<div><span class='pageno' title='144' id='Page_144'></span><h1>IX</h1></div>
<p class='pindent'>Dirk was eight; Little Sobig DeJong, in a suit
made of bean-sacking sewed together by his
mother. A brown blond boy with mosquito
bites on his legs and his legs never still. Nothing of
the dreamer about this lad. The one-room schoolhouse
of Selina’s day had been replaced by a two-story
brick structure, very fine, of which High Prairie was
vastly proud. The rusty iron stove had been dethroned
by a central heater. Dirk went to school
from October until June. Pervus protested that this
was foolish. The boy could be of great help in the
fields from the beginning of April to the first of November,
but Selina fought savagely for his schooling,
and won.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Reading and writing and figgering is what a farmer
is got to know,” Pervus argued. “The rest is all foolishness.
Constantinople is the capital of Turkey he
studies last night and uses good oil in the lamp. What
good does it do a truck farmer when he knows Constantinople
is the capital of Turkey? That don’t help
him raise turnips.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Sobig isn’t a truck farmer.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, he will be pretty soon. Time I was fifteen
I was running our place.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Verbally Selina did not combat this. But within
her every force was gathering to fight it when the time
should come. Her Sobig a truck farmer, a slave to
the soil, bent by it, beaten by it, blasted by it, so that
he, in time, like the other men of High Prairie, would
take on the very look of the rocks and earth among
which they toiled!</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dirk, at eight, was a none too handsome child, considering
his father and mother—or his father and
mother as they had been. He had, though, a “different”
look. His eyelashes were too long for a boy.
Wasted, Selina said as she touched them with a fond
forefinger, when a girl would have been so glad of
them. He had developed, too, a slightly aquiline
nose, probably a long-jump inheritance from some
Cromwellian rapscallion of the English Peakes of a
past century. It was not until he was seventeen or
eighteen that he was to metamorphose suddenly into a
graceful and aristocratic youngster with an indefinable
look about him of distinction and actual elegance. It
was when Dirk was thirty that Peter Peel the English
tailor (of Michigan Avenue north) said he was the
only man in Chicago who could wear English clothes
without having them look like Halsted Street. Dirk
probably appeared a little startled at that, as well he
might, west Halsted Street having loomed up so large
in his background.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina was a farm woman now, nearing thirty. The
work rode her as it had ridden Maartje Pool. In the
DeJong yard there was always a dado of washing,
identical with the one that had greeted Selina’s eye
when first she drove into the Pool yard years before.
Faded overalls, a shirt, socks, a boy’s drawers grotesquely
patched and mended, towels of rough sacking.
She, too, rose at four, snatched up shapeless garments,
invested herself with them, seized her great coil of
fine cloudy hair, twisted it into a utilitarian knob and
skewered it with a hairpin from which the varnish had
long departed, leaving it a dull gray; thrust her slim
feet into shapeless shoes, dabbed her face with cold
water, hurried to the kitchen stove. The work was
always at her heels, its breath hot on her neck. Baskets
of mending piled up, threatened to overwhelm
her. Overalls, woollen shirts, drawers, socks. Socks!
They lay coiled and twisted in an old market basket.
Sometimes as she sat late at night mending them, in and
out, in and out, with quick fierce stabs of the needle in
her work-scarred hand, they seemed to writhe and
squirm and wriggle horribly, like snakes. One of her
bad dreams was that in which she saw herself overwhelmed,
drowned, swallowed up by a huge welter and
boiling of undarned, unmended nightshirts, drawers,
socks, aprons, overalls.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Seeing her thus one would have thought that the
Selina Peake of the wine-red cashmere, the fun-loving
disposition, the high-spirited courage, had departed
forever. But these things still persisted. For that
matter, even the wine-red cashmere clung to existence.
So hopelessly old-fashioned now as to be almost picturesque,
it hung in Selina’s closet like a rosy memory.
Sometimes when she came upon it in an orgy of cleaning
she would pass her rough hands over its soft folds and
by that magic process Mrs. Pervus DeJong vanished
in a pouf and in her place was the girl Selina Peake
perched a-tiptoe on a soap-box in Adam Ooms’s hall
while all High Prairie, open-mouthed, looked on as the
impecunious Pervus DeJong threw ten hard-earned
dollars at her feet. In thrifty moments she had often
thought of cutting the wine-red cashmere into rag-rug
strips; of dyeing it a sedate brown or black and remodelling
it for a much-needed best dress; of fashioning
it into shirts for Dirk. But she never did.</p>
<p class='pindent'>It would be gratifying to be able to record that in
these eight or nine years Selina had been able to work
wonders on the DeJong farm; that the house glittered,
the crops thrived richly, the barn housed sleek cattle.
