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<p class='line0' style='font-size:3em;'>SO BIG</p>
<p class='line'> </p>
<p class='line0'>BY</p>
<p class='line0'><span style='font-size:x-large'>EDNA FERBER</span></p>
<p class='line'> </p>
<p class='line0'>AUTHOR OF</p>
<p class='line0'><span style='font-size:larger'>THE GIRLS, FANNY HERSELF,</span></p>
<p class='line0'><span style='font-size:larger'>ROAST BEEF MEDIUM, <span class='sc'>Etc.</span></span></p>
<p class='line'> </p>
<p class='line'> </p>
<p class='line0'>NEW YORK</p>
<p class='line0'><span style='font-size:larger'>GROSSET & DUNLAP</span></p>
<p class='line0'>PUBLISHERS</p>
<p class='line'> </p>
<p class='line0'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Made in the United States of America</span></p>
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<div class='blockquote40percent'>
<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. COPYRIGHT,
1923, 1924, BY THE CROWELL PUBLISHING COMPANY.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES AT
THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.</span></p>
</div>
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<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:2.5em;'>So Big</p>
<div><span class='pageno' title='1' id='Page_1'></span><h1 class='nobreak'>I</h1></div>
<p class='pindent'>Until he was almost ten the name stuck to
him. He had literally to fight his way free
of it. From So Big (of fond and infantile
derivation) it had been condensed into Sobig. And
Sobig DeJong, in all its consonantal disharmony, he
had remained until he was a ten-year-old schoolboy
in that incredibly Dutch district southwest of Chicago
known first as New Holland and later as High Prairie.
At ten, by dint of fists, teeth, copper-toed boots,
and temper, he earned the right to be called by his
real name, Dirk DeJong. Now and then, of course,
the nickname bobbed up and had to be subdued in a
brief and bitter skirmish. His mother, with whom
the name had originated, was the worst offender.
When she lapsed he did not, naturally, use schoolyard
tactics on her. But he sulked and glowered portentously
and refused to answer, though her tone,
when she called him So Big, would have melted the
heart of any but that natural savage, a boy of ten.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The nickname had sprung from the early and idiotic
question invariably put to babies and answered by them,
with infinite patience, through the years of their infancy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina DeJong, darting expertly about her kitchen,
from washtub to baking board, from stove to table,
or, if at work in the fields of the truck farm, straightening
the numbed back for a moment’s respite from the
close-set rows of carrots, turnips, spinach, or beets
over which she was labouring, would wipe the sweat
beads from nose and forehead with a quick duck of her
head in the crook of her bent arm. Those great fine
dark eyes of hers would regard the child perched
impermanently on a little heap of empty potato sacks,
one of which comprised his costume. He was constantly
detaching himself from the parent sack heap
to dig and burrow in the rich warm black loam of the
truck garden. Selina DeJong had little time for the
expression of affection. The work was always hot at
her heels. You saw a young woman in a blue calico
dress, faded and earth-grimed. Between her eyes was
a driven look as of one who walks always a little ahead
of herself in her haste. Her dark abundant hair was
skewered into a utilitarian knob from which soft loops
and strands were constantly escaping, to be pushed
back by that same harried ducking gesture of head
and bent arm. Her hands, for such use, were
usually too crusted and inground with the soil into
which she was delving. You saw a child of perhaps
two years, dirt-streaked, sunburned, and generally
otherwise defaced by those bumps, bites, scratches,
and contusions that are the common lot of the farm
child of a mother harried by work. Yet, in that
moment, as the woman looked at the child there in
the warm moist spring of the Illinois prairie land, or
in the cluttered kitchen of the farmhouse, there quivered
and vibrated between them and all about them
an aura, a glow, that imparted to them and their surroundings
a mystery, a beauty, a radiance.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How big is baby?” Selina would demand, senselessly.
“How big is my man?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The child would momentarily cease to poke plump
fingers into the rich black loam. He would smile a
gummy though slightly weary smile and stretch wide
his arms. She, too, would open her tired arms wide,
wide. Then they would say in a duet, his mouth a
puckered pink petal, hers quivering with tenderness
and a certain amusement, “<span class='it'>So-o-o-o</span> big!” with the
voice soaring on the prolonged vowel and dropping
suddenly with the second word. Part of the game.
