At dinner that day Alexandra said
she thought they must really manage to go over to
the Shabatas’ that afternoon. “It’s
not often I let three days go by without seeing Marie.
She will think I have forsaken her, now that my old
friend has come back.”
After the men had gone back to work,
Alexandra put on a white dress and her sun-hat, and
she and Carl set forth across the fields. “You
see we have kept up the old path, Carl. It has
been so nice for me to feel that there was a friend
at the other end of it again.”
Carl smiled a little ruefully.
“All the same, I hope it hasn’t been quite
the same.”
Alexandra looked at him with surprise.
“Why, no, of course not. Not the same.
She could not very well take your place, if that’s
what you mean. I’m friendly with all my
neighbors, I hope. But Marie is really a companion,
some one I can talk to quite frankly. You wouldn’t
want me to be more lonely than I have been, would
you?”
Carl laughed and pushed back the triangular
lock of hair with the edge of his hat. “Of
course I don’t. I ought to be thankful that
this path hasn’t been worn by well,
by friends with more pressing errands than your little
Bohemian is likely to have.” He paused
to give Alexandra his hand as she stepped over the
stile. “Are you the least bit disappointed
in our coming together again?” he asked abruptly.
“Is it the way you hoped it would be?”
Alexandra smiled at this. “Only
better. When I’ve thought about your coming,
I’ve sometimes been a little afraid of it.
You have lived where things move so fast, and everything
is slow here; the people slowest of all. Our
lives are like the years, all made up of weather and
crops and cows. How you hated cows!” She
shook her head and laughed to herself.
“I didn’t when we milked
together. I walked up to the pasture corners
this morning. I wonder whether I shall ever be
able to tell you all that I was thinking about up
there. It’s a strange thing, Alexandra;
I find it easy to be frank with you about everything
under the sun except yourself!”
“You are afraid of hurting my
feelings, perhaps.” Alexandra looked at
him thoughtfully.
“No, I’m afraid of giving
you a shock. You’ve seen yourself for so
long in the dull minds of the people about you, that
if I were to tell you how you seem to me, it would
startle you. But you must see that you astonish
me. You must feel when people admire you.”
Alexandra blushed and laughed with
some confusion. “I felt that you were pleased
with me, if you mean that.”
“And you’ve felt when
other people were pleased with you?” he insisted.
“Well, sometimes. The men
in town, at the banks and the county offices, seem
glad to see me. I think, myself, it is more pleasant
to do business with people who are clean and healthy-looking,”
she admitted blandly.
Carl gave a little chuckle as he opened
the Shabatas’ gate for her. “Oh,
do you?” he asked dryly.
There was no sign of life about the
Shabatas’ house except a big yellow cat, sunning
itself on the kitchen doorstep.
Alexandra took the path that led to
the orchard. “She often sits there and
sews. I didn’t telephone her we were coming,
because I didn’t want her to go to work and
bake cake and freeze ice-cream. She’ll
always make a party if you give her the least excuse.
Do you recognize the apple trees, Carl?”
Linstrum looked about him. “I
wish I had a dollar for every bucket of water I’ve
carried for those trees. Poor father, he was an
easy man, but he was perfectly merciless when it came
to watering the orchard.”
“That’s one thing I like
about Germans; they make an orchard grow if they can’t
make anything else. I’m so glad these trees
belong to some one who takes comfort in them.
When I rented this place, the tenants never kept the
orchard up, and Emil and I used to come over and take
care of it ourselves. It needs mowing now.
There she is, down in the corner. Maria-a-a!”
she called.
A recumbent figure started up from
the grass and came running toward them through the
flickering screen of light and shade.
“Look at her! Isn’t
she like a little brown rabbit?” Alexandra laughed.
Maria ran up panting and threw her
arms about Alexandra. “Oh, I had begun
to think you were not coming at all, maybe. I
knew you were so busy. Yes, Emil told me about
Mr. Linstrum being here. Won’t you come
up to the house?”
