ife good. He had struck me over the heart and stunned me and then
gone singing by. In Mary's eyes he was the better man of the two. To
my eyes he was, and I hated him for it. He could go his way and I
should go mine, for we must stand alone. In the morning he would go
away and leave me with the Tim I loved, with the boy who sat with me at
yonder desk, who raced with me over the ridges, who read with me at the
fireside.
The shadows deepened in the school-room, for a curtain of clouds was
sweeping across the moon. Peering through the window, over the flats,
I saw a light gleaming steadily at the head of the village street. It
was my light burning in the window, and I knew that Tim was there,
waiting for me. All the past rose up to tell me that he was still the
comrade of my school-days, my companion of the hunt, my brother of the
fireside.
My head sank to the table and my hands clasped my eyes to shut out the
blackness. But the blackness came again.
XVII
Tip Pulsifer leaned on my gate. Crowning the post at his side was his
travelling bandanna, into which he had securely clasped by one great
knot all his portable possessions. It was very early in the morning,
in that half-dark and half-dawn time, when the muffled crowing begins
to sound from the village barns and the dogs crawl forth from their
barrels and survey the deserted street and yawn. Tip was not usually
abroad so early, but in his travelling bandanna and solemn face, as he
leaned on his elbows and smoked and smoked, I saw his reason for
getting out with the sun. He was taking flight. The annual Pulsifer
tragedy had occurred; the head of the house had tied together his few
goods, and, vowing never to trouble his wife again, had set his face
toward the mountain. But on my part I had every reason to believe that
Tip would show surprise when I hobbled forth from the misty gloom.
[Illustration: Tip Pulsifer leaned on my gate.]
Just a few minutes before I had awakened. I had lifted my head from my
desk, half-dazed, and gazed around the school-room. I had rubbed my
eyes to drive away the veils that hid my scholars from me. I had
pounded the floor with a crutch and cried: "It's books." The silence
answered me. I had not been napping in school, nor was I dreaming.
The long, miserable night flashed back to me, and I stamped into the
misty morning. Weary and dishevelled, I was crawling home, purposeless
as ever, now vowing I would br
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