Delphi Complete Works of William Dean Howells

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Delphi Complete Works of William Dean Howells Page 922

by William Dean Howells


  A prevalent voice was the voice of Sally. “Well, just one sup more, Mis’ Braile. You do make the best coffee! I believe in my heart that it’s took my toothache all away a’ready, and I suppose poor Abel’ll be goun’ up home with some of that miser’ble stuff he gits at the store, and expectun’ to find me there in bed yit. I thought I’d jest slip down, and borry a little o’ your’n to surprise him with, but when I smelt it, I jest couldn’t hold out. I don’t suppose but what he stayed to see the Little Flock off, anyway, and you say Squire Braile went. Well, I reckon he had to, justice o’ the peace, that way. I’m thankful the Good Old Man’s gone, for one, and I don’t never want to see hide or hair of him ag’in in Leatherwood. There’s such a thing as gittun’ enough of a thing, and I’ve got enough of strange gods for one while.”

  Murmurs of reply came from Mrs. Braile at times, but Sally mainly kept the word.

  “Well, and what do you think of Nancy Billun’s lettun’ her Joey go off with the Little Flock, her talkun’ the way she always done about ‘em? Of course he’s safe with Mr. Hingston and Benny, and they’ll bring him back all right, but don’t you think she’d be afeared that he might be took up in the New Jerusalem when it riz ag’in?”

  “Abel,” the Squire said, “I don’t like this. We seem to be listening. I don’t believe Sally will like our overhearing her; and we ought to warn her. It’s no use your stamping your bare feet, for they wouldn’t make any noise. I’ll rap my stick on the floor.” He also called out, “Hello, the house!” and Sally herself came to the kitchen door. She burst into her large laugh. “Well, I declare to goodness, if it ain’t Abel and the Squire! Well, if this ain’t the best joke on me! Did you see Dylks off, Squire Braile? And a good riddance to bad rubbage, I say.”

  XXI

  Hughey Blake, long-haired, barefooted and freckled, hung about the door of Nancy’s cabin, where she sat with her little girl playing in the weedy turf at her foot. The late October weather was sometimes hot at noon, but the evenings were cool and the evening air was sweet with the scent of the ripened corn, and the faint odor of the fallen leaves. The grasshoppers still hissed; at moments the crickets within and without the cabin creaked plaintively.

  “I just come,” Hughey said, “to see if you thought she wouldn’t go to the Temple with me, to-night. The Flock lets us have our turn reg’lar now, and we’re goin’ to have Thursday evenin’ meetin’ like we used to.” In a discouraging silence from Nancy, he went on, “I’m just on my way home, now, and I’ll git my shoes there; and I don’t expect to wear this hickory shirt, and no coat—”

  “Yes, I know, Hughey, but I don’t believe it’ll be any use. You can try; but I don’t believe it will. I reckon you’d find out that she’s goin’ with Jim Redfield, if anybody. She’s been off with him ‘most the whole afternoon, gatherin’ pawpaws — he knows the best places; I should think they could have got all the pawpaws in Leatherwood by this time. You know I’ve always liked you, Hughey, and so has her father, and you’ve played together ever since you was babies, and you’ve always been her beau from childern up. There ain’t a person in Leatherwood that don’t respect you and feel to think that any girl might be glad to get you; but I’m afraid it’s just your cleverness, and bein’ so gentle like—”

  “Do you ‘spose, Nancy,” the young man faltered disconsolately, “it’s had anything to do with my not gettin’ her that hair? I could ‘a’ done it as easy as Jim Redfield; but to tear it right out of his head, that way, I couldn’t; it went ag’in my stommick.”

  “I don’t believe it’s that, Hughey. If you must know, I believe it’s just Jim Redfield himself. He’s bewitched her and she’s got to be bewitched by somebody; if it ain’t one it’s another; it was him then, and it’s Jim, now.”

  “I see,” the young man assented sadly.

  “She ain’t good enough for you, that’s the truth, Hughey, though I say it, her own kith and kin. I can’t make you understand, I know; but she’s got to have somebody that she can feel the power of.”

  “I’d do anything for her, Nancy.”

