The Joy of Nelly Deane
By
Willa Sibert Cather
NELL and I were almost ready to go on for the last act of "Queen Esther," and we
had for the moment got rid of our three patient dressers, Mrs. Dow, Mrs. Freeze, and Mrs.
Spinny. Nell was peering over my shoulder into the little cracked looking-glass that Mrs.
Dow had taken from its nail on her kitchen wall and brought down to the church under her
shawl that morning. When she realized that we were alone, Nell whispered to me in the
quick, fierce way she had:
"Say, Peggy, won't you go up and stay with me to-night? Scott Spinny 's asked to
take me home, and I don't want to walk up with him alone."
"I guess so, if you'll ask my mother."
"Oh, I'll fix her!" Nell laughed, with a toss of her head which meant that
she usually got what she wanted, even from people much less tractable than my mother.
In a moment our tiring-women were back again. The three old ladies—at least they
seemed old to us—fluttered about us, more agitated than we were ourselves. It seemed
as though they would never leave off patting Nell and touching her up. They kept trying
things this way and that, never able in the end to decide which way was best. They
would n't hear to her using rouge, and as they powdered her neck and arms, Mrs. Freeze
murmured that she hoped we would n't get into the habit of using such things. Mrs. Spinny
divided her time between pulling up and tucking down the "illusion" that filled
in the square neck of Nelly's dress. She did n't like things much low, she said; but after
she had pulled it up, she stood back and looked at Nell thoughtfully through her glasses.
While the excited girl was reaching for this and that, buttoning a slipper, pinning down a
curl, Mrs. Spinny's smile softened more and more until, just before Esther
made her entrance, the old lady tiptoed up to her and softly tucked the illusion down as far as it
would go.
"She's so pink; it seems a pity not," she whispered apologetically to Mrs.
Dow.
Every one admitted that Nelly was the prettiest girl in Riverbend, and the
gayest—oh, the gayest! When she was not singing, she was laughing. When she was not
laid up with a broken arm, the outcome of a foolhardy coasting feat, or suspended from
school because she ran away at recess to go buggy-riding with Guy Franklin, she was sure
to be up to mischief of some sort. Twice she broke through the ice and got soused in the river
because she never looked where she skated or cared what happened so long as she went fast
enough. After the second of these duckings our three dressers declared that she was trying
to be a Baptist despite herself.
Mrs. Spinny and Mrs. Freeze and Mrs. Dow, who were always hovering about Nelly, often
whispered to me their hope that she would eventually come into our church and not "go
with the Methodists"; her family were Wesleyans. But to me these artless plans of
theirs never wholly explained their watchful affection. They had good daughters
themselves—except Mrs. Spinny, who had only the sullen Scott,—and they loved
their plain girls and thanked God for them. But they loved Nelly differently. They were
proud
of her pretty figure and yellow-brown eyes, which dilated so easily and sparkled
with a kind of golden effervescence. They were always making pretty things for her, always
coaxing her to come to the sewing circle, where she knotted her thread, and put in the
wrong sleeve, and laughed and chattered and said a great many things that she should not
have said, and somehow always warmed their hearts. I think they loved her for her
unquenchable joy.
All the Baptist ladies liked Nell, even those who criticized her most severely, but the
three who were first in fighting the battles of our little church, who held it together by
their prayers and the labor of their hands, watched over her as they did over Mrs. Dow's
century-plant before it blossomed. They looked for her on Sunday morning and smiled at her
as she hurried, always a little late, up to the choir. When she rose and stood behind the
organ and sang "There Is a Green Hill," one could see Mrs. Dow and Mrs. Freeze
settle back in their accustomed seats and look up at her as if she had just come from that
hill and had brought them glad tidings.
It was because I sang contralto, or, as we said, alto, in the Baptist choir that Nell
and I became friends. She was so gay and grown up, so busy with parties and dances and
picnics, that I would scarcely have seen much of her had we not sung together. She liked
me better than she did any of the older girls, who tried clumsily to be like her, and I
felt almost as solicitous and admiring as did Mrs. Dow and Mrs. Spinny. I think even then
I must have loved to see her bloom and glow, and I loved to hear her sing, in "The
Ninety and Nine,"
But one was out on the hills away
in her sweet, strong voice. Nell had never had a singing lesson, but she had sung from
the time she could talk, and Mrs. Dow used fondly to say that it was singing so much that
made her figure so pretty.
