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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">XIV</span></h2>
<p id="p0244"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">On</span></span> the morning of
the 22d I wakened with a start. Before I opened my eyes, I seemed to
know that something had happened. I heard excited voices in the
kitchen—grandmother’s was so shrill that I knew she must
be almost beside herself. I looked forward to any new crisis with
delight. What could it be, I wondered, as I hurried into my clothes.
Perhaps the barn had burned; perhaps the cattle had frozen to death;
perhaps a neighbor was lost in the storm.</p>
<p id="p0245">Down in the kitchen grandfather was standing before
the stove with his hands behind him. Jake and Otto had taken off their
boots and were rubbing their woolen socks. Their clothes and boots
were steaming, and they both looked exhausted. On the bench behind the
stove lay a man, covered up with a blanket. Grandmother motioned me to
the dining-room. I obeyed reluctantly. I watched her as she came and
went, carrying dishes. Her lips were tightly compressed and she kept
whispering to herself: “Oh, dear Saviour!” “Lord,
Thou knowest!”</p>
<p id="p0246">Presently grandfather came in and spoke to me:
“Jimmy, we will not have prayers this morning, because we have a
great deal to do. Old <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda is dead, and his
family are in great distress. Ambrosch came over here in the middle of
the night, and Jake and Otto went back with him. The boys have had a
hard night, and you must not bother them with questions. That is
Ambrosch, asleep on the bench. Come in to breakfast, boys.”</p>
<p id="p0247">After Jake and Otto had swallowed their first cup of
coffee, they began to talk excitedly, disregarding grandmother’s
warning glances. I held my tongue, but I listened with all my ears.</p>
<p id="p0248">“No, sir,” Fuchs said in answer to a
question from grandfather, “nobody heard the gun go off.
Ambrosch was out with the ox team, trying to break a road, and the
women folks
was shut up tight in their cave. When Ambrosch come in it was dark and
he did n’t see nothing, but the oxen acted kind of queer. One of
’em ripped around and got away from him—bolted clean out
of the stable. His hands is blistered where the rope run through. He
got a lantern and went back and found the old man, just as we seen
him.”</p>
<p id="p0249">“Poor soul, poor soul!” grandmother
groaned. “I’d like to think he never done it. He was
always considerate and un-wishful to give trouble. How could he forget
himself and bring this on us!”</p>
<p id="p0250">“I don’t think he was out of his head for
a minute, <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Burden,” Fuchs declared. “He
done everything natural. You know he was always sort of fixy, and fixy
he was to the last. He shaved after dinner, and washed hisself all
over after the girls was done the dishes. Ántonia heated the
water for him. Then he put on a clean shirt and clean socks, and after
he was dressed he kissed her and the little one and took his gun and
said he was going out to hunt rabbits. He must have gone right down to
the barn and done it then. He layed down on that bunk-bed, close to
the ox stalls, where he always slept. When we found him, everything
was decent except,”—Fuchs wrinkled his brow and
hesitated,—“except what he could n’t nowise
foresee. His coat was hung on a peg, and his boots was under the bed.
He’d took off that silk neckcloth he always wore, and folded it
smooth and stuck his pin through it. He turned back his shirt at the
neck and rolled up his sleeves.”</p>
<p id="p0251">“I don’t see how he could do it!”
grandmother kept saying.</p>
<p id="p0252">Otto misunderstood her. “Why, mam, it was
simple enough; he pulled the trigger with his big toe. He layed over
on his side and put the end of the barrel in his mouth, then he drew
up one foot and felt for the trigger. He found it all right!”</p>
<p id="p0253">“Maybe he did,” said Jake grimly.
“There’s something mighty queer about it.”</p>
<p id="p0254">“Now what do you mean, Jake?” grandmother
asked sharply.</p>
<p id="p0255">“Well, mam, I found Krajiek’s axe under
the manger, and I picks it up and carries it over to the corpse, and I
take my oath it just fit the gash in the front of the old man’s
face. That there Krajiek had been sneakin’ round, pale and
quiet, and when he seen me examinin’ the axe, he begun
whimperin’, ‘My God, man, don’t do that!’
