The next morning Angelique, Amedee’s
wife, was in the kitchen baking pies, assisted by
old Mrs. Chevalier. Between the mixing-board
and the stove stood the old cradle that had been Amedee’s,
and in it was his black-eyed son. As Angelique,
flushed and excited, with flour on her hands, stopped
to smile at the baby, Emil Bergson rode up to the
kitchen door on his mare and dismounted.
“’Medee is out in the
field, Emil,” Angelique called as she ran across
the kitchen to the oven. “He begins to cut
his wheat to-day; the first wheat ready to cut anywhere
about here. He bought a new header, you know,
because all the wheat’s so short this year.
I hope he can rent it to the neighbors, it cost so
much. He and his cousins bought a steam thresher
on shares. You ought to go out and see that header
work. I watched it an hour this morning, busy
as I am with all the men to feed. He has a lot
of hands, but he’s the only one that knows how
to drive the header or how to run the engine, so he
has to be everywhere at once. He’s sick,
too, and ought to be in his bed.”
Emil bent over Hector Baptiste, trying
to make him blink his round, bead-like black eyes.
“Sick? What’s the matter with your
daddy, kid? Been making him walk the floor with
you?”
Angelique sniffed. “Not
much! We don’t have that kind of babies.
It was his father that kept Baptiste awake. All
night I had to be getting up and making mustard plasters
to put on his stomach. He had an awful colic.
He said he felt better this morning, but I don’t
think he ought to be out in the field, overheating
himself.”
Angelique did not speak with much
anxiety, not because she was indifferent, but because
she felt so secure in their good fortune. Only
good things could happen to a rich, energetic, handsome
young man like Amedee, with a new baby in the cradle
and a new header in the field.
Emil stroked the black fuzz on Baptiste’s
head. “I say, Angelique, one of ’Medee’s
grandmothers, ’way back, must have been a squaw.
This kid looks exactly like the Indian babies.”
Angelique made a face at him, but
old Mrs. Chevalier had been touched on a sore point,
and she let out such a stream of fiery patois
that Emil fled from the kitchen and mounted his mare.
Opening the pasture gate from the
saddle, Emil rode across the field to the clearing
where the thresher stood, driven by a stationary engine
and fed from the header boxes. As Amedee was not
on the engine, Emil rode on to the wheatfield, where
he recognized, on the header, the slight, wiry figure
of his friend, coatless, his white shirt puffed out
by the wind, his straw hat stuck jauntily on the side
of his head. The six big work-horses that drew,
or rather pushed, the header, went abreast at a rapid
walk, and as they were still green at the work they
required a good deal of management on Amedee’s
part; especially when they turned the corners, where
they divided, three and three, and then swung round
into line again with a movement that looked as complicated
as a wheel of artillery. Emil felt a new thrill
of admiration for his friend, and with it the old
pang of envy at the way in which Amedee could do with
his might what his hand found to do, and feel that,
whatever it was, it was the most important thing in
the world. “I’ll have to bring Alexandra
up to see this thing work,” Emil thought; “it’s
splendid!”
When he saw Emil, Amedee waved to
him and called to one of his twenty cousins to take
the reins. Stepping off the header without stopping
it, he ran up to Emil who had dismounted. “Come
along,” he called. “I have to go
over to the engine for a minute. I gotta green
man running it, and I gotta to keep an eye on him.”
Emil thought the lad was unnaturally
flushed and more excited than even the cares of managing
a big farm at a critical time warranted. As they
passed behind a last year’s stack, Amedee clutched
at his right side and sank down for a moment on the
straw.
“Ouch! I got an awful pain
in me, Emil. Something’s the matter with
my insides, for sure.”
Emil felt his fiery cheek. “You
ought to go straight to bed, ’Medee, and telephone
for the doctor; that’s what you ought to do.”
Amedee staggered up with a gesture
of despair. “How can I? I got no time
to be sick. Three thousand dollars’ worth
of new machinery to manage, and the wheat so ripe
it will begin to shatter next week. My wheat’s
short, but it’s gotta grand full berries.
What’s he slowing down for? We haven’t
got header boxes enough to feed the thresher, I guess.”
Amedee started hot-foot across the
stubble, leaning a little to the right as he ran,
and waved to the engineer not to stop the engine.
Emil saw that this was no time to
talk about his own affairs. He mounted his mare
and rode on to Sainte-Agnes, to bid his friends there
good-bye. He went first to see Raoul Marcel, and
found him innocently practising the “Gloria”
for the big confirmation service on Sunday while he
polished the mirrors of his father’s saloon.
As Emil rode homewards at three o’clock
in the afternoon, he saw Amedee staggering out of
the wheatfield, supported by two of his cousins.
Emil stopped and helped them put the boy to bed.