<SPAN name="chap27"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XXVII </h3>
<h3> BLUE RIBBON CORN </h3>
<p>NEVER in her life had Kate worked harder than she did that fall; but
she retained her splendid health. Everything was sheltered and housed,
their implements under cover, their stock in good condition, their
store-room filled, and their fruits and vegetables buried in hills and
long rows in the garden. Adam had a first wheat premium at the County
Fair and a second on corn, concerning which he felt abused. He thought
his corn scored the highest number of points, but that the award was
given another man because of Adam's having had first on wheat. In her
heart Kate agreed with him; but she tried to satisfy him with the blue
ribbon on wheat and keep him interested sufficiently to try for the
first on corn the coming year. She began making suggestions for the
possible improvement of his corn. Adam was not easily propitiated.</p>
<p>"Mother," he said, "you know as well as you know you're alive, that if
I had failed on wheat, or had second, I would have been given FIRST on
my corn; my corn was the best in every way, but they thought I would
swell up and burst if I had two blue ribbons. That was what ailed the
judges. What encouragement is that to try again? I might grow even
finer corn in the coming year than I did this, and be given no award at
all, because I had two this year. It would amount to exactly the same
thing."</p>
<p>"We'll get some more books, and see if we can study up any new
wrinkles, this winter," said Kate. "Now cheer up, and go tell Milly
about it. Maybe she can console you, if I can't."</p>
<p>"Nothing but justice will console me," said Adam. "I'm not complaining
about losing the prize; I'm fighting mad because my corn, my beautiful
corn, that grew and grew, and held its head so high, and waved its
banners of triumph to me with every breeze, didn't get its fair show.
What encouragement is there for it to try better the coming year? The
crows might as well have had it, or the cutworms; while all my work is
for nothing."</p>
<p>"You're making a big mistake," said Kate. "If your corn was the
finest, it was, and the judges knew it, and you know it, and very
likely the man who has the first prize, knows it. You have a clean
conscience, and you know what you know. They surely can't feel right
about it, or enjoy what they know. You have had the experience, you
have the corn for seed; with these things to back you, clear a small
strip of new land beside the woods this winter, and try what that will
do for you."</p>
<p>Adam looked at her with wide eyes. "By jing, Mother, you are a dandy!"
he said. "You just bet I'll try that next year, but don't you tell a
soul; there are more than you who will let a strip be cleared, in an
effort to grow blue ribbon corn. How did you come to think of it?"</p>
<p>"Your saying all your work had been for nothing, made me think of it,"
she answered. "Let them give another man the prize, when they know
your corn is the best. It's their way of keeping a larger number of
people interested and avoiding the appearance of partiality; this
contest was too close; next year, you grow such corn, that the CORN
will force the decision in spite of the judges. Do you see?"</p>
<p>"I see," said Adam. "I'll try again."</p>
<p>After that life went on as usual. The annual Christmas party was the
loveliest of all, because Kate gave it loving thought, and because all
of their hearts were especially touched. As spring came on again, Kate
and Adam studied over their work, planning many changes for the better,
but each time they talked, when everything else was arranged, they came
back to corn. More than once, each of them dreamed corn that winter
while asleep, they frankly talked of it many times a day. Location,
soil, fertilizers, seed, cultivation—they even studied the almanacs
for a general forecast of the weather. These things brought them very
close together. Also it was admitted between them, that Little Poll
"grappled them with hooks of steel." They never lacked subjects for
conversation. Poll always came first, corn next, and during the winter
there began to be discussion of plans for Adam and Milly. Should Milly
come with them, or should they build a small house on the end of the
farm nearest her mother? Adam did not care, so he married Milly
speedily. Kate could not make up her mind. Milly had the inclination
of a bird for a personal and private nest of her own. So spring came
to them.</p>
<p>August brought the anniversary of Nancy Ellen's death, which again
saddened all of them. Then came cooler September weather, and the
usual rush of preparation for winter. Kate was everywhere and enjoying
her work immensely. On sturdy, tumbly legs Little Poll trotted after
her or rode in state on her shoulder, when distances were too far. If
Kate took her to the fields, as she did every day, she carried along
the half of an old pink and white quilt, which she spread in a shaded
place and filled the baby's lap with acorns, wild flowers, small
brightly coloured stones, shells, and whatever she could pick up for
playthings. Poll amused herself with these until the heat and air made
her sleepy, then she laid herself down and slept for an hour or two.
