When she stopped screaming and opened her eyes and looked up at us, she did not look like Annie at all. The color had not come back to her cheeks.

  “Don’t tell anybody, Ray, you and Church,” she said weakly. “Will you promise?”

  “Why not, Annie?” Church said. “Why don’t you want us to tell anybody?”

  “I’m having a baby,” she said, closing her eyes.

  Church leaned so far forward that a whole armful of clay and sand broke loose and fell down into the ditch. Some of it covered one of her legs.

  We backed away from the ditch, not getting up from our hands and knees until we were a dozen yards away.

  “Let’s get away from here,” Church said, holding his breath between he words. “I want to go home.”

  We ran across the field. When we were halfway across, I happened o think about our walnut sacks that we had left at the drain ditch, but I did not say a word to Church about them. When we reached the grove, Church was all out of breath, and we had to stop a minute and lean against some of the trees to get our wind back.

  “Do you think Annie’s going to die, Ray?” he said, holding his breath between the words and almost choking each time he said one of them.

  I did not know what to say. I started running again, and Church began crying because he was behind. By the time we had got to the field behind P. G. Howard’s barn, Church was crying so much he could not see where to run. He fell down and tumbled head over heels two or three times, but I did not stop to wait for him to catch up. I kept on running until I got on our front porch.

  (First published in Kneel to the Rising Sun)

  Priming the Well

  WHEN I WAS A little fellow my mother, who was half damyankee, used to tell me the story about wooden nutmegs. Even now I can clearly remrember her picturing the early peddlers with pouches of painted nutmegs going from farm to farm along the Potomac, selling the spice with all the solemnity of a Methodist circuit rider. That the nutmegs were easily sold and eagerly bought is beside the story; the wonder is that we Southerners were so dumb we did not know the difference.

  For some reason I never fully understood, my mother and father, when I was still quite young, went down East and bought a farm in the Kennebec River Valley. Then, when I was eleven years old and my sister nine, they decided that they would sell the farm and move back to Virginia. This was the easiest phase of the decision, because finding somebody who wanted to invest six thousand dollars in a Maine farm was a problem difficult to solve. Even when we did find a purchaser it as by mere accident that the sale was so easily made.

  It was a three-months drought that finally brought a buyer to us. And that was chance, too; because droughts for more than three or four weeks were uncommon where we were.

  In the late spring, about four months before the drought came to an end — the last rain fell on the first day of June — there were two men who were very anxious to buy our farm. The price either of them was willing to pay at that time, however, was not much more than one half the figure my father had placed on it. Mr. Geroux, a Frenchman, was one of the prospective purchasers, and Elisha Goodwin the other. Mr. Geroux was a native of New Brunswick, but he had lived in Maine thirty years or longer. He had become unusually prosperous in recent years because of the rising market for seed potatoes, and during all that time he had been acquiring that same cautious mind Elisha Goodwin had inherited from six generations of forefathers. Both of these men, however, realized the value of our farm and both knew it was worth every dollar of six thousand. Neither of them was willing, though, to pay the price asked until he was sure it could not be bought for less. And, as we were told afterwards, Mr. Geroux would have paid almost anything up to ten thousand for the farm, because its improvements, fertility, and location were making it increasingly valuable.

  In the month of August, the beginning of the last month of the terrible drought, both Mr. Geroux and Elisha Goodwin came to see my father in regard to purchasing our farm. They did not come together, of course, because each of them wanted to buy it before the other did. At the same time, each of them wanted to close the deal before he was forced to bid against the other. The month of August was the dryest ever to be recorded in the State of Maine. Everyone was certain of that. No rain had fallen since the first of June. The Kennebec River was so low that it was out of the question for the paper mills to float pulpwood, and all of those which were not importing Scandinavian baled pulp had to close down. Even the lakes in the back country were so low that at least fifty per cent of the fish had already died. There was nothing that could be done about the weather, though, and everybody just had to wait for fall to come, bringing rain or snow. Towards the end of the month the water famine was becoming dangerous. The farmers, whose wells had gone dry and who had been drawing water from the river and lakes, were faced with additional danger when the river went completely dry along with most of the lakes. The stock on every farm was dropping dead day and night. There had been no milk in the valley for nearly a month, and the horses, steers, and sheep were hungry and thirsty. The month of August was without exception the most damaging month in the history of the entire Kennebec River Valley.

  There was a deep lake on our farm about a mile and a half from the buildings and we were fortunate in having some water for our stock and ourselves. We drew water to the house every day from the lake. Our well had gone dry just as quickly as all the other wells in the valley.

  We had been drawing water in three barrels every day from the lake. After six weeks of this my father became tired of having to go to the lake every day. He decided that we would draw twenty-five or thirty barrels one day a week and store it on the farm. This would save us the trouble of having to go every day and give us time to do some other work that was needed. The real problem, however, was where and how to store a week’s supply of water. It would have been foolish to buy twenty-five or thirty barrels, or even half that many, when we could use them at the most only two or three weeks longer. Then they would have to be stored away and they would dry and warp until they were valueless. I believe it was my mother who made the suggestion of storing the water in the well. At least, it was she who said it was the only place she knew about. At first my father was of the opinion that the water would run or seep out of the well faster than we could haul it, but he was willing to try it, anyway. The plan worked, much to my mother’s joy. All of us — my father, my sister, and myself — congratulated her on making such a wise suggestion.

