Spring had come. Despite the many wet and gusty days which April
had thrust in rude challenge upon reluctant May, in the glory of
the triumphant sun which flooded the concave blue of heaven and the
myriad shaded green of earth, the whole world knew to-day, the
whole world proclaimed that spring had come. The yearly miracle
had been performed. The leaves of the maple trees lining the
village street unbound from their winter casings, the violets that
lifted brave blue eyes from the vivid grass carpeting the roadside
banks, the cherry and plum blossoms in the orchards decking the
still leafless trees with their pink and white favours, the timid
grain tingeing with green the brown fields that ran up to the
village street on every side--all shouted in chorus that spring had
come. And all the things with new blood running wild in their
veins, the lambs of a few days still wobbly on ridiculous legs
skipping over and upon the huge boulders in farmer Martin's meadow,
the birds thronging the orchard trees, the humming insects rioting
in the genial sun, all of them gave token of strange new impulses
calling for something more than mere living because spring had
come.
Upon the topmost tip of the taller of the twin poplars that flanked
the picket gate opening upon the Gwynnes' little garden sat a
robin, his head thrown back to give full throat to the song that
was like to burst his heart, monotonous, unceasing, rapturous. On
the door step of the Gwynnes' house, arrested on the threshold by
the robin's song, stood the Gwynne boy of ten years, his eager face
uplifted, himself poised like a bird for flight.
"Law-r-ence," clear as a bird call came the voice from within.
"Mo-th-er," rang the boy's voice in reply, high, joyous and shrill.
"Ri-ght a-way af-ter school. Good-bye, mo-ther, dear," called the
boy.
"W-a-i-t," came the clear, birdlike call again, and in a moment the
mother came running, stood beside the boy, and followed his eye to
the robin on the poplar tree. "A brave little bird," she said.
"That is the way to meet the day, with a brave heart and a bright
song. Goodbye, boy." She kissed him as she spoke, giving him a
slight pat on the shoulder. "Away you go."
But the boy stood fascinated by the bird so gallantly facing his
day. His mother's words awoke in him a strange feeling. "A brave
heart and a bright song"--so the knights in the brave days of old,
according to his Stories of the Round Table, were wont to go forth.
In imitation of the bird, the boy threw back his head, and with
another cheery good-bye to his mother, sprang clear of the steps
and ran down the grass edged path, through the gate and out onto
the village street. There he stood first looking up the country
road which in the village became a street. There was nothing to be
seen except that in the Martin orchard "Ol' Martin" was working
with his team under the trees which came in rows down to the road.
Finding nothing to interest him there, he turned toward the village
and his eyes searched the street. Opposite the Gwynnes' gate, Dr.
Bush's house stood back among the trees, but there was no sign of
life about it. Further down on the same side of the street, the
Widow Martin's cottage, with porch vine covered and windows bright
with flowers, hid itself under a great spreading maple. In front
of the cottage the Widow Martin herself was busy in the garden. He
liked the Widow Martin but found her not sufficiently exciting to
hold him this spring morning. A vacant lot or two and still on the
same side came the blacksmith's shop just at the crossroads, and
across the street from it his father's store. But neither at the
blacksmith's shop nor at the store across from it was there
anything to awaken even a passing interest. Some farmers' teams
and dogs, Pat Larkin's milk wagon with its load of great cans on
its way to the cheese factory and some stray villagers here and
there upon the street intent upon their business. Up the street
his eye travelled beyond the crossroads where stood on the left
Cheatley's butcher shop and on the right McKenny's hotel with
attached sheds and outhouses. Over the bridge and up the hill the
street went straight away, past the stone built Episcopal Church
whose spire lifted itself above the maple trees, past the Rectory,
solid, square and built of stone, past the mill standing on the
right back from the street beside the dam, over the hill, and so
disappeared. The whole village seemed asleep and dreaming among
its maple trees in the bright sunlight.
Throwing another glance at the robin still singing on the treetop
overhead, the boy took from his pocket a mouth-organ, threw back
his head, squared his elbows out from his sides to give him the
lung room he needed, and in obedience to a sharp word of command
after a preliminary tum, tum, tum, struck up the ancient triumph
hymn in memory of that hero of the underground railroad by which
so many slaves of the South in bygone days made their escape "up
No'th" to Canada and to freedom.
