The Brimming Cup
CHAPTER VI
THINGS TAKE THEIR COURSE
A Couple of Hours from Mr. Welles' New
Life.
I
April 10.
One of the many things which surprised Mr. Welles was that he
seemed to need less sleep than in the city. Long hours in bed had
been one of the longed-for elements of the haven of rest which his
retiring from the office was to be. Especially as he had dragged
himself from bed to stop the relentless snarl of his alarm-clock,
had he hoped for late morning sleeps in his new home, when he could
wake up at seven, feel himself still heavy, unrefreshed, unready
for the day, and turn on the pillow to take another dose of
oblivion.
But here, after the first ten days of almost prostrate
relaxation, he found himself waking even before the dawn, and lying
awake in his bed, waiting almost impatiently for the light to come
so that he could rise to another day. He learned all the sounds of
the late night and early morning, and how they had different voices
in the dark; the faint whisper of the maple-branches, the
occasional stir and muffled chirp of a bird, the hushed, secret
murmur of the little brook which ran between his garden and the
Crittenden yard, and the distant, deeper note of the Necronsett
River as it rolled down the Ashley valley to The Notch. He could
almost tell, without opening his eyes, when the sky grew light over
the Eagle Rocks, by the way the night voices lifted, and carried
their sweet, muted notes up to a clearer, brighter singing.
When that change in the night-voices came, he sat up in bed,
turning his face from the window, for he did not want any mere
partial glimpse for his first contact with the day, and got into
his clothes, moving cautiously not to waken Vincent, who always sat
up till all hours and slept till ten. Down the stairs in his
stocking-feet, his shoes in his hand; a pause in the living-room to
thread and fasten shoe-laces; and then, his silly old heart beating
fast, his hand on the door-knob. The door slowly opened, and the
garden, his own shining garden, offered itself to him anew, so
fresh in the dew and the pale gold of the slanting morning
sun-rays, that he was apt to swallow hard as he first stepped out
into it and stood still, with bare head lifted, drawing one long
breath after another.
He was seldom alone in those early hours, although the house
slept profoundly behind him; a robin, the only bird whose name he
was sure of, hopped heavily and vigorously about on the sparkling
grass; a little brown bird of whose name he had not the slightest
notion, but whose voice he knew very well by this time, poured out
a continuous cascade of quick, high, eager notes from the top of
the elm; a large toad squatted peaceably in the sun, the loose skin
over its forehead throbbing rhythmically with the life in it; and
over on the steps of the Crittendens' kitchen, the old Indian
woman, as motionless as the toad, fixed her opaque black eyes on
the rising sun, while something about her, he could never decide
what, throbbed rhythmically with the life in her. Mr. Welles had
never in all his life been so aware of the rising sun, had never so
felt it like something in himself as on those mornings when he
walked in his garden and glanced over at the old Indian.
Presently, the Crittenden house woke, so to speak, with one eye,
and took on the aspect of a house in which someone is astir. First
came the fox-terrier, inevitable precursor of his little master,
and then, stepping around Touclé as though she were a tree
or a rock, came his little partner Paul, his freckled face shining
with soap and the earliness of the hour. Mr. Welles was apt to
swallow hard again, when he felt the child's rough, strong fingers
slip into his.
"Hello, Mr. Welles," said Paul.
"Hello, Paul," said Mr. Welles.
"I thought sure I'd beat you to it for once, this morning," was
what Paul invariably said first. "I can't seem to wake up as early
as you and Touclé."
Then he would bring out his plan for that particular morning
walk.
"Maybe we might have time to have me show you the back-road by
Cousin Hetty's, and get back by the men's short-cut before
breakfast, maybe? Perhaps?"
"We could try it," admitted Mr. Welles, cautiously. It tickled
him to answer Paul in his own prudent idiom. Then they set off,
surrounded and encompassed by the circles of mad delight which
Médor wove about them, rushing at them once in a while, in a
spasm of adoration, to leap up and lick Paul's face.
Thus on one of these mornings in April, they were on the
back-road to Cousin Hetty's, the right-hand side solemn and dark
with tall pines, where the ground sloped up towards the Eagle
Rocks; jungle-like with blackberry brambles and young pines on the
left side where it had been lumbered some years ago. Paul pointed
out proudly the thrifty growth of the new pines and explained it by
showing the several large trees left standing at intervals down the
slope towards the Ashley valley. "Father always has them do that,
so the seeds from the old trees will seed up the bare ground again.