The child became so habituated to this question that
sometimes, if Selina happened to glance round at him
suddenly in the midst of her task, he would take his
cue without the familiar question being put and would
squeal his “<span class='it'>So-o-o-o</span> big!” rather absently, in dutiful
solo. Then he would throw back his head and laugh
a triumphant laugh, his open mouth a coral orifice.
She would run to him, and swoop down upon him, and
bury her flushed face in the warm moist creases of his
neck, and make as though to devour him. “So big!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But of course he wasn’t. He wasn’t as big as that.
In fact, he never became as big as the wide-stretched
arms of her love and imagination would have had him.
You would have thought she should have been satisfied
when, in later years, he was the Dirk DeJong
whose name you saw (engraved) at the top of heavy
cream linen paper, so rich and thick and stiff as to have
the effect of being starched and ironed by some costly
American business process; whose clothes were made
by Peter Peel, the English tailor; whose roadster ran
on a French chassis; whose cabinet held mellow Italian
vermouth and Spanish sherry; whose wants were
served by a Japanese houseman; whose life, in short,
was that of the successful citizen of the Republic. But
she wasn’t. Not only was she dissatisfied: she was at
once remorseful and indignant, as though she, Selina
DeJong, the vegetable pedler, had been partly to
blame for this success of his, and partly cheated
by it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When Selina DeJong had been Selina Peake she had
lived in Chicago with her father. They had lived in
many other cities as well. In Denver during the rampant
’80s. In New York when Selina was twelve.
In Milwaukee briefly. There was even a San Francisco
interlude which was always a little sketchy in
Selina’s mind and which had ended in a departure so
hurried as to bewilder even Selina who had learned to
accept sudden comings and abrupt goings without question.
“Business,” her father always said. “Little
deal.” She never knew until the day of his death how
literally the word deal was applicable to his business
transactions. Simeon Peake, travelling the country
with his little daughter, was a gambler by profession,
temperament, and natural talents. When in luck they
lived royally, stopping at the best hotels, eating
strange, succulent sea-viands, going to the play, driving
in hired rigs (always with two horses. If Simeon
Peake had not enough money for a two-horse equipage
he walked). When fortune hid her face they lived
in boarding houses, ate boarding-house meals, wore the
clothes bought when Fortune’s breath was balmy.
During all this time Selina attended schools, good,
bad, private, public, with surprising regularity considering
her nomadic existence. Deep-bosomed matrons,
seeing this dark-eyed serious child seated alone
in a hotel lobby or boarding-house parlour, would
bend over her in solicitous questioning.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Where is your mamma, little girl?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“She is dead,” Selina would reply, politely and composedly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, my poor little dear!” Then, with a warm
rush, “Don’t you want to come and play with my little
girl? She loves little girls to play with. H’m?”
The “m” of the interrogation held hummingly, tenderly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No, thank you very much. I’m waiting for my
father. He would be disappointed not to find me
here.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>These good ladies wasted their sympathy. Selina
had a beautiful time. Except for three years, to recall
which was to her like entering a sombre icy room
on leaving a warm and glowing one, her life was free,
interesting, varied. She made decisions usually devolving
upon the adult mind. She selected clothes.
She ruled her father. She read absorbedly books
found in boarding-house parlours, in hotels, in such
public libraries as the times afforded. She was alone
for hours a day, daily. Frequently her father, fearful
of loneliness for her, brought her an armful of
books and she had an orgy, dipping and swooping
about among them in a sort of gourmand’s ecstasy of
indecision. In this way, at fifteen, she knew the writings
of Byron, Jane Austen, Dickens, Charlotte Brontë,
Felicia Hemans. Not to speak of Mrs. E. D. E. N.
Southworth, Bertha M. Clay, and that good fairy of
the scullery, the <span class='it'>Fireside Companion</span>, in whose pages
factory girls and dukes were brought together as inevitably
as steak and onions. These last were, of
course, the result of Selina’s mode of living, and were
loaned her by kind-hearted landladies, chambermaids,
and waitresses all the way from California to New
York.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Her three dark years—from nine to twelve—were
spent with her two maiden aunts, the Misses Sarah and
Abbie Peake, in the dim, prim Vermont Peake house
from which her father, the black sheep, had run away
when a boy. After her mother’s death Simeon Peake
had sent his little daughter back east in a fit of remorse
and temporary helplessness on his part and a spurt of
forgiveness and churchly charity on the part of his
two sisters. The two women were incredibly drawn in
the pattern of the New England spinster of fiction.
