Old Lady Number 31 | Page 3

Louise Forsslund
at this last home meal. She herself had never
believed in buttering bread when there was "sass" to eat with it; but
Abe's extravagant tastes had always carried him to the point of desiring
both butter and sauce as a relish to his loaf.
"Naow, fur 's I'm concerned," pursued Abe, "I hain't got nothin' agin the
poorhouse fer neither man ner woman. I'd as lief let yew go thar 'stid o'
me; fer I know very well that's what yew're a-layin' out fer ter do. Yes,
yes, Mother, yew can't fool me. But think what folks would say! Think
what they would say! They 'd crow, 'Thar's Abe a-takin' his comfort in
the Old Men's Hum, an' Angeline, she's a-eatin' her heart out in the
poorhouse!'"
Angeline had, indeed, determined to be the one to go to the poorhouse;
but all her life long she had cared, perhaps to a faulty degree, for "what
folks would say." Above all, she cared now for what they had said and
what they still might say about her husband and this final ending to his
down-hill road. She rested her two hands on the table and looked hard
at the apple-sauce until it danced before her eyes. She could not think
with any degree of clearness. Vaguely she wondered if their supper
would dance out of sight before they could sit down to eat it. So many
of the good things of life had vanished ere she and Abe could touch
their lips to them. Then she felt his shaking hand upon her shoulder and
heard him mutter with husky tenderness:
"My dear, this is the fust chance since we've been married that I've had
to take the wust of it. Don't say a word agin it naow, Mother, don't yer.
I've brought yer ter this pass. Lemme bear the brunt o' it."
Ah, the greatest good of all had not vanished, and that was the love
they bore one to the other. The sunshine came flooding back into
Mother's heart. She lifted her face, beautiful, rosy, eternally young.
This was the man for whom she had gladly risked want and poverty,
the displeasure of her own people, almost half a century ago. Now at
last she could point him out to all her little world and say, "See, he

gives me the red side of the apple!" She lifted her eyes, two bright
sapphires swimming with the diamond dew of unshed, happy tears.
"I'm a-thinkin', Father," she twittered, "that naow me an' yew be
a-gwine so fur apart, we be a-gittin' closer tergether in sperit than we
've ever been afore."
Abe bent down stiffly to brush her cheek with his rough beard, and then,
awkward, as when a boy of sixteen he had first kissed her, shy,
ashamed at this approach to a return of the old-time love-making, he
seated himself at the small, bare table.
This warped, hill-and-dale table of the drop-leaves, which had been
brought from the attic only to-day after resting there for ten years, had
served as their first dining-table when the honeymoon was young. Abe
thoughtfully drummed his hand on the board, and as Angy brought the
tea-pot and sat down opposite him, he recalled:
"We had bread an' tea an' apple-sass the day we set up housekeeping
dew yew remember, Angy?"
"An' I burned the apple-sass," she supplemented, whereupon Abe
chuckled, and Angy went on with a thrill of genuine gladness over the
fact that he remembered the details of that long-ago honeymoon as well
as she: "Yew don't mind havin' no butter to-night, dew yer, Father?"
He recalled how he had said to her at that first simple home meal:
"Yew don't mind bein' poor with me, dew yer, Angy?" Now, with a
silent shake of his head, he stared at her, wondering how it would seem
to eat at table when her face no longer looked at him across the board,
to sleep at night when her faithful hand no longer lay within reach of
his own. She lifted her teacup, he lifted his, the two gazing at each
other over the brims, both half-distressed, half-comforted by the fact
that Love still remained their toast-master after the passing of all the
years. Of a sudden Angy exclaimed, "We fergot ter say grace."
Shocked and contrite, they covered their eyes with their trembling old
hands and murmured together, "Dear Lord, we thank Thee this day for
our daily bread."

Angy opened her eyes to find the red roses cheerfully facing her from
the back of the rocking-chair. A robin had hopped upon the window-sill
just outside the patched and rusty screen and was joyfully caroling to
her his views of life. Through the window vines in which the bird was
almost meshed the sunlight sifted
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 44
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.