  “That’s just it! She don’t want that kind of lovin’, as you may call it. I don’t believe my brother’s a very easy man to turn, but Jane has always done as she pleased with him; he’s been like clay in the hands of the potter with her. Many another girl would have been broken into bits before now; but she’s just as tough as so much hickory. I don’t say but what she’s a good girl; there ain’t a better in Leatherwood, or anywheres. She’s as true as a die, and tender as anything in sickness, and’d lay down and die where she saw her duty, and’d work till she dropped if need be; but, no, she ain’t one that wants softness in her friends. Well, she won’t git any too much of it in Jim Redfield. They’re of a piece, and she may find out that she’s made a mistake, after all.”

  “Has she — she hain’t promised to marry him yit?”

  “No, I don’t say that. But ever since that night at the Temple he’s been round after her. He’s been here, and he’s been at her father’s, and she can’t go down to the Corners for anything but what he comes home helpin’ her to bring it. You seen yourself, how he always gets her to come home from meetin’.”

  “Yes,” Hughey assented forlornly. “I’m always too late at the door; he’s with her before a body can git the words out.”

  “Well, that’s it. I don’t say she ain’t a good girl, one of the very best, but she’s hard, hard, hard; and I don’t see what’s ever to break her.”

  The girl’s voice came from round the cabin, calling, “Honey, honey, honey!” and the little one started from her play at her mother’s feet, and ran toward the voice, which Jane now brought with her at the corner, and chuckling, and jug-jugging, birdlike, for joy, threw herself at Jane’s knees.

  “See what I brought you, honey. It’s good and ripe, but it ain’t half as good as my honey, honey, honey!” She put the pawpaw into the child’s hands and mumbled her, with kisses of her eyes, cheeks, hair, and neck. “Oh, I could eat you, eat you!”

  She must have seen the young fellow waiting for her notice, but Nancy had to say, “Here’s Hughey, Jane,” before she spoke to him.

  “Oh! Hughey,” she said, not unkindly, but as if he did not matter.

  He stood awkward and Nancy judged it best for all the reasons to add, “Hughey wants you to go to the Temple with him to-night,” and the young fellow smiled gratefully if not hopefully at her.

  The girl stiffened herself to her full height from the child she was stooping over. She haughtily mounted the steps beside Nancy, and without other recognition of Hughey in the matter she said, “I’ve got company,” and disappeared into the cabin.

  “Well, Hughey?” Nancy pityingly questioned.

  “No, no, Nancy,” he replied with a manful struggle for manfulness, “I — I — It’s meant, I reckon,” and slunk away from the girl’s brutality as if it were his own shame.

  Nancy picked up her little one, and followed indoors.

  “Don’t you talk to me, Aunt Nancy!” the girl cried at her. “What does he keep askin’ me for?”

  “He won’t ask you any more, Jane,” the woman quietly returned.

  They joined in putting the little one to bed. Then, without more words, Jane kissed the child, and came back to kiss her again when she had got to the door. “Aunt Nancy, I hate you,” she said as she went out and left the woman alone.

  Ever since Joey went away with the believers to see the New Jerusalem come down in Philadelphia, Jane had been sleeping at her father’s cabin in resentful duty to his years and solitude. She got him his breakfast and left it for him before she went to take her own with Nancy, and she had his dinner and supper ready for his return from the field, but she did not eat with him, and he was abed before she came home at night.

  Joey had been gone nearly a month, and no word had come back from any of the Little Flock who went with Dylks. It was not the day of letters by mail; if some of the pilgrims had sent messages by the wagoners returning
from their trips Over the Mountains, they had not reached the families left behind, and no angel-borne tidings came to testify of the wonder at Philadelphia. Those left behind waited in patience rather than anxiety; where life was often hard, people did not borrow trouble and add that needless debt to their load of daily cares. Nancy said to others that she did not know what to think, and others said the same to her, and they got what comfort they could out of that.

  Now she did not light the little rag-lamp which she and Jane sometimes sat by with their belated sewing or darning if they had not kept the hearth-fire burning. She went to bed in the dark, and slept with the work-weariness which keeps the heart-heavy from waking.

  She had work in her tobacco patch to do, as well as in the house, where Jane helped her; she would not let the girl help her get the logs and brush together on the clearing which Laban had begun burning to enrich the soil for the planting of the next year’s crop with the ashes.

  She must have slept long hours when she heard the sound of a cry from the dark without.

