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Title: Country People
Author: Suckow, Ruth (1892-1960)
Date of first publication: 1924
Edition used as base for this ebook:
   Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, 1924
Date first posted: 26 February 2012
Date last updated: 26 February 2012
Project Gutenberg Canada ebook #918

This ebook was produced by
Barbara Watson, woodie4, Mark Akrigg
& the Online Distributed Proofreading Canada Team
at http://www.pgdpcanada.net






  _Country People_




  _SOME BORZOI BOOKS_
     _SPRING, 1924_


  THE PHILOSOPHER'S STONE
  J. ANKER LARSEN

  AN ISLAND CHRONICLE
  WILLIAM CUMMINGS

  WOMEN AND WIVES
  HARVEY FERGUSSON

  THE PITIFUL WIFE
  STORM JAMESON

  TONY
  STEPHEN HUDSON

  IMPERTURBE
  ELLIOT H. PAUL

  WINE OF FURY
  LEIGH ROGERS

  SANDOVAL
  THOMAS BEER





  _Country People_

  _Ruth Suckow_

  _Toronto: The Macmillan Company of
  Canada, Ltd., at St. Martin's House_
                 _1924_






  PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA





                _Contents_


                 PART ONE

    _I: August Kaetterhenry's Place_      9
   _II: The Kaetterhenrys_               14
  _III: Emma Stille_                     32

                 PART TWO

    _I: The Farm and the Children_       53
   _II: Grandma and Grandpa_             67
  _III: Loosening Up_                    82
   _IV: The War_                        100

                 PART THREE

    _I: Operation_                      115
   _II: Town_                           133

                 PART FOUR

    _I: Retired Farmers_                151
   _II: Obituary_                       167
  _III: The Estate_                     185
   _IV: Mrs. Emma Kaetterhenry_         199






_Part One_




_I: August Kaetterhenry's Place_


Some of the best land in the country, people said, was right here in
Richland Township. The soil in Wapsipinicon County was a little inclined
to be sandy, didn't bring quite the price of the very best Iowa
farming-land; but this stretch in here between Richland and "Wapsie"
didn't give the farmers much chance for complaint.

This was the road that was later made a highway. It had a slight jog
about a mile out of Richland. Tall cottonwoods grew on one side, on the
other a tangle of bushes. There was always a kind of mud-hole here,
sifted over with leaves and little fluffs from the cottonwoods; a bad
place in the road, closed in and shaded.

Beyond this it was all straight going to "Wapsie." The land spread out
rich and rolling, in smooth, tilted vistas of square fields, green,
yellow, and earth-brown, trees growing in full-leaved clusters down
about the banks of the little caved-in creeks in the pastures or
standing lone, and slanting, on the crests of the low, rounded hills. In
the distance the groves of farms were softened, blurred together; the
far-off rising land was swathed in blue, a faint milky tint in which dim
figures of trees were swimming.

A pink frame school-house stood on one side of the road. The long grass
was trampled this way and that by the children's feet. Over beyond Ed
Angell's place lay the Grove, where Sunday-School picnics and Fourth of
July celebrations were held--a rich, thick cluster of trees, oaks and
hickories, spreading over the hill and down the depressions of the
slope, dark green upon the paler green of the short-cropped grass on the
hill-side. The road went high and straight until it dipped down into
"Wapsie," which lay deep in trees, the red stone tower of the
court-house rising out of thick tufts of elms.

The farms were good along this road. A good class of people had settled
here, German and English most of them. Men who kept an eye out for land
deals noted shrewdly how well the buildings and barbed-wire fences were
kept up, the red barns and silos, the prim white houses, square or with
an ell, some of them with front yards enclosed in fences, and rose or
snowball bushes growing. Most of these farmers--except the LaRues, who
lived in a dingy, unpainted house with a bare farm-yard and a hog-pen of
trampled, sloughy mud--drove into town in neat "two-seated rigs" with
good teams. The cattle feeding in the pastures that sloped down,
emerald-green, turfy, almost mossy, to the edges of the creeks were
sleek and brown.

Over on the cross-roads there were more woods, and it was hillier. The
farm-buildings were poorer, the fences slacker. These were the farms
where people from "Wapsie" drove out to buy cheap a chicken, a goose, or
a few crates of berries.

The place on the north of the road, beyond LaRue's, was August
Kaetterhenry's.

It was a neat, plain farm, two hundred and fifty acres, virtually all
under cultivation. The house was set back at what was termed "a nice
distance" from the road--a white house with pink trimmings and a narrow
porch. The front yard was not fenced in, but August made the boys keep
the grass mowed, and it presented a neat appearance. Tall summer lilies,
orange with dark spots, grew near the front porch in a spreading patch.
On the west of the house stood the wind-break--two rows of elms that
were lofty now, rather thin, and close together. The lawn ended at their
trunks in a ridge of high grass and feathery weeds that the boys could
not keep cut. A barbed-wire fence, caught together in one place by a
wooden staple, separated them from the cornfield. The lofty upper
branches rustled and moved slightly against the blue sky. In the evening
their outlines were blurred and there was a sadness in their dark
leafiness, high and motionless.

The wide yard sloped east to the barns and sheds across "the drive." It
was worn bare of grass about the buildings and scattered with chicken
fluff and droppings. The geese ran squawking across it when teams drove
in. The great barn stood at the end of the slope, raised on a high
foundation, with an inclined platform of heavy planks that thundered and
shook under the horses' hoofs. Everyone about here remembered when
August Kaetterhenry had put up this barn. It was painted white, as was
the silo, and on the peak of the roof were two cupolas with slatted
sides, and lightning-rods that glittered intermittently upon the
blueness of the sky. On the side toward the road was painted in large
black letters slowly getting weather-dimmed:

                         AUGUST KAETTERHENRY
                                  1907

It was one of the best barns in the country there when it was put up.
All of Kaetterhenry's buildings were good. The old barn had been made
over by his brother-in-law, Hans Stille, into a granary and milk-house,
painted white, too, the ground always slippery and muddy about the
milk-house, a dribble of yellow ears leaking out from the corn-crib,
kernels scattered in front of it, where the chickens were pecking. On
the slope nearer the house the windmill stood, with the tank beside it,
a bare steel skeleton giving off sudden flashes, the grey-painted wheel
turning now fast, now slow, up there in the sky.

"Yes," people said when they drove past, "Kaetterhenry's done pretty
good here. Well, he's a worker all right."

They admired the neat, square fields of oats and corn, the high, rolling
pasture dotted with white clover, a few wild plum-trees set slanting,
delicate and lonely, here and there.

"Yes, sir, he's got a nice farm."




_II: The Kaetterhenrys_


August Kaetterhenry had not always had a farm like this. He had had to
work for what he had got, like most of the people in that country. He
hadn't got prosperous by wishing. There were plenty of people who could
remember when he first came into the Richland neighbourhood. Along about
the early eighties or late seventies it must have been, because he had
worked for Henry Baumgartner, and it was in 1884 or "somewheres around"
that the Baumgartners had moved into town. He came from Turkey Creek,
where there were still "a whole raft of those Kaetterhenrys." August was
one of old Casper Kaetterhenry's boys.

Turkey Creek was a little backwoods town about fifteen miles north of
Richland, up in the timber. It still had no railroad and was "years
behind the times," but some of the farmers around there had money, if
they only cared to spend it. It was a good trading-centre. There was a
large German settlement around Turkey Creek, more Germans than in the
country near Richland, which had a good many settlers from Somerset, in
England. Turkey Creek had had Scotch and Yankee settlers in the first
place, trappers and woodsmen; but the Germans coming in to farm had
crowded these people out. They were a slow, hard-headed set, those
Turkey Creek Germans, but they were better than the timber-men, who had
had, as old men who knew that country liked to tell, "some pretty rough
characters among them." The Germans were hard-working, money-savers, and
they had come to make homes for themselves.

It was Henry Baumgartner who had brought them there in the first
place--old Henry Baumgartner. He was gone now, but he had been "quite a
character" in his day. He was a Prussian who had come to this country
when he was only a boy. He was said to have worked at one of the forges
in Pennsylvania. There was a story of how, when he had been working
there, he had been converted to German Methodism. He had come out to
Iowa in a very early day and had bought up large tracts of timber-land
when it was selling for almost nothing. Later, in the interests of both
riches and religion, which the old man had always shrewdly worked
together, he had sent back to Prussia and got a dozen families to come
and settle on his land, promising them help in getting started on the
condition that they should all become German Methodists. He had been
afraid that the German Catholics, who had a settlement over in the hills
at Holy Cross, would "get a hold" in the Turkey timber. That was the way
that large German Methodist community had first started. Other Germans
had begun coming in until the region was full of them. Most of them had
been Lutherans in the old country, but Henry Baumgartner had been
careful to see that there was no Lutheran church started here.

It was a hilly region, timber and bottom-land. The people had lived
primitively there; many of them did still. There were still a few of the
old log cabins to be seen in isolated places, down on the Turkey Bottom.
In those early days they had all lived in log cabins. The old-timers
could remember well when the first frame-house in the country had gone
up on old Herman Klaus's farm. Turkey Creek had been a wild little
timber town with a few wooden stores and houses, after the first old
log buildings had gone down, and the town hall, of the native yellow
limestone, that was standing yet at the end of the business street, and
where now the community held the harvest-home supper and the young
people had dances.

The Kaetterhenrys had lived in one of those log houses on the same land
where one of them, a half-brother of August's, was living now--the farm
about three miles straight north of Turkey Creek, the one with the small
white house and the patch of timber. It had all been timber in those
days.

The Kaetterhenrys had not been among those whom Henry Baumgartner had
brought to this region--they came a few years later--but their history
was not very different from that of many families in the community. They
came to this country from Germany in about 1849 or 1850, Casper and his
wife and two children, and his brother Adolph and his wife. Casper's
wife's brother, Johann Rausch, had preceded them. He was one of those
who had drifted over into Iowa from Ohio or New York, coming because
others were coming, because everyone was talking about the West. He had
written back to his relatives in the old country, full of enthusiasm,
praising the country and telling how fine the land was, until he had got
Casper and Adolph persuaded to come.

They landed at New Orleans after a voyage of eight weeks and three days
in a sailing-vessel, and from there took boat up the Mississippi to St.
Louis. They spent the winter there, waiting for spring. The older child,
Joseph, died of cholera while they were there. Early the next March, as
soon as the river was open, they again took boat, and went up as far as
north-eastern Iowa. They bought oxen and farm implements at Guttenberg,
the little river town where they landed, and from there went straight
over to Turkey Creek to join Johann. He soon after pulled out again and
went on West, but Casper and Adolph took up land near each other. Casper
started right in clearing his land and putting up the log cabin in which
the family lived until the children were good-sized.

The cabin had one room at first; later, two more were added. They did
their cooking, eating, sleeping all in there. There the children were
born, one after another--Mina, Kurt, Mary, August, Sophie, Heinie,
Ferdinand. They had had only Lena when they came there, since little
Joseph had died on the way. They lived all crowded into that little
cabin, four children sleeping packed into a dusty feather-bed over which
the covers were hastily drawn in the day-time. Feather-beds and pillows
and a little black tea-pot with raised blue flowers were all that the
Kaetterhenrys had brought with them from the old country. They had had
none of the "comforts of life" to begin with. They had saved up just
money enough to pay for the journey and their first crude
farming-necessities. They went through all the hardships of pioneer
life, the clearing of the land, storms that killed their cattle and
flooded their fields, the terrible blizzards of those days. Another
child--Mary--died, and was buried in a little grave that Casper himself
dug in a corner of their land. They had to work, all of them, father,
mother, girls, and boys, just as soon as they could get into the field.

But they were a sturdy tribe: they could stand things. Casper
Kaetterhenry had been a farm-labourer in the old country. He had always
worked hard, and so had his wife. But now that he was working for
himself instead of for some wealthy Pomeranian landowner who would get
all the profits, he was willing to work. Now he was going to make a
landowner of himself.

He brought up his children to know very little but work. The mother had
little time for them. In the intervals of bearing them she had to work
in the field. So did Lena, the oldest girl. Mina gave them all the care
that was given. They always cared more for this sister, in a way, than
for any other human being--Mina, a thick-faced, heavy, "Dutchy"-looking
girl, slow and melancholy and conscientious and kind. She afterwards
married Rudy Nisson, and had a hard time of it.

The older children had no chance for any schooling, but a school-house
was built on the outskirts of Turkey Creek to which the younger ones
went off and on, as they could be spared, in the winter. That Turkey
Creek school! It had wooden benches and a great stove on which one of
the teachers--"Old Man Bartlett" they called him--kept hickory switches
drying. Teachers were as irregular as pupils. Old Man Bartlett stayed
only one week. He had already "licked" all the boys once or twice over,
and he celebrated his last day by whipping every one of the girls. The
next Monday he did not appear. He had "skipped the country." He had come
to Turkey Creek from no one knew where, with only the clothes on his
back, and no one ever learned what had become of him. There were a few
attempts made to hold a German school, but they did not come to much.
But it seemed to Casper Kaetterhenry that his children were in clover.
He himself could do little more than write his own name. Even some of
the other farmers about there said that Casper wasn't easy on his
children. He expected them to work and that he should get all the
benefit of their work. As soon as they were old enough to do anything,
they had to help on the farm. That was the way to save up money. Casper
kept them at it every minute.

As soon as August was eleven he began "hiring out" to some of the
neighbouring farmers. He was a good worker. All of the Kaetterhenrys
were. "_Ach_, those Kaetterhenrys!" people would sometimes say, meaning
that they were stubborn and silent and _dumm_. And of Kurt or August or
Heinie, "_Ja_, he's a Kaetterhenry all right." They were Pomeranians.
"Pummers" people called them, making fun of some of their ways and the
queer Low Dutch expressions that old Casper used. But August was good
help. He could do nearly everything about a farm that a man could.

He worked for all kinds of people. For Schumacher once, and for Grobaty,
a fat, black-bearded old German who beat his wife and his horses and was
converted regularly at every camp-meeting. Grobaty's father lived with
him. He had an immense white beard that reached below his waist. Usually
he kept it buttoned inside his coat, but sometimes August would see him
lift it out and fondly stroke and caress it. August tried blacksmithing
for a while, too, but he liked farming better. He would go back to
school in the winter-time, but when he was fourteen he quit for good.

By the time that he was fifteen he was virtually on his own resources.
He did not get on well with his father. August had a temper and he
didn't stand the old man's tyranny. August was the pick of the family,
most people thought. He was not so slow as the rest of them, although he
had all of the Kaetterhenry stubbornness. There was more of the mother
in him. There was a different strain in the Rausches. They were more
restless, more ambitious. People said that Mrs. Kaetterhenry might have
liked to have things a little different from what they were at home if
it hadn't been for "him." She was not a "Pummer." August was more like
her. He looked like her, too, with a fresh-coloured skin and blue eyes
showing temper in the way that they were set. Sophie, too, was "a
Rausch."

It was mostly work in those days, but there were other things. Weddings
were made much of in that community. Sometimes the celebration lasted
three days, like Hans Nisson's wedding, at the end of which most of the
men were laid out on the straw in the barn, dead drunk. There was still
more intoxication at the camp-meetings which were held in the timber by
travelling evangelists. People drove to them from miles around, camping
out in the woods and attending the meetings. They were times of
religious debauch. The shouting and singing and weeping, the general
wallow of emotionalism, gave an outlet after all the hard, grinding
work. August "went forward" at one of these meetings, along with the
other young men, stirred and yet shamefaced at the same time. He
believed that he was "converted."

Most of the life of the community centred about the German Methodist
church out in the country, which Henry Baumgartner helped them to build.
It was a plain white frame-building, bleak and small, a long
hitching-board in front of it, and behind it the sheds for the teams and
the two tiny outhouses all standing stark on a great clearing. Church
was held in the afternoon. The farmers drove there in lumber-wagons,
tying their horses to the long hitching-board, or in bad weather putting
them in the sheds. They stood about on the church-steps, talking, the
men together and the women in another group, until the preacher drove
up. Then they all marched solemnly into the church. The congregation
sat, the men and boys on one side, the women and girls on the other,
facing the pulpit--a silent, stolid congregation, moving slowly and
heavily in dark garments, creaking awkwardly as they turned to kneel on
the hard wooden floor, some of the men poised precariously on their
haunches, muttering the Lord's Prayer together in a guttural German that
was loud in the silent country church, the women's voices a husky murmur
above the deep, shamed rumble of the men's.

They had no regular pastor. Sometimes Wilhelm Stille, a farmer from over
near Richland who "did some preaching," came. He was a thin, fervent
man, with a greyish beard and long hair, who leaned over the pulpit and
spoke in a high, thin voice, his deep-set brown eyes burning with a kind
of mystic ardour. Sometimes they had one of the travelling preachers,
old exhorters, who wept and paced the platform as they prayed for
sinners, and pounded the Bible.

After the service the people went outside and talked a little before
they drove home. It was for this that the young men came. They stood
about in abashed Sunday-constrained groups, pretending to talk to one
another, but aware of the girls, whose eyes were aware of them; in their
thick, dark best clothes that made their skin look leather-brown, their
brown and black felt hats, their feet clumping awkwardly in stiff Sunday
shoes. This group of boys and young men was the last to disperse. The
older people talked in German, about the weather and the crops. Then the
men went out to get the teams hitched up to drive home.

August stayed around Turkey Creek until his mother died. She had been
ailing for years, had bought "herb" medicine and liver pills and tonics
from the medicine-man who drove around to the different farms with a
horse and wagon selling remedies. No one had known what it was except
stomach trouble, or had thought much about it. She had kept on working
all the time. But finally, when she was almost confined to her bed,
could digest virtually nothing, and could hardly drag herself into the
kitchen to see how Mina, whom they had called in, was doing the work,
Casper thought it might be time to drive into town and have the doctor
come out with him. Of course it was too late then. Otherwise it would
have been foolish for the doctor to be called. He too muttered something
about stomach trouble, but the neighbour women who came in whispered
"cancer" to each other. The children were sent for, and stood in awkward
panic about the old walnut bed where their mother lay "wasted to a
shadow," as the neighbour women said. The children had not actually
realized that there was anything the matter with her until now. She
died, and was buried in the little Turkey Creek cemetery near the German
church.

"Ach, that old Kaetterhenry!" the women said. "He worked her to death,
and then what did she have!" She had not lived to enjoy anything from
all her toil. They had been for a few years in the new frame-house, but
she had had to do things as she had always done them before.

It was expected that Mina would stay on at home and keep house for the
old man, at least until Heinie, who worked on the home place, brought
home a wife; Rudy Nisson was drinking and could not be counted upon to
support Mina. But this was not at all what old Casper had in mind. A few
weeks after his wife had died, he offered ten dollars to anyone who
could find him a new wife; and astonishingly, gross and hard-fisted and
stingy as he was, a fat old man with a rough beard who went around in
his bare feet, a tolerably fair-looking young woman was found for him.
He had never spent anything and he owned a good farm now. Poor Mina knew
nothing of all this until he brought the new wife home; then she had to
leave. Rudy was off in the next town, supposed to be working, and she
had nowhere to go and no money to keep her. She had to stay at Sophie's
until Sophie's husband could get Rudy to come back and find some sort
of home for her. The new mistress proved to be very different from the
old one: she made the old man Kaetterhenry stand around--build an
addition to the house, get her some decent furniture. You never caught
her working in the fields!

The children were furious. They talked about the insult to their mother
and the injustice to Mina, but greed was at the bottom of it. This woman
was a schemer; they could see that. Sophie declared that she looked like
the kind of woman who would go about having children right away and beat
the rest of them out of what was theirs by rights. What she had wanted
was to get the farm left to her. It made them all angry to see how much
she got from the old man while they, who had had to work like dogs for
him from the time they were babies, got nothing. What had he ever done
for them? It broke up the family and started a feud that still lasted
after the old man Kaetterhenry had died and one of his sons by the
second wife had the farm. But she did not get everything. Schemer that
she was, she could never get old Casper to make a will, and the
children came in for some of his property.

Most of the Kaetterhenry children married young and settled down to
farming right where they were. August was the only one who did not.
Sophie had married a Klaus, and her brother-in-law, young Herman Klaus,
had gone up to Richland to work. August liked what he heard of the
Richland neighbourhood. He wanted to get into a better community; he
thought he could earn more up there. He went there and got a job with a
wood-choppers' gang in the winter, and the next spring he hired out to
Henry Baumgartner.

This old Henry Baumgartner was harder to work for than any man in that
part of the country. August found that out soon enough. It was not for
nothing that he was as rich as he was. He was worth at this time about a
hundred thousand dollars in land and money, considered rich for a farmer
in those days, but no one would ever have guessed it from the way that
the family lived. The old lady Baumgartner hoarded the bread until it
was mouldy. It was said that she was still wearing the same clothes in
which she had come over from Germany. It was not until they moved into
town and the children got hold of some of the money that it began to
show. Old Baumgartner was inconceivably mean in petty things. August
remembered about Mrs. Hooper, a widow in Richland who supported her
family by doing washing. She wanted a little straw to pack about her
house in the winter-time, and Henry Baumgartner promised that he would
bring her some when he next came into town. Then he charged her not only
more than the price of the straw, but for his time and for the hauling,
although he had been bringing in other things at the same time. Plenty
of farmers, as he knew very well, would have been glad to give the poor
woman that little bit of straw for nothing.

Yet he had his big, effusive side. August had seen him at the
camp-meetings groaning and praying and exhorting, tears running down the
side of his fat nose and soaking into his beard. He was about sixty at
this time, short, bulky, with a thick, square-cut beard, a broad smooth
German under lip that showed his emotionalism, and mean little eyes.
Afterwards, when he moved into Richland and joined the Methodist church
there, he ran the church. The preachers looked upon him with fear as he
sat short, heavy, belligerent in the front pew--he was getting
deaf--giving little grunts of disapproval or breaking out into sonorous
"Amens!" following the emotional parts of the sermon with a running
comment of groans, head-shakings, tears. A terrible figure, with his big
head and square-cut, bushy beard showing that wet, shining lower lip,
the ominous glare of his small eyes. He was sincere, more than sincere,
in all this. It was life to him. Plenty of people hated him, but they
spoke of him as the most religious man around there.

