<div><span class='pageno' title='96' id='Page_96'></span><h1>VI</h1></div>
<p class='pindent'>The evenings turned out to be Tuesdays, Thursdays,
and Saturdays. Supper was over by six-thirty
in the Pool household. Pervus was there
by seven, very clean as to shirt, his hair brushed till it
shone; shy, and given to dropping his hat and bumping
against chairs, and looking solemn. Selina was torn
between pity and mirth. If only he had blustered. A
blustering big man puts the world on the defensive. A
gentle giant disarms it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina got out her McBride’s Grammar and Duffy’s
Arithmetic, and together they started to parse verbs,
paper walls, dig cisterns, and extract square roots.
They found study impossible at the oilcloth-covered
kitchen table, with the Pool household eddying about
it. Jakob built a fire in the parlour stove and there
they sat, teacher and pupil, their feet resting cosily on
the gleaming nickel railing that encircled the wood
burner.</p>
<p class='pindent'>On the evening of the first lesson Roelf had glowered
throughout supper and had disappeared into the
work-shed, whence issued a great sound of hammering,
sawing, and general clatter. He and Selina had
got into the way of spending much time together, in
or out of doors. They skated on Vander Sijde’s pond;
together with the shrieking pigtails they coasted on
the little slope that led down from Kuyper’s woods
to the main road, using sleds that had been put together
by Roelf. On bad days they read or studied.
Not Sundays merely, but many week-day evenings
were spent thus. Selina was determined that Roelf
should break away from the uncouth speech of the
countryside; that he should at least share with her the
somewhat sketchy knowledge gained at Miss Fister’s
select school. She, the woman of almost twenty,
never talked down to this boy of twelve. The boy
worshipped her inarticulately. She had early discovered
that he had a feeling for beauty—beauty of
line, texture, colour, and grouping—that was rare in
one of his years. The feel of a satin ribbon in his
fingers; the orange and rose of a sunset; the folds of
the wine-red cashmere dress; the cadence of a spoken
line, brought a look to his face that startled her. She
had a battered volume of Tennyson. When first she
read him the line beginning, “Elaine the fair, Elaine
the lovable, Elaine, the lily maid of Astolat——” he
had uttered a little exclamation. She, glancing up
from her book, had found his eyes wide, bright, and
luminous in his lean dark face.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What is it, Roelf?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He had flushed. “I didn’t say nothing—anything.
Start over again how it goes, ‘Elaine——’ ”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She had begun again the fragrant lines, “Elaine the
fair, Elaine the lovable . . .”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Since the gathering at Ooms’s hall he had been
moody and sullen; had refused to answer when she
spoke to him of his bid for her basket. Urged, he
would only say, “Oh, it was just fun to make old
Ooms mad.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Now, with the advent of Pervus DeJong, Roelf
presented that most touching and miserable of spectacles,
a small boy jealous and helpless in his jealousy.
Selina had asked him to join the tri-weekly evening lessons;
had, indeed, insisted that he be a pupil in the
class round the parlour stove. Maartje had said, on
the night of Pervus DeJong’s first visit, “Roelf, you
sit, too, and learn. Is good for you to learn out of
books the way teacher says.” Klaas Pool, too, had approved
the plan, since it would cost nothing and, furthermore,
would in no way interfere with Roelf’s farm
work. “Sure; learn,” he said, with a large gesture.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Roelf would not. He behaved very badly; slammed
doors, whistled, scuffled on the kitchen floor, made
many mysterious trips through the parlour up the
stairs that led off that room, ascending with a clatter;
incited Geertje and Jozina to quarrels and tears; had
the household in a hubbub; stumbled over Dunder, the
dog, so that that anguished animal’s yelps were added
to the din.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina was frantic. Lessons were impossible amidst
this uproar. “It has never been like this before,” she
assured Pervus, almost tearfully. “I don’t know
what’s the matter. It’s awful.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Pervus had looked up from his slate. His eyes were
calm, his lips smiling. “Is all right. In my house is
too still, evenings. Next time it goes better. You
see.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Next time it did go better. Roelf disappeared into
his work-shed after supper; did not emerge until after
DeJong’s departure.</p>
<p class='pindent'>There was something about the sight of this great
creature bent laboriously over a slate, the pencil held
clumsily in his huge fingers, that moved Selina
strangely. Pity wracked her. If she had known to
what emotion this pity was akin she might have taken
away the slate and given him a tablet, and the whole
course of her life would have been different. “Poor
lad,” she thought. “Poor lad.” Chided herself for
being amused at his childlike earnestness.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He did not make an apt pupil, though painstaking.
