VI
The Speckled Hen
IN ORDER to relieve the reader's suspense, I may as well say
here that Jimmy Dunn did not marry Miss Seiler. It is too bad to have to
sacrifice what promised to be a first-class love interest, but the truth is
that there is less chance of Jimmy ever marrying Miss Seiler than there seemed
likelihood of Isobel and me reaching Port Lafayette in Mr. Millington's automobile.
Usually when we started for Port Lafayette, my wife and
Millington's wife would dress for the matinee or church, or wherever they
intended going that day, and when Millington heard the knocking sound in his
engine and began to get out his tools, they would excuse themselves politely
and go and spend the day in the city. They usually returned in time to get into
the car and ride back to the garage. But I stuck to Millington. You never can
tell when a car of that kind will be ready to start up, and I was really very
anxious to go to Port Lafayette. I spent some very delightful days with
Millington that way, for when he was mending his car he was always in a
charming humour, and as gay and playful as a kitten.
I began to fear that one, if not the only, reason why Mr.
Millington was always in such a good humour when his car was in a bad one, was
because I had told him that I had heard of a man in Port Lafayette who had a
fine farm of White Wyandotte chickens, and that I thought I might buy some for
my place. Millington does not believe in Wyandottes. He is all for Orpingtons.
It is remarkable how many wives object to chickens. I do not
blame Isobel for not liking chickens, for she was born in a flat, and I am
willing to make allowances for her lack of education; but why Mrs. Rolfs and Mrs.
Millington should dislike chickens was beyond my comprehension. Both were born
in the suburbs, and grew up in a real chickenish atmosphere, and still they do
not keep chickens. I must say, however, that Mr. Rolfs and Mr. Millington are
persons of greater intelligence. Almost the first day I moved into the suburb
of Westcote, Mr. Rolfs leaned over the division fence and complimented me on my
foresight in purchasing such an admirable place on which to raise chickens. He
told me that if I needed any advice about chickens he would be glad to supply
me with all I wished, just as a neighbourly matter. He seemed to take it as a
matter of course that I would arrange for a lot of chickens as soon as I was
fairly settled on the place, and in this he was seconded by Mr. Millington.
When Mr. Millington saw Mr. Rolfs talking to me, he came
right over and said that, while he hated to boast, he had studied chick ens
from A to Gizzard, and that when I was ready to get my chickens he could give
me some suggestions that would be simply in valuable. We talked the chicken
matter over very thoroughly, and I soon saw that they were men of knowledge and
deep experience in chicken matters, and when they had decided that I would keep
chickens, and what kind of chickens, and where I should build the coop, and
what kind of coop I should build, we all shook hands warmly, and I went around
front to tell Isobel. I was very enthusiastic about chickens when I went. After
I had interviewed Isobel for three minutes I learned, definitely, that I was
not going to keep chickens. There were a great many things Mr. Rolfs and Mr.
Millington had not said about chickens, and those were the very things Isobel
told me, and they were all reasons for not having chickens on the place at all.
She also threw in an opinion of Mr. Rolfs and Mr. Millington. It seemed that
they were two villains of the most depraved sort, who did not dare keep
chickens themselves because they were afraid of their wives, and who were
trying to steal a vicarious joy by bossing my chickens when I got them, but
that I was not going to get any. Absolutely!
Of course, I always do what Isobel tells me, and when she
told me I w T as not going to have chickens, I obeyed. But I merely told Mr.
Rolfs and Mr. Millington when they came over the next day, that I had been
thinking the matter over and that I was doubtful whether the south corner or
the north corner would be the best place for the coop. So we three went and
looked over the ground again. Both favoured the north corner, so I hung back
and seemed undecided and doubtful, and finally, in a week or two, they agreed
with me.
I never saw two men so anxious to have a neighbour keep
chickens. They were willing to let me have almost everything my own way. It was
quite a strain on me, for I had to think of a new objection to their plans
every day or so, but I could see the suspense was harder on Mr. Rolfs and Mr.
