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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">XII</span></h2>
<p id="p0585"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">After</span></span>
Ántonia went to live with the Cutters, she seemed to care about
nothing but picnics and parties and having a good time. When she was
not going to a dance, she sewed until midnight. Her new clothes were
the subject of caustic comment. Under Lena’s direction she
copied <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener’s new party dress and
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Smith’s street costume so ingeniously in cheap
materials that those ladies were greatly annoyed, and
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Cutter, who was jealous of them, was secretly
pleased.</p>
<p id="p0586">Tony wore gloves now, and high-heeled shoes and
feathered bonnets, and she went downtown nearly every afternoon with
Tiny and Lena and the Marshalls’ Norwegian Anna. We High-School
boys used to linger on the playground at the afternoon recess to watch
them as they came tripping down the hill along the board sidewalk, two
and two. They were growing prettier every day, but as they passed us,
I used to think with pride that Ántonia, like Snow-White in the
fairy tale, was still “fairest of them all.”</p>
<p id="p0587">Being a Senior now, I got away from school early.
Sometimes I overtook the girls downtown and coaxed them into the
ice-cream parlor, where they would sit chattering and laughing,
telling me all the news from the country. I remember how angry Tiny
Soderball made me one afternoon. She declared she had heard
grandmother was going to make a Baptist preacher of me. “I guess
you’ll have to stop dancing and wear a white necktie then.
Won’t he look funny, girls?”</p>
<p id="p0588">Lena laughed. “You’ll have to hurry up,
Jim. If you’re going to be a preacher, I want you to marry me.
You must promise to marry us all, and then baptize the
babies.”</p>
<p id="p0589">Norwegian Anna, always dignified, looked at her
reprovingly.</p>
<p id="p0590">“Baptists don’t believe in christening
babies, do they, Jim?”</p>
<p id="p0591">I told her I did n’t know what they believed,
and did n’t care, and that I certainly was n’t going to be
a preacher.</p>
<p id="p0592">“That’s too bad,” Tiny simpered.
She was in a teasing mood. “You’d make such a good one.
You’re so studious. Maybe you’d like to be a professor.
You used to teach Tony, did n’t you?”</p>
<p id="p0593">Ántonia broke in. “I’ve set my
heart on Jim being a doctor. You’d be good with sick people,
Jim. Your grandmother’s trained you up so nice. My papa always
said you were an awful smart boy.”</p>
<p id="p0594">I said I was going to be whatever I pleased.
“Won’t you be surprised, Miss Tiny, if I turn out to be a
regular devil of a fellow?”</p>
<p id="p0595">They laughed until a glance from Norwegian Anna
checked them; the High-School Principal had just come into the front
part of the shop to buy bread for supper. Anna knew the whisper was
going about that I was a sly one. People said there must be something
queer about a boy who showed no interest in girls of his own age, but
who could be lively enough when he was with Tony and Lena or the three
Marys.</p>
<p id="p0596">The enthusiasm for the dance, which the Vannis had
kindled, did not at once die out. After the tent left town, the Euchre
Club became the Owl Club, and gave dances in the Masonic Hall once a
week. I was invited to join, but declined. I was moody and restless
that winter, and tired of the people I saw every day. Charley Harling
was already at
Annapolis, while I was still sitting in Black Hawk, answering to my
name at roll-call every morning, rising from my desk at the sound of a
bell and marching out like the grammar-school children.
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Harling was a little cool toward me, because I
continued to champion Ántonia. What was there for me to do
after supper? Usually I had learned next day’s lessons by the
time I left the school building, and I could n’t sit still and
read forever.</p>
<p id="p0597">In the evening I used to prowl about, hunting for
diversion. There lay the familiar streets, frozen with snow or liquid
with mud. They led to the houses of good people who were putting the
babies to bed, or simply sitting still before the parlor stove,
digesting their supper. Black Hawk had two saloons. One of them was
admitted, even by the church people, to be as respectable as a saloon
could be. Handsome Anton Jelinek, who had rented his homestead and
come to town, was the proprietor. In his saloon there were long tables
where the Bohemian and German farmers could eat the lunches they
brought from home while they drank their beer. Jelinek kept rye bread
on hand, and smoked fish and strong imported cheeses to please the
foreign
palate. I liked to drop into his bar-room and listen to the talk. But
one day he overtook me on the street and clapped me on the
shoulder.</p>
<p id="p0598">“Jim,” he said, “I am good friends
with you and I always like to see you. But you know how the church
people think about saloons. Your grandpa has always treated me fine,
and I don’t like to have you come into my place, because I know
he don’t like it, and it puts me in bad with him.”</p>
<p id="p0599">So I was shut out of that.</p>
<p id="p0600">One could hang about the drug-store, and listen to
the old men who sat there every evening, talking politics and telling
raw stories. One could go to the cigar factory and chat with the old
German who raised canaries for sale, and look at his stuffed birds.
