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"We have till eight o'clock. It's now just seven."
"Come on then, Barney!" cried d.i.c.k. "We're good for an hour, anyway."
"I don't know, d.i.c.k," said Barney, hesitating.
"Come along! I can stand it and I know you can." And off he set again at racing pace and making no attempt to hide it.
In half an hour there were still left them, taking two swaths apiece, the two long sides and the two short ends.
"You can't do it, boys," said Alec regretfully. "Let 'er go."
"Yes, boys," cried the "Old King," who, with the crowd, had drawn near, "you've done a big day's work. You'll hurt yourselves. You've earned double pay and you'll get it."
"Not yet," cried d.i.c.k. "We'll put in the half hour at any rate. Come on, Barney! Never mind your rake!"
His face looked pale and worn, but his eyes were ablaze with light, and but for his pale face there was no sign of weariness about him. He flung away his rake and, s.n.a.t.c.hing up a band, kicked the sheaf together, caught it up, drew, tied, and fastened it as with one single act.
"We'll show them waltz time, Barney," he called, springing toward the next sheaf. "One"--at the word he s.n.a.t.c.hed up and made the band, "two"--he pa.s.sed the band around the sheaf, kicking it at the same time into shape, "three"--he drew and knotted the band, shoving the end in with his thumb. After him went Barney. One--two--three! and a sheaf was done. One--two--three! and so from sheaf to sheaf. It took them fifteen minutes to go down the long side. d.i.c.k, who had the inside, finished and sprang to his place at the outer side.
"Get inside!" shouted Barney, "let me take that swath!"
"Come along!" replied d.i.c.k, tying his sheaf.
"Fifteen minutes left, boys! I believe you're going to do it!" At this Ben gave a yell.
"They're goin' to do it!" he shouted, stumping around in great excitement.
"Double up, d.i.c.k!" cried Barney, carrying one sheaf to the next and tying them both together. d.i.c.k followed Barney's example, but here his brother's extra strength told in the race. Close after them came the crowd, Alec leading them, watch in hand, all yelling.
"Two minutes for that end, boys!" cried Alec, as they reached the corner. "You're goin' to do it, my hearties! You're goin' to do it!"
They had thirteen minutes in which to bind a side and an end.
"They can't do it, Alec," said the "Old King." "They'll hurt themselves.
Call them off!"
"Are you all right, d.i.c.k?" cried Barney, swinging on to the outer swath.
"All right," panted his brother, striding in at his side.
"Come on! We'll do it, then!" replied Barney.
Side by side they rushed. Sheaf by sheaf they tied together, Barney gradually gaining by the doubling process.
"Don't wait for me," gasped d.i.c.k, "if you can go faster!"
"One minute and a half, boys, if you can stand it!" cried Alec, as they reached the last corner. "One minute and a half, and we win!"
There remained five sheaves on the outer of Barney's two swaths, two on the inner of d.i.c.k's. In all, nine for Barney, six for d.i.c.k. The sheaves were comparatively small. Springing at this swath, Barney doubled the first two, the second two, the third two, and putting the last three together swung in upon d.i.c.k's swath where there were two sheaves left.
"Don't you touch it!" gasped d.i.c.k angrily.
"How's the time, Alec?" panted Barney.
"Half a minute."
Before he spoke, d.i.c.k flung himself on his last two sheaves, crying, "Out of the way there!" s.n.a.t.c.hed his band, pa.s.sing it around the sheaf, tied it, flung it over his shoulder, and stood with his hands on his knees, his breath coming in sobbing gasps.
For a few minutes the men went wild. Barney stepped to d.i.c.k's side, and patting him on the shoulder, said, "Great man, d.i.c.k! But I was a fool to let you!"
"That's what you were!" cried the "Old King," slapping d.i.c.k on the back, "but there's the greatest day's work ever done in these parts.
The wheat's yours," he said, turning to Alec, "but begad! I wish it was goin' to them that won it!"
"An' that's where it is going," said Alec, "every blamed sheaf of it, to Ben's gang."
"We'll take what's coming to us," said Barney shortly.
"I told yeh so," said Ben regretfully.
"Why, don't you know it was for you I took the bet?" said Alec, angry that he should be balked in his good intention to help the boys.
"We'll take our wages," repeated Barney in a tone that settled the controversy. "The wheat is not ours."
"Then it ain't mine," said Alec, disgusted, remembering in how great peril his $50 had been.
"Well, boys," said the "Old King," "it ain't mine. We'll divide it in three."
"We'll take our wages," said Barney again, in sullen determination.
"Confound the boy!" cried the "Old King." "What'll we do with the wheat?
I say, we'll give it to Ben; he's had hard luck this year."
"No, by the jumpin' Jemima Jebbs!" said Ben, stumping over to Barney's side. "I stand with the boss. I take my wages."
"Well, dog-gone you all! Will you take double pay, then? There's two days' good work there. And the rest we'll give to the church. Good thing the minister ain't here or he'd kick, too!"
"But," added the "Old King," turning to his son Sam, "after this you crawl into your sh.e.l.l when there's any blowin' bein' done about Ben's gang."
IX
LOVE'S TANGLED WAYS
The mill lane was prinked with all the June flowers. Over the snake fence ma.s.sed the clover, red and white. Through the rails peeped the thistle bloom, pink and purple, and higher up above the top rail the white crest of the dogwood slowly nodded in the breeze this sweet summer day. In the clover the b.u.mblebees, the crickets, and the gra.s.shoppers boomed, chirped, crackled, shouting their joy to be alive in so good a place and on so good a day. Above, the sky was blue, pure blue, and all the bluer for the specks of cloud that hung, still-poised like white-winged birds, white against the blue. Last evening's rain had washed the world clean. The sky, the air, the flowers, the clover, red and white, the kindly gra.s.s that ran green everywhere under foot, the dusty road, all were washed clean. In the elm bunches by the fence, in the maples and thorns, the birds, their summer preoccupations forgotten at the bidding of this new washed day, recalled their spring songs and poured them forth with fine careless courage.
In tune to this brave symphony of colour and song, and down this flower-prinked, song-filled, clean washed, gra.s.sy lane stepped d.i.c.k this summer morning, stepped with the spring and balance of the well-trained athlete, stepped with the step of a man whose heart makes him merry music. A clean-looking man was d.i.c.k, harmonious with the day and with the lane down which he stepped. Against the grey of his suit his hands, his face, and his neck, where the negligee s.h.i.+rt fell away wide, revealing his strong, full curves spreading to the shoulders, all showed ruddy brown. He was a man good to look upon, with his springy step, his tan skin, his clear eye, but chiefly because out of his clear eye a soul looked forth clean and unafraid upon G.o.d's good world of wholesome growing things.