BOYS TOGETHER - CHAPTER VIII.
When Caesar came in after seeing Philip
to the door, he said, “Not a word of this to
the girl. You that are women are like pigs we’ve
got to pull the way we don’t want you.”
On that Kate herself came in, blushing
a good deal, and fussing about with great vigour.
“Are you talking of the piggies, father?”
she said artfully. “How tiresome they are,
to be sure! They came out into the yard when
the moon rose and I had such work to get them back.”
Caesar snorted a little, and gave
the signal for bed. “Fairies indeed!”
he said, in a tone of vast contempt, going to the corner
to wind the clock. “Just wakeness of faith,”
he said over the clank of the chain as the weights
rose; “and no trust in God neither,” he
added, and then the clock struck ten.
Grannie had lit two candles one
for herself and her husband, the other for Nancy Joe.
Nancy had slyly filled three earthenware crocks with
water from the well, and had set them on the table,
mumbling something about the kettle and the morning.
And Caesar himself, pretending not to see anything,
and muttering dark words about waste, went from the
clock to the hearth, and raked out the hot ashes to
a flat surface, on which you might have laid a girdle
for baking cakes.
“Good-night, Nancy,” called
Grannie, from half-way up the stairs, and Caesar,
with his head down, followed grumbling. Nancy
went off next, and then Kate was left alone.
She had to put out the lamp and wait for her father’s
candle.
When the lamp was gone the girl was
in the dark, save for the dim light of the smouldering
fire. She began to tremble and to laugh in a whisper.
Her eyes danced in the red glow of the dying turf.
She slipped off her shoes and went to a closet in
the wall. There she picked an apple out of a
barrel, and brought it to the fire and roasted it.
Then, down on her knees before the hearth, she took
took two pinches of the apple and swallowed them.
After that and a little shudder she rose again, and
turned about to go to bed, backwards, slowly, tremblingly,
with measured steps, feeling her way past the furniture,
having a shock when she touched anything, and laughing
to herself, nervously, when she remembered what it
was.
At the door of her father’s
room and Grannie’s she called, with a quaver
in her voice, and a sleepy grunt came out to her.
She reached one hand through the door, which was ajar,
and took the burning candle. Then she blew out
the light with a trembling puff, that had to be twice
repeated, and made for her own bedroom, still going
backwards.
It was a sweet little chamber over
the dairy, smelling of new milk and ripe apples, and
very dainty in dimity and muslin. Two tiny windows
looked out from it, one on to the stable-yard and the
other on to the orchard. The late moon came through
the orchard window, over the heads of the dwarf trees,
and the little white place was lit up from the floor
to the sloping thatch.
Kate went backwards as far as to the
bed, and sat down on it She fancied she heard a step
in the yard, but the yard window was at her back, and
she would not look behind. She listened, but heard
nothing more except a see-sawing noise from the stable,
where the mare was running her rope in the manger
ring. Nothing but this and the cheep-cheep of
a mouse that was gnawing the wood somewhere in the
floor.
“Will he come?” she asked herself.
She rose and loosened her gown, and as it fell to
her feet she laughed.
“Which will it be, I wonder which?”
she whispered.
The moonlight had crept up to the
foot of the bed, and now lay on it like a broad blue
sword speckled as with rust by the patchwork counterpane.
She freed her hair from its red ribbon,
and it fell in a shower about her face. All around
her seemed hushed and awful. She shuddered again,
and with a back ward hand drew down the sheets.
Then she took a long, deep breath, like a sigh that
is half a smile, and lay down to sleep.