Part 7 (1/2)

CHAPTER III

THE SPARK IN THE CLOD

It did not cost Isom so many pangs to minister to the gross appet.i.te of his bound boy as the spring weeks marched into summer, for gooseberries followed rhubarb, then came green peas and potatoes from the garden that Ollie had planted and tilled under her husband's orders.

Along in early summer the wormy codlings which fell from the apple-trees had to be gathered up and fed to the hogs by Ollie, and it was such a season of blighted fruit that the beasts could not eat them all. So there was apple sauce, sweetened with mola.s.ses from the new barrel that Isom broached.

If it had not been so n.i.g.g.ardly unnecessary, the faculty that Isom had for turning the waste ends of the farm into profit would have been admirable. But the suffering attendant upon this economy fell only upon the human creatures around him. Isom's beasts wallowed in plenty and grew fat in the liberality of his hand. For himself, it looked as if he had the ability to extract his living from the bare surface of a rock.

All of this green truck was filling, as Isom had said, but far from satisfying to a lad in the process of building on such generous plans as Joe. Isom knew that too much skim-milk would make a pot-bellied calf, but he was too stubborn in his rule of life to admit the cause when he saw that Joe began to lag at his work, and grow surly and sour.

Isom came in for quick and startling enlightenment in the middle of a lurid July morning, while he and Joe were at work with one-horse cultivators, ”laying by” the corn. Joe threw his plow down in the furrow, cast the lines from his shoulders, and declared that he was starving. He vowed that he would not cultivate another row unless a.s.sured, then and there, that Isom would make an immediate enlargement in the bill-of-fare.

Isom stood beside the handles of his own cultivator, there being the s.p.a.ce of ten rows between him and Joe, and took the lines from around his shoulders, with the deliberate, stern movement of a man who is preparing for a fight.

”What do you mean by this kind of capers?” he demanded.

”I mean that you can't go on starving me like you've been doing, and that's all there is to it!” said Joe. ”The law don't give you the right to do that.”

”Law! Well, I'll law you,” said Isom, coming forward, his hard body crouched a little, his lean and guttered neck stretched as if he gathered himself for a run and jump at the fence. ”I'll feed you what comes to my hand to feed you, you onery whelp! You're workin' for me, you belong to me!”

”I'm working for mother--I told you that before,” said Joe. ”I don't owe you anything, Isom, and you've got to feed me better, or I'll walk away and leave you, that's what I'll do!”

”Yes, I see you walkin' away!” said Isom, plucking at his already turned-up sleeve. ”I'm goin' to give you a tannin' right now, and one you'll not forget to your dyin' day!”

At that moment Isom doubtless intended to carry out his threat. Here was a piece of his own property, as much his property as his own wedded wife, defying him, facing him with extravagant demands, threatening to stop work unless more bountifully fed! Truly, it was a state of insurrection such as no upright citizen like Isom Chase could allow to go by unreproved and unquieted by castigation of his hand.

”You'd better stop where you are,” advised Joe.

He reached down and righted his plow. Isom could see the straining of the leaders in his lean wrist as he stood gripping the handle, and the thought pa.s.sed through him that Joe intended to wrench it off and use it as a weapon against him.

Isom had come but a few steps from his plow. He stopped, looking down at the furrow as if struggling to hold himself within bounds. Still looking at the earth, he went back to his implement.

”I'll put you where the dogs won't bite you if you ever threaten my life ag'in!” said he.

”I didn't threaten your life, Isom, I didn't say a word,” said Joe.

”A motion's a threat,” said Isom.

”But I'll tell you now,” said Joe, quietly, lowering his voice and leaning forward a little, ”you'd better think a long time before you ever start to lay hands on me again, Isom. This is twice. The next time----”

Joe set his plow in the furrow with a push that sent the swingle-tree knocking against the horse's heels. The animal started out of the doze into which it had fallen while the quarrel went on. Joe grinned, thinking how even Isom's dumb creatures took every advantage of him that opportunity offered. But he left his warning unfinished as for words.

There was no need to say more, for Isom was cowed. He was quaking down to the tap-root of his salt-hardened soul, but he tried to put a different face on it as he took up his plow.

”I don't want to cripple you, and lay you up,” he said. ”If I was to begin on you once I don't know where I'd leave off. Git back to your work, and don't give me any more of your sa.s.s!”

”I'll go back to work when you give me your word that I'm to have meat and eggs, b.u.t.ter and milk, and plenty of it,” said Joe.

”I orto tie you up to a tree and lash you!” said Isom, jerking angrily at his horse. ”I don't know what ever made me pity your mother and keep her out of the poorhouse by takin' in a loafer like you!”