YE'LL TAK' THE HIGH ROAD AND I'LL TAK' THELOW ROADThe day broke with a scream of wind out of the prairies and such cloudbursts of snow that Joe could see neither bank of the river as he made his way down the big bend of ice.
The wind struck so bitterly that now and then he stopped and, panting and gasping, leaned his weight against it.The snow on the ground was caught up and flew like sea spume in a hurricane;it swirled about him, joining the flakes in the air, so that it seemed to be snowing from the ground upward as much as from the sky downward.
Fierce as it was, hard as it was to fight through, snow from the earth, snow from the sky, Joe was grateful for it, feeling that it veiled him, making him safer, though he trusted somewhat the change of costume he had effected at Beaver Beach.Arough, workman's cap was pulled down over his ears and eyebrows; a knitted comforter was wound about the lower part of his face; under a ragged overcoat he wore blue overalls and rubber boots;and in one of his red-mittened hands he swung a tin dinner-bucket.
When he reached the nearest of the factories he heard the exhaust of its engines long before he could see the building, so blinding was the drift.
Here he struck inland from the river, and, skirting the edges of the town, made his way by unfrequented streets and alleys, bearing in the general direction of upper Main Street, to find himself at last, almost exhausted, in the alley behind the Pike Mansion.There he paused, leaning heavily against a board fence and gazing at the vaguely outlined gray plane which was all that could be made of the house through the blizzard.He had often, very often, stood in this same place at night, and there was one window (Mrs.Pike's) which he had guessed to be Mamie's.
The storm was so thick that he could not see this window now, but he looked a long time through the thickness at that part of the gray plane where he knew it was.Then his lips parted.