Sweet Land Stories Read Online Free Page B

Sweet Land Stories
Book: Sweet Land Stories Read Online Free
Author: E. L. Doctorow
Pages:
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Lundgren said. He arrived the night before so he will be on time the next morning. This is my brother. It is important to him, even if it costs money. He sleeps at the hotel in La Ville.
    How could you know that? Mama said.
    I know from the guest book in the La Ville hotel where I find his signature, Henry Lundgren said.
             
    MAMA SAID , All right, Earle, we’ve got a lot more work to do before we get out of here.
    We’re leaving?
    What is today, Monday. I want to be on the road Thursday the latest. I thought with the inquest matter back there we were okay at least to the spring. This business of a brother pushes things up a bit.
    I am ready to leave.
    I know you are. You have not enjoyed the farm life, have you? If that Swede had told us he had a brother, he wouldn’t be where he is today. Too smart for his own good, he was. Where is Bent?
    She went out to the yard. He was standing at the corner of the barn peeing a hole in the snow. She told him to take the carriage and go to La Ville and pick up a half a dozen gallon cans of kerosene at the hardware. They were to be put on our credit.
    It occurred to me that we still had a goodly amount of our winter supply of kerosene. I said nothing. Mama had gone into action, and I knew from experience that everything would come clear by and by.
    And then late that night, when I was in the basement, she called downstairs to me that Bent was coming down to help.
    I don’t need help, thank you, Aunt Dora, I said, so astonished that my throat went dry.
    At that they both clomped down the stairs and back to the potato bin where I was working. Bent was grinning that toothy grin of his as always, to remind me he had certain privileges.
    Show him, Mama said to me. Go ahead, it’s all right, she assured me.
    So I did, I showed him. I showed him something to hand. I opened the top of the gunnysack and he looked down it.
    The fool’s grin disappeared, the unshaven face went pale, and he started to breathe through his mouth. He gasped, he couldn’t catch his breath, a weak cry came from him, and he looked at me in my rubber apron and his knees buckled and he fainted dead away.
    Mama and I stood over him. Now he knows, I said. He will tell them.
    Maybe, Mama said, but I don’t think so. He’s now one of us. We have just made him an accessory.
    An accessory?
    After the fact. But he’ll be more than that by the time I get through with him, she said.
    We threw some water on him and lifted him to his feet. Mama took him up to the kitchen and gave him a couple of quick swigs. Bent was thoroughly cowed, and when I came upstairs and told him to follow me, he jumped out of his chair as if shot. I handed him the gunnysack. It was not that heavy for someone like him. He held it in one hand at arm’s length as if it would bite. I led him to the old dried up well behind the house, where he dropped it down into the muck. I poured the quicklime in and then we lowered some rocks down and nailed the well cover back on, and Bent the handyman he never said a word but just stood there shivering and waiting for me to tell him what to do next.
    Mama had thought of everything. She had paid cash down for the farm but somewhere or other got the La Ville bank to give her a mortgage and so when the house burned, it was the bank’s money. She had been withdrawing from the account all winter, and now that we were closing shop, she mentioned me the actual sum of our wealth for the first time. I was very moved to be confided in, like her partner.
    But really it was the small touches that showed her genius. For instance, she had noted immediately of the inquiring brother Henry that he was in height not much taller than I am. Just as in Fanny the housekeeper she had hired a woman of a girth similar to her own. Meanwhile, at her instruction, I was letting my dark beard grow out. And at the end, before she had Bent go up and down the stairs pouring the kerosene in every room, she made sure he was good and
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