Millington. Every morning they came and hung over my fence wistfully, and every
evening they came over .and talked chickens, and on the train to town they
spoke freely of the chickens they were going to keep. In a month they were talking
of the chickens they were keeping, and bragging about them; and old-seasoned
chicken raisers used to hunt them up and sit with them and ask for information
on knotty points.
Toward fall Mr. Rolfs and Mr. Millington were beginning to
talk about the large sums of money they were making out of their chickens, and
promising settings of their White Orpington and White Wyandotte eggs to the
commuters, and they began to be really annoying. They would stand at the fence,
hollow-eyed and hungry-looking, staring into my yard, and when I passed they
would make slighting remarks about me and the lack of decision in my character.
They said sneeringly that they did not believe I would ever get any chickens.
"You, Millington, and you, Rolfs," I said firmly,
"should remember one thing: I am the man who is getting these chickens,
and the main thing in raising chickens is to start right. I do not want to go
into this thing hastily and then regret it all my life. If you do not like my
way, all you have to do is to build coops yourselves and buy chickens and raise
them yourselves. Be patient. Every day I am learning more about chickens from
your conversations on the train, and when I do get my chickens you will find I
have profited by your suggestions."
Millington and Rolfs had to be satisfied with that, so far
as I was concerned, for although I spoke to Isobel frequently on the subject of
chickens she had not changed. I silenced Millington by telling him I would have
chickens long before he ever succeeded in taking Isobel and me to Port
Lafayette in his automobile. If that is all you are waiting for," he said,
"we will start to-morrow," and so we did; but that was all.
Millington and Rolfs, during the winter, worked off some of
their surplus chicken energy writing letters to the poultry periodicals. My
friends in town began asking me why I did not keep chickens when I
lived near to such chicken experts as Rolfs and Millington, by whose experience
I could profit; but the worst came one day on the train when Rolfs actually had
the assurance to offer me a set ting of his White Wyandotte eggs. I blame Rolfs
and Millington for acting in this way. No man should brag about chickens he has
not; I only bragged about those I meant to get.
"So we three went and looked over the ground
again"
By the time spring put forth her tender leaves, Rolfs and
Millington were so deep in their imaginary chicken business that they talked
nothing else, and all their spare time was spent in my yard, urging me to hurry
a little and get the chickens.
"I wish you would hurry a bit in getting those chickens
of mine," Millington would say; "I ought to have at least ten hens
sitting by this time." And then Rolfs would say: "He is right about
that. Unless you get my White Wyandottes soon, the chicks will not be hatched
out before cold weather. I ought to have the hens on the eggs now."
Occasionally I mentioned chickens in an off-hand way to
Isobel, but she had not changed her views.
"Now, Isobel," I would say, "about chickens —"
At the word "chickens" Isobel would look at me
reproachfully, and I would end meekly:
"About chickens, as I was saying. Don't you think we
could have a pair of broilers to-morrow?"
As a matter of fact, this happened so often that I began to
hate the sight of a broiled chicken, and was forced to mention roast chicken
once in a while. It was after one of these times that the event happened that
stirred all Westcote.
I had reached a point where I dodged Mr. Rolfs and Mr.
Millington when I saw them, in order to avoid their insistent clamour for
chickens, when one evening Isobel met me at the door with a smile.
"John!" she cried. "What do you think! Our
chicken laid an egg!"
"Chicken?" I asked anxiously. "Did you say
chicken?"
"And I am going to give you the egg for dinner,"
cried Isobel joyfully. "Just think, John! Our own egg, laid by our own
chicken! Do you want it fried, or boiled, or scrambled?"
"Isobel," I demanded, "what is the meaning of
all this?"
"I just could not kill the hen," Isobel ran on,
"after it had been so so friendly. Could I? I felt as if I would be
killing one of the family."