After I went into the choir it was found to be easier to get Nelly to choir practice.
If I stopped outside her gate on my way to church and coaxed her, she usually laughed, ran
in for her hat and jacket, and went along with me. The three old ladies fostered our
friendship, and because I was "quiet," they esteemed me a good influence for
Nelly. This view was propounded in a sewing-circle discussion and, leaking down to us
through our mothers, greatly amused us. Dear old ladies! It was so manifestly for what
Nell was that they loved her, and yet they were always looking for "influences"
to change her.
The "Queen Esther" performance had cost us three months of hard practice, and it was
not easy to keep Nell up to attending the tedious rehearsals. Some of the boys we knew
were in the chorus of Assyrian youths, but the solo cast was made up of older people, and
Nell found them very poky. We gave the cantata in the Baptist church on Christmas Eve,
"to a crowded house," as the Riverbend "Messenger" truly chronicled. The
country folk for miles about had come in through a deep snow, and their teams and wagons
stood in a long row at the hitch-bars on each side of the church door. It was certainly
Nelly's night, for however much the tenor—he was her schoolmaster, and naturally
thought poorly of her—might try to eclipse her in his dolorous solos about the rivers
of Babylon, there could be no doubt as to whom the people had come to hear—and to
see.
After the performance was over, our fathers and mothers came back to the dressing-
rooms—the little rooms behind the baptistry where the candidates for baptism were
robed—to congratulate us, and Nell persuaded my mother to let me go home with her.
This arrangement may not have been wholly agreeable to Scott Spinny, who stood glumly
waiting at the baptistry door; though I used to think he dogged Nell's steps not so much
for any pleasure he got from being with her as for the pleasure of keeping other people
away. Dear little Mrs. Spinny was perpetually in a state of humiliation on account of his
bad manners, and she tried by a very special tenderness to make up to Nelly for the
remissness of her ungracious son.
Scott was a spare, muscular fellow, good-looking, but with a face so set and dark that
I used to think it very like the castings he sold. He was taciturn and domineering, and
Nell rather liked to provoke him. Her father was so easy with her that she seemed to enjoy
being ordered about now and then. That night, when every one was praising her and telling
her
how well she sang and how pretty she looked, Scott only said, as we came out of the
dressing room:
"Have you got your high shoes on?"
"No; but I've got rubbers on over my low ones. Mother does n't care."
"Well, you just go back and put 'em on as fast as you can."
Nell made a face at him and ran back, laughing. Her mother, fat, comfortable Mrs.
Deane, was immensely amused at this.
"That 's right, Scott," she chuckled. "You can do enough more with her
than I can. She walks right over me an' Jud."
Scott grinned. If he was proud of Nelly, the last thing he wished to do was to show it.
When she came back he began to nag again. "What are you going to do with all those
flowers? They'll freeze stiff as pokers."
"Well, there won't none of your flowers freeze, Scott Spinny, so
there!" Nell snapped. She had the best of him that time, and the Assyrian youths
rejoiced. They were most of them high-school boys, and the poorest of them had
"chipped in" and sent all the way to Denver for Queen Esther's
flowers. There were bouquets from half a dozen townspeople, too, but none from Scott. Scott was a
prosperous hardware merchant and notoriously penurious, though he saved his face, as the
boys said, by giving liberally to the church.
"There 's no use freezing the fool things, anyhow. You get me some newspapers, and
I 'll wrap 'em up." Scott took from his pocket a folded copy of the Riverbend "Messenger"
and began laboriously to wrap up one of the bouquets. When we left the church door he bore
three large newspaper bundles, carrying them as carefully as if they had been so many
newly frosted wedding-cakes, and left Nell and me to shift for ourselves as we floundered
along the snow-burdened sidewalk.
