“Hain't seed you for some time, Will,” remarked Mr. Bixby; “goin' over to the exercises? We'll move along that way,” and he thrust his hand under Mr. Wetherell's elbow. “Whar's Jethro?”
“He's here somewhere,” answered the storekeeper, helplessly, moving along in spite of himself.
“Keepin' out of sight, you understand,” said Bijah, with a knowing wink, as much as to say that Mr. Wetherell was by this time a past master in Jethro tactics. Mr. Bixby could never disabuse his mind of a certain interpretation which he put on the storekeeper's intimacy with Jethro. “You done well to git in with him, Will. Didn't think you had it in you when I first looked you over.”
Mr. Wetherell wished to make an indignant denial, but he didn't know exactly how to begin.
“Smartest man in the United States of America—guess you know that,” Mr. Bixby continued amiably. “They can't git at him unless he wants 'em to. There's a railroad president at Isaac Worthington's who'd like to git at him to-day,—guess you know that,—Steve Merrill.”
Mr. Wetherell didn't know, but he was given no time to say so.
“Steve Merrill, of the Grand Gulf and Northern. He hain't here to see Worthington; he's here to see Jethro, when Jethro's a mind to. Guess you understand.”
“I know nothing about it,” answered Wetherell, shortly. Mr. Bixby gave him a look of infinite admiration, as though he could not have pursued any more admirable line.
“I know Steve Merrill better'n I know you,” said Mr. Bixby, “and he knows me. Whenever he sees me at the state capital he says, 'How be you, Bije?' just as natural as if I was a railroad president, and slaps me on the back. When be you goin' to the capital, Will? You'd ought to come down and be thar with the boys on this Truro Bill. You could reach some on 'em the rest of us couldn't git at.”
William Wetherell avoided a reply to this very pointed inquiry by escaping into the meeting-house, where he found Jethro and Cynthia and Ephraim already seated halfway up the aisle.