<h1><SPAN name="chap_12"></SPAN>A Summons Home</h1>
<p>Mrs. Thaddeus Clayton came softly into the room and
looked with apprehensive eyes upon the little old
man in the rocking-chair.</p>
<p>“How be ye, dearie? Yer hain’t wanted
fer nothin’, now, have ye?” she asked.</p>
<p>“Not a thing, Harriet,” he returned cheerily.
“I’m feelin’ real pert, too. Was
there lots there? An’ did Parson Drew say a heap
o’ fine things?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Clayton dropped into a chair and pulled listlessly
at the black strings of her bonnet.</p>
<p>“’T was a beautiful fun’ral, Thaddeus--a
beautiful fun’ral. I--I ’most wished it
was mine.”</p>
<p>“Harriet!”</p>
<p>She gave a shamed-faced laugh.</p>
<p>“Well, I did--then Jehiel and Hannah Jane would
‘a’ come, an’ I could ‘a’
seen ’em.”</p>
<p>The horrified look on the old man’s face gave
way to a broad smile.</p>
<p>“Oh, Harriet--Harriet!” he chuckled, “how
could ye seen ’em if you was dead?”</p>
<p>“Huh? Well, I--Thaddeus,”--her voice rose
sharply in the silent room,-- “every single
one of them Perkins boys was there, and Annabel, too.
Only think what poor Mis’ Perkins would ‘a’
given ter seen ’em ’fore she went! But
they waited--<i>waited,</i> Thaddeus, jest as
everybody does, till their folks is dead.”</p>
<p>“But, Harriet,” demurred the old man,
“surely you’d ‘a’ had them
boys come ter their own mother’s fun’ral!”</p>
<p>“Come! I’d ‘a’ had ’em
come before, while Ella Perkins could ‘a’
feasted her eyes on ’em. Thaddeus,”--Mrs.
Clayton rose to her feet and stretched out two gaunt
hands longingly,--“Thaddeus, I get so hungry
sometimes for Jehiel and Hannah Jane, seems as though
I jest couldn’t stand it!”</p>
<p>“I know--I know, dearie,” quavered the
old man, vigorously polishing his glasses.</p>
<p>“Fifty years ago my first baby came,”
resumed the woman in tremulous tones; “then
another came, and another, till I’d had six.
I loved ’em, an’ tended ’em, an’
cared fer ’em, an’ didn’t have a
thought but was fer them babies. Four died,”--her
voice broke, then went on with renewed strength,--“but
I’ve got Jehiel and Hannah Jane left; at least,
I’ve got two bits of paper that comes mebbe
once a month, an’ one of ’em’s signed
‘your dutiful son, Jehiel,’ an’ the
other, ’from your loving daughter, Hannah Jane.’”</p>
<p>“Well, Harriet, they--they’re pretty good
ter write letters,” ventured Mr. Clayton.</p>
<p>“Letters!” wailed his wife. “I can’t
hug an’ kiss letters, though I try to, sometimes.
I want warm flesh an’ blood in my arms, Thaddeus;
I want ter look down into Jehiel’s blue eyes
an’ hear him call me ’dear old mumsey!’