“Why not sit down there in your
corner? Carl wants to see the orchard. He
kept all these trees alive for years, watering them
with his own back.”
Marie turned to Carl. “Then
I’m thankful to you, Mr. Linstrum. We’d
never have bought the place if it hadn’t been
for this orchard, and then I wouldn’t have had
Alexandra, either.” She gave Alexandra’s
arm a little squeeze as she walked beside her.
“How nice your dress smells, Alexandra; you
put rosemary leaves in your chest, like I told you.”
She led them to the northwest corner
of the orchard, sheltered on one side by a thick mulberry
hedge and bordered on the other by a wheatfield, just
beginning to yellow. In this corner the ground
dipped a little, and the blue-grass, which the weeds
had driven out in the upper part of the orchard, grew
thick and luxuriant. Wild roses were flaming
in the tufts of bunchgrass along the fence. Under
a white mulberry tree there was an old wagon-seat.
Beside it lay a book and a workbasket.
“You must have the seat, Alexandra.
The grass would stain your dress,” the hostess
insisted. She dropped down on the ground at Alexandra’s
side and tucked her feet under her. Carl sat at
a little distance from the two women, his back to the
wheatfield, and watched them. Alexandra took
off her shade-hat and threw it on the ground.
Marie picked it up and played with the white ribbons,
twisting them about her brown fingers as she talked.
They made a pretty picture in the strong sunlight,
the leafy pattern surrounding them like a net; the
Swedish woman so white and gold, kindly and amused,
but armored in calm, and the alert brown one, her full
lips parted, points of yellow light dancing in her
eyes as she laughed and chattered. Carl had never
forgotten little Marie Tovesky’s eyes, and he
was glad to have an opportunity to study them.
The brown iris, he found, was curiously slashed with
yellow, the color of sunflower honey, or of old amber.
In each eye one of these streaks must have been larger
than the others, for the effect was that of two dancing
points of light, two little yellow bubbles, such as
rise in a glass of champagne. Sometimes they seemed
like the sparks from a forge. She seemed so easily
excited, to kindle with a fierce little flame if one
but breathed upon her. “What a waste,”
Carl reflected. “She ought to be doing all
that for a sweetheart. How awkwardly things come
about!”
It was not very long before Marie
sprang up out of the grass again. “Wait
a moment. I want to show you something.”
She ran away and disappeared behind the low-growing
apple trees.
“What a charming creature,”
Carl murmured. “I don’t wonder that
her husband is jealous. But can’t she walk?
does she always run?”
Alexandra nodded. “Always.
I don’t see many people, but I don’t believe
there are many like her, anywhere.”
Marie came back with a branch she
had broken from an apricot tree, laden with pale yellow,
pink-cheeked fruit. She dropped it beside Carl.
“Did you plant those, too? They are such
beautiful little trees.”
Carl fingered the blue-green leaves,
porous like blotting-paper and shaped like birch leaves,
hung on waxen red stems. “Yes, I think
I did. Are these the circus trees, Alexandra?”
“Shall I tell her about them?”
Alexandra asked. “Sit down like a good
girl, Marie, and don’t ruin my poor hat, and
I’ll tell you a story. A long time ago,
when Carl and I were, say, sixteen and twelve, a circus
came to Hanover and we went to town in our wagon,
with Lou and Oscar, to see the parade. We hadn’t
money enough to go to the circus. We followed
the parade out to the circus grounds and hung around
until the show began and the crowd went inside the
tent. Then Lou was afraid we looked foolish standing
outside in the pasture, so we went back to Hanover
feeling very sad. There was a man in the streets
selling apricots, and we had never seen any before.
He had driven down from somewhere up in the French
country, and he was selling them twenty-five cents
a peck. We had a little money our fathers had
given us for candy, and I bought two pecks and Carl
bought one. They cheered us a good deal, and
we saved all the seeds and planted them. Up to
the time Carl went away, they hadn’t borne at
all.”
“And now he’s come back
to eat them,” cried Marie, nodding at Carl.
