<h2> CHAPTER XII </h2>
<p>After the success of his corn cutting machine and the apparatus for
unloading coal cars that brought him a hundred thousand dollars in cash,
Hugh could not remain the isolated figure he had been all through the
first several years of his life in the Ohio community. From all sides men
reached out their hands to him: and more than one woman thought she would
like to be his wife. All men lead their lives behind a wall of
misunderstanding they themselves have built, and most men die in silence
and unnoticed behind the walls. Now and then a man, cut off from his
fellows by the peculiarities of his nature, becomes absorbed in doing
something that is impersonal, useful, and beautiful. Word of his
activities is carried over the walls. His name is shouted and is carried
by the wind into the tiny inclosure in which other men live and in which
they are for the most part absorbed in doing some petty task for the
furtherance of their own comfort. Men and women stop their complaining
about the unfairness and inequality of life and wonder about the man whose
name they have heard.</p>
<p>From Bidwell, Ohio, to farms all over the Middle West, Hugh McVey's name
had been carried. His machine for cutting corn was called the McVey
Corn-Cutter. The name was printed in white letters against a background of
red on the side of the machine. Farmer boys in the States of Indiana,
Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and all the great corn-growing States
saw it and in idle moments wondered what kind of man had invented the
machine they operated. A Cleveland newspaper man came to Bidwell and went
to Pickleville to see Hugh. He wrote a story telling of Hugh's early
poverty and his efforts to become an inventor. When the reporter talked to
Hugh he found the inventor so embarrassed and uncommunicative that he gave
up trying to get a story. Then he went to Steve Hunter who talked to him
for an hour. The story made Hugh a strikingly romantic figure. His people,
the story said, came out of the mountains of Tennessee, but they were not
poor whites. It was suggested that they were of the best English stock.
There was a tale of Hugh's having in his boyhood contrived some kind of an
engine that carried water from a valley to a mountain community; another
of his having seen a clock in a store in a Missouri town and of his having
later made a clock of wood for his parents; and a tale of his having gone
into the forest with his father's gun, shot a wild hog and carried it down
the mountain side on his shoulder in order to get money to buy school
books. After the tale was printed the advertising manager of the
corn-cutter factory got Hugh to go with him one day to Tom Butterworth's
farm. Many bushels of corn were brought out of the corn cribs and a great
mountain of corn was built on the ground at the edge of a field. Back of
the mountain of corn was a corn field just coming into tassel. Hugh was
told to climb up on the mountain and sit there. Then his picture was
taken. It was sent to newspapers all over the West with copies of the
biography cut from the Cleveland paper. Later both the picture and the
biography were used in the catalogue that described the McVey Corn-Cutter.</p>
<p>The cutting of corn and putting it in shocks against the time of the
husking is heavy work. In recent times it has come about that much of the
corn grown on mid-American prairie lands is not cut. The corn is left
standing in the fields, and men go through it in the late fall to pick the
yellow ears. The workers throw the corn over their shoulders into a wagon
driven by a boy, who follows them in their slow progress, and it is then
hauled away to the cribs. When a field has been picked, the cattle are
turned in and all winter they nibble at the dry corn blades and tramp the
stalks into the ground. All day long on the wide western prairies when the
gray fall days have come, you may see the men and the horses working their
way slowly through the fields. Like tiny insects they crawl across the
immense landscapes. After them in the late fall and in the winter when the
prairies are covered with snow, come the cattle. They are brought from the
far West in cattle cars and after they have nibbled the corn blades all
day, are taken to barns and stuffed to bursting with corn. When they are
fat they are sent to the great killing-pens in Chicago, the giant city of
the prairies. In the still fall nights, as you stand on prairie roads or
in the barnyard back of one of the farm houses, you may hear the rustling
of the dry corn blades and then the crash of the heavy bodies of the
beasts going forward as they nibble and trample the corn.</p>
<p>In earlier days the method of corn harvesting was different. There was
poetry in the operation then as there is now, but it was set to another
rhythm. When the corn was ripe men went into the fields with heavy corn
knives and cut the stalks of corn close to the ground. The stalks were cut
with the right hand swinging the corn knife and carried on the left arm.
All day a man carried a heavy load of the stalks from which yellow ears
hung down. When the load became unbearably heavy it was carried to the
shock, and when all the corn was cut in a certain area, the shock was made
secure by binding it with tarred rope or with a tough stalk twisted to
take the place of the rope. When the cutting was done the long rows of
stalks stood up in the fields like sentinels, and the men crawled off to
the farmhouses and to bed, utterly weary.</p>
<p>Hugh's machine took all of the heavier part of the work away. It cut the
corn near the ground and bound it into bundles that fell upon a platform.
