The water was
lyin’ in the flats already. “Gor a-mighty, Jesse!” he bellers out at me,
“get that rubbish away all manners you can. Don’t stop for no fagottin’,
but give the brook play or my wheat’s past salvation. I can’t lend you no
help,” he says, “but work an’ I’ll pay ye.”’
‘You had him there,’ Jabez chuckled.
‘Yes. I reckon I had ought to have drove my bargain, but the brook was
backin’ up on good bread-corn. So ‘cardenly, I laid into the mess of it,
workin’ off the bank where the trees was drownin’ themselves head-down in
the roosh—just such weather as this—an’ the brook creepin’ up on me all
the time. ‘Long toward noon, Jim comes mowchin’ along with his toppin’ axe
over his shoulder.
‘“Be you minded for an extra hand at your job?” he says.
‘“Be you minded to turn to?” I ses, an’—no more talk to it—Jim laid in
alongside o’ me. He’s no hunger with a toppin’ axe.’
‘Maybe, but I’ve seed him at a job o’ throwin’ in the woods, an’ he
didn’t seem to make out no shape,’ said Jabez. ‘He haven’t got the
shoulders, nor yet the judgment—my opinion—when he’s dealin’ with
full-girt timber. He don’t rightly make up his mind where he’s goin’ to
throw her.’
‘We wasn’t throwin’ nothin’. We was cuttin’ out they soft alders, an’
haulin’ ’em up the bank ‘fore they could back the waters on the wheat. Jim
didn’t say much, ‘less it was that he’d had a postcard from Mary’s Lunnon
father, night before, sayin’ he was comin’ down that mornin’. Jim, he’d
sweated all night, an’ he didn’t reckon hisself equal to the talkin’ an’
the swearin’ an’ the cryin’, an’ his mother blamin’ him afterwards on the
slate. “It spiled my day to think of it,” he ses, when we was eatin’ our
pieces. “So I’ve fair cried dunghill an’ run. Mother’ll have to tackle him
by herself. I lay she won’t give him no hush-money,” he ses. “I
lay he’ll be surprised by the time he’s done with her,” he ses.
An’ that was e’en a’most all the talk we had concernin’ it. But he’s no
hunger with the toppin’ axe.
‘The brook she’d crep’ up an’ up on us, an’ she kep’ creepin’ upon us
till we was workin’ knee-deep in the shallers, cuttin’ an’ pookin’ an’
pullin’ what we could get to o’ the rubbish. There was a middlin’ lot
comin’ down-stream, too—cattle-bars, an’ hop-poles and odds-ends bats, all
poltin’ down together; but they rooshed round the elber good shape by the
time we’d backed out they drowned trees. Come four o’clock we reckoned
we’d done a proper day’s work, an’ she’d take no harm if we left her. We
couldn’t puddle about there in the dark an’ wet to no more advantage. Jim
he was pourin’ the water out of his boots—no, I was doin’ that. Jim was
kneelin’ to unlace his’n. “Damn it all, Jesse,” he ses, standin’ up; “the
flood must be over my doorsteps at home, for here comes my old white-top
bee-skep!”’
‘Yes. I allus heard he paints his bee-skeps,’ Jabez put in. ‘I dunno
paint don’t tarrify bees more’n it keeps em’ dry.’
‘“I’ll have a pook at it,” he ses, an’ he pooks at it as it comes round
the elber. The roosh nigh jerked the pooker out of his hand-grips, an’ he
calls to me, an’ I come runnin’ barefoot. Then we pulled on the pooker,
an’ it reared up on eend in the roosh, an’ we guessed what ’twas.
‘Cardenly we pulled it in into a shaller, an’ it rolled a piece, an’ a
great old stiff man’s arm nigh hit me in the face. Then we was sure.
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