Part 5 (2/2)
Milford sneered. ”Madam, I'm a crank.” He begged her pardon for his harshness. Her forgiveness came with a smile. He told her that he was as morbid as a mad dog, and he said it with such energy that she drew back from him. ”But you won't fail to see George, will you? Come on, Bobbie. Oh, I forgot to tell you of some new arrivals--a Mrs. Goodwin, wife of a well-known doctor in town, and her companion, one of the handsomest young women I ever saw--a Norwegian girl, as graceful as one of her native pines. You won't fail to come, will you? Good-bye.”
The evening was sultry, with a lingering smear of red in the western sky. At the supper table Milford nodded in his chair. The hired man spoke to him, and he looked up, his batting eyes fighting off sleep.
”Them slashes have about got the best of you, haven't they, Bill? I'd let that corn go before I'd dig my life out among them tough clods. I'm givin' it to you straight.”
”I don't doubt it. But it will pay in the end. I've come to the conclusion that all hard work pays. It pays a man's mind, and he couldn't get a much better reward. But I'd like to go to bed, just the same.”
”Why don't you? Not goin' to dig any more to-night, are you?”
”No, but I've got to go over to Mrs. Stuvic's to see a man.”
”A man?” Mitch.e.l.l asked, with a wink.
”I said a man.”
”Yes, I know you said a man.”
”Then why not a man?”
”Well, I don't know, only it seems to me that if I was as tired as you look I wouldn't go to see no man's man.”
”How about any woman's woman?”
”Well, that's different. You can put off seein' a man, and you might put off seein' a woman, but you don't want to. But maybe you ain't as big a chump about a woman as I am.”
Milford said that the wisest man among wise men could easily be a fool among women. Solomon's wisdom, diluted by woman, became a weak quality.
”Except once,” he added, taking down his pipe from the clock shelf, ”and that was when he called for a sword to cut a child in two to divide it between two mothers; but if the question had been between himself and a woman, I don't know but he'd have got the worst of it.”
It was the hired man's turn to clear away the dishes, and Milford sat smoking in a muse. Night flies buzzed about the lamp, and the mosquito, winged sting of the darkness, sang his sharp tune over the rain-water barrel beneath the window. The hired man put away the dishes, and went into his sh.e.l.l-like bedroom, a thin addition built against the house.
Milford heard him sit upon the edge of his bed, heard his heavy shoes drop upon the floor, heard him stretch out upon the creaking slats to lie a log till the peep of day. The tired laborer's pipe fell to the floor. He got up with a straining shrug of his stiff shoulders, s.n.a.t.c.hed off his sticking garments, bathed in a tub, put on clean clothing, and set out to keep his appointment. He muttered as he walked along the road. He halted upon a knoll in the oat-field, and stood to breathe the cool air from the low-lying meadow. As he drew near to the house, he heard the shouts of children and the imploring tones of nurses and mothers, begging them to go to bed. A lantern hanging under the eaves of the veranda shed light upon women eager to hear gossip from the city apartment house, and men, who, though breathing a fresh escape from business, had already begun to inquire as to the running of the trains.
In the dooryard, a dull fire smoked in a tin pan,--a ”smudge” to drive off the mosquitoes. Some one flailed the piano. The Dutch girl, singing a song of the lowlands, was grabbing clothes off a line, with no fear of running over an old man. Mrs. Blakemore and George were sitting at a corner of the veranda, apart from the general nest of gossipers. Bobbie had been bribed to bed. The woman got up and gave Milford her hand. In his calloused palm it felt like the soft paw of a kitten. George nodded with an indistinct grunt.
”Well, how is everything?” Milford asked.
”Rotten,” George answered. His wife sighed, and brushed off a white moth that had lighted on his coat sleeve. ”But it will get better,” she said.
”Don't you think so, Mr. Milford?”
”Bound to,” Milford agreed. ”I'm a firm believer in everything coming out all right. I've seen it tested time and again. Hope is the world's best bank account.” George looked at him. ”That's all right enough,” he admitted.
”Hope is the soul's involuntary prayer,” his wife observed, and he looked at her. ”That's all well enough, too,” said he, ”but what's the use of tying a ribbon around your neck in a snow-storm, when what you need is an overcoat? A man can wrap all the hope in the world around himself, and then freeze to death.”
”That's true,” said Milford, catching sight of the woman's eyes as she drew a long breath, ”but hope may lead him out of the storm. Pardon me, but I infer that you've met business reverses.”
”Struck the ceiling,” said George.
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