Collected works of zane.., p.822

Collected Works of Zane Grey, page 822

 

Collected Works of Zane Grey
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  “That’d be easy, if you an’ Clara could behave,” he drawled.

  “Edd Denmeade!” cried Lucy.

  “Wal, you know you played hob with the boys. Why can’t you be honest? Shore, Lucy, I wouldn’t want to go if you did that again.”

  “All right. I promise to behave if I go. I’ll talk to Clara.”

  “Wal, suit yourself. But I reckon you know I’ll never go to another dance unless I can take you.”

  “Never?” echoed Lucy.

  “Yes, never,” he retorted.

  “Why, Edd? That’s a strong statement.”

  “Reckon because every dance before that one I was made fun of, most when I took a girl. But when I had you they didn’t dare. That shore was sweet.”

  “Thanks, Edd. Sometimes you say nice things.”

  So they talked as they walked along the cool, sandy, pine-mat bordered trail. It was quite a walk from the cabin to what the Denmeades called the High Field. This was a level piece of ground, perhaps fifty acres in area, irregular in shape, and surrounded by the green forest of cedar and pine.

  Of all the slashes cut into the woodland, this appeared to Lucy the most hideous. It was not a well-cultivated piece of ground. These Denmeades were hunters, wood-hewers, anything but farmers. Yet they were compelled to farm to raise food for themselves and grain for horses and hogs. Nevertheless, the hogs ran wild, subsisting most of the year upon roots, nuts, acorns, and what the backwoodsmen called mast.

  A hundred or more dead trees stood scattered round over this clearing, cedars and pines and oaks, all naked and bleached and rotting on their stumps. They had been girdled by an axe, to keep the sap from rising, which eventually killed them. This was done to keep the shade of foliaged trees from dwarfing the crops. Corn and beans and sorghum required the sun.

  It was the most primitive kind of farming. In fact, not many years had passed since Denmeade had used a plough hewn from the fork of an oak. High Field was fenced by poles and brush, which did not look very sure of keeping out the hogs. Right on the moment Danny and Dick were chasing hogs out of the field. Corn and weeds and yellow daisies, almost as large as sunflowers, flourished together, with the corn perhaps having a little advantage. The dogs were barking at some beast they had treed. Hawks and crows perched upon the topmost branches of the dead pines; woodpeckers hammered on the smooth white trunks; and the omnipresent jays and squirrels vied with each other in a contest calculated to destroy the peace of the morning.

  Beyond the large patch of ground that had been planted in potatoes lay the three acres of beans, thick and brown in the sunlight. Beans furnished the most important article of food for the backwoods people. Meat, potatoes, flour, honey mostly in place of sugar, were essential and appreciated, but it was as Denmeade said, “We shore live on beans.”

  This triangle of three acres, then, represented something vastly important in their simple lives. They made the picking of beans a holiday, almost a gala occasion. Every one of the Denmeades was on hand, and Uncle Bill packed two big bags of lunch and a bucket of water. The only company present, considering that Lucy and Clara were not classified under this head, was Mertie’s beau, young Bert Hall, a quiet boy whom all liked. Lucy regarded his presence there as a small triumph of her own. The frivolous Mertie really liked him, as anyone could plainly see. She had only been under the influence of Sadie Perdue. By a very simple expedient Lucy had counteracted and so far overcome this influence. She had devoted herself to Mertie; roused her pride through her vanity, subtly showed Bert’s superiority to the other boys who ran after her, and lastly had suggested it would be nice to have Bert go with them to Felix. How important little things could become in this world of the Denmeades It caused Lucy many pangs to reflect upon how often their lives went wrong for lack of a little guidance.

  Manifestly Edd was the captain of this bean-picking regiment. He was conceded to be a great picker, and had a pride in his prowess second only to that of his lining of bees. Denmeade, the father, had two great gifts, according to repute — he could wield an axe as no other man in the country, and he was wonderful with his hunting hounds. Joe was the best one with horses, Dick with tools. Uncle Bill would plough when, according to him, all his relatives had been laid away in the fence corners. Thus they all excelled in some particular thing peculiarly important to their primitive lives.

  “Wal, all hands get ready,” called out Edd cheerily. “Reckon we got to clean up this patch to-day. You girls an’ the kids can pick here in the shade. We’ll pack loads of beans to you....Bert, seein’ you’re company, I’ll let you off pickin’ out there in the sun. You can set with the girls. But I’m recommendin’ you set between Lucy an’ Clara. Haw! Haw!”