If August managed to stick at the Baumgartners', he would be the first
hired man who had ever done so. But August was a sticker. People soon
found that out. He had no intention of leaving until he was ready to go.
He went stolidly about his work from four o'clock in the morning until
nine at night. He knew what he was after. All the time he was saving
part of his wages, putting some away. He did not intend to let old Henry
Baumgartner's meanness drive him out until he had saved enough to start
in farming for himself. It was that for which he was working.




_III: Emma Stille_


August liked the new community. He saw that in some respects it was
ahead of Turkey Creek. For one thing, there was a railroad, a main line
of the Illinois Central that connected Richland directly with Chicago.
It would be easier to market crops here. There would not be so much
hauling to do. It was only eleven miles from "Wapsie," the county seat,
and that was an advantage. And, then, he liked the looks of the country.
There was not so much timber, more prairie-land; and after all the
clearing that he had had to do about Turkey Creek, August was not fond
of timber. He said little, but he made up his mind before very long that
he wanted to get hold of some land about here and settle down. Someone
would be wanting to sell and move out. He had been saving ever since he
started working for other people and was putting away some all the time.
When he saw a good piece of land he was going to try to get it, paying
for it gradually as he could. And he had his eyes open for some girl who
looked as if she would make him a good wife.

There were not so many Germans here as around Turkey Creek, and there
were some Lutherans among them, so that they had no German Methodist
church. Those who were close enough drove over to the Turkey Creek
church when the weather was good. Most of them began "going in town."
They drove to the Richland church, four of them together, two girls and
two boys, in a two-seated buggy. The old people did not care to go there
because the services were in English. They thought that it meant, too,
that the young people were getting away from them.

There were more good times not connected with the church than there had
been at Turkey Creek. Socials at the country schools, bob-rides, and big
country parties where they played the old country games and
kissing-games until the whole thing ended in a general "spooning," with
the lights out. August was bashful. Herman Klaus urged him to get a girl
and come on. But he did not go to these parties very much until he
began keeping company with Emma Stille.

That was in the first summer after he came to Richland. Henry
Baumgartner let him go over to help the Stilles at threshing-time. The
Stille boys had come over to help the Baumgartners. The Stille farm was
about two miles from where August was working.

Old Wilhelm Stille was the one who used to preach in the Turkey Creek
church. He was a gentle, dreamy kind of man. His threshing was always
left until near the last. But old lady Stille saw to it that he did not
get too far behind. People spoke of her as "someone to watch out for."
She was short, squat, heavy. She had a round, wrinkled, crafty face with
narrow, suspicious eyes. She looked as if she might just have come from
the old country. She parted her hair smoothly in the middle and wore
round ear-rings. When they drove into town, she never wore a hat, but a
dark scarf tied over her head. Her dark, thick, shapeless clothes, her
shawls, her scarf, her soft felt slippers, all added to the feeling of
craft, of slyness, that she gave. People were afraid of her. She was
stingy, too, as stingy as the Baumgartners; but the girls saw to it
that the threshers were well fed.

There were two of the Stille girls at home, Emma and Mollie. Herman
Klaus liked Mollie Stille pretty well. Everyone liked the Stille girls.
They said that they were just nice girls, not so queer as their father
and without their mother's meanness. They waited on the table when the
threshers came. The men all knew them and joked with them. August had
nothing to say, but he knew every move that Emma Stille made as she
hurried around the long table bringing in more stewed chicken and
coffee. She was not very large, but she looked like a good worker. Her
black hair curled a little from the heat, and her face was flushed. Her
lips, full German lips, curved, dark red, were slightly parted. The men
teased her. "Hurry up there, Emma! Emma, you're too slow!" August sat
eating industriously, without looking up; but when Emma came near him
and put out her hand to take his coffee-cup, he caught the faint scent
of heat that came from her, saw the little beads of perspiration about
the roots of her shiny black hair.

He liked her. He wondered if she was pretty strong. She seemed to be
able to get through with a lot of work. She did not look in the least
like her mother. She was a giggler; she and Mollie both could seem to
giggle by the hour, but just the same she was pretty sensible. She
taught country school in the Benning Township school-house, but she knew
how to wait on threshers.

The old man Stille was not badly off despite his preaching. He had come
out in an early day and had managed--he and the boys together--to get
hold of a good deal of land. He had helped the boys, and he ought to be
able to help the girls a little, too. The Stille girls would have had
more beaus if the young men had not been afraid to get mixed up with
that old lady. She was down on all her daughters-in-law. That would not
stop August. He'd like to see any old woman that could bother him very
much.

The threshers were at the Stilles' two days. It was in early September,
dry, burning weather, when the bright new evergreens in the grove at the
north of the house stood motionless and pointed against the blue sky.
The men worked with their old horse-power thresher out in the fields,
where the stubble was bright and harsh under their feet and the sun
blazed on the yellow-gold straw-stacks that piled up behind the machine.
Emma and Mollie came out once to see them work. Some of the men stopped
for a moment and "joshed" with them, offered to let them run the
machine, told them they ought to be out here helping thresh instead of
sitting around the house doing nothing.

"_Ja_, doing nothing!" the girls scoffed. "I guess we'd see what would
happen if you didn't get any supper to-night."

"Oh, do _you_ get supper?" Herman Klaus said. "I thought your ma did
that, and you girls set around looking nice." They struck out at him
until he backed off from them, holding up his hands and shouting, "Hey!
Hey! I gotta work! Owgust, come here once and help!"

August was too bashful yet to join in. He pretended not to notice, but
he saw the girls, standing there leaning against each other, half
closing their eyes against the sun, which was bright on their black hair
and flushed cheeks, the blue dresses against the blazing gold of the
straw-stacks and the stubble out under the blue prairie-sky. The chaff
filled the air, and the men turned to grin with a flash of white teeth
in their blackened faces. That night August "cleaned up" very carefully,
although usually he didn't think it was much use until threshing was
over.

After that, Herman began to tease him about Emma Stille. August sat next
to her at a bob-ride one night. Either she managed it, or he did, or
Herman and Mollie, he didn't know just who. She had come with Herman and
Mollie and didn't have any fellow of her own that night. The moon was
not up yet. It was dark except for the dim, ghostly white glare of the
snow. The fur of the buffalo robes was cold to the touch, but underneath
them it was all warm, dark, secret, and intimate. He could feel Emma
beside him, her arm against his, her feet close to his down in the warm
straw in the bottom of the bob, her frosty breath. When the bob-runners
struck a rut, Emma fell over against August. He steadied her and said,
"Whoa, there!" Then he kept his arm around her the rest of the way until
they stopped at the Stille farm, and she struggled out of the warm nest
of straw under the robes. "Hey, August, ain't you cold? Lost your girl?"
the rest all shouted.

He had never gone to the box socials, always grunting shamefacedly,
"_Ach_, I don't want to go there; I ain't got no girl to take," when
Herman urged him to go. But he went to one that winter, out in the
Benning Township school-house where Emma taught. Mollie told Herman
which was Emma's box, and Herman told August--a big shoe-box covered
with ruffled red crpe-paper and a huge green bow. When it was put up
for auction, August turned as red as the box. Martin Graettinger, a
young fellow from Benning Township, was bidding for it. Now that he had
started, August was doggedly determined to let no one get ahead of him,
and although he had no idea of paying so much, and it made him squirm,
he got the box for three dollars and sixty cents. He and Emma and Mollie
and Herman ate together in a corner of the room, which they barricaded
with chairs, the girls giggling and Herman teasing them, August sitting
red and silent, but happy. People thought that he and Emma would "go
together" now.

But August was slow to get started. He did not take Emma anywhere until
the next summer. He was cautious, and, besides, he had to save his
money. Then he and Herman decided to ask the two Stille girls to go to
the Fourth of July celebration at Richland Grove.

They started early and called at the Stille place for the girls. They
had hired a team. They wore their best dark, thick suits, which made
their hands and necks look browner. The girls wore striped summer
dresses with tight basques, and Mollie had fastened a row of
"spit-curls" across her forehead. August did the driving. Emma sat on
the front seat beside him, and Herman and Mollie were "cutting up" in
the back seat, Herman shouting, "Now, Emma, you make that Owgust act
decent up there in front, where I can't look after him."

"You better act decent yourself," Emma retorted. August blushed
furiously.

The big wooden gate of the grove was propped open. "This way, boys!" a
man shouted jovially. They drove in slowly over the fresh wheel-marks
that had smoothed down the long green grass and looked around for a
place to tie. The buggy-wheels scraped over a stump half hidden in the
grass, lifting up the buggy on one side and making the girls squeal.
They stopped. No one seemed to know just what to do.

"Well, might as well get out," Herman said. "What you girls sitting in
here for?" The girls stood aside while the boys staked out the horses.
Then they all wandered off together, not knowing just what to do now
that they were here. There were bunches of girls going around together,
children darting off and being hauled back, women shrieking, "Come here,
Mister! You don't get away yet. Come back here and fix this swing."

The grove had been well cleared of underbrush, and there were open
spaces through which the sun shone golden-green. There were bur-oaks in
clumps, larger oaks standing apart, full-leaved, casting a gracious
shade. The ground lay in smooth, rounded slopes with long fine green
grass that was full of little whirring things. It was sprinkled with
wild gooseberry bushes, bitter-smelling white yarrow, clumps of catnip
filled with black-bodied wild bees. The creek was dry, a narrow stream
bed filled with hot white sand. Some children were running along it with
bare feet.

There were swings put up, games going on. Rigs were standing all about:
wagons, buggies of all descriptions, a carryall. Horses, big farm
horses, were staked out with ropes. They would begin to eat the bark
off the trees, and then the men would have to run up and tie them
somewhere else. There were family groups, old ladies sitting on cushions
or in buggies, unattached boys going about hoping to find girls, men
pitching horseshoes. The four young people were glad when it was time
for the program.

The speaker's stand was built of fresh new planks, with a resiny scent,
bound around with red-white-and-blue bunting. There was an amphitheatre
of planks laid across low saw-horses. August and Herman and the two
girls stood at the edge of the crowd. There was a smell of perspiring
people, cloth, starched dresses, planks. Babies cried. The chorus sang
patriotic songs. A strong, fierce-looking girl went pounding to the
front of the platform and declaimed "Barbara Frietchie" in a loud,
coarse voice. When she came to "Dame Barbara _snatched_ the silken
scarf," she caught up the flag and waved it wildly. Some people clapped,
others looked half gratified and half foolish. The chorus sang again,
"We're tenting to-night on the old camp ground." Despite harsh untrained
voices, there was something touching about the sad cadences, sung there
in the open, breezy grove. State Representative Calkins, from "Wapsie,"
spoke. There was a scraping and moving-about when he first came forward,
and then a long silence before he began. He spoke loudly, but it was
hard to hear him. The breeze seemed to carry his voice away from all
except the people directly in front of him. The children were still
playing in the swings. Young people who did not care about speeches, the
oak leaves rustling, the horses, the whispering on the outskirts of the
audience, drowned the speech. Herman and Mollie got tired of it and
slipped away. August and Emma felt foolish when they saw that the others
had gone. Emma's brother, Willie Stille, was in the chorus, and he sat
up there grinning at them.

They sat near the buggy to eat their lunch. Emma and Mollie had brought
a huge lunch in a big red pasteboard box. The table-cloth was hunched up
in places by little spears and bunches of grass. But eating seemed to
dispel their awkwardness.

After dinner the boys went away for a while and pitched horseshoes. The
girls went to sleep, and awoke with hot, shiny faces. They took down
their hair, and were just putting it up again when the boys came back.
They squealed. The boys teased Mollie about her spit-curls until she got
angry and threw them away. Herman put them on and pranced around, and
then he had to go after Mollie and make peace. August and Emma sat down
on the buggy-robe on the grass. August took off his heavy felt hat.
There was a white band of flesh that shaded into red-brown below the
golden roots of his hair. The oak leaves rustled dreamily.

August and Emma wandered off together. They crossed the hot white stream
bed and climbed the hill, sat down in the shade between some trees and
gooseberry bushes. Emma picked some of the gooseberries to take home,
and August helped her pull off the woody little hulls. He put his hand
over hers in the grass. The hand quivered, and he held it closer, his
hard brown fingers grasping a little higher on the wrist. There was an
exciting incongruity between their halting self-conscious talk and the
warm, thrilling animal intimacy of their hot, moist palms in the long
fine grass. The shouting from the races down on the level ground came to
them long-drawn-out and dreamily distant. They were aware of the little
green things that jumped about in the grass and of the heat of their two
hands on the cool earth near the grass roots.

When they went back, Mollie and Herman were sitting in the buggy
"spooning."

August made Herman drive home. He and Emma sat in the back seat. Herman
kept saying, "Why are you two so quiet back there?"

"_Ach_, you shut up, and tend to your driving." August put his arm
around Emma. She took off her hat and put her head against his shoulder.
The weeds along the roadside were damp, and wet night odours and mists
came up from the fields. There was nothing but riding, jolting on
through the dusk, the horses' hoofs pounding on the hard road, the
buggy-wheels scraping.

After that August and Emma "kept company right along." The old lady
Stille made little trouble, for she wanted her girls to be married.
Wilhelm Stille promised to let them go on one of his farms, the one
between Richland and "Wapsie," with the privilege of paying for it
gradually. Emma did not teach country school the next year, but stayed
at home getting ready to be married. The wedding would be as soon as
August had enough saved to start them out on the farm.

The first day that August could get away they drove into "Wapsie." The
four of them again, in the Stilles' two-seated buggy, August and Emma
and Herman and Mollie. It was late February, just before the last thaw.
The road to "Wapsie" was a winter study in dull black and white. The
snow, which had an opaque, thick look under the colourless winter sky,
drifted down the black earth of the slopes; the plum-trees in interlaced
masses along the creek, low, spreading, done in smoky black, purple
tinging the massed farther trees and the bushes; the creek half under
thin greyish ice cracked and broken down in places; the road dead black,
sifted over with fine snow. The buggy looked small on that great expanse
of land, the hoofs of the horses on the hard wintry road made a lonesome
sound.

The town had a closed-up winter look. The girls did not speak as they
drove along the wintry street. They sat small and subdued in their heavy
country wraps and dark knitted hoods. They drove to the court-house. The
two boys tramped solemnly into the old brick building, with its dusty
wooden floors and brown spittoons and glimpses of littered rooms, with
shelves stuck full of records. August got the licence of the county
clerk, a little crippled man with one shoulder higher than the other.

Then they drove to the minister's house.

The girls got out of the buggy and stood stiffly on the board side-walk
while the boys tied the team to a wooden hitching-post. All four went
solemnly up the walk to the house. They did not know whether to knock or
to open the storm-door. No one heard them at first, and they went into
the chilly, bare little entry, where overshoes and a fibre mat were
piled, until August finally rang the bell.

"Ring again once," Emma whispered.

The minister's wife came, tall, gaunt, with spectacles. She said in a
businesslike way:

"Did you wish to see Mr. Taylor? Step inside."

They filed silently into the parlour. They sat waiting, the girls
clasping their hands nervously, staring at the hard-coal burner, the
lounge, the pink sea-shell on the stand.

The minister came in with hastily brushed hair. They sat in frozen
embarrassment.

"Is there anything I can do for you?"

August cleared his throat resolutely. He and Herman had been turning
their caps on their knees, with hands red from the cold.

"We came to get married. If you----"

"Oh, certainly, certainly," Mr. Taylor assured them hastily.

Mrs. Taylor had thought "wedding" when they first came in, and had come
back into the room. Now she asked the girls if they would not like to
take off their wraps. She offered to let them go into the bedroom "if
they wanted to fix up any," but they shyly refused. August asked her
where the kitchen was, and after he had washed his hands at the granite
basin, he came back and murmured, "Do you want to wash up, Emma?"

After many backings and exchanging of places, with a nervous
determination on Mr. Taylor's part to mistake Mollie for the bride,
which made Herman blush, the wedding party was arranged. August and Emma
stood between the two windows, with Herman and Mollie in frozen
attitudes on each side of them, and Mr. Taylor facing them.

"Dearly beloved, we are gathered together in the presence of God and
these witnesses to join this man and this woman in the holy bonds of
matrimony."

The voice sounded sonorous in the small, bleak room. Emma stood in
trembling quietness. August had to clear his throat, and then his voice
came out gruffly. Herman breathed hard and eased his weight. Some coal
dropped in the stove.

They felt shy and happy under the congratulations of Mr. and Mrs.
Taylor. They signed the certificate, and August fished in his pocket and
brought out two dollars for the minister. Emma said that they would
bring his wife a chicken in the summer.

They drove back to the farm down the dim, chilly road, the bare bushes
thin and small, the fields spreading out black and sprinkled with snow.
There was a wintry red in the Western sky.

They had supper at the Stilles', where the old lady had got up a big
meal for them, inviting in all the married children. Emma was to stay
there until August "got things fixed" at the farm and could come after
her. But he had to go straight over to the farm in the morning. One of
the Stille boys was staying there now, looking after things, but the
next day August was to take possession.





_Part Two_




_I: The Farm and the Children_


The farm, when August and Emma first went there, didn't look much as it
did later. It was one that Wilhelm Stille had got hold of almost by
accident through a mortgage. It had had a poor owner, and then renters
on it, so that it was in bad shape. Willie Stille had been "batching it"
there during the winter months, but of course he knew that he wasn't
going to stay, and had done no more than keep things going. But it was a
piece of land that would pay the man who really took hold of it.

Few of the present improvements were there. The buildings were flimsily
built affairs, some of them unpainted. There was a little one-story
house with old-fashioned small-paned windows, dismal and dark and ugly.
No yard, no bushes or flowers, and over on the west a tangled,
half-grown wilderness of all kinds of trees and bushes planted together.
August cut all those down later, except the double row of elms that he
left for a wind-break. One thing there was, a good well. Otherwise it
was like building a place up from the beginning.

The old lady Stille would have liked to keep the farm in her own hands,
to have had August and Emma stay there merely as renters. She liked to
keep a hold on the children. But August would not go there under any
such conditions. He meant to work without stopping until he had paid for
the farm. He had a genuine Kaetterhenry obstinacy and a desire to do
things for himself. He would not stand interference; his mother-in-law
soon found that out.

The Kaetterhenrys started in with almost nothing, as most young couples
did in those days. August had something saved from all his years of
work; Emma did not know exactly how much. He spent this very thriftily.
At first they would have to get along with as little as they could,
"until they got the farm paid for." He paid for part of his stock and
implements and went in debt for the rest. To have a farm free from
encumbrances; to own "clear" the stock, the machinery, and the land, was
what he was working for. All that he had or could make went into the
farm.

The house--_ach_, that didn't matter so much. It was a gloomy, bare
little house. Emma brought along what she could from home: comforters
that she and her sisters had been making through the winter; some
goose-feather pillows; rag rugs that she had sewed; some heavy white
dishes, with a brown rim, and a clover leaf in the centre, that she and
Mollie had picked out in the store in Richland. August and Emma drove
into town one day and got what furniture they would need: a black walnut
bed and commode; a kitchen table and stove; chairs; a parlour stand.
There were wedding presents. Emma's father gave them a clock, and her
mother a feather-bed. Hans Stille, who was known as "quite a carpenter,"
made them a tall narrow desk and bookcase of home-grown black walnut.
August's sister Mina sent them a "splasher" for the commode on which she
had worked in red outline stitch some ducks and waves. The Stille boys
gave them an album with orange plush covers, and Mollie and Herman
Klaus, who were going to be married soon, bought them a set of vases,
with cattails encrusted in gold on the sides. Their living was done in
the kitchen and bedroom. The front room, which had the rag carpet, the
stand, the vases, and the album, and a large German Bible, they kept
shut off.

They could not afford help. August did most of the work himself. He got
up at daylight, or earlier, and it was dark before he finished his
chores in the evening. He was "one of the best workers around," people
said. He was going to have a good place here some day. One or another of
the Stille boys came over and helped when the work was heaviest. Emma
had to help him in the field. August saw nothing unusual in that,
although most of the farmers' wives here were not seen in the fields.
All "the womenfolks" had had to help over in the Turkey timber. He had
always seen his mother and his sister Lena out working with the men. He
expected it of his "woman."

There was not much but work for them these days. They had no buggy at
first, only a wagon. But they drove into church when they could on
Sunday mornings. Church--that was somehow part of doing well, of living
the way they should and getting prosperous. They couldn't go off the
place often, since they had no one to leave with the stock. And when
they did go, they must always be back in time for chores. August got
away more than Emma did; he had trips to make into town. Emma soon found
out that he was not the kind who would take her with him. His mother had
never gone to town. He did all of the buying. He had a shrewd, hard
feeling that he must keep things in his own hands if he was going to get
ahead. He had that thrifty, bull-headed Kaetterhenry streak in him that
showed in his attitude toward the woman. Emma hated to ask him for
things. She went out to the wagon timidly, said, "August, do you think
you could get me a little of that calico, maybe?" He grunted. He would
get it if he thought she needed it, but he decided that.

Emma settled down quickly into a young farm wife. She "lost her
giggles," as the family said, and got an air of timidity that was an
accentuation of her old shyness. She was thin, with skin burned dark,
and tired, hollow eyes. She seldom got out of her wrappers. August was
close; he did not tell her things. He expected a good deal of her. But,
still, as her sisters told her and as she knew, she had got a good man.
He would have a fine farm some day, and then she would be glad that
they had worked while they were young.

Then the children were born, Frankie, Mary, Elva, Carl. That kept Emma
busy enough. While she had only the first two, she still helped in the
field. Frankie and Mary were easy to manage. But when Elva was born,
Emma had a hard time. It had to be right in haying-time, the men there,
and no one to feed them, no one to look after the other children. They
got August's sister Mina, a fat, kind, melancholy woman now, who worked
at anything that she could find to do; but the old lady Stille couldn't
stand it to have any of August's folks there. She came over, "nosing
in," as August said, and she drove out even Mina, who was used to all
kinds of treatment. Emma had to get up before she was ready and go to
work again. There was no time for rest these days, she said, even if a
person was sick. But she was never quite so well from that time.