Once she had trouble with stomach teeth that brought Dr. Gray racing,
and left Kate white and limp with fear. Everything else had gone
finely and among helping Adam, working in her home, caring for the
baby, doing whatever she could see that she thought would be of benefit
to the community, and what was assigned her by church committees, Kate
had a busy life. She had earned, in a degree, the leadership she
exercised in her first days in Walden. Everyone liked her; but no one
ever ventured to ask her for an opinion unless they truly wanted it.</p>
<p>Adam came from a run to Hartley for groceries one evening in late
September, with a look of concern that Kate noticed on his face. He was
very silent during supper and when they were on the porch as usual, he
still sat as if thinking deeply. Kate knew that he would tell her what
he was thinking about when he was ready but she was not in the least
prepared for what he said.</p>
<p>"Mother, how do you feel about Uncle Robert marrying again?" he asked
suddenly.</p>
<p>Kate was too surprised to answer. She looked at him in amazement.
Instead of answering, she asked him a question: "What makes you ask
that?"</p>
<p>"You know how that Mrs. Southey pursued him one summer. Well, she's
back in Hartley, staying at the hotel right across from his office;
she's dressed to beat the band, she's pretty as a picture; her car
stands out in front all day, and to get to ride in it, and take meals
with her, all the women are running after her. I hear she has even had
Robert's old mother out for a drive. What do you think of that?"</p>
<p>"Think she's in love with him, of course, and trying to marry him, and
that she will very probably succeed. If she has located where she is
right under his eye, and lets him know that she wants him very much,
he'll, no doubt, marry her."</p>
<p>"But what do you THINK about it?" asked Adam.</p>
<p>"I've had no TIME to think," said Kate. "At first blush, I'd say that
I shall hate it, as badly as I could possibly hate anything that was
none of my immediate business. Nancy Ellen loved him so. I never shall
forget that day she first told me about him, and how loving him brought
out her beauty, and made her shine and glow as if from an inner light.
I was always with her most, and I loved her more than all the other
girls put together. I know that Southey woman tried to take him from
her one summer not long ago, and that he gave her to understand that
she could not, so she went away. If she's back, it means only one
thing, and I think probably she'll succeed; but you can be sure it will
make me squirm properly."</p>
<p>"I THOUGHT you wouldn't like it," he said emphatically.</p>
<p>"Now understand me, Adam," said Kate. "I'm no fool. I didn't expect
Robert to be more than human. He has no children, and he'd like a
child above anything else on earth. I've known that for years, ever
since it became apparent that none was coming to Nancy Ellen. I hadn't
given the matter a thought, but if I had been thinking, I would have
thought that as soon as was proper, he would select a strong, healthy
young woman, and make her his wife. I know his mother is homesick, and
wants to go back to her daughters and their children, which is natural.