as he used to. I wouldn’t ask ’em ter stay--I
ain’t unreasonable, Thaddeus. I know they can’t
do that.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, wife, mebbe they’ll come--mebbe
they’ll come this summer; who knows?”</p>
<p>She shook her head dismally.</p>
<p>“You’ve said that ev’ry year for
the last fifteen summers, an’ they hain’t
come yet. Jehiel went West more than twenty years ago,
an’ he’s never been home since. Why, Thaddeus,
we’ve got a grandson ’most eighteen, that
we hain’t even seen! Hannah Jane’s been
home jest once since she was married, but that was
nigh on ter sixteen years ago. She’s always
writin’ of her Tommy and Nellie, but--I want
ter see ’em, Thaddeus; I want ter see ’em!”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes; well, we’ll ask ’em,
Harriet, again--we’ll ask ’em real urgent-like,
an’ mebbe that’ll fetch ’em,”
comforted the old man. “We’ll ask ’em
ter be here the Fourth; that’s eight weeks off
yet, an’ I shall be real smart by then.”</p>
<p>Two letters that were certainly “urgent-like”
left the New England farmhouse the next morning. One
was addressed to a thriving Western city, the other
to Chattanooga, Tennessee.</p>
<p>In course of time the answers came. Hannah Jane’s
appeared first, and was opened with shaking fingers.</p>
<p><i>Dear Mother</i> [read Mrs. Clayton aloud]:
Your letter came two or three days ago, and I have
hurried round to answer it, for you seemed to be so
anxious to hear. I’m real sorry, but I don’t
see how we can get away this summer. Nathan is real
busy at the store; and, some way, I can’t seem
to get up energy enough to even think of fixing up
the children to take them so far. Thank you for the
invitation, though, and we should enjoy the visit
very much; but I guess we can’t go just yet.
Of course if anything serious should come up that made
it necessary-- why, that would be different: but I
know you are sensible, and will understand how it
is with us.</p>
<p>Nathan is well, but business has been pretty brisk,
and he is in the store early and late. As long as
he’s making money, he don’t mind; but I
tell him I think he might rest a little sometimes,
and let some one else do the things he does.</p>
<p>Tom is a big boy now, smart in his studies and with
a good head for figures. Nellie loves her books, too;
and, for a little girl of eleven, does pretty well,
we think.</p>
<p>I must close now. We all send love, and hope you are
getting along all right. Was glad to hear father was
gaining so fast.</p>
<p>Your loving daughter</p>
<p style="font-variant: small-caps; text-align: right">Hannah Jane</p>
<p>The letter dropped from Mrs. Clayton’s fingers
and lay unheeded on the floor. The woman covered her
face with her hands and rocked her body back and forth.</p>
<p>“There, there, dearie,” soothed the old
man huskily; “mebbe Jehiel’s will be diff’rent.
I shouldn’t wonder, now, if Jehiel would come.
There, there! don’t take on so, Harriet! don’t!
I jest know Jehiel’ll come.”</p>
<p>A week later Mrs. Clayton found another letter in
the rural delivery box. She clutched it nervously,
peered at the writing with her dim old eyes, and hurried
into the house for her glasses.</p>
<p>Yes, it was from Jehiel.</p>
<p>She drew a long breath. Her eager thumb was almost
under the flap of the envelope when she hesitated,
eyed the letter uncertainly, and thrust it into the
pocket of her calico gown. All day it lay there, save
at times-- which, indeed, were of frequent occurrence--when
she took it from its hiding-place, pressed it to her
cheek, or gloried in every curve of the boldly written
address.</p>
<p>At night, after the lamp was lighted, she said to
her husband in tones so low he could scarcely hear:</p>
<p>“Thaddeus, I--I had a letter from Jehiel to-day.”</p>
<p>“You did--and never told me? Why, Harriet, what--”
He paused helplessly.</p>
<p>“I--I haven’t read it, Thaddeus,”
she stammered. “I couldn’t bear to, someway.
I don’t know why, but I couldn’t. You read
it!” She held out the letter with shaking hands.</p>
<p>He took it, giving her a sharp glance from anxious
eyes. As he began to read aloud she checked him.</p>
<p>“No; ter yerself, Thaddeus--ter yerself! Then--tell
me.”</p>
<p>As he read she watched his face. The light died from
her eyes and her chin quivered as she saw the stern
lines deepen around his mouth. A minute more, and
he had finished the letter and laid it down without
a word.</p>
<p>“Thaddeus, ye don’t mean--he didn’t
say--”</p>
<p>“Read it--I--I can’t,” choked the
old man.</p>
<p>She reached slowly for the sheet of paper and spread
it on the table before her.</p>
<p><i>Dear Mother</i> [Jehiel had written]: Just
a word to tell you we are all O. K. and doing finely.