Usually the top draught of the stove was open, and
the glow of the fire imparted to his face and head a
certain roseate glory. He was very grave. His
brow wore a troubled frown. Selina would go over a
problem or a sentence again and again, patiently, patiently.
Then, suddenly, like a hand passed over his
face, his smile would come, transforming it. He had
white strong teeth, too small, and perhaps not so white
as they seemed because of his russet blondeur. He
would smile like a child, and Selina should have been
warned by the warm rush of joy that his smile gave
her. She would smile, too. He was as pleased as
though he had made a fresh and wonderful discovery.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s easy,” he would say, “when you know it once.”
Like a boy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He usually went home by eight-thirty or nine. Often
the Pools went to bed before he left. After he had
gone Selina was wakeful. She would heat water and
wash; brush her hair vigorously; feeling at once buoyant
and depressed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Sometimes they fell to talking. His wife had died
in the second year of their marriage, when the child
was born. The child, too, had died. A girl. He
was unlucky, like that. It was the same with the farm.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Spring, half of the land is under water. My piece,
just. Bouts’s place, next to me, is high and rich.
Bouts, he don’t even need deep ploughing. His land
is quick land. It warms up in the spring early. After
rain it works easy. He puts in fertilizer, any kind, and
his plants jump, like. My place is bad for garden
truck. Wet. All the time, wet; or in summer baked
before I can loosen it again. Muckland.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina thought a moment. She had heard much
talk between Klaas and Jakob, winter evenings. “Can’t
you do something to it—fix it—so that the water will
run off? Raise it, or dig a ditch or something?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“We-e-ell, maybe. Maybe you could. But it costs
money, draining.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It costs money not to, doesn’t it?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He considered this, ruminatively. “Guess it does.
But you don’t have to have ready cash to let the land
lay. To drain it you do.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina shook her head impatiently. “That’s a very
foolish, short-sighted way to reason.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He looked helpless as only the strong and powerful
can look. Selina’s heart melted in pity. He would
look down at the great calloused hands; up at her.
One of the charms of Pervus DeJong lay in the things
that his eyes said and his tongue did not. Women always
imagined he was about to say what he looked, but
he never did. It made otherwise dull conversation
with him most exciting.</p>
<p class='pindent'>His was in no way a shrewd mind. His respect for
Selina was almost reverence. But he had this advantage:
he had married a woman, had lived with her
for two years. She had borne him a child. Selina
was a girl in experience. She was a woman capable
of a great deal of passion, but she did not know that.
Passion was a thing no woman possessed, much less
talked about. It simply did not exist, except in men,
and then was something to be ashamed of, like a violent
temper, or a weak stomach.</p>
<p class='pindent'>By the first of March he could speak a slow, careful,
and fairly grammatical English. He could master
simple sums. By the middle of March the lessons
would cease. There was too much work to do about
the farm—night work as well as day. She found herself
trying not to think about the time when the lessons
should cease. She refused to look ahead to April.</p>
<p class='pindent'>One night, late in February, Selina was conscious
that she was trying to control something. She was trying
to keep her eyes away from something. She realized
that she was trying not to look at his hands. She
wanted, crazily, to touch them. She wanted to feel
them about her throat. She wanted to put her lips on
his hands—brush the backs of them, slowly, moistly,
with her mouth, lingeringly. She was terribly frightened.