Mitts, preserves, Bible, chilly best room, solemn and
kittenless cat, order, little-girls-mustn’t. They smelled
of apples—of withered apples that have rotted at the
core. Selina had once found such an apple in a corner
of a disorderly school-desk, had sniffed it, regarded
its wrinkled, sapless pink cheek, and had bitten into it
adventuresomely, only to spit out the mouthful in an
explosive and unladylike spray. It had been all black
and mouldy at its heart.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Something of this she must have conveyed, in her
desperation, to her father in an uncensored letter.
Without warning he had come for her, and at sight of
him she had been guilty of the only fit of hysteria that
marked her life, before or after the episode.</p>
<p class='pindent'>So, then, from twelve to nineteen she was happy.
They had come to Chicago in 1885, when she was sixteen.
There they remained. Selina attended Miss
Fister’s Select School for Young Ladies. When her
father brought her there he had raised quite a flutter
in the Fister breast—so soft-spoken was he, so gentle,
so sad-appearing, so winning as to smile. In the investment
business, he explained. Stocks and that kind
of thing. A widower. Miss Fister said, yes, she understood.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Simeon Peake had had nothing of the look of the
professional gambler of the day. The wide slouch
hat, the flowing mustache, the glittering eye, the too-bright
boots, the gay cravat, all were missing in Simeon
Peake’s makeup. True, he did sport a singularly
clear white diamond pin in his shirt front; and his hat
he wore just a little on one side. But then, these both
were in the male mode and quite commonly seen. For
the rest he seemed a mild and suave man, slim, a trifle
diffident, speaking seldom and then with a New England
drawl by which he had come honestly enough,
Vermont Peake that he was.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Chicago was his meat. It was booming, prosperous.
Jeff Hankins’s red plush and mirrored gambling
house, and Mike McDonald’s, too, both on Clark
Street, knew him daily. He played in good luck and
bad, but he managed somehow to see to it that there
was always the money to pay for the Fister schooling.
His was the ideal poker face—bland, emotionless, immobile.
When he was flush they ate at the Palmer
House, dining off chicken or quail and thick rich soup
and the apple pie for which the hostelry was famous.
Waiters hovered solicitously about Simeon Peake,
though he rarely addressed them and never looked at
them. Selina was happy. She knew only such young
people—girls—as she met at Miss Fister’s school.
Of men, other than her father, she knew as little as a
nun—less. For those cloistered creatures must, if
only in the conning of their Bible, learn much of the
moods and passions that sway the male. The Songs
of Solomon alone are a glorious sex education. But
the Bible was not included in Selina’s haphazard reading,
and the Gideonite was not then a force in the hotel
world.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Her chum was Julie Hempel, daughter of August
Hempel, the Clark Street butcher. You probably
now own some Hempel stock, if you’re lucky; and eat
Hempel bacon and Hempel hams cured in the hickory,
for in Chicago the distance from butcher of 1885 to
packer of 1890 was only a five-year leap.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Being so much alone developed in her a gift for the
make-believe. In a comfortable, well-dressed way she
was a sort of mixture of Dick Swiveller’s Marchioness
and Sarah Crewe. Even in her childhood she extracted
from life the double enjoyment that comes usually
only to the creative mind. “Now I’m doing this.
Now I’m doing that,” she told herself while she was
doing it. Looking on while she participated. Perhaps
her theatre-going had something to do with this.
At an age when most little girls were not only unheard
but practically unseen, she occupied a grown-up seat at
the play, her rapt face, with its dark serious eyes, glowing
in a sort of luminous pallor as she sat proudly
next her father. Simeon Peake had the gambler’s love
of the theatre, himself possessing the dramatic quality
necessary to the successful following of his profession.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In this way Selina, half-hidden in the depths of an
orchestra seat, wriggled in ecstatic anticipation when
the curtain ascended on the grotesque rows of Haverly’s
minstrels. She wept (as did Simeon) over the
agonies of The Two Orphans when Kitty Blanchard
and McKee Rankin came to Chicago with the Union
Square Stock Company. She witnessed that startling
innovation, a Jewish play, called Samuel of Posen.