"Glory, glory, hallelujah, his soul goes marching on." By means of
"double-tongueing," a recently acquired accomplishment, he was able
to give a full brass band effect to his hymn of freedom. Many
villagers from door or window cast a kindly and admiring eye upon
the gallant little figure stepping to his own music down the
street. He was brass band, conductor, brigadier general all in
one, and behind him marched an army of heroes off for war and
deathless glory, invisible and invincible. To the Widow Martin as
he swung past the leader flung a wave of his hand. With a tender
light in her old eyes the Widow Martin waved back at him. "God
bless his bright face," she murmured, pausing in her work to watch
the upright little figure as he passed along. At the blacksmith's
shop the band paused.
The conductor graduated the tempo so as to include the rhythmic
beat of the hammer with the other instruments in his band. The
blacksmith looked, smiled and let his hammer fall in consonance
with the beat of the boy's hand, and for some moments there was
glorious harmony between anvil and mouth organ and the band
invisible. At the store door across the street the band paused
long enough simply to give and receive an answering salute from the
storekeeper, who smiled upon his boy as he marched past. At the
crossroads the band paused, marking time. There was evidently a
momentary uncertainty in the leader's mind as to direction. The
road to the right led straight, direct, but treeless, dusty,
uninviting, to the school. It held no lure for the leader and his
knightly following. Further on a path led in a curve under shady
trees and away from the street. It made the way to school longer,
but the lure of the curving, shady path was irresistible. Still
stepping bravely to the old abolitionist hymn, the procession moved
along, swung into the path under the trees and suddenly came to a
halt. With a magnificent flourish the band concluded its triumphant
hymn and with the conductor and brigadier the whole brigade stood
rigidly at attention. The cause of this sudden halt was to be seen
at the foot of a maple tree in the person of a fat lump of good
natured boy flesh supine upon the ground.
"Ugh," grunted Joe, from the repose of limitless calm.
"Come on, then, quick, march." Once more the band struck up its
hymn.
"Hol' on, Larry, it's plenty tam again," said Joe. The band came
to a stop. "I don' lak dat school me," he continued, still
immersed in calm.
Joe's struggles with an English education were indeed tragically
pathetic. His attempts with aspirates were a continual humiliation
to himself and a joy to the whole school. No wonder he "no lak dat
school." Besides, Joe was a creature of the open fields. His
French Canadian father, Joe Gagneau, "Ol' Joe," was a survival of a
bygone age, the glorious golden age of the river and the bush, of
the shanty and the raft, of the axe and the gun, the age of
Canadian romance, of daring deed, of wild adventure.
"An' it ees half-hour too queek," persisted Joe. "Come on hup to
de dam." A little worn path invited their feet from the curving
road, and following their feet, they found themselves upon a steep
embankment which dammed the waters into a pond that formed the
driving power for the grist mill standing near. At the farther end
of the pond a cedar bush interposed a barrier to the sight and
suggested mysterious things beyond. Back of the cedar barrier a
woods of great trees, spruce, balsam, with tall elms and maples on
the higher ground beyond, offered deeper mysteries and delights
unutterable. They knew well the cedar swamp and the woods beyond.
Partridges drummed there, rabbits darted along their beaten
runways, and Joe had seen a woodcock, that shyest of all shy birds,
disappear in glancing, shadowy flight, a ghostly, silent denizen of
the ghostly, silent spaces of the forest. Even as they gazed upon
that inviting line of woods, the boys could see and hear the
bluejays flash in swift flight from tree to tree and scream their
joy of rage and love. From the farther side of the pond two boys
put out in a flat-bottomed boat.
"There's big Ben and Mop," cried Larry eagerly. "Hello, Ben," he
called across the pond. "Goin' to school?"
"Yap," cried Mop, so denominated from the quantity and cut of the
hair that crowned his head. Ben was at the oars which creaked and
thumped between the pins, but were steadily driving the snub-nosed
craft on its toilsome way past the boys.
