A Daughter of the Land - Page 146/249

Then she led the way downstairs. There were enough members of the

immediate family to pack the front rooms of the house, the

neighbours filled the dining room and dooryard. The church choir

sang a hymn in front of the house, the minister stood on the front

steps and read a chapter, and told where Mr. Bates had been born,

married, the size of his family and possessions, said he was a

good father, an honest neighbour, and very sensibly left his

future with his God. Then the choir sang again and all started to

their conveyances. As the breaking up began outside, Mrs. Bates

arose and stepped to the foot of the casket. She steadied herself

by it and said: "Some time back, I promised Pa that if he went

before I did, at this time in his funeral ceremony I would set his

black tin box on the foot of his coffin and unlock before all of

you, and in the order in which they lay, beginning with Adam, Jr.,

hand each of you boys the deed Pa had made you for the land you

live on. You all know WHAT happened. None of you know just HOW.

It wouldn't bring the deeds BACK if you did. They're gone. But I

want you boys to follow your father to his grave with nothing in

your hearts against HIM. He was all for the men. I don't ever

want to hear any of you criticize him about this, or me, either.

He did his best to make you upstanding men in your community, his

one failing being that he liked being an upstanding man himself so

well that he carried it too far; but his intentions was the best.

As for me, I'd no idea how sick he was, and nobody else did. I

minded him just like all the rest of you always did; the BOYS

especially. From the church I want all of you to go home until

to-morrow morning, and then I want my sons and daughters by BIRTH

only, to come here, and we'll talk things over, quietly, QUIETLY,

mind you; and decide what to do. Katie, will you come with me?"

It was not quite a tearless funeral. Some of the daughters-in-law

wept from nervous excitement; and some of the little children

cried with fear, but there were no tears from the wife of Adam

Bates, or his sons and daughters. And when he was left to the

mercies of time, all of them followed Mrs. Bates' orders, except

Nancy Ellen and Robert, who stopped to help Kate with the dinner.

Kate slipped into her second dress and went to work. Mrs. Bates

untied her bonnet strings and unfastened her dress neck as they

started home. She unbuttoned her waist going up the back walk and

pulled it off at the door.