Your letter reminded me that it was about time I was
writing home to the old folks. I don’t mean to
let so many weeks go by without a letter from me,
but somehow the time just gets away from me before
I know it.</p>
<p>Minnie is well and deep in spring sewing and house-cleaning.
I know-- because dressmaker’s bills are beginning
to come in, and every time I go home I find a carpet
up in a new place!</p>
<p>Our boy Fred is eighteen to-morrow. You’d be
proud of him, I know, if you could see him. Business
is rushing. Glad to hear you’re all right and
that father’s rheumatism is on the gain.</p>
<p>As ever, your affectionate and dutiful son, JEHIEL</p>
<p>Oh, by the way--about that visit East. I reckon we’ll
have to call it off this year. Too bad; but can’t
seem to see my way clear.</p>
<p>Bye-bye, J.</p>
<p>Harriet Clayton did not cry this time. She stared
at the letter long minutes with wide-open, tearless
eyes, then she slowly folded it and put it back in
its envelope.</p>
<p>“Harriet, mebbe-” began the old man timidly.</p>
<p>“Don’t, Thaddeus--please don’t!”
she interrupted. “I--I don’t want ter
talk.” And she rose unsteadily to her feet and
moved toward the kitchen door.</p>
<p>For a time Mrs. Clayton went about her work in a silence
quite unusual, while her husband watched her with
troubled eyes. His heart grieved over the bowed head
and drooping shoulders, and over the blurred eyes that
were so often surreptitiously wiped on a corner of
the gingham apron. But at the end of a week the little
old woman accosted him with a face full of aggressive
yet anxious determination.</p>
<p>“Thaddeus, I want ter speak ter you about somethin’.
I’ve been thinkin’ it all out, an’
I’ve decided that I’ve got ter kill one
of us off.”</p>
<p>“Harriet!”</p>
<p>“Well, I have. A fun’ral is the only thing
that will fetch Jehiel and--”</p>
<p>“Harriet, are ye gone crazy? Have ye gone clean
mad?”</p>
<p>She looked at him appealingly.</p>
<p>“Now, Thaddeus, don’t try ter hender me,
please. You see it’s the only way. A fun’ral
is the--”</p>
<p>“A ’fun’ral’--it’s murder!”
he shuddered.</p>
<p>“Oh, not ter make believe, as I shall,”
she protested eagerly. “It’s--”</p>
<p>“Make believe!”</p>
<p>“Why, yes, of course. <i>You’ll</i>
have ter be the one ter do it, ‘cause I’m
goin’ ter be the dead one, an’--”</p>
<p>“Harriet!”</p>
<p>“There, there, <i>please,</i> Thaddeus!
I’ve jest got ter see Jehiel and Hannah Jane
’fore I die!”</p>
<p>“But--they--they’ll come if--”</p>
<p>“No, they won’t come. We’ve tried
it over an’ over again; you know we have. Hannah
Jane herself said that if anythin’ ‘serious’
came up it would be diff’rent. Well, I’m
goin’ ter have somethin’ ‘serious’
come up!”</p>
<p>“But, Harriet--”</p>
<p>“Now, Thaddeus,” begged the woman, almost
crying, “you must help me, dear. I’ve
thought it all out, an’ it’s easy as can
be. I shan’t tell any lies, of course. I cut
my finger to-day, didn’t I?”</p>
<p>“Why--yes--I believe so,” he acknowledged
dazedly; “but what has that to do--”</p>
<p>“That’s the ‘accident,’ Thaddeus.
You’re ter send two telegrams at once-- one
ter Jehiel, an’ one ter Hannah Jane. The telegrams
will say: ‘Accident to your mother. Funeral
Saturday afternoon. Come at once.’ That’s
jest ten words.”</p>
<p>The old man gasped. He could not speak.</p>
<p>“Now, that’s all true, ain’t it?”
