<div><span class='pageno' title='108' id='Page_108'></span><h1>VII</h1></div>
<p class='pindent'>They were married the following May, just
two months later. The High Prairie school
year practically ended with the appearance of
the first tender shoots of green that meant onions,
radishes, and spinach above the rich sandy loam.
Selina’s classes broke, dwindled, shrank to almost nothing.
The school became a kindergarten of five-year-old
babies who wriggled and shifted and scratched in
the warm spring air that came from the teeming
prairie through the open windows. The schoolhouse
stove stood rusty-red and cold. The drum in Selina’s
bedroom was a black genie deprived of his power now
to taunt her.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina was at once bewildered and calm; rebellious
and content. Over-laying these emotions was something
like grim amusement. Beneath them, something
like fright. High Prairie, in May, was green and
gold and rose and blue. The spring flowers painted
the fields and the roadside with splashes of yellow, of
pink, of mauve, and purple. Violets, buttercups, mandrakes,
marsh-marigolds, hepatica. The air was soft
and cool from the lake. Selina had never known
spring in the country before. It made her ache with
an actual physical ache. She moved with a strange air
of fatality. It was as if she were being drawn inexorably,
against her will, her judgment, her plans, into
something sweet and terrible. When with Pervus she
was elated, gay, voluble. He talked little; looked at
her dumbly, worshippingly. When he brought her a
withered bunch of trilliums, the tears came to her eyes.
He had walked to Updike’s woods to get them because
he had heard her say she loved them, and there were
none nearer. They were limp and listless from the
heat, and from being held in his hand. He looked up
at her from where he stood on the kitchen steps, she
in the doorway. She took them, laid her hand on his
head. It was as when some great gentle dog brings
in a limp and bedraggled prize dug from the yard and,
laying it at one’s feet, looks up at one with soft asking
eyes.</p>
<p class='pindent'>There were days when the feeling of unreality possessed
her. She, a truck farmer’s wife, living in High
Prairie the rest of her days! Why, no! No! Was
this the great adventure that her father had always
spoken of? She, who was going to be a happy wayfarer
down the path of life—any one of a dozen things.
This High Prairie winter was to have been only an
episode. Not her life! She looked at Maartje. Oh,
but she’d never be like that. That was stupid, unnecessary.
Pink and blue dresses in the house, for her.
Frills on the window curtains. Flowers in bowls.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Some of the pangs and terrors with which most prospective
brides are assailed she confided to Mrs. Pool
while that active lady was slamming about the kitchen.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Did you ever feel scared and—and sort of—scared
when you thought about marry, Mrs. Pool?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Maartje Pool’s hands were in a great batch of
bread dough which she pummelled and slapped and
kneaded vigorously. She shook out a handful of
flour on the baking board while she held the dough
mass in the other hand, then plumped it down and
again began to knead, both hands doubled into fists.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She laughed a short little laugh. “I ran away.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You did! You mean you really ran—but why?
Didn’t you lo—like Klaas?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Maartje Pool kneaded briskly, the colour high in her
cheeks, what with the vigorous pummelling and rolling,
and something else that made her look strangely young
for the moment—girlish, almost. “Sure I liked him,
I liked him.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But you ran away?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Not far. I came back. Nobody ever knew I ran,
even. But I ran. I knew.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why did you come back?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Maartje elucidated her philosophy without being in
the least aware that it could be called by any such high-sounding
name. “You can’t run away far enough.
Except you stop living you can’t run away from
life.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The girlish look had fled. She was world-old. Her
strong arms ceased their pounding and thumping for a
moment. On the steps just outside Klaas and Jakob
were scanning the weekly reports preparatory to going
into the city late that afternoon.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina had the difficult task of winning Roelf to her
all over again. He was like a trusting little animal,
who, wounded by the hand he has trusted, is shy of it.
She used blandishments on this boy of thirteen such as
she had never vouchsafed the man she was going to
marry. He had asked her, bluntly, one day: “Why
are you going to marry with him?” He never spoke
the name.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She thought deeply. What to say? The answer
ready on her tongue would have little meaning for this
boy. There came to her a line from Lancelot and
Elaine. She answered, “To serve him, and to follow
him through the world.” She thought that rather
fine-sounding until Roelf promptly rejected it. “That’s
no reason. An answer out of a book. Anyway, to
follow him through the world is dumb. He stays
right here in High Prairie all his life.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How do you know!” Selina retorted, almost angrily.
