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Susan helped him again, and secured another brief respite.
"Ephraim," said he, after awhile, "you ain't skilled to cook oysters like this, I don' believe. You ought to get married! I was sayin' to Susan t'other day--well, now, mother, have I said an'thing out o' the way?--well, I don' s'pose 'twas just my place to hev said an'thing about gittin' married, to Ephraim, seein's--"
"Come, come, father," said Aunt Lyddy, "that'll do, now. You must let Ephraim alone, and not joke him about such things."
Meanwhile Susan had hastily gone into the pantry to look for a pie, which she seemed unable at once to find.
"Pie got adrift?" called out Joshua. "Seems to me you don' hook on to it very quick. Now that looks good," he added, when she came out. "That looks like cookin'! All I meant was, 't Ephraim ought not to be doin'
his own cookin'--that is--if you can call it cookin'--but then, of course, 'tis cookin'--there's all kinds o' cookin'. I went cook myself, when I was a boy."
After supper, Aunt Lyddy sat down to knit, and Joshua drew his chair up to an open window, to smoke his pipe. In this vice Aunt Lyddy encouraged him. The odor of Virginia tobacco was a sweet savor in her nostrils. No breezes from Araby ever awoke more grateful feelings than did the fragrance of Uncle Joshua's pipe. To Aunt Lyddy it meant quiet and peace.
Susan and Eph sat down on the broad flag door-stone, and talked quietly of the simple news of the neighborhood, and of the days when they used to go to school, and come home, always together.
"I didn't much think, then," said Eph, "that I should ever bring up where I have, and get ash.o.r.e before I was fairly out to sea!"
"Jehiel's schooner got ash.o.r.e on the bar, years ago," said Susan, "and yet they towed her off, and I saw her this morning, from my chamber window, before sunrise, all sail set, going by to the eastward."
"I know what you mean," said Eph. "But here--I got mad once, and I almost had a right to, and I can't get started again; I never shall. I can get a livin', of course; but I shall always be pointed out as a jail-bird, and could no more get any footin' in the world than Portuguese Jim."
Portuguese Jim was the sole professional criminal of the town, a weak, good-natured, knock-kneed vagabond, who stole hens, and spent every winter in the House of Correction as an "idle and disorderly person."
Susan laughed outright at the picture. Eph smiled, too, but a little bitterly.
"I suppose it was more ugliness than anything else," he said, "that made me come back here to live, where everybody knows I've been in jail and is down on me."
"They are not down on you," said Susan. "n.o.body is down on you. It's all your own imagination. And if you had gone anywhere that you was a stranger, you know that the first thing that you would have done would have been to call a meetin' and tell all the people that you had burned down a man's barn, and been in the State's-prison, and that you wanted them all to know it at the start; and you wouldn't have told them why you did it, and how young you was then, and how Eliphalet treated your mother, and how you was going to pay him for all he lost. Here, everybody knows that side of it. In fact," she added, with a little twinkle in her eye, "I have sometimes had an idea that the main thing they don't like is to see you savin' every cent to pay to Eliphalet."
"And yet it was on your say that I took up that plan," said Eph. "I never thought of it till you asked me when I was goin' to begin to pay him up."
"And you ought to," said Susan. "He has a right to the money--and then you don't want to be under obligations to that man all your life. Now, what you want to do is to cheer up and go around among folks. Why, now, you're the only fish-buyer there is that the men don't watch when he's weighin' their fish. You'll own up to that, for one thing, won't you?"
"Well, they are good fellows that bring fish to me," he said.
"They weren't good fellows when they traded at the great wharf," said Susan. "They had a quarrel down there once a week, reg'larly."
"Well, suppose they do trust me in that," said Eph. "I can never rub out that I've been in State's-prison."
"You don't want to rub it out. You can't rub anything out that's ever been; but you can do better than rub it out."
"What do you mean?"
"Take things just the way they are," said Susan, "and show what can be done. Perhaps you'll stake a new channel out, for others to follow in that haven't half so much chance as you have. And that's what you will do, too," she added.
"Susan!" he said, "if there's anything I can ever do, in this world or the next, for you or your folks, that's all I ask for, the chance to do it. Your folks and you shall never want for anything while I'm alive.
"There's one thing sure," he added, rising. "I'll live by myself and be independent of everybody, and make my way all alone in the world; and if I can make 'em all finally own up and admit that I'm honest with 'em, I'm satisfied. That's all I'll ever ask of anybody. But there's one thing that worries me sometimes--that is, whether I ought to come here so often. I'm afraid, sometimes, that it'll hinder your father from gettin' work, or--something--for you folks to be friends with me."
"I think such things take care of themselves," said Susan, quietly. "If a chip won't float, let it sink."
"Good-night," said Eph, and he walked off, and went home to his echoing house.
After that, his visits to Joshua's became less frequent.
It was a bright day in March--one of those which almost redeem the reputation of that desperado of a month. Eph was leaning on his fence, looking now down the bay and now to where the sun was sinking in the marshes. He knew that all the other men had gone to the town-meeting, where he had had no heart to intrude himself--that free democratic parliament where he had often gone with his father in childhood; where the boys, rejoicing in a general a.s.sembly of their own, had played ball outside, while the men debated gravely within. He recalled the time when he himself had so proudly given his first vote for President, and how his father had introduced him then to friends from distant parts of the town. He remembered how he had heard his father speak there, and how respectfully everybody had listened to him. That was in the long ago, when they had lived at the great farm. And then came the thought of the mortgage, and of Eliphalet's foreclosure, and--
"Hallo, Eph!"
It was one of the men from whom he took fish--a plain-spoken, sincere little man.
"Why wa'n't you down to town-meet'n'?"
"I was busy," said Eph.
"How'd ye like the news?"
"What news?"
There was never any good news for him now.
"Hain't heard who's selected town-clerk?"
"No."
Had they elected Eliphalet, and so expressed their settled distrust of him, and sympathy for the man whom he had injured?
"Who's elected?" he asked, harshly.
"You be!" said the man; "went in flyin', all hands clappin' and stompin'
their feet!"
An hour later the doctor drove up, stopped, and walked toward the kitchen door. As he pa.s.sed the window, he looked in.
Eph was lying on his face, upon the settle, as he had first seen him there, his arms beneath his head.
"I will not disturb him now," said the doctor.
One breezy afternoon, in the following summer, Captain Seth laid aside his easy every-day clothes, and transformed himself into a stiff broadcloth image, with a small silk hat and creaking boots. So attired, he set out in a high open buggy, with his wife, also in black, but with gold spectacles, to the funeral of an aunt. As they pursued their jog-trot journey along the Salt Hay Road, and came to Ephraim Morse's cottage, they saw Susan sitting in a shady little porch, at the front door, sh.e.l.ling peas, and looking down the bay.
"How is everything, Susan?" called out Captain Seth; "'bout time for Eph to be gitt'n' in?"
"Yes," she answered, nodding and smiling, and pointing with a pea-pod; "that's our boat, just coming up to the wharf, with her peak down."