“I know you did, Mr. Ralph, but they ain’t none now. I didn’t
have no luck with my peaches this year. I must ‘a’ let the air
git at ‘em. They all worked on me, an’ I had to throw ‘em out.”
Ralph was thoroughly annoyed. “I never heard of such a thing,
Mahailey! You get more careless every year. Think of wasting all
that fruit and sugar! Does mother know?”
Mahailey’s low brow clouded. “I reckon she does. I don’t wase
your mudder’s sugar. I never did wase nothin’,” she muttered. Her
speech became queerer than ever when she was angry.
Ralph dashed down the cellar stairs, lit a lantern, and searched
the fruit closet. Sure enough, there were no pickled peaches.
When he came back and began packing his fruit, Mahailey stood
watching him with a furtive expression, very much like the look
that is in a chained coyote’s eyes when a boy is showing him off
to visitors and saying he wouldn’t run away if he could.
“Go on with your work,” Ralph snapped. “Don’t stand there
watching me!”
That evening Claude was sitting on the windmill platform, down by
the barn, after a hard day’s work ploughing for winter wheat. He
was solacing himself with his pipe. No matter how much she loved
him, or how sorry she felt for him, his mother could never bring
herself to tell him he might smoke in the house. Lights were
shining from the upstairs rooms on the hill, and through the open
windows sounded the singing snarl of a phonograph. A figure came
stealing down the path. He knew by her low, padding step that it
was Mahailey, with her apron thrown over her head. She came up to
him and touched him on the shoulder in a way which meant that
what she had to say was confidential.
“Mr. Claude, Mr. Ralph’s done packed up a barr’l of your mudder’s
jelly an’ pickles to take out there.”
“That’s all right, Mahailey. Mr. Wested was a widower, and I
guess there wasn’t anything of that sort put up at his place.”
She hesitated and bent lower. “He asked me fur them pickled
peaches I made fur you, but I didn’t give him none. I hid ‘em all
in my old cook-stove we done put down cellar when Mr. Ralph
bought the new one. I didn’t give him your mudder’s new
preserves, nudder. I give him the old last year’s stuff we had
left over, and now you an’ your mudder’ll have plenty.” Claude
laughed. “Oh, I don’t care if Ralph takes all the fruit on the
place, Mahailey!”
She shrank back a little, saying confusedly, “No, I know you
don’t, Mr. Claude. I know you don’t.”
“I surely ought not to take it out on her,” Claude thought, when
he saw her disappointment. He rose and patted her on the back.
“That’s all right, Mahailey. Thank you for saving the peaches,
anyhow.”
She shook her finger at him. “Don’t you let on!”
He promised, and watched her slipping back over the zigzag path
up the hill.
XIV