‘I reckon I’m a-goin’ to look into this,’ says
I. Then he begun to squeal like a rat and run about wringin’ his
hands. ‘They’ll hang me!’ says he. ‘My God,
they’ll hang me sure!’”</p>
<p id="p0256">Fuchs spoke up impatiently. “Krajiek’s
gone silly, Jake, and so have you. The old man would n’t have
made all them
preparations for Krajiek to murder him, would he? It don’t hang
together. The gun was right beside him when Ambrosch found
him.”</p>
<p id="p0257">“Krajiek could ’a’ put it there,
could n’t he?” Jake demanded.</p>
<p id="p0258">Grandmother broke in excitedly: “See here, Jake
Marpole, don’t you go trying to add murder to suicide.
We’re deep enough in trouble. Otto reads you too many of them
detective stories.”</p>
<p id="p0259">“It will be easy to decide all that,
Emmaline,” said grandfather quietly. “If he shot himself
in the way they think, the gash will be torn from the inside
outward.”</p>
<p id="p0260">“Just so it is, <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Burden,”
Otto affirmed. “I seen bunches of hair and stuff sticking to the
poles and straw along the roof. They was blown up there by gunshot, no
question.”</p>
<p id="p0261">Grandmother told grandfather she meant to go over to the
Shimerdas
with him.</p>
<p id="p0262">“There is nothing you can do,” he said
doubtfully. “The body can’t be touched until we get the
coroner here from Black Hawk, and that will be a matter of several
days, this weather.”</p>
<p id="p0263">“Well, I can take them some victuals, anyway,
and say a word of comfort to them poor
little girls. The oldest one was his darling, and was like a right
hand to him. He might have thought of her. He’s left her alone
in a hard world.” She glanced distrustfully at Ambrosch, who was
now eating his breakfast at the kitchen table.</p>
<p id="p0264">Fuchs, although he had been up in the cold nearly all
night, was going to make the long ride to Black Hawk to fetch the
priest and the coroner. On the gray gelding, our best horse, he would
try to pick his way across the country with no roads to guide him.</p>
<p id="p0265">“Don’t you worry about me,
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Burden,” he said cheerfully, as he put on a
second pair of socks. “I’ve got a good nose for
directions, and I never did need much sleep. It’s the gray
I’m worried about. I’ll save him what I can, but
it’ll strain him, as sure as I’m telling you!”</p>
<p id="p0266">“This is no time to be over-considerate of
animals, Otto; do the best you can for yourself. Stop at the Widow
Steavens’s for dinner. She’s a good woman, and
she’ll do well by you.”</p>
<p id="p0267">After Fuchs rode away, I was left with Ambrosch. I
saw a side of him I had not seen before. He was deeply, even
slavishly, devout.
