But to-day Jinny’s horn, Nip’s yap, and Methusalem’s pseudo-spirited pawing, were alike powerless to evoke the familiar forth-bustling of Caleb and Martha. Only cocks crowed and doves moaned, while from the river-slope came the lowing of cattle. Alarmed for the lonely and aged couple, Jinny jumped down and tapped at the door. Nobody replying, she lifted the latch and came from the joyous spring sunshine on a chill, silent piece of hall-way in which even the tall clock had stopped dead. She peeped perfunctorily into the musty parlour on her way to the kitchen—the lozenge-shaped motto: “When He giveth quietness, who then can make trouble?” seemed to have taken on a strange and solemn significance. But she knew that the kitchen was the likeliest lair, so not pausing to examine, the ominously unopened letter addressed to Mrs. Flynt which she espied on the mantelpiece, she pressed on to the rear. The kitchen, however, was still more desolate, not only of the couple, but of the habitual glow on the cavernous hearth. What wonder if Nip, who had followed her, set up an uncanny whining! She halloaed up the staircase, but that only aggravated the silence. She dashed next door to the shepherd’s section—similar solitude! With a feeling of lead at her heart she rushed back into the ironic sunshine and towards the orchard—now unbearably beautiful in its blossoming—and as she was approaching a remote corner that harboured the pigsty in which Martha’s pet sow carried on a lucrative maternity, she was half relieved to collide with Caleb who was moving houseward with haggard eyes and carpet slippers. “Is anything the matter?” she gasped. “Sow glad you’ve come. The missus keeps arxing for you. We’ve been up all night with her.” “With your wife?” He looked astonished. “Noa, Maria!” Jinny’s full relief found vent in a peal of laughter. “It’s no laughin’ matter—the missus wants ye to tell the wet to come at once.” “But what’s the matter with her?” inquired Jinny, still unable to rise to his seriousness. “A snout-ache?” “She’s a goner,” said Caleb solemnly. “We’ve reared up nine boys, but Maria’s been more trouble than the lot. The missus would bring her up by hand, and Oi always prophesied she wouldn’t live.” Amusedly aware that Maria’s progeny had already exceeded sixty, Jinny offered to visit the patient. “Do—that’ll comfort the missus and ye’ll know better what to tell Jorrow. Oi’ll hold your hoss. You know the way—behind the red may-tree.” Jinny smiled again. The idea of Methusalem needing restraint amused her, but she did not dispel Caleb’s romantic illusion. The sick sty was visible through a half-door that gave at once air and view, and over which Nip at once bounded on to the startled Martha’s back as she hung over the prostrate pig on its bed of dirty straw. Maria belonged to the Society of Large Black Pigs, and snuffed the world through a long, fine snout; but life had evidently lost its savour, for the poor sow was turning restlessly. “Oh, Jinny!” moaned Martha. “She had thirteen last time, and I knew it was an unlucky number.” “Nonsense!” quoth Jinny gaily. “Twelve would have been less lucky—at the price I got you!” “Yes, dearie, but I’m not thinking of prices. She was a birthday present for my loneliness.” “I know,” said Jinny gently. “No, you don’t.” She wrung her hands. The self-possession Caleb had admired when the letter broke on their lives was no longer hers. “You’ve got lots of Brethren and Sisters, but I’ve got nobody to break bread with, no fraternal gatherings to go to, and even Flynt won’t be immersed, though he’s in his sixty-nine and we must all fall asleep some day. So it was a comfort to have Maria following me about everywhere like Nip does you, and I do believe she’s got more sense than the so-called Christians here, and would be the first to pray for the peace of Jerusalem with me if she could only speak. But now even Maria may be taken from me. You’ll send Jorrow at once, won’t you, dearie?” “But what’s the matter with her?” “Can’t you see? All night she kept rooting up the ground. Oh, I hope it isn’t fever.” “Rubbish! Look at the skin of her ears. And she isn’t coughing at all. What’s she been overeating?” “Nothing—only the grass Flynt has been cutting.” “Why don’t you give her a dose of castor-oil?” “She won’t take it. She knows we’ve covered it up—I told you she’s got as much brains as a Christian.” “Let me try and get it down.” “It is down. The piglets ate the mess up.” “Oh dear!” laughed Jinny. “That will need Jorrow. Anything else, Mrs. Flynt?” “I can’t think this morning. Ask Flynt.” Caleb, however, proved equally distraught. “There was summat extra special, Oi know,” he said, his red-shirted arm clinging heroically to Methusalem’s bridle, “for here’s the knot in my hankercher. But what it singafies Lord onny knows.” “It wasn’t a new shirt?” she suggested slyly. He shook his head. “Noa, noa; this keeps her colour as good as new. But the missus did make a talk about my Sunday neckercher.” “I’ll get you a new one. Plain or speckled?” “Oi leaves that to you, Jinny—you know more about stoylish things.” |