He Fell In Love With His Wife, Edward Payson Roe [children's books read aloud .TXT] 📗
- Author: Edward Payson Roe
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hired farm-hands of the ruder sort came riding and trudging to Weeks’ barn,
where there was a barrel of cider on tap. Here they blackened their faces
with charcoal and stimulated their courage, for it was well known that
Holcroft was anything but lamblike when angered.
“He’ll be like a bull in a china shop,” remarked Tim, “but then there’s enough
of us to handle him if he gets too obstrep’rous.”
Armed with tin pans and horns which were to furnish the accompaniment to their
discordant voices, they started about eight in the evening. As they moved up
the road there was a good deal of coarse jesting and bravado, but when they
approached the farmhouse silence was enjoined. After passing up the lane they
looked rather nervously at the quiet dwelling softly outlined in the
moonlight. A lamp illumined the kitchen window, and Tim Weeks whispered
excitedly, “He’s there. Let’s first peek in the window and then give ‘em a
scorcher.”
Knowing that they should have the coming day in which to rest, Holcroft and
Alida had busied themselves with outdoor matters until late. She had been
planning her flower beds, cutting out the dead wood from some neglected
rosebushes and shrubbery, and had also helped her husband by sowing seed in
the kitchen garden back of the house. Then, weary, yet pleased with the labor
accomplished, they made a very leisurely supper, talking over garden matters
and farm prospects in general. Alida had all her flower seeds on the table
beside her, and she gloated over them and expatiated on the kind of blossoms
they would produce with so much zest that Holcroft laughingly remarked, “I
never thought that flowers would be one of the most important crops on the
place.”
“You will think so some day. I can see, from the expression of your eyes,
that the cherry blossoms and now the apple blows which I put on the table
please you almost as much as the fruit would.”
“Well, it’s because I notice ‘em. I never seemed to notice ‘em much before.”
“Oh, no! It’s more than that,” she replied, shaking her head. “Some people
would notice them, yet never see how pretty they were.”
“Then they’d be blind as moles.”
“The worst kind of blindness is that of the mind.”
“Well, I think many country people are as stupid and blind as oxen, and I was
one of ‘em. I’ve seen more cherry and apple blossoms this year than in all my
life before, and I haven’t thought only of cherries and apples either.”
“The habit of seeing what is pretty grows on one,” she resumed. “It seems to
me that flowers and such things feed mind and heart. So if one HAS mind and
heart, flowers become one of the most useful crops. Isn’t that practical
common sense?”
“Not very common in Oakville. I’m glad you think I’m in a hopeful frame of
mind, as they used to say down at the meeting house. Anyhow, since you wish
it, we will have a flower crop as well as a potato crop.”
Thus they continued chatting while Alida cleared up the table, and Holcroft,
having lighted his pipe, busied himself with peeling a long, slim hickory
sapling intended for a whipstock.
Having finished her tasks, Alida was finally drying her hands on a towel that
hung near a window. Suddenly, she caught sight of a dark face peering in.
Her startled cry brought Holcroft hastily to his feet. “What’s the matter?” he
asked.
“I saw—” Then she hesitated from a fear that he would rush into some unknown
danger.
The rough crew without perceived that their presence was known, and Tim Weeks
cried, “Now, all together!”
A frightful overture began at once, the hooting and yelling almost drowning
the instrumental part and sending to Alida’s heart that awful chill of fear
produced by human voices in any mob-like assemblage. Holcroft understood the
affair at once, for he was familiar with the custom, but she did not. He
threw open the door with the purpose of sternly expostulating with the
disturbers of the peace and of threatening them with the law unless they
retired. With an instinct to share his danger she stepped to his side, and
this brought a yell of derision. Lurid thoughts swept through her mind. She
had brought this danger. Her story had become known. What might they not do
to Holcroft? Under the impulse of vague terror and complete self-sacrifice,
she stepped forward and cried, “I only am to blame. I will go away forever if
you will spare—” But again the scornful clamor rose and drowned her voice.
Her action and words had been so swift that Holcroft could not interfere, but
in an instant he was at her side, his arm around her, his square jaw set, and
his eyes blazing with his kindling anger. He was not one of those men who
fume early under provocation and in words chiefly. His manner and gesture
were so impressive that his tormentors paused to listen.
“I know,” he said quietly, “all about this old, rude custom—that it’s often
little more than a rough lark. Well, now that you’ve had it, leave at once.
I’m in no mood for such attention from my neighbors. This is my wife, and
I’ll break any man’s head who says a word to hurt her feelings—”
“Oh yes! Take care of her feelings, now it’s your turn. They must ‘a’ been
hurt before,” piped up Tim Weeks.
“Good for you, old man, for showin’ us your poorhouse bride,” said another.
“We don’t fancy such grass-widders, and much married, half-married women in
Oakville,” yelled a third.
“Why didn’t yer jump over a broomstick for a weddin’ ceremony?” someone else
bawled.