But whatever you began with him, the talk went back to taxidermy.
There was the depot, of course; I often went down to see the night
train come in, and afterward sat awhile with the disconsolate
telegrapher who was always hoping to be transferred to Omaha or
Denver, “where there was some life.” He was sure to bring
out his pictures of actresses and dancers. He got them with cigarette
coupons,
and nearly smoked himself to death to possess these desired forms and
faces. For a change, one could talk to the station agent; but he was
another malcontent; spent all his spare time writing letters to
officials requesting a transfer. He wanted to get back to Wyoming
where he could go trout-fishing on Sundays. He used to say
“there was nothing in life for him but trout streams, ever since
he’d lost his twins.”</p>
<p id="p0601">These were the distractions I had to choose from.
There were no other lights burning downtown after nine o’clock.
On starlight nights I used to pace up and down those long, cold
streets, scowling at the little, sleeping houses on either side, with
their storm-windows and covered back porches. They were flimsy
shelters, most of them poorly built of light wood, with spindle
porch-posts horribly mutilated by the turning-lathe. Yet for all their
frailness, how much jealousy and envy and unhappiness some of them
managed to contain! The life that went on in them seemed to me made up
of evasions and negations; shifts to save cooking, to save washing and
cleaning, devices to propitiate the tongue of gossip. This guarded
mode of existence was
like living under a tyranny. People’s speech, their voices,
their very glances, became furtive and repressed. Every individual
taste, every natural appetite, was bridled by caution. The people
asleep in those houses, I thought, tried to live like the mice in
their own kitchens; to make no noise, to leave no trace, to slip over
the surface of things in the dark. The growing piles of ashes and
cinders in the back yards were the only evidence that the wasteful,
consuming process of life went on at all. On Tuesday nights the Owl
Club danced; then there was a little stir in the streets, and here and
there one could see a lighted window until midnight. But the next
night all was dark again.</p>
<p id="p0602">After I refused to join “the Owls,” as
they were called, I made a bold resolve to go to the Saturday night
dances at Firemen’s Hall. I knew it would be useless to acquaint
my elders with any such plan. Grandfather did n’t approve of
dancing anyway; he would only say that if I wanted to dance I could go
to the Masonic Hall, among “the people we knew.” It was
just my point that I saw altogether too much of the people we knew.</p>
<p id="p0603">My bedroom was on the ground floor, and as
I studied there, I had a stove in it. I used to retire to my room
early on Saturday night, change my shirt and collar and put on my
Sunday coat. I waited until all was quiet and the old people were
asleep, then raised my window, climbed out, and went softly through
the yard. The first time I deceived my grandparents I felt rather
shabby, perhaps even the second time, but I soon ceased to think about
it.</p>
<p id="p0604">The dance at the Firemen’s Hall was the one
thing I looked forward to all the week. There I met the same people I
used to see at the Vannis’ tent. Sometimes there were Bohemians
from Wilber, or German boys who came down on the afternoon freight
from Bismarck. Tony and Lena and Tiny were always there, and the three
Bohemian Marys, and the Danish laundry girls.</p>
<p id="p0605">The four Danish girls lived with the laundryman and
his wife in their house behind the laundry, with a big garden where
the clothes were hung out to dry. The laundryman was a kind, wise old
fellow, who paid his girls well, looked out for them, and gave them a
good home. He told me once that his own daughter died just as she was
getting old enough to
help her mother, and that he had been “trying to make up for it
ever since.” On summer afternoons he used to sit for hours on
the sidewalk in front of his laundry, his newspaper lying on his knee,
watching his girls through the big open window while they ironed and
talked in Danish. The clouds of white dust that blew up the street,
the gusts of hot wind that withered his vegetable garden, never
disturbed his calm. His droll expression seemed to say that he had
found the secret of contentment. Morning and evening he drove about in
his spring wagon, distributing freshly ironed clothes, and collecting
bags of linen that cried out for his suds and sunny drying-lines. His
girls never looked so pretty at the dances as they did standing by the
ironing-board, or over the tubs, washing the fine pieces, their white
arms and throats bare, their cheeks bright as the brightest wild
roses, their gold hair moist with the steam or the heat and curling in
little damp spirals about their ears. They had not learned much
English, and were not so ambitious as Tony or Lena; but they were
kind, simple girls and they were always happy. When one danced with
them, one smelled their clean, freshly ironed clothes that