After the first two, she had to stop helping August outside. She still
helped with the milking, took care of the chickens and geese and the
milk and cream, and made butter. She had all that _she_ could do in the
house. Wherever she went, the children were following her--in dingy,
much-washed blue dresses, made too large, so that they could be handed
along and fit the next one--little, frowzy-headed country children,
toddling after her, pulling at her skirt, under her feet wherever she
stepped. The older ones could play outdoors by themselves, but there was
always a baby in the red high-chair beside the stove while she cooked or
ironed; and she would have to stop to change diapers, cry, "No, no, you
can't have that!" snatch the child hurriedly up, murmuring, remorsefully
but a little fretfully, "Come on now. No, mamma ain't forgot all about
you. Did you think she had? Can't you let mamma get back to her work
now?" Sometimes she was fretful and anxious. But Emma never seemed to
get really cross. She never sprang up and "took a whack at them," like
Mollie, and then got ashamed of herself.

Emma did not look so strong, but she could keep going.

The two oldest children, Frankie and Mary, had always been "real good."
Emma had never had any trouble with them when they were babies. They
were both quiet, slim, dark-haired children, like some of the Stilles.
They would always play together and amuse themselves, Mary especially.
Mary was always a great one for school. When she was a tiny thing she
used to play school out near the corn-crib, with the ears of corn, with
their long silken hair, for "scholars," all arranged in a row before
her, their hair braided, wearing little hats of leaves trimmed with
clover blossoms, which she carefully removed when school began. She
tried to read before she knew one letter from another; anything, the
texts on the coloured Sunday-school cards, seed catalogues that came to
the house, the labels on baking-powder cans. "She must be going to be a
school-teacher when she grows up," people said.

Elva was the odd one. She didn't seem to belong to the rest of the
family. Perhaps it was because she had been sickly when she was a baby
and had had some "spoiling." She had been twice as much trouble as the
other two put together. When she was a baby she used to have spells of
holding her breath, and even her father had a hard time to manage her.
She had fine, red-gold hair and a very white skin, although she was
never exactly pretty. She liked to get out of things and to leave Mary
to do them.

She still took more care than Carl, when he was born three years later.
Carl was the one who took after his father most. He had the light hair,
ruddy skin, blue eyes, and was stocky and sturdy. He kept things to
himself, too. Carl was August's favourite. August was never much of a
hand to be around the children, but he paid more attention to Carl.

August wanted his children to have what other children had, but he
thought they ought to help. Frankie had to help his father out in the
field as soon as he was big enough to go out there. August wasn't going
to pay for help when he had boys of his own. "My, how those
Kaetterhenrys all work!" people would exclaim. They would see this
little fellow out in the field, in the burning sun, working just like a
man. Looking like a man, too, in his blue overalls and big straw hat. It
didn't seem to August that his children had it hard. He remembered his
own childhood and how his father had made all of them slave. He didn't
work Frankie like that. August wouldn't have thought of having Frankie
go and hire out off the place, as he had had to do. Frankie didn't know
what it was to have to get along as his father had done at some of those
places where he had worked, Grobaty's, for instance, where he used to
sleep in the straw. August could not see that he was hard on the boy.
But other people said that Frankie was a man before his time. A short,
dark, sober boy with brown skin, always looking a little stunted,
especially in that best suit of dark, thick cloth, the blue tie, and the
brown felt hat, that he wore to Sunday school.

August never required Mary to help on the place, as his oldest sister
had done. That hadn't hurt Lena any. Look at her now, a big stout woman,
mother of seven children, stronger than it seemed Mary would ever be.
Mary was obedient and good, and she was a great help with the housework
and the little ones. The trouble with her was that she didn't have her
mind on what she was doing. She always had to have her nose in a book,
anything that she could get hold of, the big German Bible, a "History of
the Civil War" that August was once inveigled into buying from an agent,
the mail-house catalogues. Those catalogues opened up worlds to Mary.
She could hardly wait for her father to go into town to the post office
when it was time for a new one to come. She couldn't bear to go past
anything that had printing on it. When they were driving along the road
and saw a piece of newspaper, she would beg to get out and capture it.
August thought this was silly. He could see no sense in a girl's wanting
to read and study so much.

"_Ach_, what do you always have to be reading for?" the others said.

But the oldest girl in a family like theirs didn't get much chance to
read.

The country school was two miles from the Kaetterhenry farm. August
always "aimed" to let the children go. They walked the two miles back
and forth, taking their lunch in tin pails. They went "pretty regular,"
except when they were needed at home, Frankie for the farm work and Mary
to help with the babies. Elva didn't care much for school, but Mary made
a terrible fuss, they said, when she had to miss.

That school seemed pretty fine to August when he thought of what he had
had. That old Turkey Creek school with teachers coming and going! This
was a nice frame building, painted pink, with desks and seats like
those in the town school. And then they had a teacher for the whole
term. A high-school girl from Richland usually (the high school there
gave a two-year course) who was teaching a few terms of country school
before getting married. Mary was always talking about town school, but
August couldn't see but that they got about as good as what they'd get
in town. All they needed, anyway.

August and Emma wanted to do the best for their children that they
could. It worried Emma that they couldn't always get in to Sunday
school; that was more important than the other school. That was bringing
the children up right. August bought a buggy so that he could take them.
They drove in on Sunday mornings--August and Frankie on the front seat,
in the back the two girls, and Emma holding little Carl on her lap.
Often they got there too late for church, but they were in time for
Sunday school. Mary and Elva in funny little dresses too long for them,
stiff best hats with elastic under their chins, hair in tight black and
blond braids tied with little pieces of narrow blue ribbon. Frankie
clumping in heavy shoes that smelled of blacking, looking too old for
his age in his heavy dark suit with "long pants" and a brown felt hat
like his father's.

They prized the coloured cards that they got, with pictures and the
golden text on them, showing Christ, with brown curly hair, in white
robes, the disciples in blue and red (blue for John, who was pictured as
almost as pretty as Jesus). Their Sunday-school papers were treasured
during the week--_The Boy's Friend_, _The Girl's Friend_, _Dew Drops_.
Mary read the stories avidly. Even Emma got into the habit of looking at
the serials in _The Girl's Friend_, although she never actually finished
one.

The children were shy, and wouldn't say much in Sunday school, Mary and
Elva because of the town girls, who wore better dresses than they did.
But they all looked forward to Sunday school, loved the cards, the
papers, the drive to town, the hymns, jingly Methodist "Sabbath-school"
hymns, "There Is Power in the Blood," "Jesus Paid It All," "The Old-time
Religion." Mary wished that they had an organ so that she could learn to
play these songs at home, and Emma admitted wistfully that it "would be
nice." When they went to Henry Stille's, where there was an organ in
the closed, chilly front room, Mary went in and learned to "pick out the
tune," or something like the tune.

"Until they got all this paid for once"--that was the answer to
everything, new house, new furniture, organ.

The old Stilles did not like it very well that their grandchildren were
going to "English church." August and Emma did not speak German in the
home, as the old people had done.

"_Ach, das ist nicht recht!_" the old man Stille would say sadly. He
wondered what would become of them all.




_II: Grandma and Grandpa_


The house simply wouldn't hold them all. Three years after Carl there
was Johnnie. And then the old Stilles wanted to give up their home and
come to live with August and Emma. August hated to do anything with the
house until he had a better barn, but there was no way out of it. The
old Stilles would help a little.

Hans Stille was working over near "Wapsie." He was the only one who
never married, a little, shy, dark-haired man with shining, dark-brown
eyes and timid, gentle ways. Mary was like him in some ways, the
Kaetterhenrys said when they were provoked at Mary. He never seemed to
settle down and get anywhere, but there was not much in the line of
handy things that he couldn't do. He stayed with August and Emma all
that summer and the next. They moved back the old house, used the two
old front rooms for kitchen and bedroom, and built on three new rooms
in front and an upstairs with two rooms. It looked like a nice modern
house when they got through with it, although the upstairs was never
fully finished--white, with pink trimmings, a narrow porch, a triangle
of wooden lace under the peak in front. The next summer Hans made over
the two old back rooms into a corn-crib and tool-house.

Then there had to be new things for the house, of course. They ordered
some new furniture from the catalogue, a combination desk and bookcase
for the front room (they used the old one that Hans had made for a
cupboard), a new stationary rocker upholstered in green-flowered velvet.
They got a new bedroom set for themselves, dresser, commode, and bed of
golden oak, the bed with a high head-board. They put the old walnut
things in the boys' room, the big end room, left half finished, used as
a store-room, too.

When the old Stilles came they brought some of their things with
them,--their long extension table and some chairs for the dining-room;
grandpa's old German books, queer ancient things with faded black and
brownish bindings, religious books; some old home-made walnut beds and
feather-beds; ancient quilts of dark woollen pieces. The little old
downstairs bedroom in the back now became "grandma's and grandpa's
room," a small, dark, stuffy room with an uneven floor, one dingy,
small-paned window. They set up an ancient walnut dresser with a little
dark-framed mirror hung above it, an old rope bed piled high with
billowy feather-mattresses, with dark-looking musty-smelling quilts over
them; and on nails in one corner, grandma's and grandpa's clothes--an
old brown waistcoat, the coat in which grandpa had done his preaching,
some big gaping country shoes, and grandma's dark dresses and
stealthy-looking grey shawls and old black petticoats. The two big
wooden rockers stood there, and beside one of them an ancient brown
spittoon.

One thing that the old people brought was an organ. One of the old
carpeted pedals would not work. It was put into the sepulchral front
room, and August declared that he could pay for no lessons. But somehow
Mary managed to pick out a few hymn tunes on it. Maybe some day some of
them could "take."

The old people had had misfortunes. After getting together a good-sized
pile of money from his land, grandpa had made poor investments. Some he
had lost in Colorado gold-mines; and a German Methodist insurance
company advertised in the flaming German monthly which he took, _Die
Flammende Fackel_, had swindled him out of more. His son Willie took the
home farm, but some of the rent would have to go to make up losses. Old
Wilhelm Stille had long been on the verge of joining a communistic
colony in Wisconsin of some wild Methodist sect, but the old lady had
kept him from it; and now that he had so little money to put into the
common fund, the colony seemed much less eager to get him. So he went
instead to his daughter Emma's. The old lady shrewdly suspected that her
son-in-law August was likely to have the best home for them in the long
run.

They moved over soon after the new house was finished. August was close,
but he would do what he must. He realized that he owed some of his start
to his wife's people, but he determined that the old lady should know
her place.

The old folks were now "Grandma" and "Grandpa" Stille to everyone. They
had aged greatly in the last few years. It seemed as if grandpa had
changed, now that he no longer had farm affairs to attend to, and that
his "religious side" had come uppermost. He was thin, with a lean face,
a large nose, scant, straight silvery-white hair that grew long, a white
beard, and deep-set, mystical, dark eyes. His thin voice was gentler,
had a far-away sound. He was feeble, and when he first came, they feared
that he wouldn't last long. He couldn't do much but sit in the wooden
rocker with the calico cushion, smoking a black pipe and reading his old
German religious books and papers.

The old lady was squatter, craftier-looking than ever, with that round,
wrinkled face, the smooth hair showing the broad, worn white parting,
the round ear-rings, her eyes now two slits in narrowed, lashless rims.
She went softly about in slippers, in a shapeless dark-grey calico dress
and dingy, black apron, a scarf tied over her head. At first she tried
to run things. She tried to tell the children what they should do and
she protested against every cent that the family spent, wanted them to
live in every way just as she and grandpa had lived.

Emma was going to submit to grandma's interfering at first. The old lady
had always had all of the children--and grandpa, too--under her thumb,
ruling them through their fear of her meanness. But August had no
intention of letting grandma get the upper hand. He had stood things
from grandma before, when she had come snooping over to see how they
were running the farm and to exclaim at the waste. But things were
changed now. He had finished paying for the farm a good while ago,
although he had not actually admitted it to Emma, thinking the less the
womenfolks knew about that sort of thing the better. This was his own
house now. No woman was going to come around and tell him how to run it.

Grandma soon found that there was one person whom she couldn't rule. All
her schemes, her craft, her sullenness, and her tantrums, which had
always got her what she wanted as a last resort, were powerless against
August's stubbornness. She was a little afraid of August from the start.
She tried to get in her work without August's knowing it, when he was
out of the house; but when he came in and found out what she was up to,
then there were battles. The children sat in terrified, wide-eyed awe,
and Emma wept a little, silently and tremblingly, while grandpa pleaded,
moaning sadly, "Ma--_Mutter_--_ach_, no! no! no!" The children had
never seen anyone like grandma at these times. The old woman could be a
fury. But August was stronger than she. She found that she could not
conquer him as she had the others. She was reduced to impotence, to
angry mutterings, while she eyed August with a bitter, vengeful,
helpless glare.

She had always had sullen times when no one could do anything with her.
She had them now--times when she would not eat or move or speak, when,
after grandpa and Emma had vainly tried to call her to meals, the
children were sent to the door of her room. They found her sitting there
in her old wooden rocker in the gloomy, low-ceiled room, among her old
household things and her shawls and dresses, a tragic, baffled, ominous
old figure, shapeless and huddled together in her dark, dingy old
clothes, with her feet in their spreading, black felt slippers, rocking,
and muttering, in guttural German, things that they could not
understand.

This was the only revenge against August that she had. He let her be
when she was like this. But she knew that even in this she dared not go
too far. August was the only one who had ever been able to manage her.
Far down underneath her anger and bitterness there was a kind of
admiration of him. He was hard and thrifty and strong and a good farmer.
She secretly despised her other son-in-law, Herman Klaus, beside
him--Herman, a little, dried-up, under-sized man who let Mollie have the
say-so. August was not a "blower." He was close-mouthed, and the old
woman admired that. And she secretly approved of his looks. You could
tell from them that not many people were going to get ahead of him.
Sturdy, square-set, heavy, but not fat, in his old blue shirt and
overalls, with his ruddy face and blue eyes and the harsh outcropping of
golden beard upon his sunburned skin, and the golden hairs on his thick
brown arms. His hair was not so heavy now; there was a bald spot on top,
but the old lady thought contemptuously that he looked younger than Emma
did. She secretly thought that he was too good a man for Emma, whom she
considered weak and _lppisch_.

Having the old folks there made more work for Emma. Her father she
didn't mind. He made no more trouble than he could help. He tried to
come out of his dreams to do what he could for her. He gathered the
eggs, helped to hitch up the horses, kept the little ones out of the way
sometimes when she was busy. Marguerite, the youngest, who was born
after grandma and grandpa came, was his favourite. A pretty, wilful
little baby, knowing very well that she was the youngest and had
privileges, with a fuzz of golden curls and bright blue eyes. She was
the only child born in the new house, and she seemed to come into a
different order of things. Even her father was less severe with her than
with the others. Grandpa put aside his old papers, trotted her on his
knee, sang old German hymns to her in a faint high-pitched voice that
seemed to come from a different world, took her out obediently to see
the "calfies," made Johnnie give up his playthings to her. Emma had
plenty to do besides, and was glad to have grandpa look after
Marguerite.

Grandma had always worked hard at home, but she wanted to say how things
should be done. Here she complained that she was useless; no one paid
any attention to her. She would have helped with the cooking. But,
"_Ach_, I don't know," Emma told Mollie. "Ma has her old ways of doing
things, and the children they don't seem to like what she makes." She
clung more than ever to her old ways now, spoke almost nothing but
German, would not leave the place or ride in the new buggy, would use
none of the "new-fangled" things except the telephone. That was
grandma's one solace. She could sit "listening in" for an hour at a
time, a look of stealthy gratification on her face, hearing everything:
her daughter Mollie call a neighbour, Herman call in from town to Mollie
and say what he was going to buy for Sunday, long conversations between
two country women, deals between men. But they could never get her to
speak into the telephone herself.

Grandpa had been the one who was ailing when the old people came. But,
although he stayed somewhat feeble and tremulous, when his troubles and
farm worries were off his shoulders at last, he seemed to get better and
sink into a kind of irresponsible sweet content, dreaming, reading his
old books, playing with Marguerite. It was grandma who was ailing now.
They didn't know what was the matter with her. She took more and more
looking after. One morning when she got out of bed she fell, and
couldn't get up. They had to have August come in and lift her.
Afterwards they thought that it must have been "kind of a stroke." She
seemed to get all right again, and yet they thought that it was hard for
her to lift her feet, and that she mumbled a little sometimes when she
tried to talk. Always in Emma's mind was the fear of the time when her
mother might be helpless, like the old lady Schuldt, and have to be
taken care of.

It all came on Emma. Grandpa helped a little, but there was more
washing, more cooking and more cleaning. It seemed as if she lived more
than ever in the kitchen. Neighbours consoled her. "Well, now you can go
more. You can leave the children with grandma and grandpa and get away."
Maybe they did go a little more than before. They had a nice, big,
leather-topped, two-seated buggy now. There were the boys to help August
with the chores, so that he didn't have it all to do.

They went into church often on Sundays, leaving the two smallest ones
with grandpa. August and Emma joined the Bible class, which was taught
by the Hon. H. G. Bossingham, who had served a term as State
representative and got the "Honourable" before his name. August never
talked in the class, but he enjoyed it more than anything since he used
to attend the old German country church near Turkey Creek. Emma liked
it, but she didn't always feel like coming. Either she or Mary had to
stay at home and see about the dinner, and it had better be she, since,
if she came, she felt uneasy about grandma.

They had their outings, like the other country people. They drove in to
the Fourth of July celebration at "Wapsie" on a blistering hot day,
leaving their team and buggy at the park and tramping the burning
streets, where red-white-and-blue bunting was hung between the telephone
poles. A silent country party, ill at ease, the girls in home-made lawn
dresses of blue, with cheap lace, the boys sunburned and short, like
little old men in their heavy clothes and felt hats. The hot cement
burned through their stiff Sunday shoes. They listened to the band
concert and the speech in the park. They brought their dinner in a big
pasteboard box, and they and Herman's family ate together on the grass,
fried chicken, thick bread and butter, pickles, coco-nut cake. The
children teased for ice-cream, which the Baptist Ladies' Aid were
serving, but August said there were too many of them and that they had
enough without. The children liked to come, but there was all that work
beforehand getting up the big lunch and getting all the children ready,
then looking after them while they were there and getting them all
together to go home again. Emma and Mollie said that they'd almost as
soon stay at home.

They went to the county fair, held every September in the fair grounds
at "Wapsie." They drove, and Herman and Mollie drove, and they took big
boxes of lunch again and ate together. The men enjoyed the races, but
the women liked to go into the big, flimsy wooden building, where the
fancy work and cooking-exhibits were held, walking about and looking and
murmuring to each other, "There's Mrs. Lempcke's quilt. It didn't get a
prize. Look at that big pincushion with the blue tag on it. Do you think
that's so pretty as all that?" Mollie brought some things once or twice,
but Emma said, "_Ach_, I ain't got time for all such things."

The children always teased for more money than August would give
them--wanted lemonade and wanted to go into all the shows. The older
children now began to go by themselves. Mary and Elva went with two
"fellows" in a buggy, and Frank teased for grandpa's old one-seated
buggy so that he could take his girl. The parents would meet the young
people about the fair grounds, four or six going around together, Elva
always giggling and "carrying on" until Emma was ashamed of her. They
saw them at the lemonade and the ice-cream stands, and saw them carrying
toy balloons. But they never met Frank and his girl. They didn't know
where those two kept themselves.

August and Emma never went anywhere without the children except once to
"open-air conference" down in the Turkey timber. While they were gone,
Elva and the two little ones came down with scarlet fever. Emma said
she'd never try that again. It was worse than staying at home.

Then grandma had the "stroke" that they had all been looking for. She
was completely paralysed, and never got out of bed again. She didn't
seem to realize much, but she never let anyone but Emma do things for
her, except that she wanted August to turn and lift her. She was in bed
for five years.

Emma lived between bedroom and kitchen, the kitchen a narrow, low-ceiled
room, calcimined in green, the little window with geraniums in tin cans
looking out across the back yard to the small orchard.

Emma always said that these were the hardest years of all.




_III: Loosening up_


Things were a little easier after grandma's death. At first Emma could
scarcely realize that she could really leave the place, that when she
worked she needn't always have the feeling that she ought to go in and
look at grandma. In a way she missed the fact that grandma no longer
needed her. But grandma had scarcely been a person to anyone for the
last five years--only a responsibility, a gnawing sense of worry under
everything. Nearly all the feeling connected with grandma had been fear,
defence, rebellion, care, worry. Emma could not help feeling the relief
that slowly seeped through everything.

Grandpa they didn't mind, he made so little trouble. He stayed about the
same, as Emma told people, except that he seemed in a way to have
withdrawn himself to a greater distance, that he seemed to be living in
some region of his own. Only when some old friend or neighbour came out
occasionally, and they got to talking of religion, he would come out of
his dreams. They could hear him praying aloud in his room sometimes, the
children coming in wide-eyed and whispering, "Mamma, listen to grandpa
in there!" "_Unser Vater ... in dem Himmel_," the German words sounding
rich, feeling, even in his thin, high-pitched voice, with long pauses
between. He sat nearly always in his own room. Marguerite was bigger
now, she didn't need him. He looked just about as when he had first come
to the farm--tall, thin, bent, with his narrow, lined face and white
beard, thin, silvery hair, his deep-burning, dark eyes.

August was getting a few things now. He was putting improvements on the
place. He had put up the big new barn, and Hans Stille, who was keeping
some bees now and doing a little farming over on the other side of
Richland, had come for the summer again and made over the old buildings.
August had all the farm buildings painted white, but the house would
have to wait awhile for its new coat. They had a good milk-separator
now, and Hans had fixed up a milk-house for them. August kept everything
in fine repair. He kept all his machinery under cover, had no old
ploughs and shredders standing about in the grove, like Herman Klaus and
some other farmers. But he did not do much to the house. He had put in a
sink in the kitchen, with a wooden cupboard underneath, and a soft-water
pump. That was about all.

