登陆注册
15442700000010

第10章 A BRANCH ROAD(9)

"He's a gambler-that's his trade! He plays cards, and every cent is bloody. I wouldn't touch such money no how you could fix it~"

"Wouldn't, hay?" The young man straightened up. "Well, look-a-here, old man: did you ever hear of a man foreclosing a mortgage on a widow and two boys, getting a farm f'r one quarter what it was really worth? You damned old hypocrite! I know all about you and your whole tribe-you old bloodsucker!"

The old man's jaw fell; he began to back away.

"Your neighbors tell some good stories about you. Now skip along after those cows or I'll tickle your old legs for you!"

The old man, appalled and dazed at this sudden change of manner, backed away, and at last turned and racked off up the road, looking back with a wild face at which the young man laughed remorselessly.

"The doggoned old skeesucks!" Will soliloquized as he walked up the road. "So that's the kind of a character he's been givin' me!"

"Hullo! A whippoorwrn. Takes a man back into childhood-No, don't 'whip poor Will'; he's got all he can bear now."

He came at last to the little farm Dingman had owned, and he stopped in sorrowful surprise. The barn had been moved away, the garden plowed up, and the house, turned into a granary, stood with boards nailed across its dusty cobwebbed windows. The tears started into the man's eyes; he stood staring at it silently.

In the face of this house the seven years that he had last lived stretched away into a wild waste of time. It stood as a symbol of his wasted, ruined life. It was personal, intimately personal, this decay of her home.

All that last scene came back to him: the booming roar of the threshing machine, the cheery whistle of the driver, the loud, merry shouts of the men. He remembered how warmly the lamplight streamed out of that door as he turned away tired, hungry, sullen with rage and jealousy. Oh, if he had only had the courage of a man!

Then he thought of the boy's words. She was sick. Ed abused her.

She had met her punishment. A hundred times he had been over the whole scene. A thousand times he had seen her at the pump smiling at Ed Kinney, the sun lighting her bare head; and he never thought of it without hardening.

At this very gate he had driven up that last forenoon, to find that she had gone with Ed. He had lived that sickening, depressing moment over many times, but not times enough to keep down the bitter passion he had felt then, and felt now as he went over it in detail.

He was so happy and confident that morning, so perfectly certain that all would be made right by a kiss and a cheery jest. And now!

Here he stood sick with despair and doubt of all the world. He turned away from the desolate homestead and walked on.

"But I'll see her-just once more. And then-" And again the mighty significance, responsibility of life fell upon him. He felt as young people seldom do the irrevocableness of living, the determinate, unalterable character of living. He determined to begin to live in some new way-just how he could not say.

IV

OLD man Kinney and his wife were getting their Sunday school lessons with much bickering, when Will drove up the next day to the dilapidated gate and hitched his team to a leaning post under the oaks. Will saw the old man's head at the open window, but no one else, though he looked eagerly for Agnes as he walked up the familiar path. There stood the great oak under whose shade he had grown to be a man.

How close the great tree seemed to stand to his heart, some way!

As the wind stirred in the leaves, it was like a rustle of greeting.

In that low old house they had all lived, and his mother had toiled for thirty years. A sort of prison after all. There they were all born, and there his father and his little sister had died. And then it had passed into old Kinney's hands.

Walking along up the path he felt a serious weakness in his limbs, and he made a pretense of stopping to look at a flowerbed containing nothing but weeds. After seven years of separation he was about to face once more the woman whose life came so near being a part of his- Agnes, now a wife and a mother.

How would she look? Would her face have that oldtime peachy bloom, her mouth that peculiar beautiful curve? She was large and fair, he recalled, hair yellow and shining, eyes blue-He roused himself. This was nonsense! He was trembling. He composed himself by looking around again.

"The old scoundrel has let the weeds choke out the flowers and surround the beehives. Old man Kinney neverbelieved in anything but a petty utility."

Will set his teeth, and marched up to the door and struck it like a man delivering a challenge. Kinney opened the door, and started back in fear when he saw who it was.

"How de do? How de do?" said Will, walking in' his eyes fixed on a woman seated beyond, a child in her lap.

Agnes rose, without a word; a fawnlike, startled widening of the eyes, her breath coming quick, and her face flushing. They couldn't speak; they only looked at each other an instant, then Will shivered, passed his hand over his eyes, and sat down.

There was no one there but the old people, who were looking at him in bewilderment. They did not notice any confusion in Agnes's face. She recovered first.

