"You'll stay to dinner, Cal?" said Mr. Sim. "Calvin, you'll eat dinner with us?" cried Mr. Sam. Calvin Parks looked at Miss Sands, and saw hospitality beaming in her face. "Thank ye, Sim;" he said, "I'm obliged to you, Sam; I'll stay with pleasure, Miss Hands!" It was a singular meal. Mary Sands sat at the head of the table, with all the dishes before her, and helped the three men largely to the excellent boiled dinner. Calvin Parks faced her at the foot, and the twins sat on either side. They talked cheerfully with their visitor and Miss Sands, but did not address each other directly. Calvin remarked upon the excellence of the beef. "Fancy brisket, ain't it?" he asked. "Yes!" replied Mr. Sim. "It's the best cut on the critter for cornin'." Mr. Sam looked at his cousin. "Tell him I don't agree with him!" he said. "Cousin Sim, Cousin Sam don't agree with you!" said Mary Sands placidly. "Tell him the aitch bone is better!" continued Mr. Sam with some heat. "He says the aitch bone is better!" repeated Mary Sands. "Tell him it ain't!" said Mr. Sim. "Cousin Sim says it ain't, Cousin Sam," said Mary, "and that's enough on the subject." She spoke with calm and cheerful authority; the twins glowered at the corned beef in silence. "Speakin' of critters," said Calvin Parks There was no reply. Looking at Miss Sands, her eyes directed his glance to Mr. Sam. "How many head are you carryin', Sam?" he repeated. "Twenty!" replied Mr. Sam. "That's a nice herd," said Calvin. "Hereford, be they?" "Holstein!" said Sam. "They're the best milkers, and the best beef critters too." Mr. Sim looked at Mary Sands with kindling eyes. "Tell him it ain't so!" he said. "Tell him he knows better!" "Cousin Sim says it ain't so, and you know better, Cousin Sam," said Mary Sands. "Tell him he knows wuss!" grunted Mr. Sam. "Cousin Sam says you know wuss, It was the same at dessert. Calvin praised the admirable quality of the pie. "Now this," he said, "is my idee of a squash pie. It isn't slickin' up and tryin' to look like custard, nor yet it don't make believe it's pumpkin; it just says, 'I am a squash pie, and if there's a better article you may let me know.'" "I'm real pleased you like it," said Mary Sands modestly; "it's Cousin Lucindy's recipe. She must have been a master hand at pies." "She certinly was!" said Mr. Sam. "Squash and pumpkin and cranberry, Ma was fust-rate in all; but mince was her best holt." "Tell him it warn't," said Mr. Sim, fixing his cousin with a burning eye. "Tell him her apple bet it holler." "Cousin Sim says it warn't, Cousin Sam, "Tell him he's a turnip-head!" said Mr. Sam. "I don't repeat no calling names," said Mary Sands. "Mr. Parks, will you have some more of the pie? Cousin Sam, another piece? Cousin Sim? well, then, the meal is finished, Cousins!" Each twin, as he rose from the table, cast a glance of invitation at Calvin Parks; but he hastily seized a dish. "I'm going to help Miss Hands clear off," he said; and he followed Mary Sands into the kitchen. "Oh! Mr. Parks," said Mary, "you no need to do that! I'm well used to washing dishes!" "I should suppose you was," responded Calvin Parks gallantly, "but if you'll let me help, Miss Hands, it would be an accommodation, now it would. Fact is," he continued, "I expect I shall bust if I don't "How long?" repeated Mary Sands. "Ever since I come. Haven't they always been so?" "Always been so?" repeated Calvin Parks. "Why, Miss Hands—why—" he looked about him helplessly. "Well, I am blowed!" he said plaintively. "I'll have to ask you to excuse the expression, Miss Hands, but I really am! Perhaps I'd better tell you how things used to be in this house, and then you can see how—how blowed I am at findin' them as they be." "I should be real pleased if you would!" said Mary Sands. "I've been wonderin' and wonderin', ever since I come, but there's no near neighbors, you know, and I don't know as I should have cared to ask 'em if there had been; but you are a friend of both, I see, and it seems different." "I'll wash to your wipin'," said Calvin Parks, taking off his coat and rolling up his shirt sleeves, "and we can talk as we go; I'm an old hand at dishes too. Well! Friend of both? well, I should remark! I lived on the next ro'd, not more'n half a mile across lots. You might have seen a burnt cellar hole?—Well, that was our home. First I remember of Sam and Sim was them sittin' together in their chair. 