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The Envoy Extraordinary
by
This was Sam’s golden opportunity. His father’s fields stood yellow with ripening grain to be cut on the morrow, but he deliberately hired himself out to a neighbor, where he would get good wages to start a little home with; for, farmer-like, old Billy Norris never paid his son wages. Sam was supposed to work for nothing but his clothes and board as reward, and a possible slice of the farm when the old man died, while a good harvest hand gets board and high wages, to boot. This then was the hour to strike, and the morning the grain stood ready for the reaper Sam paused at the outside kitchen door at sunrise.
“Mother,” he said, “I’ve got to have her. I’m going to marry her to-day, and to-morrow start working for Mr. Willson, who will pay me enough to keep a wife. I’m sorry, mother, but–well, I’ve got to have her. Some day you’ll know her, and you’ll love her, I know you will; and if there’s ever any children–“
But Mrs. Norris had clutched him by the arm. “Sammy,” she whispered, “your father will be raging mad at your going, and harvest hands so scarce. I know he’ll never let me go near you, never. But if there’s ever any children, Sammy, you just come for your mother, and I’ll go to you and her without his letting.”
Then with one of the all too few kisses that are ever given or received in a farmhouse life, she let him go. The storm burst at breakfast time when Sam did not appear, and the poor mother tried to explain his absence, as only a mother will. Old Billy waxed suspicious, then jumped at facts. The marriage was bad enough, but this being left in the lurch at the eleventh hour, his son’s valuable help transferred from the home farm to Mr. Willson’s, with whom he always quarreled in church, road, and political matters, was too much.
“But, father, you never paid him wages,” ventured the mother.
“Wages? Wages to one’s own son, that one has raised and fed and shod from the cradle? Wages, when he knowed he’d come in fer part of the farm when I’d done with it? Who in consarnation ever gives their son wages?”
“But, father, you told him if he married her he was never to have the farm–that you’d leave it to Sid, that he was to get right off the day he married her.”
“An’ Sid’ll get it–bet yer life he will–fer I ain’t got no son no more. A sneakin’ hulk that leaves me with my wheat standin’ an’ goes over to help that Methodist of a Willson is no son of mine. I ain’t never had a son, and you ain’t, neither; remember that, Marthy–don’t you ever let me ketch you goin’ a-near them. We’re done with Sam an’ his missus. You jes’ make a note of that.” And old Billy flung out to his fields like a general whose forces had fled.
It was but a tiny, two-room shack, away up in the back lots, that Sam was able to get for Della, but no wayfarer ever passed up the side road but they heard her clear, young voice singing like a thrush; no one ever met Sam but he ceased whistling only to greet them. He proved invaluable to Mr. Willson, for after the harvest was in and the threshing over, there was the root crop and the apple crop, and eventually Mr. Willson hired him for the entire year. Della, to the surprise of the neighborhood, kept on with her school until Christmas.
“She’s teachin’ instid of keepin’ Sam’s house, jes’ to git money fer finery, you bet!” sneered old Billy. But he never knew that every copper for the extra term was put carefully away, and was paid out for a whole year’s rent in advance on a gray little two-room house, and paid by a very proud little yellow-haired bride. She had insisted upon this before her marriage, for she laughingly said, “No wife ever gets her way afterwards.”