I haven't an objection in the world to him marrying a PROPER woman, at
a proper time and place; but Oh, dear Lord, I do dread and despise to
see that little Southey cat come back and catch him, because she knows
how."</p>
<p>"Did you ever see her, Mother?"</p>
<p>"No, I never," said Kate, "and I hope I never shall. I know what Nancy
Ellen felt, because she told me all about it that time we were up
North. I'm trying with all my might to have a Christian spirit. I
swallowed Mrs. Peters, and never blinked, that anybody saw; but I
don't, I truly don't know from where I could muster grace to treat a
woman decently, who tried to do to my sister, what I KNOW Mrs. Southey
tried to do to Nancy Ellen. She planned to break up my sister's home;
that I know. Now that Nancy Ellen is gone, I feel to-night as if I
just couldn't endure to see Mrs. Southey marry Robert."</p>
<p>"Bet she does it!" said Adam.</p>
<p>"Did you see her?" asked Kate.</p>
<p>"See her!" cried Adam. "I saw her half a dozen times in an hour. She's
in the heart of the town, nothing to do but dress and motor. Never saw
such a peach of a car. I couldn't help looking at it. Gee, I wish I
could get you one like that!"</p>
<p>"What did you think of her looks?" asked Kate.</p>
<p>"Might pretty!" said Adam, promptly. "Small, but not tiny; plump, but
not fat; pink, light curls, big baby blue eyes and a sort of hesitating
way about her, as if she were anxious to do the right thing, but feared
she might not, and wished somebody would take care of her."</p>
<p>Kate threw out her hands with a rough exclamation. "I get the
picture!" she said. "It's a dead centre shot. THAT gets a man, every
time. No man cares a picayune about a woman who can take care of
herself, and help him with his job if he has a ghost of a chance at a
little pink and white clinger, who will suck the life and talent out of
him, like the parasite she is, while she makes him believe he is on the
job, taking care of her. You can rest assured it will be settled
before Christmas."</p>
<p>Kate had been right in her theories concerning the growing of blue
ribbon corn. At the County Fair in late September Adam exhibited such
heavy ears of evenly grained white and yellow corn that the blue ribbon
he carried home was not an award of the judges; it was a concession to
the just demands of the exhibit.</p>
<p>Then they began husking their annual crop. It had been one of the
country's best years for corn. The long, even, golden ears they were
stripping the husks from and stacking in heaps over the field might
profitably have been used for seed by any farmer. They had divided the
field in halves and Adam was husking one side, Kate the other. She had
a big shock open and kneeling beside it she was busy stripping open the
husks, and heaping up the yellow ears. Behind her the shocks stood like
rows of stationed sentinels; above, the crisp October sunshine warmed
the air to a delightful degree; around the field, the fence rows were
filled with purple and rose coloured asters, and everywhere goldenrod,
yellower than the corn, was hanging in heavy heads of pollen-spraying
bloom.</p>
<p>On her old pink quilt Little Poll, sound asleep, was lifted from the
shade of one shock to another, while Kate worked across her share of
the field. As she worked she kept looking at the child. She frankly
adored her, but she kept her reason and held to rigid rules in feeding,
bathing, and dressing. Poll minded even a gesture or a nod.</p>
<p>Above, the flocking larks pierced the air with silver notes, on the
fence-rows the gathering robins called to each other; high in the air
the old black vulture that homed in a hollow log in Kate's woods,
looked down on the spots of colour made by the pink quilt, the gold
corn, the blue of Kate's dress, and her yellow head. An artist would
have paused long, over the rich colour, the grouping and perspective of
that picture, while the hazy fall atmosphere softened and blended the
whole. Kate, herself, never had appeared or felt better. She worked
rapidly, often glancing across the field to see if she was even with,
or slightly in advance of Adam. She said it would never do to let the
boy get "heady," so she made a point of keeping even with him, and
caring for Little Poll, "for good measure."</p>
<p>She was smiling as she watched him working like a machine as he ripped
open husks, gave the ear a twist, tossed it aside, and reached for the
next. Kate was doing the same thing, quite as automatically. She was
beginning to find the afternoon sun almost hot on her bare head, so she
turned until it fell on her back. Her face was flushed to coral pink,
and framed in a loose border of her beautiful hair. She was smiling at
the thought of how Adam was working to get ahead of her, smiling
because Little Poll looked such a picture of healthy loveliness,
smiling because she was so well, she felt super-abundant health rising
like a stimulating tide in her body, smiling because the corn was the
finest she ever had seen in a commonly cultivated field, smiling
because she and Adam were of one accord about everything, smiling
because the day was very beautiful, because her heart was at peace, her
conscience clear.</p>
<p>She heard a car stop at her gate, saw a man alight and start across the
yard toward the field, and knew that her visitor had seen her, and was
coming to her. Kate went on husking corn and when the man swung over
the fence of the field she saw that he was Robert, and instantly
thought of Mrs. Southey, so she ceased to smile. "I've got a big
notion to tell him what I think of him," she said to herself, even as
she looked up to greet him. Instantly she saw that he had come for
something.</p>
<p>"What is it?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Agatha," he said. "She's been having some severe heart attacks
lately, and she just gave me a real scare."</p>
<p>Instantly Kate forgot everything, except Agatha, whom she cordially
liked, and Robert, who appeared older, more tired, and worried than she
ever had seen him. She thought Agatha had "given him a real scare,"
and she decided that it scarcely would have been bad enough to put
lines in his face she never had noticed before, dark circles under his
eyes, a look of weariness in his bearing. She doubted as she looked at
him if he were really courting Mrs. Southey. Even as she thought of
these things she was asking: "She's better now?"</p>
<p>"Yes, easier, but she suffered terribly. Adam was upset completely.
