<div><span class='pageno' title='67' id='Page_67'></span><h1>V</h1></div>
<p class='pindent'>High Prairie swains failed to find Selina
alluring. She was too small, too pale and
fragile for their robust taste. Naturally, her
coming had been an event in this isolated community.
She would have been surprised to know with what eagerness
and curiosity High Prairie gathered crumbs of
news about her; her appearance, her manner, her
dress. Was she stuck up? Was she new fangled?
She failed to notice the agitation of the parlour curtains
behind the glittering windows of the farmhouses
she passed on her way to school. With no visible
means of communication news of her leaped from
farm to farm as flame leaps the gaps in a forest fire.
She would have been aghast to learn that High Prairie,
inexplicably enough, knew all about her from the colour
of the ribbon that threaded her neat little white
corset covers to the number of books on her shelf.
She thought cabbage fields beautiful; she read books to
that dumb-acting Roelf Pool; she was making over a
dress for Maartje after the pattern of the stylish
brown lady’s-cloth she wore (foolishly) to school.
Now and then she encountered a team on the road.
She would call a good-day. Sometimes the driver
answered, tardily, as though surprised. Sometimes he
only stared. She almost never saw the High Prairie
farm women, busy in their kitchens.</p>
<p class='pindent'>On her fifth Sunday in the district she accompanied
the Pools to the morning service at the Dutch Reformed
Church. Maartje seldom had the time for
such frivolity. But on this morning Klaas hitched up
the big farm wagon with the double seat and took the
family complete—Maartje, Selina, Roelf, and the pigtails.
Maartje, out of her kitchen calico and dressed
in her best black, with a funereal bonnet made sadder
by a sparse and drooping feather whose listless fronds
emerged surprisingly from a faded red cotton rose,
wore a new strange aspect to Selina’s eyes, as did
Klaas in his clumsy sabbaticals. Roelf had rebelled
against going, had been cuffed for it, and had sat very
still all through the service, gazing at the red and yellow
glass church window. Later he confided to Selina
that the sunlight filtering through the crude yellow
panes had imparted a bilious look to the unfortunates
seated within its range, affording him much secret satisfaction.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina’s appearance had made quite a stir, of which
she was entirely unaware. As the congregation entered
by twos and threes she thought they resembled
startlingly a woodcut in an old illustrated book she
once had seen. The men’s Sunday trousers and coats
had a square stiff angularity, as though chopped out of
a block. The women, in shawls and bonnets of rusty
black, were incredibly cut in the same pattern. The
unmarried girls, though, were plump, red-cheeked, and
not uncomely, with high round cheek-bones on which
sat a spot of brick-red which imparted no glow to the
face. Their foreheads were prominent and meaningless.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In the midst of this drab assemblage there entered
late and rustlingly a tall, slow-moving woman in a city-bought
cloak and a bonnet quite unlike the vintage millinery
of High Prairie. As she came down the aisle
Selina thought she was like a full-sailed frigate. An
ample woman, with a fine fair skin and a ripe red
mouth; a high firm bosom and great thighs that moved
rhythmically, slowly. She had thick, insolent eyelids.
Her hands, as she turned the leaves of her hymn book,
were smooth and white. As she entered there was a
little rustle throughout the congregation; a craning of
necks. Though she was bustled and flounced and panniered,
you thought, curiously enough, of those lolling
white-fleshed and unconventional ladies whom the sixteenth
century painters were always portraying as having
their toe nails cut with nothing on.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Who’s that?” whispered Selina to Maartje.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Widow Paarlenberg. She is rich like anything.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes?” Selina was fascinated.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Look once how she makes eyes at him.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“At him? Who? Who?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Pervus DeJong. By Gerrit Pon he is sitting with
the blue shirt and sad looking so.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina craned, peered. “The—oh—he’s very good
looking, isn’t he?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Sure. Widow Paarlenberg is stuck on him. See
how she—Sh-sh-sh!—Reverend Dekker looks at us.
I tell you after.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina decided she’d come to church oftener. The
service went on, dull, heavy. It was in English and
Dutch. She heard scarcely a word of it. The Widow
Paarlenberg and this Pervus DeJong occupied her
thoughts. She decided, without malice, that the widow
resembled one of the sleekest of the pink porkers rooting
in Klaas Pool’s barnyard, waiting to be cut into
Christmas meat.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The Widow Paarlenberg turned and smiled. Her
eyes were slippery (Selina’s term). Her mouth became
loose and wide with one corner sliding down a
trifle into something very like a leer.</p>
<p class='pindent'>With one surge the Dutch Reformed congregation
leaned forward to see how Pervus DeJong would respond
to this public mark of favour. His gaze was
stern, unsmiling. His eyes were fixed on that extremely
dull gentleman, the Reverend Dekker.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“He’s annoyed,” thought Selina, and was pleased at
the thought. “Well, I may not be a widow, but I’m
sure that’s not the way.” And then: “Now I wonder
what it’s like when <span class='it'>he</span> smiles.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>According to fiction as Selina had found it in the
<span class='it'>Fireside Companion</span> and elsewhere, he should have
turned at this moment, irresistibly drawn by the magnetism
of her gaze, and smiled a rare sweet smile that
lighted up his stern young face. But he did not. He
yawned suddenly and capaciously. The Reformed
Dutch congregation leaned back feeling cheated.
