In Nelson Flat the lupines were like spilled bluing in great, acre-wide

blots upon the meadow grass. Between cabin and creek bank a little plot

had been spaded and raked smooth, and already the peas and lettuce and

radishes were up and growing as if they knew how short would be the

season, and meant to take advantage of every minute of the warm days.

Here and there certain plants were lifting themselves all awry from

where they had been pressed flat by two small feet that had strutted

heedlessly down the rows.

The cabin yard was clean, and the two small windows were curtained with

cheap, white scrim. All before the door and on the path to the creek

small footprints were scattered thick. It was these that Marie pulled up

her hired saddle horse to study in hot resentment.

"The big brute!" she gritted, and got off and went to the cabin door,

walking straight-backed and every mental and physical fiber of her

braced for the coming struggle. She even regretted not having a gun;

rather, she wished that she was not more afraid of a gun than of any

possible need of one. She felt, at that minute, as though she could

shoot Bud Moore with no more compunction that she would feel in swatting

a fly.

That the cabin was empty and unlocked only made her blood boil the

hotter. She went in and looked around at the crude furnishings and the

small personal belongings of those who lived there. She saw the table

all set ready for the next meal, with the extremely rustic high-chair

that had DYNAMITE painted boldly on the side of the box seat. Fastened

to a nail at one side of the box was a belt, evidently kept there for

the purpose of strapping a particularly wriggly young person into

the chair. That smacked strongly of Lovin Child, sure enough. Marie

remembered the various devices by which she had kept him in his go cart.

She went closer and inspected the belt indignantly. Just as she

expected--it was Bud's belt; his old belt that she bought for him just

after they were married. She supposed that box beside the queer high

chair was where he would sit at table and stuff her baby with all kinds

of things he shouldn't eat. Where was her baby? A fresh spasm of longing

for Lovin Child drove her from the cabin. Find him she would, and that

no matter how cunningly Bud had hidden him away.

On a rope stretched between a young cottonwood tree in full leaf and

a scaly, red-barked cedar, clothes that had been washed were flapping

lazily in the little breeze. Marie stopped and looked at them. A man's

shirt and drawers, two towels gray for want of bluing, a little shirt

and a nightgown and pair of stockings--and, directly in front of Marie,

a small pair of blue overalls trimmed with red bands, the blue showing

white fiber where the color had been scrubbed out of the cloth, the two

knees flaunting patches sewed with long irregular stitches such as a man

would take.




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