"All right," said Ben, heading the boat for the bank. "Let me take
an oar, Ben," said Larry, whose experience upon the world of waters
was not any too wide.
"Here, where you goin'," cried Mop, as the boat slowly but surely
pointed toward the cedars. "You stop pulling, Ben. Now, Larry,
pull around again. There now, she's right. Pull, Ben." But Ben
sat rigid with his eyes intent upon the cedars.
"What's the matter, Ben?" said Larry. Still Ben sat with fixed
gaze.
"By gum, he's in, boys," said Ben in a low voice. "I thought he
had his nest in one of them stubs."
"What is it--in what stub?" inquired Larry, his voice shrill with
excitement.
"That big middle stub, there," said Ben. "It's a woodpecker. Say,
let's pull down and see it." Under Mop's direction the old scow
gradually made its way toward the big stub.
They explored the stub, finding in it a hole and in the hole a
nest, the mother and father woodpeckers meanwhile flying in wild
agitation from stub to stub and protesting with shrill cries
against the intruders. Then they each must climb up and feel the
eggs lying soft and snug in their comfy cavity. After that they
all must discuss the probable time of hatching, the likelihood of
there being other nests in other stubs which they proceeded to
visit. So the eager moments gaily passed into minutes all unheeded,
till inevitable recollection dragged them back from the world of
adventure and romance to that of stern duty and dull toil.
"Say, boys, we'll be late," cried Larry, in sudden panic, seizing
his oar. "Come on, Ben, let's go."
"I guess it's pretty late now," replied Ben, slowly taking up his
oar.
"Dat bell, I hear him long tam," said Joe placidly. "Oh, Joe!"
cried Larry in distress. "Why didn't you tell us?"
Joe shrugged his shoulders. He was his own master and superbly
indifferent to the flight of time. With him attendance at school
was a thing of more or less incidental obligation.
"We'll catch it all right," said Mop with dark foreboding. "He was
awful mad last time and said he'd lick any one who came late again
and keep him in for noon too."
"Aw, let's hurry up anyway," cried Larry, who during his school
career had achieved a perfect record for prompt and punctual
attendance.
In ever deepening dejection the discussion proceeded until at
length Mop came forward with a daring suggestion.
"Say, boys, let's wait until noon. He won't notice anything. We
can easily fool him."
This brought no comfort to Larry, however, whose previous virtues
would only render this lapse the more conspicuous. A suggestion of
Joe's turned the scale.
"Dat woodchuck," he said, "he's got one hole on de hill by dere.
He's big feller. We dron heem out."
"Come on, let's," cried Mop. "It will be awful fun to drown the
beggar out."
"Guess we can't do much this morning, anyway," said Ben,
philosophically making the best of a bad job. "Let's go, Larry."
And much against his will, but seeing no way out of the dilemma,
Larry agreed.
They explored the woodchuck hole, failing to drown out that cunning
subterranean architect who apparently had provided lines of retreat
for just such emergencies as confronted him now. Wearied of the
woodchuck, they ranged the bush seeking and finding the nests of
bluejays and of woodpeckers, and in a gravel pit those of the sand
martens. Joe led them to the haunts of the woodcock, but that shy
bird they failed to glimpse. Long before the noon hour they felt
the need of sustenance and found that Larry's lunch divided among
the four went but a small way in satisfying their pangs of hunger.
The other three, carefree and unconcerned for what the future might
hold, roamed the woods during the afternoon, but to Larry what in
other circumstances would have been a day of unalloyed joy, brought
him only a present misery and a dread for the future. The question
of school for the afternoon was only mentioned to be dismissed.
They were too dirty and muddy to venture into the presence of the
master. Consequently the obvious course was to wait until four
o'clock when joining the other children they might slip home
unnoticed.
The afternoon soon began to lag. The woods had lost their first
glamour. Their games grew to be burdensome. They were weary and
hungry, and becoming correspondingly brittle in temper. Already
Nemesis was on their trail. Sick at heart and weighted with
forebodings, Larry listened to the plans of the other boys by which
they expected to elude the consequences of their truancy. In the
discussion of their plans Larry took no part. They offered him no
hope. He knew that if he were prepared to lie, as they had
cheerfully decided, his simple word would carry him through at
home. But there the difficulty arose. Was he willing to lie? He
had never lied to his mother in all his life. He visualised her
face as she listened to him recounting his falsified tale of the
day's doings and unconsciously he groaned aloud.