Handsome, certainly, Selina reflected. But then,
probably Klaas Pool, too, had been handsome a few
years ago.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The service ended, there was much talk of the
weather, seedlings, stock, the approaching holiday season.
Maartje, her Sunday dinner heavy on her mind,
was elbowing her way up the aisle. Here and there
she introduced Selina briefly to a woman friend. “Mrs.
Vander Sijde, meet school teacher.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Aggie’s mother?” Selina would begin, primly, only
to be swept along by Maartje on her way to the door.
“Mrs. Von Mijnen, meet school teacher. Is Mrs.
Von Mijnen.” They regarded her with a grim gaze.
Selina would smile and nod rather nervously, feeling
young, frivolous, and somehow guilty.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When, with Maartje, she reached the church porch
Pervus DeJong was unhitching the dejected horse that
was harnessed to his battered and lopsided cart. The
animal stood with four feet bunched together in a
drooping and pathetic attitude and seemed inevitably
meant for mating with this decrepit vehicle. DeJong
untied the reins quickly, and was about to step into the
sagging conveyance when the Widow Paarlenberg
sailed down the church steps with admirable speed for
one so amply proportioned. She made straight for
him, skirts billowing, flounces flying, plumes waving.
Maartje clutched Selina’s arm. “Look how she
makes! She asks him to eat Sunday dinner I bet you!
See once how he makes with his head no.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina—and the whole congregation unashamedly
watching—could indeed see how he made with his
head no. His whole body seemed set in negation—the
fine head, the broad patient shoulders, the muscular
powerful legs in their ill-fitting Sunday blacks. He
shook his head, gathered up the reins, and drove away,
leaving the Widow Paarlenberg to carry off with such
bravado as she could muster this public flouting in full
sight of the Dutch Reformed congregation of High
Prairie. It must be said that she actually achieved this
feat with a rather magnificent composure. Her round
pink face, as she turned away, was placid; her great
cowlike eyes mild. Selina abandoned the pink porker
simile for that of a great Persian cat, full-fed and
treacherous, its claws all sheathed in velvet. The
widow stepped agilely into her own neat phaeton with
its sleek horse and was off down the hard snowless
road, her head high.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well!” exclaimed Selina, feeling as though she had
witnessed the first act of an exciting play. And
breathed deeply. So, too, did the watching congregation,
so that the widow could be said to have driven off
in quite a gust.</p>
<p class='pindent'>As they jogged home in the Pool farm wagon
Maartje told her tale with a good deal of savour.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Pervus DeJong had been left a widower two years
before. Within a month of that time Leendert Paarlenberg
had died, leaving to his widow the richest and
most profitable farm in the whole community. Pervus
DeJong, on the contrary, through inheritance from
his father, old Johannes, possessed a scant twenty-five
acres of the worst lowland—practically the only lowland—in
all High Prairie. The acreage was notoriously
barren. In spring, the critical time for seedlings
and early vegetable crops, sixteen of the twenty-five
were likely to be under water. Pervus DeJong patiently
planted, sowed, gathered crops, hauled them to
market; seemed still never to get on in this thrifty
Dutch community where getting on was so common a
trait as to be no longer thought a virtue. Luck and
nature seemed to work against him. His seedlings
proved unfertile; his stock was always ailing; his cabbages
were worm-infested; snout-beetle bored his rhubarb.
When he planted largely of spinach, hoping
for a wet spring, the season was dry. Did he turn the
following year to sweet potatoes, all auguries pointing
to a dry spring and summer, the summer proved the
wettest in a decade. Insects and fungi seemed drawn
to his fields as by a malevolent force. Had he been
small, puny, and insignificant his bad luck would have
called forth contemptuous pity. But there was about
him the lovableness and splendour of the stricken giant.
To complete his discomfort, his household was inadequately
ministered by an elderly and rheumatic
female connection whose pies and bread were the scandal
of the neighbouring housewives.</p>
<p class='pindent'>It was on this Pervus DeJong, then, that the Widow
Paarlenberg of the rich acres, the comfortable farmhouse,
the gold neck chain, the silk gowns, the soft
white hands and the cooking talents, had set her affections.