August and Emma had been too busy really to know that they were getting
older. They had to look at the children to realize that. Emma looked
older. Her hair was getting grey. She had always been slender, but she
began to take on flesh now. People joked her about it, said, "You're
getting fleshy, ain't you? You must be makin' the girls do the work for
you." She said, without rancour, that she guessed she'd always been on
her feet too much to get any flesh before. She'd run it all off. It made
her look older instead of younger, dumpy and shapeless and middle-aged.
She had to put on glasses, too. She should have done so long ago. She
ordered a pair from a man who came around with a little card testing
eyes, and who fitted people out with glasses cheap. But when farmers who
had known August Kaetterhenry around Turkey Creek happened to meet him
in town, they said, "Well, you ain't got so much older a'ready,
August." He looked a little heavier, his neck creased and red, but in
general about the same.

It was the children who were changing. Frank was a man now, they had to
realize, although he was a short little fellow and didn't look any older
than Carl when you saw them out in the field together. He had once
wanted to be a mechanic, but he had given up that notion and was going
to get married and settle down to farming. He had been going with the
same girl, for five or six years now--Lottie Schenck, a heavy, coarse,
hard-working girl. People were all asking when the wedding was to be.

August would miss Frank when he left the place, but Carl and Johnnie
would help. Johnnie might take hold better if Frank wasn't there to do
things. He was the restless one. Neither of the other boys could be
relied upon quite so much as Frank. They hadn't been brought up to work
so hard. But August always believed that Carl would make a better farmer
than Frank when he settled down to it. It was hard to tell about
Johnnie.

Frank was looking around for a place to farm. August was doing most of
the looking, however. He had always wanted to get hold of the next
piece of land, where those LaRues had lived, and now, finally, the last
of them was pulling out and going to Colorado. He took the farm for
Frank. Frank was to pay him back eventually in the form of rent. August
wanted to see the boy get a good start. He might be realizing a little,
although he didn't admit it, that he had been harder on Frank than on
the other boys. And he didn't mind having that other two hundred acres.
It was a good investment, and made him the owner of four hundred acres
of the best land, all there together. It gave him an excuse, too, to say
to the family, who were getting to want too many things, "Needn't ask
for that until I've got back some of what I paid for Frank's farm."

Mary was the one who was giving them trouble. More than Elva now, who
had been inclined to be wild and to run around with fellows whom her
parents couldn't approve. Mary had always been such a good child except
for that weakness for reading. The only time they had had any trouble
with her had been when she'd been determined to study to be a teacher
and to go to the little Methodist academy at Wesley. August had said
that she could teach country school without going there. He had too
many children to send them away to school. She'd settle down and marry
like the rest of them, and there'd be his money wasted. She had seemed
to give that up and not to say anything more about it. She had taken to
dressmaking a little, had gone about to the neighbouring farms as people
called for her. Of course she hadn't made much at it, because she was
just Mary Kaetterhenry, someone whom they all knew; but it had given her
something to do and got that crazy notion out of her head.

But now she began to have some queer spells. No one knew what to call
them. The neighbour women were all interested, wondered if they could be
fits, wanted to know all the symptoms. She would get pale and seem to
stiffen out. The neighbours all advised different things, brought over
remedies that had helped them. August and Emma bought her large bottles
of "nerve tonic" at the drug-store, but that didn't seem to help. They
were frightened, even to the extent of hitching up and taking her in to
old Dr. Bowen's office in Richland. He gave them a prescription, but he
didn't seem to know much more than they did what was the cause of the
thing. They "kind of lost confidence in Bowen," they said. A neighbour
told them about this new "rubber doctor" in "Wapsie," and how he had
cured her brother's wife. Mary wanted to try him. They took her into
"Wapsie." He told them that some bone was out of place and was pressing
on a nerve; and although they didn't see how that had caused the spells,
they thought they'd try him. He wanted Mary to come in twice a week for
treatment. $1.50 a treatment, a lot of money to pay for that little
rubbing, but they were worried now. For a time it seemed that the
treatments were helping her. Then all at once she got worse than ever.
They heard of a place over across the river in Wisconsin where they gave
mud baths that were supposed to cure anything. Despite the expense, they
sent her there. When she came back she was better--she had never been
away from home before--but she was told to take it easy, not do much of
the work.

It had shaken them up a good deal to have Mary go back on them. It made
them more careful with the other children. Elva was going with Roy
Robbins, but it didn't seem as if Mary was going to get married. They
let her go over to visit her Aunt Sophie Klaus at Turkey Creek. Then
August let her go in to Rapids City and take a sewing-course. That was
the most like going away to school of anything she had ever had. She
improved after that, but she was not strong. She was like Grandpa
Stille, tall, slender, black-haired, with bright, shy, dark, intelligent
eyes.

Elva married when she was just a girl. She had stopped the country
school long ago. Her parents wondered how she would like it when she had
everything to do herself. They thought that she and Roy would make a
queer set of farmers. They were both so flighty. But they started in
immediately to raise a family, and that steadied them down.

Elva was the one who complained most that the younger ones "had it
pretty easy." It was true; August was not so hard upon Carl and Johnnie
as he had been upon Frank. Things were easier on the farm. Carl and
Johnnie didn't have to stay out of school and help with the farm work,
as Frank had done.

Frank felt himself at a disadvantage with the younger boys. They grew up
into big, blond, good-looking boys. They didn't mingle much with the
older ones. They kept to themselves and seemed to enjoy things together.
Frank was a little shy with them because they had gone to school so much
more than he had. Frank had had to quit the country school at what would
have been about the seventh grade in town.

The roads were better now. It was easier to get about. There were more
horses on the farm, and there was grandpa's old one-seated buggy. August
let the boys take that and Nell, one of the old horses, and drive in to
Richland to school. More and more country children were doing that now
that the high school gave a full course. The boys took Marguerite as far
as the country school. She was too little to go into town yet, and by
the time that she was ready, probably they would have this new
consolidated school against which August was voting because of the
taxes.

August didn't know how it would be in the winter. The first winter the
boys tried to drive back and forth the five miles. The next year they
stayed in town until spring, at the Henry Stilles', where they kept the
fires going and looked after the chickens and the cow and chopped the
wood. They could go to the high-school parties, and play basket-ball,
go around with the town "kids." Johnnie had a town girl, and so did Carl
part of the time. But he still went to see Clara Josten, in the country,
when he and Johnnie went home on Friday night, and he took her to box
socials in the country schools. August grumbled about the boys--_ach_,
they thought they had to have everything; didn't know anything but
basket-ball any more. But he was proud of them.

It was entirely different with Marguerite than with the older girls. She
had everything, it seemed, that Mary and Elva hadn't had. Elva grudged
it to her, said, "I'd like to see what pa would have done to us if we'd
asked for just half the things she does!" But she was so much the
youngest, the baby and the pet, that it seemed natural that they should
give her things. Mary made all her clothes for her, fitting her out
regularly every spring and fall, and watching the dresses of the little
girls at Sunday school to get ideas for her. They liked to "dress baby
up." The whole family were proud of her hair, a thick, blond fuzz that
couldn't be braided, and at which everyone looked, saying, "Hey, there,
curly-head!" They all knew that "baby" could get things out of August.
He grumbled, but when he knew that the cloth that Mary wanted to buy was
to make "baby" a dress, she was sure to get it. He even let Marguerite
take lessons on the organ from Miss Grace Bracebridge, who drove about
through the country with a pony and buggy teaching music.

August listened to the younger boys as he had never done to Frank,
although he was still close and kept things in his own hands. The boys
saw how other people did things. They tried to get their father to
"loosen up a little," to get things that other farmers were getting.
When they talked with their mother about it, she said, looking
frightened, "_Ach_, how can we afford all that?" The boys hadn't grown
up with any such awe of money matters. Emma had no idea of what the
family resources were; she would never have dared to ask. But the boys
seemed to know, somehow or other, what their father could do, how much
he had. They scoffed, to Emma's scared delight, and said, "Aw, pa could
have lots of things if he'd just loosen up and get them. We don't need
to do things this way. Pa's so afraid he's going to take a cent out of
the bank. He's got more than most farmers have. He could put up a silo
if Uncle Willie did. Why couldn't he?" "_Ach!_" Emma said, frightened;
but it pleased her.

They were beginning to get things. August began to try out new
machinery. He put up a silo. One thing meant another. The boys kept
talking gasolene-engines. It was crazy to pump all their water and turn
the separator by hand. They couldn't get August to say anything. They
needn't think that he would do whatever they wanted. But he had been
talking to Art Miller in Richland, who was handling the Porter lights,
and one summer he had his own electric plant installed on the farm. He
didn't have the house wired at once, but they had lights in the barn and
ran all their machinery by electricity. August wanted his farm to have
what other farms had, but he hated to dig into that pile in the bank. He
knew how much work it had taken to put it there. No one worked harder
for their money than the farmers did. He must think of his old age. They
wanted to take it easy some day. He didn't want to find himself with as
little as Grandpa Stille had.

He kept on digging. He worked as hard as he had ever done, except that
he had the boys to help.

The greatest change came when he bought the Ford. August had been one of
those who kept his old horses as long as he could, but he had to come to
the automobile, like the rest of the farmers. He went into "Wapsie" one
Saturday and looked at cars. He had the agent take him out and teach him
how to drive that afternoon, and he drove the car home at night. The
family came out into the yard. The children shouted, "Mamma, see what
pa's got!" August drove proudly, scowling, not sure whether he could
miss all the buildings and stop where he wished. The boys ran up to ask
excitedly, "Can you stop her, pa? Hey, look out for that wagon! Where'd
you get her? How much was she?" After August went into the house they
stayed out there, looking the little five-passenger car all over,
testing the wheels, examining the engine.

"_Ja_, I s'pose they'll think it's theirs now," August grumbled.

Emma declared at first that she would never go in the car. Her timidity
delighted all of them. The boys could take the auto; she would drive
with the horses and the old buggy. "_Ach_," she said, "I don't trust
those things. You read about accidents all the time." "Well, mamma,
horses can run away, too. Old Dick ran away with Frank." "_Ja_, but
then----" But the children teased her so much that she finally consented
to get into the car. "Now, ain't this better than the old buggy?" the
boys demanded. "_Ja_, well it ain't so bad, I guess," was all that they
could get her to say. She never really liked the car. She was always
nervous and looking out for accidents. For some reason she didn't
believe that August could learn to be a good driver. "_Ach_, it's so
late for him to learn!" She had never been afraid when he had a hand on
the reins when they had gone out with the horses. After the boys learned
to drive, she liked it better. She said it seemed more natural for young
folks to learn things like that. She had faith in Carl and Johnnie. But
when she went with August, she always kept one hand on the seat ready to
open the door and jump out. And although he got to handle the car in any
kind of weather and on any kind of roads, as all farmers did, August
never did drive as well as the boys. They could seem to get the thing
cranked when he couldn't. It was a knack they had. Emma noticed that he
was ready to let them do the driving when he could.

The car meant that they could get away from the farm. They went into
town oftener. They drove to Elva's and Frank's and Mollie's. The
relationship nearly always had Sunday dinner together now. They went
into church more regularly, and to other things in town--basket-ball
games to see the boys play, the lecture course.

They even took a little trip, the first time they'd really been away
from the farm. Once after harvest they left the boys to look after the
farm, and August and Emma and Marguerite drove down to Turkey Creek and
visited all of August's folks. The old man Kaetterhenry was dead, of
course, but most of August's brothers and sisters were still living
about there. It was a beautiful time of the year. The autumn was lovely
there in the timber, among the hills. They all drove out for picnics
together. They made plans with Sophie and her husband to drive to the
"Picture Rocks" on the Mississippi some year, stopping at the little old
town of Guttenberg, where their folks had stopped when they came up the
Mississippi and had bought their first farm implements.

Then the road past the farm, between Richland and "Wapsie," was made a
highway. That dreadful hill by Ed Hunter's farm was graded down so that
no one need be afraid of it any more. The old country road was widened
and ditched and gravelled; the tall black-eyed Susans and the sweet
clover were ruthlessly slashed down into dusty stubble. Although August
fought the highway and joined other farmers in grumbling at the taxes,
still "it made it handier." They went into "Wapsie" often, although they
still did most of their trading in Richland, believing it must be
cheaper there, since the stores had fewer goods and they were set out
with less style.

That used to be a country road along which occasional wagons and buggies
jolted. Now it was a gravelled highway, "Primary Road 5." Cars flashed
down it all day, and on Sundays in the summer there was a constant
stream of travel. Head-lights and wind-shields gave off sharp white
flashes as cars whirred past on the light-coloured, glittering gravel.
It was a wonder to Emma to sit on the porch on Sunday afternoons and
count how many vehicles went by. But grandpa wouldn't even try to count.
"_Ach_, no! no! no!" was all that he would say. This was all so wicked
on Sunday!

August had kept his hands on other things, but he couldn't keep the boys
from using the car. When they took their girls, it wasn't an all-day
occasion, as when Frank had got grandpa's old buggy to drive Lottie to
the fair. They went out on Sunday afternoons when they felt like it.
August would go out and find the car gone again. It was no use trying to
stop them. Emma thought it dreadful for the boys to "pleasure-drive on
Sunday," against which the Richland Methodist church was making a last
futile stand, as against cards and dancing; but both she and August got
used to it. All the young people seemed to do it. But one thing August
said: if he ever heard of his boys driving to a Sunday base-ball game,
they could never have the car again.

Grandpa never grew accustomed to all this. He was now too mild, too
feeble and withdrawn, to protest much against it; but he would say
sadly, when he saw that the boys were gone, "_Ach_, no! no! _das ist
nicht gut_." And sometimes, sitting alone in the big rocker in his
gloomy little room, he would mutter, "_Nein, nein, das ist nicht gut_."




_IV: The War_


The first years of the war didn't affect the Richland farmers very much.
It seemed far away from them. "_Ach_, over there in those old
countries----" August said with a kind of contemptuous blankness. The
men talked about it down at the implement store and at the produce
house. They said that this country would never be involved. They were
opposed to that, the farmers, as they were opposed to anything that
seemed unsettling. They were a conservative bunch about Richland.

August had at first only a slight German feeling. Many of the farmers
around Richland were English, and there had always been a little line of
cleavage between the English and the German farmers. Sometimes, when
August heard old Roland Yarborough "blowing off" about how wicked the
Germans were, and that they ought all to be exterminated, it made him
hot for a moment, made him feel that he was a German. All the feeling
that he had was naturally and instinctively on the side of Germany. But
most of the farmers were agreed. "Well, they've got to fight it out
among themselves. It's their business; 'tain't ours." That was the way
that August felt. He went about his own business.

Grandpa was the one who got excited. The old man, so withdrawn, his
inner life known now to no one but himself, buried in strange dreams and
prayers and fervours, now suddenly came back to the world. It was as if
all at once childhood things, which had long been buried, came surging
to the surface and overwhelmed him with memories. He went back to his
boyhood in that little village in Mecklenburg whose name the boys had
never heard before. Now he was always talking about it--Gultberg. "_Ja_,
in Gultberg den----" "Gultberg? What's that? What's he talking about?"
the boys asked, half amused. This was all far away to them. It tickled
them, they said, to see "grandpa get himself all worked up" over
something he had painstakingly read in the paper; come tottering out
from his room, in his old felt slippers and patched brown trousers, his
dark, sunken eyes burning, shaking one long, bony finger and pouring
out a lot of broken English and German that they could only half
understand. "Are de Germans so bad, den? _Mein_ oldt _Vater, mein_ Uncle
Carl, I remember in de old country, were dey den all such bad men? No,
no." They would listen, grinning a little, until he was exhausted and
would go back to his room, shaking his head and mourning sadly, "_Ach_,
no, _nein_," to sit in the old rocker, sadly, his hands in his lap,
muttering as he used to do about the Sunday travel.

Emma tried to calm him; she was afraid that the excitement would hurt
him. She couldn't see why he was so affected by this, by things so far
away; but of course he was thinking about his old home.

But when this country went in, all this was changed. Then feelings that
had never been known before were all about. Then the taunts, the talk
about Huns and _Boche_, made farmers like August for the first time
actually realize their German ancestry. August had always taken it for
granted that he belonged in this country. They awoke a deep racial
resentment that could not come flaring out into the open but had to
remain smouldering, and that joined with the fear of change, the
resentment at interference, into a combination of angry feelings.

This centred chiefly in a deep opposition to the draft. To have someone
tell his boys to do this and that! To take away his help on the farm
just when he needed it most! To have somebody just step in and tell them
where they had to go! Was that what happened in this country? Why had
his people left the old country, then, if things were going to be just
the same?

Carl was twenty-three now, Johnnie twenty. Carl's was among the first
three names drawn in Richland, where he had to register. It was on the
list in the post office--Carl Kaetterhenry, along with Ray Powers and
Jay Bennett, the preacher's son. August stormed, wanted to know what
right the Government had. But Carl took it quietly. There was no use
kicking, he said. His name happened to be one drawn, and that was all
there was to it.

What roused August to the greatest anger was that Harlan Boggs, the
banker's son in "Wapsie," should get exempt, while his boy had to go.
Harlan Boggs had appealed to the board and got exemption on the grounds
that he couldn't be spared from the bank because of Liberty-bond work.
But it didn't matter to the board, August said, that he couldn't get
help and that they should take his boy right in the midst of the harvest
season. Johnnie was working for Frank that year, and Carl was the only
one he had on the farm. They said, "Produce, produce," but how was he
going to do it when he got no help? There was all this talk about the
women working on the farms, but August didn't see many of those
high-school girls from Richland coming out and offering to do his
threshing for him. Where were all these women working, then?

Grandpa quieted down after he learned that this country was in the war;
regarded with a hurt, sorrowing, bewildered wonder that it should be
fighting Germany. That was all that mattered to him, all that he could
see of it. Carl went in to say good-bye to him, embarrassed and a little
afraid of what grandpa might do. The old man rose from his chair,
holding it by one arm, and quietly shook Carl's hand. Then he returned
to his solitary brooding. It was strange and remote, the touch of that
dry, aged, bony hand, although grandpa had been there in the house ever
since Carl could remember.

The train left in the early morning. August drove his family in, Emma
and Carl and Marguerite. Johnnie and Frank and Frank's wife came in
Frank's car; Mary and Elva and Roy in Roy's. There was a little group at
the small wooden station: the other two boys and their families, a few
people from town, one or two detached travelling men. The family stayed
awkwardly in the depot, didn't know what to do or to say to one another.
Johnnie and August went out to see if the train was in sight.

Just before the train came--the morning _Clipper_, the Chicago train, by
which clocks were set and rising timed--old Jerry McGuire the
postmaster, an old Catholic who had come into office when "the Democrats
came in," lined the three boys up on the station platform and read the
President's Proclamation to them. It was a strange, solemn, unreal
scene. Even the people who saw it didn't believe in it. The three boys
standing there, their figures against the dim red of the harvest
sunrise, with solemn blank faces, frowning a little to keep down any
signs of emotion. One of the mothers sobbed. Emma wept only a little,
effacing herself even now. Carl looked big and fresh between the other
two boys, Jay Bennett, a thin boy, dissipated in a small-town way; Ray,
gawky and sunburned, with a wild head of hair. Carl was such a big,
sturdy boy! He had his father's fresh-coloured skin, only finer-grained,
rough light hair, full boyish lips, and clear blue eyes.

The little town was silent. Away from the station stretched pastures,
the dew lying wet and heavy on red clover and tall weeds. The train came
bearing down upon them, puffing out blackish smoke into the pale morning
sky. It went black and big into the red prairie-sunrise. The fields were
left silent again. The scattered group of people on the platform got
into their battered cars and drove back home to the morning chores.

When Johnnie had to go, they were more used to it.

It was a queer time at home. It was so strange to be without the boys!
August was a big, vigorous man, but now he realized for the first time,
now that he had everything to do alone, that he was getting older. He
had never stopped working hard; but now he saw that, strong and dogged
as he was, he couldn't quite do the work he had done in those days when
they first went on the farm. He didn't even think of getting Emma out
into the field now. "Mamma" belonged in the house.

The feeling in the neighbourhood against the German farmers had grown to
a degree that would have seemed incredible at the beginning of the war.
August "got off easy" compared with some of them. He had two boys in the
service, he could keep his mouth shut, he bought Liberty bonds, although
he didn't like to be told to do so. If it had not been for Carl and
Johnnie in the army, he might have refused, like old Rudolph Haas, out
of pure Kaetterhenry stubbornness. It was the thought of Carl and
Johnnie that kept him from flaring up too fiercely when the boys yelled
at him, when he drove into Richland, "Hey, Dutchy! Old Dutchman! Old
Dutchy Kaetterhenry!" Once or twice he threatened, and started after
them; but usually he only glared at them, smothering his impulse to
fight. Some of the other German farmers came up before the board because
of things they had said, or were reported to have said. Old Haas's
corn-crib was burned. But nothing worse happened to August than being
yelled at on the street and finding painted in crude red letters on his
barn: "Old Dutchy Kaetterhenry. Hun. Bosh. Look Out."

They were having terrible times down around Turkey Creek, which was
solidly German, and where there had been more resistance to the draft.
One of August's brothers had been threatened. A mob of boys and men from
"Wapsie" had gone down there one night and tarred and feathered the
preacher at the old Turkey Creek German church.

August kept himself in hand because of the boys and because of the way
Emma worried. And underneath all his anger was a strange, hurt, puzzled
incredulity. Hadn't he lived here all his life, been born twenty miles
from here? Didn't everybody know August Kaetterhenry? Hadn't he been a
good farmer and citizen and church-member all his life? There was at the
same time something fiercely real and yet utterly incredible about the
whole thing.