“That is a good story. I can remember
you a little, Mr. Linstrum. I used to see you
in Hanover sometimes, when Uncle Joe took me to town.
I remember you because you were always buying pencils
and tubes of paint at the drug store. Once, when
my uncle left me at the store, you drew a lot of little
birds and flowers for me on a piece of wrapping-paper.
I kept them for a long while. I thought you were
very romantic because you could draw and had such black
eyes.”
Carl smiled. “Yes, I remember
that time. Your uncle bought you some kind of
a mechanical toy, a Turkish lady sitting on an ottoman
and smoking a hookah, wasn’t it? And she
turned her head backwards and forwards.”
“Oh, yes! Wasn’t
she splendid! I knew well enough I ought not
to tell Uncle Joe I wanted it, for he had just come
back from the saloon and was feeling good. You
remember how he laughed? She tickled him, too.
But when we got home, my aunt scolded him for buying
toys when she needed so many things. We wound
our lady up every night, and when she began to move
her head my aunt used to laugh as hard as any of us.
It was a music-box, you know, and the Turkish lady
played a tune while she smoked. That was how she
made you feel so jolly. As I remember her, she
was lovely, and had a gold crescent on her turban.”
Half an hour later, as they were leaving
the house, Carl and Alexandra were met in the path
by a strapping fellow in overalls and a blue shirt.
He was breathing hard, as if he had been running, and
was muttering to himself.
Marie ran forward, and, taking him
by the arm, gave him a little push toward her guests.
“Frank, this is Mr. Linstrum.”
Frank took off his broad straw hat
and nodded to Alexandra. When he spoke to Carl,
he showed a fine set of white teeth. He was burned
a dull red down to his neckband, and there was a heavy
three-days’ stubble on his face. Even in
his agitation he was handsome, but he looked a rash
and violent man.
Barely saluting the callers, he turned
at once to his wife and began, in an outraged tone,
“I have to leave my team to drive the old woman
Hiller’s hogs out-a my wheat. I go to take
dat old woman to de court if she ain’t careful,
I tell you!”
His wife spoke soothingly. “But,
Frank, she has only her lame boy to help her.
She does the best she can.”
Alexandra looked at the excited man
and offered a suggestion. “Why don’t
you go over there some afternoon and hog-tight her
fences? You’d save time for yourself in
the end.”
Frank’s neck stiffened.
“Not-a-much, I won’t. I keep my hogs
home. Other peoples can do like me. See?
If that Louis can mend shoes, he can mend fence.”
“Maybe,” said Alexandra
placidly; “but I’ve found it sometimes
pays to mend other people’s fences. Good-bye,
Marie. Come to see me soon.”
Alexandra walked firmly down the path
and Carl followed her.
Frank went into the house and threw
himself on the sofa, his face to the wall, his clenched
fist on his hip. Marie, having seen her guests
off, came in and put her hand coaxingly on his shoulder.
“Poor Frank! You’ve
run until you’ve made your head ache, now haven’t
you? Let me make you some coffee.”
“What else am I to do?”
he cried hotly in Bohemian. “Am I to let
any old woman’s hogs root up my wheat? Is
that what I work myself to death for?”
“Don’t worry about it,
Frank. I’ll speak to Mrs. Hiller again.
But, really, she almost cried last time they got out,
she was so sorry.”
Frank bounced over on his other side.
“That’s it; you always side with them
against me. They all know it. Anybody here
feels free to borrow the mower and break it, or turn
their hogs in on me. They know you won’t
care!”
Marie hurried away to make his coffee.
When she came back, he was fast asleep. She sat
down and looked at him for a long while, very thoughtfully.
When the kitchen clock struck six she went out to
get supper, closing the door gently behind her.
She was always sorry for Frank when he worked himself
into one of these rages, and she was sorry to have
him rough and quarrelsome with his neighbors.
She was perfectly aware that the neighbors had a good
deal to put up with, and that they bore with Frank
for her sake.