But it could not be truthfully said. True, she had
achieved some changes, but at the cost of terrific effort.
A less indomitable woman would have sunk into apathy
years before. The house had a coat of paint—lead-gray,
because it was cheapest. There were two horses—the
second a broken-down old mare, blind in one eye,
that they had picked up for five dollars after it had
been turned out to pasture for future sale as horse-carcass.
Piet Pon, the mare’s owner who drove a
milk route, had hoped to get three dollars for the animal,
dead. A month of rest and pasturage restored
the mare to usefulness. Selina had made the bargain,
and Pervus had scolded her roundly for it. Now he
drove the mare to market, saw that she pulled more
sturdily than the other horse, but had never retracted.
It was no quality of meanness in him. Pervus merely
was like that.</p>
<p class='pindent'>But the west sixteen! That had been Selina’s most
heroic achievement. Her plan, spoken of to Pervus
in the first month of her marriage, had taken years to
mature; even now was but a partial triumph. She had
even descended to nagging.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why don’t we put in asparagus?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Asparagus!” considered something of a luxury,
and rarely included in the High Prairie truck farmer’s
products. “And wait three years for a crop!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes, but then we’d have it. And a plantation’s
good for ten years, once it’s started.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Plantation! What is that? An asparagus plantation?
Asparagus I’ve always heard of in beds.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That’s the old idea. I’ve been reading up on it.
The new way is to plant asparagus in rows, the way
you would rhubarb or corn. Plant six feet apart, and
four acres anyway.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He was not even sufficiently interested to be amused.
“Yeh, four acres where? In the clay land, maybe.”
He did laugh then, if the short bitter sound he made
could be construed as indicating mirth. “Out of a
book.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“In the clay land,” Selina urged, crisply. “And out
of a book. Every farmer in High Prairie raises cabbage,
turnips, carrots, beets, beans, onions, and they’re
better quality than ours. That west sixteen isn’t bringing
you anything, so what difference does it make if I
am wrong! Let me put my own money into it, I’ve
thought it all out, Pervus. Please. We’ll under-drain
the clay soil. Just five or six acres, to start.
We’ll manure it heavily—as much as we can afford—and
then for two years we’ll plant potatoes there.
We’ll put in our asparagus plants the third spring—one-year-old
seedlings. I’ll promise to keep it
weeded—Dirk and I. He’ll be a big boy by that
time.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How much manure?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, twenty to forty tons to the acre——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He shook his head in slow Dutch opposition.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“—but if you’ll let me use humus I won’t need
that much. Let me try it, Pervus. Let me try.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>In the end she had her way, partly because Pervus
was too occupied with his own endless work to oppose
her; and partly because he was, in his undemonstrative
way, still in love with his vivacious, nimble-witted, high-spirited
wife, though to her frantic goadings and proddings
he was as phlegmatically oblivious as an elephant
to a pin prick. Year in, year out, he maintained his
slow-plodding gait, content to do as his father had
done before him; content to let the rest of High Prairie
pass him on the road. He rarely showed temper.
Selina often wished he would. Sometimes, in a sort
of hysteria of hopelessness, she would rush at him,
ruffle up his thick coarse hair, now beginning to be
threaded with gray; shake his great impassive shoulders.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Pervus! Pervus! if you’d only get mad—real mad!
Fly into a rage. Break things! Beat me! Sell the
farm! Run away!” She didn’t mean it, of course.
It was the vital and constructive force in her resenting
his apathy, his acceptance of things as they were.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What is that for dumb talk?” He would regard
her solemnly through a haze of smoke, his pipe making
a maddening putt-putt of sleepy content.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Though she worked as hard as any woman in High
Prairie, had as little, dressed as badly, he still regarded
her as a luxury; an exquisite toy which, in a
moment of madness, he had taken for himself. “Little
Lina”—tolerantly, fondly. You would have
thought that he spoiled her, pampered her. Perhaps
he even thought he did.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When she spoke of modern farming, of books on
vegetable gardening, he came very near to angry impatience,
though his amusement at the idea saved him
from it. College agricultural courses he designated
as foolishness. Of Linnæus he had never heard.
