CHAPTER I
Claude was to continue farming with
his father, and after he returned from his wedding
journey, he fell at once to work. The harvest
was almost as abundant as that of the summer before,
and he was busy in the fields six days a week.
One afternoon in August he came home
with his team, watered and fed the horses in a leisurely
way, and then entered his house by the back door.
Enid, he knew, would not be there. She had gone
to Frankfort to a meeting of the Anti-Saloon League.
The Prohibition party was bestirring itself in Nebraska
that summer, confident of voting the State dry the
following year, which purpose it triumphantly accomplished.
Enid’s kitchen, full of the
afternoon sun, glittered with new paint, spotless
linoleum, and blue-and-white cooking vessels.
In the dining-room the cloth was laid, and the table
was neatly set for one. Claude opened the icebox,
where his supper was arranged for him; a dish of canned
salmon with a white sauce; hardboiled eggs, peeled
and lying in a nest of lettuce leaves; a bowl of ripe
tomatoes, a bit of cold rice pudding; cream and butter.
He placed these things on the table, cut some bread,
and after carelessly washing his face and hands, sat
down to eat in his working shirt. He propped
the newspaper against a red glass water pitcher and
read the war news while he had his supper. He
was annoyed when he heard heavy footsteps coming around
the house. Leonard Dawson stuck his head in at
the kitchen door, and Claude rose quickly and reached
for his hat; but Leonard came in, uninvited, and sat
down. His brown shirt was wet where his suspenders
gripped his shoulders, and his face, under a wide
straw hat which he did not remove, was unshaven and
streaked with dust.
“Go ahead and finish your supper,”
he cried. “Having a wife with a car of
her own is next thing to having no wife at all.
How they do like to roll around! I’ve been
mighty blamed careful to see that Susie never learned
to drive a car. See here, Claude, how soon do
you figure you’ll be able to let me have the
thrasher? My wheat will begin to sprout in the
shock pretty soon. Do you reckon your father
would be willing to work on Sunday, if I helped you,
to let the machine off a day earlier?”
“I’m afraid not.
Mother wouldn’t like it. We never have done
that, even when we were crowded.”
“Well, I think I’ll go
over and have a talk with your mother. If she
could look inside my wheat shocks, maybe I could convince
her it’s pretty near a case of your neighbour’s
ox falling into a pit on the Sabbath day.”
“That’s a good idea. She’s
always reasonable.”
Leonard rose. “What’s the news?”
“The Germans have torpedoed
an English passenger ship, the Arabic; coming this
way, too.”
“That’s all right,”
Leonard declared. “Maybe Americans will
stay at home now, and mind their own business.
I don’t care how they chew each other up over
there, not a bit! I’d as soon one got wiped
off the map as another.”
“Your grandparents were English
people, weren’t they?”
“That’s a long while ago.
Yes, my grandmother wore a cap and little white curls,
and I tell Susie I wouldn’t mind if the baby
turned out to have my grandmother’s skin.
She had the finest complexion I ever saw.”
As they stepped out of the back door,
a troop of white chickens with red combs ran squawking
toward them. It was the hour at which the poultry
was usually fed. Leonard stopped to admire them.
“You’ve got a fine lot of hens. I
always did like white leghorns. Where are
all your roosters?”
“We’ve only got one.
He’s shut up in the coop. The brood hens
are setting. Enid is going to try raising winter
frys.”
“Only one rooster? And
may I ask what these hens do?”
Claude laughed. “They lay
eggs, just the same, better. It’s
the fertile eggs that spoil in warm weather.”
This information seemed to make Leonard
angry. “I never heard of such damned nonsense,”
he blustered. “I raise chickens on a natural
basis, or I don’t raise ’em at all.”
He jumped into his car for fear he would say more.
When he got home his wife was lifting
supper, and the baby sat near her in its buggy, playing
with a rattle. Dirty and sweaty as he was, Leonard
picked up the clean baby and began to kiss it and
smell it, rubbing his stubbly chin in the soft creases
of its neck. The little girl was beside herself
with delight.
“Go and wash up for supper,
Len,” Susie called from the stove. He put
down the baby and began splashing in the tin basin,
talking with his eyes shut.
“Susie, I’m in an awful
temper. I can’t stand that damned wife of
Claude’s!”
She was spearing roasting ears out
of a big iron pot and looked up through the steam.
“Why, have you seen her? I was listening
on the telephone this morning and heard her tell Bayliss
she would be in town until late.” “Oh,
yes! She went to town all right, and he’s
over there eating a cold supper by himself. That
woman’s a fanatic. She ain’t content
with practising prohibition on humankind; she’s
begun now on the hens.” While he placed
the chairs and wheeled the baby up to the table, he
explained Enid’s method of raising poultry to
his wife. She said she really didn’t see
any harm in it.
“Now be honest, Susie; did you
ever know hens would keep on laying without a rooster?”
“No, I didn’t, but I was
brought up the old-fashioned way. Enid has poultry
books and garden books, and all such things. I
don’t doubt she gets good ideas from them.
But anyhow, you be careful. She’s our nearest
neighbour, and I don’t want to have trouble
with her.”
“I’ll have to keep out
of her way, then. If she tries to do any missionary
work among my chickens, I’ll tell her a few home
truths her husband’s too bashful to tell her.
It’s my opinion she’s got that boy cowed
already.”
“Now, Len, you know she won’t
bother your chickens. You keep quiet. But
Claude does seem to sort of avoid people,” Susie
admitted, filling her husband’s plate again.
“Mrs. Joe Havel says Ernest don’t go to
Claude’s any more. It seems Enid went over
there and wanted Ernest to paste some Prohibition posters
about fifteen million drunkards on their barn, for
an example to the Bohemians. Ernest wouldn’t
do it, and told her he was going to vote for saloons,
and Enid was quite spiteful, Mrs. Havel said.
It’s too bad, when those boys were such chums.
I used to like to see them together.” Susie
spoke so kindly that her husband shot her a quick
glance of shy affection.
“Do you suppose Claude relished
having that preacher visiting them, when they hadn’t
been married two months? Sitting on the front
porch in a white necktie every day, while Claude was
out cutting wheat?”
“Well, anyhow, I guess Claude
had more to eat when Brother Weldon was staying there.
Preachers won’t be fed on calories, or whatever
it is Enid calls ’em,” said Susie, who
was given to looking on the bright side of things.
“Claude’s wife keeps a wonderful kitchen;
but so could I, if I never cooked any more than she
does.”
Leonard gave her a meaning look.
“I don’t believe you would live with the
sort of man you could feed out of a tin can.”
“No, I don’t believe I
would.” She pushed the buggy toward him.
“Take her up, Daddy. She wants to play with
you.”
Leonard set the baby on his shoulder
and carried her off to show her the pigs. Susie
kept laughing to herself as she cleared the table
and washed the dishes; she was much amused by what
her husband had told her.
Late that evening, when Leonard was
starting for the barn to see that all was well before
he went to bed, he observed a discreet black object
rolling along the highroad in the moonlight, a red
spark winking in the rear. He called Susie to
the door.
“See, there she goes; going
home to report the success of the meeting to Claude.
Wouldn’t that be a nice way to have your wife
coming in?”
“Now, Leonard, if Claude likes it ”
“Likes it?” Big Leonard
drew himself up. “What can he do, poor
kid? He’s stung!”
CHAPTER II
After Leonard left him, Claude cleared
away the remains of his supper and watered the gourd
vine before he went to milk. It was not really
a gourd vine at all, but a summer-squash, of the crook-necked,
warty, orange-coloured variety, and it was now full
of ripe squashes, hanging by strong stems among the
rough green leaves and prickly tendrils. Claude
had watched its rapid growth and the opening of its
splotchy yellow blossoms, feeling grateful to a thing
that did so lustily what it was put there to do.
He had the same feeling for his little Jersey cow,
which came home every night with full udders and gave
down her milk willingly, keeping her tail out of his
face, as only a well disposed cow will do.
His milking done, he sat down on the
front porch and lit a cigar. While he smoked,
he did not think about anything but the quiet and
the slow cooling of the atmosphere, and how good it
was to sit still. The moon swam up over the bare
wheat fields, big and magical, like a great flower.
Presently he got some bath towels, went across the
yard to the windmill, took off his clothes, and stepped
into the tin horse tank. The water had been warmed
by the sun all afternoon, and was not much cooler
than his body. He stretched himself out in it,
and resting his head on the metal rim, lay on his
back, looking up at the moon. The sky was a midnight-blue,
like warm, deep, blue water, and the moon seemed to
lie on it like a water-lily, floating forward with
an invisible current. One expected to see its
great petals open.
For some reason, Claude began to think
about the far-off times and countries it had shone
upon. He never thought of the sun as coming from
distant lands, or as having taken part in human life
in other ages. To him, the sun rotated about the
wheatfields. But the moon, somehow, came out
of the historic past, and made him think of Egypt
and the Pharaohs, Babylon and the hanging gardens.
She seemed particularly to have looked down upon the
follies and disappointments of men; into the slaves’
quarters of old times, into prison windows, and into
fortresses where captives languished.
Inside of living people, too, captives
languished. Yes, inside of people who walked
and worked in the broad sun, there were captives dwelling
in darkness, never seen from birth to death.
Into those prisons the moon shone, and the prisoners
crept to the windows and looked out with mournful
eyes at the white globe which betrayed no secrets
and comprehended all. Perhaps even in people
like Mrs. Royce and his brother Bayliss there was
something of this sort but that was a shuddery
thought. He dismissed it with a quick movement
of his hand through the water, which, disturbed, caught
the light and played black and gold, like something
alive, over his chest. In his own mother the
imprisoned spirit was almost more present to people
than her corporeal self. He had so often felt
it when he sat with her on summer nights like this.
Mahailey, too, had one, though the walls of her prison
were so thick and Gladys Farmer. Oh,
yes, how much Gladys must have to tell this perfect
confidant! The people whose hearts were set high
needed such intercourse whose wish was so
beautiful that there were no experiences in this world
to satisfy it. And these children of the moon,
with their unappeased longings and futile dreams,
were a finer race than the children of the sun.
This conception flooded the boy’s heart like
a second moonrise, flowed through him indefinite and
strong, while he lay deathly still for fear of losing
it.
At last the black cubical object which
had caught Leonard Dawson’s wrathful eye, came
rolling along the highroad. Claude snatched up
his clothes and towels, and without waiting to make
use of either, he ran, a white man across a bare white
yard. Gaining the shelter of the house, he found
his bathrobe, and fled to the upper porch, where he
lay down in the hammock. Presently he heard his
name called, pronounced as if it were spelled “Clod.”
