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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">IV</span></h2>
<p id="p0893"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">The</span></span> next afternoon
I walked over to the Shimerdas’. Yulka showed me the baby and
told me that Ántonia was shocking wheat on the southwest
quarter. I went down across the fields, and Tony saw me from a long
way off. She stood still by her shocks, leaning on her pitchfork,
watching me as I came. We met like the people in the old song, in
silence, if not in tears. Her warm hand clasped mine.</p>
<p id="p0894">“I thought you’d come, Jim. I heard you
were at <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Steavens’s last night. I’ve been
looking for you all day.”</p>
<p id="p0895">She was thinner than I had ever seen her, and looked,
as <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mrs.</span> Steavens said, “worked down,” but
there was a new kind of strength in the gravity of her face, and her
color still gave her that look of deep-seated health and ardor. Still?
Why, it flashed across me that though so much had happened in her life
and in mine, she was barely twenty-four years old.</p>
<p id="p0896">Ántonia stuck her fork in the ground, and
instinctively we walked toward that
unploughed patch at the crossing of the roads as the fittest place to
talk to each other. We sat down outside the sagging wire fence that
shut <span class="tei tei-abbr">Mr.</span> Shimerda’s plot off from the rest of the
world. The tall red grass had never been cut there. It had died down
in winter and come up again in the spring until it was as thick and
shrubby as some tropical garden-grass. I found myself telling her
everything: why I had decided to study law and to go into the law
office of one of my mother’s relatives in New York City; about
Gaston Cleric’s death from pneumonia last winter, and the
difference it had made in my life. She wanted to know about my friends
and my way of living, and my dearest hopes.</p>
<p id="p0897">“Of course it means you are going away from us
for good,” she said with a sigh. “But that don’t
mean I’ll lose you. Look at my papa here; he’s been dead
all these years, and yet he is more real to me than almost anybody
else. He never goes out of my life. I talk to him and consult him all
the time. The older I grow, the better I know him and the more I
understand him.”</p>
<p id="p0898">She asked me whether I had learned to like big
cities. “I’d always be miserable in a
city. I’d die of lonesomeness. I like to be where I know every
stack and tree, and where all the ground is friendly. I want to live
and die here. Father Kelly says everybody’s put into this world
for something, and I know what I’ve got to do. I’m going
to see that my little girl has a better chance than ever I had.
I’m going to take care of that girl, Jim.”</p>
<p id="p0899">I told her I knew she would. “Do you know,
Ántonia, since I’ve been away, I think of you more often
than of any one else in this part of the world. I’d have liked
to have you for a sweetheart, or a wife, or my mother or my sister—anything that a woman can be to a man. The idea of you is a
part of my mind; you influence my likes and dislikes, all my tastes,
hundreds of times when I don’t realize it. You really are a part
of me.”</p>
<p id="p0900">She turned her bright, believing eyes to me, and the
tears came up in them slowly. “How can it be like that, when you
know so many people, and when I’ve disappointed you so?
Ain’t it wonderful, Jim, how much people can mean to each other?
I’m so glad we had each other when we were little. I can’t
wait till my little girl’s old enough to
tell her about all the things we used to do. You’ll always
remember me when you think about old times, won’t you? And I
guess everybody thinks about old times, even the happiest
people.”</p>
<p id="p0901">As we walked homeward across the fields, the sun
dropped and lay like a great golden globe in the low west. While it
hung there, the moon rose in the east, as big as a cartwheel, pale
silver and streaked with rose color, thin as a bubble or a ghost-moon.
For five, perhaps ten minutes, the two luminaries confronted each
other across the level land, resting on opposite edges of the world.
In that singular light every little tree and shock of wheat, every
sunflower stalk and clump of snow-on-the-mountain, drew itself up high
and pointed; the very clods and furrows in the fields seemed to stand
up sharply. I felt the old pull of the earth, the solemn magic that
comes out of those fields at nightfall. I wished I could be a little
boy again, and that my way could end there.</p>
<p id="p0902">We reached the edge of the field, where our ways
parted. I took her hands and held them against my breast, feeling once
more how strong and warm and good they were, those
brown hands, and remembering how many kind things they had done for
me. I held them now a long while, over my heart. About us it was
growing darker and darker, and I had to look hard to see her face,
which I meant always to carry with me; the closest, realest face,
under all the shadows of women’s faces, at the very bottom of my
memory.</p>
<p id="p0903">“I’ll come back,” I said earnestly,
through the soft, intrusive darkness.</p>
<p id="p0904">“Perhaps you will”—I felt rather
than saw her smile. “But even if you don’t, you’re
here, like my father. So I won’t be lonesome.”</p>
<p id="p0905">As I went back alone over that familiar road, I could
almost believe that a boy and girl ran along beside me, as our shadows
used to do, laughing and whispering to each other in the grass.</p>
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