Mrs. Manning had not cried much. Her heartbreak would not give into tears easily. But at Jim"s words she broke into hysterical sobs.
"Jimmy! Jimmy! I don"t see how you can ever think of such a thing after all Papa said to you. Almost his last advice to you was about getting an education. He was so proud of your school work. Why, all I"ve got to live for now is to carry out Papa"s plans for you."
Jimmy stood beside his mother. He was taller than she. Suddenly, with boyish awkwardness, he pulled the sobbing little woman to him and leaned his young cheek on her graying hair.
"Mama, I"ll make myself into a darned college professor, if you just won"t cry!" he whispered.
For several days after the funeral, Jim wandered about the house and yard fighting to control his tears when he came upon some sudden reminder of his father; the broken rake his father had mended the week before; a pair of old shoes in the wood shed; one of his father"s pipes on the kitchen window ledge. The nights were the worst, when the picture of his father"s last moments would not let the boy sleep. It seemed to Jim that if he could learn to forget this picture a part of his grief would be lifted. It was the uselessness of Big Jim"s death that made the boy unboyishly bitter. He could not believe that any other death ever had been so needless. It was only in the years to come that Jim was to learn how needlessly, how unremittingly, industry takes its toll of lives.
Somehow, Jim had a boyish feeling that his father had had many things to say to him that never had been said; that these things were very wise and would have guided him. Jim felt rudderless. He felt that it was inc.u.mbent on him to do the things that his father had not been able to do. Vaguely and childishly he determined that he must make good for the Mannings and for Exham. Poor old Exham, with its lost ideals!
It was in thinking this over that Jim conceived an idea that became a great comfort to him. He decided to write down all the advice that he could recall his father"s giving him, and when his mother became less broken up, to ask her to tell him all the plans his father might have had for him.
So it was that a week or so after her husband"s death, Mrs. Manning found one of Jim"s scratch pads on the table in his room, with a carefully printed t.i.tle on the cover:
MY FATHER"S ADVICES TO ME.
After she had wiped the quick tears from her eyes, she read the few pages Jim had completed in his sprawling hand:
"My father said to me, "Jimmy, never make excuses. It"s always too late for excuses."
"He said, "A liar is a first cousin to a skunk. There isn"t a worse coward than a liar."
"He said to me, "Don"t belly-ache. Stand up to your troubles like a man."
"My father said, "Hang to what you undertake like a hound to a warm scent."
"He said to me, "Life is made up of obeying. What you don"t learn from me about that, the world will kick into you. The stars themselves obey a law. G.o.d must hate a law breaker."
"My father said, "Somehow us Americans are quitters."
"My mother said my father said, "I want Jimmy to go through college. I want him to marry young and have a big family."
"The thing my father said to me oftenest lately was, "Jimmy, be clean about women. Some day you will know what I mean when I say that s.e.x is energy. Keep yourself clean for your life work and your wife and children.""
Mrs. Manning read the pages over several times, then she laid the book down and stood staring out of the window.
"Oh, he was a good man!" she whispered. "He was a good man! If Jimmy could have had him just two years more! I don"t know how to teach him the things a man ought to know. A boy needs his father.----Oh, my love!
My love----"
Down below, Jim was leaning on the front gate. His chum, Phil Chadwick, was coming slowly up the street. The boys had not been near Jim since the funeral. Jim had become a person set apart from their boy world. No one appreciates the dignity of grief better than a boy, or underneath his awkwardness has a finer way of showing it. Phil"s mother, to his unspeakable discomfort, had insisted now that he go call on Jim.
Phil, his round face red with embarra.s.sment, approached the gate a little sidewise.
"h.e.l.lo, Still!" he said casually.
"h.e.l.lo, Pilly!" replied Jim, blushing in sympathy.
There was a pause, then said Phil, leaning on the gate, "Diana"s got her pups. One"s going to be a bulldog and two of "em are setters.
U-u-u--want to come over and see "em and choose yours?"
Jim"s face was quivering. It was his father who had persuaded his mother that Jim ought to have one of Diana"s pups. Mrs. Manning felt toward dogs much as she might have toward hyenas.
"I--I--guess not today, Pilly!"
Another long pause during which the lads swung the gate to and fro and looked in opposite directions. A locust shrilled from the elm tree.
Finally Phil said:
"Still, you gotta come up to the swimming hole. It"ll do you good.
He--he"d a wanted you to--to--to do what you could to cheer up. Come on, old skinny. Tell your mother. We"ll keep away from the other kids. Come on. You gotta do something or you"ll go nutty in your head."
Jim turned and went into the house. His mother forestalled his request.
"If Phil wants you to go swimming, dear, go on. It will do you good.
Don"t stay in too long."
Jim and Phil walked up the road to the old Allen place. They climbed the stile into a field where the aftermath of the clover crop was richly green and vibrating with the song of cricket and katydid. The path that the boys followed had been used in turn by Indian and Puritan. The field still yielded an occasional hide sc.r.a.per or stone axe.
There was a pine grove at the far edge of the field. In the center of the grove was the pond that had for centuries been the swimming pool for boys, Indian and white. Ground pine and "checkerberry" grew abundantly in the grove. Both boys breathed deep of the piney fragrance and filled their mouths with pungent "checkerberry" leaves. The path, deep worn by many bare feet, circled round the great pines to the clearing where the pond lay. It was black with the shadows of the grove where it was not blue and white in mirroring the September sky. Lily pads fringed the brim. Moss and a tender, long gra.s.s grew clear to the water"s edge.
Several boys were undressing near the ancient springboard. They looked embarra.s.sed and stopped their laughter when they saw Jim. He and Phil got into their swimming trunks quickly and followed each other in a clean dive into the pool. They swam about in silence for a time and then landed on the far side and lay in the sun on moss and pine needles.
The beauty and sweetness of the place were subtle balm to Jim. And surely if countless generations of boy joy could leave a.s.sociation, the old swimming hole should have spoken very sweetly to Jim. The swimming hole was a boy sanctuary. The water was too shallow for men. Little girls were not allowed to invade the grove except in early spring for trailing arbutus. The oldest men in Exham told that their grandfathers, as boys, had sought the swimming hole as the adult seeks his club.
Jim looked with interest at his legs. "I"ve got six. How many have you, Pilly?"
Phil counted the brown bloodsuckers that clung to his fat calves.
"Seven. Mean cusses, ain"t they."
Jim worked with a sharp edged stone, sc.r.a.ping his thin shanks. "You"ve got fat to spare. They"ve had enough off of me today."
"I remember how crazy I was first time they got on me. Felt as if I had snakes." Phil rooted six of the suckers off his legs and paused at the seventh. "He"s as skinny as you are, Still. I"ll give him two minutes more to finish a square meal."
The two boys lay staring out at the pond.
"Have you gotta go to work, Still?" asked Phil.
"Yes," replied Jim. "Mother says I can"t, though."
Phil waited more or less patiently. His mates had long since learned that Jim"s silences were hard to break.
"But I"m going to get a job in the quarry as soon as I can keep from getting sick at my stomach every time I see a derrick."
"My dad says your--he--he always planned to send you through college,"
said Phil.
Jim nodded. "I"ll get through college. See if I don"t. But I won"t let my mother support me. I"ve got a lot of things to finish up for him."