"People do get to feeling that way about chickens when
they keep them," I said insinuatingly. "Why, Isobel, I have known
wives to love chickens so warmly wives that had never cared snap for, chickens
before wives that; hated chickens and they grew to love chickens so well that
as soon as the coop was made of course it was a nice, clean, airy coop, Isobel
and the dear little fluffy chicks began to peep about"
Isobel stiffened.
"John," she said finally "you are not going
to keep chickens!"
"Certainly not!" I agreed hastily.
"But of course we can't kill Spotty," said Isobel.
"I call her Spotty because that seems such a perfect name for her. I
telephoned for a roaster this morning, because you suggested having a roaster
for dinner, John, and when the roaster came it was a live chicken! Imagine!
"Horrors!" I exclaimed.
"I should think so!" agreed Isobel. "So there
was nothing to do but phone the grocer to come and get the live roaster, but
when I phoned, his grandmother was much worse, and the store was closed until
she got better — or worse, and I couldn't bear to see the poor thing in the
basket with its legs tied all that time, for there is no telling how long an
old person like a grandmother will remain in the same condition, so I loosened
the roaster in the cellar, and at a quarter past four I heard it cluck. It had laid
an egg. I knew that the moment I heard it cluck."
"Isobel," I said, "you were born to be the
wife of a chicken fancier! You shall eat that egg!"
"No, John," she said, "you shall eat it. It
is our first real egg, laid by our dear little Spotty, and you shall eat
it."
"No, Isobel," I began, and then, as I saw how
determined she was, I compromised. "Let us have the egg scrambled," I
said, "and each of us eat a part."
"Very well," said Isobel, "if you will
promise not to kill Spotty. We will keep her for ever and forever!"
I agreed. Isobel kissed me for that.
After we had eaten the egg and both Isobel and I agreed that
it was really a superior egg we went down cellar and looked at Spotty. I should
say she was a very intelligent-looking hen, but homely. There was nothing
flashy about her. She was the kind of hen a man might enter in the Sweepstakes
class, and not get a prize, and then enter in the Consolation class and not get
a prize, and then enter for the Booby prize and still be outclassed, and then
enter in the Plain Old Barnyard Fowl class and not get within ten miles of a
prize, and then be taken to the butcher as a Boarding House Broiler, and be re
fused on account of age, tough looks, and emaciation.
She was no pampered darling of the hen house, but a plain
old Survival-of-the-Fittest Squawker; the kind of hen that along about the
first of May begins clucking in a vexed tone of voice, flies over the top of a
two-story barn, and wanders off somewhere into the tall grass back of the cow
pasture, to appear some weeks later with twelve chicks of twelve assorted
patterns, ranging from Shanghai-bantam to plain yellow nondescript. She was a
good, durable hen of the old school, with a wary, startled eye, an extra loud
squawk, and a brain the size of a grain of salt.
Spotty was the sort of hen that could go right along day
after day without steam heat or elevators in her coop and manage to make a
living. As soon as I saw her, my heart swelled with pride, for I knew I had
secured a very rare variety of hen. Since every man that can tell a chicken
from an ostrich and some that can't has become a chicken fancier, the
aristocratic, raised-by-hand, pedigree fowl has become as common as dirt, and
it is indeed difficult to secure a genuine mongrel hen. I was elated. As nearly
as I could judge by first appearances, I was the owner of one of the most
mongrel hens that ever laid a plain, omelette-quality egg.
When I had made a coop by nailing a few slats across the
front of a soap box, and had nailed Spotty in, I took the coop under my arm and
went into the back yard. Mr. Millington was there, and Mr. Rolfs was there, and
they were arguing angrily about the respective merits of White Wyandottes and
White Orpingtons, but when they saw me they uttered two loud cries of joy and
ran to meet me. I tried to cling to the coop, but they wrested it from me and
together carried it in triumph to the north corner and set it on the grass. Mr.