"What's the matter with you, Larry?" inquired Mop, noticing his
pale face.
"Oh, nothing; it's getting a little cold, I guess."
"Cold!" laughed Mop. "I guess you're getting scared all right."
To this Larry made no reply. He was too miserable, too tired to
explain his state of mind. He was doubtful whether he could
explain to Mop or to Joe his unwillingness to lie to his mother.
"It don't take much to scare you anyway," said Mop with an ugly
grin.
The situation was not without its anxieties to Mop, for while he
felt fairly confident as to his ability to meet successfully his
mother's cross examination, there was always a possibility of his
father's taking a hand, and that filled him with a real dismay.
For Mr. Sam Cheatley, the village butcher, was a man of violent
temper, hasty in his judgments and merciless in his punishment.
There was a possibility of unhappy consequences for Mop in spite
of his practiced ability in deception. Hence his nerves were set
a-jangling, and his temper, never very certain, was rather on edge.
The pale face of the little boy annoyed him, and the little
whimsical smile which never quite left his face confronted him like
an insult.
"You're scared," reiterated Mop with increasing contempt, "and you
know you're scared. You ain't got any spunk anyway. You ain't got
the spunk of a louse." With a quick grip he caught the boy by the
collar (he was almost twice Larry's size), and with a jerk landed
him on his back in a brush heap. The fall brought Larry no
physical hurt, but the laughter of Joe and especially of big Ben,
who in his eyes was something of a hero, wounded and humiliated
him. The little smile, however, did not leave his face and he
picked himself up and settled his coat about his collar.
"You ain't no good anyway," continued Mop, with the native instinct
of the bully to worry his victim. "You can't play nothin' and you
can't lick nobody in the whole school."
Both of these charges Larry felt were true. He was not fond of
games and never had he experienced a desire to win fame as a
fighter.
"Aw, let him alone, can't you, Mop?" said big Ben. "He ain't
hurtin' you none."
"Hurtin' me," cried Mop, who for some unaccountable reason had
worked himself into a rage. "He couldn't hurt me if he tried. I
could lick him on my knees with one hand behind my back. I believe
Joe there could lick him with one hand tied behind his back."
"I bet he can't," said Ben, measuring Larry with his eye and
desiring to defend him from this degrading accusation. "I bet
he'd put up a pretty fine scrap," continued Ben, "if he had to."
Larry's heart warmed to his champion.
"Yes, if he had to," replied Mop with a sneer. "But he would never
have to. He wouldn't fight a flea. Joe can lick him with one
hand, can't you, Joe?"
"No, I know you don't want to, but you could, couldn't you?"
persisted Mop. Joe shrugged his shoulders. "Ha, I told you so.
Hurrah for my man," cried Mop, clapping Joe on the back and pushing
him toward Larry.
Ben began to scent sport. He was also conscious of a rising
resentment against Mop's exultant tone and manner.
"I bet you," he said, "if Larry wanted to, he could lick Joe even
if he had both hands, but if Joe's one hand is tied behind his
back, why Larry would just whale the tar out of him. But Larry
does not want to fight."
"No," jeered Mop, "you bet he don't, he ain't got it in him. I bet
you he daren't knock a chip off Joe's shoulder, and I will tie
Joe's hand behind his back with his belt. Now there he is, bring
your man on. There's a chip on his shoulder too."
Larry looked at Joe, the little smile still on his face. "I don't
want to fight Joe. What would I fight Joe for?" he said.
"I told you so," cried Mop, dancing about. "He ain't got no fight
in him.
Take a dare,
Take a dare,
Chase a cat,
And hunt a hare."
Ben looked critically at Larry as if appraising the quality of his
soul. "Joe can't lick you with one hand tied behind his back, can
he, Larry?"
"I don't want to fight Joe," persisted Larry still smiling.