had been put away with rosemary leaves from <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span>
Jensen’s garden.</p>
<p id="p0606">There were never girls enough to go round at those
dances, but every one wanted a turn with Tony and Lena. Lena moved
without exertion, rather indolently, and her hand often accented the
rhythm softly on her partner’s shoulder. She smiled if one spoke
to her, but seldom answered. The music seemed to put her into a soft,
waking dream, and her violet-colored eyes looked sleepily and
confidingly at one from under her long lashes. When she sighed she
exhaled a heavy perfume of sachet powder. To dance “Home, Sweet
Home,” with Lena was like coming in with the tide. She danced
every dance like a waltz, and it was always the same waltz—the
waltz of coming home to something, of inevitable, fated return. After
a while one got restless under it, as one does under the heat of a
soft, sultry summer day.</p>
<p id="p0607">When you spun out into the floor with Tony, you did
n’t return to anything. You set out every time upon a new
adventure. I liked to schottische with her; she had so much spring and
variety, and was always putting in new steps and slides. She taught me
to
dance against and around the hard-and-fast beat of the music. If,
instead of going to the end of the railroad, old <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span>
Shimerda had stayed in New York and picked up a living with his
fiddle, how different Ántonia’s life might have been!</p>
<p id="p0608">Ántonia often went to the dances with Larry
Donovan, a passenger conductor who was a kind of professional
ladies’ man, as we said. I remember how admiringly all the boys
looked at her the night she first wore her velveteen dress, made like
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Gardener’s black velvet. She was lovely to
see, with her eyes shining, and her lips always a little parted when
she danced. That constant, dark color in her cheeks never changed.</p>
<p id="p0609">One evening when Donovan was out on his run,
Ántonia came to the hall with Norwegian Anna and her young man,
and that night I took her home. When we were in the
Cutter’s
yard, sheltered by the evergreens, I told her she must kiss me
good-night.</p>
<p id="p0610">“Why, sure, Jim.” A moment later she drew
her face away and whispered indignantly, “Why, Jim! You know you
ain’t right to kiss me like that. I’ll tell your
grandmother on you!”</p>
<p id="p0611">“Lena Lingard lets me kiss her,” I
retorted, “and I’m not half as fond of her as I am of
you.”</p>
<p id="p0612">“Lena does?” Tony gasped. “If
she’s up to any of her nonsense with you, I’ll scratch her
eyes out!” She took my arm again and we walked out of the gate
and up and down the sidewalk. “Now, don’t you go and be a
fool like some of these town boys. You’re not going to sit
around here and whittle store-boxes and tell stories all your life.
You are going away to school and make something of yourself. I’m
just awful proud of you. You won’t go and get mixed up with the
Swedes, will you?”</p>
<p id="p0613">“I don’t care anything about any of them
but you,” I said. “And you’ll always treat me like a
kid, I suppose.”</p>
<p id="p0614">She laughed and threw her arms around me. “I
expect I will, but you’re a kid I’m awful fond of, anyhow!
You can like me all you want to, but if I see you hanging round with
Lena much, I’ll go to your grandmother, as sure as your
name’s Jim Burden! Lena’s all right, only—well,
you know yourself she’s soft that way. She can’t help it.
It’s natural to her.”</p>
<p id="p0615">If she was proud of me, I was so proud of her
that I carried my head high as I emerged from the dark cedars and shut
the Cutters’ gate softly behind me. Her warm, sweet face, her
kind arms, and the true heart in her; she was, oh, she was still my
Ántonia! I looked with contempt at the dark, silent little
houses about me as I walked home, and thought of the stupid young men
who were asleep in some of them. I knew where the real women were,
though I was only a boy; and I would not be afraid of them, either!</p>
<p id="p0616">I hated to enter the still house when I went home
from the dances, and it was long before I could get to sleep. Toward
morning I used to have pleasant dreams: sometimes Tony and I were out
in the country, sliding down straw-stacks as we used to do; climbing
up the yellow mountains over and over, and slipping down the smooth
sides into soft piles of chaff.</p>
<p id="p0617">One dream I dreamed a great many times, and it was
always the same. I was in a harvest-field full of shocks, and I was
lying against one of them. Lena Lingard came across the stubble
barefoot, in a short skirt, with a curved reaping-hook in her hand,
and she was flushed like the dawn, with a kind of luminous rosiness
all about her. She sat down beside me, turned to
me with a soft sigh and said, “Now they are all gone, and I can
kiss you as much as I like.”</p>
<p id="p0618">I used to wish I could have this flattering dream
about Ántonia, but I never did.</p>
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