Although it was after midnight, lights were shining from many of the little wooden
houses, and the roofs and shrubbery were so deep in snow that Riverbend looked as if it
had been tucked down into a warm bed. The companies of people, all coming from church,
tramping this way and that toward their homes and calling "Good night" and
"Merry Christmas" as they parted company, all seemed to us very unusual and
exciting.
When we got home, Mrs. Deane had a cold supper ready, and Jud Deane had already taken
off his shoes and fallen to on his fried chicken and pie. He was so proud of his pretty
daughter that he must give her her Christmas presents then and there, and he went into the
sleeping-chamber behind the dining-room and from the depths of his wife's closet brought
out a short sealskin jacket and a round cap and made Nelly put them on.
Mrs. Deane, who sat busy between a plate of spice cake and a tray piled with her famous
whipped cream tarts, laughed inordinately at his behavior.
"Ain't he worse than any kid you ever see? He 's been running to that closet like a
cat shut away from her kittens. I wonder Nell ain't caught on before this. I did think
he 'd make out now to keep 'em till Christmas morning; but he 's never made out to keep
anything yet."
That was true enough, and fortunately Jud's inability to keep anything seemed always to
present a highly humorous aspect to his wife. Mrs. Deane put her heart into her cooking,
and said that so long as a man was a good provider she had no cause to complain. Other
people were not so charitable toward Jud's failing. I remember how many strictures were
passed upon that little sealskin and how he was censured for his extravagance. But what a
public-spirited thing, after all, it was for him to do! How, the winter through, we all
enjoyed seeing Nell skating on the river or running about the town with the brown collar
turned up about her bright cheeks and her hair blowing out from under the round cap!
"No seal," Mrs. Dow said, "would have begrudged it to her. Why should we?" This was at the
sewing-circle, when the new coat was under grave discussion.
At last Nelly and I got up-stairs and undressed, and the pad of Jud's slippered feet
about the kitchen premises—where he was carrying up from the cellar things that might
freeze—ceased. He called "Good night, daughter," from the foot of the
stairs, and the house grew quiet. But one is not a prima donna the first time for nothing,
and it seemed as if we could not go to bed. Our light must have burned long after every
other in Riverbend was
out. The muslin curtains of Nell's bed were drawn back; Mrs. Deane
had turned down the white counterpane and taken off the shams and smoothed the pillows for
us. But their fair plumpness offered no temptation to two such hot young heads. We could
not let go of life even for a little while. We sat and talked in Nell's cozy room, where
there was a tiny, white fur rug—the only one in Riverbend—before the bed; and
there were white sash curtains, and the prettiest little desk and dressing-table I had
ever seen. It was a warm, gay little room, flooded all day long with sunlight from east
and south windows that had climbing-roses all about them in summer. About the dresser were
photographs of adoring high-school boys; and one of Guy Franklin, much groomed and
barbered, in a dress coat and a boutonničre. I never liked to see that photograph there.
The home boys looked properly modest and bashful on the dresser, but he seemed to be
staring impudently all the time.
I knew nothing definite against Guy, but in Riverbend all "traveling men"
were considered worldly and wicked. He traveled for a Chicago dry-goods firm, and our
fathers did n't like him because he put extravagant ideas into our mothers' heads. He had
very smooth and flattering ways, and he introduced into our simple community a great
variety of perfumes and scented soaps, and he always reminded me of the merchants in
Cćsar, who brought into Gaul "those things which effeminate the mind," as we
translated that delightfully easy passage.
Nell was sitting before the dressing-table in her nightgown, holding the new fur coat
and rubbing her cheek against it, when I saw a sudden gleam of tears in her eyes.
"You know, Peggy," she said in her quick, impetuous way, "this makes me
feel bad. I've got a secret from my daddy."
I can see her now, so pink and eager, her brown hair in two springy braids down her
back, and her eyes shining with tears and with something even softer and more tremulous.
"I 'm engaged, Peggy," she whispered, "really and truly."
She leaned forward, unbuttoning her nightgown, and there on her breast, hung by a
little gold chain about her neck, was a diamond ring—Guy Franklin's solitaire; every
one in Riverbend knew it well.