Millington pulled his compass from his pocket and set the coop exactly as
advised by "The Complete Poultry Guide," with the bars facing the
morning sun, and Rolfs hurried into the back lot and hunted up a piece of bone,
which he crushed with a brick and placed in the coop, as ad vised by "The
Gentleman Poultry Fancier." He told us that a supply of bone was most
necessary if he expected his hen to lay eggs, and that he knew this hen of his
was going to be a great layer. He said he had given the egg question years of
study, and that he could tell a good egger when he saw one.
Millington told me his coop was not as he had meant it to
be, but said it would do until he could get one built according to scientific
poultry principles. He pointed out that the poultry coop should be heated by
steam, and showed me that there was no room in the soap box for a steam heating
plant. He said he would not trust his flock of chick ens through the winter
unless there was steam heating installed.
Then Rolfs and Millington said they guessed the first thing
to do, as it was so late in the season, was to set their hen immediately, and
as it would probably take Spotty thirteen days to lay enough eggs, they told me
to run down to the delicatessen store and buy thirteen eggs, while they
arranged a scientific nest in the corner of their coop, for sitting purposes.
When I suggested that perhaps Spotty was not ready to set, they laughed at me.
They said they could see
I would never make a prosperous chicken farmer if I put off
until to-morrow what the hen ought to do to-day, and that a hen that ought to
set, and would not set, must be made to set. Millington said that he did not
mind if Spotty wanted to lay. If she felt so, she could go ahead and lay while
she was taking her little rests between sets. He said that in that way she
would be doubly useful and that, judging by appearances, she was the kind of
hen that could do two or three things at the same time.
Mr. Prawley, when he saw we were going to keep our hen, came
out and spoke to Mr. Millington, Mr. Rolfs, and me. He said he had an aversion
to hens, but that if I insisted he would devote some of his time to the hen,
but Mr. Millington, Mr. Rolfs, and I assured him we would not need his help. We
felt that the three of us, with occasional aid from Isobel, could manage that
hen.
The next day Mr. Millington and Mr. Rolfs were so swelled
with pride that they would not speak to me on the train. Millington did not ask
me, that entire day, to take a little run up to Port Lafayette in his
automobile. I heard him tell one man on the train to town that he had just set
his eighteen prize White Orpingtons, and I heard Rolfs tell another man, at the
same time, about a coop he had just had made for his White Wyandottes. He drew
a sketch of it on the back of an envelope, showing the location of the heating
plant, the location of the
gasoline brooders, and the battery of eight electric incubators. He said he saw
but one mistake he had made, which was that he had had a gravel roof put on. It
should have been slate. He was afraid the hens would fly up onto the roof and
eat the gravel for digestive purposes, and if a lot of tarry gravel got in
their craws and stuck together in a lump, his hens would suffer from
indigestion. But he said he meant to have the gravel roof taken off at once,
regardless of cost, but he had not quite decided on a slate roof. One of the
slates might become loosened and fall and kill one of his prize White
Wyandottes, which he held at seventy-five dollars each. If he could avoid the
tar trouble, Rolfs said, he ought to have twelve hundred laying hens by the end
of the summer, besides the broilers he would sell. He said he was going
straight to a distinguished chemist when he reached town to learn if there was
any dissolvent that would dissolve tar in a chicken's craw, without harming the
craw.
"Millington told me his coop was not as he had meant it
to be "
Then Millington drew a sketch of the automatic heat
regulator he was having made to attach to his heating apparatus. He said that
ever since he had been keeping poultry he had made a study of coop heating, and
that the trouble with most coops was that they were either too hot or too cold.
