登陆注册
37800800000020

第20章 UP THE COULEE A STORY OF WISCONSIN(6)

"Of course not! He didn't mean it. Now, can't you send word down and have my trunk brought up? Or shall I have to walk down?"

"I guess I'll see somebody goin' down," said Laura.

"All right. Now for the hayfield," he smiled and went out into the glorious morning.

The circling hills the same, yet not the same as at night. A cooler, tenderer, more subdued cloak of color u~ on them. Far down the valley a cool, deep, impalpable, blue mist lay, under which one divined the river Ian, under its elms and basswoods and wild grapevines. On the shaven slopes of the hills cattle and sheep were feeding, their cries and bells coming to the ear with a sweet suggestiveness. There was something immemorial in the sunny slopes dotted with red and brown and gray cattle.

Walking toward the haymakers, Howard felt a twinge of pain and distrust. Would he ignore it all and smile-

He stopped short. He had not seen Grant smile in so long-he couldn't quite see him smiling. He had been cold and bitter for years. When he came up to them, Grant was pitching on; the old man was loading, and the boy was raking after.

"Good morning," Howard cried cheerily. The old man nodded, the boy stared. Grant growled something, with-out looking up. These "finical" things of saying good morning and good night are not much practiced in such homes as Grant McLane's.

"Need some help? I'm ready to take a hand. Got on my regimentals this morning."

Grant looked at him a moment.

"You look like it."

"Gimme a hold on that fork, and I'll show you. I'm not so soft as I look, now you bet."

He laid hold upon the fork in Grant's hands, who r~ leased it sullenly and stood back sneering. Howard struck the fork into the pile in the old way, threw his left hand to the end of the polished handle, brought it down into the hollow of his thigh, and laid out his strength till the handle bent like a bow. "Oop she rises!" he called laughingly, as the whole pile began slowly to rise, and finally rolled upon the high load.

"Oh, I ain't forgot how to do it," he laughed as he looked around at the boy, who was studying the jacket and hat with a devouring gaze.

Grant was studying him too, but not in admiration.

"I shouldn't say you had," said the old man, tugging at the forkful.

'Mighty funny to come out here and do a little of this. But if you had to come here and do it all the while, you wouldn't look so white and soft in the hands," Grant said as they moved on to another pile. "Give me that fork. You'll be spoiling your fine clothes."

"Oh, these don't matter. They're made for this kind of thing."

"Oh, are they? I guess I'll dress in that kind of a rig. What did that shirt cost? I need one."

"Six dollars a pair; but then it's old."

"And them pants," he pursued; "they cost six dollars, too, didn't they?"

Howard's face darkened. He saw his brother's purpose. He resented it. "They cost fifteen dollars, if you want to know, and the shoes cost six-fifty. This ring on my cravat cost sixty dollars, and the suit I had on last night cost eighty-five. My suits are made by Breckstein, on Fifth Avenue and Twentieth Street, if you want to patronize him," he ended brutally, spurred on by the sneer in his brother's eyes. "I'll introduce you."

"Good idea," said Grant with a forced, mocking smile. "I need just such a get up for haying and corn plowing. Singular I never thought of it. Now my pants cost eighty-five cents, s'penders fifteen, hat twenty, shoes one-fifty; stockin's I don't bother about."

He had his brother at a disadvantage, and he grew fluent and caustic as he went on, almost changing places with Howard, who took the rake out of the boy's hands and followed, raking up the scatterings.

"Singular we fellers here are discontented and mulish, am't it?

Singular we don't believe your letters when you write, sayin', 'I just about make a live of it'? Singular we think the country's goin' to hell, we fellers, in a two dollar suit, wadin' around in the mud or sweatin' around in the hayfield, while you fellers lay around New York and smoke and wear good clothes and toady to millionaires?"

Howard threw down the rake and folded his arms. 'My God! you're enough to make a man forget the same mother bore us!"

"I guess it wouldn't take much to make you forget that. You ain't put much thought on me nor her for ten years."

The old man cackled, the boy grinned, and Howard, sick and weak with anger and sorrow, turned away and walked down toward the brook. He had tried once more to get near his brother and had failed. O God! how miserably, pitiably! The hot blood gushed all over him as he thought of the shame and disgrace of it.

He, a man associating with poets, artists, sought after by brilliant women, accustomed to deference even from such people, to be sneered at, outfaced, shamed, shoved aside, by a man in a stained hickory shirt and patched overalls, and that man his brother! He lay down on the bright grass, with the sheep all around him, and writhed and groaned with the agony and despair of it.

And worst of all, underneath it was a consciousness that Grant was right in distrusting him. He had neglected him; he had said, "I guess they're getting along all right." He had put them behind him when the invitation to spend summer on the Mediterranean or in the Adirondacks came.

"What can I do? What can I do?" he groaned.

The sheep nibbled the grass near him, the jays called pertly, "Shame, shame," a quail piped somewhere on the hillside, and the brook sung a soft, soothing melody that took away at last the sharp edge of his pain, and he sat up and gazed down the valley, bright with the sun and apparently filled with happy and prosperous people.

Suddenly a thought seized him. He stood up so suddenly the sheep fled in affright. He leaped the brook, crossed the flat, and began searching in the bushes on the hillside. "Hurrah!" he said with a smile.

同类推荐
  • 法海经

    法海经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说得道梯隥锡杖经

    佛说得道梯隥锡杖经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 家范

    家范

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Glaucus

    Glaucus

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 竹窗随笔

    竹窗随笔

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 刀破虚空

    刀破虚空

    我若化仙,必当引导世人,步路正途。我若化魔,必当屠戮苍生,绝杀天下。化仙,却招世人妒忌与坑害,化魔,又招世人唾弃与记恨。仙路渺渺,魔路坎坷,何路能让我踏足。悠悠岁月,天道难寻,我路艰难,时间不曾陨落,我路便不曾消散,世人的妒忌,世人的唾弃,都将凐灭在时间的长河中,唯我独存。傲视天下,谁能与我一战?
  • 汉世迷殇

    汉世迷殇

    汉武之后,再无铁马金戈的喧嚣和醉卧沙场的凄凉。举世繁华的背后暗流涌动,内藏皇室权臣的勾心斗角,外有凶悍异族的虎视眈眈。平四海兮壮志凌云,舞清风兮儿女情长。试看大汉英杰能否重燃斗志,斩妖除魔。
  • 楚夫人今天脸红了吗

    楚夫人今天脸红了吗

    他,南辰国永疆帝;他,华国楚家家主。一场车祸,他变成他,穿越时空,只为那一心尖人。―众人皆知,楚家夫人姜梦雪嫁于楚家家主楚尉俢三年,两人除却新婚夜那一次同房后再无一次见面。这便是大家族家的联姻,众人都以为这两人一生都会这样,谁曾想一场车祸后局面全部发生改变。楚尉修一睁眼便喊着楚夫人的名字,从此化身宠妻狂魔外加大醋缸,每天都在撒狗粮。―某天采访:“楚先生,大家都知道曾经您对这段婚姻非常不满意,怎么车祸醒来后就变身宠妻狂魔了?”某男淡笑“曾经眼瞎,经历过生死后幡然醒悟,知道要宠老婆了,毕竟我老婆那么美,被别人抢走就得不偿失了。”
  • 黑执事之海的女儿

    黑执事之海的女儿

    她,如海般透明,如豹般危险,如傲梅般绝代风华,如高贵的黑猫般魅惑神秘,如冬莲般淡然。她犹如海的女儿,是那样通彻透明。三千蓝丝如瀑布,海色的眸是那样荒凉冷清,不带一丝感情。身上强大冷静的气势能让所有人膜拜。她的恶魔执事,再冷静,再理智,遇上满身风华的她,也在疯狂。可她,确已不会爱,也不可能爱。
  • 傲骄白狐腹黑主

    傲骄白狐腹黑主

    我可以吐你一脸圆润的口水么。凭什么别人穿越都是大美女啊,我穿越偏偏就成了一只白狐啊。而且。。。。拜托我至少是只白狐啊,要不要那么对我。。。我是无辜的~
  • 末路彷徨

    末路彷徨

    “如果世界走到了它的尽头,你会怎么选择呢?我不知道,但是我知道,我想活下去,即使已经完全没有了活下去的动力。我想这大概就是,人类的劣根性吧。”
  • 修罗神再世

    修罗神再世

    在这片强者为尊的大陆上,人与妖持续了万年的斗争,每个人或妖都有修炼的机会。生来为人,使命就是作为一名道士除妖。修罗宗杰出子弟东方瀛降生世上,开展了与妖的和平之路…
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 命争三分

    命争三分

    除了出生你不能选择,生命中的每个选择都是你自己在决定。
  • 天寂谣

    天寂谣

    有血誓在,霊天寂,在我完成复仇之前,你要保我不死!“你真的以为本君会爱上你吗。”他把“你”字说的很重,就如同一只冰锤,直接砸到季摇头顶。国师不是不老不死的仙身吗?你以为他是用什么护你来到虚无广境的?他一血肉之躯抵挡岩浆与寒冰,早已元神具损,油尽灯枯了!待你取得至宝使天下人长生不老时,天下百姓必定拥你为王,坐拥天下才是你的目的,季摇,你好大的野心!你究竟想做什么?我要做一件事,赌上天下人的性命。你,不得好死!待我功成之时,不死不灭。我李唐皇室,定会千秋万代,永世繁华!