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CHAPTER V
They finished supper, and while Mattie cleared the table Ethan went to look at the
cows and then took a last turn about the house.
The earth lay dark under a muffled sky and the air was so still that now and then he
heard a lump of snow come thumping down from a tree far off on the edge of the
wood-lot.
When he returned to the kitchen Mattie had pushed up his chair to the stove and seated
herself near the lamp with a bit of sewing. The scene was just as he had dreamed of it
that morning.
He sat down, drew his pipe from his pocket and stretched his feet to the glow.
His hard day's work in the keen air made him feel at once lazy and light of mood,
and he had a confused sense of being in another world, where all was warmth and
harmony and time could bring no change.
The only drawback to his complete well- being was the fact that he could not see
Mattie from where he sat; but he was too indolent to move and after a moment he
said: "Come over here and sit by the stove."
Zeena's empty rocking-chair stood facing him.
Mattie rose obediently, and seated herself in it.
As her young brown head detached itself against the patch-work cushion that
habitually framed his wife's gaunt countenance, Ethan had a momentary shock.
It was almost as if the other face, the face of the superseded woman, had
obliterated that of the intruder. After a moment Mattie seemed to be affected
by the same sense of constraint.
She changed her position, leaning forward to bend her head above her work, so that he
saw only the foreshortened tip of her nose and the streak of red in her hair; then she
slipped to her feet, saying "I can't see to
sew," and went back to her chair by the lamp.
Ethan made a pretext of getting up to replenish the stove, and when he returned
to his seat he pushed it sideways that he might get a view of her profile and of the
lamplight falling on her hands.
The cat, who had been a puzzled observer of these unusual movements, jumped up into
Zeena's chair, rolled itself into a ball, and lay watching them with narrowed eyes.
Deep quiet sank on the room.
The clock ticked above the dresser, a piece of charred wood fell now and then in the
stove, and the faint sharp scent of the geraniums mingled with the odour of Ethan's
smoke, which began to throw a blue haze
about the lamp and to hang its greyish cobwebs in the shadowy corners of the room.
All constraint had vanished between the two, and they began to talk easily and
simply.
They spoke of every-day things, of the prospect of snow, of the next church
sociable, of the loves and quarrels of Starkfield.
The commonplace nature of what they said produced in Ethan an illusion of long-
established intimacy which no outburst of emotion could have given, and he set his
imagination adrift on the fiction that they
had always spent their evenings thus and would always go on doing so...
"This is the night we were to have gone coasting.
Matt," he said at length, with the rich sense, as he spoke, that they could go on
any other night they chose, since they had all time before them.
She smiled back at him.
"I guess you forgot!" "No, I didn't forget; but it's as dark as
Egypt outdoors. We might go to-morrow if there's a moon."
She laughed with pleasure, her head tilted back, the lamplight sparkling on her lips
and teeth. "That would be lovely, Ethan!"
He kept his eyes fixed on her, marvelling at the way her face changed with each turn
of their talk, like a wheat-field under a summer breeze.
It was intoxicating to find such magic in his clumsy words, and he longed to try new
ways of using it.
"Would you be scared to go down the Corbury road with me on a night like this?" he
asked. Her cheeks burned redder.
"I ain't any more scared than you are!"
"Well, I'd be scared, then; I wouldn't do it.
That's an ugly corner down by the big elm. If a fellow didn't keep his eyes open he'd
go plumb into it."
He luxuriated in the sense of protection and authority which his words conveyed.
To prolong and intensify the feeling he added: "I guess we're well enough here."
She let her lids sink slowly, in the way he loved.
"Yes, we're well enough here," she sighed.
Her tone was so sweet that he took the pipe from his mouth and drew his chair up to the
table.
Leaning forward, he touched the farther end of the strip of brown stuff that she was
hemming.
"Say, Matt," he began with a smile, "what do you think I saw under the Varnum
spruces, coming along home just now? I saw a friend of yours getting kissed."
The words had been on his tongue all the evening, but now that he had spoken them
they struck him as inexpressibly vulgar and out of place.
Mattie blushed to the roots of her hair and pulled her needle rapidly twice or thrice
through her work, insensibly drawing the end of it away from him.
"I suppose it was Ruth and Ned," she said in a low voice, as though he had suddenly
touched on something grave.
Ethan had imagined that his allusion might open the way to the accepted pleasantries,
and these perhaps in turn to a harmless caress, if only a mere touch on her hand.
But now he felt as if her blush had set a flaming guard about her.
He supposed it was his natural awkwardness that made him feel so.
He knew that most young men made nothing at all of giving a pretty girl a kiss, and he
remembered that the night before, when he had put his arm about Mattie, she had not
resisted.
