid they might begin to talk about the soldiers' monument. She answered
hastily, and began to ask them about their families.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wilmington, who had no children, and Mrs. Putney, who had one, spoke
of Mrs. Gerrish's large family. She had four children, and she refused the
praises of her friends for them, though she celebrated them herself. “You
ought to have seen the two little girls that Ellen lost, Annie,” she said.
“Ellen Putney, I don't see how you ever got over that. Those two lovely,
healthy children gone, and poor little Winthrop left! I always did say it
was too hard.”</p>
<p>She had married a clerk in the principal dry-goods store, who had
prospered rapidly, and was now one of the first business men of the place,
and had an ambition to be a leading citizen. She believed in his fitness
to deal with the questions of religion and education which he took part
in, and was always quoting Mr. Gerrish. She called him Mr. Gerrish so much
that other people began to call him so too. But Mrs. Putney's husband held
out against it, and had the habit of returning the little man's
ceremonious salutations with an easy, “Hello, Billy,” “Good morning,
Billy.” It was his theory that this was good for Gerrish, who might
otherwise have forgotten when everybody called him Billy. He was one of
the old Putneys; and he was a lawyer by profession.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wilmington's husband had come to Hatboro' since Annie's long absence
began; he had capital, and he had started a stocking-mill in Hatboro'. He
was much older than his wife, whom he had married after a protracted
widowerhood. She had one of the best houses and the most richly furnished
in Hatboro'. She and Mrs. Putney saw Mrs. Gerrish at rare intervals, and
in observance of some notable fact of their girlish friendship like the
present.</p>
<p>In pursuance of the subject of children, Mrs. Gerrish said that she
sometimes had a notion to offer to take Mr. Peck's little girl herself
till he could get fixed somehow, but Mr. Gerrish would not let her. Mr.
Gerrish said Mr. Peck had better get married himself if he wanted a
step-mother for his little girl. Mr. Gerrish was peculiar about keeping a
family to itself.</p>
<p>“Well, you'll think <i>we've</i> come to board with you <i>too</i>,” said
Mrs. Putney, in reference to Mr. Peck.</p>
<p>The ladies all rose, and having got upon their feet, began to shout and
laugh again—like girls, they implied.</p>
<p>They stayed and talked a long time after rising, with the same note of
unsparing personality in their talk. Where there are few public interests
and few events, as in such places, there can be no small-talk, nothing of
the careless touch-and-go of larger societies. Every one knows all the
others, and knows the worst of them. People are not unkind; they are
mutually and freely helpful; but they have only themselves to occupy their
minds. Annie's friends had also to distinguish themselves to her from the
rest of the villagers, and it was easiest to do this by an attitude of
criticism mingled with large allowance. They ended a dissection of the
community by saying that they believed there was no place like Hatboro',
after all.</p>
<p>In the contagion of their perfunctory gaiety Annie began to scream and
laugh too, as she followed them to the door, and stood talking to them
while they got into Mrs. Wilmington's extension-top carry-all. She
answered with deafening promises, when they put their bonnets out of the
carry-all and called back to her to be sure to come soon to see them soon.</p>
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