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Books: Miss Gibbie Gault

K >> Kate Langley Bosher >> Miss Gibbie Gault

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She took up another slip of paper and glanced over it: "Mr. and Mrs.
Porter, Mr. and Mrs. Steele, Mr. James and Miss Puss Jenkins, Mr.
Brickhouse and Mrs. Deford, Judge Lynn and myself. They haven't left
a leg for Mary Cary to stand on since her talk before the council,
and yet, on the whole, I haven't heard as much about it as I
expected. That little piece of information concerning her English
grand-father was efficacious. That her father was an unknown actor
has long been a source of satisfaction to certain Yorkburgers, and
to learn that his blood was not only Bohemian but blue, and worse
still, distinguished, was hard on them.

"Yes"--she tapped the table with the tips of her fingers--"I was
sorry it was best to mention Mary's English relations, but it was.
As long as people are weighed and measured according to what they
come from rather than what they are it is at times necessary to
state a few facts of family history. Stock rises or falls according
to reports. Some mouths have to be treated and the sort of salve one
uses depends upon the sores. Not yet can a person be taken at face value.
Ancestor-worship isn't all Chinese. An ill-bred gentleman-born is still
welcomed where an ill-born well-bred man is not invited. Queer place,
this little planet in which we swing through space, Gibbie Gault, and
nothing in it queerer than you. A million or two years from now we may
see clearly, approach sense and civilization, and in the mean time you
get up and dress yourself so as to be ready for your guests!"



Chapter XII

THE BARGAIN

She held out her hand. "How do you do? Where is Mary this afternoon?
Sit down and stop staring at me like that. I'm no Chinese idol. If I
choose to put on a mandarin coat and sit on my front porch, whose
business is it but mine!"

"Nobody's, madam!" John Maxwell bent over and shook Miss Gibbie's
hand vigorously. "You are indeed no Chinese idol. But in such
gorgeousness you might be twin sister to that fearless lady of
long finger-nails and no soul, the Do-wagger Empress of China, as
Mrs. McDougal called her. She was a woman of might and a born boss.
I understand you are letting the people of this town know you are
living here again. I've come to hear about the parties."

He drew a chair close to Miss Gibbie's, and took from her lap the
turkey-wing fan. "That's a fine coat you've got on. Did you wear
that yesterday?"

"I did not. Too hot. And then Annie Steele has such poppy eyes
they might have fallen in her soup-plate had I put in on, and her
husband can't stand any more expense from Annie. She's the kind of
wife who cries for what it wants, and he's the kind of husband who
gives in to tears. But they're happy. Neither one has any sense.
Where's Mary?"

"I don't know. Seeing something about a party she is going to give
the orphan-asylum children on her birthday, I believe. Some time
off yet, but she's always ahead of time. I went by Mrs. Moon's this
morning, and several of the lunchers came in and told of the
war-whoops of the diners. Best show I've been to in years. From
their reports I thought I'd better come up and see if there were
any scraps of you left."

"I'm all here." Miss Gibbie took the fan from his hand and began
to use it; then threw back her head and laughed until the keen
gray eyes were full of tears. "Wasn't it mean of me? Wasn't it
mean to invite people to your house and not have for them one
single thing worth eating, especially when they had come for the
sole purpose of enjoying a good dinner, and finding out whether
or not I followed the traditions of my fathers? What does Mary
think about it?"

John bent over, hands clasped loosely between his knees. "Pretty
rough. She is particular about who she invites to her house, but,
having invited them, she--"

"Treats them properly. Very correct. Mary is young and life is
before her. I am old and going to do as I choose."

"But why do you ask people of that kind to your house? If you
don't admire them--"

"What nonsense!" Miss Gibbie's chin tilted and she looked at John
with an eye at an angle that only Miss Gibbie could attain. "When
one gives formal dinner-parties people are usually invited for a
purpose not pleasure. I have known my guests of last night for many
years. 'Tis true I've seen little of them for the past twenty, but
I'm back here to live, and it was necessary they should understand
certain things they didn't seem to be taking in. They're a bunch of
bulldozers and imagine others are in awe of them--socially, I mean.
In all their heads together there aren't brains enough to make
anything but trouble, but empty heads and idle hands are dangerous,
and kings can be killed by cats. Don't you see this town is dividing
itself into factions? Already one element is arraying itself against
the other, and Mary Cary is the cause of it. It was time to let the
opposing element understand I understood the situation; also that
I had heard certain remarks it had pleased them to make; also, again,
that I am not as extravagant as they had been told. A good, plain
table is what I keep--only last night it wasn't good. You should
have seen it!"