She thought to herself: “I am going crazy.
I am losing my mind. There is something the matter
with me. I wonder how I look. I must look queer.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She said something to make him look up at her.
His glance was mild, undismayed. So this hideous
thing did not show in her face. She kept her eyes resolutely
on the book. At half-past eight she closed her
book suddenly. “I’m tired. I think it’s the spring
coming on.” She smiled a little wavering smile. He
rose and stretched himself, his great arms high above
his head. Selina shivered.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Two more weeks,” he said, “is the last lesson.
Well, do you think I have done pretty good—well?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Very well,” Selina replied, evenly. She felt very
tired.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The first week in March he was ill, and did not
come. A rheumatic affliction to which he was subject.
His father, old Johannes DeJong, had had it before
him. Working in the wet fields did it, they said. It
was the curse of the truck farmer. Selina’s evenings
were free to devote to Roelf, who glowed again. She
sewed, too; read; helped Mrs. Pool with the housework
in a gust of sympathy and found strange relief
therein; made over an old dress; studied; wrote all her
letters (few enough), even one to the dried-apple
aunts in Vermont. She no longer wrote to Julie Hempel.
She had heard that Julie was to be married to a
Kansas man named Arnold. Julie herself had not
written. The first week in March passed. He did
not come. Nor did he come the following Tuesday or
Thursday. After a terrific battle with herself Selina,
after school on Thursday, walked past his house, busily,
as though bent on an errand. Despised herself for
doing it, could not help herself, found a horrible and
tortuous satisfaction in not looking at the house as she
passed it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She was bewildered, frightened. All that week she
had a curious feeling—or succession of feelings. There
was the sensation of suffocation followed by that of
emptiness—of being hollow—boneless—bloodless.
Then, at times, there was a feeling of physical pain; at
others a sense of being disembowelled. She was restless,
listless, by turns. Period of furious activity followed
by days of inertia. It was the spring, Maartje
said. Selina hoped she wasn’t going to be ill. She
had never felt like that before. She wanted to cry.
She was irritable to the point of waspishness with the
children in the schoolroom.</p>
<p class='pindent'>On Saturday—the fourteenth of March—he walked
in at seven. Klaas, Maartje, and Roelf had driven
off to a gathering at Low Prairie, leaving Selina with
the pigtails and old Jakob. She had promised to make
taffy for them, and was in the midst of it when his
knock sounded at the kitchen door. All the blood in
her body rushed to her head; pounded there hotly. He
entered. There slipped down over her a complete
armour of calmness, of self-possession; of glib how do
you do Mr. DeJong and how are you feeling and won’t
you sit down and there’s no fire in the parlour we’ll
have to sit here.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He took part in the taffy pulling. Selina wondered
if Geertje and Jozina would ever have done squealing.
It was half-past eight before she bundled them off to
bed with a plate of clipped taffy lozenges between
them. She heard them scuffling and scrimmaging
about in the rare freedom of their parents’ absence.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Now, children!” she called. “You know what you
promised your mother and father.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She heard Geertje’s tones mimicking her mincingly,
“You know what you promised your mother and
father.” Then a cascade of smothered giggles.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Pervus had been to town, evidently, for he now took
from his coat pocket a bag containing half a dozen
bananas—that delicacy of delicacies to the farm palate.
She half peeled two and brought them in to the
pigtails. They ate them thickly rapturous, and
dropped off to sleep immediately, surfeited.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Pervus DeJong and Selina sat at the kitchen table,
their books spread out before them on the oilcloth.
The sweet heavy scent of the fruit filled the room.