He did not say a word all morning, but sat with his rosary in his
hands, praying, now silently, now aloud. He never looked away from his
beads, nor lifted his hands except to cross himself. Several times the
poor boy fell asleep where he sat, wakened with a start, and began to
pray again.</p>
<p id="p0268">No wagon could be got to the Shimerdas’ until a
road was broken, and that would be a day’s job. Grandfather came
from the barn on one of our big black horses, and Jake lifted
grandmother up behind him. She wore her black hood and was bundled up
in shawls. Grandfather tucked his bushy white beard inside his
overcoat. They looked very Biblical as they set off, I thought. Jake
and Ambrosch followed them, riding the other black and my pony,
carrying bundles of clothes that we had got together for
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Shimerda. I watched them go past the pond and over
the hill by the drifted cornfield. Then, for the first time, I
realized that I was alone in the house.</p>
<p id="p0269">I felt a considerable extension of power and
authority, and was anxious to acquit myself creditably. I carried in
cobs and wood from the long cellar, and filled both the stoves. I
remembered that in the hurry and excitement
of the morning nobody had thought of the chickens, and the eggs had
not been gathered. Going out through the tunnel, I gave the hens their
corn, emptied the ice from their drinking-pan, and filled it with
water. After the cat had had his milk, I could think of nothing else
to do, and I sat down to get warm. The quiet was delightful, and the
ticking clock was the most pleasant of companions. I got
“Robinson Crusoe” and tried to read, but his life on the
island seemed dull compared with ours. Presently, as I looked with
satisfaction about our comfortable sitting-room, it flashed upon me
that if <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda’s soul were lingering about in
this world at all, it would be here, in our house, which had been more
to his liking than any other in the neighborhood. I remembered his
contented face when he was with us on Christmas Day. If he could have
lived with us, this terrible thing would never have happened.</p>
<p id="p0270">I knew it was homesickness that had killed
<span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda, and I wondered whether his released spirit
would not eventually find its way back to his own country. I thought
of how far it was to Chicago, and then to Virginia, to Baltimore,—and then the great
wintry ocean. No, he would not at once set out upon that long journey.
Surely, his exhausted spirit, so tired of cold and crowding and the
struggle with the ever-falling snow, was resting now in this quiet
house.</p>
<p id="p0271">I was not frightened, but I made no noise. I did not
wish to disturb him. I went softly down to the kitchen which, tucked
away so snugly underground, always seemed to me the heart and center
of the house. There, on the bench behind the stove, I thought and
thought about <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda. Outside I could hear the wind
singing over hundreds of miles of snow. It was as if I had let the old
man in out of the tormenting winter, and were sitting there with him.
I went over all that Ántonia had ever told me about his life
before he came to this country; how he used to play the fiddle at
weddings and dances. I thought about the friends he had mourned to
leave, the trombone-player, the great forest full of game,—belonging, as Ántonia said, to the “nobles,”—from which she and her mother used to steal wood on moonlight
nights. There was a white hart that lived in that forest, and if any
one killed it, he would be hanged, she said. Such vivid pictures came
to me that they might
have been <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda’s memories, not yet faded
out from the air in which they had haunted him.</p>
<p id="p0272">It had begun to grow dark when my household returned,
and grandmother was so tired that she went at once to bed. Jake and I
got supper, and while we were washing the dishes he told me in loud
whispers about the state of things over at the Shimerdas’.
Nobody could touch the body until the coroner came. If any one did,
something terrible would happen, apparently. The dead man was frozen
through, “just as stiff as a dressed turkey you hang out to
freeze,” Jake said. The horses and oxen would not go into the
barn until he was frozen so hard that there was no longer any smell of
blood. They were stabled there now, with the dead man, because there
was no other place to keep them. A lighted lantern was kept hanging
over <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda’s head. Ántonia and
Ambrosch and the mother took turns going down to pray beside him. The
crazy boy went with them, because he did not feel the cold. I believed
he felt cold as much as any one else, but he liked to be thought
insensible to it. He was always coveting distinction, poor Marek!</p>
<p id="p0273">Ambrosch, Jake said, showed more human feeling than
he would have supposed him capable of; but he was chiefly concerned
about getting a priest, and about his father’s soul, which he
believed was in a place of torment and would remain there until his
family and the priest had prayed a great deal for him. “As I
understand it,” Jake concluded, “it will be a matter of
years to pray his soul out of Purgatory, and right now he’s in
torment.”</p>
<p id="p0274">“I don’t believe it,” I said
stoutly. “I almost know it is n’t true.” I did not,
of course, say that I believed he had been in that very kitchen all
afternoon, on his way back to his own country. Nevertheless, after I
went to bed, this idea of punishment and Purgatory came back on me
crushingly. I remembered the account of Dives in torment, and
shuddered. But <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda had not been rich and
selfish; he had only been so unhappy that he could not live any
longer.</p>
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