Now Davie slackened his toil and opened all the windows of the house to freshen the low-ceilinged rooms for Elizabeth’s returning. Every morning he picked bunches of spring flowers and arranged them in stiff bouquets on the tables and old bureaus. He took out his Sunday suit from the closet and rebrushed it carefully and laid it with a clean collar and his musty tie. He began to carry himself all at once with something of an air, and he developed a reckless and unnatural enthusiasm about the weather; for to be darkly critical of the season after the thaw was a local point of masculine etiquette which hitherto he had scrupulously observed. The spring had always been in his judgment, sympathetically received, “too terrible warm,” or “pointin’ right to a late frost that’ll kill everything,” or, were it not palpably a failure, “so durned nice now that the summer’ll be mean.” But with the good news coming from the hospital he was ready to declare in response to friendly greetings: “It’s the beatin’est time I ever come ’cross. Dun’no’ when I hev heerd so many bluebirds or sech chirky ones. An’ the sky’s wonderful an’ the ground’s jest right. It’s goin’ to be a dreadful good year for farmin’.”
There was in his mind no premonition of trouble on his receiving from the lumbering stage an envelope directed to him in Elizabeth’s own hand. It was only that she was getting able to write to him herself. He took it unopened up to the bench by the May rose to read its contents at his leisure away from the stage-driver’s curious gaze. “Dear Davie,” the letter said, “the city streets is so wearyin’ an’ I’m comin’ home. If I ain’t so well as we hoped, don’t mind. ’Tain’t like I was young to leave. Mary’s comin’ with me, for she’s long been wantin’ to visit the Ridge. Could you meet me with your wagon, Davie?”
She could not tell, what she did not know, that the money for Mary’s journey had been sent to her by the minister for his old friend’s needs.
The afternoon was very soft and fair when Davie met the train incoming to town from the city. The farms on Turkey Ridge were illumined with growing things like the faint, precious pages of a missal. Doves fluttered on the lowly roofs. Everywhere was the calling of birds and the smell of broken earth. The minister and Mary fell behind along the way. Kerrenhappuch Green, caught walking westward to the creek, his stale pockets bulged by bait, hid with a simple delicacy in the roadside bushes from Davie’s face. Only the children hastening from school nodded to him as he passed them, nor hushed the loud clatter of their burring tongues.
It was not for young children to be stricken by that sight upon the road—the pair of patient horses drawing slowly homeward in the shining of the sun a wagon fresh lined with straw, on which lay a homely mother, smiling with old lips; and above her, on the seat, humbly bowed in his Sunday suit, a gray-haired man whose cheeks were wet with tears.
BARNEY DOON, BRAGGART
BY PHILIP VERRILL MIGHELS
The nine dusty citizens of Bitter Hole, having one and all proposed, unsuccessfully, for the hand of Miss Sally Wooster, had about concluded that Bitter Water Valley was a desert, after all, when they finally thought to turn their attention once again to Barney Doon, the cook.
Let it here be stated, nevertheless, there was one thing to prove that the valley was a desert, despite the presence of Barney, and that was the face of the country itself. One-half of that whole Nevada area was a great white blister, forty miles long and fifteen wide, acrid with alkali, flat, barren, and harsh as a sheet of zinc. The valley’s remaining territory was covered with gray, dry scrub, four inches high, through which the dusty Overland stage-route was crookedly scratched.