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A Neighbor’s Landmark
by
“When’ll you be over?” said the farmer abruptly; his hands were clenched now in his pockets. The two men stood a little way apart, facing eastward, and away from the house. The long, wintry fields before them sloped down to a wide stretch of marshes covered with ice, and dotted here and there with an abandoned haycock. Beyond was the gray sea less than a mile away; the far horizon was like an edge of steel. There was a small fishing-boat standing in toward the shore, and far off were two or three coasters.
“Looks cold, don’t it?” said the contractor. “I’ll be over middle o’ the week some time, Mr. Packer.” He unfastened his horse, while John Packer went to the un-sheltered wood-pile and began to chop hard at some sour, heavy-looking pieces of red-oak wood. He stole a look at the window, but the two troubled faces had disappeared.
II.
Later that afternoon John Packer came in from the barn; he had lingered out of doors in the cold as long as there was any excuse for so doing, and had fed the cattle early, and cleared up and laid into a neat pile some fencing materials and pieces of old boards that had been lying in the shed in great confusion since before the coming of snow. It was a dusty, splintery heap, half worthless, and he had thrown some of the broken fence-boards out to the wood-pile, and then had stopped to break them up for kindlings and to bring them into the back kitchen of the house, hoping, yet fearing at every turn, to hear the sound of his wife’s voice. Sometimes the women had to bring in fire-wood themselves, but to-night he filled the great wood-box just outside the kitchen door, piling it high with green beech and maple, with plenty of dry birch and pine, taking pains to select the best and straightest sticks, even if he burrowed deep into the wood-pile. He brought the bushel basketful of kindlings last, and set it down with a cheerful grunt, having worked himself into good humor again; and as he opened the kitchen door, and went to hang his great blue mittens behind the stove, he wore a self-satisfied and pacificatory smile.
“There, I don’t want to hear no more about the wood-box bein’ empty. We’re goin’ to have a cold night; the air’s full of snow, but ‘t won’t fall, not till it moderates.”
The women glanced at him with a sense of relief. They had looked forward to his entrance in a not unfamiliar mood of surly silence. Every time he had thumped down a great armful of wood, it had startled them afresh, and their timid protest and sense of apprehension had increased until they were pale and miserable; the younger woman had been crying.
“Come, mother, what you goin’ to get me for supper?” said the master of the house. “I’m goin’ over to the Centre to the selec’men’s office to-night. They’re goin’ to have a hearin’ about that new piece o’ road over in the Dexter neighborhood.”
The mother and daughter looked at each other with relief and shame; perhaps they had mistaken the timber-contractor’s errand, after all, though their imagination had followed truthfully every step of a bitter bargain, from the windows.
“Poor father!” said his wife, half unconsciously. “Yes; I’ll get you your supper quick ‘s I can. I forgot about to-night. You’ll want somethin’ warm before you ride ‘way over to the Centre, certain;” and she began to bustle about, and to bring things out of the pantry. She and John Packer had really loved each other when they were young, and although he had done everything he could since then that might have made her forget, she always remembered instead; she was always ready to blame herself, and to find excuse for him. “Do put on your big fur coat, won’t you, John?” she begged eagerly.