Startled, too.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I know. He stays.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Still, he could not withstand her long. Together
they dug and planted flower beds in Pervus’s dingy
front yard. It was too late for tulips now. Pervus
had brought her some seeds from town. They ranged
all the way from poppies to asters; from purple iris to
morning glories. The last named were to form the
back-porch vine, of course, because they grew quickly.
Selina, city-bred, was ignorant of varieties, but insisted
she wanted an old-fashioned garden—marigolds,
pinks, mignonette, phlox. She and Roelf dug, spaded,
planted. The DeJong place was markedly ugly even
in that community of squat houses. It lacked the air
of sparkling cleanliness that saved the other places
from sordidness. The house, even then, was thirty
years old—a gray, weather-beaten frame box with a
mansard roof and a flat face staring out at the dense
willows by the roadside. It needed paint; the fences
sagged; the window curtains were awry. The parlour
was damp, funereal. The old woman who tended
the house for Pervus slopped about all day with a pail
and a wet gray rag. There was always a crazy campanile
of dirty dishes stacked on the table, and the
last meal seemed never to catch up with the next.
About the whole house there was a starkness, a bareness
that proclaimed no woman who loved it dwelt
therein.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina told herself (and Pervus) that she would
change all that. She saw herself going about with a
brush and a can of white paint, leaving beauty in her
wake, where ugliness had been.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Her trousseau was of the scantiest. Pervus’s
household was already equipped with such linens as
they would need. The question of a wedding gown
troubled her until Maartje suggested that she be married
in the old Dutch wedding dress that lay in the
bride’s chest in Selina’s bedroom.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“A real Dutch bride,” Maartje said. “Your man
will think that is fine.” Pervus was delighted. Selina
basked in his love like a kitten in the sun. She was,
after all, a very lonely little bride with only two photographs
on the shelf in her bedroom to give her courage
and counsel. The old Dutch wedding gown was many
inches too large for her. The skirt-band overlapped
her slim waist; her slender little bosom did not fill out
the generous width of the bodice; but the effect of the
whole was amazingly quaint as well as pathetic. The
wings of the stiffly embroidered coif framed the white
face from which the eyes looked out, large and dark.
She had even tried to wear the hand-carved shoes, but
had to give that up. In them her feet were as lost as
minnows in a rowboat. She had much difficulty with
the queer old buttons and fastenings. It was as though
the dead and gone Sophia Kroon were trying, with
futile ghostly fingers, to prevent this young thing from
meeting the fate that was to be hers.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They were married at the Pools’. Klaas and
Maartje had insisted on furnishing the wedding supper—ham,
chickens, sausages, cakes, pickles, beer.
The Reverend Dekker married them and all through
the ceremony Selina chided herself because she could
not keep her mind on his words in the fascination of
watching his short stubby beard as it waggled with
every motion of his jaw. Pervus looked stiff, solemn,
and uncomfortable in his wedding blacks—not at all
the handsome giant of the everyday corduroys and blue
shirt. In the midst of the ceremony Selina had her
moment of panic when she actually saw herself running
shrieking from this company, this man, this house,
down the road, on, on toward—toward what? The
feeling was so strong that she was surprised to find
herself still standing there in the Dutch wedding gown
answering “I do” in the proper place.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The wedding gifts were few. The Pools had given
them a “hanging lamp,” coveted of the farmer’s wife;
a hideous atrocity in yellow, with pink roses on its
shade and prisms dangling and tinkling all around the
edge. It was intended to hang suspended from the
parlour ceiling, and worked up and down on a sort of
pulley chain. From the Widow Paarlenberg came a
water set in red frosted glass shading to pink—a fat
pitcher and six tumblers. Roelf’s gift, the result of
many weeks’ labour in the work-shed, was a bride’s
chest copied from the fine old piece that had saved
Selina’s room from sheer ugliness. He had stained
the wood, polished it. Had carved the front of it
with her initials—very like those that stood out so
boldly on the old chest upstairs—S. P. D. And the
year—1890. The whole was a fine piece of craftsmanship
for a boy of thirteen—would not have discredited
a man of any age. It was the one beautiful
gift among Selina’s clumsy crude wedding things. She
had thanked him with tears in her eyes. “Roelf,
you’ll come to see me often, won’t you? Often!”