These insults were fired almost in a volley. Alida felt Holcroft’s arm grow
rigid for a second. “Go in, quick!” he said.
Then she saw him seize the hickory sapling he had leaned against the house,
and burst upon the group like a thunderbolt. Cries of pain, yells, and oaths
of rage rose above the rain of blows. The older members of the crew sought to
close upon him, but he sprung back, and the tough sapling swept about him like
a circle of light. It was a terrific weapon in the hands of a strong man, now
possessed of almost giant strength in his rage. More than one fellow went
down under its stinging cut, and heads and faces were bleeding. The younger
portion of the crowd speedily took to their heels, and soon even the most
stubborn fled; the farmer vigorously assisting their ignominious retreat with
tremendous downward blows on any within reach. Tim Weeks had managed to keep
out of the way till they entered the lane; then, taking a small stone from the
fence, he hurled it at their pursuer and attempted to jump over the wall.
This was old, and gave way under him in such a way that he fell on the other
side. Holcroft leaped the fence with a bound, but Tim, lying on his back,
shrieked and held up his hands, “You won’t hit a feller when he’s down!”
“No,” said Holcroft, arresting his hickory. “I’ll send you to jail, Tim Weeks.
That stone you fired cut my head. Was your father in that crowd?”
“No-o-o!” blubbered Tim.
“If he was, I’d follow him home and whip him in his own house. Now, clear
out, and tell the rest of your rowdy crew that I’ll shoot the first one of you
that disturbs me again. I’ll send the constable for you, and maybe for some
of the others.”
Dire was the dismay, and dreadful the groaning in Oakville that night. Never
before had salves and poultices been in such demand. Not a few would be
disfigured for weeks, and wherever Holcroft’s blows had fallen welts arose
like whipcords. In Lemuel Weeks’ dwelling the consternation reached its
climax. Tim, bruised from his fall, limped in and told his portentous story.
In his spite, he added, “I don’t care, I hit him hard. His face was all
bloody.”
“All bloody!” groaned his father. “Lord ‘a mercy! He can send you to jail,
sure enough!”
Then Mrs. Weeks sat down and wailed aloud.
Chapter XXVI. “You Don’t Know.”
As Timothy Weeks limped hastily away, Holcroft, with a strong revulsion of
feeling, thought of Alida. HE had been able to answer insults in a way
eminently satisfactory to himself, and every blow had relieved his electrical
condition. But how about the poor woman who had received worse blows than he
had inflicted? As he hastened toward the house he recalled a dim impression
of seeing her sink down on the doorstep. Then he remembered her effort to
face the marauders alone. “She said she was to blame, poor child! As if there
were any blame at all! She said, ‘spare him,’ as if I was facing a band of
murderers instead of a lot of neighborhood scamps, and that she’d go away.
I’d fight all Oakville—men, women, and children—before I’d permit that,” and
he started on a run.
He found Alida on the step, where she had sunk as if struck down by the rough
epithets hurled at her. She was sobbing violently, almost hysterically, and
at first could not reply to his soothing words. He lifted her up, and half
carried her within to a chair. “Oh, oh,” she cried, “why did I not realize it
more fully before? Selfish woman that I was, to marry you and bring on you all
this shame and danger. I should have thought of it all, I ought to have died
rather than do you such a wrong.”
“Alida, Alida,” protested Holcroft, “if it were all to do over again, I’d be a
thousand times more—”
“Oh, I know, I know! You are brave and generous and honest. I saw that much
when you first spoke to me. I yielded to the temptation to secure such a
friend. I was too cowardly to face the world alone. And now see what’s
happened! You’re in danger and disgrace on my account. I must go away—I
must do what I should have done at first,” and with her face buried in her
hands she rocked back and forth, overwhelmed by the bitterness and reproach of
her thoughts.
“Alida,” he urged, “please be calm and sensible. Let me reason with you and
tell you the truth. All that’s happened is that the Oakville cubs have
received a well-deserved whipping. When you get calm, I can explain
everything so it won’t seem half so bad. Neither you nor I are in any danger,
and, as for your going away, look me in the eyes and listen.”
His words were almost stern in their earnestness. She raised her streaming
eyes to his face, then sprung up, exclaiming, “Oh! You’re wounded!”
“What’s that, compared with your talk of going away?”
All explanations and reassurances would have been trivial in effect, compared
with the truth that he had been hurt in her defense. She dashed her tears
right and left, ran for a basin of water, and making him take her chair, began
washing away the blood stains.
“Thunder!” he said, laughing, “How quickly we’ve changed places!”
“Oh, oh!” she moaned, “It’s a terrible wound; it might have killed you, and
they WILL kill you yet.”
He took her hands and held them firmly. “Alida,” he said, gravely yet kindly,
“be still and listen to me.”
For a moment or two longer her bosom heaved with convulsive sobs, and then she
grew quiet. “Don’t you know you can’t go away?” he asked, still retaining her
hands and
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