His wife came up the stairs and looked out at him.
He lay motionless, with his eyes closed. She
went away. When all was quiet again he looked
off at the still country, and the moon in the dark
indigo sky. His revelation still possessed him,
making his whole body sensitive, like a tightly strung
bow. In the morning he had forgotten, or was
ashamed of what had seemed so true and so entirely
his own the night before. He agreed, for the
most part, that it was better not to think about such
things, and when he could he avoided thinking.
CHAPTER III
After the heavy work of harvest was
over, Mrs. Wheeler often persuaded her husband, when
he was starting off in his buckboard, to take her
as far as Claude’s new house. She was glad
Enid didn’t keep her parlour dark, as Mrs. Royce
kept hers. The doors and windows were always
open, the vines and the long pétunias in the
window-boxes waved in the breeze, and the rooms were
full of sunlight and in perfect order. Enid wore
white dresses about her work, and white shoes and
stockings. She managed a house easily and systematically.
On Monday morning Claude turned the washing machine
before he went to work, and by nine o’clock the
clothes were on the line. Enid liked to iron,
and Claude had never before in his life worn so many
clean shirts, or worn them with such satisfaction.
She told him he need not economize in working shirts;
it was as easy to iron six as three.
Although within a few months Enid’s
car travelled more than two thousand miles for the
Prohibition cause, it could not be said that she neglected
her house for reform. Whether she neglected her
husband depended upon one’s conception of what
was his due. When Mrs. Wheeler saw how well their
little establishment was conducted, how cheerful and
attractive Enid looked when one happened to drop in
there, she wondered that Claude was not happy.
And Claude himself wondered. If his marriage disappointed
him in some respects, he ought to be a man, he told
himself, and make the best of what was good in it.
If his wife didn’t love him, it was because
love meant one thing to him and quite another thing
to her. She was proud of him, was glad to see
him when he came in from the fields, and was solicitous
for his comfort. Everything about a man’s
embrace was distasteful to Enid; something inflicted
upon women, like the pain of childbirth,
for Eve’s transgression, perhaps.
This repugnance was more than physical;
she disliked ardour of any kind, even religious ardour.
She had been fonder of Claude before she married him
than she was now; but she hoped for a readjustment.
Perhaps sometime she could like him again in exactly
the same way. Even Brother Weldon had hinted to
her that for the sake of their future tranquillity
she must be lenient with the boy. And she thought
she had been lenient. She could not understand
his moods of desperate silence, the bitter, biting
remarks he sometimes dropped, his evident annoyance
if she went over to join him in the timber claim when
he lay there idle in the deep grass on a Sunday afternoon.
Claude used to lie there and watch
the clouds, saying to himself, “It’s the
end of everything for me.” Other men than
he must have been disappointed, and he wondered how
they bore it through a lifetime. Claude had been
a well behaved boy because he was an idealist; he
had looked forward to being wonderfully happy in love,
and to deserving his happiness. He had never dreamed
that it might be otherwise.
Sometimes now, when he went out into
the fields on a bright summer morning, it seemed to
him that Nature not only smiled, but broadly laughed
at him. He suffered in his pride, but even more
in his ideals, in his vague sense of what was beautiful.
Enid could make his life hideous to him without ever
knowing it. At such times he hated himself for
accepting at all her grudging hospitality. He
was wronging something in himself.
In her person Enid was still attractive
to him. He wondered why she had no shades of
feeling to correspond to her natural grace and lightness
of movement, to the gentle, almost wistful attitudes
of body in which he sometimes surprised her. When
he came in from work and found her sitting on the
porch, leaning against a pillar, her hands clasped
about her knees, her head drooping a little, he could
scarcely believe in the rigidity which met him at
every turn. Was there something repellent in
him? Was it, after all, his fault?
Enid was rather more indulgent with
his father than with any one else, he noticed.
Mr. Wheeler stopped to see her almost every day, and
even took her driving in his old buckboard. Bayliss
came out from town to spend the evening occasionally.
Enid’s vegetarian suppers suited him, and as
she worked with him in the Prohibition campaign, they
always had business to discuss. Bayliss had a
social as well as a hygienic prejudice against alcohol,
and he hated it less for the harm it did than for the
pleasure it gave. Claude consistently refused
to take any part in the activities of the Anti-Saloon
League, or to distribute what Bayliss and Enid called
“our literature.”
In the farming towns the term “literature”
was applied only to a special kind of printed matter;
there was Prohibition literature, Sex-Hygiene literature,
and, during a scourge of cattle disease, there was
Hoof-and-Mouth literature. This special application
of the word didn’t bother Claude, but his mother,
being an old-fashioned school-teacher, complained
about it.
Enid did not understand her husband’s
indifference to a burning question, and could only
attribute it to the influence of Ernest Havel.
She sometimes asked Claude to go with her to one of
her committee meetings. If it was a Sunday, he
said he was tired and wanted to read the paper.
If it was a week-day, he had something to do at the
barn, or meant to clear out the timber claim.
He did, indeed, saw off a few dead limbs, and cut
down a tree the lightning had blasted. Further
than that he wouldn’t have let anybody clear
the timber lot; he would have died defending it.
The timber claim was his refuge.
In the open, grassy spots, shut in by the bushy walls
of yellowing ash trees, he felt unmarried and free;
free to smoke as much as he liked, and to read and
dream. Some of his dreams would have frozen his
young wife’s blood with horror and
some would have melted his mother’s heart with
pity. To lie in the hot sun and look up at the
stainless blue of the autumn sky, to hear the dry
rustle of the leaves as they fell, and the sound of
the bold squirrels leaping from branch to branch;
to lie thus and let his imagination play with life that
was the best he could do. His thoughts, he told
himself, were his own. He was no longer a boy.
He went off into the timber claim to meet a young
man more experienced and interesting than himself,
who had not tied himself up with compromises.
CHAPTER IV
From her upstairs window Mrs. Wheeler
could see Claude moving back and forth in the west
field, drilling wheat. She felt lonely for him.
He didn’t come home as often as he might.
She had begun to wonder whether he was one of those
people who are always discontented; but whatever his
disappointments were, he kept them locked in his own
breast. One had to learn the lessons of life.
Nevertheless, it made her a little sad to see him so
settled and indifferent at twenty-three.
After watching from the window for
a few moments, she turned to the telephone and called
up Claude’s house, asking Enid whether she would
mind if he came there for dinner. “Mahailey
and I get lonesome with Mr. Wheeler away so much,”
she added.
“Why, no, Mother Wheeler, of
course not.” Enid spoke cheerfully, as
she always did. “Have you any one there
you can send over to tell him?”
“I thought I would walk over
myself, Enid. It’s not far, if I take my
time.”
Mrs. Wheeler left the house a little
before noon and stopped at the creek to rest before
she climbed the long hill. At the edge of the
field she sat down against a grassy bank and waited
until the horses came tramping up the long rows.
Claude saw her and pulled them in.
“Anything wrong, Mother?” he called.
“Oh, no! I’m going
to take you home for dinner with me, that’s
all. I telephoned Enid.” He unhooked
his team, and he and his mother started down the hill
together, walking behind the horses. Though they
had not been alone like this for a long while, she
felt it best to talk about impersonal things.
“Don’t let me forget to
give you an article about the execution of that English
nurse.”
“Edith Cavell? I’ve
read about it,” he answered listlessly.
“It’s nothing to be surprised at.
If they could sink the Lusitania, they could shoot
an English nurse, certainly.”
“Someway I feel as if this were
different,” his mother murmured. “It’s
like the hanging of John Brown. I wonder they
could find soldiers to execute the sentence.”
“Oh, I guess they have plenty of such soldiers!”
Mrs. Wheeler looked up at him.
“I don’t see how we can stay out of it
much longer, do you? I suppose our army wouldn’t
be a drop in the bucket, even if we could get it over.
They tell us we can be more useful in our agriculture
and manufactories than we could by going into the
war. I only hope it isn’t campaign talk.
I do distrust the Democrats.”
Claude laughed. “Why, Mother,
I guess there’s no party politics in this.”
She shook her head. “I’ve
never yet found a public question in which there wasn’t
party politics. Well, we can only do our duty
as it comes to us, and have faith. This field
finishes your fall work?”
“Yes. I’ll have time
to do some things about the place, now. I’m
going to make a good ice-house and put up my own ice
this winter.”
“Were you thinking of going
up to Lincoln, for a little?”
“I guess not.”
Mrs. Wheeler sighed. His tone
meant that he had turned his back on old pleasures
and old friends.
“Have you and Enid taken tickets
for the lecture course in Frankfort?”
“I think so, Mother,”
he answered a little impatiently. “I told
her she could attend to it when she was in town some
day.”
“Of course,” his mother
persevered, “some of the programs are not very
good, but we ought to patronize them and make the best
of what we have.”
He knew, and his mother knew, that
he was not very good at that. His horses stopped
at the water tank. “Don’t wait for
me. I’ll be along in a minute.”
Seeing her crestfallen face, he smiled. “Never
mind, Mother, I can always catch you when you try to
give me a pill in a raisin. One of us has to
be pretty smart to fool the other.”
She blinked up at him with that smile
in which her eyes almost disappeared. “I
thought I was smart that time!”
It was a comfort, she reflected, as
she hurried up the hill, to get hold of him again,
to get his attention, even.
While Claude was washing for dinner,
Mahailey came to him with a page of newspaper cartoons,
illustrating German brutality. To her they were
all photographs, she knew no other way of
making a picture.
“Mr. Claude,” she asked,
“how comes it all them Germans is such ugly
lookin’ people? The Yoeders and the German
folks round here ain’t ugly lookin’.”
Claude put her off indulgently.
“Maybe it’s the ugly ones that are doing
the fighting, and the ones at home are nice, like our
neighbours.”
“Then why don’t they make
their soldiers stay home, an’ not go breakin’
other people’s things, an’ turnin’
’em out of their houses,” she muttered
indignantly. “They say little babies was
born out in the snow last winter, an’ no fires
for their mudders nor nothin’. ’Deed,
Mr. Claude, it wasn’t like that in our war;
the soldiers didn’t do nothin’ to the women
an’ chillun. Many a time our house was
full of Northern soldiers, an’ they never so
much as broke a piece of my mudder’s chiney.”
“You’ll have to tell me
about it again sometime, Mahailey. I must have
my dinner and get back to work. If we don’t
get our wheat in, those people over there won’t
have anything to eat, you know.”