"I'm going to live in Chicago, and take singing lessons, and go to operas, and do
all those nice things—oh everything! I know you don't like him, Peggy, but you know
you are a kid. You'll see how it is yourself when you grow up. He's
so different from our boys, and he's just terribly in love with me.
And then, Peggy,"—flushing all down over her soft shoulders,— "I 'm awfully fond of
him, too. Awfully."
"Are you, Nell, truly?" I whispered. She seemed so changed to me by the warm
light in her eyes and that delicate suffusion of color. I felt as I did when I got up
early on picnic mornings in summer, and saw the dawn come up in the breathless sky above
the river meadows and make all the corn-fields golden.
"Sure I do, Peggy; don't look so solemn. It's nothing to look that way about, kid.
It's nice." She threw her arms about me suddenly and hugged me.
"I hate to think about your going so far away from us all, Nell."
"Oh, you 'll love to come and visit me. Just you wait."
She began breathlessly to go over things Guy Franklin had told her about Chicago, until
I seemed to see it all looming up out there under the stars that kept watch over our
little sleeping town. We had neither of us ever been to a city, but we knew what it would
be like. We heard it throbbing like great engines, and calling to us, that far-away world.
Even after we had opened the windows and scurried into bed, we seemed to feel a pulsation
across all the miles of snow. The winter silence trembled with it, and the air was full of
something new that seemed to break over us in soft waves. In that snug, warm little bed I
had a sense of imminent change and danger. I was somehow afraid for Nelly when I heard her
breathing so quickly beside me, and I put my arm about her protectingly as we drifted
toward sleep.
In the following spring we were both graduated from the Riverbend high school,
and I went away to college. My family moved to Denver, and during the next four years I heard
very little of Nelly Deane. My life was crowded with new people and new experiences, and I
am
afraid I held her little in mind. I heard indirectly that Jud Deane had lost what
little property he owned in a luckless venture in Cripple Creek, and that he had been able
to keep his house in Riverbend only through the clemency of his creditors. Guy Franklin
had his route changed and did not go to Riverbend any more. He married the daughter of a
rich cattle-man out near Long Pine, and ran a dry-goods store of his own. Mrs. Dow wrote me
a long letter about once a year, and in one of these she told me that Nelly was teaching
in the sixth grade in the Riverbend school.
"Dear Nelly does not like teaching very well. The children try her, and she is so pretty it
seems a pity for her to be tied down to uncongenial employment. Scott is still very attentive,
and I have noticed him look up at the window of Nelly's room in a very determined way as he
goes home to dinner. Scott continues prosperous; he has made money during these hard times
and now owns both our hardware stores. He is close, but a very honorable fellow. Nelly seems
to hold off, but I think Mrs. Spinny has hopes. Nothing would please her more. If Scott
were more careful about his appearance, it would help. He of course gets black about his business,
and Nelly, you know, is very dainty. People do say his mother does his courting for him, she is
so eager. If only Scott does not turn out hard and penurious like his father! We must all have
our schooling in this life, but I don't want Nelly's to be too severe. She is a dear girl, and
keeps her color."
Mrs. Dow's own schooling had been none too easy. Her husband had long been crippled
with rheumatism, and was bitter and faultfinding. Her daughters had married poorly, and
one of her sons had fallen into evil ways. But her letters were always cheerful, and in
one of them she gently remonstrated with me because I "seemed inclined to take a sad
view of life."
In the winter vacation of my senior year I stopped on my way home to visit Mrs. Dow.
The first thing she told me when I got into her old buckboard at the station was that
"Scott had at last prevailed," and that Nelly was to marry him in the spring. As
a preliminary step, Nelly was about to join the Baptist church. "Just think, you will
be here for her baptizing! How that will please Nelly! She is to be immersed to-morrow
night."
I met Scott Spinny in the post office that morning, and he gave me a hard grip with one
black hand. There was something grim and saturnine about his powerful body and bearded
face and his strong, cold hands. I wondered what perverse fate had driven him for eight
years to dog the footsteps of a girl whose charm was due to qualities naturally
distasteful to him. It still seems strange to me that in easy-going Riverbend, where there
were so many boys who could have lived contentedly enough with my little grasshopper, it
was the pushing ant who must have her and all her careless ways.
