“Herman,” wrote Hattie Tolliver, “looked a gawk, with his freckles, and May was too fat for her dress. It was cut princess fashion and trimmed with duchess lace. She carried a shower bouquet of white roses and sweet peas. Herman’s trousers bagged at the knees. At least this is what Cousin Eva Barr, who went to the wedding, told me. I wasn’t invited. They say that the Setons have been living on cold hash ever since.
“They went to French Lick Springs on their honeymoon and now Herman is back at the factory learning the corset business.”
Miss Ogilvie had not been well lately and Aunt Julia was becoming more and more eccentric. She had shut up all but one great room at Shane’s Castle and would see no one but the Doctor and Hattie Tolliver. “I go to see her three times a week. She needs some one to take hold of that great house. There’s no one else, so I do it. Miss Ogilvie comes in to sit with Pa while I’m gone. She’s given up some of her pupils. She says she finds she can’t do as much as she once could.
“Your father is doing well at the bank and I’ve managed to lay aside quite a sum after the debts were paid. We’ll need it to send Fergus to school. I’ve sold the rings that Aunt Julia gave me and we’re now on the prosperous side of things once more. If your father had only listened to me, we’d have been rich to-day, but he always said he knew best, and he trusted people too much. Before long we’ll have enough to come East. I want to be with my children.”
Then there were inquiries after her health and Clarence’s welfare and endless cautions and advice concerning the management of the flat, for distance made little difference to Hattie Tolliver when it concerned the interests of some one she loved. It was as if she ran Ellen’s household as well. In one letter she was even bold enough to ask whether there was any hope of her becoming a grandmother.
Each of these letters, though it bore a great similarity to all the others, was in a sense an epic. They recorded in sentences vigorously written and crowded with a host of details, the daily history of a community. They were fiercely personal and colored by the prejudices of Hattie Tolliver. In her enemies there was nothing good and in those she loved best nothing bad. Her world was one of a savage intensity, painted like Skinflint Seton’s entirely in blacks and whites.
She inquired frequently whether Clarence would be coming West, insisting that he must stop and see them in the Town and tell them all the news. And the credulous woman was put off with the story that Clarence had given up traveling and would not be in the West again for a long time. It was a lie that Ellen invented to protect him, since he was too timid ever to risk meeting any one who might recognize him as spiritual ravisher of Mrs. Herman Biggs (née May Seton).
And at length there came a letter containing the news that Grandpa Barr had died.
“He passed away,” wrote Mrs. Tolliver, “quietly. I was in the room and he was just lying there looking at the ceiling and singing an old song that he used to sing when Ma was still alive and I was a little girl. They used to sing it as a duet. ‘I will find my rest in the eagle’s nest,’ it was called, and they sang it in the long summer evenings when all the chores were done and they sat out under the trees. I can remember it well. He was humming this when suddenly he tried to sit up, and said, ‘Why, Ma.... There you are, come to meet me.... I’m coming to you.... In just a minute, as soon as I get the little red cow in from the field by the cairn.’ And then he lay back and died without another word. (It was indeed a long way from Grandpa Barr, dead now, with his memories of the frontier, to Thérèse Callendar and her carved emerald saved from the sack of Constantinople.)
“It was a good thing because he wanted to die for so long. It was hard on a man like that who had always been so active. He was like a little child. For a long time he hadn’t said anything sensible. I did everything for him and I don’t regret it. It was hard sometimes with so much else to worry me and take up my time.