登陆注册
26255900000023

第23章 UP THE COULEE A STORY OF WISCONSIN(9)

"The poet who writes of milking the cows does it from the hammock, looking on," Howard soliloquized as he watched the old man Lewis racing around the filthy yard after one of the young heifers that had kicked over the pail in her agony with the flies and was unwilling to stand still and be eaten alive.

"So, so! you beast!" roared the old man as he finally cornered the shrinking, nearly frantic creature.

"Don't you want to look at the garden?" asked Mrs. McLane of Howard; and they went out among the vegetables and berries.

The bees were coming home heavily laden and crawling slowly into the hives. The level, red light streamed through the trees, blazed along the grass, and lighted a few old-fashioned flowers into red ai~d gold flame. It was beautiful, and Howard looked at it through his half-shut eyes as the painters do, and turned away with a sigh at the sound of blows where the wet and grimy men were assailing the frantic cows.

"There's Wesley with your trunk," Mrs. McLane said, recalling him to himself.

Wesley helped him carry the trunk in and waved off thanks.

"Oh, that's all right," he said; and Howard knew the Western man too well to press the matter of pay.

As he went in an hour later and stood by the trunk, the dull ache came back into his heart. How he had failed! It seemed like a bitter mockery now to show his gifts.

Grant had come in from his work, and with his feet released from his chafing boots, in his wet shirt and milk-splashed overalls, sat at the kitchen table reading a newspaper which he held close to a small kerosene lamp. He paid no attention to anyone. His attitude, Curiously like his father's, was perfectly definite to Howard. It meant that from that time forward there were to be no words of any sort between them. It meant that they were no longer brothers, not even acquaintances. "How inexorable that face!" thought Howard.

He turned sick with disgust and despair, and would have closed his trunk without showing any of the presents, only for the childish expectancy of his mother and Laura.

"Here's something for you, Mother," he said, assuming a cheerful voice as he took a fold of fine silk from the trunk and held it up.

"All the way from Paris."

He laid it on his mother's lap and stooped and kissed her, and then turned hastily away to hide the tears that came to his own eyes as he saw her keen pleasure.

"And here's a parasol for Laura. I don't know how I came to have that in here. And here's General Grant's autobiography for his namesake," he said with an effort at carelessness, and waited to hear Grant rise.

"Grant, won't you come in?" asked his mother quiveringly.

Grant did not reply nor move. Laura took the handsome volumes out and laid them beside him on the table. He simply pushed them to one side and went on with his reading.

Again that horrible anger swept hot as flame over Howard. He could have cursed him. His hands shook as he handed out other presents to his mother and Laura and the baby. He tried to joke.

"I didn't know how old the baby was, so she'll have to grow to some of these things."

But the pleasure was all gone for him and for the rest. His heart swelled almost to a feeling of pain as he looked at his mother.

There she sat with the presents in her lap. The shining silk came too late for her. It threw into appalling relief her age, her poverty, her work-weary frame. "My God!" he almost cried aloud, "how little it would have taken to lighten her life!"

Upon this moment, when it seemed as if he could endure no more, came the smooth voice of William McTurg:

"Hello, folkses!"

"Hello, Uncle Bill! Come in."

"That's what we came for," laughed a woman's voice.

"Is that you, Rose?" asked Laura.

"It's me-Rose," replied the laughing girl as she bounced into the room and greeted everybody in a breathless sort of way.

"You don't mean little Rosy?"

"Big Rosy now," said William.

Howard looked at the handsome girl and smiled, saying in a nasal sort of tone, "Wal, wal! Rosy, how you've growed since I saw yeh!"

"Oh, look at all this purple and fine linen! Am I left out?"

Rose was a large girl of twenty-five or thereabouts, and was called an old maid. She radiated good nature from every line of her buxom self. Her black eyes were full of drollery, and she was on the best of terms with Howard at once. She had been a teacher, but that did not prevent her from assuming a peculiar directness of speech. Of course they talked about old friends.

"Where's Rachel?" Howard inquired. Her smile faded away.

"Shellie married Orrin Mcllvaine. They're way out in Dakota.

Shellie's havin' a hard row of stumps."

There was a little silence.

"And Tommy?"

"Gone West. Most all the boys have gone West. That's the reason there's so many old maids."

"You don't mean to say-"

"I don't need to say-I'm an old maid. Lots of the girls are."