The picture papers meant a great deal
to Mahailey, because she could faintly remember the
Civil War. While she pored over photographs of
camps and battlefields and devastated villages, things
came back to her; the companies of dusty Union infantry
that used to stop to drink at her mother’s cold
mountain spring. She had seen them take off their
boots and wash their bleeding feet in the run.
Her mother had given one louse-bitten boy a clean
shirt, and she had never forgotten the sight of his
back, “as raw as beef where he’d scratched
it.” Five of her brothers were in the Confederate
army. When one was wounded in the second battle
of Bull Run, her mother had borrowed a wagon and horses,
gone a three days’ journey to the field hospital,
and brought the boy home to the mountain. Mahailey
could remember how her older sisters took turns pouring
cold spring water on his gangrenous leg all day and
all night. There were no doctors left in the
neighbourhood, and as nobody could amputate the boy’s
leg, he died by inches. Mahailey was the only
person in the Wheeler household who had ever seen
war with her own eyes, and she felt that this fact
gave her a definite superiority.
CHAPTER V
Claude had been married a year and
a half. One December morning he got a telephone
message from his father-in-law, asking him to come
in to Frankfort at once. He found Mr. Royce sunk
in his desk-chair, smoking as usual, with several
foreign-looking letters on the table before him.
As he took these out of their envelopes and sorted
the pages, Claude noticed how unsteady his hands had
become.
One letter, from the chief of the
medical staff in the mission school where Caroline
Royce taught, informed Mr. Royce that his daughter
was seriously ill in the mission hospital. She
would have to be sent to a more salubrious part of
the country for rest and treatment, and would not
be strong enough to return to her duties for a year
or more. If some member of her family could come
out to take care of her, it would relieve the school
authorities of great anxiety. There was also a
letter from a fellow teacher, and a rather incoherent
one from Caroline herself. After Claude finished
reading them, Mr. Royce pushed a box of cigars toward
him and began to talk despondently about missionaries.
“I could go to her,” he
complained, “but what good would that do?
I’m not in sympathy with her ideas, and it would
only fret her. You can see she’s made her
mind up not to come home. I don’t believe
in one people trying to force their ways or their
religion on another. I’m not that kind of
man.” He sat looking at his cigar.
After a long pause he broke out suddenly, “China
has been drummed into my ears. It seems like
a long way to go to hunt for trouble, don’t
it? A man hasn’t got much control over
his own life, Claude. If it ain’t poverty
or disease that torments him, it’s a name on
the map. I could have made out pretty well, if
it hadn’t been for China, and some other things....
If Carrie’d had to teach for her clothes and
help pay off my notes, like old man Harrison’s
daughters, like enough she’d have stayed at
home. There’s always something. I don’t
know what to say about showing these letters to Enid.”
“Oh, she will have to know about
it, Mr. Royce. If she feels that she ought to
go to Carrie, it wouldn’t be right for me to
interfere.”
Mr. Royce shook his head. “I
don’t know. It don’t seem fair that
China should hang over you, too.”
When Claude got home he remarked as
he handed Enid the letters, “Your father has
been a good deal upset by this. I never saw him
look so old as he did today.”
Enid studied their contents, sitting
at her orderly little desk, while Claude pretended
to read the paper.
“It seems clear that I am the
one to go,” she said when she had finished.
“You think it’s necessary
for some one to go? I don’t see it.”
“It would look very strange
if none of us went,” Enid replied with spirit.
“How, look strange?”
“Why, it would look to her associates
as if her family had no feeling.”
“Oh, if that’s all!”
Claude smiled perversely and took up his paper again.
“I wonder how it will look to people here if
you go off and leave your husband?”
“What a mean thing to say, Claude!”
She rose sharply, then hesitated, perplexed.
“People here know me better than that. It
isn’t as if you couldn’t be perfectly comfortable
at your mother’s.” As he did not
glance up from his paper, she went into the kitchen.
Claude sat still, listening to Enid’s
quick movements as she opened up the range to get
supper. The light in the room grew greyer.
Outside the fields melted into one another as evening
came on. The young trees in the yard bent and
whipped about under a bitter north wind. He had
often thought with pride that winter died at his front
doorstep; within, no draughty halls, no chilly corners.
This was their second year here. When he was driving
home, the thought that he might be free of this house
for a long while had stirred a pleasant excitement
in him; but now, he didn’t want to leave it.
Something grew soft in him. He wondered whether
they couldn’t try again, and make things go better.
Enid was singing in the kitchen in a subdued, rather
lonely voice. He rose and went out for his milking
coat and pail. As he passed his wife by the window,
he stopped and put his arm about her questioningly.
She looked up. “That’s
right. You’re feeling better about it,
aren’t you? I thought you would. Gracious,
what a smelly coat, Claude! I must find another
for you.”
Claude knew that tone. Enid never
questioned the rightness of her own decisions.
When she made up her mind, there was no turning her.
He went down the path to the barn with his hands stuffed
in his trousers pockets, his bright pail hanging on
his arm. Try again what was there
to try? Platitudes, littleness, falseness....
His life was choking him, and he hadn’t the courage
to break with it. Let her go! Let her go
when she would!... What a hideous world to be
born into! Or was it hideous only for him?
Everything he touched went wrong under his hand always
had.
When they sat down at the supper table
in the back parlour an hour later, Enid looked worn,
as if this time her decision had cost her something.
“I should think you might have a restful winter
at your mother’s,” she began cheerfully.
“You won’t have nearly so much to look
after as you do here. We needn’t disturb
things in this house. I will take the silver down
to Mother, and we can leave everything else just as
it is. Would there be room for my car in your
father’s garage? You might find it a convenience.”
“Oh, no! I won’t
need it. I’ll put it up at the mill house,”
he answered with an effort at carelessness.
All the familiar objects that stood
about them in the lamplight seemed stiller and more
solemn than usual, as if they were holding their breath.
“I suppose you had better take
the chickens over to your mother’s,” Enid
continued evenly. “But I shouldn’t
like them to get mixed with her Plymouth Rocks; there’s
not a dark feather among them now. Do ask Mother
Wheeler to use all the eggs, and not to let my hens
set in the spring.”
“In the spring?” Claude looked up from
his plate.
“Of course, Claude. I could
hardly get back before next fall, if I’m to
be of any help to poor Carrie. I might try to
be home for harvest, if that would make it more convenient
for you.” She rose to bring in the dessert.
“Oh, don’t hurry on my
account!” he muttered, staring after her disappearing
figure.
Enid came back with the hot pudding
and the after-dinner coffee things. “This
has come on us so suddenly that we must make our plans
at once,” she explained. “I should
think your mother would be glad to keep Rose for us;
she is such a good cow. And then you can have
all the cream you want.”
He took the little gold-rimmed cup
she held out to him. “If you are going
to be gone until next fall, I shall sell Rose,”
he announced gruffly.
“But why? You might look
a long time before you found another like her.”
“I shall sell her, anyhow.
The horses, of course, are Father’s; he paid
for them. If you clear out, he may want to rent
this place. You may find a tenant in here when
you get back from China.” Claude swallowed
his coffee, put down the cup, and went into the front
parlour, where he lit a cigar. He walked up and
down, keeping his eyes fixed upon his wife, who still
sat at the table in the circle of light from the hanging
lamp. Her head, bent forward a little, showed
the neat part of her brown hair. When she was
perplexed, her face always looked sharper, her chin
longer.
“If you’ve no feeling
for the place,” said Claude from the other room,
“you can hardly expect me to hang around and
take care of it. All the time you were campaigning,
I played housekeeper here.”
Enid’s eyes narrowed, but she
did not flush. Claude had never seen a wave of
colour come over his wife’s pale, smooth cheeks.
“Don’t be childish.
You know I care for this place; it’s our home.
But no feeling would be right that kept me from doing
my duty. You are well, and you have your mother’s
house to go to. Carrie is ill and among strangers.”
She began to gather up the dishes.
Claude stepped quickly out into the light and confronted
her. “It’s not only your going.
You know what’s the matter with me. It’s
because you want to go. You are glad of a chance
to get away among all those preachers, with their
smooth talk and make-believe.”
Enid took up the tray. “If
I am glad, it’s because you are not willing
to govern our lives by Christian ideals. There
is something in you that rebels all the time.
So many important questions have come up since our
marriage, and you have been indifferent or sarcastic
about every one of them. You want to lead a purely
selfish life.”
She walked resolutely out of the room
and shut the door behind her. Later, when she
came back, Claude was not there. His hat and
coat were gone from the hat rack; he must have let
himself out quietly by the front door. Enid sat
up until eleven and then went to bed.
In the morning, on coming out from
her bedroom, she found Claude asleep on the lounge,
dressed, with his overcoat on. She had a moment
of terror and bent over him, but she could not detect
any smell of spirits. She began preparations
for breakfast, moving quietly.
Having once made up her mind to go
out to her sister, Enid lost no time. She engaged
passage and cabled the mission school. She left
Frankfort the week before Christmas. Claude and
Ralph took her as far as Denver and put her on a trans-continental
express. When Claude came home, he moved over
to his mother’s, and sold his cow and chickens
to Leonard Dawson. Except when he went to see
Mr. Royce, he seldom left the farm now, and he avoided
the neighbours. He felt that they were discussing
his domestic affairs, as, of course, they
were. The Royces and the Wheelers, they said,
couldn’t behave like anybody else, and it was
no use their trying. If Claude built the best
house in the neighbourhood, he just naturally wouldn’t
live in it. And if he had a wife at all, it was
like him to have a wife in China!
One snowy day, when nobody was about,
Claude took the big car and went over to his own place
to close the house for the winter and bring away the
canned fruit and vegetables left in the cellar.
Enid had packed her best linen in her cedar chest and
had put the kitchen and china closets in scrupulous
order before she went away. He began covering
the upholstered chairs and the mattresses with sheets,
rolled up the rugs, and fastened the windows securely.
As he worked, his hands grew more and more numb and
listless, and his heart was like a lump of ice.
All these things that he had selected with care and
in which he had taken such pride, were no more to
him now than the lumber piled in the shop of any second-hand
dealer.
How inherently mournful and ugly such
objects were, when the feeling that had made them
precious no longer existed! The debris of human
life was more worthless and ugly than the dead and
decaying things in nature. Rubbish... junk...
his mind could not picture anything that so exposed
and condemned all the dreary, weary, ever-repeated
actions by which life is continued from day to day.