Gosh! You'd ought to hear him light into the choppers when they
forget to leave the seed-pines or when they cut under six inches
butt diameter."
Mr. Welles had no more notion what cutting under six inches butt
diameter meant than he had of the name of the little brown bird who
sang so sweetly in his elm; but Paul's voice and that of the
nameless bird gave him the same pleasure. He tightened his hold of
the tough, sinewy little fingers, and looked up through the
glorious brown columns of the great pines towards where the
sky-line showed, luminous, far up the slope.
"That's the top of the Eagle Rocks, where you see the sky,"
explained his small cicerone, seeing the direction of his eyes.
"The Powerses lost a lot of sheep off over them, last year. A dog
must ha' started running them down in the pasture. And you know
what fools sheep are. Once they get scared they can't think of
anything to do except just to keep a-running till something gets in
their way. About half of the Powers flock just ran themselves off
the top of the Rocks, although the dog had stopped chasing them,
way down in the valley. There wasn't enough of them left, even to
sell to the butcher in Ashley for mutton. Ralph Powers, he's about
as old as I am, maybe a little bit older, well, his father had
given him a ewe and two twin lambs for his own, and didn't they all
three get killed that day! Ralph felt awful bad about it. He don't
ever seem to have any luck, Ralph don't."
. . . How sweet it was, Mr. Welles thought to himself, how
awfully sweet to be walking in such pine-woods, on the early
morning, preceded by such a wildly happy little dog, with a little
boy whose treble voice ran on and on, whose strong little hand
clasped yours so tightly, and who turned up to you eyes of such
clear trust! Was he the same man who for such endless years had
been a part of the flotsam cast out every morning into the muddy,
brawling flood of the city street and swept along to work which had
always made him uneasy and suspicious of it?
"There's the whistle," said Paul, holding up a finger. "Father
has the first one blown at half-past six, so's the men can have
time to get their things ready and start; and not have to
hurry."
At this a faint stirring of interest in what the child was
saying broke through the golden haze of the day-dream in which Mr.
Welles was walking. "Where do they come from anyhow, the men who
work in your father's mill?" he asked. "Where do they live? There
are so few homes at Crittenden's."
"Oh, they live mostly over the hill in the village, in Ashley.
There are lots of old houses there, and once in a while now they
even have to build a new one, since the old ones are all filled up.
Mr. Bayweather says that before Father and Mother came here to live
and really run the mill, that Ashley Street was all full of empty
houses, without a light in them, that the old folks had died out
of. But now the men have bought them up and live in them. It's just
as bright, nights! With windows lighted up all over. Father's had
the electric current run over there from the mill, now, and that
doesn't cost anything except . . ."
Mr. Welles' curiosity satisfied, he fell back into his old
shimmer of content and walked along, hearing Paul's voice only as
one of the morning sounds of the newly awakened world.
Presently he was summoned out of this day-dream by a tug at his
hand. Paul gave out the word of command, "We turn here, so's to get
into the men's short-cut."
This proved to be a hard-trodden path, lying like a loosely
thrown-down string, over the hill pasture-land which cut Ashley
village off from Crittenden's mill. It was to get around this rough
tract that the road had to make so long a detour.
"Oh, I see," said Mr. Welles. "I'd been thinking that it must
bother them a lot to come the two miles along the road from the
village."
"Sure," said Paul. "Only the ones that have got Fords come that
way. This is ever so much shorter. Those that step along fast can
make it easy in twelve or fifteen minutes. There they come now, the
first of them." He nodded backward along the path where a distant
dark line of men came treading swiftly and steadily forward, tin
pails glistening in their hands.
"Some of those in that first bunch are really choppers by
rights," Paul diagnosed them with a practised eye, "but of course
nobody does much chopping come warmer weather. But Father never
lays off any men unless they want to be. He fixes some jobs for
them in the lumber-yard or in the mill, so they live here all the
year around, same's the regular hands."
The two stood still now, watching the men as their long,
powerful strides brought them rapidly nearer. Back of them the sun
rose up splendid in the sparkling, dustless mountain air. The
pasture grass on either side of the sinuous path lay shining in the
dew. Before them the path led through a grove of slim, white
birches, tremulous in a pale cloud of light green.