She wooed him openly, notoriously, and with
a Dutch vehemence that would have swept another
man off his feet. It was known that she sent him a
weekly baking of cakes, pies, and bread. She urged
upon him choice seeds from her thriving fields; seedlings
from her hotbeds; plants, all of which he steadfastly
refused. She tricked, cajoled, or nagged him
into eating her ample meals. She even asked his advice—that
subtlest form of flattery. She asked him
about sub-soiling, humus, rotation—she whose rich
land yielded, under her shrewd management, more
profitably to the single acre than to any ten of Pervus’s.
One Jan Bras managed her farm admirably under her
supervision.</p>
<p class='pindent'>DeJong’s was a simple mind. In the beginning,
when she said to him, in her deep, caressing voice,
“Mr. DeJong, could I ask you a little advice about
something? I’m a woman alone since I haven’t got
Leendert any more, and strangers what do they care
how they run the land! It’s about my radishes, lettuce,
spinach, and turnips. Last year, instead of tender,
they were stringy and full of fibre on account
that Jan Bras. He’s for slow growing. Those
vegetables you’ve got to grow quick. Bras says my
fertilizer is the fault, but I know different. What you
think?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Jan Bras, getting wind of this, told it abroad with
grim humour. Masculine High Prairie, meeting Pervus
DeJong on the road, greeted him with: “Well,
DeJong, you been giving the Widow Paarlenberg any
good advice here lately about growing?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>It had been a particularly bad season for his fields.
As High Prairie poked a sly thumb into his ribs thus
he realized that he had been duped by the wily widow.
A slow Dutch wrath rose in him against her; a male
resentment at being manipulated by a woman. When
next she approached him, cajolery in her voice, seeking
guidance about tillage, drainage, or crops, he said,
bluntly: “Better you ask Harm Tien his advice.”
Harm Tien was the district idiot, a poor witless creature
of thirty with the mind of a child.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Knowing well that the entire community was urging
him toward this profitable match with the plump, rich,
red-lipped widow, Pervus set his will like a stubborn
steer and would have none of her. He was uncomfortable
in his untidy house; he was lonely, he was unhappy.
But he would have none of her. Vanity,
pride, resentment were all mixed up in it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The very first time that Pervus DeJong met Selina
he had a chance to protect her. With such a start, the
end was inevitable. Then, too, Selina had on the
wine-coloured cashmere and was trying hard to keep
the tears back in full view of the whole of High Prairie.
Urged by Maartje (and rather fancying the
idea) Selina had attended the great meeting and dance
at Adam Ooms’s hall above the general store near the
High Prairie station. Farmer families for miles
around were there. The new church organ—that
time-hallowed pretext for sociability—was the excuse
for this gathering. There was a small admission
charge. Adam Ooms had given them the hall. The
three musicians were playing without fee. The women
were to bring supper packed in boxes or baskets, these
to be raffled off to the highest bidder whose privilege it
then was to sup with the fair whose basket he had
bought. Hot coffee could be had at so much the cup.
All the proceeds were to be devoted to the organ. It
was understood, of course, that there was to be no
lively bidding against husbands. Each farm woman
knew her own basket as she knew the countenance of
her children, and each farmer, as that basket came up
at auction, named a cautious sum which automatically
made him the basket’s possessor. The larger freedom
had not come to High Prairie in 1890. The baskets
and boxes of the unwed women were to be the fought-for
prizes. Maartje had packed her own basket at
noon and had driven off at four with Klaas and the
children. She was to serve on one of those bustling
committees whose duties ranged from coffee making
to dish washing. Klaas and Roelf were to be pressed
into service. The pigtails would slide up and down the
waxed floor of Ooms’s hall with other shrieking pigtails
of the neighbourhood until the crowd began to
arrive for the auction and supper. Jakob Hoogendunk
would convey Selina to the festivities when his
chores were done. Selina’s lunch basket was to be a
separate and distinct affair, offered at auction with
those of the Katrinas and Linas and Sophias of High
Prairie. Not a little apprehensive, she was to pack
this basket herself. Maartje, departing, had left copious
but disjointed instructions.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ham . . . them big cookies in the crock
. . . pickles . . . watch how you don’t spill . . .
plum preserves . . .”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Maartje’s own basket was of gigantic proportions
and staggering content. Her sandwiches were cubic
blocks; her pickles clubs of cucumber; her pies vast
plateaus.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The basket provided for Selina, while not quite so
large, still was of appalling size as Selina contemplated
it. She decided, suddenly, that she would have
none of it. In her trunk she had a cardboard box
such as shoes come in. Certainly this should hold
enough lunch for two, she thought. She and Julie
Hempel had used such boxes for picnic lunches on their
Saturday holidays. She was a little nervous about the
whole thing; rather dreaded the prospect of eating
her supper with a High Prairie swain unknown to her.
