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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">XV</span></h2>
<p id="p0275"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Otto Fuchs</span></span> got
back from Black Hawk at noon the next day. He reported that the
coroner would reach the Shimerdas’ sometime that afternoon, but
the missionary priest was at the other end of his parish, a hundred
miles away, and the trains were not running. Fuchs had got a few
hours’ sleep at the livery barn in town, but he was afraid the
gray gelding had strained himself. Indeed, he was never the same horse
afterward. That long trip through the deep snow had taken all the
endurance out of him.</p>
<p id="p0276">Fuchs brought home with him a stranger, a young
Bohemian who had taken a homestead near Black Hawk, and who came on
his only horse to help his fellow-countrymen in their trouble. That
was the first time I ever saw Anton Jelinek. He was a strapping young
fellow in the early twenties then, handsome, warm-hearted, and full of
life, and he came to us like a miracle in the midst of that grim
business. I remember exactly how he strode into our kitchen in his
felt boots and long
wolfskin coat, his eyes and cheeks bright with the cold. At sight of
grandmother, he snatched off his fur cap, greeting her in a deep,
rolling voice which seemed older than he.</p>
<p id="p0277">“I want to thank you very much,
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Burden, for that you are so kind to poor strangers
from my kawn-tree.”</p>
<p id="p0278">He did not hesitate like a farmer boy, but looked one
eagerly in the eye when he spoke. Everything about him was warm and
spontaneous. He said he would have come to see the Shimerdas before,
but he had hired out to husk corn all the fall, and since winter began
he had been going to the school by the mill, to learn English, along
with the little children. He told me he had a nice
“lady-teacher” and that he liked to go to school.</p>
<p id="p0279">At dinner grandfather talked to Jelinek more than he
usually did to strangers.</p>
<p id="p0280">“Will they be much disappointed because we
cannot get a priest?” he asked.</p>
<p id="p0281">Jelinek looked serious. “Yes, sir, that is very
bad for them. Their father has done a great sin,” he looked
straight at grandfather. “Our Lord has said that.”</p>
<p id="p0282">Grandfather seemed to like his frankness. “We
believe that, too, Jelinek. But we believe
that <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda’s soul will come to its Creator
as well off without a priest. We believe that Christ is our only
intercessor.”</p>
<p id="p0283">The young man shook his head. “I know how you
think. My teacher at the school has explain. But I have seen too much.
I believe in prayer for the dead. I have seen too much.”</p>
<p id="p0284">We asked him what he meant.</p>
<p id="p0285">He glanced around the table. “You want I shall
tell you? When I was a little boy like this one, I begin to help the
priest at the altar. I make my first communion very young; what the
Church teach seem plain to me. By ’n’ by war-times come,
when the Austrians
fight us. We have very many soldiers in camp near my village, and the
cholera break out in that camp, and the men die like flies. All day
long our priest go about there to give the Sacrament to dying men, and
I go with him to carry the vessels with the Holy Sacrament. Everybody
that go near that camp catch the sickness but me and the priest. But
we have no sickness, we have no fear, because we carry that blood and
that body of Christ, and it preserve us.” He paused, looking at
grandfather. “That I know, <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Burden, for it
happened to myself. All the soldiers know,
too. When we walk along the road, the old priest and me, we meet all
the time soldiers marching and officers on horse. All those officers,
when they see what I carry under the cloth, pull up their horses and
kneel down on the ground in the road until we pass. So I feel very bad
for my kawntree-man to die without the Sacrament, and to die in a bad
way for his soul, and I feel sad for his family.”</p>
<p id="p0286">We had listened attentively. It was impossible not to
admire his frank, manly faith.</p>
<p id="p0287">“I am always glad to meet a young man who
thinks seriously about these things,” said grandfather,
“and I would never be the one to say you were not in God’s
care when you were among the soldiers.”</p>
<p id="p0288">After dinner it was decided that young Jelinek should
hook our two strong black farmhorses to the scraper and break a road
through to the Shimerdas’, so that a wagon could go when it was
necessary. Fuchs, who was the only cabinet-maker in the neighborhood,
was set to work on a coffin.</p>
<p id="p0289">Jelinek put on his long wolfskin coat, and when we
admired it, he told us that he had shot and skinned the coyotes, and
