The Heart's Kingdom - Page 47/148

"Charlotte! Dab!" it called; and we both answered with all speed.

"That Parson Goodloe have got the power to draw the teeth of seven

devils, and you both consider the words of his mouth or he'll git the

teeth outen yourn," Mammy called after us in ambiguous warning.

And upon our arrival on the scene of action being executed upon the

dahlias, we found the commander of the devils awaiting us, though in his

hands was no forked instrument of dentistry, but in one he held a large

slice of rye bread thickly spread with butter, and the other was

disarmed by a ripe red apple. As we drew near he finished a direction to

father and took a huge bite out of the slab of bread that left a gap as

wide as one would expect a Harpeth jaguar to make.

"Harrowing deep makes great growth in all plant life," he was saying

past the slice of bread with agricultural prosiness to father, who had

completely sweated down the very high and stiff collar which he always

wore swathed in a wide tie of black after a Henry Clay cut, in a savage

attack with the hoe upon the mulch that was smothering the dahlias in

richness.

"Does the same deep digging result hold true in biological and psychic

life?" puffed father, and then he leaned on his hoe and looked up at the

young man towering over him. In his eyes was the appeal of disappointed

age calling to the ideals of flaming strength and youth in the

deep-jeweled eyes that answered with a look of passionate tenderness as

the parson poised the bread for another bite.

"'Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth,' Mr. Powers, is the direct data we

have on that subject," he said. Then he, for the first time, observed

the approach of Dabney and myself, of which his widening smile and the

quick lowering of the slab of rye pone gave notice to father, who

exploded accordingly.

"You black son-of-a-gun! Why didn't you rake off these dahlias as I told

you to yesterday? Now you get his hide, Parson!" was the greeting that

Dabney received, while I was ignored by all concerned.

"That hinge in your back rusty again, Dabney?" questioned the parson,

with leonine mildness.

"I been upsot by my young mistis coming home," answered Dabney, with a

quick glance at me as if to indicate me as a substantial excuse for any

crimes. I stood convicted, for I do use Dabney continually in all my

hospitalities.

"We understand, Dabney," was the answer he got from the feeding Jaguar,

who gave me that glint of a laugh that I had learned to expect and

to--dread. I knew what he meant to imply, and I also knew that he knew

that I understood that he considered me a disturbing element. Then he

again raised the half-demolished hunk of bread to his mouth, stopped and

regarded the apple in meditative indecision. From head to heels he was

clothed in the most exquisite white flannel and buckskin tennis

clothes, but for all their civilized worldliness he resembled nothing so

much as a feeding king of the forest in the poise of his wonderful head

and equally wonderful body. I glanced quickly at his face with its

gentle, deep, comprehending lines, in positive fear of him, and I found

reassurance in the smile that curled his strong red mouth and glinted at

me from his brilliant eyes under dull gold. Then, after the smile, he

decided for the apple rather than further conversation, and was just

going to set his white teeth in its rosy cheek when I stopped him with

an almost involuntary exclamation.