Emma worried about the boys. She never heard the telephone ring that she
didn't think it might be a message for them, as their neighbour, Mrs.
Griffin, had got. She knew now that of all the children Johnnie was her
boy, just as Carl was August's. Carl was steadier and more level-headed.
She had a feeling that Carl would take care of himself, that nothing
would happen to him. But Johnnie--he would go rushing into everything.

It was long since she had done the milking and all such work. Despite
having less cooking and washing to do, it was hard on her. She was
ailing more or less, although she kept up. That old trouble that she had
sometimes had before came back on her. "Spells with her stomach," she
called it. The family had long supposed that these spells were just
something that mamma had, but now she told Mollie that August wanted to
get the doctor out for her. She always said, "_Ach_, no. Wait awhile. I
guess it won't last long." Then she would feel better again.

Things were strange all about these days. One of the queerest things
that happened was Mary's marriage. Years ago Mary had gone with Joe
Fields. He used to take her to the county fair when Roy took Elva. But
then Mary had wanted to go to school, and Joe had married Ada Griffin.
He was a widower now, with four little children. Mary was "sewing
around." People hadn't even known that Joe was "looking in that
direction" again. But all at once he and Mary turned up at the
Kaetterhenry farm married! Well, the family were glad that she was
settled, although they didn't see how she was going to be strong enough
to do all that work and look after those four children. But she and Joe,
it seemed, had always liked each other, although once Mary had wanted a
different kind of man from Joe. The family thought it was a good thing
to have her settled down at last. This was something to write the boys,
if it didn't take them so long to get their mail that it would be old
before they heard of it.

Carl had gone into the army first, but Johnnie got across before he did.
Carl had his father's knack with horses. They kept him down at one of
the Southern camps training new recruits to handle the horses. Johnnie
was in the machine-gun division. He was right in the thick of it, as
they thought Johnnie would be sure to be. He was wounded once, but his
family didn't hear of it until he was back in the fighting again. Carl
just got across when the armistice was signed.

Carl came back, ready to settle down for good, saying that this old Iowa
farm looked better to him than any place he had ever seen or hoped to
see. That went far to soothe August's anger. Carl hadn't been at home
three weeks when he married his old girl in the country, Clara Josten,
and brought her out to the farm until he and she could find a place of
their own.

But Johnnie was different. He was restless. He was reported cured of his
wound, but they could see that he was nervous, jumpy, not the boy that
he used to be. He couldn't seem to be still a minute. He was always
running off with the car and going to town. The car was the only thing
in which he was interested. August, who was a cautious driver, grumbled
about the way that Johnnie drove, with all the gas on, muffler open,
fenders rattling, making that old car go at top speed every moment.
Johnnie went over to help Frank again. They thought that maybe that
might help to give him a change and quiet him down. But at the height of
the season he suddenly walked out and went into Richland, where he got
a job at the garage with the Beal Brothers.

August shared in the high prices and the land boom that raged in Iowa
after the war. He had an offer of five hundred dollars an acre for the
farm. It dazzled him, but still August was too cautious to sell. And if
he did, then what would he do? It was a better piece of land than he
could pick up again. Ray Robbins and Elva did sell their farm, but then
the slump in prices came, and the man couldn't make payments, and they
had it back on their hands again. There was a piece of land down near
Turkey Creek, however, that old Casper Kaetterhenry had left to the
children; the second wife had got the home farm. August and his brother
Heinie bought that piece from the others and sold it when prices were at
the peak.

War-time feelings died out, but a little of the old resentment stayed.
August never felt quite the sense of home and security in Richland
Township that he had felt before.





_Part Three_




_I: Operation_


Carl's wife was a great help in the house. She was much like Carl
himself, fresh-faced, light-haired, rather quiet, but good-tempered and
sturdy and vigorous. At first Emma tried to treat her like company, but
Clara said that she was used to doing things and really tried to take
some of the hardest work off Emma's hands. Emma had always had the
feeling that she must be responsible for all that was done in the house.
But now she let Clara do things for her. She told the relatives she
"liked Carl's wife real well. She was nice to have around."

The family thought that Emma might get to feeling better now that the
boys were at home again and she didn't have all that worry. But she was
still miserable. People noticed that she didn't look well; said, "Ain't
you thinner than you been the last few years? What they been doing to
you?" August was slow to believe anything really wrong with any of his
family. But he did see that Emma didn't look right.

Then she was "right down sick." August didn't know when Emma had ever
really given out before, and it frightened him. He asked her if she
didn't want to try that place where Mary had gone. The neighbours and
relatives all came in to help and advise. They all said wisely that it
was something that had better be looked after. They told about Mrs. Ed
Kohler. None of these doctors could help her, and old Bowen had said she
was dying, until she had gone up to the clinic at Rochester. Others had
gone there, as formerly they had tried patent medicine and mud-baths.
People talked Rochester, Rochester, until August asked Emma, "Well, do
you think you'd like to go up there, then?" She said, as she always did,
"_Ach_, I don't know." But he could see that she rather wanted to go.
All the children urged it. They wanted August to take her there. Carl
and Clara could look after the farm. Finally August said he guessed he'd
take her up there.

It was the greatest journey that they had ever taken together. August
had gone to Chicago once with stock during the war, and when she was a
little child Emma had come out to Iowa from New York with her parents;
but they had never gone farther on the train together than to Dubuque,
about thirty miles away.

Everyone knew that he was taking her to Rochester. People who had been
there, or had had members of their family there, came over to tell Emma
details of operations. When they saw that she was getting frightened
they said, "Well, now, maybe you'll find it's just some little thing
that don't need an operation, like Myrtie Rohrer."

It seemed to Emma and August that they were taking a terrible and final
journey. Carl drove them to the station. They were taking Marguerite
with them. Clara stood in the kitchen doorway, her arms hugged in her
apron, because the March wind was cold. As Carl cranked the car and
hurried around to the side to get in, she waved her arm and called,
"Don't worry about your chickens." Emma asked fearfully, "What's that
she said?" "Said not to worry about your chickens, mamma." They drove
out through the deep, black, sticky mud of their own drive, out to the
highway, with its brown gravel gritty and wet in the sharp, windy March
air.

At the station they felt a faint importance and pride when August told
the people who inquired, "_Ja_, I'm takin' her up to Rochester; see if
those fellows can't help her some a'ready."

The children, too, felt pride in the clipping from the Richland _Banner_
that they sent on to the folks up at Rochester.

     "Mr. and Mrs. August Kaetterhenry left Tuesday for Rochester,
     Minn., to consult the Drs. Mayo in regard to her health. Mrs.
     Kaetterhenry has been in poor health for some time, and it is
     hoped by her many friends that she will find speedy relief at
     this famous establishment."

The trip up to Minnesota, bleak and sharp as the weather was, had
interest for them. It was almost the first time that they had been in
any other State than Iowa. August was in the smoking-car. He came back
and said to Emma and Marguerite, "Do you know you're in Minnesota
a'ready?" "Oh, are we?" Emma looked out of the window. She thought with
a thrill, "We're in another State!" August kept watching to see how the
country looked, and whether things were as far along up here as he had
left them back there. He saw some nice farms, he said. But the land was
flatter than around home, and a fellow to whom he had been talking told
him that they had more wind up here. August said he didn't think he'd
like to live where they were all Swedes and Norwegians. He hadn't seen
any farm yet that looked better than his own in Richland Township.

They took the journey in the day coach and thriftily ate the lunch that
Clara and Lottie had put up for them, taking the fried chicken out of
the pasteboard box and telling Marguerite to brush the crumbs off the
dusty, red plush seat. They looked like country people, August heavy and
silent, his farmer's red neck showing rough and creased above his collar
in the back, in his heavy coat and overshoes and cap; Emma subdued and
uncertain over the journey, looking with a kind of fearful curiosity at
the other people in the train; a sickly woman with greyish hair and
old-fashioned glasses, in a stiff, black velvet hat and an old black
coat of some imitation fur with old-fashioned sleeves gathered slightly
at the top, a black skirt that came down to her rubbers, black golf
mittens. Even Marguerite looked a little coarse and sullen, with her
blue knitted tam pulled down upon her bright fuzz of hair.

They went to a boarding-house where some of their neighbours had gone,
one that was said to be clean and that didn't charge as much as some. It
was just as good as anybody'd want, Mrs. Griffin had told them. It was
snowing when they got there, as they wrote back to the children, and
they trudged up through the dismal streets, with their left-over dingy
snow, August carrying the two suit-cases that Carl and Johnnie had let
them have. The boarding-house was an old-fashioned, brown frame-house
close to the medical buildings. Marguerite shared a room with an
excitable, talkative woman who took pride in being in Rochester for the
fourth time. She told Marguerite all about her different doctors, saying
happily, "I said when I come in, 'Well, doctor, you've got me back
again, you see.' Dr. Barnard knew me right away. Well, he'd ought to;
this is the fourth time I been in Rochester. He's had to examine me
twice before his-self. He says, 'Well, Miss Parmenter, I see I have.
What do you mean by this?' He's awful good-natured; not like some.
Always a-jokin' you when you come in there."

The Kaetterhenrys had nothing to say to the other boarders at first.
They ate in silence, asking one another in hushed voices for butter or
bread. But they had to wait several days until they could have their
turn at the clinic. One of the women who sat in the shabby
boarding-house parlour, with its ancient furnishings, began to talk to
Emma. "You here on your own account?" she said. "I thought you was the
one. What's your trouble?" They talked over symptoms together. The woman
told Emma what she must expect in going through the clinic, and
terrified her with descriptions of all the tests that she herself had
had to have, leaving out no detail. She thought that Emma must have just
what her cousin's wife had had, and she had spent four months in the
hospital and now was going to have to come again. At night Emma and
August talked over the boarders together in their room, in hoarse
whispers, Emma telling what she had gleaned of where this one lived,
what that one's husband did, what was the matter with another one.

They started in at the clinic at last, when Emma was afraid that "mister
would get restless and want to go home if they didn't get in pretty
soon." When the girl at the desk asked them for what they had come, they
said--looking at each other as if the other one might know--they didn't
know, that was what they wanted to find out. She sent them patiently to
the abdominal section, which was a good guess for most farmer people.
Emma took the tests, while August stolidly waited in the lobby of the
clinic building, with his overcoat thrown open and his cap on his knee.
Emma wanted him around. He did not take an interest in watching the
people, as she would have done, but he liked to see how the building was
put up, to calculate how much space and how many rooms they must have
and how many people there must have been going through it to-day.

He was just where Emma had left him. He said, "Well, what'd he tell
you?" "_Ach_, I got to see another one to-morrow."

Gradually they felt themselves drawn into the life of the place. It was
an experience to them, more than the mud-baths had been to Mary.
Although they were bashful and ill at ease away from home, it was not
so hard getting acquainted as they had thought. People talked to
them--the boarders, people who happened to sit near them in the
clinic--and wore away their country shyness. Emma felt a kind of
enjoyment in talking over the tests she had taken, and the doctors she
had seen, with three or four other people who sat in the boarding-house
parlour with the landlady and talked. Her ailments had never had any
importance before. They always asked, when she and August came in,
"Well, still taking tests?" "_Ja_, I guess that's what she'll always be
doing," August answered. Emma smiled shyly. The boarders thought that
that Mrs. Kaetterhenry was a real sweet little person. Even August fell
into conversation with a fat man who sat next him in the clinic and who
was also waiting for his wife. They talked about their wives' illnesses,
and the man told how the crops had been in Wisconsin. August had some
conversation with a fellow from Texas that gave him a travelled feeling.
Marguerite went to the movies and into the shops with Miss Parmenter,
who flew about town buying squares to make drawn-thread handkerchiefs in
the intervals of examinations.

The strange and unaccustomed thing was the importance of Emma. August
and Marguerite counted for nothing beside her here, were merely here to
be with her. It was a new idea to both of them, and to Emma, too. August
went in with her to the doctor who had examined her to hear the verdict.
He did not make a murmur about the expense, although it was all so much
more than he had figured on. Emma's value was strangely enhanced in his
eyes when the doctor, a large, well-groomed, imposing man with a
courteous manner that made Emma admire him, spoke respectfully of "Mrs.
Kaetterhenry," outlined her condition, and said that she must go at once
to the hospital.

The boarders all said, "Gall-bladder operation! Well, that's just what I
thought from what she told me," although the woman who had thought that
Emma had her cousin's wife's ailment was disappointed and unconvinced.
This was a respectable and well-known operation, and it, too, seemed to
raise Emma's value in some strange way. The boarders were interested,
helped Marguerite to pack her mother's suit-case for the hospital,
reassured, and condoled.

Emma seemed still more removed from their common ways of life when she
entered the hospital. August went into her room for a while, a small
double room, Emma's bed across from another bed where a woman with a
long, meager braid lay and talked in sepulchral whispers with a visitor
in a hat with green plumes. Emma looked changed, in the narrow, white
iron bed, so immaculate, different from their puffy feather-bed at home,
without her spectacles, her thin grey hair neatly parted and braided by
the nurse. Both she and August felt a mysterious fear of "the sisters"
who glided about the halls in their robes and rosaries. They had always
felt a fascinated horror of the wickedness of the Catholics.

"It kind o' makes me creepy to have them around here," Emma protested.

"_Ach_, I guess they're all right. He wouldn't 'a' sent you here if they
wasn't," August said.

All this whiteness and immaculateness seemed great splendour to them.

Emma had her operation the next day. August was really frightened then.
The boarders all reassured him, all told of the wonders of the surgeon.
August had seen him for a moment in the hospital--a short, plump, very
clean man, exhaling a kind of unshakable vigour. August felt a
tremendous awe of him. They both trusted him in the blind way that they
trusted their Methodist God, because they must. It helped August, fed
his pride, that his wife was to have a famous surgeon. But, although he
said little, he was shaken. Emma had made him promise to be right there.
It seemed now that August mattered more to her than Marguerite.

He waited in the sun parlour. He had never gone through such an endless
morning. He tried to think about the farm, about what crops he would put
in this summer; but under everything was a sinking, sickening dread in
which he would suddenly be submerged. He was silent, turning his cap
upon his knee. Marguerite sat restlessly beside him. She could not keep
her hands still, fingered her dress and her beads and her handkerchief.
People were wheeled past from the operating-room--mounds of white, some
silent, some moaning. August looked at his watch. He went through
terror. It shouldn't have taken as long as this. Something must have
gone wrong. He tiptoed down the hall to Emma's room. Her bed was still
empty.

The nurse came for them at last. They went, solemn, shaken, on tiptoe,
into Emma's room. They felt awed, taken aback, at the sight of her
strange, pinched, colourless face at which they stood awkwardly gazing.

"You can speak to her," the nurse said encouragingly. August was
terribly in awe of Emma. He did not know what to say.

"Well, it's over," he said finally.

"_Ja_, I guess so," Emma whispered.

Marguerite stood looking sullen and angry in her fright. She hardly
dared go near her mother, kissed her quickly, barely touching her cheek,
when the nurse said that she might. They stared awhile longer, tiptoed
out.

The excitement of the day died down. The boarders all said, "Well, she
got through it all right, I see. Sure. I knew she would. Well, now you
must telegraph the folks at home. I expect there'll be some pretty
anxious folks."

It was the first telegram that August had ever sent. "Operation over
mamma doing fine." That, too, gave him importance.

After that August and Marguerite went twice a day to the hospital in the
motor-bus that ploughed clumsily through the spring mud. August always
felt big and awkward and out of place in that silent building, but he
got to know the faint odour of drugs. He recognized some of the people
who always went up in the elevator with him and felt a kind of kinship
with them. He even felt less awe of the gliding sisters. He wasn't
dreadfully abashed now at the woman in the other bed, who talked to him
and Emma, called him Mr. Kaetterhenry.

Emma now seemed to belong to the place. She said that they were nice to
her. She took with shy gratitude the first attention and petting that
she had had since she was a girl, with a kind of feeling that she, a
married woman and mother, shouldn't have it, but a feminine pleasure in
it. The nurses liked her. They were good to her, petted and cared for
her in a way that made Marguerite look at them wide-eyed, remembering
that this was mamma. It was so strange to see mamma waited on and of
first importance! The other woman in the room was fretful and exacting.
Emma was such a contrast to her that the nurses appreciated her all the
more. They told her she mustn't be afraid to ask for what she wanted,
and they liked her shyness and fear of giving them trouble.

For the first time Emma had a life in which family were outsiders. She
had a kind of intimacy with the nurses, and with the very spruce,
black-haired young intern who came in and jested with her in a kind of
fond teasing way that greatly flattered her. He never did learn how to
pronounce her name, and called her blithely "Mrs. Katterhenry," at which
she was too shy to protest.

As Emma grew better and his fright died down, poor August hardly knew
what to do with himself. He never had been without work before in his
life. He had never had a real vacation from the farm except that drive
down into the Turkey timber, and then he had had the car to look after
and had still talked crops with his brothers. When he could not be at
the hospital, he hung about the boarding-house, yawned, sat drearily
while the others were gossiping. He had never been a talker. He couldn't
find the interest in the discussion of ailments that the others did,
since he had never had any of his own. Now that he knew what it was,
that Emma was getting better, he was no longer interested. There was no
one just now to talk crops with him. That was the longest three weeks he
had ever spent. He would rather have been threshing. The boarders said,
"Well, I expect you're getting anxious to get back to your work now, Mr.
Kaetterhenry." He said, _ja_, he was. He worried about how Carl was
managing the farm. He would have gone back if Emma hadn't begged him to
stay.

The boarders said encouragingly, when they saw his restlessness, "Oh,
the vacation'll do you good." "_Ja_, but I've had about enough of it,
though," he said.

Emma, too, said that she was anxious to get back home, but in a way she
was having the best time that she had had for years. She was taking her
leisure with a clear conscience. She had never been treated with such
consideration. She really hated to leave the nurses and the young
intern.

When she got back to the boarding-house most of the boarders who had
been there before her operation were gone. Miss Parmenter had left much
disappointed because they had told her that she didn't need an
operation; a little medicine was enough. Dr. Barnard had gone down in
her estimation. Emma missed the care and attention which had embarrassed
her so at first. She missed the visits of the young intern, with his
flattering jests. The boarding-house seemed dreary.

The specialist at the clinic had a talk with August before they left for
home. August listened, subdued and respectful. The doctor said that he
"anticipated no trouble," but that Mrs. Kaetterhenry must do no heavy
work this summer and must take things very easily. August heard him
uneasily, agreed, "_Ja_, I guess we can manage that." Something in it
appealed to his sturdiness and reliability, his feeling of protection.
Down underneath was a little feeling of bewildered guilt. This thing had
opened August's eyes a little.

They went back to Richland feeling journeyed and full of Rochester.
August was glad to get back to the farm and plunged at once into the
late spring work. Emma was fearful of her strength at first. She
remembered the admonitions. Clara said, "Now, mamma, we mustn't let you
overdo." But when Emma got home, into the familiar routine, she threw
off invalid ways. She had always worked here. They couldn't keep her
from doing things. No one knew the people of whom she talked in
Rochester. The surgeon, the doctors, meant nothing to Clara and Carl.
The event of her home-coming was soon over. She settled down into the
old ways again. She didn't go around telling everyone of her operation,
as Mrs. Griffin had done, but the experience stayed, sharp and
momentous, in her mind.

August, too, was a little different. He seemed to accept with relief her
settling back into the rle of mamma. But he was more thoughtful of her.
He asked her if she couldn't let Clara do this or that. He saw, they all
saw, that she wasn't equal to the things that she used to do.

August had worried about the farm. But when he came back to it he
couldn't find anything very wrong with Carl's management. Things seemed
to look as usual. That summer Carl kept on with some of the things that
he had been doing that August had never entrusted to any of the boys
before.

Those years of the war, when he had had everything to do, had tired
August. He had always intended to retire, take it easy, when he could
afford it; but all these things brought him to it now. He announced to
Emma one day that they might move in to town and leave the farm to
Carl.




_II: Town_


The chief question was what they should do with grandpa if they left the
farm. He had lived in that little room so long! He was over eighty now.
It would be hard for him to make any change. He wouldn't want to go to
town with them; he was used to the country. Clara and Carl said, "Let
him stay here," but Emma hated to do that. He was getting so old now and
might need a good deal of care before long; and they were young people,
and didn't want to be tied to the place. Grandpa ought to have some of
his own children to look after him. August thought that Herman and
Mollie ought to take care of him now. They had let Emma have the whole
care of both grandma and grandpa always. Now it wouldn't hurt Mollie to
do something for her father. The old man would be no expense to them. He
had a tiny income from bits of his land that had been left to him,
enough to buy tobacco for him and _Die Flammende Fackel_, and the few
clothes and things that he needed. Now August and Emma were going into
town to take it easy. Emma wasn't going to be saddled with the care of
grandpa, August said, as she had been with grandma.

They took grandpa's belongings over to Mollie's one day in the
motor-truck that Johnnie had assembled from an old engine and various
miscellaneous parts: the ancient rope-bed with the feather-mattresses,
the two wooden rocking-chairs, the commode and little old mirror, the
air-tight stove, the ancient, faded books. Mollie and Herman made little
trouble about taking him. They would probably not move off the farm for
years yet. They couldn't afford it. Herman hadn't done as well as August
had. The Klauses had taken things more easily all along, were more
happy-go-lucky and not such workers as the Kaetterhenrys. They were
easy-going people, Herman a little, lean man with kindly, childlike eyes
and a kind of innocence of speech, Mollie short and fat and shapeless,
waddling, good-hearted. Their farm had a dingy old-fashioned house set
close to a scraggly, tangled willow grove where the ground seldom got a
chance to dry and the blackbirds were noisy. They used a gasolene engine
for some of their work, but they had no silo, no lights, and only the
old red-painted barn. Farm implements stood about the worn, grassless
farm-yard. August had always despised Herman a little for being so
easy-going and not getting anywhere. They put grandpa's things into
their own downstairs bedroom, moving up themselves into the room that
Ernie, their son, had had, and saying, "_Ach_, we don't care. We can get
along anywhere."

Emma felt a dreadful sense of guilt and desertion in leaving her father
there. Not that Herman and Mollie wouldn't be good to him. But she knew
how things went at Mollie's. It didn't seem right to have him anywhere
but in that room where he had lived so long. But August said it would
have to be that way.

