I
The slope in front of old Mosey’s
cabin was a mass of purple lupine. Behind the
house the wild oats were dotted with brodiaea, waving
on long, glistening stems. The California lilac
was in bloom on the trail, and its clumps of pale
blossoms were like breaks in the chaparral, showing
the blue sky beyond.
In the corral between the house and
the mountain-side stood a dozen or more burros, wearing
that air of patient resignation common to very good
women and very obstinate beasts. Old Mosey himself
was pottering about the corral, feeding his stock.
He stooped now and then with the unwillingness of
years, and erected himself by slow, rheumatic stages.
The donkeys crowded about the fence as he approached
with a forkful of alfalfa hay, and he pushed them
about with the flat of the prongs, calling them by
queer, inappropriate names.
A young man in blue overalls came
around the corner of the house, swinging a newly trimmed
manzanita stick.
“Hello, Mosey!” he called.
“Here I am again, as hungry as a coyote.
What’s the lay-out? Cottontail on toast
and patty de foy grass?”
The old man grinned, showing his worn, yellow teeth.
“I’ll be there in a minute,” he
said. “Just set down on the step.”
The young fellow came toward the corral.
“I’ve got a job on the
trail,” he said. “I’m going
down-town for my traps. Who named ’em for
you?” he questioned, as the old man swore softly
at the Democratic candidate for President.
“Oh, the women, mostly.
They take a lot of interest in ’em when they
start out; they’re afraid I ain’t good
to them. They don’t say so much about it
when they get back.”
“They’re too tired, I suppose.”
“Yes, I s’pose so.”
“You let out five this morning,
didn’t you? I met them on my way down.
The girl in bloomers seemed to be scared; she gave
a little screech every few minutes. The others
didn’t appear to mind.”
“Oh, she wasn’t afraid.
Women don’t make a noise when they’re scared;
it’s only when they want to scare somebody else.”
The young fellow leaned against the
fence and laughed, with a final whoop. A gray
donkey investigated his hip pocket, and he reached
back and prodded the intruder with his stick.
“You seem to be up on the woman
question, Mosey. It’s queer you ain’t
married.”
The old man was lifting a boulder
to hold down a broken bale of hay, and made no reply.
His visitor started toward the cabin. The old
man adjusted another boulder and trotted after his
guest, brushing the hay from his flannel shirt.
A column of blue-white smoke arose from the rusty
stovepipe in the cabin roof, and the smell of overdone
coffee drifted out upon the spiced air.
“I was just about settin’
down,” said the host, placing another plate
and cup and saucer on the blackened redwood table.
“I’ll fry you some more bacon and eggs.”
The visitor watched him as he hurried
about with the short, uncertain steps of hospitable
old age.
“By gum, Mosey, I’d marry
a grass-widow with a second-hand family before I’d
do my own cooking.”
The young fellow gave a self-conscious
laugh that made the old man glance at him from under
his weather-beaten straw hat.
“Your mind seems to run on marryin’,”
he said; “guess you’re hungry. Set
up and have some breakfast.”
The visitor drew up a wooden chair,
and the old man poured two cups of black coffee from
the smoke-begrimed coffee-pot and returned it to the
stove. Then he took off his hat and seated himself
opposite his guest. The latter stirred three
heaping teaspoonfuls of sugar into his cup, muddied
the resulting syrup with condensed milk, and drank
it with the relish of abnormal health.
“I tell you what, Mosey,”
he said, reaching for a slice of bacon and dripping
the grease across the table, “there ain’t
any flies on the women when it comes to housekeeping.
Now, a woman would turn on the soapsuds and float
you clean out of this house; then she’d mop up,
and put scalloped noospapers on all the shelves, and
little white aprons on the windows, and pillow-shams
on your bunk, and she’d work a doily for you
to lay your six-shooter on, with ‘God bless our
home’ in the corner of it; and she’d make
you so comfortable you wouldn’t know what to
do with yourself.”
“I’m comfortable enough
by myself,” said the old man uneasily. “When
you work for yourself, you know who’s boss.”