Two men followed the machine, one to drive the horses and the other to
place the bundles of stalks against the shocks and to bind the completed
shocks. The men went along smoking their pipes and talking. The horses
stopped and the driver stared out over the prairies. His arms did not ache
with weariness and he had time to think. The wonder and mystery of the
wide open places got a little into his blood. At night when the work was
done and the cattle fed and made comfortable in the barns, he did not go
at once to bed but sometimes went out of his house and stood for a moment
under the stars.</p>
<p>This thing the brain of the son of a mountain man, the poor white of the
river town, had done for the people of the plains. The dreams he had tried
so hard to put away from him and that the New England woman Sarah Shepard
had told him would lead to his destruction had come to something. The
car-dumping apparatus, that had sold for two hundred thousand dollars, had
given Steve Hunter money to buy the plant-setting machine factory, and
with Tom Butterworth to start manufacturing the corn-cutters, had affected
the lives of fewer people, but it had carried the Missourian's name into
other places and had also made a new kind of poetry in railroad yards and
along rivers at the back of cities where ships are loaded. On city nights
as you lie in your houses you may hear suddenly a long reverberating roar.
It is a giant that has cleared his throat of a carload of coal. Hugh McVey
helped to free the giant. He is still doing it. In Bidwell, Ohio, he is
still at it, making new inventions, cutting the bands that have bound the
giant. He is one man who had not been swept aside from his purpose by the
complexity of life.</p>
<p>That, however, came near happening. After the coming of his success, a
thousand little voices began calling to him. The soft hands of women
reached out of the masses of people about him, out of the old dwellers and
new dwellers in the city that was growing up about the factories where his
machines were being made in ever increasing numbers. New houses were
constantly being built along Turner's Pike that led down to his workshop
at Pickleville. Beside Allie Mulberry a dozen mechanics were now employed
in his experimental shop. They helped Hugh with a new invention, a
hay-loading apparatus on which he was at work, and also made special tools
for use in the corn-cutter factory and the new bicycle factory. A dozen
new houses had been built in Pickleville itself. The wives of the
mechanics lived in the houses and occasionally one of them came to see her
husband at Hugh's shop. He found it less and less difficult to talk to
people. The workmen, themselves not given to the use of many words, did
not think his habitual silence peculiar. They were more skilled than Hugh
in the use of tools and thought it rather an accident that he had done
what they had not done. As he had grown rich by that road they also tried
their hand at inventions. One of them made a patent door hinge that Steve
sold for ten thousand dollars, keeping half the money for his services, as
he had done in the case of Hugh's car-dumping apparatus. At the noon hour
the men hurried to their houses to eat and then came back to loaf before
the factory and smoke their noonday pipes. They talked of money-making, of
the price of food stuffs, of the advisability of a man's buying a house on
the partial payment plan. Sometimes they talked of women and of their
adventures with women. Hugh sat by himself inside the door of the shop and
listened. At night after he had gone to bed he thought of what they had
said. He lived in a house belonging to a Mrs. McCoy, the widow of a
railroad section hand killed in a railroad accident, who had a daughter.