He said a cold coop meant that the chickens got chilly and exhausted their
vitality growing thick feathers when all their strength should have been used
in egg-laying, and that a hot coop meant that the chickens felt lax and
indolent. A hot coop enervated a chicken and made it too lazy to lay eggs,
Millington said, but this regulator he was having made would keep the heat at
an even temperature, summer and winter, and render the hens bright and cheerful
and inclined to do their best. Millington explained that this was especially
necessary with White Orpingtons, which are great eaters and consequently more
inclined toward nervous dyspepsia, which makes a hen moody. He was going on in
this way, and every one was hanging on his words, when he happened to say that
one thing he always attended to most particularly was the state of his hens
teeth. He said he had, so far, avoided dyspepsia in his hens, by keeping their
teeth in good condition. Every one knew poor teeth caused stomach troubles.
That was the end of Millington. Rolfs had been green with
jealousy because so many commuters were listening to Millington, and the moment
Millington mentioned teeth Rolfs sneered.
"How many teeth do White Orpingtons have,
Millington?" he asked. "I did not know they had any."
Then Millington saw his mistake, and did his best to explain
that as a rule chickens had no teeth, but that he had, by a process of
selection, created a strain that had eighteen teeth, nine above and nine below,
but no one believed him, and Rolfs was crowing over him when he made his
mistake. He was bragging that he never made a mistake of that kind, because he
knew hens never got indigestion in any such way. All that was necessary he
said, was to let them have plenty of exercise, and to let them out once in a
while for a good fly. He said he let his hens out once every three days, so
they could fly from tree to tree.
Then Millington asked, sneeringly, how high his hens could
fly, and Rolfs said they were in such good condition they thought nothing of
flying to the top of a forty-foot elm tree, and Millington sneered and said any
one could guess what kind of White Wyandottes Rolfs had, when a common White
Wyandotte is so heavy it cannot fly over a rake handle. That was the end of
Rolfs, and I was glad of it, for the two of them had been getting enough
reputation on the strength of my chickens. They sneaked out of the smoking car,
and at last I had a chance to say a few words, modestly of course, about my
splendid group of six hundred Buff Leghorns. I did not brag, as Millington and
Rolfs had bragged, but stated facts coldly and calmly, and my words met the
attention they deserved, for I was not speaking without knowledge, as
Millington and Rolfs had spoken, but as a man who owns a hen can speak.
I reached home that evening in a pleasant state of mind, for
I knew how kind hearted Isobel is, and I knew she would see, if I placed it
before her, that it was extremely cruel to keep a hen in solitary confinement,
when the hen had probably been accustomed to a great deal of society. I felt
sure that in a few days Isobel would order me to purchase enough more poultry
to allow Spotty to lead a pleasant and sociable life. But when Isobel met me at
the gate she disheartened me.
She said the grocer's grandmother had not been seriously
ill, after all; she had been in a mere comatose condition, and had come to, and
the grocer had come back, and he had called and taken Spotty. He offered to
kill her Spotty, not Isobel or his grand mother but Isobel could not bear to
eat Spotty so soon after she had been a member of our family, so the grocer
took Spotty away and sent up another roaster. At least he said it was another,
but after I had carved it I had my doubts. In general strength and durability
the roaster and Spotty were one.
The next morning, when I went out to see if Mr. Prawley had
hoed the garden properly, I found Mr. Rolfs and Mr. Millington leaning over my
fence. They were unabashed.
"I have just been looking over your place," said
Rolfs, "and I must say it is a most admirably located place on which to
keep a cow. And if you want any suggestions on cow-keeping, you may call on me
at any time. I have studied the cow, in all her moods and tenses, for
years."
"Nonsense!" said Millington. "A man is
foolish to try to keep live stock. Live stock is subject to all the ills ——"
"Such as toothache!" sneered Rolfs.
"All the ills of man and beast," continued
Millington. "What you want is an auto mobile. Now I will sell mine ——"
"No!" I said positively.
"You only say that because you do not know my
automobile as I know it," said Millington. "It is a wonder, that
machine is. Now, I propose that to-morrow you and your wife take a little run
up to Port Lafayette with me and my wife. After the cares of chicken raising —"
"Very well, Millington," I said, "we will go
to Port Lafayette!"
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