“Naw, you don’t, Mosey,
not by a long shot; you don’t know whether you’re
boss or the cookin’. I tried bachin’
once” the speaker made a grimace
of reminiscent disgust; “the taste hasn’t
gone out of my mouth yet. You’re a pretty
fair cook, Mosey, but you’d ought to see my girl’s
biscuits; she makes ’em so light she has to put
a napkin over ’em to keep ’em from floating
around like feathers. Fact!” He reached
over and speared a slice of bread with his fork.
“If I keep this job on the trail, maybe you’ll
have a chance to sample them biscuits. I’m
goin’ to send East for that girl.”
“Where you goin’ to live?”
“Well, I didn’t know but
we could rent this ranch and board you, Mosey.
Seems to me you ought to retire. It ain’t
human to live this way. If you was to die here
all by yourself, you’d regret it. Well,
I must toddle.”
The visitor stood a moment on the
step, sweeping the valley with his fresh young glance;
then he set his hat on the back of his head and went
whistling down the road, waving his stick at old Mosey
as he disappeared among the sycamores in the wash.
The old man gathered the dishes into a rusty pan,
and scalded them with boiling water from the kettle.
“I believe I’ll do it,”
he said, as he fished the hot saucers out by their
edges and turned them down on the table; “it
can’t do no harm to write to her, no way.”
II
Mrs. Moxom put on her slat sunbonnet,
took a tin pan from the pantry shelf, and hurried
across the kitchen toward the door. Her daughter-in-law
looked up from the corner where she was kneading bread.
She was a short, plump woman, and all of her convexities
seemed emphasized by flour. She put up the back
of her hand to adjust a loosened lock of hair, and
added another high light to her forehead.
“Where you going, mother?” she called
anxiously.
The old woman did not turn her head.
“Oh, just out to see how the
lettuce is coming on. I had a notion I’d
like some for dinner, wilted with ham gravy.”
“Can’t one of the children get it?”
There was no response. Mrs. Weaver turned back
to her bread.
“Your grandmother seems kind
of fidgety this morning,” she fretted to her
eldest daughter, who was decorating the cupboard shelves
with tissue paper of an enervating magenta hue, and
indulging at intervals in vocal reminiscences of a
ship that never returned.
“Oh, well, mother,” said
that young person comfortably, “let her alone.
I think we all tag her too much. I hate to be
tagged myself.”
“Well, I’m sure I don’t
want to tag her, Ethel; I just don’t want her
to overdo.”
Mrs. Weaver spoke in a tone of mingled
injury and self-justification.
“Oh, well, mother, she isn’t
likely to put her shoulder out of joint pulling a
few heads of lettuce.”
The girl broke out again into cheerful
interrogations concerning the disaster at sea:
“Did she never_r_ re_tur_ren?
No, she never_r_ re_tur_rened.”
Mrs. Weaver gave a little sigh, as
if she feared her daughter’s words might prove
prophetic, and buried her plump fists in the puffy
dough.
Old Mrs. Moxom turned when she reached
the garden gate and glanced back at the house.
Then she clasped the pan to her breast and skurried
along the fence toward the orchard. Once under
the trees, she did not look behind her, but went rapidly
toward the field where she knew her son was plowing.
The reflection of the sun on the tin pan made him look
up, and when he saw her he stopped his team.
She came across the soft brown furrows to his side.
“I’d have come to the
fence when I saw you, if I hadn’t had the colt,”
he said kindly. “What’s wanted?”
The old woman’s face twitched.
She pushed her sunbonnet back with one trembling hand.
“Jason,” she said, with
a little jerk in her voice, “your paw’s
alive.”
The man arranged the lines carefully
along the colt’s back; then he took off his
hat and wiped the top of his head on his sleeve, looking
away from his mother with heavy, dull embarrassment.
“I expect you’d ’most
forgot all about him,” pursued the old woman,
with a vague reproach in her tone.
“I hadn’t much to forget,”
answered the man, resentment rising in his voice.
“He hasn’t troubled himself about me.”
“Well, he didn’t know
anything about you, Jason, he went away so soon after
we was married. It’s a dreadful position
to be placed in. It ’u’d be awfully
embarrassing to to the Moxom girls.”