She saw Fanny Davenport in Pique. Simeon even
took her to a performance of that shocking and delightful
form of new entertainment, the Extravaganza.
She thought the plump creature in tights and spangles,
descending the long stairway, the most beautiful being
she had ever seen.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The thing I like about plays and books is that anything
can happen. Anything! You never know,”
Selina said, after one of these evenings.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No different from life,” Simeon Peake assured her.
“You’ve no idea the things that happen to you if you
just relax and take them as they come.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Curiously enough, Simeon Peake said this, not
through ignorance, but deliberately and with reason.
In his way and day he was a very modern father. “I
want you to see all kinds,” he would say to her. “I
want you to realize that this whole thing is just a
grand adventure. A fine show. The trick is to play
in it and look at it at the same time.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What whole thing?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Living. All mixed up. The more kinds of people
you see, and the more things you do, and the more
things that happen to you, the richer you are. Even
if they’re not pleasant things. That’s living. Remember,
no matter what happens, good or bad, it’s
just so much”—he used the gambler’s term, unconsciously—“just
so much velvet.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Selina, somehow, understood. “You mean
that anything’s better than being Aunt Sarah and Aunt
Abbie.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well—yes. There are only two kinds of people
in the world that really count. One kind’s wheat and
the other kind’s emeralds.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Fanny Davenport’s an emerald,” said Selina,
quickly, and rather surprised to find herself saying it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes. That’s it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And—and Julie Hempel’s father—he’s wheat.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“By golly, Sele!” shouted Simeon Peake. “You’re
a shrewd little tyke!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>It was after reading “Pride and Prejudice” that she
decided to be the Jane Austen of her time. She became
very mysterious and enjoyed a brief period of
unpopularity at Miss Fister’s owing to her veiled allusions
to her “work”; and an annoying way of smiling
to herself and tapping a ruminative toe as though engaged
in visions far too exquisite for the common eye.
Her chum Julie Hempel, properly enough, became
enraged at this and gave Selina to understand that she
must make her choice between revealing her secret or
being cast out of the Hempel heart. Selina swore her
to secrecy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Very well, then. Now I’ll tell you. I’m going to
be a novelist.” Julie was palpably disappointed,
though she said, “Selina!” as though properly impressed,
but followed it up with: “Still, I don’t see
why you had to be so mysterious about it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You just don’t understand, Julie. Writers have
to study life at first hand. And if people know you’re
studying them they don’t act natural. Now, that day
you were telling me about the young man in your
father’s shop who looked at you and said——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Selina Peake, if you dare to put that in your book
I’ll never speak——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“All right. I won’t. But that’s what I mean.
You see!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Julie Hempel and Selina Peake, both finished products
of Miss Fister’s school, were of an age—nineteen.
Selina, on this September day, had been spending the
afternoon with Julie, and now, adjusting her hat preparatory
to leaving, she clapped her hands over her
ears to shut out the sounds of Julie’s importunings that
she stay to supper. Certainly the prospect of the
usual Monday evening meal in Mrs. Tebbitt’s boarding
house (the Peake luck was momentarily low) did
not present sufficient excuse for Selina’s refusal. Indeed,
the Hempel supper as sketched dish for dish by
the urgent Julie brought little greedy groans from
Selina.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s prairie chickens—three of them—that a
farmer west of town brought Father. Mother fixes
them with stuffing, and there’s currant jell. Creamed
onions and baked tomatoes. And for dessert, apple
roll.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina snapped the elastic holding her high-crowned
hat under her chignon of hair in the back. She uttered
a final and quavering groan. “On Monday
nights we have cold mutton and cabbage at Mrs. Tebbitt’s.
