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PAGE 4

Una Of The Hill Country
by [?]

“But ‘t ain’t no differ, gran Mad,” Valeria often sought to reassure him. “I’ll work some way out.”

And when he would irritably flout the possibility that she could do aught to materially avert disaster she was wont to protest: “You jes’ watch me. I’ll find out some way. I be ez knowin’ ez any old owel.”

Despite her slender physique and her recurrent heavy tasks the drear doom of poverty with its multiform menace had cast no shadow on her ethereal face, and her pensive dark gray eyes were full of serene light as she met the visitor at the bars. A glimmer of mirth began to scintillate beneath her long brown lashes, and she spoke first. “The folks in the mountings air mighty nigh skeered out’n thar boots by yer foolishness, Brent”–she sought to conserve a mien of reproof. “They ‘low ez it war a manifestation of the Evil One.”

Brent laughed delightedly. “Warn’t it prime?” he said. “But I never expected ter work sech a scatteration of the crowd Thar skeer plumb terrified me. I jes’ set out with the nimblest, an’ run from the devil myself.”

“Won’t them candidates fur office be mighty mad if they find out what it war sure enough?” she queried anxiously. “They gin the crowd a barbecue an’ bran dance, an’ arter all, the folks got quit of hevin’ ter hear them speak an’ jaw about thar old politics an’ sech.”

“Them candidates air hoppin’ mad fur true,” he admitted. “I been down yander at Gilfillan’s store in the Cove an’ I hearn the loafers thar talkin’ powerful ’bout the strange happening. An’ them candidates war thar gittin’ ready ter start out fur town in thar buggy. An’ that thar gay one–though now he seems ez sober ez that sour one–he said ‘t warn’t no devil. ‘Twar jes’ a ventriloquisk from somewhar–that’s jes’ what that town man called it. But I never said nuthin’. I kep’ powerful quiet.”

Brent Kayle was as vain a man as ever stood in shoe leather–even in the midst of his absorption in his disclosure he could not refrain from a pause to reflect on the signal success of his prank and laugh and plume himself.

“But old Gilfillan he loves ter believe ez the devil air hotfoot arter other folks with a pitchfork, an’ he axed how then did sech a man happen ter be in the mountings ‘thout none knowin’ of it. An’ that candidate, the gay one, he say he reckon the feller kem from that circus what is goin’ fer show in Shaftesville termorrer–mebbe he hearn ’bout the bran dance an’ wanted ter hev some fun out’n the country folks. That candidate say he hed hearn dozens o’ ventriloquisks in shows in the big towns–though this war about the bes’ one he could remember. He said he hed no doubt this feller is paid good money in the show, fur jes’ sech fool tricks with his voice–good money!”

Valeria had listened in motionless amazement But he had now paused, almost choking with his rush of emotion, his excitement, his sense of triumph, and straight ensued a certain reluctance, a dull negation, a prophetic recoil from responsibility that clogged his resolve. His eyes roved uncertainly about the familiar domestic scene, darkening now, duskily purple beneath the luminous pearly and roseate tints of the twilight sky. The old woman was a-drowse on the porch of the rickety little log-cabin beneath the gourd vines, the paralytic grandfather came hirpling unsteadily through the doorway on his supporting crutch, his pipe shaking in his shaking hand, while he muttered and mumbled to himself–who knows what?–whether of terror of the future, or regret for the past, or doubt and despair of to-day. The place was obviously so meagre, so poverty-bitten, so eloquent of the hard struggle for mere existence. If it had been necessary for Brent Kayle to put his hand to the plow in its behalf the words would never have been spoken–but “good money” for this idle trade, these facile pranks!