The man gave her a quick, curious
glance. He had never heard her speak of his half-sisters
in that way before.
“They’re so kind of high-toned,”
she went on, “just as like as not they’d
blame me. I’m sure I don’t know what
to do.”
Jason kicked the soft earth with his sunburnt boot.
“Where is he?” he asked sullenly.
“In Californay.”
“How’d you hear?”
“I got a letter. He wrote
to Burtonville and directed it to Mrs. Angeline Weaver,
and the postmaster give it to some of your uncle Samuel’s
folks, and they put it in another envelope and backed
it to me here. I thought at first I wouldn’t
say anything about it, but it seemed as if I’d
ought to tell you; it doesn’t hurt you any, but
it’s awful hard on the the Moxom
girls.”
The man shifted his weight, and kicked awhile with
his other foot.
“Well, I’d just give him
the go-by,” he announced resolutely. “You’re
a decent man’s widow, and that’s enough.
He’s never”
“Oh, I ain’t saying anything
against your step-paw, Jason,” the old woman
broke in anxiously. “He was an awful good
man. It seems queer to think it was the way it
was. Dear me, it’s all so kind of confusing!”
The poor woman looked down with much
the same embarrassment over her matrimonial redundance
that a man might feel when suddenly confronted by
twins.
“I’m sure I don’t
see how I could help thinking he was dead,” she
went on after a little silence, “when he wrote
he was going off on that trip and might never come
back, and the man that was with him wrote that they
got lost from each other, and water was so scarce and
all that. And then, you know, I didn’t
get married again till you was ’most ten years
old, Jason. I’m sure I don’t know
what to do. I don’t want to mortify anybody,
but I’d like to know just what’s my dooty.”
“Well, I can tell you easy enough.”
The man’s voice was getting beyond control,
but he drew it in with a quick, angry breath.
“Just drop the whole thing. If he’s
got on for forty years, mother, I guess he can manage
for the rest of the time.”
“But it ain’t so easy
managin’ when you begin to get old, Jason.
I know how that is.”
Her son jerked the lines impatiently,
and the colt gave a nervous start.
“I suppose you know this farm
really came to you from your paw, don’t you,
Jason?” she asked humbly.
“Don’t know as I did,”
answered the man, without enthusiasm.
“Well, you see, after we was
married, your grandfather Weaver offered your paw
this quarter-section if he’d stay here in Ioway;
but he had his heart set on going to Californay, and
didn’t want it; so after it turned out the way
it did, and you was born, your grandfather gave me
this farm, and I done very well with it. That’s
the reason your step-paw insisted on you having it
when we was dividing things up before he died.”
“Seems to me father worked pretty
hard on this place himself.”
The man said the word “father” half defiantly.
“Mr. Moxom? Oh, yes, he
was a first-rate manager, and the kindest man that
ever drew breath. I remember when your sister
Angie was born oh, dear me!” the
old woman felt her voice giving way, and stopped an
instant, “it seems so kind of strange.
Well, I guess we’d better just drop it, Jason.
I must go back to the house. Emma didn’t
like my coming for lettuce. She’ll think
I’ve planted some, and am waitin’ for it
to come up.”
She gave her son a quivering smile
as she turned away. He stood still and watched
her until she had crossed the plowed ground. It
seemed to him she walked more feebly than when she
came out.
“That’s awful queer,”
he said, shaking his head, “calling her own
daughters ‘the Moxom girls.’”
III
Ethel Weaver had been to Ashland for
the mail, and was driving home in the summer dusk.
A dash of rain had fallen while she was in the village,
and the air was full of the odor of moist earth and
the sweetness of growing corn. The colt she was
driving held his head high, glancing from side to
side with youthful eagerness for a sensation, and shying
at nothing now and then in sheer excess of emotion
over the demand of his monotonous life.
The girl held a letter in her lap,
turning the pages with one unincumbered hand, and
lifting her flushed face with a contemptuous “Oh,
Barney, you goose!” as the colt drew himself
into attitudes of quivering fright, which dissolved
suddenly at the sound of her voice and the knowledge
that another young creature viewed his coquettish terrors
with the disrespect born of comprehension. As
they turned into the lane west of the house, Ethel
folded her letter and thrust it hastily into her pocket,
and the colt darted through the open gate and drew
up at the side door with a transparent assumption
of serious purpose suggested by the proximity of oats.
