<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></SPAN><SPAN href="#CONTENTS">CHAPTER XVI.</SPAN><br/> <span class="small">THE TIGER IN HIS LAIR.</span></h2>
<p>The next house to that of the French people was
larger and more pretentious than theirs. It had
more of a garden, there were two stories instead of
one, and the roof was surmounted by a tiny tower.</p>
<p>The outside of the tiger's den was highly satisfactory,
and 'Tilda Jane smiled in weary stoical humour.
Now to find the particular corner in which
the tiger himself abode. The house was dark, except
for one feeble glimmer of light on the ground floor.
She had rapped at the front door, she had rapped at
the back door without getting any response, and now
she returned to the latter to see if perchance it had
been left unfastened.</p>
<p>It had, and lifting the latch cautiously, she went
in. She knew Mr. Dillson was an old man, she
knew he was lame, and possibly he heard her, but
could not come to her rescue. Passing through a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span>
small porch where she stumbled against some heaped
up pans, she turned the first door-knob she touched
in passing her hand around the dark wall.</p>
<p>She found herself in a kitchen. The table in the
middle of the floor, the chairs, the dresser, were all
illumined by a feeble, dying glow in a small cooking
stove, and by the beams of a candle struggling
through an open door.</p>
<p>Poacher and Gippie crept after her as she proceeded
slowly in the direction of this light. They
felt that there was something mysterious afoot.</p>
<p>'Tilda Jane paused at the bedroom door. Here
was the lair of the tiger, and there was the tiger
himself,—an old man with white hair, red eyes, and
a night-cap. A candle was on a shelf by the head
of the bed, and a pair of crutches was within reaching
distance, and the old man was lifting his head
from the pillow in astonishment.</p>
<p>'Tilda Jane could not help laughing aloud in her
relief. This was not a very dangerous looking person.
He seemed more amazed than vexed, and she
laughed again as she noted his clutch of the bed-clothes,
and the queer poise of his white head.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"'Scuse me, sir," she said, humbly, "for comin'
this time o' night, but I thought you'd like me to
report first thing. I hope you've heard from your
son I was comin'?"</p>
<p>The old man said nothing. He was still open-mouthed
and dumb, but something in his face
assured 'Tilda Jane that he had heard—he had
received some news of her, apart from the telegram
sent by Mr. Jack.</p>
<p>"I've had lots o' speriences," she said, with a tired
gesture. "I'll tell 'em some other time. I jus'
wanted to 'nounce my 'rival, an' tell you I'm goin'
to wait on you good—I guess I'll go to bed, if
you'll tell me where to get a candle, an' where I'm
to sleep."</p>
<p>He would tell her nothing. He simply lay and
glared at her, and by no means disposed to seek a
quarrel with him, she made her way back to the
kitchen, opened the stove door, and, lighting a piece
of paper, searched the room until she found the
closet where the candles were kept.</p>
<p>The old man lay motionless in his bed. He heard
her searching, heard the dogs pattering after her,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span>
and a violent perspiration broke out upon him.
Wrath sometimes gave him unwonted fluency of
speech. To-night it rendered him speechless. He
did not wish this beggar's brat to wait on him.
Hank had not asked his permission to send her—had
simply announced that she was coming. He
was treated as if he were a baby—an idiot, and this
was his own house. Hank had nothing to do with
it. He didn't care if Hank did pay her. He had
money enough of his own to hire a housekeeper.
But he didn't want one. He wanted to wait on
himself. He hated to have women cluttering round,
and he lay, and perspired, and inwardly raged, and
obtained not one wink of sleep, while 'Tilda Jane,
having obtained what she wished, peacefully composed
herself to rest.</p>
<p>First though, she calmly bade him "Good-night,"
told him to "holler," if he wanted anything, and,
calling her dogs, went off in search of a bed for
herself.</p>
<p>Beyond the kitchen was a front hall,—cold,
dusty, and comfortless. Up-stairs were four rooms,
two unfurnished, one having something the appear<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span>ance
of a spare room left long unoccupied, the other
smelling of tobacco, exceedingly untidy, littered with
old clothes, fishing rods, bats, cartridge shells, and
other boyish and manly belongings. This must be
Hank's room, probably it had been occupied later
than the other, and the bed would not be so damp.
She would sleep here, and she turned down the
clothes.</p>
<p>"Good land!" she murmured, "I wonder how
long sence those blankets has been washed?" and
she turned them back again, and, going to the
other room, obtained two coverlets that she spread
over herself, after she lay down on the outside of the
bed.</p>
<p>The dogs had already curled themselves up on a
heap of clothes on the floor, and in a few minutes
the three worn-out travellers were fast asleep.</p>
<p>When 'Tilda Jane lifted her head from her very
shady pillow the next morning, her ears were saluted
by the gentle patter of rain. The atmosphere was
milder—a thaw had set in.</p>
<p>She sprang up, and went to the dogs, who were
still snoring in their corner. "Wake up," she said,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span>
touching them with her foot. Gippie started, but
something in the expression of Poacher's eloquent
eyes told her that, although he had been apparently
sound asleep, he knew perfectly well what was going
on about him.</p>
<p>"Let's go and see Mr. Dillson," she exclaimed,
and picking up Gippie, she ran down-stairs with
Poacher at her heels.</p>
<p>"It ain't cold—it's just pleasant," she muttered,
turning the key with difficulty in the front door, and
throwing it open.</p>
<p>"Oh, my, how pretty!" and she clasped her hands
in delight. Across the road was the deep hollow of
the river. She was in one of a line of cottages following
its bank, and across the river were fields and
hills, now a soft, hazy picture in the rain. But the
sun would shine, fine days would come—what an
ideal place for a home! and her heart swelled with
thankfulness, and she forgot the cross old man in
the room behind her.</p>
<p>The cross old man would have given the world
to have turned her out of his house at that very
minute, but his night of sleeplessness and raging<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span>
temper had given him a fierce headache, a bad
taste in his mouth, and such a helplessness of limbs
that he could not turn in bed.</p>
<p>'Tilda Jane fortunately did not know that if he
could have commanded his tongue he would have
ordered her into the street, but she saw that there
was something wrong with him, and as she stood in
his doorway, she said, pityingly, "I guess you're
sick; I'll make you some breakfast," and she vanished
in the direction of the wood-shed.</p>
<p>He heard her chopping sticks, he heard the brisk
snapping of the fire and the singing of the teakettle.
