Part 27 (1/2)
”Boone, I'm mighty glad you felt that you could talk to me this way,”
she said. ”I want to be a _real_ friend. But I've been working hard today--and if it won't hurt your feelings, I wish you'd go home now. I'm dog-tired, and I'd like to go to bed.”
He had started away, but the evening had brought such surprises--and such a lifting of heavy anxiety--that he wanted to mull matters over out there in the soothing moonlight and the clean sweetness of the air.
So he sat down on a boulder where the shadow blotted him into the night, and when he had been there for a while he looked up in a fresh astonishment. Happy had not gone to bed. She was coming now across the stile, with movements like those of a sleep-walker. Outside on the road she stood for a while, pallid and wraith-like in the moonlight, looking in the direction she supposed he had taken, while her fingers plucked at her dress with distressed little gestures. Then with unsteady steps she went on to the edge of the highway and leaned against the boll of a tall poplar. He could see that her eyes were wide and her lips moving. Then she wheeled and threw her hands, with outspread fingers, against the cool bark above her head, leaning there as a child might lean on a mother's bosom, and the sobs that shook her slender body came to him across the short interval of distance.
Boone went over to her with hurried strides, and when she felt his hands on her shoulders she wheeled. Then only did her brave disguise fail her, and she demanded almost angrily, forgetting her school-taught diction, ”Why didn't ye go home like I told ye? Why does ye hev ter dog me this fas.h.i.+on, atter I'd done sent ye away?”
”What's the matter, Happy?” he demanded; but he knew now, well enough, and he was too honest to dissimulate. ”I didn't know, Happy,” he pleaded. ”I thought you meant it all.”
”I did mean hit all--I means thet I wants thet ye should be happy--only--” Her voice broke there as she added, ”--only I've done always thought of myself as yore gal.”
She broke away from him with those words and fled back into the house, and most of that night Boone tramped the woods.
On the morning after Happy had fled from him, under the spurring of her discovered secret, she had not been able with all her bravery of effort to hide from the family about the daybreak breakfast table the traces of a sleepless and tearful night. To Happy, this morning the murky room which was both kitchen and dining hall seemed the epitome of sordidness, with its newspaper-plastered walls and creaking puncheon floor.
Yesterday each depressing detail had been alleviated by the thought that the future held a promise of release. Contemplating delivery, one can laugh gaily in a cell, but now the dungeon doors seemed to have been permanently closed and the key thrown away.
”Happy's done been cryin',” shrilled one of the youngest of the brother and sister brood--for that was a typical mountain family to which, for years, each spring had brought its fresh item of humanity. As Cyrus pithily expressed it, ”Thar hain't but only fo'teen of us settin' down ter eat when everybody's home.”
Old Cyrus put a stern quietus on the chorus of questioning elicited by the proclaiming of his daughter's grief.
”Ef she's been cryin', thet's her own business,” he announced. ”I reckon she don't need ter name what hit's erbout every time she laughs or weeps.”
And, such is the value of the patriarchal edict, the tumult was promptly stilled.
Yet the head of the house, himself, could not so readily dismiss a realization of the unwonted pallor on cheeks normally soft and rosily colourful. The eyes were undeniably wretched and deeply ringed. To himself Cyrus said, ”They've jest only done had a lovers' quarrel. Young folks is bound ter foller fallin' out as well as fallin' in, I reckon.”
Neither that day nor the next, however, did the girl ”live right up to her name,” and on the following night Boone did not come over to sue for peace, as a lover should, under such April conditions of sun and storm.
”What does ye reckon's done come over 'em, Maw?” the father eventually inquired, and the mother shook her perplexed head.
The two of them were alone on the porch just then, save for one of the youngest children, who was deeply absorbed with the feeding of a small and crippled lamb from a nursing bottle improvised out of a whiskey flask.
Slowly the old man's face clouded, until it wore so forebodingly sombre a look as the wife had not seen upon it since years before when life had run black. Then, despite all his efforts to ”consort peaceful with mankind,” he had been drawn into an enmity with a fatal termination.
Cyrus had on that occasion been warned that he was to be ”lay-wayed”
and, as he had taken down his rifle from the wall, his eyes had held just the same hard and obdurate glint that lingered in them now. The woman, remembering that time long gone, when her husband had refused to turn a step aside from his contemplated journey, shuddered a little. She could not forget how he had been shot out of his saddle and how he had, while lying wounded in the creek-bed road, punished his a.s.sailant with death. He was wounded now, though not with a bullet this time, and his scowl said that he would hit back.
”What air hit, Paw?” she demanded, and his reply came in slow but implacable evenness:
”I've done set a heap of store by Boone Wellver. I've done thought of him like a son of my own--but ef he's broke my gal's heart--an's she's got ther look of hit in her eyes--him an' me kain't both go on dwellin'
along ther same creek.” He paused a moment there, and in his final words sounded an even more inflexible ring: ”We kain't both go on livin'
hyar--an' I don't aim ter move.”
”Paw”--the plea came solicitously from a fear-burdened heart--”we've just got ter wait an' see.”
”I don't aim ter be over-hasty,” he rea.s.sured her, with a rude sort of gentleness, ”but nuther does I aim ter endure hit--ef so be hit's true.”