“Ed!” called the girl,
“the next time you hitch up Barney for me, I
wish you’d put a kicking-strap on him.
I had a picnic with him coming down the hill by Arbuckle’s.”
Ed maintained the gruff silence of
the half-grown rural male as he climbed into the buggy
beside his sister and cramped the wheel for her to
dismount.
“They haven’t any quart
jars over at the store, mother,” said Ethel,
entering the house and walking across to the mirror
to remove her hat. “They’re expecting
some every day. Well, I do look like the Witch
of Endor!” she exclaimed, twisting her loosened
rope of hair and skewering it in place with a white
celluloid pin. “That colt acted as if he
was possessed.”
“Oh, I’m sorry about the
jars,” said Mrs. Weaver regretfully. “I
wanted to finish putting up the curr’n’s
to-morrow.”
“Did you get any mail?” quavered grandmother
Moxom.
“I got a letter from Rob.”
There was a little hush in the room.
The girl stood still before the mirror, with a sense
of support in the dim reflection of her own face.
“Is he well?” ventured
the old woman feebly, glancing toward her daughter-in-law.
“Yes, he’s well; he’s
got steady work on some road up the mountain.
He writes as if people keep going up, but he never
tells what they go up for. He said something
about a lot of burros, and at first I thought he was
in a furniture store, but I found out he meant mules.
An old man keeps them, and hires them out to people.
Rob calls him ‘old Mosey.’ They’re
keeping bach together. Rob tried to make biscuits,
and he says they tasted like castor oil.”
As her granddaughter talked, Mrs.
Moxom seemed to shrink deeper and deeper into the
patchwork cushion of her chair.
“Rob wants me to come out there
and be married,” pursued the girl, bending nearer
to the mirror and returning her own gaze with sympathy.
“Why, Ethel!” Mrs. Weaver’s
voice was full of astonished disapproval. “I
should think you’d be ashamed to say such a thing.”
“I didn’t say it; Rob
said it,” returned the girl, making a little
grimace at herself in the glass.
“Well, I have my opinion of
a young man that will say such a thing to a girl.
If a girl’s worth having, she’s worth coming
after.”
Mrs. Weaver made this latter announcement
with an air of triumph in its triteness. Her
daughter gave a little sniff of contempt.
“Well, if a fellow’s worth
having, isn’t he worth going to?” she asked
with would-be flippancy.
“Why, Ethel Imogen Weaver!”
Mrs. Weaver repeated her daughter’s name slowly,
as if she hoped its length might arouse in the owner
some sense of her worth. “I never did hear
the like.”
The girl left the mirror, and seated
herself in a chair in front of her mother.
“It’ll cost Rob a hundred
dollars to come here and go back to California, and
a hundred dollars goes a long way toward fixing up.
Besides, he’ll lose his job. I’d just
as soon go out there as have him come here. If
people don’t like it they they needn’t.”
The girl’s fresh young voice
began to thicken, and she glanced about in restless
search of diversion from impending tears.
“Well, girls do act awful strange these days.”
Mrs. Weaver took warning from her
daughter’s tone and divided her disapproval
by multiplying its denominator.
“Yes, they do. They act
sometimes as if they had a little sense,” retorted
Ethel huskily.
“Well, I don’t know as
I call it sense to pick up and run after a man, even
if you’re engaged to him; do you, mother?”
Old Mrs. Moxom started nervously at
her daughter-in-law’s appeal.
“Well, it does seem a long way
to go on on an uncertainty, Ethel,”
she faltered.
The girl turned a flushed, indignant
face upon her grandmother.
“Well, I hope you don’t
mean to call Rob an uncertainty?” she demanded
angrily.
“Oh, no; I don’t mean
that,” pleaded the old woman. “I haven’t
got anything agen’ Rob. I don’t suppose
he’s any more uncertain than than
the rest of them. I”
“Why, grandmother Moxom,”
interrupted the girl, “how you talk! I’m
sure father isn’t an uncertainty, and there
wasn’t anything uncertain about grandfather
Moxom. To tell the honest truth, I think they’re
just about as certain as we are.”
