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<h1><span style="font-size: 173%">Book II—The Hired Girls</span></h1>
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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">I</span></h2>
<p id="p0396"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">I had</span></span> been living
with my grandfather for nearly three years when he decided to move to
Black Hawk. He and grandmother were getting old for the heavy work of
a farm, and as I was now thirteen they thought I ought to be going to
school. Accordingly our homestead was rented to “that good
woman, the Widow Steavens,” and her bachelor brother, and we
bought Preacher White’s house, at the north end of Black Hawk.
This was the first town house one passed driving in from the farm, a
landmark which told country people their long ride was over.</p>
<p id="p0397">We were to move to Black Hawk in March, and as soon
as grandfather had fixed the date he let Jake and Otto know of his
intention. Otto said he would not be likely to find another place that
suited him so well; that he was tired of farming and thought he would
go back to what he called the “wild
West.” Jake Marpole, lured by Otto’s stories of adventure,
decided to go with him. We did our best to dissuade Jake. He was so
handicapped by illiteracy and by his trusting disposition that he
would be an easy prey to sharpers. Grandmother begged him to stay
among kindly, Christian people, where he was known; but there was no
reasoning with him. He wanted to be a prospector. He thought a silver
mine was waiting for him in Colorado.</p>
<p id="p0398">Jake and Otto served us to the last. They moved us
into town, put down the carpets in our new house, made shelves and
cupboards for grandmother’s kitchen, and seemed loath to leave
us. But at last they went, without warning. Those two fellows had been
faithful to us through sun and storm, had given us things that cannot
be bought in any market in the world. With me they had been like older
brothers; had restrained their speech and manners out of care for me,
and given me so much good comradeship. Now they got on the west-bound
train one morning, in their Sunday clothes, with their oilcloth
valises—and I never saw them again. Months afterward we got a
card from Otto, saying that Jake had been down with mountain fever,
but now they were both working in the Yankee Girl mine, and were doing
well. I wrote to them at that address, but my letter was returned to
me, “unclaimed.” After that we never heard from them.</p>
<p id="p0399">Black Hawk, the new world in which we had come to
live, was a clean, well-planted little prairie town, with white fences
and good green yards about the dwellings, wide, dusty streets, and
shapely little trees growing along the wooden sidewalks. In the center
of the town there were two rows of new brick “store”
buildings, a brick schoolhouse, the courthouse, and four white
churches. Our own house looked down over the town, and from our
upstairs windows we could see the winding line of the river bluffs,
two miles south of us. That river was to be my compensation for the
lost freedom of the farming country.</p>
<p id="p0400">We came to Black Hawk in March, and by the end of
April we felt like town people. Grandfather was a deacon in the new
Baptist Church, grandmother was busy with church suppers and
missionary societies, and I was quite another boy, or thought I was.
Suddenly put down among boys of my own age, I found I had a great deal
to learn. Before
the spring term of school was over I could fight, play
“keeps,” tease the little girls, and use forbidden words
as well as any boy in my class. I was restrained from utter savagery
only by the fact that <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Harling, our nearest neighbor,
kept an eye on me, and if my behavior went beyond certain bounds I was
not permitted to come into her yard or to play with her jolly
children.</p>
<p id="p0401">We saw more of our country neighbors now than when we
lived on the farm. Our house was a convenient stopping-place for them.
We had a big barn where the farmers could put up their teams, and
their women-folk more often accompanied them, now that they could stay
with us for dinner, and rest and set their bonnets right before they
went shopping. The more our house was like a country hotel, the better
I liked it. I was glad, when I came home from school at noon, to see a
farm wagon standing in the back yard, and I was always ready to run
downtown to get beefsteak or baker’s bread for unexpected
company. All through that first spring and summer I kept hoping that
Ambrosch would bring Ántonia and Yulka to see our new house. I
wanted to show them our red plush
furniture, and the trumpet-blowing cherubs the German paper-hanger had
put on our parlor ceiling.</p>
<p id="p0402">When Ambrosch came to town, however, he came alone,
and though he put his horses in our barn, he would never stay for
dinner, or tell us anything about his mother and sisters. If we ran
out and questioned him as he was slipping through the yard, he would
merely work his shoulders about in his coat and say, “They all
right, I guess.”</p>
<p id="p0403"><span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Steavens, who now lived on our
farm, grew as fond of Ántonia as we had been, and always
brought us news of her. All through the wheat season, she told us,
Ambrosch hired his sister out like a man, and she went from farm to
farm, binding sheaves or working with the thrashers. The farmers liked
her and were kind to her; said they would rather have her for a hand
than Ambrosch. When fall came she was to husk corn for the neighbors
until Christmas, as she had done the year before; but grandmother
saved her from this by getting her a place to work with our neighbors,
the Harlings.</p>
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