  “Mother! Mother! Oh, mother!” it came nearer and nearer, till it beat with the sound of a fist on the cabin door. In the piecing out of the instant dream which she started from, she thought as that night when Dylks called her, that it must be Laban; he sometimes called her mother after the baby came, and now she called back, “Laban! Laban!” but the voice came again, “It ain’t father; it’s me, mother; it’s Joey!”

  “Oh, dear heart!” she joyfully lamented, and flung herself from her bed, and reeled still drunk with slumber, and pulled up the latch, and flung open the door, and caught her boy to her breast.

  “Oh, mother!” he said, laughing and crying. “I’m so hungry!”

  “To be sure you’re hungry, child; and I’ll have you your supper in half a minute, as soon as I can rake the fire open. Lay down on mother’s bed there, and rest while I’m gettin’ ready for you. The baby won’t wake, and I don’t care if she does.”

  “I s’pose she’s grown a good deal. But I am tired,” the boy said, stretching himself out. “Me ‘n’ Benny run all the way as soon as we come in sight of the crick, and him ‘n’ Mis’ Hingston wanted me to stay all night, but I wouldn’t. I wanted to see you so much, mother.”

  “Did Mr. Hingston come back with you? Or, don’t tell me anything; don’t speak, till you’ve had something to eat.”

  “I woon’t, mother,” the boy promised, and then he said, “But you ought to see Philadelphy, mother. It’s twenty times as big as Wheeling, Benny says, and all red brick houses and white marble steps.” He was sitting up, and talking now; his mother flew about in the lank linsey-woolsey dress she had thrown over her nightgown in some unrealized interval of her labors and had got the skillet of bacon hissing over the coals.

  “And to think,” she bleated in self-reproach, “that I’ll have to give you rye coffee! You know, Joey dear, there hain’t very much cash about this house, and the store won’t take truck for coffee. But with good cream in it, the rye tastes ‘most as good. Set up to the table, now,” she bade him, when she had put the rye coffee with the bacon and some warmed-up pone on the leaf lifted from the wall.

  She let the boy silently glut himself till he glanced round between mouthfuls and said, “It all looks so funny and little, in here, after Philadelphy.”

  Then she said, “But you don’t say anything about the New Jerusalem. Didn’t it come down, after all?” She smiled, but sadly rather than gladly in her skepticism.

  “No, mother,” the boy answered solemnly. Then after a moment he said, “I got something to tell you, mother. But I don’t know whether I hadn’t better wait till morning.”

  “It’s most morning, now, Joey, I reckon, if it ain’t already. That’s the twilight comin’ in at the door. If you wouldn’t rather get your sleep first—”

  “No, I can’t sleep till I tell you, now. It’s about the Good Old Man.”

  “Did he — did he go up?” she asked fearfully.

  “No, mother, he didn’t. Some of them say he was took up, but, mother, I believe he was drownded!”

  XXII

  “Drownded?” the boy’s mother echoed. “What do you mean, Joey? What makes you believe he was drownded?”

  “I seen him.”

  “Seen him?”

  “In the water. We was all walkin’ along the river bank, and some o’ the Flock got to complainin’ because he hadn’t fetched the New Jerusalem down yit, and wantin’ to know when he was goin’ to do it, and sayin’ this was Philadelphy, and why didn’t he; and Mr. Hingston he was tryin’ to pacify ‘em, and Mr. Enraghty he scolded ‘em, and told ’em to hesh up, or they’d be in danger of hell-fire; but they didn’t, and the Good Old Man he begun to cry. It was awful, mother.”

  “Go on, Joey. Don’t stop.”

  “Well, he’d been prayin’ a good deal, off and on, and actin’ like he wasn’t in his right senses, sometimes, talkin’ to hisself, and singin’ his hymn — that one, you know—”

  “Never mind, Joey dear,” his mother said, “keep on.”

  “And all at once, he up and says, ‘If I want to, I can turn this river into a river of gold,’ and one o’ the Flock, about the worst one, he hollers back, ‘Well, why don’t you do it, then?’ and Mr. Enraghty — well, they call him Saint Paul, you know — he told him to shut his mouth; and they got to jawin’, and I heard a rattlin’ of gravel, like it was slippin’ down the bank, and then there was the Good Old Man in the water, hollerin’ for help, and his hat off, floatin’ down stream, and his hair all over his shoulders. And before I knowed what to think, he sunk, and when he come up, I was there in the water puttin’ out for him.”

