<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p>It was Saturday afternoon, the twenty-fourth of December, and the
weary sisters of the Dorcas band rose from their bruised knees and removed
their little stores of carpet-tacks from their mouths. This was
a feminine custom of long standing, and as no village dressmaker had
ever died of pins in the digestive organs, so were no symptoms of carpet-tacks
ever discovered in any Dorcas, living or dead. Men wondered at
the habit and reviled it, but stood confounded in the presence of its
indubitable harmlessness.</p>
<p>The red ingrain carpet was indeed very warm, beautiful, and comforting
to the eye, and the sisters were suitably grateful to Providence, and
devoutly thankful to themselves, that they had been enabled to buy,
sew, and lay so many yards of it. But as they stood looking at
their completed task, it was cruelly true that there was much left to
do.</p>
<p>The aisles had been painted dark brown on each side of the red strips
leading from the doors to the pulpit, but the rest of the church floor
was “a thing of shreds and patches.” Each member of
the carpet committee had paid (as a matter of pride, however ill she
could afford it) three dollars and sixty-seven cents for sufficient
carpet to lay in her own pew; but these brilliant spots of conscientious
effort only made the stretches of bare, unpainted floor more evident.
And that was not all. Traces of former spasmodic and individual
efforts desecrated the present ideals. The doctor’s pew
had a pink and blue Brussels on it; the lawyer’s, striped stair-carpeting;
the Browns from Deerwander sported straw matting and were not abashed;
while the Greens, the Whites, the Blacks and the Greys displayed floor
coverings as dissimilar as their names.</p>
<p>“I never noticed it before!” exclaimed Maria Sharp, “but
it ain’t Christian, that floor! it’s heathenish and ungodly!”</p>
<p>“For mercy’s sake, don’t swear, Maria,” said
Mrs. Miller nervously. “We’ve done our best, and let’s
hope that folks will look up and not down. It isn’t as if
they were going to set in the chandelier; they’ll have something
else to think about when Nancy gets her hemlock branches and white carnations
in the pulpit vases. This morning my Abner picked off two pinks
from the plant I’ve been nursing in my dining-room for weeks,
trying to make it bloom for Christmas. I slapped his hands good,
and it’s been haunting me ever since to think I had to correct
him the day before Christmas—Come, Lobelia, we must be hurrying!”</p>
<p>“One thing comforts me,” exclaimed the Widow Buzzell,
as she took her hammer and tacks preparatory to leaving; “and
that is that the Methodist meetin’-house ain’t got any carpet
at all.”</p>
<p>“Mrs. Buzzell, Mrs. Buzzell!” interrupted the minister’s
wife, with a smile that took the sting from her speech. “It
will be like punishing little Abner Miller; if we think those thoughts
on Christmas Eve, we shall surely be haunted afterward.”</p>
<p>“And anyway,” interjected Maria Sharp, who always saved
the situation, “you just wait and see if the Methodists don’t
say they’d rather have no carpet at all than have one that don’t
go all over the floor. I know ’em!” and she put on
her hood and blanket-shawl as she gave one last fond look at the improvements.</p>
<p>“I’m going home to get my supper, and come back afterward
to lay the carpet in my pew; my beans and brown bread will be just right
by now, and perhaps it will rest me a little; besides, I must feed ’Zekiel.”</p>
<p>As Nancy Wentworth spoke, she sat in a corner of her own modest rear
seat, looking a little pale and tired. Her waving dark hair had
loosened and fallen over her cheeks, and her eyes gleamed from under
it wistfully. Nowadays Nancy’s eyes never had the sparkle
of gazing into the future, but always the liquid softness that comes
from looking backward.</p>
<p>“The church will be real cold by then, Nancy,” objected
Mrs. Burbank.—“Good-night, Mrs. Baxter.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no! I shall be back by half-past six, and I shall
not work long. Do you know what I believe I’ll do, Mrs.
Burbank, just through the holidays? Christmas and New Year’s
both coming on Sunday this year, there’ll be a great many out
to church, not counting the strangers that’ll come to the special
service to-morrow. Instead of putting down my own pew carpet that’ll
never be noticed here in the back, I’ll lay it in the old Peabody
pew, for the red aisle-strip leads straight up to it; the ministers
always go up that side, and it does look forlorn.”</p>
<p>“That’s so! And all the more because my pew, that’s
exactly opposite in the left wing, is new carpeted and cushioned,”
replied the president. “I think it’s real generous
of you, Nancy, because the Riverboro folks, knowing that you’re
a member of the carpet committee, will be sure to notice, and think
it’s queer you haven’t made an effort to carpet your own
pew.”</p>
<p>“Never mind!” smiled Nancy wearily. “Riverboro
folks never go to bed on Saturday nights without wondering what Edgewood
is thinking about them!”</p>
<p>The minister’s wife stood at her window watching Nancy as she
passed the parsonage.</p>
<p>“How wasted! How wasted!” she sighed. “Going
home to eat her lonely supper and feed ’Zekiel . . . I can bear
it for the others, but not for Nancy . . . Now she has lighted her lamp,
now she has put fresh pine on the fire, for new smoke comes from the
chimney. Why should I sit down and serve my dear husband, and
Nancy feed ’Zekiel?”</p>
<p>There was some truth in Mrs. Baxter’s feeling. Mrs. Buzzell,
for instance, had three sons; Maria Sharp was absorbed in her lame father
and her Sunday-school work; and Lobelia Brewster would not have considered
matrimony a blessing, even under the most favourable conditions.