  So the work of picking beans began. The children made it a play, a game, a delight, over which they screamed and fought. Yet withal they showed proficiency and industry.

  The men fetched huge bundles of beans on the vines, and deposited them on the ground under the shady oaks at the edge of the field. Mrs. Denmeade and Allie picked with nimble and skilful hands. The girls sat in a little circle, with Bert in attendance and the children monopolising all the space and most of the beans. Bert, having deposited piles of beans in front of each member of the party, was careful to sit down between Lucy and Clara, an action that caused Mertie to pout and laugh.

  The process of stripping beans appeared a simple one to Lucy, yet she saw at once where experience counted. She could not do so well even as Mary. It piqued her a little. After all, intelligence and reason were not factors that could at once bridge the gap between inexperience and dexterity.

  As they sat there talking and laughing and working, Lucy’s thought ran on in pleasant and acquiring trend. Above all, what brought her happiness in this hour was the presence of her sister. Clara had begun to mend physically, and that, with the lonely environment, the simplicity of the Denmeades, the strength of natural things had unconsciously affected her spiritually. She loved the children. She was intensely interested in their little lives. She fell to this fun of bean picking with a pleasure that augured well for the blotting of trouble from her mind. Clara had begun to be conscious of the superficiality of many sides and points of life in civilised communities. Here in the backwoods life seemed an easier, happier, simpler thing.

  From time to time Lucy stole a look out into the field at Edd as he worked. He moved forward on his knees, keeping a sack pushed in front of him, and his hands flew. He was an engine of devastation to the rows of beans. She seldom heard his voice. When he finished a row he would get up, and gathering a huge bundle of vines he would carry them to where the women were picking. Dust and sweat had begrimed his face; his shirt was wet through. There seemed something tremendously rugged, vital, raw about his physical presence. He took this task seriously. Lucy wondered what was going on in his mind. Did things she had talked of or read to him revolve as he worked? There was a suggestion of the plodding nature of his thought, strangely in contrast with the wonderful physical energy of his work. She mused over the fact that she liked him as he was, yet was striving to teach him, change him, put him on the road to being a civilised man. Yet — ! Something vaguely regretful stirred deeply within her consciousness.

  These more serious thoughts, however, only recurred at intervals; for the most part she was alive to the objective task of learning to pick beans, and to the conversation around her. Allie Denmeade was as incessant a talker as Joe was a listener; she had a shrewd wit and a sharp tongue. Mertie was charming under favourable influence, and when she was receiving her meed of attention. Mrs. Denmeade had a dry geniality and a store of wilderness wisdom. Mary was the sweet dreaming one of the family.

  Lucy had no idea that the noon hour had arrived until the dusty men stalked in from the field, hungry and thirsty, bringing with them an earthy atmosphere. “Nineteen rows for me,” declared Edd, “an’ I’m spittin’ cotton...Where’s the bucket? I’ll fetch fresh water from the spring.”

  “Wal, ma, how’d you all git along?” queried Denmeade, wiping his sweaty face.

  “I disremember any better mawnin’ for pickin’,” she replied. “Bert has been fillin’ the sacks. Reckon there’s quite a few.”

  “Even dozen,” exulted Bert.

  “Good! We’ll finish early. Edd shore is a cyclone for pickin’ beans...An’ now, ma, spread out the grub. I’m a hungry old Jasper.”

  Uncle Bill carried forth the packs of food, which he had hidden from the children.

  “It was a tolerable pickin’, though I’ve seen better,” he said. “The season’s been dry an’ thet’s good for beans an’ pickin’...Wal, Lee, I’m noticin’ Miss Lucy an’ her sister have shore done themselves proud, fer tenderfeet.” Denmeade surveyed the respective piles of beans, one before Lucy, and a smaller one in front of Clara. “Not so bad,” he said genially. “An’ it shore is good to see you both settin’ thar.”

  “Lee, tell their fortune with beans,” suggested Mrs. Denmeade.

  “I reckon I wouldn’t risk that,” he replied.

  “Ma, you tell them. An’ Bert’s, too. It’ll be fun. He’s never been here to a bean pickin’,” said Mertie. “All the same, I had mine told once, down at Sadie’s. Her old aunt told it,” said Bert. “An’ once is enough for me.”