Suppose no one should bid for her box! She resolved
to fill it after her own pattern, disregarding Maartje’s
heavy provender.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She had the kitchen to herself. Jakob was in the
fields or out-houses. The house was deliciously quiet.
Selina rummaged for the shoe box, lined it with a sheet
of tissue paper, rolled up her sleeves, got out mixing
bowl, flour, pans. Cup cakes were her ambition. She
baked six of them. They came out a beautiful brown
but somewhat leaden. Still, anything was better than
a wedge of soggy pie, she told herself. She boiled
eggs very hard, halved them, devilled their yolks, filled
the whites neatly with this mixture and clapped the
halves together again, skewering them with a toothpick.
Then she rolled each egg separately in tissue
paper twisted at the ends. Daintiness, she had decided,
should be the keynote of her supper box. She
cut bread paper-thin and made jelly sandwiches, scorning
the ubiquitous pork. Bananas, she knew, belonged
in a lunch box, but these were unobtainable. She substituted
two juicy pippins, polished until their cheeks
glittered. The food neatly packed she wrapped the
box in paper and tied it with a gay red ribbon yielded
by her trunk. At the last moment she whipped into
the yard, twisted a brush of evergreen from the tree
at the side of the house, and tucked this into the knot
of ribbon atop the box. She stepped back and thought
the effect enchanting.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She was waiting in her red cashmere and her cloak
and hood when Hoogendunk called for her. They
were late arrivals, for outside Ooms’s hall were hitched
all manner of vehicles. There had been a heavy snowfall
two days before. This had brought out bob-sleds,
cutters, sleighs. The horse sheds were not large
enough to shelter all. Late comers had to hitch where
they could. There was a great jangling of bells as
the horses stamped in the snow.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina, balancing her box carefully, opened the door
that led to the wooden stairway. The hall was on the
second floor. The clamour that struck her ears had
the effect of a physical blow. She hesitated a moment,
and if there had been any means of returning to the
Pool farm, short of walking five miles in the snow,
she would have taken it. Up the stairs and into the
din. Evidently the auctioning of supper baskets was
even now in progress. The roar of voices had broken
out after the sale of a basket and now was subsiding
under the ear-splitting cracks of the auctioneer’s hammer.
Through the crowded doorway Selina could
catch a glimpse of him as he stood on a chair, the baskets
piled before him. He used a barrel elevated on
a box as his pulpit. The auctioneer was Adam Ooms
who himself had once been the High Prairie school
teacher. A fox-faced little man, bald, falsetto, the
village clown with a solid foundation of shrewdness
under his clowning and a tart layer of malice over it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>High and shrill came his voice. “What am I bid!
What am I bid! Thirty cents! Thirty-five! Shame
on you, gentlemen. What am I bid! Who’ll make
it forty!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina felt a little thrill of excitement. She looked
about for a place on which to lay her wraps. Every
table, chair, hook, and rack in the hallway was piled
with clothing. She espied a box that appeared empty,
rolled her cloak, muffler, and hood into a neat bundle
and, about to cast it into the box, saw, upturned to her
from its depths, the round pink faces of the sleeping
Kuyper twins, aged six months. From the big hall
now came a great shouting, clapping of hands, stamping,
cat-calls. Another basket had been disposed of.
Oh, dear! In desperation Selina placed her bundle
on the floor in a corner, smoothed down the red cashmere,
snatched up her lunch box and made for the doorway
with the childish eagerness of one out of the
crowd to be in it. She wondered where Maartje and
Klaas Pool were in this close-packed roomful; and
Roelf. In the doorway she found that broad black-coated
backs shut off sight and ingress. She had written
her name neatly on her lunch box. Now she was
at a loss to find a way to reach Adam Ooms. She
eyed the great-shouldered expanse just ahead of her.
In desperation she decided to dig into it with a corner
of her box. She dug, viciously. The back winced.
Its owner turned. “Here! What——!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina looked up into the wrathful face of Pervus
DeJong. Pervus DeJong looked down into the startled
eyes of Selina Peake. Large enough eyes at any time;
enormous now in her fright at what she had done.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m sorry! I’m—sorry. I thought if I could—there’s
no way of getting my lunch box up there—such
a crowd——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>A slim, appealing, lovely little figure in the wine-red
cashmere, amidst all those buxom bosoms, and overheated
bodies, and flushed faces. His gaze left her
reluctantly, settled on the lunch box, became, if possible,
more bewildered. “That? Lunch box?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes. For the raffle. I’m the school teacher. Selina
Peake.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He nodded. “I saw you in church Sunday.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You did! I didn’t think you. . . . Did
you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Wait here. I’ll come back. Wait here.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He took the shoe box. She waited. He ploughed his
way through the crowd like a Juggernaut, reached
Adam Ooms’s platform and placed the box inconspicuously
next a colossal hamper that was one of a dozen
grouped awaiting Adam’s attention. When he had
made his way back to Selina he again said, “Wait,”
and plunged down the wooden stairway. Selina
waited. She had ceased to feel distressed at her inability
to find the Pools in the crowd, a-tiptoe though
she was. When presently he came back he had in his
hand an empty wooden soap-box. This he up-ended
in the doorway just behind the crowd stationed there.