"Well, they've got a pretty good way to get to their work, all
right," commented Mr. Welles.
"Yep, pretty good," agreed Paul. "It's got tramped down so it's
quite smooth."
A detachment of the file of tall, strongly built, roughly
dressed men had now reached them, and with friendly, careless nods
and greetings to Paul, they swung by, smoking, whistling, calling
out random remarks and jokes back and forth along the line.
"Hello, Frank. Hello, Mike. Hello, Harry. Hello, Jom-bastiste.
Hello, Jim." Paul made answer to their repeated, familiar, "Hello,
Paul."
Mr. Welles drew back humbly from out their path. These were men,
useful to the world, strong for labor. He must needs stand back
with the child.
With entire unexpectedness, he felt a wistful envy of those men,
still valid, still fit for something. For a moment it did not seem
as sweet as he had thought it would always be, to feel himself old,
old and useless.
II
April 12.
He was impatient to be at the real work of gardening and one
morning applied seriously to Mrs. Crittenden to be set at work.
Surely this must be late enough, even in this "suburb of the North
Pole," as Vincent called Vermont. Well, yes, Mrs. Crittenden
conceded to him, stopping her rapid manipulation of an oiled mop on
the floor of her living-room, if he was in such a hurry, he could
start getting the ground ready for the sweet peas. It wouldn't do
any harm to plant them now, though it might not do any good either;
and he mustn't be surprised to find occasional chunks of earth
still frozen. She would be over in a little while to show him about
it. Let him get his pick-mattock, spade, and rake ready, up by the
corner of his stone wall.
He was waiting there, ten minutes later, the new implements
(bought at Mrs. Crittenden's direction days and days ago) leaning
against the wall. The sun was strong and sweet on his bared white
head, the cool earth alive under his feet, freed from the tension
of frost which had held it like stone when he had first trod his
garden. He leaned against the stone wall, laid a century ago by who
knew what other gardener, and looked down respectfully at the strip
of ground along the stones. There it lay, blank and brown, shabby
with the litter of broken, sodden stems of last year's weeds, and
unsightly with half-rotten lumps of manure. And that would feed and
nourish . . .
For an instant there stood there before his flower-loving eyes
the joyful tangle of fresh green vines, the pearly many-colored
flesh of the petals, their cunning, involved symmetry of
form—all sprung from a handful of wrinkled yellow seeds and
that ugly mixture of powdered stone and rotten decay.
It was a wonderful business, he thought.
Mrs. Crittenden emerged from her house now, in a short skirt,
rough heavy shoes, and old flannel shirt. She looked, he thought,
ever so trig and energetic and nice; but suddenly aware that
Vincent was gazing idly out of an upper window at them, he guessed
that the other man would not admire the costume. Vincent was so
terribly particular about how ladies dressed, he thought to
himself, as he moved forward, mattock in hand.
"I'm ashamed to show you how dumb I am about the use of these
tools," he told her, laughing shamefacedly. "I don't suppose you'll
believe me, but honestly I never had a pick-mattock in my hand till
I went down to the store to buy one. I might as well go the whole
hog and confess I'd never even heard of one till you told me to get
it. Is this the way you use it?" He jabbed ineffectually at the
earth with the mattock, using a short tight blow with a half-arm
movement. The tool jarred itself half an inch into the ground and
was almost twisted out of his hand.
"No, not quite," she said, taking the heavy tool out of his
hand. If she were aware of the idle figure at the upper window, she
gave no sign of it. She laid her strong, long, flexible hands on
the handle, saying, "So, you hold it this way. Then you swing it
up, back of your head. There's a sort of knack to that. You'll soon
catch it. And then, if the ground isn't very hard, you don't need
to use any strength at all on the downward stroke. Let Old Mother
Gravity do the work. If you aim it right, its own weight is enough
for ordinary garden soil, that's not in sod. Now watch."
She swung the heavy tool up, shining in the bright air, all her
tall, supple body drawn up by the swing of her arms, cried out,
"See, now I relax and just let it fall," and bending with the
downward rush of the blade, drove it deep into the brown earth. A
forward thrust of the long handle ("See, you use it like a lever,"
she explained), a small earthquake in the soil, and the tool was
free for another stroke.
