登陆注册
15705000000017

第17章 The Three Johns(4)

It was gardening time,and the three Johns were putting in every spare moment in the little paling made of willow twigs behind the house.It was little enough time they had,though,for the cattle were new to each other and to the country,and they were hard to manage.It was generally conceded that Waite had a genius for herd-ing,and he could take the "mad"out of a fractious animal in a way that the others looked on as little less than superhuman.

Thus it was that one day,when the clay had been well turned,and the seeds arranged on the kitchen table,and all things prepared for an afternoon of busy planting,that Waite and Henderson,who were needed out with the cattle,felt no little irritation at the inex-plicable absence of Gillispie,who was to look after the garden.It was quite night-fall when he at last returned.Supper was ready,although it had been Gillispie's turn to prepare it.

Henderson was sore from his saddle,and cross at having to do more than his share of the work."Damn yeh!"he cried,as Gillispie appeared."Where yeh been?""Making garden,"responded Gillispie,slowly.

"Making garden!"Henderson indulged in some more harmless oaths.

Just then Gillispie drew from under his coat a large and friendly looking apple-pie.

"Yes,"he said,with emphasis;"I've bin a-makin'garden fur Mis'Ford."And so it came about that the three Johns knew her and served her,and that she never had a need that they were not ready to supply if they could.Not one of them would have thought of going to town with-out stopping to inquire what was needed at the village.As for Catherine Ford,she was fighting her way with native pluck and maternal unselfishness.If she had feared solitude she did not suffer from it.The activity of her life stifled her fresh sorrow.

She was pleasantly excited by the rumors that a railroad was soon to be built near the place,which would raise the value of the claim she was "holding down"many thou-sand dollars.

It is marvellous how sorrow shrinks when one is very healthy and very much occupied.

Although poverty was her close companion,Catherine had no thought of it in this prim-itive manner of living.She had come out there,with the independence and determi-nation of a Western woman,for the purpose of living at the least possible expense,and making the most she could while the baby was "getting out of her arms."That process has its pleasures,which every mother feels in spite of burdens,and the mind is happily dulled by nature's merciful provision.With a little child tugging at the breast,care and fret vanish,not because of the happiness so much as because of a certain mammal complacency,which is not at all intellectual,but serves its purpose better than the pro-foundest method of reasoning.

So without any very unbearable misery at her recent widowhood,this healthy young woman worked in field and house,cared for her little ones,milked the two cows out in the corral,sewed,sang,rode,baked,and was happy for very wholesomeness.Some-times she reproached herself that she was not more miserable,remembering that long grave back in the unkempt little prairie cemetery,and she sat down to coax her sorrow into proper prominence.But the baby cooing at her from its bunk,the low of the cattle from the corral begging her to relieve their heavy bags,the familiar call of one of her neighbors from without,even the burning sky of the summer dawns,broke the spell of this conjured sorrow,and in spite of herself she was again a very hearty and happy young woman.Besides,if one has a liking for comedy,it is impossible to be dull on a Nebraska prairie.The people are a merrier divertissement than the theatre with its hackneyed stories.Catherine Ford laughed a good deal,and she took the three Johns into her confidence,and they laughed with her.There was Minerva Fitch,who insisted on coming over to tell Catherine how to raise her children,and who was almost offended that the children wouldn't die of sunstroke when she predicted.And there was Bob Ackerman,who had inflam-matory rheumatism and a Past,and who confided the latter to Mrs.Ford while she doctored the former with homoeopathic medicines.And there were all the strange visionaries who came out prospecting,and quite naturally drifted to Mrs.Ford's cabin for a meal,and paid her in compliments of a peculiarly Western type.And there were the three Johns themselves.Catherine con-sidered it no treason to laugh at them a little.

Yet at Waite she did not laugh much.

There had come to be something pathetic in the constant service he rendered her.The beginning of his more particular devotion had started in a particular way.Malaria was very bad in the country.It had carried off some of the most vigorous on the prairie,and twice that summer Catherine herself had laid out the cold forms of her neighbors on ironing-boards,and,with the assistance of Bill Deems of Missourah,had read the burial service over them.She had averted several other fatal runs of fever by the con-tents of her little medicine-case.These remedies she dealt out with an intelligence that astonished her patients,until it was learned that she was studying medicine at the time that she met her late husband,and was persuaded to assume the responsibilities of matrimony instead of those of the medi-cal profession.

One day in midsummer,when the sun was focussing itself on the raw pine boards of her shanty,and Catherine had the shades drawn for coolness and the water-pitcher swathed in wet rags,East Indian fashion,she heard the familiar halloo of Waite down the road.This greeting,which was usually sent to her from the point where the dip-ping road lifted itself into the first view of the house,did not contain its usual note of cheerfulness.Catherine,wiping her hands on her checked apron,ran out to wave a welcome;and Waite,his squat body looking more distorted than ever,his huge shoulders lurching as he walked,came fairly plung-ing down the hill.