"Ya, ya," persisted Mop. "Here, Joe, you knock this chip off
Larry's shoulder." Mop placed the gauge of battle on Larry's
shoulder. "Go ahead, Joe."
To Joe a fight with a friend or a foe was an event of common
occurrence. With even a more dangerous opponent than Larry he
would not have hesitated. For to decline a fight was with Joe
utterly despicable. So placing himself in readiness for the blow
that should have been the inevitable consequence, he knocked the
chip off Larry's shoulder. Still Larry smiled at him.
"Aw, your man's no good. He won't fight," cried Mop with
unspeakable disgust. "I told you he wouldn't fight. Do you know
why he won't fight? His mother belongs to that people, them
Quakers, that won't fight for anything. He's a coward an' his
mother's a coward before him."
The smile faded from Larry's lips. His face which had been pale
flamed a quick red, then as quickly became dead white. He turned
from Joe and looked at the boy who was tormenting him. Mop was at
least four years older, strongly and heavily built. For a moment
Larry stood as though estimating Mop's fighting qualities. Then
apparently making up his mind that on ordinary terms, owing to his
lack in size and in strength, he was quite unequal to his foe, he
looked quickly about him and his eye fell upon a stout and
serviceable beechwood stake. With quiet deliberation he seized the
club and began walking slowly toward Mop, his eyes glittering as if
with madness, his face white as that of the dead. So terrifying
was his appearance that Mop began to back away. "Here you, look
out," he cried, "I will smash you." But Larry still moved steadily
upon him. His white face, his burning eyes, his steady advance was
more than Mop could endure. His courage broke. He turned and
incontinently fled. Whirling the stick over his head, Larry flung
the club with all his might after him. The club caught the fleeing
Mop fairly between the shoulders. At the same time his foot caught
a root. Down he went upon his face, uttering cries of deadly
terror.
"Keep him off, keep him off. He will kill me, he will kill me."
But Larry having shot his bolt ignored his fallen enemy, and
without a glance at him, or at either of the other boys, or without
a word to any of them, he walked away through the wood, and deaf to
their calling disappeared through the cedar swamp and made straight
for home and to his mother. With even, passionless voice, with
almost no sign of penitence, he told her the story of the day's
truancy.
As her discriminating eye was quick in discerning his penitence,
so her forgiveness was quick in meeting his sin. But though her
forgiveness brought the boy a certain measure of relief he seemed
almost to take it for granted, and there still remained on his face
a look of pain and of more than pain that puzzled his mother. He
seemed to be in a maze of uncertainty and doubt and fear. His
mother could not understand his distress, for Larry had told her
nothing of his encounter with Mop. Throughout the evening there
pounded through the boy's memory the terrible words, "He is a
coward and his mother is a coward before him." Through his
father's prayer at evening worship those words continued to beat
upon his brain. He tried to prepare his school lessons for the day
following, but upon the page before his eyes the same words took
shape. He could not analyse his unutterable sense of shame. He
had been afraid to fight. He knew he was a coward, but there was a
deeper shame in which his mother was involved. She was a Quaker,
he knew, and he had a more or less vague idea that Quakers would
not fight. Was she then a coward? That any reflection should be
made upon his mother stabbed him to the heart. Again and again
Mop's sneering, grinning face appeared before his eyes. He felt
that he could have gladly killed him in the woods, but after all,
the paralysing thought ever recurred that what Mop said was true.
His mother was a coward! He put his head down upon his books and
groaned aloud.
"No, no, mother. It is nothing. I am tired," he said, and went
upstairs.
Before she went to sleep the mother, as was her custom, looked in
upon him. The boy was lying upon his face with his arms flung over
his head, and when she turned him over to an easier position, on
the pillow and on his cheeks were the marks of tears. Gently she
pushed back the thick, black, wavy locks from his forehead, and
kissed him once and again. The boy turned his face toward her.
A long sobbing sigh came from his parted lips. He opened his eyes.
"That you, mother?" he asked, the old whimsical smile at his lips.
"Good-night."
He settled down into the clothes and in a moment was fast asleep.
The mother stood looking down upon her boy. He had not told her
his trouble, but her touch had brought him comfort, and for the
rest she was content to wait.