  “A Mexican woman once told my fortune,” interposed Clara with a smile that was not all mirth. “It came true. And I — I don’t want to know any more what’s going to happen to me.”

  “Oh, I’m not afraid,” called out Lucy. “Come, Mrs. Denmeade. Tell mine.”

  Whereupon Mrs. Denmeade, to the infinite delight of the children, selected some differently coloured beans and pressed these into Lucy’s palm. Then she intently studied Lucy’s face, after which she struck the outstretched hand, causing some of the beans to roll off and others to change position and settle.

  “Wal, you’re goin’ to find happiness takin’ someone else’s troubles on your shoulders,” said Mrs. Denmeade, impressively. “Your past has been among many people who didn’t care for you. Your future will be among a few who love you...I see a journey — a secret — something that’ll never come out — two dark years with white ones followin’. A child!...A cabin! A happy wife!”

  This conclusion was greeted with a merry shout from the children and girls. Lucy, in her amusement, wished to carry the thing as far as possible to please them all. It struck her that Clara’s faint colour had vanished. How a few words could pain her! Lucy had no faith in any kind of fortune telling; she hardly took Mrs. Denmeade seriously.

  “Wonderful!” she ejaculated. “Do the beans tell what kind of a husband I get?”

  “No,” rejoined Mrs. Denmeade, “but I reckon he won’t be a city man.”

  “How interesting! I think I’m rather glad. Clara, I’m to have a country man for a husband. These red and white beans have foretold my fate.”

  She became aware then that Edd had returned and, standing behind her, evidently had heard her concluding words. Quite absurdly the fact embarrassed Lucy. The gay remarks forthcoming from all around fell upon her somewhat unfelicitously.

  “Wal, Lucy, I see ma an’ Allie have worked an old trick on you,” he drawled. “Shore I told you to look out for them.”

  “Oh — it was only fun!” exclaimed Lucy, relieved despite her common sense.

  Mrs. Denmeade smiled enigmatically. She seemed to possess some slight touch of mysticism, crude and unconscious. Lucy dispelled any idea that there was connection between the red and white beans and Mrs. Denmeade’s prophecies. For that reason she found herself fixing in mind the content of those statements regarding her past and future.

  “Come set around, folks,” called Uncle Bill with gusto,

  The lunch hour of the bean-pickers was as merry as a picnic dinner. The Denmeades had rushed through the morning hours; now they had leisure to eat slowly and to talk and joke. Lucy enjoyed this pleasant interval. It had but one break, an instant toward the end, when she espied Joe Denmeade sitting as always quietly in the background, with eyes of worship fixed upon Clara’s face. That troubled Lucy’s conscience.

  Lucy wore out her gloves and made blisters on her fingers, acquiring along with these accidents a proficiency in the art of picking beans. Clara wearied early in the afternoon, and went to sleep under a pine tree. Mertie and Bert finished their allotment of beans, and wandering along the edge of the forest, they seemed to become absorbed in each other. Mrs. Denmeade and Allie worked like beavers, and the children drifted to playing.

  The men soon finished picking and sacking the beans. Then Edd and his brothers stalked off to fetch the pack-burros. Uncle Bill still found tasks to do, while Denmeade rested and talked to his wife. Lucy leaned comfortably against the oak, grateful for relief from work, and because of it, appreciating infinitely more the blessing of rest. She did not try very hard to resist a drowsy spell, out of which she was roused to attention by a remark of Denmeade to his wife.

  “Wal, it’d shore make bad feelin’ between the Denmeades an’ Johnsons if Sam homesteaded on the mesa.”

  “Reckon it would, but he’s goin’ to do it,” returned Mrs. Denmeade. “Mertie told me.”

  “Sadie Perdue’s back of that,” said Denmeade meditatively.

  “She’s never forgive Edd...It’d be too bad if Sam beat Edd out of that homestead.”

  “Don’t worry, wife. Sam ain’t a-goin’ to,” returned her husband. “Edd located the mesa, found the only water. He’s just been waitin’ to get himself a woman.”

  “But Edd oughtn’t to wait no longer,” protested Mrs. Denmeade.

  “Wal, I reckon,” rejoined Denmeade thoughtfully, “we’ll begin cuttin’ logs an’ get ready to run up a cabin. It’s bad enough for us to be on the outs with Spralls, let alone Johnsons...I’m goin’ to walk up to the mesa right now.”

