Amos Burr crossed to the stove and turned his dripping back to the heat.
“Gimme a rubbin’ down, Sairy Jane,” he pleaded, and his daughter took a dry cloth and began mopping off the water.
Marthy Burr placed an iron on the stove and took one off.
“Whar’d you git dinner, Nick?” she inquired suddenly.
“At the judge’s.”
“What did they have?” demanded Jubal from the hall, ceasing the clatter of the churn. “Golly! Wouldn’t I like a bite of something!”
“I shouldn’t mind some strange cookin’, myself,” said Marthy Burr, shaking her head at one of the children who had come into the kitchen with muddy feet. “I ain’t tasted anybody else’s vittles for ten years, an’ sometimes I feel my mouth waterin’ for a change of hand in the dough.”
She took one of her husband’s shirts from the pile of freshly dried clothes, spread it on the ironing-board, and sprinkled it with water. Then she moistened her finger and applied it to the iron.
Amos Burr looked up from before the stove, where he still sat drying.
“You’re a man now, Nick,” he said slowly, as if the words had been revolving in his brain for some time and he had just received the power of speech.
“Yes, pa.”
“Whatever he is, he don’t git it from his pa,” put in Marthy Burr as she bent over the shirt. “He ain’t got nothin’ of yo’rn onless it’s yo’ hair, an’ that’s done sobered down till you wouldn’t know it.”
Amos waited patiently until she had finished, and then went on heavily as if the pause had been intentional, not enforced.
“You’ve got as much schoolin’ as most city chaps,” he said. “Much good it’ll do you, I reckon. I never saw nothin’ come of larnin’ yet, ’cep’n worthlessness. But you’d set yo’ mind on it, an’ you’ve got it.”
“Thar warn’t none of yo’ hand in that, Amos Burr,” cried his wife, checking him again before he had recovered breath from his last sentence. “Many’s the night I’ve wrastled with you till you war clean wore out with sleeplessness, ‘fo’ you’d let the child keep on at his books.”
“I ain’t never seen no good come of it,” repeated Burr stolidly; then he returned to Nicholas.
“I reckon you’ll want to do somethin’ for the family, now,” he said, “seein’ yo’ ma is well wore out an’ the brindle cow died calvin’, an’ Sairy Jane is a hard worker.”
Nicholas looked at him without speaking.
“Yes?” he said inquiringly, and his voice was dull.
“I was talkin’ to Jerry Pollard,” continued his father, letting his slow eyes rest upon his son’s, “an’ he said you war as likely a chap as thar was roun’ here, and he reckoned you’d be pretty quick in business.”
“Yes?” said Nicholas again in the same tone.
Amos Burr was silent for a moment, and his wife filled in the pause with a series of running interjections. When they were over her husband took up his words.