<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>VI</h2>
<h3>THE STORY OF A PLANTING</h3>
<div class='cap'>THE little girl was making believe, as she
planted the corn, that the field was a great
city; the long rows, reaching up from the timothy
meadow to the carnelian bluff, were the
beautiful streets; and the hills, two steps apart,
were the houses. She had a seed-bag slung
under her arm, and when she came to a hill she
put her hand into it and took out four plump,
yellow kernels. And as she went along, dropping
her gifts at each door, she played that she
was visiting and said, "How do you do?" as
politely as she could to the lady of the house,
at the same time taking off her battered blue
sailor-hat and bowing,—just as she had seen
the lightning-rod agent do to her mother.</div>
<p>She had begun the game by naming every
family she called upon. But it was not long
before she had used up all the names she could
think of—those of the neighbors, the Indians,
the story-book people, the horses, the cows, the
oxen, the dogs, and even the vegetables in the
garden. So, after having planted a row or two,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span>
she contented herself with making believe she
was among strangers and just offering a
friendly greeting to every household.</p>
<p>She had come out to the field when the prairie-chickens
were still playing their bagpipes
on the river bank, their booming sounding
through the morning air so clearly that the little
girl had been sure they were not farther than
the edge of the wheat-field, and had walked out
of her way to try to see them, tramping along
in her best shoes, which had shiny copper toes
and store-made laces. But when she had
reached the wheat, the booming, like a will-o'-the-wisp,
had been temptingly farther on; and
she had turned back to the newly marked corn-land.</p>
<p>Her big brothers had sent her out to drop and
cover eighty rows, the last corn-planting to be
done that year on the big Dakota farm. They
had finished the rest of the field themselves and,
intent on getting in the rutabaga crop, had
turned over the remaining strip to the little
girl, declaring that she could drop and cover
forty rows in the morning and forty in the
afternoon, and not half try. To make sure
that she would have time to finish the work, they
had started her off immediately after a five-o'clock
breakfast; and in order that she should
not lose any time at noon, they had made her
take her dinner with her in a tall tin pail.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Her first glimpse of the unplanted piece had
greatly discouraged her, for it seemed dreadfully
wide and long. So, after deciding to plant
the whole of it before doing any covering with
the hoe, because the dropping of the corn was
much easier and quicker to do than the hoeing,
she went to work half-heartedly. Now, to make
her task seem short, she had further determined
to play "city."</p>
<p>It was such fun to pretend that, as she went
bobbing and bowing up and down the rows, she
forgot to stop her game and throw clods at the
gray gophers. They lived in the timothy meadow,
and were so bold that, if they were not
watched, they would come out of their burrows
and follow the rows, stealing every kernel out of
the hills as they went along and putting the
booty in their cheek-pouches.</p>
<p>After she had dropped corn as much as a
whole hour, the little girl's back ached, and
when she went to refill her seed-bag at the corn-barrel
that stood on the border of the meadow
near the row-marker, she sat down to rest a moment.
The marker resembled a sleigh, only it
had five runners instead of two, and there were
rocks piled on top of it to make it heavy. So the
minute the little girl's eyes fell upon it and
she saw the runners, she thought of winter.
Winter instantly reminded her of the muskrats
in the slough below the bluff. And with that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>
thought she could not resist starting down to see
if they were busy after the thaw.</p>
<p>She gathered many flowers on the way, and
stopped to pull off her shoes and stockings. At
last she reached the slough and waded in to a
muskrat house, where she used her hoe-handle
as a poker to scare out some of the muskrats.
