登陆注册
15442700000027

第27章 UP THE COULEE A STORY OF WISCONSIN(13)

The paper on the walls showed the first concession of the Puritans to the Spirit of Beauty, and was made up of a heterogeneous mixture of flowers of unheard-of shapes and colors, arranged in four different ways along the wall. There were no books, no music, and only a few newspapers in sight-a bare, blank, cold, drab- colored shelter from the rain, not a home. Nothing cozy, nothing heartwarming; a grim and horrible shed.

"What are they doing? It can't be they're at work such a day as this," Howard said, standing at the window.

"They find plenty to do, even on rainy days," answered his mother.

"Grant always has some job to set the men at. It's the only way to live."

"I'll go out and see them." He turned suddenly. "Mother, why should Grant treat me so? Have I deserved it?"

Mrs. McLane sighed in pathetic hopelessness. "I don't know, Howard. I'm worried about Grant. He gets more an' more downhearted an' gloomy every day. Seem's if he'd go crazy. He don't care how he looks any more, won't dress up on Sunday. Days an' days he'll go aroun' not sayin' a word. I was in hopes you could help him, Howard."

"My coming seems to have had an opposite effect. He hasn't spoken a word to me, except when he had to, since I came.

Mother, what do you say to going home with me to New York?"

"Oh, I couldn't do that!" she cried in terror. "I couldn't live in a big city-never!"

"There speaks the truly rural mind," smiled Howard at his mother, who was looking up at him through her glasses with a pathetic forlornness which sobered him again. "Why, Mother, you could live in Orange, New Jersey, or out in Connecticut, and be just as lonesome as you are here. You wouldn't need to live in the city. I could see you then every day or two."

"Well, I couldn't leave Grant an' the baby, anyway," she replied, not realizing how one could live in New Jersey and do business daily in New York.

"Well, then, how would you like to go back into the old house?" he said, facing her.

The patient hands fell to the lap, the dim eyes fixed in searching glance on his face. There was a wistful cry in the voice.

"Oh, Howard! Do you mean-"

Up The Coulee 93

He came and sat down by her, and put his arm about her and hugged her hard. "I mean, you dear, good, patient, work-wear~ old Mother, I'm going to buy back the old farm and put you in it."

There was no refuge for her now except in tears, and she put up her thin, trembling old hands about his neck and cried in that easy, placid, restful way age has.

Howard could not speak. His throat ached with remorse and pity.

He saw his forgetfulness of them all once more without relief-the black thing it was!

"There, there, Mother, don't cry!" he said, torn with anguish by her tears. Measured by man's tearlessness, her weeping seemed terrible to him. "I didn't realize how things were going here. It was all my fault-or, at least, most of it. Grant's letter didn't reach me. I thought you were still on the old farm. But no matter; it's all over now.

Come, don't cry any more, Mother dear. I'm going to take care of you now."

It had been years since the poor, lonely woman had felt such warmth of love. Her sons had been like her husband, chary of expressing their affection; and like most Puritan families, there was little of caressing among them. Sitting there with the rain on the roof and driving through the trees, they planned getting back into the old house. Howard's plan seemed to her full of splendor and audacity. She began to understand his power and wealth now, as he put it into concrete form before her.

"I wish I could eat Thanksgiving dinner there with you," he said at last, "but it can't be thought of. However, I'll have you all in there before I go home. I'm going out now and tell Grant. Now don't worry any more; I'm going to fix it all up with him, sure." He gave her a parting hug.

Laura advised him not to attempt to get to the barn; but as he persisted in going, she hunted up an old rubber coat for him.

"You'll mire down and spoil your shoes," she said, glancing at his neat calf gaiters.

"Darn the difference!" he laughed in his old way. "Besides, I've got rubbers."

"Better go round by the fence," she advised as he stepped out into the pouring rain.

How wretchedly familiar it all was! The miry cow yard, with the hollow trampled out around the horse trough, the disconsolate hens standing under the wagons and sheds, a pig wallowing across its sty, and for atmosphere the desolate, falling rain. It was so familiar he felt a pang of the old rebellious despair which seized him on such days in his boyhood.

Catching up courage, he stepped out on the grass, opened the gate, and entered the barnyard. A narrow ribbon of turf ran around the fence, on which he could walk by clinging with one hand to the rough boards. In this way he slowly made his way around the periphery, and came at last to the open barn door without much harm.

It was a desolate interior. In the open floorway Grant, seated upon a half-bushel, was mending a harness. The old man was holding the trace in his hard brown hands; the boy was lying on a wisp of hay. It was a small barn, and poor at that. There was a bad smell, as of dead rats, about it, and the rain fell through the shingles here and there. To the right, and below, the horses stood, looking up with their calm and beautiful eyes, in which the whole scene was idealized.

Grant looked up an instant and then went on with his work.

"Did yeh wade through?" grinned Lewis, exposing his broken teeth.

"No, I kinder circumambiated the pond." He sat down on the little toolbox near Grant. "Your barn is good deal like that in 'The Arkansas Traveller.' Needs a new roof, Grant." His voice had a pleasant sound, full of the tenderness of the scene through which he had just been. "In fact, you need a new barn."