"It don't pay to marry these days."

"Are you married?"

"Not yet." His eyes lighted up again in a humorous way.

"Not yet! That's good! That's the way old maids all talk."

"You don't mean to tell me that no young fellow comes prowling around-"

"Oh, a young Dutchrnan or Norwegian once in a while. Nobody that counts. Fact is, we're getting like Boston-four women to one man; and when you consider that we're getting more particular each year, the outlook is-well, it's dreadful!"

"It certainly is."

"Marriage is a failure these days for most of us. We can't live on the farm, and can't get a living in the city, and there we are." She laid her hand on his arm. "I declare, Howard, you're the same boy you used to be. I ain't a bit afraid of you, for all your success."

"And you're the same girl? No, I can't say that. It seems to me you've grown more than I have-I don't mean physically, I mean mentally," he explained as he saw her smile in the defensive way a fleshy girl has, alert to ward off a joke.

They were in the midst of talk, Howard telling one of his funny stories, when a wagon clattered up to the door and merry voices called loudly:

"Whoa, there, Sampson!"

"Hullo, the house!"

Rose looked at her father with a smile in her black eyes exactly like his. They went to the door.

"Hullo! What's wanted?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 他给的梦幻天堂

    他给的梦幻天堂

    我永远记得那年,他双手怀胸,居高临下的望着我说:“伊一,你还知道回家?!”虽然语气很差,但是我却能感觉到他的担心,他强装冷静的面容。这些都使我映像深刻,无法忘怀!“艾熙然,遇到你到底是我的有幸还是不幸?”“艾熙然,我舍不得从来没有遇到过你?”
  • 锋烟

    锋烟

    丹朱笔墨绘就的壮丽山河,残存着红色的彩,从战国延续下来的硝烟,春风吹过又生,这痛彻的时代,是最绚烂的时代,乱世英雄,佳人飘摇,弹一曲琵笆,手一盘国道,来这世上走一遭。
  • 异界中的游戏

    异界中的游戏

    一个平凡又阳光的少年在放学回家后迷迷糊糊的打开电脑之后令他没想到的是自己有一天居然会有像电视上拥有超能力。在虚拟游戏中吸血鬼,僵尸,幽魂等逐个被他消灭。。。。。。惊心又恐怖的旅程开始了。
  • 萌宝1加1:帝少宠妻无下限

    萌宝1加1:帝少宠妻无下限

    组织出现叛徒,她悲催的被下药了,阴差阳错的他替她解了毒,而她把人家吃干抹净就逃了。他发誓,就算是掘地三尺也要把这个女人找出来。九年后,她带着俩天才宝贝再次闯入他的生活,笑得非常妖娆。某宝:“妈咪快跑!前方爹地出没!”秘书:“BOSS,小姐刚刚砸了你的三辆车。”某男认真的工作:“再送三辆给她砸。”秘书:“BOSS,小姐刚刚炸了你的公寓。”某男继续认真工作:“帮她炸。”他宠她根本就是捧在手心里。突然有一天,某男失忆了?这是什么老梗?神马!还要和别的女人结婚?!某女立即拍板,走!盛装出席,抢婚去!
  • 终极武皇

    终极武皇

    “我爱美女。”“谁敢在我面前狂妄,我让他吃不了兜着走。”这是少年的座右铭。少年传承了千古武皇的记忆,从此崛起,有美女相伴,有高强的功法武技,傲视群雄。佛挡杀佛神挡杀神的热血人生,从少年脚下一步步展开……一个字,爽!
  • 妖玄

    妖玄

    柳轩对自己的生活很满足……门中人丁虽少,但是其乐融融。师父、师姐、师兄们都对自己照顾有加……十八岁最大的期待就是修行有成下山行走……
  • 诛神本纪

    诛神本纪

    三千世界传道者数千太古至今正邪不两立众神位面邪神私生之子刑决遗落凡位面,举鼎绝膑,仍心怀大志,手执嗜血邪剑撞破三千小世界逆反五百大世界踏入众神位面,成就帝尊武神命运坎坷便可放弃?
  • 七色彩瞳

    七色彩瞳

    一个男生和六位女生的眼睛瞳孔的颜色和正常人不相同,7位主角的超能力!
  • 亡之审判者

    亡之审判者

    死后的世界是什么样子,是去天堂还是地狱?人死后是否能重生……
  • 拳意述真

    拳意述真

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。