登陆注册
37919800000085

第85章 X(2)

Claude could see that her heart was bursting with homesickness, full of tender memories of the far-away time and land of her youth. She had never talked to him of these things before, but now she poured out a flood of confidences about the big dairy farm on which she had worked as a girl; how she took care of nine cows, and how the cows, though small, were very strong,--drew a plough all day and yet gave as much milk at night as if they had been browsing in a pasture! The country people never had to spend money for doctors, but cured all diseases with roots and herbs, and when the old folks had the rheumatism they took "one of dem liddle jenny-pigs" to bed with them, and the guinea-pig drew out all the pain.

Claude would have liked to listen longer, but he wanted to find the old woman's tormentors before his train came in. Leaving his bags with her, he crossed the railroad tracks, guided by an occasional teasing tinkle of the bell in the cornfield. Presently he came upon the gang, a dozen or more, lying in a shallow draw that ran from the edge of the field out into an open pasture. He stood on the edge of the bank and looked down at them, while he slowly cut off the end of a cigar and lit it. The boys grinned at him, trying to appear indifferent and at ease.

"Looking for any one, soldier?" asked the one with the bell.

"Yes, I am. I'm looking for that bell. You'll have to take it back where it belongs. You every one of you know there's no harm in that old woman."

"She's a German, and we're fighting the Germans, ain't we?"

"I don't think you'll ever fight any. You'd last about ten minutes in the American army. You're not our kind. There's only one army in the world that wants men who'll bully old women. You might get a job with them."

The boys giggled. Claude beckoned impatiently. "Come along with that bell, kid."

The boy rose slowly and climbed the bank out of the gully. As they tramped back through the cornfield, Claude turned to him abruptly. "See here, aren't you ashamed of yourself?"

"Oh, I don't know about that!" the boy replied airily, tossing the bell up like a ball and catching it.

"Well, you ought to be. I didn't expect to see anything of this kind until I got to the front. I'll be back here in a week, and I'll make it hot for anybody that's been bothering her." Claude's train was pulling in, and he ran for his baggage. Once seated in the "cotton-tail," he began going down into his own country, where he knew every farm he passed,--knew the land even when he did not know the owner, what sort of crops it yielded, and about how much it was worth. He did not recognize these farms with the pleasure he had anticipated, because he was so angry about the indignities Mrs. Voigt had suffered. He was still burning with the first ardour of the enlisted man. He believed that he was going abroad with an expeditionary force that would make war without rage, with uncompromising generosity and chivalry.

Most of his friends at camp shared his Quixotic ideas. They had come together from farms and shops and mills and mines, boys from college and boys from tough joints in big cities; sheepherders, street car drivers, plumbers' assistants, billiard markers.

Claude had seen hundreds of them when they first came in; "show men" in cheap, loud sport suits, ranch boys in knitted waistcoats, machinists with the grease still on their fingers, farm-hands like Dan, in their one Sunday coat. Some of them carried paper suitcases tied up with rope, some brought all they had in a blue handkerchief. But they all came to give and not to ask, and what they offered was just themselves; their big red hands, their strong backs, the steady, honest, modest look in their eyes. Sometimes, when he had helped the medical examiner, Claude had noticed the anxious expression in the faces of the long lines of waiting men. They seemed to say, "If I'm good enough, take me. I'll stay by." He found them like that to work with; serviceable, good-natured, and eager to learn. If they talked about the war, or the enemy they were getting ready to fight, it was usually in a facetious tone; they were going to "can the Kaiser," or to make the Crown Prince work for a living.

Claude, loved the men he trained with,--wouldn't choose to live in any better company.

The freight train swung into the river valley that meant home,--the place the mind always came back to, after its farthest quest. Rapidly the farms passed; the haystacks, the cornfields, the familiar red barns--then the long coal sheds and the water tank, and the train stopped.

On the platform he saw Ralph and Mr. Royce, waiting to welcome him. Over there, in the automobile, were his father and mother, Mr. Wheeler in the driver's seat. A line of motors stood along the siding. He was the first soldier who had come home, and some of the townspeople had driven down to see him arrive in his uniform. From one car Susie Dawson waved to him, and from another Gladys Farmer. While he stopped and spoke to them, Ralph took his bags.

"Come along, boys," Mr. Wheeler called, tooting his horn, and he hurried the soldier away, leaving only a cloud of dust behind.

Mr. Royce went over to old man Dawson's car and said rather childishly, "It can't be that Claude's grown taller? I suppose it's the way they learn to carry themselves. He always was a manly looking boy."

"I expect his mother's a proud woman," said Susie, very much excited. "It's too bad Enid can't be here to see him. She would never have gone away if she'd known all that was to happen."

