Part 41 (1/2)
”'You may think so,' I joshed him, 'but if I couldn't keep a place lookin' a little slicker 'n this, I'd sell out and give some better man a chance.'
”Did that faze him? Not on your life. He checked up both horses before he opened his mouth again.
”'You don't look none too slick yourself. How comes it you're trampin'
this hot weather?'
”I see what he was driving at and so I fed him the dope he wanted.
”'Well, I've had hard luck,' I says. 'I've been sick.'
”'You don't look sick,' he snapped out, quick as a flash. 'You look tolerable husky. You 'pear like one o' these chaps that eat up all they earn--eat and drink and gamble,' he went on, pilin' it up. 'I don't pity tramps a bit; they're all topers.'
”I took it meek as Moses.
”'Well,' I says, 'I'm just out of the hospital, and whilst I may seem husky, I need a good quiet place and a nice easy job for a while.
Moreover, I'm terrible hungry.'
”'You go 'long up to the house,' he says, 'and tell the girl in the kitchen to hand you out a plate of cold meat. I'll be along in a minute.'
”And off he went to the barn, leavin' me shakin' with his jolt. He was game all right! He figured me out as the prodigal son, and wa'n't goin'
to knuckle. He intended for me to do all the knee exercise. I drifted along up the path toward the kitchen.
”Judas! but it did seem nice and familiar. It was all so green and flowery after camp. There ain't a tree or a patch of green gra.s.s left in Cripple; but there, in our old yard, were lylock-trees, and rose-bushes climbin' the porch, and pinks and hollyhocks--and beehives, just as they used to set--and clover. Say, it nearly had me snifflin'. It sure did.”
The memory of it rather pinched his voice as he described it, but he went on.
”Of course I couldn't live down there now--it's too low, after a man has breathed such air as this.”
He looked out at the big clouds soaring round Pike's Peak.
”But the flowers and the gra.s.s they did kind o' get me. I edged round on the front side of the house, and, sure enough, there sat mother, just as she used to--in the same old chair.
”Cap, I want to tell you, I didn't play no circus tricks on _her_. Her head had grown white as snow and she looked kind o' sad and feeble. I began to understand a little of the worry I'd been to her. I said good evening, and she turned and looked at me. Then she opened her arms and called out my name.”
His voice choked unmistakably this time, and it was a minute or two before he resumed.
”No jokes, no lies doin' there! I opened right up to her. I told her I'd done well, but that I didn't want father to know it just yet, and we sit there holdin' hands when the old man hove round the corner.
”'Stephen,' says mother, kind o' solemn, 'here's our son Edward.'
”Did the old man wilt, or climb the line fence and offer to shake hands?
Nitsky! He just shoved one hip onto the edge of the porch and remarked:
”'Does this dry spell reach as fur as where you've been?'”
He broke into silent laughter again, and I joined him. This was all so deeply characteristic of the life I had known in my youth that I writhed with delight. I understood the duel of wits and wills. I could see it proceed as my companion chuckled.
”Well, sir, we played that game all the evening. I told of all the bad leases I'd tackled--and how I'd been thrown from a horse and laid up for six months. I brought out every set-back and bruise I'd ever had--all to see if the old man would weaken and feel sorry for me.”