Selina mounted it; found her head a little above the
level of his. She could survey the room from end to
end. There were the Pools. She waved to Maartje;
smiled at Roelf. He made as though to come toward
her; did come part way, and was restrained by
Maartje catching at his coat tail.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina wished she could think of something to say.
She looked down at Pervus DeJong. The back of his
neck was pink, as though with effort. She thought,
instinctively, “My goodness, he’s trying to think of
something to say, too.” That, somehow, put her at
her ease. She would wait until he spoke. His neck
was now a deep red. The crowd surged back at some
disturbance around Adam Ooms’s elevation. Selina
teetered perilously on her box, put out a hand blindly,
felt his great hard hand on her arm, steadying her.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Quite a crowd, ain’t it?” The effort had reached
its apex. The red of his neck began to recede.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, quite!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“They ain’t all High Prairie. Some of ’em’s from
Low Prairie way. New Haarlem, even.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Really!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>A pause. Another effort.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How goes it school teaching?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh—it goes pretty well.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You are little to be school teacher, anyway, ain’t
you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Little!” She drew herself up from her vantage
point of the soap-box. “I’m bigger than you are.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They laughed at that as at an exquisite piece of
repartee.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Adam Oom’s gavel (a wooden potato masher)
crashed for silence. “Ladies!” [Crash!] “And
gents!” [Crash!] “Gents! Look what basket we’ve
got here!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Look indeed. A great hamper, grown so plethoric
that it could no longer wear its cover. Its contents bellied
into a mound smoothly covered with a fine white
cloth whose glistening surface proclaimed it damask.
A Himalaya among hampers. You knew that under
that snowy crust lay gold that was fowl done crisply,
succulently; emeralds in the form of gherkins; rubies
that melted into strawberry preserves; cakes frosted
like diamonds; to say nothing of such semi-precious
jewels as potato salad; cheeses; sour cream to be
spread on rye bread and butter; coffee cakes; crullers.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Crash! “The Widow Paarlenberg’s basket, ladies—<span class='it'>and</span>
gents! The Widow Paarlenberg! I don’t
know what’s in it. You don’t know what’s in it. We
don’t have to know what’s in it. Who has eaten
Widow Paarlenberg’s chicken once don’t have to know.
Who has eaten Widow Paarlenberg’s cake once don’t
have to know. What am I bid on Widow Paarlenberg’s
basket! What am I bid! WhatmIbidwhatmIbidwhatmIbid!”
[Crash!]</p>
<p class='pindent'>The widow herself, very handsome in black silk, her
gold neck chain rising and falling richly with the little
flurry that now agitated her broad bosom, was seated
in a chair against the wall not five feet from the auctioneer’s
stand. She bridled now, blushed, cast down
her eyes, cast up her eyes, succeeded in looking as unconscious
as a complaisant Turkish slave girl on the
block.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Adam Ooms’s glance swept the hall. He leaned forward,
his fox-like face fixed in a smile. From the
widow herself, seated so prominently at his right, his
gaze marked the young blades of the village; the old
bucks; youths and widowers and bachelors. Here
was the prize of the evening. Around, in a semi-circle,
went his keen glance until it reached the tall figure
towering in the doorway—reached it, and rested there.
His gimlet eyes seemed to bore their way into Pervus
DeJong’s steady stare. He raised his right arm
aloft, brandishing the potato masher. The whole
room fixed its gaze on the blond head in the doorway.
“Speak up! Young men of High Prairie! Heh, you,
Pervus DeJong! WhatmIbidwhatmIbidwhatmIbid!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Fifty cents!” The bid came from Gerrit Pon at
the other end of the hall. A dashing offer, as a start,
in this district where one dollar often represented the
profits on a whole load of market truck brought to the
city.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Crash! went the potato masher. “Fifty cents I’m
bid. Who’ll make it seventy-five? Who’ll make it
seventy-five?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Sixty!” Johannes Ambuul, a widower, his age
more than the sum of his bid.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Seventy!” Gerrit Pon.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Adam Ooms whispered it—hissed it. “S-s-s-seventy.
