Snow-Blind | Page 2

Katharine Newlin Burt
a quiet, husky boy-voice.
"Damn you, Pete!" was snarled at him for answer. "Haven't you got my
boot mended yet?"

The boot, still lacking its heel, lay on the floor near the stove, and Hugh
now picked it up and hurled it half across the room.
"I have to get out into this ice chest of a wilderness and this flaming
glare that cuts my eyeballs open, and work till the sweat freezes on my
face, and then come home to find you loafing by the fire as if you were
a house cat--purring and rubbing against my legs when I come in," he
snarled. "Thanking me for a quiet nap and a saucer of milk, eh? You
loafer! What do I keep you for? You gorge the bread and meat I earn by
sweating and freezing, and you keep your sluggish mountain of bones
covered. A year or two ago I'd have urged you along with a stick. I
used to get some work out of you then. But you think you're too big for
that, now, don't you? You fancy I'm afraid of your bigness, eh? Well,
do you want me to try it out? What about it?"
During the first part of his brother's speech, Pete had faced him, but in
the middle he had turned his back and stood in front of one of the
clumsy windows. He looked out now at a white wall of snow, above
which shone the dazzle of the midday. He whistled very softly to
himself and sank his hands deep into the pockets of his corduroys. He
did not answer the snarling question, but his wide, quiet mouth,
exquisitely shaped, ran into a smile and a dimple, deep and narrow, cut
into his thin and ruddy cheek.
Between the woman, who went on with her work as though no one had
come into the room, and the silent smiling youth, Hugh Garth prowled
the floor like a shadow thrown by a moving light.
He was a man of forty-five, gray-haired, misshapen, heavy above the
waist and light to meanness below; a man lame in one leg and with an
ill-proportioned face, malicious, lined, lead-colored; a man who limped
and leaped about the room with a fierce energy, the while his tongue,
gifted with a rich and resonant voice, poured vitriol upon the silence.
Suddenly the woman spoke. She turned back on the threshold of the
kitchen door through which her work had been taking her to and fro
during Garth's outbreak. Her voice was monotonous and smothered; it
had its share in her unnatural self-repression.

"Why don't you tell him to be quiet, Pete? You've been chopping wood
since daybreak to make up for what he didn't do last week, and you
only came in about ten minutes before he did. Why don't you speak out?
You're getting to be pretty close to a man now, and it isn't suitable for
you to let yourself be talked to that way. You always stand like a fool
and take it from him."
Pete turned. "Oh, well," he answered good-humoredly, "I guess maybe
he's tired. Let up, Hugh, will you? I'll finish your boot after dinner."
"The hell you will! You'll do it now!" Venting on his brother his anger
at the woman's intervention, Garth swung his misshapen body around
the end of the table and thrust an elbow violently against Pete's chest.
The attack was so unexpected that Pete staggered, lost his balance, and
stepping down into the shallow depression of a pebbled hearth, fell,
twisting his ankle. The agony was sharp. After a dumb minute he lifted
a white face and pulled himself up, one hand clutching the board
mantel. "Now you've done it!" he said between his teeth. "How will
you get your pelts to the station now? I won't be able to take them."
There ensued a dismayed silence. The woman had come back from the
kitchen and stood with a steaming dish in her hands. After the brief
pause of consternation she set down the dish and went over to Pete.
"Here," she said, "sit down and let me take off your moccasin and bathe
your ankle before it begins to swell."
Hugh Garth had seated himself in the thronelike chair at the head of the
table. His expression was still defiant, indifferent, and lordly. "Come
and eat your dinner, both of you," he commanded. "You've had your
lesson, Pete. After this, I guess you'll do what I tell you to--not choose
the work that happens to suit your humor. Don't, for God's sake, baby
him, Bella. Don't start being a grandmother before you've ever been a
sweetheart. You're too young for the one even if you're getting a bit too
old for the other!"
Bella flushed deep and
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