Susie did not mean this as a thrust, but it took effect. Mr. Royce turned away and lit a cigar with some difficulty. His hands had grown very unsteady this last year, though he insisted that his general health was as good as ever. As he grew older, he was more depressed by the conviction that his women-folk had added little to the warmth and comfort of the world. Women ought to do that, whatever else they did. He felt apologetic toward the Wheelers and toward his old friends. It seemed as if his daughters had no heart.

同类推荐
  • 佛说大摩里支菩萨经

    佛说大摩里支菩萨经

    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。
  • 本草衍义

    本草衍义

    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。
  • 华严心要法门注

    华严心要法门注

    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。
  • 爱清子至命篇

    爱清子至命篇

    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。
  • 急救仙方

    急救仙方

    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
  • TFBoys之遇见他

    TFBoys之遇见他

    我从不轻易说爱,因为我知道爱不同于喜欢,你的一生可以对很多人说喜欢,但你这一生只会对一个人说爱,因为这代表陪伴。我当初一直执着于在一起,后来才发现,如果放手你能快乐,那么就请忘了我吧。处女作,不喜勿喷
  • 技师

    技师

    每个人都有每个人的故事,这是一群特殊的人,昼伏夜出,穿梭在灯红酒绿。我说,我说的是真实故事!当然,你可以随便听听,当它是个故事……
  • 太极八卦阵

    太极八卦阵

    一行八人,有的为了寻找师傅,有的为了阻止魔尊,各自有各自的原因聚集在一起,没有无敌的主角,轻松愉快的旅程即将开启,同行路上因为有你,我很开心。
  • 美男遍地:绝世堡主夫人

    美男遍地:绝世堡主夫人

    音书绝:楹儿遇见你,是我音书绝最大的福气,能被你爱是我今生最大的福分,我音书绝在此发誓:此生此世,永不负你。黄浦霄:为什么?难道我就这么不值得你爱吗?就因为绝比我先遇到的你?黄浦燚:楹儿,你不要把我对你的爱视为负担,就当做它不曾有过,你只要开开心心的活着,要我时时刻刻的看到你,我就已经心满意足了。答应我,不要躲在我看不到的地方。
  • 覆天盖世

    覆天盖世

    陆辰,天生的废材,在家族受尽讥言屈辱,偶然间发现一滴血,从此逆天改命,走上传奇之路。
  • 一线明星

    一线明星

    我想每个人都会有一个致命的伤口,这个伤口会在某个时刻让你鲜血淋漓,痛不欲生。就像生命中不可或缺的阳光,我更爱此刻站在逆光下微笑的你。迟瑾瑜,就是初夏冬日里的暖阳,黑暗冰冷,却奇迹般在某个时刻感动过她,所以故事的最后是没有结局的,因为连迟瑾瑜都不明白在五年的陪伴中,是否爱过初夏。
  • 跪倒在无敌之下吧

    跪倒在无敌之下吧

    寂寞,寂寞,无敌的生活,好似君王践祚,纵万人朝拜,却无一人与杯酒斟酌!一声呵令天下人,万界众生俯首臣!请诸君,跪在无敌之下!(本文有一些“错别字”,请注意!)
  • 千寻万遥

    千寻万遥

    当第一百三十七代圣女雪衣出世,这个世界就注定了因她而与众不同。她为救族人而走出里灵域,遇到了此生挚友兰小夭、宁君城、苏羿临等人。也遇到了此生挚爱宫砚痕……当在她生命里出现的人都离她而去,雪衣才发现自己竟是为劫而生。而他,竟是放弃神之身,神之力来帮她渡劫的人。一个人等了一万年那么远的距离,不过就是为了寻回完整的她。
  • 某科学的旅行事件簿

    某科学的旅行事件簿

    这庞大的宇宙,最初只是源于一个微不足道的奇点。而所有的一切,由此开始——无数的人们向往着远方的地平线;机械的轰鸣创造了无数的奇迹;在乱世中有人用文字记录下他们的思想;在战火中有人举起了变革的旗帜。爆炸后的奇点不断的膨胀着,无数的时间线向着各个角度不断的延伸,缔造出了各种各样不同的事件。而在那宇宙的尽头,图鉴档案馆正静静的矗立在那里。“当时间的齿轮开始转动,所有的一切都将被记录,这是注定发生,无法改变的真实。”时之轮逆转,图鉴链接时空。跨越时间长河,在不同的维度中,探寻无尽的奥秘。(这是一篇动漫同人小说,不要被简介骗了)注:本作品为《超电磁炮的守护》二次同人创作,已得到授权。补充关键词:魔法禁书目录,学园都市
  • 重新回来爱你

    重新回来爱你

    这是一个平凡男人遇见所爱后的一系列故事和转变