The old woman got up and began to
move the chairs about with purposeless industry.
“It’s awful hard to know
what to do sometimes,” she said, indulging in
a generality that might be mollifying, but was scarcely
glittering.
“Well, it isn’t hard for
me to know this time,” said Mrs. Weaver,
her features drawn into a look of pudgy determination.
“No girl of mine shall ever go traipsing off
to California alone on any such wild-goose chase.”
Ethel got up and moved toward the
stairway, her tawny head thrown back, and an eloquent
accentuation of heel in her tread.
“I just believe old folks like
for young folks to be foolish and wasteful,”
she said over her shoulder, “so they can have
something to nag them about. I’m sure I” She
slammed the door upon her voice, which seemed to be
carried upward in a little whirlwind of indignation.
Mrs. Weaver glanced at her mother-in-law
for sympathy, but the old woman refused to meet her
gaze.
“I’m just real mad at
Rob Kendall for suggesting such a thing and getting
Ethel all worked up,” clucked the younger woman
anxiously.
Mrs. Moxom came back to her chair
as aimlessly as she had left it.
“Men-folks are kind of helpless
when it comes to planning,” she said apologetically.
“To think of them poor things trying to keep
house and the biscuits being soggy!
It does kind of work on her feelings, Emma.”
Mrs. Weaver gave her mother-in-law
a glance of rotund severity.
“I don’t mind their getting
married,” she said, “but I want it done
decent. I don’t intend to pack my daughter
off to any man as if she wasn’t worth coming
after, biscuits or no biscuits!”
She lifted her chin and looked at
her companion over the barricade of conventionality
that lay between them with the air of one whose position
is unassailable. The old woman sighed with much
the same air, but with none of her daughter-in-law’s
satisfaction in it.
“I’m sure I don’t
know,” she said drearily; “sometimes it
ain’t easy to know your dooty at a glance.”
Mrs. Weaver made no response, but
her expression was not favorable to such lax uncertainty.
“The way mother Moxom talked,”
she said to her husband that night, “you’d
have thought she sided with Ethel.”
Jason Weaver was far too much of a
man to hazard an opinion on the proprieties in the
face of his wife’s disapproval, so he grunted
an amiable acquiescence in that spirit of justifiable
hypocrisy known among his kind as “humoring
the women-folks.” Privately he was disposed
to exult in his daughter’s spirit and good sense,
and so long as these admirable qualities did not take
her away from him, and paternal pride and affection
were both gratified, he saw no reason to complain.
This satisfaction, however, did not prevent his “stirring
her up” now and then, as he said, that he might
sun himself in the glow of her youthful temper and
chuckle inwardly over her smartness.
“Well, Dot, how’s Rob?”
he asked jovially one evening at supper about a month
later. “Does he still think he’s worth
running after?”
“I don’t know whether
he thinks so or not, but I know he is,” asserted
the young woman, tilting her chin and looking away
from her father with a cool filial contempt for his
pleasantries bred by familiarity. “He’s
well enough, but the old man that lives with him had
a fall and broke his leg, and Rob has to take care
of him.”
Old Mrs. Moxom laid down her knife
and fork, and dropped her hands in her lap hopelessly.
“Well, now, what made him go
and do that?” she asked, with a fretful quaver
in her voice, as if this were the last straw.
“I don’t know, grandmother,”
answered Ethel cheerfully. “As soon as he’s
well enough to be moved, they’re going to take
him to the county hospital. I guess that’s
the poorhouse. But Rob says he’s so old
they’re afraid the bone won’t knit; he
suffers like everything. Poor old man, I’m
awful sorry for him. Rob has to do all the cooking.”
The old woman pushed back her chair
and brushed the crumbs from her apron.
“I guess I’ll go upstairs
and lay down awhile, Emma. I been kind of light-headed
all afternoon. I guess I set too long over them
carpet rags.”
She got up and crossed the room hurriedly.
Her son looked after her with anxious eyes. Presently
they heard her toiling up the stairs with the slow,
inelastic tread of infancy and old age.