But Nancy was framed and planned for other things, and ’Zekiel
was an insufficient channel for her soft, womanly sympathy and her bright
activity of mind and body.</p>
<p>’Zekiel had lost his tail in a mowing-machine; ’Zekiel
had the asthma, and the immersion of his nose in milk made him sneeze,
so he was wont to slip his paw in and out of the dish and lick it patiently
for five minutes together. Nancy often watched him pityingly,
giving him kind and gentle words to sustain his fainting spirit, but
to-night she paid no heed to him, although he sneezed violently to attract
her attention.</p>
<p>She had put her supper on the lighted table by the kitchen window
and was pouring out her cup of tea, when a boy rapped at the door.
“Here’s a paper and a letter, Miss Wentworth,” he
said. “It’s the second this week, and they think over
to the store that that Berwick widower must be settin’ up and
takin’ notice!”</p>
<p>She had indeed received a letter the day before, an unsigned communication,
consisting only of the words, “Second Epistle of John. Verse
12.”</p>
<p>She had taken her Bible to look out the reference and found it to
be:—</p>
<p>“Having many things to write unto you, I would not write with
paper and ink; but I trust to come unto you, and speak face to face,
that our joy may be full.”</p>
<p>The envelope was postmarked New York, and she smiled, thinking that
Mrs. Emerson, a charming lady who had spent the summer in Edgewood,
and had sung with her in the village choir, was coming back, as she
had promised, to have a sleigh ride and see Edgewood in its winter dress.
Nancy had almost forgotten the first letter in the excitements of her
busy day, and now here was another, from Boston this time. She
opened the envelope and found again only a single sentence, printed,
not written. (Lest she should guess the hand, she wondered?)</p>
<p>“Second Epistle of John. Verse 5.”</p>
<p>“And now I beseech thee, lady, not as though I wrote a new
commandment unto thee, but that which we had from the beginning, that
we love one another.”</p>
<p>Was it Mrs. Emerson? Could it be—any one else?
Was it—? No, it might have been, years ago; but not now;
not now!—And yet; he was always so different from other people;
and once, in church, he had handed her the hymn-book with his finger
pointing to a certain verse.</p>
<p>She always fancied that her secret fidelity of heart rose from the
fact that Justin Peabody was “different.” From the
hour of their first acquaintance, she was ever comparing him with his
companions, and always to his advantage. So long as a woman finds
all men very much alike (as Lobelia Brewster did, save that she allowed
some to be worse!), she is in no danger. But the moment in which
she perceives and discriminates subtle differences, marvelling that
there can be two opinions about a man’s superiority, that moment
the miracle has happened.</p>
<p>“And now I beseech thee, lady, not as though I wrote a new
commandment unto thee, but that which we had from the beginning, that
we love one another.”</p>
<p>No, it could not be from Justin. She drank her tea, played
with her beans abstractedly, and nibbled her slice of steaming brown
bread.</p>
<p>“Not as though I wrote a new commandment unto thee.”</p>
<p>No, not a new one; twelve, fifteen years old, that commandment!</p>
<p>“That we love one another.”</p>
<p>Who was speaking? Who had written these words? The first
letter sounded just like Mrs. Emerson, who had said she was a very poor
correspondent, but that she should just “drop down” on Nancy
one of these days; but this second letter never came from Mrs. Emerson.—Well,
there would be an explanation some time; a pleasant one; one to smile
over, and tell ’Zekiel and repeat to the neighbours; but not an
unexpected, sacred, beautiful explanation, such a one as the heart of
a woman could imagine, if she were young enough and happy enough to
hope.</p>
<p>She washed her cup and plate; replaced the uneaten beans in the brown
pot, and put them away with the round loaf, folded the cloth (Lobelia
Brewster said Nancy always “set out her meals as if she was entertainin’
company from Portland”), closed the stove dampers, carried the
lighted lamp to a safe corner shelf, and lifted ’Zekiel to his
cushion on the high-backed rocker, doing all with the nice precision
of long habit. Then she wrapped herself warmly, and locking the
lonely little house behind her, set out to finish her work in the church.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />