登陆注册
37800800000004

第4章 A BRANCH ROAD(3)

"No, I won't need any sugar, if you just smile into it." This from gallant David, greeted with roars of laughter.

"Now, Dave, s'pose your wife 'ud hear o' that?"

"She'd snatch 'im bald-headed, that's what she'd do."

"Say, somebody drive that ceow down this way," said Bill.

"Don't get off that drive! It's too old," criticised Shep, passing the milk jug.

Potatoes were seized, cut in halves, sopped in gravy, and taken one, two! Corn cakes went into great jaws like coal into a steam engine. Knives in the right hand cut and scooped gravy up. Great, muscular, grimy, but wholesome fellows they were, feeding like ancient Norse, and capable of working like demons. They were deep in the process; half-hidden by steam from the potatoes and stew, in less than sixty seconds from their entrance.

With a shrinking from the comments of the others upon his regard for Agnes, Will assumed a reserved and almost haughty air toward his fellow workmen, and a curious coldness toward her. As he went in, she came forward smiling brightly.

"There's one more place, Will." A tender, involuntary droop in her voice betrayed her, and Will felt a wave of hot blood surge over him as the rest roared.

"Ha, ha! Oh, there'd be a place for him!"

"Don't worry, Will! Always room for you here!"

Will took his seat with a sudden angry flame. "Why can't she keep it from these fools?" was his thought. He didn't even thank her for showing him the chair.

She flushed vividly, but smiled back. She was so proud and happy, she didn't care very much if they did know it. But as Will looked at her with that quick angry glance, and took his seat with scowling brow, she was hurt and puzzled. She redoubled her exertions to please him, and by so doing added to the amusement of the crowd that gnawed chicken bones, rattled cups, knives and forks, and joked as they ate with small grace and no material loss of time.

Will remained silent through it all, eating in marked contrast to the others, using his fork instead of his knife in eating his potato,'and drinking his tea from his cup rather than from his saucer-

"finickies" which did not escape the notice of the girl nor the. sharp eyes of the other workmen.

"See that? That's the way we do down to the sem! See? Fork for pie in yer right hand! Hey? I can't do it. Watch me."

When Agnes leaned over to say, "Won't you have some more tea, Will?" they nudged each other and grinned. "Aha! What did I tell you?"

Agnes saw at last that for some reason Will didn't want her to show her regard for him, that be was ashamed of it in some way, and she was wounded. To cover it up, she resorted to the feminine device of smiling and chatting with the others. She asked Ed if he wouldn't have another piece of pie.

"I will-with a fork, please."

"This is 'bout the only place you can use a fork," said Bill Young, anticipating a laugh by his own broad grin.

"Oh, that's too old," said Shep Watson. "Don't drag that out agin. A man that'll eat seven taters-"

"Shows who docs the work."

"Yes, with his jaws," put in Jim Wheelock, the driver. "If you'd put in a little more work with soap 'n' water before comin' in to dinner, it 'ud be a religious idee," said David.

"It ain't healthy to wash."

"Well, you'll live forever, then."

"He ain't washed his face sence I knew 'im."

"Oh, that's a little too tought! He washes once a week," said Ed Kinney.

"Back of his ears?" inquired David, who was munching a doughnut, his black eyes twinkling with fun.

"What's the cause of it?"

"Dade says she won't kiss 'im if he don't." Everybody roared.

"Good fer Dade! I wouldn't if I was in her place."

Wheelock gripped a chicken leg imperturbably, and left it bare as a toothpick with one or two bites at it. His face shone in two clean sections around his nose and mouth. Behind his ears the dirt lay undisturbed. The grease on his hands could not be washed off.

Will began to suffer now because Agnes treated the other fellows too well. With a lover's exacting jealousy, he wanted her in some way to hide their tenderness from the rest, but to show her indifference to men like Young and Kinney. He didn't stop to inquire of himself the justice of such a demand, nor just how it was to be done. He only insisted she ought to do it.

He rose and left the table at the end of his dinner, without having spoken to her, without even a tender, significant glance, and he knew, too, that she was troubled and hurt. But he was suffering. It seemed as if he had lost something sweet, lost it irrecoverably.

He noticed Ed Kinney and Bill Young were the last to come out, just before the machine started up again after dinner, and he saw them pause outside the threshold and laugh back at Agnes standing in the doorway. Why couldn't she keep those fellows at a distance, not go out of her way to bandy jokes with them?

Some way the elation of the morning was gone. He worked on doggedly now, without looking up, without listening to the leaves, without seeing the sunlighted clouds. Of course he didn't think that she meant anything by it, but it irritated him and made him unhappy. She gave herself too freely.

Toward the middle of the afternoon the machine stopped for a time for some repairing; and while Will lay on his stack in the bright yellow sunshine, shelling wheat in his hands and listening to the wind in the oaks, he heard his name and her name mentioned on the other side of the machine, where the measuring box stood.

He listened.

"She's pretty sweet on him, ain't she? Did yeh notus how she stood around over him?"

"Yes; an' did yeh see him when she passed the cup o' tea down over his shoulder?"

Will got up, white with wrath as they laughed.

"Some way he didn't seem to enjoy it as I would. I wish she'd reach her arm over my neck that way."

Will walked around the machine, and came on the group lying on the chaff near the straw pile.

"Say, I want you fellers to understand that I won't have any more of this talk. I won't have it."

There was a dead silence. Then Bill Young rose up.

"What yeh goen' to do about Ut?" be sneered.

"I'm going to stop it."

The wolf rose in Young. He moved forward, his ferocious soul flaming from his eyes.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 时空异人

    时空异人

    当异能撞上古武!是风火雷电横行天下?还是刀枪剑戟睥睨一切?异人说:规则在手,可掌千秋!武者说:开宗立派,武传万代!主角呵呵一笑:一群龙套……就喜欢凑热闹……
  • 惊世帝尊女王圣恋

    惊世帝尊女王圣恋

    “次奥……刚来人间……就被炎老头坑了一把……本尊堂堂圣魔帝尊居然被自家老子坑了……炎老头……本尊回去不打屎你本尊就不姓嗜冷……哼!”圣魔女王,称帝尊的高贵少女:嗜冷羽寒。是怎么也没想到居然被自家老子坑了个大满贯,去学校也就算了。居然还不准用圣魔神力,真当自己是老子就爱怎么着就这么着么?本尊还真就用了……哼……好吧……看本尊任何玩校园……交校友……遛校草……虐白莲……让你炎老头看看本尊的厉害,可奥……妖孽老弟要来!!!炎老头……还能不能愉快的学习了!!!本尊跟你没完!!!
  • 小九九

    小九九

    你好我是小九九请问有烟吗?你好我是小九九神仙可以天天吃饭吗?你好我是小九九女人可以给你生几个娃?你好我是小九九孩子想天天学泡妞嘛?
  • 万年长青

    万年长青

    王陵:“我不知道前方有什么,只知道我要的是什么;我只想安安静静的走下去,我不想挡别人的路,挡了,我就让开;别人也不要挡我的路,挡了,我就杀之”——————————————————————王陵,一个天资不错的少年,奋斗一生,加上几分机缘,造就了一段不朽的传奇!传奇路上,翻云覆雨、剑戟寒霜,几番厮杀,几番挣扎,磕磕绊绊,终得永恒!(您的收藏、推荐是对我最大的支持,愿我们一同走下去,直至完本)
  • 路过的天才物理学家

    路过的天才物理学家

    创造了新世界的假面骑士Build,桐生战兔与埃伯尔特的决战,激发了未知的能量,他被传送至许多个不同的世界,他到底何去何从?
  • 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!
  • 神遗之森

    神遗之森

    一个普普通通的地球17岁少年,在一次平常的旅行中,被一道不平常的闪电劈中,死后灵魂被吸入另一个世界,少年醒来后,眼前的一切都不一样了。这里是一个魔法,有斗气,甚至还有龙,而现在这个少年。的身体竟然是一个5岁的小男孩!这一切都让他惊奇无比,同时也担心着,因为自己身处在一片原始森林中!
  • 苏家屯的变迁

    苏家屯的变迁

    《苏家屯的变迁》,70万字左右。60年代初,山村苏家屯,出身卑微,人单势薄的苏老二,与队长的千金康素贞同年同月同日生,在推荐上高中的时代,他没有资格上高中,而上了高中的康素贞却因对苏老二的暗恋中途辍学。两人恋爱的过程,极具凄美,终因“改革开放”的春风,怒放了两人爱情的花朵。在“改革开放”年代新旧两种思想的碰撞中,作品用事实证明了农村宗族势力的野蛮和强大,同时也证明了人的主观能动性在改变命运中的强大动力。作品通过康苏两家不同社会背景所产生的矛盾,从苏家屯风物的变迁等,反映了中华民族每前进一步的艰辛,反映了任何社会都需要不断地“改革”才能进步的道理,更反映了那个年代各色人等的处世哲学,以及“改革开放”的重要性,必然性和不完美性。康素贞和苏老二等人从“童年、少年”到“青年、中老年”的过程,反映了康素贞的善良纯洁和苏老二的刚正不阿。故事情节一波三折,悲喜交加,笑中有泪,泪中含笑,弘扬了真善美,有鲜明的思想导向。主人公的人生,同时也是那个时代芸芸众生的人生缩影,清晰地再现了50、60、70后丰富的苦乐年华和奋斗历程。
  • 妇科心法要诀

    妇科心法要诀

    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。
  • 三世孽乱

    三世孽乱

    屏对雕栏月色清,狼向皓月读空明。三生三世又何如,却道着,一生离经一世净。这部书是有三生三世的故事,从洪荒到盛唐再到满清。然而,道究竟何如,侠究竟何如,情又究竟何如?苍天似乎不屑回答这个问题,那就让这三生三世的孽乱再一次的轮回吧!