“I don’t know what’s
come over your mother, Jason,” said his wife.
“She hasn’t been herself all summer.
Sometimes I think I’d ought to write to the
girls.”
“Oh, I guess she’ll be
all right,” said Jason, with masculine hopefulness.
“Dot, you’d better go up by and by and
see if grandmother wants anything.”
Safe in her own room, Mrs. Moxom sank
into a chair with a long breath of relief and dismay.
“The poorhouse!” she gasped.
“That seems about as mortifying as to own up
to your girls that you wasn’t never rightly married
to their father.”
She got up and wandered across the
room to the bureau. “I expect he’s
changed a good deal,” she murmured. She
took a daguerreotype from the upper drawer, and gazed
at it curiously. “Yes, I expect he’s
changed quite a good deal,” she repeated, with
a sigh.
IV
“Why, mother Moxom!”
Mrs. Weaver sank into her sewing-chair
in an attitude of pulpy despair.
“Well, I don’t see but
what it’s the best thing for me to do,”
asserted the old woman. “The cold weather’ll
be coming on soon, and I always have more or less
rheumatism, and they say Californay’s good for
rheumatism. Besides, I think I need to stir round
a little; I’ve stayed right here ’most
too close; and as long as Ethel has her heart set on
going, I don’t see but what it’s the best
plan. If I go along with her, I can make sure
that everything’s all right. If you and
Jason say she can’t go, why, then, I don’t
see but what I’ll just have to start off and
make the trip alone.”
“Why, mother Moxom, I just don’t know
what to say!”
Mrs. Weaver’s tone conveyed
a deep-seated sense of injury that she should thus
be deprived of speech for such insufficient cause.
“’Tisn’t such a
very hard trip,” pursued the old woman doggedly.
“They say you get on one of them through trains
and take your provision and your knitting, and just
live along the road. It isn’t as if you
had to change cars at every junction, and get so turned
round you don’t know which way your head’s
set on your shoulders.”
Mrs. Weaver’s expression began
to dissolve into reluctant interest in these details.
“Well, of course, if you think
it’ll help your rheumatism, and you’ve
got your mind made up to go, somebody’ll
have to go with you. Have you asked Jason?”
“No, I haven’t.”
Mrs. Moxom’s voice took on an edge. “I
can’t see just why I’ve got to ask people;
sometimes I think I’m about old enough to do
as I please.”
“Why, of course, mother,”
soothed the daughter-in-law. “Would you
go and see the girls before you’d start?”
“No, I don’t believe I
would,” answered the old woman, her voice relaxing
under this acquiescence. “They’d only
make a fuss. They’ve both got good homes
and good men, and they’re married to them right
and lawful, and there’s nothing to worry about.
Besides, I’d just get interested in the children,
and that’d make it harder. I’ve done
the best I knew how by the girls, and I don’t
know as they’ve got any reason to complain”
“Why, no, mother,” interrupted
the daughter-in-law, with rising feathers, “I
never heard anybody say but what you’d done well
by all your children. I only thought they’d
want to see you. I think they’d come over
if they knew it well, of course, Angie couldn’t,
having a young baby so, but Laura she’d come
in a minute.”
“Well, I don’t believe
I want to see them,” persisted Mrs. Moxom.
“It’ll only make it harder. I guess
you needn’t let them know I’m goin’.
Ethel and I’ll start as soon as she can get
ready. Seems like Rob’s having a pretty
hard time. He couldn’t come after Ethel
now if he wanted to. It wouldn’t be right
for him to leave that that old
gentleman.”
“Well, I wouldn’t want
the girls to have any hard feelings towards me.”
“The Moxom girls ain’t
a-going to have any hard feelings towards you,
Emma,” asserted the old woman, with emphasis.
“She has the queerest way of
talking about your sisters, Jason,” Mrs. Weaver
confided to her husband later. “It makes
me think, sometimes, she’s failing pretty fast.”
V
As the road to the foot of the trail
grew steeper, Rob Kendall found an increasing difficulty
in guiding his team with one hand. His bride drew
herself from his encircling arm reluctantly.
“You’d better look after
the horses,” she said, with a vivid blush.
