The Able McLaughlins Margaret Wilson (best ebook reader under 100 TXT) đ
- Author: Margaret Wilson
Book online «The Able McLaughlins Margaret Wilson (best ebook reader under 100 TXT) đ». Author Margaret Wilson
âIt really beats all the way you run this farm with your father gone,â he affirmed. âWhen he gets back, Iâd like to hire you myself.â He saw the boy relishing his praise. âYou must treat Chirstie like a man, Dod. You mustnât blame her for crying. Itâs the way women do, sometimes. You say to her when you go in that my mother is always waiting to do for her. Sheâs the one that can help her. She donât need to cry any more. We can fix things right. You say that to her, Dod, and tomorrow Iâll ride over and see what it is. You tell her weâll fix everything for her.â
He went away in uncertainty and distress. He ought to tell his mother how things were. The idea of that girl sitting there with a gun, as if she didnât recognize him! Or maybe it would be better to go to his Aunt Libby Keith. She ought to know. He didnât like going to anybody. It was his affair. He couldnât think of insinuating to anyone that the girl wasâ âwell, not quite right in her mind. He must be very careful.
And then her face came before him, loving him. After all, it was just his affair and hers. There was some reason why she must wait. But she loved him! His mind dwelt on that, rather than on his inexplicable rejecting. He decided that in the morning he would ride over to the Keithsâ and ask in a roundabout way, what the trouble was with Chirstie.
But in the morning he felt so certain that she loved him, in spite of everything, that he announced to his father that he was going over to cut slough grass on his eighty, to use in thatching his new barn, having decided to go to Keithsâ, less conspicuously, in the evening. This was the first time he had as much as mentioned his own farm all summer. His father was pleased, but his mother protested. Why should he begin such work on the hottest morning of the summer, when he hadnât really been able to help in the haying at all? He might easily be overcome with the heat, in his condition. But Wully, it seemed, was at last feeling as well as he had ever felt. He had been loafing too long. He must begin to get something done on his own place.
So down in his slough he worked away with all his might, and now that his heart was light, and his fever broken, it was no contemptible strength he could exert. About the time he was so hot, so soaked through with sweat that he must sit down for a rest, he saw a horseman coming towards him. And upon that meeting there depended the destiny of generations.
He smiled when he saw who it was. Peter Keith was a cousin of both Chirstieâs and his, the only remaining child of their Aunt Libbyâs and Uncle John Keithâs, the smallest adult of Wullyâs seventy-one cousins, being not more than five feet seven. And he was by far the most worthless of them. Of course Peter would be riding leisurely over after the mail in the middle of the morning, while the haying was to be finished, and the wheat was white and heavy for harvest. His excuse this summer for not working was that he had a disabled foot. He said that he had accidentally discharged his gun into it. Peter Keith was such a man that when he told that story, his hearersâ faces grew shrewd and thoughtful, trying to decide whether or not he really was lazy enough to hurt his own foot in order to get out of work. There was no place for laziness in a world where men existed only by toil. It was like chronic cowardice in the face of the enemy. Peterâs mother, to be sure, said he wasnât strong. Libby Keithâs way of hanging over him, of listening to his rather ordinary cough, her constant babying of him, was what was spoiling Peter, many said. Wully had always been more tolerant of him than some of the cousins were, because he could never imagine a man feigning so shameful a thing as physical weakness. If Peter didnât want to farm, why insist, he argued. If he wanted to go west, to get into something else, let him go. He might be good for something somewhere. But his doting mother would never listen to such hardheartedness.
The two of them made themselves a shade in the grass, and talked away intimately. Wully was more affable than usual, having resolved upon first sight of Peter to learn something from him. Peter was always full of neighborhood news. Tam McWhee had bought ten acres more of timber, and the Sprouls were beginning to break their further forty, and so on, and so on. Wully was screwing up his courage to introduce the subject that was interesting him, in some casual way. Peter was the last man with whom he cared to discuss Chirstie. But he was exactly the one who might know something valuable. He delayed, the question at the tip of his tongue, till even the lazy Peter thought it was time to be riding on, and rose to go. His foot wasnât really much hurt, but he hadnât renounced his limp. It was then or never with Wully, so he said, trying to appear uninterested:
âI was riding by McNairsâ yesterday, and I saw Chirstie sitting there crying. What do you suppose she would be crying about, Peter?â
Peter gave him a sharp look, and grew red in one moment.
âHow the devil should I know what girls cry about?â he asked angrily. âItâs
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