Burbank was, for him, non-existent, and he thought
head-lettuce a silly fad. Selina sometimes talked of
raising this last named green as a salad, with marketing
value. Everyone knew that regular lettuce was
leaf lettuce which you ate with vinegar and a sprinkling
of sugar, or with hot bacon and fat sopping its wilted
leaves.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He said, too, she spoiled the boy. Back of this may
have been a lurking jealousy. “Always the boy; always
the boy,” he would mutter when Selina planned
for the child; shielded him; took his part (sometimes
unjustly). “You will make a softy of him with your
always babying.” So from time to time he undertook
to harden Dirk. The result was generally disastrous.
In one case the process terminated in what was perilously
near to tragedy. It was during the midsummer
school vacation. Dirk was eight. The woody slopes
about High Prairie and the sand hills beyond were covered
with the rich blue of huckleberries. They were
dead ripe. One shower would spoil them. Geertje
and Jozina Pool were going huckleberrying and had
consented to take Dirk—a concession, for he was only
eight and considered, at their advanced age, a tagger.
But the last of the tomatoes on the DeJong place were
also ripe and ready for picking. They hung, firm,
juicy scarlet globes, prime for the Chicago market.
Pervus meant to haul them to town that day. And
this was work in which the boy could help. To Dirk’s,
“Can I go berrying? The huckleberries are ripe.
Geert and Jozina are going,” his father shook a negative
head.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes, well tomatoes are ripe, too, and that comes
before huckleberries. There’s the whole patch to
clean up this afternoon by four.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina looked up, glanced at Pervus’s face, at the
boy’s, said nothing. The look said, “He’s a child.
Let him go, Pervus.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dirk flushed with disappointment. They were at
breakfast. It was barely daybreak. He looked
down at his plate, his lip quivered, his long lashes lay
heavy on his cheeks. Pervus got up, wiped his mouth
with the back of his hand. There was a hard day
ahead of him. “Time I was your age, Sobig, I would
think it was an easy day when all I had to do was pick
a tomato patch clean.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Dirk looked up then, quickly. “If I get it all picked
can I go?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s a day’s job.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But if I do pick the patch—if I get through early
enough—can I go?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>In his mind’s eye Pervus saw the tomato patch, more
scarlet than green, so thick hung the fruit upon the
bushes. He smiled. “Yes. You pick them tomatoes
and you can go. But no throwing into the baskets and
getting ’em all softed up.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Secretly Selina resolved to help him, but she knew
that this could not be until afternoon. The berry
patches were fully three miles from the DeJong farm.
Dirk would have to finish by three o’clock, at the latest,
to get there. Selina had her morning full with
the housework.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He was in the patch before six; fell to work, feverishly.
He picked, heaped the fruit into hillocks. The
scarlet patches glowed, blood-red, in the sun. The
child worked like a machine, with an economy of gesture
calculated to the fraction of an inch. He picked,
stooped, heaped the mounds in the sultry heat of the
August morning. The sweat stood out on his forehead,
darkened his blond hair, slid down his cheeks that
were pink, then red, then tinged with a purplish tone
beneath the summer tan. When dinner time came he
gulped a dozen alarming mouthfuls and was out again
in the broiling noonday glare. Selina left her dinner
dishes unwashed on the table to help him, but Pervus
intervened. “The boy’s got to do it alone,” he insisted.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“He’ll never do it, Pervus. He’s only eight.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Time I was eight——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He actually had cleared the patch by three. He
went to the well and took a huge draught of water;
drank two great dippersful, lipping it down thirstily,
like a colt. It was cool and delicious beyond belief.
Then he sloshed a third and a fourth dipperful over his
hot head and neck, took an empty lard pail for berries
and was off down the dusty road and across the fields,
running fleetly in spite of the quivering heat waves
that seemed to dance between fiery heaven and
parched earth. Selina stood in the kitchen doorway
a moment, watching him. He looked very small and
determined.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He found Geertje and Jozina, surfeited with fruit,
berry stained and bramble torn, lolling languidly in
Kuyper’s woods. He began to pick the plump blue
balls but he ate them listlessly, though thriftily, because
that was what he had come for and his father
was Dutch. When Geertje and Jozina prepared to
leave not an hour after he had come he was ready to
go, yet curiously loath to move. His lard pail was
half filled. He trotted home laboriously through the
late afternoon, feeling giddy and sick, with horrid
pains in his head. That night he tossed in delirium,
begged not to be made lie down, came perilously near
to death.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina’s heart was an engine pumping terror, hate,
agony through her veins. Hate for her husband who
had done this to the boy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You did it! You did it! He’s a baby and you
made him work like a man. If anything happens to
him! If anything happens to him!——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, I didn’t think the kid would go for to do it.