By a kind of unformulated etiquette one did not call upon candidates for baptism on the
day of the ceremony, so I had my first glimpse of Nelly that evening. The baptistry was a
cemented pit directly under the pulpit rostrum, over which we had our stage when we sang "Queen
Esther." I sat through the sermon somewhat nervously. After the minister, in his long,
black gown, had gone down into the water and the choir had finished singing, the door from
the dressing-room opened, and, led by one of the deacons, Nelly came down the steps into
the pool. Oh, she looked so little and meek and chastened! Her white cashmere robe clung
about her, and her brown hair was brushed straight back and hung in two soft braids from a
little head bent humbly. As she stepped down into the water I shivered with the cold of
it, and I remembered sharply how much I had loved her. She went down until the water was
well above her waist, and stood white and small, with her hands crossed on her breast,
while the minister said the words about being buried with Christ in baptism. Then, lying
in his arm, she disappeared under the dark water. "It will be like that when she
dies," I thought, and a quick pain caught my heart. The choir began to sing
"Washed in the Blood of the Lamb" as she rose again, the door behind the
baptistry opened, revealing those three dear guardians, Mrs. Dow, Mrs. Freeze, and Mrs.
Spinny, and she went up into their arms.
I went to see Nell next day, up in the little room of many memories. Such a
sad, sad visit! She seemed changed—a little embarrassed and quietly despairing. We talked
of many of the old Riverbend girls and boys, but she did not mention Guy Franklin or Scott
Spinny, except to say that her father had got work in Scott's hardware store. She begged
me, putting her hands on my shoulders with something of her old impulsiveness, to come and
stay a few days with her. But I was afraid—afraid of what she might tell me and of
what I might say. When I sat in that room with all her trinkets, the foolish harvest of
her girlhood, lying about, and the white curtains and the little white rug, I thought of
Scott Spinny with positive terror and could feel his hard grip on my hand again. I made
the best excuse I could about having to hurry on to Denver; but she gave me one quick
look, and her eyes ceased to plead. I saw that she understood me perfectly. We had known
each other so well. Just once, when I got up to go and had trouble with my veil, she
laughed her old merry laugh and told me there were some things I would never learn, for
all my schooling.
The next day, when Mrs. Dow drove me down to the station to catch the morning train for
Denver, I saw Nelly hurrying to school with several books under her arm. She had been
working up her lessons at home, I thought. She was never quick at her books, dear Nell.
It was ten years before I again visited Riverbend. I had been in Rome for a long time,
and had fallen into bitter homesickness. One morning, sitting among the dahlias and asters
that bloom so bravely upon those gigantic heaps of earth-red ruins that were once the
palaces of the Cćsars, I broke the seal of one of Mrs. Dow's long yearly letters. It
brought so much sad news that I resolved then and there to go home to Riverbend, the only
place that had ever really been home to me. Mrs. Dow wrote me that her husband, after
years of illness, had died in the cold spell last March. "So good and patient toward
the last," she wrote, "and so afraid of giving extra trouble." There was
another thing she saved until the last. She wrote on and on, dear woman, about new babies
and village improvements, as if she could not bear to tell me; and then it came:
"You will be sad to hear that two months ago our dear Nelly left us. It was a terrible
blow to us all. I cannot write about it yet, I fear. I wake up every morning feeling that
I ought to go to her. She went three days after her little boy was born. The baby is a
fine child and will live, I think, in spite of everything. He and her little girl, now
eight years old, whom she named Margaret, after you, have gone to Mrs. Spinny's. She loves
them more than if they were her own. It seems as if already they had made her quite young
again. I wish you could see Nelly's children."
Ah, that was what I wanted, to see Nelly's children! The wish came aching from my heart
along with the bitter homesick tears; along with a quick, torturing recollection that
flashed upon me, as I looked about and tried to collect myself, of how we two had sat in
our sunny seat in the corner of the old bare school-room one September afternoon and
learned the names of the seven hills together. In that place, at that moment, after so
many years, how it all came back to me—the warm sun on my back, the chattering girl
beside me, the curly hair, the laughing yellow eyes, the stubby little finger on the page!