Selina brought the parlour lamp into the kitchen, the
better to see. It was a nickel-bellied lamp with a yellow
glass shade that cast a mellow golden glow.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You didn’t go to the meeting,” primly. “Mr. and
Mrs. Pool went.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No. No, I didn’t go.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why not?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She saw him swallow. “I got through too late. I
went to town, and I got through too late. We’re fixing
to sow tomato seeds in the hotbeds to-morrow.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina opened McBride’s Grammar. “Ahem!” a
school-teacherly cough. “Now, then, we’ll parse this
sentence: Blucher arrived on the field of Waterloo
just as Wellington was receiving the last onslaught of
Napoleon. ‘Just’ may be treated as a modifier of the
dependent clause. That is: ‘Just’ means: at the time
<span class='it'>at which</span>. Well. <span class='it'>Just</span> here modified <span class='it'>at the time</span>.
And Wellington is the . . .”</p>
<p class='pindent'>This for half an hour. Selina kept her eyes resolutely
on the book. His voice went on with the dry
business of parsing and its deep resonance struck a response
from her as a harp responds when a hand is
swept over its strings. Upstairs she could hear old
Jakob clumping about in his preparations for bed.
Then there was only stillness overhead. Selina kept
her eyes resolutely on the book. Yet she saw, as
though her eyes rested on them, his large, strong hands.
On the backs of them was a fine golden down that deepened
at his wrists. Heavier and darker at the wrists.
She found herself praying a little for strength—for
strength against this horror and wickedness. This
sin, this abomination that held her. A terrible, stark,
and pitiful prayer, couched in the idiom of the Bible.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, God, keep my eyes and my thoughts away
from him. Away from his hands. Let me keep my
eyes and my thoughts away from the golden hairs on
his wrists. Let me not think of his wrists. . . .
The owner of the southwest ¼ sells a strip 20
rods wide along the south side of his farm. How
much does he receive at $150 per acre?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He triumphed in this transaction, began the struggle
with the square root of 576. Square roots agonized
him. She washed the slate clean with her little sponge.
He was leaning close in his effort to comprehend the
fiendish little figures that marched so tractably under
Selina’s masterly pencil.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She took it up, glibly. “The remainder must contain
twice the product of the tens by the units plus the
square of the units.” He blinked. Utterly bewildered.
“<span class='it'>And</span>,” went on Selina, blithely, “twice the
tens, times the units, plus the square of the units, is the
same as the sum of twice the tens, and the units, times
the units. <span class='it'>Therefore</span>”—with a flourish—“add 4
units to the 40 and multiply the result by 4. <span class='it'>Therefore</span>”—in
final triumph—“the square root of 576 is
24.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She was breathing rather fast. The fire in the kitchen
stove snapped and cracked. “Now, then, suppose
you do that for me. We’ll wipe it out. There!
What must the remainder contain?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He took it up, slowly, haltingly. The house was
terribly still except for the man’s voice. “The remainder
. . . twice . . . product . . . tens
. . . units . . .” A something in his voice—a
note—a timbre. She felt herself swaying queerly,
as though the whole house were gently rocking. Little
delicious agonizing shivers chased each other, hot and
cold, up her arms, down her legs, over her spine.
. . . “plus the square of the units is the same as
the sum twice the tens . . . twice . . . the
tens . . . the tens . . .” His voice stopped.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina’s eyes leaped from the book to his hands, uncontrollably.
Something about them startled her.
They were clenched into fists. Her eyes now leaped
from those clenched fists to the face of the man beside
her. Her head came up, and back. Her wide startled
eyes met his. His were a blaze of blinding blue in
his tanned face. Some corner of her mind that was
still working clearly noted this. Then his hands unclenched.
The blue blaze scorched her, enveloped her.
Her cheek knew the harsh cool feel of a man’s cheek.
She sensed the potent, terrifying, pungent odour of
close contact—a mixture of tobacco smoke, his hair,
freshly laundered linen, an indefinable body smell. It
was a mingling that disgusted and attracted her. She
was at once repelled and drawn. Then she felt his lips
on hers and her own, incredibly, responding eagerly,
wholly to that pressure.</p>
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