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<h2><span style="font-size: 144%">III</span></h2>
<p id="p1048"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">After</span></span> dinner the
next day I said good-bye and drove back to Hastings to take the train
for Black Hawk. Ántonia and her children gathered round my
buggy before I started, and even the little ones looked up at me with
friendly faces. Leo and Ambrosch ran ahead to open the lane gate. When
I reached the bottom of the hill, I glanced back. The group was still
there by the windmill. Ántonia was waving her apron.</p>
<p id="p1049">At the gate Ambrosch lingered beside my buggy,
resting his arm on the wheel-rim. Leo slipped through the fence and
ran off into the pasture.</p>
<p id="p1050">“That’s like him,” his brother said
with a shrug. “He’s a crazy kid. Maybe he’s sorry to
have you go, and maybe he’s jealous. He’s jealous of
anybody mother makes a fuss over, even the priest.”</p>
<p id="p1051">I found I hated to leave this boy, with his pleasant
voice and his fine head and eyes. He looked very manly as he stood
there without
a hat, the wind rippling his shirt about his brown neck and
shoulders.</p>
<p id="p1052">“Don’t forget that you and Rudolph are
going hunting with me up on the Niobrara next summer,” I said.
“Your father’s agreed to let you off after
harvest.”</p>
<p id="p1053">He smiled. “I won’t likely forget.
I’ve never had such a nice thing offered to me before. I
don’t know what makes you so nice to us boys,” he added,
blushing.</p>
<p id="p1054">“Oh, yes you do!” I said, gathering up my
reins.</p>
<p id="p1055">He made no answer to this, except to smile at me with
unabashed pleasure and affection as I drove away.</p>
<p id="p1056">My day in Black Hawk was disappointing. Most of my
old friends were dead or had moved away. Strange children, who meant
nothing to me, were playing in the Harlings’ big yard when I
passed; the mountain ash had been cut down, and only a sprouting stump
was left of the tall Lombardy poplar that used to guard the gate. I
hurried on. The rest of the morning I spent with Anton Jelinek, under
a shady cottonwood tree in the yard behind his saloon. While I was
having my mid-day
dinner at the hotel, I met one of the old lawyers who was still in
practice, and he took me up to his office and talked over the Cutter
case with me. After that, I scarcely knew how to put in the time until
the night express was due.</p>
<p id="p1057">I took a long walk north of the town, out into the
pastures where the land was so rough that it had never been ploughed
up, and the long red grass of early times still grew shaggy over the
draws and hillocks. Out there I felt at home again. Overhead the sky
was that indescribable blue of autumn; bright and shadowless, hard as
enamel. To the south I could see the dun-shaded river bluffs that used
to look so big to me, and all about stretched drying cornfields, of
the pale-gold color I remembered so well. Russian thistles were
blowing across the uplands and piling against the wire fences like
barricades. Along the cattle paths the plumes of golden-rod were
already fading into sun-warmed velvet, gray with gold threads in it. I
had escaped from the curious depression that hangs over little towns,
and my mind was full of pleasant things; trips I meant to take with
the Cuzak boys, in the Bad Lands and up on the Stinking Water. There
were enough Cuzaks to play with for
a long while yet. Even after the boys grew up, there would always be
Cuzak himself! I meant to tramp along a few miles of lighted streets
with Cuzak.</p>
<p id="p1058">As I wandered over those rough pastures, I had the
good luck to stumble upon a bit of the first road that went from Black
Hawk out to the north country; to my grandfather’s farm, then on
to the Shimerdas’ and to the Norwegian settlement. Everywhere
else it had been ploughed under when the highways were surveyed; this
half-mile or so within the pasture fence was all that was left of that
old road which used to run like a wild thing across the open prairie,
clinging to the high places and circling and doubling like a rabbit
before the hounds. On the level land the tracks had almost disappeared—were mere shadings in the grass, and a stranger would not have
noticed them. But wherever the road had crossed a draw, it was easy to
find. The rains had made channels of the wheel-ruts and washed them so
deep that the sod had never healed over them. They looked like gashes
torn by a grizzly’s claws, on the slopes where the farm wagons
used to lurch up out of the hollows with a pull that brought curling
muscles on the smooth hips of the horses. I sat down and watched the
haystacks turn rosy in the slanting sunlight.</p>
<p id="p1059">This was the road over which Ántonia and I
came on that night when we got off the train at Black Hawk and were
bedded down in the straw, wondering children, being taken we knew not
whither. I had only to close my eyes to hear the rumbling of the
wagons in the dark, and to be again overcome by that obliterating
strangeness. The feelings of that night were so near that I could
reach out and touch them with my hand. I had the sense of coming home
to myself, and of having found out what a little circle man’s
experience is. For Ántonia and for me, this had been the road
of Destiny; had taken us to those early accidents of fortune which
predetermined for us all that we can ever be. Now I understood that
the same road was to bring us together again. Whatever we had missed,
we possessed together the precious, the incommunicable past.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">The End</span></p>
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