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PAGE 8

A March Wind
by [?]

“That his girl?” he asked, indicating Rosie with his knife, in a gustatory pause.

“Whose?” inquired Amelia willfully.

“His.” He pointed again, this time to the back room, where Enoch was still washing his hands.

“Yes.”

“Mother dead?”

Amelia sprang from her chair, while Rosie looked at her with the frightened glance of a child to whom some half-forgotten grief has suddenly returned.

“Josiah Pease!” said Amelia. “I never thought a poor, insignificant creatur’ like you could rile me so,–when I know what you’re doin’ it for, too. But you’ve brought it about. Her mother dead? Ain’t I been an’ married her father?”

“Law, Amelia, do se’ down!” said Josiah indulgently. There was a mince-pie warming on the back of the stove. He saw it there. “I didn’t mean nuthin’. I’ll be bound you thought she’s dead, or you wouldn’t ha’ took such a step. I only meant, did ye see her death in the paper, for example, or anything like that?”

“‘Melia,” called Enoch, from the doorway, “I won’t come in to dinner jest now. Elbridge True’s drove into the yard. I guess he’s got it in mind to talk it over about them cows. I don’t want to lose the chance.”

“All right,” answered Amelia. She took her seat again, while Enoch’s footsteps went briskly out through the shed. With the clanging of the door, she felt secure. If she had to deal with Josiah Pease, she could do it better alone, clutching at the certainty that was with her from of old, that, if you could only keep your temper with cousin Josiah, you had one chance of victory. Flame out at him, and you were lost. “Some more potatoes?” asked she, with a deceptive calm.

“Don’t care if I do,” returned Josiah, selecting greedily, his fork hovering in air. “Little mite watery, ain’t they? Dig ’em yourself?”

“We dug ’em,” said Amelia coldly.

Rosie stepped down from her chair, unnoticed. To Amelia, she was then no bigger than some little winged thing flitting about the room in time of tragedy. Our greatest emotions sometimes stay unnamed. At that moment, Amelia was swayed by as tumultuous a love as ever animated damsel of verse or story; but it merely seemed to her that she was an ill-used woman, married to a man for whom she was called on to be ashamed. Rosie tiptoed into the entry, put on her little shawl and hood, and stole out to play in the corn-house. When domestic squalls were gathering, she knew where to go. The great outdoors was safer. Her past had taught her that.

“Don’t like to eat with folks, does he? Well, it’s all in what you’re brought up to.”

Amelia was ready with her counter-charge. “Have some tea?”

She poured it as if it were poison, and Josiah became conscious of her tragic self-control.

“You ain’t eat a thing,” said he, with an ostentatious kindliness. He bent forward a little, with the air of inviting a confidence. “Got suthin’ on your mind, ain’t you, ‘Melia?” he whispered. “Kind o’ worried? Find he’s a drinkin’ man?”

Amelia was not to be beguiled, even by that anger which veils itself as justice. She looked at him steadily, with scorching eyes.

“You ain’t took any sugar,” said she. “There ‘t is, settin’ by you. Help yourself.”

Josiah addressed himself to his tea, and then Amelia poured him another cup. She had some fierce satisfaction in making it good and strong. It seemed to her that she was heartening her adversary for the fray, and she took pleasure in doing it effectually. So great was the spirit within her that she knew he could not be too valiant, for her keener joy in laying him low. Then they rose from the table, and Josiah took his old place by the stove, while Amelia began carrying the dishes to the sink. Her mind was a little hazy now; her next move must depend on his, and cousin Josiah, somewhat drowsy from his good dinner, was not at once inclined to talk. Suddenly he raised his head snakily from those sunken shoulders, and pointed a lean finger to the window.