Part 11 (1/2)
”Yes. We broke it off together.”
”You needn't tell me 'twas Jerry Norton's fault.” Mrs. Joyce pushed her cup from her and winked rapidly. ”He's as good a boy as ever stepped, an' he sets by you as he does his life.”
Stella was regarding her in wonder, a gentle little creature who omitted to say her soul was her own on ordinary days, yet rousing herself, with ruffled feathers, to defend, not her young, but the alien outside the nest.
”If he had give you the mitten, I shouldn't blame him a mite, turnin'
him away from the door as you have two Sat.u.r.day nights runnin'. But he ain't done it. I know Jerry too well for that. His word's as good 's his bond, an' you'll go through the woods an' get a crooked stick at last.”
Then she looked across at Stella, as if in amazement over her own fury; but Stella, liking her for it and thrilled by its fervor, laughed out because that was the way emotion took her.
”You can laugh,” said her mother, nodding her head, as she rose and began to set away the dishes. ”But 'fore you git through with this you'll laugh out o' t'other side o' your mouth, an' so I tell ye.”
Upon her words there was a step at the door, and Stella knew the step was Jerry's. Her mother, with the prescience born of ire, knew it too.
”There he is,” she said. ”Now you go to cuttin' up any didos, things gone as fur as they have, an' you'll repent this night's work the longest day you live. You be a good girl an' go 'n' let him in!”
She had returned to her placidity, a quiet domestic fowl whose feathers were only to be ruffled when some terrifying shadow flitted overhead.
Stella flew to the door and opened it on her lover, standing still and calm, like a figure set there by destiny to conquer her.
”Jerry,” she burst forth out of the nervous thrill her mother had awakened in her, ”you're botherin' me 'most to death. It's awful not to ask you in when you come to the door, and you a neighbor so. But I can't. You know I can't. It ain't as if you'd come in the day-time. But Sat.u.r.day night--it's just as if--why, you know what Sat.u.r.day night is.
It's just as if we were goin' together.”
Jerry stood there immovable, looking at her. He had shaved and he wore the red tie she had given him. Perhaps it was not so much that she saw him clearly through the early dusk as that she knew from memory how kind his eyes were and what a healthy color flushed his face. It seemed to her at this moment as if Jerry was the nicest person in the world, if only he wouldn't plague her so. But he was speaking out of his persistent quiet.
”I might as well tell you, Stella, an' you might as well make up your mind to it. It ain't to-night only. I'm comin' here every Sat.u.r.day night.”
She was near crying with the vexation of it.
”But you can't, Jerry,” she said. ”I don't want you to.”
”You used to want me to,” said he composedly.
”Well, that was when we were--”
”When we were goin' together.” He nodded in acceptance of the quibble.
”Well, if you wanted me once, a girl like you, you'll want me ag'in. An'
anyways, I'm comin'.”
Stella felt a curious thrill of pride in him.
”Why, Jerry,” she faltered, ”I didn't know you took things that way.”
He was answering quite simply, as if he had hardly guessed it either.
”Well, I don't know myself how I'm goin' to take things till I've thought 'em out. That's the only way. Then, after ye've made up your mind, ye can stick to it.”
Stella fancied there was a great deal in this to think over, but she creaked the door insinuatingly.