This is Monday.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well then, silly, why not stay!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Father comes home at six. If I’m not there he’s
disappointed.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Julie, plump, blonde, placid, forsook her soft white
blandishments and tried steel against the steel of
Selina’s decision.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“He leaves you right after supper. And you’re
alone every night until twelve and after.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t see what that has to do with it,” Selina
said, stiffly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Julie’s steel, being low-grade, melted at once and
ran off her in rivulets. “Of course it hasn’t, Selie
dear. Only I thought you might leave him just this
once.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“If I’m not there he’s disappointed. And that terrible
Mrs. Tebbitt makes eyes at him. He hates it
there.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Then I don’t see why you stay. I never could
see. You’ve been there four months now, and I
think it’s horrid and stuffy; and oilcloth on the
stairs.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Father has had some temporary business setbacks.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina’s costume testified to that. True, it was
modish, and bustled, and basqued, and flounced; and
her high-crowned, short-rimmed hat, with its trimming
of feathers and flowers and ribbons had come from
New York. But both were of last spring’s purchasing,
and this was September.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In the course of the afternoon they had been looking
over the pages of Godey’s <span class='it'>Ladies’ Book</span> for that
month. The disparity between Selina’s costume and
the creations pictured there was much as the difference
between the Tebbitt meal and that outlined by Julie.
Now Julie, fond though defeated, kissed her friend
good-bye.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina walked quickly the short distance from the
Hempel house to Tebbitt’s, on Dearborn Avenue.
Up in her second-floor room she took off her hat
and called to her father, but he had not yet come in.
She was glad of that. She had been fearful of being
late. She regarded her hat now with some distaste,
decided to rip off the faded spring roses, did rip a stitch
or two, only to discover that the hat material was more
faded than the roses, and that the uncovered surface
showed up a dark splotch like a wall-spot when a picture,
long hung, is removed. So she got a needle and
prepared to tack the offending rose in its accustomed
place.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Perched on the arm of a chair near the window, taking
quick deft stitches, she heard a sound. She had
never heard that sound before—that peculiar sound—the
slow, ominous tread of men laden with a heavy
inert burden; bearing with infinite care that which was
well beyond hurting. Selina had never heard that
sound before, and yet, hearing it, she recognized it by
one of those pangs, centuries old, called woman’s instinct.
Thud—shuffle—thud—shuffle—up the narrow
stairway, along the passage. She stood up, the needle
poised in her hand. The hat fell to the floor. Her
eyes were wide, fixed. Her lips slightly parted. The
listening look. She knew.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She knew even before she heard the hoarse man’s
voice saying, “Lift ’er up there a little on the corner,
now. Easy—e-e-easy.” And Mrs. Tebbitt’s high
shrill clamour: “You can’t bring it in there! You
hadn’t ought to bring it in here like this!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina’s suspended breath came back. She was panting
now. She had flung open the door. A flat still
burden partially covered with an overcoat carelessly
flung over the face. The feet, in their square-toed
boots, wobbled listlessly. Selina noticed how shiny
the boots were. He was always very finicking about
such things.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Simeon Peake had been shot in Jeff Hankins’s place
at five in the afternoon. The irony of it was that the
bullet had not been intended for him at all. Its derelict
course had been due to feminine aim. Sped by
one of those over-dramatic ladies who, armed with
horsewhip or pistol in tardy defence of their honour,
spangled Chicago’s dull ’80s with their doings, it had
been meant for a well-known newspaper publisher
usually mentioned (in papers other than his own) as
a bon vivant. The lady’s leaden remonstrance was to
have been proof of the fact that he had been more
vivacious than bon.</p>
<p class='pindent'>It was, perhaps, because of this that the matter was
pretty well hushed up. The publisher’s paper—which
was Chicago’s foremost—scarcely mentioned the incident
and purposely misspelled the name. The lady,
thinking her task accomplished, had taken truer aim
with her second bullet, and had saved herself the trouble
of trial by human jury.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Simeon Peake left his daughter Selina a legacy of
two fine clear blue-white diamonds (he had had the
gambler’s love of them) and the sum of four hundred
and ninety-seven dollars in cash. Just how he had
managed to have a sum like this put by was a mystery.
