Part 4 (1/2)
”Well--I--I might,” faltered the fleshy one, sidling toward the table and getting himself into a seat. Without further word his father pa.s.sed the great dish of fried potatoes, then the platter of bacon. Judith brought hot coffee and corn pone for him. She did not sit down with the men, having quite enough to do to get the meal served.
Unheedingly she heard the matter discussed at the table; only when Creed Bonbright's name came up was she moved to listen and put in her word.
Something in her manner of describing the a.s.sistance Bonbright offered seemed to go against Blatch's grain.
”Got to look out for these here folks that's so free with their offers o'
he'p,” he grunted. ”Man'll slap ye on the back and tell ye what a fine feller ye air whilst he's feelin' for your pocket-book--that's town ways.”
The girl was like one hearkening for a finer voice amid all this distracting noise; she could hear neither. She made feverish haste to clear away and wash her dishes, that she might creep to her own room under the eaves. Through her open cas.e.m.e.nt came up to her the sounds of the April night: a heightened chorus of little frogs in a rain-fed branch; nearer in the dooryard a half-dozen tree-toads trilling plaintively as many different minors; with these, scents of growing, sharpened and sweetened by the dark. And all night the cedar tree which stood close to the porch edge below moved in the wind of spring, and, chafing against the s.h.i.+ngles, spoke through the miniature music in its deep, m.u.f.fled legato, a soft baritone note like a man's voice--a lover's voice--calling to her beneath her window.
It roused her from fitful slumbers to happy waking, when she lay and stared into the dark, and painted for herself on its sombre background Creed Bonbright's figure, the yellow uncovered head close to her knee as he stood and talked at the foot of the mountain trail. And the voice of the tree in the eager spring airs said to her waiting heart--whispered it softly, shouted and tossed it abroad so that all might have heard it had they been awake and known the s.h.i.+bboleth, murmured it in tones of tenderness that penetrated her with bliss--that Creed was coming--coming--coming to her, through the April woods.
Chapter III
Suitors
April was in the mountains. All the vast timbered slopes and tablelands of the c.u.mberlands were one golden dapple, as yet differentiated by darker greens and heavier shadows only where some group of pine or cedar stood. April in the c.u.mberlands is the May or early June of New England.
Here March has the days of s.h.i.+ne and shower; while to February belongs the gusty turbulence usually attributed to March. Now sounded the calls of the first whippoorwills in the dusk of evening; now the first mocking-bird sang long before day, very sweetly and softly, and again before moonrise; hours of sun he filled with bolder rejoicings, condescending in his more antic humour to mimic the hens that began to cackle around the barn. Every thicket by the water-courses blushed with azaleas; all the banks were gay with wild violets.
Throughout March's changeful emotional season, night after night in those restless vehement impa.s.sioned airs, the cedar tree talked ardently to Judith. Through April's softer nights she wakened often to listen to it.
It went fondly over its first a.s.surances. And the time of Creed Bonbright's advent was near at hand now. Thought of it made light her step as she went about her work.
”Don't you never marry a lazy man, Jude.”
The wife of Jim Cal Turrentine halted on the doorstep, a coa.r.s.e white cup containing the coffee she had come to borrow poised in her hand as she turned to harangue the girl in the kitchen.
”I ain't aimin' to wed no man. Huh, I say marry! I'm not studyin' about marryin',” promptly responded Judith in the mountain girl's unfailing formula; but she coloured high, and bent, pot-hooks in hand, to the great hearth to s.h.i.+ft the clumsy Dutch oven that contained her bread.
”That's what gals allers says,” commented Iley Turrentine discontentedly.
”Huldy's forever singin' that tune. But let a good-lookin' feller come in reach and I 'low any of you will change the note. Huldy's took her foot in her hand and put out--left me with the whole wash to do, and Jim Cal in the bed declarin' he's got a misery in his back. Don't you never wed a lazy man.”
”Whar's Huldy gone?” inquired Judith, sauntering to the door and looking out on the glad beauty of the April morning with fond brooding eyes. The grotesque bow-legged pot-hooks dangled idly in her fingers.
”Over to Nancy Cyard's to git her littlest spinnin' wheel--so she _said_.
I took notice that she had a need for that wheel as soon as ever she hearn tell that Creed Bonbright was up from Hepzibah stayin' at the Cyards's.”
Had not Iley been so engrossed with her own grievances, the sudden heat of the look Judith turned upon her must have enlightened her.
”Huldy knowed him right well when she was waitin' on table at Miz.
Huffaker's boarding-house down at Hepzibah,” the woman went on. ”I ain't got no use for these here fellers that's around tendin' to the whole world's business--they' own chil'en is mighty apt to go hongry. But thar, what does a gal think of that by the side o' curly hair and soft-spoken ways?”
For Judith Barrier at once all the light was gone out of the spring morning. The bird in the Rose of Sharon bush that she had taken for a thrush--why, the thing cawed like a crow. She could have struck her visitor. And then, with an uncertain impulse of grat.i.tude, she was glad to be told anything about Creed, to be informed that others knew his hair was yellow and curly.
”Gone?” sounded old Jephthah's deep tones from within, as Mrs. Jim Cal made her reluctant way back to a sick husband and a house full of work and babies. ”Lord, to think of a woman havin' the keen tongue that Iley's got, and her husband keepin' fat on it!”
”Uncle Jep,” inquired Judith abruptly, ”did you know Creed Bonbright was at Nancy Card's--stayin' there, I mean?”