Actions without meaning.... As he looked out
and saw the grey landscape through the gently falling
snow, he could not help thinking how much better it
would be if people could go to sleep like the fields;
could be blanketed down under the snow, to wake with
their hurts healed and their defeats forgotten.
He wondered how he was to go on through the years
ahead of him, unless he could get rid of this sick
feeling in his soul.
At last he locked the door, put the
key in his pocket, and went over to the timber claim
to smoke a cigar and say goodbye to the place.
There he soberly walked about for more than an hour,
under the crooked trees with empty birds’ nests
in their forks. Every time he came to a break
in the hedge, he could see the little house, giving
itself up so meekly to solitude. He did not believe
that he would ever live there again. Well, at
any rate, the money his father had put into the place
would not be lost; he could always get a better tenant
for having a comfortable house there. Several
of the boys in the neighbourhood were planning to be
married within the year. The future of the house
was safe. And he? He stopped short in his
walk; his feet had made an uncertain, purposeless
trail all over the white ground. It vexed him
to see his own footsteps. What was it what
was the matter with him? Why, at least,
could he not stop feeling things, and hoping?
What was there to hope for now?
He heard a sound of distress, and
looking back, saw the barn cat, that had been left
behind to pick up her living. She was standing
inside the hedge, her jet black fur ruffled against
the wet flakes, one paw lifted, mewing miserably.
Claude went over and picked her up.
“What’s the matter, Blackie?
Mice getting scarce in the barn? Mahailey will
say you are bad luck. Maybe you are, but you can’t
help it, can you?” He slipped her into his overcoat
pocket. Later, when he was getting into his car,
he tried to dislodge her and put her in a basket,
but she clung to her nest in his pocket and dug her
claws into the lining. He laughed. “Well,
if you are bad luck, I guess you are going to stay
right with me!”
She looked up at him with startled
yellow eyes and did not even mew.
CHAPTER VI
Mrs. Wheeler was afraid that Claude
might not find the old place comfortable, after having
had a house of his own. She put her best rocking
chair and a reading lamp in his bedroom. He often
sat there all evening, shading his eyes with his hand,
pretending to read. When he stayed downstairs
after supper, his mother and Mahailey were grateful.
Besides collecting war pictures, Mahailey now hunted
through the old magazines in the attic for pictures
of China. She had marked on her big kitchen calendar
the day when Enid would arrive in Hong-Kong.
“Mr. Claude,” she would
say as she stood at the sink washing the supper dishes,
“it’s broad daylight over where Miss Enid
is, ain’t it? Cause the world’s round,
an’ the old sun, he’s a-shinin’
over there for the yaller people.”
From time to time, when they were
working together, Mrs. Wheeler told Mahailey what
she knew about the customs of the Chinese. The
old woman had never had two impersonal interests at
the same time before, and she scarcely knew what to
do with them. She would murmur on, half to Claude
and half to herself: “They ain’t
fightin’ over there where Miss Enid is, is they?
An’ she won’t have to wear their kind
of clothes, cause she’s a white woman.
She won’t let ’em kill their girl babies
nor do such awful things like they always have, an’
she won’t let ’em pray to them stone iboles,
cause they can’t help ’em none. I
’spect Miss Enid’ll do a heap of good,
all the time.”
Behind her diplomatic monologues,
however, Mahailey had her own ideas, and she was greatly
scandalized at Enid’s departure. She was
afraid people would say that Claude’s wife had
“run off an’ lef’ him,” and
in the Virginia mountains, where her social standards
had been formed, a husband or wife thus deserted was
the object of boisterous ridicule. She once stopped
Mrs. Wheeler in a dark corner of the cellar to whisper,
“Mr. Claude’s wife ain’t goin’
to stay off there, like her sister, is she?”
If one of the Yoeder boys or Susie
Dawson happened to be at the Wheelers’ for dinner,
Mahailey never failed to refer to Enid in a loud voice.
“Mr. Claude’s wife, she cuts her potatoes
up raw in the pan an’ fries ’em.
She don’t boil ’em first like I do.
I know she’s an awful good cook, I know she
is.” She felt that easy references to the
absent wife made things look better.
Ernest Havel came to see Claude now,
but not often. They both felt it would be indelicate
to renew their former intimacy. Ernest still
felt aggrieved about his beer, as if Enid had snatched
the tankard from his lips with her own corrective hand.
Like Leonard, he believed that Claude had made a bad
bargain in matrimony; but instead of feeling sorry
for him, Ernest wanted to see him convinced and punished.
When he married Enid, Claude had been false to liberal
principles, and it was only right that he should pay
for his apostasy. The very first time he came
to spend an evening at the Wheelers’ after Claude
came home to live, Ernest undertook to explain his
objections to Prohibition. Claude shrugged his
shoulders.
“Why not drop it? It’s
a matter that doesn’t interest me, one way or
the other.”
Ernest was offended and did not come
back for nearly a month not, indeed, until
the announcement that Germany would resume unrestricted
submarine warfare made every one look questioningly
at his neighbour.
He walked into the Wheelers’
kitchen the night after this news reached the farming
country, and found Claude and his mother sitting at
the table, reading the papers aloud to each other in
snatches. Ernest had scarcely taken a seat when
the telephone bell rang. Claude answered the
call.
“It’s the telegraph operator
at Frankfort,” he said, as he hung up the receiver.
“He repeated a message from Father, sent from
Wray: ‘Will be home day after tomorrow.
Read the papers.’ What does he mean?
What does he suppose we are doing?”
“It means he considers our situation
very serious. It’s not like him to telegraph
except in case of illness.” Mrs. Wheeler
rose and walked distractedly to the telephone box,
as if it might further disclose her husband’s
state of mind.
“But what a queer message!
It was addressed to you, too, Mother, not to me.”
“He would know how I feel about
it. Some of your father’s people were seagoing
men, out of Portsmouth. He knows what it means
when our shipping is told where it can go on the ocean,
and where it cannot. It isn’t possible
that Washington can take such an affront for us.
To think that at this time, of all times, we should
have a Democratic administration!”
Claude laughed. “Sit down,
Mother. Wait a day or two. Give them time.”
“The war will be over before
Washington can do anything, Mrs. Wheeler,” Ernest
declared gloomily, “England will be starved out,
and France will be beaten to a standstill. The
whole German army will be on the Western front now.
What could this country do? How long do you suppose
it takes to make an army?”
Mrs. Wheeler stopped short in her
restless pacing and met his moody glance. “I
don’t know anything, Ernest, but I believe the
Bible. I believe that in the twinkling of an eye
we shall be changed!”
Ernest looked at the floor. He
respected faith. As he said, you must respect
it or despise it, for there was nothing else to do.
Claude sat leaning his elbows on the
table. “It always comes back to the same
thing, Mother. Even if a raw army could do anything,
how would we get it over there? Here’s one
naval authority who says the Germans are turning out
submarines at the rate of three a day. They probably
didn’t spring this on us until they had enough
built to keep the ocean clear.”
“I don’t pretend to say
what we could accomplish, son. But we must stand
somewhere, morally. They have told us all along
that we could be more helpful to the Allies out of
the war than in it, because we could send munitions
and supplies. If we agree to withdraw that aid,
where are we? Helping Germany, all the time we
are pretending to mind our own business! If our
only alternative is to be at the bottom of the sea,
we had better be there!”
“Mother, do sit down! We
can’t settle it tonight. I never saw you
so worked up.”
“Your father is worked up, too,
or he would never have sent that telegram.”
Mrs. Wheeler reluctantly took up her workbasket, and
the boys talked with their old, easy friendliness.
When Ernest left, Claude walked as
far as the Yoeders’ place with him, and came
back across the snow-drifted fields, under the frosty
brilliance of the winter stars. As he looked up
at them, he felt more than ever that they must have
something to do with the fate of nations, and with
the incomprehensible things that were happening in
the world. In the ordered universe there must
be some mind that read the riddle of this one unhappy
planet, that knew what was forming in the dark eclipse
of this hour. A question hung in the air; over
all this quiet land about him, over him, over his
mother, even. He was afraid for his country,
as he had been that night on the State House steps
in Denver, when this war was undreamed of, hidden
in the womb of time.
Claude and his mother had not long
to wait. Three days later they knew that the
German ambassador had been dismissed, and the American
ambassador recalled from Berlin. To older men
these events were subjects to think and converse about;
but to boys like Claude they were life and death,
predestination.
CHAPTER VII
One stormy morning Claude was driving
the big wagon to town to get a load of lumber.
The roads were beginning to thaw out, and the country
was black and dirty looking. Here and there on
the dark mud, grey snow crusts lingered, perforated
like honeycomb, with wet weedstalks sticking up through
them. As the wagon creaked over the high ground
just above Frankfort, Claude noticed a brilliant new
flag flying from the schoolhouse cupola. He had
never seen the flag before when it meant anything but
the Fourth of July, or a political rally. Today
it was as if he saw it for the first time; no bands,
no noise, no orators; a spot of restless colour against
the sodden March sky.
He turned out of his way in order
to pass the High School, drew up his team, and waited
a few minutes until the noon bell rang. The older
boys and girls came out first, with a flurry of raincoats
and umbrellas. Presently he saw Gladys Farmer,
in a yellow “slicker” and an oilskin hat,
and waved to her. She came up to the wagon.
“I like your decoration,”
he said, glancing toward the cupola.
“It’s a silk one the Senior
boys bought with their athletic money. I advised
them not to run it up in this rain, but the class
president told me they bought that flag for storms.”
“Get in, and I’ll take you home.”
She took his extended hand, put her
foot on the hub of the wheel, and climbed to the seat
beside him. He clucked to his team.
“So your High School boys are
feeling war-like these days?”
“Very. What do you think?”
“I think they’ll have a chance to express
their feelings.”
“Do you, Claude? It seems awfully unreal.”
“Nothing else seems very real,
either. I’m going to haul out a load of
lumber, but I never expect to drive a nail in it.
These things don’t matter now. There is
only one thing we ought to do, and only one thing
that matters; we all know it.”
“You feel it’s coming nearer every day?”
“Every day.”
Gladys made no reply. She only
looked at him gravely with her calm, generous brown
eyes. They stopped before the low house where
the windows were full of flowers. She took his
hand and swung herself to the ground, holding it for
a moment while she said good-bye. Claude drove
back to the lumber yard. In a place like Frankfort,
a boy whose wife was in China could hardly go to see
Gladys without causing gossip.
CHAPTER VIII
During the bleak month of March Mr.
Wheeler went to town in his buckboard almost every
day. For the first time in his life he had a
secret anxiety. The one member of his family who
had never given him the slightest trouble, his son
Bayliss, was just now under a cloud.
