Produced by Jeff Kaylin and Andrew Sly
Jane Field
A Novel
By
Mary E. Wilkins
Author of "A Humble Romance, and other stories" "A New England Nun, and other stories" "Young Lucretia, and other stories"
Illustrated
New York
Harper & Brothers Publishers
Chapter I
Amanda Pratt's cottage-house was raised upon two banks above the road-level. Here and there the banks showed irregular patches of yellow-green, where a little milky-stemmed plant grew. It had come up every spring since Amanda could remember.
There was a great pink-lined shell on each side of the front door-step, and the path down over the banks to the road was bordered with smaller shells. The house was white, and the front door was dark green, with an old-fashioned knocker in the centre.
There were four front windows, and the roof sloped down to them; two were in Amanda's parlor, and two were in Mrs. Field's. She rented half of her house to Mrs. Jane Field.
There was a head at each of Amanda's front windows. One was hers, the other was Mrs. Babcock's. Amanda's old blond face, with its folds of yellow-gray hair over the ears and sections of the softly-wrinkled, pinky cheeks, was bent over some needle-work. So was Mrs. Babcock's, darkly dim with age, as if the hearth-fires of her life had always smoked, with a loose flabbiness about the jaw-bones, which seemed to make more evident the firm structure underneath.
Amanda was sewing a braided rug; her little veiny hands jerked the stout thread through with a nervous energy that was out of accord with her calm expression and the droop of her long slender body.
"It's pretty hard sewin' braided mats, ain't it?" said Mrs. Babcock.
"I don't care how hard 'tis if I can get 'em sewed strong," replied Amanda, and her voice was unexpectedly quick and decided. "I never had any feelin' that anything was hard, if I could only do it."
"Well, you ain't had so much hard work to do as some folks. Settin' in a rockin'-chair sewin' braided mats ain't like doin' the housework for a whole family. If you'd had the cookin' to do for four men-folks, the way I have, you'd felt it was pretty hard work, even if you did make out to fill 'em up." Mrs. Babcock smiled, and showed that she did not forget she was company, but her tone was quite fierce.
"Mebbe I should," returned Amanda, stiffly.
There was a silence.
"Let me see, how many mats does that make?" Mrs. Babcock asked, finally, in an amiable voice.
"Like this one?"
"Yes."
"This makes the ninth."
Mrs. Babcock scrutinized the floor. It was almost covered with braided rugs, and they were all alike.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Jane Field by Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman
- 2: On each of her chairs was a tidy
- 3: Babcock shook her head resolutely
- 4: Babcock dropped her voice still lower
- 5: Babcock was leaning forward and smiling ingratiatingly
- 6: Babcock made quite a long call
- 7: And some long sprays of sweetbrier bowing over it
- 8: Lois did not think it tangibly
- 9: And the vestry windows were parallelograms of yellow light
- 10: He stated formally that Thomas Maxwell was dead
- 11: There was Esther an' Lois an' me
- 12: Lois always makes me think of her
- 13: Amanda sat at her usual window
- 14: It seemed as if shrinking from something
- 15: Amanda set down the dish she was wiping
- 16: Amanda ran around to the horse's head
- 17: Lois cast a terrified glance up at Amanda
- 18: Amanda set the glass on the table
- 19: And Lois heard them whispering together
- 20: Even Amanda had marvelled indignantly at it
- 21: Amanda spoke with stern warmth
- 22: Amanda and Lois went back into the sitting room
- 23: They reddened and tittered nervously
- 24: It was half past five when she arrived in Elliot
- 25: It was almost as if the deaf lawyer
- 26: Extended quiveringly in a rusty black glove
- 27: The lawyer pressed forward hurriedly
- 28: Tuxbury turned abruptly toward his desk
- 29: Tuxbury stepped forward with decision
- 30: Sheet iron wood stove the Maxwells had always eschewed coal
- 31: There was still a pale glimmer upon the opposite wall
- 32: Tuxbury was in his office when she got there
- 33: And saw her daughter Lois standing there
- 34: Flora was frowning reflectively
- 35: Pinky faces were full of cherubic glee
- 36: Tuxbury had been sitting in the parlor with his guests
- 37: Tuxbury would have helped the guests to beefsteak
- 38: But they ate their pie unconcernedly
- 39: Lois slunk mutely behind her again
- 40: And Lois sat down in the nearest chair
- 41: Lois shrank away from her mother as she wept
- 42: And Lois stirred herself wearily and got up
- 43: Lois looked full at her mother
- 44: Lois stood looking at her mother
- 45: Lois watched it listlessly the black draped hearse
- 46: Maxwell screwed her face contemptuously
- 47: Smiling pleasantly down at Lois
- 48: Lois looked at him hesitatingly
- 49: Lois looked up at him suddenly
- 50: I thought mother Amanda was dreadfully scared
- 51: Lois freed her hand and got up
- 52: Lois was bewildered and terrified
- 53: And she and Lois stood waiting
- 54: I always thought Edward Maxwell was prudent
- 55: Maxwell turned over a page of the album
- 56: Stern face bending over the album
- 57: Maxwell kept asking Lois at the window
- 58: Maxwell has not kept the glad tidings to herself
- 59: Maxwell made frequent errands into the room
- 60: I knew as long as she was Flora Maxwell
- 61: Francis seldom glanced at Lois
- 62: Robbins nodded to each other imperceptibly
- 63: Babcock drank with desperate gulps
- 64: Mebbe some time when Adoniram ain't drove
- 65: Babcock drew her face down quickly
- 66: I s'pose Lois is a good deal better
- 67: Babcock spread her green umbrella
- 68: Adoniram Babcock came over about eight o'clock
- 69: Found her rolling out sugar gingerbread
- 70: Adoniram got out and helped her into the wagon
- 71: After Adoniram had driven away
- 72: Lois sat out in the front yard sewing
- 73: She hesitated with her eyes fixed warily on Lois
- 74: She almost turned her back toward Flora as she sewed
- 75: Babcock flung one open peremptorily
- 76: Don't you know us Mandy an' Mis' Green an' Mis' Babcock
- 77: The thunder crashed closely in its wake
- 78: Babcock talked and wondered about it a great deal to Mrs
- 79: Babcock had said the day but one after their arrival
- 80: Babcock concerning her daughter
- 81: Why did she call you Esther instead of Jane
- 82: Babcock peeped out of a window as Lois went down the path
- 83: Lois followed him without a word
- 84: Suppose this obstacle were removed
- 85: They've all called me Esther Maxwell here
- 86: Lois pressed forward and clung to her