I didn’t ask him to pick and then go berrying. He said
could he and I said yes. If I had said no it would
have been wrong, too, maybe.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re all alike. Look at Roelf Pool! They tried
to make a farmer of him, too. And ruined him.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What’s the matter with farming? What’s the
matter with a farmer? You said farm work was
grand work, once.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I did. It is. It could be. It—— Oh, what’s
the use of talking like that now! Look at him! Don’t,
Sobig! Don’t, baby. How hot his head is! Listen!
Is that Jan with the doctor? No. No, it isn’t.
Mustard plasters. Are you sure that’s the right
thing?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>It was before the day of the omnipresent farmhouse
telephone and the farmhouse Ford. Jan’s trip to
High Prairie village for the doctor and back to the
farm meant a delay of hours. But within two days
the boy was again about, rather pale, but otherwise
seeming none the worse for his experience.</p>
<p class='pindent'>That was Pervus. Thrifty, like his kind, but unlike
them in shrewdness. Penny wise, pound foolish;
a characteristic that brought him his death. September,
usually a succession of golden days and hazy
opalescent evenings on the Illinois prairie land, was
disastrously cold and rainy that year. Pervus’s great
frame was racked by rheumatism. He was forty
now, and over, still of magnificent physique, so that to
see him suffering gave Selina the pangs of pity that one
has at sight of the very strong or the very weak in pain.
He drove the weary miles to market three times a
week, for September was the last big month of the
truck farmer’s season. After that only the hardier
plants survived the frosts—the cabbages, beets, turnips,
carrots, pumpkins, squash. The roads in places
were morasses of mud into which the wheels were
likely to sink to the hubs. Once stuck you had often
to wait for a friendly passing team to haul you out.
Pervus would start early, detour for miles in order to
avoid the worst places. Jan was too stupid, too old,
too inexpert to be trusted with the Haymarket trading.
Selina would watch Pervus drive off down the
road in the creaking old market wagon, the green stuff
protected by canvas, but Pervus wet before ever he
climbed into the seat. There never seemed to be
enough waterproof canvas for both.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Pervus, take it off those sacks and put it over your
shoulders.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That’s them white globe onions. The last of ’em.
I can get a fancy price for them but not if they’re all
wetted down.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Don’t sleep on the wagon to-night, Pervus. Sleep
in. Be sure. It saves in the end. You know the
last time you were laid up for a week.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’ll clear. Breaking now over there in the west.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The clouds did break late in the afternoon; the false
sun came out hot and bright. Pervus slept out in the
Haymarket, for the night was close and humid. At
midnight the lake wind sprang up, cold and treacherous,
and with it came the rain again. Pervus was
drenched by morning, chilled, thoroughly miserable.
A hot cup of coffee at four and another at ten when
the rush of trading was over stimulated him but little.
When he reached home it was mid-afternoon. Beneath
the bronze wrought by the wind and sun of many
years the gray-white of sickness shone dully, like silver
under enamel. Selina put him to bed against his
half-hearted protests. Banked him with hot water
jars, a hot iron wrapped in flannel at his feet. But
later came fever instead of the expected relief of perspiration.
Ill though he was he looked more ruddy
and hale than most men in health; but suddenly Selina,
startled, saw black lines like gashes etched under his
eyes, about his mouth, in his cheeks.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In a day when pneumonia was known as lung fever
and in a locality that advised closed windows and hot
air as a remedy, Pervus’s battle was lost before the
doctor’s hooded buggy was seen standing in the yard
for long hours through the night. Toward morning
the doctor had Jan Steen stable the horse. It was a
sultry night, with flashes of heat lightning in the west.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I should think if you opened the windows,” Selina
said to the old High Prairie doctor over and over, emboldened
by terror, “it would help him to breathe. He—he’s
breathing so—he’s breathing so——” She
could not bring herself to say so terribly. The sound
of the words wrung her as did the sound of his terrible
breathing.</p>
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