Thomas Tryon - Harvest Home

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It was almost as if time had not touched the village of Cornwall Coombe. The quiet, peaceful place was straight out of a bygone era, with well-cared-for Colonial houses, a white-steepled church fronting a broad Common. Ned and Beth Constantine chanced upon the hamlet and immediately fell in love with it. This was exactly the haven they dream of. Or so they thought.
For Ned and his family, Cornwall Coombe was to be come a place of ultimate horror.

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“Hex is Pennsylvania Dutch, isn’t it?” Maggie said. “I never heard of any hex in Cornwall, did you, Robert?”

“No. I don’t believe so.”

“Where did you find it, Ned?”

“In Justin’s cornfield.”

I watched Robert closely, seeking some visible expression behind his dark glasses. It was impossible to see beyond them. He drummed his fingers thoughtfully on the arms of his chair. From the corner of my eye I saw Maggie collecting her gardening things, dropping the iris cuttings and bulbs into her basket. She rose, dusting her knees. “I’m going to leave you men to sort it all out. It’s too much for me.”

“What would Mr. Buxley do?” I asked Robert again when she had taken her basket and gone.

He shrugged. “I suppose he’d look the other way, just as the Catholic Church does. The church and the law have learned it’s a lost cause trying to censure such beliefs. How can you hope to fight them, when it’s proved that the old Cornishmen arrived here with the same gods the Indians already had?”

“But-vestigial, you say?”

“Margaret’s word, but I suppose it suffices. All these things are the traces of the older culture. Who knows why Fred Minerva will let his barn burn before he’ll put up lightning rods? Or why the Widow can cure things the doctor can’t? Or how Missy can tell the future?

“Justin traces his lineage back in an unbroken line to the earliest families in Cornwall. Now, those forebears of his were — as Cornishmen are-deeply religious. They believed in one way for countless years, and then the priests came and renamed all the streams and wells and glens, and tore down the temples and built churches and gave them Christ on a cross. They accepted all this for more than a thousand years. But all the time, they were feeling some nameless longing inside. What do they do? They hark back to the olden times, where they find a source of comfort that even they can’t comprehend, a fever that cools the fever, a mask that hides the mask.

“Superstitious? Oh, yes, Justin’s superstitious. It’s in his blood, his bones, his very nature. In his father’s, and in his grandfather’s. Because he believes that come hell or high water, bad crops or plague, what’s going to save him is that inner voice that he listens to. His or Missy Penrose’s, no matter which. That’s why they still have fires and dancing on the Common.” He put his hands on the arm of his chair to lift himself. “No, no, I can do it. Come in and have a drink? No? Come over again, it’s always good to have company.”

He went across the lawn as if he had eyes to tell him the way, and when he got to the back door Maggie came and opened it, holding it for him while he entered. “Thank you, Margaret,” he said, going in. I waved, but she appeared not to have seen me, and I turned to go home.

15

When I reached the corner of the hedge, I heard the sound of hoofbeats along the road, and saw Kate coming down the lane astride Tremmy. She sat the horse well for the length of time she had been riding, though it briefly occurred to me that she was coming at too fast a pace. When she reined up beside me, her face was flushed and excited with the elation of being on horseback.

Remembering the former owner’s warning, I told her to be careful not to give the animal so much head. She leaned from the saddle and smoothed the mane over the ridge of the chestnut neck muscles. “She’s just high-spirited, Daddy. Watch!”

She flicked the reins, spun the mare, and rode her in circles around me as I stood in the middle of the road.

“Fine, sweetheart. But I think Tremmy’s had enough for one day, and so have you. Cool her off now, and give her her dinner. Don’t forget to rub her down,” I called as I went in the back door.

In the bacchante room, I discovered ladies come to call.

“Behold your seraglio,” said the Widow Fortune, looking up from her sewing. Her horse, she said, had a stony hock today, so she had come shanks’ mare with Mrs. Zalmon and Mrs. Green to bring us a gift, a little wooden keg of honey mead. She pointed to the dusty vessel on the piecrust table, saying she had not wiped it off, since she wanted me to see how old it was. I made myself a Scotch-and-soda and sat in my club chair. Kate came in with a can of polish and began using it on her boots. “Kate,” the Widow said, “You sit that horse like a reg’lar hussar.”

“I want a new saddle for her, only I’ll have to wait until next year.”

“How’s that?”

“Haven’t the money. I have to save out of my allowance.”

“Chickens,” the Widow announced. “You ought to go into business and raise chickens.” She gave me a look. “You put up some wire and stakes and build the child a chicken run. When the chickens get tired of laying, you can always eat ‘em. Beth, you promised me that recipe for chicken and crabmeat.”

“I’ll copy it out before you go.”

“What’s for dinner?” Kate asked.

“Steaks and salad.”

Kate made a face. “I’d rather have chili.”

Chili ?” the Widow said.

Beth laughed. “Kate’s favorite thing in the world is Pepe Gonzalez’s chili.”

“You come to me for dinner one night, Kate, and let me fix you a nice clam chowder, and you’re bound to change your mind.”

“Clams is all spoiled over to Boston,” Mrs. Green said.

“No.” The Widow was shocked.

Mrs. Zalmon said, “There’s poison in the water makes ‘em go bad. People are dyin’ of it.”

The Widow shook her head. “Not content to ruin the land, now they must poison the sea. Think of that. No clams.”

“And oysters,” Mrs. Green put in. “Imagine. Today folks eat oysters whether the month’s got an ‘R’ or not. Things certainly have changed since I was a girl!”

“Cozy room, Ned,” the Widow observed, looking around. “Be nice for winter evenin’s.”

Mrs. Green made a mock shiver. “Ooh-winter, and so soon.”

“Aye, soon. People claim a New England winter’s hard, and I s’pose it is for them what’s soft. But I like to feel all tucked in by a blanket of snow come Thanksgivin’. And they say when winter comes, spring can’t be far behind. The shadblow will pop before you know it, and it’ll be Plantin’ Day again. There’ll be Spring Festival, and dancin’ on the green.”

“The maypoles,” Mrs. Green said.

“Maybe Worthy’ll be takin’ Kate to the maypoles.” The Widow gave her a bright look.

“Kate, darling,” Beth suggested, “why don’t you clean your boots in the kitchen?” Kate took her boots and polish away, mourning Pepe Gonzalez’s chili.

Suddenly a gust of wind blew down the chimney, scattering the ashes from the fire I had made to test the cleaned-out flue.

“Oh, dear…” Mrs. Green looked doubtfully at Mrs. Zalmon. The Widow glanced up behind her spectacles, then borrowed Beth’s shears to snip a thread.

“An omen, for sure,” Mrs. Zalmon said in a hushed tone.

Beth used the fireplace brush to tidy up the hearth. “Well, we can’t say the chimney isn’t drawing.”

I said I hoped so; Worthy and I had worked like dogs.

“I told you he was a good worker,” the Widow said with some satisfaction.

“What do you suppose can be the matter with Worthy?” Beth said. “I never saw such a change in a boy.”

Mrs. Zalmon replied, “Some young people want too much from life. More than they’re meant to have. Worthy don’t know how lucky a boy he is. To have been chosen the Young Lord is an honor most boys wouldn’t sneeze at. Look at Justin. See at the fine farm he’s made, the finest in the Coombe. Worthy could do a lot for his family by settin’ his mind in the village ways and not wantin’ to be a revolutionary. Ought to thank the Lord he’s been chosen, Worthy ought.”

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