At her feet was a pool of freshly stirred fragments of earth,
loose, friable, and moist, from which there rose in a gust of the
spring breeze, an odor unknown to the old man and thrilling.
He stooped down, thrust his hand into the open breast of earth,
and took up a handful of the soil which had lain locked in frost
for half a year and was now free for life again. Over it his eyes
met those of the beautiful woman beside him.
She nodded. "Yes, there's nothing like it, the smell of the
first earth stirred every spring."
He told her, wistfully, "It's the very first stirred in all my
life."
They had both lowered their voices instinctively, seeing Vincent
emerge from the house-door and saunter towards them immaculate in a
gray suit. Mr. Welles was not at all glad to see him at this
moment. "Here, let me have the mattock," he said, taking it out of
Mrs. Crittenden's hands, "I want to try it myself."
He felt an anticipatory impatience of Vincent's everlasting
talk, to which Mrs. Crittenden always had, of course, to give a
polite attention; and imitating as well as he could, the free,
upward swing of his neighbor, he began working off his impatience
on the unresisting earth. But he could not help hearing that, just
as he expected, Vincent plunged at once into his queer, abrupt
talk. He always seemed to think he was going right on with
something that had been said before, but really, for the most part,
as far as Mr. Welles could see, what he said had nothing to do with
anything. Mrs. Crittenden must really be a very smart woman, he
reflected, to seem to know what he meant, and always to have an
answer ready.
Vincent, shaking his head, and looking hard at Mrs. Crittenden's
rough clothes and the handful of earth in her fingers, said with an
air of enforced patience with obvious unreasonableness, "You're on
the wrong track, you know. You're just all off. Of course with you
it can't be pose as it looks when other people do it. It must be
simply muddle-headed thinking."
He added, very seriously, "You infuriate me."
Mr. Welles, pecking feebly at the ground, the heavy mattock
apparently invested with a malicious life of its own, twisting
perversely, heavily lop-sided in his hands, thought that this did
not sound like a polite thing to say to a lady. And yet the way
Vincent said it made it sound like a compliment, somehow. No, not
that; but as though it were awfully important to him what Mrs.
Crittenden did. Perhaps that counted as a compliment.
He caught only a part of Mrs. Crittenden's answer, which she
gave, lightly laughing, as though she did not wish to admit that
Vincent could be so serious as he sounded. The only part he really
heard was when she ended, ". . . oh, if we are ever going to
succeed in forcing order on the natural disorder of the world, it's
going to take everybody's shoulder to the wheel. Women can't stay
ornamental and leisurely, and elegant, nor even always nice to look
at."
Mr. Welles, amazed at the straining effort he needed to put
forth to manage that swing which Mrs. Crittenden did so easily,
took less than his usual small interest in the line of talk which
Vincent was so fond of springing on their neighbor. He heard him
say, with his air of always stating a foregone conclusion,
something so admitted that it needed no emphasis, "It's
Haroldbellwrightism, pure and simple, to imagine that anything you
can ever do, that anybody can ever do, will help bring about the
kind of order you're talking about, order for everybody. The
only kind of order there ever will be, is what you get when you
grab a little of what you want out of the chaos, for your own self,
while there's still time, and hold on to it. That's the only way to
get anywhere for yourself. And as for doing something for other
people, the only satisfaction you can give anybody is in
beauty."
Mr. Welles swam out of the breakers into clear water. Suddenly
he caught the knack of the upward swing, and had the immense
satisfaction of bringing the mattock down squarely, buried to the
head in the earth.
"There!" he said proudly to Mrs. Crittenden, "how's that for
fine?"
He looked up at her, wiping the sweat from his forehead. He
wondered for an instant if she really looked troubled, or if he
only imagined it. There was no doubt about how Vincent looked, as
though he thought Mr. Welles, exulting over a blow with a mattock,
an old imbecile in his dotage.
Mr. Welles never cared very much whether he seemed to Vincent
like an old imbecile or not, and certainly less than nothing about
it today, intoxicated as he was with the air, the sun, and his new
mastery over the soil. He set his hands lovingly to the tool and
again and again swung it high over his head, while Vincent and Mrs.
Crittenden strolled away, still talking. . . . "Doesn't it depend
on what you mean by 'beauty'?" Mrs. Crittenden was saying.