"I need a good many things more'n I'll ever get," Grant replied shortly.

"How long did you say you'd been on this farm?"

"Three years this fall."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 地狱三太子

    地狱三太子

    蒙追,本是地狱三太子,因其天性与地狱的无间做不到融合。更是打乱了地狱之中轮回的因果,导致被其父:地狱之主的流放。无意之中,蒙追穿过轮回隧道,来到人间。人间与地狱,本是两个世界,地狱小鬼不能私自来到人间,这是铁律。蒙追在人间,因为流放,被封印了三太子的法力,只有小鬼的本事。但总有一天,他会带着骄傲与地狱三太子应有的姿态,重回地狱!
  • 查理九世之回魂梦2

    查理九世之回魂梦2

    冰,重新的复活过,夜之冒险队带领着羽之冒险队和DODO冒险队开始了新的冒险。意外,总是会让他们失去重要的东西。在战胜神秘黑暗组织后,意外穿越回三次元,回到现代,而多多他们却像做了一场梦似得,把一切,都当成了梦,直到查理把信拿出来,才知道,这一切都是存在的,都是真的。你们,会忘记我们吗?
  • 高中博士

    高中博士

    一个标准的loser博士段小楼意外死亡,醒来后发现自己以一个高大帅气的高中生陈觅的身份复活,在还没有来得及搞明白一切的时候,他的新身份被学校开除,回到了西南的一个偏远县城继续读高中。一身武功令他在弱肉强食的世界里可以自保,但如何在新的生活中找到人生的方向,如何处理与三个女子的关系,是他不得不面对的首要问题。
  • 太初玄黄录

    太初玄黄录

    混沌初开之时,没有天地万物,一片昏朦!突有一日,玄黄奇莲诞生,奇莲衍化阴阳二气、聚合五行四象、塑造属性法则!亿万岁月后,天地初成!太初神树携无穷生命源气而生,神树孕育出万物生灵!天地世界终成!而太初神树因此枯萎、只留下一颗种子飘荡于虚空,玄黄奇莲终也碎裂,化为九块碎片散落于天地之间……悠悠万古,太初神树和玄黄奇莲竟同时现世,这将会引发什么样的故事?请关注《太初玄黄录》
  • 好哥你好,好哥再见

    好哥你好,好哥再见

    某傲娇老师:“沈图啊,你妈当初给你起这个名字的时候知道你耳朵会这么小吗?”某蠢萌女学生:“好哥,你妈给你起名字的时候也不知道你会这么坏啊!”没错这就是蠢萌女学生与傲娇男老师的故事!
  • 炼狱武帝

    炼狱武帝

    当你常被死神眷顾,在你面前只有两条路:杀与被杀。你,会如何选择?当你从炼狱中踏出,在你面前只有两条路:杀与被杀。你,会如何选择?----------------------------------------------------------------------------“我名辰武,是为灭族罪人,罪名之大,理当千刀万剐。”“为何十万年后,苍天又要我这罪人自冰封中醒来。”且看传承辰家禁忌血脉的辰武,融合那自冰封而来的冰魔之息,如何踏碎天道,抓出潜藏在三界六道外的布局者!
  • 转生之名

    转生之名

    这是一款现实与虚拟共用一条生命的游戏,在这里一旦玩家死亡就再也不会复活。生存或者死亡?欢迎参加“转生”内测。这虽然只是个内测游戏,但可不是闹着玩的。新人跪求推荐,收藏,点评,并承若永不太监。
  • 林玖

    林玖

    《林玖》六玖的脑洞谁来填……林玖不填不填就不填,然后六玖脑洞越来越大了……林玖你填不填!
  • TFBOYS之路走完陌生了

    TFBOYS之路走完陌生了

    他说要把天空中最亮的那颗繁星摘下来送给她,可她等了好久也没等到。四年了,我找了你四年的时间,这些年来我一直沉寂在痛苦和后悔之中。可你已经不是曾经的小南,不是我认识的那个小南,你是伍陌,当我们第一次见面的时候你就已经是伍陌了。两个男生的默默守护,即使不需多少言语,他们付出的真心,她心中早有了自己的答案。又是一场避不开的'厮杀',最后他们还能否找回曾经属于他们的自己,又是否懂得了珍惜。青衣组织的阴谋,一步步的蔓延走向毁灭的路。这次的劫难,是他们必须要经历的。他们,是否撑得住?那么多曾经的美好,瞬间灰飞烟灭。她说来年的风今年吹过,即使不完整也没关系,她不知道该如何选择,是对是错,是真是假?
  • 西游修缘

    西游修缘

    东胜神州傲来国中花果山上,主人公名为小小的小猴子本来过着非常平凡,但无忧无虑的生活,可是恰在猴王大闹天宫、于天为敌之时,花果山脚下一处不起眼的地方,却发生了决定未来三界沉浮的关键【封面来源于网络,如有侵权,立即更换】