Failing in this, she picked up her shoes and
stockings and went around the slough to find
out if any green leaves were unfolding yet in
the wild-plum thicket. A little later she climbed
the bluff to the corn-field, making a diligent
search for Indian arrowheads all the way.</p>
<p>When she reached the seed-bag again, she
threw the string over her head and started up a
row determinedly. For a rod or more she did
not pause either to be polite or to scare away
gophers, but hurried along very fast, with her
eyes to the ground. Suddenly she chanced to
look just ahead of her, and stopped abruptly,
standing erect. Her shadow pointed straight
for the bluff: it was noon and high time to eat
dinner.</p>
<p>She sat down on the marker and munched
her sandwiches of salted lard and corn-meal
bread with great appetite. She was just finishing
them when the call of a goose far overhead
attracted her attention. She got down and lay
flat on her back, with her head on the seed-bag,
to watch the flock, high above her, speeding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span>
northward to the lakes, their leader crying commands
to the gray company that flew in
V-shaped order behind him. When the geese
were but a dark thread across the north sky,
she felt drowsy and, turning on her side with
her hat over her face and her back to the gentle
spring breeze, went fast asleep.</p>
<p>She lay there for hours, entirely unaware of
the saucy stares of several gophers who paused
in their hunt for kernels and stood straight as
picket-pins to watch and wonder at the little
heap of pink calico under the battered sailor-hat,
or whisked about her, their short legs
flashing, their tails wide and bushy, their cheek-pouches
so full of kernels that they smiled fatly
when they looked at her, and showed four long
front teeth. But the little girl was wrapped in
a happy dream of a certain beautiful red wagon
with a real seat that she had seen in a thick
catalogue sent her mother by a store in a distant
city. So she never moved till late in the afternoon,
when the gentle breeze strengthened to a
sharp wind that, with a petulant gust, whirled
her sailor across the rows and far away.</p>
<p>The flying hat caused a stampede among some
curious gophers who were just then investigating
a near-by unplanted row in the hope of
finding more corn. Clattering shrilly, they
scudded back to the meadow, and the little girl
rose. After a long chase for the hat, she went<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>
stiffly to work again, not stopping to put on
her shoes and stockings, though the wind was
cold.</p>
<p>After that she planted faithfully, leaving off
only to throw clods at the gophers, or to ease
her back now and then. And it was when she
was resting a moment that she noticed something
that made her begin working harder than
ever. Her shadow stretched out so far to the
eastward that she could not touch its head with
the end of her long hoe. When she first came
out that morning, it had fallen just as far the
other way. She looked anxiously up at the sun,
which was shining slantingly upon the freshly
harrowed land through a gray haze that hung
about it. Then she looked again at her shadow,
distorted and grotesque, that moved when
she moved and mimicked her when she bent
to drop the corn. Its length showed her that
it was getting late, and that she would soon hear
the summoning blast of the cow-horn that hung
behind the kitchen door.</p>
<p>She dropped the seed-bag, walked across the
strip still unplanted, and counted the rows. She
returned on the run. The dropping was little
more than half finished, and no covering had
been done at all. She knew she could not finish
that day; yet if they asked her at the farm-house
if she had completed the planting, she
would not dare to tell them how little of it was
done. She sat down to pull on her shoes and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span>
stockings, thinking hard all the while. But,
just as she had one leg dressed, she sprang up
with a happy thought, and stood on the shod
foot like a heron while she dressed the other.
Then, without stopping to lace her shoes, she
tossed her sailor aside, swung the seed-bag to
the front, and began dropping corn as fast as
she could.</p>
<p>The kernels were counted no longer, nor were
they placed in the hills precisely. Without
a glance to right or left, she raced along the
rows, her cheeks flaming and her hair flying
out in the wind. She had decided that she
would <i>plant</i> all of the strip—but not <i>cover</i> the
corn until next day.</p>
<p>The sun sank slowly toward the horizon as
she worked. But the unplanted rows were rapidly
growing fewer and fewer now, and the
descending disk gave her little worry. Up and
down she hurried, scattering rather than dropping
the seed, until she was on her final trip.
When she reached the end of the last row, she
joyfully put all the corn she had left into one
hill, turned the seed-bag inside out, slipped her
lunch-bucket into it, and, after hiding her hoe
in the stone pile on the carnelian bluff, turned
her face toward the house. And at that very
moment, with the winding of the cow-horn for
its farewell salute, the last yellow rind of the
sun went out of sight below the level line of the
prairie.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p><span class="smcap">Early</span> the next day, while the little girl's big
brothers were busy with the chores, she mounted
her pony and rode away southward from the
farm-house. At the reservation road, she
faced toward the sun and struck her horse
to a canter. A mile out on the prairie to the
east, she turned due north up a low ravine;
and finally completed almost a perfect square
by coming west, when on a line with the carnelian
bluff, to the edge of the corn-field.
There she tied her pony to a large stone on the
slope of the bluff and well out of sight of the
house, and, after hunting up the hoe, started
energetically to cover up the planting of the
day before.</p>
<p>She began at the bluff on the first uncovered
row, and swung down it rapidly, her hoe flashing
brightly in the sun as she pulled the dirt
over the kernels. But when she had gone less
than half the distance to the meadow she
stopped at a hill and anxiously examined it a
moment. She went on to the next without
using her hoe, then on to the next and the next;
and, finally, putting it across her shoulder,
walked slowly to the end.</p>
<p>Arrived at the edge of the meadow, she
turned about and followed up another row.
