Tess of the Storm Country | Page 3

Grace Miller White

did it with us one day last winter. She scooted by our hut and down
dropped the yeast. Wouldn't as much as let her step her foot in my
kitchen bakin' day. Air we goin' out again to-night, fellers?"
"Yep," answered Ben Letts. "Sposin' Orn'll go, too. He air in town but
he'll get back, Orn will. There ain't no man on the shores of this here
lake that can pull a net with a steady hand like Orn Skinner. Pity he has
such a gal."
Letts gave another wipe at the scales which still clung to his neck and
his eyes glittered evilly as he looked in the direction the girl had taken.
He turned when Longman touched his arm. For years it had been the
custom of the fishermen to allow the subject of netting to remain
undiscussed. They plied their trade, spent a term in prison if detected,
and returned to again take up their occupation of catching and selling
fish. Ben Letts knew he was venturing upon dangerous ground.
"Broad daylight," he growled, catching the expression upon his
companion's face, "and there ain't no one in sight that'll tell."
"Better be satisfied to keep yer mouth shut, Ben Letts," cautioned
Longman, "nettin' air bad for the man what gets caught."
"Got any bait out there?" he finished, pointing lakeward to a bobbing
box anchored a distance from the shore.
"Not a damn bit," replied Jake Brewer, "don't need it now. Keep the
bait cars a floatin' to blind the eyes of some guy that might be a
rubberin'. They don't know a minnie from a whale, those city coves

don't."
"Ain't that Orn's boat comin' under the shadders of the trees?" queried
Longman, rising to his feet and wiping his long jack-knife on his
blue-jeans breeches. "Yep, it air him," he added, getting a closer look at
the approaching flat-bottomed boat in which sat a big round-shouldered
individual working vigorously away at the oars. Orn Skinner was called
the "Giant Fisherman," because even in his bare feet he was seven
inches above every other man in the settlement. Two enormous humps
stood side by side on his shoulders, and a grizzled head lifted and sank
with each sweep of the oars. Glancing around to direct his course,
Skinner saw the men waiting for him in front of Jake Brewer's hut.
With a sharp turn he swung the boat shoreward and a few vigorous
strokes sent it grating upon the sand. Jumping out he dragged the boat
to a safe mooring, from where the waves could not beat it back into the
lake.
CHAPTER II
In the beginning, it is said, God made the heavens and the earth. He
made the seas and all that in them is, with the myriads of fish, the toads,
the snakes and afterward man. Then to grace His handiwork, He
created the heart of a woman--the loving, suffering, unteachable heart
of Eve.
The first tinge of thinking sorrow comes into a woman's heart at the age
of fifteen, and this was the beginning of Tessibel's sorrow, as she lifted
her feet over the hot sands and sped onward. Tessibel was what most
people would call a careless, worthless jade. She shamefully neglected
her father, but covered the fact to him by the wild, willful worship
which she bestowed upon him. If he uttered a word of disapprobation
she would fling herself, like a cat, upon his crooked shoulders and bend
back his head until the red of her lips met his--- the pathos in her
red-brown eyes quieting his qualms as to the dirt he had to go through
to get into bed.
In the mornings, either in summer or winter, he was obliged to tumble

the ragged girl from the roped cot he had made for her (when at last she
had reached an age too old to sleep with him), and force her, grumbling
the while, to eat the bacon and fish he had prepared. But he seemed
happy through it all, for the brown-eyed girl brought back to his mind
the slip of a fishermaid who had died when Tessibel was born. True,
there was more copper in the girl's hair and eyes than there had been in
the mother's--more of the bright burnishing like that of a polished
old-fashioned kettle hanging over the spigot in a tidy housewife's
kitchen. But Tessibel's one room was never tidy nor had she a kettle. In
one iron frying pan she cooked the fish and bacon, while a small tin
pail held the water for the tea. These were the only cooking utensils of
the hut.
Tess could climb to the top of the highest pine tree in the forest yonder;
she could squirm through the underbrush with the agility of a rabbit.
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 122
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.