The daughter, Rose McCoy, taught a country school and most of the year was
away from home from Monday morning until late on Friday afternoon. Hugh
lay in bed thinking of what his workmen had said of women and heard the
old housekeeper moving about down stairs. Sometimes he got out of bed to
sit by an open window. Because she was the woman whose life touched his
most closely, he thought often of the school teacher. The McCoy house, a
small frame affair with a picket fence separating it from Turner's Pike,
stood with its back door facing the Wheeling Railroad. The section hands
on the railroad remembered their former fellow workman, Mike McCoy, and
wanted to be good to his widow. They sometimes dumped half decayed
railroad ties over the fence into a potato patch back of the house. At
night, when heavily loaded coal trains rumbled past, the brakemen heaved
large chunks of coal over the fence. The widow awoke whenever a train
passed. When one of the brakemen threw a chunk of coal he shouted and his
voice could be heard above the rumble of the coal cars. “That's for Mike,”
he cried. Sometimes one of the chunks knocked a picket out of the fence
and the next day Hugh put it back again. When the train had passed the
widow got out of bed and brought the coal into the house. “I don't want to
give the boys away by leaving it lying around in the daylight,” she
explained to Hugh. On Sunday mornings Hugh took a crosscut saw and cut the
railroad ties into lengths that would go into the kitchen stove. Slowly
his place in the McCoy household had become fixed, and when he received
the hundred thousand dollars and everybody, even the mother and daughter,
expected him to move, he did not do so. He tried unsuccessfully to get the
widow to take more money for his board and when that effort failed, life
in the McCoy household went as it had when he was a telegraph operator
receiving forty dollars a month.</p>
<p>In the spring or fall, as he sat by his window at night, and when the moon
came up and the dust in Turner's Pike was silvery white, Hugh thought of
Rose McCoy, sleeping in some farmer's house. It did not occur to him that
she might also be awake and thinking. He imagined her lying very still in
bed. The section hand's daughter was a slender woman of thirty with tired
blue eyes and red hair. Her skin had been heavily freckled in her youth
and her nose was still freckled. Although Hugh did not know it, she had
once been in love with George Pike, the Wheeling station agent, and a day
had been set for the marriage. Then a difficulty arose in regard to
religious beliefs and George Pike married another woman. It was then she
became a school teacher. She was a woman of few words and she and Hugh had
never been alone together, but as Hugh sat by the window on fall evenings,
she lay awake in a room in the farmer's house, where she was boarding
during the school season, and thought of him. She thought that had Hugh
remained a telegraph operator at forty dollars a month something might
have happened between them. Then she had other thoughts, or rather,
sensations that had little to do with thoughts. The room in which she lay
was very still and a streak of moonlight came in through the window. In
the barn back of the farmhouse she could hear the cattle stirring about. A
pig grunted and in the stillness that followed she could hear the farmer,
who lay in the next room with his wife, snoring gently. Rose was not very
strong and the physical did not rule in her nature, but she was very
lonely and thought that, like the farmer's wife, she would like to have a
man to lie with her. Warmth crept over her body and her lips became dry so
that she moistened them with her tongue. Had you been able to creep
unobserved into the room, you might have thought her much like a kitten
lying by a stove. She closed her eyes and gave herself over to dreams. In
her conscious mind she dreamed of being the wife of the bachelor Hugh
McVey, but deep within her there was another dream, a dream having its
basis in the memory of her one physical contact with a man. When they were
engaged to be married George had often kissed her. On one evening in the
spring they had gone to sit together on the grassy bank beside the creek
in the shadow of the pickle factory, then deserted and silent, and had
come near to going beyond kissing. Why nothing else had happened Rose did
not exactly know. She had protested, but her protest had been feeble and
had not expressed what she felt. George Pike had desisted in his effort to
press love upon her because they were to be married, and he did not think
it right to do what he thought of as taking advantage of a girl.</p>
<p>At any rate he did desist and long afterward, as she lay in the farmhouse
consciously thinking of her mother's bachelor boarder, her thoughts became
less and less distinct and when she had slipped off into sleep, George
Pike came back to her. She stirred uneasily in bed and muttered words.
Rough but gentle hands touched her cheeks and played in her hair. As the
night wore on and the position of the moon shifted, the streak of
moonlight lighted her face. One of her hands reached up and seemed to be
caressing the moonbeams. The weariness had all gone out of her face. “Yes,
George, I love you, I belong to you,” she whispered.</p>
<p>Had Hugh been able to creep like the moonbeam into the presence of the
sleeping school teacher, he must inevitably have loved her. Also he would
perhaps have understood that it is best to approach human beings directly
and boldly as he had approached the mechanical problems by which his days
were filled. Instead he sat by his window in the presence of the moonlit
night and thought of women as beings utterly unlike himself. Words dropped
by Sarah Shepard to the awakening boy came creeping back to his mind. He
thought women were for other men but not for him, and told himself he did
not want a woman.</p>
<p>And then in Turner's Pike something happened. A farmer boy, who had been
to town and who had the daughter of a neighbor in his buggy, stopped in
front of the house. A long freight train, grinding its way slowly past the
station, barred the passage along the road. He held the reins in one hand
and put the other about the waist of his companion. The two heads sought
each other and lips met. They clung to each other. The same moon that shed
its light on Rose McCoy in the distant farmhouse lighted the open place
where the lovers sat in the buggy in the road. Hugh had to close his eyes
and fight to put down an almost overpowering physical hunger in himself.