"I'm glad to see you back, Will," she said, rising and putting the sleeping child down in a neighboring room. As she gave him her hand, he said:

"I'm glad to get back, Agnes. I hadn't ought to have gone." Then he turned to the old people: "I'm Will Hannan. You needn't be scared, daddy; I was jokin' last night."

"Dew tell! I wanto know!" exclaimed granny. "Wal I never! An, you're my little Willy boy who ust 'o he in my class. Well! well!

W'y, Pa, ain't he growed tall! Growed handsome tew. I ust 'o think he was a drelful humly boy; but my sakes, that mustache-"

"Wal, he give me a tumble scare last night. My land! scared me out of a year's growth," cackled the old man.

This gave them all a chance to laugh and the air was cleared. It gave Agnes time to recover herself and to be able to meet Will's eyes. Will himself was powerfully moved; his throat swelled and tears came to his eyes everytime he looked at her.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 她心他城他的人

    她心他城他的人

    她说想去看看首都的繁华,他为她办理好一切事宜。两年后她再度北上,这个城里从此有他,也有她。目睹他结婚生子全过程,她依旧彷徨于此,直到他抱住她说,我们结婚吧,她却无比哀伤。身边已有良人,如何不负如来不负卿?
  • 月雪倾歌

    月雪倾歌

    她,丞相之女,却因貌美而遭亲姐姐的嫉妒,而被嫡姐与亲姐姐亲手推下悬崖。她,隐藏的金牌特工,却为了自己所爱之人而死。异世界,天山,“瑶,别怪我……”
  • 邓稼先传(共和国科学拓荒者传记系列)

    邓稼先传(共和国科学拓荒者传记系列)

    在家人的眼里,他,一个忠厚朴实却又聪明绝顶之人,毅然决然地参与了我国核研究工作;他,一个默默无闻却又是绝佳的科研领军之人,戈壁的风沙吹散了他的姓与名;他是党最忠心的儿子,他是中华民族的骄傲。国难当前,方显英雄本色!为了一个坚定的信念,他面对重重困难,无所畏惧,勇往直前。站在选择面前,他毫不犹豫,用他的话说:“我的生命就献给未来的工作了。做好了这件事,我这一生就过得很有意义,就是为它死了也值得。”
  • 江湖不再

    江湖不再

    江湖?修真?不过是伪修真。好人?坏人?只为利益而在。善良?邪恶?不过因人而异。事实?假象?一切谁来说法。
  • 重生学霸养成记

    重生学霸养成记

    什么?重生?我去!这个世界还可以这么逆天啊!上辈子可是个学渣啊!不怕,咱有“学霸宝典”!家里穷啊!不怕,咱有“赚钱秘籍”!自从有了“万能书包”以后,林雪的重生之路一路逆袭!学业Get!事业Get!美男Get!
  • 家父西门吹雪

    家父西门吹雪

    简介:一天,陆小凤找西门吹雪喝酒,不小心,两人都中了春药陆小凤选择去青楼,西门吹雪打算借此锤炼意志,结果没忍住那一年,西门吹雪十八岁,作为一个立志要成为剑神的少年,为了剑心通透,他不得不承担起另一份重要的责任简介二:不小心穿越武侠世界,为了让自己生活的更舒适,他决定要努力让它实现现代化,首先从电灯开始。声明如果文章跟你印象中的内容有出入,请参考以下解释:本文作者gaga,非酒鬼古龙,截止
  • 叶家纪事

    叶家纪事

    男主是女主的大十二岁的堂叔,这在我国法律上并不受控制。无奈相隔千山万水,一场密不透风的恋情,因为家族爱恨生出重重误会,一步错,步步错,步步之后,他依然可以为了她,她也从来只相信他。
  • 寻仙之升仙入魔

    寻仙之升仙入魔

    游戏世界升仙入魔闲来无事动动手指记录青春
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 今天涯

    今天涯

    两个性格迥异的好兄弟,机缘巧合之下来到一个架空的江湖,原以为只要能找到回去的方法就能够一切从旧,重回正轨。但是俗话说一入江湖身不由己,江湖的是是非非远比他们想象的要复杂,兄弟二人要从适应环境开始,克服艰险,历经磨难,一步一步查明这所有事情的原委,终于发现一个惊天阴谋,而这个阴谋的种子其实在他们还未穿越之前就已经种下了......待各种风波平息之后,他们真的还能回头吗?