The Black Creek Stopping-House eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 162 pages of information about The Black Creek Stopping-House.

The Black Creek Stopping-House eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 162 pages of information about The Black Creek Stopping-House.

Mrs. Corbett could talk and work at the same time, her sudden disappearances from the room as she replenished the table merely serving as punctuation marks, and not interfering with the thread of the story at all.

When she was compelled by the exigencies of the case to be present in the kitchen, and therefore absent in the dining-room, she merely elevated her voice to overcome distance, and dropped no stitch in the conversation.

“New neighbor, is it, you are sayin’, Tom?  ’Deed and I have, and her the purtiest little trick you ever saw—­diamond rings on her, and silk skirts, and plumes on her hat, and hair as yalla as gold.”

“When she comes over here I can’t be doin’ my work for lookin’ at her.  She was brought up with slathers of money.”  This came back from the “cheek of the dure”, where Mrs. Corbett was emptying the tea leaves from the teapot.  “But the old man, beyant, ain’t been pleased with her since she married this Fred chap—­he wouldn’t ever look at Fred, nor let him come to the house, and so she ran away with him, and no one could blame her either for that, and now her and the old man don’t write at all, at all—­reach me the bread plate in front of you there, Jim—­and there’s bad blood between them.  I can see, though, her and the old man are fond o’ one another!”

“Is her man anything like the twin pirates?” asked Sam Moggey from Oak Creek; “because if he is I don’t blame the old man for being mad about it.”  Sam was helping himself to another quarter of vinegar pie as he spoke.

Mrs. Corbett could not reply for a minute, for she was putting a new bandage on Jimmy MacCaulay’s finger, and she had the needle and thread in her mouth.

“Not a bit like them, Sam,” she said, as soon as she had the bandage in place, and as she put in quick stitches; “no more like them than day is like night—­he’s only a half-brother, and a lot younger.  He’s a different sort altogether from them two murderin’ villains that sits in the house all day playin’ cards.  He’s a good, smart fellow, and has done a lot of breakin’ and cleanin’ up since he came.  What he thinks of the other two lads I don’t know—­she never says, but I’d like fine to know.”

“Sure, you’ll soon know then, Maggie,” said “Da” Corbett, bringing in another platter of bacon and eggs and refilling the men’s plates.  “Don’t worry.”

In the laugh that followed Maggie Corbett joined as heartily as any of them.

“Go ’long with you, Da!” she cried; “sure you’re just as anxious as I am to know.  We all think a lot of Fred and Mrs. Fred,” she went on, bringing in two big dishes of potatoes; “and if you could see that poor, precious lamb trying to cook pork and beans with a little wisp of an apron on, all lace and ribbons, and big diamonds on her fingers, you’d be sorry for her, and you’d say, ’What kind of an old tyrant is the old man down beyant, and why don’t he take her and Fred back?’ It’s not wrastlin’ round black pots she should be, and she’s never been any place all summer only over here, for they’ve only the oxen, and altho’ she never says anything, I’ll bet you she’d like a bit of a drive, or to get out to some kind of a-doin’s, or the like of that.”

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The Black Creek Stopping-House from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.