  “Yes, Joey—”

  “I can’t remember how I got there; must ‘a’ jumped in without thinkin’; he’d been so good to me, all along, and used to come to me in the nighttime when he ‘sposed I was asleep, and kiss me; and cry — But I’d ‘a’ done it for anybody, anyway, mother.”

  “Yes. Go—”

  “Some of ’em was takin’ their shoes and coats off to jump in, and some jest standin’ still, and hollerin’ to me not to let him ketch holt o’ me, or he’d pull me under. But I knowed he couldn’t do that, becuz I could ketch him by one arm, and hold him off — me ‘n’ Benny’s practised it in the crick — and I swum up to him; and he went down ag’in, and when he come up ag’in, his face was all soakin’ wet like he’d been cryin’ under the water, and he says, kind o’ bubblin’ — like this,” the boy made the sound. “He says, ‘Oh, my son, God help — bub-ub — bless you!’ and then he went down, and I swum round and round, expectin’ he’d come up somewheres; but he didn’t come up no more. It was awful, mother, becuz that didn’t seem to be the end of it; and it was. Just didn’t come up no more. They jawed some, before they got over the mountains,” the boy said reminiscently. “They hadn’t brung much money; even Mr. Hingston hadn’t, becuz they expected the Good Old Man to work miracles, and make silver and gold money out of red cents, like he said he would. All the nights we slep’ out o’ doors, and sometimes we had to ast for victuals; but the Good Old Man he always found places to sleep, nice caves in the banks and holler trees, and wherever he ast for victuals they give plenty. And Mr. Enraghty he said it was a miracle if he always knowed the best places to sleep, and the kindest women to ast for victuals. Do you believe it was, mother?”

  Nancy said, after an effort for her voice, “He might have been there before.”

  “Well, that’s so; but none of ’em thunk o’ that. And what Mr. Enraghty said stopped the jawin’ at the time. It all begun ag’in, worse than ever when we got almost to Philadelphy; and he said some of ’em must take the south fork of the road with Saint Paul and keep on till they saw a big light over Philadelphy, where the New Jerusalem was swellin’ up, and the rest would meet ’em there with him and Saint Peter. They said, ‘Why couldn’t we all go together?’ And it was pretty soon after that that he slipped into the river. Stumbled on a round stone, I reckon.”

&n
bsp; The woman sat slowly smoothing the handle of the coffee-pot up and down, and staring at the boy; but she did not speak.

  “Benny jumped in by that time, but it wasn’t any use. Oh! I seen the ocean, mother! Mr. Hingston took me ‘n’ Benny down on a boat; and I seen a stuffed elephant in a show, or a museum, they called it. Benny said it was just like the real one in the circus at Wheeling. Mother, do you believe he throwed hisself in?”

  “Who, Joey?” she faintly asked.

  “Why, the Good Old Man. That’s what some of ’em said, them that was disappointed about the New Jerusalem. But some said he did fetch it down; and they seen it, with the black horses and silver gates and velvet streets, and everything just the way he promised. And the others said he’d fooled ‘em, or else they was just lyin’. And they said he’d got to the end of his string; and that was why he throwed himself in, and when he got in, he was scared of drowndin’ and that was why he hollered for help. But I believe he just slipped in. Don’t you, mother?”

  “Yes, Joey.”

  “Mother, I don’t believe the Good Old Man had a grea’ deal of courage. All the way Over the Mountains, he’d seem to scare at any little noise, even in broad daylight. Oncet, when we was goin’ along through the woods, a pig jumped out of some hazel-nut bushes, and scared him so that he yelled and fell down in a fit, and they was a good while fetchin’ him to. Do you think he was God, mother?”

  “No, Joey.”

  “Well, that’s what I think, too. If he was God, he wouldn’t been afeared, would he? And in the night sometimes he’d come and git me to come and lay by him where he could put his arm round my neck, and feel me, like as if he wanted comp’ny. Well, now, that wasn’t much like God, was it? And when he thought I was asleep, I could hear him prayin’, ‘O merciful Savior!’ and things like that; and if he was God, who could he pray to? It wasn’t sense, was it? Well, I just believe he fell in, and he was afeared he was drowndin’ and that’s why he hollered out. Don’t you, mother?”

 

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