Miss Gibbie leaned back in her chair and fanned with wide, deliberate
strokes. "I fixed the flowers. They were sunflowers fringed with
honeysuckle in a blue glass pitcher--colonial colors as befitted my
ancestried guests. The pitcher was Tildy's. My dear"--she tapped John's
knee with the tip of her fan--"don't bother about them. You can't make
some people mad. As long as they think I have money they won't cut my
acquaintance. They'll abuse me, yes. Everybody is abused who can't be
used; but they'll come to the next party if it's given to a celebrity
and there's the promise of champagne. Of course last night I couldn't
say all the things I wanted to say; that's the disadvantage of being a
hostess, but I think they understand Mary Cary is a friend of mine.
Mary doesn't approve of my methods. Sorry, but methods depend upon the
kind of people with whom you have to deal. Love is lost on some natures,
and certain individuals use weapons she doesn't touch. Anybody can stab
in the back; it takes an honest person to fight fair, and a strictly
honest person is as rare as one with good manners. All Mrs. Deford
wants is the chance to stab. But what about the lunch? Was that
abused, too?"

"Not on your life! Didn't you say you had some cigars around here?
I've used all of mine and can't get your kind in town." He got up
and started indoors. "As I order the kind you keep for company,
I don't mind smoking them. May I have one?"

She waved her fan. "In the library behind the Brittanica. Keep them
there to save Jackson from the sin of smoking them. Best darky on
earth, but helping himself isn't stealing, of course. What did they
say about the lunch?"

John lighted his cigar and took a good whiff. "You're a sensible
woman, Miss Gibbie, to let a fellow smoke a thing like that. It
begets love and charity. What did they say about the lunch? Let
me see: Most beautiful thing ever seen in Yorkburg, most delicious
things to eat, most of them never tasted or heard of before; perfect
service, exquisite lace table-cloth or lace something, patriarchal
silver, ancestral china, French food, table a picture, you another.
Said you looked like a duchess in that old-fashioned gray satin gown.
Mrs. Tate declared anybody could tell you were a lady the minute they
saw your feet, even if they didn't know who you were, but Mrs. Burnham
thought it was your hands that gave you away. Your hands are rather
remarkable."

John patted the latter, then flicked the ashes from his cigar. "I
didn't tell them, but I could have done so, that it wasn't an
idiosyncrasy, but sense, that made you wear elbow sleeves all the
time. An arm and wrist and hand like yours have no right to be
hidden."

"Nonsense, nonsense!" Again the fan was waved, but Miss Gibbie's
lips twitched. "Vanity in a woman of my age is past pardon. I don't
like anything to touch my wrist, and sleeves are in the way. Tell
me"--she leaned toward him--"is Mary worried with me?"

"Not that I know of. I have scarcely seen her for two days. She's
been having so many committee meetings, and so many people have been
after her for this and for that, and some sick child at the asylum had
to be visited so often, that except in the evenings I have hardly had
time to speak to her. And then she is so tired I don't like to keep her
up. She can't stand this sort of thing, Miss Gibbie. It will wear her
out, and it ought to be stopped." He got out of his chair and began to
walk up and down the porch, one hand in his pocket, the other holding
his cigar. "It's got to be stopped."

"Who is going to stop it?"

"I know who'd like to stop it." He stood in front of her. "Aren't
you going to help me, Miss Gibbie?"

"I am not." She looked up into the strong face now suddenly serious.
"I mean in the way you mean. I am going to keep her from wearing
herself out, but she is not doing that. Hedwig takes care of her and
sees that she gets proper food and rest and is spared a thousand
things other women have to contend with. And it doesn't hurt anybody
to be busy. If you don't think about something else you think about
yourself, and the most ruinous of all germs is the ego germ. She
isn't likely to be attacked, for she has good resistance, but it's
in the air, and I don't want her to get it. She is very happy."

"Is she?"

"Why not? Isn't she leading the life she wants to lead? She has a
passion for service. She has a home of her own, simple, but complete;
is earning an income sufficient to take care of herself, and has
besides, a little money, every cent of which she gives away, however;
and, above all, she has the power of making people love her. What more
could a girl want?"

"Is it enough?"

"Quite enough!" Miss Gibbie's eyes flashed into John Maxwell's.
"Why not enough? She has work to do, a place to fill, is needed,
and is bringing cheer and sunshine to others. There is a great deal
to be done for Yorkburg, and being that rare thing, a leader, she has
already started much that will make great changes later on. Sit down
and stop looking at me that way! She has quite enough."