Bayliss was a Pacifist, and kept telling
people that if only the United States would stay out
of this war, and gather up what Europe was wasting,
she would soon be in actual possession of the capital
of the world. There was a kind of logic in Bayliss’
utterances that shook Nat Wheeler’s imperturbable
assumption that one point of view was as good as another.
When Bayliss fought the dram and the cigarette, Wheeler
only laughed. That a son of his should turn out
a Prohibitionist, was a joke he could appreciate.
But Bayliss’ attitude in the present crisis disturbed
him. Day after day he sat about his son’s
place of business, interrupting his arguments with
funny stories. Bayliss did not go home at all
that month. He said to his father, “No,
Mother’s too violent. I’d better
not.”
Claude and his mother read the papers
in the evening, but they talked so little about what
they read that Mahailey inquired anxiously whether
they weren’t still fighting over yonder.
When she could get Claude alone for a moment, she
pulled out Sunday supplement pictures of the devastated
countries and asked him to tell her what was to become
of this family, photographed among the ruins of their
home; of this old woman, who sat by the roadside with
her bundles. “Where’s she goin’
to, anyways? See, Mr. Claude, she’s got
her iron cook-pot, pore old thing, carryin’
it all the way!”
Pictures of soldiers in gas-masks
puzzled her; gas was something she hadn’t learned
about in the Civil War, so she worked it out for herself
that these masks were worn by the army cooks, to protect
their eyes when they were cutting up onions! “All
them onions they have to cut up, it would put their
eyes out if they didn’t wear somethin’,”
she argued.
On the morning of the eighth of April
Claude came downstairs early and began to clean his
boots, which were caked with dry mud. Mahailey
was squatting down beside her stove, blowing and puffing
into it. The fire was always slow to start in
heavy weather. Claude got an old knife and a
brush, and putting his foot on a chair over by the
west window, began to scrape his shoe. He had
said good-morning to Mahailey, nothing more. He
hadn’t slept well, and was pale.
“Mr. Claude,” Mahailey
grumbled, “this stove ain’t never drawed
good like my old one Mr. Ralph took away from me.
I can’t do nothin’ with it. Maybe
you’ll clean it out for me next Sunday.”
“I’ll clean it today,
if you say so. I won’t be here next Sunday.
I’m going away.”
Something in his tone made Mahailey
get up, her eyes still blinking with the smoke, and
look at him sharply. “You ain’t goin’
off there where Miss Enid is?” she asked anxiously.
“No, Mahailey.” He
had dropped the shoebrush and stood with one foot
on the chair, his elbow on his knee, looking out of
the window as if he had forgotten himself. “No,
I’m not going to China. I’m going
over to help fight the Germans.”
He was still staring out at the wet
fields. Before he could stop her, before he knew
what she was doing, she had caught and kissed his
unworthy hand.
“I knowed you would,”
she sobbed. “I always knowed you would,
you nice boy, you! Old Mahail’ knowed!”
Her upturned face was working all
over; her mouth, her eyebrows, even the wrinkles on
her low forehead were working and twitching.
Claude felt a tightening in his throat as he tenderly
regarded that face; behind the pale eyes, under the
low brow where there was not room for many thoughts,
an idea was struggling and tormenting her. The
same idea that had been tormenting him.
“You’re all right, Mahailey,”
he muttered, patting her back and turning away.
“Now hurry breakfast.”
“You ain’t told your mudder yit?”
she whispered.
“No, not yet. But she’ll
be all right, too.” He caught up his cap
and went down to the barn to look after the horses.
When Claude returned, the family were
already at the breakfast table. He slipped into
his seat and watched his mother while she drank her
first cup of coffee. Then he addressed his father.
“Father, I don’t see any
use of waiting for the draft. If you can spare
me, I’d like to get into a training camp somewhere.
I believe I’d stand a chance of getting a commission.”
“I shouldn’t wonder.”
Mr. Wheeler poured maple syrup on his pancakes with
a liberal hand. “How do you feel about it,
Evangeline?”
Mrs. Wheeler had quietly put down
her knife and fork. She looked at her husband
in vague alarm, while her fingers moved restlessly
about over the tablecloth.
“I thought,” Claude went
on hastily, “that maybe I would go up to Omaha
tomorrow and find out where the training camps are
to be located, and have a talk with the men in charge
of the enlistment station. Of course,”
he added lightly, “they may not want me.
I haven’t an idea what the requirements are.”
“No, I don’t understand
much about it either.” Mr. Wheeler rolled
his top pancake and conveyed it to his mouth.
After a moment of mastication he said, “You
figure on going tomorrow?”
“I’d like to. I won’t
bother with baggage some shirts and underclothes
in my suitcase. If the Government wants me, it
will clothe me.”
Mr. Wheeler pushed back his plate.
“Well, now I guess you’d better come out
with me and look at the wheat. I don’t know
but I’d best plough up that south quarter and
put it in corn. I don’t believe it will
make anything much.”
When Claude and his father went out
of the door, Dan sprang up with more alacrity than
usual and plunged after them. He did not want
to be left alone with Mrs. Wheeler. She remained
sitting at the foot of the deserted breakfast table.
She was not crying. Her eyes were utterly sightless.
Her back was so stooped that she seemed to be bending
under a burden. Mahailey cleared the dishes away
quietly.
Out in the muddy fields Claude finished
his talk with his father. He explained that he
wanted to slip away without saying good-bye to any
one. “I have a way, you know,” he
said, flushing, “of beginning things and not
getting very far with them. I don’t want
anything said about this until I’m sure.
I may be rejected for one reason or another.”
Mr. Wheeler smiled. “I
guess not. However, I’ll tell Dan to keep
his mouth shut. Will you just go over to Leonard
Dawson’s and get that wrench he borrowed?
It’s about noon, and he’ll likely be at
home.” Claude found big Leonard watering
his team at the windmill. When Leonard asked
him what he thought of the President’s message,
he blurted out at once that he was going to Omaha
to enlist. Leonard reached up and pulled the lever
that controlled the almost motionless wheel.
“Better wait a few weeks and
I’ll go with you. I’m going to try
for the Marines. They take my eye.”
Claude, standing on the edge of the
tank, almost fell backward. “Why, what what
for?”
Leonard looked him over. “Good
Lord, Claude, you ain’t the only fellow around
here that wears pants! What for? Well, I’ll
tell you what for,” he held up three large red
fingers threateningly; “Belgium, the Lusitania,
Edith Cavell. That dirt’s got under my
skin. I’ll get my corn planted, and then
Father’ll look after Susie till I come back.”
Claude took a long breath. “Well,
Leonard, you fooled me. I believed all this chaff
you’ve been giving me about not caring who chewed
up who.”
“And no more do I care,”
Leonard protested, “not a damn! But there’s
a limit. I’ve been ready to go since the
Lusitania. I don’t get any satisfaction
out of my place any more. Susie feels the same
way.”
Claude looked at his big neighbour.
“Well, I’m off tomorrow, Leonard.
Don’t mention it to my folks, but if I can’t
get into the army, I’m going to enlist in the
navy. They’ll always take an able-bodied
man. I’m not coming back here.”
He held out his hand and Leonard took it with a smack.
“Good luck, Claude. Maybe
we’ll meet in foreign parts. Wouldn’t
that be a joke! Give my love to Enid when you
write. I always did think she was a fine girl,
though I disagreed with her on Prohibition.”
Claude crossed the fields mechanically, without looking
where he went. His power of vision was turned
inward upon scenes and events wholly imaginary as
yet.
CHAPTER IX
One bright June day Mr. Wheeler parked
his car in a line of motors before the new pressed-brick
Court house in Frankfort. The Court house stood
in an open square, surrounded by a grove of cotton-woods.
The lawn was freshly cut, and the flower beds were
blooming. When Mr. Wheeler entered the courtroom
upstairs, it was already half-full of farmers and
townspeople, talking in low tones while the summer
flies buzzed in and out of the open windows.
The judge, a one-armed man, with white hair and side-whiskers,
sat at his desk, writing with his left hand. He
was an old settler in Frankfort county, but from his
frockcoat and courtly manners you might have thought
he had come from Kentucky yesterday instead of thirty
years ago. He was to hear this morning a charge
of disloyalty brought against two German farmers.
One of the accused was August Yoeder, the Wheelers’
nearest neighbour, and the other was Troilus Oberlies,
a rich German from the northern part of the county.
Oberlies owned a beautiful farm and
lived in a big white house set on a hill, with a fine
orchard, rows of beehives, barns, granaries, and poultry
yards. He raised turkeys and tumbler-pigeons,
and many geese and ducks swam about on his cattleponds.
He used to boast that he had six sons, “like
our German Emperor.” His neighbours were
proud of his place, and pointed it out to strangers.
They told how Oberlies had come to Frankfort county
a poor man, and had made his fortune by his industry
and intelligence. He had twice crossed the ocean
to re-visit his fatherland, and when he returned to
his home on the prairies he brought presents for every
one; his lawyer, his banker, and the merchants with
whom he dealt in Frankfort and Vicount. Each
of his neighbours had in his parlour some piece of
woodcarving or weaving, or some ingenious mechanical
toy that Oberlies had picked up in Germany. He
was an older man than Yoeder, wore a short beard that
was white and curly, like his hair, and though he
was low in stature, his puffy red face and full blue
eyes, and a certain swagger about his carriage, gave
him a look of importance. He was boastful and
quick-tempered, but until the war broke out in Europe
nobody had ever had any trouble with him. Since
then he had constantly found fault and complained, everything
was better in the Old Country.
Mr. Wheeler had come to town prepared
to lend Yoeder a hand if he needed one. They
had worked adjoining fields for thirty years now.
He was surprised that his neighbour had got into trouble.
He was not a blusterer, like Oberlies, but a big,
quiet man, with a serious, large-featured face, and
a stern mouth that seldom opened. His countenance
might have been cut out of red sandstone, it was so
heavy and fixed. He and Oberlies sat on two wooden
chairs outside the railing of the judge’s desk.
Presently the judge stopped writing
and said he would hear the charges against Troilus
Oberlies. Several neighbours took the stand in
succession; their complaints were confused and almost
humorous. Oberlies had said the United States
would be licked, and that would be a good thing; America
was a great country, but it was run by fools, and
to be governed by Germany was the best thing that
could happen to it. The witness went on to say
that since Oberlies had made his money in this country
Here the judge interrupted him.