The Kaetterhenrys moved to town in the late fall. There was no house
that they could get to rent. They had to take rooms in old Mrs.
Freeman's house until they could get a place of their own. Houses were
scarce in Richland, where little business was done. This was a small
house in the south part of town, the old and hilly part beyond the
railroad tracks. It was half-frame, half-brick, painted a cream-yellow.
They lived in the brick half. There were three rooms. They did their
cooking and eating in one, August and Emma slept in another, and
Marguerite had a cot and dresser in the third, which was their
sitting-room. The rooms had the old square, small-paned windows, close
to which some oak-trees rustled dry leaves. They had to get all their
water from the pump next door. They had a stove only in the room where
Marguerite slept, except the little oil-burner in the kitchen.

Emma didn't know just what August intended to do, whether he meant to
buy or to build a house of his own. He still kept all such things to
himself. He managed all the money. Once Johnnie said to her when he came
over, "Heard pa was trying to buy one of those lots over by
Cunningham's." "_Ach_, is he?" she said. "_Ja_, he don't tell me
nothing." She did not think of making a fuss, as some would have done,
but no one suspected the resentment that lay deep under her silence.

The children all said cheerfully, "Well, mamma, you can take it easy
this winter. You ain't got much to do here." She said a little
complainingly, "No, I should say I ain't. I wish I had a little more."
These three small rooms were nothing after she had looked after a
farm-house. Of course there were the meals to get, and they were hard to
cook on this little three-burner oil-stove, when she was used to her big
range. Johnnie ate with them, although they didn't have room for him to
stay there.

But she had all afternoon to herself and she hardly knew what to do. It
was a long, snowy winter. There were not many side-walks in this part of
town, and it was hard to get out anywhere. She didn't see the children
as often as she had in the country. She didn't get out to Mary's once
all winter. She knew a few people in town--her two sisters-in-law, Mrs.
Henry and Mrs. Willie Stille--but this was too far for them to come and
see her much. She had a cold, and didn't even get to church most of the
winter.

Once she said to August:

"Johnnie says you're buying one of them lots over north."

"_Ja_, I guess maybe," he admitted.

"Well, are we going to build?"

"I guess we better build. They ain't no good houses for sale. Why,
don't you want to build?" he demanded.

"_Ach_, I'd like it, I guess. I just wondered what you was doing."

He grunted. But she had to find out from the children that he had
actually bought a lot and that he was ordering lumber from the Great
Western Lumber-yard. Elva demanded angrily, "Why don't pa ask you
something about it? You ought to have some say-so about your own house,
I should think. I'd like to see Roy do that." She said, "_Ach_, that's
the way he always does." He did mean to let her have something to say
about the way the house should be built, but buying the lot and things
like that--he couldn't see how they concerned her. The house did, of
course. She often wondered how much he had to pay for the lot, but she
never asked him.

August's interest was all in the new house now. It was something to
build up, as he had built up the farm. There were some pictures of
houses in the window of the bank, a large card showing four of them, all
planned by the same company, all more or less on the bungalow type.
August went in several times to look at them. The banker always said,
"Sure! Any of those appeal to you, Mr. Kaetterhenry?" August replied
cautiously, "_Ach_, I don't know. I ain't quite ready to build yet
a'ready." "No, no. Well, they're pretty nice little houses." "_Ja_,
they're pretty nice all right."

When he had got his mind pretty well made up, he asked for one of the
sheets with the pictures and took it home to show to Emma.

"How'd you like to live in one of those?" he asked. He had always had a
kind of idea that when he came to town he would put up a big house, one
like Mr. Nixon's, the banker's, that had a porch all the way around. But
it seemed that they weren't putting up many of those houses now. Mr.
Nixon sent the contractor, Herb Carter, to see them. "Heard you folks
were thinking some of building." Herb tried to get them to put up a
pebble-dashed bungalow, like the one he had put up for Dan Myers the
summer before. But they wouldn't agree to that. Emma wanted an upstairs.
August wasn't sure that he liked this pebble-dash. It was a pretty new
thing, and he wasn't sure how it would "hold." They compromised on a
kind of semi-cottage with no attic and three small upstairs rooms.

That was a good part of town where their lot was. It was where the
building would be going on now. The banker's son, Clarence Nixon, owned
the lot next to theirs, they had heard. He would probably build as soon
as he got married. There was no house so far on their side of the street
except Tom Cunningham's, on the corner, and that faced the other street.
There were no trees either--just a short, vacant block, beyond which
were pastures.

They began work on the house as soon as they could in the spring. Herb
Carter had a lot of houses to build. He always promised more than he
could do. But they got along because August did so much of the work
himself. He got a wagon and team from the boys and hauled his own sand
and earth for the yard. He was a pretty good carpenter, handy, as many
Germans are, and he helped with the lathing and siding. It kept the men
on the job, too, to have him there. There wasn't much fooling with
August Kaetterhenry, as people who had had to deal with him knew. He
meant to have the house ready, so that they could move into it before
winter.

The boys said laughingly, "Thought pa was going to town to take it
easy. He's working as hard as he did on the farm. I'd want to be paid
good and plenty before I'd take to hauling all that dirt."

But August liked it. The house filled up the blank left by the farm. It
fed his pride to be putting up a good house, showing people that he
could afford it. There was the thought that he had worked hard for this,
that he owed most of it to himself. People said, "You always see Mr.
Kaetterhenry going back and forth from his new house. It must be going
up pretty fast. They say it's going to be nice."

It was up now, although the finishing wasn't done inside. The _Banner_
had an item about it:

     "Mr. August Kaetterhenry has put up his fine new house in the
     north part of town and is about ready for the finishing. Mr.
     Kaetterhenry says that the first of October will see them
     established in the new house."

He went over to see it in the early summer evening, to take some more
boards over, so that the men would have them there in the morning, but
really to see how the place looked when he wasn't working on it.

The house stood, new, bare, bright, on the raw earth that was littered
over with boards, shavings, pails of dirtyish mortar. It had had its
first coat of paint, the upper story yellow, and the lower white. The
shingles looked brown and fresh and had a woody smell. The porch roof
sloped, and there was one of those dormer-windows in the centre that
looked as if it had slipped down half-way. Narrow planks that bent a
little led up over the porch steps and to the shining front door. The
door was locked now. The house was past the stage when little girls
could go in and find shaving-curls to hang over their hair, and when
women could go there looking around and speculating on which room was
which.

Inside, the house was new, echoing, still. The unstained floors and
woodwork made August feel that he shouldn't be stepping about in his
heavy shoes. The walls were rough, white, untinted. The bath-room was
finished, although chunks of plaster lay around. He was proud of the
shining pipes, the white porcelain of the fixtures still unwashed, with
labels sticking to it. Another thing that he admired was the colonnade
between the dining-room and living-room. It seemed queer to both of them
not to have a parlour, but that was the way that houses were being made
now. Although he had worked on this house, August could hardly believe
in it, somehow, and that he was ever going to live here.

There were some small boards laid over the stairs to keep them clean. He
thought he'd go up and see how it looked up there. But he did not stay
long. It was dim up there, more silent, and his shoes made a fearful
noise as he creaked from room to room. He had a stealthy feeling, as if
someone would catch him there. These rooms kept the heat of the day. He
was proud of the shining bronze-and-black registers in the walls.

Well, he guessed there was nothing he could do in here. He'd seen it all
often enough.

He went outside. In the early summer evening there was a kind of sadness
and bareness in the new house, standing stark against the pale evening
sky, the new boards around, the raw dirt, the tools thrown down whenever
the men had happened to drop them, the vacant lots beyond, and then the
pastures stretching away, damp and fresh with dew, and the slow-moving
forms of cattle.

They had wanted to move in in September, but it was the middle of
October before they could. Then the woodwork was all stained and
varnished--light, shining golden-oak. They had had the walls in the
front room "tiffanied." In the other rooms the walls were tinted light
green or blue, with stencilled borders. They had bought new rugs for the
two front rooms, with bright mottled patterns, and had had the old rag
rugs made up into strips for the bedrooms. They were "doing everything
right."

They hadn't brought in all of their furniture. August said some of it
wasn't worth carting. The combination desk and bookcase, their bedroom
furniture, the standard rocker, and three or four others--all these they
had. The old rockers and the little old stand they put upstairs.
Grandpa's old German Bible and the album and other old things went into
the small store-room at the head of the stairs. Downstairs, as people
said admiringly, half the things were new. The dining-room furniture was
all new--a round table and four chairs with leather seats. They had kept
some of the old chairs to help out when they had company. They had a new
set of dishes, too, although they themselves used the old ones. The new
ones were white, with scalloped edges and a thin gold line. The
dining-room table remained immaculate, on it a round, embroidered crash
doily and a plant. They would do their eating in the kitchen. In the
living-room was the piece of furniture that the children admired--a
large brown davenport upholstered in stiff half-leather.

People went in to see the Kaetterhenrys. They said they were "fixed real
nice."

At first it seemed queer to the children to see ma and pa in this
brand-new modern house, with the shining floors and white plumbing and
new furniture. But they got used to it quickly. Now, when they came into
town, it was a settled thing that they should go to the folks' for
dinner, and leave the babies there while they did their buying. They
came in on Sundays to church, and all ate in the new dining-room, the
daughters holding babies on their laps.

There was one thing that disappointed them, Emma especially. They had
fixed up such a nice room for Johnnie and had thought that they could
have him with them again. He had been rooming over in an old house near
the garage. But just before they moved into the new house, he had driven
over to "Wapsie" one day with his landlady's daughter, and had come
back and announced himself married. Emma felt dreadfully, both because
of the girl he had married and because he hadn't told her and his father
about it.

They hated to think of his marrying "such a little flip," as people in
town called her. The other two boys had married good workers, good
sensible girls, although in some ways they didn't care much for Frank's
wife. This Bernice was only a junior in high school, a silly, rather
pretty girl, with a large, soft, powdered face and great buns of dark
hair showing the rats, melting, foolish brown eyes. She wore sleazy
over-blouses moulded by her large, soft breasts, and knee-skirts showing
her fat white legs in cheap, thin silk stockings that had a brownish
cast. She didn't know how to do anything. She and Johnnie were to stay
with mamma.

If Frank had married a girl like that, August might not have forgiven
him for years. He did storm and say that he wouldn't do anything more
for Johnnie. But, although the marriage was known as a great
disappointment to the Kaetterhenrys, August's anger didn't last. In a
way this crazy action of Johnnie's, while it hurt August, partly
satisfied his old grudge about the way he had been treated in war-time,
the peremptoriness of the Government in taking his boys off the farm,
being called "Old Dutchy Kaetterhenry." If Johnnie had not gone to war,
he would never have done such a thing. He had not been the same boy
since, as anyone could see.

Johnnie quarrelled with Bernice's mother, an old Tartar, and he and
Bernice went to live in some rooms up over the hardware store. Their
baby was born soon after that. Women whispered how long it should have
been before the baby ought to have come. But Junior was the prettiest,
sturdiest, fattest baby in the relationship. It gave Emma something to
do to go over to Johnnie's rooms and clean up and help Bernice with the
baby.

Johnnie seemed to be settling down now. Being older than Bernice made
him seem older and more staid to himself. August said that if he had
really made up his mind now to stay in the garage business, and not just
tinker, they'd see what they could do for him.





_Part Four_




_I: Retired Farmers_


People asked the children now:

"Well, how do the folks like it in town?"

"Oh, pretty good, I guess," the children answered. "Mamma likes it a lot
better since they're in their new house. I guess pa kind o' misses the
farm, though."

"I guess Marguerite's glad they've moved in."

"Oh, sure, _she's_ glad. It suits her just fine."

The Kaetterhenrys were settled in town now, retired farmers.

Marguerite was the one who had profited by the change. She was a town
girl now. Her sisters said that she acted as if she had never lived in
the country. She was in high school now, where she played basket-ball
and went around with the girls. Marguerite Kaetterhenry was a
good-looking girl. She was tall, large-boned, but still thin, with a
fresh skin that was apt to break out a little. Her fuzz of bright light
hair she wore in huge side-puffs. She was very particular about how her
clothes should be made. She wouldn't buy shoes at one of the general
stores in Richland, but made her father take her in to "Wapsie," or went
to Dubuque with one of the boys when they were going. She was popular in
high school, had good marks in her studies, and went to all the parties,
although the Kaetterhenrys wouldn't let her go to the town dances in the
opera-house. But she was a kind of stranger at home.

She did not look as if she belonged to the same tribe as her sisters,
when they came to town. Mary lived away out in the country, near the old
mill. She looked aged and hollow-eyed, with dark skin and those glowing,
shy, intelligent dark eyes. Her clothes were shabbier than her mother's.
Elva took more pains with hers. She still had her white skin, but
somehow her things had a country look. She was getting fat and matronly
and sloppy, with all those fat white babies of hers. Clara, of course,
was young and fresh-looking, and she looked well in the clean ready-made
bungalow aprons that she wore out on the farm. But when she came to
town, she seemed different, coarser, and she wore shabby, high black
shoes with her thin summer dresses. Lottie, Frank's wife, was a heavy,
coarse, homely woman, with straight red hair and a thick-freckled face.
Marguerite would never be satisfied with what her sisters had had.

In some ways the Kaetterhenrys lived much as they had done on the farm.
They did most of their living in the kitchen. August always washed his
hands and face there, at the sink, in the granite basin, instead of in
the bath-room; and he kept an old pinkish comb and his shaving-things on
the shelf above the sink. They used their old dishes and ate from the
oilcloth.

They had arranged to get their cream and eggs from the farm, but they
found that it was very different from having those things right at hand
in abundance. Emma said that she had to learn to cook all over again.
They were sparing of milk and butter when they had to pay for these
things in cash. They got several quarters of meat when Carl butchered,
and Emma put it up in jars, as she had always done. But somehow, when
they were so near town, they found themselves getting more fresh meat.
Emma canned quarts and quarts of vegetables, too. The cellar was full.
They couldn't use half the things. They couldn't have chickens because
they might dig up the lawn, which was freshly seeded.

August had let Carl keep the old car and had bought a new sedan. They
drove a little more now, oftener to "Wapsie" and to Dubuque, where they
got into the habit of doing their important shopping, like most Richland
people. But August used the car chiefly for going back and forth to the
farm. He wouldn't let Marguerite drive it, and of course Emma never
thought of doing so. They still did little pleasure-driving. They took
out the minister and his wife for a drive, went two or three times to
Turkey Creek. In the hot summer evenings the car was locked in the
garage, although they might have been out getting the freshness from the
open country, where ghostly vapour rose from the cornfields and the
trees looked misty and drenched in the loneliness of evening.

They got considerable consolation from the church. Now they were among
the chief and faithful members. If the Kaetterhenrys were not in their
pew, the minister knew that something was wrong with them, and took
pains to call the next week. They were among the eight or nine who
attended the prayer-meetings. Emma had a kind of fondness and loyalty
for the church because of her father, and August remembered it as the
best thing in his young days. Going to church, and being steady and a
good worker, and not drinking, and paying his bills, and saving money,
were all part of the same thing. August and Emma still attended the Hon.
Mr. Bossingham's Bible class, where August sat dumb and Emma
occasionally made a timid answer. They never said much at
church-meetings, but they could always be counted upon to be there.
After the evangelist had been to Richland--a modern evangelist who had a
singer who shouted, "Now put a little pep into these hymns, people!" not
like the old travelling evangelists who used to go around to the
camp-meetings--they offered the use of their house for one of the
cottage prayer-meetings that were held for as long as a month before
they petered out.

But although the church was still a social and business centre in a
little country town like Richland, one doctor attending the Methodist
church, the other the Congregational, it didn't seem to have the
importance that it had had when they were young people in the country
here. The children didn't make the effort to come in to services that
they had made, easy as it was for them now, compared with those old days
of buggies and dirt roads. There were too many other places where people
could go now. August and Emma made Marguerite go to church and Sunday
school, but after the League she went walking, on pleasant nights, with
her current admirer.

And, really, it was only as a kind of deep-rooted custom, a bulwark
against worrying changes, an idea, that August cared for the church. He
often went to sleep during the services. He did not get the sentimental
and emotional satisfaction out of the prayers and sermons and hymns that
Emma did. It did not fill the same place in his life. He had never
questioned anything, but it was doubtful what these things really meant
to him.

Emma was getting used to town. As the children said, she liked it better
now that they were in their own house. She was still very quiet, but she
was beginning to go about a little more than formerly. Her
sister-in-law, Mrs. Henry Stille, "got her into" the Social Circle Club,
a collection of elderly ladies who met every Tuesday to eat and talk.
They had no program, like the Tourist Club, took up no "line of study."
The club was only and frankly for social purposes. The _Banner_ said of
it:

     "The Social Circle Club held its weekly meeting on Tuesday last
     at the pleasant new residence of Mrs. August Kaetterhenry. The
     ladies brought fancy work and, after a pleasant hour spent in
     social intercourse, were served with a delicious luncheon by
     the hostess, after which the club adjourned, thanking the
     hostess one and all for a delightful afternoon's
     entertainment."

Then there was the Aid Society. This, too, was composed largely of the
older women of the church, who were still willing to get up big suppers,
work at cleaning the church, make sheets and pillow-cases for the
missions that they supported, and raise money for the parsonage fund by
making quilts which women from "Wapsie" came down to buy. Emma enjoyed
these quilting-afternoons in the quiet, chilly church basement, to which
she went with Mrs. Willie Stille, with all the women sitting about in
old-fashioned comfort, talking over neighbourhood affairs, telling what
their husbands and children had done, as they worked together at the
big quilting-frame. It was like her girlhood days, when she was getting
ready to be married, and they had held quilting-bees in the country.
There was the crisp smell of coffee, which some of the ladies were
getting ready on the oil-stove, coming in and saying, "Well, don't you
ladies think you better quit working so hard and have a little coffee
for a change?" She helped at the church suppers, was one of those who
could be counted upon to work in the kitchen. But it was noticed that
the Kaetterhenrys were always careful not to donate too much.

Emma still had the feeling that August mustn't be kept waiting a minute
for his meals and that she "must be getting back."

She took more pains with the house than she had ever taken with the one
in the country. It was all so bright and shining, and she wanted to keep
it that way. Marguerite, of course, didn't get things out of order as
the boys had done. Emma raised plants, geraniums, and coloured foliage,
and a sword-fern for the front window that she hoped would grow huge,
like Mrs. Henry Stille's. She did more sewing than she had done before.
She used to count on Mary for that, but Mary had less time than she did
now. Emma made Marguerite's clothes, under minute and fretful and
exacting directions. "No, mamma, I told you I had to have the belt
_down_ lower. This makes me look like Lottie." She got patterns from
other women and crocheted wide elaborate yokes for Marguerite's
corset-covers and camisoles.

She took care of the grandchildren when the young people wanted to go
somewhere. She went out into the country to help out when there was
sickness at the homes of any of the children. She missed the farm
sometimes--missed the quiet, her work with the poultry, the feeling of
the old rooms, the country air and sounds. But she kept busy enough.

August was the one who felt that he had nothing to do. The house was
finished now. Life moved along, and what else was there to do? He was
taking it easy now. He made a kind of religion of the garden and the
lawn. He looked forward to the meetings of the stockholders of the
Farmers' Bank, in which he had an interest. He made a rite of going
downtown for the mail and the meat. But all this meant nothing.

There was no club for him. For some obscure reason he "didn't believe in
lodges." He paid his subscription to the church, and that was the end of
it. He read the Richland _Banner_ and a Dubuque paper and a farm
journal. He cared for nothing else. There was no library in Richland, no
place where magazines were sold, but he would not have patronized such
places if he had had them, although Emma might have done so.

He didn't come right home when he went down for the mail. He got into
the habit of hanging around with the other retired farmers, in at
Dawson's store or at the post office. Not at the barber-shop. The
"tougher element" hung out there, and at the restaurant, which had a
pool hall in connection. The men talked a little about politics, but
mostly about farms changing hands, and crops and roads, with minute
observations on the weather.

"Well, that was just about a frost we had last night."

"Yeh. Little too windy for a frost."

"My wife thought some of her plants had been frosted."

"No. Wasn't quite a frost. Our plants didn't show any sign of it."

Most of them had a kind of seedy look. They walked heavily, without
spring. They didn't know what to do with themselves.

People said, "Have you noticed how old Mr. Kaetterhenry's getting to
look? He don't seem like the same man he did when they first moved into
town. I wonder if he can be well." He wasn't very well. He had
headaches, trouble with his stomach, once a dizzy spell. He was eating
the same heavy meals that he had eaten when he was working hard on the
farm, coffee and meat three times a day, August thought he had to have
his meat.

It was true that all at once he was beginning to show his age. Emma
looked no older now than he did. She had gained flesh again since her
operation, and some of the lines had gone from her face. August, when he
decided to retire, had been a hearty, vigorous man seemingly in the
prime of life. But now all at once his old colour was gone, his
shoulders were slack, his vigorously bright curling hair was sparse and
faded, and he walked like a man ten years older. He actually looked
older than Herman Klaus, who had always been a little dried-up fellow.
August had never had anything the matter with him except when he had
lost two fingers from his left hand in the corn-shredder. But now he
began buying a patent tonic at the drug-store, and he and Emma both took
it.

Emma said that she believed half the trouble was that August had nothing
to keep him busy any more. He did a little hauling. There was a job
vacant in the lumber-yard. He would have liked to take it, at seventy
dollars a month, but his old stubbornness kept him from it. He had said
that he wanted to quit work. Actually he would have been glad at times
to work on the roads or the section. But no work was vital any more. No
work looked forward to anything. He didn't want someone else for his
boss. Everything that he had done had been for the farm. The farm had
always come first. He had always talked about retiring some day, quit
this slaving; but he had never really looked forward to it. He had used
every energy to build up the farm. He had done it, from almost nothing,
by his own efforts, and now that he had made a fine place of it, Carl
was living on it and he had moved to town. Well, that was what everybody
did. He would not have wanted to be like Herman, not able to do it.