Ladies and gents, I wouldn’t repeat out loud
sucha figger. I would be ashamed. Look at this
basket, gents, and then you can say . . . s-s-seventy!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Seventy-five!” the cautious Ambuul.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Scarlet, flooding her face, belied the widow’s outward
air of composure. Pervus DeJong, standing beside
Selina, viewed the proceedings with an air of
detachment. High Prairie was looking at him expectantly,
openly. The widow bit her red lip, tossed
her head. Pervus DeJong returned the auctioneer’s
meaning smirk with the mild gaze of a disinterested
outsider. High Prairie, Low Prairie, and New Haarlem
sat tense, like an audience at a play. Here, indeed,
was drama being enacted in a community whose
thrills were all too rare.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Gents!” Adam Ooms’s voice took on a tearful
note—the tone of one who is more hurt than angry.
“Gents!” Slowly, with infinite reverence, he lifted
one corner of the damask cloth that concealed the
hamper’s contents—lifted it and peered within as at a
treasure. At what he saw there he started back dramatically,
at once rapturous, despairing, amazed. He
rolled his eyes. He smacked his lips. He rubbed his
stomach. The sort of dumb show that, since the days
of the Greek drama, has been used to denote gastronomic
delight.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Eighty!” was wrenched suddenly from Goris Von
Vuuren, the nineteen-year-old fat and gluttonous son
of a prosperous New Haarlem farmer.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Adam Ooms rubbed brisk palms together. “Now
then! A dollar! A dollar! It’s an insult to this
basket to make it less than a dollar.” He lifted the
cover again, sniffed, appeared overcome. “Gents, if
it wasn’t for Mrs. Ooms sitting there I’d make it a dollar
myself and a bargain. A dollar! Am I bid a
dollar!” He leaned far forward over his improvised
pulpit. “Did I hear you say a dollar, Pervus DeJong?”
DeJong stared, immovable, unabashed.
His very indifference was contagious. The widow’s
bountiful basket seemed to shrink before one’s eyes.
“Eighty-eighty-eighty-eighty—gents! I’m going to
tell you something. I’m going to whisper a secret.”
His lean face was veined with craftiness. “Gents.
Listen. It isn’t chicken in this beautiful basket. It
isn’t chicken. It’s”—a dramatic pause—“it’s <span class='it'>roast
duck!</span>” He swayed back, mopped his brow with his
red handkerchief, held one hand high in the air. His
last card.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Eighty-five!” groaned the fat Goris Von Vuuren.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Eighty-five! Eighty-five! Eightyfiveeightyfiveeightyfive
eighty-five! Gents! Gen-tle-men! Eighty-five
once! Eighty-five—twice!” [Crash!] “Gone to
Goris Von Vuuren for eighty-five.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>A sigh went up from the assemblage; a sigh that
was the wind before the storm. There followed a
tornado of talk. It crackled and thundered. The
rich Widow Paarlenberg would have to eat her supper
with Von Vuuren’s boy, the great thick Goris. And
there in the doorway, talking to teacher as if they
had known each other for years, was Pervus DeJong
with his money in his pocket. It was as good as a
play.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Adam Ooms was angry. His lean, fox-like face
became pinched with spite. He prided himself on his
antics as auctioneer; and his chef d’œuvre had brought
a meagre eighty-five cents, besides doubtless winning
him the enmity of that profitable store customer, the
Widow Paarlenberg. Goris Von Vuuren came forward
to claim his prize amidst shouting, clapping,
laughter. The great hamper was handed down to
him; an ample, rich-looking burden, its handle folded
comfortably over its round stomach, its white cover so
glistening with starch and ironing that it gave back
the light from the big lamp above the auctioneer’s
stand. As Goris Von Vuuren lifted it his great
shoulders actually sagged. Its contents promised
satiety even to such a feeder as he. A grin, half
sheepish, half triumphant, creased his plump pink
face.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Adam Ooms scuffled about among the many baskets
at his feet. His nostrils looked pinched and his skinny
hands shook a little as he searched for one small object.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When he stood upright once more he was smiling.
His little eyes gleamed. His wooden sceptre pounded
for silence. High in one hand, balanced daintily on
his finger tips, he held Selina’s little white shoe box,
with its red ribbon binding it, and the plume of evergreen
stuck in the ribbon. Affecting great solicitude
he brought it down then to read the name written on
it; held it aloft again, smirking.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He said nothing. Grinning, he held it high. He
turned his body at the waist from side to side, so that
all might see. The eyes of those before him still held
a mental picture of the huge hamper, food-packed,
that had just been handed down. The contrast was
too absurd, too cruel. A ripple of laughter swept the
room; rose; swelled to a roar. Adam Ooms drew his
mouth down solemnly. His little finger elegantly
crooked, he pendulumed the box to right and left. He
swerved his beady eyes from side to side. He waited
with a nice sense of the dramatic until the laughter had
reached its height, then held up a hand for silence. A
great scraping “Ahem!” as he cleared his throat
threatened to send the crowd off again.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ladies—<span class='it'>and</span> gents! Here’s a dainty little tidbit.