John threw his cigar away and took the chair she pushed toward him.
"I don't believe we do understand each other as well as we thought,"
he said, again leaning forward and clasping his hands together. "I
know what Mary is to you. I saw it that first day I joined you at
Windemere, and during the weeks we were together I saw also it wasn't
Mary alone I'd have to win, but there'd be you to fight as well. I
told you in the beginning just where I stood. I've kept nothing from
you and I'm fighting fair, but neither you nor anybody else on God's
earth can keep me from trying to make her my wife. Life is before us--"

"And behind me."

He flushed. "I didn't mean that. I mean that Mary is not to sacrifice
herself to an idea, to a condition, if I can help it. I'm with her in
all this work for the old place. I love it. I've tried to prove it in
more than words, and I would not ask her to give it up entirely. A
home can always be kept here, but another sort of home is meant for
Mary. And it's the one I want to make for her."

"Your mother's?"

John's steady eyes looked in the stormy ones. "No--not my mother's.
When Mary is my wife she goes to the home of which she is to be the
mistress. Like you, my mother--"

"Objects to matrimony. I understand Mrs. Maxwell is as much opposed
to your marriage as I am to Mary's. That should be a stimulus to both
of you. Opposition is a great incentive, but in this case the trouble
is with Mary herself. Would you marry her, anyhow?"

"I would." He smiled. "I'd take Mary any way I could get her. Oh,
I used to have theories of my own about such things, but love
knocks theories into nothingness. It makes us do things we never
thought we would, doesn't it?"

Miss Gibbie turned her head away from his understanding eyes,
and tapped the porch impatiently with her foot.

"It makes fools of most people. But as long as we've mentioned it
we might as well have this out, Mary doesn't want to marry anybody.
She is happy, and you are not to be coming down here trying to make
her change her mind, trying to take her away!"

"Who is going to stop it?"

They were her words, and at remembrance of them her face changed
and over it swept sudden understanding, and her hand went
helplessly toward him.

"John," she said, "I'm an old woman and she's all I've got. Don't
take her from me! Don't take her away!"

He frowned slightly, but he took the hand which he had never before
seen tremble, and smoothed it gently. "Not from you, Miss Gibbie. I
wouldn't take her out of your life. She would let nothing or nobody
do that, but for years I have been waiting--"

"How old are you?"

"Twenty-seven in October."

She sat suddenly upright. "An infant! She will be twenty-three in
June. And I--I am sixty-five. Your life, as you said, is before you,
yours and hers. Mine is behind, but in the little of mine left I
need her. Will you hold off for a while? Listen! she doesn't know
she loves you. Doesn't know the reason she has never loved any one
else is because there is but one man in her life, and that is you.
I didn't want to tell you this, didn't want you to know it, don't
want her to know it--yet. She is a child still, though so verily a
woman in much. She has owned you since that first visit you made to
Michigan, a big, awkward, red-faced boy of seventeen, with the same
fearless eyes you've got now and the same determined mouth. You've
told me about it and she's told me about it and how all you said at
first was 'How'd do, Mary? I'm here.' And you've been 'here' ever
since. Don't you see she takes you for granted? The best of women
will do that and never guess how rare a thing is a strong man's
love. For you there's but one woman in the world, but a woman is
the strangest thing God's made yet, and there are no rules by which
to understand her. And you don't understand Mary. Until she does
what it is in her heart to do here--gets rid of some of the
regulations that use to enrage her as a child, starts flowers where
are weeds, and opens eyes that are shut--she couldn't be happy. But
listen! I am going to tell you what for cold, hard years I pretended
not to believe. A woman's heart never ceases to long for the love
that makes her first in life, and after a while Mary will know her
arms were meant to hold children of her own."

For a moment there was silence, and then Miss Gibbie spoke again.

"Let her alone, John. Let her find for herself that the best
community mother should be the woman who has borne children and
knows the depths of human experience are needed to reach its heights.
She has her own ideas of service; so have I. Mine are that most people
you try to help are piggy and grunt if you happen to step on their
toes. She says they grunt only when the stepping is not by accident,
and the pigginess is often with the people who help. As benefactors
they want to own the benefactored. Perhaps they do. She knows much
more of the behind-the-scenes of life than I do. But I know some
things she doesn't, and a good many you don't. If I didn't like you,
boy, I wouldn't tell you what I'm going to tell you, and that is,
stay away and let her miss you. I'd tell you to keep on and nag her
to death, and make her despise you for your weakness. She'll never
marry a man she doesn't respect, even if she loved him, and love
is by no means dependent on respect."