Then, as he had hesitated, “I’ll need you so. You’re
all I’ve got.” A strange thing for a bride to say.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll come,” the boy had said, trying to make his
voice casual, his tone careless. “Sure, I’ll come oncet
in a while.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Once, Roelf. <span class='it'>Once</span> in a while.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He repeated it after her, dutifully.</p>
<p class='pindent'>After the wedding they went straight to DeJong’s
house. In May the vegetable farmer cannot neglect
his garden even for a day. The house had been made
ready for them. The sway of the old housekeeper
was over. Her kitchen bedroom was empty.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Throughout the supper Selina had had thoughts
which were so foolish and detached as almost to alarm
her.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Now I am married. I am Mrs. Pervus DeJong.
That’s a pretty name. It would look quite distinguished
on a calling card, very spidery and fine:</p>
<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'><span class="invisible">x</span></td></tr>
<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'><span class="invisible">x</span></td></tr>
<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'><span class="invisible">x</span></td></tr>
<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'> <span class='sc'>Mrs. Pervus DeJong</span><span class="invisible">xxxxxxxxx</span></td></tr>
<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'><span class="invisible">x</span></td></tr>
<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'><span class="invisible">x</span></td></tr>
<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'> <span class='it'>At Home Fridays</span></td></tr>
<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'><span class="invisible">x</span></td></tr>
</table>
<p class='noindent'>She recalled this later, grimly, when she was Mrs. Pervus
DeJong, at home not only Fridays, but Saturdays,
Sundays, Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and
Thursdays.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They drove down the road to DeJong’s place. Selina
thought, “Now I am driving home with my husband.
I feel his shoulder against mine. I wish he
would talk. I wish he would say something. Still,
I’m not frightened.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Pervus’s market wagon was standing in the yard,
shafts down. He should have gone to market to-day;
would certainly have to go to-morrow, starting early in
the afternoon so as to get a good stand in the Haymarket.
By the light of his lantern the wagon seemed to
Selina to be a symbol. She had often seen it before,
but now that it was to be a part of her life—this the
DeJong market wagon and she Mrs. DeJong—she saw
clearly what a crazy, disreputable, and poverty-proclaiming
old vehicle it was, in contrast with the neat
strong wagon in Klaas Pool’s yard, smart with green
paint and red lettering that announced, “Klaas Pool,
Garden Produce.” With the two sleek farm horses
the turnout looked as prosperous and comfortable as
Klaas himself.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Pervus swung her down from the seat of the buggy,
his hand about her waist, and held her so for a moment,
close. Selina said, “You must have that wagon
painted, Pervus. And the seat-springs fixed and the
sideboard mended.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He stared. “Wagon!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes. It looks a sight.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The house was tidy enough, but none too clean.
Old Mrs. Voorhees had not been minded to keep house
too scrupulously for a man who would be unlikely to
know whether or not it was clean. Pervus lighted the
lamps. There was a fire in the kitchen stove. It
made the house seem stuffy on this mild May night.
Selina thought that her own little bedroom at the
Pools’, no longer hers, must be deliciously cool and
still with the breeze fanning fresh from the west.
Pervus was putting the horse into the barn. The bedroom
was off the sitting room. The window was shut.
This last year had taught Selina to prepare the night
before for next morning’s rising, so as to lose the least
possible time. She did this now, unconsciously. She
took off her white muslin underwear with its frills and
embroidery—the three stiff petticoats, and the stiffly
starched corset-cover, and the high-bosomed corset
and put them into the bureau drawer that she herself
had cleaned and papered neatly the week before. She
brushed her hair, laid out to-morrow’s garments, put
on her high-necked, long-sleeved nightgown and got
into this strange bed. She heard Pervus DeJong shut
the kitchen door; the latch clicked, the lock turned.
Heavy quick footsteps across the bare kitchen floor.
This man was coming into her room . . . “You
can’t run far enough,” Maartje Pool had said. “Except
you stop living you can’t run away from life.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Next morning it was dark when he awakened her at
four. She started up with a little cry and sat up,
straining her ears, her eyes. “Is that you, Father?”
She was little Selina Peake again, and Simeon Peake
had come in, gay, debonair, from a night’s gaming.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Pervus DeJong was already padding about the room
in stocking feet. “What—what time is it? What’s
the matter, Father? Why are you up? Haven’t you
gone to bed . . .” Then she remembered.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Pervus DeJong laughed and came toward her.
“Get up, little lazy bones. It’s after four. All yesterday’s
work I’ve got to do, and all to-day’s. Breakfast,
little Lina, breakfast. You are a farmer’s wife
now.”</p>
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