  We went to work at once and all that day we drew water from the lake and poured it into the well. By late afternoon we had transferred about thirty or thirty-five barrels of lake water to the well. That evening all we had to do was to lower the bucket and bring up as much water as we needed for the stock. The next day it was the same. The water was still there and apparently none had seeped away. It was a great improvement over the way we had been doing before.

  It was by accident that Elisha Goodwin stopped at our house that afternoon. His horse had thrown a shoe and he came up to the barn to draw out the nails so the hoof would not be injured. He came up to the barn where we were at the time.

  “Well, Mr. Langley,” he said to my father, “what are we going to do about this here drought? The whole State of Maine will be ruined this keeps up another two weeks. There ain’t a drop of water on my whole farm.”

  “The drought is terrible,” my father said. “I won’t have even a peck of potatoes out of the whole farm to sell this year. But, strange to say, I’ve got plenty of water in my well.”

  “What?” Mr. Goodwin shouted unbelievingly. “You say you got water in your well?”

  “Plenty of it.”

  “Well, I don’t believe it. Nobody else has got any water in their wells. How comes it you got water in your’n?”

  “I water my stock from it twice a day and we have plenty of water for the kitchen besides. It’s just as full as it’s ever been.”

  Elisha Goodwin thought we were joking with him about
having plenty of water in the well, but he went over to see for himself just the same. My father sent my sister into the house.

  Elisha Goodwin picked up three or four pebbles and leaned far over the well looking down into it and trying to see the water. He dropped one of the pebbles into the well and cocked his head sideways, listening for the ker-plunk the stone made when it struck the water. He repeated this as long as his pebbles lasted. Then he stood up and looked at us. By watching his face we could tell that he was getting ready to say something important.

  He stood up looking at us and scratching the top of his head with three of his fingers while his hatbrim was held tightly by the other two. His chin-whiskers moved up and down faster than I could count.

  “How much is it you’re asking for this place of your’n?”

  My father told him how much we were holding it for.

  “You haven’t closed a deal with anybody yet, have you?”

  “Well, not exactly,” my father stated. “Though Mr. Geroux has asked me to give him a two-month option on the place.”

  “Did you let him have it?” Elisha Goodwin asked hurriedly.

  “I’m to let him know tomorrow about it,” my father said.

  “You come with me to the village,” Elisha Goodwin said. “We’ll fix up a sale before sundown. I’m going to buy your place. It’s the only farm in the whole gol-darned State that’s got any well water on it.”

  “Are you sure you want to buy it, Mr. Goodwin?” my father asked him. “You know the price and terms. It’s six thousand dollars cash.”

  “I don’t give a gol-darn what your terms are. I’m going to pay you six thousand dollars in cash for it as soon as you go to the village with me and draw up a bill of sale and turn over the deed. I ain’t going to let that good-for-nothing Canuck get his hands on the best farm in the whole gol-darned country. Come on to the village and get it settled right away.”

  Instead of driving to the village in the buggy, he and my father went in our automobile. He left his horse and buggy hitched at our barn. They were gone about two hours.

  When they came back, they shook hands with each other and Elisha Goodwin drove home at a fast clip. He must have forgotten about his horse throwing a shoe.

  My mother came out with my sister and asked us what agreement had been made. My father told her all about it. She smiled a little but did not say anything just then. While I carried water to the stock and while my sister went down into the cellar to get some potatoes for supper, they walked across the pasture talking to themselves about something they did not want us to overhear. When they came back, we all went into the kitchen while supper was cooking.

  “Well, we are moving back to Virginia next week,” my father told us, smiling at my mother. “As soon as we can pack everything we want to take with us we’re leaving.”

  He called my sister to him and lifted her on his knee. He stroked her curls absent-mindedly several times.

  “Louise,” he smiled at her, “tell me: are you a little Virginia girl, or are you a little New Englander?”

  My sister answered without a moment’s hesitation.

  “I’d rather be a little Virginia lady.”

  “But your mother is a damyankee — don’t you want to be like her?”

  He always smiled to himself when he called my mother a damyankee.

  Before my sister could reply, my mother came over where we were and lifted her to the floor from my father’s lap.

  “Louise, you and Tommy run out into the yard and play until supper is ready. Run along, now.”

  We left the kitchen and went out on the porch. Hardly before we were down the front steps, we heard two people laughing as though they had just seen the funniest thing in the world. We tiptoed to the kitchen window and looked in to see what was so funny. Both my mother and father were standing in the middle of the kitchen floor holding on to each other and laughing so hard I thought they would burst open if they kept it up much longer.