He heard her breaking eggs—two eggs
when he never cooked more than one at a time!
He opened his mouth to protest, but only gave
utterance to a low roar that brought Poacher, who
happened to be the only one in the kitchen, into his
room to stare gravely and curiously at him.</p>
<p>She made an omelet, she toasted bread, she
steeped him a cup of tea—this slip of a girl. She
had evidently been taught to cook, but he hated her
none the less as she brought in a tray and set it
beside his bed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He would not touch the food, and he gave her
a look from his angry eyes that sent her speedily
from the room, and made her close the door behind
her.</p>
<p>"I guess he'd like to gimme a crack with them
crutches," she reflected, soberly, "I'd better keep
out of his way till he's over it. Reminds me o' the
matron's little spells."</p>
<p>If she had been a petted darling from some loving
home, she would have fled from the cottage in dismay.
As it was, although she suffered, it was not
with the keenness of despair. All her life she had
been on the defensive. Some one had always found
fault with her, some one was always ready to punish
her. Unstinted kindness would have melted her,
but anger always increased her natural obstinacy.
She had been sent here to take care of this old man,
and she was going to do it. She was too unconventional,
and too ignorant, to reflect that her protective
attitude would have been better changed for a
suppliant one in entering the old man's domain.</p>
<p>However, if she had meekly begged the privilege
of taking care of him, he would have sent her away,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
and as she was given neither to hair-splitting nor
introspection, but rather to the practical concerns of
life, she calmly proceeded with her task of tidying
the house without reference to future possibilities.</p>
<p>The kitchen was the first place to be attacked, and
she carefully examined the stove. It smoked a little.
It needed cleaning, and girding on some old aprons
she found in the porch, she let the fire go out, and
then brushed, and rubbed, and poked at the stove
until it was almost as clean outside as it was inside.
Her next proceeding was to take everything off the
walls, and wipe them down with a cloth-bedraped
broom. Then she moved all the dishes off the
dresser, washed the chairs, and scrubbed the
floor.</p>
<p>Then, and not until then, did she reopen the door
into the old man's room. Now he could see what a
clean kitchen she had, and how merrily the fire was
burning in the stove. It was also twelve o'clock,
and she must look about for something more to
eat.</p>
<p>Mr. Dillson had not touched his breakfast, so she
ate it herself, made him fresh toast, a cup of tea, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
a tiny meat hash, then went up-stairs to tidy her
bedroom.</p>
<p>The hash was well-seasoned, and the odour of
onions greeted the old man's nostrils tantalisingly.
He was really hungry now. His wrath had burned
down for lack of fuel, and some power had come
back to his limbs. He ate his dinner, got out of
bed, dressed himself, and limped out to the kitchen.</p>
<p>When he had dropped in his big rocking-chair, he
gazed around the room. The girl had done more in
one morning than all the women he had ever
employed had done in three. Perhaps it would be
economy to keep her. He was certainly growing
more feeble, and a tear of self-pity stood in his eye.</p>
<p>There she was now, coming from the French-woman's
house. She had been over there to borrow
sheets, and a flash of impotent rage swept over
him. He tried to have no dealings with those foreigners.
He hated them, and they hated him. This
girl must go, he could not stand her.</p>
<p>The back of his rocking-chair was padded, and
before he realised what was happening, his state
of fuming passed into one of sleepiness,—he was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
off, soundly and unmistakably announcing in plain
terms, through throat and nose, to the world of the
kitchen, that he was making up for time lost last
night.</p>
<p>When he opened his eyes, it was late afternoon,
and 'Tilda Jane, sitting at a safe distance from him,
was knitting an unfinished sock of his, left by his
dead wife some ten years ago.</p>
<p>He blinked at her in non-committal silence. She
gave him one shrewd glance, with her toe pushed
Gippie's recumbent body nearer her own chair, and
went on with her work. If he wanted to hear her
talk, he could ask questions.</p>
<p>The afternoon wore away and evening came.
When it grew quite dark 'Tilda Jane got up,
lighted a lamp, put on the teakettle, and with
the slender materials at hand prepared a meal
that she set before the uncommunicative old man.</p>
<p>He ate it, rolling his eyes around the clean
kitchen meanwhile, but not saying a word.</p>
<p>'Tilda Jane kept at a safe distance from him
until he had finished and had limped into bed.
She then approached the table and ate a few mor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>sels
herself, muttering as she did so, "I ain't hungry,
but I mus' eat enough to help me square up to that
poor ole crossy."</p>
<p>She was, however, too tired to enjoy her supper,
and soon leaving it, she washed her dishes and went
up-stairs.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span></p>
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