Here’s something not only for the inner man, but
a feast for the eye. Well, boys, if the last lot was too
much for you this lot ought to be just about right. If
the food ain’t quite enough for you, you can tie the ribbon
in the lady’s hair and put the posy in your buttonhole
and there you are. <span class='it'>There</span> you are! What’s
more, the lady herself goes with it. You don’t get a
country girl with this here box, gents. A city girl, you
can tell by looking at it, just. And who is she? Who
did up this dainty little box just big enough for two?”
He inspected it again, solemnly, and added, as an after-thought,
“If you ain’t feeling specially hungry. Who?——”
He looked about, apishly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina’s cheeks matched her gown. Her eyes were
wide and dark with the effort she was making to force
back the hot haze threatening them. Why had she
mounted this wretched soap-box! Why had she come
to this hideous party! Why had she come to High
Prairie! Why! . . .</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Miss Selina Peake, that’s who. Miss Se-li-na
Peake!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>A hundred balloon faces pulled by a single cord
turned toward her as she stood there on the box for all
to see. They swam toward her. She put up a hand to
push them back.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What’m I bid! What’m I bid! What’m I bid
for this here lovely little toothful, gents! Start her
up!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Five cents!” piped up old Johannes Ambuul, with
a snicker. The tittering crowd broke into a guffaw.
Selina was conscious of a little sick feeling at the pit
of her stomach. Through the haze she saw the
widow’s face, no longer sulky, but smiling now. She
saw Roelf’s dear dark head. His face was set, like a
man’s. He was coming toward her, or trying to, but
the crowd wedged him in, small as he was among those
great bodies. She lost sight of him. How hot it was!
how hot . . . An arm at her waist. Some one
had mounted the little box and stood teetering there
beside her, pressed against her slightly, reassuringly.
Pervus DeJong. Her head was on a level with
his great shoulder now. They stood together in
the doorway, on the soap-box, for all High Prairie
to see.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Five cents I’m bid for this lovely little mouthful
put up by the school teacher’s own fair hands. Five
cents! Five——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“One dollar!” Pervus DeJong.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The balloon faces were suddenly punctured with
holes. High Prairie’s jaw dropped with astonishment.
Its mouth stood open.</p>
<p class='pindent'>There was nothing plain about Selina now. Her
dark head was held high, and his fair one beside it
made a vivid foil. The purchase of the wine-coloured
cashmere was at last justified.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And ten!” cackled old Johannes Ambuul, his
rheumy eyes on Selina.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Art and human spitefulness struggled visibly for
mastery in Adam Ooms’s face—and art won. The
auctioneer triumphed over the man. The term “crowd
psychology” was unknown to him, but he was artist
enough to sense that some curious magic process, working
through this roomful of people, had transformed
the little white box, from a thing despised and ridiculed,
into an object of beauty, of value, of infinite
desirability. He now eyed it in a catalepsy of admiration.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“One-ten I’m bid for this box all tied with a ribbon
to match the gown of the girl who brought it. Gents,
you get the ribbon, the lunch, <span class='it'>and</span> the girl. And only
one-ten bid for all that. Gents! Gents! Remember,
it ain’t only a lunch—it’s a picture. It pleases
the eye. Do I hear one——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Five bits!” Barend DeRoo, of Low Prairie, in the
lists. A strapping young Dutchman, the Brom Bones
of the district. Aaltje Huff, in a fit of pique at his indifference,
had married to spite him. Cornelia Vinke,
belle of New Haarlem, was said to be languishing for
love of him. He drove to the Haymarket with his
load of produce and played cards all night on the
wagon under the gas torches while the street girls
of the neighbourhood assailed him in vain. Six
feet three, his red face shone now like a harvest
moon above the crowd. A merry, mischievous eye
that laughed at Pervus DeJong and his dollar
bid.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Dollar and a half!” A high clear voice—a boy’s
voice. Roelf.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, no!” said Selina aloud. But she was unheard
in the gabble. Roelf had once confided to her that he
had saved three dollars and fifty cents in the last three
years. Five dollars would purchase a set of tools that
his mind had been fixed on for months past. Selina
saw Klaas Pool’s look of astonishment changing to
anger. Saw Maartje Pool’s quick hand on his arm,
restraining him.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Two dollars!” Pervus DeJong.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Twotwotwotwotwotwo!” Adam Ooms in a frenzy
of salesmanship.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And ten.” Johannes Ambuul’s cautious bid.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Two and a quarter.” Barend DeRoo.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Two-fifty!” Pervus DeJong.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Three dollars!” The high voice of the boy. It
cracked a little on the last syllable, and the crowd
laughed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Three-three-three-three-threethreethree. Three
once——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And a half.” Pervus DeJong.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Three sixty.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Four!” DeRoo.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And ten.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The boy’s voice was heard no more.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I wish they’d stop,” whispered Selina.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Five!” Pervus DeJong.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Six!” DeRoo, his face very red.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And ten.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Seven!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s only jelly sandwiches,” said Selina to DeJong,
in a panic.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Eight!” Johannes Ambuul, gone mad.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Nine!” DeRoo.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Nine! Nine I’m bid! Nine-nine-nine! Who’ll
make it——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Let him have it. The cup cakes fell a little.