“Please confine yourself to statements which
you consider disloyal, made in your presence by the
defendant.” While the witness proceeded,
the judge took off his glasses and laid them on the
desk and began to polish the lenses with a silk handkerchief,
trying them, and rubbing them again, as if he desired
to see clearly.
A second witness had heard Oberlies
say he hoped the German submarines would sink a few
troopships; that would frighten the Americans and
teach them to stay at home and mind their own business.
A third complained that on Sunday afternoons the old
man sat on his front porch and played Die Wacht am
Rhein on a slide-trombone, to the great annoyance
of his neighbours. Here Nat Wheeler slapped his
knee with a loud guffaw, and a titter ran through
the courtroom. The defendant’s puffy red
cheeks seemed fashioned by his Maker to give voice
to that piercing instrument.
When asked if he had anything to say
to these charges, the old man rose, threw back his
shoulders, and cast a defiant glance at the courtroom.
“You may take my property and imprison me, but
I explain nothing, and I take back nothing,”
he declared in a loud voice.
The judge regarded his inkwell with
a smile. “You mistake the nature of this
occasion, Mr. Oberlies. You are not asked to
recant. You are merely asked to desist from further
disloyal utterances, as much for your own protection
and comfort as from consideration for the feelings
of your neighbours. I will now hear the charges
against Mr. Yoeder.”
Mr. Yoeder, a witness declared, had
said he hoped the United States would go to Hell,
now that it had been bought over by England.
When the witness had remarked to him that if the Kaiser
were shot it would end the war, Yoeder replied that
charity begins at home, and he wished somebody would
put a bullet in the President.
When he was called upon, Yoeder rose
and stood like a rock before the judge. “I
have nothing to say. The charges are true.
I thought this was a country where a man could speak
his mind.”
“Yes, a man can speak his mind,
but even here he must take the consequences.
Sit down, please.” The judge leaned back
in his chair, and looking at the two men in front
of him, began with deliberation: “Mr. Oberlies,
and Mr. Yoeder, you both know, and your friends and
neighbours know, why you are here. You have not
recognized the element of appropriateness, which must
be regarded in nearly all the transactions of life;
many of our civil laws are founded upon it. You
have allowed a sentiment, noble in itself, to carry
you away and lead you to make extravagant statements
which I am confident neither of you mean. No man
can demand that you cease from loving the country
of your birth; but while you enjoy the benefits of
this country, you should not defame its government
to extol another. You both admit to utterances
which I can only adjudge disloyal. I shall fine
you each three hundred dollars; a very light fine
under the circumstances. If I should have occasion
to fix a penalty a second time, it will be much more
severe.”
After the case was concluded, Mr.
Wheeler joined his neighbour at the door and they
went downstairs together.
“Well, what do you hear from
Claude?” Mr. Yoeder asked.
“He’s still at Fort R .
He expects to get home on leave before he sails.
Gus, you’ll have to lend me one of your boys
to cultivate my corn. The weeds are getting away
from me.”
“Yes, you can have any of my
boys, till the draft gets ’em,”
said Yoeder sourly.
“I wouldn’t worry about
it. A little military training is good for a
boy. You fellows know that.” Mr. Wheeler
winked, and Yoeder’s grim mouth twitched at
one corner.
That evening at supper Mr. Wheeler
gave his wife a full account of the court hearing,
so that she could write it to Claude. Mrs. Wheeler,
always more a school-teacher than a housekeeper, wrote
a rapid, easy hand, and her long letters to Claude
reported all the neighbourhood doings. Mr. Wheeler
furnished much of the material for them. Like
many long-married men he had fallen into the way of
withholding neighbourhood news from his wife.
But since Claude went away he reported to her everything
in which he thought the boy would be interested.
As she laconically said in one of her letters:
“Your father talks a great deal
more at home than formerly, and sometimes I think
he is trying to take your place.”
CHAPTER X
On the first day of July Claude Wheeler
found himself in the fast train from Omaha, going
home for a week’s leave. The uniform was
still an unfamiliar sight in July, 1917. The first
draft was not yet called, and the boys who had rushed
off and enlisted were in training camps far away.
Therefore a redheaded young man with long straight
legs in puttees, and broad, energetic, responsible-looking
shoulders in close-fitting khaki, made a conspicuous
figure among the passengers. Little boys and young
girls peered at him over the tops of seats, men stopped
in the aisle to talk to him, old ladies put on their
glasses and studied his clothes, his bulky canvas
hold-all, and even the book he kept opening and forgetting
to read.
The country that rushed by him on
each side of the track was more interesting to his
trained eye than the pages of any book. He was
glad to be going through it at harvest, the
season when it is most itself. He noted that
there was more corn than usual, much of
the winter wheat had been weather killed, and the fields
were ploughed up in the spring and replanted in maize.
The pastures were already burned brown, the alfalfa
was coming green again after its first cutting.
Binders and harvesters were abroad in the wheat and
oats, gathering the soft-breathing billows of grain
into wide, subduing arms. When the train slowed
down for a trestle in a wheat field, harvesters in
blue shirts and overalls and wide straw hats stopped
working to wave at the passengers. Claude turned
to the old man in the opposite seat. “When
I see those fellows, I feel as if I’d wakened
up in the wrong clothes.”
His neighbour looked pleased and smiled.
“That the kind of uniform you’re accustomed
to?”
“I surely never wore anything
else in the month of July,” Claude admitted.
“When I find myself riding along in a train,
in the middle of harvest, trying to learn French verbs,
then I know the world is turned upside down, for a
fact!”
The old man pressed a cigar upon him
and began to question him. Like the hero of the
Odyssey upon his homeward journey, Claude had often
to tell what his country was, and who were the parents
that begot him. He was constantly interrupted
in his perusal of a French phrase-book (made up of
sentences chosen for their usefulness to soldiers, such
as; “Non, jamais je ne regarde
les femmes”) by the questions of curious
strangers. Presently he gathered up his luggage,
shook hands with his neighbour, and put on his hat the
same old Stetson, with a gold cord and two hard tassels
added to its conical severity. “I get off
at this station and wait for the freight that goes
down to Frankfort; the cotton-tail, we call it.”
The old man wished him a pleasant
visit home, and the best of luck in days to come.
Every one in the car smiled at him as he stepped down
to the platform with his suitcase in one hand and
his canvas bag in the other. His old friend, Mrs.
Voigt, the German woman, stood out in front of her
restaurant, ringing her bell to announce that dinner
was ready for travellers. A crowd of young boys
stood about her on the sidewalk, laughing and shouting
in disagreeable, jeering tones. As Claude approached,
one of them snatched the bell from her hand, ran off
across the tracks with it, and plunged into a cornfield.
The other boys followed, and one of them shouted,
“Don’t go in there to eat, soldier.
She’s a German spy, and she’ll put ground
glass in your dinner!”
Claude swept into the lunch room and
threw his bags on the floor. “What’s
the matter, Mrs. Voigt? Can I do anything for
you?”
She was sitting on one of her own
stools, crying piteously, her false frizzes awry.
Looking up, she gave a little screech of recognition.
“Oh, I tank Gott it was you, and no more trouble
coming! You know I ain’t no spy nor nodding,
like what dem boys say. Dem young fellers
is dreadful rough mit me. I sell dem
candy since dey was babies, an’ now dey turn
on me like dis. Hindenburg, dey calls me,
and Kaiser Bill!” She began to cry again, twisting
her stumpy little fingers as if she would tear them
off.
“Give me some dinner, ma’am,
and then I’ll go and settle with that gang.
I’ve been away for a long time, and it seemed
like getting home when I got off the train and saw
your squaw vines running over the porch like they
used to.”
“Ya? You remember dat?”
she wiped her eyes. “I got a pot-pie today,
and green peas, chust a few, out of my own garden.”
“Bring them along, please.
We don’t get anything but canned stuff in camp.”
Some railroad men came in for lunch.
Mrs. Voigt beckoned Claude off to the end of the counter,
where, after she had served her customers, she sat
down and talked to him, in whispers.
“My, you look good in dem
clothes,” she said patting his sleeve.
“I can remember some wars, too; when we got back
dem provinces what Napoleon took away from us,
Alsace and Lorraine. Dem boys is passed
de word to come and put tar on me some night, and I
am skeered to go in my bet. I chust wrap in a
quilt and sit in my old chair.”
“Don’t pay any attention
to them. You don’t have trouble with the
business people here, do you?”
“No-o, not troubles, exactly.”
She hesitated, then leaned impulsively across the
counter and spoke in his ear. “But it ain’t
all so bad in de Old Country like what dey say.
De poor people ain’t slaves, and dey ain’t
ground down like what dey say here. Always de
forester let de poor folks come into de wood and carry
off de limbs dat fall, and de dead trees. Und
if de rich farmer have maybe a liddle more manure
dan he need, he let de poor man come and take
some for his land. De poor folks don’t git
such wages like here, but dey lives chust as comfortable.
Und dem wooden shoes, what dey makes such
fun of, is cleaner dan what leather is, to go
round in de mud and manure. Dey don’t git
so wet and dey don’t stink so.”
Claude could see that her heart was
bursting with homesickness, full of tender memories
of the far-away time and land of her youth. She
had never talked to him of these things before, but
now she poured out a flood of confidences about the
big dairy farm on which she had worked as a girl;
how she took care of nine cows, and how the cows,
though small, were very strong, drew a
plough all day and yet gave as much milk at night as
if they had been browsing in a pasture! The country
people never had to spend money for doctors, but cured
all diseases with roots and herbs, and when the old
folks had the rheumatism they took “one of dem
liddle jenny-pigs” to bed with them, and the
guinea-pig drew out all the pain.
Claude would have liked to listen
longer, but he wanted to find the old woman’s
tormentors before his train came in. Leaving his
bags with her, he crossed the railroad tracks, guided
by an occasional teasing tinkle of the bell in the
cornfield. Presently he came upon the gang, a
dozen or more, lying in a shallow draw that ran from
the edge of the field out into an open pasture.
He stood on the edge of the bank and looked down at
them, while he slowly cut off the end of a cigar and
lit it. The boys grinned at him, trying to appear
indifferent and at ease.
“Looking for any one, soldier?”
asked the one with the bell.
“Yes, I am. I’m looking
for that bell. You’ll have to take it back
where it belongs. You every one of you know there’s
no harm in that old woman.”
“She’s a German, and we’re
fighting the Germans, ain’t we?”
“I don’t think you’ll
ever fight any. You’d last about ten minutes
in the American army. You’re not our kind.
There’s only one army in the world that wants
men who’ll bully old women. You might get
a job with them.”