the young man who “batched” with him, Jan Bouska,
who had been a fur-worker in Vienna, made the coat. From the windmill
I watched Jelinek come out of the barn with the blacks, and work his
way up the hillside toward the cornfield. Sometimes he was completely
hidden by the clouds of snow that rose about him; then he and the
horses would emerge black and shining.</p>
<p id="p0290">Our heavy carpenter’s bench had to be brought
from the barn and carried down into the kitchen. Fuchs selected boards
from a pile of planks grandfather had hauled out from town in the fall
to make a new floor for the oats bin. When at last the lumber and
tools were assembled, and the doors were closed again and the cold
drafts shut out, grandfather rode away to meet the coroner at the
Shimerdas’, and Fuchs took off his coat and settled down to
work. I sat on his work-table and watched him. He did not touch his
tools at first, but figured for a long while on a piece of paper, and
measured the planks and made marks on them. While he was thus engaged,
he whistled softly to himself, or teasingly pulled at his half-ear.
Grandmother moved about quietly, so as not to disturb him. At last he
folded his ruler and turned a cheerful face to us.</p>
<p id="p0291">“The hardest part of my job’s
done,” he announced. “It’s the head end of it that
comes hard with me, especially when I’m out of practice. The
last time I made one of these, <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Burden,” he
continued, as he sorted and tried his chisels, “was for a fellow
in the Black Tiger mine, up above Silverton, Colorado. The mouth of
that mine goes right into the face of the cliff, and they used to put
us in a bucket and run us over on a trolley and shoot us into the
shaft. The bucket traveled across a box cañon three hundred
feet deep, and about a third full of water. Two Swedes had fell out of
that bucket once, and hit the water, feet down. If you’ll
believe it, they went to work the next day. You can’t kill a
Swede. But in my time a little Eyetalian tried the high dive, and it
turned out different with him. We was snowed in then, like we are now,
and I happened to be the only man in camp that could make a coffin for
him. It’s a handy thing to know, when you knock about like
I’ve done.”</p>
<p id="p0292">“We’d be hard put to it now, if you did
n’t know, Otto,” grandmother said.</p>
<p id="p0293">“Yes, ’m,” Fuchs admitted with
modest pride. “So few folks does know how to make
a good tight box that’ll turn water. I sometimes wonder if
there’ll be anybody about to do it for me. However, I’m
not at all particular that way.”</p>
<p id="p0294">All afternoon, wherever one went in the house, one
could hear the panting wheeze of the saw or the pleasant purring of
the plane. They were such cheerful noises, seeming to promise new
things for living people: it was a pity that those freshly planed pine
boards were to be put underground so soon. The lumber was hard to work
because it was full of frost, and the boards gave off a sweet smell of
pine woods, as the heap of yellow shavings grew higher and higher. I
wondered why Fuchs had not stuck to cabinet-work, he settled down to
it with such ease and content. He handled the tools as if he liked the
feel of them; and when he planed, his hands went back and forth over
the boards in an eager, beneficent way as if he were blessing them. He
broke out now and then into German hymns, as if this occupation
brought back old times to him.</p>
<p id="p0295">At four o’clock <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Bushy, the
postmaster, with another neighbor who lived east of us, stopped in to
get warm. They were on their
way to the Shimerdas’. The news of what had happened over there
had somehow got abroad through the snow-blocked country. Grandmother
gave the visitors sugar-cakes and hot coffee. Before these callers
were gone, the brother of the Widow Steavens, who lived on the Black
Hawk road, drew up at our door, and after him came the father of the
German family, our nearest neighbors on the south. They dismounted and
joined us in the dining-room. They were all eager for any details
about the suicide, and they were greatly concerned as to where
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda would be buried. The nearest Catholic
cemetery was at Black Hawk, and it might be weeks before a wagon could
get so far. Besides, <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Bushy and grandmother were sure
that a man who had killed himself could not be buried in a Catholic
graveyard. There was a burying-ground over by the Norwegian church,
west of Squaw Creek; perhaps the Norwegians would take
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda in.</p>
<p id="p0296">After our visitors rode away in single file over the
hill, we returned to the kitchen. Grandmother began to make the icing
for a chocolate cake, and Otto again filled the house with the
exciting, expectant song of the plane.