The boys had speculated upon whether pa would be able to stay away from
the farm. They weren't surprised to see him going out there. He made
excuses at first. When he got the new sedan, he drove out just to see
what Carl was doing. Then he said, "Want me to help you some with that
ploughing?" Then he began to go regularly, except when the weather was
too bad and he was forced to hang about the house, looking at the farm
journal and trying to take a nap.

He and Emma had always thought of taking a trip, but it seemed now that
neither of them really wanted to go.

The farm looked different now, more so as time went on. When August and
Emma sometimes drove out there for Sunday dinner, it gave them a kind of
shock when they turned into the drive. The place was theirs, and yet it
wasn't. The house was different. Carl and Clara were getting new
furniture. They used grandpa's old room for a store-room. They didn't
like the upstairs, which was not well finished. They had a brass bed and
a shiny mail-order dresser in the downstairs bedroom, which was full of
the baby's things, thrown around everywhere. They had a new
bright-coloured rug in the parlour, where there was none of the old
furniture except the organ, which Marguerite had refused to have moved
into town. Clara said she didn't know why they kept it there, since
neither of them could play a note. She wanted a Victrola if crops were
good this year. Carl had made a little cage for the baby, like one that
they had seen in a store window in Dubuque. They let him play there on
the new parlour rug, with all his celluloid animals and the little doll
like one of the characters in the funny papers. None of Emma's children
had ever been permitted to be in the parlour.

It was still different out on the place. August thought that Carl was
doing a good deal of experimenting with new things. August had never
believed in sweet clover for pasturage. He called sweet clover a weed.
Now Carl had got a lot of new seed from the state agricultural college.
August couldn't get used to the feeling that he couldn't tell Carl just
what to do. Carl was the boss now. He was good-tempered, didn't say
much. But August noticed that he kept on with exactly what he had
planned to do. He was a Kaetterhenry. August worked on the farm, but
then what did that mean when he was no longer doing it for anything? The
life had gone out of his work. Sometimes he hated to go out there,
although he couldn't stay away.

Carl didn't like to have him come, either, as he told Frank. Pa was too
used to thinking he could do anything he pleased there. They had
quarrels once or twice.

Emma, all of them, thought that August was working too hard. They said,
"You don't need to go out to that farm and kill yourself." He kept on
stubbornly. One day he was overcome with the heat out there. Carl had to
bring him home in the sedan. But even after that he wouldn't stop. Carl
had to be careful, and scheme so that his father would get the easier
part of the work.

"Mr. Kaetterhenry looks real bad," people said. He would not admit it.
Emma wanted him to try this and that that other people recommended. The
children said, "Pa'll have a stroke some day if he isn't careful."

He was never so vigorous again after that heat prostration. He knew that
he was sick, but he tried obstinately not to give in, to hang on. Then
one day, coming home from town, he had a kind of dizzy spell. He got
home all right, and no one knew it. But it frightened him. It broke his
resistance. He told Emma that he believed there was something the matter
with him. The next day Emma telephoned the children that she and pa were
going to Rochester again.




_II: Obituary_


It was in the dead of winter that August and Emma took their second trip
to Rochester. They did not take Marguerite with them this time. She was
going to stay with her uncle Henry Stille, so that she needn't miss
school. Altogether the trip seemed less eventful than the first one that
they had made, when everything was new.

August was not interested in the farms this time, or the country. It lay
under a heavy crust of snow, the willow-trees pencilled bleak and small
upon a grey sky. Although they had both had such awe of the operation
before, this time there was a different fear in their hearts, down under
everything, gnawing in silence.

They went to their same old boarding-house. The landlady did not
recognize them until they told their names and reminded her of when they
had been here before. Then she exclaimed:

"Oh, my! Well, I should say! Well, what are you folks back here for?
Are you the sick one this time, Mr. Kaetterhenry? Missus looks fine,
though."

They did not like the place so well as before. They were used to the
shining immaculateness and comforts of their new house now. The bedroom,
the dining-room, with the brown linoleum and the little step up from the
ancient parlour, seemed darker and shabbier to them. They did not know
any of these boarders. Somehow, it seemed to them that they must meet
some of those who had been here before, that they must belong to the
boarding-house.

The landlady tried to cheer them. She said:

"Oh, they'll fix you up over there. They're great folks. Not much them
doctors can't do."

Emma said:

"_Ja_, if he'll do what they say."

"Oh, he will. That's what he's come here for." She rallied him: "I never
thought I'd see you folks here on your account, Mr. Kaetterhenry. Ain't
you ashamed of yourself? My, I remember that Mrs. Boohey that was here
with her husband, had the operation on the jaw, used to say, if her
husband looked half as strong as Mr. Kaetterhenry! Well, they'll have
you looking that way again."

But she was doubtful. She told the other boarders about how vigorous
August had been and how he had aged. She said:

"I'll bet he's waited too long before he came, just like all those old
farmers. He looks to me as if he might have had some kind of a stroke.
Did you notice how kind of slow he moves? Well, sir, it's that big
strong kind of men that sometimes goes all of a sudden."

She frightened Emma, who had never actually noticed before how changed
August was. It was hard to say what the change was, exactly. He was not
thin. His face was still high-coloured. But the skin looked different;
there were wrinkles; his figure was sunken, and his movements were no
longer vigorous; his eye was vacant and seemed to turn slowly. The whole
impression of the man was different.

Emma and the children had wondered if August would ever submit to all
those tests and examinations. He had always scorned all such things. It
had taken him a long while to give up, but now he had done so
completely. He was suddenly not the same person. He was meek. He let
Emma do things for him, turned to her. He seemed to depend upon her.
When they went to the clinic, he let her make all the arrangements. And
he called her in and let her answer many of the questions that the
doctor asked. All the time, from the doctor's careful, non-committal
manner--a new doctor, large and calm--from something that they felt, but
could not name, they were afraid.

August had fought all these months against having anything done for him,
against "seeing anyone." But now that it might be too late, he was
suddenly ready to do anything. He went through all the tests without a
murmur, and he even seemed to find a relief in having his ailments
admitted to the doctor. August! He seemed to want Emma's help and
sympathy. Before, he wouldn't even so much as admit that his stomach was
out of order, was angry with anyone who dared to suggest it.

They had both been hoping that the doctor would say that there must be
an operation. Since Emma had been helped by an operation, it seemed to
them that an operation would do anything. But the doctor merely said
that this condition could hardly be helped by that. He wouldn't say
much about it all, only murmuring something about "blood pressure pretty
high." He was going to give August a diet, and he was to do no physical
work, not to drive the car, to be quiet and avoid excitement. August and
Emma did not say to each other what was meant, but they knew. "High
blood pressure" was a term of terror to people in Richland, although old
Dr. Bowen laughed at the whole business and said there was no such
thing. Everyone said that that was what had caused Mrs. Vesey's stroke.
The doctor's coolness, his temperate statements, only soothed them for
the time being. "Stroke" was what they were both fearing. It was the
fear of all the elderly people in Richland. Time was counted from the
day when Mrs. Vesey or Grandpa Granger or Fred Williams had had a
stroke.

Emma was all the more fearful because the doctor kept her and questioned
her closely about the time last summer when August had been overcome
with the heat. She answered timidly, half consciously trying to make it
sound less serious than it had been, for fear of that word. But she had
to ask the doctor what he thought it had been. He would admit no more
than that it might have been slightly on the order of a stroke. But he
let her know that August's condition was serious.

August had a reaction from his meekness before the doctors. The night
before they left Rochester he was discouraged. He let himself sink into
bitter depths of hopelessness. He blamed the doctors. He said that if
he'd known they weren't going to do any more for him than that, he
wouldn't have come up here and wasted all his money. Just tell him to be
careful! Any old fool, even old Doc Bowen, could have done that. He
didn't need to come clear up to Minnesota to learn a thing like that.
Emma tried to soothe him. She defended the doctors.

"Well, maybe there ain't anything else they could do. They said there
wasn't anything to operate for. I suppose there's times when they can't.
They gave you a diet."

"_Ja_, diet!" he said bitterly. "Think if I can't do anything else, then
I might as well starve too, a'ready."

They admitted to the landlady that they didn't think August had got much
help. It seemed to both of them that the doctors should have _done_
more. August declared that he believed that stuff he'd taken last summer
had given him more help. They both thought that if Emma's old doctor
could have looked at him, he might have done something. "If he helped
you, why couldn't he have helped me?" Their notion of medicine was still
as of some universal panacea. August had looked to "operation" and
"Rochester" as the last resort, the final magic independent of what he
himself did. Now it seemed that there was no panacea.

They went home silent and discouraged, fearful, hating to admit to the
children and the neighbours what had been said. They had not sent word
that they were coming. There was no one to meet them at the little
station, standing bleak in the midst of frozen winter pastures. They
went up the lonely, icy street. They had had a discussion about the
suit-case. Emma had been afraid to have August carry it all the way
home. She had wanted to leave it in the depot. One of the boys would be
in town soon and could get it. He had angrily refused. Then she had
said:

"Well, let me take it, then. I don't want you to carry it. You'll hurt
yourself." He picked it up and went angrily on with it, she trotting
over the ice at his side and urging him to let her have it.

Then they met one of their neighbours, Lew Parsons, in his car. He
stopped at the corner, called, "Hello! didn't know you folks was back!
Don't you want to ride home?" They climbed in thankfully. "_Ja_, I
thought mister oughtn't to carry that suit-case, but he wouldn't give it
up," Emma said.

Lew Parsons said, "Well, what did they do to you up there?" August said
gloomily, "_Ach_, not much of anything." "Not much of anything, hey?
Well, I could have told you before you went how it would be. Them places
makes a big noise, but there's some stuff right down here at the
drug-store that me and the missus always takes when we got anything the
matter with us, and it does the business."

They went into their house. The furnace was out. The place was ice-cold.
Emma worried over anything that August did, but he was determined not to
let her help him start the fire. It was a bleak home-coming.

The children came in when they found that "the folks" were at home.
There wasn't much to tell them. Emma said the doctors hadn't had much
to say.

But people in town gradually knew. They said that Mr. Kaetterhenry had
"high blood pressure," and that they'd told him he was liable to have a
stroke. One might take him off any time, and they marvelled again over
what a big strong man he had always seemed to be. They said that was
often the way. They had time in Richland to watch and study people, to
go minutely over and over physical symptoms, to see what kind of people
seemed to last and what didn't.

All that winter August sat around the house, went down occasionally for
the mail. Emma was fearful. She watched him. If she didn't know where he
was and what he was doing, she sent Marguerite to see. People said,
"He's failed just since they come back from Rochester." They saw how
slowly he walked. His feet dragged as he went past their houses to the
post office. He never went out to the farm any more. He said he didn't
want to go there.

They were not content with merely diet and care. They tried other
things. Another brand of medicine, and then a treatment for "high blood
pressure," regardless of cause, that a doctor in "Wapsie" gave. They
thought at first that it might be helping. Then they couldn't tell
whether it did or not. Mrs. Cooley, who, people whispered, was "kind of
a Christian Scientist or some such thing," told Emma about a man over at
Wellington who claimed to give people mental healing. She wanted Emma to
take August over there and have him try that. Emma was quite worked up
over all the wonders of which Mrs. Cooley had told her, but August
refused to go. Although, in medical matters, he was quite ready to
believe in magic, it must be connected with something that he could see,
a bottle or a knife. He said that this was "nothing but some more
Christian Science," and that he had always considered almost equal in
wickedness to Catholicism.

In the summer he seemed to be a little better. Perhaps it was because he
could get out more. He mowed the lawn, although Emma didn't like to have
him do it. He went downtown and stood about with the other men. The
anxiety that had been hanging over them lightened a little. But there
was always the fear of that day he might do a little too much.

The day came. There was a sale of stock out in the country, and August
secretly took the car and drove out there. All of a sudden he had got
tired of hanging around, and had broken loose. It happened to be one of
the very hottest days of the whole summer. Emma did not know that August
had gone, but she knew what it meant when she saw Carl driving up the
street in their sedan. He and Dr. Brady were bringing August home.

That evening everyone in town knew of it.

"Have you heard about Mr. Kaetterhenry's stroke? _Ja_, he had a stroke
this afternoon out at Gorensen's sale; ain't expected to live. Well, I
guess they been kind of expecting it a long time."

The children were summoned. They drove in from the country. It had been
a severe stroke. Their father might not live through the night. In all
their hearts was the hope that he would not "live to be like grandma."

Several times they thought that he was dying. They went into the bedroom
where he lay unconscious. But he was a vigorous man, and it took the
thing a long time to kill him. He lived for three days. The children had
to go back to their farms, and only Roy and Elva were there when he had
another stroke and died.

"August Kaetterhenry's dead! He died at three o'clock." That was what
everyone in Richland was saying now. He had never regained
consciousness. They all said again how strange it seemed. What a strong
man he had seemed to be when he first moved to town--had looked as if he
would live for years! They remembered how he had helped to build his new
house. They said what a pity that he had lived so few years to enjoy it.
Now everyone was wondering where and when the funeral would be. The
Kaetterhenrys were such Methodists, probably it would be in the church.

Funerals were still public events in Richland. This one was expected to
be large. A great many people came in from the country. Towns-people
turned out, although they hadn't known August very well, to see what
kind of service it would be and who was there. All the pews were filled
as Tom Peters, who was studying with the local undertaker, led one
family after another to their places in a creaking silence. They wanted
to hear what the Methodist quartet, Dr. Brady, Herb Carter, Willie
Stille, and Mr. Rush, would sing. Most of all, they wanted to see "who
had come from away." They whispered, "My, he must have had a lot of
relations!" "Well, some of these are hers."

The five front rows at the side were reserved for the mourners. There
were all the children and the children-in-law and the grandchildren.
Grandpa Stille, of course, couldn't get in, although he had wanted to
come, had sighed and mourned over "the young folks going." Herman and
Mollie Klaus were there. There were five families of Stilles. Those whom
people really wanted to see were "his folks," who had come from Turkey
Creek. Sophie Klaus and her husband, Heinie and Ferdinand Kaetterhenry
and their wives. Mina had come. She was a fat, toothless old widow now.
She had always cared the most for August, although he had not done much
for her. She wore a little scrap of cheap black veiling on her ancient
summer hat. The two brothers were heavier men than August, more like the
old man Kaetterhenry.

There was a long procession of cars that went out to the cemetery. Most
of them were from the country. All the children and all the relatives
from Turkey Creek, and a good many of the other country people from the
Richland neighbourhood. It pleased the Turkey Creek relatives to see how
many. August had been the most successful brother, and Richland was more
metropolitan than Turkey Creek.

They drove down the hard, brown, dusty road, slowly, stopping so that
the cars wouldn't bump into one another. They went through the big iron
gate of the cemetery, which was open to-day. The relatives looked around
and whispered, "Oh, that's where his lot is. It's in a nice spot."
August had bought the lot when he moved to town. It was over in the
newer part of the cemetery, near a large evergreen.

The summer wind stirred in the unaccustomed black veils of the women as
they stood about the grave. "Must be a country funeral," people driving
past said when they saw all the waiting cars and the solemn, stolid
group of people there.

The children had to drive home to do the chores. But August's sister
Sophie and the Ferdinand Kaetterhenrys were going to spend the night
with Emma, so that she and Marguerite wouldn't be alone. The Henry and
the Willie Stilles came over in the evening.

They talked about August, in voices slightly hushed, but more natural
now that it was all over. They said how nice the funeral had been, how
many had driven in from the country. They talked about the sermon. "This
good brother who has gone before us," the minister had said. That was
right. They said what a good church-member, how faithful, August had
always been! Ferdinand said he remembered when he and August had "gone
forward" at one of the old Turkey Creek camp-meetings. August had been
faithful to his pledge. The minister had said what a good citizen and
good farmer August had been. They said that that was true. Sophie and
Ferdinand were proud of how much August had been able to accumulate when
they remembered the old days in the cabin down on Turkey Creek. They
said he had worked hard for all he had got. He had deserved it. The only
pity was that he hadn't lived to get more enjoyment out of it.

Then they talked over the details of his illness. They said how quickly
he had seemed to fail when he once started. It didn't seem any time
since he was over at Turkey Creek the last time and had helped Heinie
with the haying.

Emma cried a little. It seemed to her that August had had to work so
hard, and then after he moved to town he hadn't got much out of all his
work. They gave her vague consolations: "Well, we don't understand why
he should have been taken this way, but, then, there's some reason." But
they thought as she did. It didn't seem right that Herman Klaus, for
instance, was still living, as well and happy as ever, and August was
gone. They had thought of that when they had looked at Herman at the
funeral.

There was consolation and pride in the column of close print in the
Richland _Banner_ on Thursday. Emma ordered extra copies.

                      "ESTEEMED RESIDENT PASSES"

And below, in smaller type:

                   "RETIRED FARMER ANSWERS SUMMONS."

August's life seemed different to her, more important, as she read it
there, as if she had been reading about a stranger.

     "On Sunday last the grim Reaper called from our midst an
     esteemed citizen, Mr. August Kaetterhenry. August Ernst
     Kaetterhenry was born on a farm near Turkey Creek, Iowa, on
     September 10, 1859. He was the fifth son of Casper and Luisa
     Kaetterhenry, who were natives of Pommern, Germany."

She read, as if she had never known it before, how August had had "such
education as the schools of that day afforded," how he had "left his
native township and come to Richland Township to seek his fortune,
working for a time on the farm of the late Henry Baumgartner, well-known
Richland Township farmer." Then how "he was united in marriage with Emma
Stille, daughter of Wilhelm, now known as Grandpa Stille, and to them
six children were born, all of whom survive." How he had acquired the
farm, how he had made it into one of the best improved farms in Richland
Township, "where the deceased's son, Carl Kaetterhenry, is now operating
the farm on the principles taught him by his father.... Mr. Kaetterhenry
was known to all his neighbours as a conscientious farmer and an honest,
upright man. He united with the Methodist denomination when a young man,
and was all his life one of its most faithful members and one whose loss
will be felt by the church and community.... Mr. Kaetterhenry is
survived by his sorrowing widow, Mrs. Emma Kaetterhenry, and by his
children Frank, Mrs. Joe Fields, Mrs. Roy Robbins, Carl, John, and
Marguerite and by numerous grandchildren. Also by his sisters Mrs. Ed
Klaus and Mrs. Mina Nisson and brothers Henry and Ferdinand
Kaetterhenry, all of Turkey Creek."

She had never seen all their names in print before. "Esteemed resident,"
"retired farmer"--it sounded like someone else than August.

Emma cut these columns out from several papers and folded the strips in
the old "doctor-book" that lay on the doily on the bottom shelf of the
bookcase behind the glass door.




_III: The Estate_


Then there was all the settling-up of the estate to be done.

August had never let Emma know anything of business affairs. Of late
years he had permitted her to do a small amount of the buying, but he
had never thought of letting her handle anything that was not directly
connected with the household. He had bought the meat, subscribed for the
papers, planned the garden, managed everything. Now, suddenly, she had
to see to all these things.

It worried her at first. Even a little thing like sending the "card of
thanks" that must be inserted in the next issue of the _Banner_:

     "WE, the undersigned, wish to thank our friends and neighbours
     for their kindness to us during the illness and death of our
     husband and father and for the beautiful flowers.

                                  "(Signed) MRS. EMMA KAETTERHENRY.

                                            "THE CHILDREN."

There was one of these cards in every issue of the _Banner_, and Emma
always read them conscientiously, but still she did not know how to go
about it to have her own put there. She made Johnnie write it for her
and take it down to the _Banner_ office.

She hadn't been used to getting the mail. She didn't know whether to
keep on subscribing for the farm journal or not. She "hated to let it
go," since August had taken it so long. She could not conceive of
subscribing instead for a household magazine for herself. That seemed
too audacious. She had scarcely been inside the bank. She had no idea
how to make out a cheque, and was afraid of her cheque-book. She
employed devices for getting out of going to the bank, such as making
out a cheque to Johnnie under his directions and having him cash it, and
keeping the money that came in to her from this and that. Although
Johnnie explained the cheque-book to her, she said that she would never
know from that how much money she had, not unless her money was
somewhere where she could see it and "keep track of it." She was afraid
to draw a cent. She liked to keep silver and odd change in an old
tea-pot in the cupboard, as she had kept the egg money. There was the
worry over what to do with the car. She would never use it. She hated to
have it "sitting in the garage." Some of these auto thieves might steal
it.

There were all the little worries, too, that immediately followed
August's death. For a time she was "pestered" by catalogues and visits
from monument men from Dubuque and Rapids City. One of the salesmen, a
slick young fellow with bright grey eyes set too close together, upset
her dreadfully by wanting her to order a large monument and two markers
with "Father" and "Mother," promising her a reduction if she would get
all three. Emma said, "It would make me think I was dead a'ready." The
children said that she needn't order the things, but Emma told them that
she didn't see how else she was ever going to get rid of that fellow.
She even got a sample copy of the old-fashioned black memorial cards
with a verse and the name in gold, "Mr. August Kaetterhenry." She
wondered how those people had known that August was dead, and how they
had got his name. She remembered that they had had cards like that when
her oldest sister Bertha had died, but they were so "gloomy-looking"
that she was glad the children didn't want her to get them now.

People were interested to hear whether August had left a will. There
would be a muddle if he hadn't. Emma said, "_Ach_, I don't think pa ever
made a will." But he had made one, it seemed, when he had moved into
town, although he hadn't told them anything about it. The lawyer, E. P.
Bland, read it to all of them. Emma had never known before "what they
had." She did not understand very well now. She had thought that Frank
owned the farm where he lived, but it seemed that August had still been
the owner of it. Now both the farms were hers. She was to have some rent
from both of them. There was the stock in the bank, which was divided
among the family, and a little piece of land in Montana that no one had
known that August had, and that went to the children. Emma had the house
and lot in town. She was "pretty well fixed." August had accumulated
more than Emma had thought; not so much as certain people in town had
predicted, who always said of other people, "Aw, he's got more tucked
away than anybody knows about." Of course Emma would have the taxes and
insurance and repairs, things she had never thought of before.