Miss Gibbie nibbled the tip of her turkey-wing fan for a moment of
stillness, unbroken save for the twitter of birds in the trees near
by, then turned once more to the man by her side.

"I'll be honest with you. I don't want her to marry you or anybody
else. I want to keep her with me; but I'll be square. It will be
hands off until she decides for herself. If you will say nothing
to her for a year I will say nothing before her against marriage
in general, and I've said a great deal in the past. And, moreover,
I will wrap my blessing up to-day and hand it out a year hence if
you deserve it, even if the handing breaks my heart." She held out
her hand. "Is it a bargain?"

"I don't know whether it is or not." He interlocked his fingers and
looked down on the floor of the porch. The ridges in his forehead
stood out heavily, and his teeth bit into his under lip. "It is asking
a good deal, and I don't like to make a promise I might not be able to
fulfil. A year is a long time. She might need me. Something might
happen."

"About your only chance. Don't you see she needs something to wake
her up? I'm not going to wake her. I want her to sleep on. I'm
selfish and don't deny it. But, of course, do as you choose." She
waved her fan with a wash-my-hands-of-you air, and settled herself
back in her chair. "I've been a fool to talk as I have, perhaps, but
I couldn't see a dog hit his tail on a fence and not tell him it was
barbed if I knew it and he didn't. Being a man, you must think it
over, I suppose, and take a week to find out what a woman could tell
you in the wink of an eye. A man's head is no better than a cocoanut
where his heart is concerned."

"If I should do this," he said, presently, "and anything should happen
in which she needed me, and you did not let me know, did not send for
me, I--"

"Don't be tragic, /mon enfant/. And in the mean time I don't mind
telling you she is coming down the street. I wouldn't turn my head,
if I were you, though that big hat she's got on, with the wreath of
wild roses, is very becoming. She ought always to wear white. She
is inside the gate now." His hand was given a quick warm grasp.
"Boy--boy--I've been young. If she needs you I will let you know."



Chapter XIII

A GRATEFUL CONVALESCENT

"Ain't it pink and white and whispery to-day?" she said to herself.
"The birds are having the best time, and the sun looks like it's singing
out loud, it's so bursting bright. 'Tain't hard to love anybody on a day
like this."

Peggy's thin little fingers played with the spray of roses on her lap,
and her big brown eyes roved first in one direction and then the other
as she followed the movements of the girl on the lawn cutting fresh
flowers for the house; then as the latter came closer she held out a
wasted little hand, but drew it back before it was seen.

It was her first day outdoors for three weeks, and it was very good
to be in the open air again. She leaned back in the steamer-chair
filled with pillows, in which she had been placed an hour before,
and stretched out her feet luxuriously. Over them a light blanket
had been thrown, and as she smoothed the pink kimona which covered
her gown she sighed in happy content.

"This is me, Peggy McDougal, who lives in Milltown," she went on,
talking to herself, "but right now feeling like she might be in
heaven. My! but I'm glad I ain't, though, 'cause there mightn't be
anybody in heaven I know, and this place where Miss Mary Cary lives
is happy enough for me. Muther say I'd been dead and buried before
this if'n it hadn't been for Miss Mary. I reckon I would. Some nights
I thought I was goin' to strangle sure, and the night I had that
sinker spell, and pretty near faded out, I saw Miss Mary, when 'twas
over, put her head down on the table and just cry and cry. Look like
she couldn't help it. She thought I didn't know a thing. But I did.
I knowed she cared. Warn't it funny for a lady like her to care about
a little child like me what comes of factory folks and ain't got
nothin' ahead but plain humbleness?

"And diphtheria is a ketchin' disease muther says. That's why Miss
Mary picked me up so quick and brought me out here when the doctor
said I had it. If'n she hadn't Teeny might have took it from me, 'cause
we sleep in the bed together, and Susie might, too, for she's in the
same room, and all the twins might, the little ones and the big ones,
and muther would have been worked to death a-nursin' of me and a-cookin'
for the rest. And I might have died and been put in the ground, and
then they'd had to pay for the funeral, and there warn't a cent for it.
Muther couldn't have paid for a funeral out of eggs, 'cause coffins have
gone up, and the hens don't lay 'em fast enough, and 'twould have took
too many. I wish hens could lay more than one egg a day. Roosters ain't
a bit of 'count for eggs."