The boys giggled. Claude beckoned
impatiently. “Come along with that bell,
kid.”
The boy rose slowly and climbed the
bank out of the gully. As they tramped back through
the cornfield, Claude turned to him abruptly.
“See here, aren’t you ashamed of yourself?”
“Oh, I don’t know about
that!” the boy replied airily, tossing the bell
up like a ball and catching it.
“Well, you ought to be.
I didn’t expect to see anything of this kind
until I got to the front. I’ll be back here
in a week, and I’ll make it hot for anybody
that’s been bothering her.” Claude’s
train was pulling in, and he ran for his baggage.
Once seated in the “cotton-tail,” he began
going down into his own country, where he knew every
farm he passed, knew the land even when
he did not know the owner, what sort of crops it yielded,
and about how much it was worth. He did not recognize
these farms with the pleasure he had anticipated,
because he was so angry about the indignities Mrs.
Voigt had suffered. He was still burning with
the first ardour of the enlisted man. He believed
that he was going abroad with an expeditionary force
that would make war without rage, with uncompromising
generosity and chivalry.
Most of his friends at camp shared
his Quixotic ideas. They had come together from
farms and shops and mills and mines, boys from college
and boys from tough joints in big cities; sheepherders,
street car drivers, plumbers’ assistants, billiard
markers. Claude had seen hundreds of them when
they first came in; “show men” in cheap,
loud sport suits, ranch boys in knitted waistcoats,
machinists with the grease still on their fingers,
farm-hands like Dan, in their one Sunday coat.
Some of them carried paper suitcases tied up with
rope, some brought all they had in a blue handkerchief.
But they all came to give and not to ask, and what
they offered was just themselves; their big red hands,
their strong backs, the steady, honest, modest look
in their eyes. Sometimes, when he had helped
the medical examiner, Claude had noticed the anxious
expression in the faces of the long lines of waiting
men. They seemed to say, “If I’m good
enough, take me. I’ll stay by.”
He found them like that to work with; serviceable,
good-natured, and eager to learn. If they talked
about the war, or the enemy they were getting ready
to fight, it was usually in a facetious tone; they
were going to “can the Kaiser,” or to
make the Crown Prince work for a living. Claude,
loved the men he trained with, wouldn’t
choose to live in any better company.
The freight train swung into the river
valley that meant home, the place the mind
always came back to, after its farthest quest.
Rapidly the farms passed; the haystacks, the cornfields,
the familiar red barns then the long coal
sheds and the water tank, and the train stopped.
On the platform he saw Ralph and Mr.
Royce, waiting to welcome him. Over there, in
the automobile, were his father and mother, Mr. Wheeler
in the driver’s seat. A line of motors stood
along the siding. He was the first soldier who
had come home, and some of the townspeople had driven
down to see him arrive in his uniform. From one
car Susie Dawson waved to him, and from another Gladys
Farmer. While he stopped and spoke to them, Ralph
took his bags.
“Come along, boys,” Mr.
Wheeler called, tooting his horn, and he hurried the
soldier away, leaving only a cloud of dust behind.
Mr. Royce went over to old man Dawson’s
car and said rather childishly, “It can’t
be that Claude’s grown taller? I suppose
it’s the way they learn to carry themselves.
He always was a manly looking boy.”
“I expect his mother’s
a proud woman,” said Susie, very much excited.
“It’s too bad Enid can’t be here
to see him. She would never have gone away if
she’d known all that was to happen.”
Susie did not mean this as a thrust,
but it took effect. Mr. Royce turned away and
lit a cigar with some difficulty. His hands had
grown very unsteady this last year, though he insisted
that his general health was as good as ever.
As he grew older, he was more depressed by the conviction
that his women-folk had added little to the warmth
and comfort of the world. Women ought to do that,
whatever else they did. He felt apologetic toward
the Wheelers and toward his old friends. It seemed
as if his daughters had no heart.
XI Camp habits persisted. On
his first morning at home Claude came downstairs before
even Mahailey was stirring, and went out to have a
look at the stock. The red sun came up just as
he was going down the hill toward the cattle corral,
and he had the pleasant feeling of being at home,
on his father’s land. Why was it so gratifying
to be able to say “our hill,” and “our
creek down yonder”? to feel the crunch of this
particular dried mud under his boots?
When he went into the barn to see
the horses, the first creatures to meet his eye were
the two big mules that had run away with him, standing
in the stalls next the door. It flashed upon Claude
that these muscular quadrupeds were the actual authors
of his fate. If they had not bolted with him
and thrown him into the wire fence that morning, Enid
would not have felt sorry for him and come to see
him every day, and his life might have turned out
differently. Perhaps if older people were a little
more honest, and a boy were not taught to idealize
in women the very qualities which can make him utterly
unhappy But there, he had got away from
those regrets. But wasn’t it just like him
to be dragged into matrimony by a pair of mules!
He laughed as he looked at them.
“You old devils, you’re strong enough
to play such tricks on green fellows for years to come.
You’re chock full of meanness!”
One of the animals wagged an ear and
cleared his throat threateningly. Mules are capable
of strong affections, but they hate snobs, are the
enemies of caste, and this pair had always seemed
to detect in Claude what his father used to call his
“false pride.” When he was a young
lad they had been a source of humiliation to him,
braying and balking in public places, trying to show
off at the lumber yard or in front of the post office.
At the end manger Claude found old
Molly, the grey mare with the stiff leg, who had grown
a second hoof on her off forefoot, an achievement
not many horses could boast of. He was sure she
recognized him; she nosed his hand and arm and turned
back her upper lip, showing her worn, yellow teeth.
“Mustn’t do that, Molly,”
he said as he stroked her. “A dog can laugh,
but it makes a horse look foolish. Seems to me
Dan might curry you about once a week!” He took
a comb from its niche behind a joist and gave her
old coat a rubbing. Her white hair was flecked
all over with little rust-coloured dashes, like India
ink put on with a fine brush, and her mane and tail
had turned a greenish yellow. She must be eighteen
years old, Claude reckoned, as he polished off her
round, heavy haunches. He and Ralph used to ride
her over to the Yoeders’ when they were barefoot
youngsters, guiding her with a rope halter, and kicking
at the leggy colt that was always running alongside.
When he entered the kitchen and asked
Mahailey for warm water to wash his hands, she sniffed
him disapprovingly.
“Why, Mr. Claude, you’ve
been curryin’ that old mare, and you’ve
got white hairs all over your soldier-clothes.
You’re jist covered!”
If his uniform stirred feeling in
people of sober judgment, over Mahailey it cast a
spell. She was so dazzled by it that all the
time Claude was at home she never once managed to examine
it in detail. Before she got past his puttees,
her powers of observation were befogged by excitement,
and her wits began to jump about like monkeys in a
cage. She had expected his uniform to be blue,
like those she remembered, and when he walked into
the kitchen last night she scarcely knew what to make
of him. After Mrs. Wheeler explained to her that
American soldiers didn’t wear blue now, Mahailey
repeated to herself that these brown clothes didn’t
show the dust, and that Claude would never look like
the bedraggled men who used to stop to drink at her
mother’s spring.
“Them leather leggins is
to keep the briars from scratchin’ you, ain’t
they? I ’spect there’s an awful lot
of briars over there, like them long blackberry vines
in the fields in Virginia. Your madder says the
soldiers git lice now, like they done in our war.
You jist carry a little bottle of coal-oil in your
pocket an’ rub it on your head at night.
It keeps the nits from hatchin’.”
Over the flour barrel in the corner
Mahailey had tacked a Red Cross poster; a charcoal
drawing of an old woman poking with a stick in a pile
of plaster and twisted timbers that had once been
her home. Claude went over to look at it while
he dried his hands.
“Where did you get your picture?”
“She’s over there where
you’re goin’, Mr. Claude. There she
is, huntin’ for somethin’ to cook with;
no stove nor no dishes nor nothin’ everything
all broke up. I reckon she’ll be mighty
glad to see you comin’.”
Heavy footsteps sounded on the stairs,
and Mahailey whispered hastily, “Don’t
forgit about the coal-oil, and don’t you be lousy
if you can help it, honey.” She considered
lice in the same class with smutty jokes, things
to be whispered about.
After breakfast Mr. Wheeler took Claude
out to the fields, where Ralph was directing the harvesters.
They watched the binder for a while, then went over
to look at the haystacks and alfalfa, and walked along
the edge of the cornfield, where they examined the
young ears. Mr. Wheeler explained and exhibited
the farm to Claude as if he were a stranger; the boy
had a curious feeling of being now formally introduced
to these acres on which he had worked every summer
since he was big enough to carry water to the harvesters.
His father told him how much land they owned, and how
much it was worth, and that it was unencumbered except
for a trifling mortgage he had given on one quarter
when he took over the Colorado ranch.
“When you come back,”
he said, “you and Ralph won’t have to hunt
around to get into business. You’ll both
be well fixed. Now you’d better go home
by old man Dawson’s and drop in to see Susie.
Everybody about here was astonished when Leonard went.”
He walked with Claude to the corner where the Dawson
land met his own. “By the way,” he
said as he turned back, “don’t forget to
go in to see the Yoeders sometime. Gus is pretty
sore since they had him up in court. Ask for
the old grandmother. You remember she never learned
any English. And now they’ve told her it’s
dangerous to talk German, she don’t talk at
all and hides away from everybody. If I go by
early in the morning, when she’s out weeding
the garden, she runs and squats down in the gooseberry
bushes till I’m out of sight.”
Claude decided he would go to the
Yoeders’ today, and to the Dawsons’ tomorrow.
He didn’t like to think there might be hard
feeling toward him in a house where he had had so many
good times, and where he had often found a refuge
when things were dull at home. The Yoeder boys
had a music-box long before the days of Victrolas,
and a magic lantern, and the old grandmother made
wonderful shadow-pictures on a sheet, and told stories
about them. She used to turn the map of Europe
upside down on the kitchen table and showed the children
how, in this position, it looked like a jungfrau;
and recited a long German rhyme which told how Spain
was the maiden’s head, the Pyrenees her lace
ruff, Germany her heart and bosom, England and Italy
were two arms, and Russia, though it looked so big,
was only a hoopskirt. This rhyme would probably
be condemned as dangerous propaganda now!
As he walked on alone, Claude was
thinking how this country that had once seemed little
and dull to him, now seemed large and rich in variety.