she asked anxiously. “The ‘accident’
is this cut. The ‘fun’ral’ is old
Mis’ Wentworth’s. I heard ter-day that
they couldn’t have it until Saturday, so that’ll
give us plenty of time ter get the folks here. I needn’t
say whose fun’ral it is that’s goin’
ter be on Saturday, Thaddeus! I want yer ter hitch
up an’ drive over ter Hopkinsville ter send
the telegrams. The man’s new over there, an’
won’t know yer. You couldn’t send ’em
from here, of course.”</p>
<p>Thaddeus Clayton never knew just how he allowed himself
to be persuaded to take his part in this “crazy
scheme,” as he termed it, but persuaded he certainly
was.</p>
<p>It was a miserable time for Thaddeus then. First there
was that hurried drive to Hopkinsville. Though the
day was warm he fairly shivered as he handed those
two fateful telegrams to the man behind the counter.
Then there was the homeward trip, during which, like
the guilty thing he was, he cast furtive glances from
side to side.</p>
<p>Even home itself came to be a misery, for the sweeping
and the dusting and the baking and the brewing which
he encountered there left him no place to call his
own, so that he lost his patience at last and moaned:</p>
<p>“Seems ter me, Harriet, you’re a pretty
lively corpse!”</p>
<p>His wife smiled, and flushed a little.</p>
<p>“There, there, dear! don’t fret. Jest
think how glad we’ll be ter see ’em!”
she exclaimed.</p>
<p>Harriet was blissfully happy. Both the children had
promptly responded to the telegrams, and were now
on their way. Hannah Jane, with her husband and two
children, were expected on Friday evening; but Jehiel
and his wife and boy could not possibly get in until
early on the following morning.</p>
<p>All this brought scant joy to Thaddeus. There was
always hanging over him the dread horror of what he
had done, and the fearful questioning as to how it
was all going to end.</p>
<p>Friday came, but a telegram at the last moment told
of trains delayed and connections missed. Hannah Jane
would not reach home until nine-forty the next morning.
So it was with a four-seated carryall that Thaddeus
Clayton started for the station on Saturday morning
to meet both of his children and their families.</p>
<p>The ride home was a silent one; but once inside the
house, Jehiel and Hannah Jane, amid a storm of sobs
and cries, besieged their father with questions.</p>
<p>The family were all in the darkened sitting-room--all,
indeed, save Harriet, who sat in solitary state in
the chamber above, her face pale and her heart beating
almost to suffocation. It had been arranged that she
was not to be seen until some sort of explanation had
been given.</p>
<p>“Father, what was it?” sobbed Hannah Jane.
“How did it happen?”</p>
<p>“It must have been so sudden,” faltered
Jehiel. “It cut me up completely.”</p>
<p>“I can’t ever forgive myself,” moaned
Hannah Jane hysterically. “She wanted us to
come East, and I wouldn’t. ’Twas my selfishness--’twas
easier to stay where I was; and now--now--”</p>
<p>“We’ve been brutes, father,” cut
in Jehiel, with a shake in his voice; “all of
us. I never thought--I never dreamed-father, can--can
we see-- her?”</p>
<p>In the chamber above a woman sprang to her feet. Harriet
had quite forgotten the stove-pipe hole to the room
below, and every sob and moan and wailing cry had
been woefully distinct to her ears. With streaming
eyes and quivering lips she hurried down the stairs
and threw open the sitting-room door.</p>
<p>“Jehiel! Hannah Jane! I’m here, right
here--alive!” she cried. “An’ I’ve
been a wicked, wicked woman! I never thought how bad
‘twas goin’ ter make <i>you</i> feel.
I truly never, never did. ’Twas only myself--I
wanted yer so. Oh, children, children, I’ve been
so wicked--so awful wicked!”</p>
<p>Jehiel and Hannah Jane were steady of head and strong
of heartland joy, it is said, never kills; otherwise,
the results of that sudden apparition in the sitting-room
doorway might have been disastrous.</p>
<p>As it was, a wonderfully happy family party gathered
around the table an hour later; and as Jehiel led
a tremulous, gray-haired woman to the seat of honor,
he looked into her shining eyes and whispered:</p>
<p>“Dear old mumsey, now that we’ve found
the way home again, I reckon we’ll be coming
every year--don’t you?”</p>
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