  Suiting action to word, Denmeade started off. Lucy sat up and impulsively called. “Please take me with you, Mr. Denmeade. I — I’d like to walk a little.”

  “Come right along,” he responded heartily.

  Lucy joined him and entered the woods, taking two steps to one of his long strides.

  “I’m goin’ up to a place we call the mesa,” he was saying. “Edd has long set his heart on homesteadin’ there. It ain’t far, but uphill a little. Sam Johnson has been talkin’ around. Shore there ain’t no law hyar to prevent him stealin’ Edd’s homestead. An’ I reckon there’s bad blood enough. So I’m goin’ to begin work right off. That’ll throw Sam off the trail an’ then we won’t have no call to hurry.”

  Lucy was interested to ask questions until she became out of breath on a rather long and steep slope. Here she fell back and followed her guide, whose idea of distance, she averred, was vastly different from hers.

  At last, however, they reached a level. Lucy looked up, to be stunned by the towering, overpowering bulk of the Rim, red and gold, with its black-fringed crown, bright and beautiful in the westering sun. She gazed backward, down over a grand sweep of forest, rolling and ridging away to the far-flung peaks. Her position here was much higher than on any point she had frequented, and closer to the magnificent Rim.

  “There’s two or three hundred acres of flat land hyar,” said Denmeade, sweeping his hand back toward the dense forest. “Rich, red soil. Enough water for two homesteads, even in dry spells. It’s blue snow water, the best kind, comin’ down from the Rim. Wal, I’m hopin’ Dick or Joe will homestead hyar some day. It’s the best farm land I know of.”

  “Why, Mr. Denmeade, it’s all forest!” exclaimed Lucy.

  “Shore. It’ll have to be cleared. An’ that’s a heap of work.”

  “Goodness! It looks it. How do you go about making a farm out of a thick forest?”

  “Wal, we’ll cut logs first to run up a cabin,” replied Denmeade. “Then we’ll clear off timber an’ brush, an’ set fire to it, leavin’ the stumps. They’ll rot out in a few years. The big trees we kill an’ leave standin’...This hyar mesa is high an’ dry, warm in winter an’ cool in summer. It joins on to a big canyon where there’s water an’ grass for stock. An’ it’s the best place for bees in this country. I reckon Edd’s pretty smart. He’s shore goin’ to do somethin’ with his bee-huntin’.”

  They entered the level forest, and Lucy was at once charmed and fascinated. This woodland differed from any she had visited. It was level, open in glades, aisles, and dense in thickets and patches. A dry, hot fragrance of pine and cedar and juniper seemed to wave up from the brown-carpeted earth. How easy and delightful the walking here! As they penetrated deep into the forest the pines grew so huge that they actually thrilled her. Then the other trees were as large in proportion. Some of the junipers were truly magnificent, six feet thick at the base, symmetrical and spreading, remarkable for their checker-board bark and lilac-hued berries. Under every one of these junipers the ground was a soft, grey-green mat of tiny needles, fragrant, inviting rest. Under the pines Lucy kicked up furrows in the dry depths of brown needles, and these places even more called her to tarry. A wonderful sweet silence pervaded this mesa forest. No birds, no squirrels, no deer or turkeys! Yet Denmeade pointed out tracks in every dusty trail. “Reckon game’s all down by the water,” he explained. “There’s a gully runs right through this mesa, dividin’ it in half. Shore is a wild place. I’ll show you where an old she bear jumped on me. She had cubs, an’ a mother bear is bad.”

  Lucy revelled in this exploration. The farther she followed Denmeade the more delighted she was with the wilderness and beauty, the colour and fragrance of the forest.

  “Oh, but it will be a shame to cut all these trees — and burn a hideous slash in this beautiful forest!”

  “I reckon. Shore Edd says the same,” replied Denmeade. “But we have to make homes. An’ the forest, just like this, will surround the homesteads. We only cut an’ clear land where there’s water. A few acres slashed don’t make much of a hole in these woods...Look hyar. See between the pines, up there where the bluffs run down — it shows a break in the woods. That’s the canyon I spoke of. It looks narrow and short. Wal, it’s wide an’ long, an’ it’ll always be wild. It can’t never be cut. An’ there’s many canyons like it, runnin’ in under the Rim....Miss Lucy, I come hyar twenty years ago. There’s as many bear an’ deer now as then. An’ I reckon it’ll be the same in twenty more years.”

 

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