"
THE CANOPY BED
"My great-grandfather slept in it," Van Alen told the caretaker, as she
ushered him into the big stuffy bedroom.
The old woman set her candlestick down on the quaint dresser. "He must
have been a little man," she said; "none of my sons could sleep in it.
Their feet would hang over."
Van Alen eyed the big bed curiously. All his life he had heard of it,
and now he had traveled far to see it. It was a lumbering structure of
great width and of strangely disproportionate length. And the coverlet
and the canopy were of rose-colored chintz.
"I think I shall fit it," he said slowly.
Mrs. Brand's critical glance weighed his smallness, his immaculateness,
his difference from her own great sons.
"Yes," she said, with the open rudeness of the country-bred; "yes, you
ain't very big."
Van Alen winced. Even from the lips of this uncouth woman the truth
struck hard. But he carried the topic forward with the light ease of a
man of the world.
"My grandfather had the bed sawed to his own length," he explained; "did
you ever hear the story?"
"No," she said; "I ain't been here long.
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