“What’ll grandmother think of us?”
The young fellow removed the offending
arm and reached back to pat the old lady’s knee.
“I ain’t afraid of grandmother,”
he said joyously. “Grandmother’s a
brick. If she stays out here long, she’ll
soon be the youngest woman on the mesa. I shouldn’t
wonder if she’d pick up some nice old gentleman
herself how’s that, grandmother?”
He bent down and kissed his wife’s ear.
“Catch me going back on grandmothers after this!”
“You haven’t changed a
bit, Rob,” said Ethel fondly; “has he,
grandmother?” She turned her radiant smile upon
the withered face behind her.
The old woman did not answer.
The newly wedded couple resumed their rapturous contemplation
of each other.
“How’s that funny old
man, Rob?” asked Ethel, smoothing out her dimples.
“Old Mosey? He’s
pretty rocky. I’m afraid he won’t
pull through.” Rob strove to adjust his
voice to the subject. “I’d ‘a’
got a house down in town, but I didn’t like
to leave him. We’ll have to go pretty soon,
though. I’m afraid you’ll be lonesome
up here.”
The old woman on the back seat leaned
forward a little. The young couple smiled exultantly
into each other’s eyes, with superb scorn of
the world.
“Lonesome!” sneered the girl.
Her husband drew her close to him with an ecstatic
hug.
“Yes, lonesome,” he laughed, his voice
smothered in her bright hair.
The old woman settled back in her
seat. The team made their way slowly through
the sandy wash between the boulders. When they
emerged from the sycamores, Rob pointed toward the
cabin. “That’s the place!” he
said triumphantly.
The sunset was sifting through the
live-oaks upon the shake roof. Two tents gleamed
white beside it, frescoed with the shadow of moving
leaves. Ethel lifted her head from her husband’s
shoulder, and looked at her home with the faith in
her eyes that has kept the world young.
“I’ve put up some tents
for us,” said the young fellow gleefully; “but
you mustn’t go in till I get the team put away.
I won’t have you laughing at my housekeeping
behind my back. Old Mosey’s asleep in the
shanty; the doctor gives him something to keep him
easy. You can go in there and sit down, grandmother;
you won’t disturb him.”
He helped them out of the wagon, lingering
a little with his wife in his arms. The old woman
left them and went into the house. She crossed
the floor hesitatingly, and bent over the feeble old
face on the pillow.
“It’s just as I expected;
he’s changed a good deal,” she said to
herself.
The old man opened his eyes.
“I was sayin’ you’d changed a good
deal, Moses,” she repeated aloud.
There was no intelligence in his gaze.
“For that matter, I expect I’ve
changed a good deal myself,” she went on.
“I heard you’d had a fall, and I thought
I’d better come out. You was always kind
of hard to take care of when you was sick. I remember
that time you hurt your foot on the scythe, just after
we was married; you wouldn’t let anybody come
near you but me”
“Why, it’s Angeline!” said the old
man dreamily, with a vacant smile.
“Yes, it’s me.”
He closed his eyes and drifted away
again. The old wife sat still on the edge of
the bed. Outside she could hear the sigh of the
oaks and the trill of young voices. Two or three
tears fell over the wrinkled face, written close with
the past, like a yellow page from an old diary.
She wiped them away, and looked about the room with
its meagre belongings, which Rob had scoured into
expectant neatness.
“He doesn’t seem to have
done very well,” she thought; “but how
could he, all by himself?” She got up and walked
to the door, and looked out at the strange landscape
with its masses of purple mountains.
“I’ve got to do one of
two things,” she said to herself. “I’ve
just got to own up the whole thing, and let the girls
be mortified, or else I’ve got to keep still
and marry him over again, and pass for an old fool
the rest of my life. I don’t believe I
can do it. They’ve got more time to live
down disgrace than I have. I believe I’ll
just come out and tell everything. Ethel!”
she called. “Come here, you and Rob; I’ve
got something to tell you.”
The young couple stood with locked
arms, looking out over the valley. At the sound
of her voice they clasped each other close in an embrace
of passionate protest against the intrusion of this
other soul. Then they turned toward the sunset,
and went slowly and reluctantly into the house.