The children wanted to sell that Montana land at once and get what they
could out of it. They had always been a little afraid of their father.
Even after he had left the farm and moved to town, the thought of him
had checked them. Now they began to blossom out a little, to get things,
to think of themselves as really adult.

Frank wouldn't do much differently than he had been doing. He was a
settled young-old farmer, short and small and very quiet, a good steady
worker, but one who was not likely to get ahead very far. He and Lottie
had a horde of children, and they were one of those families who are
always having accidents, sickness, and doctor's bills. Frank was caught
in the gasolene engine and just missed being killed or mangled. Lottie,
big sturdy woman that she was, had had several operations performed by
her brother-in-law, a doctor in Bishop. There was one thing after
another the matter with the children. Their farm was an untidy place,
much like their uncle Herman's.

Carl would do better. He was going to make as good a farmer as his
father. Better, some people thought. While he might not be able to keep
at it quite so doggedly, might not be quite so saving, he was more ready
to try things, less stubborn and set in his ways. He was just as
particular about the buildings and machinery as August had been. His
wife, Clara, was a hustler. She had nearly a thousand chickens, and was
making money with them. Her canned goods took prizes at the Farmers'
Institute in the armoury building in "Wapsie." Carl and Clara worked
hard, but they "went," too. They were going to have some fun as they
went along. They had no fear of poverty in their old age.

The farm looked very different now. Carl had had the house
"pebble-dashed." August's name was gone from the barn now, which was
painted a new shining white.

Mary, in a way, scarcely belonged to the family any more; she and Joe
lived so far away, or it seemed far away. They were part of the Adams
Grove neighbourhood now, and did their trading in Bishop. Joe's farm was
in the timber country there. There were some limestone cliffs and a
little glen on the edge of their own land. The whole country was
different from that around Richland. Not just like the Turkey Creek
country, but hilly and backwoodsy and queer.

Mary and Joe seemed to be happy together. Mary had never had much but
hard work out of life, except for those few years when she had been a
mysterious invalid. She had two children of her own besides the other
four. There was no more time for books now than she had ever had, but
she found an outlet in the neighbourhood church, where she taught a
large Sunday-school class and worked with the young people. She went
with them to Epworth League conventions, and she was famed for having
the best papers in the missionary society. Sunday school was the only
glimpse of anything besides "practical work" that Mary had ever known.

Elva and Roy were talking now of moving to Oklahoma. Roy had a cousin
who had an interest in some oil-wells out there, and Roy was wild to go,
"quit this farming."

Johnnie was turning out better now. He bought out the Beal brothers in
the garage, and he took the little house near his mother's where Nannie
Frost had lived. The garage was on a highway and did a good business.
But it worried Emma that it kept Johnnie so busy all the time. He was
up until all hours of the night. He was a good mechanic. The fact that
he was dealing with things that would go, his sight of passing travel,
eased his restlessness. He was less nervous now. But he had never been
the same boy since the war. It seemed to have affected Johnnie and Carl
in opposite ways.

Johnnie was tremendously fond of Junior, but otherwise he was not very
happy at home. He had no illusions about Bernice. He knew that she was a
fool. She was shiftless, and there were frequent ructions with his
mother-in-law. He seemed to enjoy being near his mother, although he
seldom went in and talked to her. He brought home the mail for her and
cashed cheques and saw about the insurance. She was better satisfied
when she thought of him now; but it worried her that Johnnie seemed to
care nothing for the church. She tried, timidly and anxiously, to get
him to go. He usually said that he couldn't get away from the garage,
but once he told her, "No, mamma, I'm all through with that. It don't
mean anything to me." She thought that perhaps it came from having a
business that ran on Sunday, and that grandpa had been right: this
Sunday travel was going to ruin the country. That wild streak in Johnnie
that had troubled them for a while seemed to be wearing off, but there
was a kind of bitterness that she couldn't understand. She thought
Johnnie looked older than Carl. He was so thin! And his sunburned skin,
his fair hair, his oil-stained khaki overalls seemed all of a
colour--the colour of the dust on the highway that followed the wheels
of the cars going endlessly past the garage.

Marguerite had finished the high school now. Emma would have liked to
have her stay at home for company, but Marguerite wanted to go and take
a business course in Rapids City. Half the youth of Richland were going
to business college now, either in Rapids City or Dubuque, and
Marguerite had to go, too. She wanted to earn money of her own, so that
she could buy the kind of clothes she liked. She wanted to be in a
larger town.

All of the children lived better than their parents had done, unless it
was Mary. They came into town often, and they thought nothing of driving
to Dubuque for a day. They had all given elaborate names to their
children, which sounded absurd with the old German surnames: Maxine,
Velda, Delight, Gwendolyn, Eugene, Dwayne.

Not long after August's death, Emma went out to Mollie's to see her
father. Carl took her out and was to call for her. She hadn't been there
for months. Grandpa Stille was over ninety now. Who could tell how much
longer he might be there?

It was a sunny September day. The willows along the edge of Herman's
farm sprinkled narrow, shiny, yellow leaves over the drive where they
turned in, which had a patch of smooth, leathery, brownish-black mud,
with cracks across it. The dingy house and the scraggly grove had a kind
of beauty to-day in the sunshine and the burning blue sky.

She found grandpa in his room on the west of the house, the window
looking out on the willow grove. Mollie took her in to him, went up, and
shouted:

"Pa, _sieh wer hier ist_!"

He peered forward.

"_Ach, ja, ja, ja--Emma ists? Ja, so!_" He put out a hand that trembled
slightly.

He was thinner, bonier than ever, his hair only a few long silver wisps
under an old skull-cap, his mouth sunken in under his beard. His
deep-set brown eyes still had life in them. Despite the age and the
dinginess, those dark quilts that she knew so well on the billowing
feather-bed, the bare floor painted a dark red, there was a beauty that
she felt in the old room to-day, with the September sunlight slanting in
through the window and a rustling sound from the willow grove.

Mollie and Herman had told her that the old man seldom talked to them
now. He seemed to be somewhere in a place of his own. Yet his mind, when
he did talk, was as clear as ever. Now that the dreadful war was over,
he had gone back to his dreams. He came back with an effort, repeated
her name, sighed over the death of August _so jung_, but declared that
there was no great sorrow in dying; roused to ask her why _die kleine
Marguerite_ never came out to see her old grandpa. They talked in
German. He answered her when she told him where Marguerite was now and
what the boys were doing, of August's death. He was kind, and held her
hand as she talked, looked at her with affection in his thin old face,
told her that she was a good girl. He mourned that she should have lost
her husband. But when she left him he seemed to go back at once into
that reverie in which he lived now, broken only by occasional
mutterings, as in the old days. But they were peaceful mutterings now.

She stayed awhile with Mollie. They talked about their father. Emma
said:

"Grandpa seems to be real content."

"_Ach, ja_," Mollie said easily, "he's always happy."

"_Ja_, but what does he do in there alone all day? I should think he'd
get awful' lonesome."

"No, he don't get lonesome. _Ach_, I don't know what he does. He always
seems to have plenty to think about. He used to read, but that he can't
do any more."

"I hate to see him sit alone like that."

"_Ach_, he's all right."

What was he doing, thinking? Mollie said that sometimes they heard him
singing old German hymns, so old that she didn't know them. He wanted
nothing but his tobacco, his meals, wood for his stove in winter.

Mollie had gone to the kitchen for some eggs that she was going to give
Emma to take home. Emma heard the old man, in his room, praying. She
had forgotten how he used to do that, so that it startled her for a
moment. The German words, guttural, rich, with long pauses between, had
a sound that was unearthly and yet fitting in the still, sunlit country
air. She looked into his room. He sat in the old wooden rocker. His deep
eyes had a withdrawn, mystic look. He did not notice her. Mollie said:

"_Ja_, we often hear him doing that."

Emma thought about it as Carl was driving her home between the September
fields of dusty gold in the late afternoon. She could still hear those
faint, far-apart, devout German words. August had always said that if
her father had been more of a farmer and less of a preacher, he'd be
better off to-day. August had despised him in a dispassionate way. But
the old man had had something, she hardly knew what, that had lasted him
when his work was over.

"He's got something to think about," she thought.

It was that something, she could not name it, which she had missed all
her married life.

She remembered the pathos of August, coming in from the farm and saying
bitterly that everything had to go Carl's way now; of him sitting about
the house, trying to look at the farm journal, not knowing what to do
with himself. Her father, what a frail man he had been when he had first
come to live with them years ago! And here he was living still,
contented with the little that he had, and well, and August was the one
who was gone.




_IV: Mrs. Emma Kaetterhenry_


Retired farmers, widows, spinsters--these made up most of the little
town of Richland. Emma was one of the widows now--widows living alone on
small independent incomes, on the rents from farms, or helped by their
children.

Marguerite was in Rapids City now. Women in Richland said disapprovingly
that she ought to have stayed with her mother, but they were appeased by
hearing that Marguerite was making twenty-two dollars a week as a
stenographer. And they heard that she was engaged to that young fellow
who sometimes came home with her, although she didn't seem to be
marrying him.

She came home over Sunday sometimes. She brought her "friend," a slim,
glossy-haired young man who was employed in an office in Rapids City,
and who had bought a second-hand car in which they drove to Richland.
They drove down on Sunday morning, and after dinner they either sat
talking in low, meaning voices while Emma dozed--"You didn't? Oh, you
did, too. How do _I_ know? Sure I know!"--or drove out to Carl's. Emma
told Marguerite that she ought to stop and see grandpa; but when they
came back, and she asked them about it, Marguerite said, "Oh, we didn't
get over there this time." Emma did not know whether these two were
engaged or not.

Marguerite had converted herself into a very urban young lady. Her chief
business in staying in Rapids City was to watch the proper length of
skirts and waists and to have everything right. She was tall, still
thin, and wore her clothes well. The only thing about her looks that
really worried her was that her hair was too fuzzy to take a wave well.
She and another girl were doing their own cooking in light-housekeeping
rooms, and what she saved on food she spent on clothes. Emma thought it
was dreadful when she saw what Marguerite was wearing out to Carl's,
"just out in the country"--those sheer dresses and light, high-heeled
slippers and silk stockings. But she did nothing more than murmur:

"Is that what you're going to wear out there? Won't you spoil it?"

Marguerite was a real Kaetterhenry, however. At home she had done none
of the work, but now that she had a job, although the interest of her
life was in clothes, she did her work well and disdained the slipshod
ways of other stenographers. She was cool, hard, scrupulous,
level-headed, a good worker. She seemed to be a nice, capable girl,
people in Richland had decided, although she wasn't much comfort to her
mother.

Even if she was alone, there were still claims upon Emma. There was the
aid society, of which she was now one of the chief supports. She still
worked in the kitchen at church suppers. She was sent for when there was
sickness in the country. She was often called upon to keep the
grandchildren while Carl and Clara, or Elva and Roy, drove to Dubuque.
Some of the little ones stayed with her while the others were sick with
measles or whooping-cough or scarlet fever. She often had Junior with
her. Bernice was "always on the go," or fancied that she had something
the matter with her. "Ma"--"grandma" they were beginning to call
her--was still the stand-by of all the children, and "grandma's house"
was the place where they all expected to go when they went to town.

But in a way she was knowing leisure for the first time in her life. She
did not feel the responsibility that she had felt when things were
dependent upon her alone. She always had plenty of time to herself. She
was doing what she pleased in ways that she had never done before. She
had friends outside her home, elderly ladies like herself, with whom she
spent pleasant, gossipy afternoons, as she hadn't done while August was
living. Her personality, smothered and silent for many years, was
blossoming out, very faintly and timidly, but a little, enough to shed a
kind of light of content and freedom over this quiet end of life. She
might be lonely later on, but she was not now. She was a Stille, not a
Kaetterhenry. That showed now. She could be happy pottering about on her
own devices. The children said ma got along better alone than they'd
been afraid she would.

She had gradually got used to the fact that money was her own, that
there was no one but herself to say what she should spend and what she
shouldn't. She did not say much about it, but not even her children
realized what a wonder and pleasure it was to her to have a little money
in her own hands. She still felt timid and out of place when she went
into the bank. She made the boys do it for her. She was still very
cautious about what she spent, could not overcome the lifelong habit of
hoarding and thinking about the future. It seemed wicked to her to spend
more than a very little on herself, she had had the self-effacement of
mother and wife so ground into her. But when she admired a piece of
goods in the store window, she could think, "Well, I can have it if I
want it." She needn't ask anybody.

She could enjoy buying small presents for the grandchildren, getting
cloth to make up for them, sending dollar bills in letters to Marguerite
so that she could get herself something she wanted. She gave generously
when she was solicited for the church, and people said, "I guess it was
him that was the close one more than she. She gives real freely." She no
longer had to turn away agents who came to the house selling things that
she didn't want, something that had always given her tender and
sentimental heart a guilty feeling. She said "they might need it; you
could never be sure." She'd rather take the chance and not send anyone
away. She had never subscribed for the household magazine that she
wanted, thinking three dollars a year almost too sinful a waste for
reading-matter; but she had a little magazine at which she never looked,
having given her subscription to a young Armenian--"a young foreigner,"
she called him--who had asked her to "vote for him" by giving him a
subscription. The youth who got the most of these "votes" would be
elected by the magazine company for a year at college. She never heard
whether her young foreigner had been elected.

Emma even talked of taking a trip some time out to Nebraska to see her
brother Ed. But just as soon as the children began to press her to go,
she would begin to make excuses. She did not quite have the courage to
make a trip, or decide on one, by herself. If they had gone while pa was
still alive, then that would have been different.

The children could hardly believe their Aunt Mollie when she told them
that as a girl their mother had "liked to go." Now it was hard for them
to get ma even to drive to Dubuque with them. She only told them
mildly, ach, she had forgotten how, she'd stayed at home so much. It was
something that she had looked forward to when they were working so hard
on the farm, that when they "once had something" and "got to town," she
could go again as much as she pleased. She did not tell the children now
how timid she felt about starting out anywhere, how she "seemed better
off at home."

They could not believe, either, that she had been a giggler, as Mollie
said. There was a picture of Emma and Mollie in the album, taken in the
same dresses and hats that they had worn to the Richland Grove Fourth of
July celebration, the first place where Emma had gone with August. The
children laughed over Aunt Mollie's spit-curls, and said that she
needn't talk; and their mother's hat with a ridiculous feather, the
attitude of the two girls sitting there displaying their finery. The
children said, "Don't you talk to us!" But they couldn't really believe
that their quiet, shy mother had been as she looked in that photograph.

But she did go a little, more than she had been doing. She never missed
church, of course. She went to the "aids" and the missionary-meetings.
She got Mrs. Henry Stille to stop for her and went to the Social Circle
Club. She didn't mind going to places so much if she had someone to go
with her. She enjoyed entertaining the club more now than when she had
felt that it was bothering August. He had grumbled about "What do all
those women want to sit around and talk for? Better go home and look
after their houses." She felt more free to serve what refreshments she
pleased.

She looked better than she had for years, a plump, shapeless, elderly
woman, with grey hair a little curling; spectacles--good ones now, with
light, narrow shell rims; she had got them "up at Rochester"--and mild,
soft, faded brown eyes. She was dowdy and countrified, but wore clothes
of lasting materials, always having one good silk dress, and letting
Marguerite persuade her to buy a new spring hat instead of wearing her
old one again.

She still got up early every morning. Not so early as when August was
living, however. Then they were awake at four, as they had been in the
country. Now she lay abed sometimes until after six o'clock. That gave
her a scared, delicious, audacious feeling. She liked to work in the
garden in the early morning. She enjoyed having time for flowers. She
had always had a few on the farm, but couldn't take care of them. They
were food for her sense of beauty. Now she chose the seeds herself. She
planted moss roses near the house and had Johnnie put up a trellis,
shocked that he did it on Sunday. She liked to be out there planting in
the spring. She put on an ancient black calico wrapper, a sunbonnet, a
black, padded, sleeveless jacket, and some old shoes of August's, and
went out in the yard. It was silent and sunny, no sound but an
occasional car on the road, a rooster crowing, sometimes the noise of
Junior's little kiddy-car on the cement walk. She liked the feel of the
cool spring earth, sun-warmed on the surface, black and moist and chill
underneath, as she patted it over the tiny dry seeds. She talked to
Junior, said, "Dig over there in the corner, Junie, if you have to dig
too, then"; but her mind was far away from him, in some wordless place
of mysterious content.

She ate most of her meals alone at the little table in the kitchen. That
was what she minded most of living alone--the meals. Carl and Clara had
made her promise that she would cook herself real meals and not just
take to lunching, as many women did when they had no men to cook for.
She obeyed them pretty well, although sometimes she said, "_Ach_, just
for myself!" She took great pains with her housework, although she
worked slowly since there was no reason to hurry. There was a kind of
mystery and contentment, too, in moving about the quiet, bright house as
she worked. She wanted to keep the floors as shining as when the house
was new. It worried her, although she did not say so, to have the
grandchildren "get things around." After they had gone, she went about
picking things up after them. She had never had time for that on the
farm.

In the afternoon she often had to take care of Junior for Bernice. He
was her favourite, although she would not say so, of all the
grandchildren, just as Johnnie had secretly been her favourite of the
children. Junior didn't seem to have suffered from the shortcomings of
his mother. He was one of the sturdiest babies in town, one of whom
women said lovingly, "That dear little Junior Kaetterhenry!" and men,
"Ain't he a buster, though!" His fat, white cheeks and his brown eyes
and his engaging smile, the fact that he had won second place in the
baby-show in "Wapsie," consoled his grandmother for the fact that
Johnnie had made a poor marriage, and that he didn't go to church or
"believe." It seemed that the Lord must not be angry with Johnnie, since
he had given him Junior. She baked cookies so that she would have some
for Junior--"gran'ma's cookies," he called them--and had bought some
little celluloid animals at the ten-cent store in Dubuque. He followed
her about the house and asked questions, and shrieked "Daddy!" when any
man went past in an automobile. And yet she felt it a kind of strain to
have him there. She loved him, but she felt a kind of relief when
Bernice came flouncing in to get him and take him home.

She did more fancy work now. She liked to make little clothes for the
grandchildren, and tried to be very impartial with them. Marguerite
picked out "cute patterns" for her in Rapids City. These little youngest
Kaetterhenrys dressed very differently than her children had done. She
made little bright-coloured chambray frocks, with apples and
morning-glories in appliqu.

She had to care for the lot in the cemetery. She got Johnnie to drive
her out there. She said that she didn't mind walking back, and usually
there was someone coming along in a car who would take her as far as
town. The monument was up now, a large, square, polished grey stone,
with "KAETTERHENRY" carved upon it; below that:

                            "AUGUST ERNST
                              1859-1922"

and below that a space. But she had not bought her own marker. Johnnie
had got rid of the monument man for her. She had had a photograph taken
of the lot when the stone was put up, and she cherished that.

She kept a vase on August's grave, which she filled with flowers in the
summer, although the bunches of sweet-peas and cosmos frequently
withered before she could get out with a fresh bouquet. She had had a
small bridal-wreath bush set out in a corner of the lot. This summer she
was going to have a border of that little pink love-in-a-mist around the
grave. She wanted her lot to look as well as any in the cemetery.

The Richland cemetery was in a high, sunny spot. She was not unhappy as
she went about there, filling the vase, moving slowly down the narrow
path through the thick grass to the small iron gate.

She told the children that she did not lack for company. Another elderly
widow who had been a farmer's wife, Mrs. Wall, lived on the next street
in a large, square house painted pale blue. Emma called for Mrs. Wall,
and they went to the prayer-meeting and the evening church-service
together, and to the missionary-meeting and the "aid." It "made it nice
for both of them," people said.

Mrs. Wall came over sometimes in the evening. They sat together,
sometimes in the front room, or "just out in the kitchen." Mrs. Wall
knew more of what was going on than Emma did, although she said that she
didn't hear so much now that she didn't have a man coming home from
town. They talked over illnesses and approaching weddings and of those
whom they had seen going past their houses that day. Emma told Mrs. Wall
about her operation, and Mrs. Wall told her about those of sisters and
sisters-in-law and brothers. They talked about the birth of children and
grandchildren. Each one found a consolation in detailing to the other
the last illness and death of her husband--all the symptoms from week to
week, the death, the laying-out, the funeral, in hushed, confiding
voices, shaking their heads and murmuring, "Yes, oh, it must have been
terrible; I know what that is." They sat in the twilight together,
sympathizing and condoling and narrating. Emma said it helped her to
have someone to tell these things to. She would not have told them to
the children.

The two women talked of religion together, of what they thought heaven
was going to be like, of the way that they thought God looked at things.
Emma had no such mystic fervour as her old father, but the hymns, the
prayers, the familiar words, were an emotional satisfaction. They
comforted her.

They talked of their troubles, said of them, that such things were hard
to bear; they didn't always see why they must be--Johnnie's getting such
a poor wife and turning away from the church, Grandma Stille's
helplessness, Mr. Wall's sufferings from cancer. These women had both
worked hard. Now they were getting old, and many things had not turned
out as they had thought they would.

Mrs. Wall sometimes said:

"Well, we've all had our troubles. All had things to go through. Well, I
say we ought to be thankful that we've got good homes, and children to
look after us if we need it; that we don't have to be sent to the
poorhouse like that poor old woman in Bishop the other day. Did you hear
about that?"

Emma said:

"_Ja_, that's true, too."


                                 THE END


    +--------------------------------------------------------------+
    | Transcriber's Note:--                                        |
    |                                                              |
    | Punctuation errors have been corrected.                      |
    |                                                              |
    | The following suspected printer's errors have been addressed.|
    |                                                              |
    | Page 31 Duplicate word 'of' removed. (part of his wages)     |
    |                                                              |
    | Page 129 'to' changed to 'too'. (was too shy to protest)     |
    |                                                              |
    +--------------------------------------------------------------+




[End of Country People, by Ruth Suckow]