The envelope containing it had evidently once held a
larger sum. It had been sealed, and then slit. On
the outside was written, in Simeon Peake’s fine, almost
feminine hand: “For my little daughter Selina Peake
in case anything should happen to me.” It bore a
date seven years old. What the original sum had
been no one ever knew. That any sum remained was
evidence of the almost heroic self-control practised by
one to whom money—ready money in any sum at all—meant
only fuel to feed the flames of his gaming
fever.</p>
<p class='pindent'>To Selina fell the choice of earning her own living
or of returning to the Vermont village and becoming a
withered and sapless dried apple, with black fuzz and
mould at her heart, like her aunts, the Misses Sarah
and Abbie Peake. She did not hesitate.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But what kind of work?” Julie Hempel demanded.
“What kind of work can you do?” Women—that is,
the Selina Peakes—did not work.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I—well, I can teach.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Teach what?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The things I learned at Miss Fister’s.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Julie’s expression weighed and discredited Miss Fister.
“Who to?” Which certainly justified her expression.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“To children. People’s children. Or in the public
schools.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You have to do something first—go to Normal, or
teach in the country, don’t you?—before you can teach
in the public schools. They’re mostly old. Twenty-five
or even thirty—or more!” with nineteen’s incapacity
to imagine an age beyond thirty.</p>
<p class='pindent'>That Julie was taking the offensive in this conversation,
and Selina the defensive, was indicative of the
girl’s numbed state. Selina did not then know the
iron qualities her friend was displaying in being with
her at all. Mrs. Hempel had quite properly forbidden
Julie ever to see the dead dissolute gambler’s
daughter again. She had even sent a note to Miss
Fister expressing her opinion of a school which would,
by admitting such unselected ladies to its select circle,
expose other pupils to contamination.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Selina rallied to Julie’s onslaught. “Then I’ll just
teach a country school. I’m good at arithmetic. You
know that.” Julie should have known it, having had
all her Fister sums solved by Selina. “Country
schools are just arithmetic and grammar and geography.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You! Teaching a country school!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She looked at Selina.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She saw a misleadingly delicate face, the skull small
and exquisitely formed. The cheek bones rather
high—or perhaps they looked so because of the fact
that the eyes, dark, soft, and luminous, were unusually
deep-set in their sockets. The face, instead of narrowing
to a soft curve at the chin, developed
unexpected strength in the jaw line. That line, fine,
steel-strong, sharp and clear, was of the stuff of which
pioneer women are made. Julie, inexperienced in the
art of reading the human physiognomy, did not decipher
the meaning of it. Selina’s hair was thick, long,
and fine, so that she piled it easily in the loops, coils,
and knots that fashion demanded. Her nose, slightly
pinched at the nostrils, was exquisite. When she
laughed it had the trick of wrinkling just a little across
the narrow bridge; very engaging, and mischievous.
She was thought a rather plain little thing, which she
wasn’t. But the eyes were what you marked and remembered.
People to whom she was speaking had a
way of looking into them deeply. Selina was often
embarrassed to discover that they were not hearing
what she had to say. Perhaps it was this velvety
softness of the eyes that caused one to overlook the
firmness of the lower face. When the next ten years
had done their worst to her, and Julie had suddenly
come upon her stepping agilely out of a truck gardener’s
wagon on Prairie Avenue, a tanned, weather-beaten,
toil-worn woman, her abundant hair skewered
into a knob and held by a long gray hairpin, her full
calico skirt grimed with the mud of the wagon wheel,
a pair of men’s old side-boots on her slim feet, a grotesquely
battered old felt hat (her husband’s) on her
head, her arms full of ears of sweet corn, and carrots,
and radishes, and bunches of beets; a woman with bad
teeth, flat breasts, a sagging pocket in her capacious
skirt—even then Julie, staring, had known her by her
eyes. And she had run to her in her silk suit and her
fine silk shirtwaist and her hat with the plume and had
cried, “Oh, Selina! My dear! My dear!”—with a
sob of horror and pity—“My dear.” And had taken
Selina, carrots, beets, corn, and radishes, in her arms.
The vegetables lay scattered all about them on the
sidewalk in front of Julie Hempel Arnold’s great stone
house on Prairie Avenue. But strangely enough it had
been Selina who had done the comforting, patting
Julie’s silken shoulder and saying, over and over,
“There, there! It’s all right, Julie. It’s all right.
Don’t cry. What’s there to cry for! Sh! . . .
It’s all right.”</p>
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