His mind still protested that women were not for him. When his fancy made
for him a picture of the school teacher Rose McCoy sleeping in a bed, he
saw her only as a chaste white thing to be worshiped from afar and not to
be approached, at least not by himself. Again he opened his eyes and
looked at the lovers whose lips still clung together. His long slouching
body stiffened and he sat up very straight in his chair. Then he closed
his eyes again. A gruff voice broke the silence. “That's for Mike,” it
shouted and a great chunk of coal thrown from the train bounded across the
potato patch and struck against the back of the house. Downstairs he could
hear old Mrs. McCoy getting out of bed to secure the prize. The train
passed and the lovers in the buggy sank away from each other. In the
silent night Hugh could hear the regular beat of the hoofs of the farmer
boy's horse as it carried him and his woman away into the darkness.</p>
<p>The two people, living in the house with the old woman who had almost
finished her life, and themselves trying feebly to reach out to life,
never got to anything very definite in relation to each other. One
Saturday evening in the late fall the Governor of the State came to
Bidwell. There was a parade to be followed by a political meeting and the
Governor, who was a candidate for re-election, was to address the people
from the steps of the town hall. Prominent citizens were to stand on the
steps beside the Governor. Steve and Tom were to be there, and they had
asked Hugh to come, but he had refused. He asked Rose McCoy to go to the
meeting with him, and they set out from the house at eight o'clock and
walked to town. Then they stood at the edge of the crowd in the shadow of
a store building and listened to the speech. To Hugh's amazement his name
was mentioned. The Governor spoke of the prosperity of the town,
indirectly hinting that it was due to the political sagacity of the party
of which he was a representative, and then mentioned several individuals
also partly responsible. “The whole country is sweeping forward to new
triumphs under our banner,” he declared, “but not every community is so
fortunate as I find you here. Labor is employed at good wages. Life here
is fruitful and happy. You are fortunate here in having among you such
business men as Steven Hunter and Thomas Butterworth; and in the inventor
Hugh McVey you have one of the greatest intellects and the most useful men
that ever lived to help lift the burden off the shoulder of labor. What
his brain is doing for labor, our party is doing in another way. The
protective tariff is really the father of modern prosperity.”</p>
<p>The speaker paused and a cheer arose from the crowd. Hugh took hold of the
school teacher's arm and drew her away down a side street. They walked
home in silence, but when they got to the house and were about to go in,
the school teacher hesitated. She wanted to ask Hugh to walk about in the
darkness with her but did not have the courage of her desires. As they
stood at the gate and as the tall man with the long serious face looked
down at her, she remembered the speaker's words. “How could he care for
me? How could a man like him care anything for a homely little school
teacher like me?” she asked herself. Aloud she said something quite
different. As they had come along Turner's Pike she had made up her mind
she would boldly suggest a walk under the trees along Turner's Pike beyond
the bridge, and had told herself that she would later lead him to the
place beside the stream and in the shadow of the old pickle factory where
she and George Pike had come so near being lovers. Instead she hesitated
for a moment by the gate and then laughed awkwardly and passed in. “You
should be proud. I would be proud if I could be spoken of like that. I
don't see why you keep living here in a cheap little house like ours,” she
said.</p>
<p>On a warm spring Sunday night during the year in which Clara Butterworth
came back to Bidwell to live, Hugh made what was for him an almost
desperate effort to approach the school teacher. It had been a rainy
afternoon and Hugh had spent a part of it in the house. He came over from
his shop at noon and went to his room. When she was at home the school
teacher occupied a room next his own. The mother who seldom left the house
had on that day gone to the country to visit a brother. The daughter got
dinner for herself and Hugh and he tried to help her wash the dishes. A
plate fell out of his hands and its breaking seemed to break the silent,
embarrassed mood that had possession of them. For a few minutes they were
children and acted like children. Hugh picked up another plate and the
school teacher told him to put it down. He refused. “You're as awkward as
a puppy. How you ever manage to do anything over at that shop of yours is
more than I know.”</p>
<p>Hugh tried to keep hold of the plate which the school teacher tried to
snatch away and for a few minutes they struggled laughing. Her cheeks were
flushed and Hugh thought she looked bewitching. An impulse he had never
had before came to him. He wanted to shout at the top of his lungs, throw
the plate at the ceiling, sweep all of the dishes off the table and hear
them crash on the floor, play like some huge animal loose in a tiny world.