During the months in camp he had been wholly absorbed
in new work and new friendships, and now his own neighbourhood
came to him with the freshness of things that have
been forgotten for a long while, came together
before his eyes as a harmonious whole. He was
going away, and he would carry the whole countryside
in his mind, meaning more to him than it ever had
before. There was Lovely Creek, gurgling on down
there, where he and Ernest used to sit and lament
that the book of History was finished; that the world
had come to avaricious old age and noble enterprise
was dead for ever. But he was going away....
That afternoon Claude spent with his
mother. It was the first time she had had him
to herself. Ralph wanted terribly to stay and
hear his brother talk, but understanding how his mother
felt, he went back to the wheat field. There
was no detail of Claude’s life in camp so trivial
that Mrs. Wheeler did not want to hear about it.
She asked about the mess, the cooks, the laundry, as
well as about his own duties. She made him describe
the bayonet drill and explain the operation of machine
guns and automatic rifles.
“I hardly see how we can bear
the anxiety when our transports begin to sail,”
she said thoughtfully. “If they can once
get you all over there, I am not afraid; I believe
our boys are as good as any in the world. But
with submarines reported off our own coast, I wonder
how the Government can get our men across safely.
The thought of transports going down with thousands
of young men on board is something so terrible ”
she put her hands quickly over her eyes.
Claude, sitting opposite his mother,
wondered what it was about her hands that made them
so different from any others he had ever seen.
He had always known they were different, but now he
must look closely and see why. They were slender,
and always white, even when the nails were stained
at preserving time. Her fingers arched back at
the joints, as if they were shrinking from contacts.
They were restless, and when she talked often brushed
her hair or her dress lightly. When she was excited
she sometimes put her hand to her throat, or felt
about the neck of her gown, as if she were searching
for a forgotten brooch. They were sensitive hands,
and yet they seemed to have nothing to do with sense,
to be almost like the groping fingers of a spirit.
“How do you boys feel about it?”
Claude started. “About
what, Mother? Oh, the transportation! We
don’t worry about that. It’s the Government’s
job to get us across. A soldier mustn’t
worry about anything except what he’s directly
responsible for. If the Germans should sink a
few troop ships, it would be unfortunate, certainly,
but it wouldn’t cut any figure in the long run.
The British are perfecting an enormous dirigible,
built to carry passengers. If our transports are
sunk, it will only mean delay. In another year
the Yankees will be flying over. They can’t
stop us.”
Mrs. Wheeler bent forward. “That
must be boys’ talk, Claude. Surely you
don’t believe such a thing could be practicable?”
“Absolutely. The British
are depending on their aircraft designers to do just
that, if everything else fails. Of course, nobody
knows yet how effective the submarines will be in our
case.”
Mrs. Wheeler again shaded her eyes
with her hand. “When I was young, back
in Vermont, I used to wish that I had lived in the
old times when the world went ahead by leaps and bounds.
And now, I feel as if my sight couldn’t bear
the glory that beats upon it. It seems as if
we would have to be born with new faculties, to comprehend
what is going on in the air and under the sea.”
CHAPTER XII
The afternoon sun was pouring in at
the back windows of Mrs. Farmer’s long, uneven
parlour, making the dusky room look like a cavern
with a fire at one end of it. The furniture was
all in its cool, figured summer cretonnes.
The glass flower vases that stood about on little
tables caught the sunlight and twinkled like tiny
lamps. Claude had been sitting there for a long
while, and he knew he ought to go. Through the
window at his elbow he could see rows of double hollyhocks,
the flat leaves of the sprawling catalpa, and the
spires of the tangled mint bed, all transparent in
the gold-powdered light. They had talked about
everything but the thing he had come to say.
As he looked out into the garden he felt that he would
never get it out. There was something in the
way the mint bed burned and floated that made one a
fatalist, afraid to meddle. But after
he was far away, he would regret; uncertainty would
tease him like a splinter in his thumb.
He rose suddenly and said without
apology: “Gladys, I wish I could feel sure
you’d never marry my brother.”
She did not reply, but sat in her
easy chair, looking up at him with a strange kind
of calmness.
“I know all the advantages,”
he went on hastily, “but they wouldn’t
make it up to you. That sort of a compromise
would make you awfully unhappy. I know.”
“I don’t think I shall
ever marry Bayliss,” Gladys spoke in her usual
low, round voice, but her quick breathing showed he
had touched something that hurt. “I suppose
I have used him. It gives a school-teacher a
certain prestige if people think she can marry the
rich bachelor of the town whenever she wants to.
But I am afraid I won’t marry him, because
you are the member of the family I have always admired.”
Claude turned away to the window.
“A fine lot I’ve been to admire,”
he muttered.
“Well, it’s true, anyway.
It was like that when we went to High School, and
it’s kept up. Everything you do always seems
exciting to me.”
Claude felt a cold perspiration on
his forehead. He wished now that he had never
come. “But that’s it, Gladys.
What have I ever done, except make one blunder
after another?”
She came over to the window and stood
beside him. “I don’t know; perhaps
it’s by their blunders that one gets to know
people, by what they can’t do.
If you’d been like all the rest, you could have
got on in their way. That was the one thing I
couldn’t have stood.”
Claude was frowning out into the flaming
garden. He had not heard a word of her reply.
“Why didn’t you keep me from making a fool
of myself?” he asked in a low voice.
“I think I tried once.
Anyhow, it’s all turning out better than I thought.
You didn’t get stuck here. You’ve
found your place. You’re sailing away.
You’ve just begun.”
“And what about you?”
She laughed softly. “Oh, I shall teach
in the High School!”
Claude took her hands and they stood
looking searchingly at each other in the swimming
golden light that made everything transparent.
He never knew exactly how he found his hat and made
his way out of the house. He was only sure that
Gladys did not accompany him to the door. He
glanced back once, and saw her head against the bright
window.
She stood there, exactly where he
left her, and watched the evening come on, not moving,
scarcely breathing. She was thinking how often,
when she came downstairs, she would see him standing
here by the window, or moving about in the dusky room,
looking at last as he ought to look, like
his convictions and the choice he had made. She
would never let this house be sold for taxes now.
She would save her salary and pay them off. She
could never like any other room so well as this.
It had always been a refuge from Frankfort; and now
there would be this vivid, confident figure, an image
as distinct to her as the portrait of her grandfather
upon the wall.
CHAPTER XIII
Sunday was Claude’s last day
at home, and he took a long walk with Ernest and Ralph.
Ernest would have preferred to lose Ralph, but when
the boy was out of the harvest field he stuck to his
brother like a burr. There was something about
Claude’s new clothes and new manner that fascinated
him, and he went through one of those sudden changes
of feeling that often occur in families. Although
they had been better friends ever since Claude’s
wedding, until now Ralph had always felt a little
ashamed of him. Why, he used to ask himself, wouldn’t
Claude “spruce up and be somebody”?
Now, he was struck by the fact that he was somebody.
On Monday morning Mrs. Wheeler wakened
early, with a faintness in her chest. This was
the day on which she must acquit herself well.
Breakfast would be Claude’s last meal at home.
At eleven o’clock his father and Ralph would
take him to Frankfort to catch the train. She
was longer than usual in dressing. When she got
downstairs Claude and Mahailey were already talking.
He was shaving in the washroom, and Mahailey stood
watching him, a side of bacon in her hand.
“You tell ’em over there
I’m awful sorry about them old women, with their
dishes an’ their stove all broke up.”
“All right. I will.”
Claude scraped away at his chin.
She lingered. “Maybe you
can help ’em mend their things, like you do
mine fur me,” she suggested hopefully.
“Maybe,” he murmured absently.
Mrs. Wheeler opened the stair door, and Mahailey dodged
back to the stove.
After breakfast Dan went out to the
fields with the harvesters. Ralph and Claude
and Mr. Wheeler were busy with the car all morning.
Mrs. Wheeler kept throwing her apron
over her head and going down the hill to see what
they were doing. Whether there was really something
the matter with the engine, or whether the men merely
made it a pretext for being together and keeping away
from the house, she did not know. She felt that
her presence was not much desired, and at last she
went upstairs and resignedly watched them from the
sitting-room window. Presently she heard Ralph
run up to the third storey. When he came down
with Claude’s bags in his hands, he stuck his
head in at the door and shouted cheerfully to his
mother:
“No hurry. I’m just
taking them down so they’ll be ready.”
Mrs. Wheeler ran after him, calling
faintly, “Wait, Ralph! Are you sure he’s
got everything in? I didn’t hear him packing.”
“Everything ready. He says
he won’t have to go upstairs again. He’ll
be along pretty soon. There’s lots of time.”
Ralph shot down through the basement.
Mrs. Wheeler sat down in her reading
chair. They wanted to keep her away, and it was
a little selfish of them. Why couldn’t they
spend these last hours quietly in the house, instead
of dashing in and out to frighten her? Now she
could hear the hot water running in the kitchen; probably
Mr. Wheeler had come in to wash his hands. She
felt really too weak to get up and go to the west
window to see if he were still down at the garage.
Waiting was now a matter of seconds, and her breath
came short enough as it was.
She recognized a heavy, hob-nailed
boot on the stairs, mounting quickly. When Claude
entered, carrying his hat in his hand, she saw by
his walk, his shoulders, and the way he held his head,
that the moment had come, and that he meant to make
it short. She rose, reaching toward him as he
came up to her and caught her in his arms. She
was smiling her little, curious intimate smile, with
half-closed eyes.
“Well, is it good-bye?”
she murmured. She passed her hands over his shoulders,
down his strong back and the close-fitting sides of
his coat, as if she were taking the mould and measure
of his mortal frame. Her chin came just to his
breast pocket, and she rubbed it against the heavy
cloth. Claude stood looking down at her without
speaking a word. Suddenly his arms tightened and
he almost crushed her.
“Mother!” he whispered
as he kissed her. He ran downstairs and out of
the house without looking back.
She struggled up from the chair where
she had sunk and crept to the window; he was vaulting
down the hill as fast as he could go. He jumped
into the car beside his father. Ralph was already
at the wheel, and Claude had scarcely touched the
cushions when they were off. They ran down the
creek and over the bridge, then up the long hill on
the other side. As they neared the crest of the
hill, Claude stood up in the car and looked back at
the house, waving his cone-shaped hat. She leaned
out and strained her sight, but her tears blurred
everything. The brown, upright figure seemed
to float out of the car and across the fields, and
before he was actually gone, she lost him. She
fell back against the windowsill, clutching her temples
with both hands, and broke into choking, passionate
speech. “Old eyes,” she cried, “why
do you betray me? Why do you cheat me of my last
sight of my splendid son!”