One pleasant thing about this time was that everybody talked more than
usual. I had never heard the postmaster say anything but “Only
papers, to-day,” or, “I’ve got a sackful of mail for
ye,” until this afternoon. Grandmother always talked, dear
woman; to herself or to the Lord, if there was no one else to listen;
but grandfather was naturally taciturn, and Jake and Otto were often
so tired after supper that I used to feel as if I were surrounded by a
wall of silence. Now every one seemed eager to talk. That afternoon
Fuchs told me story after story; about the Black Tiger mine, and about
violent deaths and casual buryings, and the queer fancies of dying
men. You never really knew a man, he said, until you saw him die. Most
men were game, and went without a grudge.</p>
<p id="p0297">The postmaster, going home, stopped to say that
grandfather would bring the coroner back with him to spend the night.
The officers of the Norwegian church, he told us, had held a meeting
and decided that the Norwegian graveyard could not extend its
hospitality to <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda.</p>
<p id="p0298">Grandmother was indignant. “If these foreigners
are so clannish, <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Bushy, we’ll have
to have an American graveyard that will be more liberal-minded.
I’ll get right after Josiah to start one in the spring. If
anything was to happen to me, I don’t want the Norwegians
holding inquisitions over me to see whether I’m good enough to
be laid amongst ’em.”</p>
<p id="p0299">Soon grandfather returned, bringing with him Anton
Jelinek, and that important person, the coroner. He was a mild,
flurried old man, a Civil War veteran, with one sleeve hanging empty.
He seemed to find this case very perplexing, and said if it had not
been for grandfather he would have sworn out a warrant against
Krajiek. “The way he acted, and the way his axe fit the wound,
was enough to convict any man.”</p>
<p id="p0300">Although it was perfectly clear that <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span>
Shimerda had killed himself, Jake and the coroner thought something
ought to be done to Krajiek because he behaved like a guilty man. He
was badly frightened, certainly, and perhaps he even felt some
stirrings of remorse for his indifference to the old man’s
misery and loneliness.</p>
<p id="p0301">At supper the men ate like vikings, and the chocolate
cake, which I had hoped would linger on until to-morrow in a mutilated
condition, disappeared on the second round. They talked excitedly
about where they should bury <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda; I gathered
that the neighbors were all disturbed and shocked about something. It
developed that <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Shimerda and Ambrosch wanted the old
man buried on the southwest corner of their own land; indeed, under
the very stake that marked the corner. Grandfather had explained to
Ambrosch that some day, when the country was put under fence and the
roads were confined to section lines, two roads would cross exactly on
that corner. But Ambrosch only said, “It makes no
matter.”</p>
<p id="p0302">Grandfather asked Jelinek whether in the old country
there was some superstition to the effect that a suicide must be
buried at the cross-roads.</p>
<p id="p0303">Jelinek said he did n’t know; he seemed to
remember hearing there had once been such a custom in Bohemia.
“<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Shimerda is made up her mind,” he
added. “I try to persuade her, and say it looks bad for her to
all the neighbors; but she say so it must be. ‘There I will bury
him, if I dig the grave myself,’ she say. I have to promise her
I help Ambrosch make the grave to-morrow.”</p>
<p id="p0304">Grandfather smoothed his beard and looked judicial.
“I don’t know whose wish should decide the matter, if not
hers. But if she thinks she will live to see the people of this
country ride over that old man’s head, she is
mistaken.”</p>
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