I felt as if even then, when we sat in the sun with our heads together, it was all
arranged, written out like a story, that at this moment I should be sitting among the
crumbling bricks and drying grass, and she should be lying in the place I knew so well, on
that green hill far away.
Mrs. Dow sat with her Christmas sewing in the familiar sitting-room, where the carpet
and the wall-paper and the table-cover had all faded into soft, dull colors, and even the
chromo of Hagar and Ishmael had been toned to the sobriety of age. In the bay-window the
tall wire flower-stand still bore its little terraces of potted plants, and the big fuchsia
and the Martha Washington geranium had blossomed for Christmastide. Mrs. Dow herself did
not look greatly changed to me. Her hair, thin ever since I could remember it, was now
quite white, but her spare, wiry little person had all its old activity, and her eyes
gleamed with the old friendliness behind her silver-bowed glasses. Her gray house-dress
seemed just like those she used to wear when I ran in after school to take
her angel-food cake down to the church supper.
The house sat on a hill, and from behind the geraniums I could see pretty much all of
Riverbend, tucked down in the soft snow, and the air above was full of big, loose flakes,
falling from a gray sky which betokened settled weather. Indoors the hard-coal burner made
a tropical temperature, and glowed a warm orange from its isinglass sides. We sat and
visited, the two of us, with a great sense of comfort and completeness. I had reached
Riverbend only that morning, and Mrs. Dow, who had been haunted by thoughts of shipwreck
and suffering upon wintry seas, kept urging me to draw nearer to the fire and suggesting
incidental refreshment. We had chattered all through the winter morning and most of the
afternoon, taking up one after another of the Riverbend girls and boys, and agreeing that
we had reason to be well satisfied with most of them. Finally, after a long pause in which
I had listened to the contented ticking of the clock and the crackle of the coal, I put
the question I had until then held back:
"And now, Mrs. Dow, tell me about the one we loved best of all. Since I got your
letter I've thought of her every day. Tell me all about Scott and Nelly."
The tears flashed behind her glasses, and she smoothed the little pink bag on her knee.
"Well, dear, I'm afraid Scott proved to be a hard man, like his father. But we
must remember that Nelly always had Mrs. Spinny. I never saw anything like the love there
was between those two. After Nelly lost her own father and mother, she looked to Mrs.
Spinny for everything. When Scott was too unreasonable, his mother could 'most always
prevail upon him. She never lifted a hand to fight her own battles with Scott's father,
but she was never afraid to speak up for Nelly. And then Nelly took great comfort of her
little girl. Such a lovely child!"
"Had she been very ill before the little baby came?"
"No, Margaret; I'm afraid 't was all because they had the wrong doctor. I feel
confident that either Doctor Tom or Doctor Jones could have brought her through. But, you
see, Scott had offended them both, and they 'd stopped trading at his store, so he would
have young Doctor Fox, a boy just out of college and a stranger. He got scared and did n't
know what to do. Mrs. Spinny felt he was n't doing right, so she sent for Mrs. Freeze and
me. It seemed like Nelly had got discouraged. Scott would move into their big new house
before the plastering was dry, and though 't was summer, she had taken a terrible cold
that seemed to have drained her, and she took no interest in fixing the place up. Mrs.
Spinny had been down with her back again and was n't able to help, and things was just
anyway. We won't talk about that, Margaret; I think 't would hurt Mrs. Spinny to have you
know. She nearly died of mortification when she sent for us, and blamed her poor back. We
did get Nelly fixed up nicely before she died. I prevailed upon Doctor Tom to come in at
the last, and it 'most broke his heart. 'Why, Mis' Dow,' he said, 'if you'd only have come
and told me how 't was, I'd have come and carried her right off in my arms.'"
"Oh, Mrs. Dow," I cried, "then it need n't have been?"
Mrs. Dow dropped her needle and clasped her hands quickly. "We must n't look at it
that way, dear," she said tremulously and a little sternly; "we must n't let
ourselves. We must just feel that our Lord wanted her then,
and took her to Himself. When it was all over, she did look so like a child of God, young and trusting,
like she did on her baptizing night, you remember?"
