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At The Foot Of The Trail
by
“I’m comfortable enough by myself,” said the old man uneasily. “When you work for yourself, you know who’s boss.”
“Naw, you don’t, Mosey, not by a long shot; you don’t know whether you’re boss or the cookin’. I tried bachin’ once”–the speaker made a grimace of reminiscent disgust; “the taste hasn’t gone out of my mouth yet. You’re a pretty fair cook, Mosey, but you’d ought to see my girl’s biscuits; she makes ’em so light she has to put a napkin over ’em to keep ’em from floating around like feathers. Fact!” He reached over and speared a slice of bread with his fork. “If I keep this job on the trail, maybe you’ll have a chance to sample them biscuits. I’m goin’ to send East for that girl.”
“Where you goin’ to live?”
“Well, I didn’t know but we could rent this ranch and board you, Mosey. Seems to me you ought to retire. It ain’t human to live this way. If you was to die here all by yourself, you’d regret it. Well, I must toddle.”
The visitor stood a moment on the step, sweeping the valley with his fresh young glance; then he set his hat on the back of his head and went whistling down the road, waving his stick at old Mosey as he disappeared among the sycamores in the wash. The old man gathered the dishes into a rusty pan, and scalded them with boiling water from the kettle.
“I believe I’ll do it,” he said, as he fished the hot saucers out by their edges and turned them down on the table; “it can’t do no harm to write to her, no way.”
II
Mrs. Moxom put on her slat sunbonnet, took a tin pan from the pantry shelf, and hurried across the kitchen toward the door. Her daughter-in-law looked up from the corner where she was kneading bread. She was a short, plump woman, and all of her convexities seemed emphasized by flour. She put up the back of her hand to adjust a loosened lock of hair, and added another high light to her forehead.
“Where you going, mother?” she called anxiously.
The old woman did not turn her head.
“Oh, just out to see how the lettuce is coming on. I had a notion I’d like some for dinner, wilted with ham gravy.”
“Can’t one of the children get it?”
There was no response. Mrs. Weaver turned back to her bread.
“Your grandmother seems kind of fidgety this morning,” she fretted to her eldest daughter, who was decorating the cupboard shelves with tissue paper of an enervating magenta hue, and indulging at intervals in vocal reminiscences of a ship that never returned.
“Oh, well, mother,” said that young person comfortably, “let her alone. I think we all tag her too much. I hate to be tagged myself.”
“Well, I’m sure I don’t want to tag her, Ethel; I just don’t want her to overdo.”
Mrs. Weaver spoke in a tone of mingled injury and self-justification.
“Oh, well, mother, she isn’t likely to put her shoulder out of joint pulling a few heads of lettuce.”
The girl broke out again into cheerful interrogations concerning the disaster at sea:–
“Did she never r re tur ren?
No, she never r re tur rened.”
Mrs. Weaver gave a little sigh, as if she feared her daughter’s words might prove prophetic, and buried her plump fists in the puffy dough.
Old Mrs. Moxom turned when she reached the garden gate and glanced back at the house. Then she clasped the pan to her breast and skurried along the fence toward the orchard. Once under the trees, she did not look behind her, but went rapidly toward the field where she knew her son was plowing. The reflection of the sun on the tin pan made him look up, and when he saw her he stopped his team. She came across the soft brown furrows to his side.