But that had been out-of-doors, under the open irresponsible night.
Now, in the warm lamplit room, with all its ancient implications of conformity and
order, she seemed infinitely farther away from him and more unapproachable.
To ease his constraint he said: "I suppose they'll be setting a date before long."
"Yes. I shouldn't wonder if they got married some time along in the summer."
She pronounced the word married as if her voice caressed it.
It seemed a rustling covert leading to enchanted glades.
A pang shot through Ethan, and he said, twisting away from her in his chair: "It'll
be your turn next, I wouldn't wonder." She laughed a little uncertainly.
"Why do you keep on saying that?"
He echoed her laugh. "I guess I do it to get used to the idea."
He drew up to the table again and she sewed on in silence, with dropped lashes, while
he sat in fascinated contemplation of the way in which her hands went up and down
above the strip of stuff, just as he had
seen a pair of birds make short perpendicular flights over a nest they were
building.
At length, without turning her head or lifting her lids, she said in a low tone:
"It's not because you think Zeena's got anything against me, is it?"
His former dread started up full-armed at the suggestion.
"Why, what do you mean?" he stammered. She raised distressed eyes to his, her work
dropping on the table between them.
"I don't know. I thought last night she seemed to have."
"I'd like to know what," he growled. "Nobody can tell with Zeena."
It was the first time they had ever spoken so openly of her attitude toward Mattie,
and the repetition of the name seemed to carry it to the farther corners of the room
and send it back to them in long repercussions of sound.
Mattie waited, as if to give the echo time to drop, and then went on: "She hasn't said
anything to you?"
He shook his head. "No, not a word."
She tossed the hair back from her forehead with a laugh.
"I guess I'm just nervous, then.
I'm not going to think about it any more." "Oh, no--don't let's think about it, Matt!"
The sudden heat of his tone made her colour mount again, not with a rush, but
gradually, delicately, like the reflection of a thought stealing slowly across her
heart.
She sat silent, her hands clasped on her work, and it seemed to him that a warm
current flowed toward him along the strip of stuff that still lay unrolled between
them.
Cautiously he slid his hand palm-downward along the table till his finger-tips
touched the end of the stuff.
A faint vibration of her lashes seemed to show that she was aware of his gesture, and
that it had sent a counter-current back to her; and she let her hands lie motionless
on the other end of the strip.
As they sat thus he heard a sound behind him and turned his head.
The cat had jumped from Zeena's chair to dart at a mouse in the wainscot, and as a
result of the sudden movement the empty chair had set up a spectral rocking.
"She'll be rocking in it herself this time to-morrow," Ethan thought.
"I've been in a dream, and this is the only evening we'll ever have together."
The return to reality was as painful as the return to consciousness after taking an
anaesthetic.
His body and brain ached with indescribable weariness, and he could think of nothing to
say or to do that should arrest the mad flight of the moments.
His alteration of mood seemed to have communicated itself to Mattie.
She looked up at him languidly, as though her lids were weighted with sleep and it
cost her an effort to raise them.
Her glance fell on his hand, which now completely covered the end of her work and
grasped it as if it were a part of herself.
He saw a scarcely perceptible tremor cross her face, and without knowing what he did
he stooped his head and kissed the bit of stuff in his hold.
As his lips rested on it he felt it glide slowly from beneath them, and saw that
Mattie had risen and was silently rolling up her work.
She fastened it with a pin, and then, finding her thimble and scissors, put them
with the roll of stuff into the box covered with fancy paper which he had once brought
to her from Bettsbridge.
He stood up also, looking vaguely about the room.
The clock above the dresser struck eleven. "Is the fire all right?" she asked in a low
voice.
He opened the door of the stove and poked aimlessly at the embers.
When he raised himself again he saw that she was dragging toward the stove the old
soap-box lined with carpet in which the cat made its bed.
Then she recrossed the floor and lifted two of the geranium pots in her arms, moving
them away from the cold window.
He followed her and brought the other geraniums, the hyacinth bulbs in a cracked
custard bowl and the German ivy trained over an old croquet hoop.
When these nightly duties were performed there was nothing left to do but to bring
in the tin candlestick from the passage, light the candle and blow out the lamp.
Ethan put the candlestick in Mattie's hand and she went out of the kitchen ahead of
him, the light that she carried before her making her dark hair look like a drift of
mist on the moon.
"Good night, Matt," he said as she put her foot on the first step of the stairs.
She turned and looked at him a moment. "Good night, Ethan," she answered, and went
up.
When the door of her room had closed on her he remembered that he had not even touched
her hand.