同类推荐
  • On the Track

    On the Track

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Modeste Mignon

    Modeste Mignon

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 评琴书屋医略

    评琴书屋医略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 拾遗记

    拾遗记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金川妖姬志

    金川妖姬志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 梦绕绝尘:逆天倾城魔王妃

    梦绕绝尘:逆天倾城魔王妃

    她,被自己最爱的人背叛、被自己最信任的人给欺骗。她,是三大世家——云家的花痴废材女。一次穿越,使她穿到这个令人欺凌,容貌尽毁的废材女身上。是谁说她是废材?打通筋脉,绝世天才也不是对手。是谁说她是丑女?印记一除,不管是多国色天香的妖媚毒姐,照样能比下去。可遇见他..........“我愿助你九傲天下,只不过....只有一事允你答应。”“什么……"“以身相许!”“滚粗!”
  • 夜半冥婚:我的老公是只鬼

    夜半冥婚:我的老公是只鬼

    灵山新语,鬼王娶妻。鬼王一出,百鬼臣服!”突然,一道似乎从灵魂深处响起的声音席卷而来,空灵而又渗人,忽的破旧的木门吱嘎吱嘎的凭空打开了。
  • 婴龙决

    婴龙决

    为报家仇,而一步步走向修真道路
  • 撒旦校草很霸道,丫头不许动

    撒旦校草很霸道,丫头不许动

    南暖阳觉得自己上辈子肯定做了一个天大的坏事,不然怎么会招惹到冷尘风这座瘟神。不仅被夺走了初吻,还被强迫当他的女朋友,什么?他已经有喜欢的人了,那干嘛还要缠着她?某女某天终于忍不住“冷尘风,我们分手吧!感觉你这样缠着我你喜欢的人会吃醋的”“哦?我喜欢谁?”某男笑着把她按墙壁咚“你喜欢谁关我什么事!”南暖阳见冷尘风的妖孽脸越来越贴近,急忙偏过头“知道我喜欢谁吗?”冷尘风一只手捏住她的脸,另一只手抓着她的手“不想知道!唔~”
  • 星辰战世纪

    星辰战世纪

    不知道公告应该发在哪,写在简介上,本书已经推倒重写了,存稿神马的已经完全删除了,已经上传的挨个重写!
  • 秦毒

    秦毒

    小镇在一夜之间惨遭恐怖病毒袭击,无人幸存而灾难的起因竟是因为始皇陵地抢救开掘当历史将那座伟大的王陵湮没了两千多年后,地宫终于因为难以承受巨大的封土重量趋于崩塌一连串惊人秘密伴着危机剥茧抽丝般呈现守卫王陵的巨猫散播出了令天下胆寒的病毒精美绝伦的大秦建筑艺术让人叹为观止当人们终于将足以中断人类历史的病毒消灭时,却不知一个更大的阴谋还隐藏在后面
  • 法逆蛮荒

    法逆蛮荒

    懦弱少年柳风,带着不甘与怒火穿越异世蛮荒;偶得神器,改天逆命,撼破苍穹,御玄黄,统神宇,法逆蛮荒,唯吾尊神!
  • 狂爆逆天

    狂爆逆天

    青龙大陆的罗午在一次偶然机会得到狂神传承,从此踏上了一条逆天之路,且看罗午笑傲天下,戏逗对手,完爆敌人,与他们斗武,斗智,得到无数女子倾慕,让雄性们都眼红。。。。。。。
  • 皇储先生,来玩

    皇储先生,来玩

    “温婉然,你还满意你看见的吗?”语音低沉,笑意浅浅的美男裸着上半身紧盯着她。温婉然十分冷静,这已经是这个月第几次了呢?“皇储先生,您真是out,能不能换句话?”她豪放地拉开自己的睡袍,“这样才叫诚意!”“给我穿上,像什么样子!”“遵命,殿下。”臭女人,朝夕相处这么多年了,还搞不定你?马上让你见识下皇室宝刀的厉害!现代架空,1V1,轻松搞笑YY风。外务大臣遗女温婉然与皇储太子姬毓白可爱激萌的扑倒与反扑倒故事。PS:女主火辣美艳型,男主霸道总裁风却总是走歪,不是灰姑娘的灰姑娘童话。
  • 帝龙星祖之君临

    帝龙星祖之君临

    主要是部同人小说。帝皇之心,混沌龙体,星拳之祖,君临天下,唯我独尊。王牌杀手冷峰在一次任务中,不幸身亡。但是他却重生了,重生在了异界,并且还意外开启了君临系统。