WHEN the man came out into the mountain road, he saw the little boy sitting on the sack of corn beside the red ox, and he smiled as he had smiled at the hammering birds, at the yellow butterflies. He turned down toward the tragic picture, lengthening his steps. The sun, by some trick of the moving world, seemed to follow him out of the abandoned path. The little boy did not see the man approaching, but he observed that the ox, apparently resigned to passing the night on the mountain, was making ready to lie down, knees first, after the manner of cattle. And the comfortable assurance of Berry in this, the hour of their misfortune, was more than he could bear. He arose and began to beat the ox with his little fists. “Git up, Berry!” he cried. “You ole dog! You ole scalawag! Git up!” The ox slowly arose, and the child turned to find the man beside him. “Poor Berry!” said the man, smiling. “Is he a very bad ox?” “He's a lazy ole pup,” replied the little boy, his wet eyes catching and reflecting the stranger's smile. “He's spilt!” Then he crowded his little fists into his eyes to remove the traces of weakness with which he had been taken unawares. “Do you reckon,” he said, “that both of us could put the corn on him if we lifted together?” “I think so,” replied the man; “at least we will try.” He took up the piece of yellow carpet and laid it over the ox's back. Then he stooped down, put his arms around the sack, linking his fingers together under it. The little boy took hold of the corner. The man raised the sack with scarcely an effort, the child contributing his tiny might. Then, as though the child's help were essential to the task, he nodded. “Now,” he said, and with a swing lifted the sack onto the ox's back. The boy straightened up, and put both little hands on his hips. His face was now radiant. “We got it up all right, didn't we?” he said, “both a-liftin'; an' now,” he paused and regarded the ox with some concern, “I've got to git on somehow-er-nuther.” The ordinary man would then have lifted the child and set him on the ox, but this man did not. He seemed to know and regard that self-reliance which was so dear a thing to this child. He stood back and looked over the patriarch. “Berry is a big ox,” he said. “We will lead him up to the bank.” The little boy walked across the road, with a bit of a swagger. “Yes,” he said, “Berry's a big ox.” He liked this strange man who understood and considered him. The man led the ox to the roadside, and standing by the beast's shoulder, set his knee against the bank. The little boy put his foot on the man's knee, caught hold of the ox's shoulder, and climbed up onto the sack of corn. He panted with the effort. “Berry's everlastin' big,” he observed in comment. Then he set himself squarely on the sack. “We're goin' to mill,” he said. “Where are you goin'?” “If you don't mind,” replied the man, “I shall go along with you and Berry.” The tiny chest expanded. “I don't mind,” he said, “ner Berry don't neither.” Then, as a sort of condescension, as a sort of return for the man's kindness, he gravely handed down the bit of ancient rope. “An' you k'n lead Berry if you want to.” They crossed the low gap and began to descend the mountain on the other side. The man walked in front with the rope in his hand, the ox followed with a slow, roiling gait, his head lowered, the child sitting astride the sack of corn. The sun seemed to linger on the crest of the mountain as though loath, now, to withdraw wholly from the world, a vagrant breeze began to move idly in the tree tops, a faint haze to gather over the forests, below the sun, as though it were some visible odor arising from the earth. The road was steep and rough, low stumps and the roots of trees remained in it, and it was washed out in great ruts. The winter rain had carried the loose earth out of it and left the stones and the tree roots uncovered. A modern vehicle could hardly have kept together on such a road, although it bore the marks of wheels where the mountaineer had gone over with his wagon. The little boy sat regarding the man who walked before him in the road. He seemed not to have felt with this man that fear of the stranger which is so strong an instinct with a child. From the first moment he had been wholly at his ease. He spoke without restraint. “Where's your hat?” he said. The man paused, and put up his hand as though he had not until this moment realized that he was bareheaded. A note of distress came into the child's voice. “You've lost your hat. Are you goin' back to look for it? 