Part 18 (1/2)
”They?”
”The--the--Little Flock,” he answered shamefacedly.
”The Herd of the Lost will kill you if you don't.” She said it not in mocking, but in realization of the hopeless case, and not without pity.
But at his next words, she hardened her heart again.
”I don't know what to do. I don't know where to go. I have nowhere to lay my head.”
”Don't you use them holy words, you wicked wretch! And if you're hintin'
at hidin' in my house, you can't do it--not with Jane here--_she_ would kill you, I believe--and not without her.”
”No, Nancy. I can see that. But where can I go? Even that place in the woods, they're watching that, and they would have me if I tried to go back.”
From an impulse as of indifference rather than consideration she said, ”Go to Squire Braile. He let you off; let him take care of you.”
”Nancy!” he exclaimed. ”I thought of that.”
She gathered up the basin and the towel she brought, and without looking at him again she said, ”Well, go, then,” and turned and left him where he stood.
XVI
Matthew Braile was sitting in his wonted place, with his chair tilted against his porch wall, smoking. Dylks faltered a moment at the bars of the lane from the field of tall corn where he had been finding his way unseen from Nancy's cabin. He lowered two of the middle bars and when he had put them up on the other side he stood looking toward the old man. His long hair hung tangled on his shoulders; the white bandage, which Nancy had bound about his head, crossed it diagonally above one eye and gave this the effect of a knowing wink, which his drawn face, unshaven for a week, seemed to deprecate.
Braile stared hard at him. Then he tilted his chair down and came to the edge of his porch, and called in cruel mockery, ”Why, G.o.d, is that _you?”_
”Don't, Squire Braile!” Dylks implored in a hoa.r.s.e undertone. ”They're after me, and if anybody heard you--”
”Well, come up here,” the Squire bade him. Dylks hobbled slowly forward, and painfully mounted the log steps to the porch, where Braile surveyed him in detail, frowning and twitching his long feathery eyebrows.
”I know I don't look fit to be seen,” Dylks began ”but--”
”Well,” the Squire allowed after further pause, ”you _don't_ look as if you had just come 'down from the s.h.i.+ning courts above in joyful haste'!
Had any breakfast?”
”Nancy--Nancy Billings--gave me some coffee, and some cold pone--”
”Well, you can have some _hot_ pone pretty soon. Laban there?”
”No, he's away at work still. But, Squire Braile--”
”Oh, I understand. I know all about Nancy, and her first husband and how he left her, and she thought he was dead, and married a good man, and when that worthless devil came back she thought she was living in sin with that good man--in _sin_!--and drove him away. But she's as white as any of the saints you lie about. It was _like_ you to go to her the first one in your trouble. Well, what did she say?” ”She said--” Dylks stopped, his mouth too dry to speak; he wetted his lips and whispered--”She said to come to you; that you would know what it was best for me to do; to--” He stopped again and asked, ”Do you suppose any one will see me here?”
”Oh, like as not. It's getting time for honest folks to be up and going to work. But I don't want any trouble about you this morning; I had enough that _other_ morning. Come in here!” He set open the door of one of the rooms giving on the porch, and at Dylks's fearful glance he laughed, not altogether unkindly. ”Mis' Braile's in the kitchen, getting breakfast for you, though she don't know it yet. Now, then!” he commanded when he sat down within, and pushed a chair to Dylks. ”Tell me all about it, since I saw you going up the pike.”
In the broken story which Dylks told, Braile had the air of mentally checking off the successive facts, and he permitted the man a measure of self-pity, though he caught him up at the close. ”Well, you've got a part of what you deserve, but as usually happens with us rascals, you've got too much, at the same time. And what did Nancy advise?”
”She told me to come to you--”