Atlantic Narratives Part 52
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'I'm going to call up the doctor,' he whispered.
But after the doctor had come and gone, he went upstairs again and sat down by the bed, while his shocked eyes sought the small, still upturned face. It was so characteristic of the boy that, in a high fever, he should not chatter in delirium, that he should not scream wild things about a pony, that he should only lie there quietly, with his eyes closed and his face turned upwards. For a long time the watcher by the bed looked down in the flickering half-light, and then he went downstairs to his study and shut the door. When he had read the papers, which he took from his pocket, from beginning to end, he placed a clean sheet sharply on the desk before him, and with his mouth closed into a taut, straight line which relaxed into no curve of compromise as his pen marched down the sheet, Mr. Henry Tarbell wrote a letter to the Pony Man.
He sealed and directed it--and walked out of the house, with long strides, to the post-box.
It was many days later that he hung over the bed where a child lay tired out with fever, and gently said something that he thought might bring a little light back into the white face.
'They did send you a prize, Crosby, after all! A first-cla.s.s little prize that has just come this morning! Look!' And he held up a small but crisply ticking watch upon a cheaply s.h.i.+ning chain.
Crosby reached up his hand. 'I don't believe--it would keep the--right time--would it?' he asked slowly, with a suspiciousness quite new. And his unwavering eyes sought his father's.
'_Why_ did they--write such a--lie to me--about the pony?' he challenged faintly.
'Forget it, boy!' returned his father gayly. 'We'll have a pony yet!
We'll have to have one to get the color back into your face, I'm thinking! Say, sonny, I'm glad you got the old stall fixed up for it, aren't you?'
The unwavering eyes were still upon his father, and the first entirely unresisted tears that any one had ever seen in them since he stepped out of his baby's dresses and marched forth to life, with brave but unaccustomed feet, and steadying pauses, slipped quietly down the white cheeks.
'_You--you_ wouldn't--talk that way--unless you meant it!' whispered Crosby.
THE SQUIRE
BY ELSIE SINGMASTER
THE squire was a bachelor, and lived alone in his house; therefore he was able to use the parlor and dining-room for offices. The parlor contained only a pine desk, a map, hanging 'at' the wall, as Millerstown would have said, and a dozen or so plain pine chairs. The law was administered with scant ceremony in Millerstown.
The squire sat now in the twilight in his 'back' office, which was furnished with another pine table, two chairs, and a large old-fas.h.i.+oned iron safe. He was clearly of a geographical turn of mind, for table, safe, and floor were littered with railroad maps and folders. The squire was about sixty years old; he had all the grave beauty which the Gaumer men acquired. Their hair did not thin as it turned gray, their smooth-shaven faces did not wrinkle. They all looked stern, but their faces brightened readily at sight of a little child or an old friend, or with amus.e.m.e.nt over some untold thought.
The squire's face glowed. He was going--his age, his inexperience, the certain disapproval of Millerstown notwithstanding--he was going round the world! He would start in a month, and thus far he had told no one but Edwin Seem, an adventurous young Millerstonian who was to leave that night for a ranch in Kansas, and whom the squire was to visit on his own journey. For thirty years he had kept Millerstown straight; there was no possible case for which his subst.i.tute would not find a precedent.
Fortunately there were no trusts to be investigated and reproved, and no vote-buyers or bribers to be imprisoned or fined. There were disputes of all kinds, dozens of them. There was one waiting for the squire now in the outer office; he shook his head solemnly at thought of it, as he gathered up his maps and thrust them back into the safe, that precious old safe which held the money for his journey. He had been thirty years gathering the money together.
The law might be administered in Millerstown without formality, but it was not administered without the eager attention of the citizens. Every one in the village was on hand when simple-minded Venus Stuber was indicted for stealing, or when the various dramatic scenes of the Miller-Weitzel feud were enacted. This evening's case, Sula Myers vs.
Adam Myers for non-support, might be considered part of the Miller-Weitzel feud, since the two real princ.i.p.als, Sula's mother and Adam's mother, had been respectively Sally Miller and Maria Weitzel.