He looked at Rose and his hands trembled from the strength of the strange
impulse. As he stood staring she took the plate out of his hand and went
into the kitchen. Not knowing what else to do he put on his hat and went
for a walk. Later he went to the shop and tried to work, but his hand
trembled when he tried to hold a tool and the hay-loading apparatus on
which he was at work seemed suddenly a very trivial and unimportant thing.</p>
<p>At four o'clock Hugh got back to the house and found it apparently empty,
although the door leading to Turner's Pike was open. The rain had stopped
falling and the sun struggled to work its way through the clouds. He went
upstairs to his own room and sat on the edge of his bed. The conviction
that the daughter of the house was in her room next door came to him, and
although the thought violated all the beliefs he had ever held regarding
women in relation to himself, he decided that she had gone to her room to
be near him when he came in. For some reason he knew that if he went to
her door and knocked she would not be surprised and would not refuse him
admission. He took off his shoes and set them gently on the floor. Then he
went on tiptoes out into the little hallway. The ceiling was so low that
he had to stoop to avoid knocking his head against it. He raised his hand
intending to knock on the door, and then lost courage. Several times he
went into the hallway with the same intent, and each time returned
noiselessly to his own room. He sat in the chair by the window and waited.
An hour passed. He heard a noise that indicated that the school teacher
had been lying on her bed. Then he heard footsteps on the stairs, and
presently saw her go out of the house and go along Turner's Pike. She did
not go toward town but over the bridge past his shop and into the country.
Hugh drew himself back out of sight. He wondered where she could be going.
“The roads are muddy. Why does she go out? Is she afraid of me?” he asked
himself. When he saw her turn at the bridge and look back toward the
house, his hands trembled again. “She wants me to follow. She wants me to
go with her,” he thought.</p>
<p>Hugh did presently go out of the house and along the road but did not meet
the school teacher. She had in fact crossed the bridge and had gone along
the bank of the creek on the farther side. Then she crossed over again on
a fallen log and went to stand by the wall of the pickle factory. A lilac
bush grew beside the wall and she stood out of sight behind it. When she
saw Hugh in the road her heart beat so heavily that she had difficulty in
breathing. He went along the road and presently passed out of sight, and a
great weakness took possession of her. Although the grass was wet she sat
on the ground against the wall of the building and closed her eyes. Later
she put her face in her hands and wept.</p>
<p>The perplexed inventor did not get back to his boarding house until late
that night, and when he did he was unspeakably glad that he had not
knocked on the door of Rose McCoy's room. He had decided during the walk
that the whole notion that she had wanted him had been born in his own
brain. “She's a nice woman,” he had said to himself over and over during
the walk, and thought that in coming to that conclusion he had swept away
all possibilities of anything else in her. He was tired when he got home
and went at once to bed. The old woman came home from the country and her
brother sat in his buggy and shouted to the school teacher, who came out
of her room and ran down the stairs. He heard the two women carry
something heavy into the house and drop it on the floor. The farmer
brother had given Mrs. McCoy a bag of potatoes. Hugh thought of the mother
and daughter standing together downstairs and was unspeakably glad he had
not given way to his impulse toward boldness. “She would be telling her
now. She is a good woman and would be telling her now,” he thought.</p>
<p>At two o'clock that night Hugh got out of bed. In spite of the conviction
that women were not for him, he had found himself unable to sleep.
Something that shone in the eyes of the school teacher, when she struggled
with him for the possession of the plate, kept calling to him and he got
up and went to the window. The clouds had all gone out of the sky and the
night was clear. At the window next his own sat Rose McCoy. She was
dressed in a night gown and was looking away along Turner's Pike to the
place where George Pike the station master lived with his wife. Without
giving himself time to think, Hugh knelt on the floor and with his long
arm reached across the space between the two windows. His fingers had
almost touched the back of the woman's head and ached to play in the mass
of red hair that fell down over her shoulders, when again
self-consciousness overcame him. He drew his arm quickly back and stood
upright in the room. His head banged against the ceiling and he heard the
window of the room next door go softly down. With a conscious effort he
took himself in hand. “She's a good woman. Remember, she's a good woman,”
he whispered to himself, and when he got again into his bed he refused to
let his mind linger on the thoughts of the school teacher, but compelled
them to turn to the unsolved problems he still had to face before he could
complete his hay-loading apparatus. “You tend to your business and don't
be going off on that road any more,” he said, as though speaking to
another person. “Remember she's a good woman and you haven't the right.
That's all you have to do. Remember you haven't the right,” he added with
a ring of command in his voice.</p>
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