She put her hands behind her head and drew in a deep breath. "But I
ain't dead." Suddenly the wasted little fingers were pressed over
tightly closed eyes. "Oh Lord," she said, soberly, "I'm very much
obliged to you for lettin' of me live. I hope nobody will ever be
sorry I didn't die. Help me to grow up and be like Miss Mary Cary.
Lookin' out, like her, for little children what ain't got anybody
special to be lookin' after them. 'Course I had my muther and father,
but they had so much to do, and didn't have the money, and diphtheria
takes money. Poor people ain't got it. If'n I don't ever have any
money, please help me to help some other way. Maybe I might be
cheerfuler. Amen."

"Hello, Peggy. Sleep?"

Mary Cary's hands, flower-filled, were held close to Peggy's face, and
at sound of her voice Peggy's eyes opened joyfully. "Oh, Miss Mary,
you skeered me! I thought you were way down by the gate.
/Ain't/ they lovely! Ain't they LOVELY!" And Peggy's little pug
nose sniffed eagerly the roses held close to them.

"Hardly anything left but roses now, but June is the rose month. Lend
me one of your cushions and I'll sit down awhile and cool off before I
go in."

She laid the flowers carefully on the ground, threw the cushion beside
them and, pulling Peggy's chair closer to the large chestnut-tree, whose
branches made a wide circle of shade in the brilliant sunshine, sat
down, then rested her hand in Peggy's lap and smiled in her happy eyes.

"It's good to have you out here, Peggy child," she said. "You'll soon
have cheeks like peaches. This sunshine and fresh air will paint them for
you and make the color stick. Did you have some milk at ten?"

"Yes'm, thank you. Milk and eggs, too. Reckon I'll be bustin' fat
by this time next week if'n I keep on swallowin' all them things
Miss Hedwig brings me. She certainly is a good lady, that Miss
Hedwig is. She's got roses in her cheeks, and ain't her light hair
pretty? She wears it awful plain, just parted and brushed back,
but it's like the silk in corn. Is that all the name she's got--
Hedwig?"

"No. Hedwig Armstrong is her name. She's an Austrian."

"I knew a girl named Armstrong once, but she was a Yorkburger. Is
Armstrong Austrian, too?"

"Armstrong is American, I suppose. I don't know what it is." She
laughed, pulling the petals off a rose and popping them with her
lips. "Hedwig is a pretty name, and the other part I never think
of. I had almost forgotten the other part."

"I didn't know there was any other part. But I heard Susie tell
muther once the Mrs. Deford and Miss Honoria Brockenborough were
talking about her the day they bought their spring hats, and they
said she looked like a mystery to them, and they thought 'twas
very strange a nice-looking white woman should be willing to come
down here and be a servant."

Mary Cary frowned quickly. "I wish they had said that to me.
Hedwig is my maid, but she is my friend as well. She used to be in
my uncle's hospital. In all this big country she hasn't a relative."

"They said her letters had Mrs. on them. Somebody at the post-office
told them so, but her husband ain't ever been to see her, they said,
and muther say she didn't think that sounded as righteous as it might,
comin' from Mrs. Deford, whose husband don't seem to hanker after her
neither, and--"

"Next time you hear anything like that you might mention that dead
husbands can't visit conveniently. Hedwig's husband is dead."

Peggy sat upright, eyes wide and interested. "Poor thing! I thought
she had an awful lonely look at times. I certainly am sorry he's
dead. I mean if he was worth killing. Muther say all men ain't.
Hasn't she got any little children, either?"

Mary Cary bent over the rose in her hand and buried her lips in its
damp depths. "No," she said, after a moment, "she has no children.
Her little girl died."

Peggy leaned back. Overhead a bluebird, straining its little throat
in exultant melody, flew from branch to branch of the big
chestnut-tree, and the hum of insects made soft monotone to the
shrill cry of the locust, which promised greater heat next day.
In the distance the Calverton road stretched white and dusty south
to town, north to the unknown land, the land of dreams to Peggy and
to Peggy's mother, who had never been beyond it, and as she looked
toward it she wondered if it led to the place where Hedwig had laid
her little child. She would never speak of this again. She could
tell by Miss Mary's face she would not like it.

For some minutes they sat in silence and then Peggy's hand reached
out and touched that of Mary Cary's, which was resting on the arm
of her chair. The eyes of the latter were narrowed slightly as if
lost in memories, and, looking at her, Peggy hesitated, then called
her name.

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