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CHAPTER XVI.
A HURRIED DEPARTURE.
It was not until the following morning that Aunt Nancy paid any particular attention to the circular regarding camp meeting which Bill Dean had brought.
Then, as Jack came in from milking, she said with a suddenness which caused the boy to start in surprise,--
"I have been thinking about the camp meeting. What is your opinion?"
"I don't know what you mean."
"You remember the paper which William Dean brought last night?"
"Yes."
"Well, it was the time-table of the trains which run to the grounds.
Somehow your coming upset me so I had forgotten all about the meeting, and if I should miss it, it would be the first time since I was quite a young girl."
"When does it begin?"
"Day after to-morrow."
"Why don't you go? I can stay here an' take care of crumple-horn and Louis well enough."
"Bless you, child, I wouldn't think of leaving you alone three or four days."
"Would you be gone as long as that?"
"A great many stay the whole week, and I did one year; but it was almost too tedious."
"Well, both of us couldn't be away at the same time, an'--"
"Why not?"
"Because the cow must be milked an' put in the barn."
"Daniel Chick's daughters have always done that for me, and would again."
"But what about Louis?"
"I have been wondering whether I couldn't take him with me."
"It would be terrible hard work to lug a baby 'round all the time."
"If you went I should be relieved of the greater portion of that care."
"It seems as if you had pretty nigh made up your mind already."
"There is only one thing which prevents me, and I can't figure it out,"
the little woman said with an air of anxiety.
"What is it?" Jack asked in surprise.
"I don't know that it is prudent to spare the money. You see it won't be long now before the summer boarders come, and it costs a great deal to get ready for them."
Jack could make no reply. This was a question about which he was ignorant, and there was a certain hesitation on his part regarding the discussion of such a subject when he could do nothing to forward the matter by pecuniary aid.
No more was said until after breakfast, when Mrs. Hayes came in, looking excited and breathless.
"Haven't you done anything about going to camp meeting, Nancy Curtis?"
she cried, as she swung the big rocking-chair around and would have sat on Louis had not Jack called her attention to the fact by pulling the baby from his dangerous position.
"I was just speaking about it, but don't know as I shall go."
"But you must, Nancy. The children can stay at my house."
"If I went they would go with me," the little woman replied, in a tone which told she was not willing to discuss that question.
"Very well, there is nothing to prevent. Daniel Chick will take his big tent, and he says you're welcome to use as much of it as you want."
"He is very good, I'm sure."
"And you'll go, of course? It wouldn't seem like a camp meeting if you wasn't there; and, besides, we always look to you for the coffee. Deacon Downs says it's one of the pleasures of the week to drink Aunt Nancy's Mocha."
"I do try to get the best, and when that has been done any one can make it good," the little woman said as her withered cheeks flushed with pleasure at the compliment, while never for a moment did she fancy this praise might have been given only that she should supply the occupants of the tent with their morning beverage.
"Then it is settled, you will go?" and Mrs. Hayes arose to her feet. "I can't stop a minute, but felt I must run over to find out if you'd begun preparations."
"I haven't, and whether you see me there or not depends. I will let you know to-morrow."
"But you must go, because we won't take no for an answer."
Aunt Nancy shook her head as if to say the matter was very uncertain, and the visitor took her departure, insisting that the townspeople "couldn't get along without their coffee maker."
"I'm sure I don't know what to do," the little woman said with a long-drawn sigh when she and Jack were alone.
"If you haven't money enough, why not leave me an' Louis here alone?
I'll be awful careful with the house, an' there can't any accident happen."
"I'm not afraid to trust you, Jack dear; but as I told Mrs. Hayes, it isn't to be thought of for a minute."
"Ain't there some way I might earn the money?"
"Bless you, no, child. Even if I was willing you should do such a thing, there isn't any time. The most expensive part of it is that I have always furnished the coffee for all in the tent, and it does take a powerful lot to go around. Why, Deacon Downs himself can drink three cups of a morning, an' then look around sort of wishfully for another. I always give it to him, too, if there's enough left in the pot."
Jack felt very badly because he could do nothing toward helping the little woman out of her difficulty, while Louis laughed and crowed as if he thought the whole affair decidedly comical.
Aunt Nancy bustled around the house performing a great deal of unnecessary work, her forehead knitted into a frown which showed she was thinking the matter over in the most serious fas.h.i.+on, and Jack watched her every movement.