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"Why, Mrs. Owsley!" an accusing voice cried from the window. "He made us promise not to tell who he was!"
"'N' I don't kyeer what he done!" the imperturbable one answered. "I want ye-all ter know I don't take nuthin' underhand from n.o.body, less'n hit's my man, Bill!"
The accuser ducked from sight.
"Do you mean," Jane asked, "a man about twenty-four, or five, or six, or maybe seven--with sort of brown or grayish eyes, and--and rather handsome?"
"I don't know nuthin' 'bout all them colors in his eyes. I don't know nuthin' 'bout that," she repeated, "but I do 'llow he smoked them vile cigarettes till a body couldn't breathe!"
Jane's eyes left the mother of nine, swept past Nancy whom she saw still bending over her work, and finally rested in the shadows of some cool ferns. This somewhat unexpected announcement sent a wave of pleasure--evanescent, perhaps hardly perceptible--sweeping over her.
Rather abruptly she said:
"I think your gingham looks very well, but you might get a nice print--if you'll have time to make it!"
"That's jest what I war a-thinkin' t'other day," the impa.s.sive face replied. "Red, with white dots on hit, sez I ter Mother Owsley, is jest the nicest thing! 'N' I sez ter Mister Bowser as how I hankered fer a dress like that; but he sez he done quit keepin' hit no moh. He sez he did hev a sight of hit onct, but so many of the wimmin folks come in ter buy hit, 'n' hit war sech a sight of trubble gittin' up 'n' settin' down agin, cuttin' off pieces 'n' waitin' on 'em, that he jest th'owed out what he had left 'n' allowed he wouldn't buy no moh."
This was all very serious to Mrs. Owsley and Jane replied in the same vein:
"Then a blue polka dot. I know he has that, and maybe I can help you make it up."
"Thank-ee," she turned to go back, "but I reckon Mother Owsley's Cyantha kin help some." She stood a moment, hesitating, then faced around, asking: "Ye hain't got a primer, or sumthin', I kin take ter Mother Owsley, hev ye? She's been hankerin' so ter larn a mite of readin' 'n'
writin' since I went thar, 'n' can't git out ter come down hyar!"
"Is she too feeble?" Jane sympathetically asked.
"No, she hain't feeble; but she's got the c.r.a.ps ter look arter. Mother Owsley's right peert, but with sech a sight ter do 'tween sun-up 'n'
dark holds her 'round home right tight. Her man's been crippled 'n'
pohly fer a spell."
"Could she leave him to come here to a moonlight school?" Jane asked; an idea that had been forming for sometime now suddenly receiving fresh impetus. "Maybe even your Bill could come, and the children, too!"
Mrs. Owsley's hesitation showed her to be on unfamiliar ground, and Jane, who had spoken impulsively, added: "I'll talk to you about it this afternoon," whereupon the mountain woman this time went in.
"Now!" Nancy exclaimed, holding up her paper of long division. "It's come out even!"
"Good!--it's a hard one, too!"
"You bet it's a hard one," Nancy straightened her shoulders.
"We won't work any more today," Jane said and, after a pause, asked: "Did you hear what Mrs. Owsley and I were talking about?"
"I was tryin' to," Nancy laughed. "But this last old thing wouldn't come out even so I had to bring down two moh noughts, an' that sort of mixed me up! Is her husband out of the pen?"
"Mercy! I didn't know he was there!"
"I don't either, but she said somethin' 'bout a trusty, an' I just supposed it was him."
Jane began to laugh, somewhat immoderately for a teacher, and several heads appeared at the window in giggling surprise. She had become quite suddenly and thoroughly happy.
"She said trustee, Nan,--a school officer. But the only trustee for this school is the Colonel. There's a hitch somewhere," her eyes were dancing. "Did Brent tell you to buy something, too?"
Had Nancy not already been sitting on the ground, this unexpected question might have toppled her over. She gasped once, turned furiously red, and sat staring.
"Why, no, Miss Jane!"
"With his usual discretion he left you and Dale out," she mused. "I really think it was downright decent of him--the shoes, I mean!"
"I'm beginnin' to think those shoes have got on yoh brain," Nancy cried, and both again screamed with laughter.
"Nan, I don't understand how he succeeded, but he's palmed himself off as a trustee to give authority to the act and, after making arrangements with Mr. Bowser, sent all these children there to buy shoes, or something they're in need of, for our commencement. Don't you honestly think that's splendid? Who would have thought of it?"
"I wouldn't," Nancy murmured, looking at the ground. But the subject was becoming a bit perilous, and she asked:
"Are you goin' to start a moonlight school, Miss Jane?"
"I hadn't really thought of it seriously until just now. Would you help me with it if I did?"
"Good land, Miss Jane, I'd love that better'n anythin'! I'll drive 'em in, an' you stuff 'em with these sums! I bet they'll know somethin'
then!"
"How many are there around here who can't read, do you suppose?"
"Well, old Hod Fugit can't; an' there's Willis--I forget his name, but down at the mill, you know! I don't think the sheriff can, either."
"Can your father--I mean Tom Hewlet?"
"Well, he sort of pokes along at it, but it ain't just what you'd call readin'. Sometimes, when he's right drunk, he gets a piece of old newspaper an' moves his mouth around. Oh, he did the funniest thing once!" she clapped her hands and bent over merrily. "He was workin'
himself up into an awful spree, but misplaced his demijohn an' had us lookin' everywhere for it. I'd hid it, but never let on! He groaned around a lot, an' I think sort of suspected me; but after 'while settled down with the Bible. It was upside down, so that's how I don't think he can read!"
"Then what?"
"Just guess!" Nancy went into more convulsions of laughter. "He began, talkin' right loud an' rockin' his chair right fast: 'An' Solomen, the wise man, says to his Democrats that if a step-darter treats her Pappy mean, an' hides things, she'll go down--down--down--down--' an' all this time, Miss Jane, his voice was gettin' lower an' lower till, when it couldn't go no lower, he gurgled: 'ter h.e.l.l!' Then he'd wait awhile, lookin' sort of sneakin' at me, turn some pages an' do it all over again--only each time he'd begin in a higher pitch so's he could get moh 'downs' in it, an' make it sound scarier. When I wouldn't pay any attention, he threw the Bible at me an' stomped out!"
"Is he back yet?" Jane seemed to lose some of her gaiety when asking this.
"No'm; an' I hope he won't never come back!"
"Have you any idea where he is?"
"Only he said he an' Tusk Potter were goin' in the mountains after ginseng. They go most every yeah. You can't guess the peace there's been at home this last month, Miss Jane!"
"I think I can," she murmured. "Nancy, suppose you were to work hard on those sums, and be more careful in the way you speak, and the school should grow enough for you to be my a.s.sistant, and Mr. McElroy should run his railroad through your house--where would Tom Hewlet and his wife go? Would they stay around here?"
"What a bully fairy-tale," the girl delightedly clasped one of Jane's hands. "No'm, I reckon he'd go out to Missouri an' live with his brother. He's always wantin' to. Why, Miss Jane? Is there any chance of all that?"
"I don't know, Nan. Maybe I was just dreaming."
"Then dream some more," she murmured.