Her hoe was still across her shoulder, and she
did not stop to use it until she was near the
bluff. When she reached the meadow the second<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
time, she sat down on the row-marker and
looked out across the timothy.</p>
<p>"Goodness!" she said, addressing the half-dozen
animated stakes that were eying her
from a proper distance, "you've done it!"</p>
<p>The gophers stood straighter than ever when
they heard her voice, and new ones came from
their burrows and sat up to watch her, with
their fore paws held primly in front of them,
their tails lying out motionless behind, and their
slender heads poised pertly—with no movement
except the twinkle of sharp, black eyes and the
quiver of long whiskers.</p>
<p>"And there ain't 'nough seed left in that
barrel," went on the little girl, "to plant a
single row over again."</p>
<p>She sat on the marker a long time, a sorrowful
little figure, in deep study. And when she
finally rose and resumed work at the upper end
of the strip, she thought with dread of the
disclosure that sprouting-time would bring.</p>
<p>An hour later, she untied her pony and
climbed wearily upon his back. As she rode
across the meadow toward home, she shook her
head solemnly at the mounds in the timothy.</p>
<p>"I s'pose," she said, "you've <i>got</i> to have
something to lay up for winter; but I think you
might 'a' gone down to mother's veg'table
patch, 'cause, when the corn comes up, I'll
catch it!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The corn-stalks were nodding in their first untasseled
sturdiness before the little girl's big
brothers paid the field a visit to see when the
crowding suckers should be pulled and the
first loosening given to the dirt about the hills.
They went down one morning, their muskets
over their shoulders, and the little girl went
with them, hoping that so much time had passed
since the planting that they would not punish
her even if they found fault with her work on
the last eighty rows.</p>
<p>Summer had come in on a carpet of spring
green strewn with wild clover, asters, and blazing-star.
And as they went along, the verdant
prairie rolled away before them for miles in the
warm sunlight, unbroken save where their eyes
passed to the richer emerald of wheat sprinkled
with gay mustard, new flax on freshly turned
sod, or a sea of waving maize. Overhead, the
geese no longer streaked the sky in changing
lines, but swarms of blackbirds filled the air
with crisp calls at their approach, and rose from
the ground in black clouds. Down along the
slough where the wild-plum boughs waved their
blossoms they could see the calves frolicking
together; and up on the carnelian bluff, the
young prairie-chickens scurried through the
grass before a watchful mother.</p>
<p>The little girl trailed, barefooted, behind her
big brothers, and was in no humor to enjoy any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
of the beauties of earth or sky. With anxious
face she followed them as they penetrated the
lusty stand of corn, going from south to north
on the western side of the field. Then she
tagged less willingly as they turned east toward
the strip she had planted. As they neared it
they remarked a scarcity of stalks ahead; and
when they at last stood on the first of the eighty
rows, they gazed with astonishment at the narrow
belt that showed bravely green at the upper
end by the carnelian bluff, but dark and bare
over the three fourths of its length that sloped
down to the timothy meadow.</p>
<p>"I guess <i>this</i> won't need no thinning," said
the biggest brother, ironically.</p>
<p>They set to work to examine the hills, that
only here and there sent up a lonely shoot,
the little girl standing by and silently watching
them. But they found few signs of the
gopher burrowing they felt sure had devastated
the ground. All at once the eldest brother
had a brilliant thought, and, with a glance at the
little girl, who was nervously twisting her fingers,
paced eastward and counted the rows that
made up the barren strip. There were just
eighty!</p>
<p>He came back and joined his brothers; and
the little girl, standing before him, dared not
lift her eyes to his face.</p>
<p>"Did you plant that corn?" he demanded,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
ramming the butt of his musket into the
ground.</p>
<p>"Yes," answered the little girl, her voice
husky with apprehension. There was a pause.</p>
<p>"Did a lot of gophers come in while you's
a-planting?" asked the biggest brother, more
kindly.</p>
<p>"Oh, a <i>lot</i>," answered the little girl.</p>
<p>"Did you sling clods at 'em?" demanded the
eldest brother, again pounding the musket into
the dirt.</p>
<p>"Nearly slung my arm off," answered the
little girl.</p>
<p>The eldest brother grunted incredulously.</p>
<p>"It's mighty funny," he said, "that the gophers
liked <i>your</i> planting better 'n anybody
else's."</p>
<p>The little girl did not answer. Her forehead
was puckered painfully as, gripping her
hat, she stood busily curling and uncurling
her toes in the dirt. Her lashes were fluttering
as if she awaited a blow.</p>
<p>"I'll just ask you one thing," went on the
eldest brother; "what's to-morrow?"</p>
<p>The little girl started as if the blow had fallen,
and stammered her answer.</p>
<p>"My—my—birfday," she said.</p>
<p>"A—<i>ha</i>," he replied suggestively. Then he
tramped to the timothy meadow, the others
following. And the little girl, walking very
slowly, came on behind.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p><span class="smcap">When</span> the big brothers had gone on to the farm-house,
the little girl still tarried in the corn-field.
