The Wrong Twin eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Wrong Twin.

The Wrong Twin eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Wrong Twin.

“The officers of the law might trace me by it,” she said, “so we must foil them.”

“Tie a stone to it and sink it in the river,” urged Wilbur.

“Hide it in those bushes,” suggested Merle.

But the girl was inspired by her surroundings.

“Bury it!” she ordered.

The simple interment was performed.  With the knife a shallow grave was opened close to the stone whereon old Jonas Whipple taunted the living that they were but mortal, and in it they laid the pigtail to its last rest, patting the earth above it and replacing the turf against possible ghouls.

Again the girl swaggered broadly before them, swinging her shoulders, flaunting her emancipated legs in a stride she considered masculine.  Then she halted, hands in pockets, rocked easily upon heel and toe, and spat expertly between her teeth.  For the first time she impressed the Wilbur twin, extorting his reluctant admiration.  He had never been able to spit between his teeth.  Still, there must be things she couldn’t do.

“You got to smoke and chew and curse,” he warned her.

“I won’t, either!  It says Ben Blunt was a sturdy lad of good habits.  Besides, I could smoke if I wanted to.  I already have.  I smoked Harvey D.’s pipe.”

“Who’s Harvey D.?”

“My father.  I smoked his pipe repeatedly.”

“Repeatedly?”

“Well, I smoked it twice.  That’s repeatedly, ain’t it?  I’d have done it more repeatedly, but Miss Murtree sneaked in and made a scene.”

“Did you swallow the smoke through your nose?”

“I—­I guess so.  It tasted way down on my insides.”

Plainly there was something to the girl after all.  The Wilbur twin here extracted from the dress pocket, to which he had transferred his few belongings, the half of something known to Newbern as a pennygrab.  It was a slender roll of quite inferior dark tobacco, and the original purchaser had probably discarded it gladly.  The present owner displayed it to the girl.

“I’ll give you a part of this, and we’ll light up.”

“Well, I don’t know.  It says Ben Blunt was a sturdy lad of good——­”

“I bet you never did smoke repeatedly!”

Her manhood was challenged.

“I’ll show you!” she retorted, grim about the lips.

With his knife he cut the evil thing in fair halves.  The girl received her portion with calmness, if not with gratitude, and lighted it from the match he gallantly held for her.  And so they smoked.  The Merle twin never smoked for two famous Puritan reasons—­it was wrong for boys to smoke and it made him sick.  He eyed the present saturnalia with strong disapproval.  The admiration of the Wilbur twin—­now forgetting his ignominy—­was frankly worded.  Plainly she was no common girl.

“I bet you’ll be all right in the big city,” he said.

“Of course I will,” said the girl.

She spat between her teeth with a fine artistry.  In truth she was spitting rather often, and had more than once seemed to strangle, but she held her weed jauntily between the first and second fingers and contrived an air of relish for it.

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Project Gutenberg
The Wrong Twin from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.