I felt that Mrs. Dow did not want to talk any more about Nelly then, and, indeed, I had
little heart to listen; so I told her I would go for a walk, and suggested that I might
stop at Mrs. Spinny's to see the children.
Mrs. Dow looked up thoughtfully at the clock. "I doubt if you'll find little
Margaret there now. It's half-past four, and she'll have been out of school an hour and
more. She'll be most likely coasting on Lupton's Hill. She usually makes for it with her
sled the minute she is out of the school-house door. You know, it 's the old hill where you
all used to slide. If you stop in at the church about six o'clock, you'll likely find Mrs.
Spinny there with the baby. I promised to go down and help Mrs. Freeze finish up the tree,
and Mrs. Spinny said she'd run in
with the baby, if 't was n't too bitter. She won't leave him alone with the Swede girl. She's
like a young woman with her first."
Lupton's Hill was at the other end of town, and when I got there the dusk was
thickening, drawing blue shadows over the snowy fields. There were perhaps twenty children
creeping up the hill or whizzing down the packed sled-track. When I had been watching them
for some minutes, I heard a lusty shout, and a little red sled shot past me into the deep
snow-drift beyond. The child was quite buried for a moment, then she struggled out and
stood dusting the snow from her short coat and red woolen comforter. She wore a brown fur
cap, which was too big for her and of an old-fashioned shape, such as girls wore long ago,
but I would have known her without the cap. Mrs. Dow had said a beautiful child, and there
would not be two like this in Riverbend. She was off before I had time to speak to her,
going up the hill at a trot, her sturdy little legs plowing through the trampled snow.
When she reached the top she never paused to take breath, but threw herself upon her sled
and came down with a whoop that was quenched only by the deep drift at the end.
"Are you Margaret Spinny?" I asked as she struggled out in a cloud of snow.
"Yes, 'm." She approached me with frank curiosity, pulling her little sled
behind her. "Are you the strange lady staying at Mrs. Dow's?" I nodded, and she
began to look my clothes over with respectful interest.
"Your grandmother is to be at the church at six o'clock, is n't she?"
"Yes, 'm."
"Well, suppose we walk up there now. It 's nearly six, and all the other children
are going home." She hesitated, and looked up at the faintly gleaming track on the
hill-slope. "Do you want another slide? Is that it?" I asked.
"Do you mind?" she asked shyly.
"No. I'll wait for you. Take your time; don't run."
Two little boys were still hanging about the slide, and they cheered her as she came
down, her comforter streaming in the wind.
"Now," she announced, getting up out of the drift, "I 'll show you where
the church is."
"Shall I tie your comforter again?"
"No, 'm, thanks. I 'm plenty warm." She put her mittened hand confidingly in
mine and trudged along beside me.
Mrs. Dow must have heard us tramping up the snowy steps of the church, for she met us
at the door. Every one had gone except the old ladies. A kerosene lamp flickered over the
Sunday-school chart, with the lesson-picture of the Wise Men, and the little barrel-stove
threw out a deep glow over the three white heads that bent above the baby. There the three
friends sat, patting him, and smoothing his dress, and playing with his hands, which made
theirs look so brown.
"You ain't seen nothing finer in all your travels," said Mrs. Spinny, and
they all laughed.
They showed me his full chest and how strong his back was; had me feel the golden fuzz
on his head, and made him look at me with his round, bright eyes. He laughed and reared
himself in my arms as I took him up and held him close to me. He was so warm and tingling
with life, and he had the flush of new beginnings, of the new morning and the new rose. He
seemed to have come so lately from his mother's heart! It was as if I held her youth and
all her young joy. As I put my cheek down against his, he spied a pink flower in my hat,
and making a gleeful sound, he lunged at it with both fists.
"Don't let him spoil it," murmured Mrs. Spinny. "He loves color so—like Nelly."
"'I'M ENGAGED, PEGGY'"Drawn by Paul Meylan. Half-tone plate engraved by C. W. Chadwick.