'Twas a queer chair, made o' purpose to hold the two of 'em. There they set, and tell 'tother from which was more than I could do, or anybody else for that matter, except their Ma. They might ha' been nine then, and I s'pose I was four or five. I rec'lect I went up to 'em and says, 'Be you one boy cut in two?' Cur'us things children are, sure enough. They was dressed alike, then and always; fed alike, and reared alike, every human way of it. Doctored alike, too, poor young ones! One time when they was "So they'd make up; they had to! He shook his head, and washed the platter vigorously. "Did it keep on that way after they grew up?" asked Mary Sands. "Did it?" repeated Calvin. "Yes, it did! Neither one of 'em could stand against their Ma. Folks thought the boys would marry, and that would break it up like, but Ma wouldn't have that. 'When I find two girls as much alike as they is boys,' she'd say, 'we'll talk about gettin' married; till then they're wife enough for each other.' "That was when Sam was takin' notice of Ivy Bell. She was a girl from Vermont, come visitin' Ammi Bean's folks; her "Thank you, Mr. Parks!" said Mary demurely; "I won't!" "Well, she did," said Calvin; "no two ways about that. 'Good mornin', Mr. Sills,' she says, 'was you wishin' to see anyone?' "'Yes!' says Sim, 'I want to see Mr. Bean.' "'He's down in the medder,' says Ivy; and then she kind o' hung down her head and looked up at him sideways. 'I don't suppose there's anyone else would do instead, Mr. Sills?' "'No, there ain't!' says Sim; and off he legged it to the medder." "My!" said Mary Sands, "What did she say to that?" "Why, I snickered right out in meetin'," said Calvin. "I just couldn't help it; and she was so mad she whisked into the house and slammed the door in my face, and that was the last I saw of Ivy. "But next time poor old Sam come along, slicked up for courtin', with his heart in his vest pocket all ready to hand out, why, he got the door in his face, too, and had to start in all over again. Well, sir—I beg your pardon, ma'am, Miss Sands reflected a moment. "I shouldn't be surprised," she said, "if it was their vests." "Their vests?" repeated Calvin. "Yes! You noticed Cousin Sam had on a red one and Cousin Sim a black one? Well—but suppose I tell you my end of it, Mr. Parks, just as it come to me." "I should be fairly pleased to death if Mary Sands was silent a moment, gazing thoughtfully at the blue platter she held. "I'm a lone woman!" she said at last. "I was an only child, and parents died when I was but young. I've kept house these ten years for my uncle over to Tupham Corners. He was a widower with one son, and a real good man; like a father to me, he was. Last year he died, and left the farm to Reuben,—that was his son,—and the schooner, a coasting schooner he was owner of, to me. I expect he thought—" she paused, and a bright color crept into her warm brown cheek; "well," she continued, "anyhow, Reuben and I didn't hit it off real well, and I left. I was staying with friends She stopped to laugh, a little mellow tinkling laugh. "I guess I sha'n't forget my first sight of Cousins. I come up the steps kind of quiet. The door stood open, and I knocked and waited a minute, hearin' voices; then I stepped inside the hall. The front sittin'-room door was open too, and Cousins was standin' back to it, them same brown backs, each one the other over again, and one of them was holdin' a red vest in each hand. "'Ma bought this red flannel at the bankrupt sale,' he said. 'She allowed 'twould keep us in vests and her in petticuts and thro't bandages for ten years, and I'm not going to begin to waste the minute she's under ground. She would say, "you go on wearin' them vests!" and I'm goin' to.' "'She wouldn't!' said the other. 'She'd say, "you go on wearin' the coat and pants, but if you are in mournin' for me, show it by puttin' on a black vest, as is no more than decent."' "'I can mourn just as well in red flannel as what I can in black!' says the first one. "'You can't!' says the other. "'I'll show you whether I can or not!' says the first. "And at that they turned face to face to each other and sideways to me, and each Again she tinkled a laugh. "You never see men more surprised than what they was; but they shook hands real pleasant, made me welcome, and then walked one off one way and one the other, and so it has remained. At first they wanted to eat in different rooms, but I told 'em I couldn't have that, nor yet I couldn't have no quarrellin', so now we get on real pleasant, as you see. But isn't it comical? There! when I see them—" At this moment a prolonged cough was heard from the direction of the sitting-room; and at the same time a thin high voice called, "Calvin! you got lost, or what?" "Cousins are gettin' uneasy!" said Mary "Miss Hands," replied Calvin Parks as he drew on his coat, "the man who wouldn't wash good to such wipin' as yours wouldn't deserve to eat out of a dish. The thanks is on my side for enjoyin' the privilege." |