Don’t——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ten!” said Pervus DeJong.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Barend DeRoo shrugged his great shoulders.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ten-ten-ten. Do I hear eleven? Do I hear ten-fifty!
Ten-ten-ten tententententententen! Gents!
Ten once. Ten twice! Gone!—for ten dollars to
Pervus DeJong. And a bargain.” Adam Ooms
mopped his bald head and his cheeks and the damp
spot under his chin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Ten dollars. Adam Ooms knew, as did all the
countryside, this was not the sum of ten dollars merely.
No basket of food, though it contained nightingales’
tongues, the golden apple of Atalanta, wines of rare
vintage, could have been adequate recompense for these
ten dollars. They represented sweat and blood; toil
and hardship; hours under the burning prairie sun at
mid-day; work doggedly carried on through the
drenching showers of spring; nights of restless sleep
snatched an hour at a time under the sky in the Chicago
market place; miles of weary travel down the
rude corduroy road between High Prairie and Chicago,
now up to the hubs in mud, now blinded by dust
and blowing sand.</p>
<p class='pindent'>A sale at Christie’s, with a miniature going for a
million, could not have met with a deeper hush, a more
dramatic babble following the hush.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They ate their lunch together in one corner of Adam
Ooms’s hall. Selina opened the box and took out the
devilled eggs, and the cup cakes that had fallen a little,
and the apples, and the sandwiches sliced very, very
thin. The coldly appraising eye of all High Prairie,
Low Prairie, and New Haarlem watched this sparse
provender emerge from the ribbon-tied shoe box. She
offered him a sandwich. It looked infinitesimal in his
great paw. Suddenly all Selina’s agony of embarrassment
was swept away, and she was laughing, not
wildly or hysterically, but joyously and girlishly. She
sank her little white teeth into one of the absurd sandwiches
and looked at him, expecting to find him laughing,
too. But he wasn’t laughing. He looked very
earnest, and his blue eyes were fixed hard on the bit of
bread in his hand, and his face was very red and
clean-shaven. He bit into the sandwich and chewed
it solemnly. And Selina thought: “Why, the dear
thing! The great big dear thing! And he might
have been eating breast of duck . . . Ten dollars!”
Aloud she said, “What made you do it?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know. I don’t know.” Then, “You
looked so little. And they were making fun. Laughing.”
He looked very earnest, and his blue eyes were
fixed hard on the sandwich, and his face was very red.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That’s a very foolish reason for throwing away ten
dollars,” Selina said, severely.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He seemed not to hear her; bit ruminantly into one
of the cup cakes. Suddenly: “I can’t hardly write
at all, only to sign my name and like that.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Read?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Only to spell out the words. Anyways I don’t get
time for reading. But figuring I wish I knew. ’Rithmetic.
I can figger some, but those fellows in Haymarket
they are too sharp for me. They do numbers
in their head—like that, so quick.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina leaned toward him. “I’ll teach you. I’ll
teach you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How do you mean, teach me?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Evenings.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He looked down at his great calloused palms, then
up at her. “What would you take for pay?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Pay! I don’t want any pay.” She was genuinely
shocked.</p>
<p class='pindent'>His face lighted up with a sudden thought. “Tell
you what. My place is just this side the school, next
to Bouts’s place. I could start for you the fire, mornings,
in the school. And thaw the pump and bring in
a pail of water. This month, and January and February
and part of March, even, now I don’t go to market
on account it’s winter, I could start you the fire.
Till spring. And I could come maybe three times a
week, evenings, to Pool’s place, for lessons.” He
looked so helpless, so humble, so huge; and the more
pathetic for his hugeness.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She felt a little rush of warmth toward him that
was at once impersonal and maternal. She thought
again, “Why, the dear thing! The great helpless big
thing! How serious he is! And funny.” He was
indeed both serious and funny, with the ridiculous cup
cake in his great hand, his eyes wide and ruminant, his
face ruddier than ever, his forehead knotted with
earnestness. She laughed, suddenly, a gay little laugh,
and he, after a puzzled pause, joined her companionably.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Three evenings a week,” repeated Selina, then,
from the depths of her ignorance. “Why, I’d love to.
I’d—love to.”</p>
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