The air was sultry, and rain threatened. The clouds seemed to rest on the tops of the maple trees; it was only because the Millerstonians knew the rough brick pavements as they knew the palms of their hands that there were no serious falls in the darkness. They laughed as they hurried to the hearing: it was seldom that a dispute promised so richly.
There was almost no one in the village who could not have been subpnaed as a witness, so thorough was every one's knowledge of the case.
Already the real princ.i.p.als faced each other, glaring, under the blinding light of the squire's hanging lamp. It made no difference that Millerstown listened and chuckled or that the squire had taken his seat behind the pine desk.
'When it don't give any religion, it don't give any decent behaving. But G.o.d trieth the hearts of the righteous,' said Mrs. Myers meaningly.
She was a large, commanding woman, who had been converted in middle life to the fervent sect of the new Mennonites, and young Adam had been brought up in that persuasion. Except for his marriage, young Adam had been thus far his mother's creature, body and soul.
Sula's mother, Mrs. Hill, was large also. She took off her sunbonnet, and folded her arms as tightly as possible across her broad bosom.
'There is sometimes too much religion' she said.
'Not in your family, Sally,' rejoined Mrs. Myers, her glance including not only Mrs. Hill and Sula, but all their sympathizers, and even Caleb Stemmel, who was supposed to be neutral.
Caleb Stemmel belonged in the same generation with the squire; his interest could be only general. Caleb did not see Mrs. Myers's scornful glance; he was watching pretty Sula, who sat close by her mother's side.
Sula looked at n.o.body, neither at her angry mother beside her, nor at her angry mother-in-law opposite, nor even at Adam her husband, sitting close by his mother. She wore her best clothes, her pretty summer hat, the white dress in which she had been married a year before. Even her wedding handkerchief was tucked into her belt.
Sula had been strangely excited when she dressed in the bedroom of her girlhood for the hearing. There was the prospect of getting even with her mother-in-law, with whom she had lived for a year and whom she hated; there was the prospect of seeing Adam's embarra.s.sment; there was another reason, soothing to her pride, and as yet almost unacknowledged, even to herself.
Now, however, the glow had begun to fade, and she felt uncomfortable and distressed. She heard only dimly Mrs. Myers's attack and her mother's response. Immediately Mrs. Myers told Mrs. Hill to be quiet, and Mrs.
Hill replied with equal elegance.
'You will both be quiet' said the squire sternly. 'The court will come to order. Now, Sula, you are the one that complains; you will tell us what you want.'
Sula did not answer; she was tugging at her handkerchief. The handkerchief had been pinned fast, its loosening took time.
'It was this way,' began Mrs. Myers and Mrs. Hill, together.
The squire lifted his hand. 'We will wait for Sula.' He looked sternly at Mrs. Hill. 'No whispering, Sally!'
Sula's complaint came out with a burst of tears.
'He won't support me. For three months already I didn't have a cent.'
'All this time I supported her,' said her mother.
'She had a good home and wouldn't stay in it,' said Mrs. Myers.
The squire commanded silence again.
'Sula, you were willing to live with Adam's mother when you were married. Why aren't you now?'
'She--she wouldn't give me no peace. She wouldn't let him take me for a wedding-trip, not even to the Fair.' She repeated it as though it were the worst of all her grievances: 'Not even a wedding-trip to the Fair would he dare to take.'
Mrs. Hill burst forth again. She would have spoken if decapitation had followed.
'He gave all his money to his mom.'
'He is yet under age,' said Mrs. Myers.
Again Mrs. Hill burst forth:--
'She wanted that Sula should convert herself to the Mennonites.'
'I wanted to save her soul,' declared Mrs. Myers.
'You needn't to worry yourself about her soul,' answered Mrs. Hill.
'When you behave as well as Sula when you're young, you needn't to worry yourself about other people's souls when you get old.'
Atlantic Narratives Part 52
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Atlantic Narratives Part 52 summary
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