must be hungry by this time," said his
mother. She heaped his plate with the stew. "There," said she, "don't
you wait any longer. I guess mebbe you'd better set the dish down on
the hearth to keep warm for Elmira and your father first, though."
"Ain't you goin' to eat any yourself?" asked Jerome.
"I couldn't touch a mite of that stew if you was to pay me for it. I never
set much by parsnip stew myself, anyway."
Jerome eyed his mother soberly. "There's enough," said he. "I've got all
I can eat here."
"I tell you I don't want any. Ain't that enough? There's plenty of stew if
I wanted it, but I don't. I never liked it any too well, an' to-day seems as
if it fairly went against my stomach. Set it down on the hearth the way I
told you to, an' eat your dinner before it gets any colder."
Jerome obeyed. He ate his plate of stew; then his mother obliged him to
eat another. When Elmira returned she had her fill, and there was
plenty left for Abel Edwards when he should come home.
Jerome, well fed, felt like another boy when he returned to his task in
the garden. "Guess I can get this spadin' 'most done this afternoon," he
said to himself. He made the brown earth fly around him. He whistled
as he worked. As the afternoon wore on he began to wonder if he could
not finish the garden before his father got home. He was sure he had
not come as yet, for he had kept an eye on the road, and besides he
would have heard the heavy rattle of the wood-wagon. "Father 'll be
real tickled when he sees the garden all done," said Jerome, and he
stopped whistling and bent all his young spirit and body to his work.
He never thought of feeling anxious about his father.
At five o'clock the back door of the Edwards house opened. Elmira
came out with a shawl over her head and hurried up the hill. "Oh,
Jerome," she panted, when she got up to him. "You must stop working,
mother says, and go right straight off to the ten-acre lot. Father 'ain't
come home yet, an' we're dreadful worried about him. She says she's
afraid something has happened to him."
Jerome stuck his spade upright in the ground and stared at her. "What
does she s'pose has happened?" he said, slowly. Jerome had no
imagination for disasters.
"She thinks maybe he's fell down, or some wood's fell on him, or
Peter's run away."
"Peter wouldn't ever run away; it's much as ever he'll walk lately, an'
father don't ever fall down."
Elmira fairly danced up and down in the fresh mould. She caught her
brother's arm and twitched it and pushed him fiercely. "Go along, go
along!" she cried. "Go right along, Jerome Edwards! I tell you
something dreadful has happened to father. Mother says so. Go right
along!"
Jerome pulled himself away from her nervous clutch, and collected
himself for flight. "He was goin' to carry that wood to Doctor
Prescott's," said he, reflectively. "Ain't any sense goin' to the ten-acre
lot till I see if he's been there."
"It's on the way," cried Elmira, frantically. "Hurry up! Oh, do hurry up,
Jerome! Poor father! Mother says he's--fell--down--" Elmira crooked
her little arm around her face and broke into a long wail as she started
down the hill. "Poor--father--oh--oh--poor--father!" floated back like a
wake of pitiful sound.
Chapter II
Jerome started, and once started he raced. Long-legged, light-flanked,
long-winded, and underfed, he had the adaptability for speed of a little
race-horse. Jerome Edwards was quite a famous boy in the village for
his prowess in running. No other boy could equal him. Marvellous
stories were told about it. "Jerome Edwards, he can run half a mile in
five minutes any day, yes he can, sir," the village boys bragged if
perchance a cousin from another town came a-visiting and endeavored
to extol himself and his comrades beyond theirs. In some curious
fashion Jerome, after he had out-speeded all the other boys, furnished
them with his own victories for a boast. They seemed, in exulting over
the glory of this boy of their village, to forget that the glory came only
through their defeat. It was national pride on a very small and childish
scale.
Jerome, swift little runner that he was, ran that day as he had never run
before. The boys whom he met stood aside hastily, gaped down the
road behind him to see another runner laboring far in the rear, and then,
when none appeared, gaped after his flying heels.
"Wonder what he's a-runnin' that way fur?" said one boy.
"Ain't nobody a-tryin' to
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