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"You're fond of Aunt Maggie, then, I take it."
Benny's eyes widened a little.
"Why, of course! Everybody's fond of Aunt Maggie. Why, I don't know anybody that don't like Aunt Maggie."
"I'm sure that speaks well--for Aunt Maggie," smiled Mr. Smith.
"Yep! A feller can take some comfort at Aunt Maggie's," continued Benny, trudging along at Mr. Smith's side. "She don't have anythin'
just for show, that you can't touch, like 'tis at my house, and there ain't anythin' but what you can use without gettin' snarled up in a mess of covers an' tidies, like 'tis at Aunt Jane's. But Aunt Maggie don't save anythin', Aunt Jane says, an' she'll die some day in the poor-house, bein' so extravagant. But I don't believe she will. Do you, Mr. Smith?"
"Well, really, Benny, I--er--" hesitated the man.
"Well, I don't believe she will," repeated Benny. "I hope she won't, anyhow. Poorhouses ain't very nice, are they?"
"I--I don't think I know very much about them, Benny."
"Well, I don't believe they are, from what Aunt Jane says. And if they ain't, I don't want Aunt Maggie ter go. She hadn't ought ter have anythin'--but Heaven--after Grandpa Duff. Do you know Grandpa Duff?"
"No, my b-boy." Mr. Smith was choking over a cough.
"He's sick. He's got a chronic grouch, ma says. Do you know what that is?"
"I--I have heard of them."
"What are they? Anything like chronic rheumatism? I know what chronic means. It means it keeps goin' without stoppin'--the rheumatism, I mean, not the folks that's got it. THEY don't go at all, sometimes. Old Dr. Cole don't, and that's what he's got. But when I asked ma what a grouch was, she said little boys should be seen and not heard. Ma always says that when she don't want to answer my questions. Do you?
Have you got any little boys, Mr. Smith?"
"No, Benny. I'm a poor old bachelor."
"Oh, are you POOR, too? That's too bad."
"Well, that is, I--I--"
"Ma was wonderin' yesterday what you lived on. Haven't you got any money, Mr. Smith?"
"Oh, yes, Benny, I've got money enough--to live on." Mr. Smith spoke promptly, and with confidence this time.
"Oh, that's nice. You're glad, then, ain't you? Ma says we haven't--got enough ter live on, I mean; but pa says we have, if we didn't try ter live like everybody else lives what's got more."
Mr. Smith bit his lip, and looked down a little apprehensively at the small boy at his side.
"I--I'm not sure, Benny, but _I_ shall have to say little boys should be seen and not--" He stopped abruptly. Benny, with a stentorian shout, had run ahead to a gate before a small white cottage. On the cozy, vine-shaded porch sat a white-haired old man leaning forward on his cane.
"Hi, there, Grandpa Duff, I've brought somebody ter see ye!" The gate was open now, and Benny was halfway up the short walk. "It's Mr. Smith.
Come in, Mr. Smith. Here's grandpa right here."
With a pleasant smile Mr. Smith doffed his hat and came forward.
"Thank you, Benny. How do you do, Mr. Duff?"
The man on the porch looked up sharply from beneath heavy brows.
"Humph! Your name's Smith, is it?"
"That's what they call me." The corners of Mr. Smith's mouth twitched a little.
"Humph! Yes, I've heard of you."
"You flatter me!" Mr. Smith, on the topmost step, hesitated. "Is your--er--daughter in, Mr. Duff?" He was still smiling cheerfully.
Mr. Duff was not smiling. His somewhat unfriendly gaze was still bent upon the newcomer.
"Just what do you want of my daughter?"
"Why, I--I--" Plainly nonplused, the man paused uncertainly. Then, with a resumption of his jaunty cheerfulness, he smiled straight into the unfriendly eyes. "I'm after some records, Mr. Duff,--records of the Blaisdell family. I'm compiling a book on--
"Humph! I thought as much," interrupted Mr. Duff curtly, settling back in his chair. "As I said, I've heard of you. But you needn't come here asking your silly questions. I shan't tell you a thing, anyway, if you do. It's none of your business who lived and died and what they did before you were born. If the Lord had wanted you to know he'd 'a' put you here then instead of now!"
Looking very much as if he had received a blow in the face, Mr. Smith fell back.
"Aw, grandpa"--began Benny, in grieved expostulation. But a cheery voice interrupted, and Mr. Smith turned to see Miss Maggie Duff emerging from the doorway.
"Oh, Mr. Smith, how do you do?" she greeted him, extending a cordial hand. "Come up and sit down."
For only the briefest of minutes he hesitated. Had she heard? Could she have heard, and yet speak so unconcernedly? It seemed impossible. And yet--He took the chair she offered--but with a furtive glance toward the old man. He had only a moment to wait.
Sharply Mr. Duff turned to his daughter.
"This Mr. Smith tells me he has come to see those records. Now, I'm--"
"Oh, father, dear, you couldn't!" interrupted his daughter with admonis.h.i.+ng earnestness. "You mustn't go and get all those down!" (Mr.
Smith almost gasped aloud in his amazement, but Miss Maggie did not seem to notice him at all.) "Why, father, you couldn't--they're too heavy for you! There are the Bible, and all those papers. They're too heavy father. I couldn't let you. Besides, I shouldn't think you'd want to get them!"
If Mr. Smith, hearing this, almost gasped aloud in his amazement, he quite did so at what happened next. His mouth actually fell open as he saw the old man rise to his feet with stern dignity.
"That will do, Maggie. I'm not quite in my dotage yet. I guess I'm still able to fetch downstairs a book and a bundle of papers." With his thumping cane a resolute emphasis to every other step, the old man hobbled into the house.
"There, grandpa, that's the talk!" crowed Benny. "But you said--"
"Er--Benny, dear," interposed Miss Maggie, in a haste so precipitate that it looked almost like alarm, "run into the pantry and see what you can find in the cooky jar." The last of her sentence was addressed to Benny's flying heels as they disappeared through the doorway.
Left together, Mr. Smith searched the woman's face for some hint, some sign that this extraordinary s.h.i.+ft-about was recognized and understood; but Miss Maggie, with a countenance serenely expressing only cheerful interest, was over by the little stand, rearranging the pile of books and newspapers on it.
"I think, after all," she began thoughtfully, pausing in her work, "that it will be better indoors. It blows so out here that you'll be bothered in your copying, I am afraid."
She was still standing at the table, chatting about the papers, however, when at the door, a few minutes later, appeared her father, in his arms a big Bible, and a sizable pasteboard box.
"Right here, father, please," she said then, to Mr. Smith's dumfounded amazement. "Just set them down right here."