'Cause me an' Berry can go on to the mill by ourselves.” “No,” said the man, “I shall go on with you and Berry.” “But you ain't got no hat,” the child continued. “Perhaps I shall find one somewhere,” replied the man. “No,” said the child, “you won't never find one, 'cause nobody don't lose their hats up here. You'll have to buy one at the store.” Then he went on to tell of all the wonderful things that the store contained: Striped candy in sticks in a big glass jar, and fishhooks, and sea grass fishin' lines, and guns, and pistols, and knives. But principally knives. Upon this particular topic he spoke with deep personal interest. In that place of wonders were knives with six blades, with “peraly” handles, with gimlets and tweezers in them, little knives that one could hide between one's fingers and big ones with a ring in the handle so one could tie them to his “galluses.” And Barlows with IXL on the blade. He paused and thrust his hand into his pocket. He had one that his grandfather had given him at Christmas, and he held it up—a Barlow with a bone handle and a single blade. The man stopped and came back to the ox's shoulder. He took the knife and examined it carefully, opened it and tried the edge on his thumb. The blade was round and blunt at the end. The child explained this with an air of apology. “Gran'-pap was afraid I'd run it in my eye, so he grinded it off. Have you got a knife?” The man felt in his pockets. “No,” he replied, “I don't seem to have a knife.” “Well,” said the little boy, “you can git one when you go to git your hat.” The man walked on by the ox's shoulder, and the child continued to talk. There were difficulties to be met. The store was very far away, and one required money to obtain its treasures. The getting of money was a very troublesome affair. But he knew a way or two by which the thing could be accomplished. One could gather hickory nuts or one could dig ginseng. The latter method was to be advised—a pound brought a dollar and seventeen cents. But it must be dried. One strung it on a string and hung it over the fireplace. The storekeeper would not take it green. He spoke a word of comment concerning the storekeeper. He was hard to fool. He always broke the ginseng roots to see if there was a nail concealed inside. The child knew a man who had outwitted the storekeeper once by putting shot in the ends of the root, leaving the middle unmolested; but, he added, that was “no way to do.” The road on this side of the mountain was steep. The turns short. The little party soon reached the foot, and came out into a valley, cleared and sowed in timothy grass. Through this valley, between sodded banks, ran a dark-colored, swiftly flowing stream. The road followed the stream through the meadow until it approached the mill. There the stream descended swiftly over ridges of sandstone into a dam of ancient logs. The mill sat beside the road, its roof projecting, its porch raised above the ground, its door and its gable open, its entrance coated with white dust. The machinery was of the simplest, two stone burrs turned by a paddle wheel; the water carried down from the dam in a boxed sluice, covered with green moss. The mill evidently served two uses. There was a second door to one-half of it, also opening on the porch, and through the open door one could see a stove, a bed, a well-scrubbed table. As the man leading the red ox approached, a woman appeared in the mill door. She was a sturdy woman of middle life, her calico dress pulled up in front and girded around her ample waist with an apron string. Her sleeves were rolled to the elbows, and her fat, powerful hands rested on her hips. Her mouth was compressed, the muscles of her jaws protruded, her bright gray eyes rested on the strange man with a profound, unmoved scrutiny. When the ox stood beside the porch, the man spoke. “Good evening,” he said. The woman did not reply, she jerked her head; then she came slowly out, still looking at the man. “Jump off, David,” she said to the boy; then she took up the sack with ease, swung it into the hollow of her arm, and went with it into the mill, But over her shoulder she continued to regard the man standing in the road. She threw the sack down by the hopper, and came again into the mill door. Her fat hands returned to her hips and her eyes went again to the man. But she spoke to the boy. “You'll be late gittin' home.” “I ain't goin' home,” replied the child. “I'm goin' to Uncle Jimmie's,” and he pointed his linger up the valley. “You can make that by dark.” said the woman, “but you better be movin' along.” She came out and spread the piece of carpet on the ox. The small boy stepped off the mill porch and went out into the road behind the man, where a flat rock lay in the dust. He remained a moment squatted down on his bare legs. Then he returned, climbed onto the ox, and set out up the valley, kicking his heels against the patriarch's ancient ribs. At the bend of the road, the boy stopped and shouted. The man turned about where he was standing. The boy pointed his finger. “There's somethin' under that rock,” he called. Then he swung around on his piece of carpet, spoke to the ox, and was swallowed up in the shadows of the valley. The man stooped down and turned the fiat stone over. There lay the Barlow knife. The woman, watching the man, suddenly brought her bent palm to her forehead and looked up at the mountain, to see if some stray bit of the setting sun had entered the valley. But there was nothing. Night had descended.
|