  My sister pulled me by the arm and pointed down the river. The sky down there was the blackest I have ever seen. The black clouds were coming closer and closer all the time, like somebody covering you with a big black blanket at night. Away down the valley we could see the tops of trees bending over so far that many of them broke off and fell to the ground.

  “Look!” my sister said, clutching my arm. She was trembling all over. “Look!”

  Holding each other tightly by the hand, we ran into the house as fast as we could.

  (First published in American Earth)

  The Shooting

  SOMEBODY FIRED A pistol two or three times, and the reports shook dust loose from the canned goods on the grocery shelves and woke up some of the flies in the display windows.

  There had not been so much excitement in town since the morning three years before when the bloodhounds tracked the post-office robbers he vestry of the Methodist church.

  The sound of the pistol shots was still ringing in people’s ears when two or three dozen men and boys burst out of the stores and poolrooms and made a beeline for the center of the square, where they could see what was going on. When they got there, most of them were in such a hurry to see something happen that they began running round in circles trying to find it.

  “I’d swear that was a .45 that went off,” somebody said. “But I don’t know a single soul in town who owns anything better than a .38.”

  Just then a man ran out of the building between the bank and the barbershop, and some of the boys followed him through the square until he stopped, with his back against the brick wall, in front of the drugstore. The building he had run out of was a walk-up hotel with a lot of dead flies in the front windows.

  Either somebody had telephoned him, or else he had heard the shooting all the way at home, because it was not more than three or four mines before Toy Shaw, the town marshal, came running down the street with his suspenders hanging loose.

  “It’s still pretty early in the day for anybody to be practicing with a gun, or even playing with it,” somebody said. “I know I never got up after breakfast to do anything like that.”

  By that time the housewives who had been downtown doing early shopping were slipping out the back doors of the grocery stores and trying to get home before any more shooting took place. A lot of them always wore boudoir caps when they came down to the stores around nine and ten o’clock to do the buying for the day, and it was a peculiar sight to see them tiptoeing through the back alleyways with a bag of groceries in one hand and their skirts held high with the other.

  Toy Shaw ran up to the crowd in the square, pulling out his revolver and pinning his marshal’s badge on his shirt at the same time.

  “What’s all this shooting about?” Toy said, puffing and blowing.

  Somebody pointed at the man across the square against the drugstore brick wall. Nobody remembered ever seeing him before, but he looked a lot like most of the fruit-tree salesmen who came through the country about that time of the year.

  “I don’t know who did the shooting,” the fellow said, “but that’s the one who did the running.”

  “Has he got a gun on him?” Toy asked.

  Nobody knew about that. They kept on shaking their heads.

  “Well, then,” Toy said, putting his gun away and moving his badge to the other side of his shirt. “There’s nothing to be scared about.”

  Just then, when the crowd started to follow Toy over to the drugstore, a woman ran down the stairs of the walk-up hotel and dashed into the street.

  People everywhere scurried into the buildings. When the barbershop was full, they began crowding into the bank and poolroom.

  The woman, who really did not look to be more than an eighteen-year-old girl, had a long-barrel, blue-steel revolver.

  Somebody nudged Toy Shaw, and Toy stuck his head out the barbershop door and orderedher to disarm herself.

  “Pitch that gun on the ground, lady,” he said, ducking back inside.

  The girl
leveled the pistol at the wall of the barbershop and fired it stiff-armed, The pistol recoiled so strongly that she almost toppled over backward. After a while she took her finger out of her ear and looked all around to see if she had hit anybody or anything.

  “What’s the matter, Toy?” somebody asked him. “You ain’t scared to disarm a woman, are you?”

  Toy pulled up his suspenders and looped them over his shoulders.

  “That’s one of these gunwomen,” he said, keeping back out of sight.

  “Shucks, Toy,” somebody said, “she’s just a girl. She couldn’t hit a barn door.”

  Toy stuck his head through the door once more, and drew it back after he had taken a hasty look outside.

  “It’s funny the way a woman thinks about a gun before she does anything else when she gets a little peeved about something or other,” he said. “It looks like men would’ve learned by this time that it don’t pay to leave firearms laying around where their womenfolks can lay hold of hem.”

  The man across the square had not moved an inch the whole time. He was as motionless as a telephone pole against the drugstore wall.

  “What kind of a marshal are you, anyway, Toy,” a fellow said, “if you’re scared to disarm a woman?”

  “I don’t remember that being in the bargain,” Toy said. “When I look the oath, it only mentioned armed housebreakers and bankrobbers and other men. It didn’t say a single word about these gunwomen.”

  The girl backed across the street, still searching the doorways and windows with her eyes for the man who had run out of the walk-up hotel. When she got to the center of the square, she turned around for he first time and saw the man backed up against the drugstore wall. He looked too scared even to turn and run out of sight.

  “Now’s your chance, Toy,” somebody said, shoving him to the door. Go on out there and slip up behind on her, and she’ll never know what grabbed her.”

  Toy tried to stay where he was for the present, but the crowd kept on shoving and pushing, and he found himself outside in the street. Somebody slammed the door shut, and unless he turned tail and ran, there was nothing he could do but go in the direction of the girl.