Adam, 3d, and Susan and their families are away from home and won't be
back for a few days unless I send for them. They went to Ohio to visit
some friends. I stopped to ask if it would be possible for you to go
down this evening and sleep there, so that if there did happen to be a
recurrence, Adam wouldn't be alone."</p>
<p>"Of course," said Kate, glancing at the baby. "I'll go right away!"</p>
<p>"No need for that," he said, "if you'll arrange to stay with Adam
to-night, as a precaution. You needn't go till bed-time. I'm going
back after supper to put them in shape for the night. I'm almost sure
she'll be all right now; but you know how frightened we can get about
those we love."</p>
<p>"Yes, I know," said Kate, quietly, going straight on ripping open ear
after ear of corn. Presently she wondered why he did not go. She
looked up at him and met his eyes. He was studying her intently. Kate
was vividly conscious in an instant of her bare wind-teased head, her
husking gloves; she was not at all sure that her face was clean. She
smiled at him, and picking up the sunbonnet lying beside her, she wiped
her face with the skirt.</p>
<p>"If this sun hits too long on the same spot, it grows warm," she told
him.</p>
<p>"Kate, I do wish you wouldn't!" he exclaimed abruptly.</p>
<p>Kate was too forthright for sparring.</p>
<p>"Why not?" she asked.</p>
<p>"For one thing, you are doing a man's work," he said. "For another, I
hate to see you burn the loveliest hair I ever saw on the head of a
woman, and coarsen your fine skin."</p>
<p>Kate looked down at the ear of corn she held in her hands, and
considered an instant.</p>
<p>"There hasn't any man been around asking to relieve me of this work,"
she said. "I got my start in life doing a man's work, and I'm frank to
say that I'd far rather do it any day, than what is usually considered
a woman's. As for my looks, I never set a price on them or let them
interfere with business, Robert."</p>
<p>"No, I know you don't," he said. "But it's a pity to spoil you."</p>
<p>"I don't know what's the matter with you," said Kate, patiently. She
bent her head toward him. "Feel," she said, "and see if my hair isn't
soft and fine. I always cover it in really burning sun; this autumn
haze is good for it. My complexion is exactly as smooth and even now,
as it was the day I first met you on the footlog over twenty years ago.
There's one good thing about the Bates women. They wear well. None of
us yet have ever faded, and frazzled out. Have you got many Hartley
women, doing what you call women's work, to compare with me physically,
Robert?"</p>
<p>"You know the answer to that," he said.</p>
<p>"So I do!" said Kate. "I see some of them occasionally, when business
calls me that way. Now, Robert, I'm so well, I feel like running a
footrace the first thing when I wake up every morning. I'm making
money, I'm starting my boy in a safe, useful life; have you many year
and a half babies in your practice that can beat Little Poll? I'm as
happy as it's humanly possible for me to be without Mother, and Polly,
and Nancy Ellen. Mother used always to say that when death struck a
family it seldom stopped until it took three. That was my experience,
and saving Adam and Little Poll, it took my three dearest; but the
separation isn't going to be so very long. If I were you I wouldn't
worry about me, Robert. There are many women in the world willing to
pay for your consideration; save it for them."</p>
<p>"Kate, I'm sorry I said anything," he said hastily. "I wouldn't offend
you purposely, you know."</p>
<p>Kate looked at him in surprise. "But I'm not offended," she said,
snapping an ear and reaching for another. "I am merely telling you!
Don't give me a thought! I'm all right! If you'll save me an hour the
next time Little Poll has a tooth coming through, you'll have
completely earned my gratitude. Tell Agatha I'll come as soon as I
finish my evening work."</p>
<p>That was clearly a dismissal, for Kate glancing across the field toward
Adam, saw that he had advanced to a new shock, so she began husking
faster than before.</p>
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