Her eldest brother's hint concerning her
birthday had suggested the cruel punishment
she felt certain was to be hers, and she could
not bear to face the family at the dinner-table.</p>
<p>For months she had longed for a little red
wagon—a wagon with a long tongue, and "Express"
on the side in black letters; and had
planned how she would harness Bruno and
Luffree to it and drive along the level prairie
roads. Evening after evening she had taken
out the thick catalogue and pored over the
prices, and had shown the kind she wanted
again and again to all the big brothers in turn.</p>
<p>Then one day she had surprised her biggest
brother while he was taking a bulky brown-paper
package off the farm wagon on his return
from Yankton. He had sent her into the
house; but she had found out later that the
package was in the corn-crib, and had crept in
there one afternoon, when the farm-house was
deserted, and taken a good look at it as it hung
from a rafter and well out of reach. It was
still unwrapped, but the brown paper was torn
in one place, and through the hole the little girl
had seen a smooth, round red stick. It was a
wheel-spoke.</p>
<p>Her sixth-and-a-half birthday was not far off,
and she had waited for its coming as patiently
as she could, in the meantime working secretly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>
on harnesses for the dogs, who had resigned
themselves good-naturedly to much measuring.
Now, on the very eve of her happiness, she was
to be deprived of the yearned-for wagon.</p>
<p>Crouching in the corn-field, she grieved away
the long day. Dinner-time came, and all the
corn-stalk shadows pointed significantly toward
the carnelian bluff; then they slowly shifted
around to the eastward and grew very long;
and at last commingled and were blotted out by
the descending gloom that infolded the little
girl.</p>
<p>Lying upon her back, she looked up at the
sky, that with the gathering darkness of the
warm summer night disclosed its twinkling
stars, and wished that she could suddenly die
out there in the field in some mysterious way,
so that there might be much self-condemning
woe at the farm-house when they found her,
cold and still. And she could not refrain from
weeping with sheer pity for herself. After
pondering for a while on the sad picture of her
untimely death, she changed to one of great
deeds and happiness, wealth and renown, in
some far-off land toward which she was half
determined to set out. But this delightful
dream was rudely broken into.</p>
<p>A long blast from the cow-horn sounded
through the quiet night and echoed itself
against the bluff. The little girl sat up and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
looked toward the house through the dark aisles
of the corn.</p>
<p>"I'm not coming," she said, speaking out
loud in a voice that broke as she ended, "I'm
going to stay here and <i>starve</i> to death!"</p>
<p>Once more the cow-horn blew, and this time
the call was more prolonged and commanding
in tone. It brought the little girl to her feet,
and she hunted up her hat and put it on. Then,
as two short, peremptory blasts rang out, she
started toward home.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p><span class="smcap">Next</span> morning she dressed hurriedly and got
to the sitting-room as quickly as she could.
But there was no bright red wagon standing
bravely in wait for her as she entered; there
was nothing under her breakfast plate, even,
when she turned it over. She ate her grits and
milk in silence, choking a little when she swallowed,
and, as soon as she could, rushed away
to the corn-crib to see if the brown-paper package
were still there.</p>
<p>It was gone!</p>
<p>Then she knew that her big brothers had sent
it away.</p>
<p>She crept back to the house and climbed the
ladder to the attic, where she meant to hide
and mourn alone. But no sooner had she
gained her feet beneath the peaked roof, than
she saw what she had been seeking.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It hung by its scarlet tongue from a beam,
flanked on one side by the paper of sage that
was being saved to season the holiday turkeys,
and on the other by the bag that held the
trimmings of the Yule-tree. And the little girl,
sitting tearfully beneath it, tried to count on
her fingers the days that must pass before
Christmas.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />